GEeRGIA ACHIEVEMENTS OPPORTUNITIES WHAT THE EMPIRE STATE OF THE SOUTH HAS DONE AND WHAT SHE OFFERS YOU FACTS FOR THE BUSY MAN WHO WANTS TO KNOW PUBLISHED BY THE GEORGIA STATE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE JAMES D. PRICE, COMMISSIONER DECEMBER, 1916 SERIAL No. 70 PUBLISHED QUARTERLY ENTERED IN ATLANTA, GA .. AS SECOND.CLASS MATTER, OCTOBER 7. IgOO UNDER ACT OF JUNE e. I gOO THE IDEAL COMBINATION PRESENTED IN GEORGIA SAYS GOVERNOR HARRIS State of Georgia, Executive Department, Atlanta. Georgia i still maintaining her claim to be the Empire State of the outh. Her agricultural products have increa ed bvch in extent and variety in the la t few year 'with wonderful rapidity. Large quantities of her area, heretofore l.ulimproved, have been brought into cultivation and the production outrun the improvement. In the development of her manufactures also he i taking a high stand, utilizing her water power by applying them through the agency of electricity to her innumerable indu trial plants throughout the State, ettling the que tion of location and bringing the manufacturer to the very door of the agricultural producer. Thi i the ideal combination for a great State. State Capitol, November 24, 1916. Governor. J. D. PRICE. CommJssion of Agriculture. Georgia. TO THOSE WHO WOULD KNOW GEORGIA LET ME SAY: In presenting to you fact about Georgia of Today, the land of happiness and hospitality, situated in a latitude that affords the mo t delightful of all climates, we want to tell you briefly why the home- eeker may well stop and con ider the opportunities that are offered him here. The network of railroad that traver e the tat, the fI ecy cotton fields, the grain field , the animal indu try, the hum of the pindle in all the different manufacturing e tabli hment , together with the productive oils, Urni h rare opportunitie for inve tor and home-seeker. A we Georgian advance along the thre hold of the greates"t agricultural era we have ever known, having in the la t few year implified cientific re arch to uch an extent that the farmer have put science into practice and injected bu ine I olicie into their operation, we have tartled not only the people of OUT own tate, but the people of the entire Nation are wondering at the great po ibilitie that Georgia i offering. The financial condition of our bank, our manufacturer and our farmer i an index of the tidal wave of pro perity that i within our border, and I want to tell the world, in fulfillment of a parting duty, what Georgia ha done and i doing for her own people, and what he can and will do for other if they will come and give her a chance. That, briefly, is the object of this little booklet. j. D. PRICE, ommis ioner of Agriculture of Georgia. 5 GEORGIA AS A ~ORN STATE. 1, Section of Georgia Boys' Corn Club exnlblt at the Southeastern Fall'. 2. Corn over 12 feet high on Mrs. H. L. Judd's farm, near Oao SchoOl, Bainbridge, Georgia. Industrial High School, Columbus, Georgia. A few examples of Georgia's numerous and well-constructed high school buildings which dot the State. Many high schools are found close to rural communities. other southern State, recent advanced development pointing to her as the educational center of the South. Activities of the Georgia State Board of Health, for the protection of the public health, have been extended into every county in the State. There are local health boards and authorities which are cordially co-operating with the State Board. 37 TRANSPORTATION- MARKETS FEW tate in the nion enjoy such tran portation facilitie, hipping rate and marketing advantage a Georgia. Of the State 152 countie , 146 have raih'oads. A p rfect n twork of rail cover the State, connecting every city and town and almo t every village and totalling in mileage 7,290 miles, which i more in proportion to area than any tate outh of Virginia. rfen important trunk lines connect Georgia with the cities and market~ not only of the orth and Ea t but the Middle Wet and We t a well, by the most lirect and advantageou routes. Trunk lines entering and traver ing Georgia are Atlantic Coast Line, outhern Railway, eaboard Air Line, Atlanta, Birmingham & Atlantic, Loui ville & a hville, ashville, hattanooga & t. Loui , Atlanta & West Point, Georgia outhern & Florida, Central of Georgia, and Georgia Railroad. There are 1 500 tation which are hipping point in Georgia. Georgia hipper today enjoy the low t freight rates in the outh, and all freight and expres rate are fixed and regulated by an active State Railroad Commi ion. The Railroad Commis ion, in addition exer i e public utility function , e tabli hing pecial commodity rate on vegetable and fruit and aiding producer in other ways to market their product. Railroad and express companies are al 0 rendering . pl ndid aid along imilar line through their market bureau a are th G orgia Fruit Ex hange tate College of Agri ultur , Georgia hamb I' of Commerce and the tate Department of Agriculture. STONE MOUNTAIN, DeKALB COUNTY. The largest single block of granite In the world. This Is the northern view. Ex- tensive quarries are on the eastern and southern sides. 38 GEORGIA MA UFACTURES GEORGIA i the greate t manufacturing tate in the South and i rapidly becoming one of the foren:ost in th.e Un~on. The total value of the product of GeorgIa textIle mIll alone in 1915 i e timated by Commi ioner of Labor H. nf. Stanley at over '70,000,000 while the total value of all manufactured product for 1915 i close to $250,000 000. T xtile mill come fir t in Georgia manufacture" On January 1, 1916 the number of t xtil mills in GeorO'ia wa 166, with a combined' capital of $4 , 49 232.73. '1'he number of spindle wa. 22- ,310, and of loom 43, 64. There were 11 0 3,966 knitting machines and 457 ewing machine. The raw material u ed annually i about $40,000,000. They pay annually about $10,000,000 to wage earn 1'., practically all of whom are white people, and about $1,300,000 in salaries to offic 1'. and clerk. They u approximately 90000 hoI' epower, and turn out annually orne 500 000,000 yards of clo h, ':1:,000 000 dozen of ho e and 500,000 dozen of kni.tt d Imderwear, totalling in value over 70- 000,000, a tated above. otton oil mill and fer til i- z e I' f a c- torie come next in i. m pOl' t- ance. On Jan. 1, 1916, G ol'O'ia had 1 otton oil mill with capital A GEORGIA COTTON MILL. The Sibley Mills near Augusta. and inve tment of '14 120,000, and manufactured product for the preceding year to the value of $2 ,149,59 . Fertilizer plant totalled 260, with capital inve tment of $41,200," 000, and manufactured product to the value of $20,950,6 0. Georgia i one of the leading tates in lumber and naval stores There are 1 00,000 awmiU in the tate, cutting annually about one billion feet, valued at $25 000 000. About 24000,000 out of G orgia total 3-1: 000,000 acre are in forest embracing more kind of wood than are grown in any other tate except Florida, and of which the principal are long and hort leaf pine, poplar cypre oak, hickory and other hardwoods. 39 Pine Timber a Pine is the mo t important as commercial timber, the long leaf pine Big Georgia Product region covering today some 17,000 quare mile and containing, it is es- timated, over twenty billion feet of merchantable timber. It is to the exten ive pine fore t that Georgia owe her prominence in naval tore turpentine and 1'0 in. The total annual value i about $7,000,000. The foundry, machine and general repair hop in Georgia for the year ending December 31,1915 and including work in iron steel. bra , copper and tin, totalled 1 5 e tabli hm nt , with capital of $10,410,4 , value of raw material to the amount of $3,0 3,000 and turning out manufactured product worth 6 203 106. The e tabli hment that manufacttll'e bri k, tile, ewer piping and cla product number 130, with apital of $3,951, 91, and manufactured product worth annually $1 571 700. Georgia marble and granite are the finest produced on the American continent, and have furni hed the material for orne of the fin t National and tate building in the nion. The marble and granite quarrie and marble yard of the tate total 105 e tablisbment , with a capital of $3,150,000 and annual produ ts worth $2,3 0,000. There are ixty e tabli bment in Georgia turning out buggie" carriages and wagon v6th capital of ,'3,000,000, u ing raw material to the value of $1,346,000, with fini hed product valu d at $2,200,000. Many Opportunities Tanner and manufacturer of leather good hav 37 e, tablishment , 'lith in Manufacturing capital of $2,565.000, and product. valued annually at $2,500000, There are 195 flour and gri t mill , with capital of $2,900,000, and annual product worth $ ,350,000. Georgia' printing and new paper plant number 4 00, with capital above $230000,000 and fini hed product worth $235000000 annually. Among other manufacturing enterpri es carried on ucce, fully in eorgia are: AO'ricultural implement paper boxes bakery product, confectionery car and hop construction, clothing, wooden ware, furniture, mattre ,e drugs and patent medicine slaughtering and meat packing, tobacco and cigar metal products, and a ho t of other. The opportunitie offered manufacturing enterpri e in Georgia are un urpa sed anywhere in the world. Cheap and unlimited upplie of raw material are available, coupled with be t railroad and hipping facilities, and cheap and abundant power furni hed by tbe tremendou hydro-electric d velopment in "ariou part of the State. pecial information to anyone who wi he to inve tigate Georgia', manufacturing opportunitie will be gladly furni hed on reque t by the Georgia Department of Agriculture, State Capitol, tlanta. Ga. 40 MI ES A D FORESTS GEORGlA. i today producing 23 different kind of minerals in ~ommercia~ 9-uantiti~s of tota~ ~nnual. value running well mto the illlilion , while the unlimIted mmeral and mining re. ource of the tate which have not yet been touched at all afford a rich field for development. Indeed, there are very few minerals of wide commercial u e which are not found in Georgia. The principal minerals already being mined in commercial quantities are clay, marble, granite, iron, coal, baryte , lime tone, mica, mangane e, bauxite, a be to ,cement gold, graphite, corundum, ocher, pyrite, copper, late, talc and sand tone. The greate t clay indu trie in the whol nitecl States are in central Georgia, with a combined annual value of over $2,000,000. The clay bed are inexhau tible. Georgia marble rank with the mo t beautiful in the world, and i shipped in large quantities to almo t every tate in the Union for decoration and con truction purpose. Marble production runs to $1,000,000 a year. The Corcoran Art Gallery at Wa. hington, the New York tock Exchange, the Bo ton Federal Building the Royal Bank of anada at Montreal, and many other public buildings are of Georgia marble. Georgia is the eventh State in the output of granite. No granite in America is better known or more widely used than that which comes from Stone Mountain, the large t monolith of its kind in the world, and from Lithonia, both in the neighborhood of Atlanta. Granite production goe as high annually a $1,000,000. A SOUTH GEORGIA TURPENTINE STILL. The naval stores-turpentine and rosin-Industry flourishes in Georgia to the extent of $7,000,000 a year. 41 Iron ore production has gone as high as $ 37,102, and coal produc- tion ha been a high a $600,000. The European war stimulated the mining of mica, feldspar and baryte , and a company with '250,000 i ucce fully pro ecuting this indu try. Georgia i to Jay producing more baryte' than any other tate in the Union. Among the preciou tones which have been found in Georgia in connection with the mining of gold and corundum, are the diamond, true ruby, beryl, garn t, amethy t, 1'0 e quartz, agate, ja per, opal and moonstone. . 'l'he service of the Georgia tate Geological Department are alway at the command of tho intere ted in mining and kindred indu trie . Georgia's Vast bout 60 per cent of the area of Georgia i still wooded and while ome of it Timber Resources ha been everely cut it will probably average 5,000 feet board mea ure per acre at the present tim , making the total stand of timber about ] 15 billion feet. Accor ling to the 1910 government census there were in thi State 2,0 3 active saw mill which cut 1,345,349,000 feet of lumber, valued at over $17,000000. Long leaf pine, short leaf pine, oak, cedar, cypres , poplar are the most important tree. Georgia ha more different pecie of tree than any other State in the nion except Florida. Pine make up 40 per cent, oak 20 per cent, and other tree 40 per cent. 'l'here i enough cypre s in Georgia to shingle every hou e in the tate of ew York. Georgia a Leader Georgia, with its already magnificent network of good road , will be the :fir t in Road Building tate in the Union to take advantage of the new Federal appropriation to aid in roadbuilding. nder the Federal Aid Act of ongre , Georgia get $2,000 000 during the next five year to aid in this work and the program he ha outlined contemplate the spending in addition of orne '6,000,000 of her own money. The Federal appropriation, of which Georgia gets $134 000 the fir t year, i conditioned on th pI' entation to Washington of a defi- nite program of what i to be done with the money, and Georgia' plans have been pre ented before tho e of any other State. By a bill pas ed by the tate Legislature in 1916, Georgia ha a tate IIighway ommi. ion whi h co-operate with the individual countie in road work. Thi commi ion is compo ed of the three mem- ber of the Pri on ommis. ion, the tate GeoloO'i t, and the profe - ors of civil engineering from the niver ity of Georgia an I the Geor- gia School of Technology. Georgia work practically all of her convict on public road and the system ha proven a ucce s in every way. Of the 7000 convict now in Georgia, fully 6000 are .engaged in road builcling work. The co t of their maintenance i about $2,500,000 .annually, and it i e ti- mated that the work they do i annually worth more than $5,000000. 42 HAS MANY MAGNIFICENT ROADS. (2) Hard sandclay r 0 a d through pines -T'homas Co, (1) Famous shell road In Chatham County, (3) Sand-clay road In Muscogee County near Columbus. And all this work i going forward in a State which already hal:! plendid road, It is e timated that Georgia ha today approximately 5,000 miles of public road , of which over 20,000 are already paved with sand clay, and several thousand paved with macadam, chert, stone or gravel. Since 190 , when the convict road-building y tem wa adopted, Georgia ha made greater progre than any other tate in the outh. The U. S. Good Road Bureau of the Department of Agriculture has called attention to thi fact, and the y tem is giving Georgia a plendid network of highways through all part of the State. 43 BUSINESS AND FINANCE GEORGIA., becau 'e of it central location, it railroad and port' i the leading bu ine State of the outhea t. Atlanta, the geographical, financial and railroad center of the dates in the outhea tern group, i the sout.hern headquarters for practically all the big northern and ea tern corporations, in urance ag ncie and manufacturing oncel'll operating in thi ection. tlanta i also the head of the outh' whole ale and retail merchandi ing. During the I'd. t ten y ar Georgia' productivene in a bu ine and manufacturing way. ha more than doubled, while the capital available through bank to handle thi increa e ha more than trebled. The railroad headquarter for all the territory between the Ohio, Potomac and Mi i ippi River are centered in Georgia. The port of Georgia are among the bu ie t of the Atlantic seaboard. This mean that the whole current of trade in outh a tern territory flow into and out of Georgia. The combined advantages of available capital, hipping rate and natural re ources make Georgia the ideal location alike for the manufacturer and merchant. avannah, Brun wick, Darien and t. Mary s are the four Georgia eaport which handle exten ive foreign and dome tic commerce. avannah, with foreign import amounting to over $6.000,000 annually and foreign export of between '100,000,000 and . 150 000 000, i the large t port on the Atlantic eaboard outh of Baltimore. The other three port are al 0 among the mo t active on th oa t. The credit of Georgia a a tate. and of Georgia' individual COUlltie , cities and town tand so high and i maintained on so ound a ba i that it ha b en over and over again ref 1'1' d to by the greate t financier of merica a a model y t m. Georgia's Credit on Solid Basis hen thi. wa pnt to th aeid t t by the big refun ling bond i ue in 1915. it wa di cover I that few tate in the nion coul(] borrow money 011 nch advantageou term a Georgia. Economically thi tate i not m l' ly pro p rou , but i onnd to the core. Total aggregate value of taxable property in G orgia for 1916 amount to '954,125707, or practically one billion dollar. The State total out tanding bonded debt i. only $6 540000 back of which is the We tern & Atlantic Railroad, an income-bearing property belonging entirely to the State and worth over $15,000,000. 44 This llle.lnS, that taking into consideration all bonded indebtedness, the State government of Georgia is not merely sound and solvent, but can actually point to a handsome balance on the CREDIT SIDE of the ledger. The credit of individual countie and communities is as jealously O'uarded a that of the State by a clause in the State Constitution pro- hibiting the issuance of bonds above 7 per cent of the taxable value, and the inve tor is further protected by trict laws on bond validation. Generous Aid is Generou aid, under legitimate circum tance, to the farmer and mer- Given The Farmer chant make the banking in titutions of Georgia a powerful factor in the progre of the tate. With a liberal policy toward agriculture and bu ine ,the bank are characterized by a con ervative oundness that make banl: failure an almo t unheard-of rarity. Georgia s 114 National banks con titute a eries of financial insti- tution ranked among the trongest in the world, and for aid in the movement of crop and imilar purpo es their a i tance i ready and available to the full limit of good credit. The number of Georgia '8 State bank which are un ler trict u- pervision and ubject to tate examination y ar]y, is 692. Tbey have ucce fully carried the Georgia farmer and merchant through every financial cri i the countr ha known. Georgia al 0 ba one of the twelve Federal Re erve or ' Regional bank e tabli hed under the national currency law. It is lo- cated in Atlanta and. erve the territory of the ixth re erve di - trict, including Georgia, labama, Florida, and part of Loui iana, ii. is. ippi and Tellnes ee. ince its establi 11- ment in 19]4 it ha proven of ine timable value to the ec- tion. STATE CAPITOL, ATLANTA, GA. 45 Tax Rate L d Imlte Georgia tax rate, limited ,y the Con titution to 5 mill or $5 un ach by the Constitution $1000, and actually fixed today by . the State Tax olllmi ion at $4.50 per $1,000, is below the average of other tate and con titute a light burden equitably.di tributed among all cla e of property holder. Property i generally taxed at 60 per cent of it market value, and a recent tax equalization law give promi e of further materially reduc- ing the rate. Georgia farm land is regarded by inve tor as splendid security for liberal loans, and farmers have no difficulty in obtaining money on rea onable terms. There inver a time when an honest farmer i unable to aet the money he need for making hi crop or for improving or extending hi farm facilitie . Ten of the largest in urance, tru t and bonding companie~ which have loans in Georgia aggregating between $15,000,000 and $20000,000 have placed more than 60 per cent of the amount on farm lands. Georgia Cities are Prosperous tlanta, avannah. Augu ta and Macon are the four principal citie of Georgia, ranging in ize a follow tlanta. 200,000 inhabitant: avannah 70,000' Auau ta, 55,000, and '[aeon, 45,000. Other thriving and important cities are Columbu with over 20,OO~; Waycros. with over 1 ,000; Athen, with 17,000; Rome, with over 14.000; Brun wick, with 11,000; Valdosta. with 10,000; Al- bany, with about 10,000, and Americu with over ,000. There are 12 pro perous town ,vith more than 1,000 inhabitant each and several hundred malleI' ub tantial and rapidly growing town . Practically all the communitie of 1,000 and over enjoy electric light and power and other public utilitie . Georgia "'ill furni h ideal. port for hunter an 1 fisherman for year and probably generations to come, a the plendid. tock of game in which the ction naturally abound i protected by a model game law, which has behind it an fficient department and trong public . entiment backing its enforc ment. Among the varietie of game which may be l:ill d in eason in Georgia are quail or partridge wild turkey woodcock, doves, grou e and phea ant, duck, deer squirrels, o'possums, and occasional bear. The already d veloped hydro-electric Georgia's Hydro- power in Georgia today total over 200,- Electric Power 000 hoI' epower, while the available undeveloped power i limitle. It has been con ervatively e timated at ov l' 1,000.000. Of the available un- dev loped power 'in the tat orne 325,000 hoI' epower is already owned by hydro-electric companie which have active plans for its development. 46 RIVERS AND HARBORS. (1) River steamboats on the Chatta~ooche, which go from Columbus to the Gulf. (2) Extensive naval stores docks at Columbus. (3) Loading cross-ties for foreign shipment on wharf at Savannah. Thi mean that Georgia today not only ha ample and inexpensive power for all the manufacturing nt rpri es it now ha and tho e which may be expected to come in the n ar future, but that it ha. ready more than ample power re ourc s to make Georgia the peer of the world as a manufacturing center. The power plant already in operation are widely distributed throughout the State, while teel tower transmi , ion line carrying this power to all principal citie , to many towns and to manufacturing plant all over the tate render it available in unlinIited quantities to every section. The largest ingle development i at Tallulah Fall which generates 96,000 horsepower and can generate more than double that amount, 47 while others are located around Atlanta, Columbu , Macon, Augu ta and other point. Prosper.lty Shown The automobile is an important institution in Georgia, made more so by the con truc- in Automobiles tion ,of every good road. T?-ere are ap- , proXllllately 60,000 of them ill the tate, according to e timates of the ecretary of tate, who e department has thi year i ued licen e to 47,310. Approximately half of them are used in the country and on the farm. Many thousands of them have been purcha ed by farmer ince eptember following the making of good crop, and will appear upon next year's official record. Georgia accords the arne right and privileges to automobili ts from other State, that are accorded by tho e tate to Georgia. Automobili t are allowed to pa s through, if they have complied with the laws of their own State. Their licen e number are good in Georgia, just a long as a Georgia licen e i good in their tate, the period ranging from even to sixty day . WRITE FOR INFORMATION. For any desired information about opportunitie in Georgia in any indu trial or agricultural line write to the following: State Department of Agriculture, Atlanta, Ga. Georgia Chamber of ommerce, tlanta, Ga. tate College of Agriculture, then, Ga. Atlanta hamber of Commerce, Atlanta, Ga., or the Chamber of ommerce at avannah Macon Auau ta, olumbu Rome or of any city in the tate. COTTON MILL, GRIFFIN, GA. Complied and Edited by LEWISSEABROOK COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga. 48