The Douglas breeze. (Douglas, Coffee County, Ga.) 18??-190?, July 19, 1902, Image 7
SOUTHERN FARM NOTES. *-A- Topics of Interest to the Planter, Stock man and Truck Grower. The South and Live Stock. * W. c. Swop?, of Courtlaml, Ala., lives just forty miles below the quar antine lines. He believes that a great future is before tlie South as a live stock country, but be shares opposite views of many cattlemen wlio consider the danger of Southern fever as a great handicap. Speaking on this point he says: •‘lf the cattle are handled rightly, the danger can be reduced to a mini mum, but the moment the breeder of the exposition management gets a little careless his herd is gone. 1 have had oniy one death among my Xor them cattle in the past two years, and now see that I could easily have avoided that. The ease was that of one of my young bulls, which I served to a grade cow. She was ticky, which did not of itself mean that the bull would catch the fever, but I carelessly de ferred spraying the animal with disin fectants until too late. “There is a general impression among Northern cattlemen that the best thing I to do with their cattle when the stock Is shipped below the quarantine line or Otherwise exposed to Southern fever, is to inoculate them. For my own part I am not in favor of inoculation. It may be effective in the long run, but a jeow or bull that has been inoculated femaius in a poor, half-sick condition jjor four or five months after inocula tion. Thus the breeder loses so much f valuable time. “The way I handle my cattle is to spray them witlr disinfectants, and I have always found this works admir ably, especially so when I keep my breeding stock in fenced pastures and do hot allow it to mingle with the wild native cattle. I have constructed a corral, or series of chutes into which I can dyive the pure breds from time to time and give them a good spraying. Such a course of procedure, combined with coinmdn sense management, ren ders Herefords as safe in the South as in the,North. “The crying need of my State as well as the whole South is better cattle. The people have at last come to reali zation of this, I think, and the future will see rapid strides made in the im k proved quality of our range and feed Kot stock. The ever present Jersey is too common class of cattle down my jjiAk'. Wo have a few Idirhams, but to begin to til! the tic.sis tf&Sc country. I' is a good terri'.ory N.iribcrn c'l.-i-s in we. tip. : 'l'' ‘ "hi find h • • ii. v< s' as ila 11 > V'':; l '''. 1 u 1 '1 I>,mil! !:\ •■ 1 ■ V' i mA i rt>i'i M issur.v; <!-r • ■ i ■ lplgslgraygH HhBHT! '•'' ■' > ftjsnra|^E^ls-v ,- > SSEnSpPW.'. .? wi..-ii i wii^^i. for rIV markets. > I “Alabama offers pleSy of incluee * rnents to cattlemen. "We havcio harm winters, and never worry whether there is a bounteous corn crop pr not, realizing that the cattle will carry over just as well on hay. My heiftrs will average well with any of the stye* of fered in the ordinary present s; le, yet l their only feed all winter ha s been k tiftecn pounds of hay each day. & “We have the land and the j here fc withal to handle Ilerefords ant : other cattle; all that is needed is t little of our stockmen and tnv State soon take a much higher r.lnk iii blooded stock raising business.” i \ i Sheep Made Hite Cotton. \ A correspondent of Farm and t a noli says: “One of the most difficult prob lems with which Southern farmers have had to wrestle is that of proper fertilizing for cotton. On black lands with alternate plots fertilized and un fertilised, the unfertilized have usually given the best results. On sandy loams heavy applications of nitroge nous manures have given too much •weed' without a corresponding yield cf lint aid seed, and yet on our river bottom lands, rich in humus, the cot ton plant frequently grows eight to nine feet high, and yields from 750 to l 1000 pounds of lint cotton per acre. L Here we have a heavy yield with cnor- mous weed, proving that heavy yield great gnwth of ‘weed’ are not in- tut under proper condi- of soil tnil good cultivation the F -weedy’ growtl is necessary to a larg; yield of cotton. The writer had seven acres of sandy Warn that had been a sheep pen, or ;eries of pens. For twelve years thi.- ground was planted alternately with lotton and corn. The Bs left eighteen rows. The re de thicket and cotton, on the it was^planted and I harvested five and one-half bush els of clean, rough rice; shipped 115 pounds to a rice mill and had it: cleaned and received back seventy pounds of clean rice, pronounced by one of our merchants in Alexander City, Ala., to be as good as any that they sold. There were two grades —cracked and uncracked. I am satisfied that I made at the rate of sixty or seventy bushels per acre. I also had some of the rough rice ground on a grist mill and fed to my cow. I find it as good as corn meal. I notice in a bulletin from the South Carolina Experiment Station on the feeding of rice meal to hogs they find Ilat rice meal is as good as coiu meal or better. It is easily grown. Plant after danger of frost in drills like sorghum, two or three foot rows, and cultivate two or three times and you are sure of a good crop. All stock love it. Cut in the dough state it makes an excellent hay. Last year I planted a small patch and harvested ; several bushels, but I didn’t consider it a good yield. It grows from three to five feet high, and when it began to head the beads would curl up like they had been cut off. Has any other read er had a similar experience? I would like to hear from them as to what was the matter and the remedy. Brother farmers, wake up and plant two or three acres of that land you in tend to plant in cotton in upland rice and fill your barn with some of the host feedstuff that you have ever fed. I filled my barn last fall with rice hay. millet and peavine hay, as fine as ever giew, and have fed my mules and cows nothing much but this hay this winter, and have plenty to carry me through. I also make as much corn and cotton as any other man to the mule. Plenty of hay and corn and cattle to consume it is the secret of success in farming. j Covr Ration* in the South. ‘ Th*-'ifollowing rations made up of our common feeding stud’s are sug gested by one of the stations as being suitable for dairy eows in the South: No. I—Cottonseed hulls 20 pounds, corniseal S pounds and cottonseed meal 5 pounds. XaV 2—Crab grass hay 10 pounds, cowifta bay 10 pounds and corn and cobHleal 10 pounds. No.Ti—Corn ent ilage 30 pounds, bran 0 pounds, cottonseed meal 3 pounds and c;.C-4iseed bulls 12 pounds. ;oJ 4 -Crab grass bay 20 pounds, corn stover 12 pounds, eornmeal 3 pounds and cottonseed meal 3 pounds. iio. s—Corn stover 18 pounds, wheat bran k 4 pounds, cottonseed meal 4 putuißl and eornmeal 0 pounds. Noi-j o—Sweet potatoes 25 pounds, corn Mover 10 pounds, cottonseed meal 4 poimds and eornmeal 8 pounds. Xo;j—Corn shucks 12 pounds, cow pea fjly 10 pounds, eornmeal -1 pounds and (Jttonseed meal 3 pounds. No. B—Vetch8 —Vetch bay 1-1 pounds, cotton seed hulls 10 pounds and eornmeal 0 pounds. No* 9—Cowpea hay 15 pounds, shre®?<J cornstalks 10 pounds, cotton seedlieal 9 pounds and eornmeal 2 pounWhi J -Corn shucks 25 pounds, cot tonseed iieal 5 pounds and wheat bran 3 pot'Adii. No IT —Cottonseed hulls 20 pounds, eottjmeled meal 4 pounds and wheat brain sfcounds. I Cantaloupe might. Th cantaloupe blight is increasing in som sections. As it i.s carried in the sole duo doubt other section's will soon mikt fts acquaintance, and it is well to be on the lookout for its first ap pea ranee. The cantaloupe blight is caused by a true larasit-:- l’ungus. It first appears as a number of small brown spots upon the leaves in the centre of the hill. If the younger leaves are exarn inetj it will be seen that the fungus is at work some time before the brown spots make their appearance. It will holnotic-ed that the leaf tissue is being eaten away where the fungus is at wii-k, and it is the decomposition or dying of this tissue that causes these bibwn spots. The spots grow larger as the fungus spreads, until the leaves aljecttd have the appearance of being frostb tten. At lie first appearance of Hie dis eais fpray with berdeaux mixture maSejin the following manner: Dis solvejsix pounds of blues tone; slake four Sounds of fresh lime: when the cooled, strain off the lime watef and add it to th? bluestoue so lutjioj; add water enough to make font; gallons. As the vines grow rapidly at the time of spraying it will be necessary ty JE-peat .often in order to cover the nej growths. Almost all spraying mlliures'‘should be stirred while being wt i prevent precipitation. Best of Ocfons. ■Vnions are not grown- in the South like the extent they are fn North and West, hut some of .our Bowers are growing them very •suc- Btsfully. The varieties best adapted South are the Bermudas. Kxlra |B;iy White I’eari, and the rotate tdiliough the standard • < sorts also sne-cet-d and do H^Brvvell. Covr Peas in the Cotton Crop. tlie cotton and tobacco crops by frequent cultitation, and Hciv: j.eas in tlie cot.on wh< n the last time, in this way J improt jjjj^V''-njad-.'.--Bou::,ei , ii Planter. DR. CHAPMANS SEKMON , SUNDAY DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED ! PASTOR.SVANCELIST. Subject: The "Wagons Aio Coining—. The j Story of Jacob—A I.ossou For the Veo- j pie of To-Itay—lf SVe Give Ourselves to GodUßitifited Blessing Will He Ours. "New Yohk City. —The Rev. .1. Wilbur Chapman, the popular pastor ot the Fourth Presbyterian Church, who is remarkably successful as an evangelist, has prepared m interesting sermon upon the subject of “The Wagons Are Commg." It i v preached from the text, “And when he ww the wagons which Joseph had sent to ?arry him, the spirit of .Jacob their father revived.” Geneiss 4.‘ ; : 27. There is a fascination about the land of Egypt which cannot be described in words. There are some particular features of this indent land which impress you. First of all there is a peculiar haze over the country which is unlike anything to be seen in any other part of the world. The sunsets are indescribable, but the most striking thing about Egypt is the ruins; on every side of you are these ruins telling of the splendors of past days. You pass up and down ave nues that are lined with sphinx and with obehsk, the exquisite carvings of which re veal the fact that there were giants in the days when these works of art were made. In the olden times the world’s pomp and wealth seemed to have been poured at the very feet of this capital ol Egypt, and here m all the days of its splen dor and power stood Joseph, next, to Pha raoh in power. There are some places vis ited by the traveler to-day which speak di rectly of Joseph and his times, as. for ex ample., the ancient obelisk at Helioapoliv, where Joseph got his bride, and the most ancient sphinx standing near the pyramids beyond Cairo looking out to-day over the waste of the desert as it has been doing for centuries, and if its lips could move it might say truly, “Before Abraham was .1 am.” The story of the early life of Joseph need not be told, for we are per fectly familiar with it. We listened to the recounting of it in our childhood's d.iys. and it was one of the fascinating sto ries told us by our Christian mothers. The account of his coat of many colors, the bowing sheaves in the harvest field, the anger of his brother, and the grief of his old father are facts too well known to need telling here, except that it is well for us to know hat he is, to say the least, an almost perfect illustration of our Saviour, or a-s some one has said, “Our Joseph,” for the names of Joseph and Jesus are practi cally the same. Joseph was loved by his father, hated by his brethren, and was ex alted to the place of power in the then known greatest kingdom in the world. Our Saviour was the beloved Son of His Fath er, was hated by those whom He came to save, sold for thirty pieces of silver, cast into the pit, i.s to become the Saviour of His brethren, and is exalted to-day at the right hand of the Father in majesty and in power. AH this is striking, to say the least, and makes the text to be of added interest. I. The story of Jacob. We cannot appre ciate this text without we have the story of this remarkable Old Testament character. He was a typical Jew, if we understand him as we may understand Israel ; a people found in every country and belonging to none. Some one has said that Abraham was a hero, but Jacob a plain man dwelling in tents. Abraham is above us. but Jacob is one of ourselves, and the difference be tween Abraham and Jacob in the Old Tes tament is the difference between Paul and Peter in the New Testament, the one tow ering above us like some mighty mountain peak, and the other our brother and com panion in temptation and failure. There are several points in the history of Jacob which we would do well to have in mind. First. Bet lie). It was a bleak, barren place in the heart of Palestine, the. traveler sees on every side of him great rocks and ! nothing but rocks, and long years ago ! when Jacob was fleeing away from his [ brother Esau the swift Eastern night conies i down upo’n him: and there was nothing for i him.to do but to lie down, make a pillow of.st6n.es for bis head and try to sleep. (a) The Ladder. Did this not teach in the days of Jacob what we have learned since the lime of Christ that earth is not tli£ binding star, but is bound to heaven not simply by a ladder in a man’s dream, but by Him of whom the ladder is an illus tration, and who said. “No man eometh unto the Father but by Ale.” (bV The Angel.*. When we see them as cending it is an illustration of our prayers rising to God. and when we behold them descending it is an illustration of the an swers coming down. Tt is certainly a com fort for us all to know that we are truly united to God as in the night of Jacob’s dream he felt himself to be. (c) The Voice of God. He said to the slopping man, “1 will be with thee, T will ! Keep thee. I will not leave thee,” and this j dream was an inspiration for many a long | dreary day. .Second, Jabbok. Jacob is on his way hack home when suddenly he hears that Esau is ahead of him and he is afraid. He sends his property over the stream and then his children and finally his beloved Rachel, and he himself is left alone. Around him the stillness of the midnight hour, beside hipi the murmur of the brook over the stones, above him the depths of heaven, and while he was left alone the thought of his past failure comes to him and he i.< depressed, when suddenly he finds himself in the grasp of the angel, and he struggles to free himself. Let it be noted that, he is not wrestling with the an gel. but. the angel with him, and is this not God seeking to take from Jacob’s life that which has hindered the development of Cod’s life in him. There arc three things to be remembered, here. (a) The change of his name. His name was Jacob, which means “a sunplanter and cheat.” and the angel gave him the name of Israel, which means “a prince,” because he had prevailed. (hi Power with God and with men. but let it be remembered that it is power with God first, b’o many rff us are peeking for power to m<r\*e men; if we could but learn that we can move men by the way o; the throne of God it would be a lesson of un speakable value. fc) The vision of God. Ever d as Jacob remembered Jabbnk he said, “I have seen God face to face.” and this was the secret in part of the transformation of his character. Third, Bethel. It will be noticed that Jacob is at Bethel aqpiin. He has had a dreary experience of failure, and in the 35th chapter of Genesis God tells him to go back to Bethel. In itself Bethel is not much, it is just a k>ng range of barren hills, but to Jacob it was n •pot. for there he had seen God. Tt is an ?asy thing to understand how he might save been homesick for Bethel, for we ong to see the old home so filled with sa ?red memories and the ofl land where we vere horn, the old church where fijet we *ame to Christ, and co God said to Jacob. ‘Put away your idols.” *bd he buried “herd near to the oak, and hurried on to Bethel. Is this not a lesnu f- •/> — nf ps. n these days, we have spiritually cic eJ. :o have lost the peace.that once we had. •he power that uned to he ours, let u- go Dack to Bethel and pray as we used fo ; >ray. read the Bib’e a we used to read it mend the Lord’s day as we need p, srend :t. give ourselves to Go 1 again. Id, uV | mt hnt that blessing will be onr w ithout j neasure. There are soio-Ikt event - ! i A'hich we ought to keep in mind in the life 1 i )f Jacob to appreciate the text. Or;?* was j j die death of Rachel as he came near to Bethlehem. I ha* o seen the tomb ■ • •hu’i : ; t is said her bodv was n’aced. and this is I recorded in the ?”rh chanter of G j j [he 16th to the 19th verses. “And they ] journeyed from Bethel; and there was but I a uttie wav to conic to Enhratii; ana | Rachel travailed, and she had hard labor. And it came to pass as she was in hard labor that the midwife said unto heV, Fear not. thou shalt have this eon also. And it came to pass, as her soul was in depart ing, for she died, tlmt she called his name IVn-owi, but his father called him Benja min. And Rachel died, and was buried in the way to Ephrath, which is Bethlehem. The other was his loss of Joseph. For twenty years he had mourned him. There are some cries that are crushed out of his heart which enable us to see and under stand his grief, as, for example, “I shall go clown to my grave mourning.” and again. “Me ye have bereft of my children. Joseph is not. Sim ion is not and now you will take Benjamin from me.” 11. The meeting of Joseph and Jacob. We are familiar with the story of Joseph’s rev elation of peace to his brethren and now at Pharaoh’s suggestion the wagons were s *nt for th- old man and all his loved ones, that they might come into the land of Egypt and dwell there while the famine raged in Canaan. I can hear the wagons rumbling outside the.palace door, and Pbav raoh stands at his palace with Joseph t>jk skle him, the ring upon his hand amfcJ* chain of authority about his neck. Wagon j after wagon passes away ladencd with conn i and wheat and a change of raiment, andjl can see Jacob as he sits in front of lji. c home thinking of his absent sons’ and hi Joseph, 1 am sure, for whether our Ini go out to the ends of the earth or hea\rn ■ they never get a wav from us. Snddefly he sees a cloud of dust in the distance, aid he knows that some one is coining, llis heart begins to beat rapidlv when lie Im agines it to be his sons. When theylire near enough to cry out to him thevloll I him, “Joseph is yet alive.” At this thnold man fainted. “But when lie sawTlie wagons which Joseph had sent to Jrrv him the spirit of Jacob their father re vived.” And he said. “It is enJigh. Joseph my son i.s vet, alive. I will giiand j see him before l die.” From all nffthis beautiful Old Testament incident I |?arn these helpful lessons. First, the wagons have come fof us. ! bringing us the best blessings of hven containing a change of raiment, so th* we need be clad no longer in the garnieils ol our own righteousness, but in the rows ol His righteousness. In this garmentTjhere is the mark of the Mood shed for ok' re demption and the reflection of the gj/ry ol the throne of God, bringing us fwd to eat that the world cannot give, andji’hich if a man eat he shall live forever, fy Second, bringing us good news. wThese wagons shall come to us as they cape to Jacob. T-he best of the news wri that Joseph was yet alive. In the OlfC'esta meut when the day of atonement oijie the priest took off his garment of girl' and beauty and clad in linen robes mile hit way into the presence of the Arlflof the Covenant, and then the service <rer h( came out and put on again the garment o] glory and beauty, on the hem of tje robe of which there was a golden belli and f pomegranate the whole length of fie hen round about, and ay he moved arqfnd the people Heard the ringing of the hills am knew that, the priest was yet alive> Jacol knew that Joseph was alive beiuse h< saw the wagons, and we know tint om Joseph is yet alive because of th’ bless ings He is showering upon us jnd tin peace which passeth understandiig filling our souls, and Jacob heard that) Jostml himself would come to meet him.,find om day our Joseph shall ‘appear, vie knov not when that day shall bo, but (lie .skin shall brighten with our coining llrd, am when He comes we shall step intoithe cha riot and be taken away from thisJcarth t( j heaven. Lord Jeans come quickly. Third, the wagons took Jacob ip to hi lost boy, and one day the wagon h ill com* i QX us to take us up to our frauds win have gone from us. Jacob did not third ol the Nile in Egypt, which he iris to see hut. of Joseph, and that is wlit heaver is to us, the presence of Jesus, If He i: not there, there will be no mus j; if He it 'not there, there will be no glor ; if lje h not there, there will be no joy. hit thanks be unto God these wagons pliftl take w I up to meet our loved ones to whoni w< I have said good-bye in this work, and that j will be joy unspeakhble. ~ m - b Home at last. The end haj come for i Jacob. His has been a great j4\’ and hit i a great fight. We scarcely him i until he is going. We have IJ>ked upon j great buildings in process of pnstruction j anil said. “ That is the greatest building I in the city,” but never until -Vc scaffold ing is taken down do we amrecidle the ! work of the architect or theUkill of the j men who canned out his plai-t, and now ; t hat the scaffolding is being a hen down irom about Jacob we see his ifd manhood, i “I shall be gathered to myj people,” he said to those who were abd t him, and i that settles for me the mjfction as to whether we shall know eachptlier in the i other land. i . > “What is death, O whar j[ death? ’Tis slumber to the we a if, ’Ti-s rest to the forlorn, ’Tis shelter to the drear/, ’Tis peace amid the ’Tis the entrance to onnhorpe, ’Tis the passage to tha; Got Who bids His childrenjrome. When their weary coupe is trod.” “Bury me with my fathes.” he said, Genesis 49: 29-31. “And he chYged them, i and said unto them, I am to r; gathered onto my people; bury me wit.blny fathers j in the cave that i in the fieldhd Ephron. ! the Hittite. In the ?ave th; is in the ! field of Machpelah, which is bj pre Mamre v j in the land of Canaan, whip Abraham*! bought with the field, of Ephi n, the Hit- j tite, lor a possession of g bury-place. ! There they buried Abrahaitf and Sarah, I his wife: there they hnried Faao and Re- ’ bekah. his wife, and thr-r** I Juried Leah,” 1 and that must have beep proces- i 15 inn which started from Ey\ jt to T’anaan | J can think lof another mrolssion a little j ■ike it. In 1881. not >Mr inn Luxor, n j great find was made and queens i a p ace called Del Elfßafi. For a long time the tourists had 'imn picking up j pieces of jewelry and Lbcr valuables j which the scholars knJpbelonged to (lie kings and queens of Mier ages, and ;;t j after much workßvwas found that r*. discovery-had been of the greatest value, and when the reße.sentatives of the ! Government made t™. way to Del El Bahri they really fount the mummy of the | groat Rharaoh and otierft who were bur- ; md with him. Thes? bodies were taken 1 out of the place of h 'ling, carried to the , Nile and floated off Jo Cairo, and it is said as the procession ■'moved along the cel- I cheated river, the Egyptians lined the bank j all the way 4o the iflv, threw dust into the air. fell upon ueir faces and cried aloud. “Pharaoh the freat has come again! ! Pharaoh the great J <as come again!” ]t [ must have h?cn like this when Jacob was fallen back to Car un, “Jacob, the great, ! has come afeain.” Hut at Igst they reach j the cave it Machfelali. and they plae* him there t|> rest. Abraham is there with j Sarah and Isaac with Kebekab and Jacob u ’ith Leah,land there they shall wait until j the tomb (is opened by the* coining of I Ghrist. anj hand in hand they shall go t | forth t?o nject Him. May God speed the Jay. J The Estimate of a Man. If a man be graqjous and courteous t? | strangers, it shows .that he i.s a citizen ol the world fand that his heart is no.island cut off from but a continent hat joins to them. If lie be eorniia.ssiojA ' a*e toward- the ..fflictions of others. ■■ i >how< that hi*-- heaft is like the noble | th.-it i.s wo nded itself when jt gives rip j balm. 1, he- easily pardons and remits 1 - offenses, i shows tnat his mind is planted I above injur.es, so tliat it cannot be. shot. I | if he be thankful for small benefits, it ! | -hows that he weighs men’s minds, and j I not their trash.--Catholic Mirror. PELVIC CATARRH CAUSES Palpitation of the heart, Cold Hands and Feet, Sinking Feelings—Pe-ru-na Cures Catarrh Wherever Located. l\ j /I—L—. ; : \\ //; J : : i l VMrs.X.SchneiderT * | Mrs. X. SchiiMcier, 2409 Thirty-seventh l’lace, Chicago, 111., writes: ‘‘After tit king sever ill remedies without result, 1 be gun in January, lfWl, to take your valuable-remedy, I‘eruna. I was a complete wreck. Had palpitation of the heart, cold handsand feet, female weakness, no appetite, trembling, sinking feeling nearly ail the time, l’ou sa id l was suffering with systemic catarrh, and 1 believe that I received your help in the nick of time, 1 followed your direct ions carefully and can say to day that lam welt again. 1 cannot jhwnk you enough for my cure. J will always be your debtor. J have already recommended I'eruna to my friends and neighbors and they all praise 11. I wish that all suffer ing women would try it. 1 testify this according to the truth.” — Mrs. X. Schneider. Over half the women have catarrh in mmmm; .r The Woman Men Admire I Ro!,a! Slßr C9rSßf Co ’ \ SOUTHERN DENTAL COLLEGE, A, fc*- If you are interested in obtaining- a dental education wrilo for free catalogue of full instruction. Address Dr. J". tL 1 . loafer, D<tan, Fil I nniflii Uldg.. Mllci:ita t Ca. BOTT ."PTRtS PQ engines mmzz-xmaJr oMuhxax nrlnw—fl naLnauiJ Vk/ I/Ulks, Stiit’k). . S I,4U(i -pi|>WH P.lld .'•O0(i|.liOO v* oik, Shaftlnp, 1 ulleys, (Irariwc, Boxrs, Klc. BriltldLng UnmlugH • ot ever day; c.a* I’tttdiy, .:00 linn ib. l.oin lilird I<ou ii dry, Dliicklue hikl )iwil-r Worlu, Au/u-'ln C>.'i iMs4ooiueisHrßEE: We will vo tlie above t ward to any perwhj who will correctly r/ranire the above Voders to m>M names <>: three American oitiON. Use each letter but cir-e Try it. win poKitively niv - the mom* uv.uy, , and you may te the fortunate person. Should there bo more tbamm net ot eorrect Mnm% - rs the merit:/ ■will 1)0 divkhe] ctiuttlJy. Forinatauoo, rtfiould five'pereon* send iniorrect answorH, each will should ten iwhoiin Hend in correct answers each will receive S4O; t-Wfity permn**, |iConch. Wo do this to introduce onr firm and poodti \v* handle ao ipiiclvly iio possible, i-haif no money with your answoi, This a fr contest. A post card will do. Those who have, not received fcnytduff from other c meats try this one. NATIONAL SUPPLY CO., Niagara Falls, Ontario. Malsby & Company, 41 S. Forsyth Bt., Atlanta, Ga. Engines and Boilers fitnasi Hatvr If eaters, Steam Pomps and Fembertliy Injectors. Manufacturers and Dealers In SAW MILL Si. Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Uin Machin ery and Grain Separators. SOLID and IWSKKTKL Saws. Saw Teeth and Vtniicl.t’s Patent Mill and Kegiri Stcpaim, Governors, Crate Kars and a full line of Mill Supplies Price and quality of p'oods guaranteed. Ofttaloffue free by nrientlonliig ttils paper rv:£***n*%w****%*VL*w**L*yrn I HEADACHE „ “V l flouredCpie | J 5 Also Feverishness, Sick Heedaonc -J Nervous Headache etc, and w J .Stic. At hrii“ stores. v€ t DROPSY 10 O.’.rT Tr.LATME.NT FREE. Xlavo made Dropry and its com plicatior.a atpctiaiiy for tweaty years with tfie dost wcaderfal vaccess. Have cared many thotta aad case*. v r;.fira.6srsM'3 B:iJC, Eox ii ' Atlanta, Ga. k> I HE mom E RE Me DV CO . f.Ls’i , ATLAfTTA.UA. n&mtZm Thompson’s Eys Water J so;ne form or another. And yet, probably, • not a tenth of the women know that their • disease is catarrh. To distinguish catarrh •of various organs it has been named very • differently. J One woman has dyspepsia, another bron • ehitis, another Bright’s disease, another • liver complaint, another consumption, an ti other female complaint. These women J would tie very much surprised to hear that they are all suffering with chronic catarrh. • But it is so, nevertheless. • Kaeh one of these troubles and a great' many more are simply catarrh —that is. ehronie inflammation of the mucous lining of which ever organ is affected. Any internal remedy that will cure catarrh in one loca tion will cure it in any other. This is why Peruna has become so justly famous in the cure of female diseases. It cures catarrh wherever located. Its cures remain. Pe runa does not palliate—-it cures. Hon. Joseph B. Crowley, Congressman from Illinois, writes from Robinson, 111., the following praise for the great catarrhal tonic Peruna. Congressman Crowley says: “Mrs. Crowley has taken a number of bottles of Peruna on account of nervous troubles. It lias proven a strong tonic and lasting cure. 1 can cheerfully recommend it.” — J. It. Crowley. A catarrh hook sent free by The Peruna Medicine Cos., Columbus, Ohio. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a fr” statement of your case and he will be pleased to give yon his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. llartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. nmm I did net know what it was to eat a good bnakfast in the morning. By noon I would become so sick and have gnat pain and discomfort. I got so that I would do without eating as feng as 1 could, so as to avoid the msotfy. At night I could not sleep, rhe doctors said 1 had nervous i n-d.gest ion. 1 heard much about Ripaiti Tabules and at last I thought 1 waild try them. I had only taken oie box when 1 obtained relief. At trugglsts. The Five-Cent pwleet !* enough for an ordinary oeoasioi. The family bottle, €b cents, eootulm a supply for a year. HEDICAL DEPARTMENT Tulane Lniverfty of Louisiana. Ft/unded in iKM,ond ws has H,Ki4- (JradnatAt. It* advantage*. toy practital instruction, both in ample lb Ihhutm it. und abiind&'f hospital materia l> ar ’ine- Qtiailtfd. iucumi h *v u 101. great ('li/tr.ty Hov pita. witn Hoc b**<l* and annually. Spheral instruction ig’frivei) dal at the btdfpdn nr jack- The neit ***:on begins < cwbn ?<Hi. likfi Fur cata logue and information ardrewi Yb<>V. S- E <;hati.AK, M. I> , Dean, P. O. Druv-rte l. New Organs. la. HOME STUDY. PLNMAXBHIP, etc , rccfcsfall y liinght by mail (or ro ciiArgc^ Drauihon’s Bus. Colleges Vi Ik-. St. Doaia, AtUnta, Moatgom try, Fort Worth, Caiveaton, Little Rock, Shre vrjJort. May deposit money in b.’n^B t 13 position i 6**ur*-<l. la.ooo Ptudoots. Ii:x;klcl on Horn Stqdy-’or t -ttiU-tfr. hep. <>(). Orau jhon’s Bus. Coll. Nashville, Xfllj * .. .. >,-• llu*** lt-nu-d - .At^HSSgEgH 4 lm AU uV™AjLS. Ilißßl }' -\t < • r;xh fcyriip. T.'u-Ja y (mj.wl. I HH| in time. Sold by