Newspaper Page Text
UNFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING
ROOMS FOR RENT.
ONE or twb- unfurnisned or mminy pos:
0 y fur
u.lf}td front rooms, kitchenette. Ivy
TWO rooms, kitchenetts; priv: 4
france. 238 Gak St Cor. Lawton. West
'de nice first-floor unfurnis}
R&i& Pulliam street. Main ?oss:f?,, T
W
water; 251 Central, ”Ad‘ltxlfs.bdth' .-
TWO nice unfurnisheq rooms - louse
keeping. Ivy 5878.7. > sos house-
B e
FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED
- HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS
FOR RENT.
R A AR e
TWO nice rooms, furnished -
nished. _Phone Main 2504.1 " "7 10T
_—— —_— e
FURNISHED APARTS. FOR RENT
mw-ww%,_
FIVE-ROOM apartment, close in, North
Side; all conveniences; splendidly ar
ranged; cool porches; A-1 personal; very
fiasonnble to good tenant. References,
ain 1228,
S 800 RN oeet st ot
%WROOM apartment to refineq
adults in home with owner; private
&L "ance, bath and Kitchenette, s{,eeping
rggsu 8 _wmdows. 40 Kennesaw. Ivy
NEATLY furnished s—room3fi. hot and
cold water, electricity, gleeping porch,
bath; private entrance and phone; de
sirable location. West 583,
FAMILY GOING AWAY FOR SUMMER
WISH TO SUBLEASE 5-ROOM
APARTMENT:; EVERY MODERN CON
VENIENCE, IVY 9323,
FOR 1. ¥NT—Furnished apartment: two
rooms and lavatory; one room inclosed
in glass, ‘o gentleman. Phone Ivy 5219-J,
SRR kel Y R
UNFURN'SHED APARTMENTS
+'QR RENT,
AR AA A A AAAAA AT A AAAA AN AAN AN,
FRANCES
JUNCTION
PEACHTREE AND lIVY.
ROOMS, single or ensuite. Rates rea
sonable.
WITH OWNER, NEW THREE-ROOM
APARTMENT; SCREENED SLEEP
ING PORCH, BATH, LIVING PORCH.
IVY 7963-7 AFTER 6 P. M.
THREE-ROOM flat, Kkitchenette and
porcelain bath; gas, North Side; close;
Dice; $12.60. Phone owner, Ivy '2155.
WILL sublet four-room apartment and
sleeping fioroh. on Durant place, just
oft Ponce DeLeon: $33. Ivy 7070-1..
e T 900, VY (oL,
FURNISHED CR UNFURNISHED‘
APARTMENTS FOR RENT. |
_MM-MM\.\AM ‘
IN BEST locality, one three-room, one
four-room apartment; sleening porches.
For summer or longer. Ivy §2§9:~L_~ |
APARTMENT four rooms, with modern |
conveniences. Ideal location. Ivy
2945-J, |
m—:_z—::::: }
\
FURNISHED HOUSES FOR RENT.
MWAAWMMAW
BEAUTIFULLY furnished home, sleep-‘
ing porch, two baths, cheap rent.
“‘North Side,” care Georgian.
L e T
UNFURNISHED HOUSES
FOR RENT. 1
A A AP AN AAP PAAAA I A
ABSOLUTELY new five-room bungalow, }
on Boulevard terrace: all improve
ments; furnace, tile bath; very reason- |
able to desirable tenant; by the month
or lease. CflLvaJ.-",-Et;l«_m.qrnms%;"
FIVE-ROOM bungalow: modern: near
Milton Avenue School; select neighbor- |
hood; lot fenced; ideal location for phy
siclan. Owner, Box 3, care Georgian.
Ivy 1377. |
SIX-ROOM cotlafie: modern; near Mil
ton Avenue School; five lots fenced:
siable, fruit. Box 126, care Georgian.
Ivg_ 1377, SRR
R RENT--Bix-room bungalow, large
porches, nice shade, reasonable rent
if taken at once. 79 Druid place. Ivy
.
FIVE-ROOM cottage: all conveniences.
34 Dargan St., West End. West 339.
18 SIMPSON, 10-R. 106 min. walk. Conv.
S3O. Glover's, 21; Walton
g T T
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
AA A AAAAANAA AANAR A AAASAA AN
NEAT NORTH SIDE BUNGALOW.
EVERY MODERN CONVENIENCE.
HAS six rooms; tile bath; excellent lo
cation: close to car; just off of High
land avenue; a beauty. Call and let ma
show you this. JPrice $5,0600, Terms
eagy. Call Owner, Ivy 6770-J, evenings
315 Peters Bldg.
FOR SALE--Bs owner, new 7-room
brick veneer bungalow; hardwood
floors, art glass doors, tile bath, large
rooms, lleepini porch, big, shady lot;
built by day labor; everything the bes::
will gacrifice to good party: terms; rea
son for selling, have purchaged larger
space., 5556 Lucile Ave. West 208,
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. REAL ESTATE FCR SALE.
MMMWMANWW\WM\AMWM
HOMES FOR COLORED PEOPLE.
' DUNLAP STREET. | GARTRELL STREET.
This is large house, near Caini A 9-room house, near Jackson
street, in good condition. Price | street, large lot, house in good re
£2,ooo. | pair. Price $2,250.
——-——————————»——-—-——(—-——-_———————.—
ROCKDALE PARK. 4 THURMOND STREET.
Near Inman Yards, a 3.r00m | c o
house, lot 250x140, Price sßoo,| Corner Vine street, 3.r00m
Terms SIOO cash and #lO a house, lot 96x150, room for more
month, ' houses. Price $1,200.
FORREST & GEORGE ADAIR.
Second Floor. Atlanta National Bank Building.
e
CONTRACTORS, __CONTRACTORS.
BUILDING REPAIRS- ; CABINET WORK
' GRYDER & HAWKINS,
BUILDING CONTRACTORS.
OFFICE AND SHOP,
Bell Phone M. 1306-J. 18 Trinity Ave. Atlanta
:/N?'\\\\ T\T(’mhml ‘ f @«,}‘:\\"
Al ATLANTA iy
|£3f,,“' REAL ESTATE BOARD l 1,3,4 g l
) "’“.?l FOR SAFETY AND INTEGRITY DEAL it e
THROUGH MEMBERS OF THIS BOARD.
ADAIR, FORREST & GEORGE,
Atlanta National Bank Bldg. Main 76
i BARNWELL, R. W.
Candler Bullding. lvy 1852
BEASLEY & HARDWICK,
20 Walton Street. Ivy 8168
BROWN, FOSTER, ROBSON co.,
Flatiron Bldg. Main 1031
DUPREE, W. L. & JOHN O.
Empire Building. Ivy 10
GRANT, B. M.-ADAMS, A. 8., CO,
Gran nuham‘.l fvy 485
GLOVER, CHAS. P, REALTY CO.
W lltoa:ll;g;!t. 5. G. 00 Ivy 3390
Third National Bdnk'Bu'fidan‘ffl Ivy 2043
KNOX, FITZHUGH.
Cand anundmz. Tvy 4446
KI M. C.. REAL ESTATE CO
814 Candler Bidg. Main 1524
LIEBMAN, A, F.
17 Walton Street. Ivy 1217
wJRPHY. J. GREGORY
Peters M"['..A'TCHEY‘. - Ruun 3026
Candler mlnm * 7 tvy 5320
THE ATLANTA GTZORGIAN
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. l
ANIAP P Rt Kok
|
om ] - \
12TH ST. HOME—#S,OOO.
SELDOM, indeed, is the oppor
_ tunity offered to get a home
In this seetion for such a price.
It is right at West Peachtree;
has furnace and is a veal six
room home.
3
JOHN STARR,
611 Flatiron Building.
S tmeimpi bl i
BEAUTIFUL bungalow on oak-shaded
lot, granite columns, mantel chimney,
marble porch floor; living, dining,
breakfast rooms, kitchen, bath, two
bem'ug)ms on first floor, two bedrooms
upstairs, oak floors, beamed ceilings,
built-in = hookease, china closet and
kitchen cabinet, 6 closets, 3 lavatories,
combination laundry tub and sink in
km-hen,. Peck-Willlams. under-fed fur
hace, tile bath with sanitary base.
W orkmanship and material as good as
vou will find in a $30,000 home. For price
and terms call Went 1239,
e A U A
A 14 PER CENT
INVESTMENT,
:\I:ARTMENT HOUSE, CONTAINING
5 ELEGANT APARTMENTS, SITU
ATED AT ENTRANCE TO BEAUTI
FUL WEST END PARK. EVERY
MUDF,'R_N CONVENIENCE. RENT, SB3
PER MONTH. PRICE $7,000. MUST BE
SOLD AT ONCE. 15 'S. GORDON.
P PL)\’F;SXJ 99 '.li; e
WILL BUILD HOUSE.
LARGE, elevated, shady lot in Decatur
for sale cheap, or will build house to
suit purchaser on easy terms. See Mr.
Cline, 410 Silvey Bldg. Main 410.
NICE SIX-ROOM bungalow; all con
veniences; good section: adjoining
Druid Hills, Decatur. Price cut to
§2.250; only SIOO cash; S2O monthly;
small loan, W. H. 8 Hamilton, 204
Equita!g'._q_?lgg_.«_fl 5234,
FOR SALE—SBix-room bunfalow: all
modern conveniences; level lot, 50 by
230; well shaded: must be seen to be
appreciated. For price and terms, see
owner, 29 Langhorn St., Atlanta, Ga.
LARGE lot, 50 by 167, only block from
Ponce Del Leon avenue; has water,
sewer, sidewalks amd curb. SI,OOO for
quick sale. SSO cash and $lO month. Ad
dress P. O. Box 163, Clty.
EAST TENTH STREET—-Faclng Pied
mont Park, beautifully elevated tutld- |
ing lot, $2,850; terms. R. W. Barnwell.
Tvy 1852 421 Candler Ride.
BEAUTIFUL SUBURBAN BUNGALOW
SIX rooms and bath; hardwood floors;
large, shady lot. Terms. Decatur 286.
2750 0N 00 ANUIN LOSRNE.S
WEST END bargain: six rooms: mod
ern bungalow: at less than cost. Lot
56 by 140. Phone owner. Dec. 609-L.
IF IT 1S real estate vou want to buv,
or sell, it will g_rxw you to see me. A.
Graves, 24 Bast Hunter St.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE OR
EXCHANGE.
EAST POINT level lot, corner Park and
Hamilton streets, city water. Easy
terms. R. F. Gilliam, Main 651, Fourth‘
National Barnk Bufliflt’g;w e
REAL ESTATE WANTED.
FOR EXCHANGE-Established
ladies’ cloak and suit business,
free of debt, for improved farm
or Atlanta income property.
Grossman’s, 96 Whitehall St.,
Atlanta. §
e . e
FARMS WANTED.
A AAAA AN AN AR A
FARMS WANTED.
I HAVE four houses and lots
in the city, with all modern
improvements, that I will give
in exchange for 50 to 100 acres
of land in Cobb or Douglas
County, in and around Aus
tell. Must have some improve
‘ments_and running water. Ad
dress Land, Box 360, care Geor
'gian. |
DESK SPACE FOR RENT.
D}«}S;{MS?;:\\(‘E for public utenogrlpher
or _vmm(g attorney. Address D., Box
801, care Georgian.
McKINNON, G. M.
Peters Bullding.
OTIS & HOLLIDAY,
Peters Building. Main 175
SELIG, MONTEFIORE.
Empire Building, Ivy 965
SHARP, BOYLSTON & DAY,
12 Auburn Avenue. Ivy 1871
SMITH, EWING & RANKIN,
130 Peachtree Street. Ivy 1511
THROWER, M. L.
39 North Forsyth Street. Ivy 163
TREADWELL, W. E, & CO.
Empire Building. . Ivy 2023
TURMAN & CALHOUN,
Empire Bullding. ivy AB6O
WATKINS, B. D.
Fourth Nntiolnal n:nk Bld!. . “M'll'r; 648
a ortgages Exclusively,
— F;rx{’mfi'g SRR
ust Co. of Georgia Building. lvy
™ KATSER. HERBERT.
Empire Building. v lvy 2262
BL!CER. J. 8.
Empire Bullding. Ivy 8389
PLANTS, TREES AND SEEDS.
AR AN AR AAN AN s P oP B AISS
ALL VARIET!ES
\
MeMILLAN
BROTHERS’
HIGH-GRADE
~
SEEDS.
¥
Vegetable and |
Flower Seeds,
Fertilizers and
Insecticides, Bedding
vand Decorative
Plants.
Everything
; for the Farm,
Garden and Lawn.
MeMILLAN
nl
. SEED CO,,
12 South Broad St.
b bbb e N O
T GRASS Beced. Now is
BERMLDA the time to sow - it.
Sudan im”' chufas, peanuts, velvet
beans. Mark W. Jehnson Seed Co., 35
SR,
BUGS.
RILL them with parie green, Sprayin;
with a DEMING SPRA%ER'. TRO !1"001
Company, 58 Marietta St. -
COTTON SEED,
T HAVE a few bushels Willlame' Reim
proved freen seed that I will sell at
60c peck, 32 bushel, while they last. Re
mit by bank draft. §. L. Uoshaw, Lu
thereville, Ga.
POTATO PLANTS.
FOR SALl—Potato plants ready, the
following kinds: Porto Rico Pumpkin
and Banana Yams and Spanish Yams,
1.000 to 10,000, 81.25Tp0r 1,000; 10,000 to
20,000, 81 per 1,000. Tomato plants, $1.50
Per 1,000. All f. 0. b. Cash must coma
with all orders. Yours to serve, James
M. Henry, Box 30, Doerun, Ga. '
SWEET PO‘I‘ATO}Fam; ready for ship
ment. Nancy Hall, Porto Rleo Tri
umph, Norton, Sou. Queen, Pattasaw.
Send money with order. SI.OO per 1,000,
M. G, Paxon, Abbeville, Ga. _ __~
SWEET potato plants: Southern Quean,
SI.OO per 1,000: Triumph, $1.25 per
1,000; Naney Ha'l, $1.25 per 1.000. Al
orders shipped promptly. H. D. Salter,
Pitts, Ga. LA
MITCHELL'S reimJirovon King earilest
double prolific and large vield lint cot
ton, 100 pounds seed, si. Cocke’s prolifie
seed corn, sl_peck, $2.50 bushel. Sugar
Loaf Farm, Y%un?nvi“e, N. C.
SAFETY F!Efi'r.
TRIUMPH, Nancy Hall and Porto Rico
yam gotato ylamn for $1.35 per 1,000
J_W. Staf, Waldo. Fla. _ '
PORTO RICO, Nancy Hall and Dooley
yamrfomto plants, tl.socper thousand.
S. Y. Hancock, Ashburn, Ga.
POTATO PLANTS, $1.25 per thousand.
Nancy Hall, Porto Rico, Triumph. O.
E. Watts, Bartow, Fla. 3
|
POULTRY, PET AND LIVE STOCK.
AAA AA A PP AP AP PPNt
AL'. VARIETIES.
A AP AP ISP
BREEDER, exhibitor and importer of|
8. C. White and Buff lL.eghorns, White
and Buff Plymouth Rocks, Silver Pen
clled Plymouth Rock, Purmdge Plym
outh Rock, Blue Andalusians, Black Or
mnfiton-. Silver Spangled Humburfs.
White Minorecas, Lrght Brahmas Price
g.so per fifteen aggs, or $2.76 per thirty,
ark Cornish, Lakenvelder, price §2 per
fifteen eggs. Blue ()rpln%ona. $3 pe:
fifteen eggs. Wild Mallard Ducks, White
Muscovy Ducks, Fawn and White Run
ner Ducks, $1.50 per fiftean. Guarantee
twelve live chicks or replace free. Or
der direct from this ad and we pay
express. Catalogue free. Write your
wants. Lombardy Heights Poultry
Farm, Stanford, Ky.
BARRED ROCKS—Finest posl‘ble exhi
_bition quality. KEggs, 15, $3.00; 380,
$5.00, Have ?0 granddaughte: Parks-
Mittendorff 2 1-e% hen leeh Bell,
rF’:lzgfl, 15, 8%510: 100, n“so, Whfi:te Legs~
orns, grand layers, winners. g», 15,
$1.50; fi. $2.50. 2.600 ribbons, 4! cups,
8 years. Catalog. John Low Smith, 18
W. Mitchell. Atlanta, Ga. |
STANDARD bred Buff Wyunaofleu.\
Blue Orpingtons, 8. C. Mottled An
conas, White 'Hol'l:nd turkeys, White
African fulnecs. Blue Orpington eggs,
$3 to § {’;" 16. Heninghurgt Farm,
Jaflersoll, a. o =
BARGAIN PRICES - Heavy strain . C,
White l.eghorn, Buff Orpingtons and
R. 1. Reds: pullets, $1.25 each; cockerels,
$2, for quick sale, DeWitt C. Bacon,
Guyton, Ga.
. COCHINS.
6N thale and four famale YOung part
ridge Cochins, $12.00. One male and
six female l,i,.ht Brahmas, §IB.OO. One
trio of Buff Cochins, SB.OO. on money
back guarantee. C. . Milligan, Moui
trie, Ga.
EGGS,
EGGE from first prize winnérs tx
Holland turkeys, Ringlet Barre.
Rocks, Rose Comb White Wyandottes.
Satisfaction (,uamnued. Circulars free.
Mrs. M. F. Gooch, Somerset, Va,
FOR s,\l,E--~~l7,ggn from pure bred,
prize-winning 8. C. White Leghorn
and Sllver Lacte Wf’nndntle chickens,
§1 for 15. J. N, Lewis, Swainsboro, Ga.
g LEGHORNE,
FOR SAl.F,‘—~§rown Leghorn eggs for
hatching, from a flock that has
averaged 70 per cent the entire winter.
$1 per 15. T. M. Hutchinson, Monti
sello, Ga. e
THQUBANDB OF BABY CHICKS.
YOUNG strain 8, C, White Laghorns
at 10¢ each, In lots of 26 or more.
fl;blms Leghorn Farms Co., Ensley,
a.
FOREALE—S. C. Brown Leghorn oBES,
18 for sl. Incubator lots of 100 for
¥‘s, Prompt shipments, L. E. Toole,
oute 2, Macon, Ga.
WHITE LEGHORN e‘gu, snt 'mrlns
strain; 90c for 15; $1.60 for 30; $4.5
?‘pr 100. Rosemont Farm, Waynesboro,
ad.
b
ORPINCTONS, '
BUTHF ORPINGTORS —Bix hncy breed
ing pens of four hens and one cock,
$lO pen. Single cocker‘la, $2 afld $5.
l‘:fgs. $1.50 ancd $2 per 16. J. J. Hemp
erley, 241 Lucile Ave. .
WHITE ORPINGTONS,
OUT of eggs that cost us $lO lettlnf.
'l‘he*_ are beauties, Priced right. Fair
View Farm, Palmetto, Ga.
ORPINGTONS-~White, Biack and Buff:
heavy laying strains; twelve yards
grand birds, corréctly mated; fifteen
eggs for two dollars. Mrs. L. P. Eber
hardt, Elberten; Ga. S
ORPINGTONE ~CHANGHE — POULTRy
WHITE HRPIN?TON. hu‘}' in South;
our $5 em"n at $1 getting. Chicks make
1% pounds in two months. Dan Sharpe,
Asheboro, N, C.
FORBSALL-~Buff Orpiugton ben and 16
bafl chicks. =M. 4088-L
READ FOR PROFIT-—GEORGIAN WANT ADS—USE FOR RESULTS
. .
Poultru. Pigeons and Live Stock
By JNO. S. McCREIGHT
¢ i
Address all communications to the Pigeon, Poultry and Live Stock Dept.,
\ The Georgian Compuany, 20 E. Alabama St., Atlanta, Ga.
Starting Right in Poultry
Each lyur finds man* new recruitg in
the poultry Industry. he poultry jour
nal solicitor with his aggressive friendly
way meets you at the county fair or
poultry show and asks you point blank,
‘Do you raise chickens?’ You admit
that you were reared on the farm, and,
although you do not happen to be so
fortunate as to be raising fowls now,
you certainly have a “laelinf" that way.
Accordingly you subscribe for the lJmn"-
nal on the strength that it will tell you
all about how te raise poultry.
But many of the poultry journals have
too much of the professional air about
them and the person starting with fowls
finds himself in deep water as far as
understanding what a great many ar
ticles are about. Too many of us for-
POULTRY, PET AND LIVE STOCK.
SN NAAAS A SNINATASAS NSNS NSNS\ SN PALAGNINI
PLYMO%IU ROCKS, i
LOOR OUT—4O Fureka arred Rocks
layed 092 eggs in February. E?s
from these sreat layers and show birds,
92 for 15; sl2 eer 100. W. H. Haun,
Hendricks, W, Va.
Platafitw
RS a ——
" RED CARNFAUX.
SUPERIOR SIZE, Supdior Type, Supe
rior Color. Bree(?ers and you% mggk
rli.dd from Champion Prize inners
ggd ?I‘d shipped on approval. W. A,
ehaffey, Route 7, Box 141, Fort Worth,
ol SRR
DO you want to save grain? Bave (ime,
labor and trouble? Keep your birds
healthy and rdise larger squabs? 'Phe
‘‘Hasco’’ feeder will do all this and more,
too. waite for circulars, prices, otc.l
Hazard uab Co,, Georgetown, & C
s EMPO ™M)
GIANT White Runts, Yellow.Mondaine
Giant Markst Breeders, Carneaux, Mal'-'
tese, Homers. Individual &roedm SVS.
tem, Stock guaranteed. rite C%arles
B. Neff, Smithsburg, Md.
WHITE HOMERS-~Raiséd in tlie South
and acclimated, Large birds. Prolifle
breeders. Mated and banded. Satisfac
tion guaranteed, il.w(!:er“fmr, express
gnd. on filve pairs. . alter Stone,
owling Green,' K;.
BIRDS out of condifion, sour crop,
going l‘l’.ht. try Cartet's !‘imn Coit«
rector an oxou will be convinced. Prics
50 for ’l. . Also a srut benefit to'
hens ae ore laying. J. J. Carter, Need
b!(LfllhsL.!l}g‘;__* AR
PIGRONS-14,000 to eflec&from. Call
fornia Gitgg Runts, hite Ktng‘n,
Hungarians, White Kings, Show Hom
ers. Base arrival guun&eed CVery«
gh‘ere. King Lofts, Box 666, Hayward,
al.
300 CARNEAUX, white and blue Homer
pigeons, from Plymouth Bqguab Co.; 75
&quabs on hand; nice, new wire for six
;\enl; must sell this week; all complete,
125. 8., Box 205, care Georgian.
BARGATNS [n Carneaux and Whits
Kings, Mondaines. Fere is your op
fmrtunny to get first class stock fer
asß than half vqlge. Write me today,
E. Q. Carlson. Woburn, Maes.
HOMER and Carneau Pigeons for breed
ing, mated and workm‘f, unmated or
young stock, Blue An aLuslnn itocEn
and eggs. Gerald 1. Swihart, 111 B
ChlcaFo st.g sgurewl Mich.
CEFDERS o ow and utility ar
neaux, l%)mar-. White Kings, fancy
glgeona. on more prizes than any
reeder in the Bouth last year. Milford
Bros., Columbus, Ga.
WHITE KINGS— Yo ingeters, ver{ chea ‘
~ quality considered; any quantity o’i‘
each. All Ymm}ptor- bred from best
birds. Sterling Pigeon Lofts, P. O. Box
3;45:.9‘5!9'31_@2-;‘0.&. ks
L SUCCESS wit p’ileons i« what our
Bwiss Mountain Mondaineg bring vou.
Heavy producers of giant squabs, 1%
pounds each, 4 weeks old. Ridgethorpe,
EOMIBIN, sk . |
Carneaux and English Pouters,
MATED show and utility birds. Geo. W,
__Anderson, 17 Gillette St., Atlanta, Ga. '
FANCY and squab breeders, 28 varie
ties of pigeons; can pléease you in
quality and price; satisfaction or money
back. G. W _Milligan, Moultrie. Ga.
JOHN 8. McCREIGHT,
Breeder and Exhibitor of
RED CARNEAUX PIGEONS,
. _lLawton Street, Atlanta, Ga.
CARNEAUX pigeons, show and utility
birds. Mated and guaranteed breed
ers. L. B, Thompson, Mercer Ave., Col-
A e
THE best will prove cheapest and our
Red and Yellow Carneaux are in the
better class. Write N. K. Bowden,
Columbus, Ga.
# DO%F.
KIRKWOOD Collie Kennels. Glanmoir
Sample 1685942, son of champion Routh
port Bample. Stud fee §ls. Ormskirk
Buster fee $lO. L. Janssens, Kirkwood,
Ga., Atlanta Phone Fast 203-F.
E. WRIGHTSON THORP, famous judge
and Alredale breeder, has prize dogs
and bitches for sale. Bargain prices.
1701 Eighth street, Santa Monica. Cal. _
FOR BALT —Registered Llewellyn setter
__buppies. H, Roquemoré, Mansfield, Ga.
CATTLE.
‘REGISTERED Jersey Cattie.
~ Both Bt. Lamberths and Island breed-1
ing: none better. |
~ Remistered Holstein Cattle, H'a'vy‘
producers of De Kol strain. Calves S4O
"n SIOO each. My herd is tuberculin |
‘tested by the government and déclared |
‘absolutely clean, Low prices with qual
ity., For particulars address Jlurer}
Stock Farm, Motley, Va. G. W. shuler,
B
FOR SALE- Regirtered Jersey bull
calves at reasonable prices, Sired by
Raleighs Combination, the best bred
Jersey bull Bouth. Write at onee. J.
R. Humphries Aeworth, Ga. =
I i ot
m‘fifif’]‘wn Nice cows: fregh in
milk. Hae third calf. No. 10 Racine
street, West 1265-J.
THREEK good milch cows cheap, See
quick. Wagon Yard, 161 Decatur.
FOR BALE- One Jersey cow, young.
Tvy 6684, 270 Houston Bt. =~ =
"0&& -~ PN P P
TTUBERKSATRE lOGS.
WE are offering some mighty fine boars
ready for service, voung boars, bhig
breed sows, bred and o;‘v’en gilts, Size
and quality ag well as breeding. Fair
View Farm, filmeun, Ga.
HAMPSHIRE ri’s for sale. | have a
nice bunch of fall and winter pigs for
sale. Algo book orders for spring far
row. Can furnish pairs and trios no
;e:iauon. W. H, Metzger, Route 7, Peru,
nd.
REGISTERED Duroc boars, gilts, choice
pigs., best breeding, reasonable prices,
Claude Jenkins, Shelbyville, Tenn.
FOR SALE-A fine lot of registered g
1. C. pigs at reasonable prices. B, P,
Jones Reynolds, Ga.
. HORSES AND MUL!‘, d
TO RF}N’i ~Two good mules, without
wagon, and either with or without
drivers, for ten days or more. Will give
best feed and care. Apply Piedmont
gfi;tland Cement Company, 7080 Austell
.—!—_' e e e e
LVE STOON
GEORGIA Xgrlrulh'ml Collegs, brees -
ers of Holstein and Jersey cattls,
Berkshire and Tamworth hogs Breed.
lnfi stock for sale. For {.artinulnrn write
Milton P. Jarnagin, Athens, Ga.
BUY Ayrshires tor your dalty or fam
fly cows. Stock all ages for sale,
Young ponles for children. J, F. Con+
verse % Co, Woodville. N. ¥ _
COW invigorator, with book; two
weeks' treatment for more and bet
ter milk., Send 50c if satisfled, to Dan«
lele, 172 Milk_&t.. Beston,
At S TORES: o i
A IS WIS it
WANTED A male monkey: state color,
age, disposition, size and price., Geo.
H. Hilton, Bylvania, Ga.
g€t theé time we got our first setting of
eggs and just how eager we read every
word we could find on how to rear
chicks, feed, make coops and all the va
;rlcd J}roblems of poultry keeping.
I did, like many of you have just
done, answered an advertisement of one
of the breders claiming to have 57 va
of the brecders and water fowls. We
got the immense catalogue and then
could hardly sleep nights thinking what
an immense farm that breeder must have,
and if we on? had it we would be in
paradise, as far as this world is con
cerned. Somehow we are all after
something cheap and at bargain prices.
These little one-inch ads scattered ail
‘about in the periodicals and, strangely,
‘quite Searce in the poultry journals,
‘have an enticing way about them.
The beginner who subscribes for a
good poultry journal and commences to'
get In touch with the breeders ad'ertl‘-‘
ing In them is on the r:gbt track. The
poultry journals carry advertising for a
livelihood, and do not be afraid, Mr, Be
ginner, to place your order for stoek or
eggs with any of them, for the poultry
journal can not afford to keep scoundrel
‘advertisers more than a month. There
fore, you are protected and you need
have no hesitancy in placing your con
fidence in and order with breedérs who
are making a life studl and specialty
out of their variety ‘These are the
breaders ’o tie to. They are giving their
individual attention to their variety and
only anxions to help you get started
rm{t. Dg not be taken in by ads found
in the eheap magazines and farm pa
pers. You may get value received and
you may not
Decide upon the variety you like best
and then go at it in earnest. Do not
make the mistake of trying out a half
Gozen varieties to see which is best.
You will know little mere about it atl
the end of a year or two than you know
now. Decide upon one of the well-ad-'
vertised varieties, for there is certainly
merit in a variety that is widely adver
tised. Decide whether you want to breed
for meat or eggs. Also whether for fancy
or utility or a eombination of both.
Make up your mind for all time to comé
and stick to it. Making a success with
poultry is prindipally sticking to it and
profiting by your own experience. If
you want to breed for meat, choose one
of the larger varieties. If your tastes
run to lots of eggs, take up one of the
lighter egg breeds, for they will pro-l
duce more eggs as a rule and on less
feed per égg than any of the heavier
varieties.
The nex& thing to decide is how much
vou can afford to put mto‘rmng stock
ar:ggs this first season. ake up your
mi you are going in to win financially
and as to {he quality of your stock.
Therefore, do not be misled into getting
cheap stock yourself of into believing you
will buy cheap stock and breed up, for
how can you, a person with no experi
ence in breeding poultry, make much
‘héadway in the next five years breeding
up vour cheap flock to a better flock?
Answer the advertisements of breeders
iadvarnulng stock of the variety you have
chosen and ask them frankly what they
}Wou]d advise you as a he%&nner to do.
All of them wil] tell you that the best
i® ncne too good and that the best pagn
!in the end, while the beginner who
starts with the cheapest stock of ongxl
he can find, with the idea of breeding
up, finds after a few years’ dear experi
ence that he must dfepose of all hig
stock and start over with stock several
grades higher than he has. Toe many
heginners scan the advertisements for
the cheapest stock of e?gs they can find
offered. The only one | ever knew who
g\oade A succegs at this was a red-heéaded
l v friend of mine, who hecame inter
ested in my thoroughbreds and decided
to embark himself in fowls. He decided
upon White Leghorng, but had onl% o 0
cents. 1 loaned him 50 cents until cher
ry-picking time, and he found an ad
vertisement of 25 eggs for sl. He
hatched 23 chicks and ralsed 21 of the
lot and in the fall goid a trio for $lO.
That was a pretty good investment, But
even this boy saw hé muet have bétter
quality, and to make a success he had
to keep thig cheap blood out of hig flock
with the care as if it wére a contagious
digease, for whenever he introduced it
into the better fowlx he subsequently
rtm he found he had trouble with qual
v.
Make it your policy to go slow and get
the best. Rather buy one setting of 35
eggse than 100 eggs for $5, for the chicks
raised from the 35 setting of eggs will
quite likely be worth moré than a dozen
(raised from the $5 per 100 eggs. Often
you can raise ten of more chieks from
’a gingle setting, but'* do not eount the
money lost if you succeed in saving one
chick, for n!{u- chances out of ten he
will be worth more than you paid for
the setting of eggs.
Now 18 the ideal time to start with
poultry. If vou have a little back vard
vou have all that is necessary. | started
with a back yard, without a Hl{n of a
fence or coop. [ made the midtake of
starting with a cheap ineubator and
brooder. The brooder burned up, with
all the chicks, after the second hatch,
but T got a valuable experience. Rur'
a good incubator or brooder, or, what |s
better for the beginner, hatch your nrml
year or txo epgs with hems. Gat ac—
quainted with nature’'s way. You ean
buy sitting hens at this time of the year
most anywhere for soc to $1 éach. QGet
your héen and makeée a niee nest in an
empty barrel in the back yard. Put a
few glass eggs under her ané darken
the front and leave her 24 hours. Order
vour egges, for you will have litfle troubie
?onlng the hen to stick to business.
“dce the barrel to a littlé run, if pos
sible, Keep the hen quiet. Furnish her
with plenty of corn and wheat and
water and grit. See that she returns to
the nest the first few days. and by the
time the eggs arrive ¢he will he attend-
Ing to her nest without any coaxing.
thimf bheats a barrel for setting a hen
in. It ig reomy and the hen wans into
the nest, instead of jumping down into
the nest and breaking »gun. a 8 80 many
do when a box is provided. The barrel
out on the ground is just near enough
mother earth to make an jdeal place,
Just as nature would have it should veu |
find the jungle fowl with her nest built
in a thicket or underbrush in the wild.
Keen the hen Adusted with a good lice
powder twies during the perind of in
cubation, and a protection of a few
boards up in front of the barral whila
she is on the nest, especially at night,
to guard n’mhyst possible acecident
through a eaf or A6g or rat bhothering
the ne&t, and vou will have splendid
success with the eggs. If you want to
raige several chicks firat season a good
plan is to set two or more hens at one
time and then reset one hen. A hen fed
and cared for well can easily ineubate
two clutches of eggs*without any harm
of eruélty to the hen, and the other hen
can raise the first lot of chicks. I have
had hens woigh more at the end of six
weeks than they did at the start, sime
ply because [ gave them proper feed
land cate, | will tell In next month's
article about the problems to be exe
pectad in raising the chicks, - Bvery
hody's Poultry Magazine
COTTON SEED MEAL AS A FERTI.
LIZER.
At the present time when potash in
the form of salts is practica'ly unob
tainable and when both nitrogen and
acld phosphate have advanced in price
because of the ues of nitrates and sul
rhurk' acid for munition purposes, cot
on feed meal, which carries all threes
of the fertilizing elements, becomes of
great importance. In recent years im
manse quantities of this material have
gone into fertilizers, approximately 1,
;vnrw» ton® having been so used in
913,
Cotton seed meal, the residue after
the o!l has been extracted from cotton
geed, Ie a dry, yellowish powder, having
excelient mechanical properties for fer
tilizer mixtures and containe about 6.5
per cent of nitrogen, 2 per cent of
phosphoric aeld, and 2 per cent of pot
ash. It is, therefore, according to spe
cialists of the United States Department
of Agriculture, pgmarily a nitrogenous
fortilizer, but unfer present conditions
fts potash conte Is highly important
Child-mother, Trailed to Califor
nia, Refuses to Return.
y
Baby's Father Held.
(By International News Service.)
LOS ANGELES, May 10.—A dra
matic scene was emacted in the
county jaii here today when 17-year
old Lois Ransford, in an effort to
shield the man who deserted his ewn
wife and ehiidren and eloped with
heér from her Indiana home, re
nounced the relatives who came to
take her back. Lois is the mother of
an 8-month-old baby, the father of
Which is irank Gariepy, formerly of
Teérre Haute. The girl disclaimed ac
quaintanceship with an aunt who ap
pealed (o her to go back.
The story of the elopement reads
like a page tarn from fietion, Gariepy
eloped with the girl and came to Ful
lerton, Cal, where they assumed the
name of Mr. and Mrs, ¥. E. Alexan
der. Aas “Alexander” Gariepy became
an engineer at the city pumping
plant. The baby came, and the
““Alexander” family became #vs;m('t(‘d
in the little town of “ullerton.
Gariepy is under indictment in the
Federal Court at Indianapolis. Hear
ing on extradition proceedings will be
held May 17.
Fire Chief Is Hurled
From Truck; Inj
rom Truek; Injured
AMERICUS, May 10.—Fire Chief
James B. Parker was thrown from
the automobile fire truek here this
morning, sustaining serions gashes in
the head, internal injuries and a
mashed foot,
Chief Parker was attempting to
mount the maehine, responding to a
call, when he was thrown against a
brick wall of the fire hall. His condi
tion is very serious, ac cording to lat
est reports,
i
. .
Y
LiquorSeizureFought
: .
In U, 8. Court Action
MACON, May 10.-—Judge Speer has
granted a temporary injunction in
United States District Court against
Sheriff Ricketson, of Coffee County,
regtraining him from destroying $39, -
000 worth of liquor seized from the
Ocilla, Pinebloom and Valdosta Rail
road.
The case will be heard here on May
nn
and i 8 a decided factor in determinin
the price at which the material is mhf.
In Prufiee cofton seed meal should
be mixed with other ingredients. Most
of the formulas heretofore published
have advocated various proportioms of
acid phosphate and muriate of potash
in comhbination with cotton seed meal,
Muridte of potash is to all intents and
purposes unobtainable this year and
must he omitted from frenent consid
eration. If 1000 poundd of cotton seed
méal and 1.000 x;‘mnds of acid phos
phate are mixed, howéver, a ton of ma
terfal results, which contains about 180
pounds of phosphoric acid, 65 pounds
of nitrogen dnd 20 pounds of potash.
This is about 9 per cent phosphoric
acid, 3.25 per cent nitrogen, and 1 per
cent potagh, and makes a very satis
factory mixture for many soils where
fisld crops are to be grown. For truck
ing and gurdening present practice de
mands a higher content of potash, and
the mixture may o’ supplemented by
the application of unleached wood ashes
if obtainable.
N!lro{an in cotton seed meal is not
8o quickly, available a& when applied in
the form of nitrate, but, on the other
hand, i 8 not so llkefy to be leached out
In times of heavy rainfall. In light,
sandy soils, where leaching is rapid, the
use of orranic material, sueh as cotton
seed meal, is to be preferred in supply
ing the necessary nitrogen. Decay of
the organic material liberates the nitro
gen gradually and there {8 much less
dan%&r of losg than ig the case when
sol;:’ le salts, like Chilian nitrate, are
used.
Most of the mineral ingredients in
cotton seed meal are racovered in the
manure if the materfal is used as a cat.
tle feed. The most economical nse of
cotton seed meal is, therefore, to feed it
and apply the manure to the land. In
this way the material 18 made to serve
a dounble purpose. European dairymen
have for some years bought large q?nn
tities of American cotton seed meal for
fesd'ng‘fnrpouu. As the live stock in
dustry develops In our Southern States
doubtless an increasing amount of this
material wi'l be diverted from the ferti
lizer trade for use as stock feed, and
at present wherever posstble the prac
tiea of feeding the meal and using the
manure for fertilizer should bf followed,
rather than the direct application of
the cotton seed meal to the land.
THE CARNEAU,
(By Frank Lee Miles )
The history of pigeons in general es
tablishes the fact as follows: No pigeon
has sprun{ into So’mlnrlty a 8 has the
Carneau pigeon. rior to 1900 they were
comparatively unknown in the United
States We have no authentic record of
any importation prier to that date,
From the day of their introduction they
havé marched to the front with re
markable rapidity, and today, not a joft
of prominence but what have a number
of these wonderful breaders, and the
wide-awake are huy!ngr all the good
birds they ean secure. heir attributes
are 8o gron and fau'ts, If any, so few,
that it behooves us to frace their origin.
. By a careful reading of Brent, Wil
loughby and others, we find they were
in existence as far back as® have any
record of any M,nmm The early his
tory shows all of our plrmmu of today
un{er a new name. Willoughby, in his
writings, mentions in particular this
pigeon, but not h{ name. He speaks of
a pigeon more apt on the wing than the
Rnn? that they are more proiific, heing
smalfer than the Runt and yet muyech
larger than the common birll, and also
describes their color ag red, red and
white, vyvellow, and tiger rouge. We
later find them the domestie gquab bird
of France and Belgium. Théy are not,
a 8 some have stated, a made bird, ex
cept a 8 nature, in her work of evolution,
madé them 'l‘hr-" do not only breed
often and regularly, bhut their squahs
are very large and palatable, The meat
of their squabs i& white or butter yel
low Before being frozen, are also plump,
oxnomlonwn{v well fluv;‘)rad, am} \:i'hen
roperly fed, gurpass the game foo
. '?'g- vr’;d, y.tf.m, red and whita, or yel
low and white, do not Aiffer in squan
producing mluh”e!. Feather color i
merely a fad for show purposes. and
many beginners make the mistake of
thinking that it is necessary to get a
solid bird In order to get thé genuine
Carneau.
The Carneau is kind, easy to handle,
endires Nhardship lHke a soldier, good
feeders, take good care of thelr voung,
hreeding from ol,hl to elevel times a
vedr, fquaby weighing from 9 to 12
pounds to the dozen when ready for
market. The body is compact and solid
flesh =olld and firm, breast full round
and well devaloped, ocarriage well up,
!hanghl,v and free from any crouchlik»
appearance, with plumage closa-Atting.
MAL T @
§ §§\\ \\‘te\\\ ¥ \\§ “'-:i:;}:}\_ ‘i\ Y
ANkl N » \\\\ S ®
N NS AN NAW NY 8
Pace’s Ferry Road
To Have New Homes|
S
Several prominent Atlantans soon will
build homes on Paces Ferry road, ac
cording to report heard Wednesday.
Marton 8. Harper, of .the Marion S.
Harper Ol Company at HKast Point,
bought a 10t next to Robert F. Maddox's
Waeodhaven estate last year for $26,000
cash and probably will build eifher in
the fall or next spring.
Char'es C. McGehee and Kdward H.
Inman are others who have been men
tioned, while John D. Little owns a large
iot and is only waiting for a favorable
opportunity to dispose of hig handsome
home at the northwest corner of Peach
tree and Eighth streets.
A local architect is said to have made
sketches for a $35,000 home for Paces
Ferry road, but he declined to say who
would build.
Bulldlng Figures Jump.
Atlanta’s buil Ing figures for the first
four months in 1916 have passed the
same period of 1916 by nearly §slß,ooo.
This was made possible Tuesday when
the Southern Bell Telephone and Tel
egraph Compan yapplied for a permit to
erect a branch north exchange at Tenth
and Cypress streets at & cost of SBO,OOO
The comparative figures are $1.585,754
and §51,687,900. The figures for 1918 dJde
not include a $35,000- apartment applica
tion for which a permit is expected to
be issued soon.
Warranty Deeds.
s2o,ooo—Mrs, Luey T. Black to J. N.
McßEachern and S. A, Wardlaw, 15
acreg at southwest corner Ashby ?«E‘d
Simpson streets, known as G. W, El
liott home place. October 9, 1914
$28,000-Alexander Reeves to J. W,
Goldsmith, lot north side Luckie street,
131 feet east of Bartow street, 40 by
150. May 8, 1916.
$4,500—1L. O, Montgomery to R. B
Hickson, lot south side Bdgewood ave
nue, 9% feet east of Waddell street, 40
by 181, April 13, 1916,
s€.ooo--Mrs, Ola B! Harbour to F. D.
MceMillan lot north side Ponce Del.eon
avenue, 135 feet east right of way of
.]\'r"n:'thern Railway, 81 by 230. May 9,
916,
$25 and Bxchange of Pro(rentes—:l.
N. McFachern and 8, A, Wardlaw, to J.
R. Dortch, lot at the intersection of the
northwest side of Marietta street, with
northeast side of Mason and Turner
Ferry road, 50 by 140. Lot on the north
east side of Mason and Turner Ferry
road, 46 feet northwest of Marie street,
184 by 43. November 19, 1913,
$2,350-~J. R. Dortch to T. L MeCur
ry. same nroperty. April 14, 1916, ‘
$5,600-~W, B. Phelps to Mrs. Fflnnie‘
Howell, lot on the northwest corner of
Highland and Leland alley, 70 by 150.
May 5, 1914,
$lO to Becure Purchase Money Notes—
T. J. Weathers to American Savings
and Investment Company. No. 178 How
ell street, 51 h?' 118, May 8, 1916,
sl,9oo—Mrs, Laura L. Tugilo to A. A,
Cook, No. 8¢ Echo street, 100 by 127.
Nar ) iy T
s4,ooo—Thomas M. Jackson to J. R,
Jackson, lot on the northwest side of
Cheshire hrldge road at the northeast
line of right of way of the 8. A. L. Rail
wav, 29 bv 808, February 1, 1916
'§s—~Mrs. M. J. Jackson et al to samae,
1072 acres. on the northwest side of
Cheshire Bridge road, land lots 4 and
iifl ;hventeont‘h Distriet. February 1,
ss—Thomas P. Hinman to David Kel
ler, No. 40 Brown street, 45 by 117 feet.
May 16, 1018, Made to secure purchase
money notes,
6 and to Secure Purchase Money
‘l\'nten—-—fllme to same, No. 28 Browni
street, 45 by 117. May 6, 19186, |
| &% and fto Becure Purchase Money
Notes—Same to same, No. 24 Brown
street, 44 by 117. May 6, 1916,
sz‘rmww? P. Rice to Charles J. Ha
den, lot on the southwest side of Hemp
bill avenue, 273 fest northwest of West |
Third «treet, 132 by 104. May 18, 1912.
| $30,000--Mrs. Anna C. H. Mathewson
to Southedstern Investment Company,
' No. 444 Peachiree street, 50 by 360.
CApril 27, 1916.
- S6OO—HI, H. Brandon to L. A. Kelly,
lot on the south side of Atlianta avenue I
€0 feet west of Grant stregf, 50 by 189,
feet. December 11, 1915, .
RIS Edwin P Analey 10 Dr. C. . |
Murphy, lots 18 and 17, bloek 23, lots 12,
13 and 21. block 32, of Ansley Park.
January 20, 1916,
_ s2.3soGermania SBavings Bank to F.
J. Allen, lot on the west gide of East
Point avenue, 55 feet south of Morrlll
street, 54 b& 190. May 5, 19186,
__%3oo—P. R. Smoak et al to Nationa)
Underwriting Company, lot on the east
side of Chapel street, 25 feet north of
- Akridge atreet, 50 by 140. Mayv 9, 1916,
- s2so—-B. F. Burdette to H. M. Thorn
'l‘!;‘l‘4 et al., same property. July 15,
S4OO-~Tnterstate Land Company to A,
' L. Kenyon, lot on the east side of Glen
wood drive, being lot 3, bloek 4, of
1 Peachtree Terrace subdivision, 50 by 155,
May 9, 19186,
S4OO-—lnterstate Land Company to R,
B. Kenyon, lot 4, block D, ofp.f’each'rea
Terrace subdivision, on east side Olcnn-l
' wood drive, 50 by 155, May 9, 1918,
| $5,260—H. C. Stewart to Mrs, F. W.
Stokes, lot northeast side Avery drive,
being lot 2, Block B, Napler property, 56
by 201. M%)' 8, 19186,
$lO and Exchange of Property—§. B.
Adams to C. . Miller, lot east side
North Boulevard, 150 feet northwest of
Allen road, 50 a’\ 190, January 29, 1916,
i $2.000- - Mrs, Maggie M. Afers to B. A,
Jones, Jr.. lot west side Avery drive,
| being lot 9, block A, of Napier subdi
vision, land 'ot 55, Seventeenth District,
80 by 175. May R, 19146,
Loan Deeds.
| $1.400.J. 1. Oxford to Mortgage Bond
| Company of New York, lot south side
| Boulevard place, 665 feet easgt of Boule
| vard, 50 by 134, May 8, 1918,
| %2700 Mrs, Lilllan M. Church to Penn
iMunml Life Insurance Company, lot
i northwest corner Crescent avenue ani
| (leveland avenue, 51 by 140, April 29,
| 1918,
| SI,OOO-Mrs, Annie N. Mathews to
Robert Adamson, lot north side Glenn-
L wood avenue, 745 feet east of land lot
'ine of 'and lot 13, Fourteenth Distriet,
mnminln, 15 mcres. May 9, 1918,
$2.250-C. G. Childs to Penn Mutual
Life Insurance Cnmmn‘y. No. 330 Wash -
ington streat, 33 by 116. April 22, 1916,
| S6OO-C. E. Carey to Mrs. Lilllan D,
i Ittner, Nos. 281 and 285 Little street, 14
'by 40, May 8, 1918,
| #3OOO D. Zaban to Eminent House
hold Columbian Woodmen, No. 517 South
Pryor street, 49 h,y 180. May 8, 1916,
$760- Pleasant J. Wrey to Mrs. lda F,
Stern, lot southwest side Lakewood ave
nue, 200 feet northwest of Dorothy
( street, 50 by 160, M:{ 1, 1818, |
$2 000 Mrs. Irene H. Jennison to Mrs
Louise W. Hart, lot south side West
minster drive, being lot 23, block 18,
lAnslry Park, b 0 by 147. May 8, 1916,
s7s—James K. Smith to Phenix Plan
[ ing Mill, lot north side Glennwood ave
nue, 169 feet u-x of Martin street, 4
by 115, October 3, 1015,
$1,700-John W. Forrester to A, A.
Cook, lot containing between eleven and
twelve acres in land lot 38, Fourteenth
District, being the north one-half filn
in ‘ngr;l;‘thwut corner sald land lot. ay
9, .
$1.260--T. L. McCurry to Georgia Sav.
ings Bank and Trust Company, lot at
corner formad by intersection of north.
west side Marie street with northeast
side Mason and Turner avenue, B 0 by
| 146, May 6, 1916,
11.01»--Mme to same, lot northeast
side Mason and Turner uvem‘:. 48 sent
Rf'"":'fq'm"‘ Marie street, 184 hy 106,
flom F. D, McMillan to M, 8. !lc‘r
man estate (by executors), lot north side
Ponce Deleon avenue, 135 feet east of
right of way of SBouthern Railway Com
pany, 81 hy 380, »I':*’ 8, 1918,
S6B 2803 N, eFachern and 8 A,
Wardlaw to Kdward D. Brown, lot south
side Simpseon street, 120 feet west of
Ashby street, 240 by 140; n!-o' south
west corner Ashby ana Mari¥® streets,
MAY 1916.
256 by 300; also lot northeast side’ e
son and Turner av%m feet &
west of Marie street, by 175. A
28, 19186, :
Bonds for Title. L
s7,6oo—Mrs. Gladys SB, Cox to J. ag"
Dodson, No. 90 Ashby street, 50 by 1
July 20, 1914. Transferred to R. A,
Evans. May, 1916, i 3
ssl'gé.wol'“oc“%" wG-. Childs to Dda';
SBmith, Ne.. j ashington street, 3
by 115. May 4, 1916. i
Quitclaim Deeds. '
SIO~M. 7T. Lester and T. L. McCurry
to J. N, McEachern and 8. A. Wardlaw,
lot on Mason and Turner avenue, being
lot 43 in City View subdivision, 56 by
140. April 25, 1916. il
$lO-Bank of Bowersville to J. B
Dortch, lot at the interseéction of north
west side of Marfe street with north
cast side of Mason and Turner avenue,
50 by 140. Apri 15, 1916. :
§l—Bame to same, lot northeast stde
Mason and Turner avenue, 46 feet
novthwest of Marie street, 184 by 140,
April 15, 1918, et
$64—H. 8. Herrington to W. B. 60‘3-
son and A. B. Chapman, lot No. 97,
Hurt street. May 8, lul6. »
slo—Benjamin Straus to A. H. &l&y
and J. L, Kurfees, lot south side Ba tle
Hill avenue, 433 feet sast of Wellington
street, 50 by 150. May 8, 1916,
ss—Germania Sevings Bank to €. H.
Hedges, lot 178 feet north of comcr”%f
Simpson and Fowler streets, 30 by
;Apl{fl 20, }19918. il
%1 and Purpose of Levy and Sal a
curity State Bank to ? H. Lake, lot
west side Dargan street, 210 feet south
of Sells avenue, 46 by 145, May 9, 1916,
sl—Provident Realty and Trust Com
pany to J. W. Goldsmith, No. 87 Luckie
istruet. 40 by 150. May 8, 1916.
Mortgages. *
! s46s—Mrs., Mary 18 Arnold to Colon
Trust Company, No. 37 Bunker street,
45 by 185. May 9, 1918, .
_s622—Mary L. D. Smith to Central
‘Bank and Trust Corporation, lot north
side Wabash avenue, 45 feet west. of
(Arnold street, 456 by 14¢. April 6, 1916, .
| DE KALB COUNTY. .
F -
-
‘ Warranty Deeds. .
$1 and Exchan of property, Mr
Elia Mitchell to. Mra Marie Hate, 1o
100 of Lennox place sutidlvision, 50 ‘!"
135 feet, May 3, 1916.
__§7oo—A. V. Gude, Jlr, snd D. B
Henry to Richardson Investment Come
pany, Jot in town of East Lake, on
southwest corner of second avenue anti
;Fsalwe'lor street, 90 by 180 feet. May
$3,260—J. G. Yarbrough tb E. W.
Klein, lot in town of Kirkwood, on
southeast corner of Norwood avenue i.g
Georgia Rallway right of way, 803
176 feet. May 3, 1918. -
$lO and Kxchange of Property—C. D.
Moore to G. F. Turner, lot in city of At
lanta, on east side of Elmira place,
260.15 feet north of Deialb avenue, 40.25
by 98 feet. May 3, 1916, .
$lO and Mxchange of Property—G. F.
Turner to C. D. Moore, lot in eity of
Atlanta, on east side of Klmira pmc;‘
$30.65 feet north of DeKalb avenue, 48,
by 10¢ feet. May 3, 1916,
$2,050—J. P. Tucker to J. F. Walker,
33,4 acres in land lot 197 of Fifteenth
district. May 3, 1918,
s3oo—-W. H. 8. Hamilton to T. H.
Withers, lot in town of Decatur, on west
side of Church street, 1,087 fest uor?
;f l;lanter street, 61 by 190 feet. July
b 1913,
$2.500~KE. A. Hartsock to Mrs, Flora
Estelle Pinson, lot in city of Atlanta,
lnn north side of Metropolitan avenue,
44 by 190 feet. April 25, 1916. '
Q\fl!’cillp Deed.
s6—-A. C. Van Epps to Mrs. 8. Rumble,
lots 1 to I'% in block 3 of Julla C. Van
Kpps estate, on east side of Flat Shoals
ravenue, April, 1916,
Sheriff's Deed.
sl,loo—Marbut-Thornton Lumber Co.
(by Eheriff) to the Lowry National
Bank, of Atlanta, 18t in city of Atlanta,
on east side of Flora street, 360 faef
[south of Lakrance street, 50 by 450 feel.
' May 4, 1916,
Loan Deeds. ¢ :
S26O—~J, F. Walker to Mrs. Louise H,
Carlton, 32.4 acresuln lan;"‘ilBOt 197 of
Fifteenth district. May 2, . *
i §1.500--G. A, Wight and W, 8 Wight
to Mre. India M. Chrisman, lot 1 of the
(" T. Ladson Peachtres road property.
ay 1, 1916, "
IMMY,M-FZ, W. Klein to Everette [sa
man, lot in town of Kirkwood, on south
east cornmer of Norwood avenue and
Georgia Railway right of way, £0.3 by
175 feet. Mdy 4, 1916,
. .
Filibuster Is Faced
l On Pork Barrel Bill
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, May 10.—The
Senate today faced the prospect of a
filibugter against the rivers and haf
| bors bill, earrying approximately $43,-
| 000,000, as amended by the Sénate
, Commerce Committee,
‘ The bill, as recommended by the
committee, has provoked opposition
in two directions, Senators Kenyon,
of Towa, and Sherman, of Illinots, both
Republicans, are leading a fight
against the measure, on the ground
that such an enormous expenditure
can not be justified when the country
is to be g 0 heavily taxed to pay for
' the preparedness program. They have
‘m'rm'pd a_substitute bill appropriating
£20,000,000, to be spent at the discre
tion of the Secretary of War,
Saenator O’Gorman, of New York,
has announced that he also will maks
a fight on the floor againgt the com
mittee’s action in cutting out the
$£500,000 appropriation recommended
by the President for improving the
Fast River channel leading to the
Brooklyn Navy Yard.
SHORTHORNS
The Dual Purpose Cattle.
They pay their keep and ralse a ¢
worth uody at six months. Bulls rea
for service. Helfers bred and unbred
lng number,
ome and select for yourself or writs
Box 301,
C. W. FOWLER, Mgr.,
Raymond, Ga. .
B\
o
£ P e
v, .:u:‘""o,, i ;‘b(.""..l e
For Lawns and Gardens
~=BRAND ...
Concentrated Pulverized
MANURE
Shipped in 100-pound har—lfl.
from weed seeds-—isofthe finenegs
of granulated tobacco—hence
easily digested by the soil, Order
from dealer—or, direct from us.
Grasses Grow Greener
Wherever Wizard Works
Descriptive booklet on request. Write
now- Right npow !!
The Pulverized Manure 3
Dent. €, Union Stock Yards, Chiea:
13