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MMISSIONEH NESBITT.
HIS MONTHLY TALK WITH THE
GEORGIA FARMERS
On Subjects of General Interest Per
taining to the Farm and
Garden—Good Advice.
Department oe Agriculture,
Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 1, 1803.
COTTON.
The month just passed has carried out
the same weather conditions as that
which preceded it. In some localities
there has been too much rain for the
proper development of the fruit or cot
ton, although there is redundant weed
growth. Where these conditions exist,
the fields, to a superficial observer, pre
sent a most promising appearance, but a
closer inspection reveals the fact that
there are more leaves than bolls or
forms. In other sections, which suffered
from a long continued drouth, the rains
have caused a most marked improve
ment, and plant growth and develop
ment have been rapid. In all the drouth
regions, however, barring exceptionally
early plantings, the crop is backward,
and its ultimate size and yield will de
pend on the lateness of the fall.
RUST
is also making its appearance, showing
the want of a proper distribution of the
elements of planet growth. Sometimes,
however, after a long drouth, heavy and
repeated rains seem to produce a scald
ed condition of the plant, causing it to
shed its leaves and young bolls, and this
-condition is frequently mistaken for
fust. Again, a highly nitrogenous ma
nure, not properly distributed, and com
ing in contact with the roots will pro
duce the same result. But the expe
rienced farmer can detect the difference
between these conditions and the fungus
growth of genuine rust. As explained
in last month's report, the most effective
preventive of this destructive disease in
cotton has been found to be a judicious
rotation; that is, planting other crops,
which offer no encouragement for the
production of the fungous growth, nota
bly, grains and grasses.
It has also been demonstrated that the
application of fertilizers running high on
potash has accomplished good results in
checking the disease. Farmers should
study these questions and in a small way
experiment for themselves, watching
each result carefully. For the next two
months almost our entire time will be
devoted to the
PICKING
of this great money crop of the south.
Every energy and every moment, when
the weather permits, should be devoted
to the housing of the staple, the produc
tion of which has cost us so many
months of hard and continuous labor,
and upon the successful marketing of
which rest the hopes of not only our ag
ricultural population, but of the people
at large.
ITS WIDE INFLUENCE.
• Besides those actually engaged in its
production and marketing, this crop fur
nishes employment to thousands of
others, clothes the world, and is of more
or less interest to every civilized nation
on the globe. The magnitude of its in
fluence can scarcely be appreciated by
those who have not studied the various
reciprocal relations, which control and
.direct the intricate machinery of the
business world. Within the narrow
bounds of our own state we produce $35,-
000,000 worth of the staple, and this
crop, though of late years made at an
actual loss to the producer, yet throws
life and activity into every enterprise
conducted within our own borders—and
extends out into the busy marts of other
nations. The eager eyes of the world
are now turned to the south, anxiously
awaiting tiding of the coming crop.
To say that above all others ours is
pre-eminently the most favored country
for producing this great staple, is but to
state a fact, which has been fully demon
strated. In Egypt, at one time consid
ered a formidable rival, the area on
which cotton can be produced is limited,
and the same land is never planted in
succession, although this land is rich and
: labor cheap, 10 cents a day being the
standard price. The expenses of prepar
ation and irrigation are such that every
pound costs the producer 10 cents. In
. India the crop is of inferior grade, the
staple short, and although labor is cheap
and the plant perennial, the cotton bears
no comparison with that of American
growth. Our principal aim now should
be to cheapen the cost of production to
ourselves, and thus drive out these for
eign competitors. We know that we
can produce it at a cost of less than 10
cents, and each point that we gain in
cheapening its production but strength,
ens our position as masters of the situa
tion. If, but 10 years ago, we had de
voted to this question the study we are
giving to it to-day, how different our po
sition before the world! If, by a judi
cious rotation of crops and systematic
manuring were our lands now stored
with humus; it we had studied the ques
tion of home supplies and its influence
on our money crop; in other words, if
we had learned to raise our own provi
sions and. make our cotton cheaper, the
present financial depression would not
affect us so painfully. Of course the
farmer is a fellow’ sufferer with the men
of other employments from the present
financial pressure.
But the careful farmer, who by judi
cious management and wise forethought
has Made provision for ample home sup
plies, while he may not escape the busi
ness depression, is, perhaps, today the
«nost independent man in the union. He
may read of the stringency of the money
market; of the heavy burdens pressing
upon the laboring men of other classes,
he may realize that there is a cry going
op from the masses, not for bread, but
for work—work to help the -countless
women and children, and give them
food; he may be told that inon owning
thousands worth ot property and with
ample collaterals, vet cannot realize one
dollar on them. These rumors, reaching
his quiet home, excite his sympathy, and
may cause a feeling of apprehension,
but they do not affect his personal se
curity. He has his home, he lias his
provisions secured; his cotton has been
made at reasonable cost, and although
he may not live in luxury, lie is a
stranger to the desperate struggle now
going on in the business world.
In that world there is absolutely stagna
tion of trade. The banker sits with bis
contracted brow, and anxious expect
ancy, awaiting telegrams from the busi
ness centres, hoping for some improve
ment in the financial situation; the mer
chant sees his trade diminished and de
pressed; the artisan and the mechanic sit
inactive by workshop and bench; the fac
tory operative is suffering from enforced
idleness; every citizen of our state, be ho
preacher, lawyer, doctor, merchant,
farmer, mechanic, artisan or day la
borer, feels the effect of our financial
condition.
Generally speaking, however, the
farmer’s lot is a happy one, when com
pared with that of the thousands of
workingmen in cities, now thrown out
of employment. Of course there are ex
ceptional cases, borne sections of the
state have been visited by severe and de
structive storms, and over a large por
tion of North Carolina a protracted
drouth has cut off the yield of corn; but,
as a rule, the grain crops are good, hogs
are more plentiful and the cotton has
been made more economically than
heretofore. Under usual conditions,
these facts would place the farmer on
this vantage ground, that he could use
his discretion in selling his cotton, and
not sacrifice it at a ruinously low’ price.
But later, when his obligations mature,
if there is no improvement in the finan
cial condition, he, too, will feel the pres
sure to be almost unbearable. His cot
ton will be ready for market, but unless
times brighten there will be no money to
move it: or, if lie owes, his debts will
have to be settled on a basis of five or six
cents cotton—perhaps less. Under these
circumstances what can he do? Let
him, if possible, save himself from this
tremendous sacrifice by placing liis cot
ton with his merchant. This will pro
tect and maintain the credit of both.
And then let him join liis voice with the
millions who are protesting against our
unjust financial system, which enables a
few money lenders to “corner” the
money of the country, the south and
west being the victims, while the shy-
locks of tile east grow fat from their ne
cessities and sufferings.
SAVING SEED FOR PLANTING.
In gathering the cotton crop care
should be taken to save only the best
seed for planting. If the farmer cannot
do this himself, let him select a careful
hand, who will go through the crop and
select the best bolls from the stalks, and
those from the middle crop are the most
desirable, as the top crop is not usually
well matured and the bottom crop is
generally more or less injured, although
good seed saved from the bottom or first
crop generally mature earlier. The ut
most care must bo taken in drying the
seed and securing them against all inju
rious influences.
Tlie seed corn should be selected in the
same manner, taking only well devel
oped, full ears from healthy, vigorous
stalks, storing' these carefully, and at
the same time reselecting, and using only
the perfect grains from the butt towards
the middle of the ear, rejecting the
ends. In storing away the corn crop, a
good plan is to sprinkle each layer, as it
is put in the barn, with salt water; this
is a preventive of weavils, often so de
structive in the lower part of the state,-
and also renders the shucks more palata
ble for feeding.
FALL CROPS.
I would again urge, at the risk of be
ing considered tedious, that full crops of
grain, grass and clover be put in as far
as practicable.
. September is the month for getting in
a stand for winter oats. Rye and bar
ley should also be sown, and if we would
have a good start with clover and grass
now is the time to put them in. What
ever is attempted on this line should be
done thoroughly. To succeed properly
the land should be naturally good, or
should be made so by proper fertiliza
tion, and the work should be thorough.
W e only court disappointment when at
the end of the fall we “scratch” in a few
Beed on our poorest land. I again re
peat, that this is one cause of the usual
failure of our fall sown grains. Neces
sarily this work comes at an inconvenient
time, when we are absorbed in saving
the cotton, but the man who has fully
made up his mind to lay the foundation
for diversified crops and improved lands,
will find some plan for carrying out his
intention. There w’ill be many days
when the cotton is not in condition to be
gathered. These eanjje used in turning
under the pea vines and in sowing these
fall crops. Of course the man who ha.s
most of his farm in cotton is debarred
from these improved methods, for it will
be too late, when the cotton is finally
gathered, to attempt them with profit,
which is but another plea for concentrat
ing our cotton crop and reducing the area
and intensifiying its preparation, fertil
ization and cultivation.
A RECENT TRIP
through some of the most flourishing
counties of the state proved to me most
conclusively the great chauge which is
daily progressing in the minds of our
farmers in regard to the diversity of
crops and the importance of closer atten
tion to what might be termed the details
of the farm. There is a growing inter
est in good stock, a manifest desire to
raise more; care is being shown in tin
selection of sires; the question of judi
cious rotation of cropsjis being more close
ly studied. Humus is greatly needed in
most of our soils, and intelligent farmers
are beginning to realize that one of the
most important subjects for study is ; ,
to the cheapest and most practical meth
ods of storing it there. Unquestionably
peas and clover are the great nitrogen
depositors and humus manufac
turers, but if any farmer will take the
trouble to turn under in the fall, even
the growth of natural grass, he will be
surprised at the increased yield of the
succeeding crops grown on this land over
those where the land has been in clea-’
culture, thus denuded of every particle
of vegitable matter, and then hastily
prepared in the spring for another cro]
It is by such experiments that we deni
onstrate the correctness of the assertion
that our lands almost without exeeptior
need vegetable matter. Farmers gener
ally are beginning to realize.this impor
tant truth, and to one who travels
through the state and studies its agricul
tural conditions, the fact is patent, that
an era of better methods has already
dawned. R. J. Nesbitt,
I Commmissioner.
Troup Superior Court, November
Term, 1 8i>.‘{.
GRAND JURORS, 1st WEEK.
E D Pitman, N H McOallay,
R R Clark, W 8 Jackson,
R M Mobley, G T Mitcham,
W A Poer, R M Hudson,
T J Harwell W T Evans,
E P Cleaveland, C Ii Bass,
H H Onrv, W C Davidson,
J G Truitt, B G Swanson,
W J McClure, J A Fomby,
M H Rachels, G H Carter,
J H Hays, # JO Cleaveland,
ATDallis, TC Floyd,
E R Bradtield, D T Daniel,
VV O Duke, J L Robertson,
TI C Timmons JM Whitaker,
TRAVERSE JURORS. l8t, WEEK.
J C G Carter, J P Freeman,
M M Tommie, J M Lewis,
T G Camerou, J J Owensby,
J M Sanders, F R Hudson,
B A Bird, Edward O’Neal.
W G Mallary, W C Lanier,
J G Hunter, G W Murphy,
W T Johnson, R L Christopher,
G M Humphry, Olin Carleton,
L J Busbee, J M Trippe,
A A Furgerson, C D Jones,
J T Traylor, W Harrison,
J O Perry, J T White,
W M Hairston, J RiCooper,
J H Covin, T W Houston,
TRAVERSE JURORS, 2nd WEEK.
E N Dunn, C M Sweeney,
FS Tatum, M D Jenkins,
P J. Nelson, C W Sanders,
J L Sims, C O Cleaveland,
J T Dickson, J A Cooley,
J L Blackmon, J H Brittain,
B J Dickson, W. J Hipp,
J F Hocg, W B Robertson,
W T Rawls, J B Hammett,
E H DunsoD, J A Broome,
W E Glenn, J A Rakestraw,
■T M Owen, J E Dunson,
Virgil Denny, J H Strong,
G W Callaway, G P Adams,
W T Birdsong, W J Allison.
TRAVERSE JURORS, 3d WEEK.
W G Cleaveland, P O Upchurch,
L Strong, P P Fleeth,
G W Williams, C J Mathews,
J A Baugh, Jr JLSchaub,
W M Fling, L £ Spikes,
S G Darden, T H Thompson,
W F Hines, A H Cary,
J A Harper, E G Hood,
Albert Dunson, Z T Gorham,
T W Smith, W E Palmer,
L H Booker, W L Young,
T J Thornton, B C Dollar,
R H Strong, B J Wilkinson,
J W Murpby, J F Market
R F Caudle H W Houston.
Deafness Cannot be Cured
by local applications as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is only one way to cure deaf
ness, and that is by constitutional
remedies. Deafness is caused by an
inflamed condilion of the mucous
lining of the Eustachian Tube. When
this tube is inflamed you have a rum-
blin g souEd or imperfect hearing, aDd
when it is entirely closed, Deafness is
the result, and unless the inflammation
can be taken out and thistuberestored
to its normal condition,hearing will be
destroyed forever: nine cases out of
teD are caused by catarrh, which is
nothing but an inflamed condition of
the muoous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars
for any case of Deafness (caused by
catarrh) that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circu
lars ; free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
^ss-Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Don’t do it, My Boy.
Don’t smoke.
It makes you stupid.
It does not advance you in athletic
sports.
It makes you nervous.
It does not make you a better shot.
It makes you smell like a taproom.
It makes you offensive in company.
It does you no good.
It makes you appear ridiculous and
silly.
You don’t get a bit of comfort out
of it, and you know it.
So don’t smoke.
A Battle for Blood
Is what Hood’s Saisaparilla vigorous
ly fights, and it is always victorious
in expelling all the foul taints and
giving the vital fluid the quality and
quantity of perfect health. It cures
scrofula, salt rheum, boils and all
other troubles caused by impure
blood.
Hood’s Pills cure all liver ills. 25c.
Sent by mail on receipt of price by C.
I. Hood & Co., Apothecaries, Lowell,
MasB.
It takes 70 men to make a knife.
La Grippe.
During the prevalence of Grippe
the past season it was a noticeable
fact that those who depended upon
Dr. King’s New Discovery, not only
had a speedy recovery, but escaped
all of the troublesome after effects of
the malady. This remedy seems to
have’ a peculiar power in effecting
rapid cures not only in cases of La
Grippe, but in all Diseases of Throat,
Chest and Lungs, and has cured cases
ofAstbmaand Hay Fever of long
standing.' Try it and be convinced. It
won’t disappoint you. Free Trial
Bottles at W. T. Herring’s Drug
Store.
A He can run fast, but the feet of
truth never slip.
CALLS EUCHRE GAMBLING.
A Chattanooga. Judge Stirs Up
the Society People by H is
Charge.
By Southern Afternoon Press.
Washington, D. 0., September, 5.—
Hpeoial dispatches from Chattanoo
ga, Tenn., say that Judge Moon, in
his charge to the grand jury yester
day, created a sensation by declaring
•■hat, progressive euchre is gambling.
He said:
“Not only is gambling carried on in
regular gambling resorts, bnt, people
of high standing and respectability
gamble. They may not put down
money, but they set the example for
others In playing for prizes and
awards. In these progressive euchre
games these persons play for tine
pictures or gold-headed canes. Ex
amples are set that are a violation of
the law and it is just as demoralizing
as common gambling. The convic
tion of one man of the higher class is
better, as an example, than the con
viction of only ordinary people for
common gambling.”
Society people are excited over the
attitude taken by the judge.
When gossip beats the drum of the
ear the tongue tells the tune.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, 1
Lucas County. j ss
Frank J. Cheney makes oath tha t
he is the senior partner of the firm of
F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in
the City of Toledo, County and State
aforesaid, aDd that said firm will pay
the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL
LARS for each and every case of
Catarrh that cannot be cured by the
use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed
in my presence, this Gth day of De
cember, A. D. 188G.
seal.
A. W. GLEASON.
1 ’ Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internal
ly and acts directly on the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. Send
tor testimonials, free.
A good story of Gen. John C. Breck
inridge is said to have been told by
himself with evident relish not long
before his death, says the Chicago
Post. In talking to some friends
about the many kindnesses which
had been shown him by his people,
and the pleasant things which had
bet n said to him, he remarked tnat
he valued as highly as aoy compli
ment he had ever received one which
an old Kentucky farmer paid him
duriDg the war, which hart come to
his ears only a short time before. It
was the custom in war time, as it has
always been at all times, for the
country people to come into the coun
try town on Satuiday afternoon to
exchange news gathered during the
week. At one of these gatherings in
a store in Richmond, Ky., just after
the battle of Cbickamauga, one of
the men said be had heard some
grand news. Upon being pressed to
tell it, he said gravely:
"I did hear thar has been a most
powerful fight down in Tennessee,
and they says that for a long time it
went mighty agin our folks, but that
then Mr. Breckinridge come forrad
and asked the privilege of the field
for just fifteen minutes, and they do
say that be slew 30,000.”
Which statement was received with
due respect by the assembled compa
ny, although it appeared to occasion
a slight ripple of surprise, much to
the narrator’s satisfaction.
A great many medicines relieve
Catarrh in the Head. That means
that it’s driven from the head into the
throat and luDgs. But, by its mild,
soothing, cleansing and healing proi
perries, Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy
perfectly and permanently cures.
A moderate drinker is worth more
to the devil than a drunkard.
To gain strength—Hood’s Sarsapa
rilla.
For steady nerves—Hood’s Sarsapa
rilla,
For pure blood—Hood’s Sarsaparil
la.
A thirst has often been started with
a teaspoon that barrels could not
quench.
A Lady in Illinois.
I have been sick for several years,
aDd have doctored with six or seven
different doctors, and none of them
did me any good—even the great Di.
G ,ofSt. Louis. I have taken
two bottles of D.r. White’s Pult&pna-
ria, and it has done me more good
than all the other medicines I have
taken. I was about dead when I
began to take the pulmonaria. Mar
garet L. Baldwin, White Hall, Ill.
This great medicine Is sold and
warranted by your druggist, W. T.
Herring.
For a lame back or for a pain in the
side or cbeBt, try saturating a piece
of flannel witb Chamberlain’s Fain
Balm and blndiDg it In the affected
parts. This treatment will cure any
ordinary case in one or two days.
Pain Balm also cures rheumatism. 50
cent bottles for sale by all Druggists
and Medicine Dealers.
Germany has an army of 8,000,000
agricultural workeis.
THE WORLD’S FAIR
AND AMERICAN RAILWAYS.
The Queen & Crescent Route,
widely known as the road running the
“ Finest Trains in The South,” is in tho
field to carry everybody from the South
to the World’s Fair at Chicago. No
part of the Southern country is left un
cared for by this great railway and its
connections. The through Car System
is an admirable exposition of tho won
derful capabilities of American rail
roading. From New Orleans, Through
Sleeping cars run dally—morning and
evening—carrying its passengers via
Cincinnati or Louisville, as they may’
select.
From Shreveport, Vicksburg and
Jackson, another Through Sleeping
Car Line comes to join and become a
part of the magnificent Vestibuled
Through Trains which, passing through
Birmingham and tho famous Wills Val
ley of Alabama, is joined at Chatta
nooga by the train from Jacksonville,
Fla., .Brunswick and Atlanta, Ga., over
the E. T. V. & Ga. Ry., and proceeds
north over tho beautiful Cincinnati
Southern through the grandest natu
ral scenery and most attractive histori
cal country in the world, to Oakdale,
where another magnificent l’ullman
car is received, coming from the Rich
mond and Danville System from Char
leston, S. C., through Columbia, S. C.,
the beautiful French Broad country
and Ashville, N. C. and Knoxville,
Tennessee.
The time to Chicago is made so as to
afford the most convenient hours for
departures from the principle cities,
and arrivals in Chicago.
Passengers can purchase tickets good
over one line north of the River, and
returning via another, if they desire a
variable route without extra charge;
or they can go via Cincinnati, return
ing via Louisville, or vice versa.
Round trip tickets on sale at reduced
rates. Agents of the Chicago line will,
on request, assist in looking up rooms
or accommodation for visitors to the
Fair.'
Everything that an almost perfect
system can devise to deserve the praise
and patronage of the travelling publio
lias' been provided. Any of the agents
of the company named below, will
cheerfully give all possible informa
tion and assistance ; R. H. Garratt,
New Orleans, La. I. Hardy, Vicks
burg, Miss. J. Ii. McGregor, Birming
ham, Ala. E. T. Charlton, Chatta
nooga, Tenn. W. D. Cozatt, Junction
City, Ky., or D. G. Edwards, Cincin-
nati. Ohio,
ARE YOU GOING TO THE
Ripans Tabules.
Ripans Tabules are com
pounded from a prescription
widely used by the best medi
cal authorities and are pre
sented in a form that is be
coming the fashion every
where.
Ripans Tabules act gently
but promptly upon the liver,
stomach and intestines; cure
dyspepsia, habitual constipa
tion, offensive breath and head
ache. One tabule taken at the
first symptom of indigestion,
biliousness, dizziness, distress
after eating, or depression of
spirits, will surely and quickly
ile
remove the whole difficulty.
Ripans Tabules may be ob
tained of nearest druggist.
Ripans Tabules
are easy to take,
quick to act, and/^
save many a doc
tor’s bill.
RICHMOND & DANVILLE
RAILROAD.
WORLD’S FAIR
CHICAGO?
THE E. & N.
Offers Choice Several Routes,
3 Trains Daily.
Leave ATLANTA W. & A.
10.00 a. m., 3.16 p. m.,
8.20 p. m.
Arrive CHICAGO 8:68 a. m.,
4:30 p. m., 9:30 p. m.
LESS THAN 23 HOURS TO CHICAGO
By the Nashville Route.
THROUGH CABS! Variable
Routes. SPECIAL RATES
The Greatest Southern System.
The route of the Great Washing
ton and Southwestern Vestibuled
Limited, composed only of Pullman
vestibuled sleeping and dining cars
to and from New York, includii g
through vestibuled sleepers betwein
Memphis and Washington via Bir-
minghpm. Atlanta, Charlotte, Dan
ville and Charlottesville.
Also, the U. S. Great Fast ’ Mail,
saving twelve hours, affording mag
nificent service between Boston,
New York, Washington and Atlanta,
Birmingham and the Southwest,
with through drawing-room Buffet
sleeping cars between New York
and Montgomery, connecting at At
lanta with Pullman sleepers between
Atlanta and Birmingham.
Triple daily fast trains between
the South and the North via this
great route.
Double daily trains service with
Pullman drawing-room sleepers be
tween Atlanta and Birmingham.
Also, solid through trams between
Atlanta and Greenville, Miss., with
Pullman sleepers Atlanta and Bir-
mingbari, and Birmingham and
Winona.
For maps, summer home folders,
timetables, sleeping car reservation
apply to any agent of the Richmond
& Danville R. R., or address
W. H. TAYLOE,
D. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.
S. H. HARDWICK,
Ass’t. Gen’l. Pass. Agdnt.
W. A. TURK,
General Passenger Agent.
[['jgr’Jt will pay you to write me.
FRED. D. BUSH, D. P. A.
L. &. N. R. R.
30 Wall Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Every Good Kitchen.
As every 'good housewife knows,
The difference between appetll-
tng, delicious cooking and the
opposite kind Is largely in deli
cate sauces and palatable gra
vies. Now, these require a
strorg, delicately flavored stock,
and the best stock Is
Liebig Company’s
Extract of Beef
TESTIMONIALS published in
■ l-»Glin1f nf T-TnnH’a Sar.«
belialf of Hood’s Sarsaparilla are
as reliable and worthy of confidence as
if from your most trusted neighbor.
PARKER’S
SI HAIR BALSAM
Never Fails to Restore Gray
Tonic. It cures the worst Cough, Weak Lungs* Debility, In
digestion, Female weakness, Rheumatism anil l’ain. 60c. it f L
HINDERCORMS. The only sure cure for Coriu
Stupa all puiu. MakuAwalking easy. 16cts, at Druggists.
For Malaria, Liver Trou
ble, or Indigestion,use
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE noVVip.
Do you wear them? When next In need try a pair.)
Best In the world.
$5.00
$4.00
$3.50
$2.50
$2.25
$2.00
00
£2.50
42.00
FOR LADIES
#2.00
4I.7S
FOR BOYS
$1*75
If you want a One DRESS SHOE, made In the tatat
styles, don’t pay $6 to $8, try my S3, $3.50, $4.00 or
$5 Shoe. They fit equal to custom made and look and
wear as well. If you wish to economize In your footwear,
do 10 by purchasing W. L. Douglas Shoes. Name and
price stamped on the bottom, look for It when you buy
TV. JL. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Hue. Sold by
EDMONDSON & SEAY BEOS.
1
r
K
V-
Perfectly Well. v
Fillmore, Dubuque Co., Ia., Sept-., 1 W
Mias K. Finnigan write*: My mettle .*» *•
Mater used Pastor Koenig’s Nerve lode f
neuralgia. They are both perfectly wall no
and never tired of praising the Tonic.
Las Vegas, Now Mexico, .July d, ltfW.
When I was young my mother had a. b-
fright and she gave inn her bosom became •«
was crying, and two hours a'ter I hod ii fi
attack of heart disease. Pastor Koenig’s sen
Tonic has done me much go^d and ha - utv*. t.tij
desired effort. MMrrif.r. a auti'.iii vf
MJiiUEL A. Gl/££t i*.
Morrilton, ArU., Oct. It,
'♦’or four years iny stepdaughter was ho .
to epilepbiemts, and the use of Pastor Koeoigj
Nerve ionic gave immediate satisfaction
since she commenced baking it she ha* n*n
even »h« slightest symptoms of the die*a*'
bsarUeU thanks to thifr medicine.
JOHN bCHjuU/r.
FIIFF-A Valuable Rook Nervous
LULL Diseases sent free to any Address,
j N T W and poor patients can also obtain
| IliLiLa this medicine free of charge.
This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend
Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayne, Ind„ since 1875, and
Is now prepared underhis direction, by the
KOENIG MED. CO., Chicago, III.
Gold by Dm ■
larim "■
' nor Bottle. 6 far 95.
Co,- «<J
Nature’s
J Schenck’s
Mandrake.
T D
Liver Pills'
========
PILES
“AlfAKESIS ” (fives instant
relief and Is an infallible
Cure for Piles. Pricejl. By
Druggists or mail. Samples
free. Address“ANAKBSIB,>»
Box 2416, How York City.
If you r ,feel weak
and all worn out take
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS