The Courant-American. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1889-1901, August 23, 1900, Image 7

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Women are Like Healthy andstrong r lowers, they blossom an d bloom. Sickly, they wither and ■ Every woman ought to look well and feel well, it’s her right and duty, but she might as well try to put out a .... W uh oil as to be healthy and at tractive wiin *,wrrwa.n® — organs that make her a woman. U.oon their health depends her health. If there is inflammation or weakening drains or suffering at the monthly oeriod. attend to it at once. Don t delay. You're one step nearer the crave every day you put it off. Women can stand a great deal, but they cannot live forever with disease dragging at the most delicate and vital organs in their body. You may have been deceived in so-called cures. We don't see how you could help it— there is so much worthless stuff on JL m-irket. But vou won’t be dis appofnved in Bradfield’s Female Reg ulator We believe it is the one medi c neon earth for womanly ills. There is as much difference between it and other so-called remedies as there is between right and wrong. Bradfield s Female Regulator soothes the pain, stops the drains, promotes regularity, strengthens, purities and cleanses. It dues all this quickly and easily and naturally. It is for women alone to de cide whether they will be healthy or sick Bradfield’s Regulator lies at band. Ji p*r bottle at drug store. Scad for our free booklet. THf REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. Beautiful a. 4 Hair Dr. Murray’s Dulvenal Hair Promoter ! cm dandruff, atop. Um batr from toll !• out, the growth, ■ o icpert* dreeeiux, and while not o dye, hy nonrtahinf it* root., will |KiUv*ly ro mrc rr.r hair to it. original color. It la Um (Mtf-MC.ll.nc of *ll h*4r rtManm pwot. w.OO Tern LAita* Bottl*. If* by dru.fi.ta —If *ot, mod to o. | ltd it will b. Mat prepaid, upon reootftt I of pnom. MAavtAOTtMMo mmjt m rm * Murray Medioinc Company. ATLANTA, OA. ■fc CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH Pennyroyal pills OrUrtfiMl and Only Oensiite. |' / rslisMs Ladle*, uk Drurfist i CHICHKSTEK’S ENGLISH KEI) and Gold metallic boxes, sealed I BL b,u *ribbon. Take aa ether. I iH VvJ Dsscerstts HubotltaUan* and Lmltu- Id I ~ flf tions. Buy of your Dru#rfii. sr -ead 4e. I1 W Jr for Psrtleslars. Temtlcaeaials I D snd “Keltef for Ladlea,” <n Uttmr. by re- I A U tura Mall. 10.000 TAtlinoniaU. Sold by I ' sllDrugfidu. Chick eater Cheasiaal Ca., ■ kesNoc this psper. Mad U.. PmrW. PI! I LA., PA. WENT anything you invent or improve; also get MVEJT,TRADE-MARK, COPYRIGHT or DESIGN ' PROTECTION. Send model, sketch, or photo. , *or free examination and advice. N(l{ OH PATENTS fee before patent. C.A.SNOW&CO „ Patent Lawyers. WASHINGTON, D.C. y a YANKEL BICYCLES/ 9 11 I r /\\ /r\ stricter \ f t UJir / \ Vl First Cittss i ,7 , ;fir J) Willi Niclret \ t f plaied Lamp j | 5 *?Mu”() V I| hMIS ' aU ““***•• W-O* up. Wnle forraulogp 0 "and P fuU particulars, CTCLe c. ■ swUmintL. 4. Philadelphia Pa ouiiierii Railway *BB Milpg - One Management. w SOUTHERN STATES. lid Vestibuled Trains, * Equipment Fast Schedules. INING cars Pirated on Southern Hailway Trains -SERVATION CARS, tibuleijb'r'w ll ?? Southwestern ,C‘>Httanoo^^\„Vi , l d edv;rL?K S3nt Pullman Sleeping Cars Dh H u, est pattern on all through h < I LP, Traffic M ana(r e r( w A.TCRt „ Washington, D. C. ’ Pcnirer Agent, i®RSBCOTPD "'ashingtotf. D. o. ' A “’ t Ge *. I’assenirer A?t. I— r ’haUanooKa. Tens. of n t- P “ yslcl4 ay/tka |S^^£ayrJis “ •! hr ail ‘“ltix BEST FERTILIZERS FOR WHEAT- Results of Tests at State Experi ment Stations. American Agriculturalist. At experiment station tests Illi nois and Kentucky, commercial fertilizers gave poor results on wheat. The West Virginia station concludes that it is not profitable to use nitrogenous fertilizers in large quantititics or use them in ordinary quantities alone as fertilizers for growing wheat. The combination of potash, nitrogen and phosphoric acid produces the largest yield. Phosphoric acid alone produces I very satisfactory results. The Miss* issippi station found that the best fertilizer for wheat on a gray loam, somewhat sandy, was a mixture of 400 lbs. of acid phosphate, 250 lbs. of kainit and 400 lbs, of castor po- I mace per acre. This mixture in creased the yield 131 per cent. Barnyard manure in Illinois gave ! better results than commercial fer tilizers. In Indiana horse manure was found better than commercial fertilizers. The latter resulted in a loss. The same station made a comparison of the light and heavy applications of fertilizers and horse mani re and of the cost per bushel of increase in yield. This showed the horse manure to be the more economical. At the Texas station the use of every kind of commer cial fertilizer resulted in a financial loss. With the use of stable ma nure the increased yield of over the unfertilized plots was greater than with any of the com mercial fertilizers. Of all the 111a i terials applied, stable manure alone afforded a profit. Twenty tons of barnyard manure per acre is an excessive amount for wheat, ac cording to the Kansas station. It causes an increased yield of straw and fails to develop the kernel. At the Kansas station wheat was sown after plowing under cowpea and soy bean stubble. The largest yield was secured on the soy bean stubble. Cowpeas planted July 31 and plowed under October 10 in creased the yield of wheat over the plot without green manure 12 bu. per acre. The Arkansas station found it more profitable to pick the peas and plow under the vines than to plow under the entire plant. At the North Carolina station seven 25-acre plots were laid out, half of each plot being on land where a crop of cowpeas had been plowed under. On the same half of each plot ccrsvpeas were grown during each succeeding summer and plow ed under before seeding, to wheat in the fall. The other half of each plot was undisturbed between the harvesting of one whert crop and the fall preparation for the next. Taking the average of four years, the gain per acre in yield of wheat from peavine manuring is as fol lows: With no fertilizers applied to peas, 9.68 bu; with 300 lbs. kainit applied peas, 16.46 with 300 lbs acid phosphate applied to peas, 16.81; with 175 lbs. acid phosphate, 87.5 lbs. cottonseed me 1 and 37.5 lbs. kainit applied to peas, 14.67; with 300 lbs. cottonseed meal ap plied to peas, 7.83. This empha sizes the importance of growing a leguminous crop like cowpeas the same season after small grain. In ate.-t of varieties of cowpeas at the Missouri station the winter found that the New Era would ma ture in 40 days from planting. In northern lowa he found that this same variety planted June 9 ma tured seed before frost. Asa green manure it seems practicable that a quick maturing cowpea will be profitable in the spring wheat belt. Some fear is being felt over the spread of sweet or Bokhara clover, a legume found covering every vac ant lot and spreading along the high ways. At the Ohio station wheat was sown in the fall on a piece of very poor clay land on which this clover had been grown three years. The same variety of wheat was also sown on adjoining land which had been in corn, oats and wheat dur ing previous years. The yield on the former plot was 26.9 bu. per acre and on the latter plot 18.6 bu. This shows that a legume though a weed may be profitable. There is no family Medicine so favorable known as Pain-Kiljer. For sixty years it has been used by missionaries in all parts of the world, not only to counteract the climatic influences on their famil ies, but for the cure of all diseas s of the bowels, and for wounds, burns, bruises, etc. Avoid sub stitutes, there Is but one Pair.- Killer, Perry-Davis.’ Price 25c. and 50c. Tallest Man. Lewis’Wilkins, a young farmer living near St. Paul, Minn., is be lieved to be the tallest man alive, measuring 8 feet 11 1-2 inches in height. He was born in 1874,and from the start grew so rapidly that, according to the stories current in his home, he was 6 feet tall when only 10 years old. Wilkins weighs 463 pounds. WHtELER DISCUSSES CHINA Says This Goverrv'it-nt Seeks Only the Safcv of Our People. Cincinnati, Ohio, August 15 — Gen. Joseph Wheeler, “Fighting Joe,” the little Giant of Sailing \ is at the St. Nicholas. He came to inspect the troops at Fort Thom as. He is accompanied by Assist ant Adjt. Gen, W. P. Hall. In an interview Gen. Wheeler said: “In addition to inspecting the troops at Fort Thomas, I shall also inspect the fort, to see what, if any, im provemen.s are necessary.” Asked in regard to China, he said: “There are so many matters to be conside ed in that connection that it is mere guesswork as to the final result. I believe it is the in tention of our government to with draw our troops from Chinese soil when our minister and other peo ple of our country have been res-, cued. On the other hand, I do not think that Russia and the other powers will do likewise. Russia, especially, is in for blood, and will no doubt demand a great domain —all of Manchuria, pe haps— of the Chinese Government; and Gfcr many and the other powers will in all probability w uit to share in the spoils We can not tell what is going to happen, and, as I said be fore, it is all conjecture. I know nothing of this government’s in tentions in the Phillipines. We have 60,000 men 1 ovv in the islands.” Gen. Wheeler denied the pu! - lished statements that he had said in a recent speech that the United States should have a large standing army, He declined to talk polit ics, stating that it was not within the province of a soldier. Gen. Wheeler, upon arrival at Fort Thomas, was received with booming artillery, eleven guns, suitable to the rank of the hero of Santiago. He arrived at the fort on the private car Blue Grass, in company with Congressman Berry. They arrived at the post at 9:15. The commandant of the post and his staff received the General at headquarters, and after a short in formal reception the troops were called for formation and inspeotion. The Ist and 3rd Battalions and band were inspected by Gen. Whee ler, who complimented the officers in charge on the fine appearance of the men. The drill and parade was perfect. The Ist Battalion was in the regulation blue uniform and the 3rd Battalion and band were in the khaki uniform. Afte the inspection Gen. Wheeler vis ited various points at the fort. “War From 1861 to 1865.” The confederate veterans, in their annual convention in Louis ville, decided that the war of 1861- 65 should be known as the “war between the states.’’ This is the name that Alexander H. Stephens favored, and it is the one generally used by the people of the South in speaking of that war, the Northern people calling it the rebellion. Strange it is that neither name is a correct definition of the event. All know that there was no rebel lion. States that had sovereignty could not be guilty of rebellion. Neither was it a war between the states, but actually a war betwe n two governments madeupofstat s. Some writers call it a civil w r ar, yet it was not a war between citizens in their civil capacity, but. as be fore said, a war between regularly organized governments. There is, in fact, no concise way of naming the conflict; hence these misnomers. Possibly the best title would he the simple one of calling it by the years of its beginning and close — namely, the war of 1861-65. — Mobile Register. Americans are known as a dys peptic people. The extent of this disease may be inferred from the multitude of so called “medicines” offered, as a remedy. They are often in tablet form and have no value except as palliatives of the immediate effects of dyspepsia. The man who uses them may feel better but is surely getting worse. They do not touch the real cause of the disease. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is a medicine specially prepared to cure diseases of the stomach and organs of di gestion and nutrition. It is not made to give temporary relief but to effect permanent cure. In übie ty-eight cases ou of every hu dr - J it cures perfectly and permanently. It has cost Dr. Pierce’s $25,000 to give away in the last year the copies of his People’s Common Sense Medical A v ser, which have been applied for. This book of 1008 pages is sent free on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to pay ex pense of mailing or 1 ". Address Dr. R. V. Pierce. B ff do, N. Y. OASTORIA. Bear* the Kted You Have Always Bought z 'T'(Z& Bad blood is a bad thing to inherit or acquire, but bad olo r >d h ay be made good blood by tak'ug Hood's Marsapa 1:1*. EGZEBBA - SA TA N,c This most ating and tormenting of all skin diseases is caused by an acid condition of B B mim S me bhxxl, ami unless relieved through certain instrumentalities too much CSfel- ac ? d P°'*° n reaches the skin and it becomes reel and inflamed. The itching and burning are • lnos U* l >earaole, especially when overheated from auy cause. The skiti seems on fire, sleep or rest is fVrt 1 ?$(&• mposaiole, the desperate sufferer, regardless of consequences, scratches until strength is exhausted. gSa ( 1 , itching humor appears sometimes in little pustules, discharging a sticky fluid, which wjgfW • ~_l 'i™ 1 ® crust * and scales. Again the skin is drv, hard and Assured, itches intensely, bleeds and scabs over j&ff A This is a painful and stubborn form of the disease. .1 bile Eczema, Tetter, Erysipelas, Salt Rheum and many like troubles are spoken of as diseases of ’ ffl lhe skln , they are really blood diseases, because E|g|grjp THERE CAN BE HO EXTERNAL IRRITATION > WITHOUT AN INTERNAL CAUSE. f is in a pure, healthy condition, no poisonous elements can reach the skin. uvv . External applications of washes, lotions and salves sometimes mitigate the itching and soothe the . but cannot reach the disease. Only S. S. S., the real blood medicine, can do this. S. S. the only purely vegetable remedy known, is a safe and permanent cure for Eczema and all deep-sealed blood and v trebles. It goes direct to the seat of the disease, nentrali?es the acids and cleanses the blood, re in forces and invigorates ail ine organs, and thus clears the system of all impurities through the natural channels; the skin relieved, all inflammation subsides, and all signs of the disease disappear. Mr*. Uefa M. Hoff min, of Cardington, Ohio, says *he was afflicted with Scrofulous sores and Kczema Ironi rn:'t Her lace at times Itecame so badlv swollen that stv was not recognisable and her limbs -a H'SwL rjarr and hands were■ ve-v < re was treated bv all the doctors in town without being benefitted and In Mlfcfc. her research**- h r itnf w. - told by an old physician to take S ft. S. She followed hts advice an.l was rromptb <-or< 1e nd has never had a return of the disease This was ■•eventeen years ago. She sincerely w '"'••'JLafc w *”*l®!* a. A It wnTdo" for 11 hers" *** h " K ™ ve ye * rß afs ° b,,t for S ' S ' s ■ * ud add *. ’’what ft has done for me Dj • Send for o-tr Book <>ti Blood anil Skin Diseases, and write our physicians fully about vour case: thev will cheerfully gn-e any information or advice wanted. We make no charge for this. Address, Swift Specific Cos., Atlanta. Ga. The Invaluable China Berry Tree, To the News and Courier: I have been reading with inte est the var ious uses and benefits of the China berrv or Pride of India, tree and its wood, by your correspondents. Let rue add my testimony to its uses. Two years ago I-used the decayed wood of this tree to smoke my bacon and to my surprise no bugs or worms interfered with ba con during the summer. Last sum mer I used the same rotten wood to smoke my bacon and now, the mid dle of August, my hams, shoulders and middlings are as sound and free from vermin as when first hung for smoking. Ido not take my bacon down, but use from the gal lows poles as I need it. Another discovery I have made of its use. My corn, as summer approached, was always weevil until a few years ago I re sorted to the free use of the bough of the China-berry tree. Since then I have no trouble with the weevil. My corn keeps well and is comparatively free from these pestiferous insects. My rule is to sweep and brush my bins well and if bins have been much infested with the weevil scale the walls and floor with a strong decoction of the roo. berries or leaves of this tree. Then cover the floor with the green boughs of the tree and as the corn is hauled in mix all through each load the boughs of the tree. It is a cheap remedy, and will be found an excellent preservation against these destructive insects. The bins designated for summer use ought to be freely supplied with the boughs of the tree. For corn used in the early season I am not par ticular to use much of these bushes. Try it, farmers, and you will be satisfied with the merely nominal expense. Sometimes the weevil | invades the field before the corn in j housed, but these insects usually escape from an infested barn and enter the corn near by. A. E. Williams. M. D. OASTORIA. Bear* the Le Kind You Have Always Bought Spain’s Greatest Need. Mr. B. P. Olympia, of Barcelona, Spain, spends his winters at Aiken, S. C. Weak nerves had caused se vere pains in the back of his head. On using Electric Bitters, Ameri ca’s greatest Blood and Nerve Rem edy, all pain soon left him. He says this grand medicine is what his country needs. All America knows that it cures liver and kid ney trouble, purifies the blond tones up the stomach, strengti ens the nerves, puts vim, vigor and new life into every muscle, nerve and organ of the body. If weak, tired or ailing you need it. Every bottle guaranteed, only 50 cents. Sold by Young Bros., druggists. FREE BLOOD CURE. An Offer Providing Ftilth to Sufferers. Is your blood pure ? Are you sure of it? Do cuts or scratches heal slowly ? Does your skin itch or burn ? Have you pimoles ? Eruptions ? Achiug bones or back ? Eczema ? Old sores ? Boils? Scrofula? Rheumatism? Foul breath? Catarrh? Are you pale? II so purify vour blood at once with B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm). It makes the blood pure ana .ieh, heals every sore aud gives a clear, smooth, healthy skin. Deepseated cases like ulcers,cancer.eat ing sores, painful swellings, blood pois on are quickly cured by B. B. 8., made especially lor all obstinate blood and skin troubles. B. B. B. is different from other remedies because B. B. B. drains the poison and humors out of the blood and entire system so the symptoms can not return. Oive it a trial. It mres when all else fails. Thoroughly tested for 30 years. Sold at drug stores at $i per large bottle, 6 large bottles (full treatment) $5. So sufferers may test it, a trial bottle given away absolute!v free. Write lor it. Address BLOOD BLAM CO., Atlanta, Ga, Write today. Describe trouble and free ad vice give Nervousness is cured 1 y making the blood rich and pure with H od’s Sars aparilla. It gives the sweet, refreshing a.een of childhood. k Si Louis By. own raill, with throuch twain service to ROME, CBAniWSOfiC MSitVtilE AND MEMPHIS. PULLMAN B!AE:p£R3 ;>.NO f TAT- f.LAES DAY COACH TO Si. Lem 3 anti jrj PsLiis West. t oOHliJUl*.w I O CHICAGO *> NORTHWEST. Excellent Serv ac tv LsaSsvftFSg Cincinnati and Ohio, InaJxrsi- azd Michigan Points • ALL RAIL AMo! STEAMSHIP LINES TO NEW YORK knp THE EAST. TOURIST RATES TO ALL RESORTS. Cheap Emigrant Rales lo Arkansas ami Texas. Far schemes, maps, or any railroad Information, call ipoi w write fo J. W. THOMAS, JR., H. P. SMITH, CHARLES E. HARMAN, Ccncral Manager, Traffic Manager, Gen. Pass. Agent, NASHVII • w.nwviLLE, TENN. ATLANTA, GA. TIME AND £ r Jjils, A ./ v are practically annihilated m I J by the ocean cables and . I J I land telegraph systems JL JL ML JLs*# which now belt the cir cumference of Old Earth in so many different directions. “Foreign parts” are no longer foreign in the old meaning of the term. Europe, Africa, Asia, are “next door” to us. What happens there to-day we know j. to-morrow — if we read THE CHICAGO RECORD, whose Special Cable Correspondents are located in every important v city in the world outside of the United States. Ao other t - American newspaper ever attempted so extensive a service; L and it is supplemented by the .regular foreign news service I of The Associated Press. For accurate intelligence of the I* stirring events which are shaking the nations—of wars and B rumors of wars—of the threatening dissolution of old govern i ments and the establishment of new—of the onward sweep of f the race in all parts of the world—the one medium of the most satisfactory information is the enterprising, “up-to-date” American newspaper, THE CHICAGO RECORD. A large map of the world on Mercator's Projection, about 23Kx 16 1-4 >-4 inches in size, beautifully printed In colors, with a map J M\ Ij I y of Europe on the reverse side, will be mailed to any address free of charge on receipt of request accompanied by two 2-cent stamps to cover postage and wrapping. The maps Illustrate clearly how comprehensively the special cable service of The Chicago Rbcord covers the entire civilized world. Ad dress The Chicago Record, 181 Madison street, Chicago. Tetter, Salt-Rheum and Eczema. The intense itching and smarting, inci dent to these diseases, is instantly allayed by applying Chamberlain’s Eye and Skin Ointment. Many very bad cases have been permanently cured by it. It is equally efficient for itching piles and a favorite remedy for core nipples, chapped hands, chilblains, frost bites and chronic sore eyes. 25 eta. per box. Dr. Cady’s Condition Powders, are just what i horse needs when in bad condition. Tonic, blood purifier and vermifuge. They are not food but medicine and the best in use to put a horse in prime condition. Price 29 cents per package. Zc rests with you whether you continue nerve-killing tobacco habit. Ko* rO-BAll/J removes the desire lor tobacco. with^-CT p out nervous a is trees, expeifl E tine, purifies the blood, S A “Jl^nLoCO •tores lost v 3 boxes makes you III to health. ncrYCyidK case.* cur*-.*, Buy nd ■ S/TIO TGKAC from j/y A | AJW’yonr own drugrgirt. who til ■SOw-'will Touch for us. TAice it wito jntW a will, patiently, On* Bffiaf box m. nsualtr ruren; 3 h.ics. fC 6*, BB’y (rurntid to ct:i e, or we refund ranneir. B**r!2acllDe4rC*.,6lilMc*,*wttrcal,B*vlK* PETERS LOADED SHELLS STRONGEST, CLEANEST, QUICKEST. PETERS METALLIC CARTRIDGES WON WORLD’S RECORD. Ask for Sportsman's Handy Book, FRJSR, THE PETERS CARTRIDGE CO., 248, 248. 250 WAIN ST.. CINCIN NATI. O. An Old Idea. day the belief of emi nent physician* that impure blood is the cause of the nuycrity of our disease*. Twenty-five years apo this theory was used as a basis for the formula of Browns’ Iron Bitters. The many remarkable cures effected by this famous old household remedy are sufficient to prove that the theory is correct! Browns’ Iron Bitters is sold by all deal ora.