Newspaper Page Text
JACKSON
Real Estate aid Renting Apncy.
D. J. THAXTON, Manager.
SUCCESSOR TO
H. O. Benton & Cos.
Farm Lands, Business Lots and
Residence Lots For Sale.
FREE OF CHARGE.
We Advertise Property in
the MIDDLE GEORGIA AR
GUS without cost to the
owner
re the only Real Estate Agents in Jackson, and have in our hands quite a
number of valuable and desirable farms in Butts and other counties for sale on the
beet of terms.
Also City Property, Residence and
Business Lots.
If you hare land te sell, put it into our hands and we will find you a buyer. If
you hare houses to rent, we will find you a renter. If you wish to buy a home call
•a us and we will furnish team and driver.
WE ASK ONLY A TRIAL.
fackson, Ga., June 9, 1892.
kjrtILAORAN6E FEMALE COLLEGE
Literature, Music, Art.. Normal course. Dressmaking, typewriting, stenography.
raflßfll WIHBIMI Music <1 Art unsurt.aaaed. VOICE CULTURE A SPECIALTY. Bookkeep
inn, harmony, phyaicial culture free. Ik>oM>Biieal nniforaa. Send for cata
tiroirtts. 1885-S6. 1590-91. ; higue. tj(r4*tU session begins Sep. S6, 1891.
40 119 ! EiTLER B. SMI ]H, Sccr., ¥ fiA
LMusic Pupils t 6 169 1 RUFUS W. SVII ill, l > rcs., ii-iJilftltllj, (Id,
A Prize Picture Puzzle.
EXPLANATION . — The following picture contains four faces, a man and his three daughters.
Amy one can find the man’s face, but it is not so easy to distinguish the faces of the three young ladies.
The picture was published in a few newspapers some time ago, and attracted considerable attention to
•ur standard remedies. We now offer a new prize competition in connection with it. As the sole object
as to introduce our medicines into new homes, those who entered the former competition are requested
sot to compete in this one. Af to the reliability of “The Ford Piii C 0.,” and the estimation in which their
■aedicules are held in Toronto, Canada, where they are best known, patrons are referred to the daily
aewspapers, wholesale druggists and leading business houses generally of Toronto.
Tkt proprietors f “The Ford Pill Co.,’’ will give an elegant pair of Shetland Ponies*
Carriage and Harness* valued at S6OO, (delivered free in any part of the United States,
to the 73 r-j? person who can make out the three daughters' faces. To the second will be given an elegant
Lady *LCo!d Watch, set in sapphires and diamonds. To the third will be given a pair orf
itnutne Diamond Ear-rings, To the fourth win be given aWodsome China Dinner
or vice, lo the/<///* will be given a Kodak Camera. To the a Swiss Music
lox. *■< va* seventh, a French Mantel Clock. To the eighth, an elegant Banquet
•amp. To the ninth, a pair of Crown Derby Vases. To the tenth, a complete La W n
Tennis Set, and many other prizes in order of merit. Every competitor must cut out the above
“ Puzzle Picture,” distinguish the three girls’ feces by marking a cross with a lead pencil on each,
and enclose same with 15 U. S. two-cent stamps for one of the following “Prize Remedies:”—
‘Ford’s Prize Pills,” “Ford’s Prize Catarrh. Remedy,” or “Ford’s Prize
Cure.” , Select any one of the above remedies you desire. Address “The Ford
Pill C 0.,” Cor. Wellington & Bay Sts., Toronto, Canada. The person whose envelope is
postroarkvd first will be awarded the first prize, and the others in order of merit. As this adver
tisement appears simultaneously throughout the United States, every one has an equal oppor
tunity. To the person sending the Inst correct answer will be given. an elegant Upright Concert
” rnnd rlano, valued at *500.00. To the Jtrsi person from the last sending a correct answer
w'.l be given a gentleman’s fine Gold “Sandoz” \V fitch, which strikes the hours and quarter
■ours on small cathedral gong at pleasure, and valued at *300.00. To the second from the last, a
first-das* (safety Bicycle, pneumatic tire. To the third from the /or/, a first-class English Shot
gun. To th z fourth from the last, a suite of Parlor Furniture. To the fifth from the last, a
ha ad some Silver TeaServico. To the sixth from the last, an elegant Piano Lamp. To the
seventh from the last, a. handsome pair of Portieres. To the eighth from the last, a genuine
English leather travelling Trunk. To the ninth from the last, two pieces of genuine French
tutuary, and many other prizes in order of merit.
SPECIAL PRIZHjS FOB EACH STATE.
A special prize of a Silk Dress Pattern (sixteen yards, any color), or & first-elass
n c V Machine (any make desired) will be given to the first person in each State in the
"■. j- *“° can make out the three "daughters’ feces. We shall give away 200 valuable prizes,
special prize*, (if there should be so many sending correct answers.) Nocharge is made for boxing
P*- >a * , prise*; The names of the leading prize winners will be published in connection with our
sd vemaoßMatin leading newspapers next month. Extra premiums will be given to only those who are
wiliiag te ****** in Introducing our medicines. Nothing is charged for the prizes in any way. They
absolutely given away to introduce and advertise “Ford’s Prize Remedies,” which are stand
* . ••“****•• and will be used in every family for years where they have been once introduced. All
ynaas will b in order of merit, and with perfect satisfaction to thepublic. The remedies
w4l be sent by mail, postpaid, and prizes free of duty.
A WATCH FOB EVERY CORRECT ANSWER.
An extTM premium of a genuine 44 Fearless M W atoll* (stem winder,) will be awarded to every
Mrson whoscaa** correct answer within 30 days after this advertisement appears, in case they should not
Ve forttmats enough to secure one of the larger prizes. That U, if any one can £nd the three faces and
% fiji 1 rasUsd one of the leading prizes, or an extra premium of a watch on conditions stated.
Wa aww Will not contain 30 cents for one of Ford’s Prize Remedies*
Address THE FORD PILL CO, “37," Cor. Wellington & Bay Sts., Toronto, Canada.
COMMISSION BUT
!* Monthly Talk with the Farmers
of Georgia.
Department of Agriculture,
Atlanta. Ga. Dec._l. 1891.
One or Two Plain Truths.
BY HON. R. T. NESBITT, COMMISSIONER OP
AGRICULTURE OF GEORGIA.
From the November Southern Culivator.
I know what I am about to say will not
at first be pleasant, or perhaps accepta
ble. to the majority of farmers, but
when thinking men analyze these plain
truths, they will pardon their first dis
agreeable impression, for the sake of
the kernel of good that lies in them. I
do not claim originality in presenting
them, they have been repeated hundreds
of times, and the principles underiving
them are as old as the hills themselves,
but the urgency of our present needs
demands that they should be impressed
again and again upon the minds of our
fanners,
Farming, ail things considered, is the
best business on earth, and the safest,
where the farmer gives the same atten
tion to his work that the doctor, the
lawyer, the merchant bestows on his;
but under our present management it is
actually cheaper for a farmer to buy
cotton, than it is for him to raise it!
And this is the crop on which we expend
all our enegies, all our means, and on
which we depend for our income.
To the owner of land, this condition
is deplorable, but to the farmer, who
rents land and borrows money, or pro
visions to make cotton, it is ruinous.
When we examine into the causes
which has led to this distressing and
almost general agricultural condition,
we find among other mistakes, tw.p of
greatest prominence. The first is, that
we have depended too much on common
fertilizers and too little on green crops
and home manures. The liis! dry of agri
culture throughout the world shows that
in those countries where commercial
fertilizers are relied on exclusively or
even mainly to produce crops, poverty
and want have resulted, __ while in
countries where it is used in conjunction
wbh thorough preparation of the land,
that is a preparation, which puts the
land in condition to utilize the fertilizer,
prosperity and riches, even, have blessed
the farmer’s intelligent efforts.
It is beyond contradiction that a man
cannot permanetly enrich his land with
guanos alone. They produce an artific
ial stimulus, but they do not build it up.
This “building up” must be done by
green crops, and by compost applied
broadcast over the land. The common
practice of running a furrow, drilling in
a little commercial fertilizer, covering
and planting on that, is possitively no
benefit to the land, and often proves of
little benefit to the crop. And this is
not from any fault of the guano, the
failure most frequently comes from our
mistaken manner of using it. A most
important lesson, which we have got t o
learn is, that we cannot afford to use
expensive fertilizers, unless by means of
these, renovating crops and deep plow
ing, we put our lands in condition to ap
propriate to the best advantage that
large proportion of these fertilizers,
which is now wasted. - Our hinds once
brought to this condition we need not
fear to fertilize heavily. _ The renovating
process is “slow and tedious,” but until
we nerve ourselves to this task, and
undertake it earnestly‘and systemati
cally, we cannot hope for agricultural
prosperity.
This process of renovation is also
costly, but it is not more so than the
present plan of planting largo aroaa.
hastily prepared and imperfectly culti
vated. And in the end the “building
up” plan is far more certain, far more
remunerative.
Just here is suggested to our minds
the second grave error, that is, planting
large areas in the uncertain, “slip-shod”
manner which has characterized our
methods for many years, in other words,
undertaking to plant more land than we
thoroughly manage. There are thous
ands of acres throughout the State,
which do not begin to pay _ for the cost
of cultivation. Leave these to the kindly
offices of Mother nature, select only
your best land, and apply there all the
energy, all the manure, which has here
tofore been too much diluted by the
“spreading” process.
What we need is concentration. If
our last season’s 9,000,000 bales had
been made on half the land which was
used to make that crop, and the othor
half had been applied to improved
methods of raising corn, wheat, oats,
grass and stock, how many millions of
money that escapes through our fingers,
would have been retained at home, and
be now adding to our prosperity ?
The big farms of the northwest have
not as a rule proved permanently profit
able. Tlie most prosperous communities
are where...the farms are moderate in
size, highly cultivated and occupied by
intelligent and industrious families, who
take pleasure and priue in their business
and surroundings.
To make the cotton producers of the
-south the richest and most independent
people of tlie globe, they have only to
cultivate less land in cotton, cultivate it
better, that is, bring it to the highest
state of cultivation possible and put the
remainder in diversified crops, cultivated
on the same plan.
Matters of General Interest to the Farmer.
The following extracts from the
exchanges of the Department of agri
culture, do we believe contain sound
advice and information of value to
farmers.
CLOVER AS A FERTILIZER, SUITED BEST
TO MIDDLE AND NORTH GEORGIA -
The clover plant yields the nicest ma
nures, add that is the stuiT that most
farmers most need. Clover gives . good
wheat, corn, meat, milk and the cheapest
and best of all Wheat and
clover should take the pNce of weeds
and sassafras hushes.
I look hack over fifty years, and make
a note of the fact that the farms of this
locality on which clover has been grown
with the greatest regularity, are today
tho farthest from exhaustion. Clover is
such a help in solving the problem of
available plantfood. that I believe it to
be a work of benevolence to help in the
management of it.
There is one blunder, almost universal,
which I believe largely reduces the value
of clover, boih for feed, seed and fertility,
and this is the universal habit of pastur
ing young clover as soon as the wheat is
out ofthe field. I do not think it is
even a wise policy to pasture for a
month or six weeks after harvest, and
believe it better to lay down a rule never
to pasture the first fall under any circum
stances. This rule I have followed for
twenty years, and believe that I have
been the gamer by it.
Asa recepitulation of this article, or
rather to enforce it, I say sow clover
with all small grain, no matter what
crop is to follow it. Use plenty of seed;
it is the cheapest way of fertilizing and
keeping your land clean at your command.
Do not be so greedy for a little feed as
to pasture the young clover before it
has made growth enough -to cover
the land, for by so doing yon will in
the lond run have much less
feed and less benefit to the land. Re
member that a soil densely shaded is
always improved,, and that no other .crop
you 'aii grow will furnish as good shade
as clover. '
HOW AND WHEN TO SOW CLOVER.
September is the best month in which
to s • w clover: October is probably the
next best; if not sown before the last of
October it is better to wait until Feb
ruary. It is not considered th,e best
p r ; ice. by the most experienced clover
growers iii the southern border of the
cho ’.--growing section, to sow the seeds
wbh small grain. Success is more
certain when clover is sown by itself or
with some other grass, like orchard,
blue grass, etc. If yon sow in February
we would advise not tb sow with oats or
other grain. There is no advantage to
be gained in breaking the land earlier
than a -week or two before sowing,unless
it rr:v be necessary to break earlier in
or Ar co get it into good condition, The
soil should be well pulverized and har
rowed smooth. Sow about twelve
pour.' ls of clover seed per acre, if sown
by itself; if with orchard grass, use
eight or ten pounds of clover and one
and one-half bushels of orchard grass
seed. "While the surface is mellow and
fresh from recent harrowing, mix the
clover seel with ashes or sifted soil, or
with a good fertilizer, and sow half one
wav and half the other, so as to get a
uniform distributionr, then sow the
orchard grass, or other grass seed, in the
same way. No covering, by plow,brush,
or harrow, is necessary, the next rain
will cover
rich enough to bring a half a bale of
cotton, or twenty-five bushels of corn
per acre, it would be well to fertilize it,
using not less than two hundred pounds
of good ammoniated phosphate.
FARMING a science,
Farming is a real science, and not
mere plowing and dropping seed in the
ground; any negro can do that, but to
SOW and plow with judgement, to under
stand the law of nature, and to take
advantage of these laws means success.
When a farmer says—“it is too much
trouble, I hare not the time,” I know
how to gage his judgement. Whatever
will give or advance prosperity in any
bu.-iness, .there is always a time to do
that thing.
ADOPT BUSINESS METHODS.
Of many remedies one worth trying is
business. That old saw, business is
business, contains a world of meaning;
it is fully of sound common sense.
Every farmer ought_ to be a first-rate
business man. In this age he must be
or he will fail as sure as fate. Show me
a farmer who has no head for business
and yoo will point to a man who is on
the road to ruin.
But what do we mean by first-rate
business man? Is the farmer who pro
duces abundant crops, of the best quality,
at the least cost, a good business man?
Not necessarily; such a man is undoubte
dly a good farmer; but he might be at
the same time a poor business man.
There are a large number of farmers
in the country who year after year pro
duces abundant crops, of the best quality
and at the least cost, and yet grow
poorer and poorer the longer they live,
because they are not good business
managers.
The pecuniary success of farming, as
to every other business, depends not so
much upon production of abundance of
products, of the best quality, at the
least cost, important as this may be, as
it does upon the proper answer to the
questions. What shall we produce, in
what quantities, when shall it be pro
duced and bow, when, where and for
what price, and to whom shall it be
sold?
WHY NOT RAISE YOUR OWN WORK
ANIMALS.
Tiie following from The Southern
Cultivator shows that at 8 cents per
pound, Georgia pays 100.000 bales of
cotton for horses and mules. Can our
farmers prosper and pursue this course?
“A careful estimate -reveals the fact
that most of _ tlie counties in middle
Georgia have for long years, paid, in
actual cash, from eighteeil to thirty
thousand dollars, annually, for mules
and horses brought from the west.
Striking a low average from the eutire
state, we find between three and four
million dollars taken from the state for
stock that could be raised for a nominal
sum upon our own fields. What stup
endous folly, when it is conceded on all
hands that our stock can be raised at
less cost “than in the markets from
which we buy. Grass grows as freely;
our soil produces forage as abundantly;
our winters are far less rigorous and
the necessary case, therefore, less ex
pensive. Every thing is favorable to
tlie enterprise; wisdom and economy
urge the' undertaking. Every farmer
should raise, at least, the stock needed
upon his farm. It greatly helps the
general good to hold annual colt shows,
both as an evicence of progress and an
encouragement to others.
USE MORE FERTILIZERS,
The farmers of the south do not use
enough manure, or to state it in a dif*
ferent form, they take from the soil
every year very much more than they
return to it in manure. It is easv to
show, that .fertilizers pay better divi
dends than any other investment on the
farm. The conclusion is irresistible that
we should use more fertilizers ; not com
mercial or bought fertilizers alone, but
home manures, composts, green crops
turned under, marls, etc., everything
that will add more to the yield of the
crop than the cost of its application,
To have an abundance of stable or
barnyard manures there must be an in
crease in the number of animals fed.
This gives diversity to the farm and in
creases the sources of income, A well
fed cow will nearly pay for her keep in
manure, besides a good profit on the
butter sold and consumed.
A GOOD MAXIM FOR FARMERS.
Raising cotton on poor land does not
pay. I cannot afford to raise cotton in
lees quantities than one bale per acre,
and in order to bring my land up to
that point must intake manure, and the
cheapest is that made from stock raised
on a farm.
****** *#
The ‘ old beaten track” is not always
the best. The “old beaten track" is
not the one that will always lead us
most qv-iekly, or even most surely, to
success in agriculture. New ideas and
new methods have come up in every
branch of farm practice during recent
years, and many of them have already
been tried and found good. A preju
dice in favor of old ways should not
keep one from being progressive. Read,
study and keep up with times.
********
Farmers cannot prosper as long
as they are compelled to sell their
cotton "or starve. The situation is an
unfortunate one for our farmers, but
they can improve it very much here
after by their own efforts. They can
never command the situation so long as
they must sell their cotton or starve.
They can command it when they can
live without selling and sell only to
realize profits. The increase in the pro
duction of food crops on southern farms
shows a tendency in the right direction.
It is a tendency which no rise in the
price of cotton should stop. If it con
tinues long enough it will make the pro*
ductionof cotton again profitable and
our farmers prosperous.
** * * * * * *
CULTIVATE WELL IF YOU HAVE TO
PLANT LESS.
More work amounts to nothing,unless
there is reason, judgement and calcula
tion back of it. Judgement and calcu
lation are all important in all undertak
ings. The know-how, the_knfiW- When,.
and theTEnow why, is calculation anil
judgement nicely balanced. Labor
without forethought and calculation
will end in failure, or a poor support.
System, plan, methodical ways do not
beget a fussy, bustling or an excited
way of doing things, but the machinery
of action seems to run itself.
Again, a small business with small
profits demand long and arduous labor.
There is no exDension in some callings;
the field is limited and it will not grow
larger for there is no room for enlarge
ment. A certain amount of business
can be done in a certain calling, and no
extra efforts will add to it. Take the
newspaper business of today, with a
paper in every county, and in some two
or three. They will have a certain
amount of circulation and no more, a
certain amount of business and no more,
and all the “fuss and fury” displayed
or put on will not add a dollar, but
rather sink: money. A piece of India
rubber will stretch to a certain length,
and any more pulling will break it.
Again two farmers —Baldwin and
Milledge—with a mule a piece goes to
farming. Baldwin cultivates about
thirty acres with his mule, manures
well,” works deep, plants everything he
consumes on the place, corn, potatoes,
etc., raises his own meat, has system,
judgement and calculation in every
thing he does, does not rush and push to
try to do too much with his force, and
the result is a success. His cotton
money is all clear gain. Milledge,
without judgment and calculation,
wants to cultivate all cotton and tries
to make one mule cultivate about sixty
acres. Always in the grass, ground
badly plowed, everything to buy that
he should have raised, and though he
works harder longer, *and wears him
self out, he is a failure, and grows
poorer and poorer every year. Far bet
ter to make one acre, well manured,
prodnce thirty bushels of corn or a bag
of cotton, than three acres half cultivated
with all the wear and tear, to get thirty
bushels or one bag. The saving of
labor is making money.
Whatever you do, do well, and not
try to do too much. First calculate
how nmch you can do, and what it will
pay you to do it. Then let judgment
be your every day monitor to keep out
wild dream of speculation, over san
guine expectations, and hope without
reason to back it,
KIM, ’*! J 4
Philology Makes It Less Romantlo
Than It Sounds-
The word “kiss” is Anglo-Sax
on, and may, indeed, be taken as
an instance of how pleasant
Anglo-Saxon can be. The philo
logist assures us that it is allied to
the Gothic kustus, a proof or test,
and to the Latin gustus, a taste,
which suggests the old saying,
that “the proof of the pudding is
the pricin' o’t." That same Gothic
kussus comes from the verb kiusan.
to choose, from which one would
imagine that among the Go this
kissing went by favor. Accord
ing to Prof. Skeat, writing with
all the austerity and scholarship of
an expert, a kiss is “a gust, a taste,
a something choice.”
Rowena, the beautiful daughter
of the Saxon Hengist, is credited
with having introduced kissing
into these fortunate islands; but it
seems to me that had the natives
been so utterly unenlightened, the
Romans could hardly have failed
to anticipate her. The Romans
had a really delightful word for a
kiss —osculum, which came* from
os, the mouth, and meant a little
mouth,' a sweet mouth. “Give
me a sweet little mouth,”.would
be the phrase used when—a good
little Roman boy asked his mother
for a kiss.
Oui* English word occurs pretty
nearly in its present form in Anglo-
Saxoijj Dutch, Icelandic, Danish,
Swedish and German. And this
is worthy of note, because, natural
as kissing may seem to be (to
many of us), it is a practice un
known to the Australians, to the
Maori of New Zealand, the
Papuans of New Guinea, the peo
ple of Tahiti, the negroes of Africa,
the Botocudos of Brazil, the sav
ages of Terra del Fuego, the Lap
landers, the Esquimaux. Most of
these benighted mortals have not
got beyond the low stage of rub
bing noses together.
Bjomstjerne Bjornson.
Bjornastjerne Bjornson, the
Norwegian Apostle of Peace, is
one of the most combative of men.
One would think that he must
have been meant for a warrior;
his head, his figure are those of a
chieftain. When his gray eyes
flash under jutting brows, and his
bushy hair looks bewildered, as if
startled by some earthquake of
passions beneath, then, with his
nether lip slightly pouting and his
broad shoulders drawn back, he
makes one think of some old Norse
Viking bent on battle and ready
for the fray.—Re view of Reviews.
Misunderstood.
Mudge—l was looking over my
top coat to-day, and I find that
the moths have nearly ruined it.
Yabsley—Why don’t you sue
them for damages?
Mudge—Sue the moths for dam
ages! You talk like a child.
Yabsley—l didn’t mean the
moths; I meant the pawnbrokers
—lndianapolis Journal.
Mystery' Explained.
“Why is Miss B. • wearing
black?”
“She is in mourning for her
husband.”
“Why, she never had a hus
band.”
“Thatis why she mourns. She
is grieving over the husband that
she hasn’t got.” —Texas Siftings.
Tlie Mind-Reader at Poker,
“I hear that Flammins won a
big stake from you last night ?”
“Yes. He played me a mighty
small trick.”
“What was that?”
“He whistled ‘God save the
queen’ when he drew cards, and
his hands were full of and
aces.”—New York Weekly.
CATARRH
Is a most loathsome, dangerous, and preva
lent malady. It is a blood disease, usnaliy
of Scrofulous origin, and for which local
treatment is useless. Before health is pos
sible, the poison must be eradicated from
he system, and to do tills
SUCCESSFULLY
the disease must be treated through the
blood. For this purpose no remedy is so
effective as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
“For the past eight years I have been
severely afflicted with Catarrh, none of the
many remedies I tried affording me any re
lief. My digestion was considerably im
paired. and my sleep disturbed by phlegm
dropping into my throat. In September
last I resolved to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla,
began to use it at once, and am glad to
testify to a great improvement in my health. ’’
Frank Teson. Jr., engineer, 271 West
Fourth street, New York City.
“ My daughter, 16 years old, was afflicted
with Catarrh from her fifth year. Last Au
gust she w r as
TREATED WITH
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and after three months
of this treatment she was completely cured.
It was a most extraordinary case, as any
druggist here can testify.” Mrs. D. W.
Barnes, Valparaiso, Neb.
Ayer’s
Sarsaparilla
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer &Cos., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5.
Cures others, wilU;ureyou
m@WM MCR
7T N elegantly bound Album of
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to any address by E.O.McCormick,
G. P. &T. Agent, C. 11. &D. R.R.
Cincinnati, 0., on receipt of ten.
cents in stamps.
NIKS
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RP.P.
CURES ACL SKIN
AND
BLOOD DISEASES.
Physicians endorie P. p. P. m a eplendid oombinatlon,
and prsicrlbs It with peat satisfaction for the onrsi of al?
forms and stages of Primary, Sesondary and Tertiary
R R R
Cures scrofulA.
Sores, Glandular Swellings, Rheumatism, Malaria, old
Chronic Ulcere that hare resisted all treatment, Catarrh,
P.P.P. B&
TST T)!TeaTel7' , Eraema^!^onlc"TS l
curlal Poison, Tetter, Scald Head, etc., etc.
P^^^^^powerfo^onlc/aii^^TeellenWpnetlSir.
■if p P R
Cures’bheumatisM
building np the system rapidly.
Ladles whose systems are polsosed and whose blood la ns
anMmpmj^^ondiitlos^lu^j^iienstruamriagularltles^ar^^
DDDte OUBES
It. “Malaria
peaSJtarJj^TeneSteS™
cleansing properties of F. F.FFf. f Friokly Ash, Poke Root
and Pot\ssinm.
„ P.P.P.
CuresdyspepsiA-
LIPPKA2* BEOS., Proprietor*,
Druggists, Lippmau's Block, BlTlXllßylAa
MT- FOR THE BLOOD,
Weakness, Malaria, Indigestion and
BJ2£2sjs=e, take
BROWS.? IRON BITTERS.
It cores quickly For sale by all dealers in
toedidne. Get tbe genuine.
rIIST
lim; x t is jcxr*
/iV f/T£Cr 03r. 30, /332.
' EAST BOUND.
i.eave Chattanooga .... 12:33 Nociv
Arrive Bristol (Central Time) . . 7.35 p
Leave Bristol t Kastern Time) ‘ . . 8:4.) P. if I
Arrive Shenandoah Junction . . 7:2 i A -Vf*
Leave Shenandoah Junction . . 7:25 A. if*
Arrive Washington .... 9:50 A. id!
CONNECTIONS.
Leave Washington .... 10-00 A M
Arrive New York .... 300 P M
Leave Memphis .... 11:59 P. 5f
Arrive Chattanooga .... 12-25 I*' \l*
Leave Nashville . . . 7:30XT1.
Arrive Chattanooga . . . 25 p jf
Leave New Orleans ii \ ) S2)O PS#
Leave Birmingham . . . g. 35 \ \|"
Arrive Chattanooga . . , 11-55 A. M*
Leave Atlanta i I ! I Is-TaTm.
Arrive Cleveland . . . 1:25 P. if
.-cave Mobile . . . 8:00 P. if
!.eave Selma , . . 3 45 A.' M*
Arrive Cleveland . . . 125 p. jj'
TRAIN CONSISTS OF
'wo coaches and Baggage Car.
r ullman Sleepers. Pullman ft— m
lining Car. Pullman Sleepers r:
lew Oricans to New York,)) &S.L
femphis'to Washington andW.i
'Jashville to Washington. Din-/J JfS S • jjl PIT
ing Car Chattanooga to Wash - IL® **'’* * 1 L U LE.U
ington. Through Vestibule
Coach Atlanta to Bristol.
Oiuißjf Car Service Unsurpassed.
NO BXTRA FARES
B. W. WRENN, General Pass, Agt. Knoxville, Team.
Chamberlain’s Eye and Skin
Ointment.
A certain cure for Chronic Sore Eyes,
Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Old
Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema,
Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nipples
and Piles. It is cooling and soothing.
Hundreds of cases have been cured by
it after all other treatment had failed
85 cents per box.
„ BUYTHIfki
RUNNING
THE BEST IS IwBeST.
Send TEN cents to 28 Union Bq., N. Y.,
for our prize same, “Blind Luck,” and
win a New Home Bewlng Machine.
The New Home Sewing Machine Cos,
ORANGE, MASS.
for sale by
Scientific American
\gr- design PATENTS,
COPYRIGHTS, etoJ
Por MWmatton and free Handbook write to
MUNN A CO.. 361 BROADWAY, N*W YORK.
Oldeat bureau for securing patents In America.
* very patent taken out by tie ie brought before
the public by a notice given free of charge In the
$ ritntiffc Hmetfatt
Largest circulation of any scientific paper In the
world. Splendidly illustrated. No Intelligent
man should be without It. Weekly. *3.00 a
year; sl.sosix months. Address MUNN A CO.
Publishers, 361 Broadway, New York City.
THE MILD POWER CURE&
HUMPHREYS’
„ P r * Humphreys’ Specifics are aclaptUL
cally and carefully prepared PRE®cmmo*JPtMd
for many years In private p actloe with success
and ror over thirty yearn used by the people
Every single Specific Is a special cure for t£
disease named.
Three Specifics cure without drugging, rurglno
t , he and ore m&ctknd lee 3
the Sovereign Remedies of the World.
LIST OF PRINCIPAL NO3. CCSJE3. PSICW
II Fevers, CongouCon, inflammations.. .21
4 Worm Fever, Worm Colic. ..ill
3 Crying Colic, orTeethlngof InLants.2l
4 Diarrhea, of Children or Adults...
3 Dysentery, Griping, Bilious C01ic.... .5 L
6 Cholera Morbus, Vomiting... { }
7 Coughs, Cold, 8r0nchiti5....,.,........;;'
8 Neuralgia, Trothache.FaceaeLe ,S \
| i
1 9 Croup, Ooush, iMfflcult Breathing.
I# Si 1 * Lrevipeias, Eruptions. .si 1
IS Ifhemiißtegm, Khenmat<cPaina <s' ;
SP E gTfTc!
l? !P?r.s
R'i Ear Discharges, impaired Hearing !, >
43 Enlarged Glands, Swelling fi; ,
aiitAeKerai Bcfcllit r,PhysicalwS*. l! S
oaf dJ?h y *, an<i kocretlons | i 1
•ir • 2
28 [Nervous liehllity Seminal ’weak-***
■gif iasrif |
richly bound In Cloth and Hold. mallieePfSea
HUMPHREYS’ MEDICI.YE CO,.
cor. \\ lliiam and John Street*. New York.
HUMPHREYS’
WITCH HAZEL OIL
THE PILE OINTMENT.
or Internal-Bllad
or Bleeding,-However Inveterate or Loas
!Wfc&f3r4r.Er* r “-
80W by. Druggists, or sent post-paid n
receipt of price. 50 cents per BettleT *
t| 0 hi §• f Tssru
mUllCl
We tanUeh e-eraia r W Man ya.^iulfcik
*Vr. ■•■. ar aU year Oa.* ve JTw Jk *
HissiiriSSi'lSf-. "• ~ l ss^dsts
*af 5 s*
Qaitaip
a 0