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?!f 7NNLJAL STATEMENT OF THE FREE STATE CO-OPEKA-
C FIRE INSURANCE c °M p AN Y OF MADISON COUNTY, DAN.
fIVE *
i£IS VILLE. GA., for THE SIX MONTHS ENDING JUNE 30, 1924
Assets
. h n0 hand Jan. Ist, 1924 1,003.98
Jan. Ist, 1924 288.79
1 292 77
ere iited on Bills Receivable 114.37
Tags amount
„ Assessment Rebate 27.00 141.37
1,151.40
Income
Received since Jan. Ist, 1924
Uatriculation Fees 27.00
g; Receivable 114.37 141.37
Disburstments
Paid out since Jan. Ist, 1924
Le : ia Berryman Loss by Fire. ..; . . 500.00
Salaries and other expenses 51.00
rrr 25.00 570.00
!as:>
716.77
g n hand Junt 30th, 1924
in Company’s Office 61.91
, • p-ni- 480.44
Casi m
Os Receivable 174.42 716.77
1,292.77
*
Total amount of Insurance now in force $158,490.00
Georgia. Madison County.
Personally comes J. T. Gholston, Secretary and Treasurer of the Free
te Co-Operative Fire Insurance Company of Madison County, Dan
isisrille, Ga., who on oath says the within and foregoing statement is
cue and correct. \ 2! £
J. T. GHOLSTON, Sec. and Trcas.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this Aug. 25, 1924.
Eugene Huff, C. N. P. Madison Cos.
tffi NATIONAL HOG
AND CATTLE SHOW
9
Helping South to Cut Out
Cost of Refrigerated
Freight Trains.
IflaEta, Ga.—Again tils year, for
th teprowraent will be marked in
ft? greatest single feature of the
Wicastem Fair, October 4 to 11; the
Nutesl Hogt and Cattle Show, which,
Utef, will be enough to draw many
tends of visitors to Atlanta dur
kgft-T week.
®8 capacity of the barns and pens
® taied and additional space
te necessary for new herds ex
ited. "However, no matter how
animals are entered, standard
*®Kunodations will be provided for
**>’’ said President Oscar Mills, of
to fcir association. "We believe that
stock exhibit is a barometer
l ' Editions throughout the South,
aside from the large number of
Bl ks already received, so favorable
reports of Southern prosperity,
we are assured of the greatest
yet held.”
IV, progress is being made and
®wUenoe attained by breeders of
section may be attested by the
that a herd of Jerseys from Geor
fJwas exhibited as far in the North
-43 Grand Forks, North Dakota.
® rammer. Herefords, Shorthorns,
Aberdeen-Angus, Guernseys,
MBem-Prieelanß and Ayrshires will
4 feature in the cattle barns, and
•competition will be keen for the
toe money offered in each class.
is true of cattle is equally
10 ot hogs, big premiums being placed
*ff>c leading classes of swine, nota
• ' -Jerseys, Hampshires, Po
. Chinas, Spotted Poland Chinas and
, Jttres. The finest individuals.
7“’ groups, champions and grand
in 8 J>r ° ,3llce d in this country
found in the pens of the big
■ijf
'ft
• of the purposes of the South
b-Ii? F , alr '" slated Secretary R. M.
' ■ ‘ls to help the people of this
4 get away from paying the high
’ refrigerate freight trains from
I ¥ *t and through the cattle .exhib
it the National Hog and Cattle
P'" ar ” confident that we are la
®acre succeeding.”
CHILDREN’S DAY
* SOUTHEASTERN FAIR
Ga.—Monday, October 6,
‘lair, when all school children
Sta te are invited to visit the
*r <i^ a T rfif?eil tation of a teacher's
- a te and the payment of 15 cents
gates.
“ aitendaace on this date last
“f more than fifty thousand, and
E ’ iv P-odicted that it will
it;,..' r? ' -r this year. The cer-
E he sent tree for the
i r ' p r? who may have pu
" b
BIRDS OF A FEATHER
WILL FLOCK TOGETHER
Atlanta, Ga. —Only a few years ago,
the raising of chickens was left large
ly to chance on many Southern farms,
and, at best, the chicken crop was
just a small bi-product of the barn
yard. Chickens were just chickens,
and of just no particular breed or
strain. Eggs were gathered up by the
children on such days as they wanted
to take a few to trade at the store
for something, and were worth on an
average about 15 cents per dozen in
cash, rarely reaching 25 cents, except
during the Christmas cake and egg-nog
season.
But it’s all changed now. A visit
to the Southeastern Fair in Atlanta,
jfrom October 4 to 11, this fall, and a
few hours spent in the poultry de
partment will be enough to convince
the most skeptical that old Biddy has
come into her own. There will bo
thousands of fine birds there, and of
all the best breeds, and you can learn
everything you want to know about
die raising of poultry, and the best
methods of marketing chickens and
eggs. When properly conducted, it
is a money-making business, a r d has
assumed large proportions -so large
that you will be surprised at the dis
play you will find at the fair.
MODERN FARM TOOLS
TURN LOSS TO PROFIT
Atlanta, Ga.— Every year there has
been an exhibit of agricultural imple
ments and farm machinery at the
Southeastern Fair in Atlanta, and the
interest in the subject has been rap
idly growing throughout the South.
The display made by dealers this
year promises to surpass former years,
first because they have found that it
is the bast way to reach a large num
ber of the most progressive buyers,
and then because the steady
of diversified farming has multiplied
the demand for improved farm tools.
Labor-saving machinery, when prop
erly cared for on the farm, is one of
the beat investments possible, and so
often marks the difference between a
loss and a profit on the operations of
this year is scheduled for
October 4 to 11, and many farme/s mey
be amply repaid the expense of a trip
there by what they learn from this de
parunent alone.
STOVE WOOD
If in need of Stove Wood, ready
for stove, delivered, ece >
RALPH COLLIER
N, 8-21, 3t.
SUNDAY FARES
VIA SEABOARD
$3.00 Atlanta.
See Ticket Agent ,
THE DANIELSVILLE MONITOR, DANIELSVILLE. GEORGIA.
FOLKS
ill OUR
TOWN
A
Good
Suggestion
Vy
Edward
McCullough
AUTOCASTER
m
5 r \
„ / To ° i
V~\ I High J
YOU jSfEjElf' NOT Ry )U
Ten years ago when Charles 11.
Jury of Pasadena, California, was
52 years old he reached the break
ing point of his life. A year before
he had been wiped out in business,
losing everything he possessed but
a small cottage and a bare plot of
ground 75 by 100 feet. To add to
his troubles he was stricken with
incipient rheumatism of so pro
gressive a nature that he-became
a “hopeless” cripple. Starvation
faced him and his feeble wife. A
specialist whom he couldn’t pay
told him he would never walk
again and probably would never be
nbt° to use his hands again. A
neighbor gave him a wheeled chair
and he settled back to die, either
of starvation or creeping paralysis.
The haunted and pinched face of
his feeble wife, however, so fright
Following Round-trip Farts will appl? from Points named to Atlanta
Charlotte, N. C.~— $7.00
Monroe, N. C. 6-00
Wax ha tv, N. C.
Chester, S. C._
Carlisle, S. C. 4.50
Clinton, S. C 4.00
Greenwood, S. C. * 6-50
Corresponding tow fares from other intermediate points, Tickets cn sale 'for all regular
trains scheduled to stop at regular agency stations, on Thursday, Sept, 4, 1924. Returning,
tickets will be good on all .trains up and including No, 12. leaving Atlanta 8-00 p m., Central
Time Sept. 7, 1924- for points at which trains are scheduled to stop. Tickets Good In Coaches
or si ee pers. For tickets, reservations or further information, apply to nearest Ticket Agent or
C G LaHatte, Trav. Pass’r, Agent. SAL. Fred Geisnler, Asst. P r ;s:<,r Traffic Mgr, FAL.
Atlanta, Ga. ' . Atlanta, Ga,
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'* / OL' MAID 1
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Excursion
TO , ■
Atlanta, Georgia.
And Return
■X'lxxxrsclEi.y. SSse>jp>t. 5 •
VIA.
SEABOARD
/ sax ! \ tilifjl ■
I WHY NOT
V THOUSAND ’ /
ene-d him t hat, no ceAorm nod to
live and not only to live but to
again earn money and to again take
his place in the world of useful
persons, lie was resolved to make
the barren ground lie owned sup
port him. Fighting back the numb
ness in his swollen hands and ex
ercising them a few mirmu*s ou\
of each hour in the dry despite the
agony it entailed, he managed
within three months’ time to
manipulate ‘a hoe, on 1 with ’his
hoe arid the ah! of hm v? <■ he 1 died
the entire plot of ground before
the .Spring cf that . nr had dosed.
Before the summer >a 1 waned his
hands and arms we; t obeying him
instead of he obeying them. Dur
ing that summer he- raised enough
choice vegetables to not only sup
port himself and ids wife, but to
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sell a few to a local market. That
Winter he begun racing rabbits.
His feet and legs were paralysed
i.ncl still are and he bar. never left
the wheel cl'.'.ir excepting.td be
lifted into bed and out again.
Bui, the rheumaC ;n :..A pe aly
r,:.s have boon kept ioeaTixed there.
: ;, swollf .1 hands Ind arms c
him. He is a breeder of Belgian
1 -..res, which be sells to !o< al_ deal
ers, and ids carrots .•-••nd eobb-. 4 ';ea
are the finest in Oilifornw. He
owns anew home, bus every com
fort and is regarded as fairly well
lo do.
Abbeville, S, $3.50
Calhoun Fa!- 3,50
4 ~ \
Comer, Ga 3.00
Rlbcrton, Ga 3.00
Athens, Ga 2,50
Wiodsr. Ga 2.00
Lawrenceviile, via 1.50
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