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(ELLY-DUPLEX °cumR IIS"
Grinding IVSiiB
■» '«* Grind? aUel/a
f ' '^SfltmXLL.-> ccr. ffv.v’rr.
L»**% I “ • rj f I clover hiy
W ff^^3S^\JSnvZ4'-jV i: ^y>~* Lr '^Z vine hay.
\~ >v '-*Z?*%7*tfr%~T*fr Yl ~" Jy \. oat*.
s*'' ''^£3mK*yr | kaflir corn, and milo
ft\*v I malao in tho head.
/fcr'V' " ■ amv U /' cither wparaUly or rum-.]
/it * u ^f(|A in varied propirtiori* with
1Y\V ^ 00,11 00 th « wIj. with <.r with*
R /jj^7 Vv T CwCTa outahucka.noedoau.ryo.hftr-
^ ley. corn and all other* rrutui.
i. FULLY GUAR ANTE CO
7 ^FSB ehanjro f#«d ruv Perfect reimlaiion. fine, mecian.
or cootm rriadinj*. For capacity, «wy vupnln* arv> '
.'OODRUFF MACHINERY MFC. CO.. Atlanta. Co-
AT-SNAP
KILLS RATS
Also mice. Absolutely prevents.odors
from on roans. One package proves this.
I! tT-SXAP comes In cakes—no mixing
with other food. Guaranteed.
ffie. mIxc <1 coke) enough for PantrJ.
Kitchen or Cellar. * ’
use. sire IS cakes) for Chicken House,
coops, or small buildings. , , „
Kl.2." sire is cakes) enough for nil
farm and out-buildlngs, storngo build
ings, or factory buildings.
Sold nnd Guaranteed by
I.KK-KIXG DItl'ti COMPANY.
rowKT.t mini & hook company.
NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY.THE NEW NAN HERALD, MARCH 4, 1921.
IMPROVE THE KITCHEN—
ll.v Bessie 8. Wood.
A coinpnet, cohvenlcnlly l trail ge<l
kitchen will save miles of walking and
ninkc Hie preparation of fond for the
family n |demure rather thnn a ilrml-
grry. I.nlniri-nving equipment. properly
tirranited in a kitchen where the work
is routed from one operation to another
cuts the lulmr in khlf. A rrnrrity of
snrvnnt* nnd the inprensed cost of liv
ing have enused n larger nnd still lar
ger mmils-r of hnusewives to ilo their
own rooking. They are tinning llieir
attention to Hie kitchen ns the greatest
opportunity for improving the efficiency
of the hnueelinld. Hettcr ei|ui|)liieiil for
the kitchen mid its proper arrangement
in one of Ihe best Investmente Hint the
housewife can make. The fuel that
there are approximately 277,000 under
weight children ill (ieorgia, and Hint they
are found in the best, homes ns well
ns in Hie poorest, line brought -the reall
ration of the need for well seleeted food,
properly hniidlcd nnd intelligently pre
pared. The feeding of the family Is
no longer a hit- or miss proposition, lint
onn which rails for careful study. The
In nsewifn who does not have a model
kitchen or “food workshop" to which
she nm.v invite her neighbors is lioliiud
the times. KiUOien equipment and its
arrangement should eommrind more at
tention from the housewife Ilian any
thing else in Hie home. Cleanliness and
eonvwilcneo are thn llrst essentials of
a good kltelien. Cleanliness requires
careful thought for Moors and walls, for
the nlisenee of molding nnd other dust
ratehers, for thn closeting of utensils,
nnd for plenty of sunshine nnd fresh
air. There should lie no unnecessary an
gles, inxl nil surfaces should lie us im
pervious to grease ns possible, Thorn
should he a place in the kitchen lo wash
the hands, nwny from the food mid
dishes. On lenvitig the kitchen even for
a few moments one's hands come in
contact with doors, chairs, and oilier
objects, which may hold germs that are
dangerous to licnllli. For this -rensoli,
anyone linndling food should wash liar
hands again nail again.
Principles to Guide In Planning a
Comfortable and Useful Kitchen—
1. I ’Inn to do without a servant.
2. Makit every surface easy to edenn.
M. I’lini for convenience in every de
tail.
■f. Have a place to wash the linuds,
with hand tmvels convenient.
6. Eliminate steps by proper placing
of permanent equipment,
fl. Group your tools.
Route Your Work—
The work table, the stove, and the
sink furnish working surfnees and work
ing centers for the different processes
carried out in Hie kitchen,
Is' so related Hint, every possible extra
step and movement is saved, 'there is
one general principle that is always im
portant in kitchen iirrniigcnioiit. The
stove, the work table nnd the supply cab
inet should lie grouped so Hint you have
ill the cabinet the storage pltiro of gro
ceries mid utensils from which Hie cook
ing process starts. Then nt your right
is the table the place where the fond is
prepared. At the rigid of the table
is the stove, where Hie food is cooked.
From the sloth! ttie next step should be
to tile door of thn illliiiig-rooui. After
Ihe meal, coming back to the kitchen
from the dlulng-mom, the dishes go to
the sink; nnd from there to the dish-
wore closet lit the left of the sink.
Here lignin the dishes for the dining
table are close to the rungu for nerving.
AND
PRICES GOVERN INCREASED
REDUCED PRODUCTION.
Progressive Farmer.
Although much was said in the spring
of I1UK) about Inhor lining so short Hint
11 lull crop could not lie planted, the
acreage planted lo cotton in I P-0 In
(lie nine large cot ton-growing States was
II,7MII,0<in acres more Hum in lllll), and
2,2110,OOP of this increase was in Texas
aione, heebies 21)11,000 acres in Arkan
sas.
It may nlso surprise sumo who “Just
knew we iliilii't have labor to plant,
cultivate nnd pick a large crop of ent-
lon," Hint 2,700,000 acres or 8.(1 per
emit, increase in the cotton acreage in
those nine cotton Httiles was not ob
tained li.v mi equal redaction in tiie corn
acreage; for in those same nine States
the corn acreage was 'only reduced 204,-
OIK). acres.
The arranges to the two crops, cotton
nod corn, in tlicHe nine States were as
follows;
11110—Gotten ,'12,000,000 acres; corn
■12,701,000 acres.
11)20—Cotton IM,800,000 acres; corn
.’12,.'527,000 acres.
In other words, na increase of 8.0
per rent, in the eottou ncrengo of these
nine States only resulted in a decrease
of 0.8 per cent, in the corn acreage. Nor
did tho 2,2110,000 acres increase in the
cotton ncrengo of Texas coino from a
reduced corn ncrengo, for while tho cot
ton acreage of Toxns was increased 2,-
2:10,000 neres, or 21 ‘i per cunt.,, tint
corn acreage was only/ reduced 00,000
acres, or Ichh thnn 1 per cent. Nor did
Texas increase her cotton ncrengo by
reducing her acreage to tho grain sor
ghums, for she actually increased the
gruin sorghums 108,000" acres, or more
Hum nIio ducrenscd her corn acreage. Of
course, Hie acreage to wheat and onts
wns reduced, but." these combined fulled
by over 1,000,000 acres to equal the in-
crease in the cation acreage la Texas
in 1020,
All of which goes to show that when
prices are good there is always
available anil labor enough to
cultivate, and pick a large cotton crop.
7. Have 11 place for every utensil and
keen every utensil In its place.
8. Route your work.
0. Have n home mnde water system.
10. Don’t bend your hack,
11. Have work table, stove and sink
the proper height,
J,2, ITovhlv sufficient llulil mid venti
lation, 1
18. Ciihvi nieiit mid adequate storage
space in iiecesmi ry.
M. Tho—kitchen floor must In, made
to require as little cure ns passible,
1f>. Wells can be made sanitary and
littmetivi 1 .
Ill, I’ho Itthnr saving devices.
17. I’se power itmrhincry to do your
work,
18. Organise your work.
Ask your eonnly, home demonlnitloii
agent to help you,
Have Compact Apartment—
The kitchen should in* coinpnet in or
der to .eliminate extra steps, mid there
should be n iinliiriil arrangement, cif the
permanent equipment with regard to
Hueeessive ilporiilloliN in the epnking pro
cesses, so llifit the work goes logically
from one kind of work to nnoHier with
out retracing steps or creasing the room
miooeessuiily. Each ‘utensil should ho
placed where It will miimutlly bo uso-l,
and I hero should ho 11 supply adequate
to this grouping on Ihe binds of differ
ent hinds of work lo bo doin'. All equip
ment should Im selected with tho idea
of requiring the least possible amount
of ertre. For oiieli housekeeper wim run
have a new kltelien laboratory or food
workshop there are thousands wlm must
•nahe Hu old one do. Hut there ore few
mining these thousands wlm ommot do
something to the old kitchen to make
it easier and pleasanter in which to
work.
Have a Homc-Mndo Water System—
An it sanitary measure and a necessary
convenience for tho kitchen, a water
works system comes llrst. No woman |more rent reduction. If everybody fol-
should draw water from a well, nor lift lowed, the Memphis- acreage reduction
it the great number of times Hint it pledge, the ent in eottou would bo 50
has to be handled lo tho day's work, per cent. Hut only a fraction will sign.
If one does not linvo a water system, Anyhow, we Issue a warning to the sol
a simple home mnde device for bring- flsh farmer who is counting on other
iug water into the kitolum is recoin-1 farmers reducing -HI to 50 per cent), nnd
mended. This consists of n barret on assuming therefore that he will liiarease
the outside of the kitrhen, place-! on n his own acreage, or nt least vill not to-
support. This barrel is tilled with wn-|duce. With the present, carry over of
FACTS ABOUT COTTON.
Mnrlboro county,-B. C'., claims tho dis
tinction of nvarngiug more cotton to the
acre thnn any other comity in tho United
nnil should i States.
Ellis ennny. Texas, in total number ot
Imlcs produced is the banner cotton
growing county of the t'nitcd States.
The average per acre yield for the
United Htntes line varied from 145
pounds of lint in 1871 to 224 pounds in
Hill. The 10-year average js 181
pounds.
"Egyptian yield of cotton nvernges .'1110
pounds to the nerO. Cotton production
in Egypt is limited to irrigated acres
along the Nile.
Tho area wilder rotton in India—
about. 25,000,000 acres—covers such a
wide climatic range thnt at many sea
sons of the year planting and picking
are going on in different purts of the
country at the same. time.
Cotton Is grown in Asia as far north
ns tlio latitude of Chicago,
There is now enough iiiispun cotton in
tho world to Inst nenrly two years .
Tiie Civil War wns fought So the cot
ton Helds of thn South, destroying tem
porarily the means of supply. The re
cent WorhI-Wnr wns fought in the great
factory districts of tiie world.
There is now more eottou in tho stocks
of any one of half a dozen cotton mnr-
kets in the South than was produced in
nil of the United States a hundred years
ngo.
More than three bales of cotton, av
eraging 500 pounds in weight, have been
grown on a single acre in South Caro
lina.'
Tho estimated number of working
cotton spindles in the United States is
about «6,000,000, of which 15,000,000
are In cotton-growing^ States.
The largest cotton crop ovor planted
in the United States wns 87,458,000
acres in 1018, which yielded 14,150,480
bales of lint, 500-pound equivalents.
America’s greatest crop of cotton
(10,184,080 hales) 'was grown on .30,-
882,000 neres.
Tiie knowledge of cotton growing wild
in islands of the West Indies is ns old
ns tho history of their discovery by tho
Spaniards in 1402.
Arkwright, Hargreaves and Crompton
are the great nnmes connected with the
invention of cotton-spinning mnehiuory.
They were Englishmen.
EH Whitney, an American, invented
tho snw-gin. The original patent was
March 14, 1704. On account of tho
labor involved in sepnrnting tho lint
from tho seed by hand, cotton was of un
known commercial importance prior to
the invention of Whitney’s gin.
YOUR HOME TOWN.
We've never lieen able to diagnose his
case yroller)}', or to tell exactly wlmt is
the matter with him, but there is some
thing radically wrong with the man who
doesn't care for Hie town he wns horn in,
or who does!) 't go back to it occasionally
ilh a feeling of joy.
The man who boasts that all places
are alike to him and Hint mi.v place
where lie linngB Ids hat is home, misses
one of the first mid best incentives to
liTPiicy and duty—which. is the desire
to win the general esteem and good opin
ion of the community in which in; once
resided. No reward in money compares
in value with the golden treasure of u
goo-1 repute. If a man clients mid lies
und steals nod bears false witness, he
nitty build up a great fortune nnd still
lie plagued at night with tiie knowledge
that those about Idol hold n low opinion
of 1dm and Ids works, The favorable
opinion of one’s home-town people is al
ways worth earning nnd retaining. And
that applies to every limn, no matter
how successful lie may have lice 11 in bus
iness in the outside world.
IN
WHAT OLD FOLKS WILL SAY
NINETEEN SEVENTY-ONE.
■Progressive Farmer,
May I stop right hero and look fifty
years into the future? A’ery well.
Fifty yonrs from now yonr grandchil
dren nnd mine will hoar Home old white-
linircd man or woman (mnybe it will bo
yourself) tell of farming conditions ns
land 1 they wore up to 11)21. And in the course
plant,, of bin or her reminiscences, tho old patri
arch will say something like this:
“Why, children, bnck there before
11121 tho farmers had no voice whatever
in fixing tho price of anything they Hold.!
Every littlo one-horse, two-horse, five-'
horse, ten-horse or twonty-horso farmer
Individually sold (or tried to sell) the
products- of ids particular littlo pieeo of
WE MUST CUT COTTON ACREAGE,
I'rogressive Farmer,
Whatever the exact figures may lie,
there is undoubtedly an enormous carry
over of cot ton. Whatever the exact per
centage of ajrengo reduction ought to IgrouiuTaU* byMwv'knd Tlnel^ntae
be, It is undoubtedly going to be more tlm ,, H ol , t ot R hulldml wit hout any real,
' "'l! "'C M'*' going to get, thorough knowledge ns to market eondt-
I'dgrOHstvc /armor 1ms not on- tloil8 01 . whnt prlc0 ho ougllt to B „ t ,
humid over talk of a 50 per cent, cut You may not beliovo it, but it is so.
in acreage lor very simple reasons. Wo Tll0 flmncr nm()o tho cottoll without
lire not going 0 get n 50 per cunt. cut. w ,ilch tho cotton denlors, cotton nmmi-
No cut in cotton iierongo greater than faetm . BrN , Pt( .„ wou i (1 hnvo been helpless;
' 1» l ‘f vant. hnn ever been achieve. }t> vot t |„. fftrmer ovory fnU took cot .
Hie past. While wo should exceed that L on ( 0 town, nnd helplessly nnd submis-
ligure now, we can t. expect oh per cent. n u|, P( | tiie bnvorn whnt prmlc tliev
Consequently, talking of 50 per cent,
is likely to linvo two bud results. In
the first place, lunuy fnrmers will not
sign up for a 50 per omit, reduction
program who would sign up for a more I JX/^rer’’ ilml"'nicrcl.mit "asked.
.under,dr reduction program. BoComi, tn , th J 8 , thnt before 1921 the farmer of
ttie farmer who doesn't sign, slnco ho | dr...;,. _.i i„ ..... „.i„
hears talk of a 50 per cent- rut, is
divot,v asked the buyers what grndo they
chose to cidl it and what price they Baw
fit to give—nod lie had nothing to do
but accept I Then when lie bought cot
ton goods, lie had to pay wlmt the man
' The
Some tilings urc fitting and proper
nnd others are not proper because they
are too tightly fitting.
ECZEMA!
Monsy bsok without question
If HUNT'S Sstvs foils In tho
treetment of ITCH, BCZBMA.
RINGWORM, TETTER or
other Itching skin distress.
Try ft 71 cent box •« our rltk.
COWETA DRUG & BOOK COMPANY.
LEEiKING DRUG COMPANY.
GHIGHESTERS PILLS
DIAMOND
BRAND
00*
LAMES I
Gold metallic boxes, seeled with Blui
w
siDuuft ,111a BO oxni-x. BuyaTyeu
Dnwilal ft>4 ask for oni.OHEI.TERL
DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for twenty-Beo
jeore regarded •• Best, Safest, Always Reliable.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS
EVERYWHERE
Atlanta and 1st Point
RAILROAD
ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE
OF TRAINS AT NEWNAN. GA.
EFFECTIVE JAN. 16, 1921.
Bubjoot to change and typographical
errors.
NORTHBOUND)
No. 42 0.45 a. m.
No. 18 ...9.45 a. m.
No. .88 11.18 a. m.
O No. 40 1.00 p. m.
No. 20 0.30 p. m. *T7
No. 84 5.20 p. m.
No. 30 10.20 p. m.
* SOUTHBOUND I
No. 35 7.00 a. m.
No. 19 8.25 a. m.
No. 33 0.45 a. m.
No. 39 2.40 p. in.
No. 17 5.20 p. in.
No. 41 0.52 p. m.
No. 37 ....7.19 p. m.
^ J. P. BILLUPS, O. P. A.
V
m
■rr '
tailored to Measure by Horn”
\
\
W HAT do you consider a fair
price for good clothes?
♦ ♦
You can buy a mighty good suit here
for $40—all wool; "tailored to meas
ure by Bom.” 9 9
And we will show you hundreds of
desirable weaves at other prices, too;
some lower - and some higher.
♦ #
At any price you choose to pay, Born
Tailoring offers the most generous
value possible.
—money hack if you are not pleased **
with the style, fit and wear.
W. C. KINNARD & COMPANY
to look for a big reduction, and there
fore will inurease (or fail to reduce)
Ids own nerengp, whereas talk of 0 tiimill-
er rut would uut eneourago him in this
folly.
Then,! are tho reasons why The Pro
gressive Farmer lies opposed talk of a
So per cent, reduction. \Ve beliovo tnlk
of a 25 per rent rut would accomplish
*“ tho 8outl; lot otlior iieople price not only
. *’ -' nvervHnmr lie hnmrlit. lint tin nlsn let
everything lie bought, but lie also let
other pooplo both grade und price the
products which ho nnd his family work
ed nurd to raise,’.'
Enthusiasm to n salesman is like gas
oline to an automobile.
ter and covered with a lid, 111 tho bot
tom of the barrel is a pipe which car
ries water to .the sink. This sink Bis
large enough to hold a dish pan. nnd
of such height from the tloor that the
cotton, no acreage reduction now in pros
pect is going to iu< OUQUgli to insure I
fancy prices next fall. Consequently,
there is n very rude awakening ahead |
for any traitor who tries to tako ad-
Most pleasures aro in contrnst-
aml work, for instance.
To abort a cold
and prevent com
plications take
-rest
worker can wnsh dishes without bond• vantage of what ho imagines ills brother |
ing tier hack. On each side is a drain 1 farmers aro going to do.
board for convenience. A wasto pipe
carries off the water. Shelves can be
placed beneath the sink for heavy uten-
TO CORRECT A SLANDER.
sits and nbuvo it should lie hung tho I ProRresslvo Farmer.
articles frequently needed there,—the |
dish-washing and sink-cleaning neces
sities.
Liniment
is always ready to
ease xheumatwm
(f AT tho very first twinge, down.
an comes my bottle of Sloan's;
then quick relief. tn'lHoid rubbing,
for it 7 8 stimulating and scatters
congestion. The boys use it for
stiff muscles, and it helps Solly s
backaches, too.” 85c, fOc, $1.40.
It is hard to correct false reports.
Error travels faster than truth, and it
would seem thnt it is nlso held more
tenaciously by tho human mind. There!
never was any truth in the statement
tlmt “campaigns for the reduction of 1
tho cotton acreage in the (last luive al
ways failed. ’ ’ In fact, they have al
ways succeeded both in reducing the cot
ton acreage, nnd increasing the price.
There have been siuce 1895 four well-
marked campaigns for tho reduction of |
the cotton acreage. The one in 1919
wns lnrgely conducted by cotton fac
tors, supply merchants, ami bankers,
ami was discontinued ns soon ns prices
began going up, but there was a redac
tion in the acreage just tho same in the
following years—
1905—Acrengo reduction 13.1 per
cent.; price increased 20 per cent,
1895—Acreage reduced 14.7 per cent.;
price increased G5 per cent.
1915—Acreage reduced 14.7 per ceut';
price increased 00 per ceut.
1919—Acreage reduced 7.4 per cent.;
price increased 29 per cent.
The acreage will Ik- reduced in 1921
if the price continues low—uot 50 per
cent, we may lie sure, but a good deal.
•It is an absolute necessity, and will be
done.
C ;
Love is like the measles; we can’t have
lit had but once, nnd the later in Ufe wo
I luive it the tougher it goes with us.
The purified and refined
calomel tablets that era
nauscaiess, safe and sure.
Medicinal virtues retain*
. cd and improved. Sold
only in sealed packages.
Price 35c.
RATS DIE
so do mice, once they out RAT-SNAP.
And thov leave no odor behind. Don l
take our word for It—try a package.
Cuts and dogs won’t touch it. -.Ruts
puss up all food to get RAl-SNAl.
Three sixes.
SWc. slmc II cake) enough for Pantry,
Kitchen or Cellar. -
OSe. xlxe IS cake*) for Chicken House
coops, or small buildings.
•I.2.X slxc t5 cakes) enough for all
farm and out-buildings, storage build
ings. or factory buildings.
Sold and Guaranteed by
LEB-KING DRUG COMPANY.
COWETA DRUG A BOOK COMPANY.*
The Fertilizer That Makes
You the Most Profit
C OMPLETE Fertilizers containing phosphoric acid, ammonia
and potash make you the most profit. They must be evenly
mixed and properly proportioned from carefully selected organic
and chemical materials. This insures an even supply of plant
food throughout the growing season.
Swift & Company has everything necessary to make fertilizer
right: trained chemists—agricultural experts—modern machinery.
Buy Swift’s Red Steer Complete Fertilizers and make the most
profit.
Swift & Company
(FERTILIZER WORKS)
Atlanta, Ga. 4 Charlotte, N. C. New Orleans, La.
FOR CAI 17 RV
H. C. GLOVER AND F. H. REDWINE
NEWNAN, GEORGIA