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WHY
DR. HATHAWAY
CURES.
Reasons for His Marvelous Success—
His New, Free Book.
1 “] Dr. Hathaway's method
of treatment Is noexperi
ment. It is the result of
|F.,. g twenty years of experi
■ enee In the most exten
“[i slve practice of any
* s I specialist In his line In
. tle world. He was grad
uated from one of the
tx-st medical colleges In
jgbk Nv the country and pertect
ed his medical and surgl
cal education by exten
>F gj ve hospital practice.
Early in his professional career he made discov
eries which placed him at the head of his profes
sion as a specialist In treating what are generally
known as private diseases of men and women.
This system of treatment lie has more and more
perfected each year until today his cures are so
uivnriabie to be the marvel of the medical
profession.
Enjoying the largest practice of any specialist
In the world he still maintains a system of nomi
nal fees which makes It possible for all to obtain
his services.
Dr. Hathaway treats and cures Loss of Vitality,
Varicocele, Stricture, Blood Poisoning In Its dif
ferent stages, Rheumatism. Weak Back, Nerv
ousness, all manner of Urinary Complaints,
Ulcers. Sores and Skin Diseases. Brights Disease
and all forms oi Kidney Troubles. Ills treatmenl
for undertoned men restores lost vitality and
makes the patient a strong, well, vigorous man.
Dr. Hathaway's success In the treatment ol
Varicocele and Stricture without the aid of knife
or cautery Is phenomenal. The patient Is treated
by this method at hls own home without pain or
loss of time from business. This Is positively the
only treatment which euros without an operation.
Dr. Hathaway calls the particular attention of
sufferers from Varicocele and Stricture to pages
J 7, 28. 29, 30 and 31 of his new book, entitled,
•'Manliness, Vigor. Health,” a copy of which wiU
be sent free on application.
Write today for free book and symptom blank,
mentioning your complaint.
- J. NEWTON HATHAWAY, M. D.
Dr. Hathaway # to,
1.2 k South Hroatl .Street. Atlanta, Oa-
MKJi'TION THIS PAPKM WHIN WKiTINO.
, Writ# for tha free book Ist: “ Merry
Rhymes fur Thirsty TXmrs."
Hires
Rootbeer
L time
is here
OK ,• .sui E. HIRES CO., f hiladsipk i. Pa.
t; trs r flirts Condensed Milk.
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thirty states For catalogue address
MATTIE \ HARRIS,
President, Roanoke, Va,
-aft-ant.
BOOK AGENTS WANTED FOR
the grsndett and fastest Mlling book r published,
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0K LIVINtt TKI-THK FOR HEAR AND HKARIL
Containing Mr. MOODY’S beat Sermon# with
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m ßy D. L . Moody
ktmtelf. WUhaeompletehlitoryofhlilUkby Roy. CII AH. F.
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and Introduction b j Rev. LYMAN ABBOTT, D. |t.
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Au Uncertain liuru*.
There is no disease more uncertain in it*
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vkAHAi, 50 YEARS’
UhHBH^EXPERIENCE
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r rrw Copyrights Ac.
Anyone sending a sketch and descriptor, mav
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Patents taken through Munn A Cos. receive
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Scientific American.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. 1-argeet er
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year : four months, sl. Sold by all newsdealers.
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WILSL’R R. SMITH. Lexington, Ky.
Note. — Kentucky Vnirertily resources, F""',t>lG, oad
had newly lutM tludenU in attendance latt year.
Valuable to Women.
Especially valuable to women is Browns
Iron Bitiers. Backache vanishes, headacue
disappears, strength takes the place o<
Weamtess, and the glow of health readily
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or overworked men it has no equal. No home
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Bistti’ imp Ritters ia void by aU dealer*
I YIELDS
OF WHEAT.
How a Middle Georgia Farmer
Makes Big Crops-
SOWS HISWHtAT BROADCAST-
Cotton and Hay Are Also Important
Features in His Crops—How He
Make" Them.
Atlanta Constitution.
I have been frequently asked
how I made big yields of wheat.
I have harvested a yield of fifty
nine and a half bushels per acre.
It was sown between the 20th and
23d of November on cotton land
well cultiyated. I dragged off the
limbs and burrs with a harrow,run
up the stalks with a scooter plow,
broadcasted twenty loads of horse
and cow manure to the acre, laid
off the lands eight feet apart across
ti e cotton rows and broadcasted
400 pounds of cotton seed meal
and acid phosphate well mixed —
two of phosphate to one of cotton
seed meal. I then dragged one
; round in each land in order to mix
the acid and the cotton seed meal
with the manure and soil, as the
phosphate or meal either will kill
wheat in the germ if it comes di
rectly in contact with the grains
when they are damp or a high sea
son in the soil. I have sown the
purple straw variety for twenty
five years and don’t want any bet
ter; have never made less than
twenty bushels per acre. I sowed
a little over two and a half bush
els per acre wet with bluestotie wa
ter and rolled in lime. Plowed it
in with a common turn plow. I
have no special depth to plow in
my grain; some of the wheat may
be found on the top of the soil,and
some seven inches underneath.
Now, I have no idea which grains
will occupy the most favorable
position toward making a stand tor
the coming crop and yield. We
have birds, cold weather, wet wea
ther and crusty lands at times that
might be against wheat planted at
a certain depth in securing a stand.
I have been asked frequently
why I didn’t use a wheat drill. I
answer that I cannot make as much
as I can broadcast. Mrs. N. E.
Wilson (my sister), the winner of
the second prize given by The
Macon Telegraph last year, drilled
her wheat last fall on her No. i
land with an eight inch drill.
My wheat was sown broadcast
on my third grade land that had
never had any barn yard manure
on it until the time of sowing and
I made a yield of twenty bushels
per acre more than she did, said
yield being a good per cent, less
than she had previously made on
the same laud.
On my second grade land the
wheat was too good; it fell or bed
ded down a few days before it was
ready to be harvested. I have to
be very cautious as to the amount
of manure I use. If I used more
than I do and wanted to lie about
it I would buy an eight inch wheat
and guano drill combined. With
the drill above described I could
have used forty loads of manure to
the acre and have been accused of
Few mothr> art healthy, because
their dtrtlej are *o exacting. The anxiety
•f pregnancy, the ihodl ef childbirth,
and the care of young children, are
severe trial* on any woman. But with
Wine of Cordul within her ra*p, every
mother—every woman in the land -can
pay the debt of peronal health h
owe* her loved one*. Do you wont
robujt health with all it* privileges and
pleasures? Wine of Cordul will give K
to you.
wirawii
strengthens the female organs and Invig
orates weakened functions. For every
female ill or weakness tt is the best
medicine made. Ask your druggist for b
SI.OO bottle Wine of Cardui, andtake no
substitute under any circumstance*.
Mrs. Edwin Crs, Conner, Mich.i "When 1 C
commenced using Wine c? Carduf I was hardly Me i
I to * sik across thi house. Two weeks .her I striked I
lull a mile and picked strawberries. Then my [
other child was born I suffered with labor pains 24 ,
hours, end had to raise hun on a bottle because I had I
no nulls. Alter using the Vine during pregnancy J,
this time, Igrre birth last month to a hufcrv g:rl, and 2 .
was in tabor only tiro hours, with but little pain, K ’
and I have plenty of milk. For tliisgreat improve- Is*
R ment ia my health 1 thank God and Wine of Cardui.' a j
fjj For advice in cases requiring special directions. B f
fj address, giving symptoms, "The Ladies' Advisory £ ,
. Department." The Chat j|'
using more and would have failed
to grow fifty-nine and a half bush
els per acre. Wheat is spherical
in its natural growth, and when
two grains or sprigs come in con
tact with each other it will not
stool, but grow upward and when
drilled eight inches apart there is
five-eights of vacant land or space
that is unfavorable to a good yield,
but very favorable to a fine head
and str..w that will hold up a
wheat bitd. Another feature that
I cannot recommend is the dis
tributor placing ti e guano di e:tly
under the wheat. That is favor
able to the plant, but unfavorable
to the growth. The little plant
will make fine feed roots, but after
the leaching rains of winter and a
possible dry spring the visible plant
will be called upon to support the
invisible. In ether words, the
abundance of roots made by hav
ing such easy access to the guano
will draw later on the plant. This
land is a red gravelly soil at the
summit of a hill. I used two bind
ers in cutting the wheat on the af
ternoon of the gth of June. I used
a little over twenty five pounds of
twine in binding the four acres.
Length of the twine that made the
bind was thirty-five inches includ
ing the knot.
It was no better wheat than our
forefathers made —only thicker.
I will give the sister states an idea
of it. The machine I used was a
right hand cut and in lining up the
four acres the sheaves were placed
on the edge of the line and when
the machine was turned to cut
what the mules and the bull wheel
had passed over the sheaves touch
ed each other along the line. A
little over sixteen bundles made a
bushel.
I threshed it on the nth day of
July, in good condition, some of
the grains bursting in the thresh
ing. If I had cut it on the sth
day of June, green and wet, and
threshed on the 9th day, I should
have made over eighty bushels per
acre, as it is an established fact
that there is a difference of from
2 5 t° 33 P er cent, in wheat that is
wet and green and that which is
thoroughly dry. I couldn’t afford
to ruin my wheat by threshing wet
and green for the first prize of SSO
in gold, offered by The Macon
Telegraph.
The remainder of my crop was
not threshed until August. Wheat
will be musty if not allowed to re
main in the shock until thoroughly
dry.
Picture No. 2 represents the na
tural growth of crab-grass hay
without any additional work from
which I have harvested three tons
per acre. If we have a late frost
I will get another ton per acre from
the second cutting, sorghum cane,
peas or any of the grasses cut at
maturity, that will make a second
growth—the hay is worth much
more for feed than if left on the
land for a fertilizer. If you want
to hurt or draw on vour land, cut
anything in the summer with the
sap in it that will not make a se
cond growth, and you have accom
plished your job. Wheat, oats and
corn for shredding, mt on the
green order, will not make a second
growth, showing that the purpose
for which it was intended ends in
full maturity, and they should not
be cut until thoroughly ripe, else
you injure your laud and your
grain.
Picture No. i represents the
fortv acre cotton field that will
yield a bale per acre. It is possi
ble for some individuals to tell the
character of a man or person by
looking at the picture, but as our
fields are subjected to divine pro
vidence we cannot always present
the same picture each season or an
nually. I have seen cotton grow
on this plat of land six feet tall,
making two bales per acre. I have
also seen it when a bale to two
acres was its best. So I will give
the character of the soil, making
the basis of the picture under the
cow barn. It is a sandy loam with
a good red sub-soil. Has. been in
cultivation thirty seven years.
Sown in wheat twice within the
last fifteen years. The last time it
was too good to be harvested in the
old way. It is the piece of land
that grew the wheat that won the
prize of $125 iq gold offered by
The Macon Telegraph last year.
I never have au occasion to sub
soil land. The earth worms can
plow deeper than I 9an with mules,
and with a great deal mere ease
and less cost to me. I have people
to ask me frequently why I do not
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AVegetable Preparationfor As
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Facsimile Signature of
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Alb Mionllis itill
Dost s -Jj(i inis
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
terrace my land. I will give the
best answer I know. When Noah
went into the ark he took two of
all creeping things on the earth,
and if I terraced I am afraid I will
drown my worms. Some farmers
have built up their land wonder
fully, but as I have no formula for
making soil out of sunshine and
rain water I will still drain off the
excessive amount of rainfall; pre
pare, plant and cultivate square up
to my ditch banks, cross over and
plant in ditches it I like, and make
one continuous row twelve miles
long around a hill on a level as
near as practical, crossing every
ditch on the hill.
I expect to broadcast 400 loads
of manure next May on sixteen
ac;es of land that will make dou
ble its yield in cotton under former
circumstances, cutting off the ex
pensive amount of labor, laud and
mules, and make as much cotton
as though I had thirty-two acres
in cultivation. I will then be
ready to grow forty bushels of
wheat per acre after the manner
described on the same land. I can
keep the soil in the same or better
condition for all time to come with
the use of meal and acids, provid
ed I sow it down every third year.
I have been asked my way of
deepening the soil. We have the
deepest soil of any people on earth.
As evidenced by the trees that
send their feed roots so deep in the
ground.
Give me a few loads of gravel
and chip manure, two cows and
one bushel of peas,and I will grow
thirty bushels of wheat on an acre
of land as hard and red as the pub
lic road in front of my house in
two years. But I will have to do
my part by keeping the stalls well
littered.
Does it pay to raise wheat ? It
is worth SIOO per bushel to every
farmer on his farm. I grew this
year on fourteen acres 749 bushels
of wheat, two tons of straw worth
$lO per ton, three tons of hay
worth sl2 per ton, making a total
of $lO9 to the acre, and a net pro
fit of SSo on each acre. Some of
our best farmers may be influenced
by the present price of cotton not
to sow any wheat this fall.
I expect to sow forty acres that
will yield forty bushels to the acre,
area. good year, and if planted in
cotton, with favorable seasons,
would make sixty bales. Of the
two crops one can be completed in
one month and the other one in
thirteen months. Ido not see any
good sense in going thirteen miles
after a shadow when you can get
the ’substance by going one. A
good number of our farmers have
to walk over three hundred acres
of land to get one hundred bales of
cotton. If I wanted to put wheat
on the background and raise one
hundred bales of cotton next year,
I would plant sixty acres and niaxe
the cotton seed horn the present,
crop of sixty hcies buy the fertili-
tilt S-Xty'ncrc ciop oi
At present p .cts of cotton seed
meal and acid phosphate, I would
have a little over 800 pounds for
each acre.
My formula for rich land is four
pounds of phosph ite to one of cot
ton seed meal, well mixed. I have
my manner of j
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the / t
Signature /%$
(\ df* * n
(ur
\7 For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
▼HI CINTAUN COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY.
green cotton seed or raw meal
with oil in it tor a fertilizer. Seed
will not leach like other manures,
and often I use a few seed under
my wheat. Cotton oil will not rot,
and is so selfish in its nature it will
not mix nor get wet if corked in a
bottle with water. And it stands
ready to oppose water and mois
ture among feed roots at the most
critical time. A burnt child dreads
fire, and I will not use anything
for a fertilizer that will not get wet
nor rot.
I know farmers that are renting
sixty acres of land for one bale of
cotton, I can get sixteen bales’
rent for the same amount of land.
I attribute my success as a wheat
grower, first, to the cow and well
littered stalls. Second, to the use
of cotton seed meal, producing a
very large cotton weed so as to
procure a good shade, the grand
est natural fie'd renovator on earth,
! and without it we could not make
any claim on manure as being an
investment. Third, I follow cot
ton with wheat because the stalk
does not absorb water readily nor
give shelter to insects in winter.
Fourth, time of sowing, manner of
sowing, of plowing and broadcast
ing manure, so the little plant can
have a gradual feed. Fifth, pro
tected wheat not harvested green
or threshed wet Sixth, selecting
the heaviest and best grains for
seed. By doing this I get from
five to seven bushels more per acre
where I make a good yield.
For a number of years I have
not tried to make any money. I
turned that part of the business
over to the government. Change
your food bill from laborers to
cows, sow wheat, sow peas, and
make all the shade possible, for
we all like it in the summer months,
and if we vveie to give way to our
inclinations we would get better
prices for cotton in 1901.
W. P. Walker.
CASTORIA.
1 Bear* ti 1 118 Kind You Have Always Bought
Our Greatest Specialist.
For 20 years Dr .1. Newton Hathaway
has so successfully treated chronic dis
eases that he is acknowledged today to
stand at the head of his profession in
this line. His exclusive method ol
treatment tor Varicocele and Stricture
without the aid ot knife or cautery,
cures iu IK) per cent, of all cases. Jr the
treatment of Loss of Vital Forces, Nei
vous Disordeis, Kidney and Urinary
Complaints, Paralysis, Blood Poisoning
Rheumatism, Catarrh and Diseases pe
culiar to women, lie is equally su cess
ul Dr. Hathaway’s practice is more
than double that of any other specialist.
Cases pronounced hope'ess by other
chysicians, readily yield to his treat
ment. Write him today fully about
vour ease. He mal es no charge for
cor.suitioa o • deice, e : .ncr at his of
lice o • by ina’l.
J. NKV.ION li A . IIA WAV, M D.,
2 Souta Urc ad S*., Al’aota, Ga.
3 a.>-Kid
Th:t Throbbing Headache
Would quickly leave you, if you
used Dr. King’s New Life Pills
I'.iousonds of sufferers have proved
their matchless meri-t for Sick and
Nervous Headaches. They make
pure blood and strong nerves ami
build Up your health. Easy to take.
Iry tbem. Only Lo cents. Money
hack if m t our and. Sold hy Young
Bn .. Di ggiats.
City Government.
F M. Fo.-d, Major.
f ‘ V Vv A’, 1 rt ‘ a 'urt r.
k: A VV aldruD, ciefij
Finance-T. R. j ol .
Wottortl. W. T Burton ' ,r,n *®,J.c
Street*—<*. s. 17,1,1. k, . '•*
Zaeharv. TR. Jones. Chair, " n , J. f
Ceineterv j a .
J V. Wofford. J. i," Cbai fni.
Ordinance.—J. K a,.a.
c ‘“"
"Mi “_*!r P 7”*-' *•
Chairman, T. H. Jones, J *
lire Department.— \y
chairman, Zachary, Burton '
Sanitarv.-—J.A.'liourort W
Cobb, Anderson la, nfian,
Doctors j.g.&hb. Greene
PHYSICIANS # SORGEONS.
Office West Market Street
Cartersville, - . . ...
Georgia.
Office Phone No. 20; Residence pk
No. 43. Dr. A. B. Greene can i* , one
at the office at night. ,e oun d
Farm Loans Negotiated
miLNER & miLNER, ’
Attorneys at Law
CARTERSVILLE. GA
Commercial and Corporation Practice
and Collections. tlce
Offices with Judge T. W. Milner ove,
Bank of CartersviTle. ef
DR. WILLIAM L. CASON
DENTIST.
Office: Over Young Bros.’ Drug store.
CARTERSVILLE. CA.
DR. CLARK hTcRIFFIsT
DENTIST.
—OFFICE: —
C, Stair*. Oppoilta Word’ff lira? stoit,
CARTEKNVILLE.GA.
DR. GEO. COESTER,
Veterinary Surgeon,
Office at (In Worki. Trlrpkoit •*,
CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA
Mares and Cows attended in delivery.
W.P.&L.W.BURT
<*IDENTISTSt
Chamberlin & Johnson Building
ATLANTA, GA.
Fillings SI.OO up. Extractingsoc. Set*
of Teulii $5 00 to $lO 00. Twenty-two
cam! Gold Crowns $5.00. Gold bridge
$5 0) per tooth All work guarantee
to please. Correspondence solicited.
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Needles, Sbwttles, Repairs, etc.
Bicycles and Appliances
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Gartersville. Ga.
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CARTERSVILLE, CA.
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Guitars, Mandolins,
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Instruments Sold or Exchangedlon
easy terms Lowest prices.
<kA ... 4l KV subscribing for the
ipo.oo II Orlll BEST magazine lor
OF Children
pleasure Little Ken and Women.
FOR Fully Illustrated. Sam
lpi V pies Free.
Sl.OOaYeai v
Address,
Little Men and W omen Cos.
TROY, N. Y.
WENT
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