Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, May 20, 1920, Page 7, Image 7

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DontSend aPenny TheseLen-Mort Hard Knox, Black Leather Work and Ont Door Shoes are "wizards’’ for wear—the absolute limit in strength combined with comfort and dressy appearance. Built on stylish lace Blucher last; drill* lined;leatherinsoles;guarauteedcounters; jSSJgj two full solid leather soles —clinch nailed and •ewed— running clear through to the solid, Igsas'SKf strong heels that won't come off. Note the rugged construe- KMUEaf toon—the wear-defy- jfeW jL-'XKIBajBSSa ing quality built right in. giving pro tection at every <«s,■ TWjrCTMSMMy-y. point. So dur abl e—so yet so flexible, soft. easy "i ‘< ®JEHSgsEOra on the feet! Is it /gy3U ■arffMßWwß any wonder that JSsSx'Sy " shoes like these out wear two or * if ,U -aWaraPstffi three pairs of the ordinary kind? IgH ■fCreat Shoe Offer Much more t han ?. work shoe. The snappy, clean cut style dressy round toe make this model shoe suitable for almost any wear. You be the jodgel Slip a pair on and let them do the talking! SEND NO MONEY. Just fill in coupon and mail at once. Pay only $3.69 for shoes on arrival. If you don’t find them the easiest, most comfortable and sat isfactory shoes you ever wore, return them and we will refund your money. Sizes 6to 11. Wide widths. Order by No. AXIBI7. Send coupon now! Leonard-Morton & Co.,Dept.63Bl,Chicago,lll. Send me one pair of Len-Mort Work and Outdoor Shoes No. AXIBI7 for examination and try-on. I will pay 13.69 for shoes on arrival. If not satlsfactscy will return them and you will refund my money. SiasWidth , Name Address - „ _1 I Bee Dee 3to se&c%S Ury I The old reliable | BLACK-DRAUGHT | for Stock and poultry g Askyourmerchant! I Merchants.- ask your jobbers salesman about Bee DSki B J' ■ J You’ll Find Your Kind of Shoe In the Shield Brand Store lit THE Shield Brand line of shoes is I 'Dest complete. There is a Shield Brand Shoe for every member of the family—sturdy 9 and durable work shoes, up-to-date dress shoes, and strong wear resisting g shoes for the boys and girls. I There is value expressed in comfort ■ T /\n/T/v4-* and durability in every pair of Shield g . LvllUw L Brand Shoes. \ \ k C/ Ask your dealer for Shield Brand ■ Shoes— they “Fit Best—Wear Long- est’ ’. > fe 1 M.C. KISER CO. **Shield Brand Shoemakers” ATLANTA, GA. Il shield brand 1 BRAND SHOES Don’t neglect that bam of yours wait until the paint wears off g||| and the wood starts to crack and rot. It is far cheaper to-protect it with a coat or two of H FREE g H Paint Books || I——» “Homesand How ■ «S to Paint them.” W Jl k* pR BjFA w B B ■■Contains illue>H ffi & igAMiiaLFirtnr V W ,v 5 fag trations of paint- B FrW”!? iM MbYy ■ ed homes, floor K Wkceib&U g| plans, specifics- ■ It resists all weather .conditions and keeps its H r V* t H color. Pee Gee Bam Paint-spreads freely and «« «»«« ■ has greatest covering capacity. It is backed by H for ttl H mOre than fifty years reputation and will give you longest service at lowest cost. Thert’s 4 Pee Gee Paint for Every Purpose Ask your Dealer—if you don’t know the Pee aWih t I Gee Dealer in your locality we will tell you Peaslee-Gaulbert Co., Dept. 34 LoutsvUle, Ky. I les j ft AMERICAN CORN MILLS GRIND fetter meal, rive more real satisfaction, earn bigger dividends —because tliej are bettet built, have the exclusive American cleaning arrangement and use better pjly' grade rocks than any other mill. Sold under a “money- alaL back” Guarantee. with with zou cannot lose. Built in •izes 14-inch to 30-tnch rocks to grind from 51) to 200 Tflfi. bushels moal per day. Get illustrated catalog, copy of guarantee and price* on the size mill von need. Ask tot CATALOGUE No. 5-E. AMERICAN MACHINERY Uo.. o-f. Nelson St., Atlanta. Ga J F ;: T< j "The .VJ'NAI.TA l.ine" of Sawmill Machinery. Atlantn f-Li ' ■ Kerosene Engines, American Corn Mills. ReCutter Feed i ~ ; .!u Mills. Silos. Dnsilage Cutters. Belting. THE ATLANTA TKI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. WATCH THERMOMETER CLOSELY IN AN ARTIFICIAL BROODER Although brooding- with hens is the easiest and. simplest method of brood ing, artificial brooders are necessary where winter or very early spring chicks are raised, where only non sitting b cods of poultry are kept, or where large numbers of chickens are to be raised artificially. To operate a brooder or hover so as to insure comfort ano. safety for the chicks requires vi.remitting care on the part of the poultry man. Temperature in Brooder The best temperature at which to keep a brooder or hover depends upon many things—the position of the thermometer, the style of the hover, the age of the chickens, and the weather conditions. Aim to keep the chickens comfortable. As the opera tor learns by the of the chickens the amount of heat they require, he can discard the ther mometer if he desires. When too cold the chickens will crowd together and try to get nearer the heat. If if is found in the morn ing that the droppings are well scat tered under the hover it is an indi cation that the chickens have had enough heat. If the chickens are comfortable at night they will be spread out under the hover with the heads of some protruding from un der the hover cloth. Too much heat will cause them to pant and gasp and sit around with their mouths open. It is impossible to state for each case at which temperature the brood-, ers should b-j kept to raise) young chickens; however, It will ivn from 90 to 100 degrees in some cases, as some broods of chickens seem to re quire more heat than others. The average Is 93 to 95 degrees for the first week or ten days, when the temperature is gradually reduced to 85 degrees for the following ten days, and then lowered to 70 or 75 degrees for as long as the chickens need heat. This depends somewhat on the sea son of the year and the number of the chickens, as it can be readily seen that the heat generated by fifty chickens would raise the temperature under the hover to a higher degree than the heat given off by a lesser number, consequently the amount of heat furnished by the lamp or stove will have to be regulated accordingly. As the chickens grow larger and need less heat, the lamps may be used only at night, and later only on cold nights, say poultry specialists in the United States department of agriculture. Care should be taken to prevent - chilling or overheating the chickens, as it weakens them and may result in bowel trouble. Weed a Cool Place, Too Chickens need a cool place for scratching and exercising, in addi tion to heat. Indoor brooders and hovers can be used successfully in most sections of the country in un heated brooder houses except dur ing the coldest weather. Outdoor brooders usually have a cool com partment for exercising, where the chickens are fed in cold, stormy weather. If winter chickens are be ing raised, it. is advisable to heat the brooder house to a temperature of 60 to 70 degrees, regardless of the temperature of the hover, which often requires placing brooder pipes around the outside walls of the brooder house. The need of this heat depends en tirely upon the brooding system and the weather conditions; but it is ab solutely necessary that the heat be kept at the desired temperature un der the hover. Brooders and hovers should have from one-half to two inches of sand, dry dirt, cut clover, or chaff spread over the floor and in the brooder-house pen. The hov ers should be cleaned frequently, as cleanliness is essential in raising chickens successfully. When chickens are first put into the brooder they should be confined under or around the hover by placing a board or wire frame a few inches outside. This does not apply, how ever, to the small outdoor colony brooders. The fence or guard should be moved gradually farther away from the hover and discarded entire ly when the chickens are three or four days old or when they have learned to return to the source of heat. Young chickens should be closely watched to see that they do not hud dle together or get chilled. They should be allowed to run on the ground whenever the weather is fa vorable, as they do much better there than when kept continuously on ce ment or board floors. Weak chick ens should usually be killed as soon as noticed, as they rarely make good stock, while they may become car riers of disease. Brooders should be disinfected at least once a year, and more frequently if the chickens brooded in them -have had any dis ease. Summer Squashes Require Plenty of Heat; Look Out for Insects CLEMSON COLLEGE, May.—Five or six hills of summer suashes three or foui- feet apart will pro duce enough squashes for the aver age family. Sumer squashes re quire plenty of heat and should not be planted until the ground is rea sonably warm. If possible the hills should be made up a week or two in advance of planting the seed, a lit tle well-rotted manure and a ta blespoonful of fertilizer being thor oughly mixed with the soil of each hill. Plant about seven or eight seeds to the hill, cover one-half inch deep, and thin to three or four. Young -squash seedlings are some times attacked by the striped cu cumber beetle, but it is an easy mat ter to protect a few hills by covering each one with a small piece of. wire fly screen until the plants are ten days or two weeks old. Cucumbers should be planted and handled in the same manner as the squashes. Two or three hills will furnish enough cucumbers for the average family, unless a large sup ply is desired for pickles. Muskmelons require plenty of space, and so should be placed only in the large garden. Ten hills of Rocky Ford muskmelons, spaced five feet apart will generally supply muskmelons for the average family. However, the season of production is comparatively short. The culture is the same as for the squashes and cucumbers. It is well to give them a little additional fertilizer scattered within two or three feet of the hills at the time that the plants are being cultivated. The same precautions as to insects must be taken as with squashes and cucumbers. A little dry road dust or powdered lime sprinkled over and around the plants may keep the bugs away, but the safest rrfethod is to cover them with the wire fly screen or with cheese cloth. i Prune and Stake Tomatoes, It Pays; Don’t Decay So Fast CLEMSON' COLLEGE, May.— Many of the best home gardeners fol low the practice of pruning and stalking tomatoes. Does it pay to prune the vine to a single stem and tie them to stakes or trellises? This is the question which many home gardeners ask every year. It does pay, according to George P. Hoff mann. extension service horticultur ist, especially if the garden space is limited. Tomato plants left to them selves have a hadn’t of spreading all over the garden and producing their fruit right on the ground where it be comes covered with dirt every time it rains, and is much more subject' to decay. The chief advantages of pruning and staking tomatoes are: 1. A large number of plants can be set on the given area. 2. The tomatoes -’ill ripen a lit tle earlier when ’’i.uits are pruned and staked. 3. The fruit is kept off the ground, is clean, easy to gather, and less likely to decay. 4. The uality of the fruit is usually better on plants that are I pruned and staked. It is true that individual plants pruned and staked do not produce so large a quantity' of tomatoes as when allowed to run on the ground, but two or three times as many plants can be set on the given area, thereby actually increasing the quantity of tomatoes produced from that area. H. S. Saturday Service League AUBURN, Ala., April 23.—1 t will be recalled that during the war a movement was started in Alabama by the negro agents of the Alabama ex tension service looking to the volun tary abandonment of the Saturday holiday by the negro farmers of the south. A systematic plan of registra tion of all who would promise to work six days in the week for a certain definite period was adopted, the movement having the indorsement not only of the Alabama extension serv ice, but of the state council of de fense. In a circular which has just been issued by the Alabama extension service, T. M. Campbell, district dem onstration agent, Tdskegee institute, Alabama, estimates that under this plan 60,000 negroes worked at least twenty-one continuous Saturdays, equal to adding, 840,000 men to the productive forces of the south, in creasing the value of products raised about $5,000,000. So effective and successful was this work in the war emergency that it has been decided to continue the U. S. Saturday Service league during peace times, with the slogan. “By working six days you helped win the war; keep it up now and you will win prosperity.’’ The plan includes the formation of local branches of the principal organization, with a def inite membership, meeting regularly and stimulating each other in the aims and purposes of the organiza tion. Keep the Garden at Work By the exercise of care and fore thought in planning succession crops and rotations and by the utilization of every foot of suitable available space it is possible to grow consid erable quantities of vegetables on limited areas and so supplement the family food supply. The principal, factors in accomplishing this are the use of seed boxes and hotbeds to give plants an early start in spring before seeds may be planted out doors, the use of outside seed beds to carry plants for main-season crops while early erdps are occupy ing the garden space, and the plant ing of late or succession crops as soon as earlier plants have been re moved. The United States department of agriculture believes that the home gardet) is just as essential this year as it was during the war years and is offering the advice of practical scientific gardeners in helping to solve the problems of those who want to cultivate home gardens. | A Bushel of Corn The laws of most of the 4 states recognize 70 pounds of ears or 56 pounds of shelled corn as a bushel of corn. These weights are reliable, says the United States department of agriculture, when the ears or shell ed corn contain only 15 per cent of water. About one-third the weight of ear corn a« customarily harvest ed in the northern states is water, | while that harvested in the drier; sections of the south contains less than 15 per cent of water. 1 USE OF HOME-MADE DEVICES SWELLS POULTRY PROFITS In a certain small town which needs no name, live William Black and John Smith. They are next-door neighbors and good friends, al though totally unlike in temperament and disposition. Last year both of them became convinced of the value of a back-yard poultry flock and each decided to install chickens in his own spacious back yard to supply his family with eggs and broilers. Mr. Black is the type of man who always quotes when any one lifts an eyebrow at some of his extravagant purchases, “that the best is always cheapest in the end.” Mr. Smith, on the other hand, believes that often a cheaper article will serve the pur pose equally well and that the dif ference in cost looks well in his sav ings account book. Standardbred Fowls Selected When it came to selecting a flock Mr. Smith and Mr. Black were agreed that standardbred fowls would more than pay for their Increased initial expense by producing more eggs than would mongrels, so they arranged with a local chicken strain. He was to deliver the birds as soon as ac commodatins were ready fr them. On the matter of housing, the pros pective poultry keepers held widely divergent views. Mr. Black hired a carpenter at $6 a day to erect for him a good-looking, nicely finished poultry house. When the last coat of paint was on it truly was, as his high school son declared it to be, “a work of art.” A house so perfectly finished de marqled the best of equipment, and Mr. Black bought it. The number of things which he discovered, with the aid of a salesman, that a proper ly brought up flock of chickens should have was amazing to his family and depleting to his purse. Mr. Smith, on the other hand, de cided that he could his own poultry house with the aid of his son. He procured two piano boxes and some smaller packing cases and they set to work. Both were handy with tools, and in a short time the piano boxes had been .converted into a com fortable. sanitary domicile for the chickens. The piano-box house had been lo cated in a corner of the yard where the fence which was already there WHAT YOU NEED TO START IN SQUAB RAISING BUSINESS, WITH RESULTS The back-yard poultry keeper can hardly hope for success with tur keys, geese, ducks or guineas, but for those who have lofts over a ga rage, stable or coal shed the op portunity for squab growing is well worth considering. For food purposes pigeons are usually classed with poultry. Cul turally they are in a class by themselves, producing meat only, producing it very quickly, and able to produce well under conditions that do not admit of growing any other creature used for food. While the ideal arrangement for pigeons is to have their house on the ground, and a small covered yard, called a “fly,” connecting with it, pigeon keeping may be carried on quite extensively in upper rooms, or lofts, with or without open-air flys. Many flocks of pigeons are kept in large cities in quarters pro vided for them in the lofts or on the roofs of buildings used for mer cantile and manufacturing pur poses. A space six feet square and high enough for the attendant to stand “Market Rabbits Shot in Drives;” Wild Rab bit Meat Is Good to Eat Besides 'killing approximately 35,- 000 jack rabbits which were in jurious to crops, the rabbit “drives” which have taken place in eastern Washington during recent months have helped to lessen living costs by putting on the market a consid able amount of rabbit meat. The Biological Survey of the United States department of agriculture, under whose supervision the drives were conducted, foupd on investiga tion that there was a good demand for wild-rabbit meat. Trial ship ments made to seven markets in dicated that white-tailed rabbits would bring the shipper about $2.50 Reduced Food Production Threatened Serious risk of reduced food pro duction this year because of high wages demanded by farm laborers, high cost of farm equipment and supplies, and because of pronounced movement of people from the farms to the cities is Indicated by reports and letters that are reaching the United States department of agri culture from many sections of the country. The most definite of these reports come from New York state, where records of the population on 3,775 representative farms on February t this year and February 1 a year ago were made by federal and state workers. It was disclosed that dur ing the past year the number of people on these farms decreased nearly 3 per cent and the number of hired men decreased more than 17 per cent. If the same ratio holds for all farms in the state about 35.000 men and boys left farming to go inlo other industries, while only about 11,000 have changed from other in dustries to farming. This is a more rapid movement from the farms to other industries than took place in the early part of the war. The same conditions in varying degrees exist in all sections, accord ing to the federal bureau of crop es timates. although they are not so acute farther from industrial cen ters. Another New York report, appll- Take Care of Summer Milk The season of sour milk has ar rived, and it will <?ost the country a great deal of money between now and frost. Milk sours, and the family can not use it. Milk goes to the cheese. In either case, the dairyman loses the price of the- milk, and the country loses that much good food. The remedy is ice and steam, say dairy specialists of the United States department of agriculture. Keep the milk clean and cool. Steril ize all the utensils. If you can not get ice, use the coldest water avail able in the tanks in which the cans of milk are kept. If steam is not available, do the best you can with boiling water. See the county agent, or write to the- United States department of agriculture at Wash ington, for information on how to do it. Rural Hauling as Side Line Many of the motor trucks on farms adjacent to large cities are not loan ed to full capacity on their trips to the city. Few farmers have their business so arranged as to permit the use of the truck to its maxi mum capacity regularly. Many such farmers, according to the United States department of agriculture, have gradually begun to haul a part or all of their neighbors’ products to market, and in some cases this prac tice has led to the establishment of a regular route. Some farmers have been enabled to purchase trucks, because their own business, coupled with that of their neigh bors’, has been sufficient to war rant such an Investment. Salt the Fleas to Death Last year was an unusually bad year for fleas about houses. The time is again at hand when, though the voice of the flea may not be heard in the land, his tickling will be felt in the flesh—unless the simple prevent ive is applied. Fleas usually get into the house from the basement or some place where dogs or other ani mals have slept. Make a thorough clean-up. Then sprinkle the floor well with salt and wet it down—not wet enough to cause it to run. It may be necessary to repeat this treatment two or three times at in tervals of about three days. would serve for two sides of the yard. A few posts and some chicken netting completed the inclosure. Quick-growing vines were planted and soon screened the yard and poultry house from view and the little shed served its purpose well. All the equipment fo'r house and yard was made also from the useful packing box. Both flocks were given good care and did well and the Black and Smith families enjoyed the strictly fresh poultry products. At the end of the year, however, Mr. Black declared that only a rich man could afford to keep poultry in the city. He was discussing the subject with . Mr. Smith; “Os course, strictly fresh eggs taste better than any you can buy, but heavens, man," their cost! All we had cost me about $2 a dozen, not to mention my work in caring for the flbek. No, sir, no more back yard pou’try keeping for me. I can’t afford it.” Then Mr. Smith spoke up; “Your trouble is that of many others who go into poultry raising. You spent too much on the house and equip ment. Nests made out of orange boxes or coops made out of barrels may not look as elegant as those you can buy but they serve their purpose and cost almost nothing. My ac counts show that the eggs my flock produced cost us much less than we could have bought them on the mar ket, for aside from the flock itself, you see I had little capital invested in the project.” “I guess you are about right,” said Mr. Black, “but I do like everything around my place to be well built.” “So do'l,” retorted Mr. Smith, “but until I have a larger income I fear I can’t have everything I want. When I built that shack over there for my chickens,” he continued, “I didn’t have any guide to go by, but the other day I picked up a United States department of agriculture farmers’ bulletin that tells all about back-yard poultry keeping, and it gives instructions about making just such a house as I made. I see they recommend inexpensnve hous ing for back-yard flocks. It is bulle tin No. 889 and anyone can get it without cost by writing for it. Wish I had had a copy when' I built, for it would have proven mighty helpful.” erect will accommodate eight to ten pairs of pigeons for squab breeding, the poultry specialists in the United States department of agriculture say. The birds mate and begin breeding when six to seven months old. /The male shares with the hen the duty of incubation. The young hatch in about seventeen days. At four weeks old average squabs will weigh about three-quarters of a pound each. Some of the larger ones will weigh over a pound at that age. A good pair of breeders will pro duce six or seven or m6re pairs of squabs a' year. As many as eleven pairs of squabs have been produced by one pair in a year. When produc tion is high the female lays and be gins incubation while she has young still in the nest, leaving the care of them to her mate. Raising squabs has been increas ing in cities in recent years. On farms the tendency has been the other way. On a farm a flock of free pigeons, ff not kept down by killing off the increase, soon be comes a nuisance, destroying grain and doing a great deal of damage, especially on new-seeded ground. a dozen and black-tailed rabbits about 50 cents less. Persons desirous of marketing rabbits were advised that those which had been* shot were preferred to those which had been harried and killed by clubbing, and that the carasses should bd drawn as soon as possible after they had been cooled. The sales made the past season were chiefly in Spokane. Portland, Seattle, and Takoma. Con siderable interest is being shown in the proposal to further extend sale of jack-rabbis meat by trapping the animals in inclosures, properly bait ed. and supplying certain markets with shipments of a definite size at stated intervals. cable in some degree in every part of the country, is that farm wages this year will average 14 per cent higher than they were at the begin ning of the war. Estimates from 350 f-rmers in all parts of New York stfite indicate that experienced farm help, hired by the month, will be paid about $52 a month and board, as compared with $45.50 last year. Experienced married men, not boarded but provided with a house and farm products, are expected to receive on the average about $68.50 a month in cash as compared with S6O last year. Numerous letters to the depart ment of agriculture from its field workers or from farmers indicate a widespread disposition to cut down plantings so that the work of culti vating can be attended to by the farmer himself or by members of his family. The assertion that farm ers cannot pay the high wages de manded in competition with other in dustries and make a profit on their products is frequently made. Many farmers also declare it is unfair to them to be under the necessity of working ten, twelve or more hours a day when the tendency in other industries is toward a shorter work ing day, and a decreased output. I CREO-PINE FENCE POSTS Selected timber —air seasoned— treated with creosote oil under hy draulic pressure prhlch forces the oil far into the wo'od. Last 20 to 40 years worm-proof weather-proof nnd proof against soil acids. Can’t rust —quickly set—lbw prices. All standard sizes. Write for book let and prices. Southern Wood Preserving Company 701 Lee Street, Atlanta, Ga. Manufacturers of Creo-pine Products. Retail Distributors: West Lumber Co., Atlanta, Ga. Carter-Moss Lumber Co., Athens, Ga. Maple Street Warehouse Co., Carrollton, Ga. . Iglivered you FREE 11 JL&*&Your choice of 44 styles, colors fiETOand sizes in the famous line of “RANGER** bicycles. We pay the freight from Chicago to your town. 30 Days Free Trial« miY >ll you select, actual riding test. 11l >I‘,nV»KASy PAYMENTS if desired, at UA&aI jni q . \..s small advance over our Special 11 A 4 Esetory to-Rider cash prices. Do IfiTwSl'nlirw'u■ W not buy until you get our great SwflNi'lw Mw tr^ offer and low prices nt' HRL’as-'I’S and terms. f -g| Tip EC LAMPS. HORNS. I 81l l ‘\ >1 , '1 • ••» U w pedals, single wheels L ■ -J ■twqjl ‘l3 and repair parts for all makes ft!d»r 4‘. fa of bicycles at half usual prices. Agent, W ~ W SENO NO MONEY but write Wanted V.I ( today for the big new Catalog. Boys msk. Vj/ 1| C As) CTCLE COMPANY big money m CM Ir o*B*‘3_jgQClllO*B# i ( All makes, singles or twins * Every machine expertly rebuilt. tested. guaranteed in perfect shape. Send 2c for "Spring Bulletin" of rebuilt motorcycles Saves you half. / / THE WESTERN SUPPLIES Cl) / 366 Hayutln Bldg., Denver. Colo.j I THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1929. For More Than Forty Year? Cotton Growers have known that POTASH PAYS More than 11,651,200 Tons of Potash Salts had been imported and used in the United States in the 20 years previous to January, 1915, when shipments ceased. Os this 6,460,- 700 Tons consisted of KAINIT which the cotton grower knew was both a plant food and a preventive of blight and rust, —with it came also 1,312,400 Tons of 20 per cent MANURE SALT which has the same effects on Cotton, but which was used mainly in mixed fertilizers. Shipments of both Kainit and Manure Salt have been resumed but the shortage of coal and cars and high freight rates make it more desirable to ship Manure Salt, which CONTAINS 20 PER CENT OF ACTUAL POTASH, instead of Kainit, which con tains less than 13 per cent actual Potash. MANURE SALT can be used as a side dressing on Cotton in just the same way as Kainit and will give the same results. Where you used 100 pounds of Kainit, you need to use but 62 pounds of Manure Salt, or 100 pounds of Manure Salt go as far as 161 pounds of Kainit. MANURE SALT has been coming forward in considerable amounts and cotton growers, who can not secure Kainit, should make an effort to get Manure Salt for side dressing to aid in making a big Cotton Crop. Muriate of Potash 50 per cent actual Potash, has been coming forward also, I—loo 1 —100 pounds of Muriate are equivalent to 400 pounds of Kainit or 250 pounds of Manure Salt. These are the three Standard GERMAN Potash Salts that were always used in making cotton fertilizers and have been used for all these years with great profit and WITHOUT ANY DAMAGE TO THE CROP. The supply is not at present as large as in former years, but there is enough to greatly increase the Cotton Crop if you insist on your dealer making the necessary effort to get it for you. DO IT NOV/ Soil and Crop Service Potash Syndicate H, A. Huston, Manager 42 Broadway New York ’3’CO | After Mr. D. R. Mathews, of i —I Atlanta, Ga., covered his ■ igwith “Everwear”Roofing, he then ■ js as follows: “The more I see of your ■ —the better I like it. I believe it is ■ f not better, than roofing sold here W ita at Eight Dollars ($8.00) per square.” ■ SHJNGLES_| y shingle roof is sound, but I am ■ f fire. Ship as soon as you can,” ■ Mr. W. R. Alford, Pres., Camden ■ Oil Co.. Camden, Ala. H I THE I "I have tested your 'Everwear* ■ Roofing. It is the best of any I have ■ 1 seen,” writes Mr. P. C. Leonard, of ■ Lexington, N. C. “The roof ins I bought of you is the best ■ I have ever used.” writes Mr. C. B. Moor. ■ Marietta, Ga. "I covered my dwelling B with it and it makes a beautiful as well as a 9 durable roof. It was no trouble to put OU.” 9 MRWEIR ROOFING price PAY Freight I DIRECT TO YOU FIREPROOF EASY TO PUT ON FIREPROOF— I “Fvr>mvo,r”D t PLAIN STYLE OR I “Everwear” B CANT RUST li n E g Ve F s W Fir e moof: SHINGLE FITTERN| H | Can’t rust. Easy to nail on. Can be IS? shown on house, or plain as shown B used on new buildings or nailed MsrmftWrf°£r?£rrr n)mf rE FOR J REE ■ right over old wood shingles- quick • < FENCE BOOK. and easy. Comes in big, wide pieces. Galvanized Nails, Roofing Ham- IBj&x s - ■ met and Metal Cutting i—xTy — Shears furnished with every EVERY I order, large or small. • BLILDING y' OUR 30 DAY OFFER I Get your roofinc now. SAVES YOU MONEY I wh ile prices are low. We ’ — 1 f sell direct to you- -pay yy' the freight and ship quick. De your own merchant and keep in your own pocket the profit the dealer ISM would get. WRITE TODAY. r\ Kj Your-name and address on a i fflU 1 . l! I postal brings Big Free Samples I TO TEST -<lloli nfll and Roofing Book. ' gi Savannah Fence &. Roofing Co. ugx. I WRITE:TODAY'FOR OUR NEW CATALOG shows all the latest styles in bqj'gies jriich we have ready for immediate \ ' r K\ shipment the famous light running, easy riding Na N/ I LSiMI and long lasting GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGIES— \ '/WWI t buggies built to give years of perfect and satis- * factory service, and every one covered by an kSj! iron-clad guarantee. / FROM THE MANY STYLES SHOWN, 'X\\ 'j select the outfit you like best, and we will ship it. IP / DIRECT TO YOU AT V?/ WHOLESALE PRICE saving you every cent of middlemen’s profits of from $15.00 to $50.00, and guar anteeing you absolutely perfect satisfaction. More than a half milPon pleased customers gained in 16 years’ successful experi ence in dealing direct with the vehicle users are our best friends because We have saved them good honest money on the best buggies they ever owned, and we will do ps well or better for you because we strive to do a little better each day. Better write for new catalog now before you forget—it’s Free and we pay the nostage. I GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGY CO. g 272 MEANS ST.ATLANTA, GA. I 7