Newspaper Page Text
THE TURNING POINT
In many a business man’s career has been a good piece of advertising—It bridged the gulf between
failure and success. But such advertising is not carelessly done—even brilliant ideas go for nothing
if they are not expressed. To guard against a mistake here is our constant care, and our patrons are
sure of accurate interpretation of their thought and the fitted typographic expression, for fitness is
the real test of typography.
WE PRINT
Letter Heads, Packet Heads, Envelopes, Bill Heads etc.
ONLY THE BEST INE AND PAPER USED ON ALL WORE.
We make a specialty of Typewriter paper, legal blanks of all kinds
for both county and city officials printed to order, bank swork and in
fact, anything in the printing line. Write and get our prices before
placing your order
The Camilla Enterprise,
Fine Job Printing Camilla, Georgia
The Safe Qround
The “hog, hominy and hay”
editor of the Albany Herald gives
tins sound advice to the farmers:
‘‘Increase you x, cotton acreage
if you will, Mr. Farmer, but don’t
do it at the expense of food crops
for both man and beas.The
South should raise all the cotton
it can, but not at the expense of
its food crops.—Columbus Eu»
quire r-Sun.
Put it this way: Raise big food
crops. Give them first consider¬
ation. Then with the surplus
land and labor available on the
farm# raise cotton.
That schedule is self regulat¬
ing and self adjusting, and works
to advantage in two distinct
ways. In the first place, it sup
plies the farm with everythin?
needed by the animals that are
a part of its equipment. It pro¬
vides hay, fodder, corn, oats and
peas for horses and cattle and
ground peas and other fattening
things for hogs. It fills the
smokehouse with hams and sides
and the pantry with lard, syrup,
hominy, meal, eggs and butter.
It makes the farmer independent
of trusts and that mysterious
and fickle bug-bear, the money
market. It makes the farm the
best spot on the top side of earth
and the farmer the most content¬
ed of men.
And it works blessings in an
' other direction by keeping down
the all-cotton craze—a craze
\ which has proven ;■ c->rsf> and
thiA’hich is recpons h <• lor the de
casio<rion within r. •" '■> of
before toads of farms in the e> t <-■
The firs'be farmed who rai-e*
and Groom,” will not have a sh«r
by Judge J. H. Sdibility for c lit-
over-production. The limited
supply of farm labor in the South
places a corresponding limit on
the producing capacity of the
section, and when the proper at¬
tention is paid to food crops and
live stock theie is sure to be no
excessive cotton acreage
The sensational heights to
which cotton prices have soared
this season cannot fail to sorely
tempt the ever-optimistic tiller
of the soil, but he will commit a
most grievoi s error if at this im-.,
portant juncture he desert the
sane principles of diversified
farming and again join in the
cnase of that ruinous phantom,
fheali-cotton crop.—Herald.
Croup
The peculiar COllgh which in¬
dicates croup, is usually well
known to the mothers of croupy
children. No time should be lost
iu the treatment of it, and for this
purpose no medicine has received
more universal approval than
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy.
Do not waste valuable time in
experimenting with untried rem
idies, no matter how highly they
may be recommended, but ‘give
this medicine as directed and all
sy-npioms of croup will quickly
disappear. For sale by Lewis
Drug Co.
Even the be3t of marksmen will
occasionally miss a train.
j LOST—On the 23rd. of Dec.
about three miles above Camilla
on? white and liver colored setter
Bach, named Belle. I will pay
SoQOtonarty telling me where
she nan be found, address me J.
J. Forrester at Putney or Pelham
Ca.
NEARLY 1,000,000 ACRES
FOR GRAZING CATTLE.
Packing Houses Buy Great
Tracts in Florida.
Pensacola, Fla., Jan-, 18,.—A
land sale, said to involve nearly
1,000,000 acres, has just been
consummated between the South¬
ern States Lumber Company, on
tne one hand, and the Armours,
Swifts and other Chicago packers
on the other. The latter have
bought the land for grazing pur
poses and will make of it an im¬
mense Most cattle^arm. Of the land is located in
Escambia, county, Florida, and
in Baldwin county, Alabama.
FOR SALE:—
500 acre farm near Camilla.
TO RENT:—
50 or 75 acres south of Camilla.
I. L. Underwood.
The Rural Free Delivery is an
important educational agency,
since it so greaJLly increases the
amount of reading. People who
oo little reading usually do little
thinking. Two or three carefully
selected newspapers and maga¬
zines taken regularly into a fam¬
ily greatly facilitate the educa¬
tion of the children. In these
days when first class magazines
and papers can be had so cheap¬
ly, to do without them in the fam¬
ily is inexcusable.—Exchange.
To Cure a Cold in One Day b Cures Two Grip Days.
Seven MSBon boxes soH b past 12 Jnonths.
Hon. S. G. McLendon, of
Thomasvill8, one of the ablest
lawyers and most influential men
in the southern section of the
state, has prepared a very
thoughtful and highly interesting
lecture which has for its title
“Publicity, the Safety of the
State and Safety of the Repub¬
lic.” In the forum and on the
hustings, Mr, McLendon has, by
ability and eloquence, won many
triumphs, and his success on the
lecture platform will be equally
as marked and pronounced. Mr.
McLendon is richly qualified by
learning and experience to speak
forcefully, admirably and im¬
pressively on his theme.—Macon
News.
How To Make Money.
Agents of either eex should to¬
day write Marsh Manufacturing
Co., 538 Lake Street. Chicago,
for cuts and particulars of their
handsome Aluminum Card Case
with you name engraved on it
and filled with 100 Calling cr
Business Cards. Everybody or¬
ders them. -"'Sample Casa and 100
Cards, postpaid, 40c. This Case
and 100 Cards retail at 75 cents.
You have only to show sample to
secure an order. 3end 40c
once for case and 100 cards
send 30c for 100.cards
case. $10 prize for every agent,
Mention this paper.
We happened to be in a little
city the ocher day where there
was a baseball game between uni¬
versity clubs. The visiting club
and the not small body of “root¬
ers” that accompanied it regis¬
tered at the principal hotel of
the place, and their actions, their
posing, their bad manners, their
swaggering, their beer guzzling
and cigarette smoking disgusted
all thoughtful onlookers. We
have seen so much of this for
several years, that we are more
than ever of the opinion that our
young men are not being well ed¬
ucated. Students properly train¬
ed are gentlemanly, and tempor
ate, and moral at home and
abroad. “By their fruits ye
shall know them,” and such
fruits indicate either bad system
or incompetent university presi¬
dents and professors.—Exchange.
What’s in a name?
Everything is in the name when
it comes to Witch Hazel Salve,
E. C. Dewitt & Co., of Chicago
discovered some years ago how
to make a salve from witch ha¬
zel that is a specific for piles.
For blind, bleeding, itching and
protruding piles, eczema, cuts,
burns, bruises,land all skin dis
eases Dewitt’s Salve has no equa.
This has given!rise to numerour
worthless counterfeits. Atsk fos
Dewitt’s—the genuine. Sold by
Lewis Drug Co.