Newspaper Page Text
THE MONITOR
By the Monitor Publishing Company*
mu max cr calhsu;’ mi
AV. C. T HOM AS. I'ditor aiitl
lVoprirlor.
ns
MATHS or Sl iSSf lill-TJON.
One copy 0110 year..... fUK ,
«loo copy six months .... oil
One copy three months .... J
Advertising rates made known on a;
plication.
Entered at the Post Office H t Morgan n>
second class mail matter.
MORGAN, GA.. JAN. 21, IMIS
1 ""
New Light Correspondent On
Woman.
As some of our cotTrspotidmits
have wtitteu so mtieli about man,
I’ve concluded I would write on
Woman. From the tuno of the
Jewish dispensation, when woman’s
character shown in ail its affuigenc
upon the pages of divine history, to
the time when tho sainted Mary an-
noiuted her Lord and Master with
the costliest perfume; lnr cartel
has boon resploiidant with good and
loving deeds. Woman lias ever
been uppermost in tIre tniivds of
in on, and her deeds have illustrated
some of the grandest events CO 11'
netted with the human race. Our
mothers have told im that all through
the carnage of that terrible w ar be¬
tween the states that the woman of
the South, especially, were types of
all that was most BEAUTira, and
ELEVATING in female character.
Their ministering touch, bestored
alike upon the Blue and the Gray,
jVrtS felt around the couch of the
wounded and dying soldier. II or
influence is being felt for good as it
encircles the globe, and it is most
potent in the seclusion of her home,
where power, silent in its workings,
has directed legislation and shaped
successfully the affairs of tho state,
at times when the bravest men
quailed before the task. Her best,
most lasting and noblest works, bid¬
den in the two measures of meal,
quietly prevailing every class of .so¬
ciety with her hallowed
or like the silent dew refreshing the
drooping and disconsolate wayfarer
with the charm of her presence.
Because i.f the gentleness of her
or«, - - v i,„ e ssed her by and
her true place in shaping the uosrioy
of this world has not had its
recognition. As prejudice
away and history begins to accord
to woman her true place, wo
more clearly that every great event
recorded, either in sacred or profane
history, has been controlled largely
by the infiuenco of woman. In that
greatest of all events she, it was,
who vas last at the cross and fitst
at th* vipulchre. Ever true to her
noble character, woman has always
been foremost in every movement
that promised to elevate the suffer¬
ings of the human family, mid to
place m, ^kind on a higher plane
nearer to the Creator. The great
missionary interprises that are no.v
so far-reaching in their influence,
that aie fast encircling tire globe
tfith the magic touch of Christianity,
are controlled and directed almost
solely by women. It is no boasting
assertion, nor must offense be
taken when it is said that woman
has done more towards Christianiz¬
ing the world in the last fifty years
than was done in ten centuries.
There aie women, American women,
too, who have won imperishable
glory and ihoir names will forever
resound through the corridors of
Time, an immortal legacy to their
sey Although it was through
vcf , in yielding to the tempta¬
tion offered by the serpent, that sin
tame into tho world It will be by
her that the world will be redeemed,
aad fallen humanity bo prepared for
the. happy golden millenium when
Christ comes to claim his own.
Now, as to the “Now Woman.” Who
issht? What is her avocation in
life! Would it be wise even to touch
upon her cleverness; her sense of
good humor, when that stern old
Judge, Public Opinion, is not her
frienuf The newspapers have lidi-
culed her to such an extent and their
ridicule is so popular that it requires
an act of physical courage for her to
stand up ig her own defence. Of
course she is the woman who shrieks
on political platforms, neglects her
husband and let her children grow
up like little heathens; a woman who
wants to hold office with men and
be and talk like men and a
whose swagger is no kss
d than her skirts. Only
while she regards you
e in a companionable
•ay, •'•That’s .light,
■' meet •srgon-
r AVhen
'tine oft ei doors
10
wV
to*
of 1 tie 11
10 want wotn t 1 1
perfect i V ov m
knittihg g C ii S, arc
much tonified um-n
30 MO of lint
oven 1 lie *hicw woman 1 has to ~
sense to go in when it rains, V*
and a woman always cornc? homo < (
the hcailti rug. Dr, I lavvlhome n
lii ing asked where d:j this tlatnor
for the supremacy of woman origi-
jj, 1 . ; ••Thai, i' camel)-.nil tin-
same region wlnre every i-m, which
had been a on ■ to humanity, Lad
had ns birth. Women, self willed,
Contentious, arragant, noisy, coinba-
!i '-- ; ; “ -...... Th ;? v
’> nothing on <‘;in h or umIh tlio
f "7
• 1 - 11 1 nnnileti, true iifarltil, manly
‘; 1 " th " 1 ,vi
lamty. tnod‘-i,iy, itumimy, l a giacfous
tomtitfi', and a calm split, woman
h ‘ { 1,1 * 1
loving! V. v ami lovall ; a‘, v moving in Lor
a- .; .„ lin : n ( ll , (M . : b , 3
/ ’ ‘'
•
to her highest e-. taf , and in that, cs-
Utc ,, man » .... j .. «;‘h .......
-
meut, «'i hand wilting or Hud, a win.
dirtv open towards, a world of elreru
tb. wa <i-i, r« “s-,d
loved.” and the woman, tho wife, tins
mother, tho sister, has Leen endowed
with ju*t such self-sacrificing love
as fits her for the performance ot
her duties iu life. And side by side
is nil illustrated picture of tho “old
woman” and the “now woman” rep
lOBt-ii ting the past, 111 led with a halo
of glory while the other, with defects
sometimes enshrouding her, stands
today, in many instances, as the
embodiment of tho highest life.
Though tho world is full of great
men, it is i.ot without its famous
women, who have justly won the
laurels that wreathe their brows.
Essay <“! Boys.
From The Uolhiiu Siftings.
The following essay was delivered at
“Old I'Vhii noil school” last, week by
one of our moat prominent young ladies.
miluUHCript was stolon ly a reporter,
and is'ptftwAUed without tho consent of
the young lady:
“Boys—Boys is animals what wares
briebrsand docs mean things aiul tarea
they close and breaks things and walk
on Tom walkers hud Wavo na
sling shots and swap bacon lags.
“Therein two kinds of
boys and boys what aint good boys.
But 1 don't like good boys, cause they
jest set up in the house and talk propel
and hide around and tell when you steal
ginger cakes from nia and when you got
whipped iu school.
“I don’t like bail boys much outlier
cause they tare up play houses and
brakes dolls and cull you crybaby, mid
lies your kitten's tails together to make
’em light, amt ware patched 'niches and
dirty feet’ but, sometimes they let you
go hunt chestnuts wid 'em, andtheu —
then they niut bad boys. Boys cun
Work rilhmetic ziunplus. but they aint
smart iuspclliu, graurnenuid gogvaphy.
“Boys carry shoe-strings and nails
and rocks and fops and buck-eyes uud
whistles iu they pockets. Boys can
climb, trees aud swim creeks and go in
a Muslim and chew tobaccer and have
ground-each and stone bruises and pick
cotton and be president; b it they can't
so on buttons and make up beds and
dress dolls. When boys gits on long
brichos, they git old knives and scrape
and scrape they upper lips to git a mus-
tash, cause they think they can kiss girls
thou—and then they niu' boys no mo
aud thats all 1 know.
An exchange of ours truthfully
says: “No sensible man should got
angry because a newspaper man
dune him for money. A dun is col
impeachment of n subscribers
integrity, but it is the outcropping
the publisher’s necessity. lie has
to dun them to pay expenses, In
stead of getting mad and stopping
the paper because be is asked for
what is honestly due, the subscriber
should thank tho editor for waiting
on him so patently and pay up like
a man.”
‘'Don't you think Alfred 1ms H rather
vacant stare?’ “Painfully, That’s
because he thinks of nobody but him¬
self.”
“Who! makes you look so blue?” “1
the 'Don’t Worry Society,’ this
afternoon.” “Well?" I’m a bit n..\-
(o know where (he money for ini
inn fee and dues is to come fioia."
Brown: "Doyon know that tho nm-
of physicians are comparatively
men?” Jones: “No, I wasn’t
of that: but I know some of them
awfully poor doctors.'’
■
kit of Uk
M. K ;
lie in a
*
its
jpported his fan ’’
b<? went
pia or 1 ig
from San Francisco and i
-.out.a to Ghici and BufTalrj c the
mi t
The 3 m at
Fort Angle;;, on the t i
Ku'.'u. 100 inih-b northwfftt of f j
r<*acb'id it die;;' ,»u>;*p n/ \ >- 5 the lAt Of
.lor, ml y, ;, J 8 f in Now York city. Not
at it ended there. Lassicy must he the
r- .m-ari.a'.iOti of the Wanth-iiug Jew. for
he ,ay, he Is going still on, and that tiie
bouse on whee-is arid the tow headoT
»• ...... . ....... .. ... ....... “
. ILu'Ih in 1D00. J h>- only uou-
............- -..........-<* -....................
m, a will I,.- iuvolv.-d in the neeissity of
............... .„a„ P iii ,,.oi
a v ,tndoul.tediy this original
-\i..e,K,... family , . will , m make , a holy show
i Til, ulon^ over the smooth highways
5 1 ,;U ' .. Ui lh “ n . , , , v< ‘
i i; do.
r Tim Ii-.IIK. wheel,! built by the
0:1 \va-;
v ,, atiie I hi..... .. lt of ......... '
,
1 dapboarda and is D font high and 12 foet
" ........... -
ean , -" J divided into two compnrtpicniit.
The clapboard walls are lined with cloth
aU(i Loavy papers. I wo babies have
boon born to the couple hi their houso cn
wheels.
The plan of campaign was this: Lash-y
i« a juck of all trades, and wherever he Is
can “turn his hand” to almost anything,
Mind reading appears to bo t he lowest
depths he reached, when tie stopped in
a nelghdorhood, the queer outfit alwajs
attracted a crowd. Then Lasley’s elo¬
quence prevailed. lie succeeded general¬
ly in getting work of some sort, cither at
farming or at some mechanical tinkering,
llesld as that ho always had' on sale hi.-,
little book, the history of his travels ai d
photographs of the outlandish rig and the
whole family. In selling these lie some-
times took in money at the rate of “a
aollar a minute.” Not the least attract
lion was the tow headed children peeping
like birds out of Tho little vkuiow in the
wagon and displaying a njiilance of coin-
plexion and health absolutely dazzl
Many a millionaire would give un
sums to have his pampered gWklircn look
like tho LafJuy vy'i. leS. In California
I
J uie|-tmily lived nwhi. on grapes an
given walnuts—’“ver , •••■!. , food,* , wrli-s
Lesley, “but after two weeks it elides ”
Notumlly , .. .......... .
The house on wheels traveled G.ncn
miles on its jourmy from Port Angles,
wash,, to New York city. Lasley says
ho never shoes his horses in summer, and
they never got tender footed, It is iieecs
Mary to be truthful, however, and say two
pftiis of hovsos have tmocumberal to the
arduous labels of hauling the Lesleys by
crisscross routes over this continent and
have lain down and died, was it because
they had no shoes in summer?
Home of the fakir’s observation of travel
arc gems in their way. lie says in a lit¬
tle descriptive pamphlet, that during the
nearly four years they have been on their
journey the La-,leys have born invited to
attend church only six times. Of Califor¬
nia he Wiites, “Hnnchnu n are close fisted
they hitlhn ieg a poor man a curse to the
earth --bettor bo dead.” Of Texas,
“Texas people an the most r dlgious we
ever met, also tho poorest.” Do the two
facts belong together. Again,“It causes
us to smite to see the pomposity of some
city official:'," Many another lias had
occasion to remark the same.
Lasley is a spare man with a fresh com¬
plexion and a shrewd, bright eye. It is
said the people of New York city thought
he really might have put on a clean shirt
uheii lie reached their town and not worn
the same ono in which he started from
Seattle. Si ill, Now York era are apt to
bo overto.isitive in those little matters.
1( Is oa-y to eali'li a cold and just ns
easy to get rid of il ifyuii eomttioneo cm ly
t° use Om- Minute Cough Cure. It, cures
all coughs, colds, bronehetis, pneumonia and
throat ami lung troubles, it is pleas¬
ant to take, safe to use and sure to cure.
F- L. Boyd Leary. Mrs. S. T. Clayton,
Morgan, Henry Tinner. Edison.
An old bachelor quietly remarks that
“When a girl reaches the age of twenty-
five she loses all desire for birthday par¬
ties.’' That’s no joke.
Passenger—Let me oft' at Minute
street.
Conductor—There ain’t no such street
to my knowledge.
Passenger—O, well Sixty-seooud
street will do.
“Good listeners are rare,” remarks nil
exchange. That’s because it is so dilli-
cu't to Lear distinctly through u keyhole.
As God crowned the six days of crea¬
tion with the seventh day of holy rest,
so let the dins of honest labor become
by the solemn rest and devotion .
that day which is the glorious crown
week,
TOI'K
b-jlL TILLERS
Agricultural S crotary Hrsbltt
Gives Some Advice.
i’LAH TO EOLVIl COTTON PROBLEM
V•>#!* fiirinep< Sat t<* Ltr
fci:hr Ii.oh l r wr (L« 0 «f«»unjj Y e*r »»»• il<i
!" Uj.fMirtlf *»£ high * rices at;«! h short
Crop A2afct**r I*« L a,t
1*1 «»ta a i’urety Hu-lu <•** S.' jmlot.
LitPAh 1 me ;t or A<jBiCd;t ubs.
Atlanta, Jan. i, lbl>8
Su-eeKsfui faruuiig eomrKe.'i mti.-. more
than tiie mere planting, cultivating and
gathering the cropi. «or ... is it the abil-
try to produce a large yield from a smalt
area. This is often done at a heavy loss.
The suenr.siul farmer looks luto all the
details of his work. lie studies the re
quirements of iiis different crops, iliat is
tlm food elements required and the
SSESSS.ii.l2i
aotm rJieir '-if* me cits of fertility He
rpgsssrssfe In selocmig his fertilizers '5 ho keeps bs
m
; those needs ami the elements required
iu Hie fertilizer to supply t}, de!l aim n. of
uoadcd J)lwit food i„ e different ft i.ds
which ho expects to cultivate. These
are quosfions of as much, perhaps of
greater importance, than the amount of
the crops produced, or their value iu the
market, and, unlike the rest, they can
only perLuco. be decided bv experiment and ex-
T at certain fert.liz.irwhould
be used tor certain crops, uo oue at the
present day doubts, but we will gain an
but STEM'S observation
; analysis of tho crop, by
a«a experiment,
Times liave materially changed in tho
last 25 or 1)0 years for the farmer as well
as for the professional man and for
other men of uh trades. Tho farmers
constitute perhaps the only class which
' has not changed with changed coudi-
tions. Hero and there we find among
thorn a man who has risen to the de¬
mands of the times, but as a rule the
great body of farmers are pursu¬
ing the same beaten track which
their fathers have always followed, re¬
gardless of tho fact that, from our ex¬
haustive system of agriculture, the very
structure of on? soils oven has under¬
gone a radical change, and that these
soils now require different treatment
from that which they have received iu
the past. These are times of such fluc¬
tuating prices and close margins that it
pays tlit) farmer to do his own planning
in these matters, and to use his brains
and judgment as to what, where and
how much he shall plant of different
crops, in order to get the best returns
for his investment of time, labor, im¬
plements, stock ami laud. The experi-
ence of the past few years -will do much
to throw light on these questions. It
has been proven by repeated efforts that
farmers are not easily organized, they
do not folly appreciate the
of united effort for bp ! ? protection. An¬
other difficult? la the way of controlling
the area *n oottou ts the foot that for
gene .as we have been studying tho
naWte and peculiarities of this, our
money creo. and lt is the ono crop which
we know kovM® -It iVd& aiways
boon our money crop, and we hesitate
j other to engage iu experimental work on
lines.
j i It seems to us, however, that "p'S.’S the so-
! umvereaily followed, will once and for
; uh set at rest the question of how much
oottou the souih can afford to raise. The
answer is, as much as she can produce,
after siio inis provided for fuli burns uiuf
smokehouses; for plenty of home sun-
plies fi cm field, orchard, garden, poul-
try yard and dairy—and has thus learned
the oft repeated lesson of living at home
and working on a cash basis, to “pay as
you go, and go ua you pay.”
We must adapt ourselves to the
changed conditions, which we meet on
every hand, and this cannot bo done by
any very sudden or veiy radical re¬
forms. Over a very large area, cotton
must remain the chief money crop. To
abandon its culture and trust, to some
other perhaps unfamiliar crop would be
the height of folly, but we must not
load our agricultural strip to the gun¬
wales with cotton bales and then expect
to escape disaster when unfavorable
conditions arise.
THE USE OS' FERTILIZERS.
We have always maintained that the
wonderful power of commercial fertil¬
isers ia but faintly comprehended by
these whose misfortune it has boon to
misapply them. A thoughtful liis man
cannot expect to improve laud with
commercial fertilizers alone. The com¬
mon practice of drilling iu 100 or 200
pounds to the aero on land destitute of
humus is a grave mistake, and has
proven a curse rather than a blessing.
But, when we fill the land with humus,
by turning under vegetable matter, by
careful rotation of crops, by making and
taking proper care of all the homo ma¬
nures possible and by the uso of legu¬
minous crops, we will find ‘ that the
profitable use of commercial fertilizers
will bo limited only by the amount of
money we are able to invest in them
Tho intelligent use of the fertilizers en¬
ables oue to plow deep; to plant reiio-
rating crops; to raise ami improve
Btvek and keep more of it; to make 10.)
per cent more of home manures, and to
double the producing capacity of labor,
now our most expensive item. Injudi¬
cious and careless methods are Worse
than useless. Unless intelligent fore¬
thought marks our plans, the fertilizer
fails to feed either t.lia crop or the laud.
Nothing is more dangerous to the crops,
or pooket more than depleting heavy to the farmer’s
amouuts of commer¬
cial fertilizer indiscriminately applied
to worn and exhausted soils.
PLANS FOB THE TEAR.
The farmer should lay his plans for
tho year with careful forethought, not.
overrating mating difficulties. advantages, Having nor uuderesti-
out Ids work he better thusmapped
advantage of is prepared to
tako every favorable op
portuuity Look to push it forward to comple¬
tion. at the question of
HOW MUCH COTTON TO PLANT
From a purely business standpoint
Don’t muka your plans on the supposi-
tfon of a short crop and high prices—
both of which are subject to a score of
deciding influences, of which we have
tiealiy uo knowledge, aud which are also prao-
beyond our control. Con¬
sider what have been your profits
or losses iu the past, and thg causes
leading up to such results. Calculate
os to what, with favorable seasons, will
be a fair yield, set aside an ample area
for all provision crops, aw),then put in
just so much cotton ai your experience
shows thut you can manage snccess-
fully. Don't burden yourself with a
cotton crop so heavy that it is a con tin-
ual menace, not only to your peace of
mind, hot to the sucemfvd carrying
til
l,'ll ace of
jOL» flowing
overestimated The jnality j
rhe land. situation, euviromu ojf, an I
6.1101: s i-xercts ? a f$@cidlllg inliu' nee i»s i
t broken > tiie time the to kind plow, of to plow ? depti 1 to Oa be |
and to u se
ordinary land the plowing may on as j
long as the we riser permits, and if a
so haulier follow ■ h cam plow we are !
taking long odds against injury from ■
drouth lit 2 t summer. By CDs oiler ?s j
meant . not the nucule . , turn plows , which
wiii tbrow u quantity of clay to t he sub- sur-
i ut the mug. sharp,, strictly
SOI i plow, wnich breaks rhe suLs ill m
the bottom of tint furrow ami l« .ive.s it ( I
there. In turning b! noble, sod, ur siV.tr
land, tr.rii each furrow only partly over :
By this plan the no t-, act more directly I
np;.;i t:.e vegefcame matter and otnfei
ei! '!>*ents, and wi.on toe sui.s-qneut
prcpr.intioii.s tor planting are com;deted
thi ^ v.^ctabie mou d is thoroashly |
mixed with the soli, i istead or' remain
ittg iu a layer at the bottom of the
j furrow.
j QATIIEa AND 8AVB lIOTitE MANURES.
When tiie weather dees nos permit
th e plows to run, the teams cannot be
S"£:'
-umuiatoii around yar«is and barn. If
•
;
i rather than allow their valuable ele-
i SSWrtKSw For the home
I terrain^ mixing of fertilizui'U many ia reasons to be greatly
1 fel 'red. The reduced; pre-
| expense, is we
: know* exactly what elements of plant
i food wo are using; we can reguiute the
proportionate amounts of each to suit
; ^Lo needs of special crops or different
soiis, and during the process we are led
to study more carefully the delicate ad-
Jmstiuent of such agricultural truths as
.wigs Drought uador our observation,
It- T. N/Isbitt,
Vh!Uu of Veuves
stable Question.—I for n putting leaves in a
thing bedding, do they value add any¬
io tha manorial of the
mass, or are they simply us0d as an ob-
sorbent for the liquid aad si>-i«l animal
mauures ?
Answer.—L eavrs aione nosseas con-
giderable manorial value, ad is shown
tn the improvement of cha crops on
land which has had a heavy coating of
leaves plowed under, and as a bedding
for stable purposes they are not ex¬
celled. They not only add their own
elements of fertility to the manure, but
hold its valuable constituents prevent¬
ing their es.iape, and enabling the
farmer to save t: m to apply to his
crops. Nothing pays better than to use
the teams on wet d.-.ye when other farm
work is interrupts 1, to haul up a plen¬
tiful supply of leaves. On farms where
this is the rule throughout e year, we
hoar little complain of p. ops and
high priced fertilizers c issful farm¬
ing depends more on good t aiiogomeut
and care iu such small items as this, j
than on planting large area . small'
for.®, fikaab iffiirwlcii uL ik,. . - ma-
uares, which can ba eaved, a -
tueueki with commercial rertil 4
leguminous crops, will not oul;
satisfactory, but will bring in n_
tual cash than a large one cultsv
©Srthfr plan of taking off more fKim
the lam! than we return to it. After
« while . the annual decrease in fertility
' will become painfully apparent and
““ *“» ““ “ -»*?
and painf aily: so trace his stops and re¬
turn to his laud tho elements of which
| he has robbed it, or the money lender
comes iu to gradually absorb laud,
- h° everything. ...
lons0 . State
- ’ me Ap¬
ricultural Deparement.
Louvi .g Miinuro In Stable.
Question.— I am situated so that it
win be very inconvenient for me to
eitner haul out the manure from my
stables or compost it. Will if injure my
stock to allow it to remain in tho stables
for a mouth or two, provided I am very
careful to keep plenty of dry bedding?
If this plan ia practicable I will avoid
trouble cue handling, uud of course chat much
and expense.
Aksweb.—W hile our experience has
been that it is mucii better to hunt the
manure directly to the field or to com¬
post it, not allowing it to accumulate
iu the stables, the plan yoii suggest has
some advantage, and if you are careful
to keep a bountiful supply of good bed¬
ding your animals will not be materially
injured.
By your plan, as you suggest, you
will save one handling, Yon will also
save ail the liquid manure. You will
make much more manure, because you
will be compelled to use a much larger
amount of bedding. Yon will also pre¬
serve the manure in good condition and
when you are ready to haul it out,
which ought to be done long enough
before planting time to get the manure
thoroughly incorporated iuto tiie soil,
you will find that its chemical proper¬
ties have been well conserved and that
Its mechanical condition is such that
the spring ruins will soon wash its
strength into the soil. A good plan be¬
fore beginning to haul is to take a sharp
spade, or other suitable implement, and
cut the manure iuto blocks of conven-
ient size to handle. This will ba found
to greatly expedite the moving and
hauling of the heavy mass.—State Ag
licultural Department.
How to Behave.
I take at random two specimens
from an early Victorian manual :
“When entering tho boudoir of u
lady friend, n gentlemnn should be
very careful to remove bis hat,”
and “If at a dinner party you have
the honor to sit next your hostess,
and she depute to you the duty of
carving a leg of mutton, and if, in
doing so, you inadvertently upset
this joint into your hostess’ lap, do
not, as tho vulgar would, apologize
profusely and offer to buy her a
new dress, but pass it off lightly as
n joke. ” Strange though it seems,
the arbiter of conversation and eti¬
quette in the present day has made
no great advance from such modes
of wisdom.—Saturday Review.
Mrg. M. B. Ford, RuddeiPs I il., suffered
for eight years from dyspepsia and chronic
constipation liulc'plfj^r'r and was finally cured by using
al'rstomacho'' amMiver
troubles. P. E. Boyd Leary Mrs s T
Clayton Morgan. Hcffrv Tu ner. Edison'
mins hut
siklis iMf • S
.
J. TINSLEY AND CO.
ra
CD 03 B ; * ’ ; fcX.L a
i
Our consists of almost anything you may need. Wo invite your
attention to our mammoth stock of
| i?: %mih $w, §hk | m§ OSS 9
ftifil'# | umi§lfag§,
; tkot'iap If? $«§« a fall
, yp®j®e, mm stocks,
And all kinds of farm implements to be
If! m
t-.-v A: 1 : -II B m hi ft I - I
, f0jj$ . 1
w ft B
<
t: P “ f S3feK0®l; IffS
lev.
■s
II lie CFO, n Oil and Fertilizer Co.,
o 8
m
for §%a§cn:
Carter’s Formula, Complete Fertilizer; Arlington High Grade,
Complete Fertilizer; Our Favorite, Complete Fertilizer; Potash
Acid; Add Phosphate; IIurate of Potash; Kainit; Cotton Seed Meal.
With the above brands we chn furnish anything in plant food that ia
needed or our farmers will want. We can and will meet legitimate
corns
petition. Got our prices before buying elsewhere.
ARLINGTON OIL AND FERTILIZER CO.,
AIILISGKW UEOJttUA,