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AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS.
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO
THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD “CASTORIA,” AND
“PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” AS OUR TRADEMARK.
I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts,
was the originator of “CASTORIA,” the same that
has borne and does now bear on every
the fac- simile signature of wrapper.
This is the original “CASTO RI A” which has been used in
the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty years.
LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is
the kind you have always bough t on the
and has the signature of wrap
per. No one has authority from me to use my name except
The Centaur Company, of which Chds. H. Fletcher is President.
March 24,1898.
. JO.
Do Not Be Deceived.
Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting
a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you
(because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in¬
gredients of which even he does not know.
“The Kind You Have Always Bought”
BEARS THE SIGNATURE OF
Insist on Having
The Kind That Never Failed You.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET. NEW YORK CITY.
TYPEWRITERS!
Be progressive and keep up with age. Typewriters are now a : eces.sity
in every line of business.
TYPEWRITERS FROM $15.00 UP.
Remingtons, Smith-Premiers, New Franklins, Densmi ris,- \Vili.nms Cur
graphs, and all
STANDARD MAKES.
At Astonishing Prices. Largest Exclusive Typewriter House in the South
Best Equipped TYPEWRITER REPAIR PLANT In the South.
SEE THE NEW FRANKLIN-
The 875.00 Anti-Trust Machine. SEND FOR CATALOGUE.
Southern Typewriter Headquarters,
41 i Peactree St., Atlanta, Ga.
ALL ROADS ARE ALIKE TO A MONARCH. fdhg
Perfection is the result of our
experience.
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MONARCH AND DEFIANCE BICYCLES
♦ *
are the product of mechanical ingenuity.
$ 40.00 $ 50.00 $ 60.00
Monarch ChamlesS $100.00
Send fer ISOS Catalogue.
Agents wanted in open territory.
MONARCH CyCLE SV2FC. CO M
Lake, Halsted nnc! Fulton Streets, Chicago.
Branches—Kevv ’?cr!t, London and Hamburg.
Sand tan 2.cent stamps for c Seek of Mlonorch Ptayina Cards Illustrating
Lillian Russell, Torr. Copper,Lee Richardoon and V/alter Jones.
Are you Going to paint. <V m -'
® ® ® @ ®
Use “Southern Home Paint.”
Guaranteed the best Paint made-, No adultera¬
tion. It is strictly pure and will cover more
surface thaq any adulterated goods.............
Made in 3Q Beautiful Colors!
F. J.Cooledge & B ro.,
Paint and Varnish Makers,
Savannah & -Atlanta,.
FORAGE CROPS THE i
HOPE OF FARMERS
i
Best Means of Supplementing ]
Food Supplies.
NESBITT GIVES POINTERS
__
Agricultural Commissioner on the
Course to Pursue In View of the
High Wheat Prices and With the
Prospect of a Continuance of Such
Market Conditions.
Department of Agriculture,
Atlanta, Juno 1, 1SD8.
With wheat quoted at an almost un¬
precedented figure and prices of other
food crops advancing, and with the
prospect ctf such market conditions be¬
ing sustained for at least some mqntlis
to come, prudent farmers are now cast
about for practical means of supple¬
menting their food supplies. There is
no section of the world in which a
greater variety of
FORAGE CROPS
may lie grown than in the south, aiul as
a measure of safety it would be well for
Georgia farmers to pit in such of these
crops as our surroundings and opportu¬
nities render possible. First and fore¬
most comes
FORAGE CORN AS A FODIjSr. CROP OR FOR
silagkI
As to the best methods of managing
this crop there are somewhat conflicting
opinions, but these result from a mis¬
apprehension rather than from any real
difference in the proper plans for plant¬
ing, cultivating, etc. ft depends upon
the purpose for which the crop is in¬
tended, as to which method should be
adopted. If the crop j|s in bended for
fodder, that is, to be cu and cured, the
object is to secure a hu so yield of small
and medium sized stalks, having an
abundance of leaves and littlo grain.
The plants may, therefore, bo pl.iutod
in narrow rows and crovlded in the drill.
In is dried curing out this and crop the hare ijirplus nutritious moisture
we a
forage, which, snppleme^'ted with grain,
makes a good and complete ration. But
in planting eorn for tho^ silo, tbe object
is to secure a good yield of well de¬
veloped stalks, each one bearing at least
one well grown ear upon it. Tbe plants
must not be crowded . ;oo closely to¬
gether. The Tows shou - be at least S to
Ifeet apart, and the plants should stand
from 16 to 20 inches in the row. If the
plants stand closer than this the stalks
do not have room to ma .uro sufficiently
and the consequence is watery stalks,
and the ears which form are not well
filled with grain. Silage made from
such corn as this is apt t -'be very unsat¬
isfactory-sour and innii tious. From
this explanation we see t! ; fodder corn
ihould he crowded as lose as the
strength of the land will admit, while
x corn crop intended for the silo should
have sufficient distance to produce a
heavy yield of stalks and ears suffi¬
ciently matured to be cured into good,
sweet silage.
TIIE PEA CROP.
Field peas give us another crop for
forago, of which too much cannot bo
said. Among the many advantages of
this crop is tho fact that it can be sovn
from May until July, and : »lso that it
can be utilized as a three-foild food, for
man, for beast and for tho land. No
matter in what, way we dec kle to use it
it will return with internet whatever
amount we have invested in. it.
MILLET.
Millet also may be seeded, at any time
from May to August, and though it re¬
quires richer land and m< tre thorough
preparation than corn or peas, it is a
good investment where fo/age promises
to be short. One bushol of German
millet, sown on an acre of land, well
prepared and the seed luir -owed in, will
make a heavy yield, andjvrHen cured at
the proper time, that is b .e the seeds
mature, will make a mt—t .acceptable ad¬
dition to our forage supply'.
SORGHUM.
Sorghum is a crop which should find
a place on every Georgia farm. It is
not affected by drouth to the ruinous
degree that our corn crop often is, and
the stalk and the grain are both ex
cellent food for cattle and hangs, besidos
which there is usually a good demand
for the syrup. With the improved sys
tem of evaporating, now in gfcneral use,
the syrup has become a desir.-itble article
of food in most farm households. Dur¬
ing the hot season the man wbto is for¬
tunate enough to have a torghuan patch
is assured of green food for his stock
when every other crop is drying up,
while the cured fodder makes a nutri¬
tious and appetizing feed for the winter
months.
It is not too late to plant any of fSiese
four crops—indeed, all may be planted
later than this date, and undk-r favor¬
able conditions will be very sat* factory.
Though there are other crops, which
in time may supersede them, we would
advise, as we have, these four forage
crops of such well known value, and
with the cultivation of which we a n so
thoroughly familiar that wo do not
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
venture, except by way of experiment
on a small scale, on the culture of new
and untried crops. It is well for each
farmer to give his attention to these
new crops and to thoroughly satisfy
himself as to their merits before under
taking their culture to any large extent.
In these days, when inquiries are
— ?.
of certain insecticides, and when Paris
green Is coming inta 6uch general use,
the folKWIng f
cheap substitute fob PARIS op.hen,
which has been thoroughly tested at
the Ohio Experiment Station, may be
of service in reducing the cost in cases
where largo quantities are used.
White arsenic, inn soluble form, costs
about one-third as much as Paris
green, and unlike the latter gives no
troublo in the way of settling. Paris
green does not dissolve readily and needs
constant agitation to keep it from set¬
tling. Here is the formula:
Dissolve 2 pounds of commercial white
arsenic and 4 pounds of carbonate of
soda (washing soda) in 2 gallons of wa¬
ter and use 1 1 A pints of this mixture This to
50 gallons of Bordeaux mixture.
will be found sufficient for any purpose
where a combination mixture for fun¬
gus and insect pests is required. As for
instance, potato blight (fungus), and
potato bugs (insect): apple scab (fun¬
gus), and apple worms (insect). bulletin,
The easiest way, says the to
make the solutions is to put both the
white arsenic and the carbonate of soda
in a gallon of boiling water, keep boil¬
ing about 15 minutes, or until a clear
liquid is formed, and then dilute to 2
gallons. it is
This is the season when neces¬
sary to wage an unceasing warfare
against all kinds of insect and fungus
pests, and the above combination of
Bordeaux and white Arsenic, is effective
destroying a large proportion of those
most annoying and destructive enemies.
The horticulturist or farmer, indeed any
man, who looks to t in products of the
soil as the reward ot his labor, would do
well to study the diseases and insects
which are "liable to attack his special
crops and at the first indication of their
presence use active and prompt meas¬
ures to prevent serious injury. Some¬
times a few days’ delay in using proper
remedies is fatal, more especially in the
rapidly maturing crops. Personal ob¬
servation in the different sections of the
state confirm the reports of promising
crop conditions, although in some sec¬
tions the dry weather has retarded the
satisfactory devolopmont of the young
plants and cut off the oat crop.
R. T. Nesbitt, Comissioner.
^Mothers!
T forts dangers HE discom-__ and of //4 l A -n > us
child-birth be almost can ]
ta
tirely WineofCardui-^ avoided.AL v iSH
relieves ex
pectaut moth¬
ers. It gives
tonetothegen- italorgans,and
them ia '•'O]
condition puts to do their work
perfectly. That makes preg¬
nancy less painful, shortens
labor and hastens recovery after
child-birth. It helps a woman
bear strong healthy children.
o NY ELREE’5
0
I has also brought happiness to
thousands of homes Barren for
| years. to loving A few doses hearts often that brings long
joy for darling baby. No
a woman
.5 should neglect to try it for this
trouble. It cures nine cases out
V of ten. All druggists sell Wine
of Cardui. $i .oo per bottle.
For *Jvlce In cases requiring special
directions, address, trivinir symptoms,
the ''Ladles’ Advisory Department,” Co.,
The Chattanooga Medicine ChatU
nooga, Tenn.
c
Mrs. LOCISA HALE,
of Jefferson. Ga., says:
•‘When I first took Wine of Ci-dnl
we had boon married three years, but
eould not have any children. Nino
months later I had a fine ylrl baby.”
rlwanted Money Makers
2 » » not couiTterfeiters
w Ecan showany steady teinR and earnest ^
Bias how he caa make rood wages
handling our publications. We dori t
% refer to experienced m«u, but to those «
^ who have never gold anything. Justnow we
j are pushing our
RevcrsiDlc AVip of ft\c
United States and World
64 x 46 inches in size,
xi beautiful colors.
edition and corrected to date.
New railroads, new towns.
New counties.
The largest sheet. map printed on a
*. single
* It is
A (^holograph of Hie World
» One tide shows a colored map of ecr great
Country, with railroada, oceutier. riv.u.
“ J towns, etc. Tbe other tide show., an equally "
elegant map of tho World, locating all count
% ries at a glance by help of a marginal ir.J' £
a; It also shows ocean current!. roi.tea ci cr - -
eoverers, and accurately local's the scenes )
J of all current events, such as bcundtry cis- *
Tput... J Cuban battles, Arincnion ma».ar:es, f ft
polar expeditions. Alaskan gold holds, nr.
•I Send us your address and We wilt ailsise A
I you bow you can secure a cco:.iy ag-m or
Xj "I send prepaid ftr.oo express. and wo wilt forvraid a cr..y Ly %
Our men clear from *ao. to*jo -'-a.y.rpni A
the start hy fellewing our clue plan of vor. A
, If you get samples and don’t want to cn- :
t gage with 11 s you can relurn same and t-r t X
^ your cash back. Your newspaper or bants ,
^ will tell you ere aru responsible. \
RAND, McNALLY & CO. .
61 East Ninth Street, New- VSyrkTCUy f
A. !■ STROM 5
Watchmaker & Jeweler,
Richard’.- Store, Crawfordvifle, G-,
| Rapair Work a Specialty-
A Woman's w
*1
Heart. ' i.
■fi
The wife of a clergyman tells the story of her suffer*
ing with neuralgia of the heart , with the hope that her
experience may indicate to others the way to regain
health.
Few bodily afflictions arc more terrible
than heart disease. To live in constant
dread and expectation of death, sudden,
instant death, with last farewells unspoken,
is for most people more awful to contem¬
plate than the most severe lingering illness.
The slightest excitement brings great
suffering and danger to people so afflicted.
Such was the experience of the wife of
a well-known clergyman. She tells her
story “I feel,” for the sake said, of speaking doing good carefully to others. and
she
weighing her words, “ that Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills for Pale People relieved me of a
lifetime of sickness and sorrow, and 1 cheer¬
fully recommend them.”
This grateful woman is Mrs. Wamsley,
wife of the Rev. C. E. Wamsley, who lives
an West Sheridan Street, Greensburg, Ind.
She continued:
“ My heart became affected after the birth
of my youngest child, about six Frequently years ago.
“ The pain was constant. it
grew so severe I would be forced to cry out.
“ I could not endure any excitement
“It would increase the pain so I would
scream and fall down in a state of collapse.
In this condition I was helpless.
“These spells would come on me at
home, in the street, or anywhere I might be.
“ 1 could not sleep at night. I ate very
little.
“ Different doctors were called in. They
said I had neuralgia of the heart, resulting
from nervous prostration.
When You Need
Lumber, Laths, Lime,
Shingles, Mouldings, Doors. Sash, Bllmls, Cement, Plaster Paris. Plastering
Hair, Sewer Pipe for your well or ditches, Jars for your Lard, Jugs for your
Syrup, etc.,
Bolts, Hinges, and Screws for Your Doors or Blinds,
Nails, Locks, Coat or Hat Hooks, She f Brnekeis or anything else you may
need in a COMPLETE HOUSE, Confer with tnc.
Washington Manufacturing Co.,
WASHINGTON, GEORGIA.
They will give you right prices every time you call on them.
taascrcbo for eho v Constitution
WEEK L Y
PUBLISHED AT ATLANTA, GA.,
lii COHMECHQH WITH v '-™ac23Z£B5»“
The Advocate-Democrat
:Y LSW THE PRICE EXTHEMELT OF « $ 1 . 75 .
• • •
\nd tend your guess with it, and we will forward all for you and thus
'<! Give You a Chance to Make Good ESpney;
The Advocate-Demo era T
-
Cr£v7fcrclvilh\ Gs
NEW. ENTERPRISE '1
STOVES “E' 200,000 Bvenr BATisrAonon. onm J aivina - ^
They nre iar.de of Gouthern Iron by Southern 17ottanen,
■who are .euotaliiect by tbe products of Southern Farmers.
They last longer and make more homes happy than any
ether St 07 C on earth- Fire back3 guaranteed for X5 years.
If your Dealer does no* handle them, WRITE FOR CATALOOGE.^
)Y
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Phillips & Buttorff Mg. Co.
NASHVILLE, TENN.
UAWJfASTUf so rf
COOKING AND III ^ING STOVES,
Mantels and Grates, Hq-. Tinware, Etc.
PtAUfts IN
China, Crockery and Glassware, Cutleos
WOODEN AND WILLOWWARS.
Everything noeessary and convenient L-J /
lor the Kitchen, Dining Room, w •
Laondry and Dairy. A SPECIALTY.
f “ The dfi^tpxs treated me, but the relkf
ev gave aid not last.
I was a physical wreck, local wheti describing my cyt
fell on an item in the paper
how Mrs. Evans, of West End, had been
cured by Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pal*
People. “I Her other suffering sufferers was who like mine. read this
hope the faith 1 had when I
account will have
read of Mrs. Evans. A
“ My husband bought me one box cl
pills. The change they made in my con¬
dition was encouraging. I took anothr
box; “ then bought I gained six more in health, boxes. streng*
All the time
hope, nerve force—steadily, surely bciji.ee.' 1 j
''Before I finished the eighth
the treatment. I felt perfectly wefl, ant
doctor said I was entirely cured.” ^Wams*
To add weight to her story Mrs.
ley made affidavit to its truth before John.
F. Russell, a Notary Public of Greensbutijh
Neuralgia of the heart is only derange¬ one m
many serious evils that grow out of
ments of the nervous system or of thebloo*
The remedy that expels impurities from
the blood and supplies the necessary matey*
ials for rapidly rebuilding wasted nerve tto*
sues reaches the root of many serious dis e ases.
It is these virtues that have given Da
Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People their
wonderful curative powers In diseases that
at first glance seem widely different, by i all
This famous remedy is for sale
druggists for 50 cents a box; or six boxes
for $2.50.