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For more than Forty Years
Cotton Growers have known that
POTASH PAYS
More than 11,651,200 Tons of Potash Salts
had been imported and used in the United
States in the 20 years previous to January,
1915, when shipments ceased. Os this
6,460,700 Tons consisted of
KAINIT
which the cotton grower knew was both a
plant food and a preventive of blight and
rust, —with it came also 1,312,400 Tons of
20 per cent
MANURE SALT
which has the same effects on Cotton, but which
was used mainly in mixed fertilizers.
Shipments of both Kainit and Manure Salt have
been resumed but the shortage of coal and cars and
high freight rates make it more desirable to ship
Manure Salt, which contains 20 per cent of actual
Potash, instead of Kainit, which contains less than
H 13 per cent actual Potash.
MANURE SALT can be used as a side dressing
on Cotton in just the same way as Kainit and will
give the same results. Where you used 100 pounds
of Kainit, you need to use but 62 pounds of Manure
Salt, or 100 pounds of Manure Salt go as far as 161
pounds of Kainit.
£ MANURE SALT has been coming forward in
Considerable amounts and cotton growers, who can
not secure Kainit, should make an effort to get
Manure Salt for side dressing to aid in making a
big Cotton Crop.
Muriate of Potash
50 per cent actual Potash, has been coming forward
also, —100 pounds of Muriate are equivalent to 400
pounds of Kainit or 250 pounds of Manure Salt.
These are the three
Standard GERMAN Potash Salts
that were always used in making cotton fertilizers
and have been used for all these years with great
profit and without any damage to the crop.
The supply is not at present as large as in former
years, but there is enough to greatly increase the
Cotton Crop if you insist on your dealer making
the necessary effort to get it for you.
DO IT NOW
Soil and Crop Service Potash
Syndicate
H. A. Huston, Manager
42 Broadway New York
R We want you to see the Dixie Razor and try it thoroughly. After trial if you want to I
■ Keep it send us $1.95 and we will send you a fine SI.OO razor hone free. If you don’t Kj
■ wanHt return to us. Fill out blank below and mail to ua. The razor will be sent D
I PIXIE MANUFACTURING CO., UNION CITY, GEORGIA I
B Send men Dixie Razor on consfgnment for 10 DAYS FREE TRIAL. If natisfactory I will send you ■
9 fijpecial factory price of $1.95. If for any reason Ido not wai.t ft 1 will return it to you at the end oz ten ■
B days. If I keep razor and pay for it promptly you azti to send mo a FINE SI.OO uAZUn JIUNL f (ouj ■
"What —'“N
Killed Bill T |
Every man, woman and child in the «P
world has “Liver Trouble” some times.
Many of them Die from it and never t J?
realize it. Ko use in this. And folks ,
are learning 'better. Thousands have s%r
found out that Dr. Thacher’s Liver MU
and Blood Syrup will relieve “Liver
Troubles”. Will keep the Bowels open IjS
and the Blood rich and red. Yon ought
to try this old doctor’s prescription — H
before “Liver Trouble” gets in its dead
ly work on you— like it did on “Bill. 1 ’ JS
Get it from your drug store.
f'StM Sort of
THE MONTGOMERY MONITOR, MT. VERNON, GEORGIA.
PLANNING FOR
SOLDIER RELIEF
FIVE CHOICES WILL BE OFFERED
EX-SERVICE MEN UNDER
PROPOSAL
$1.25 DAY PROBABLE BASIS
Surety Plan Cost Placed At $6,000,*
000,000 —Basis Os Program
Be $1.25 A Day
Washington.—Republican members
of the house ways and means com
mittee virtually decided to include in
their soldier relief legislation a plan
of paid-up insurance, its value to in
crease annually by compound interest,
and on which loans could he obtained
from any postoffice.
With this addition, ex-service men
might elect any one of the five fol
lowing plans included in the Repub
lican program:
A cash bonus of $1.25 a day for each
day of service.
Aid in buying farm land, to be re
claimed by the government.
Aid in buying city homes.
Aid in their education, or the insur
ance.
To popularize the last four plans, the
Republicans propose to allow $1.75 a
day for each day of service, instead
of the $1.25 cash bonus, as the basis
for computing farm and home aid
loans and the amount of financial aid
each man might receive in the form
of educational training.
The insurance plan, as such, was
said by committeemen to be a ''mis
nomer,” hut they decided it was the
"most attractive” of any of the five
plans. The average period of service
for world war veterans was 400 days,
they said, explaining that under the
insurance plans the average vet
eran could receive a paid-up insurance
policy of $1,857. payable to him in
cash at the end of twenty years, oi
immediately to his heirs in event of
death.
The loan value of (he insurance de
noted in the legislation as "adjusted
service certificates” —would not ac
crue until the end of the third year
the plan had been in force and at that
time an ex-service man would be en
titled to a loan of $551. This would
he the cash value of his “certificate”
at that time at five per eent interest
compounded annually.
Similarly the veteran of 100 days’
service would be entitled to paid-up
20-year endowment, insurance of $164,
with a cash surrender or loan value
of $137 in three years; the 200-day
veteran to insurance of $928, with a
loan value of $275; the 300-day veteran
to insurance of $1,392, with a loan
value of $415, and the 500-day veteran
to insurance of $2,321, with a loan
value of $689.
This plan if adopted universally by
the world war veterans would cost the
government far more than the cash
bonus of $1.25 a day, committeemen
said. Estimating that 3,590,000 ex-ser
vice persons will be affected by the
bill, committeemen declared that the
ultimate cost of the insurance plan,
if adopted by all, would be approxi
mately six billion dollars.
JAPANESE GUARDS IN
EASTERN SIBERIA,
RUSSIA, ARE MURDERED
There Is No Confirmation Os The Re
port, But It Seems To Be
Well Substantiated
Washington.—Japanese guards in
the district of Nikolaevsk, eastern Si
beria, are believed to have been anni
hilated and several hundred Japanese
residents, including the Japanese con
sul there, massacred, according to an
official statement issued by the Jap
anese foreign office and made public
by the state department.
Meantime, however, the Japanese
have sent an expedition to Alexandriv
ski, accompanied by the warships Mi
kasa and Mishima. The forces had
reached their destination on April 22
and found the Japanese residents xn
that district safe. Most of them were
taken aboard the Mikama.
The Japanese statement says the
suspension of communication with the
district rendered it impossible to get
at the real state of affairs, but that
it was evident that “a serious upheav
al” had taken place. Efforts of the
Japanese to dispatch a military relief
expedition into the district have failed
because of the ice.
Patrol Bombards U. S. Submarine
Washington.—Suspected of being a
liquor smuggler, the American subma
rine S-4 was fired upon by a subma
rine chaser operating under direction
of the coast guard off the Florida
I coast, according to a report made to
the navy department by Commander
P. K. Robottom of the S-4 None of
the shots, which included ten or a
dozen shots from a rifle, and one from
a six-pounder, struck the submarine,
Commander Robottom said, but the
shot from the larger gun "came un
comfortably close."
Soviet Lists 9,641 Murder In 2 Years
Berlin. —The Moscow Izvestiya, a
copy of which has been received here,
prints the last installment of the re
port of the extraordinary commission
appointed for combatting the counter
revolution during 1918 1919. In this
period the commission arrested 128,00*'
persons. The persons shot aggregated
9,5641. The figures refer only to the
work of the Moscow and Petrograd
commissions. No account is given ot
the arrests and executions by subor
dinate district commissions
/ ~paos» !rfc "" :i fa The First
Bottle of
Relief
Writes
Mr. If. Vnnlitiren, Engineer, <l.
U. &T. Ry„ 17 Highland St.,Grand
Rapids, Mich.
Endearing Occupation.
“James in a dear, but be is certain j
ly a bug about bee culture.”
“I see; a regular honeybiig."
WATER WITH ASPIRIN
Bayer Company, who introduced Aspi
rin in 1900, give proper
directions.
The Payer Company, who intro- |
duced Aspirin, tell in llieir careful di
rections in each package of genuine j
“Payer Tablets of Aspirin” that to get j
best results one or two glasses of wa
ter should be drank after taking tab- j
lets.
"Payer Tablets of Aspirin” to be
genuine must be marked with (lie
safety “Payer Cross.” Then you are
getting the genuine, world-famous As
pirin. prescribed by physicians for
over eighteen years.
Each unbroken “Payer” package
contains proper directions for folds,
Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neu
ralgia, Lumbago, Itliemuatism, Neuri
tis. and Pain generally.
Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets
cost but a few cents. Druggists also
sell larger "Payer” packages. Aspirin
is tile trade mark of Payer Manufac
ture of Mononeetieucidestor of Saiiey-
Itcaeid. —Adv.
That Depends.
“How I would like to taste her j
cherry lips:” "Why, do you fancy the j
lipstick flavor?”
INCORPORATED 111 - ——^
“13ULL” Durham cigarettes; you roll them
yourself from genuine “Bull” Durham
tobacco; fifty from one bag.
No machine can even duplicate your “own”
rolled from genuine “Bull” Durham tobacco.
Good old reliable “Bull”. Always genuine;
since 1865 he’s been everyone’s friend.
GENUINE
PE-RU-NAI
Entirely Free from
Catarrh of the Stomach
‘‘Peruna has positively done so
me nhnt ui«uy doctors tailed to
do. X have been time and again
compelled to take to my bed for
days. The first bottle of Peruna
gave relief and while I always
keep it in the house for emerg
encies, I consider myself entirely
free from entarrh of the Btoinnrh,
the trouble from which I suf
fered for so long before taking
this remedy.”
Liquid or Tnblet Form
Sold liverywhere
Ask Your lienler
| .Many a mini has been turned down
while waiting for something to turn
up.
WOMEN! DYE RIGHT!
SAY “DIAMOND DYES”
: :
♦
L Don’t Spoil or Streak Material in a Poor Dye
Each package of “Diamond Dyes"
contains directions so simple that any
woman can diamond-dye a new, rich,
fadeless color into worn, shabby gar
men is, draperies, coverings, whether
.%aAo # aVL cCo/ practical and economical thresher tor general use.
I* handles all kinds of grain successfully. Simple
Bg \ry* Mb ln con * ,ruc t'on and light to handle over the roads.
jfck We now have these late improved Separators
|B». in stock, and want you to call in and look them I
11.-Imam ovrr II not convenient for you to come now,
. **2*/ wr,,r us ft letter and we will mail you a catalog
\ . . '.<■ ; - Ihe Farquhar Crain Separator has stood the
,rst <>r ~^ r -X rtt ™’ i,n< l 18 the one for you to buy.
rl<r reasonable, terms liberal, h.ir treatment as-
fvrr y customer. Write at once for catalog.
’ Woodruff Machinery Mfg. Co.,
I TEXAS OIL TINES I
Issued weekly, written by experts* H
and contains authentic news and re- ■
liable maps of the rich oil pools. Tells H
you whore to buy or sell any oil H
stock, and gives jfou free any lnfor- E
mation you desire. Write B
Pioneer Oil Operators and Broken! I
Brown-Mcßride A’ Co., Inc. $
Suite 75. Edws. Bldg.. Ft. Worth. Tex. fl
I \< lv 11KMPSKV, TV. COBB AM) BABB
Itt Til are World Champions for the present,
but “DAMUII FI HAMMFK HAIR TONIC**
is a World Champion. nr.t for an age hut for
all time. We guarantee It to positively euro
the must stubborn case of Dandruff In the
world, or rotund your money. For local skin
trouble It is a sure remedy. Cures shingles.
Insect poisoning, pimples, tetter, eczema,
chapped lips and bands: once a user always
a user. Price $1 25 per bottle. Dandruff
ilamnier Hair Tonic Co., Desk B. V. O. Box
til. Gadsden. Alabama. Agents wanted.
W ANTED—Every live American, to help sell
an article for home, farm, factory. l’lana
tor all Davison. Ulrlr X- Trmnboni, 98 Park
I Place, Room 9, New York City.
rnrm/l ril POSITIVE* T REMOVED hr IV. Barry’s
LgU L I LV Krrrkl# Olntyart Your <ini«irl*t or by
I nLuIV L L«J ‘“ r book Dr. C. H. Barry
■ llk.vm.kw Co., 297 S Michigan Avenue. Chicago.
• ♦ , ...... ...» »♦♦♦♦»
wool, i1 k, linen, cotton or mixed
goods.
liny “Diamond Dyes”—no other
Kind llii'ii perfect results sire guaran
teed even if .von have never dyed bo*
fore. Druggist has color card.