Wheeler county eagle. (Alamo, Ga.) 1913-current, October 03, 1913, Image 5
GUHAM& Hightower General Merchants We carry a full line of Buggies, Wagons. ✓ Harnes, Hay Presses, Engine and Cylinder Oils, Lumber and Shingles and will be glad to show you through at our general Store. Also » e operate a modern all steel Murray Ginnery with cotton cleaner attached and buy cotton and cotton seed in connection with same and extend a cordial invitation to any one needing anything in the above mentioned lines to come and get our prices before buying. MAKE OUR STORE YOUR HEADQUARTERS WHEN INTOWN Graham & Hightower ALAMO. GA Sumner's REAL ESTATE BARGAINS 100 acres choice land, two horse farm, too good settlements, five miles north of Alamo, at a bargain. 300 acres choice land, 5 mi’es north-west of Ala mo, five horse farm, well improved, to sell cheap, GOOD TERMS. ■202 acres red pebel land, 8 miles north of Alamo, two horse farm, new land, new building, plenty of timber for mill site. Let us show you this farm. Terms. The A W, Barlow place, four miles north of Alamo This is a very fine place, well improved, to go at a bargain. Cash 135 acres choice farm land, two miles from Towns, four horse farm; well improved, to go at a bargain. Terms. 100 acres good farm land, four miles north-west of Alamo, one horse farm, new land, new buildings, good community,’ at a cash bargain. 202 acres choice farm land, four miles west of Alamo, three horse farm, two good settlements. Let us show you this bargain. Cash. W. J. SUMNER, I HOTEL ANSLEY ATLANTA, CA. Open June 30, 1913 The South’s finest and most modern hotel. Fireproof. 306 rooms, Rooms with running water and private toilet SI.OO per day. Rooms with connecting bath $1.50 per day. Rooms with private bath $2.00 per day and up. i Finest Rathskellar, Case and Private Dining Rooms in the South. J. B. POUND, Pres. J. F. LETTOtf, Mgr. CHAS G. DAY, Ass’t Mgr. Church Directory FREE WILL BAPTIST—First Sunday and Sat- | urday before in each month. Prayermeetinff each Eriday night. B. F. HORN, Pastor, Plainfield MISSIONARY BAPTIST—Third Sunday in each month. METHODIST—Fourth Sunday in each month , Sunday School 3 30 each Sunday afternoon. Prayer meeting every Wednesday evening. J. T. BUDD. Paetor. PRESBYTERIAN-Thlrd Sunday afternoon. 4 •’clack. CHAS. M. MONTGOMERY. Pastor MN MD SPIDEB ATTACKIN6 COM State Entomolcglat Worsham Receive* Many Complaint* and Give* Remedies. Atlanta, Ga. —Just as Georgia Is about to make one of the largest and best cotton crops in the history of the state, numerous complaints of the ravages of the red cotton spidter and the cotton boll worm are reaching the state department of entomology; and in many Instances these pests threat en serious damage. The cotton boll worm has been sent in from a number of South Georgia counties, while reports of the red spi der come from various sections of the state, both northern and southern. Os course the best remedy in both instances is prevention, says State Entomologist E. Lee Worsham; but where the pest is already on the cot ton plant just approaching maturity, there is but one thing to do and that is to kill it with some effective poi son. The red cotton spider is exceedingly small and its prevailing color is red. It feeds on the under side of the cot ton leaf. The female lays anywhere from 50 to 80 eggs, which hatch in about four days, and there may be as many as 16 or 17 generations dur ing one year. The spiders suck the juice from the leaves, causing red dish spots to appear, later turning to dark brown. The leaves drop one by one until usually the plant dies. The pest Increases most rapidly during hot dry weather until, toward the end of August, several acres of a field , may become badly damaged. WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, GEORGIA. Peat Lives Through Winter. The cotton red spider often survives the winter, if he can find green food. As a rule, they prefer the cultivated violet, common goldenrod or the poke weed, but will attack other plants if these cannot be found. Where the red cotton spider is now prevalent in cotton fields, the only way to stop its ravages. Entomologist Worsham points out, is to spray the infected fields with some good insect icide known to kin this particular pest. The cheapest and at the same time most effective insecticides for this purpose are either a two per cent, pre pared lime-sulphur solution, or a two per cent. Scalecide solution, used as a spray. The state department of en tomology will be glad to furnish at any time, information upon this and kindred subjects. Where the red cotton spider Is prev alent Mr. Worsham calls attention to the necessity for the exercise of care to prevent its recurrence next year. Clean culture is important; all weeds and underbrush, especially pokeweed and goldenrod on ditch banks and field borders, should be grubbed out and burned. Cultivated violets near cotton fields should either be spray ed or destroyed. Trap borders, or thickly sown cotton, along the border of a field, which may be cut off and burned, is a good preventative. A careful watch should be kept for all first attacks and infested plants should be removed and burned. Work of the 801 l Worm. The moth of the boll worm, Mr. Worsham points out, generally has a wing expanse of about one and one half inches, and may be easily distin guished from Mie cotton leaf worm or caterpillar moth by the fact that, when at rest, it holds its wings slight ly raised and parted, while the cotton caterpillar moth always rests with the wings tightly closed. In Georgia there are at least four and possibly five generations of the boll worm each season. Fortunately for cotton, the female moth prefers to deposit her eggs on young corn, the eggs being laid on all parts of the plant, but preference is shown for the silk, if it is present. Each female de posits on an average of 1,100 eggs. These hatch in from three to ten days, depending on the season. It is usually the third brood that injures cotton most severely, along in August, when the corn begins to mature. Corn planted as a trap in rows from 200 to 300 feet through the entire field, so as to be in prime silking con dition about August 1, will attract the pest away from cotton. The eggs are deposited on the corn which can be cut and fed to stock when the worms are partly grown. Since the worm, when fully grown, descends into the ground where it passes the pupal stage, a splendid preventative is winter plowing of the ground, which exposes the pupa and kills it. When the worm is on the plant the only thing to do, of course, is to kill it by poison. Paris green may be used in the proportion of one pound of Paris green to tv/o pounds of flour, and at the rate of three pounds of Paris green to the acre; but the most effective method has been found to be dusting with arsenate of lead. In the case of this poison no dilution is necessary, and it should be used at the rate of about three pounds per acre. The duster is made of a one inch board one and one-half feet long er than the width of the rows and three Inches wide, with a one and one-half inch auger hole bored five inches from each end, and under each hole is attached a sAck made of un starched sheeting about fifteen inches long. The arsenate of lead is placed in these sacks and one person can dust fifteen to twenty acres per day by riding on horseback and dusting as he passes between the rows. Wherever the cotton boll worm is found this remedy should be applied at once. The roof of a Philadelphia hotel Is being equipped with a landing for aeroplanes. It will keep the manage ment busy when fly-by-night theatri cal troupes adopt this means of transportation. With a bulldog under one arm and a crate of eggs under the other, the Industrious postman is not required to lift his cap in salutation as the fair mistress of the bouse comes to get her morning letters. It must be awful to get Into a bunch of Chinese political reformers who are baseball fans and listen to their comments on the new govern ment and the Introduction of the dia mond at the same time. A Kansas City saloonkeeper, who never had a cash register but trust ed his bartender implicitly, died wort! $300,000. Now it Is up to some Ingenious psychologist to figure out just how much he would have been worth had he installed a cash regis ter. A Paris paper assures Its readers that it Is the practice of Americans to put their feet on the dining table. This is too general. It omits to speci fy the important detail that this i* the custom of Americans who are in the same class with those Parisian* I who put both forefeet in the trough , when they are eating. POPULAR Prices on IG. E» For the remainder of the season I will sell ice at the following popular prices: 100 pounds at 60 cents, delivered 100 pounds at 50 cents, at house 50 pounds at 35 cents 25 pounds at 20 cents 7 pounds at 05 cents Prompt deliveries of 25 pounds or more. Deliver at any hour. Ice guaranteed to be full weights. G. M. ELKINS “The Original Ice Man” L. A. BOND CONTRACTOR and BUILDER AND PLANING MILL HELENA, GA. All work guaranteed in work and prices Write or call on me when in need of material or want a complete honse built L. A. BOND HELENA, OA. FRIMTTFE Receives the Plaudits of the Public. Valiant. Protector of People’s Eye sight hailed as a benefacter by many thousands of enthusiastic admirers. “ Officer Printype ” responds with becoming modesty. Officer Printype nays: “I am overwhelmed by the ovation which greeted my appear ance in your midst I am simply doing my sworn duty in ridding the business and financial districts of 'he bad characters that for years have made typewriters a menance to your eyesight. I have merci lessly exposed and relentlessly pursued these dangerous typewriter types, which are responsible for more cases of defective vision than Ml •'her causes combined. "Report direct to my headquarters, in the Oliver Typewriter Building, Chicago, any machine whose type is violating the Opti cal law and I’ll have the offender haled before the court of public opinion. Printype— a- OLIVER Typewriter PRINTYPE IS OWNED AND CONTROLL ED EXCRUSIVELY BY THE OLIVER TYPEWRITER COMPAEY America rings with praise and ap plause for Printype. This superb new typewriter type has attracted more attention than any typewriter innovation brought out recent years Hundreds of thousands of people have seen this new type and wond ered what it was that made prin type correspondence seem like a spoken message. There’s virility, strength and charm in printype cor respondence. There’s refinement and “class” and style. Not pecause of its novelty—it’s inherent in type. A Vast Improvement Printype is designed in shaded let ters and numeral, like the type in whice books and magazines are printed. It is book type transformed and adopted to modern typewriter requirements. hill Dm Send Printype Coupon No I If you or anyone in whom you are interested contemplate going to a Busi ness college, write us first and we will, without charge, supply you with some very valuable information on the subject. 250 acres 8 miles south of Glenwaad, on the Spring Hill road, 3 good farms can be increased to 8. Good buildings and very choice farms. See A. D. Maddox, Glenwood, Ga. NOTICE—On and after September first I will rent my offices, up stairs, at three and four dollars per month large ones four and smaller ones three. H. S. HORWITZ, This radical departure from the old style “outline” letters makes it. pos sible to produce, on the Oliver type writer, a page of manuscript as clear and attractive as that of the finest book. The Oliver is the first and only typewriter that successfully prints print. The Primary Reason Printype resulted from our discovery that “outline” type, with its Bam»- ness, due to absence of shading, wus harmful to the eyes. The Silent Test For months, without any advertis ing, we put hundreds of Printype Oliver Typewriters into actual arrv ice, in many diverse lines of busi ness. We wanted the public verdict It came in a burst of admiration and a flood of orders that proved prin type a brilliant success. Printype letters, wherever seen, excited the keenest interest. Business men who received their first printype letter almost invariably answered, post haste—“where did you get that type Thus printype captured the country without firing a single shot, Price Not Advanced The Printpe Oliver Typewriter sells for SIOO. You can pay at rate of 17 cents a day. The new type adds 25 per cent to the value, but not one cent to the price. A small cash pay ment brings the machine. The Oliver Typewriter Co Oliver Typewriter Bldg. Chicago. Tell Officer “Printype” to write me a letter and send me his book. I’m interested Name Address