The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, October 02, 1923, Image 6

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pCTOIIF.lt 2. In PAINS IN SIDE DISAPPEARED 5Dss Kato Witclier of Con. ' taking E better he Va., writes that dicta aha la noi _ anil can do her own housework Washing, and that Tjer former fenngs—palnc fn her side—h disappeared. 8he adds that s recommending fienedicta to Mends. Get a,botile of Bend from your druggii^todayjij GEORGE O’KELLY DEVELOPING |||1(|P(1(1|/FMFI1IT IN BIG POULTRY FARM IN CLARKE; fK™ILmuil Ml WILL BUy 40,000 HATCHERYj ,.Our lady readers and nil lovers $2 opleoo, and he bought from tin ytf ri n « poultry should visit' the [ breeder In Massachusetts jvho_orf beautiful farm of Mr. George ' " O’Kelly, on the Wintervllle road. f KL and ■«•-!»*■ chickens and the I re- } *" paratlons he is inakir.g for going ( actively Into fho poultry buslr, George [ xhuit#d the Khode Island Reds and ' makes It his business to constant - ly lippfovo the, strain. He showed us ;» young* rostpr that he ays he would' not sell for fifty dollars and ould easily bring that prlct judges ol fine poultry. | Mr. O'Kelly Inst week shipped t j large number of eggs to a hatchery jat Hogansville, Ga. Later when the season arrives he will hatch day-old South It to an oxacVdpuiicato of I chicks for sale. Ho hns sold then- th TL, »! the State AKrlcullurol j £«• *'» *» >«™>Y ' h » Collet. In Athena, and •"■braces I „ urabw ot hen,, nil the conveniences of this build , Inf. Mr. O’Kelly's chicken house . It would be nn lnsplrat'on and vhl-. ‘t ti. lesson. Whale.or Genius, from O’Kelly undertake, he mukea a nn * success. «ii A( ,He has Just completed one of the most Improved poultry house- " T.not only in this section but In the .COTTON STAPLE feed as the ecu In milk. The aver age cow giving the aversgd amount of milk requires the food nutri nient contained in about one huu dred pounds of grass per day. Von can then calculate the dumber oi steps-and bite per day (the cow There never was a finer grade ol j OTHER cotton than grown uround* Athens j CROPS this year, and the turn-out is sur- I prising!} - good. I have already told i Supplementing a pasture by the bale ginned at Statham that means of crops to be cut and fed He will greatly Increase his ent roosts and all other attach* ments. . » Mr. OWeily has ’one Incubator, but he says ho is thinking of ouy* i DIFFERENT Hr. O’Kelly has a small _ pens ol the Jersey Rlack Giant chickens and says he will give them a trial tng another for the custom hatch- j Whlto h ,„ preference the Rhode. ....... . In* Of Chick.., with perhiip-, UO.WW j miand Reds, ho will niid other pop- tlfu! while lint, eggs capacity. He says auen an Jrr * I ular strains to his flocks when he! grade high. 1 "^^ibfitor Is needed In this sect Inn Juf^rts hln hatchery, I This Is doubtless In it measure weighed 570 pounds and which onlj lacked forjy pounds of halting It- self. Of course this Is nn excep tlonal yield, but later reports from farmers and glnenrs show surpris ingly lurure turn outs. Mr, Roy Williams of Madison county, says they have had several balei; ginned arid after paying the toll Upturned out about fotty per cent lint. Mr. Williams says they hav el50 acres planted. In cotton ilnd In spite of a * very poor stand he thinks they are good for 75 bales. Mr. W. I Abney says his cotton Is turning out tufrprislqgly well and on some of his fields he will make a bale per acre. He says he never! saw larger bolls tUl bursting with beau- The staple! will and If some one else - , ^ atoll one he #111 no *o. This cubator will be divided. Inti com- ,,mrlng jhe Jcrpt books partments of different -ftf Capa- k jj e r na f during five cities, and which will ha rented to netted him a pi w ... ... ... .. K * I partlse with eggs to- hatch; nrotith- liqf sdys it you preoafe for ,j bring any number of «•«*« : poultry nnd glve tho fown- MWPWSi -•^cheaper than pynhafclnjf nn Incu ^fcfator and you dre kottbt|. r m •Utudied U POULTRY does not, Jn,-| In spiyiklng of the profit ln|duo ,to^he favorable aeasoni poultry, Mr. O’Kplly nays that last 75 laying during five months thetr eggs netted him a profit of IGJ for "h poultry rnislng nnd give tho fow proper attention there are - few things more remunerative. And 1: It a pleasant occupation? Mr. O’Kelly gnve us a new "kink" on Inducing hena early nnd . often. He hai electric Sights all over his premises as well ns barns, and has his fowl house lighted by same. Every . r ™ . »¥ maturing the crop, but thr.*feood work done by the 'Winterviile Pure Seed Association and the ef forts qf farmers In lifts sedlon to Improve their cotton- seed h^ve alsc much in do-with' the advance. V This section once produced ,n This section once produeed a high comes in, and they are going to their loss made much effect to mr.ke desperate efforts to cancel famifem If they will sow down these old obligations. They are' mor land and use Improved ma- causing the debtor as many sleep-'chintry for working their crops, less nights as they do his creditor.' \Mr. Williford of Madison county, Oglethorpe is settled with a tells us that Mr. Chastain a fnr- very fine class of-pcopli and themer of Elbert, near tho Mai cn Blep f .To rr! i* Hargroves are one of the old"pio-; lino has 27j acres planted in cottoll * Sneer families of that county. We'that he hai already Bartered nine secure 100 pounds. agree with Charlie Blue, that if bale* and is assured of gathering I the creditors will not press the 21 bales from tho 2t ; a res. . | farmer, but help him get firmly j some farmers do not beltove the , planted -on his feet once more, un „ 8U al crop reports but we never they will get their money. 1 publish s’-ich uhless we secure our Take the old families on farms ^ information from loliablo men. in the counties tributary to Ath^' T j, at j- b a ,v, 0 f cotton can b* mown ens and they are honest men &pdip 0r acre under boll weevil eondi- when they bought supplies from| tlonB ls a H cttled fact. Farmers our merchanU meant to pay for, havo i Gnrne d a great final this year them. The 'collapse in prices snd iUbout cofabatting the weevil and boll weevil prevented these .PJhI 1 W U1 profit lessons nest year. In people meeting their olnlBntioiis;, or(leI , the educate am i oncoureite but with them an honest debt them wo search out and publish never K oes out of date. Of course (h0 nam0 of fomC rs who havo when green, when pasture Is short and dry, Is ^ necessity. Oats and vecht t a very good crop to sow for this purpose. A reliable crop to bo fed later will be found In fod der corn or popcorn drilled thickly in rows and put fn as early as the season will permit. Mr. Evans Lunsford, of Coving ton, Ga., has permanent pastures that attract visitors from all over Georgia. He states* that now Is the time to begin working on your pasture, during the months of Sep tember and October. It is neces- sarry to Inocnlate your soil in startting a new*, pasture, and* this Mr. Lunsford by taking soil nnd seed from an old and trell-es- tablished pasture. He :say<< by» building pastures we can trans form {be red old hills of Georgia Into evergreen pastures, where rine cattle n ay grate tbrou-ihou: the year, and chew the sweet cut of content. It ,1s a harbinger of peace and plenty. If you will prepare and plant a small plat of land In grass and clovem suitable for pastures, you then take from this space soil there are men in every county who will take advantage of a neighbor or creditor, but a great majority,of ouV farmers are hon est and will pay those old % debts when they are able. It mny take some of them years, but the creditor will in , time, get his money. SEVENTY ACRES OF COTTON YIELDS A PROFIT OF $7,000 f made unusual crops or a success of anything else In their line. STAY IN OLD RUT ’jass cotton, that waa worth In J *° l nocu h*to many acres. But now market from three-quarters to a accepted time to make a I Mr. 0-K.IIy hn. mad. « cnwful m „ rn| 4 , k „„ , .ty^ yt th. cMcktm balny »nd' |hc ||gh „ „ J', ■ Is raising prise winners. He has °‘‘ h « *rv'" sr .r; 1—pHe save, he* has" fried, all strains • jjj “/thele^S^iSS^b^sInriM tfc m.ny .*(> a. th. Leghorn., the i en , lK . e and , ewllnf , mm -vn OT "Wna*»Jyyg.JB« “-ti itr-o-K.uy«„.i fowls are of greater weight* He' y'Kelly aaya he feeds turn, nut ITw*. J5Z , P outt J y on a but they everl f greel^food dur- SVtty^BlgpuPg for JPH** w ,n riers! Jn g the BummeP and winter.' It IWmi i.d .H.rhM ei*. I >atch. he hae sowed ,th,rV.“"u wh.n .h,*;^ -» r (".. t«unry ho*., n. ri r « ^ pemltHt- Plenty of h,n *-° f .^*.**’*'"*jjttjJstekST.iMn * B and over the must also scratch iff!?™ «mnACS£ ’ZSy'ZZ « turn out only fowii large egg record you great layers. • — ed fact. He plow a*cutaway en Improving thei lay ' cent per pound more than the staple ,ta f t 0n bu Bdlng a permanent and rttleed In T.xa. and the Mlr.lwlppl ani1 ««"'» P«* tore - By writ- Delta States, but when the boll weevil appeared In order to com bat the pest farmers began to plant an early nnd Inferior ftade cotton and our prestige was lost. But progressive farmers began work to bring up the grade of the staple by buying high class seeds and ev- not only [ the acre but. the and year round pasture. By fng to the Department of Agrlcub turn at Wa.h.nrton, D. C, or to rt.^nyB o, bolt In .this day of boll weevils and labor shortage, farmers cannot af ford to travel in the same old ruti made by their forefathers. In or der to Insure u cotton crop before the pest gets It, tl.ey must press Its •sera. And with the labor shortage Aiul with tho- labor shotuge they must make fertilisers work , { for them. They cannot afford to What one farmer accomplishes 1 work two or more acres of land another farmer cap duplicate to apply poison before a square j appears, and you will make a goerf . HEALTH ^ITII crop of cotton under the most ad'i t vit. , ^ yerse boll weevy conditions. “ Executive Board of- The State College Here on Monday The executive committee of the board of trustees of the College of Agriculture,' composed of Dr. L. G. Hardman, chairman, of Com merce; Major J. J. Conner of Car- tersville, apd F. T. Kidd of Hart well,‘Was in session Monday in tho office of President Soule. Busi ness pertaining to the administra-< lien of affairs of the college were discussed. Phil W. Davis, Jr., iiT Oklahoma Muddle The following from the Ogle thorpe Echo will he read by many friends in this section of Phil W Davis, Jr., formerly of Lexington, but now of Oklahoma: We are pleased to notice In the Unless you iiQUe name “E er” on package or on tablets TmIki Okln ' woricl thKt I>hll W. ^ g--™ {h . .. ;; Vi4. nklatomn °»«» twenty-two *itar* and pro .(‘rved .Urc.jl «t th. Oklahamn million,.,o* bar. Governor Walton ha. ptocefl. Co , d J Headach. Lumbag Oklahoma un«ler Military control Ip \ his fipht omtinst Ku klnxiBm. Tho i Clash between civil nnd military | authorities nrose when Mr. Davlr adopting tho same methods and This Is an •■fkhltsl the Sicken* ,.? very great work in bov. It ,h ' , ‘" ,t * r,ln the, l| on ond tralnln* of ou ' ? K ** * Wn *‘V ®»} thrive much better. Our cotton-growers j -•ers. He also turns out only nrop*r> ly marked birds and prl*e winners thrive much better. The poultry busineei Is getting of considerable ’tnqnrUnce In the country around Athene, and trT U . pr,w i we advise breeders to Geonrs O'K.U?'™i,M*wi nd .™ *' r! ; VK> " y '- -?.vl h” ' raiB.i, tils Ca^oat him lmprov.ri fowl houM. -r|o_ seaion. Most farmers atop u.inn I poison to Boon. Keep It up ns Iona !*• you can find w«vllt in cotton. .... "acres, within a fraction of a bal. ■ •*" per acre. It is said that he liat Can Grow All Kinds Of Flowers In This Part of Country ,a better crop this year, and a patch that will make about two bales per acre. Some ope asked Mr. Johnson hdw he mansped to . ... keep down the boll weevil. He re- — - - nllmt H.I |f , - crt£^^SUssn: r » «: florist, and has work- hfkrth ii* I?”!* 1 *] 0 " cr Brokrers In both. England and America. Ha says In A.hcns and surroundinir county can h, tnccaatfully ,ro»n all kinds ,of flowers, but our red c '*y sub-soil and climate are es- preialiy adapted to ros«, and here ante and mapnifieent specimens of rotes be Brown. If some one «nd experience would plied that if a farmer expects to Brow cotton under boll weevil conditions ha must pour on cal cium arsenate like it did not cost him anjrthlnr. Don't atop for rain or anythin* else, and keep it up 1— until after’ frost. Mr. Johnson snid a number of farmera visited him to inspect hia crop and in or- dcr to show them how to apply -..poison, he would Set his machines t rat work; iHe found Jut ia the M.r, Pennock says one of spots where pf. had made demons purest evidences of rctun mn more poii< m WMSUil h 9e kaM a fanner yield of cot ton per grade of cotton haa been greatly improved. The high claaa cotton grown around Athena thta acason nnd finer lint and better arid whiter ataple,' will do much to balance the ■hort crop. * And this Important work haa juf I atarled, and next jre^ you wlli aev greater ndvaricee made. ThW'ef forts of progreaslv.e farmera In ev ery neighborhood ore setting an example to other farmers who will profit by their example. Wo Jjqw Produce In the country tributary ti Athens some half uCfcloxen highly Improved varieties of. cotton. The State Agricultural College Is uOlng the educa- - farmers. Our cotton-growers are learning every year more about the boll weevil and jiow best to combat the pest, and next year we will doubt less raise a better crop than this tho Stato Agriculture College at Athena, Ga., you will be furnUhed complete and specific information as to what seed* to pant for a pas ture and an other facto. As Mr. Abney says, this Is a vitally Important matter and fxzssrxms® THEIR OLD DEBTS strated by certain farmer! county that by the Intelligent ,ap< Plication pf poleon and'proper cul tivation a bole per aere can be raised under the inoet adverse boll weevil conditions. With cotton selling at 10 cants nor . pound even with an average yield of only one-third n bale per acre—anu which in thla section will be (mitered—thl. !■ equal to c ccqli par characteristic of Oklethonie tyi He owns the old- Hei pUcetnear Devil's Fond, one 8 rattiest farm* in his county. ti ‘ - " largrove says they will mal fair cotton crop, and at thirty weevil depredations mny sound In credible, but it is true. To subsan- tlate this narrative, we refer ' to Mr. King Howard, and aso to Mr. M. Z. Appling a fanner from the Sandy Gross section of Ogietho.-po county. And it Is hut n shortrido by matbr Car to -Mr, Appling’s farm, and you can investigate for yourself. . ,V . .This year Mr. M. Z. Appling planted seventy acres In cotton. He is n progressive farmer and good business man He kept’books on his crop, tjie same as a'mer chant or banker. would do ith with -their business. He used, poi son and worked his crop welt and thoroughly manuring heavily. Mr. Appling was tn Athens a few dafs since and says bo Is sure for sev enty bale, nf cotton, or a bale per isrmcrs [ am . f orm entire .crop. His * coun-1eery penny he has expended making rtfs cotton for labor, fer- ,, timers, and ell else. And, has ac,- [iic a ^unta are accurate and absolute- Mint Mb bill tty cants par pound will fix tha far- all right mar all right for the coming year. They have also raised plen ty of corn and a record-breaking Jy correct. He aaya he will receive enouhfl for hia cotton seed to pay the entire cost- of making this when by proper cultivation ami heavy manuring one acre produce. nH large a yield. 'Thla la what all progreHHlve farmers nre now doing. In Spartanburg county, ES. C., wo snow a farmer who uses a ton of high grado ^fertilisers under every acre he plants, nnd says It ^pays him. It requires just ns fhuch,tlm< and labor to cultivate an acre of land that will only produce ten bushels of corn or 300 pounds of keed cotton as it does to work an acre that will make a.bale of;cot ton or forty bushels of com. This weak; Mr. ityortpn Hodgson of the Hodgson Chemical Co., gave an illustration of the profit in high fertilisation, He says in 1911 they had a quantity of fertilizers ot their'factory left Unsold. They did ttof^rlah to'carry Jit to another season and so hauling it out by wagon load, scattered It broadcast, like stable manure, oyer a farm they owned near the mill. They Toothache Earache . Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Tain nml"'two~nthcr - ftsanciai. Umymt. I Recent “Bay«Tab| e l,of A, brought habeas corpus proceeding. |S> Jf" h brought naoeas corpus ^ contains proper -directions. Hai against General Markham, heart . .. ^ - twelve tshiet> r ,„e military H.par.m.nt who | Jew c^U. D^t. aTm H Aspirin Oen. ''“ir ,:r'o 0 e d . y ;„a D 7, I b0 “l« nt 24 » n "‘— -pi™ quote briefly what the newspaper | tho tra<j< mnr|{ 0 f na ycr Ma sabl i facture of Monoareticacldc.ter •• -Phil W Davis. Jr . first_«e | Salicylicacid—fAdvertisemenU fense attorney to present argumen* | * ■ declared that the aherif * waa thr ■ only legal custodian of convicted men until such time as they were placed within the penitentiary an*’ that General Markham was wholly without power or authority to hold, the men In custody. He asserted* that martial law was not contem plated In the state constitution of Inws and that the constitution dcarlr.nreved that the military was nlWays subservient to the civil. Davis took the view that the constitution set out that the pilB*- tla was only to he used In case of Insurrection or riot and then that It was always subservient to the civil authorities*, thnfc the sttftuter rhnde no orovisioii for a military Investigation of military court: that there was absolutely no,pro- year. It ha. already been demon- hiy cro p ha. been saved. Ne.rly IMVWa.ms.v.nty^... ner* In every everv farmer will kill meat absolutely clear proflt.on the.crop. acre. But It paid them better tk* n had thty sold the fertiliser, for every acre - of cotton thus manured mart© 1 two >heavy, .hales,' and the lnrtd was permanently enriched Mr. Hm. Ithe Hill Mixture man. makes about a bale per acre on 730 fnrf ilirnr nosonal ‘ nCrflB nn ‘ l h * uw " a ton of high- i mm ne co ii P fcnn W « this to bo true^ Thlsl ,rrnrte fertilizer* ®n every acre of executions He know* this to 1m true This ^ ! w w. leaves him seventy bates of cotton ■ ' vision for the military detehtlon o y citizens nnd thht If a prisoner wor needed ns a witness tho law provid ed that the court could order suot> prisoner brought froiri the peniten tiary to testify. r “ ‘Dnvla scorned the claim o'. General Markham that the gpver- nor hart granted a stny of execu tion to the three men nnd had given the military authority to keep thorn in cuztodv. He asserts that *'ie governor had no such power: that he could not grant stays of executions nor assign the place •.tton I where convicted men should be in- 66- VHONE-^ Taxi Service Day and Night every farmer will kill meat enough country ... ^ and no one need go to bed hi tn T him fn L J Mr. Appling «soys he is absolutely y i° , hi u"; lt h. /nnditlm certtlo of receiving *7,000 for bis cotton end every dollar ot whicl will be velvet. , . hungry the next twelve months. And they made this crop without going tnto debt and will not have to torn it over to ,qmq creditor. Chbrlet •ays very few plstncrs in Ogle* thorpe county, ever made • money lui'l gro labor. He esn count sue! ckv men on the fingers of on? T nucB. a this Queen -of the * M Kingdom be produced to Its grest! perfection. Nowhere else can such* , “ v large and magnificent sneclmens 5' 8 op - PiSTUBESHERE'SSf w times nn a by I Mr. W. L Abney, says ho read — Uti they ahould establish in Athens a rose farm and advertise thalr business, we could in time monopolise the trade in fine rosea. No other section esn equal the roses grown In and nd Athena. the Twi|iitWg -ospenty ia the increasing num- ir »t ladies from out in the country wlnf -Visit Kim to inquite „ „ about raising flowers,- and he use too much poison I takes very great pleasure in ■*- cotton, and the more he sisting and thtrSettcr'the ytotd.- -it r -They s , la. known aai“U» ha'' garden J weevil killer. - ■ 'find the wife of a fanner devoting very gragt Idteroat the »rtl- r. thla page laat week about tho necessity of our farmer, bar. In* permanent pacturcs. With the great increnio In the cattle anJ dairying bnsloe.a In t|ie counties around Athena, tbla matter abould bo given careful thought and at tention. It not only meana a new source of revenue for fanners, but they cannot properly Improve and build up the cultivatable land without cattle, and wo cannot raise cattle profitably without good pas- tinea. The average fanner fences In hia thinnest and uncultivatablo land, hand. But he knows many good farm- era who lost their lands by trying to grow cotton and Buying rationg for themselves, hands and stock at time-sale pricei. But Mr. Har- iny farmera have • around their Mela debta created in boom by holding cotton that I have sold at fbrty centa or bettor and finally wore forced to lot it go at from nine to twelve centa'. He himself loot several thonsand dollars. 'Some had held cotton from three crops •nd it hit'them hard. If these old debta wore only lifted, the country would bo in a highly prosperous conditions, and farm ers would make more clear money than they did before the appear ance of the boll weevil. This yesr, for the first'time since the civil war, q slrg, majority of farmers will live at-home and board at tho •amt place. Their wives and chil dren will have more money to VtjLsi do you think of this Mr. Farmer, for growing' cotton under boll woovli conditlonaf And bear In mind this C. no |ueso work on the part ot Mr. Appling, hut he has his hooka to show the accura cy of his tatement. Wo know the sol) arouqd snu- dy -cross in Oglethorpe county, it is a free grey land, naturally thin but can be brought np to produce large crops. Wo will visit Mr. Ap pling and toll our readers al abut bow be made this crop and also give tbecost of every item of ex pense. It ia to collect aucb Infor mation ns thla that the Banner- Herald has establiahed this .age. iwsfaxsi. ... - Will get big CROP and encouraging ,thejn./generally an old w ay. they wilt start a flower wood lot, and calls at their homes. When you Instead of this, yi —Brewer’s cotton i.s fine, but ho has ten acres that are safe for twelve or fifteen bale*. It is College No. — 1 and Brewer has been offered 1200 per ten for the seed by a seed company. This is another crop we will inspect and interview I Mr. Brewer about hi* methods of Philfi] her time and attention to such A gentleman told us this week that ho had inspected an extra fine cotton near Bogart belonging. . morj'tf the beauty luxuries at flowers, it Is evidence that her m”id Is relieved from the ■cos more to the beauty and at tractiveness of a rural home than a bright flower garden. Many ladies living out in the country •re tuning the raising of fiowors spend than ever in their experi- WILL PAY OI.D DEBTS worn-out field or Is fthfa "paitnre." . you should set apart your rfchest land for a pas ture and fertilise It the same os you would’ your corn, cotton or other croiii. Wooded land yield, very - little pasturage, as likewise inSnt r_;7 LL VT oU clearing,, tamely grown up In T*™?', bushes. Grass Is only to be found •g* n *J or *ty ol farmers are honest. In open spaces, while within the nearly every man owe* . ahd they intend to pay lebts. At least tide ia tho rTTTf., _ ^ ^ clumps of bushes little or nothing can be secured for cowt. The open They cannot pay those debta this year, or- perhaps next or the after. to profit and rail them to nisi-1 fle W wol. seeded In each grasos as dents of the cittas. Two ladies in Dal,,,, carpet, Peaperden and "SF'MEC JS5^. r Black Modieril of which can he p«rl 'wit their heads abov^ water, intend to start paying them* i will the street Mr. M. R. Brown of Royston, Franklin county, Ga. Mr. Brown ia one of tho 'largest and moat progressive formers In his section, running twenty plows. )Hia farms are located around Royston. Mr. Brown tayo that l* has about planted fifteen acres in cotton to the ploy and, Is good foe fully three-fourth of a crop. lie would have madh as much tbtton as before the weevil appear:*! had every cottoir grower In his section need poison. But d l not «toi do, and after he had kept down the pest Ewapns like bees, come upon his cotton fields from other farms after they had destroyed squares. .Mr. Brown toys should be enacted to forbid 'ptant.ng of cotton unless poison o law if their creditors will only ex- cultivation, Mr. W. I, Abney says he is safe, -he thinks, for a bale per acre on part of his cotton, and be never «» I %( UW larger and finer bolls and flowers from > single bed of doe better and whiter lint. He is still • * putting on poison and says it is '- doing the work, as hia pickers find - dead weevils. By killing -weevils now he gets rid of them and will* not have ao many to fight next Me white Petunias. REAP i BANNER-HERALD WANT ADS meen one mature cow during the n-tion. hut so soon as they can 22*1 25- \ n T 0n Ktm on their feet agato/Ertart ture,. however, should —*•**— — ^ - * —■ ■e" feed had therefore f about dab and one-ha more Atvr per caw,per bfa-vm. Tlv» tonng stock* cmsi^mos c one ajdty rqvr that thev have nited. It is like i>ermittlng * 9 man with small pox or any other contageous disease to walk abroad •nd infest a whole settleme* t. He says is every farmer who plants cotton will, use pofsoq wo can grow cotton successfully And profitable under boll weevil conditions. Ho ■Aid he kept pouriei poison some in liquid form a*l son U (last. He ha* two machines to apply poison and they can go over sixty acres bf cotf ~ ' * “■ moat I mill raise plenty t ? too.! ,1 not avoid "counting the cost J TD EST is better than a whip- aroma—but containing no drug ping, for tired nerves and which can excite nerves or dim muscle better for today and infinitely (better for tomorrow when the penalties of over-driv ing are likely to come duo in headaches, nervousness, and increased difficulty of resting. Postui turb digestion. If you are whipping up nerves with coffee or tea,-try a change to Postum. It willsuppiy all the comfort and -pleasure of a hot mealtime drink', and, it will let * 'and atom is a good friepd of you get the natural sleep rest and health. Postum is a rest that puts Strength and zest delightful, comforting and thor- into tirod mind;'ftirves and oughly satisfying mealtime bev- muscles. Yon’ll be counting erage, splendid' in flavor and profits instead of Coats. Mile Postnm In two forme: Insisht^ by the additioq < prepared Instantly in th. cop I Postum Cereal (Id packages) brought out by boiling fully go U about Qtw-balf cent • cup. 11 Ohere’s a Tie for Post n ffn tin*) - water, i flavor r form (| it ■MHflM