Saturday, "11111 Can you buy land at $35 per acre where -you now are and main i $55jpe iwre on it, on a staple, field crpp Can you -1 make that much net on priced land ; in your section? -Folks alorig thesp Cotton B in Arkansas s Tosco are doing it. Wherever accurate reports ira kept, the net profit per acre on peanuts aver ages well above $50 per acre, r-jJT Walker, sear Jonesboro, Ark., made 49 bu. of threshed peanuts and 27 bales of peanut hay per acre, bringing1 $1 per bu. and $1 per bale. It cost him ' only $17 for planting, growing, threshing and -harvest, leaving $55 per acre net. 3M. Story got $63 per acie net. Land like Mr. Starr's, costs only $35 to $50 per acre nawij It's the character oi the had and climate that ' makes peanuts so profitable crop down " there; and the same conditions make other , crops extra profitable. Take ribbon cane for Instance: J.F Ohenanlt,near RedwatertTiex., . makes over 400 gallons of syrup per acre from ' ribbon cane, netting him $200 profit per acre Frank Federer came s oath to Brlnkler.Arlr., " to escape the long, raw springs ot Wisconsin? be says he can raise as much thera on $15 land aa he did in Wisconsin on $2QQland-becau8Q the soil is just as rich, the crop season is much; r longer and short winters cut every expense. Two free boolro! . Written by a farmer who knows vhat any farmer elsewhere would want to know about a country that he was conslderlngcomlngto, , They tell about not only the character and . cost o f l ands, climate, crops raised, etc, but 1 uuu us bcuoo i8,cnurcneso was, social conditions. Brimful ot actual pnotograpn pictures taken on the ground' Send; me your name and address on a postal card today and get these free books now . F. W. I .R....... n t 1847 Railway ExchsmaafclrU.. F.t. Lanls. M Pi EM! Absolute "rock hottnm" iwIom J have now been reached on th greatest roofing. Don't invest a cent in new roof covering, "ding or ceiling for any buildJ jnr until you first get Edward's wonderful - freight iwmM money-sayingorer direct from - bJTcZZT grid's largest f actoryoffe IU.cWBSta -uiifHnuo unnicoie ll Al m wo aieei re rffir !i ronr or"n-7 roofs - 'K I 'hTJust"p???f "Insurance cost -,',, -T because Edwards iroarontea - ' ' is lesa thoi. . toi' 1 "Waw lightning. Eaep t0fcnaJ tooffneedeZr hid si S , "-k Galvan- -T"i """peciai tools needed. cess aftpr ii r patmiea pro and resquared. Sida ,69.60an&Flm. 'Edwards Potent i,osi Drinea 64-1 8?e i;atalog-.FEEE. PrfklMiaA Fl A a irom hi .:""-: les and VOnr xnn n nV...4i catalog So. 8747 "uu CincinnaH nhu UIHB , Jater- "gnt. ' ) pl----- I BUYING .VORK HARNESS -pease send iamplea, Frefsfct. Name..; The jCoUar for; tBe Horse Is of Hrt v ; Importance, and Too Much:" Care Cannot Be Exercised m Buying and Fitting It , .1. IF I had a . certain amount to spend for harnessI would buytht best collar 7 to be obtained a.v comfortable bridle good lines and then expend the balance to ; the best possible -advantage for harness to go with them. Of the items mentioned collars easily come" first; ,in :these the horse per forms his. "daily labor, day- after day," extending - into ; weeks, months; years, and the comfort of the horse for that time is entirely in the hands of the Purchaser. - Anv little extra' cost1 dwindles into insignificance when this is considered. V,; Most of. the horsed collars " sold throughout: the country; are faulty in many ways. This is not the fault of the mahufacturer:or merchant, but of the farmer who will buy" nothing but a cheap article. : The dealer handles goods for which he finds a ready sale, the same as you grow crops which have a ready market. r ' -The question arises as to what con stitutes a good collar? j In a word it i$a collar made of good material, -in the best manner: along'proved lines. A. collar can- hardly have ' too' much body" or be too rigid in its make-upl The larger body not only gives a larg er shoulder bearing, but alsa sets the tug clear of the horse's shoulders and sides.. " ; r The average dealer in showing , a customer a. collar will invariably twist and turn- the collar, about, to show how. pliable it is. Flexibility in a .col lar is just exactly what is not wanted. We have ample proof of this by, con sidering the kind of collars used by experienced teamsters . where .heavy hauling is regularly being done." -The closed top collars are used exclusively in" thej Canadian -lumber camps,-, or other places' where heavy hauling is being done. --. : . " - The correct fittmg "of a collar is al ways ;in- the hands of the purchaser,, but iu-the best interest of the horse let me adviser you. to forget the price and eret the best there is in collars. ; Now as to the correctfitting of bri dies; the first thing to be "considered is comfort, and "the biersrest item con nected with bridle comfort is the bit. It should be large enough that it will not chafe -the mouthy and so made that - the rings cannot, pinch the lips. Many horses have been ruined by bits ihat fit badly, or by the use of severe bits, twisted wire, scissors and curb bits, developing in many cases into laggards and runaways. These things can' usually be averted'by the use of a comfortably fitting bit, from the first. The .head' piece of the bridle should be as smooth as possible, with round ed edges, and particularly should this be the case where the brow-band and head-pjece. come together. A' sore spot from chafing is jeasy to make but hard tor heal and may cause the horse to become bridle shy. : - , Traces, hames, . back-bands and breechings :are all of enough import ance to warrant careful selection Imt to me they do not seem of as much importance as the items,, mentioned before: Personally, I have'had more satisfaction from the single-strap traces than from the doubled rand stiched variety In the first place, the single strap, trace must be cut from theJ choicest -part of the hidc,hile too often the very sorriest part of the hide is used in the stiched ones. The single strap trace will not chafe the- horse "as readily as the thick stitched Wer and if it is made of good material it.will not stretchras readily when put to severe use; : : Pancy-mountings may be attract Jve, but I. had rather. put the" extra cost in material better workmanship and comfortable fittings,. believing the horse would thank me for my careful consideration were he able, to express himself. -P-T.HINES.,-- HcLeansville N, : ; '..Care your papers andi get a. binder. ;, 1 w; . (13 325 1BIBIOUNGEM fo Stock Raisers Stablemen Dairy men ENT M4 i UIJ the tM M oilers interested in Feedhyt orw V ; The one objection to the feeding of cottonseed hulls is now eliminated, ; Lint, the trouble maker, is how 1 ; being removed fironi the' hulls, .The Souths great est forage can be fed with perfect safety. consist of the hulls, only Patented machines remove the lint. . This means that the food is free from indigestible lint ; ' that the nutritive dements are not carried off by lint; that nothing dangerous to the health of farm animals is fed. If you are feeding old ; style hulls reniember that about 500 : pounds in every ton is lint which is not only worthless as food but injurious. In other words one dollar in every four that you spend forloose hulls is wasted. Every dollar in vested in Buckeye Lintless Hulls buys a dollar's worth of iafelnutritibuafbie The only objection to feeding cottonseed hulls. heretofore has been the lint. With the lint, removed, they are the most economical and satisfactory forage you can use. Therefore, you should not fail to investigate the Buckeye Lintless Hulls. Feed 50 Buckeye Lintless Hulls and 50 Buco Cotton Seed Feed and you have an easily mixed balanced ration. Buckeye Lznf7es Hulls and Buco Cotton Seed Feed can ; be shipped in mixed cars. v ' Write or wire to nearest mill at once The Buckeye Cotton Oil Company Department A Atlanta Go. Augusta, Ga. Macon, Ga. Setma, Ala. Greenwood, Miss. Little Rock, Ark. .Birmingham, Ala, Hurtsboro, Alar Charlotte, N. C. . Jackson, Miss. Memphis, Tenn. . Once Dv.er! n with a double action harrow I ; i Save half the time and labor and hare a better seedbed. Use a Cutaway (Clark) Double Action Harrow. Its rigid main frame causes the rear disks to cat and turn all the land left br the fore disks and with equal force. It will ; W is W Disk Harrow and Plows Quickly Cut, Pulverize and Level the toughest plowed land. The Cutawat disks are of cutlery steel forged wrp and they penetrate deep without bringing up stones and trash. - Dustproof, oil-soaked, hardwood bearings and perfect balance . make light draft. Tongue truck not. required close hitch. Many Cutawat (Class: ) Harrows in use 25 years and still giring splendid service. There's a Cutaway for every need and a size for every reqnicemen t ,ir your dealer has not the genuine Cutaway, write us direct. Be sure to send Tor our new free tfJt-l , book, " The Soil and V now for Detter crops.; I THE CUTAWAY w HARROW COR1PANY- ' 997 CAIN STREET f i CGCAKUH. crm 1 Maker of tha original CLAEt awe narrows amtvwwm frm. ffet ill of every type, as well asTanks", SilbsJ Roofing and aU forms of exposed'sheet metal work; will give mm greatest service and resistance to rust it made from 1 v :;AF0LL0U HUrlest onaHty Galvanized Sheets manufactured v Actual time and weataer tests AFOLLO-KEYaTONE and accept nasabstitnte. liookforthe Keystoae ded belojr if -tsmwr product. , the Anoilo tmda-marK n insures aaraDuitT ana lanuur. imtf dealers. Every fanner and owner of bandings shoald have a copy ot oti lioildiBM" booklet eoatsinlntf fall information relative to formed metal TFcen writing to advertisers say,,Tl-saw.youf ftSvertlsernent fai The rivisslf e Fsnaer. i - .i - - ri 1 4V M 1 1 ;4 v v.. .::ti