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HILL’S MOLASSES
MIXTURE
The only Dependable Remedy for 801 l Weevil Control. Is to the Farmer’s Cotton Crop
what an Insurance Policy is to the Merchant’s Stock of Goods: An
Indemnity Against Loss . And to the Laborer what a Life
Insurance Policy is to the widow and children
when the head of the family dies
WORD TO OUR HCOIVCIU PEOPLE:
Kill’s Molasses Mixture has given such perfect protection up to date to those people that
have used the Mixture as manufactured by us, that we fear that a feeling of false security
has been produced from the results obtained to date. We want to stress the point right
here and now that you must not relax your efforts to control the weevil from now on, for it
is not too late for them to destroy your crop, and your profits on this year’s cotton crop
will depend largely on what efforts and methods you use to save and mature the fruit that
is now on your cotton plants, and up to this time no method now known will give you the
protection that Hill’s Molasses Mixture will, and we urge you to put on an application of
this preparation at once, and follow each ten days till August 1 Oth with a liberal applica
tion. The cost is small, the results are great .
We extend to the citizens of the County, State and Cotton Belt an invitation to visit
any of Mr. L. D. Hill’s farm and see the perfect protection he has received from the intelli
gent application of this Mixture as prepared by us according to Mr. Hill’s improved formula.
To those people who cannot and will not visit Mr. Hill’s plantations, we would suggest that they call on and
get permission to visit and inspect the crop of the following well-known gentlemen, who are considered as the
leading men in the county: Mr. J. H. Whitehead, Dr. J. M. Byne, Mr. E. H. Blount, Hon. F. S. Palmer, Mr. S. Bell, all
of Waynesboro. We feel that, from what these gentlemen will tell you and you can see for yourself, that if you are
not so hide bound that you will not believe anybody and your own eye-sight, that you will be convinced that by
intelligent management and the proper use of Hill’s Molasses Mixture that cotton is now being produced at a profit
in Burke county, and in some cases a handsome profit.
Cotton is the last of the world’s great products to have an enemy so destructive as to put it in the class with
other great products that cannot be produced at a profit without brains and those scientific methods to protect it
from its enemy, and the cotton farmer of the future who has the brain and executive ability to manage a large
acreage of cotton will be the most successful business man in the South, and those poor hoodlums that shut their
eyes to the changed conditions of profitable cotton culture will soon be cast in the scrap pile as old junk, and will
soon be used at old scrap iron is used, in the production of some other article other than the one they was
once used for.
We would suggest that you buy some high-grade top dresser, put 400 pound* on one area, ami use five applications of Hill’s Mixture, one every ten davs fr
now on and see what results you will receive from this additional amount of plant food and the protection of hill’s Holasses Mixture in protecting the fruit as'f«»t
it is produced. Keep a record of cost and production and see if it will pay. Do something, learn something, and try hard and make something. Don’t be a au i..
knot on a log. Do something. It is better to try and fail than to sit idly by and do nothing. H ller or a
If vou desire that perfect protection for vour cotton squares, call at the Wajnesboro Gin Co., Waynesboro, Oa.; Herrington & Braswell, Waynesboro Os
our plant "at Gough, fla , and purchase that Mixture that in two short years has covered the cotton belt like the dew covers Dixie. We are readv to serv*’ u a s
interest by selling you that scientifically compounded preparation known all over the cotton belt as Hill’s Molasses Mixture. y " yol,r beg t
Sole Manufacturers and Distributors OOTXOH., C5 ■ A
L. D. HILL, President J. H. HUDSON, Vice President J W. JOHNSON, Manager SYDNEY C. JONES, Manager Sales Department
THE TIUJE CITIZEN SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922.
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