Newspaper Page Text
!l
Country Hoys 3Iust 13a Taught at
Home the Beauty and Power
of the Fields.
st. .
la its last report to the governor the
Agricultural Department invited the
attention of his excellency to the im
portance of introducing in our schools
nature studies, agricultural industrial
education, to the end that young men
who intend to become farmers might
enjoy to some extent the practical,
special training for their work which
is afforded those seeking the professions.
A short time after this School Corn*, ’"’“L , . . , , . • ,
. Ti must be taught at school that agritul
ilivered an T*
missioner G. R Glenn delivered
address before the Cotton States Asso
ciation of the Commissioners of Agri
culture in Atlanta. Believing this ad
dress should have the widest possible
circulation, it is furnished to the press
of the State for publication
COMMISSIONER GLENN’S ADDRESS.
The country boy leaves the farm
because he has learned at school that
other fields of human activity offer
higher rewards. The country boy is
abitious to rise and to move np and on
in the world. His teacher has fired his
heart with stories of what men in the
learned professions have accomplished.
He is attracted by the laurels that men
have won in the pnlpit, at the bar, on
the hustings, on the battlefield, and on
the deck of a fighting ship. The course
of study that the schools have prescribed
for the boy tell him that to be great in
the eyes of the world he must preach a
great sermon, or write a great poem, or
make a great oration, or lead a grand
charge, or command a fleet of warships
from a bridge of a flagship in a naval
battle. How to win conquests from the
soil of mother earth, how to make the
fields blossom and ripen into a fruitage
of golden harvests, has been up to this
time, no part of of the training of the
boys in our schools. The book learning
of the academies has led away from the
hard and exacting manual toil on the
farm. In case where the boy has had
no learning at all, we have had the
stolid picture of the man with the hoe,
“tho emptiness of ages in his face,”
“A thing that grieves not and that
never hopes,
Stolid and stunned, a brother to the
ox. ”
Millet’s picture and Markham’s poem
arraign with terrific emphasis the
wrong education, or the lack of all edu
cation, that for ages past have been the
lot of the children on the farm. Not
until recent years has the world come
to recognize that agricultural pursuits
require as high form of development,
and as large a degree of intellectual
power, as may be required in any other
department of human endeavor.
The country boy will never stay on
the farm until he has been taught at
home and at school how to find the
beauty and the profit and the power
that reside in the fields as they are to
be found nowhere else. We are late in
learning, but are nevertheless learning
at last, that it is the business of the
school to train the children for the life
they are to lead after they have left the
school.
INDUSTRIAL SCHOOLS ARE NUMEROUS.
In recent years every State in the
Union hasestablished, somewhere with
in the confines of the commonwealth, a
technical school of agriculture and
mechanic arts. This is well; but it
does uot go far enough. We must put
into the public schools, the primary
schools for the masses, such elementary
branches of study as will be immedi
ately and diractly helpful in the train
ing of our children for agricultural
pursuits. At least two-thirds of our
school population in the South must of
necessity spend their lives on the farm.
Nature studies, the elements of biology,
the elements of chemistry, how plants
grow, how soils are enriched and im
poverished, how lands may be terraced,
and a thousand forms of elemental
instruction can be taught in the schools
with infiuitely greater results so far as
intellectual development goes, than by
ihe continued use of many branches of
study that have come down to U9 by
tradiiion from the monks and the mo
nasteries of ages past.
The dead languages are good in their
way and no intelligent man will speak
lightly of their educational value, but
there are living languages in plants and
blades of grass, and soils and stones,
and streams, and birds, aud flowers,
that appeal with infinite delight and
foster unmeasured growth in the heart
of a chiid. The great minds who have
done the most and the best for this
world, even in literature, in art and in
science have come from the very heart
of nature, and “nature never yet be
trayed the heart that loved her.” The
Bard of Avon even, who tuned our
English tongue to higher and sweeter
notes than e’er before were heard, put
his ear close to the meadow land and
his heart to the hills of life, and his eye
upon the silent stars, while birds and
fllowers and blades of grass spoke to
him as he toiled and tilled the land of
his native shire.
PRACTICAL MEN NEEDED.
The world wiil perhaps never see
another Shakespeare, nor another Mil-
ton, nor another Burns; it may be that
the world does not need another Ham
let, or another Paradise Lost, or another
Cotter’s Saturday Night, bnt it does
need men and it will always need men,
who can make two b ades of grass grow
this year where only one grew last year.
In agriculture as in every other
science we are coming to the reign of
law. Law is derived from intelligently
conducted experiments, and experi
ments are questions put to nature that
she will answer, ten thousand times
over, with unerring precision and reg
ularity. Traditional farm lore and
primitive methods in vogue, when men
had virgin soil, will not do for today.
When a seed is put into the ground
now, we must know the food supplies j
for the soil about the seed. The bull !
tongue plow has become obsolete, aud
the cultivator has tvken its place The
simple scythe is long since forgotten,
and iho McCormick reaper is garnering
our grain. The man going to niiil with
a bushel of corn in one end of a bag and
stones to balance it in the other end, if
he is not altogether apocryphal, has
gone never .to return. Intelligence is
establishing her right to reign every
where. Men plant no more by the
tom but by the suu.
The question is then, what can our
schools do for agriculture? How can
the public schools be so related to this
great industry of the South, that the
children who leave our schools may
desire to enter this noble and enterpris-
leld. In the first place the children
HO ICE Vegetables
will always find a ready
market—but only that farmer
can raise them who has studied
the . great secret how to ob
tain both quality and quantity
by the judicious use of well-
balanced fertilizers. No fertil
izer for Vegetables can produce
How Some of the Splendid Southern
Fruit Is drown.
The northern tomato field presents a
picture of a crop growing two feet
high; the southern field four to five
feet—that is, some of the southern
fields of early tomatoes do, and their a large yield unless it contains
growing is a science. The method of
culture is pruning and staking, and the
Mississippi trucker, his wife and chil
dren are all employed in the tomato
ture is uot only the earliest pursuit of
mankind but it is today one of the
noblest professions that men can fol
low. They most he taught that an in
telligent farmer, equipped with ail that
science and art may today bring to his
aid, can tyin aa high honor and occupy
as high place in public estimation as
can be won in the pursuit of any calling
in human life.
AGRICULTURE IS DIGNIFIED.
We must teach the children, indeed,
that the man of brains on the farm is
one of the most potential forces for good
that can be found anywhere in the
world. We must show them that work
in the field is no longer a drudgery but
that it is as noble and intelligent form
of labor as man can pursue. The
machine has come to the farm and it
has come to stay. A man with a
machine on the farm can do as much
work as ten men could do twenty years
ago. As teachers we must show the
childron the peace aud pienty, the quiet
joy, the purity of life, the contentment
of independence, the nobility of soul,
all of which may come in unhindered
fullness from the noble pursuit of scien
tific agriculture.
In the second place to accomplish
this our course of study in the publio
schools must be radically changed. The
ideal of the school must be changed.
The subject matter in the text books
must be revised. While the child is
learning to read, to write and to cipher,
it could just as well learn these elemen
tary branches in the terms of nature
studies, elements of biology, elements
of chemistry, elements of free hand
drawing and modeling of all kinds.
Intelligent testimony from the entire
educational world is to the effect that
children wili not only lose nothing, but
they will gain tremendously in their
natural aud normal development, by
making these changes.
If a boy in Holland has learned at
school to support a family of ten by
intelligent cultivation of an acre of
ground, a boy in Georgia should learn
at school how to support a family of ten
upon ten acres of ground. This is the
problem that we must solve, not only
in Georgia but in every other Southern
State.
AGRICULTURE AND EDUCATION COEQUAL
The time has come towed the Depart
ment- of Agriculture into a closer mari
tal union with the Department of Edu
cation in every Southern State. Intel
ligent agriculture methods must come
as a result of intelligent school methods.
The Department of Agriculture in the
State of New York through Prof. L. H
Bailey of Cornell University is doing a
magnificent work. Not only is he im
proving the systems of farming but he
is magnifying and itensifying the sys
tem of education in the State. Prof.
Bailey’s leaflets are now used as text
books in all the schools of the great
State of New York. We have agricul
tural possibilities and agricultural
resources in every Southern State that
are not to be found even in the great
State of New York.
From Virginia to Texas we have un
bounded agricultural wealth that is yet
to be developed. The masses of our
own people must do this work of devel
opment. The profit of this development
must go to the pockets of our own peo
ple. In order that we may accomplish
this great result the masses must be
educated through our public schools.
We need capital and we invite all desir
able immigrants into onr midst.
But more than we need capital and
more than we need immigration, we
need a high and practical intelligence
among the masses of our people who
are engaged in agriculture. Our great
manufacturing interests and our min
ing industries are enlarging rapidly and
almost as rapidly they are passing into
the hands of aliens and strangers. Our
fields of agriculture must remain our
own, aud in order that we may enjoy
the best fruits of our own labor, those
who toil on the farm must be intelli
gently trained for this noble pursuit.
at least 8% Potash. Send for
our books, which furnish full
information. We send them
free of charge.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
B3 Nassau St., New York.
1BS4 MILES
CF
MODERN RAILWAY
OBDINABY’S NOTICES.
WU TINC FANG IN GEORGIA.
Chinese Minister Pusses Through to
N( w Orleans Mardi Gras.
Atlanta, Feb. 26.—His excellency,
Wu Ting Fang, minister from the
Celestial empire to the United States,
was accorded a hearty impromptu re
ception upon his- brief stopover in the
oity euroute to New Orleans.
The distinguished Chinaman goes to
the Crescent City as a guest of the mu
nicipality.
Addressed Christian Etidravorers.
Savannah, Feb. 26.—Rev. Arthur T.
Smith, pastor of the First Fresbyterian
church of this city, preached Sunday
morning and evening in the First Pres
byterian church of Augusta* Mr. Smith
is also president of the State Union of
Yonug People’s Societies of Christian
Endeavor in Georgia, and addressed all
the young people’s societies of Augnsta
in a union meeting at the Teifair build-
ing.
STAKED AND PRUNED TOMATO VINES,
fields and kept busy pruning too. This
method of culture lias been systemat
ically tested by the New Jersey experi
ment station, but the success iu the
north has not been as great as that in
the south.
In the first place, the tomatoes are
planted in rows three aud oue-lialf feet
apart and three feet apart iu the rows,
which would be close for ordinary field
work, where tlie plants lie on the
ground. The plants are eared for in
the usual manner until they begin to
bend over with their own weight. Then
six foot stakes rived out of pine are
pushed firmly or driven into the
ground after a softening rain and the
plants tied closely to them with a
piece of ordinary white wrapping
string ten inches long. Next every
plant is pruned, and every sucker is
pulled out, leaving only single stems
with no limbs. In a short time, with
rapid growth, another tying is neces
sary, care being taken to tie the fruit
bunch on the outside, so as uot to rub
against tlie stake. Almost constant
pruning is. necessary.
The effect of this cultivation is to
force the crop ahead of the rest about
six days. The tomatoes grow to a
large size, and the fruit clusters make
an almost continuous line the height of
the stake. The fruit is where it gets
plenty of light and air, aud there is no
rotting and practically no sun scald
ing. It is also easily picked, no time
being lost In looking for ripe fruit.
With tomatoes bringing from $5
down to $2 a crate this method pays
well, but it is hardly of any practical
value iu the northern tomato field for
the main crop. However, the plan has
a number of advantages for the home
garden or patch, concludes a writer in
Farm and Fireside in an article from
which these items and illustration are
renroiluced.
Fasliion In Rice.
There is a fashion iu rice. Fashion
requires a high gloss, and to obtain
this the most nutritious portions are
removed under the polishing process.
Estimated according to the food val
ues, rice polish is 1.76 times as valua
ble for food as polished rice. The ori
ental custom, much used by farmers
in the south, of removing the hulls.and
bran with a pounder and using the
grain without polishing is economical
and furnishes a rice of much higher
food value than the rice of commerce.
In the process of polishing nearly all
the fats are removed. In 100 pounds
of rice polish there are 7.2 pounds of
fats. In 100 pounds of polished rice
there is only 0.3S pound of fat.
Fashion also increases the cost of
commercial rice by demanding whole
grains and places a value of about 2
cents per pound more on bead rice
(whole grains) than on the same quali
ty slightly broken.
G eorgia—kuuke county.—whereas,
Annie Z. Sheppard, applies to me lor per
manent lelteiso! admiuisi, at ion upon the es
tate of James K, Sheppard, iate deceased of
said county
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish
all persons interested, to show .cause, (Ii .any
they can,) belore me. at my office, at 10 o’clock
a m., on the first Monday in March, 191D,
why said letters of administration should not
be granted in terms of the law. This Feb. 8th,
190C.
GEO. F. COX Ordinary, B. C. Ga.
( 1 K
V 71 Application ol Geo. W. 'J homas, guardi
an of Marvin C„ Garnett L., Berta E. l’erei
val C., and Duke C. Thomas, minors lot-
leave to sell the lands belonging to said
minors.
These are, therefore, to cite jmd admonish
.-ill persons interested, to show cause, (if any
they can,) belore uieat my office, at to o’clock
a. m., on the first Monday in March, 19UU
why said leave to sell should not begranted
in terms ol the law. This Feb. nth, i»00.
GEO. F. COX, Ordinary, B. C, Ga.
Lawson A Scales, attorneys.
QbOKGlA-BDKKE Counti
Whereas,
a ppralsers appointed to set apart a
\ tars support lor Lula Sharpe, widow
ol ueorge onarp, late deceased ol sain count,),
and her two minor children, out of the es
tate ol sa d deceased, have filed their re
turns iUstn.i office,
i hese are, therefore, to cite aud admouish
all persons imerested, to snow cause, (if any
the,} can,' belore me at m> office, at luo’clock,
a. in., on tlie first Monday in March, 19UU
why said return should not be made the
judgment ot i he court. This Fen. 8th, 19UU.
GEO. F. CoX, Ordinary, B. C. Ga
W. H, Davis, attorney.
G i EoUgia—Burke County.—Whereas,
T Charles A. Gray, executor ol S. a.
Gray, late of said county deceased, has
applied to me for letters dismissory irom said
executorship.
These are. therefore, to cite aud admonish
ail persons interested, to show cause, (it any
they cauj belore me at my office, at lu o’clock
a. in., on the first Monday lu April,
1900, why said letters dismissory shotuu
uot be granted in terms ol the law. This
January s, 191/0.
geo. F. COX, Ordinary. B. C., Ga.*
Lawson A scales attorneys.
(jf
James s. Cates, administrator, ue boms
cum testameuto annexo, ot J homas
Cates lateol said county, deceased, lias ap
plied to me lor letters dismissory irom said
ealctit;.
i hese are, thereloi^, to cite and admoi ish
ill persons interested, to show cause, ill any
can,, belore me, at my oliice, at 111 o’c-ock, a
in., on the first Mohuay in Ap.il, 1909, why
said letters dismissory should not be granttu
iu itrms of the law. This Jan. slh, iiieO,
GEU. b - COX, ordinary. B. C, Ga.
Lawson a tecales, attorney s.
mssPAss iWim
TRAVERSING THE
Finest Fruit,
Agricultural,
Timber, and
Mineral Lands
SOUTH.
IN THE
THROUCH RATES AND TICKETS
FURNISHED UPON APPLI
CATION TO ALL POINTS
North, South,
East, West.
Centra! of Georgia Railway,
Ocean Steamship Co.
FAST FREIGHT
AND LUXURIOUS
PASSENGER ROUTE
ToJtfew York,
Boston the East,
Complete Information, Rates, Schedules of
Trains and Sailing Dates of Steamers Cheer
fully Furnished by any Agent of the Company.
Excelsior Cook loves
ARE THE BESTI *
Tinware,
Tinplate and
Roofiing, and
Housefurnishing
Goods,
m.
For Sale by
CL B. ALLEN
s3o s'X’Brs'XT, 3
Augusta, Gfeor
sept..30,99lnii * c*"' 1 *
A CORDIAL INVITATION
is extended to the
readers ot The True CrnzaN,
us at our NEW STAND,
to cal]
upon
826 BROAD STREET.
It is the handsomest and most complete
Shoe : Store : in : the : State : of : Geo
rgta.
We have the Shoes that will suit the people. We have them
at the right prices. We are exclusive agents for Hanau & Sons
and Stacv, Adams & Co., fine goods for men. Also Zeigler Bro*
finne Shoes for ladies. We carry the best §2 Ladies’ Shoe sold
Come and see us. We will please vou.
in Georgia.
JOHN M. EGAN, THEO. D. KLINE,
Vice-President, General Supt.
E. H. HINTON, J. C. HAILE,
Traffic Manager. Gen’l Pass Agt.
SAVANNAH, CA.
Ail persons are lot bidden to hunt, fish, cut
Umber or iu any Way tresspass on any lauds
owned or controlled by Botslord nhurch, ;sit-
ualc in the district, G.M. ol Burke county,
Ga. 1 will prosecute all such offenders to
the extent oi the law. This Dec. i9ti.,lb99,
j. z Daniel.*
UiiNTISj'i
but! and oUS Broauway , : AUGUhXA, GA
Bell Rhone iti75. Strower Phone274.
bin.'97—
BO AIDS!
Ui atij ciass issued promptly at .easoliablc
cost. J. represent l Hr. till lliUM,
0 no mi uMiAtituiii iwura.M, or runs-
i.elidila. I’*.
Full Paid Capital, # 500,000.00
-urptus, (above reserve,; - - 150,000.00
For lull particulars, apply in person
l write me. >v , M. FC Lbiib.K, n.gt.,
jmyb.’99 Waynesboto, Ga.
aajBSggSBgggEBgBBHaagBBBHW
A Gate That Will Swing Over Snow.
A gate so hung that it will swing
over snow is a convenience described
by an Iowa Homestead correspondent.
The gate is a
13
J
common frame
one, made as
light as possible.
Have your black
smith make two
strap binges for
the gate only,
{be eye of the
adjustable gate, lower one being
3
AN
made oblong, say, a half inch play on
the rod that the gate bangs on. Now
have your hangers made of round rods
as large as you think necessary to sup
port tlie weight of tlie gate and any
length you require to raise the gate.
You can have it so that hogs or sheep
can pass under as well as for snow
drifts. Have holes punched or drilled
in the lower rod and square headed
plugs fastened in them, and they will
support the gate at any desired height.
TV hen you wish to raise the gate, just
take hold of it with both hands while
the gate is shut and raise it up above
the plug and then let got, and it will
stay there unless yon raise too much
on the front end while closed. Tlie
prongs of the upper rod should go clear
through tlie post with washers and
nuts so as to take up any sag that may
happen..
— Wanted, for cash, Hickory,Dog
wood, Persimmon, Walnut Logs,
Southern Hardwoord Co., Charles
ton, S. C. *ct.
One Minute Cough Cure, cures.
That in what it was mode for.
Sued For Counterfeiting.
Lagrange, Ga., Feb. 27.—Charles W.
Smith, recently arrested in Lagrange
and jailed in Atlanta, was given a pre
liminary hearing in Augnsta on a charge
of counterfeiting and bound over under
$200 bond. Smith was a factory oper
ative and has a wife and children here.
He was arrested because a counterfeit
er’s outfit was found in his trunk,
which had been seized for an unpaid
board bin.
Geese are the emblems of conjugal
bliss in China., and a pair of geese are
considered n handsome present from a
gentleman ro the lady of his choice.
j THE WSWYQHK 3
f DEHTflL PARLORS,^
lill I SOUTHWESTERN
KAILROAD CO.
This Company is prepared to do genera)
repairing ot Machinery at their shops in
SOUTH MILLEN,
Having at, our command Ihe services ol
the best workmen and machinery We are
umv repairing Boilers. Engines, Saw Mills.
Ginneries, and allclassesof portable machin
ery Overhauling Locomotives a specialty.
Can tukeoffoid tires and put on new with
out taking wheels from under engine. Can
make as good as new, old locomotives for
one-lialf the cost paid when sent to any oth
er shop.
We carry a full and complete line of Globs
Angle and Check Valves, Piping, Fittings,
Oils and Packing. Wetestand repair steam
Ganges at very small cost, furnish ring cast-
ihgs. bore cylinders, and in fact, turn out
any and all class of work done in a first-class
repair shop. Respectfully,
FRANK R. DURDEN,
Geueral Manager, Monte, Ga.
F. R. MURRCW, Master Machinist,
Miilen.-Ga.
feb 10,1900— -
CASKIN, GOULEY & VAUGHN,
826 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
Landram & Sutler’s Old Stand.
We Don’t intend
TO HAVE
Bargain Sales,
On rainy days but when the weather
and our plans fail to operate in unison we
have them to fair just about as well.
The fact is that the kind of Bargains we
hold out at these special sales is enough to bring people out in spite of most any kind of
weather. People come for our Bargains with a regular Klondike eagerness. This week
we are offering special Bargains in Secretaries, Book Cases, Couches,and Sideboards in our
high grade goods, low prices and easy terms put jus still in tha lead.
FLEMING Ac BOWLE8,
904 Broad Street. AUGUSTA. GA.
-PAYABLE IN-
92S BROAD STREET,
Augusta,
Georgia.
Plates, $5.00, up
Gold Crowns, $5.00, up.
Amalgam Filliugs, .50, up.
N. B.—On Ten Dollars’ worth
of work we pay return railroad fare
for 25 miles around Augusta,
DOCTOR P. D. LUXEMBURGER.
jan20,190(J—ct
Seed
Irish
Potatoes,
Onion Sets,
Bent Corn,
and
Assorted
Garden
Seed.
INSTALLMENTS!!!
jQlT" Loans negotiated on
improved t#rms at reasonable
rates of interest and small com
missions. We are now prepareo
to negotiate loans for our clients
on GETTER TERMS THAN
EVER BEFORE.
LAWSON & SCALLS,
Waynesboro, Ga.
novl .,’88—tf
LAST CALL
The Season’s Rush is Over.
Our business was very large and profit
able. Consequently we can afford to slaugh
ter our remaining stock of Winter goods,
and as it is the custom of our store to carry
no goods from year to year, we are now of
fering- our remaining stock of Fall and
Winter Clothing at prices utterly regardless
of cost or values. If you want to buy at
prices away below the regular prices, now
is the opportunity.
I. CL Levy’s SSon & Co.,
TAILOR-FIT CLOTHIERS,
838 Broad Street, (Old Stand,) AUGUSTA, GA,
W. M. Fulcueh, R. N. Berrien, Jr.
Fulcher & Berrien,
Waynesboro, Ga,
NEGO ’ IA TORS OF LOANS.
J , W C 0 0 L £ Y ,
D £. M T I 8 T,
WAYNESBORO, -
'fflee at the Opera House.
TO V4.Skill?
DR. GEO. A. PATRICK,
(Formerly Winkler & Patrick,;
DENTIST OEEICE,
626 Broad Street,
Augusta, - - Georgia.
Office Hours—8:3J a. m., to 6 p.m.
deco.’9. i—
-AT-
LEWIS R. FORD’S
MUG STOKE. ,
DODGE, the Rubber Man !!
E. W. DODGE,
221 Campbell St,
AUGUSTA, UEOKGIA.
Rubber Stamps, 10c. line. Wax Seals. *1
Corporation aud Commissioners Seals, $2.25'
Notarial Seals, $2. Daters 25c. Pens and Pen
cils 15c. 3 A louts Rubber Type, wiih ink and
holder 25c, Badges, Ste ncils, Cotton Brands,
<tc. declO,’98—by-
Fine Line of Christmas Goods such as
Jewelry, Watches, Clocks,
Diamonds,
Fine Silver and PlatedfWare,
Novelties, &c., at the Lowest Prices.
Call and see us before purchas
ing elsewhere. Don’t forget to call at
PRONTAUT’S JEWELRY STORE,
AUGUSTA, GA.
Shoe Making,
REPAIRING, &c.
I am located on New St., Cobbham, where
I am prepared to give satisfaction in mending
Shoes and Harness at short notice. Satisfac
tion guaranteed. 1 solicit a snare of your pa
tronage. Orders left at Mr, Neely’s store will
receive prompt attention, and I wiil call for
work and deliver it to any pari of the city.
P. J. MAJOR, Waynesooro, Ga.
p F ECT" SC**.
1 LAST FOREVER. °
STEEL TRUSSED LEVERS
COPPER PLATED,
COMBINATION BEAM WITH BEAM BOX,
CATALOGUE FREE.
JONES or BINGHAMTON,
BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
MOBLEY BROS.,
FOUNDERS
AND
MACHINISTS
Wayneboro, Ga.
CASTS TUXSDP.XS ana S’ HT--?-' -’
Dealers in Grist Mills, Cotton Gins, fV
Feeders and Condensers and do all km ll> ,
glne and Boiicr repairing. BuildiugOm n> Jg .
and repairing Gins a specially. Alikinas • f
gel upallkiLds of mouldings, Window anu
junell hs—
done ODShort notice.
REmEmBER
NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER
Is the time to plant Fruit Trees.
Now is the time to order them. . .
Cedar hill nursery company
WINCHESTER, TENNESSEE,
you get what you
Is the Nursery to order from. They grow what you want and
HONEST PRICLS, S^T ~ ’ ‘
For further Information and
ulyl.’99— by
buy a*