Newspaper Page Text
8
Monday Morning’s
SPECIAL
One hundred Alumi
num Roasters
(Two Parts)
Regular Price - $3.00
Our Special
Ninety-Eight Cents
Only one to a customer —No tele
phone orders accepted
H. M. MILLER
FURNITURE CO.
BRUNSWIG K BOOSTERS.
WATCH THIS SPACE FOR AN INTEREST
ING ANNOUNCEMENT IN THE COURSE OF
THE NEXT FEW DAYS. IT WILL BE OF
GENERA LINTEREST.
jCL shirts
} fflfr !im\\ VV e are now showing a very
J Jjfgi] IIJ IV vm ,ine asosrtment of Men’s Shirts
I a * P r ' veii *hat make buying pos
/fytf'h Si 11 1 s ‘ h,c * even *° the small income.
WxdlMjjfejjfAy Beautiful Shirts
JSrwMr $1.50. $2.00, $2.50
Jfl£W ftff and $3.00
Poplins, Oxfords, Madras. S ome with collars attached.
Arrow Collars 20c.
Stephens, Lorentson
& Sheffield
Agriculture and Economics
In This Immediate Section
This Is the first of a series of arti-i
cles to be written on agricultural and
home economic subjects particularly
adapted to this community and its
people.
These articles will be written by R.
D. Miller and Mrs. Madge B. Merritt.
Mr. Miller is a recent graduate of
the University of Georgia. Ms spe
cialized in vocational agriculture and
is now working under the Smith-
Hughes Fund in co-operation with the
Glynn county board of education and
is the principle of the Community
school.
Mrs. Merritt needs no introduction
to the people, having been here long
enough for them to be acquainted
with her work. -7-.
The pecan industry is one *that is
just in its infancy.' Its, possibilities
as a money! crop are boundless and it
is needless to expaciate oh the fact
of whether or not pecans do well here.
Hundreds of mammoth trees laden
ed every year with fruit stand in our
midst as a living testimony to this
fact. *
Pecans, like every other useful
thing, havd their enemies, and unless
we start a crusade against some of
them we will find that in a few years
they will have increased to such an
extent that it will be hard to save
the pecan at all.
Mrs. Merritt is planning to put on
a campaign at once among the public
school children all over the country
to destroy the Tent Caterpillar which
is to be seen on all sides of us as
we go up and down the public high
ways and through the woods. •
Mr. Miller’s article follows:
Glynn county, like all rest of
the world, is made up of all kinds ef
folks, some doing one thing and some
doing another. Some of our folks are
enthusiastic over the agricultural de
velopment of Glynn county, and on
the other hand there are those whose
faces get so long at the very mention
of agriculture In the county that it
would take the barber all day to shave
them.
In the beginning of tjiese articles I
am going to tell about the different
people over the county who are real
ly trying to do farming in Its differ
ent fazes, and shall endeavor to tell
the failures as well as the successes
with which these people are meeting.
Because I havel bq, recently been
at Haynor I am goAg to tell about the
Durham place and what is .going or.
there:
Mr. Durham, as far as I have ever
heard, Is the only person who ever
I Want the Same Kind Again
jp ik Those arc*the*words we like mo*t of
all It is the highest praise a merchant can
• get. It is a proof that we’re living up to our
Every Crawford is a Standard of ideal of giving 100 peT cent satisfaction.
Value in its grade. No matter how the
leather market fluctuate*-~no matter Whenever you buy anything here yotr
p , r *f e * change--- you are aamred of can have complete confidence in US.
splendid, dependable shoes that are
worth the money. Reputation for providing the most attractive
We are trying to outdo ouraelves and dependable goods for the money isi
this season and have provided models . .
Eur most valued asset
If you appreciatehonest.„ intelligent
Ffort come in and let us show you the
e that i* best lor YOU Well give you
tch satisfaction that you’ll always want to
uy at this Dependable Store,
Stephens- Lorentzson
& Sheffield
shipped corn out of this county by
the carloads. Hfc found a market
cDse by in Camden county. This year
*
he has one hundred acres planted,
and told me the other day that he
would average thirty bushels to the
acre. He has been gathering corn for
six weeks and will not finish up this
week, try as he will.
He let his hogs into his corn field
several-weeks ago and it is a sight
to see his drove of hogs. Already
they a¥e fat enough to kill. Like all
good farmers he has planted Velvet
beans with his corn to giv- back to
the soil what his corn has taken out
and have the beans for his stock.
1 wish all the Barred Rock fanciers
in the cfounty coulij see Mrs. Durham's
flock. She has a hundred hens
brought over from last laying season.
They look ragged now for they are
in the midst of the molt, but she gets
enough eggs to send several dozens
to market every Friday after they
have had all tlAit the’ family eould
consume. Besides the hens she has
nearly a hundred young pullets that
will come into service before Thanks
giving. Her young cockerels are
magnificent birds now, when they are
full developed they will be beautiful
birds indeed.
Mrs. Durham has been breeding
Barred Rocks for twenty-eight years.
Her foundation sotck came .from the
pen that won first prize at the World’s
Fair at Chicago. She has promised
to exhibit at our. poultry show in No
vember.
t Mrs. Durham also specializes on
strawberries and expects to have an
acre in strawberries next year. She
plants the Klondike and Miracle vari
eties and i? adding some Ever bearing
plants this season.
WILL WRITE ALL NEWS OF
’I THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Hereafter once a week the News
will print the happenings of the pub
lic schools, written by Alfred C.
Wood, Jr,; publicity editor of the
“School NewsV This young man has
developed a talent for this kind of
work, and his articles will be both
interesting and complete.
It was intended to print the first
of these articles this morning but Mr.
Wood, not knowing the condition of
affairs in the average newspaper of
fice, furnished the copy too late for
this morning’s edition.
Store Closed
All Day
V
Monday
' ■
On Account of
Holiday
; i
PERSONAL
My beauty parlor has been in op
eration for oyer a year, ami I have
successfully treated ladies from New
York,. Jacksonville, Chicago, aud oth
er places, who say they have never
received more thorough or more rea
sonablly priced ! work.
f have studied and worked ih New
Or it ana. Richmond and Athens.
A share of your patronage is so
licited and will be appreciated.
Mrs. H. D, Cummings, 1410 Union
Btreef, Phono 1090. 9-11
Sportsmen!
Stop Experimenting—Use
Winchester Guns
and Ammunition
and know you have the world’s
proven BEST.,
Lynn-Gould Hardware Company
THE WINCHESTER STORE
505 Gloucester St. * \ Phone 261
House - Keepers
Have No Cause to Wolry
About Washwomen
When they can send everything to the
Brunswick Laundry
and have them washed in a clean, sanitary manner, re
turned to the home within a few hours at just the right
dampness lor ironing. We call this “WET WASH,” the
cost is 5 cents per pound.
Let us be your washwoman
Brunswick Laundry
F. M. BELL, Manager
Phone 129 1610 Richmond St
SUNDAY, OCT. 2, 1921.