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GEORGIA'S
LEADING
DENTIST
DOCTOR
LANIER
MA60N.GA.
When you visit
Macon it will pay
you to consult Dr.
Lanier—his offices
are the largest and
best equipp’d Den
tal Apartments in
the South. There
you can' have the
finest Crown and
Bridge made by.
Expert
Dentists
at Half you have
been paying for
inferior work.
TEETH
EXTRACTED
WITHOUT
PAIN
and beautiful ones
inserted without
artificial plates.
REMEMBER the
PLAGE
605
Cherry
Street,
Macon,
GEORGIA.
QUALITY IN CHICKENS
(By Uncle Jo)
The day of the scrubby hen Is
gone forever. There hardly seems
any necessity for an argument on j
thir point, for any one who has ever
understood the true value ot stand-
ard-brt.l poultry will never be satis- 1
fled with any other kind. If noth
ing use were luvolved than the m«r.-]
appeal one.;, cny one can appreciate
the difference betwn vigorous, larg-,
si^ed. uniformly beautiful, standard-
bred fowls and a flock of scrubby, 1
scrawny, ugly hens which looks as If
they were not worth scratching for,
and are a* poor as they look. a|
flock of pure bred poultry is an or
nament to any lawn or farm yard,
but this is not th-> main difference
between them and their rundown 1
cousins. Standard-bred poultry will
produce more eggs than can be ob
tained from the common barn-yard
stock, and the eggs will be more
valuable for the simple reason that
during batching time you will have
no trouble In disposing of them forj
at it ast double the market prlee. i
When we Tbnsider, it costs Just as:
much in food, time, labor, buildings. 1
etc., to hatch out and raise to ma
turity scrubby chickens that, when)
grown, will weigh but 3V& pounds perl
hen and 5 pounds per cock, as it does)
to hatch and raise to maturity pure|
bred poultry that will weigh 7
pounds per hen and It) pounds perl
cock. A well bred fowl requires no
more food than a barn-yard fowl. It!
requires no more time and no morel
labor, but the result is twice as)
great. Is it not foolish then to waste
vour buildings, your lime, your la-1
bor and your money on run-down
R- H. PLANT. JR., SAYS i
RHODE ISLAND REDS
stock, when both pleasure and profit
lie In the pure bred stock?
It is the start that counts very
largely in any successful undertak- 1
ing. |
Certainly this Is true in poultry
raising. Therefore start right. It is
bettor to begin on right lines than
to repair mistakes later.
It is easy lo start wrong in the!
pure bred poultry business.
It Is just as easy to make a fair
beginning. You do not have to have
large grounds nor expensive build- j
ings. |
To begin o n a large scale will. In,
most cases, cost a good deal of,
money. And sometimes this money j
is thrown away. Usually it Is better]
to begin at the beginning. Here is a
business that is open to almost every]
one. There Is no danger that poul
try raising will ever be monopolized
by a trust.
Usually the best place to begin
with poultry Is right where you are
living, right now. There is a gold
mine in that little plot behind the,
house. There Is money in poultry In
every pnrt of y»ls country, though ot
course some parts are better adapted
to poultry culture than others. The
readers of this paper are fortunate
In being In the favored spot. ‘‘Oct
busy." (tp to now the egg market Is
20.000.000 dozen short on eggs for,
this season. Do you know what that 1
means? No. Well. It means 35 and
to cents eggs for next September, Oc
tober, and November and 5rt cents'
eggs tor the winter months. Aagin.|
1 say "get busy.”—Southern Farm
tlazette.
Macon Man Believes They
arc the Best Chickens for
General Purposes,
SUNDAY TRAIN =
Eatonton and Milledgeville to Tybee
''where ocean breezes blow**
Schedule Sunday's Only, July 4, to August 8, ’09, Inclusive
No. M Sun.
(Vntial Tirm*
No, 67 Sun.
4 00 am
I.v Eatonton — Ar
1 35 am
4 29 "
" Meriwether "
1 27 “
4 47 ”
" Milledgeville “
12 48 ”
4 54 “
" Asylum June “
12 40 “
5 11 ••
“ Stevens Pot. "
12 22 “
6 81 ”
11 Ivey •*
12 13 “
5 30 ”
■* Gordon Lv
12 05 “
11 45 “
Ar TYBEE.... “
5 00 pm
These trains will stop on
charge passengers. Tickets
will he sold on Sundays good
going and returning only on
$2.50 ROUND TRIP
No Baggage Checked on These Tickets.
J. C. Haile, G. P. A. F. J. Robinson, A. G. P. A,
Building Up a Bigger
Trade; Maintaining The
Old Trade on The Merit of
OUR SPLENDID GOODS
Edwards’ “WILD CAT" and other soft drinks, including Ginger Ale, Sar-
♦ siparilla, Digestol and other brands.
I Edwards Bottling W’ks
Genuine, Natural WMskey
is a tonic, the medicinal quality's of which are fully recognized
by the highest medical authentic*. II your system needs
building up or if your nerves are "on edge" try
Sunny Brook
the PURE. FOOD
Whiskey
It will restore your old time vigor in alrr.os: no time—by using
Sunny Brook moderately you are bound tobenefit yourhealth in
general. See that you get the genuine— accept ao substi
tutes. Every bottle bears the Government "Green Stamp"—
certifying to the exact Age, Proof and Measure. No home
•bould be without it.
' DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOU EXPRESS PREPAID
BY ANY OF THE FOLLOWING DISTRIBUTERS:
PAUL HEYMAN. 416 W. 4th St.. Uind-mati. Ohio.
M. MARKSTKIN.
CHAi. BLU ,t A CO.. JacVaoivIllo, Flo.
V: C. BUTLER. Jaeka.nvilk,. Flo.
L. LOKB WHISKEY CO.. j-ca,.,ovi|l«. Fla.
ALTMAN WHISKEY OJ. " ’|
D.f.ec p. i.o.tiii
GKEIE TRtOINU CO. Pensaola. Fla. .
Hi K KIN :.4AK L'.yUOIi CJ.. FaniasoU. Fla. !
R£!U WHISKEY CO- " • y
m Bottles $ JB
a Bottles
jH 1.5th Gallon
Full Quart* *1
Rji or Bourbon DT
■ Rye or Bourboa V
No good. «iiip?o4 C. O. O.
If popularity has nnvthlrg to do
with it Rhode Island Reds have cer
tainly won the day. Chicken breed |
ers and faneters have found In this
particular breed, more pood lasting
qualities than in any other one breed.
These chickens lav well the year,
round, especially In the months of Pe I
een.ber, January, F> brunry and MarcT
the very time you want. the eggs
for hatching and when market eggr |
are cringing the fancy prices. From
the chicks hatched in these months]
you get a good lot of pullets and cock-!
erels for fall matings and tor the I
early fall shows. |
From by own experience I roca' 1 a
number of instances where 1 got eight
eggs a clay from a pen of eight hens
and four eggs* from a pen ot four pul
lets. for ns many as eight to twelvo
successive days; then perhaps »
slight drop for a few days, and back
again to the same high average.
What other breed can equal this?
The hens are good sitters and make
excellent mothers; but on the other
hand if you wish to break them up
tt is easily done and they will re
sume laying In a short time. This
breed is particularly healthy, very
vigorous slid line foragers, just give
them something to scratch In and tho
exercise Is sufficient tonic to keep
them well and happy.
The young chicks are strong from
the start, mature rapidly and with
good care will make two pound broil
ers l n eight to ten weeks. The pul
lets are early layers, often at the
age of four or five months.
As an exhibition bird I know of no
breed that will equal the Reds ns
they require very little preparation
lor the show room. Their brilliant
plumage and handsome nppenrance is
always the source of much favorable
comment.
As a breeder cf exhibition Reds I
wish to put In a word for the black
ticking in tin* hackle of tin' females.
We have been breeding for this black
lor years, and now u few breeders
who can’t get it without double mat
ing want to throw it out. If wo elimi
nate this now what 1b to become of
the bens that have been our pride
Before closing let me say a word
to tho beginner. Attend all the shows
you possibly can and watch the Judge
carefully, so ns lo establish tho rlgli
typo lit your mind. You will get
more real information from one show
than from a year’s reading. 1 can not
say too strongly, but the very best
that you can afford. If you can’t get
a pen of high class birds, get a sot
ting of good eggs from some reliable
breeder, and get tho benefit of his ex
perience in mating. By uli means
don’t start with a lot of cheap birds
as they are dear at any prlee, and
you will regret It in a short time.—
R. H. Plant, Jr., In The Industrious
Hen.
THE SAVING OF HAY
FROM COWPEA VINES
There is Skill In Doing It
Properly) But it is Easy
to Learn.
I have been fighting the bnttle for
the cow pea* for so many years that I
am glad to welcome an efficient help-]
er In Mr. French. But whut a change I
tin re has been in this respect! Twen
ty years ago hardly nny one though
of a field of peas for hay, but rested
satisfied with some sown among the
com. and the peas gathered and sold
for 50 to 75 cents per bushel.
A friend recently wrote to me:
"When you began to write and talk
cowpeas 1 could buy ail the peas I
wanted for 50 cents a bushel and
could buy land for any old price. Now
peas are worth anywhere from $2.00
up, and land has boomed in prlee, and
it is all your fault." Well, it Is a
good thing for n man to have been
nstrumental In doing some little good
o hit fellows, and I have no reason
o regret, the prlee of peas or the In
creased
value of the
land in
ids
county
I am
glad to see, too, that
Mr
French
curoH pea hay
without
the
ussy |>
-...ileos that ho
many ad
ipt.
vd'l S'*
•rev, frames, nor
(folds and
all
irrls f.
contrivances
o loso
the
paves
•<\ make poorer
hay. 1 have
f, nn It
d to show tha
t there Ih
no
liav more easily cured than peavine
hay if you will only li t it euro, and
not go to monkeying with all sorts
cf useless and expensive contrivances
to spoil It. The man who piles his
nay on scaffolds or any sort of frame
may cure It dry, but lie will lose the
best part of it, the leaves, in hand
ling It. Get the hay under cover as
soon as It Is thoroughly wilted, but
still limp, and it will cure If you let
it alone, and you will have fine,
sweet hay Instead of tho dry sticks
that one comiTicnly sees. By using a
tedder after the mower to toss the
bay up lightly and hasten the wilting.
I have always been able to rake Into
windrows ln the afternoon all that
was cut In the forenoon, and by turn-
‘ng the windrows the next morning
could put it into cocks that after.ioon
.f necessary, or leave It to finish
in the windrow, if the weather was
oot threatening, and the next dav into
the barn with it before the leaves get
crisp.—Progressive Farmer.
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
l Having sold one of the
♦ three Registered Jersey «
♦ Y earlings advertised last ♦
♦ week in this space, we *
♦ are still offering the other 4
two.
» P. O. BOX 112. ♦
♦ Milledgeville, Ga. •
<>♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
Jefferson n
Standard ILlfafe
Insurance:£Co.
Home Office: RALHKllEIGHCN.C.
Strongesfetin
The Soutkh.
mm
HWtlWC
where,
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the most #t?^1rbatiye
contracts everhftWtpafc
the markets m 1
This Policy offers, .you jIjfeurfrujLir-
ance, Endowment ^q^esfpjXftnitjTiCnt,
Cumulative t)eferrds
and Accident Insur$fls@ ra ftUeina& in
one.
You would dp well toii]i|sp$qtif,£>befcitJbe-
fore insuring elsewbtfJi’.ewhere. t
Call on our nearest ageftt-agerwritar write
the Horpe Office dir^<gt<lirect. «
We also issue all kinds pfnJbjrnftdifinwted
Payment, Straight CfiffofiiidifEandlEn-
dowment Policies.
i j ICS.
Surplus to to
Policy Hold^tdens
$493*497-°3i-03! I
Jos. G. Brown, President, cS ident, ♦
P. D. Gold, Jr.. 1st V. P.;&<3,IM&C. M
Chas. W. Gold, Sec’y; jSupt.
of Agencies.
” ♦
H. H. Bass, Mgr. Atlan^,/Qanta,?Ga.
♦
♦
Blood worth >atkl dnd:
*♦ ♦
Bloodwortborth *
AGENTS ents
Milledgeville, Ga» v ille, Ga.
o
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