"'. . r A.; -V a .i ' .. ,-. v. . . . ', . - i. ' ' "' , " ss c are going to give cut prices on the articles named be lov. Bargains are like anything else, they are not worth much unless they are bargains in really desirable, needed and serviceable goods- That is the why these ' Tuesday attractions are going tor WEE R TO WEE K. We are picking up jobs every week and in that way are selling you goods in many instances for less than whole sale prices. On many things, we can not mention here, Av e can save you money and at the same time give you a good article. One lot of men's 'shoes up to 4.00 values for.- 1.98 One lot of womens shoes up to 3.00 values for . 98c One lot of corsets up to 1.00 values for . 39c One lot of men's 25ct ties for . 15c Best lOct ginghams for 7c , Best lOct bleaching for. 7c HOLMES BRYSON 10c Satairc r Yon Waist He So I ---------B B We Blake It Easy For Yon, And This is YOU IRl CHANCE - v Sign the blank, and send it in today. You get the RURALIST 3 years, started im mediately. On April 1st, 1913, you pay us $1.00 for the three years. When we bill you, you may have choice of a splendid array of premiums just like you paid cash. SUBSCRIPTION ,B-AN Send It Now Lest You Forget SOUTHERN RURALIST, 20 S. Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga. ' ' You are authorized to enter my subscription to the SOUTHERN-RURAL-iT for 3 years. You are to start my paper at once. On April 1st, 1913, 1 will pay &1.00 for the three-year period. This order is given with the understanding that I am at liberty to stop the RU RALIST at any. time by paying the subscription to that date. Name ' Date ' ' ' to make new Iriends for us. T uesaay bales tram SEME) M MONEY nth's'.Greatiest JSt. or R: F. Post Office. H 12 l-2ct window curtain goods 9c Lenox soap 1 3c Best can corn i . 7c 10 boxes Globe parlor matches for 5c 5ct tumblers for 3c Good Rattan bottom chairs 49c 1 Oct axle grease. 5c We still sell full patent "extra,' flour for 65c salt 58 cts sugar 20 lbs. forJl.OO, good coffee 19c, Pfeteffes Farm Paper D. .State. 5 Wdsmaiidv m BOOKSHELF FOR MOTHER. Any Boy Handy at .Carpentering Can Do It and Weil For Christmas- , In alrxfost every hoaseholcV there L? eome one who is handy with tools, says the American Agriculturist. To prove its assertion It prints the following story by .lames B. Duncan and a picture that shows the result of painstaking effort A bookcase large enough to bold 100 books is an adornment to any house hold, and the youngster who is clever enough to gather in some nice bits of. pine wood and then tackle the tcol box inx the barn will be sure to have something extra from mother in his Christmas stocking. Here are the rules to follow: In the use of all edge tools. If yon would avoid cracks and splitting, be patient and do not attempt to remove wood too rapidly, although the tool should be always kept with perfectly sharp edges. There is much marking out to do. and as this must be accu rately done a good sharp pencil should always be at hand. In sandpapering it is bptt to wrap the paper around a block, as the result is more uniform than when the paper is supported by the hand.' alone. The three shelves, which are identi cal in every particular, should be smoothly nnished. giving particular attention to the ends, as these are visible through the side strips. In or der to fit around the four corners of the uprights, the tour corners of these must be notched out These uprights,, after having buti out to length, smoothly finished and the .corners rubbed down verj lightly with sand paper, should hiive thejocatiou of the shelves marked on rhem and then have the holes bored for the screws. From half inch wood cut out font bracket such a length as to fit closely beiweeo. the two uprights of each end. Six little side strips, meas uring one-fourth by one inch, ar re quired, which should be flat oa top and pointed at their end. In assembling make a hole in the corner of each shelf and carefully try EXPERIMENT FARMS' VALUE. They Open the Eyes of Farmers to the Possibilities of Their Land. The demonstration farm is just as necessary to the agriculturist as are he open air encampment and the sham battle to the militiaman. The reading of military tactics can never teach a man either to stand steady under fire or to capture an . entrenched, enemy. We know this because of the many Instances where even a brief visit made by some neighboring farmer to these experimental farms has utterly chang ed practices which have existed for generations, practices which during some seasons have proved fairly suc cessful and which have caused abso lute failure onlyat intervals. For example, shallow plowing got' a. black eye during the season of drought when the farmers noted the result at the experimental stations of deep plow ing aided by frequent shallow cultiva tion, a method which kept corn green without wilt and,produced a big crop of fully filled ears, to say nothing of keeping the potato plants green and healthy until a normal crop was ma tured. The early planting of such extremely hardy vegetables as carrots and onions,, which with them assures a good start because of the invariably copious rain fall of early spring, was only adopted when dry weather set In earlier than usual, and we by this method had as-' sured ourselves a crop. In like man ner the spraying of fruit trees annual ly, systematically and thoroughly "wa only brought about in the ' neighbor hood by the extremely healthy appear ance of the small demonstration or chards at the experimental stations, the farmers saying little, but being quick to note the dark green of th foliar- nnd the handsome appearance and juiciness of the highly flavored fruit H. B. Fullerton in Craftsman. No More Thirsty Plowmen. I thought my wife was extravagant when she bought one of those new fangled bottles for Keeping liquids hot, but it has proved xry convenient' In the housed and now that I have found a new, use for it. on the farm I am as A enthusiastic over it as she is. Before going out into the hot sun to work I $11 my double bottle with ice'cold- fil tered water and leave it in the refrigv erator so that the whole thing becomes thoroughly chilled. I then carry It put .to work with me. put it in the shade or preferably under a bit of sod. . The water keeps almosj Ice cold all day long, even in the"' hottest weather. ThLt device Is about the cutest ; thing for cold comfort and cool refreshment that l hare found jetr-Buna New -Toxker.' - .. . '.r . A CHICK FOUNTAIN. Can Be Made by Anybody, a.nd the Lit tle .Peepers Enjoy It Immensely.. Here's ' an ingenious little fountain for ! keeping a constant supply of wa ter, for youthful chickens. It is simple in the extreme to make, and any boy who, can use a saw, and drive a nail can make one in an hour. Just take two 'pieces , of board, one six inches square and the other 6 by 12 and nail them so as to form a right angle. Get an old milk bottle and nail two this FOUNTAIN FOR CHICELKNS. strips of tin so that the bottle will slip easily in and out and remain support ed head down. Then nail the lid of a tin can under the mouth of the bottle, and enough water will escape to eep the little re ceptacle always full and be handy for the chicks to get at whenever they want to liquidate their little bills. It goes without saying that the contrap tion should be kept in a cool, sLady: pot WANT REAL PARCELS POST. Entirely Too Much Energy Wasted on Rpads From Town to Country. As to some products of, the farm, there is a difference of 40 to 50 per cent between the price that the grower receives and the price that the con sumer pays. There are even cases in which this price difference amounts to 300 per cent. Part of the loss Is due to a bad system of retail distribution, . as when a dozen city milk wagons travel over the same route, each de -livering one bottle here and another bottle there, when one wagon might aa well make all the deliveries along the route. This same waste appears even more markedly between the farm and .the town. How many fully loaded! wagons do you pass in driving to town ? From a dozen- farms a dozen packages of butter, poultry or vege tables may go to town the same morn ing, each in a different vehicle. Every day a doica parcels of merchandise are hauled out of town along the same roa,d in a' dozen different conveyanceSi and the time and labor of eleven men and eleven horses go for nothing. The rural free delivery mail wagon now' comes to your house with a load that you could put in one or two bushel baskets, and it goes back to town with an even smaller load. Under present conditions it looks as if the postoffice department was not giving the farmer his money's worth. Country Gentle man. " General Farm Notes. No man who thinks anything of a tree will ever rar.e a hitching post of it There is a little mint of mone.7 saved In buying feed in the fall of the yeaf and holding it till spring need comes. One of the best tools a farmer cat! have is a good riveter for mendlnj leather straps of all kinds. One of these will save a good many trips tJ town and maybe more than one run away. Keep a blank book and jot down the mistakes you make this year as things to be avoided next year. It is easy to remember what you made money on. bat it ' makes a pretty smart man to see his own failures. A good many farmers are getting so they would rather sell their potatoes In the fall right from the field and not. have to bother with storing them-and running the risk of -low prices next spring. The shrinkage, too. is a big Item 4o be figured on. ,'- ; . - To get the best results from the agri cultural paper !t should, be read and discussed , by- - every member "of the . family. A discussion . upbn ' subject .relating, to" the, . farm and -7 the. -home will interest the younger members ot ' the family and give IncnttTe for mort thoughtful reading - '-. ' V '. v-.t: 'i-'A -- -.tv. 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