Newspaper Page Text
HWE: PAY THE I feag&sM -fen »d are !
“FRATE” WM 1 f made at our big I J I
nku,< . i'ffl r<! fel I factory a: , feWg
On bills of SIO.OO /iyjl J and are only w- Iw |
and greater Z dX Z ■ O | sold byMcDon- jV) | I
amounts. ■ .. “ aid lure ‘ XJ I
———— x to. y L Xz co. w. .. 7 |
NO. 212 SIDEBOARD ;. J ~ I£W . L I
•~4 . B Top 20 by 40 inches % I NO. 422 SIDEBOARD | j .i—.•.•- n ” : ; IyZZZ:~ k
| ['yX-J 111'bSI, ! , U Glass French bevel 14 by 24 No. 002-0 No.fi. No. 2. ’ Big and Roomy i ! |'' /
II
p rice , 8l « 18x2 o •20 [ I
_ I | __!22 ! Price $16.50 r I
■ vie”"* | — _— It : —-I t••*.<—J. J
"■Jr these goods are all ——j- f
made of oak well made S We. show on our floors I c<
I » •“'•“■ . I gg. PN-NN - I
1 “ i J~“" —11 1* U" “ ' ici' S
| K No 99 No °4 No 30 i 1 ! ■' ■ IP A I
j • 3 «- NO. 412 SIDEBOARD . N °- 22 a. - 2 • i t • ,i, • NO. 425 SIDEBOARD : ' I
j j 56 inches high 64 inches high <0 inches high ;i. | / / ■
I Top 22 by 42 inches $4 25 SS.CO $6 00 Extra Value Large— • ... ......|
I Ips Bevel Glass 14 by 24 Roll Foot < Roll Foot i Roll Foot French Bevel 1G by 28 ' '■) H
j 'W i - ' Z |
| Price $14.50 I igßt | Price 19 - 75 I
I Jr W|L i o\\i \d*> } .v. n _ --■
J f-, . K / -JE
I @ You can simply order. !(C J!1 (Qi.,. •. J- Rome furniturr .id | I .' I
giving numbers, and the „ I* n nearly every state in Fr;
exact thing will b_ W \ i < the union. Why? Be- I
e 3k- -i fe- 1: ««■.—<■ p j j
g . It add I 1 I
NO. 415 SIDEBOARD t fc_L. f y V ‘ NO. 526 SIDEBOARD M I
Top 22 by 42 inches «* / i Very Handsome and large- I
Glass bevel 16 by 28 , No. 15 B No. 15 A 015 B i Glass 13 by 30 !
j Bevel Mirror Bevel Mirror Bevel Glass | u * z 1
rasil Price iIBW I 1 1 Pfice $24 - 75 MS; I
i[ --y, McDonald furniture co. MXII
- ••
- "Y» at r ~< | .T*r* -y»
SUBLIGNA
, (Delayed Letter)
I
Our school is progressing nicely.
We have one of the best teachers in
the south. Forty-seven pupils are
now on the roll and more coming in.
Subligna is coming to the front,
p Christinas is drawing near. The
wedding bells have begun to ring.
Mr. Clay Gilreath and Miss Mary
Lou Hamilton were married last
Monday. They started Tuesday for
their future home in South Geor-
i
gia.
Mr. and Mrs. Hix made a business
trip to Rome last week.
Mr. Willie White and Miss Myrtle ,
Story of West Armuchee are at
tending school here.
Among those visiting Subligna <
Sunday were Mrs. Tom Ballenger of
Gore, Mr. Robert Trimble of West i 1
Armuchee; Miss Jennie Pruitt, Mr. i
Willis Hill of Rome; and Mr. Tom ; <
Hill of Trion.
Miss Ella Fowler was the pleas- 1
1 " j 11 " r *r ,tt" '■•? .wjjvtt"-vtibSSk
Why Site ? 1
Lrc you one of the thousands of women who II
* from female ailments ? If so, don ’t*be discour-1|
go to your druggist and get a bottle of Wine of gg
(jaraui. On the wrapper are full directions for use. ■
During the last half century, Cardui has beenH
&| established in thousands of homes, as a safe remedy eh
' m f° r P w hi c h onl y women endure. It is reliable,
3g contains no harmful ingredients and can be depend- m
ed on in almost any case.
I Tab P F-. PB El Hll a
—t Joilj
| H Will Help Yen J 34 j
Mrs. Charles Bragg, of Sweetser, Ind., tried Cardui. She I
® writes: “Tongue cannot tell how much Cardui has done for me. 3
§3 Before I began taking Cardui I could not do a day’s work. I a
Lwould work awhile and lie down. I shall always give praise to your g
F 3 medicine.” Try Cardui.
AT ALL DRUG STORES
f - *- ~r™ -t-tk x’gt'g T” ’ S ■T'-® r " w
•w-yrr-.'— l. , Y* ■ ***■' ■««■■■ ■ M—«»ti IW— ■■ u
I
ant guest of Mrs. Wesa Morton last
Sunday.
Little Miss Mary Ballenger and :
brother Dill Ballenger of Gore are
attending school here.
Mr. Hiram Hammonds of Montvale
was mingling with friends at this
place Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald visited Mr.
Jackson and family last Sunday.
Mr. Carter Langley, who has been
visiting in Alabama City, has re
turned home.
Mr. Tom Fowler mado a business
trip to Rome last week.
Miss Edna O’Barr, who has been
the guest of the Misses Dunaway of
near Rome for the past week, has
returned home to the delight of her
many friends.
Miss Mallie Lawrence left Satur
day for her school at Chattoogaville.
Mrs. D. C. Fowler spent part of
last week on Dry Creek.
xMr. Jake Ballenger has had his
dwelling repainted which helps the
looks of the town as well as the
building. XXX
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1909.
I ■!»— 1 >. mri« ■> «. r, IW»I xzv
'must give up one crop idea 1
I . I
Governments Experts Say There Is
More Money in Raising Corn
and Hogs Than in Cotton.
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Regardless
of weather he wants to break away
, from the exclusive cultivation of cot
ton or not the southern farmer has
got to adopt crop diversification or
lose the battle with the soil. This
is not tile dictum cf-a super-theorized
mind, but a palpable fdct, established
by the unchecked march of the Mexi
can boil weevil through the great |
cotton producing region of the south.
United States department of agricul
ture experts say that the damage to
the cotton crop each year as a re I
suit of the encroachments of the bop j
weevil amounts to $25,000,000. W. |
J. Spillman, agriculturist in charge '
of farm management, bureau of :
plant industry, places the annual cost I
of the devasting insect above that i
amount. Tiierefore, experts of the
department of agriculture are agreed ,
that the only available horn of the
dilema thus presented the southern
farmer is crop diversification. They
insist that in this policy lies the
foundation of a permanent prosperity
among the great agricultural class
that the boll weevil cannot affect.
The first step toward crop diversifi
cation is the abandonment of cotton
as the exclusive money crop of the
south. It is argued that the farmer
of the south region will not only get
better prices for his cotton because
of the decreased acreage, but he will
have more resources of revenue,
through diversity of marketable pro
ducts and in addition to this pecun
iary advantage he will be saving his
land by contributing to its vitality.
Professor Spillman, who is a prac
tical Missouri farmer, sees in the
cultivation of corn upon a more lib
eral scale a panacea for most of the
ills that a.flict the farmer whose ex- \
| elusive money crop is cotton. The |
price of corn, which has not been be- t
1 low 60 cents a bushel in the past
I four yet~s ..nd which is now bringing
• stiff pric es all over the country, ac- ;
cording t< Professor Spillman, will re 1
I main high. The demand for live i
' stock —notably hogs—is way in ex- ’
<:ess of the supply, and the man
who has hogs and corn to sell is now '
regarded as having the edge on the >
man whose sole dependence for cash |
i ' ■ ■ - -
! is his cotton crop.
I This may strike some as a strange
' note in view of the prevailing high
price of cotton, but the man who
plants cotton exclusively exhausts his
land from year to year, and more-'
over has to buy out of the returns
from his cotton the thing:: that the '
man who raises corn and live stock
lias produced at a decided advantage
to his land.
Prof. Stillman holds that a man
with one mule on an average farm '
in the cotton region can make more •
money by cultivating corn intelligent-,
ly than he can by cultivating a cot
i ton crop by himself. Unaided one
man with one mule can cultivate
twenty acres o onfer adequately and
i forty bushels to the acre ought to
I be the yield, and the price at which
I corn now is selling the money value
!of the twenty acres would be S6OO.
‘ One with two horses can cultivate
i forty acres in corn and make $1,200.
: Prof. Spillman insists that one man
■ cannot possibly do as well in making
a cotton crop.
But in order to make the average
land yield forty bushels of corn to
the acre the land must be built up
and kept vitalized by intelligent and
methodical treatment. Experts at
the department of agriculture lay
great stress upon the growing of
green stuff, which must be plowed
under and the ground harrowed or
rolled tight before replowing for an
other crop. Prof. Spillman recom
mends the sowing of cow peas in
corn, which should be turned under
after the corn is gathered. Burr
clover, he thinks, is fine to sow with
the peas the second summer. Stress
is placed also on the importance of
thoroughly rolling the land before
preparing it again for the cultivation
of corn. The possibilities of land
thus treated are shown in Prof. Spill
man’s own farm in Missouri. Six
j years ago he and his brother bought
I a place which at that time was pro-
I during eighteen bushels of corn to
If you are suffering from bilousness,
I constipation, indigestion, chronic head
i ache, invest one cent in a postal card
I s< nd to Chamberlain Medicine Co.,
j Des Moines, lowa, with your name
| and address plainly on the back, and
’they will forward you a free sample
■ of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver
Tablets. Sold by Summer.ill: Drug
| Co.
n>'.®ESlK' RK
the acre. Last year the same land, I
after having been scientifically treat- j
ed along the suggestions by Prof. I
Spillman, yielded forty bushels to the j
acre. He says that lie increased the
productiveness of his land by sow
ing peas with the corn and then pas-
: turing hogs on it. Prof. Spillman 1
thinks that, in corn and hogs espe
cially the farmers of the south can
. make themselves independent.
Choicest fruit in town at the De-
, pot Restaurant.
r v
1
Z/i'AcV. ■. . .'V„ .. .NCWCw
The Kind You Have Always Eought, and •which has been
in vso for over 30 years, lias borne the si;,-nature of
—S? tod lias been made under his per-
SOm;s Hij u •.’sioti inee its infancy,
yjjlo vic one to deceive you in this.
Ail Counterfeits, Imitation •; ar \ “Just- ; ,-good”are but
.Experiments that trifle w.'.h. a. ,d endanger the health of
Infants and Children —-lixpericnco again.’; experiment.
What is CASTORIA
*
Cat; na is •. harmless substitute for Castor OH, Pare-
Drop: and Socthhig Syr ips. It is Pleasant. It
< oa!..;: rici h'r Opiain, Morphine nor oilier Narcotie
Hubslunce. its ;e is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays 1 ■ ,-cri .hncss. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troibles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It as: imßates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, healthy and natural (deep.
The Children’s Panacea—'l no Moyher’s Friend.
genuine; CASTORIA always
Bears the Signature of _
Ths Kind You Have Alw Bought
In Use For Over 30 Ye rs.
THt Cf.NTAUH COMPANY. TT MUM'-AV •TACKY, NEW V «A Y.
■J—" ■'* ■■ —>
| Tho News job department in well
i equipped to do all kinds of cominer
j dal printing. The work turned out.
jis of tho highest quality, and the
j prices are always found satisfactory
by those who favor us with their or
ders for printing. When in need of
printed matter of any kind como In
and lot us figure with you.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER’S
CASTORIA