Newspaper Page Text
slf
Nervous
That Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People
have cured obstinate cases of locomotor ataxia,
partial paralysis, and St. Vitus’ dance, is the
bes t evidence that they will cure all lesser ner
vous disorders, because the principle in the
treatment of all nervous diseases is the same
Nervousness is a question of nutrition Food
for the nerves is what is needed and the best
nerve food in the world is
Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills for Pale People
Mrs. Annie H. Magee, of Port Austin, Mlchimn ,,,, .
ter. Jean, tvaa always a delicate clilld, had ifmn’.IiK. 8 ' 3 ,y daush '
debility and general weakness. She bad to to ta£n C J?,,V°» b e i D T ou ;t
kept from all study for nearly five years ° A imf, e . D .S ut of Sl:10 °
began taklng-Dr. Williams’ I’lnk Pills for PaIePent,m r S°J?‘ rS a §° sb0
to soy tlsey have helped her to become a hemthS a’ ancl 1 V’ppy
longer needs medicine of any kind. It ecarcelv^iStPP 5 ’ slrl iS bo ?°
can” be the same one who a few years a^wiS SSUSSSKtS:
hopeless, sufferer.”
Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale People contain, in a condensed form,
all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood, and
restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases
as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St.Vitus’ Dance, sciatica, neuralgia,
rheumatism, nervous headache, the after-effects of the grip, palpitation
of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness either
in male or female.
Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale People ate sold by all dealers, or
will be sent, postpaid, on receipt of price, 50c. a box or six boxes for S2.50
(they are never sold 111 bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Williams
Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
SCIENCE OF FEEDING
VALUAIUjK INFORMATION FUR
NISH Hi) BY STATE CliEM*
I>T A.’CAN D IjESS.
a scientific ration for tU9 stock yon' are
feeding. Yours truly,
John M. McCaxdless,
State Chemist.
IMPORTANCE OF COTTON SEED
How th*! I*rogr. ns v * Fiirn
Calculate »!»« 11*61 Rat
For His Stock.
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure,
Digests what you eat.
It artificially digeststhe food and aids
The Sheriff may get into arguments
a'Tut a condemned mnrderer, but
sooner or later he is obliged to drop the
."til j-ct.
OUBRY’S HEADAOHE POWDERS.
See what. Oapt. .T. D. Kirkpatrick,
president and general manager of the
White Star Line Steamboat Com any,
says:
“I have used Curry’s Headache Pow
Nature in strengthening and recon- ders for several years. They give
structingthe exhausted digestive or
gans. It is the latest discovered digest-
ant and tonic. No other preparation
can approach it in efficiency. It in
stantly relieves and permanently cures
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea,
SickHeadache.Gastralgia, Cramps, and
all other results of imperfect digestion.
Prepared by E. C. DftWItt & Co- Chicago.
E. BRADFORD.
CURRY’S LIVER COMPOUND.
Newell, Ala., Aug. 0, 1899.
I have been seeling Cnrry’s Liver
Compound for a number of yeaTS with
out a single complaint, as it always
does as recommended. I keep in stock
all the leading liver medicines, bnt sell
more of Cnrry’s than all others com
bined. It simply sells itself. Trios. J.
LovvoitN.
Sold in 10 and 256 packages by. E.
Bradford.
KAY& BRO.
DEALERS IN
Fine Whiskies,
Beer and Wines,
Cash Orders Promptly Filled.
Home, Ga.
FARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleanse* and beautifies the ha!
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
^Cjand$U)0a^Dru?gi6t^
SOUTHERN
RflMfly
Condens d Schedule in Effec; November 19,1399.
NoTTb
630am
8.35am
10.22am
4.25pm
No. 130
1.00pm
2.15pm
3.45pm
4.45pm
6. 00 m
No. *20
5.30am
6.15am
7.08am
7.40am
8.25am
No. *io
M
Birmingham Ar
.... Birmingham Jet
Selma
... Mobile.. Lv
7.15pm
5.02pm
3.00pm
No. *1S
lv... Akron...ar
..Greensboro...
Marion.....
.. .Marlon Jet.,
ar,.. Selma... lv
6.40am
7.2lam
7.53am
8.35am
10.33am
10.48am
11.11am
12.50pm
1.27 pm
1.40pm
2.03pm
2.2:1pm
3.10pm
3.45pm
lo.25pm
5.45
6 05
STATIONS.
No. ♦ T No. t25
STATIONS.
lv.New OTs.a r
lv..Moridianja r
York.
..Demopolis...
ir..Uniont*n.lv
...Marion Jet..
...Montevallo..
Calera..;..
..Columbiana..
..Childersburg.
.Anniston..
.. J ackson ville..
... Piedmont...
..Cave Springs..
Rome
ar.. Atlanta..lv
STATIONS
7.00pm
6.13pm
5.20pm
4.51pm
4.25pm
4.15pm
2.25pm
2.12pm
1.48pm
12.57pm
12 15pm
11.39am
11.':5am
11.04am
10.43am
10.00am
9.25am
! 5.3 «im
prompt, relief and leave no unpleasant
aftnr effect TconsHer them in tillable,
ami never travel without them.”
Sold in boxes containing five pow
ders, five doses, and five cores, all for
10 cents.
For sale by E. Bradford.
UuwiJIing service makes a tengh pull.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
Tiie Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
“I hear tho tenor is laid up with a
sprained ankle,” said the church choir
baritone. “Yes,” giggled the soprano,
“heslii pod np on an organ peal.”
Dr. Tichenor’s Antiseptic makes
friends with every one who gives it a
fair trial. CleaD, pleasant, harmless,
reliable. Use externally for Wounds,
Burns, Sprains, etc. 'Internally for
Colic, pain and derangement of the
Stomach aud Bowels. Little wonder
of the world. Household favorite
wherever known. Ask drnggists for it.
They like to sell it, yon know.
“I’m afraid my blood is ont of
order,” complained the lobster as the
cook drew near. “In fact, I fear I am
going to suffer with a boil ”
Women as Well as Men
Are Made Miserable by
Kidney Trouble.
lv...Birm’bam. .ar
Pell City
Anniston.....
Oxford
Ileflin
...Ed wards ville...
....Fruithuret^,,
-JZai mjtaosa....
4.40
5.51
6 57
7.07
7.45
8.57
8.07
8.25
Douglasville...
Lithia Springs.,
ar.... Atlanta....lv
STATIONS.
No. 36
Na 08
Lv Birmingham. ...
Lv Annistou
Lv Atlanta J***.!!.
Ar Macon
Ar Jesup
Ar Jacksonville '
4.40pm
6.57pm
10.45pm
12.55am
5.20am
8.30am
5 35am
7.30am
&00am
a 10am
12.05pm y
2,25pm E
G.50pm i,
10.00pm b
Lv Jesup
Ai Brunswick
7.00pm ^
8.45pm
No 36 carries elegant Pullman Drawing Room
Sleeping car Birmingham to Jackson-
: ville, and Atlanta to Brunswick
No. 38 carries Pullman Sleeping car Birm
ingham to Atlanta and Atlanta to Jacksonville
Lv Knoxville. ......
Ar Morristown
ArHot Springs.
Ar Asheville.... —
Ar Salisbury (CentTime).’.YIY, V.!!
Ar Greensboro.. (East Time)
A r Raleigh
Ar Goldsboro
No. 15
6.25pm
2Cam
2.25am
4.00am
5.10am
9.30am
3.23pm
5.10pm
9.10pm
No. 15 carries Pullman Sleeping car Rome to
wire to Salisbury and
with ' ' '
Chattanooga. Chatianooi
Salisbury to New York without change.
LvRomo
Ar Chattanooga
Ar Cincinnati .** ....J**’
Ar Louisville
6.25pm
8.40pm
7.45am
7.50am
No. 9 Pullman Sleeping car Rome to Cincin
nati and Chattanooga to Louisville.
STATIONS.
Na 38
No. 36
Lv Atlanta .
Ar Charlotte.
Ar Danville.
Ar Lynchburg ...1
Ar Charlottesville.
Ar Washington .*
Ar Baltimore .. ..i
Ar Philadelphia.
Ar New York.
1111!!!!!
cloj cJef
aassssesa
Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, dis
courages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor
and cheerfulness soon
disappear when the kid
neys are out of order
or diseased.
Kidney trouble has
become so prevalent
that it is not uncommon
for a child to be bom
afflicted with weak kid
neys. If the child urin
ates too often, if the
urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child
reaches an age when it .should be able to
control the passage, it is yet afflicted with
bed-wetting, depend upon it. the cause of
the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the first
step should be towards the treatment of
these important organs. This unpleasant
trouble is due to a diseased condition of the
kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as
most people suppose.
Women as well as men are made mis
erable with kidney and bladder trouble,
and both need the same great remedy.
The mild and the immediate effect of
Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold
by druggists, in fifty-
cent and one dollar
sizes. You may have a
sample bottle by mail
free, also pamphlet tell- Home of swamp-Root.
ing all about it, including many of the
thousands of testimonial letters received
from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer
& y -^Binghamton. N. Y., be sure and
mentTStr this paper.
To A. B. C.—Renewing my letters to
you, which have for a time been inter
rupted by more pressing official duties,
I here give you the table of analyses of
the more common feeding stuffs, which
I promised you in my last.
TABLE OF DIGESTIBLE MATTER IN 100
POUNDS OF FEED STUFFS.
g *? I Rye Fodder.
£-3 VOat Fodder...
g'g Lowpea.
fc It om : llage..
Hay n uue from Or
chard Glass
TimoiKy
Crab-giass
MixeuGlasses .....
Red Clover
White Clover ......
Crimson Clover... .
Baots^Grams, etc..
Turnips
Ruia-Lugas
Corn tgmin)........
Oals 'giaiu)
Wheat (grain)
Cotton . v eed Whole.
Com Mean.
Corn ami C jb Meal.
Ground Corn and Oals
(eqnui parts)
Wheat Bran.
Wheat Middlings
Wheal Shons
Cotton fceoJ Meal
Cotton fcoed Hulls.. ..
Wholo Milk
Skim Milk...
Separator MiJc
Butter Milk
Whey
0.84
41.99
43 11
61 :
50.£6
4.77
4.09
5 24
4.00
4.74
STOCK RAISING IN GEORGIA.
Figures MioWmg Ilrault of Kxperi-
m »t Wlih Om* Calf.
Col O. B Sievexs Commissioner.
Since your in notion into office yon
have recommended among other re
forms the keeping and raising of more
cattle on the farm. Please give me
some practical results in Georgia in
fattening cattle on cotton seed meal
and hulls, including the profits of same.
What do you think of Burmuda and
pea vine ha* ? .
Answer — \7a can not better answer
your inquiry in regard to feeding cattle
on cotton see i meal and hulls than to
give yon an*extract from a letter from
TL R. Sawtfcll of Atlanta, written a few
days since to Ex-Governor W. J. Nor-
then:
EXTRACT FROM I E ITER FROM MIL T. K.
SAWXELL
.. . . “Below yon have the results
of my experiment with the 13 months
calf that I fed, exclusively, on cotton
seed meal and cotton seed hnil*.. I send
yen also picture of the calf taken just
he'or- he* n sr s’aughtere i. x
. ou.iic tub ia.i .torn Mr _U A
Butler of Noah, Teun . Dec. 16, 18S8.
FACTS ABOUT SUGAR CANS.
* stiii*;
ufoi
Co
cerningOoi* of G< orgin* • Products.
Question—O. B. Stevens, Commis
sioner: I have determined to plant for
the year 13JO a large crop.o'sugar cane.
I desire to know ihe best method for
handling, plan ting and cultivating cane,
would like to know the best fertilizer to
use, the kind of soil best adapred and
the probable yield under favorable cir-
rumstanccs, in fact, I wquld thank yon
for any information that might lead me
to make a success of this enterprise.
Sugar cane, soon after the discovery
of America, was first planted on the
island of San Domingo and from thenca
it has be8ii grown over the tropical and
temi-lropicai parts of North aud South
America.
It may not be generally known that
tho striped or ribbon cane, which is
now grown in Sonrh Georgia, was in
18?5 irits duced from Savannah, Ga.,
into Louisiana. That state is now fa
mous for its molasses and sugar indns-
ries and is is indebted to Georgia for
this fine variety of sugar cane.
Many variotie3 have been . tried in
Louisiana, bnt none have as yet, says
Dr. Stubbs, proven worthy of supplant
ing the purple and striped varieties.
The purple seems to be the hardiest and
base suited for northern latitudes.
In trop ; oal countries the sugar cane
produces seed, but are not reliable,
rarely bearing any resemblance to their
parents.
The conditions under which cane does
best, is where the mean average tem
perature is between 6) j^nd 9l) degrees
spring aud rurnmor, n eucy of rain and
a moderate, dry, coo! fall.
SOILS ADAPTED TO CANE
Are those naturally rich and fertile.
He was thirteen months void
and j however, upon soils of very moderate
I hope you will now go back aud care
fully read s.^ain my pzevions letters
and fix in your mind the explanations
0 81 weighed SDH Doa.nl s. I paid cents fertili,y ’ with » ood preparation and
per pound, making the cost $31.16. I wel1 fertilised, remunerative crops can
1 took him to jny packing house and be K rowa '
fed him until June 16, on cotton ssed | Oiimate, rain‘all and manures are
there given of the various terms, which ! hulls aud meal. When slaughtered h9 more important factors than soils in
are used in the above table of analyses, j weighed 1320 pounds. He was sold ' caQe culture. I»i sandy soils without
what protein is and what function it at oj-o cents per pound. ! mannre3 the cane is ?^ali; caicunous
fills in the animal economy, building i Bought 890 Ib3. 3% $31.15 | 80 ^ 8 develop a superior cane, rich in
miscle and lean meat, blood, nerves, I la80 I saccharine matter. In rich a In vial
har, tendons aDd even part of the! ! soils, not proper.y drained, the canes
bones, also the office of the carbohy- ; >'et *30.67.” j are poor m sugar produce, a large qnan-
drates and the fat producing fat, in the ! What Mr. Sawtell has done with his . tity of syrnp, but not a firstcla-s article.
calf can be accomplished by any farmer ! shall we plant the entire cane or that
in Georgia under similar circumstances, j portion which is the least fitted for
There is good money in baying and feed- ! making sngai?
ing cattle for market, bnt what is bet- j Dr ^ Q Smbbs ()f Louisiaua7 after
. _ ,er y<>" owu oattle and feed » h8 “ ! discussing this question at length,
terials most likely to be met with on yoar own & ra33 and cottonseed meal j c i n( j os np th a whoie matter as follows:
tho average touihern farm aud used for , aad kulls raised on your own farm, ami ..j t CJn therefore be positively as
when you sell off only the fattened cat- I serted |bat tllB npper , bird of oar can03
tie, the manufactured article, you leave caQ te protttab!y osed for p i anti „ g oar
complete analysis of the feeding stuffs i tbe farm al ‘ the feed stuff consumed crop aud s01ld , be i ()Wer lw0 thirds of
mentioned, bnt gives tho digestible , l> y the cattle to enrich the land to make ’ pnr ent j re crop t0 tbe sog , lr honsa, thus
matter n 100 pounds of each feed. For more feed to fatten more cattle, to make increasing largely our sugar yields aud
instance, the complete analysis of cot- j more profit for the wife and babies. Do ( diminishing our heavy outlay annually
touseod meal is as follows: Water 8.2 j this, and instead of barren and bleak forsead .>
per cent, ash 7.Z per cent, protein 42 8 lands of the home weighted, down by j pueparatiox of the land
mortgage, s e will see a home of plenty,
happiness and contentment. There is
body, keeping np its heat and produc
ing force or energy. Yon will then
better understand the table just given.
This is a short table selected from nu
merous analyses, as containing the ma-
the feeding of stock.
The above table does not give the
Look in Year Mirras*
Do you see sparkling - eyes, a healthy,
tinted skin, a sweet expression and a grace
ful form? Thesis attractions are the result
of good health. If they are absent, there
is nearly always some disorder of the dis
tinctly feminine organs present. Healthy
menstrual orgnns mean health and beauty
ct vrywhere.
m&ELREe,s
. 2 s “Washington and Southwestern Lim
ited Solid Pullman Vestibule train Atlanta to
New York, carrying Pullman Sleeping car
Atlanta to New York. Dining car Atlanta to
Greensboro and Washington to New Yorlc.
Pullmj.n Library Observation car Atlanta to
New Yorlc.
Charlotte to Washington.
•Daily. tDaily Except Sunday. §S
’. & G.M. ^Vashington.D.C.
WSn& of
makes women beautiful and healthy.
It strikes at the root of all their
trouble. There is no menstrual dis
order, ache or pain which it will not
cure. It is for the budding girl, the
busy wife and the matron approaching
thy change of life. At every trying
crisis in a woman’s life it brings
health, strength and happiness. It
costs $i.oo of medicine dealers.
For advice in cases requiring special
directions, address, giving symptoms,
“The Ladies* AdvisorvDpmrtmranf •*
‘ The Ladies* Advisory Department,
The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chat
tanooga, n '
TtinS. DOZEN A. LEWIS, of Oanuville,
xexos, snjr.1“J was troubled at monthly
wj'.ji tumble pains in my head and
} Di th, but have been entirely relieved by Wiae
percent, carbohydrates 29.2 percent,
fat 13.1 per cent, or total 100 per cent.
By referring to the table, however, yon
will see that about five pounds of the
protein is indigestible and about
13 pounds of the carbohydrates
are also indigestible. The figures in
the above table have been obtained by
careful feeding experiments, and are
tbe result of much painstaking, careful,
conscientious work, and are therefore
very valuable as being practical in tbe
best sense. Only that part of tbe food
is of value to the animal which passes
into the circulation, after being acted
on by the fluids of tbe stomach and in
testines, and being taken np by tbe
blood goes to repair tbe waste of the
body, to make new flesh, to add fat, or
to serve as a source of energy or work.
In preparing these tables of digesti
ble matter tbe experimenters carefully
weighed the animals at. the beginning
of each exneriment. carefully analyzed
the rations fed to (hem, carefully saved
every drop of liquid and solid of the
dnng and urine and analyzed them,
and then by studiously comparing all
tbe results, calculated the indigestible
matter in 100 pounds of each feed stuff
and these percentages they called tbe
‘digestion coefficients.” Such tables
as these are tbe basis of scientific feed
ing. Little as yon may think of it this
subject is of tbe utmost practical im-
portau e, not only to the agricultural
community, bnt to the general prosper
ity of tbe nation.
Tbe experience of the past decade has
demonstrated, and I hope conclusively
to our farmers at least, that tbe day baa
passed when their exclusive attention
can be devoted to the production of* one
crop, aud that crop, oue wbiob is not
essential to rhe life of man; at least in
the way in which it is at present han
dled, it is only conducive to the com
fort of tbe human family as raiment,
bnt it can bs so handled as to minister,
not only to their comfort, bnt to the de
velopment and sustenance of life itself.
To explain my meaning in as few words
as possible, is this, that we have been
raising cotton for the sake of its fiber,
to be spun into cloth, when we should
have been.raisiug it for the sake of its
precion* seed, born into the world in a
manner befitting its royal origin as the
son of King Cotton, swaddled and en
circled in the downiest fur and not na
ked and foriern as is the wont of earthly
princelings. ^ It does seem as if this
jealous care of Mother Nature should
have made us reoegnize earlier the great
value of the little seed which she
wrapped up so carefully. As I said,
we have been raising it for the sake of
its fibre to be spun into cloth when we
should have, been raising it chiefly for
the sake of the protein and carbohy
drates of its seeds to be transmuted by
wonderful alchemy of the brute crea
tion into beefmiik, mutton and pork,
with the lint simply thrown in as a by
product. When we consider the won*
derfnl nutritive value of cottonseed
meal and hulls, after the oil, another
byproduct, has been extracted from
them, and the further fact that this
rich, nutritious food may be passed
through the domestic animals, giving
them life,- growth and development,
and yet in that process lose only about
10 per cent of the rich fertilizing con
stituents found in the original food,
and yielding a manure of the very best
quality, it does seem as though natnre
had been too lavish and generous in her
gifts to U9 of the south.
We have been slow to realize the im
portance of the “talent which we have
buried,** bnt tbe day is breaking, and
ere long we ehall, by developing the va
rious products of this wonderful plant,
become the richest people in the world,
and by consequence the center of civili
All soils should be well prepared and
uo^ reason TvV sreck Tailing Tn"tko P ro F erly fert,llzsd a,,d perfootly drained.
It is best to break or flash the land,
then bed into rows five to six feet wide,
open the bed and in this farrow place
the cane.
south, and especially Georgia, should
not be profitable. We have short win
ters and nature, with but little aid, will
afford good pasturage for 10 months of
the 12.
The Bermuda gra;s of the south ia
equal to the Timothy of the northwest.
The peavine hay, properly cured. Is one
of the best of all the forage plants and
admirably adapted to onr oiimate and
soil, so abundant in nitrogenous matter
and other .elements of plant food, that
almost any crop will do well to follow
the cow peas.
Georgia is then the distinctive home
of the Bermuda and the cow pea. They
both grow and thrive on almost any
soil in the stare with bnt little cultiva
tion or fertilization. This being true,
you cun grow these food products
cheapir, therefore yon can raise cattle
and fatten for the market at less cost
than the western farmer, provided yon
will be careful ro get the best breeds.
A scrub calf at two years when fat will
weigh 800 pounds. A well bred short
horn will weigh at same age 1,600
pounds. The cost of keep will be the
same. The former will bring on the
market about 4 cents while the latter
will sell for 6 cents, not to speak of tbe
great disparity in weight. You ask
why is this. 1 refer you to Mr. T. R
Sawtell or any other firstclass stook
dealer. O. B. Stevens,
Commissioner.
“Why ia Aguinultlo like a mou who
lives by his with?” “I dunno,” “He
carries his capital with him.”
PLANTING CANE
In planting the sugar cane, one con
tinuous stalk should be deposited in an
open furrow and well covered. In the
fall this covering should be several
inches thick. Remove tiie extra soil iu
early spring, to secure early germina
tion.
FERTILIZATION AND CULTIVATION.
The cultivation best for corn land is
generally good for sugar cane. Thor
ough and deep preparation of the soil,
cultivate rapidly and as sliaiiow as the
soil will permit and “lay by** when
canes shade ihe ground. The fertiliz
ers for cane should contain enough nitro
genous matter to insure a large growth
by Sept. 1. Phosphoric acid is very
beneficial to cane.
Potash may be demanded upon light
sandy soils.
Experiments have shown that the
limits of profit in the use of fertilizers
are betweeu 24 and 48-pounds of nitro
gen and 40 to 80 pounds of phosphoric
acid, obtained from cotton seed meal
and acid phosphate 600 pounds of cot-
• ton seed meal, 300 pounds of acid phos
phate.
Uudcr favorable conditions, the above
formula used on onr best cane lands in
South Georgia, we should obtain from
20 to 30 tons cf cane per acre.—State
Agricultural Department.
| rabies r=nd children need
| preoer >' o-:\ rarely ever medi-
; cine, if they do not thrive
] cn theii' foot something is
[ wrong. They need a little
I h:ip to get their digestive
f machinery working properly.
m
COD LEVER OIL
W/77J i‘iYPCPf/0SP/f/T£5 of LIME <S SODA
i v.iiS- t^ncraliy correct this
j dihiculty,
j E c you will put from one-
| fourth to half a teaspoonful
= in baby’s bottle three or four
i times a day you will soon see I
J a marked improvement. For '
■ larger children, from half to
1 a teaspoonful, according to
I age, dissolved in their milk,
| if you so desire, will very
j soon show its great nourish- j
* ing power. If the mother’s
| milk does not nourish the
| baby, she needs the emul-
Pay up your subscripti.
at once both upon mother
and child.
ration, refinemnnt and the arts. I hara j s j on . |{ w j|| show an effect
thus digressed from the technical de- I ...
tails we have been discussing for the
purpose of impressing more strongly
upon you their importance. In my next
letter, w th the aid of another table and
some explanations, I hope to be able ta
show you how Jo c&lcqlate. for yourself
R iu •« y For Dorn Stalk Borers.
Question.—Will yon please also give
me a remedy for what I call borers in
corn? They bore into it when quite
young, jnst above the grains, aud the
stalk after it gets np a foot high looks
like a load of shot had passed through
the blades.
Answer —-From the description of
the trouble given in the above question,
it is quite impossible to say jnst what
borer is referred to, since there are
not less than a dozen insects that have
the habit of boring into the corn plant.
It is very probable, however, that the
“Southeastern Corn-root Worm** is the
culprit doing tbe damage in this case.
This worm is abont half inch in length,
slender and whitish. It is the larva of
a small, oval bodied beetle with 12
black spots on its greenish yellow wing
covers.
These beetles feed on cucumbers,
squashes, melons aud a variety of other
vegetables There are two broods of
this insect in one season and it winters
in the adult stage.
No practical remedy for this insect is
known, but clean cultivation and a lib
eral application of stimulating fertili
zers are recommended to enable this
plant to outgrow the attacks and resist
the efforts of the borers. Clean cultiva
tion is not ouly advisable in the case of
this particular iusect, bnt it will do
much to reduce injuries by various other
coruroot pests.
A Jcnlons Elephant.
There is a very jealous elephant in
the .Iartliu ties Plantes. Paris. The
place where he- Is housed adjoins that
in which the camels are located, and a
young camel recently introduced has
"had great attention lavished on him, to
the detriment of the elephant, which
had hitherto monopolized public favor
in that quarter. The elephant grew
more jealous day after day. Failing to
attract the attention of a dainty little
girl who was caressing his young rival,
the huge pachyderm filled his trunk
with water and deluged the offending
fair one from head to foot.
The Way to Lire,
Lot ns not burden our time with
trifles and our souls with grievances.
We are every one of us good, had and
Indifferent in our dally journey, walk
ing with steady or unsteady step di
rectly toward an open grave, and why
worry and fret over anything? What
is the laurel wreath of fame but a
shadow? What is wealth but a bub
ble? Let us do our duty—the right as
God gives us to see the right, with
malice toward uone, with charity for
all.
Bathing and Xose Blowing.
A number of people come home from
the seaside quite deaf, aud very many.
If not deaf, are much harder of hearing
than when they left home. .The cause
of this Is Wowing the nose after bath
ing.
Of eourse one blows Ills nose because
there Is some salt water iu it. which
makes 1dm uncomfortable. This water
he forces into the little eustacliinn tube
that runs from behind the nose to the
ear. Here the water remains for days,
and the particles of stilt set up inflam
mation. The next step Is that the eu-
staebian tube gets blocked and remains
more or less so permanently, causing
.partial deafness.
You should always wait some time
after your hath before blowing your
nose, and then you should do it gently.
QUESTION ANSWERED.
Yes, Angnst Flower still has the larg
est sale of any medicine in tbe civilized
world. Y T oar mothers and grnndmoth-
e-s never thought of using am tiling
else for Indigestion or Biliousness.
Doctors were scarce, and they seldom
heard cf Appendicitis, Nervous Prostra
tion or Heart failnre, etc. They used
August Flower to clean ont the system
and stop fermentation of undigested
food, regulate the action of the liver,
stimulate the nervons and orgunic ac
tion of the system, and that is all they
took when feeling dnll and bad with
headaches and other aches. Yon only
reed a few doses of Green’s Am.nst
Flower, in liqnid form, to make yon
satisfied there is nothing serions the
mutter'with yon. Sample bottles at
Knight Drug Company’s.
Most of onr troubles are easier to
bear than the commeuts of onr friends
thereon.
C^.SIPOXI.X^..
Bears tho /) The M Ypi lfaw Always Bought
Signature
The man who can’t be satisfied with
little must learn to hustle.
Du Yon Need an El.ciric Roli-
Dr. J. Newton Hathaway has per
fected an electric belt which he is pre
pared to fnrnish to all patients who
need it, nt a merely nominal charge.
Write to J. Newton Hathaway, M. D.
221 South Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
.The man who has never made a fool
of himself doesn’t appreciate sympathy.
Have yon a congh? A dose of Bal
lard’s Horebonnd Syrnp will relieve it
Price, 2!i cents aud .10 cents. T. F.
Bnrbank.
Insomnia is sometimes another name
for a guilty conscience.
CASTOniiV.
Bears tho _yj Tha Kind You Hava Always Bought
i3 tho ^ “*"ll lUU itdiB nlWujfS
It is better for a girl to be fust asleep
than "fast” awakt.
When yon get bnrt apply Dr. 'J’icbe-
nor’s Antiseptic. It will do the rest.
Yonr druggist will take pleasure in sell
ing y on a bottle for 50c.
In cultivating a voice it is not neces
sary to irrigate the vocal chords.
Twenty Years Proof.
Tutt’s LiverPills keep the bow-
elsinnaturalmotionand cleanse
the system of all impurities An
absolute cure for sick headache,
dyspepsia, sour stomach, con
stipation and kindred diseases.
“Can’t do without them”
R. P. Smith, Chilesburg, Va.
vrites I don’t know how I could
Jo without them. I have had
Liver disease for over twenty
years. Am now entirely cured.
Tutt’s Liver Pills
WHY HE CUR!
M ». 1 d vr'nrt: ’ur.'.it r-r'a'i
Feint* are ad-
At the Experiment Station.
A jersey heifer, 15 months old, pur
chased from Hood Farm,Lowell, Mass.,
has recently given birth at the Geor
gia Experiment Station to a fine large
calf, perfectly developed in every re
spect. She was bred tbns early by
mistake, bnt notwithstanding her com
ing in so young, Prof. H. J. Wing,
dairymah, states that the heifer has
long teats and. is giving a good flow oi
milk which tests '5 per cent bntter
fat. Many who have seen her say they
never saw anything like her.
■i t’^ured t::.der
■; !oure affected
a I'ui'ti'.ti—rtli.-ou: uin the
r. consequent?
•;‘!4 fhouid be
o ftimo way
Yor rate c .mplaint
Dr. H.ifb:i\r:iy f* a special-
i*» the b* n*eof tbe
tirals i-:»-cialflis-
n pjiecisl roaaucr of
ofhisovrn—u Fypbv'a • Untied out years arc while in
Every Casa
Specialty y"Vr* oTllic luJ^oxtenstee
I rested- j;r ctlcu ejj-tytHl by uuy
•htec'*nn*rv. Dr. lbdbaw.ij***? *:rt*.:ta»j«l u:iifurm£ac-
due tu tlii-i individual sy~? .*:n of treatment.
Exc'l'si £* x L* fjdui *»t ls'.inilrcda of requests
50c. sndfi.oo, all druggists.
SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York#
; ^ .. . v ‘ - ’*’ »!' ■' ■ i Tin - II
IleaclicN Itnek to Aclu
The emperor of Japan is entitled to
be considered the most aristocrat!
ruler on earth. The royal family of
Japan.has a genealogical tree which
reaches to Adam. There have been
121 emperors of Japan, and they all
belong to tills faiiiily. The. first one
governed Japan just about 2.500 years
ago. lie was on the throne 300 years
before Alexander the Great thought he
had conquered the world. The Japa
nese have the history of ail of their
emperors from that time down to this
aud they assure you that the mikado is
a lineal descendant of the first em
peror. '
Ex^tfSl e vjs£riyfc.'»mdo4'f. »r*lRa!l|iarteof tbe
Treatment f >r lUo Jirlvila-o of
nslneDr.E*tl , tn»-ay’3mnh<»Joftr'3t.u-.;nt,li'5 believes
it\vi-*ert i nil»» none b-*ide himself the knowledge
of h» isMwil aware of the mis
chief which may m d.-rn-; by tiia nmkillfnl use of any
■ • iiy-t—ji. nevermind how perfect.
Biaozi ami oi; n 1>1*. iiatlmway'a treatment for
rsic-Mnvi disease* In whatever stage
UfSCaSCS. curoeaH form* of ule-r-, nores.
•>lotch^*s. pimrl' 3 . ctt\,nj»-1 not only re-lores the skin
itndrrr.i9 tifi "t nafuitxl uo.-idlii vi, br.tbo purifies
tlieMo.Kl ihntthe di*»*a«et* permanently and com-
plptely»J riven fruo the an 1-ill this without
iirlrafanntt--ring ’»>isouon* or «!a-i:«*r »'is times.
v^ nI Varicocele
2uj a: :i.-d-icicrol*am'*th d exciu-
Stricture, * «v dy !»is o^-n »-i in do »r j-»nt
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has heen
in use for over 30 years, lias home the signature of
, and lias been made under his per-
- and lias heen made under his per-
{jP"sonal supervision since its infancy.
/'CCccApZC Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes arc hut Ex
periments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops
and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance.' Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic.. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The ChHdren’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
'Bears the Signature cf
The Kind'You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over @0 Years.
C CENTAUR COMPANY. TT MURRAY STREET. NEWT
VANDIVER WHISKEY CO.,
JOHN M. VANDIVER, Mgr
No, 18 Broad Si, (BAMEY’S OL STAELE) HOME, GA,
FISE WHMlES^ BBAND1ES,
WINES, ETC.
,IUG OKDEllS PROMPTLY' FILLED.
- - rrrrrr -TELEPHONE NO. t
A BOON TO MANKINDS
D R -TABLETS BUCKEYE
PILE
srSS'B’-s
Scgpr o =
ui mUt jo to
* oi a : -■* -
8 2 03 H
-1 rq W CURE
A New Discovery for the Certain Cure of INTERNAL and
EXTERNAL PILES, WITHOUT PAIN.
CURES WHERE ALL. OTHERS HAVE FAILED.
Tubes, by Mail, 75 Cents; Bottles, 50 Cents.
JAMES F. BALLARD, Sole Proprietor, - - .3!0 North Main Street, ST. LOUIS. MD.
Kentucky
Whiskey
Supervision t
Bearing Eoverpesit SfaHip-fiver c&rK.
gaaranieelag its Pge. F&rho sig Frnrf.
WATCH THE FELLOWS j
=rWlio advertisn cheap [
price*! Look for V. *- 1
Stomp
this stamp. X<» STAllI'.
4 Bottles Quarts I
Rye or Bourbon eft ij? © *
Six-Year-Oid
AMTLTERATKD c
“*£»
5s u 1
Government Stamm
gmnintw of Aon. it
Express p;.v, j..i.
No Hark* on Par tar-'i i . In.!!, :.
KeuniP.o. K\[»r»t• #r». . . • t «
in O- -ht-. srert. < t;r-!? . i!
whlCcy.nocolop'v?- in?*-. 1'
T l fXT ?i *Cnn>’u | :
Rc'crcy
O’Brva-i l;’"c /
Nashville, Chananooga s si im m.
OWN RAILS, WITH THROUGH TRAIN SERVICE TO
ROME, CHATTANOOGA, NASHVILLE AN# MEMPHIS.
PULLMAN SLEEPERS AND FIRST- CLASS DAY COACH TO
Sim Louis and AH Poi&ig VWbbL
QUICKEST SCHEDULES TO
CHICAGO I
Excellent Service to LouisviMe, Gteeimsati
and Ohio, Indiana and Michigan Saints*
ALL RAIL AND STEAMSHIP LINES TO
NEW YORK ffND THE JEDiiSX.
TOURIST RATES TO ALL RESORTS.
Cheap Emigrant Rales to Arkansas and Texas,
lor Stleoilts, naps, or aay railroad inlormaiioo. call upon or write !o
J. W. THOMAS, JR., H. F. SMITH, CHARLES E. HARMAN
General Manager, Traffic Manager, Cen. Pass.' Agent
NASHVILLE, TENN. NASHVILLE, TENN. ATLANTA, C
N'rj epor
The o
WORMS ll vermIfuce:
For 20 Years Has led ail Wor«a Remedies,
STE* A.lala 23ntr&GlSTS,
JAMES F. BALLARD, St. li
THE NEWS is what you want, and ;
it in The Standard.
Ja KZWTOH HATHAWAY hi. D.
Dr. Kaiiiauay ^
«ou(Ji Bniatl Street. Atlautu, C» J
tlLhTlOU THIS PAF1.R WXUTLNe.
k For Fine Job Printing conn