Newspaper Page Text
Madison County
Farmer Comments
On Agriculture
again urge c?on our farmer*
that In fighting the boll weevil and
cultivating cotton or any other crop
do not heed the advice of every man
you meet, but read what educated and
trained scientific men aa represent the
U. S. Department of Agriculutuure or
are collected with our agricultural col*
leges advise, and then follow their
guidance. This is what such success*
ful farmers as Messrs John T. Ptttard
Harold Hulme do. Remember that l T n*
cle 8am spnds millions of dollars in
experimenting with seeds and crops
i dnv and if’l. .. «««. mnd ln combating the pest, and
with industrious white nettlera, j ^te m tay or cbTSr • mpl °” ,h * b **‘ tral "” d '“ d m °“
tnostly umall, land-owners, but I the farm as for a profession. An
pard’working and. good citizens. I educated woman will make any
t Madison wa* never .listed among when you educate a child It is
the wealthy comities in the “Black I something they can never lose or
Bolt," but I, thickly populated tave telmir«m them; .ud ta thi.
And no division of our beautiful
Piedmont section is making great
er or longer strides tn the march
of progress thin the old Free
State. It is dotted with beautiful
and modern farms, some small and
some owned by large land-holders.
Tlri... J 1
sacrifice to educate her children,
and to successfully farm one must
use hi s brains as well as muscle.
And Dorse Smith Is right abdut
the importance of conserving our
Follow Science
In Fanning
Ing more weevil* every day and “snap
per*" by the thousands and they are
r applying poison to rid thoir crops
of this menace.
Let t
Hartwell Sun
Farming News
Drive over any road in • Madison
and you find every few miles a
farm that would attract attention
in any section.
A few days ago we had a most
interesting talk with Mr. Dorse
Smith of the life section, noted for
its progressive farmers. Dorse
Smith is one of five brothers, one
being Obe Smith, the pedigreed
cotton seed grower, and ail of
whom have made good in what
ever calling or profession they
select. They were raised like other
poor country boys in this section
but by a father who trained them
up in thq way they should go.
Dorse Smith is orfe of the
wealthiest men in his section and
a progressive and successful far
mer. His success is founded on
the fact that he has always made
it his rule and practice to make
his farms sdf-sustaining and
never buy any ! article that he can
grow on his land; and when he
visits town he always brings
something td sell and carries back
home more money than ho
brought with him.. He is a regu
lar attendant on our curb market
and says it is a great help to
farmers and should bo maintained.
And Mr. Smith says a farmer
and let nothing go to waste that
can be marketed. For instance
this year his woods were full ot
huckleberries. Instead of letiiug
them dry up, oiv tyc. bushes, Mr.
Smith had thtf bdrries gathred
and fbund ready sale for them at
twenty cents per quart-
But Dprse Smith believes in
education, and sends his children
to the best schools and colleges.
His daughters are now attending
the Bessie Tilt College. He says clear money every year.
scientific men to be found to conduct
experiments. Of course the Individual
fanner is not able to gat to any such
expense. So the wise farmer clonus
ah outside counsel and.followa
the guidance df experts. Out State
Agricultural UoKeges also every
county farm agent, are furnished by
the Government with all the facts
timber. He gjfgjfjJWSTW SL'ZdEi
of bis places, near nil home, they ar* disseminated among Inllvi-
with 200 acres of wooded land.
The forest pines had been cut out
but it is pines will grow and it is
well set with, other hardwood
trees. Ho ha 8 begun work on this
they anf disseminated among In-llvl-
dual farmers,, so a farmer can
cure all of the fact*. Now take
use of poison ‘for the boll weevils The
experts advise that the use cf cal*
»*« - .. u „ v „ . clum arsenate In dust form is the only
stretch of woods, snd during idle
seasons go over It snd cut. 'downl ^ . d ' c,d ' < i .“•., „
every crooked or scrub tree or | cheap „ , nil „ e „ Mt iv« s> poison I
hush, nnd leaves the straight tfm*> r»..» .ui. ....
The Hartwell Sun and Washing
ton News-Reporter each week pub
lish a most interesting and valua
ble farm, department, edited by
their county agents, and other
weekly papers in this seltlon con
tain articles of value. Ia order that
our readers may have benefit of
this (information we condense and
publish these contributions. Sev*
.iral cf our leading farmers told us
chey were most timely suggestion*
ind they road them with profit
llbe following ia taken from the
ast issue of that splendid paper,
.he Hartwell Sun, and will be of
^special interest to our truckers
rnd gardeners:
, i , , . | i . ,i_. m niecuve u poison in
bush, Jind leaves the straight tim fj U p t f onn . But. this year farmers who
her, that will make ^ lumber. He have tried both ways of poisoning
can use this refuse for fire-wood
and other farm purposes, and it
gives his best trees and bushes
room to spread and grow. He
says our land-owners do not seem
to realize the fact that we are
that where they applied the
molaaats mixture cn their cotton they
plenty.. of weevils but their
oc'-Mior* who followed Instructions
and used the dust form of po^onlng
have exterminated the pest and not
consuming four feet of lumber for J,e W Sn' ihm the 'mota^” mixture
every foot that la growing, and In
..... growl —
a few years there will be a lum
ber famine on the land. And yet
our land-owners are wasting their
few remaining strips of wooded
land as recklessly as when the
country wa 8 covered with virgin
forests. He should not look to
self or only tomorrow, but to our
prosperity and the future. Instead
of clearing any more wooded land
we should let our broken and
washed fields grow in second
growth pines and put more work
on and build up the field we culti
vate. , .
But Mr. Smith says the first
form to do the work.
Farmers in the counties i tributary
to Athens have at their gatee the
finest agricultural college in the South
and every scientist connected there
with la at their service. Avail your-
self of this privilege and then follow
guidance of these experts with
y I doti
every ]
>tted and every T crossed.
should not desplke small things, an d foremost essential to success
ful farming is to never buy any
articles that you can^ grow
your own land
Let a farmer fol-
low this practice, making of cot
ton a surplus fnd money crop, and
any industrious man can make
money farming in this section. Wj
must reduce the acreage cultivated
and build up the productiveness of
our fields with leugme crops.
Don’t spend all you make on show
and display, but put aside some
Crop Diversification
Is Recommended
Wo aro glad to know that our
farmers liavo injcn forced into di
versifying th:lr crops. When you
depend on ono crop, a failure or
low price si»eJi 8 loss or ruin for the
grower. But this on” crop system
utso Impoverishes your fields. But
wh:n you rotate pnd diversify you
each year improve your land;
One big point in favor of dlvcrsl-
flent on is thb Insurances which is
aiforded against crop failure and
tha, mountains nboat Tucson snd ia
obla to withstand high altitudra,
making it especially dangerotig to
some parts of West Texas.
Thn new pest Is «ud to be rav
aging the cotton f bids near the
mountains, having come down from
the wild cotton of the higher alti
tudes. Tho state of Arison a liay at
tempted to stop its spread by cre
ating a non-cotton area near the
mountains. This action caused an
injunction suit by property owners
Unless the peat is checked it will
spread and soon will be in West
Texas. The new weevil is said to be
—> ANTt KILUNQ •
BOLL W.EBVIL
YORKTOWN. TEXAS — On the
farm of C. H. Hpence, red ants In
countless snd militant numbers are de
stroying the weevils snd carrying
them off to their cotonle. When
8pence first told this story nobody
would have believed him If it had not
been * recalled that he was a Presby
terian minister . Visits to the Spence
farm gave occular evidence of ail the
things Spence claimed to have expe
rienced by the score or more of the
prominent men of the city and county.
Presence of a boll weevil
Beans, cabbages, turnips and
.najiy other vegetables begin, to
urn brown on the 1 naves and
stalks.. The plant has * rusty ap
pearance. A clone examination will
show'a reddish or brownish sub-
stanca o n the surface of the leaves,
or Just under the surface snd ex
tending out of tho leaf. Quite often
the beans are said to dia from dry
weather when the real cause is
rust •
The remedy is to spray with th>
mixture of bluestone and lime ar
stated above. This mixture is call
ed Bordeaux. It is a spray to be
used on ail garden vegetables, af
fected with blight, rust, rota, etc,
and is effective for all these dis
eases.
fanners have second bottoms
which they can water from
branch nearby quite easily. You
can make some money out of this
Kind of land. FreBh potatoes In tho
full bring good money. Purchase
your seed at once. Ask for spec
ial Bulletin on fail Irish potatoes
giving more detail.
She’s Versatile
Red Spider is beglnins to ap
pear In cotton fields over the coun
ty. Often this disease spreads rap
idly from a few stalks over ssveral
acres, and may damage the cotton
crop 10 to 50 per cent if It starts
early. On the underside of the cot.
ton leaves you can see, If you have
good eyes, a very fin© web, and
crawling about In this web you can
see the very small spiders, which
are red or brownish ln color. These
spiders afe smaller than chfckro
mltas and are very hard to see.
The spiders arc nsunlly to be found
about the central vein or stem
the leaf, but may be about as small
Tomato worms are easily con
trolled by spraying the entire to
mato plant with one tablespoonful
of arsenate of lead in a gallon of
water. The poison may he put in
the Bordeaux or bluestone and
lime spray mentioned above, and
rotten and wormy tomatoes con*
troll'd at the same time.
However, there is one rot dis
ease of tomatoes that cannot b '
controlled by sprays, etc. It la
called blossom-end rot. The center
of the blossom end of the tonia-
begin to turn dark or black
looking like it had been braised tn
rome way. This spreads over the
'ntire tomato but after about a
third of It is affected, the rot has
a blackish soft appearance like
any other rot. The disease ia caus
ed by too much dry weather or t-
much wet weather. If you can
water your garden from a branch
you can control the disease In dry
weather.
Greene County
Is Progressing
The following items about crop con
ditions in Greene are from tha pen
of Editor Jim Williams.
Prospects for fine cotton and corn
rropa In Graens are as good aa can be
desired. The seasons have been pro
pitious for a promising crop. Farmers
used an unusually large amount of
fertilisers and bought quanltles rf
poison. The peanut crop is also qnite
promising.
Last year nearly all the ginneries
ih Greene closed down, but with art In-
■reseed cotton crop several ginneries
In the county will be operated and
Greensboro will have at least one
modern ginnery with the probability
another i»«ini overhauled ac«l
placed In condition.
Tags Attached
"To Salmon Tell
Their Mileage
JUNEAU Alaska—Movements of ..'
salmon of various species from the • ;
North Pacific Ocean to their
spawning: grounds in the sou:h-
stern Alaska district will be • •
charted this summer for the first
time in history, according to As-..
jlstant Fisheries Agent E. M Hull. • • <
Five thousand salmon will be
tagged, released and a reward oi
fhty cents each offered for their
return with the information ol_,
how, when and where captured.
The reward is a big on e for
fishermen who arc accustomed to *"
obtain only 25" cents for a large
salmon at fishing ports. Even ti
lower scale Is offered by canneries.
This eoso flshs will be taken-*
and tagged at Indian Island in
Cross Sound, Kings mill Port, Chat"*'/
ham Strait, Ruins Point,' Summer**■ l -'
Strait, Cape Chacon, Clarence
Strait, and Tre e Point, Rovlllagl. ,,,. f
ged«o Island.
GREENE SUPERIOR COURT
CONVENES NEXT MONDAY
fiorothy *Wolfe, 20, journalism student at Antioch College, Yellow
Springs, Ohio, is financing her education editing and managing two
weekly newspapers end writing abort stories for magazines. She
writes all the stories and all the heads that go into her two papers
the Yellow Springs News and the Bath Townahip Herald—and rustle*
op all the advertisement* and new subscribers beside.
The dairymen of Georgia should
organise and co-op#rat*. They wtu
or get anywhere with each fellow
going it alone.
Milk retails In Atlanta at 10 cents
the gallon and the producer receives
about 15 cents. Something wrong
here, sure enough.
as a nuartor or cover nearlv the * reai • u-,a * ur ®* ne •>»»»/ was
uut r
entire plant dry or w;ther up, god coming oao*.
^afSLV^TJ'Sr-SS Th * r * ,,,ould W*** IntertSrt in
>T spitsud by Xrttlnx on U» clothe. <i,i ry i n , ,„,i live .lock ral.lni in
of the perMn waikinit through thfllaroen. County. N.lure ,nv. thl.
cotton, or on plows, work stock or section every opportunity to do big
a,raging heat and they set on on* or
more of (Me worms with a fury that
doss'not stop until their victims are
In storage.
"A11 ths ants need.” aid Spence,
"is enough training to Induce them
climb the cotton stalks »to ths
wes Vila"
price fluctuations. With severe! j a very hardy creature with power
source* of Incomo It Js not likely to withstand both cold and heat
that all will bg low .in yield and 1 [ n t ho opinion of an expert ento-
prlco in any ope* year, but ttefotnlogist. Dr. W. Dwight Pierce,
chances or« thnt or more of j who expressed belief that the cas«s
the enterprises will be fairly proft*:-1 of infestation were result of one
fertilised female weevil which had
flown from th# Catalina Mountains
the enterprises
able.
Livestock enters Into mo§t *yi-
trme of d I verification. The kind
of livestock depends largely upon
tho kind and ametmt of the feed
Piui pasture available. Abundant
and cheap corn, favors hogs. Plenty
of roughage and pasture favors
cattle. Poultry utilizes wastes nnd
tty limited supply of. grain. x
n search of food and who also *r-
pressed disbelief that Infestation
existed in the restricted district at
that time, the farmer* refused to
destroy their cotton unless ade
quate funds should be provided by
the state for their reimbursement.
Figuring on a basis of profit re
ceived from last year’s cotton crap,
the farmer* average agreed to ac-
IN ARIZONA MB «n acre aa Payment for
their destroyed crops. They declined
West Texas may be threatened to accept the states’ offer of JSXJfr
with a new cotton menace in the)an acre, snd secured an Interlocn-
discovery In Arizona of an entire- tory injunction in the federal
ly new brand of boll wqevll The 1 court to prevent the destruction of
new weevil ha* been .discovered In their cotton.
• REGISTERED
TEXACO
0° TRADEMARK
Boll Weevil
Exterminator
Inquire of our
Nearest Agent
THE TEXAS COMPANY, U.S.A.
Texaco Petroleum Products __
PEAS BETTER
THAN COTTON
JEFFERSON. TEXAS.—Field peas
par better than cotton, said L. M.
Baagh, a Marion County farmer, who
diversifies. Mr. Baugh has Lve acres
planted to flv* varieties of field peas
snd hla sales record Is 175, with the
things In the dairying line.
The people. In <
• opinl'.
by other insects.
If the stalks aro badly diseased
pull them up and burn. If the
leaves on nearby ptasts are getting
reddish, you should lose no time
In spraying with u tobacco extract
However, the dieease may die ant
of it* own accord with lots of
rainy weather, but sine© you do
not know what the weather Is to
bo you had best spray the cotton^. ORBBN8BORO, —County Agent
forWi
Heat Wave Is
Good For Crops
many holidays. There will bo plenty
of time to loaf and apend money at a
later time. Work is what is needed
at this time and not *3 much I'lcnsure.
(By AtAdat.d Prew)
ATLANTA. — The heat wive
which ha, gripped the south since
the early part o( the weak la worth
milliona to the farmers of GAorrfa,
in the opinion of J> S. Peters, of
itiluicbeiter, former piimideht oI
the Georgia Bankers’ association,
in n statement made here recently
-Let the eun ihlne," mid Mr.
listers ns he .haded hla eye, .in a
local hotel with a large Palmetto
tan nnd mopped the perspiration
from he brow. “It radlatm proa-
pertty tor the state of Georgia.
••Every day this weather con
tinue. it adds at lc*«t 10,000 balm
of cotton to Georgia’s output, and
at 30 cents a pound this mpus It,-
t, take too 1 600,000 per day. to our farmer*.
Organize To
Boost Elbert-
Greene Highway
bert Conntle. haa been foclMd. which
will Croat. Interest ln th* propomd
MW hlahwnr from Etborton, to Orewta-
boro via Lcxlnfton and, Mm«ya.
Hnrnp MCWhorter. Jr. of Lexlnaton,
was .Kcud chairman; Mrs. Jamas A.
Metcalf, of Elberun. eKMtary. W.
T. nrlghtw.ll, T. B. Cunningham, H.
C.' Whitehead, are members from Oito-
thorn. Couiitri
COTTON CROP IN QREQNE
WILL BE BEST IN YEARS
Thirty days of such weather means
physical discomfort, of course, but
146,000,000 in cold cash this fall
will more than compensate for
them discomforts. So I repeat, 1st
the eun efalne snd mona power to
AraoMo John
Ti Heard. Z. *C." Mayas, are members
from Elbert County snd J. C. Wil
liam*. L. P. Whelchel and R. B. Mc
Whorter represent Orsen# County in
th s organisation.
The Stats Highway Deportment
will make a survey of the route into
Klberton to Greensboro. A resolution
was passed requesting tho reprewnt-
atives and senators U the*© to have
the state highway system Increased
19 1
Poisons hav* no effect. Take for - Wad- H. WVs:. who has been keep.
blggeat part yet to go on market Peas each gallon of wttRr one half pound. Ing a close watch on the cotton
NEW COTTON
SEED
The Germans have Invented a pro
cess by which cotton can be changed
Into a fabric having all the appear
ance and feet and texture of wool and
which beeldes permits of a saving of
M per cent In the color used, as com
pared with real wool Tabiics An
American concern is said to have
of cheap dark tobacco and soak it crop of Greene county, states that
In cold wateT for 24 hours or In • It will be the beat In several year*,
hot water for 6 minute*. Removo, More than 80 per cent of the farm-
the tobacco and spray thl# extract « r s are using poison In some form
on the. under aide* cf th© cotton and th e very latest dusting
chintry |e being u,.d. Other
“ crops, corn and peanuts, are a!*c
top of the leaf. Vs© an ande
tie to throw the spray up* on the
unorslde of th© leaf.
Red Spider may affect cotton,
vegetables, flowers, etc. The ram
qulrred the license for America, and , th© same in all
On
COTTON FLEA BEATS
WEEVIL TO THE CROP
WEIR, TEXAS — During the past
several days the farmers noted that
■ • neared on their cotton, and
:pcn examination the plant was found
| be infested to very great extent
with the cotton flea. In fact they
doing their work to such a large ex
tent that only a very few squares
reach any slse, and these are Infested
with the boll weevil before they
mature
There ’are acres and acres of
cotton bar that haa not nough boils
on It to make a pound of cotton.
ly.
FROF. TODD'S COTTON
CROP ESTIMATE
Not even in,the United States
there more careful and more accurate
student of cotton economics and condt
lions than Prof. John A. Todd oi
Liverpool, tha noted British statisti
cian. His recent forcast of th« Ameri
can cotton crop for 1924 la In part as
follows:
"If ws are extremely lucky, we may
rtt a 12,000,000*bale crop, but we ore
much mors likely to get something
inder 12,000,000 bales, and it is by
weans lmpomib that we may get only
with 40,000 acres planted and
the same abandonment and average
yield as In 122, we should only have
a.crop of 10,200.000 bales. And
In the cotton trade needs to be
told what that would mean."
NEW PEST
IN OWINNETT
new test known as the "Snap
per" is doing dairtage to the cotton
crop In Gwlsnett raunty.
These Insect*, are Just a little terr
or than ants and Jump about as “Jack
napers* living on the squares and
young bolls of cotton.
. W. H. Powell, prominent cot-
factor says that he has been
wnritlng With them on three different
*~tton patches snd that usless stopped
they will totally destroy the stalks.
Mr. Powell also stated that he had
found from actual experience that
poison would kill them.
Several farmers around Lawrence,
vuio hav© slated that they were find-
flowers, however, tobgcob a muff
dusted on the spiders is just a*
effective and more convenient.
It is time to plant fall Irish po-
tatoee. if the aeasoos ar© w©t
enough a very large yield of po
tatoes can b* made In the fall.
Creen Mountain or Lookout Moun
tain varitles are best. Seed can be
bought for around 91.50 to |2.pf
per bushel. Select a low moist
Place, that Is fertile and the soil
very light- Use a fertilizer with
lota of potash and nitrogen. Many
looking promising.
The peanut shelling plant here
la in operation and la shipping
many car loads of nuts to all.sec
tions of the country. Gins over
ths country are being repaired
and put In ghape to handle ths cot.
ton crop this fall.
3(0 POUNDS BUTTER FIRST DAY
AMEMCUS. Ok.—A total of U«
pound, of butter waa tu nod out by
k local creamery which onrued for
burtnoM on the flnt day recently.
Flftr-ono farmer* coalrlbatcd to
thin Mi Poly, It waa uld. and the
openfrf waa made under tha aup-
cnrUtun of Henry F. Brxnhan. Mate
dairy |u«pector. The creamery waa
built for tho pnrpDM of develop-
Inc dalrylnc In thl, Mction of th,
■tat,, it tu laid.
K.' 1
The former president of th-
Georgia hanky, |, reputed to be
one of the belt Informed authorl-
tlee in this Mate ou Georgia crop
condiuone, and hr further Huerta
that not elnoe IMS bu Georgia
bad ,uch a iplrndid proepect ar
confront, it today, "and fortunately
the proepect I, not .potted," uld
Mr. Peten. The tmnher further
•tap'd that the proepect over the
Mete not only applied to cotton but
"to verey other thing that (rowg tn
Georgia.”
"Of courx*. we are not going to
produce • bumper crop of cotton
or fori -r -rn«, but we »re going
to t,:t the blgfeft yield of there
Maple farm product! elnoe the
odrent of the boll weevil. That the
cotton crop l< not to be the larg*«t
we hare ever had |a due, lu a very
large pert, as I ene JL to the fact
that our cotton acreage Is limited.
Our farmer* haven’t planted a,
much cotton aa they did before thf>
weeril ceme. But what they here
planted In a wonderful state of
idvucemeaL
gratifying lenture ‘ of our
r plead Id outlook la that it bH
been obtained under weevil con
dition,, for we still haws this ptsky
parlsite with us In Georgia."
HARDWICK ANNOUNCES
SPSAK1NO TOUR DATE
ATLANTA—Fwmer Oovwnor Tho.-
max W. Hardwick, wlm Is a csndL
dar, at th, September prlnwrMa tor
Ui, United Huua mate. .In dpport
lion to nemltor tVJUIam J. Harris,
•Mklna 1-el.cUon haa announced hl»
Itinerary for aa Intahudv. .peaking
tour ol trie Mate, to opml neat Tu.«-
day at n urban nan. in Haralwta eoun-
onEENSBOJSO-t-Orecno county''
Superior Court will convene next • :
Monday for Ihe regular July term.■ ’
Judge Jamee B. Park will prc. li;I
,lde. Solicitor General Doyh
Campbell, of Uontlcrllo win lie
preeent. It I, unherstoot the dock:-''
et ie heavy for thlo term. Junlu.
Lewie, of Qreeneboro has succeed-'
cd the late Phil Robinson as court
stenographer of the Ocmulge* clr.
cult. • *-'i;
Commissioner of Agrlculluro J. ' -
J. Brown will address the votem of .
Greene county nt tho boon huu r of ,
the court Monday.
NATIVE OF GREENSBORO
HEADS CHATTANOOGA ‘
GREENSBORO Ga—A former U'
Green,boro man P. C..Bickers, war- 1 ' •' •
recently chooen president of the ••'
Chattanooga, Tenn., T, M. C. A.. ,u
Ha Is the eon of B. F. Bickers, o! . .
Greensboro. Mr. Bickers hae Ions j'
been connected with the Cbattan- " ' ’
ooga association In an official ca- Lull»
pacify. He la prominent In »• '
clal, civic and church affaire In , .,
that pity, having been president of .
the Chamber of Commerce nnd''* '
chalyman of. the Billy. 8unday> <>
Club of Chattanooga.
MAY BREAK ALL RECORDS
WRENS, Go.—To all, appear
ance* Jefferson cohnty. whirl)'
ranks fourth among Ceorgia «oun- *
ties In com acreage, according to
statUtlc, of the state agricultural
department, will break all record,
for corn producto the year. A loi .1 "
milling company Is planning to op- . lad!
crate throughout the year in view
of tho proipocts of a Urge crop.
BE8T PEACH CHOP
SPAnTA, On.—Tho peach crop
or Hancock county I.. nt its heat at
this time. The qtinllty of the fruit
Is good and prices on shipments
so far have been satisfactory.
ty
Mr ltardwlck has already apeken
at W.Uon’a dprlns. In Onw coun
ty, and al Hawktnevlll., In Pulaakl
county H. lalatad that ha Would
•peak practically «v.rr dW during
_ M
the remainder of th* campaign
lUnHwry for tha neat two weak* In
**Ru°hnnan. Tumdny. July Ms VM-
dontn, Thurodny, July Jit Hpartn. rrt*
duy Augunt -1; Cnmllton, Saturday.
August t; Dublin. Monday Augunt 4;
Cuthberi. Tonoday,. Aoguati; Dougktn.
Wednesday. , Auguit 4; MnntfcMK
Friday. Auguat S; MMkdgmiU} Satur
day. Augunt Si Dalian Monday Au
gunt tl; Balnbridg., Tucnday, Aud
it;
iSTROUS .
TRENTON. Ga—Tho entire
town of Trenton won threatened
recently to being wiped from-th-
map when a disastrous fire de-
strayed over ono million feet of
lumber, a planning mill, a warn-
home and a blackgmltk «hop.
A Forest Fire As Seen By Airplane
- SAFELY RELIEVES » j
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER (
Pl cIc S ° r BlaCK
^ r APSll I F
I "POPULAK FOR G*NE«ATIONS" % '
I COM round" comiiaVno cumii . ‘
I AT DUUGCISTS. om TSUL SOX BY HA)l 0O* I
I FROM PLAN TIN SI HCNRY *T BROOKLYN, N.V. i
| - BYWAfIC OF IMITATIONS- |
aWtk
•atarrh ,
ot DLADDE*
GUARD YOUR HEALTH
FIOFNTlMTie tee MCM
Uf«.
Jvxi
VtZTJhi,
funlecaaii BttL Siktt. AI^^J^Mia
SOLD BY DRL’GGiS TS EYEJDflKM£fi£
fight their way out through the fir* and clouds of smoke, have peris
ini i
hcd.
3E?
. . _ j coant »l
The above picture was taken near Santa Barbara.
Round Trip
Summer Fares
treat A titans, Oa.
Going end returning via
Savannah end steamship
New York. .SS3.13
Boston
Philadelphia
Baltimore ..
66.13
48.33
4s.se
mm
Going tie Savannah end ship
returning rail, or ties verse
New York. .sss.ee
Beaton .... 70.70
Pars* to other resorts proportion
ately reduced. Tickets include meals
and berth 00 steamer, except that
n additional
——x—• 94 ether-
to Ticket Office, C.ofGo.
V C *
Central ot Georgia Rjr
Ocean gteamihlp Ca.