The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, September 20, 1923, Image 6
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, I92J. r Ai ■■ fiilii ?# ,„5> Gathered By Bountiful Crops Result Of Hard Work and Unfailing Optimism Hie ttiahafement of the Banner-,own people, but it will, let outbid- Hctkld has ever had vehy hear to C rs know what we have accnm- er counties and stacs construct, , with a missing link la any one ty it would deter thousands from using it, for there are other high* ways that tourlxta would ravel. And then again we fell assured If Franklin votes bonds, that Ma Ison will cumulate its example foi that county la another link IA this highway. V. When the intelligent voteer of Franklin learn* the Importance ol this bond issue nnd how it will hance the value of every acn land on or near a road, that they will turn out and vote for bonds. tW* heart the advnncement and pjishcd In the way of agricultural I well-being of the man behind the advances. And this page’ will also] * plow. All realize that w ♦he'Jfar^' MM doors of stores *j eC f but report, every Hne pertain- would dosed, ing pli owe to gerve to enlighten other farmars Corn Cob Valuable success. Stop for one accomplished. These articles willif»% Plininicfc T-fonrle month evcry $lo\v and you. no t be confined to any one sub-] 111 VilWUlOlO 1 ldllUd **“ -* A ~ ‘iect but renort every Hne pertain-1. Chemists are now at work on the wheels of mauufactur- ing to the soil. w .dants cease to revolve, andj grass would ho growing ..nor thc'ngp^ EDIT streets of Athens and every other .FARM PAGE to^jp and city. Railways, the great arteries of Wo want formers to know that commerce, would indeed this department is their page, and in fact become *‘two streaks I we want them to help edit it nnd of rust and a right of way,” and also to direct it. Do not hesitate aunt famine stalk through the to drop u? n line giving your i views nboot whatever subject gaunt land. cotton stAlIf; nnd it ia iucuiciet that from It can be manufactured produots almost as valuable as th* seed of the plant. Thcj f have nlready found valu able Ingredients in the humble corn cob, and a factory has been • stabllshed In the Ohio valley that will require about 2,000,000 tons of cobs n year. Rome of the pro' city of Athena fullv realizes which you wish enlightenment or ducts obtained from cobs' include JJmr fllst u ♦’ *»,«. »nr ‘ y°^ thmtto-^tir brother farmers ncid tar, wood alcohol, pitch, char* " If. sh<,nl ‘ 1 kn . ow - If somc , * nMf ' r inlr '' : "- Pure acetic add. formlcaclf MCBRIDE HOWELL IS FINE FMM I?INE CROPS ON HOIJVIAN- SCOTT FARM DR. SOULE ADVISES FARMERS OF STATE few days since inspected ... ! the crops -of Messrs. * W. 8. Hol- On Tuesday afternoon, with ] and w w Scott, on the Mitch Mitch Messfn. W. E. Epps and J. Me- j **11 bridge road, Just beyond tho Dr. Soule Is ddlng a great work for 1 he education of our farmers. Bride Howell, we visited the beau- • Idty limits. These gentlemen havc. unf j iH giving them some timely that' cultivation 125 acres nnd there ! la not n more nroductive or tiful farm of the latter. between the Georgia and Seaboard I When Col. Ilolmnnn bought this •railroads and WlntervIUe and.Hull ‘ land it was considered too poor tc •n,., gt*tlon the birtb-pi.ce and ^ ~ J ing down in home of the WInterville Pure Feed J}J! *£ U T by that and nnd forfural. The latter is the more valuable of the products, It Is a rare chemical, the price be ing about $10 a pound. It can be manufactured from corn cobs at “Satan/ h 22Sff 1 SFSnS^WwSTAmi: extra/agant expenditures, the wives and eSwltrv a r*consMe nrfrel t ,*r Saughters of our farmers must agricultural product- an almo?j remember that this ^ also their manufactured from corn cobs at n s/wthM'r:^- f " dh -* iv ' **• xenre.tt that th. tlnL. had to ' susrAtzs?ut “-istr-lSaS*-. tend him every aid and encourage-' _ _ ment in their power._ And in this Make Money On needed work the Banner-Herald did all and everything in its pow er. When our bankers and mer chants subscribed a fund to em ploy experts to visit the country teach the value and use of Old Early Farm The historic old farm of Govern- calcium aracnate for combatting | or Early, on tho Oconee river, near the boll Weevil, our paper devoted; Sull Shoals, has been a soli to columns to their service. Having 1 every man or company thah owned an abiding faith In our beautiful nr ever worked It. Piedmont section and .tpe energy and courage of our farmers we J all in our power to enthuse and encourage them to.persevere. In fact some friends accused the Banner-Herald of ah exaggerated optimism. MADS NO MISTAKE The abundant harvests now ripening are proof conclusive that our' paper made no mistake in its t-SirfuS oau in Inc Wave .hearted farmers living In the^ountry trib utary to At! HH work prospci of what appeared ruin and banlt- AifiTcy. Ortly compare the eitua tioij laat fall and spring, when the era living in me country mu- r to Athawt. ■ They,went to and h*vtT> wrought' -plenty, icrlty add independence out clooda ware darkest, and the far mcr with empty bams anil pock ets sis! without credit, with the luight outlook now upon us, and it seems almost a miracle naa been wrought. TROUBLE COMES Then came the exodus move ment among, our colored popula tion and it seams .besides a ruln- uu< crop ’.failure, bur land-owners would be stripped of their labor Supply. Next cam* the torrential rami, retarded all farm work and fuW'told a multitude of boll wee vils. 1 In feet; with our farmere it wemed ‘‘that when troublee came they come not single 'files, but in battalions;” But it is needless to recount the wonderful, yen revolutionising chaos* In the agricultural situa tion in thie section of , Georgia, wrought within the 'last ill month-. A ride out h, the coun try, in any county or direction, will reveal it to you. Our farm ers an not only solving the boll weevil problem, but with their plows and hoes, largely wielded by white men, have writetn upon their fields a declaration of inde- Franklin Wants of the west. They an learning that in this land they can grow every crop known to the temper ate xone, and we are no longer only dependent on the fleecy etaple for •upport or prosperity. And never within our recollec- JkV^hai' loch unity, harmony, and t existed between ths farmers This place contains about 1400 acres of land, mostly river bot toms covered with Bermuda grass, end appears to be one of the finest terms In this section. Within the writer’s recollection a half dozen men. one being Col. James M. Smith, booth and cultivated this form, end all lost heavily. They tried to a row cotton and other crops tbnt required labor and en tailed a heavy expense. Thl, veer two -ettae men rf Athena leased this farm and Ere nob Holman and J. H. Tuck. They making of It a success. They are illiT not try to cultivate tba land, but are using It for a hay and stock farm. They secured poesee- slon too late last fall to accom- ollsh much by sowing small grain. They planted only ten acrea of cot- | are recovered corn cobs, the first nnd moat bvluable amounts to about 45 per cent of the weight of the cobe. One of Ite principal uses la a aubsll tute for silicate of sods In the man. ufneture of coarse envelopes and Paper bags. Negro in Letter LAND BADLY Says Stay South ,MPAI,BED When Howell first bought this place, like many other farms that had been worked by negroes under the ruinous* crojlper system, the lands were badly wasted. The first task of the new proprietor w*s to ditch the roUlu* fteMs and re store the washed places. Within four years, since be boufht jhis farm, Mr. Howell has accomplish In many the. Georgia papers arc accounts of negroes who left worth returning Hc-*e or writing back to their former em- p . a££ rs them *0 ** v « their old homes for thenf, ? hs they will return as soon as they can save the money to pay railroad fare. It is now generally predicted that when cold weather acts in these exodusters will bb pouring back south faster than they left. They cannot stand the rlgoroua cHmato up north nnd they fhd that it take* hard and wv*?-.r‘r^ w buy the necessities of life and pay rent for a crowded room. Whole families ore forced to occupy a single room, and If the rent of $10 per week la not paid to the day they' are throhm out In the street. Mr. A. Seymour, of Elbert county, has received a letter from Association, and fairer land.the eye never rested'' upon. It la settled with advanced and progressive farmers, most of whom caltlvato their fields aa gardens. Mr. Howell la one of the splen did citizens that Gieene county has given Athena—Like the Wilkins, Parker. Hart. Bryant and others— who have done such good work in the ^building of the city of their adoption. McBride Howell la sec retary and treasurer of the Webb- Crawford wholesale house. Ha was born and reared on a farm at White Plains, and when he moved 1 to Ath ens to engage In business he bought a farm. He purchased n place containing 280 mcrea. located ibout midway between Wlntervilln and Hull, near the famous farm of Harold Hulme. It’s aoil Is a gravel ly red. the best class of farming land. A bold branch passes through entire place with stretches of bottom land, furnish Ing the finest pasturage and fertile soil for cultivation. ppas nnd the Intelligent usd of fer- qiizers, he Has brought it up tr produrr phenomena! crops. Their cotton wns planted late but som*' of it promises n bale per acre. But cotton Is only one of the numerous crops grown t>y thes» parties. Col. Holmnn has fields o! corn, ns nlso Mr. Scott, that we be lieve will make from 30 to 40 bu shels per acre. But what Is of mos interest to our formers is theb success as liny growers. Any far mer knows thot a ton of peavlne hay to the acre is considered a good yield, nnd some contend that it Is hard to grow that much. But Mr. Rcott Inst yenr made over three tons of cured hny per acre on some twenty seres and his crop this jFenr Is equally ns good ns last. If not some better. He /ays th' trouble 4s that most farmers do not put enough seed on the land. He sown two or three bushels of cow with half a bushel of sorg hum seed to the ncre. He sold his hny nt $20 per tor villi'! more, nnd which brings In about advise. He is a strong believer In •operation, not only among neighboring farmers, but Jn coun ties nnd states, He realizes that unless our farm ers work together nnd use their brains and head as well as hands and muscles^they will be at a very great disadvantage. If farmers wouM c«-epcrr.te In each line of farm produce, to pro duce a reasonable quantity of It? kind for shipment in bulk, ihej could then always find a ready mar ket. m For instance,of n number of far mers would raise the same kind of hogs Ihey would be in much greater demand and sell better thnr $70 per acre. But on this same land Mr. bcott made a rye crop oi 15H bushels per ncre and which !• worth at least $2 per bushel. And all the labor required was a trac*‘ tor,or two mules to put* In the grain or ens. At such n small out lay Is there any section of out country .where such returns can be mnde from twenty acres of land On this farm they have now forty acres sowed In peas and sorghum «d woiwJsrs. Evary gully has bseu stooperf and ’the MW »pot» Tailored to fertility. Ha did this by a liber al application of .table manor* and sowing down half the land UpTf alternate year in cow pea*, velvet henna nnd other leaumr crops. H* ha* 'already transformed It info an Ideal farm and sayh h« has only begun improv.menU—II< has brought up a large field that he will plant In alfalfa. During the time of our vlalt he had a mower at work cutting a field of peavlne hay and shocked It ai fast as. It ... mn.M). U. -wenawly bulldlnf shocks ao an to aford ventlllatlon he can aave a beautiful hay with every leaf, with no risk of losing by a rain. Mr. Howell ear* ha t« a believer In the velvet been* to Improve land and thinks K even a former laborer on hl. farm, that inn „nn Ihn real of »h. f.rm they .indicate. «h. n!!*ht he I. in. This sowed down and Inclosed 50d acre.l"«g»- n»">e<L Bannl* Allen, writes !" * JL a, ind vri/et SS£.™nd ,C JMi “i'be'‘seeing you in a few In com velvet bean*, and no or ' TO „ „ f , m , w ^ acres In pea. and c “> |h ™ 1 Heave here. Tgot burned awfully Is naturally fertile, and they nave,^. n . j. . . a most promising crop. Tbelr “‘‘labeto make time. I find thla city batter than cow peas. Borne of his ion |. laden with belle and blda ifcinclnnati) overrun with laborers «eWs he ha* planted In a ralx- nd a bale pe* and tnany of them can't' find an tore of cowneas, velvet beast **< (opportunity to earn a living. It sorghum and says It mskee n eery ran wo.. young men wlll’is just about how you told me it most count on la stock. They have would be. Tell Alec that if he I, XP0 head of caul* which feed and still there to stay there, because fatten on tho Bermuda grass and [time, here are not like you think •he coming winter they will beithey arc.. Don't let no women torned on the com nnd beans to run you koV.'.h. If I had not took fatten for. market. They have M# »l<* I would hav* been trouble by „, 200 goats. The new myslef. I hope when these of hog* and lOO^goaU. , i?CT you they will find head .. _ r , hogs snd goats *n> acpi >'■ n dondllUm U-wUdRtt pasturtgo l you » U wel1 They sm. now supplying the Ath ena market wit# kids. Messrs. Holman and Tuck ar* just getting In shape to make money from their atoc farm, ano will peat year begin to farm right Thousands of acres of the finest ^ Bermuda grass pasturage aro now j Idle on the Oconea river. HELP FOR GIRLS WHO WORK Better Highways Mrs.Lodic Tells How Lj E. Pinkham’g Vc_ Compound Helped Her We ee* that Franklin county J» twins canvassed In the Interest ol . - .. M t...ltAln0 ntdll a bond* election for building good roads. Public ■plrlted dUzona arc conducting and addreaaing meeting* In every community, urging the P *• •S nt 7 “O™? Athena and ,. to lurn merchants and bankers. The . ^ ln ordrr , troublous times threugh which we have passed have taught each that thalr interests are one and Inseparable, and there never has and never-can’ ,B^ any .rivalry'or conflict of interest between the farmer and the resdienta of towns wjtJi whom he transacts business. I There Is a mutual dependence one upon the other. To advertise to the outside world the wonderful possibilities of this beautiful Piedmont section, and that our own home people may know what the farmers in all that re-ion rroun dabout Ath*n« have! accomplished, the Banner-Herald has set aside one page in its paper »fe die a ted to the tillers of the wtL. A representative of the Banner-HiraM,wUI vlalt the* dif ferent cihiM-ifti .jiri - . t. i i dearch out farmers Vrho have made 4 success of any lire of their hon* , red calling. This will not only i .fond- within three miles of ever} bunds. In. order ,to enlist all tec- ttons It Is proposed^tat good r«adi be tvuilt through every militia dts- — “A friend told my E. Pinkham'a Veg etable Compound had helpedWi wife, so my hus band bought me s bottle^^ ‘ partment nssures the public that the roads can be built tor the mon ey voted, nn election on a bond is* sue will be called. It Is believed that the road* can be built with this money, with the aid given by the government. Athens as likewise every town and county In ‘Georgia through which the Bankhead Highway.wll' pzzs iz vlU'.ly lulervsied in the success of this election. That great highway, uniting the East and Middle West with the 8outh Atlantic and 'Gulf cities, must pose through Franklin county and un less we- have good roads through that terHtory the value of thlr hfrh great hway would be nullified to a considerable extent It mat- of very great interest to our ter* not how good the roads oth- was so run-down, had a nervous weakness,, no strength ir. mj that 1 could hardly my work. Be fore I riod I U3?d to work to the factory, and would not bo wll to tbo house now. It has stopped tho jnins all right and 1 have found out is a wonderful body builder, ma it nos mads ms wo” — I t is going to bo tbo with me hereafter, and I sm always wfUu>£ to tsfl other women bow St ha* mo. You cgn use this letter as sorghnm and says It makes a fine hay. with large yield. NEED MORE PASTURES IN THIS SECTION y. r Valton, note that the fanners of counties In this section are holding community meetings and discuss ing the Important subject of build ing good pastures for stock rais ing. This Is a vitally important matter and It would be well for other counties to do likewise. Ai a rule cattle must be fed right here in the Sunny South from the first of November to tho middle of April ar.r! c.-via 1 ' months, or prac tically half the year. It Is a rather easy matter to have fair pasturage for tbe other alx months, but e^?n these are notj what we may have with propef, effort. Our cattle ought to be able to thrive In the pastures from hte I middle of March to the middle of j December—leaving us to feed them but three months at most. We never ade an earnest effort 'UGH always A highest in qual ity, Goodyear Tires are never high priced, a* this chart shows. See how Goodyear Tire : under the av erage price level for all commodities. Today, the best tires Goodyear ever built sell for 37% less than in 1920; 30% less than in 1914. Is a good bu-Goods This time to years. At Cn»wr SmtUa StmtUn Dealert ma tall and rsrem* mamd thm maw Gaadyaetr imatadAtU "rca%S and I WcitH^Tnid MS 5ftk thtmup mlth ttmndmrd | ft carload of mixed breeds, glsei and weights. The same applies to chickens, potatoes, corn and cot ton. If every furmer ln n county would plant the iame kind of cot* ton seed, raiMng about the aaiw staple, would add thousands of dollars to the pockets of the far* mer. The same would Apply to nearly every line of produce. TEST YEAR ON 1924 Dr. 8ou!e sounds another note ol warning for farmers. He said that next year would be the test yeat with the farmer;'that !r he shouK have a good cotton crop this yeai he might be influenced to plant too much cotton and -let up on food crops. And then we might have tor much, rain and too many weevils and then this section would go Ir the same rorut|tn|n as Pouth Geor gia thla year. These South Geor gia farmers when the boll weevil appeared began 1o diversify cropi nnd became highly prosperous They raised good cotton crops This year they went wild, neglect cd food crops nnd planted a big cotton crop. They had a wet >>ar. the weevils appeared In countless numbers, and they flnf themselves without food or money Let the farmers in this sectlor. profit by the mistakes of theli neighbors in South Georgia, ant continue to grow plenty of home made supplies and make of the staple ft surplus crop. notice that they are still h a , oats by tty. wacpn load into for..shipiuentLlu .other matfct-t’ ye olden time we imported oats by the train-load, but new shipping t > distyt. market, 'A penny saved ■ A car load of dal 9900, which means J circulation at home we did be BENEDICTA—BEST SHE ^ EVER USED « Mrs. Essie Caston, R. F. ft v. l.Box 13, Long Viewy Minn., isoS of the thousands who have hera benefited by wonderful Benedict! She writes; “I have used Ben*, dicta In my family; also have take> Benedicta mvselr and I find It a* good as you claim—even better.* We have thousands of testimonial, just like this—testifying to tfe dicta. Get a bottle of Bcnedieti pea {ear dreggjit today. ^ from your druggist today. Menedicta HEAl -i t uaa, D » Say "Bayer” and Insist! Watkinsville Will Have Cheese Plant II • now » zettled fact that Watkiiuville will have a cheeie factory, and vr* earn that the re quired capital of .2,000 to atari the.plant has all been subscribed. If corr *ctly informed the establishment of this enterprise to largely due to the ladies pf Oconee county who will have a controlling vole© in Its manage ment. This factory will encour age an Increase to the cattle rais ing business. Several fine herds of blooded cattle are owned In Oconee. Early Corn Better Than Expected SCOTT HDW. CO. ATHENS, GA* ' GOODjitEAR Many farmer, when the worm attacked their early corn believed ft destroyed; but it la turn!ng_out much better than expected, end ! will make as much ai ih'o ’general run of com planted In the aver age year. Fodder la being pulled from thia early corn and you no- |tice well developed eare, except in spota. Thla aectlon has never pro duced a finer com crop than la I now made, and every fanner will be able to mov* his crib from the Unless you tee the name "Baj. er” on package 'or on tablets yoi are not getting th* genuine Baye; product pretcrincd by physician over twenty-two year* and provej safe by millions for Colda Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache . Rheumatism Neuralgia Fain, Pain Accent -Bayer Tablet! of Aipi. if- ~ ' rin” only- Each unbroken paclui contains proper directions. Him tin boxes of twelve tablet! cos few cents. Druggist, also tel facture of Monoadxfracideittr Sallcylicacid,—(Advertisement.) TTT MILLINERY New Fall Modes in Hate are Duvetyne and Satin Sport Hati, 12.00 to *10.00. THE STYLE SHOP Miss Susie Wells west. We do not believe a more bounteoue food crop waa aver produced in thia section. And we banneJ WAN! 11 60 cents out of every dollar you spend for coal * —;• • - : iiifsaimf uoTer buo an wniQii ciiwn nlante hit hey crepe at different buIld , M , (ure , # tnl , t lng entirely to TzSoes up the chimney! times, to aa not to have them all ready for harvesting at once. •Mt. Howell has 'thla year 80 acre* In corn, 50 Is cotton and 80 In beans and rowpeaa for forage, be sides hit other amall crop*. Ha hat a lot of thoroughbred Berhahlre and Du roc Jersey hogs, and a herd of Jersey cattle. He will also .go tnrgeiy Into the nonltrv bit«'nec« and p«xt tprlnr purchave BOn bene. He has now flocks of chickens, aulneaC and tnrkaya. NEVER SAW BETTER CROP We flrit Insoacfad the corn, and we never taw better'or more prom the effort, of pature to clothe the field. In green. We nee plant, that thrive In winter, buo we have not attempted to prepare our aall for them. 1 Only laat winter, In a stroll near Athens, we saw aovcral Isolated planta, that cattle eagerly eat, vol untarily growing, showing that they are Indlgnoue to thla aectlon. One or two of them were now to ue. Oar only effort! of wlriterpaa- tnrage la the small sowing annual ly of’ry or barley, with an occas ional patch of rapo. What we need li land devoted to pasturage eown In permanent grass that wtU grow In winter and have proved t stove wastes Government that the ordinary under about 60 per cent of the heat value of the fuel, in soot, smoke and gases, which escape iup the chimney. And it has been proved in thousands of jhomes that Cole’s Hot Blast Heater, by stop ping this fuel waste, saves one-third to one- half in fueL lalng crop*. He plant! the Haatlnre I furnish grailng practically the year Prolific and every alalk ha. lanre round. Such greaaes exist end will of com w* are satisfied will yield I thrive here If our land Is proper- vpd well flll«d ear*. We n* a fl-M I ly prepared for them. Even our 85 or 40 buehele per acre. The summer paaturea could be greatly cron la now mada and the foliage I Improved by putting something he- mywcrtiaro true. Mra^d. l!omcJ B.F.D. No. 4, Box 40, Tyrooe, Pa. Lettefsllkethla bring out the mm • * They tell of tho relief nnd ailments after 3 K. Pink liam’a Vegetable » dark green. He hat also a field of early planted core from which the fodder has bean taken, and It It also fin*. There are no ashed or galled spots In his fields, sad every •talk will make a tine return. He baa a broad flat near the branch especially suited for corn. \V. next Inspect Mr. Howell’r cotton vltlUnx several fields. We Wish some Doubting Thomas who contend,' that we cannot aueccaa' fully grew cotton under boll weevil conditions would vlalt this farm and at* that' cotton. He would then confepa his error. We saw cotton reaching to a man'a shdiil- er or even taller, and'It la laden with grown boll, from bottom -to top. You notice large holla at the very top of atalka. .bowing that -nr weevil la not salting in niuck work. Although late | n the after noon nt th# time of our vlalt. th< fields were white with blooma Thera la of coura* weevlla In thla cotton but we did not find a alngte ■Idea native greases on them. The silo and tho pea crop are best substitutes for winter pastures. Much Profit in Turnip Salads Mr. Middlrhrooki, who .has _ store In Madison county, at the intencction of the Danieleville- Ila roads, telle ut that from lesi than one-tenth o£ an acre planted in turnip* he has sold this season over fifty doUnra worth of aalad. This show, the profit In small crepe. And this does not include the turnips. And yet Athene im ports from California canned apLi- ach and other .aalad*. W* are •ending abroad ’ large . aunts of money every year for artidei that can ba produced at home. Middlehrook* say* another hit profitable crop is popcorn, an ,1s Incredible the number of buah- one. Very few equaree hare abed, els that can be relied on an acre. We do not remember eyer seelnajAnd yet we lend to the weat for heavier fruited cotton, larger atslki this com. Our farmere ahi hrelng bent to th* ground from Investigate the email crops the welsht of holla. On tlnala limb-,stop the leaks by eupplying their ,*• counted five to ten grown bo'ta I home market,. Cole’s Original Hot Blast Heaters Cole's Hot Blast burns your fuel twice. First it burns the soot, gases and smoke, by mixing them with superheated air and driving them back upon the fir*, where they are completely consumed. Then it burns the bed of clean coke which'Is left after the fuel gates have been extracted. There are other Important advantages which mean much to every woman. Cole's Hot Blast Heater rocanp a cleaner home, because there is no spilling of coal ashes on the carpet. You pour the coal in at the to] of the stove instead of throwing it in at tho side. Am the ashes, are removed without spilling. Only one-half the ashes to remove the ashes to remove. You can sleep later every morning, too, because this heater holds fire all night and there is no fire to build in the morning. Just open the draft. This stove will ola fire frt from Saturday night to Monday actually ho! morning. This stove burns any fuel—hard or soft coal, coke or wood—with the same spying, and the most steady,., even heat you ever saw. Come in and see our special demonstrations and displays of Cole's Hot Blast Heaters tbis.week. It will save you money, J Baaareaareai ••Cole’s Saves Coal" BERNSTEIN BROTHERS Broad Street Athens, Geprgi^Qjj