Newspaper Page Text
ASPIRIN
“Bayer* V Genuine!
nuinc “Bayer tablets of As-
' have been proved safe by
,ns and prescribed by physi-
•cr twenty-three yem for
«1 *»>BW 'Iniscry. Handy
e Mvnl'dn tHnlAfo l..I
Urges Slicing Large Plantations Into
Small Farms in Northeast Georgia
One of our most intelligent citi.
ns, in 'discussing the. exodua
movement of'negroes and tha ap
pearance of the boll weevil soys
the only rolution of the problem
confronting the Souther.)
land owner la to carve ou*. large
_ plantations into small farms, fm-
twelve^ tablets'cost only I P |OVG the productiveness by plant.
nf W^UtVOTtore. Each| InR 1‘Rumo and other *oll-bui!dIng
filhs ffovcrr directions' crops, and by the use of Improved
and teflls how to prepare and labor-saving Implement* let
one man do the work of two
how to prepare
• »« g^r/rle for sore throat
iilitis.—(A'dvertiesmcnt.)
RAINS IN SIDB
DISAPPEARED
i Kate Witcher of CoIIands,
writes that since taking Bene-
i she is now in letter health
can do her own housework and
hinjr, and that Mr former suf-
Igs—pains in her side—have
ppcared. She adds that sho Is
m mending Bonedicta to her
ds. Get a bottle of Benedicta
your druggist today.
lenedicta
AL £ H w§K& DER
more negroes.
lie urges that we th« n organise
excursions, with the cheaj rates
that the railways will readily
givo, and bring trnln.loads of in
dustrious and intelllgeAt white
faripi
prospered but made that section
blossom ns the rose. Of course to
grow crops Incident to this sec.
tion larger farms would he neces
sary but no such vast bodies of
land as constitute the average
farm. With cheap negro labor s
land owner could afford to worli
large bodies of land, but It Is not
so today. We must curtail the
acreage under cultivating and
make two or more blades of grass
| grow where one grew before. Ou:
from tbc middle weste
a tea, and qftcr letting them sec
ir land and country sell them
irms in easy terms of pavinent. j wr |t er that In Scholswlg.HoIsteln
He says we cannot Induce ' white J K1W j nr j» e families supported
southern farmers have very broad
ideas, but we must have a re#ro.
lutloniztng changp.
Some yenrs ago Mr. T. It. Thaek-
son. of Spartanburg, S. C„ was
sent by the government to Invcs.
tigate agricultural conditions In
Germany and other European
countries Mr. Thackifin told the
labor from the north or anywhere
<>1«. to till our Inn.!, for our fur-
merit have not such homes and
ligproveimnts ns would satisfy
them. The’ other day wo saw a
letter from a Northern State ask
ing about securing farms In North
east Georgia for several white
fo miller. But the letter stated that
they would want from five to six
room houses, with modem con.
venlcnce^ a pasture, and other
single acre of land, nnd while
of course they could not mnke
much money they managed to live
well ns conditions prevailed In that
country. They cultivated every
Inch of ground ns a garden and
kept some crop growing nil the
time. And he said some actually
grew their fuel on that acre ns
well. They lined their little
plats of ground with a quick
growing shrub which they cut nnd
enlcnces thnt cannot beju^pfj ns fuel^ It did not take from
found on nny Southern farm save I the productiveness of the land
the home of the owner. But by ‘
selling these people farms on long
time nnd easy terms, they could
nnd would make their own Improve
t^ nnd which would be the very
Child's Bowels with
Californi^Fig Syrup"
Mother! j A teaspoonful
lifornla FlgflByrup" now will
ughly clean the little boweh
u few hours you have a well
child again. Even If cross
bilious, constipated or
cold, children love It*
taste.
ir druggist you want only
nuino -California Fig Sy'
hlch has directions for ba-
iiildren of all ages print*
orniii. sny 1ml-
—Advertisement.
hr sp security for the debt.
must plant onl ytiie cotton acre-^pany, with a largo capital, and th*
nge that your force can keep chief mission of this bank U to
worktd arid poisoned. In the war'loan money on cotton* Instead of
between the states Gen. Forrest our cotton growers being mend!
says he won battles by getting the . cants, begn'ng loans on their
most men there firrt. This the; s tanle, the banks are asking
farmer must now do. He must get j make them loans,
a crop on his cotton plants before j The result of this revolutionising
the pest arrives and then keep the I change is a great advance in the
crop growing and taking on fruit, i price of cotton. At this time a
And keep the weevils^ down when!fanner can get one dollar for throe
he dors arrive. 'pounds. He Is not forced to sell
You must begin the application*his cotton as soon as ginned, bot
of poison before a square appears
and thus kill off the old wlnte:
weevils before they have time to
Infest the squares.
can ty>ld It as long as his judgment
nrtd Interest Indicate. This means
that for the first time In his ex
istence, the cotton grower will
And‘when your cotton Is chopped have the privilege of fixing the
out make use of poison freely. And price of his staple, and the mlllr
what Is most Important plow un .must either pay that price or do
..'ihnnt U moans .ft trait dawn
destroy the old ytalks be
fore weevils take up ‘heir winter
quarters in woods nnd other places
here you cannot reach them.
Fertilize heavily, so ns to pre?s
th nnd early maturity of
the crop. It is better to uso l.OOt
pounds of hlg grade fertilizers or.
acre than scatter it over two
norc acres. A successful cot
ton grower says you must concen.
irate your labor and fertilizers In
few acres to successfully
ft was not kntfwrn nntil recent
years that afalfa could be success*
fully rafseif In this . section but
tbout. H means : a great dawn
of prosperity for the -' co.ttor
grower. ' v '
Alfalfa Raised
At Big' Profit
• T * ** r uuum* our coimn yieiq 01- *—. . ' . ' -
MM. We ren do u by th. prop..Urg.at hay crop of any other
methods. We win «« «hi- «««.-' forage plant known. And a well
set batch or field of alfalfa wll
methods.. We will on this page
ilern about the meth* * *"
ods of successful cotton growers
section.
a!
And some of these plots w
rounded by n ditch and In this the
owners raised carp. Almost fifty
per cent of the farm owners
Japan was les sthan one nnd
quarter ncris. Five acres !s a j
large farm, nnd thousands of ten- j ’ “
ants have less than one ncre. These ; A large farmei* and land owner
farmers are poor of course: mnnj jof /tliens was the other day dis-
of them so poor thnt they cannot j cULsJng the* borrowing ability of
afford to mt the fine Tice they | the cotton grower in days gone by 1
grow but must Import a poorei | compared with, what it la today.’
U„ '■*”"* u But jhey aro| H e said he lias knpwnwhen banks
would loan a warehouseman all
the cash he desired to buy cotton
outright of the farmer but refused
to loan one dollar for advances to
the grower to enuble him to hold
The day when we can make large
plantations, containing a thous
and or more ncrer, profitable has quality from China,
passed, never to return. But If self-sustaining nnd they do
these large farms were cut Into lose money or starve,
small tracts of from fifty to an I We must curtail .our farming op.
hundred acres theV ran be sold toleration*, and especially our cot-
a good class of white farmers; 1 ton ncrenge. Gr<at crops mean ». v „ w
Some fifteen yenrs ago.- over a lower prices nnd lower Prices meanUV* croii *un^k'l nrices Imnroved
thousand white farmers from the! financial loss. On a very small Th , s situation not only applied to
Athens, but was the practice with
*■*“*■■ .. the countr y both (n
*
to | acreage without help a man
East and middle west came
Columnar county. North Carolina, j raire foot! for his family nnd horse !b‘inks"an
nnd each family bought from ten have his own milk, butter . nnd Jy/v
twenty flv. nern, .and. The, \ Mt. nn„ cotton ... W.‘
Harding, head of tne Federal Re-
nnd i Plus. By pursuing this policy the
only • farmer will have the whip hand.
666
I Proscription, prepared for
Id, Fever, and Grippe
i» the niogj«P««<ly rfmfriy
COOP INTUIT
To show our farmers the impor
tance of co-opcration in marketing
their crop* und also of raising at
home all they require for personal
consumption and to' supply the lo.
cal demand, a friend hn* sent us
the following ntory of a car-load
or potatoes, Mud Jiuw the pries
potatoes,
grew before they reached the con
sumer;
charges, the middlemen’s profits
and tho expense of hauling said
corn from tho depot to the farm,
would cost more than to raise that
corn themselves. And it Is
same with all other Imported
We want our every farmer to
read that story of a load of pota
toes before he pitches his crop
next year. For the first time since
the war between the states the
farmers in the counties around
Athens have produced enough food
stuff to run them mxt year. They
are firmly r «’-'rhed behind the
rampants of I *epondenee and en-
‘'-! nc T:!^ ! “ £e iild gst a p’rirats baa!: !a
»er»b Bank, organlud to help the
farmer, practiced this outrageous
Injustice and by callng In loans on
cotton forced holders to sacrifice
their crop,* some selling cotton ofr
which they had refused forty cents
per pound* as los aa ton and eleven
cents. This policy Is responsible
ior the ruin of thousands of cot
ton growers and many of whom
are today living In the couhtles
around Athens. The gentleman
stated that ho himself tried to se
cure tho extension of a loan on
his cotton from the head of this
big bank, but was refused, saying
that the Federal Reserve Bank
did not loan money for specula
tive purposes .But after somo trou-
ngcri by tl.. hl«h price th»t th« | Phlatf.lpWa to Uko up tho loan
short cotton crpp is bringing they h ._
for him.
continue for ye^rs to produce a
crop with no other labor or cost
except the harvesting. In travel
ling through the country yau note
at many farms an alfalfa patch,
sod those who once grow this
crop are so well pleased that they
annually Incrase • the acreage.
Northern tourists passing through
our secton express surprise at the
fine crops of alfalfa they see on
tne roadside and say this ons crop
•Impresses them more favorably
with the possiblltles of our coun
try from an agricultural stand
point, than anything they see.
On the old ranches of Texas
fourteen acres of range was allot-
ed* to each head of cattle, and they
have there much better grazing
than are found In this section ex- '
cept on Improved pastures. But
thin Texas began to grow alfalfa
and one acre will feed and fatten
four steers. Of course the same or
even greater proportionate value
of alfalfa prevails In this seck’onl.
Dairymen say unless you have a
prepared pasture It la best to con
fine milch cows In a lot for they
lose rtiSrrt exertion In rambling to
Crop a' meal than It coats to grow
that amount of feed and give to
them in a lot. Now that the dairy
bui'nesa i« assuming such Impor
tance in this section, every man
wth a iherd of cattle should plant
an acf$ In alfalfa for every four
bead of* milch cows he has, and
then ovp them, confined* until he
can prepare a pasture where they
can gather a feed without ramb
ling over a large bgdy of land. Al
falfa Is unquestionably the mosl
profitable crop our farmers can
grow, but of course you roust en
rich and properly prepare your
ground to make It a success. Conn
ty Agent Flror will instruct you
about proparing your Und and
planting tha crop.
Methodists Face
Big Program
F o r. December
(By Associated Press.)
NASHVILLE, TENN.—Dec. Ja
to he jara important month for
Southern Methodis#. There are
five south-wide conferences to be
held ^during the mbnth in various
sections of the country and two in
ternational and Inter-denomina
tional meeting; which are at pre
sent engaging the attention of the
offclals at headquarters here of
ethodlst Episcopal Church,
South. They are as followers:
Semi-annual session of the Col
lege of Bishop, at 8an Aantonlo
Terns, December 14-17.
ethodlst Press Association, an
nual meeting, at Washington, D. C.
on December 14*17.
Sunday Bchool. Council of the
11-12. , .
Evangelist and General Singers
Association, to be held at Memphis
Tennessee, Deoefnber 19-20.
Interdenomlnatnonal Young peo
ple Commission, |o convenpat Buf
falo N. Y. December 4-7.
International . Convention of
Student Volunteer Movement, at In
dlanapolla.- Ind., December 28-
Jan 1. 1924.
The College of Bishops, to be
attended by some sixteen Bishops
tho Methodist Episcopal Church,
South at Antonio, Texaa. the bis
hops reprdierflfng the Southern
luid* foreign arreaa will dUJcuss
the centenary campaign, now in
Its last year, the Christian Edu
cation Movement and the superan
nuated ministers plans.
Bishop Warren Candler, of At
lanta. Ga.. senior active bishop, wll
preside and reports from the var
ious areas will be mhde by the i
bishops and the annual message j
to the membership given out. The
last session of the College of Bis
hops was held In Nashville.
The sessions of the Methodist
Press Association, to be held In
Washington, will be attended by
the editors of the Methodist news
papers and periotd'cals, R. 8. Bat-
tcrfield, of Nashville, Tenn., be
ing president of the organisation.
Among the prlndpal speakers at
Washington will:'President Sat
terfield, who will deliver the pre
sident's annual' address; welcome
address by Dr. C. O. Chapelt, of
Washington, ti. iC.; response, by
Dr. G. T. Rowe, of Nashville, Tenn
Dr. J. M. Rowland, of Richmond’
Va„ secrotary and treasurer; T.
P. Wiggins, Nashville. Tenn., Dr.
J. A. Burrow, Nashville; Dr. T. L.
Rulse, Louis vine, Ky:; Dr. C. Han
ford, St. Louis, Mo.; Dr. M. Laz-
enby, Birmingham; E. M. Mc
Neill, Nashville; Dr."A. C. Miller.
Little Rock, Ark.; Dr. W. W. Ply-
ler, of Raleigh, N c. who will ta^k
•on the “Ku Klox Klan*’; Dr. R.
E. Stackhouse, Columbus S. C.;
Dr. F. S. Parker, Nashville, sub
ject, “Son's! and Race Relations";
Dr.,8. K. Cockrell, Baltimore, Mr;
Dr. E. B. Chappell, Nashville; Dr.
F. E. Riley; Dr H T. Carley, New
Orleans, La.; Dr. L. T. Ballard, At
lanta; and Dr. D. H. Aston, Okla
homa, City, Oklahoma.
AT THE COLONIAL
THEBESTWAY
TO GET YOUR IRON
D O you khow that one of the
reasons why physicians have
prescribed Guao r , Pepto-Man- -
gan for 30 years is because of its
ample supply of iron? ,
Physicians found that tho 'iron
content of Gude’s waa readily
absorbed by the system,, that it did
the teeth, and thnt it quickly and
effectively toned and strengthened
the ayatem. At your druggist’s,
in both liquid and tnbleta.
Free Trial Tablets th°& f tKnS
Gude’s
Pepto-^angait
Tonic and BloodEnricher\,
Stop Coughing
The simplest and beat way to stop.,
coughs, colds, croup, bronchial,
••fltr'and la grippe coughs is to take
CHAMBERLAIN’S*
COUGH REMEDY
Every u«r is ,i fric ’-.d
JOY OF HEALTH '
WOMAN’S RIGHT
;•••■
Tho “Covered Wagon,” the]
greatest motion picture production!
since the “Birth of a Nation,”
will be offered the patrons of the {
Colonial Theatre immediately fol-i
lowing the Atlanta engagement of!
thle wonderful picture.
A company orchestra of noted!
■oloista will appear at each per
formance here on the 11th and*
18th of December. Already many
inquiries have been recevied by
the local management foi> tickets
which will go on salo at an early
date.
Mrs. Evans Freed from Female
Weakness by Lydia E.Pmkham’i
Vegetable Compound
. Detroit, Michigan.—'T had female
weakness with pains in my back, and
nl could not stand
YOU DO NOT
HAVE TO MAKE
d/f‘i
IT IS MADE
well. Oh, it is a grand thing to have
your health [ I feel well all the time
and can go out like other women and
I not feel that awful torture. When 1
took your medicine first I thought it '
should euro after the first bottle, but
I am glad my husband kept me at it.
JUST DISSOLVE IT
AND DRINK IT.
A GREAT CONVENIENCE
AND OH. SO GOOD I,.'.
well."—M v. Jinny Evans, 1604 La-
fayettc l ..J., Detroit, Michigan.
If you aro suffering from displace^
ments, irregularities, backache, ner
vousness or other forms of female
weakness, you should take Lydia E.
weakness, you should take Lydia
Pir.kham's Vegetable Compound.
The reason is given in letters like
these, and we nave published thou- .
Bands of them. You may expect that
a medicine that has nelped other
women wiy help you. Try it.
Read Banncr-Hcrald
WANT ADS
Read Banner-Herald
Want Ads.
. rcswrkable to
=ver .11 farms of HchU«
Particularly bsntftelsl
rcotmfait of set eras, that
— to —
chi:dr*#—chapped hsnda osd
«. tfiMct bites,core fact. Not
Injurious to tho sport dsllests.
•kin. Resll bslow whot
Lillian Durfso of 1M B»
>St.AIprns,Hkhlisn,ssyst
M wtlimf thnt Dr. A. W.ChMO’J
gyuynt btgmi—
my skin
“ ■tdKimo.-*
kuy Dr. Chase's Otat-
n«ru, SttKSS. TofalJJIt
Tou eso Buy Dr. Chase'S OWV
n '*nt at »J! #ru* stOCSs. TobcsurS
«*tUo* tho fcnnlns, o«# that
Oonr.it sod sicBsmrc of A W.
r M.D. arson Mil bo*
A carload of Irish potatoes waa
shipped from Centurla, Wisconsin.
March 14.’ The car contained 600
bushels of number one grade Irish
potatoes, packed in new 160 pound
sack*’, nnd loaded In a stone lined
refrigerator car. It cost $126 or 86
cents per bushel when It started
an Infant for Knoxville, Tenn.
It grew to $227.46, or 44 cents
per bushel, as its railroad fare was
paid. It took on another $35 or
6 cents per bushel when it passed
through the wholesaler*# hdhd*. By
tho time the retailer received It It
was $629.20 strong, or 88 efttts per
bushel. When It reached the con.
symer It wn* u full grown ndult,
wprth $840, or $1.40 per bushel
bumper cotton crop, they lose the
advantage they have gained nnd
will enslave and Impoverish them-
sHves for the enrichment of
western grain grower, tho railways
and the middlemen.
This is the great danger now
confronting the country, and; the
fnct cannot be too atrongly Im-
preaard upon the farmer. If we
keep down the production of cot.
ton to around ten million bales,
growers can with absolute certain
ty count on being paid thirty
This practice could have but one
result—to force the cotton grower
to market Ills crop as fast as gath
ered, and whloh enabled the buyer
and manufacture to flv their own
price. Ever since the war batween
tho states the southern farmer has
sold his cotton wtfbout profit and
sometimes below actual coat ol
production. In fact, the people
were kept In bondage by the men
who used their staple. The-cotton
grower not only had outsiders and
itiL%ai*u pal ties to fix the pric<
I.nrire Quantities of
Home Made Flour
.15 cent, per peck. It. valu. having
cent. for.he..apt.1 but when yon be Wkl *• £ .„d'no. «» for.tgn IwM.
In th!* age nearly every food
•tuff la’Rdulterated with some for
eign Ingredient, either to Increase
Its weight, to produce tome pata.
table effect, or dther selfish and
gainful/reason. A few daye elnCB
a miller near Athens, who sup.
plies the tr*dc with home-ground
meal and flour, received a letter
from ik northern company asking
the capacity of his mill and hpw
much phosphate did he use a year
to mix with his flour, and offered
tn quote Ions prlcea on a large
quantity. The miller replied that
Use the Best Part of the Wheat
by Sweet Rose
increased marly 300 per cent
The moral of this Is that the
Tennessee* farmef would Have 6?
cant* per buthel over th«- Wiscon
sin farmer In growing potatoes ha
for ns markeUng expenaes
concerned, nnd much more
vantage if he can market direct
The production of Irish p«ta»o** *r
Tennessee is about one and a half
bushels per capita while the pet
capital consumption of the United
Stntrs ns a whole is three and e
half bushel*. The Tennessee farm,
would gain more than $2,000,•
If they raised the potato#*
themaelvf*. exclusive of the cor
of rrtallin*f and which amounts
nearly $3,600,000 more.
Wisconsin farmer who grew
those potatoes was paid .16 cent!
per bushel f. o. b. cars. The Tenn
essee ednsumer paid for the sarm
potatoes $1.40 per bushel. Now
Mr. Georgia Farmer, do you no'
hiize thnt the same fustrageour
difference In price you must paj
for every article that you purchas#
...j1 which Is grown In some dls
tant rtate—corn, oats, flour, hay
and all else? Cannot you also sef
thr wisdom of growing on youi
own farm everything you cair pro
vince, Instead of buying elsewhere
j Gen. Bob. Toombs once remark**
In an address before* Wilkee eoun
farmers, that It would not paj
xceed that limit the larger the|to fix the price of everything H£ hte Sr oSTgro-
a*.. OUm nr(r»n TV> nnl Wn» fnrEAll tn HtIV tn IHaIta thuH*" ‘ ll " n0Ur » 41,0 "® ,a O n, y *
crop the lower the price. Do nof
Increase the cotton acreage over
’ast ye^r, hut rather curtail It, for
there ore farmers who wHI go
wi’d and plant their front yards
and house tops In the fleecy rtaple.
But If you have well filled barns,
garners and smoke houses, you are
Independent of the world. Oar
southern cotton growers have la
bored for the enrichment of oth
ers long enqugh. Now toil foi
vour own self qnd wife and child
Farmers Will Learn
To Beat Weevil
We belUve that in time our f«r-
.ners will learn to master the boil
weevil and produce a full crop o
:otton on a limited acreage as be-
ore the advent of the pest. Bev.
•ral have accomplished this in ou:
«dopted by tiuir neighbors. Mr.
•omhatting the weevil will lx
idopttd by their negihbors. Mr,
"rure tells us that last week he
vent on a business trip to Roy-
•ton ami met a Mr. Carey, who
ms a farm near the Gold Mine,
vho had gathered twenty bale* of
•otton from twenty acres and n
•ale per acre on some fields were
iot uncommon In parts of Frank-
in county. We were also told of
farm«r near High Shoals,
was forced to buy to make that
crop, it seemed that the wbolr
world was organized and permit
ted to prey upon the southern cot
ton grower. He waa. unquestiona
bly tho poorest paid workqr in ou
great Republic and had to use
cheap negro labor to grow cotton
and oinke ends meet at the end ol
the .year. This Is unquestlonablj
true, as every^prodUcer of cottoi
knows. •**
But since the boll weevil appear
ed and that exodus of negroes set
in d revolutionizing change ha-
taken place. In fact, the boll wee
vil is to the southern cotton crow
cr Is what Abraham Lincoln wat
to the sonthern slaves; and when
bo many nogroc, were driven frcrc
the cotton fields abd the yield oil
third or more, It cman
c! pa ted tho cotton maker am 1
placed the bottom .rail on top.
Take the situation today an.*
compare it with only three year
ago, and also for the past' twi
years: Instead of refusing to loar
money on cotton stored in ware
houses, hanks are courting these
loans. You find in nil the leadlnp
dailies and other publi&Yons that
reach* the farmer conspicuous ad
vertisements from hanks inviting
loans on cotton by farmers or hold
era, and these banks will advance
three-fourth* th«- market value o'
t'rat cotton. Till* same, situating
piles to the entira cotton I»» It
>conee, ‘ who had gathered fifty
ales from lees* than, sixty acre* jfrotn North Carolina to ?***•• It
lut you can never make such]our own Athens, Mr..John Wllklttt
* :n
hlou
— . T
duct ground from whrot, and if his
-uatomers wanted any mixture
*hey could do It tbemselvea.
We have always contended that
flour ground from home-grown
wheat was swe«ter and more nu
trlcloua than Imported flour. While
no *o white, it la superior in ev
ery other way and more healthful
and palatable. henW you [ *
bread from wheat raised and
yround at home, you know just
what you arc eating. If flour l* a*
white as the drifted snow you
may know aonle chemical procesr
hn* been employed to produce tha‘
effect. Of course ft rellabf# mill.
wouhf. not h!?nd with the flout
he offer# for sale nny polnou* In-
tredtent, but such mixture* can
not have the same healthful nnd
nutriruou* value as flour made
from pure hnd clean wheat grains
In this section, by proper prep, i
irntion of land .we enn grow good
•rops of wheat. *ome formers hav.
«rg made twenty bushels or more
ter acre, and which It* a large
•rop In the wheat producing, sec-
ions of the west. And when we
**ount the freight charges by rail,
-nnds. on# can see the folly of im-
rt<d flour when we can produce
■ home all the wheat we need and
when ground at a local mill it It
•run tin teed against adulteration.
WEZ few acres of wheat with thle
wsll P**ared a farmer can pro-
luce riyty of grain to feed’ hi*
family'lnd hand*. Do not *end
tbrtsirt for anything ypu,#jqt> grow
r r YOU could have a friendly chat
with the millers who prepare Sweet
Rose Self-Rising Flour you’d find out
why it is that Vour bakings are 10 good.
Sweet Row is made from the choiceit
part of the wheat berry, the cream of
the golden grain. Then too, the leaven
ing material, used in Sweet Rose are
the purest and best obtainable. There’,
not a cheap,’ low grade ingredient in
Sweet Rok; everything i, of the finest. •
That’, why you can make auch uni
formly ■ good bucuits and delicious
pastries with it. ■ '
If you know what real economy is, you
will have found out by now that it »:
using only the result-getting products.
Such a product is Sweet Rose.
You are conserving .your time and
strength and saving on your household
expenses by using Sweet Rose Self-
Rising Flour because with it there can
be no baking failures, no left-overs, no
throw-aways. It pays to use Sweet
Rose.
i* i*.
Am. S.lf.
RhlfFlm*.
CALLAWAY GROCERY COMPANY
Wholesale Distributors * Athens, Ga.
SWE-ET ROSE FLOUR
This KUd Pine! is ou nny (Mg of Swni Rom—Plain