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TARMS FOR SALL'
TWO GREAT AUCTION T.AND §A LI
The noted Perry Fstate, consistipe of
Ahaut 400 acres, situsted v the hear
of the famous Sweeiwaler \alley, thive
miles fram Swestiwaior. Tenn, bas beer
subdivided into smail farms and will be
sl &t publle aucilon on reasobsbos
“mwdn»fll) January 12
w 0 teres, Bpite 4. centalning et
3 i ihe tow dtite
town of Cleveland, Teon , bhas h-u.‘k sul
%fl‘n and will be sold st auetios
B e assiring amall U
< L r ity L & . »
of i%—.11“ & ned im‘(:t‘ n‘u.. [
w“‘ of the Lnited Biates
e subdivide large estates and e
m At _auction n\’ttu‘:m.' the South
INTERETATE LaAxD OO
RATION,
Hrintol M'!fl/- 25
PORBATLE AT bargalin, 41 seren o
fevel farm gt 'n Oeomes County Al
w Impßovamentsa and oonves
. beautifuly lotated an ralirosd
:: National 'H:n\:'yh Mlenty wood
good pasture, runnin ter
One mile t'a' 'm:‘ town, with "v:" ve
pehool. Oood community and splendid
stand for cress roads store and biack
amith shop. Not an acre of waste land
on phace Address . Bax W are
Georglan
YOU ocan own & fully matured grape
frult and avooade grove in Florida
without one dollar of cash outiay T hls
epportunity is lmited A liille work on
youP part will sscure Your grove i
want you to make a trip of inspection
ot my expende Marold J. Bryant, West
mrinster N’d_!;_f'h.sf'uln“ . =
SANTED Small farmers to La ne ?
hors and sssist In colonizing this
West Gulf Coast of Flordda hlack sandy
jand, the home of all vegelables, the
Paven of oysters, fad oranges and
mh‘i. salt water breeses and perfect
R A M. Meekiin, Mulat, Fia
WE WANT 1o send every one wanting
t» Mfl iand sample copy of American
g" ulletin, containing land for sale
twenty Btates Write stating kind
wanted American Land Bulletin, Baid
win, Wis. __ e
155 ACRES near Tyler. four seis im
provements, 'rfl"w‘"!‘orvl,' an'r:::u::
P > a: Y
:z.l.h:'::m‘s.. Qgg“por_?:'n’ &' i« Bos
-I‘&!._‘."‘ Co,, Tyler, Toexas -
MIACRER good land, wall watered, fine
stock ',rn. close In, 91.75 acre: 180
;.am fust as good, 1175 acre Jonot]
il !". Ark. g
fi’l&'m 100-acre farm near Aritin
.t r Acre. eARy terms, Owner,
Box Ewnmonl. ™ ‘
R I T T I
FARMS FOR EXCHANGE.
m for small siore eor
other ‘: rgmu property, in eity.
Samue’. 102, care American
RSeT S o i -
FARMS WANTED.
NI AN SN NN A
IF YOU have city property
which you want to trade for a
farm, see us. We can trade i(l
for you.
SMITH & SHANNON,
815.16 Empire Bldg., Ivy 1647,
wfim—w “ready-to-wear
Also m"’mff.'.‘"‘»?:&'...'"i' A::‘r“o‘:f
M otal valne $35,000 Witl ex
either for large improved farm
encumbrunce. Urossman’s Cloak
Co., Atlanta, Ga.
fi*"“‘. ol e
ST 5 LISSO
~ crop on halves)
must farnish all supplies.
b 10 Circle 1, Atlanta, Ga.
o from owner of farm
or fend for sale. C. C
ouston, Texas.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
IBN NI LI
MONEY TO LEND.
WE WOULD LIKE TO
- HAVE SOME APPLI
CATIONS FOR HIGH
CLASS LOANS ON
CENTRAL AND SEMI- '
CENTRAL BUSINESS
PROPERTY. '
LOW RATES.
WE CAN HANDLE
THESE LOANS IN THE
NEXT FEW DAYS AT
LOW RATES.
FORREST & GEORGE
ADAIR.
LOAN AGENTS NEW
- ENGLAND MUTUAL
LIFE INSURANCE
FOR SALE—Six-room house.
~ River car line. large lot.
$1,500—#515.00 a month. No ecash
payment. John Carey, 2 White
hall street.®
'UINI‘H!D'APARTG. FOR RENT.FURNISHED APARTS. FOR RENT.
NEW COLQUITT APARTMENTS.
The beautiful new Colquitt Apartments, at the corner of Highland and
‘Colquitt avenues, are now nearing completion, and will be ready for
occupancy about the first or middle of February. They run in size from
thres to four rooms each, are splendidly equipped with all modern apart
~ ment house devices, and on account of the location, surroundings, acces.
sibility to the center of the city, etc., they are among the most desirable
. every offered for rent. Prices from S3O to S4O, according to size and loca-
L tion.
i BEASLEY & ITARDWICK,
. 605 Empire Building, Phone Ivy 8168.
. i —————————————
FURNISHED APARTMENT FOR RENT.
THREE rooms and private bath, steam heat, electric
~ lights and gas, fine silverware, nice gas range, all uten
sils, everything complete, nothing to buy, for only $37.50
. per month. This is the best small apartment in Atlanta
. for the money. 231 West Peachtree Street.
;f ; E. L. BARGER,
N 528 Grait Bldg. Ivy 764.
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN,
I“L ESTATE FOR “L!..
CONEL CONE,
OVERLOOKING
Beautiful
PIEDMONT PARK,
On NINTH ETREET, East, Ne
&2, Mr, e Hvam—awns the
pace. A two-story, Rike-room
! house, sieeping poreh, servants’
house; Jot 80 by 19, Bure, You
’ can ses ! We'll ake you out -
the mald is there, she'll show it
The Nerth Aide has no betier
‘ home. Warth #OSOO Buy It fer
.00
c (CHAS. CONE REALTY
f 0.,
Main 3361, 215 Peters Bldg
CONE. CONE.
HOMES TAKEN FOR LOANS
WHICH MUST BE SOLD.
EASRY TERMS
$2.500-401 Grant street: lot 50 by 160
to & 1000 t aliey. seven-room »e
with all conveniences, esst 'ruu."-“lr
No. 1444 Dekalb avenue; lot 53
by 180; five-room houss, water, m‘
near Clifton street; §ls per month |
$2.500--35 South Mayson avenue: lot 80
:&-'.'“.."&" Moah:::.‘ &‘l:":u ‘
4 u‘#nn douth Sayson avenue; m‘&
B oSS s 8
per mw&
$6.000- Poplar elrele, Inman Park:
nine-room house, two-story; P.-I off Pu
olid svenus: lot 8 Ly 1M n change
!‘o::"k:..tza'nnfimuu; %fl’)h‘n at
THOMAS J. " WESLEY.
Telephone lvy 5341, 300 Grant Bidg.
HAVE a vary attractive bu with
et S (S o, Sy e
nace heated, m.f wed oak in
three rooms, l& woodwork fin
ished In nl% In plate
Klass, beautiful showers: bath
room has wx.«uum Hinoelum on
e i B o
must be to Appreciated and Is
32'.%."{'54% s, o.l:eru:‘-'t:i. water
ewer ‘n;ry %:a‘u. Lot 80
by 151 to . ,850. Tcrm
Lh-‘:n. assume & of §2.500
monthly. C Ivy 2%, from
btoTp m -
bfi'{fi build your house for
~ you. Material is advaneing
in price every day, and you will
save money by building now.
Let us explain cur monthly pay
ment gl;u to you.
. H. CALDWELL
CONTRACTING CO,,
315-16 Empire Building.
Tvy 1647,
GEORGE SAYS IT IS A REAL
BARGAIN,
OWNER leaving city, must have small
car and some money, T-room bunga
low, exposed beams, electrio lights, ete.
Logl $0x200; one %lock north of Pones
Deleon avenue, o lll’;;luad' excellent
Brspiment o home, ¥ one M. 4308-L.
¢ Y N n the alty limits
L& A('R l'as of College Park,
fronting 1,400 feet on two streets, with
plenty of shade, -v!mmlnf pool, Ihlunfl
rink, 0 by 70 feet, well lighted: a
ready for amusement. Price $13,000.
With inducement, will do some exchang
ing. W. T Johnson, College Park, Ga.
A BUBURBAN HOME —Just outside of
city, on car line, on lot 150 by 3200
feet; is & good two-story, eight-room
house, with cabinet mantels and tile
hearths, which can be bought on terms
f:&!m than oost of house. For particu-
I address P, O, Bpr?_!,_A!h_lltl.. Ga.
GOOD HOME FOR COLORED
FAMILY-No. 236 Foundry ltnot‘ five
rooms; lot 41 by 120; price 31,450;
small cash payment or vacant lot ae
first payment; balance sl2 monthly, Look
it _over, then F&Pl"gn. Ivy 5338,
FOR BALE— r‘g‘ to sell my aulty in
two five-room ngalows, th all
modern conveniences; at ‘5.“ sac
rrifice; 44-46 Grexe! Ave. dress 178
W. College Ave., Decatur, Ga. Decatur
171, or apply 40 Grexel Ave, owner.
OWN YOUR OWN HOME-—To protect
my home I purchased adjoining lot,
am building new bungalow on it. To
secure (ood‘ neighbor will sell very rea
sonable; .u‘y payments, Call Ivy 4954-L.
See owner, §1 Boulevard terrace.
FOR BALI —Florida house, 8 rooms; lot
160 by 400; in Melrose; healthy loca
tion; fine shooting and fishing. &"“
$1,200, or will exchange for Atlanta
propert(. C. J. Gardner, 863 Whitehall
St., Atlanta, Ga.
FOR SALE-—Forced to sell my equity
in a six-room bungalow, with all mod
ern conveniences, at a great sacrifice.
(:\gnnu P. O. Box 798, or call Main
.
FOR SALE OR RENT—Some desirable
|y propertly. a!so farm near p.cklrg
house, for sale cheap for cash. o N
McDonald, Moultrie, Ga.
WEST END—New house, (w 0 baths,
eight rooms, large closets, all conven
fences, furnace. On terms. No loan
West 1449-L. o
HAVE customers for r;nt-ptyln( fn
vestment I:roperg. hone or list
Kromptlv. Otis & Holliday, Peters Bldg.
fain_l7B.
INMAN PARK-E(rht-mm home;
hardwotod g:or-:‘ al fignwnxlcnegi’by
owner, at a bargain. one s
DRCATUR — fivo-room house, sbo.oo
down, balance monthly; all conven
tences. West 1449-L.
OR SALF-—Bargain, six-room bunge
jow, West End; furnace; large lawn.
West 41-J. \
READ #OR PROFIT— SUNDAY AMERICAN WANT ADS-—USE fOR RESULTS
I REAL nml rn SALE On
A<TI A 5
TO EXCHANGE iweive and she-half-
San &e’ of the Fiew m"fi
in . B "dmll am
m b & Short distance
e e ;«v
B 7T 1 vnen i Lave yon
oler? it in hat have
R‘p u*—'twm brick, on & lot
by ! on Main street, in Hraden.
T ios bebay. "the enty Sae 1 tow
flth.én‘hd!h pmn..:t
The ow mhnhun‘?mhwoi
o:‘h reasen you can buy this business
- property mmlw are
;d‘ ot (wo Lundred - 1 foot.
ou cAn buy this business. brick .
ing. and lot for nine thousand fve hun
dred dollare on easy terms. This ip the
mnd'fa'nm'x:?r ATE COMPANY
BRADES nfi« ‘g,s :
A et nd farm ‘o
W araiir e <
W
REAL ESTATE WANTED
g At AN A AN
ll:;‘l u‘-n-cn for reat mt:'l a
n-.m F_r 4 lieliday, Peters
" 10 i mrts e SIS
PLANTS, TREES AND SEEDS
AL VARIGTIES.
OS'ER xu;” nil;; wl.v--flwml cabbage
| plants of the highest quality Price
laxpress colieor. §i.9o per 1,000 uo"pfl
L LOO9O for 5,000 or murd. Varieties: Jer
[sey Wakeflawd, Charieston, Wakefled,
| Karly a'gt.u. Early and Late Pt
Duteh, Bariy Sucosssion, Late Bucoes
sion. Mest, lettuce, onion and Copen
hagen Market 1060 per 1000 Al ‘puru
by mail e per 100, Ten years in the
business snd thousands of satisfied ous
tomers 6re your gusraniess. Alfred
Jousnnet, Mt Fleasant, 8 B i i
10 MILILUN cabhage plants at Lo m
thousand w;nd.l’xla- to—‘fi 10,
or more &t per rm
onlon, lettuce at N 1 “mm .":2
berry plants at u“r 1,000 All kinds
sorghum seed ot N mbmol Neew
corn, special selection & “‘ per bu;hl
-1 Sweat potate rfll ready Apri
z\'m. for prices he Jurbu },‘lhpmm
Company, Box A, "!’g'n\“‘ &
CURETUN NURSERIES -Tree and
piant store, 30 East Hunter. Every
thing for lawn or orchard. Plant now
Phone Main 4-J £t 5
GARDEN ‘n‘:zmm":‘%
sweel . e h |
rommeeetalare. 7P Yobaate “heed "o 3
SREER BEPEE B o oimrities
ENEED NURSERIES, Morrow, Ga., will
mail you free catalogues of ail kinds
of frult trees, vines and planws, grafied
DR UB e
GA!’AOI PLAQPTE!._ e
PROBT-PROOF cabbage plants, Char
leston, w-mmq and Succession; best
early varieties; 75 centa thous: Loy
;( ‘c‘. cents. R F. Nermillion, Hodges,
Jufi.‘omi—i’"- Farly Wakefield
and Succession cabbage m and
oouu"u’hnu. $1.96 per 1 vered,
Rt . Oaks Plant Farm, Fort Green,
CABHAOE AND 'EW(‘.BA ONTON
anp Teaproven Borts Rico potato plants,
- 0 o R
u’ll. Ofi.’n M, %25 Oolx:n Seed Co,
Moultrie, Ga. o E
YOUR cabbage crop comes three weeks
urllo'r‘:{.nm our -m?l. frost.
&a( . special price housand
xle good Co., 113 Ihll’l.l‘; st. |
A - y arsey
: Wakefleld plants ready n::; ‘tu centy
; mev ~five cen housand.
W, ctrord, "‘mu. e
v b
APt Farn ol
Park, Ga.
‘i I'au ! niinigu’ m”'.«mi
| 3 ur ; &
ig § e:rolot‘ .&nm PBros., Lub-
SELECT COTTON SEED
THERE has never been such & demand
for fine seeds; they are scarce and
high; v them while you can. Cleve
land’s & Dol Redding’s select Cleve
u:iutd annamaker's rduru Cleve
o me.:“mn‘l:‘mm:nd' o“nuno'm;
on
5’." man can -bow.'dl.n bushel for
one or 100 bushels. r View Farm,
Paimetto, Ga.
POULTRY, PET AND LIVE STOCK |
B e
. ALL VARIETIES.
A A AA A AR A
FOR BALE-—-Registered Berkshire {vlp
of the best brudlng; also Grist (mv|
dys, Hopkinson ‘Warhorse and Bhawi
neck Pit Game chickens. H. Roque
more, Mansfield, Ga.
FOR SALFP-Ringlip barred rocks, cor-
Yonll and paulets cheap; also my
{l)fl. winners at half g:'leo‘ Address
Dr. E. Em!!":_j"—.l";.D;,"?;..!q_.é"'m'»
WANTED -Five uturw hens. Atlanta
Poultry Yards, 582 . Peachtres St
i!’hono Ivy 831-J.
AI!TAME. .
BLACK-BREASTED game bantams, 3
trios out of pen headed by cock, first
gavannah, Augusta, Valdosta, Colum
bus: second stag Raleigh; $ trio. E. L.
schirm, Savannah, Ga.
S QAR D I i
T 8 THE BLOOD that makes torgrhe
Campines; § out of 14 firsts at Syra
cuse in September. Why not get some
of this blood for your stock now at spe
cial prices? You win, or money back.
Remember “Martling l!\urnnt.ou -
hateh.” The Martling Hennery, P. O.
Box "?.'_.B_’.d_,__.."fl‘u.’t-g.'-f;_.-._. e
SILVER CAMPINES—SS and §10; show
birds our specialty. Good utility hens
and cockerels. $3. Order quick. A. D.
Bradford, Orandview Campine Farm,
Milton, Vt. |
HANDSOME poultry onulofuo free. It
glves prices and full descr ptions of 45
varieties standard bred poultry and
egge. S. A. Hummel, Box 83, Free-
BT I b
SILVER campines, ten hens, laid 2200
eggs in ten months. 32 per 15 eggs.
No stock for sale. N. R. Hamer, Hurts
boro, Ala.
GAMES.
AAAAA AN A A AAR
WORLD'S best Fmo flcmlvg fowl!s and
my famous artridge ames, the
farmer's mortgage lifters. 1916 calendar,
with prices, 10c. Alfred F. Graham,
Moultrie, Ga.
e LEGHORNS.
FOR SALE—Peerless Single Comb
White h&:wrm. Lay, weigh, pay
and win, t the bpest first, it ?a{-.
Winners for your show. Good utility
stock. Satisfaction Q’nnmud. Ryan
Bros., Hendricks, W. Va. ____ _____
WHITE LBGHORNS —Speclal orices on
day-old chickens. Eggs for hatching.
Get them now for eayly layers, ‘‘Model
Strain;”’ none better. Write for prices.
Meodel Poultry Farms, Inc, Colbert, Ga.
SINGLE Comb White Leghorns,
Lawson's egg machine strain. Money
makers. Eggs, stock chohx; one or
thousand; mat(ns list free. .J. Law
son, R, (laveland, Tenn.
WHITE LEGHORN cockerel bargains;
stock bred from pedigreed, record
laying hens; every bird active, vigorous,
and sold on agwonl: large euulog.
Ondawa Farm, Box C., Shushan, N. Y.
J. R. MILLER, of Postelle and Duck
town, Tenn., breeder of single comb
white Leghorns exclusively. Guaranteed
cure for cholera, 25 cents. KEverybody
knows Miller.
SINGLE COMB White Leghorn baby
ohicks, I-Want-Some-More strain. The
better kind. Write for catalog = ané
gflc‘u. Mrs. Minnle Tanger, DBoliing
prings, Pa.
urf INTERESTED in Whll:e Leghorns
or any purpose, record layers, “utility
exhibition, g:ir-old chicks or hltc&ng
ofn, write den Rod Egg Farm, Har
dinshurg, Ky.
ORPINGTONS.
AAAAAA A AP A A A
WHITE ORPINGTONS-—2OO hl‘h class
show birds at prices that will move
them. Patrick & Airgood, Coloradoe
springs, Cole.
POULTRY, PET AND LIVE STOCK,
www
BARRED m% |
ey .a':...-"”“fi! T
.
. 'r_h‘ ?!'. ...&a- .t
¥ have te fl*
- ot & bargain &‘-‘.’ D‘
DL e not wall te wWite.
it akd Ga
s My n :
o ond utiiition »
. pens mated, 4'-'-" haten.
i, Posontior 1 0. 0 Tonkyeps. ot
Wit of 2 pui .......,”“.?".‘.‘
wiker m.o: ’?&nn i r ok,
%)lu, gtuzh. Mass, for clreniar.
White i L
O ey, SR
e e
m” Solfax,” Evanston, ) £
u]é Hre Pureks Harred Rocks
never i the showroom, fees
averags | eaxs last JeAr, corhereis
" ow prices ressonable L
b‘..’:. endricks. W Ve e
RHODE 18LAND REDS.
mfl veively red rese An‘l K
1 and big Geolden Bu "T”
tone u:rm bred to lay: fnest
strain and best biood Mnes, Sell cock
erels cheap Ava Poultry Yards, Au.‘
b ,‘,W"Qv“,m;lh‘i‘,:!‘-w B ‘
WHITE LEGHORNS- a‘m. females and
one wale, §l3 for the ot All healthy |
and some laying now, Cockers! not akin
1o females and he alone is cheap at & ]
William J Lioyd, Chattahooches, Ga. ‘
LEAVING CITY-Must sell prise pen
Mack Langshan chickens: sleven bens
and ro:!y'(glg s Decatur 9 A
HITE ORPINGTONS. ..
Wfi%.t %‘\m Orpingtons; (hres
extra fine sxhibition Bens and & fine
cockerel, & bargain for some One that
will be satisfied with only the best. One
trio. one cockerel and two pullets, for I
Willlam J. Lloyd, Chattahoochee Ga.
WIGTE ORPINGTONS-Best sow! on
earth. 1 have guality. Noted winners
Splendid stock and eggs from superb
mu-!: Catalog free. P Bullington,
Box 228, mfbnwgddn
FOR RALE-Ruft Orpinglond. nice,
healthy, vigorous roun.l stock, 33 &
trio. Few cockerels at §1 sach. Wil
lam J. lLloyd, Chattahoochee, Ga.
| WYANDOTT
BUFF WYANDOTTE yearling hens;
May hatched pullets, cockerels and
encks for sale; heavy laying stmain: "t
h‘.flmnnmo«l; 'pnco reasonable
3M. . !’.!‘W
PAKT Wyandottes ®1 nKted
Hamburg ockerels; Efln and
mt laying strain, o - ;tn
thy stock. Raymond Heald, West
Chester, Pa.
m‘ 106, Mileh p::m How?
Shown for ioe. Both. Ibe. Practieal
Poultry-Goat Farm, East Bridgewater,
Mass. !
“m‘ u: iy [ !t'“ &
pou eculture
a for my circular, "i!.ls‘:n‘n-t
h%u." Dr. Prudnomme, Thurmon'
FOR BALE — Twenty 'thom:‘h ghbred
white Wmflom hens at §1.50 each
that were from fine stock. F. P.
Roemer, Montgomery, Ala.
M £OU
(CONKEY SAYS:—
DON'T worry: Conkey's Roup Pills are
just the thing for treating individua!
cases of colds or roup. Conkey's new
pouitry book free with & package. Deal
ers _ev here.
'Aflfi—m as white leghorn pal
lots, guineas, ducks, geese peafowis,
ote. State lowest price. Gibson, ld{
Powers St |
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE for_game
chickens, twenty oclean-leg Yellow
Tumbler la:ooal Ballor SBmith, Meo-
Donough, Ga. e
Flflmh
w\a MONEY BREEDING SQUABS.
1918 demand Mg'nt ever. Squad
book free, telling how Michigan hired
man now works for himself breading
PR squabs for 35 dozen, and how Indi
ana man sold 4,652 PR 1\1.& for 51,265,
and cured himself of desire to leave
tarm: how a South Carolina man mails
PR sauabs 125 miles to city hotel at
$4.25 qozen. You can do the same. More
money making experiences. How to get
g to $8 dozen: start small. grow big.
any romon customers. Write to—dn‘
for this big free hook. Plymouth Roe
!Tub Co., 425 Howard K St, Melrose
Highlands Massachusetts, }
PIGEON FEED.
Saginaw, 100 Ibs. . . . . .$3.25
Esco XX, 100 Ibs. . ~ . . . 3.00
Peanuts, 100 Ibs. . . - . . 3.50
EVERETT SEED CO.,
All Kinds of Supplies.
DOGS.
AT PUBLIC STUD,
THE GREAT ENGLISH SET
TER, GENERAL WHITE
STONE, F. D. 8. B. 15720.
S ’
COUNT WHITESTONE
MARION MILLS IL
HERE !s one of the voxg few llvlni sons
of the world famous COUNT WHITE
STONE, who sired more winners than
nng dog that ever lived. The GICNERAI,
is himself a flelgd trial winner and a fin
ished shooting dog, very stylish, and the
fastest dog 1 ever saw. %Vlll run him
against any dog In Qeorgia, I paid a
very fancy rrlco for the GENERAL and
had him shipped 8,000 miles to Atlanta
in order to get more of his kind in
Georgia. Will charge a fee of $25. For
extended pedlgren and full particulars,
address J. 8. Collins, 7)4 Em?lro Build
ing. Atlanta, Ga. Phone Ivy 7190.
BlG———=— RED-————— CARNEAUX
Extra large high grade utllity and
show Dbirds, producing squabs every
month in the year that wal‘fh from 20
to 24 ounces at four weeks old. No stock
welghing less than 44 ounces to the =oir
and up to 50 ounces. True Carneaux
types and sold on guarantee plan W.
A. Mahaffey, Route 7, Box {O, !‘ort‘
Worth. Texas. |
SIO.OO STLVER CUP.
WAS WON by our Extra Plymouth Rock
~_ Homers in the last Columbus show.
‘Get in your order now for a few pairs
‘of these fine birds, $1.75 yer Palr.
MILFORD BROS., COLUMBUS, GA.
__Members Dixie Pilgeon Assoclation.
FOR SALF—2OO high-class Jacobins of
' the modern type. These birds are
bred from the best stogk that could be
bought in America :gd abroad. No
birds for less than $3. Show birds a
specialty. George W. Meyer, 43 Chest
nut St., Boyertown, Pa.
PIGEONS—White Homers, White Swiss
Mondaines, Belgian Carneaux, Enflllh
Giant Runts, all large, healthy birds;
\maud and working; will sell cheap;
money back if they don’'t please. Write
for prices. H. B. Gordon, 112 Allen St
Owensboro, Ky. ¢
FANCY p:feons. carneaux, white
‘:‘nn. maltese, white homers, gilant
h®mers, large crosses and all other
breeds at reasonable prices. Alston
S%uab Farm Co., 38 North Beacon St.,
~Allston, Mass,
"HOMERS AND CARNEAUX —Healthy,
prolific. Show and utility birds rea
sonable. Elxgt years' breod!n),. la
formation free. gmo wants. National
Squab Farm, Wallace Willlams, Prop.,
I\asca, Texas.
FOUNDATION STOCK Carneaux. Start
small, watch them grow. We have
the birds. Write your wants. All breed
ers guaranteed as represented. Quincy
Carneaux Co., Box 62, Quiney, Xv.
BARGAINS—Squab Breeders—Bargains.
Mated and working Homers, $1 per
pair; mated and working Carneaux, $3
al;_‘rclr' unmated Carneauxy s§l .uh.‘
4 E. Swihart, Sturgis, Mich.
. w. PEY AND LIVE m‘
’J N@ . ..‘4Ol 55
'} tor m'.t::‘ . 'u“!
Hogen
'.‘.'::J"G‘.H." m-u.."h‘ A.&:‘.. "
Gillaite street. Atiants, 0o
BCVER TP Tor best !g :R
b ol
‘umd foaren ‘:S‘::":uu ms‘
Columbos ahaw te g‘v wants .
ik PLR o
Tie® FTH have an inlernational
reputation, tu:"ou recing records
o’ rekta iy b obrairatis
Write for partieulars Edwin 8. MHun
sioker, Norristown, Pa
imz: T.K!m ufi .
‘hu«.;:flu"o for fancy :t"‘dt 2
jare .mmv everywisre. K G
| Webure, Joes. e
[7O FNCOURAGE ~ the fanc -, will |
R e S
grm-o MHarry &uumumld ost
nd Atlanta
!l’fl'fi?i"“i.f Teaient rec
! I.n¢ );-‘un n AUO'::‘”I have a
gz:i::n“tl:do. D ‘ ¥ Bomar, &&111.
0 ""Blfl & Carneaus. squab
t'b:‘w‘fl\ fllfuu. [ mor.u‘ n.‘:
Show birde, 38 each up. Won thres cups
at Hovsten. . J Lane, Hous Texas
VOR SALE—BB White hen one.
s end gsy o
Hafiee "Hioe W inbie B Chicage, T
SQUAR RATEING # profitable when
| you_start right "fi‘ for pur prices
on Carneaux and omer Hfi
Crowley Farmas, nil"“m . X
'CAR{‘M[‘!’ and Runts, lév pairs for
| sale; prices um-u, my
l-la records at Garden g xh“
AJ H-fl#:,_g(m s
’ %? tor o
P. A
b L
A
.fit.*’..'fi'a':..‘fié, Y
Ave. Atlanta, Ga .
e
‘Mmla m,
WANTED lot wEi.t:. ::mon and white
Gibson, 104 Powsrs 8t "
Rfi:‘fiflf'—fi .;:‘in of carneaus,
maltese . pigmy tars.
Best. siock Main 330 t *
POULTRY REMEDIES —
CONKEY SAYS:—
DON'T worry; hens. like hu et
“fagged out™ at times, bulne::ior-
Poultry Tonie puts new life into them
and makes them enjoy working for you.
Dealers everywhere.
BELOIAN HARES.
A A
THOROUGHBREL Rufus Red Belgian
hares, red a-‘hr'lcr‘ my stock is full
Mlfln‘d, »a tiataction ¨“‘.
Charles C. . Keys, 1219 E ard St
LR it
QUINEA PIGS, .
MMWW
FOR BALE--Guinea pigs, rabbite, ring
- doves, white ?ml fancy pigeons,
spotted rats, white rats, fancy mice
John M. Ormelias, 1719 East Mason
e e eT T
| INFA PIGS nis%e fine pe
" ehildren and find ready sale at good
prices. breeders and young stock for
sale 1 M Young Jr. Wayeross Ga.
PET STOCK.
I"O'I;MIA:‘?:;:". mice at “1' & palr:
. & pair; specia on
'6{& lots. KEd. Schwing, I\‘mle:'l.
fiofim‘lAmu' W“:fi'o‘pmtco at w“—e s pair;
white ra & palr; spec on
lg’r"n lots. Bd. Schwing, Miadletown,
0. i
- e WEEEEm eu
e
FOR SALE--Pointers, setters, shep
herds, oollles, houu&l. poodies, ter
riers, spitz, bulldogs or pupe, reason
able. Also pit game chickens. The
fighting kind. Stamp for booklet. Talk
'mf parrot, white rabbits. R. L. Dar
nall, Willlamston, 8. C.___ ______
WIHITE BULL TERRIER, female, one
vear old, Female pointer, one year
old, untrained, sls each, or will ex-
OSSR 10l nadeea pa ot beae
ounds, o
a:und!. trained. Fred filfl. Monroe,
fii YOU want a pointer that finds mc‘
birda? Does all but retrieve. Shl;'v?od‘
on three days' approval to responsible
party, $20.00. Less than it cost to raise,
minus training. T. H. Shellman, Cedar
town, Ga.
GENUINE fox terriers, “:l months
old: eolors white with yellow and
dark in faces; males $4; females $2.50.
Send postal order. B. W. Springfield,
Dalton, Ga.
WANTED—TO exchange a Eifiofi
English setter male pup, 7 months old,
for a registered English setter bitch. C.
A. Renfroe, Lumber City, Ga.
FOR SALE--One thmugsm white
English _buli up. Male, age five
montgo Price fit. Address Box 321,
Douglaciille, G&.
THOROUGHBRED Liewellyn _setter:
partly trained; 1 year old; fast. wil
:}ell cheap. Howard Wall, Americus,
a.
[RAVING CITY —Will sell bull terrier
biteh, with four fine pups. Phone
Decatur 79, $26.
——————— S ——— SRR
COWS. 3
YOUNG Jersey cow, fresh in milk; heifer
calf: English Berkshire pigs, ten
weeks old, $6 each; brood.sows, herd
boars, fox terrier dogs and gupo; thirty
five varieties of thoroughbred poultry
and eggs from same. College View
Farm, College Park, Ga. Atlanta phone
49 East Point Exchange. |
FOR SALP—-BIG BEEF cow. 130
CREW STREET. MAIN 3842-7.
HORSES, MULES, VEHICLES, ETC.
e A A A AAN
FOR SALE—Ons horse, one new set of
brass-mounted buggy harness, one
new set one-horse wagon harness. Box
830, care Georglan, or call Main 4468-J.
FOR RENT--Horses, wagons, buggies,
by the hour or day. ‘gn hltmsll.
ngr_‘__z_x_ga,__flgnm 1894, 2
FOR SALE—Thoroughbred Berkshire
pigs for male at $§ each. Agply to J.
Thomas Batson, West Point, Ga.
HOGS.
A NSNS NSNS
: BERKSHIRE HOGS
SPECIAL offerlng of boars, ready for
service, bred and open gflfs. A com
bination of individual excellenie with
‘prncucal utility, size as well as juality
and breeding. Fair View Farm, Pal-
BIARRO, UM Let
AGENTS—~We will lhxpgon sample ;;llr
of the famous O. 1. C. hof' on time
and give ngency to first “t?p? icant; two
weighed 2, pounds. rite for free
book, ‘“The Hog from Birth to Sale."
The L. P. Silver Co., 561 Vickers Bldg.,
Cleveland. Ohio.
TWENTY-FIVE largest Poland China
and Berkshire sows in farrow;. none
better; va first nine months old only
§5 each. Write yvour wants, KEast Lake
Farm, Dalton, Ga.
DUROC-JERSEY hogs, Tegistered bred
sows, service boars, all cherry-red,
fine specimens; cheap for quick sale.
gema.nd the best. R. O. Sams, Newborn,
a.
FOR SALF_Boar, about 220 pounds.
Mudbeckner, Lakewood Park.
HORSES, WAGONS AND BUGGIES
FOR RENT.
mw\m
FOff RENT-—-Horses, wagons, buTu.
by the hour or day. 209 Whitehall St.
Main 28398, Atlanta phone 1384. |
USE SUNDAY AMERICAN 1
| WANT ADS.
§ Pigeons. Poultry and Live Stock ‘
| By JNO. S. McCREIGHT. {
Address all communications to the Pigeon, Pouliry and Live Stock Dept, i
The Georgian Company, 20 B. Aladema St Atients, Ge. {
WWMW
The New Corneaux Standard
[y.fi-mmmw g < - -
‘ ‘ ‘ é
]
* ll" - - =
P A ’
Bred by C. J. Lane, MHouston, Texss
By W. A. MeHAFFEY, Ft. Worth, Tex.
lam Weclosing eopy ©of a letter I have
written Frank Lee Miles, which ex
presses my views concerning a sow
changes In the Carneaux standand:
“1 will regret 10 ses the Dixle Pigeon
Assoolation have one standard and the
International Carneaux Club have one
different. Why can't they agree on ohe
standard”
The bird which the Dixie
Assoclation sdopled for its atum
not rounded oul enough In the breast
His carriage s good and neck fine, back
ao‘wu”::w. but he s too tall
epth y.
?o following was sent Mr. Miles:
write you as president of the In
ternational Carneaux Club, understand
ing that there are contemplated cnnfu
to be made At your coming meeting
in the standard for Red Carnesux Pig
eons. Whatever cm{:. are nuq‘ 1
trust they will be »0 p h‘uu& it
that any judge may have n:.u;u. in
piacing awards according new
tm
; “1, for one, feel that type and color
t.l: in ndd“ z‘ ’.l; T eo!l::
1 , type r oen
R“pdlb. the %Th« 2% poT;h u‘\. dl
ot et uy“m‘n Yor. & Nwhg
2 y w
::’ iulnt‘ roundot with
ing weil apart, broad back and
shoulders, close muaf w.t:r. tall me
dium hm stout b and neck,
well rou out over breast and back,
bird standing erect at about 8 degrees
angle. | would llke to see the color
more definitely expressed, say dark bay
red or deep mhornr red, free from
any clate or smntty cast, under color
shading lighter to M‘. free from ll‘
slata or stons color. am very muc
of the opinion that the standard for
mt should be raised. 1 would say
t male should be 21 to 25 ounces,
a range of 4 ounces; adult hens 1§ to
23 ounces; young males 20 to 24 ounces,
Young hens 18 *u 20 ounces. This would
not place tham In & class with the
larger .rd-ouf‘mnu. etc., and would
place them w they belong. above
the smaller varieties, and, in my mind
. most ideal m:‘f’or b;!b uuug u:’
oy ob
(ahioa WU adstroring & troe’ Car
neaux type.
“1 trust that whatever you and your
committes declde upon in making any
ehanges, it will be done for the ad
vancement of the Carneaux pigeon, both
in the North and in our Soutbland."
The Collle and the Poultryman,
From time past remembrance mn!
have been lovers of the dog, dbut it is
only within recent years that the beau
tiful and intelligent collie has com-‘
to his own, and in the present day the
high and ihe low, the rich and the
poor, must have & collie. And there
Are many Pod reasons for this, but
more especially the two reasons, viz:
that the collie is not only one of the
i anstaw oy
|R T B & 1
SRR M M e o %
Sk
| i i Wi 1
g S .J' R 3
| g e e g
st e P 8
I b 2 ARG fi* %y
AR <
T
S A
RO 0 S
& % TR {
eo b S
First Cock, Mouston, Texas, Owned by
C. J. Lane.
most beautiful, but at the same time
one of the most intelligent of all the
dog family. The man of business, the
farmer, the lady of millions, the wo
man tired of life, the mother with
child, the child itself, wants a collle—
and why? Because the collie is not
only a companion that understands,
or seems to understand, all that you
say, but he is a friend, a companion
and a lover, all in one; moreover, he
{s faithful and to be trusted.
But thie is not what 1 started to
say. ] had in mind the usefulness of
the collie to the roultrym-n. Every
poultryman who Is keeping poultry
not only because he likes poultry, but
as a business, knows how .very im
portant it is to have a faithful watch
dog, one that can be depended upon
at all times. To such 1 would say.
What you need is a good collle—and
why? Because yoy can train your
oollie not only to be a watchdog, bul
you oan make a boon companion, but
of him, a companion that will in most
cases be of greater comfort to you
than a human friend—and why? Be
cause once he is friend and companion,
you need never fear that any outside
influence will turn him against vou. He
is your friend through thick and thin,
whether you have much for him to eat
or little, and though you maAay scold
him one moment, the next he is will
ing to take you as though you had
never been forced to scold him.
I belleve the most perfect watchdog
that a poultryman can have is the Col
lle, but his usefulness does not end
there, as it is easily possible to train
him to do many different things, just
as the cattleman can readily train his
collie to take care of a drove of COWS,
loavinfi them in the care of his faith
ful collie, no matter where he himself
mfi' be.
owever, in buying a collle, pleass
bear in mind this one great and impor
tant fact: If you want a collie that is
easy to train, that is not stubborn and
wild, ses to {t that both the dam and
the stud are of the trus, pure-blooded
t{po. If you T’et a collle with mongrel
blood it will be almost impossible to
train him.—Dr. R. 8. Clymer.
The Superiority of the Bull Terrier.
The bull terrier is the gentleman of
the dog family. He knows how to con
duot himself under all circumstances;
he has a stylish manner, a graceful car
riage. One is not ashamed to take him
for a walk along the street, for he has
an upright carriage, up on his toes
every minute, never cringing; he is full
of {rlt and determination, yet obe
dient—a gentleman, not looking for
trouble, vet perfectly able and willing,
to defend himself or those he loves.
Ready to defend the home, day or night.l
{et of a peaceful disposition. Let the
aby pull his tail or slap him, see him
as he patiently gets up and walks away
and finds anothér place to finish his
nap; yvet if a stranger comes in and at-
ATLANTA, GA, SUNDAY, JANUARY _ 1916,
tempts to clui that samae little one
or any of other children, see hl-sl
uul and ready he s to defend them
1 & strange oat n-obla the yard,
MA.&:. cateh the little chiokens, or
:u " "'m"ifi'-" - M‘l‘
WAy, or A comes
'hm.wt harm the children, and he
will it and if necessary fght
as long as he has breath. Most people
have an idea that the buill terrier &s &
clase is of & mean disposition, cross
and to enap or bite. 1 have owned
Lfl never yet had one which
to bite any of my own family,
yot some of them would not aliow &
nn%“ touch one of the chfl
dren. pa -es‘pooph ovm-m
dm«mhno} r the jime or
Samin b these ' uifes aa” cutived
on, Q ou
above are natural in the bull terrier.
. ey with grecefs
on, together f'\“
hines ‘omly. head and limbs, all set off
with the correctly carried beautifully
shaped tall of the buil terrier, thod_“bm
come an admirer of this part jar |
breed, almost to the exclusions of all
others.—Charles R. Saunders.
A SuccessFul Poyltry Woman.
Mrs. Leon J. Healy, %fl"u her
experience with pouitry In The m, Four
Poultry Journal, has the following to
say:
ooy bors 4.3 Srm e covn
| a t most of my life 3
in faot, all but the time that I attended
or taught school. It was my ambition
to be & '-ch:l ma‘'am,’ so I stuck to it
untdl 1 the diploma and certifi
cate. Never was much of & hand to
‘Bive .fi" and even now 1 hate like fury
:.o f of accomplishing what 1 pian
o 40.
‘leo 1 attended school 1 did quite
a lot of newspaper work; wrote up the
“locals and ponoflz funerals, wed
dings, eto., and have done 80 ever since.
It's like = 'hu:r bad ocold—something
I can't get rid easily.
“When [ wasn't In school I used to
like pnu&.'dl to get out to the hen
house or chioken yard, but my moth
or didn’'t care to have me or any one
::‘n :’lx‘oom hom‘ndll l'nmufln‘ -ro':md‘
. ¢ w enough to
stay lm”.n"bho 'dtdn!(mwnm anybody
to scare the life out of the nulng
hens.' 1 eame in pretty bandy thous
when she had her semtfannual clean-up
to get the wheelbarrow and haul the
refuse to the en for fertilizer, to
scald the roosts by d!vplnr them in & bls
fron kettie of bolilng Iye-water, an
other odd jobs. So, you ses, the ex
perience that 1 had {n the chicken busi
ness before I sallied out ‘:’u"{ for my-~
self wasn't very much; t did get
this much thoroughly learned: ‘Look
out for mites,’ ‘Koer the house clean,’
I'!‘ood the youu% poults onlon tops.’ Yes,
and I almost forgot the ducks, ‘Get
them up every mfim during the laying
season or Lou wil! not get the oq‘l
and ‘Don't let the young ones rt to the
stream before they are full-feathered,
because there are skunks, minks and
weasels who will get the lion's share.’
“When I decided to take up domes
tio sclence instead of teaching—not as
an experiment, but as a lifetime ocou
pation—l was presented with several
dozen hens as a wedding present. Some
were grade Barred Rocks, some Brown
Leghorns, and the rest were Lun hens.
1 had always liked thoroughbreds and
had & great desire to own such a flock
myself, but as yet I di¢ not have the
wherewithal, so 1 was mighty glad to
g:t the ez: from my hens, and had to
satisfi with ‘any old chickens.’
And, O, how 1 did want to set some
hens. The ducks wers laying and so
were the hens, but all the neighbors
had hens setting, and if mine had not
beer laying so well I wouldn’t have been
sure they were not roosters. But they
finally went to setting and I managed
to get some ready to fry by the time
sweet potatoes were large enough to
cook. .
“My little chickens had head lice and
& neighbor told me to use equal parts
of kerosene and lard and apply under
the hens’ wh\g, and that in this way
the little shic would gct enough on
their heads to kill the lice. 1 con
cluded if that was a good way to keep
the lice off the lttle chicks I would
grease the setting hens, too. An ounce
of prevention would be worth a pound
of cure. It no- doubt chontod the em
bryo ohicks from getting any lice, but
it also .rnvontod them from getting
enough air to live; consequently they did
not hatoh. It was about & pound of pre
vention.
“1 also tried my hand at raising ducks
and was more successful with them.
But I had to round them ur before
every shower and at night drive them
home, and to sum up my first year's
work, it wasn’'t much of a suocess. But
I learned many th(ng:.:nd learned, too,
that some of the °* hands’ in the
chicken business did not always get
|portoet results.
o 3 < 3 g
3 & 5 3 -
3 W ? et
X - o %
. 3
. 2 W SN 3 .
’ 3 e a 8
: ¥
A LR . o ¥+
. R et rin
e S .
NN S
STI R Ry
AR g 2 o PN
DR : B ot
VR AR
S e Y
. A S
2 AR
SRR
- X
sOe A S
SRR s 5 3
Garnsaux Hen, first Houston, Texas,
©71914; second, 1915, 23 In Class. Bred
by C. J. Lane.
. “For the next two or thres vears I
had better luck, but not yet very sat
|sfactory results. I missed the check
'which always came at the end of the
month when I was teaching and felt
that I was sort of a failure, so I just
sat down and looked myself over and
came to this conclusion: ‘You have
lost all your backbone—if you would
sit down and study the nature of chick
ens just as you studied vour geography,
history, Latin, geometry and the rest,
g;ou mfg‘ht expect some results. Your
ens do not lay in winter—they do not
set when they oufht to,’ etc. After
finding a lot of fault with the hene
I concluded to read uP on the subject
of oultrg keeping. looked up the
pouTtry epartments in all the farm
papers, found some pamphlets, sent for
some iovomment bullatins and went
to work accordingly. If what I read
seemed reasonable I tried it out if
I though& an article good, clipped it
and saved it for future use. I bought
an incubator, much to the consterna
tion of some of my neighbors, and somse
R SRR A R ANS
.
- “m!umfl“'f
turity | culled ot ll‘.
on the market, all but
§ kept and twe ecoc
the nwl' the park
next ¥ raised WO 1
some of the cockerels for
rest on the markel, and
business commenced 10 loom
inn-nuu But after |
menced n.a:cfi
}u"zumt t .":lfit
| ° ‘
53‘.7 would preveni %
;&'m never w.
| ‘s A oertaln
| "um?hwb
i Bacods .-:.z{.__'a' a
“2 am in my ines .'3
read t was tl".
I.: on the of .
:;1 l:.'wu-“.m.
dis and in about o
2 left. 1 euduul‘“'l.l -as
diarrhen, but opened some of
chicks and found sand In “‘”
'u—r‘ They were so full
belleve It would ::n been
sible to crowd In
ehicks use no discretion g“.'
what goes Into thelr mouthe,
I have seen lhbrno th
.mlm-ot.mll m
"u'm&ln. ve made many ures
and had 1 fesl -nmb.
1 uv&w pretty -'dhl. a
{3 buy the tatting-cottom:
with fresh eggs and meat the
sround, pay the miscellanecus
that ‘come n:‘m- inconceivable cop
ners, and y checolates too (and
there are four of us and all have &
loollh fov. .sumlnu\.
“1 ban my frat
six years ago, and hm to ‘
SVery year
"mmlyl--.m‘hmz
woman wanied to know If ahe
make SIOO In one year from W
poultry, It vunl‘u!!
‘get the SIOO-—-and “what :
ens should she keep™ One
chickens au more guited to
person’s n than to Wt
o 8 .:'l‘la :«:fl:l&m
& marke w
o the conditions under which they are
to be raised. Then study breed,
know thelr origin, their m
u-wutwrwm
according to the sta . Get_ youwr
business well in hand. know and un~
derstand it. You will mest the scoun
drel, the bluffer and the honest -a
Act on the square. Read, study
think leyonnd(. If you Just
.u'“ ufll .not e 'mcry ch
w
live. There B ifficuities and’ oheta
cles to overcome in any business ven
m"& but our efforts -ni t;.?-mu
we do our part and our
“It -«:u uln.l'oo looa::“"dl all of
‘my troubles—alil a" “fim
everything and everything _of oe-e
every .
thing,’ and It may be applied to
!wu]{ry industry as well as unhu? p
Exceed 1915,Forecast
Cuba's sugar crop this Year is expec
to exceed 1916 production by m.a
tons. The domestic sugar increass of
100000 tons over last year's recosd
figures
Discussing the outiook the A. H. Lame
born Co. says:
“Present indications are that the
soarcity of spol supplies of cane sugar in
the United States market will oonunu,
to be & factor until the second hßif o
January. By the end of January, Cuba
shoud be %muucmf sugar in sufficiens
volume to bring relief to the situation.
However, there is nothing to indicate
any substantial doch?o from present
prices. The extent of the advance in
prices, during the latter part of l’t‘;
will depend ufou the out-turn of t
SUgRr cr;X.ot ava, Mauritius, Australia.
Fiji Isiands, Argentina, and the domes~
tic beet crop; in other words, on the
countries whioh market during thc.m
ond half of the year. It seems pro
these countries will produce more than
the grenm season, as ‘with the exception
of the domestic beet crop they in every
instance made short crops.'
Steel Demand Large;
’
Mills Reject Orders
NEW YORK, J ~~The demand for
steel from bfih-&em and domestie
consumers continues urgent, and ef
forts are being made by many to have
the mills uo«%g tonnages for second
half delivery. he efforts are meeting
with indifferent syccess, though some
light tonnages are being sandwiched m
here and there on June rolling schedulea. ,
France and Italy are ln&ulfln( Lere
for additional tonnages of billets and
round bars, undeterred by the facts that
mills rejected offers of business in De
cember, while the fovommentl them-«
selves rotu:l?dh tofle ose on lo::u l'?:
nages on which prices were quo
quotations were ro‘livdod as to:‘\
and the renewing of the inquiries
taken to indicate a desire to feel o
the mills on the question of price wg
deliveries advanged a trifle from
original inquiry.
——————
$435,875,000 T. 8.
Gold Imports in 19156
i
. WASHINGTON, Jan, _=Gold {
ported into the United Stitss batwe:
January 1 and December 24, in P
amounted to $435,875,000, the L
Reserve Board announces, Aboul
gzxz.ooo.ooo.wu in foreign ooln, abm
165,000,000 in United States ooin
about $44,000,000 in bullion. About s2Bo\~
000,000 came through New York .or
Canada into the United States. q:
Francisco, however, reoeived ab
$66,000,000. ’
el ————
Woolworth Sales in
December 12,193,735
NEW YORK, Jaz. The sales of the
F. W. Woolworth L‘o. for Decem
amounted to $1£,193,735, an increase
31,691,862, or 16.11 per cent. The
gtores’ share of this increase was 891%-
204, . For the year ended December 81
last the sales were $75,080,840, a 2
of $6,363,880, or 8.37 per cent. The
stores’ share of this gain was $3,357,
3 !
Railroads’ Nov. Net
Revenue $883,621,936
e
WASHINGTON, Jan. —A statement®
just issued by the Interstate Commerce
Commission shows that for Novemk
140 railroads earned $226,742,644,expend~
ed $163,220,708 and had net revenues of
$83,521,036. For November, 1914, the
net revenue of these carriers totaled
$49,176,520.
- HUTTON cho. CQTTON LETTE
NEW YORK, Jan. ~.—Liverpool ca
lower than due to-day, but reports
large fi;urchues of spos at full prioe
in Arkansas and Tex for export
checked the selling. One Texas grn
{s saild to have bought 12,000 bal
while a big St. Louis firm took a@
bales at 13 cents for round lot. Thie
buying for export is thought to fores
cast early relief to the freight con
tion, which, if true, means a hl:l;.‘
market.
The political atmosphere was clears@
to-day by the announcement frog
Washington that Germany had eed
in every respect to the demands :Ft.hh
country regarding submarine warfare.
With this ‘“bugaboo’” out of the way.x
that is now needed to encourage tr.
ers to take bull side is more vessels
to wrg the cotton. It is rumored tismt
Great Britain will ahortglg furnish the
ships and limit the freight rates.to
per hundred. - Relief of some Kkind
cartainly not far distant,