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THE CAMDEN CHRONICLE H. I). NXES. .KdiUr PuYlf.ber PuwTuhcd every Friday at No. flOt Broad Street ana entered at the Cam* den, South Carolina postoffice aa second claaa mail matter. Price per annum 92.00, payable in advance. Camden, 8. Friday Feb. 15, 11129. The Chronicle along with their numerous Camden friend* wiahe* to extend congratulation* to the two young native* who have recently been so signally honored by the United State* navy. They are Thomas J. Kirklund, Jr., son of Mr. und Mrs. Thomas J Kirkland, of Camden, and Daniel Bird Miller, uls; of this city who is a son of the late Athol H. Miller, of Columbia, audi Mrs. Margaret Miller Muyfteld, of I Camden. The last named young man I was born in Columbia t but was I reared 1)V Camden, where both arc I held in high esteem. The news I story carried in our news columns is from the associated press und from P. H. McGowun, speciul Wash-1 iugton correspondent for the Colum- f bia State. Complaint has been made about the I utter disregard of traffic signs placed at the intersection of many of tho streets. Also the disregard of the I Speed limit ip the residential section. Many pass the stop signs as though they were not there. The police department might put u stop to this practice J>y u few arrests and some stiff fines. When a motorist utterly disregards the traffic regulations he 1 should be made to pay for it. The outcome of the Carnes case in Atlanta is further proof of the fact J that if you intend to steal the best plan is to go into the business on u I big scale. The negro or poor white I man who steuls a chicken or a water-1 melon generally gets a long period of hard labor on the public roads, while the financier who gets away with depositors' and stockholders'! money, many of them widows and I orphans, sometimes goes to the I penitentiary for a short period, but I if he does, is a more or less privileged I character, und his sojourn in prison is a form of durance, but not durance I vile. Carnes is a man of the world,] and knew what he was doing when | he started to stealing. If he had stopped with a few hundred dollars, j he would not have been able to hire I brilliant lawyers to defend him, and I to wheedle the prosecution into ac- ] cepting a compromise, nnd letting! this arch-thief off with from fH'e to seven years instead of life. Th$ outcome of the case will probably not sit well with the runk and file whose million it was that was stolen, and I who arc being asked to replace the purloined funds.?Chester Reporter. < lyd. Fowler, aged 33, negro.l know:. as I <>m Williams in Charlotte, I whore he wa> wanted for the murder "f H Kdgnr Cone!!. Charlotte policeman, while raiding a negro house in ] search of stolen goods, was ruptured near Greer in Spartanburg county Saturday night. Large rewards had been offered for tho man's capture and his arrest brought to a close one "of the most intensive man hunts in many days. When sighted at a negro house sitting by a fire the negro ran and was chased for half a mile by officers, when he finally dived into a pool of water and lay stretched out. j The officers found him and the negro offered no further resistance. He was hurried away to Raleigh for safe j keeping. Charlotte newspapers have I >taited a fund for the widow and farthcrless children of the dead officer. Robert Guillen says, wisely indeed, that thi* greatest service to society the unlit i .in render is to lot his poor v? ah -! ;.'.r ? ml with himself. Rut the Iioul'e v that none seems to' cor sidei themselves unfit; and all efT-ni- have tho state or its aut horr/.i <i o\|n:ts on the question do? nie a qu??'fi.i;, *o important to society. ale fought to the la>l ditch by e\er\ epileptic, weak-minded, diseased. insane, or near-insane, or merely ignorant or indifferent, as eneroa, hing on personal liberty and the (totl-given right to burden the world with hopelessly handicapped offspiings Some effort has been made along tins line in South Carolina but it s never got farther than to be hooted about the legislature as a bad joke.?Cv lumbia State. Mayor L. R. Owens turned tho first shovelful of dirt Friday morning a' the site where Columbia's new muni cipal airport is to be constructed, th< fust step in preliminary work of lev el.ng the field off so that the landinj field Will he in readiness in case Col Charles Lindbergh, international! known a\ iator, accepts an invitatio extended him by wire Thursday t step over and dedicate the airport o his way hack from Panama, where V is opening the United Statcs-Panam air mail route. When Engineer Murray told the member* of the general aaeembly U?t Thursday, "In your hand* you hold the future South Carolina, which la to me, the greatest of any atate," he told them the truth, W* have heard other men, not natives of the state, nay practically the same thing, and The Yorkville Enquirer has said the same thing time and again, but it is strangely a fact that the majority of the natives of the state do not >{?em to grasp the fact.-?York Enquirer. Nomination Withdrawn Columbia, Feb. 13.?^iov. John G. Richards today, in a special message to the senate, withdrew the name of I). L. McLaurin of McColl, from the list of senate confirmations. Mr. McEaurin was appointed a member of the tax commission by the governor on January 24th. He was not con? firmed however, the senate instead passed a resolution in which they said that they considered the services of Mr. Lyon as member of the commission highly desirable at this time. Prosecuting Attorney Behind Bars ? I?o# Angeles, Cal., Feb. 11.?A grotesque figure in his ill fitting prisoner's uniform, Asa Keyes, former, district attorney of Eos Angeles, paced a jail cell here and told how he ultimately hoped to prove himself innocent of conspiracy charges. His words as a convicted felon somehow ( failed to impress as they once did when he occupied the county's highest law enforcement office and the kkin-tight trousers and baggy coat of blue 'denim flattened the * dignified poise he built in 25 years as State prosecutor. "I want justice, not sympathy," he said as the sleeve of his too large coat clipped to his elbow. "I'll prove my innocence if I have to take the case to the highest courts. I may go to San Quentin, but somehow, some time, my friends will be glad they witheld judgment on me," "He had other statements to make, but he declined to discuss more personal matters?such as his " reaction to entering San Quentin^ where hundreds he prosecuted now are serving terms. Nfrs. Joseph L. Diddier of Charlotte, was fatally injured, and her husband was slightly hurt by the overturning of an automobile on the Concord road Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Diddier, with Reg Mowery as a driver, were on their way to a funeral at Salisbury, when the accident occurred. Jack Adams, filling station operator at Iv.t. was acquitted by a jury at Anderson on Friday after a trial in which he was charged with the killing of Arthur "Hop" Bennett in November last. Adams' defense was that Bennett was approaching him with an open knife to attack him when he fired the shot that killed Bennett. MASTER'S SAI.E State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. (Court of Common Pleas) The Enterprise Building and I.oun Association of Camden, S. C., plaintiff. against John Pegues, Sr., defeivdant. Under and by virtue of a Decree of his Honor, Judge T. J. Mauldin, presiding in the Fifth Circuit, dated February 13, 1921), I will offer for sale before the Court House door, in the City of Camden, during the legal hours of sale, on the first Monday in March, 1929, (being March 4, 1929) to the highest bidder for cash the following described property: "All that parrel or lot of land in the City of Camden, in the County of Kershaw and Slate of South Carolina, fronting .fifty-one (51) feet, I iu.ee !('?<, eastwardly on Campbell Street, and extending back west "f a uniform width along a proposed " e?--epa rating from property f. i met is ' Dibble, now of James t for a distance of one hundred twenty i 120) feet, more or less, and .i ..n the north by the said prov.; .-'.feet separating from lot now i merly of Dibble; on the east by -aul Campbell Street; on the south S\ property of Gibson, and west by property of Baxter Gary." Four (4) shares of the Capital Stock of The Enterprise Bu Uling and Loan Association in the Seventeenth Series. No hid will be received at said sale from any person who shall not deposit with the undersigned, the surr of Twenty-five ($25.00) Dollars B money or certified check, as a pledg< to make good his hid in case of it: ^ acceptance. t \V. L. DePASS, J*R., Master for Kershaw Cqunty. B February 14, 1929. King Justice, 45. farmer of Hender ^ son county, N. C., stood in the yard o his aged mother m the Dana commur ^ ity, and slashed his throatowith n razor, in an effort to commit suicidi ? He was takeiv_J.o a hospital at Her n dcrsonvillc and his condition was r< 11 yarded as critical. No motive ws n assigned for his act. LEGION-SHRINE SHOWS! SCORE REAL TRIUMPH The First Annual legion Shrine Minstrels appearing Thursday evening on the stage of Camden's new Majestic Theatre and playing before the largest and most appreciative audience ever assembled for a hometalent production abandoned the ranks of amateur entertainers today and went en toure in all the splendor and perfected detail of Broadway's highest-rated organization. Bookings as arranged by Arthur! Clarke, advance agent, include an en- j gagcment at Kershaw v tonight, at Winnsboro Monday night and tentative showings later in the week at Bishojrville and Iatncaster. Those why witnessed and aypiaudad last evening's performance began assembling long before the scheduleJ hour for the cuHalb and inahy were disappointed upon arrival to find the box office closed and every available seating space taken. Among Camden's own artists who were temporarily halted time after time by last night's riotous applause were A. S. Llewellyn as interlocutor and the following black-face end men: John Goodale, Smyrl Halsall, Leon Schiosburg, George Creed, W. F. Nettles, Joe Guthrie, Marion Baxley, G. W. Lowman, Karl Roseborough and Gus Ward. Ballad soloists who also scored highest acclaim were T. V. Walsh, Fred Bryant; Cliff McKain, Joe McKain, Maurice Campbell and Ed Bryant. Specialty artists included Lee and George Little, Camden's magicians; Arnold Brothers, the musical boys, and Snowball and Highball, the City Slickers from Lugoff. The minstrel song program featured: "Somebody Lied," by Joe Guthrie; "Jeannine," T. V. Walsh; "G^p, I wish I had a Sweetheart," Joe McKain; "I Didn't Ask", He Didn't Say, So I 'Don't Know," John Goodale.; "Dreams, Dreams, Dreams," Bryant and Quarttettie ? " Dreams Of Childhood Days," Marion Baxley; "You're In Ldve And I'm' In Lbxe; We're All in Love With Love," Cliff MoKain; -"Me and Mah Razor," Smyrl Hal?*ll; "Carolina Moon," Maurice Camph?ll; "Minstrel Show Parade," Leon Schlosburg and End Men; "You Tell Me Your Dream," E. C. Zemp. <' ^ 4 A London dispatch of Tuesday says that thousands of people are ^Ick. throughout European countries with | influenza. The list of sick in. France t includes many government officials i' and others high in the life of the na- ' tion. Intensely cold weuther is pre- 1 vailing in central and southeastern ' Europe. J,phn A. A rant, vocational agricul- ; tural pupil of the Pageland High ' school, last year produced two and a half bales of cotton on one acre, which . beats the record made by R. L. A Ivorson of 2.28 bales per acre made in the 1928 state-wide five-acre contest. ; Arant by jiroducing two and a half ' bales on an acre wins not only the state championship but the championship of the south as well, and entitles him to two educational trips offered as prizes by the Chilean nitrate of soda educational bursa*Young Arant harvested 3,746 pounds of lint co<tton from three a ergs. His labor income from his cotton was $254.17 p.tr acre. MASTER'S SALE State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. (Court of Common Pleas) Kershaw County, plaintiff, against Annie I>iet.z RudLsill, defendant , Under and by virtue of a I*?ciee I of his Honor, Judge T. J. Mauldin, j I presiding in the Fifth Circuit, dated February 13. 1929, 1 will offer for sale before the Court House door, in the City of Camden, during the legal hours of sale, on the first Monday in March, L929-, tbeing March 4, 1929K to the highest In elder for cash the | following described property: "All that piece, parcel or tract of land, situate, lying and being in the City of Cannlen, in the County of Kershaw, and State of South Carolina, fronting ninety (90) feet east on Milt Street, and extending back westward therefrom on the northern part i of said lot to the promises of Clark, . a distance of two hundred fifty (25Qj , feet, more or less, and on the southi ern part to a depth of two hundred ? seventy-four (274) feet, more or less, * to the premises of W. Robin Zemp. The said lot is bounded on the nortn by lot formerly of Weeks, now of Clarke, and by lot of von TresckoW; on the oust by Mill Street; on the _ south bw premises of J. II. Moore, . and on the west by property of W. f Robin Zemp, and of Clarke." No will be received from my person. who.shall not deposit with the a undere gned the sum of Fifty (J.'umjO) i.! P?iMuks: iii money or certified ch. ck, i- as a pledvja to make good his bid in ). raae of acceptance. ,W. L. DePAsy, JR.. Master for Kershaw Cour.tv, February 14, 1929. V . I "M r The case of the state against Jacob Vanderburgh charged with the death of his mother, father, two sisters and; a brother in Gaston county several weeks ago by burning the home will come to triaJ at the regular superior court term on April 15, instead of the special term set fox Feb. 18. Wants?For Sale FOR SALE?Atwa&er Kent and other trade in radio/ sets. Sacrifice prices.. ? Dewey J/ Creed, Radiotrician, Telephone 210 or 304-J., Camden, S. C. 47 tf. LOST?Roll of. poultry wire lost between Camden and Cassatt. Please notify Box 305,. Bethune, S. C. 47 pd. LOST?Watch chain emblem. Ma? sonic Commandery and Chapter emblem. Initials UD. J. C." Bfc ward for return to D. J. Creed; Oarofiha Motor Company, Camden, S. C. 47-43 pd. LOST?One cameo brooch, somewhere on Main street. Reward it returned to Mrs* J. D. Matthews, 1307. Mill street, Camden, S. C. 47 pd. FOR SALE?Fine old plantation in the hills of Sumter county at loss than half value. ' Open land and natural forest. Beautiful residential site. Pine and oak covered with Spanish moss. Game plentij ful. Call on or address W. R. Phillips, Sumter, S. C. 47 pd. - ANorn Kif RADTO'BARGRIN1H",vv t .iust traded for a model 47 Atwater I Kent all electric ' lamp socket. Model complete and in perfect condition, only $75.00* Remember this set does not use batteries. We traded with Dr. C. A. West. Ask him about this set. W. Q, Hay local Atwater Kent dealer. Phone 138 or *337. ' 47 tf ATVTATKR KENT'S ^w^r^duct The wonderful electric dynamic al electric lamp socket r^dio set This set is something-, differen! from anything you-,Jfltave evei heard and the price is Oply $14( complete. All we askJ* that yot allow us the chance to demonstrat< | with no obligation on your part 4? Remember we guarantee all Y>ev model sots we sell for one year W. O. Hay, local dealer. 40 tf DEWEY 7! (REED Radiotrician Kolster and Philco radio sets Telephones 210 and 304-J.; Cam ' den, S.r. , 47 tf FOR RENT?Two rooms, kitchen am v v bath, all furnished, electric lights hot and cold water. Phone 182-. or call at ir,02 Fair St. 47-50 sb . - ^ ' TAKEIfc UP?On my Savage place near Lugoff one dark bay mare mule about nine years old. Qwner can get same by paying expenses of upkeed and this advertisement. L. O. Funderburk, Camden, S. C. 46-48 pd. FOR. SALE?Number one and number two pine shingles for sale. Apply ta MoCaskill & Lollis, Camden, S. C. 47 tf. | FOR. SALE?Hybrid Tea Roses, bud- j ded?yellow, red, pink and white.. I Forty cents each. At the Com- > J munity Club Market in Camden, on.; Saturday. Borden Nursery, Borden,, S. C. 47. abi FOJEL RENT?Hudson coach for thflfc season. Looks like new, runs, like, new. Condition guaranteed, perfact. Apply to W.. O. Hay, at Lu. A. Campbell & Company Garagp, Ca mden, S. lC. 1 '' 47. tf. ANTIQUES in Sumter, S. C.r- A short drive over gpod roads. Inlaid sideboards;, pair of ihlaid card tables; dining tables; cheats, of drawers; portraits; glass; china; brass; conterpanes; hooked -rugs; [ bottles. Mrs, Frank A. McLeod, 523 Hampton. Avenue, iSumter, 1 S. C. Phone. 138. 47-48 sb. iARGAINS in used radio sets. \Ye have a few trado in battery operated Atwater Kent sets, five to seven tube models complete with I good batteries from $35 to $50! complete, nothing more to buy. i \Y. O. Ray, local denier. 46 tf. TRAIGHt" S a l A r y $35.00 per week and expenses. Man or woman with rtg~ttrflTfrbduce Poultry Mixture. Eureka Mfg. Co., East St. Louis, 111. ? 47 pd. 'OR SALE,?Dry pine wood, 18 and 24-inch lengths, delivered; also dry oak wood, 24 and 30 inches. Send orders to W. A. Edwards, Westville, S. C? R 1. 36-fit-d BARG AINS ~ FOR sale ? Second "hand bath tuba and sinks. Good as new. Address A. A. Shanks, West ~ DeKalb Street, Camden, S. C. 46-48 pd. ATWATER KENT'S newest product. The wonderful electric dynamic all electric lamp, socket radio set. This set is _ something different from anything you have ever heard and the pHce is only $140 complete. All wc ask is that you allow us the chance to demonstrate with no obligation on your part. Remember we guarantee "all new model sets we sell for one year. _ }V- Hay, local^fajfafe... 46 tf. KARL Bl'ERLE, chief engineer of the great German Graf Zeppelin, fi s^a tlJe Majestic Radio.?Camdon Furniture Company. 35 sb. .. . FOR SALE?'House,. lot' aindHtoi building: on State Highway,-msI Dusty Bend. Good location tori filling station or lunch stand. Ap-I B ply to Elijah^JMayhew, CamdaJ WANTED?No. h pine logs. Highal I cash prices paid; year round dm mand. Sumter Planing. Mill! all Lumber Co., Attention E. S. BootM Somter, S. C? . CTSTOM HATCHING?4" cents pej egg. We will be here Saturdoj^^B of each week for your hatctoj? convenience.. Leave yaur eggswiti^^B Wilsons Filling, Station. If ihterl ested in Biirred Rbcks, Rhode land Reds or White Leghorn! notify me 3. weeks, adtead. W& I furnish you very: best T stoo! Lancaster Hatchery, Y. L.. Bla! ; mon, , 4*48*/ FQRRENT?Unfiinihhed: aporK^H provate Bath) Gall) telephone $4541 or applJir 1218; Fair street, Cw! FOR SALE?Antiques of all Choiea pieces,. Also ccnttage ft*! ture. Prices reasonable. Mrs. JH E. Lyles, 1401 Blandiiig, Street, lumftia, S. ,C. . 4S-iyB MONEY TO LOAN?At "six ami o^H half cent interest on isftpwsl city real estate. Apply Savage, Jir., Camden, S. C. ! THAT iSuper-Dymwuc Speaker^! built in every New Majestic Rid! the Radio everybody likes to hei^H ?r am den Furniture Company ! CURT A IN S^TRETClTRIV^A ny ? .! wishing curtains stretched pl<*B apply at 904 Campbell Jjgj! Prices reasonable. *! FOR RENT -Four room cottage Broad Street. Apnlyto L. A.^njl kowsky, Camden, S. C. WANTED-T500 "bushels" flelTpSB market price. Apply Welsh MojB Company, Camden. ?. C. j^B FOR RENT?Two farms in Kere^! County. Apply ~ to 'X A. kowsky, Camden, S. C.* *?J1 CXruentteiun^ phone 268, 812 Church Strtl Camden, S. C., will give factory Jiervke- to all for alljg! of carpenter work. p BuflgJ B general repairs, screening. cijjJJ making and repairing fun^2 My workmanship U.Jny.reftgfij I solicit your patronage. log you in advance. ' Ti3b BARGAINS in used radio set^T^jM have a few trade in !>**** operated Atwater Kent sots, f B to seven tube models complete good batteries from $35 te^; complete, nothing more to WfB W. O. Hay, local dealer. -ftSBl HHK VOL. Ill, NO. Vir><??U-r.ar.>Uaa Chemical Corpora lion Cop>,y,t $3 H I Grow What They Want Cotton fiber of uniform standards has always been wajited by the loan ufaeturers, ami the price premium has always favored these standards, says the U. H. Department of Agriculture. But farmers offered what they grew inatead of growing what the marked wanted. Quality kept on getting worse?until "finally,the cause became clear." Public gins had taken the place of tne old-time ........ plantation ami everybody's m < <l was being mixed, crossing and mongrelising the whoje <'rop. The way to do, says the Department, is to plant one good variety of cotton in each ginning neighborhood. In other words, put uOOD seed on your V-C Fertilizer. , V.C Newspapers from cornstalks In six hours is the latest record made by the scientific sharps. What will they do next? FULL HOWS Is prepared for anything short of a paid-up subscription list. V-Q "On one 5-ackk purr I used 450 pounds of V-C j>er acre with no soda or top dressing of any kind, and 1 picked seven bales averaging 650 pounds. V-C beat them all!"? W. J. McStetyart, Coats, . C. ?. ??V-C ? Education Pays Dividends A study of 1271 farmers was made by the Georgia tftate College of Agriculture in 1025, says the Yearbook of Agriculture. Records showed that farmers with a common school education had a yearly income of about two and a half times as much as farmers without schooling. Farmers with a high schooleducation earned approximately three times as much, prut farmers mth a short course in agricultural education earned about forir times as much as thdee without schooling. ? v-d ? Takes a smart boll weevil to beat Y-C cotton. y-C ? . "Tax son., like an athlete, finds it hard to come back once it is bordering on exhaustion/' says Modern Farming. "The time to g< t. most from an investment in plant food is BEFORE the soil is depleted." A Preacher of Farming One of the hardest working and Ixnt meaning folks in the world ia vour typical average county agent. Jfe's a sort of preacher about I farming instead- of religion. Yet how often does he get credit for trying? < >r for knowing what he's talking about? Still, Funn ltnws lias noticed one thing: the farmer# who make money year in and1 year out always listen when the county ogent talks. The money may be due to the batoning, or the listening * may be duo to the money ,.bHt somehow go together. :? ,v.(5? C "As yield per acre ftnes UP. neffl coer per pound goes DOWN. < II ?U.S. Deportment oj Agriculture. JJ V-C One-Variety Cotton "Advantages may ho expfeoted by one - variety cotton communitiesabove 8lm prices obtained by com- i inunities that produce a miscellano- , ous crop," aays the 1927'Yearbook of Agriculture. "This is shown by experience in communities where the seed is kapt pure and u uniform liber , is prodhecd. In California, Arizona and Now Mexico one-variotv communities have been maintained Since 1920. Definite programs of community improvement have been adopted1 recently in several of the older cotton-growiug state*." v-C? HOW TO RAISE TURNIPS-' "Take hold of the top and pull,"' says Mixed Goods. ?v-c "About 25 pkr cknt of the averuge cost* of fertiliser js jnade up of inbound and outbound freight charges."?National Fertilizer A hah . v-c? "Trtw bkahon I decided to-rpcrtinrnt with V-C super analysis grades, planting 15 acres and using IKK) pounds of 5-15-5 per acre. .On this field I mode more than a bole to d.e i"-re."?/>r. W. C. Carver, Vidette, (la. Save Labor Cost With V-C ^^^9] I V-C Fertilisers aro Eheapcr t|)Ca | lal?or, so why not Jot them lower your cost#? Instead; of 300 |H>un<le ( per acre on three fyTM of cot ( , f ,r 9 instance, try the whole. 000 jtounfa : oh one acre. You won't save any. t?w. K on the fertiliser, of oourai, Hut, man, wind you'll nave on Uthor I and ?e*ll ('hook up afterward and 1 moo how 0 lotto it luto to I4S for ov^ry acre,, ' :? 7:; -.- aSfcLMMftML. 1 IIMIIHMtf fl ' ? "Tw competition with nuxl?n, 9 industry, the farmer inust ?wint Into step with tha marc'- of n,o.:. f ern business methods." I J. ^ 1 Department of the Interior. I ' ?VJO ' I . Aijd Money for the Fawner j I Crude cottonseed oil is fit only to I Inirn in Tamps, says, the IJ,. ,H. IV I partonent of Agriculture. The ro- j> Aning process is what make* if r. ally I valuable. Refined cottonseed ujf fl ia good for so nany purjamcs it ,4 I would be hard tp list them all, hut [m they include hhIiuIh, medicine,.cook, ing, soap, nitro-glycerin, pitch, j paint and rooling. ' ~y-o In. (HtUKIt TO 11 HI NO TOP IMtlCI?,, 9: sweet potatoes must< be inedium large, well rounded and not slender^ * and must cook dry and mealy. All. 1 these good qualities are put in thciq., 9 by plenty of the right V-C fertilizer* a rs V-C ' 9 "7Vie United States today one* less, than A pounds of commercial fertilizer per tu-rc per year, as compared! I with 99 pounds per acre for Hoi: land, 60 pounds for Germany, 20 I . pounds fa>r France and 16 pounds for fl: Client Britain."?American Farming' 9 Wi?e-Farmers-Make Sure- fl I Two formers gftjertactlythesame- 9 , prioe fbr their prodlieh?4>ut- one' ^9 I ! MAKK8 MOHK than the other for , hiss yearf* work- The- difference is< 9 I ; in Chati of Production. And! the 9 i biggest* factor in eontmlling cost. ofc'.I 'production is fertilizer*?-i&e~ tfirtd, the ritfKf analysis, used'right.: 9 JTiteorrtniss farmers tako a* chanceand hope for the best. >> Ghodfarm- 1 9 . ers> wiae farmers, the kxnd who make : money, take NO chances that'they don't have to take. They buy Y-Ci T ' ' ?* J, w I I i II N I H ?; I r< I A ?: AHOI.I ISA CIIKMICAL COHKORA^JOW-?"??PP<?<PPW - " ' ^ I! 3 I