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12 D LOVERS PARTEL WHEN FAMILIES WAGE FEUD WAR Trial of Principals.in Battle Re veals Lost Romance of Caro lina Mountain Girl, REMAINS LOYAL TO PARENTS Clansmen Get Light Fines for Ter rific Clash When None Es caped Unscratched. RALEIGH, April 256.—Thre is a tragic figure in the Carolina moua tains. Martha Pitts, 27, a typical, rosy-cheeked mcuntain girl, was to have married Joe Hennessey ten vears ago. But with a sudden fury that these mountains know well, a bitter feud boiled between the two families, and to-day the girl sits alone in the home of her father She is still true to her first love, but holds her duty to her family and the feud above that of self. Only last week the story of as breathless a fight as ever happened outside the pages of fiction was re vealed in court. It told how the Hen nesseys and the Pittg, blood enemlies, came out of the North Carolina mountains to Glen Alpine and clagshed in a flerce feudists' battle that turned the sleepy mountaln viilage into scene of terror. Thirteen men xus boys were engaged, in age from i 1o 11, and not one came out of the fieht unscathed. Children with bare ly strength enough to lift rifles fought side by side with thelr elders, Trouble Old One. Bad blood had existed between the two families for ten years or more, but had never been viciously dis ~layved until at Glen Alpine, more than a vear ago, Dr, Hennessey en tered the store of the Pittg family to buy a horse brush. The Plitts fam ily was lounging in the store that day, and when Dr. Hennessey entered they uprose and, without asking his purpose, assailed him, | And the feud =till is smoldering. | Says This Old-Time Eczema Rem edy Is Applied Like Cold Cream. Any irritation or breaking out on the face, arms, legs or body, when accompanied by ftcetting or when the skin is dry and feverish, can be read v overcome by appiving a little bold sulphur cream, savs a noted derma tolpgist He states that bold:sulphur instant lv allayvs the angry itching and irri tation and soothes and heals the [o zema right up, leaving the skin clear and smooth. Bold-sulphur has occu pled a secure position for many yvears in the treatment of cutaneous digor ders because of its parasite-destroy ing property Nothing has ever been found to take its place in treating the frritable and inflammatory skin af fections. While not alwayvs estabhigh ing a permanent cure, it never fails to subdue the itching irritation and drive the Eczema away and It is often voars later before any eruption AZAIN appears on the skin Those troubled should obtain at am pharmacy an ounce of bold-sulphur ream, which is applied to the affected warts in the same manner as ord nary <old cream I'his advertisemer i published for Walter Lauther Dodge (o Cineinnati Ohlo | — s ‘ : | For Twenty-Eight Years, ltched and Burned Badly. Could Hardly Sleep at All, First on Foreheadi Then on Body. - Cuticura Soap: ' and Ointment Cured, | Sl Sivells Nend, Texas "1 was attacked with sczema from my head to the bottom of my feet. 1 suffered most of the time for twenty-seven or twenty-eight ¢ Vears The eczema started in just a round crusty sore g and it itched and burned so S badiy that | could not hardly sleep any at all It first s ‘ ‘\ came on my forehead then fi » came on my body My 3 . \’“ clothes caused it 1o inflame ¥ and spread. | suffered un told agony itching and buming. The skin would break and hleed My legs were swaollen so | could hardly walk I used and many other remedies without muchgeod last year 1 commenced using Cuaticura Soap and Ointment. 1 used three cakes of Cuticura Soap and four boxes of Cutleura Ointment and 1 was cured.” Signed: 1), D Gibbhs, June 16 1913 The regular use of Cuticura Soap for tollet ana vath not only tends 10 presery e, purify and beautify the skin, scalp hair and hands, but assists in prevenfing inflammation, irrl tation and clogelng of the pores, the cotmmon ause of pimples. blackheads. redness and roughiness. vellow, olly. mothy "and other unwholesome conditions of the skin. Cuti. ira Soap and Cutlcura Ointment £ are sold by druggists and dealers throughout the world Liberal sample of pach mailod free. with 32-p, Skin Book. Ad dress post-card "Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston L Men who shave and shampoo with Oy. 1.. u Bowp will find 1t best forskin and scalp Widow Builds Tunnel - Her Husband Began [ Turns $1,000,000 Job Over to North-;; | ern Pacific Rallroad on Sched- ‘ ‘ ule Time. l TACOMA, Aprll 26.~~Mr5. Nelson, Bennett has turned over to the Northern Pacific Railroad the com pleted Point Defiance tunnel, in the north end of this city, which is to shorten the Tacoma-Portland line and greatly reduce the grades. Upon the death of Nel#on Bennett, the pioneer railrnad bullder, last July, Mrs, Bennett notified the company of her intention ot assume the contract obligations of her husband and promised to finigsh the great $1,000,000 project om schedule time, Personally superintending the work on the big tube, Mrs Bennett soon had matters running smoothly. Why Bald Heads Nod in Church lOW A CITY, April 25.--Ralph Eyre, of Osceola, a senlor ele:- trical engineering student in the State University, has found the scientific bagis for the fact that baldheaded men are prone to fall agleep In church, and he has found the remedy for this unfortunate fact. “A glaring light before the eyes is sure to produce drowsiness,” Mr. Eyre reasoned, “Men with bald heads and negligible eyebrows are less pro tected from glaring lights than those blessed with abundant hair. A little care in placing lights in a church will have all the difference in the world.” . Drops In To Pay Bill He Owed 40 Years INDIANA, PA, April 25.—A man who left this place 40 years ago and Las never been back since surprised E. H. Grifith by dropping into his shop, telling who he was and asking for the amount of a long forgotten bill, paying part of it and promising to send the balance as soon as he Bould, The man said he had always beéen poor, but he never forgot the bill, and it never was outlawed as far as he was concerned, Tried to Get Pastor To Run Against Him TERRE HAUTE, April 25.—While he was the Democratic candldate for his present office, Mayor Donn M. Rcherts, on trial on charges of con spiracy to corrupt elections, attempt ed to induce the Rev. Paul C. Cur nick, clergyman and prominent Pro gressive, to become a candidate for Mayor as his opponent, The clergy man declined. This was the testimony of John S. Roper, who declared that for five or six years he had served as a political agent for Mayor Roberts, $2OO Wife Too High, He Cuts Price Half LLOS ANGELES, April 25—When Sarah Kotoff, member of the Rus sian religious sect known as Molo kanes, appeared in court to prosecute her husband, Jacob Yuren, for fallure to provide for her two children, it de velaped that neither she nor any of more than 1,000 voung women mem bers of the Russian colony here were married, Mre, Kotoff said she was sold to Yuren for $2OO but that the man re pented of his bargain and refused to pay more than $lOO. . Fined $lOO Because He Curls Mustache CHICAGO, April 25.—Municipal Judge Mahoney was vexed when [Kd ward Rochette, a salesman, accused of wife beatilng, stood before him twirling the waxed ends of his dap per mustache, “(i0 ahead, curl your mustache,” the judge said. “This may make your hair curl. too. One hundred and costs, My experience has been that a man with a cute mustache which he con stantly curls is not worth the powder to powder RQis face.” Windmills to Hel —~——p TOPEK A, April 25.--The State Irrl gation Board will conduet filve experi ent stations this year in an attempt o ascertain just what crops can be grown | profitably in Western Kansas with the aid of frrigation, Cost and. methods of irrigation also are to be studied, The board is giving the windmill a thorough tryvout this vear. The mem hers belleve the windmill is to be the =olution of the ¥Wrrigation problem in many of the Western Kansas counties Mayor Walks on His BATTLE CREEK, April 23 Frank Shaettle, former Mayor of Monrovia, Wik, has adopted & new plan to retain his health This was a promenade across a 4 lawn on his hands. He was not following any physician's order, but he said he fognd that the effort “did heaps of good” and that he would continue it daily He is a blg man who won two years ago the name of ‘‘the Wood- Saw Wing Mayvor v v Starts Forge at 96 To Win Widow of 73 : n Widow o SOUTH WEYMOUTH, MASS, April 25 Proof that the fires of love «an burn hotly even though the swain he 96 vears old will be demonstrated at Pocotow when Willlam MeNabb opens a tiny blacksmith shop on Un ion street, where, without even an apprentice, he will start to accumu late money enough to win the heart of a widow of T 4 The widow is Mrs Allce Clarke, of Worcester, Mass CLUBWOMEN'S HOME OF ADOBE, SANTA CLARM Apri] 25.--Work men are engaged in restoring the old andobe house Joeated in Santa Clara and recently purchased by the Womes nn "ub to be used as a clubhouse Tha velling was erected about 185 vears ago. when Spanish rule held #wnay over the valley HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, APRIL 26, 1914. 11,300 GEORGIA FARMERG GET EXPERTS HELP Demonstration Agents Teach Them How to Increase Crops 50 to 100 Per Cent. By CHARLES A, WHITTLE, When the farmers of Georgia do It the way the farm demonstration agents tell them, thelr crops are from 50 to 100 per cent larger. That is the reason the demand for farm demon stration agents in Georgia can not be suppled. In round numbers, 10,600 farmers were enrolled in demonstration work in Georgia in 1913. Of this number 5,600 were classed as demonstration farmers and 5236 as co-operating farmers. What happened? These farmers had 18,000 demon stration acres of corn that produced 36.3 bushels per acre, more than twice the average yield of the State. They had 15,000 acres of cotton planted and cultivated according to methods laid down by the demonstration agents, and the yleld of seed cotton was 1,303 pounds per acre, more than twice the average of the State, The 4,005 acres of oats yielded an average of 43 bush els per acre, when 25 bushels is con sidered good for Georgia, Average Conditions Represented. The demonstrations were extensive and varied enough to be considered to have approached near the average farm conditions. The results are, of course, to be looked to as represent ing mecre nearly 'what the average farmer can attaln to than the tremen dous results obtained on single-acre tracts by the boys of the Corn Clubs. 'l'he:i boys are given the cream of the land. Sixty-five demonstration agents were mployed in Georgia during the year 1913, For the most part there was one agent to a county, but In some instances an agent had two counties or parts of two counties. The boll weevil ushered the farm demonstration agent on the scene in the South, first as a Federal employéee, but now in Georgla the county or parties in a community join in half of ‘the expense, This has served 1o stretch out the Federal funds over a great territory, has created local in terest and receptivity, &nd has mate rtally added to the direct results. The Federal funds used in demonstration work in the South are a part of that whioch 18 appropriated by Congress to combat the boll weevil. The farm demonstration work in the South was fnaugurated by the late Seaman Knapp, and ig now being ably carried ’fnrward by his son, Bradford Knapp. Weevil Aids Progress. | Where cotton had been the sole erop for generations there was little know!- edge of diversified farming. With the boll weevil oh the scene or its da structive visit imminent, the cotton farmer became ready to learn other ways of making a living. The demand for farm demonstration agents in the South has been greatar than the supply. The men who had been trained in colleges of agricul ture were preferred, and good salaries ‘ha\'e been offered, but very few have been available. ‘ The startling demonstrations of the Boys' Corn Clubs, the Girls’ Canning (C'lubs and the Pig Clubs of Georgla exert no small influence in the cam paign of agricultural education in the State, In 1913 there were 10,000 Corn Club boys and about 2,500 Can ning Club girls enrolled, The largest corn yield on an acra was 184 bush ¢ls. The largest net result from a tenth acre of tomatoes cultivated by a member of the Girls’ Canning Club was $l3O, 22,500 Get Advice. Thus it will be seen that during the year 1913 Georgla had 10,000 farmers, 10,000 Corn C'lub boys and 2,- 500 Canning Club girls engaged in demonstration work—a body of 22,500 progressive and enthusiastic people accepting advice from the State 4‘o]-‘ lege of Agriculture and the United States Bureau of Agriculture, \ ‘ This body has ite organization center for the State at the State Col lege of Agriculture, where a State agent is in general charge of demon stration work, Corn Clubs and Car ning Clubg, and where the head of the Canning Club work and the Boys' Club worlk are located under his immediate charge and dlrection. GETS HIS FIRST BATH AT 72 SANDUSKY, April 25.—According to Sergeant 8. N. Coke, of Cottage Mack, State Soldiers’ Home, a veteran from near Urbana, admitted the other day, sighed when ushered into the receiving barracks anteroom to wait his turn in the barracks bath, and remarked: “Well, I'm 72 vears old, and this is fnlng to be the first time 1 ever took a bath.” Improper kidney actlon causes more sickness, suffering and serfous compli cations than any other organ. The kid nevs are two large glands situated near {the middle of the back #nd their func tion is to purify every ounce of blood in the body, and to do this they must be in & healthy condition If they become inflamed, congested or otherwise weak ened in their action, ¢he polson remains in the blood, and the whole system be comes impregnated. The general symp toms are backache, loss of appetite, headache, torpid liver, constipation, in digestion, Nervousness, drowsiness, sleeplessness, skin troubles, malaria, ete If you have any of these symp toms, you should at once commence taking Warner's Safe Kikiney and Liver Remedy, which for thirty-seven years has been a standard remedy for the kid neys and lver and today it stands without a rival in healing with certain ty the frail tubular struc tures constituting these fmportant organs It 18 & N sure antidote to polsons FIAERYIRE formed in the human body, owing to incapable D action of the kkineys and / Hver. eliminating through P the kidneys, bowels and PN skin all morbid and R et unhealthy accumulations [JENERSNE! from the system. It will B help you from the very [ERW = first dose At all drug N t:n'n in boe and $1 sizes veo sample and valuable Information f vou write AWArusr Nafs % Company, Dept. 43b, Rachestur, N. ) He Beat and Cut Her, But Was Pretty Good Aside From Ufl—ng;—;ntle and Fist, Wife Says He Was All . Right, SAN FRANCISCO, April 256.~The pleture or family life at Julius Blanchi's home was vividly drawn in the divgrce action of Blanchi vs, Bi anchl, tried before Judge Grahma. “My husband knocked one or iny teeth out and he cut me on the arm with a kmife, and he beat me back and blueqoften and often,” declared Mrs., Delia Bianchi, who was the plaintiff, “What sort of a man was your hus band?” asked one of the lawyers, “Well, he was a pretty good sort of a man aside from what I'm telling vou,” responded the wife, cheerfully. Weds Her Stepson, Who's Just Her Age BINGHAMTON, N. Y, April 25.— Announcement was received in this city of the marriage in Brooklyn of Mrs. Anna H. Hall, widow of Charles S. Hall, United States (‘ommissioner for the Northern District of New York from the time of his appoint ment by Pregident Lincoln in 1864 until his death about two vears ago, and S. Holden Hall, son of her late khusband by a former marriage. They are of the same age. Board Named to Make Army Horse Trade WASHINGTON, April 25.—That a kingdom may not be given for a horse, the War Department has ap pointed a board consisting of Major R. G. Paxton and Captains T. A. Bald win, Jr, and G. Rublno, Quartermas ter's Department, to sit on the horse and establish its value. I 7 the commission reports the right price and the owner is willing to sell the United States Government will make a trade, . Motherless Pig Is Incubator Baby MUSKOGEE, April 26.—The strang est ‘“incubator baby” In Oltla homa Is (he one now being rearesd in an incubator on the farm of T. J. Cuneo, an Okmulgee County farmer. The “baby” is a wee Duroc- Jeérsey plg, just a few weeks old, sole survivor of a fine drove of Duroc- Jersevs which Mr. C'uneo owned be fore hog cholera killed almost every one. WILD HORSES STARVED. OPAL, WYO., April 25.—500 severe have winter conditions been in the cdesert country of this region that bands of wild horses which have flourished for years have been great ly decimated by starvation. } ASTHMA SUFFERERS A New Home Cure That Anyone Can | Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Time. We have a New Method that cures Asthma, and we want vou to try itat our expense. No matter whether your case is of long standing or recent de velopment, whether it is present as oc casional or chroniec Asthma, you should send for a free trial of our method. No matter in what ciimate you live, no matter what your age or occupation, if you are troubled with asthma, our method should relieve you promptly. We especially want to send it to those apparentiv hopeless cases, where all forms of inhalers, douches, opium prep arations, fumes, ‘“‘patent smokes,” etc., have falled. We want to show every one at our own expense, that this new method 18 designed to end all difficult breathing. all wheezing, and all those terrible paroxysms at once and for all time. This free offer is too Important to neglect a single day. Write now and then begin the method at once. Send no money Simply mail coupon below. Do It To-day FREE ASTHMA COUPON. FRONTIER ASTHMA C 0.,, Room 40-J, Niagara and Hudson Sts., Buffalo, N. Y. Send free trial of your method to: We Eat Too Many Sweets, Which Clog Kidneys—Try Old Folks' Recipe of Buchu and Juniper. Candy, sugar and sweets, eaten to excess, have a had effect on the kid-‘ nevs and bladder, causing Diabetes, says a well-known authority. Tho‘ kidneys get clogged and sluggish anl hurt. You experience scalding, €drih. bling, straining or too frequent pas sage of urine; forehead and the back of-the-head aches: stitches and pains in the back: bone pains; spots before the eyes. vellow skin; slug gish bowels; swollen eyelide or an—l kles: leg cramps: unnatural short breath; sleeplessness and dasxmnden-] cy, Diabetes, Bright's Disease. The moment vou have any of the above svmptoms of Diabetes and weak kid neys get from any reliable druggist a good -sized bottle of Stuart's Buchu and Juniper Compound. Take a ta blespoonful after meals. Drink plen ty of fresh water and abstain from eating too much sugar, sweets or highly seasoned foods. Your kidneys and bladder will then act fine and natural. Stuart's Buchu and Junipar has been used for generations to flush clogged Kidneys, also to neutralize the acids and sugar in urine, so it ao longer hurts you to pass water. It s old folks' recipe for weak kidneys and bludder and strengthens these organs and cures Diabetes, und reduces o'l swellings: ulso acts gently on the bowels., Re supre vou get Stuart's Bu. chu and Juniper, as Stuart's i prop erly compounded for kidney and blad. der trouble and Diabetes ~ADVER. TISEMENT. FARMS FOR SALE. FARMS FOR SALE. LAND—BUY—LAND. 1715 ACRES near Cascade Springs on Cascade dirt road, cornering on Hemphill road. If bought quick, close price and easy terms. Titles perfect. THE L. C. GREEN CO., : ‘ > 305 Third National Bank Building. \ . | e ——————————————————————————————————————————— W e T e o SR O SRR e A BIG PICKUP. 250 ACRES of good farm land, twelve miles south of Dougasville, twe miles from McWhorter, Ga. Eight-room, good dwelling, three / room tenant house, two good barns. Bighty acres in high state of cultivation. Will sell for a quick sale at $l2 per acre. Good red land. This is one of the best bargains in Georgia. On main public road. T. W. TOLBERT & CO,, VILLA RICA, GA. e e e o W INVESTORS, TAKE NOTICE! 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 acre tracts, all in high state cultivation for truck grow ing and chicken ranch, within one mile of city limits; good build ings and water; on easy terms. Also from 100 to 2,2)0 acres, price $lO to $3O per acre. Write J. A. Justice & Co. The owner of some of this property will be at 62 West Peachtree street until last of next week. Call Tvy 2260. J. A. JUSTICE & CO. ESTABLISHED 1895, . : FITZGERALD, GA. We give our three National Banks and business men for our reference, FARM SECTION. FARM SECTION. AR AR A AR AR AAR ARAAA A AR A AR AR AR AR AN AN AN AN SN S i s s oo JONESBORO, GA. Right at the doors of Atlanta is lecated a desirable resident, commercial and manufacturing town, Ig_ is only a few minutes’ ride to this prosperous, growing and developing town. The fare is the mere pittance of 10 centms and the scnedules are accommodating and convenient, and the service sveryvthing that could be desired. If vou work in Atlanta vou will ind it to your advantage to live in this delightful little city, that possesses a fine school sys tem and the principal denominational churches. The social atmos phere and moral tone are ideal. You will feel more like work after having spent the evening and night here without the distracting noises incident to city life. No malodorous fumes and blackening smoke. The atmosphere is pure and bright. Get out from.the city, and become one of us, and enjoy the fullest pleasures of living. INFORMATION: Any of the following parties will readily and truthfully answer all inquiries relative to the town and country around it: Bank of Clayton County .........Banking. Bank of J0ne5b0r0...............8anking. Evans 8r05.............c5.....+..General Merchandise. Joneshoro Drug Company .......Drugs and Prescription J. 0. Blaloek: ~ i . .50 voivts vveedios e Real-Histate T O Buflglng .. oviisvina s Grooeriee. THE TRIY ... i 00 v vie i v, BT lENGE: H. C.McMullan ......ceeae. o evs s Liveryman. D. P: Melson & Coo....vc.ouos....General Merchants, ° RAOVES BIol: .. . ciansssvisisren TADCY Groceries. A B BWErs .......icasesicnas - UOtton ann Vertilines. R A B ... i i s Cotion anld Wertiiiner: W.E. BUrns .......«...e:oos:...Bcft Drinks and Fancy Groceriea. A A CREMID .. 0 cvoivasis ENEFR] MATORARGINN | W. H. Turnipseed ...............Lumber and Hardware. \ TALLAPOOSA, GEORGIA. LOCATFION : Tt is situated in the Southern part of Haralson County, on the Tallapoosa River, and about midway be tween Atlanta and Birmingham on the Southern Railway. MANUFACTURING: There are located here several impor tant industrial plants that are uniformly successful. Many desirable sites can be secured at a nominal sum. LIGHT, WATER, POWER: The city is amply supplied with _ these three manufacturing requisites, and are fur. nished at an unusual low rate. SCHOOLS AND CIHURCHES: The school system is a model in its perfection. Various denominational churches are represented, and are uniformly well attended. FFARMING : Tallapoosa is in the midst of a rich agricultural seetion. Many well-built,” hard-surfaced roads radiate from this eity to all sections of the county. Farm lands can be purchased from s£lo.oo and upward. The soil is adapted to the growing of all Southern erops. AN INVITATION: We especially extend an invitation to the home-seeker, manufacturer, and the Southern farmer, whether you are seeking a loeation or not, to pay us a short or a long visit, and let us show you the merits of our claims. FOR further information write the Mayor and General Coun ell. g MAKE OFFER. 244 OGLETHORPE AVENUE-Nice cottage; lot 65 by 180. Assume loan of §1,450. Small cash payment and balance to suit. i 187 LEE STREET - Large two-story, lot 70 by 200, Assume §1,900 loan. Small ____cash payment, balance monthly. WE QRE GOING to well the above places, so do not hesitate to make an offer, OTIS & HOLLIDAY. Georgian Want Ads REAL ESTATE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE ON THE STONE, MOUNTAIN CAR LINE. ELEVEN MILES out from Union Depot is the town of Clarkston. Twen. ty-eight feet elevation above Atlanta. With a population of 600, No factory element. Cheap taxes. Good schools. 15¢ car fare; com mutation ticket.ss.7o per month, with 35 days to ride them out. Come out and buy a home. Prices are reasonable, and we invite you to come, Any inquiries you wish to make write E. L. Waggoner, Mayor of Clark. ston, Ga., and he will take pleasure in answering you. Respectfully,, ; } E. L. WAGGONER, Mayor, | Clarkston, Ga. . : SACRIFICE SALE. : 38 ACRES, fronts Georgia Railroad, electric car line and main drive from Atlanta to Stone Mountain, three-fourths mile below Clarkston depot. One six-room dwelling, two tenant houses, large barn, fine poultry bu?l?i ings, good orchard, oné mule, one wagon, farming tools, feed stuff, growing crop. Price, $8,500. 50 per cent investment. Some terms. N MRS. KATIE L. MUSE, *. - CLARKSTON, GA. 5 $l,BOO. FOR SALE—By owner, lot 60x97 in Ansley Park. Apply L. A. Fleichman, 75 Peachtree Street. ¥ DECATUR PROPERTY FOR SALE. A BEAUTIFUL home on Adams street: corner lot; east front: one block of car line, Agnes Scott College and public school. Lot 140 by 200. For quick sale we are instructed to sell this place for ...........$6,250 ON COLLEGE AVENUE we have a seven-room bungalow that is a beau- : ty. Owner has left the city and has told us to sell this quick. The lot is b 5 b)}'l 200, and lies as well as any you ever saw. If you want a real home, this will surely suit you. Terms. Price ...........ccovivennn.n.....ss,soo ON CANDLER STREET, the Peachtree of Decatur, we can show you a two-story eight-room house, with all improvements, and situated on a lot 60 by 300. Is an east front and close to car line, school and Agnes Scott College. No loan to assume on this. Price ..5....................54,500 WE HAVE one aottage, practicaily new and with all city improevements and close to the car line that we can sell you on terms of $l6O cash and the balance in monthly payments of $25 per month. Has loan of only $l,OOO on it. Price 33,500 RIGHT at the car line, and in one of the best sections of the city we have a few’lots left that have all city improvements and all lie nicely. The prices have not been agvanced on these lots yet. They are all 50 by - 190, For a few' days will sell them &t...........ciivnerioiiitinriaccncassasd 650 W. E. TREADWELL & C 0.,, J. M. WORSHAM, Mgr. Decatur Department. 24 South Broad Street. Bell Phone M. 2644, - ON HOUSTON STREET, we have a large lot fronting both on H B e with & depih of over %0 feet This propesty has & substantial brick building on part of it and negro house on the other part renting for $l5O per month. Price, $20,000. assume a $5,000 loan, balance some cash. The owner will take some smaller property as part payment. This property is paying a handsome rental and is sure to enhance in. value. Large lots, with two street frontages, are getting scarce on good streets, combined with a good rental. See us Monday, PEACHTREE STREET, at Five Points, we have a smail lot we can sell at a bargain. If you are looking for a gold bond proposition, see us at once, as we expect it to go this week. RALPH O. COCHRAN (O, 21 SOUTH BROAD STREET OGLETHORPE PARK. TO MY FELLOW MEMBERS OF THE : CAPITAL CITY CLUB: DRIVE out to-morrow and look over the elub site offered by me to the Capital City Club. Tum in at Mr. Stovall’s house and follow the temporary road until you see the signs placed on this hill. T am sure vou- will agree with me that it is an ideal location for a clubhouse. EDWIN P. ANSLEY, - Realty Trust Building. BRICKS FOR SALE. WE have a great many bricks left at the Palmer Brick Company plant. and it is absolutely nee essary that we dispose of them immediately. If interested, apply on premises, or to Forrest and George Adair. MISCELLANEOUS. MISCELLANEOUS. WMMM‘M”% 4 . STOCK OF GOODS TO TRADE. I have about three thousand dollars’ worth of ladies’ and gents' fur nishings, consisting of ladies’' coat suits, one-plece syits, shirtwaists, coats, shoes, gents' shirts, ties and «hoes; will trade this stock for farm lands and give or take difference. Reason for trading, golng out of business. If you have anything to trade, make me an offer. Also & fine newspaper outfit, worth $2,000; will sell or lease. This outnt consists of paper press, paper cutter, four good Job presses, plenty of typs of “ll kinds, and gasoline en gine, sverything ready to run w pmper, in the best growing town In Geor gia. If Interested, call on or uddress R. W. EAVES, RTONK MOUNTAIN, A