Thomasville times-enterprise and South Georgia progress. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1904-1905, November 18, 1904, Image 9

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TIMES BNTK.B1>tt'.>r4. I '() >I A-VM.U'.QiOKU IS, NOVEMBER 18 IS04 PBS ' .Giving 1 Prices of the Great mum Begins Wednesday, November 23rr Lasts ten days, \<p to Dec 3rd. fcP me of the lowest p r ic3s ever offered in Georg a NEW CONSUMPTION CURE. fcrmon Doctor Inject* Medicine* Di rectly Into the Lunar*. United States Consul General Gnn fher, at Frankfort, Germany, has for warded to the department ot commerce and labor an Interesting account of i new method of treatment for consump tion. He says: ' ? Professor Jacob, first physician oi the Hospital Churlte of Be.-lin, lectured a few days ago before the Berlin Soci ety For Internal Medicine on n new mode o? treatment of consumption of the lungs originated by him. Profess or Jacob started with the presumption that the remedies usuMly employed, do not reach Use location of the disease at all, and he therefore conceived the Idea of introducing medicaments dl rectly into the lungs. Through numer ous experiments on animals be lsocame convinced that such injections arc well borne by them. The manipulation Is very simple and can be undertaken by every physician who Is familiar- with the uso of the throat mirror. After tho trachea and larynx have been made Insensible’by cocaine or anaesthesias a thin rubber tube is introduced luto the lungs, and the medicine is injected through it. The whole process lasts hardly ten min utes. Professor Jacob has found that the most efficient remedy is the well known tuberculin which Professor Koch used thirteen years ago. Next in efficiency Is creosote. Ho succeeded in this way in making the tuberculosis bacilli disappear completely in from four to eight weeks. So far he has treated only five patients by his meth od, though he expects Its general adop tion. Ho added that through Ills new method n safe diagnosis can be mado of consumption of the lungs, while this has so far not been possible. Heretofore tuberculin . was injected hypodermicully to demonstrate wheth- rod from tuberculosis. {Be ©are t@ @©me v To this Big Sal8 it you ever wil . « , er a person suffered from tuberculosis. need anything else m tiie jury j yet. even»the.reaction was positive, Goods. Clothing, Shoe> or Tin ware line • (25 TO 50 PER CENT SAVING.) A. F. CHURCHWELL & Co. 133 Broad St. Thomasville. Ga. Money Severs fo Mankinds ’W*A m 2X mr T^TD . ! At 230 232 West Jackson Sreet all the Hides, Furs, « and Skins, in Georgia, Florida and Alabama Also all Prickly Ash Baric Jerusalem *" " Oak Seed and Deer Tongue - Remember The Place, J j W, WATKINS & CO 230 and 232 W- Jackson St. Thomasville, Ga •AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA •aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Cotton Waehouse Hitai i A Prps., DE.VLEKd IS Horses, Mules, Cattle, Cotton Seed. We buy all kinds Country produce-and pay the highest mark et price at all times When you have something to sell, see us nothing was known about the seat of the tuberculosis. Now only hnr new method of “lung Infusion.” ns ho calls It, needs to be employed, to determine whether tuberculosis of the lungs ex ists. It Is reported that tho lecture was received with great applause. Reward will be-paid to any person who can find Qne atom of opium, chloral, morphine, cocaine, ether or chloroform in any form in any of Dr. Miles’ Remedies. This reward is offered because certain unscrupulous persons make false statements about these remedies. It is under stood that this reward applies only to goods purchased m the open market, which have not been tampered with in any way. Dr. Miles’ remedies cure by their soothing, nourishing, strengthening and invigorat ing effects upon the nervous system, and not by paralyzing •and weakening the nerves as would be the case if these drugs were used. For this reason Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills are universally considered the best pain remedy '•I have suffered for 25 year* with sever* pains in my head, heart and back, and have triotl cvcrythingr I- could get and could not find any relief until iKot n box of Dr. Miles' Antl- Poln Pills. I suffered no long ns 12 hours nt a time with such severe pains that I t ^red I would lose my inlnd. Tho Anti-Pain Pills gavo mo relief In from 10 to 20 minutes. I do not have to ur«o Mnnhlno any more. I wish you would publish this so that other sufferers may flrul relief/' I. A. WALK12R, It. F. D. No. 6. fialem, Ind. Cfr. Wiles' Antl-Paln Pills an sold by your druoolet. who will guarantee that the first package v/ffl benefit. If It fills ho will return your money. 23 dasec, 25 cents. Neve** sold in bulk. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind LETTER STATE CHEMIST «u*>i£ancfj put into a fertilizer, or ex isting there naturally, which is not phosphoric acid, nitrogen or potash. Filters are of two kinds, natural anti artificial. 1 have Just given you an instance of a‘ natural, “filler,” In the complete analysis of the fertilzer maJt cut of acid phosphate, cotton seed meal end kainit, and in this mixture only twelve and eighty-three hun dredths pounds per hundred consisted ef phosphoric acid, nitrogen and pot ash; tho rest was all filler, put there ! by naturo in the original making ot these materials. It is true, man did put In some sulphuric acid, but that was necessary to ~~ake phosphoric affable or soluble, so It can scarcely be considered as an artificial onr huiidrrd pounc;3 of the fertilizer,! p,u eiv there srovine and fifty-two nundreans Tho Rr t?fi c fal -'filler” is the filler put pound*, ol' superphosphate of lime, ( j n py man for the purpos'e-of reducing which dissolves readily in water, and i the total percentage of plant food in of this amount fiye and sevcnty.elght a fertilizer. The materials used as hundredths pounds are pure, pliospbo artificial ”flllers” are numerous; they ric acid. In like manner the rortil- mny sand, powdered cinders, graph- Jzor cor* I airs in one hundred pounas it c slate, shale, pyrites cinder, marl, 3.02 pounds of reverted pnojptato ci ■ gypsum, etc. All of them are prac- lime and of this amount ono cud tlt-j tically without any value as fertilizers: ^y-eight hundredths pounds are pure* how is it, then, you Inquire, that such phosphoric acid,* and readily soluble I substances can be put into our fertil- !n water, but which does dissolve ■ izers, If we have an efficient inspec- slowly in tko soil and soil-water. Thm; tion by the Department of Agriculture, is also sometimes called "citrate-solu-1 l will explain to you how that is. ble” phosphoric acid, because it dis- Suppose that a manufacturer, instead John M. McCandleE3 Regarding Fertilizers. HE GIVES FULL E'vPLJ.fJATION Of the Analysis of Fertilizers Contain ed In His Last Letter end Also Oi* | cusses the Subject of “Fillers.” In the analysis of tho complete ter j tllizcr, the mono-calcic or supsrphos* I hate of lime given at 9.52 i-ei cent..! contains G.7S per cent,, of'water-soluble ! phosphoric acid. That is to say in! : c, a gr-2j piwvteu, or vn the tailura to ifsshce on the solves in a solution of cltrnt eot am monia made to Imitate the- action of soil water. Tho water-aoiuble phos phoric acid or 5.7S pounds, and the re verted phosphoric acid, or 1.68 pounds, are added together, malting 7.36 pounds, and their sum Is called the available phosphoric acid, being con sidered as available for tho use of the | contains 20 per cent, of available phos* plant. phoric acid; also Mltrate ot soda with. Under tho “reverted” phosphate of • L6 per cent, of nitrogen, dried blood lime you will seo in the analyse there with fourteen per cent, nitrogen, .sul- are 1.99 pounds of tri-calclc phosphi.te, pbato of ammonia with twenty per or, as it is usually called, “Bone-Phos-j cnt. nitrogen, muriate of potash w* phate” of lime. Of this amount i0.9l) 50 per cent, of potash; with these ma- ninety-one hundredths of a pound Jy j terials on hand ho receives your order pure phosphoric acid, but it is m the j for a fertilizer, guaranteed to contain form of tri-calcic phosphate, and will j as small on amount of plant food as not dissolve in pure water or in the the law will permit, viz.; twelve per soil-water, and it is, therefore, callod | cent., made, up of eight per cent avail- the “Insoluble” phosphoric acid. It; able phosphoric acid, two per cent, is sometimes also called the “Acid” j nitrogen, two per cent potash. Coo* soluble phosphoric acid because, when ; nideting the materials he has on hand, the cliomist analyzes it, he uses phos-1 he figures out this formula: phoric acid to dissolve it. Tly» “Avail. t wr/»l and indastrlsJ ca v, ij* co.xptU£at# Ujt hm own idu« 4 «.it of the individual citizen. Tr.»n- tor a mo mam, pose we Bhou. t a law making it Impcrpibio to ar.y artificial “JSB-l ers” in thi manu:uc:ur3 of comraerciaij fertilizers, by raising the grade to a[ very high point. Do you not see thati by to (Icing we ^hculd at once paralyx* this greet-inda .try. and cut short tha. cotton crop of th;t State, since W wqu.o at once bar the use of' South 1 Cnroffiia acid phosphate, cotton Beef meal and kainit and a number of oth.es goed material cf similar grade, ant thus at onco raise the price of the high-grade materials to an unhcar&et degree by greatly increasing the de mand for them? No, the conditions have boea very thoroughly studied in every particular by fhe Commissioners of Agriculture of fhe various States, aided and afr vised by those best qualified by experi ence and training to understand Hue matter in all of its details, and the re sult of their deliberations is embodied in tho new Georgia fertilizer law print ed In Bulletin 39. This Jaw raise? the grade of commercial fertilizer* from a total plant food of ten pan cent, minimum under the old law to .. . . t _ 4 , _ j twelve per cent, minimum, and pro* ? and i?" SOl ' n Car ,°" n “ teas the farmer In every way that* Acid phosphate, cotton seed meal and kainit when you call on him for an 8-2-2 goods, has on hand some of the highest giada materials known to the trade. He has say, acid phosphate made from Tennessee or Florida rock, which 825 pounds of 20 p. c. acid phosphate 216 pounds X4 p. c. dried blood 75 pounds of 16 p. c. nitrate of soda 85 pounds 60 p. c. muriate of potash 1200 pounds good and just law can protect him. if will give him the highest grade off fertilizers ho has ever bought, it wilt protect him against fraud, it will guar antee that ho.g2ts every pound of fer tilizing value that he pays for; in fitter It Is the best fdftllizor law now Ok tho statute books of any State, bn* even such a law cannot prevent th* uso of “fillers.” ^ Only education on the part of tire farmer, and a demand on his part for the higher grades of fertilizers will eliminate the use of “fillers.” 'Wire* you and your brother farmers •tody the per centagcs of plant food i* r fertilizer, and prefer to buy five or she sacks of a high grado goods to buying ten sacks of a goods containing only fhe same quantity of actual plant food, then there will bo no more “filler'* pul Into high-grade fertilizer mmterlnlaJ, but the capital of the manufactnra; r * and the skill of the chemist wDl be.. exerted in the effort to take out of tho present low-grade fertilizer materials aa much as possible of the "fiBer,** which God and nature have put there.* • Tours truly, JNO. M. McCaNDLESS. State i able” phosphoric aetd and the “Insol uble" phosphoric acid added together make what is called tho “Total” ph6s» phoric acid, or all the phosphoric acid there Is in the fertilizer. Valuable Qaullties of the Gypsum that la Found in Fertilizers. Referring back to The analysis, un der the item trl- or Bone-phosphate, you will And that tho fertilizer also' *>n for safety. You called for eight w „ Bn Aod |..o^, contain, twenty-four ud ,lx tenth. Per cent, of , ton In available phoa-1 r „ puUr piarer. with cuts, pound, of aulphnte of lime or gypalnn' Phoric acid or one hundred and alxty j Tljer0 |jav0 latoly ln the or lapd plaeter, which we all differ-. pound,, end In hla 825 pound, of twen- icrera | aeiuntlopal nights at ent namea for one and the name thing, f? P"r cent add phoaphate he haa prominent theaters whan to mark thm Oypaum la e good fertlllaer of Itself, given you one hundred and ality-flve lost performance .of a. local pantomime and bsa s apeclal action of lta own'In pound, of available phoaphorlo add: ‘-all manner of gift, have been, thrown : the soil, breaking up the potaih-yleld- ? ou c,,lei1 far two per cent of a ton, | upon tho stage for the benefit ot Beam ing silicates ln clay aolla and bringing or tort y pound, of nitrogen, and ln hla ' tor performers. Now ln thla 1,200 pounds of high- grado materials he has nil the plant_ food you called for, with a amall mar- j THROWN UPON THE STAGE IS the potash into soluble form as sul* 215 pounds of dried blood, containing phate of potash. This gypsum, as fourteen per cent nitrogen and seven- has been remarked, was formed when *y-five pounds nitrate of soda with six* the sulphuric add was mixed with the teen P er ce,,t nitrogen, he has giv- powdered phosphate rock, and it- Is en y° u forty-two and one-tenth pounds now held a prisoner by the limo In of nitrogen. In like manner you called such a way that It has lost all of Its f° r forty pounds of potash, and In former caustic and corrosive qualities, eiffhty-flvo pounds of fifty per cent, and can do no harm but only good in muriate of\potaBh he has given you the soil. forty-two and a half pounds of actual Under the Item of gypsum we find’ potash. Now the best thing both for 3.19 pounds of sulphate of potash; fou and the manufacturer, the cheapest this comes out of the kainit used in thing .for both *>f you, would be for making the fertilizer, and it contains, him to send you that twelve hundred one and seven tenths pounds of actual, Pounds put up in six sacks, which, up potash (K2 0). Under this item you on inspection and analysis, would find three-tenths of a pound of muriata , show: 1 of potash, which also chxr.e cut of th ? I kainit, and this contains 0.19 of a Available Phosphoric Acid . .13.^5 p. c. pound of actual potash; under this Nitrogen 3.60 p.c Item again you find 0.56 of a pound of, Potash ... 3.54 p. c actual potash. This came out of the j cotton seed meal. Adding the three But no, you won’t have it that way, actual potash ltoms together, they you must have a ton, ton sacks of 8-2*2, amount to two and forty-five hun* so fne manufacturer rather than enter dredths per cent (2.45) or pounds per upon a campaign of education with hundred. Lastly, look further down •» ot his customers, obligingly ireights the line till you come to tho item pro* i luto Ws factory eight hundred pounds fflitHE GENERATOR For Use in Residences, Stores, Fac tories and Public Buildings. A Light Cheaper than Kerosene and Better thm Electricity. -fn, A.LWAYS RELIABLE, -mafr- It does awiy with all trouble ircidenial to the old M3'le of generator and makes a pure light. Fjlters the Gas aud does not clog the Burners. Entirely Automatic. Acetylene Generators Repaired, Overhauled and exchaugid for new. Write to Boston Gas Licht j n Co Acetylene Engineers, BOSTON, GA. teln. You already know all tbout protein as I have written you so much about it In previous letters. This thirteen and two tenths pounds r protein contains two and eleven hun dredths (2.11) pounds of nitrogen. Now, when the State Department ot Agriculture analyzers fertilizer, It does not make such an analysis as this, because it would be too laborious, too costly, and would really do no prao* tical good; so they go at once into the meat of it and analyze tho fertilizer for its available phoapnoric acid, its nitrogen and potash, and calculate value from these three ingredients. The analysis of such a fertilizer as wo have been discussing would appeal m the annual Bulletin in this form: Available phosphoric acid ....7.30p.c. Insoluble phosphoric, acid. N.trogcn .... Potash (K2 0) 0.91 p.c . 2.11 p.c 2.43 p.C 12.83 p.c As you rce this analysis only foots up twelve Pad eighty-tore.* hundredth; ! pounds per hundred You need no long er ask whet constitutes the . othei | eighty-fceven and seventeen hundredths j pounds. All this extra 87.17 per cent i I* “filler” pat In by nature and not b» J msti. All About “Fillers." i In this connection we may jfrofltablj : say a few words in regard to “fillers.’ j A "filler” may be defined as being an? of powdered slate mined some hundred miles away, utterly worthless as fer tilizer. and mixes It In with the twelve hundred pounds of good fertilizer mak ing one ton. This mixture on Inspection and analysis shows : Available Phosphoric Acid... .8.25 p. c. Nitrogen 2.10 p..c Potash 2.12 p.c. A Small Quantity of High Grade Fertil izer Better than a Largs Quantity of a Lower Grade. Now suppose you had exercised a little common sense and bought the six sacks, analyzing 13.76, 3.60 and 3.54, you would have been saved tho cost of mining, pulverizing and freight ing of the artificial “filler” to the fac tory, end the freight on four sacks of It from the factory to your rai!ro&< station, and tho wear and tear on your rauie*; hauling that extra cue hundred pounds tea mP.es to the farr.' Wouldn't 11 Luvs been rr/jch * have bought the z'.x and when you got home, if you wi .i l: proportion of 8-2-2, wfc’ej r a pg.h. proportion, to have lute.cr? up tr? ; sacks yourself wit\ wood’- < r.rtb; *n compost, or even fand. bvter? d " uting? I think I hear you £ar, wr * that’s true, but why don't you fix t' t«w and raise the grade so the?e * lows can’t put in all this arUffcl •filler.” My dear friend, there never y» was, and the*? never will be, a la framed which can mast* all the com! m . All tlioM> acquainted for Ion tbe Inner Ufa of tbe theatrical •Ion can tell tome remarkable of these gifts coat upon th. stag*. Tk* most celebrated and unlverao! ot the** relates to a Indy irbo once held th* main portion of tbe lease of a promi nent Loudon tbenter. While thla ladj was still an actress only and not * manageress, nn actress of great talent and benuty, there wna one night on tho first production of the piece ■ ■ bouquet cast upon the utage at feet. Attncbed to the bouquet was a smell [lutein leather card case, an side this were bank notes to tho v of £1.UOO exactly. On no fewer t seven different occasions, with a t nbl.v long Interval between, did same thing occui and.the lady, au legcd, 1ms never from that day to thlf discovered who her i admirer though all manner of romantic tures were made at tbe timet Even within the last few unknown elderly gentleman threw a envelope weighted with pennies u containing n five pound not* to o til child performing In a London nbn ban pantomime. Some theaters hot been celebrated for their gift aU manner of presents, from pans to green vegetables, having gently deposited on tbe stage for popular actors; yet, on th. other b both writs and summonses bar* I handed to actors who could not ba proached through tbe stage door, who consented to receive presents i tho footlights on their benefit night The most curious sight the ever saw Ic eouncetiou-wlth these gift throw ing nights was In relation to s. favorite actor who, at a great clal theater, played during a to touiiuiic run the part of a named Cadgl. who carried s pipe that had a linge howl and whose oft repeated cry was, “Can any one obllgs me with a bit o' 'buccal” On the tost night of the performance the r»min.f requost for a “bit o' 'bacen- had as* sooner been spoken than literally scores of packets and "screws" of tobacco off every Imaginable kind were throws upon the singe, more limn 120 of tfceM falling about tbe actor.—Loudon Ht-j Uils. ■■ The T-—«*st* ot PlS|Mk L “Now. Uont.i.ly." said the uabe!!w*lt' “have yoti ever been helped by praycr'j Can you point to a single Instance is, which you can truthfully any praying bus done you the sll| service t” 1 should any I could!" replied tbs good old elder. “If I hadn’t stopped to suy any prayers tbe other morning rd have caught tbe 7:-fi) train Into ths city, mid Instead of alxty-one paaaes- gera killed and injured In the wreck I'd Imre probably made tbe sixty-sec ond."—Chicago Kccord-OcraM.