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Cotton Must Have
Potash is an cssential plant food
which must be added as a fertilizer §
b or the soil will
7 !
become ex
’ X ~ hausted, as is §
b A 0 N i true of so
\&‘ W, many cotton
' "‘\g\\_ \b‘ fiCIdS.
r ~~s‘ oA 47,
W B R N {
p ’\ ‘?*Jcfi @ ‘\'h'e have books
S b‘l’;"‘:’:"‘ S giving valuable de
vpY 4 '4‘ ':.:, tails about fertiliz-
Y ers. We will send
them free to any farmer who asks us for them,
GERIMAN KALI WORKS,
Néw York —OB Nassau Street, or
Atlanta, Ga.--22% 80, Broad Bt.
Machi
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TAet- Wi s SRS
T D AR WL
PRATT. MUNGER.
WINSHIP.
EAGLE. SIMTH.
We make the most complete lime of any
concern in the world, We also make
ENGINES and BOILERS,
LINTERS for OIL MILLS.
We sell everything needed about a Cotton Gin,
Write for Illustrated Catalogue.
| Gin Co..
Continental Gin Co.,
Birmingham, Ala.
Saw Mills
Th.A Deloach Patent Variable Friction Feed
Saw Mill with 4 h. p. cuts 2, 000 feet per day. All
sizes and‘lpricel to suit. Del.oach Shingle Mills,
Ed{lers. rimmers, Planers; Corn and Buhit
Mills, Water Wheels, Lath Mills, Wood Saws.
Our handsome new Catalog will interest you
Del.oach Miil Mfg. Co., Box 834, Atlanta, G 2
IR, AR AT RRR RI B R AU BRI RN EOR R RE ißonm Re,
. Our Latest Im-
R lar Saw Mills,
with Hege's Universal Log Beams,Rectilin
ear, Bimultaneous Set Worksand the Hea
oook—}ing Variable Feed Works are unex
celledc for ACCURACY, SIMPLICITY, DURABII
ITY AND EASE OF OPERATION. Write for full
desorlxtlve eirculars. Manufactured by the
SALEM IRON WORKS,Winston-Salem,N.C.
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ALABASTINE
the Durabale Wall Coating,
Wen't Rub Off;
WHY?
Beocause it cements to, and
is not stuck on the wall with
deoaying, animal glue, as are
the various so-called ‘““wall fin
fis.” which are kalsomines
under fanciful names.
You can apply Alabastine. .
aFx
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: k.;; 6PO e
> Co?
T e, ke
A LT PR A R
oy “L»‘_ ‘.“‘\‘ 2 3 1}7% % 5 i
CRIRRP L s,
e i , ;Lv{&ij,
L o~ 0
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”: 7 5% . ,’-.‘-‘3’ ..{&1.
s 84/ YW et 7N K
£ LA 0 g A AL gl Tl B
R | e X s
B :\:\};g owB (i
% Miss Alice Bailey, of =
Atlanta, (la., escaped the sur=
geon’s knife, by using Lydia BE.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
“DeEAR Mns. PINkuAM :— I wish to
express my gratitude for the restored
health and happiness Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound has
broug}lllt into my life.
*1 had suffered for three years with
terrible pains at the time of menstrua
tion, and did not know what the trouble
was until the doctor pronounced it in
flammation of the ovaries, and
proposed an operation.
‘] felt so weak and sick that I felt
sure that I could not survive the ordeal,
and so I told him that I would not un
dergo it. The following week I read
an advertisement in the pa){]er of your
Vegetable Compound in such an emer
gency, and so I decided to tryit. Great
was my joy to find that I actuvally im-
Proved after taking two bottles, so I
tegt taking it for ten weeks, and at the
end of that time I was cured. I had
gained eighteen pounds and was in
excellent health, and am now.
‘* You surely deserve great success,
and you have my very best wishes.” —
Miss Arice Barnxy, 50 North Boule
vard, Atlanta, Ga. — g6OOO forfeit if original
m:wc letter proving genuineness eannot be pro-
All sick women would be wise
if they would take Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound and
be well.
MALsSBY & Co.
4| South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga.
_ ™ ,-')‘
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NS Jit 1‘ '
% sty SAT RTITL T I h
“&_._ “_L-_';.,.\ Y ..,'3'_3)) .'{' it (R ALI 3 L }
R\ R By e N DTS
Portable and Stationary
w .l
Engines, Boilers,
&
Saw Mills
Co:nplste line carried in stock for
IMMEDIATE shipment.
Best Machinery, Lowest Prices and Best Terms
Write us for catalogue, prices,
etc., before buying.
The Only Sanitary and Permanent Wall Coating .
LABASTINE s not a discase-breeding, hot water glue wall finish, furnish
ing & lodgment and harbor-ground for disease germs; it is a natural, rock-base
ocomposition, in white and many exquisitely beautiful tints; in powder form, ready
for use by simply mixing with ecold water. Anyone can brush it on.
ALABASTINE cements to walls, distroys disease germs and vermin, and never rubs
off or scales. Other wall coatings, under fanoiful names, and usually mixed with hot
water, are unhealthful kalsomines, stuck on the wall with glue, which soon rots,
nourishes germs of deadly disease, rubs and scales, spoiling walls, clothing and furniture.
When it is necessary to refinish, the old coats must be washed off—-an expensive, nasty,
disagreeable job, making the reoms damp and unfit to live in.
When walls are once coated with Alabastine, suoceeding coats may be applied, year
after year, without washing the walls, thus saving great expense and annoyance.
Hot and Cold Water Kalsomines Have No Merit
Some dealers try to sell them, buying them cheap, and trying to sell on Alabastine’s demand
until such time as their customers learn of the imposition.
< THEY ARE WORTHLESS PREPARATIONS
If you cannot buy Alabastine of your hardware, paint or drug dealer, refuse all
imitations, and write us. We will tell you where you can get Alabastine without delay,
or sell it to you direct. $8500.00 GIVEN AWAY. Write for particulars.
Leafiet of daint tlnt-' hints on dooorltln{. and our artists’ up-to-date id beau
tifying the home, I!n.. finy Alabastine only in packages, properly l:.beTea. o o
Alabastine Company (e vo e v OH.
p y and 105 Water St, Rew York City.
A Martyr.
“She has such a Christian spirit it
actually pains her to talk gcanda\."
“Yes, but it is gives so much plcas
ure to her friends she undergoes the
suffering as a Christian duty.”—Judge.
Journalism.
Reporter—Senator Bilgins has abso
lutely nothing to say.
Editor—Well, boil it down. We are
terribly crowded tonight.
Reeder—‘“Scott said a clever thing
to-day; said that luck is a good bit
like lightning; for it seldom strikes
twice in the same place.”” Heeder—
“Yes, and as a rule neither of them
needs to.””—Pennsylvania Punch Bowl
There is moro Catarrh in t%is section of the
country than all other diseases put together,
and until the last few years was supposed to
be incurable. Fora great many years doctors
pronounced it a local disease and prescribed
local remedies, and by constantly failing to
cure with local treatment, pronounced it in
curable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a
constitutional disease and therefors requires
constitutional treatment. Hall’'s Catarrh
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure
on the market, It istaken internallyindoses
from 10 drolps toateaspoonful. Itacts direct
ly on the blood and mucous surfacss of the
system. They offer one hundred dollars for
any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars
and testimonials, Address F.J. CHENEY &
Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75e.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
“Gracious,” sighed Mr. De Spepsey,
“I wish I could acquire an appetite.”
“For goodness’ sake!” exclaimed his
wife, “what do you want with an ap
petite? It would only give you more
dyspepsia.”’—Phiiadelphia Press.
" Billlon Dollar Grass and Alfalfa,
When we introduced Billion Dollar
Grass three years ago, little did we dream
it would be the most talked of grass in
America, the biggest, quick, hay producer
on earth, but this has come to pass.
Agr. Fditora wrote about it, Agr. Col
lege Professors lectured about It, Agr. In
stitute Orators talked about it, while in
the farm home by the quiet fireside, in the
corner grocery, in the village postoffice, at
the creamery, at the depot, in_fact wher
ever farmers gathered, Salzer’s Billion Dol
le © Grass, that wonderful ;irass, (good for
5 to 14 tons per acre, and lots of pasture
besides, is always a theme worthy of the
farmer’s voice.
A. Walford, Westlore Farms. Pa., writes:
“I have 60 acres in Salzer’s Alfalfa Clover.
It is immense. I cut three crops this sea
son and have lots of pasture besides.”
JUST BEND THIS NOTICE AND 10C. IN
; STAMPS
to the John A. Salzer Seed Co,, La Crosse,
Wis., and receive their big cata]oiand lots
of farm seed samples free. [A.C.L.]
_ There are about 12,000 lepers in the Phil
ippine Islands.
H. H, GReEEN’s Jons, of Atlanta, Ga., ara
the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the
world, See their liberal offer in advertise
ment in another column of this paper.
Warmed-over love is anything but satis
factory.
Piso’s Cure cannot be too highly spoken of
as a cough cure.—J. W. O’BriEN, 322 Third
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900,
Many a man would be glad if his wife
would talk to herself.
" TAKING THE OATH.
Different People Approach the Cere
] mony in Different Ways.
To many people the taking of an
oath on the Bible is a trifling matter,
but to others it is an act of most se
rious import, says the Philadelphia
Telegraph. It is quite an interesting
experience to witness the manner in
which men and women prepare to tell
“the truth, the whole truth and noth
ing but tae truth,” whether it be in
poliée station, coroner’s, civil or crim
‘inal court. Policemen carelessly slap
a heavy hand on the leaves, Hebrews
cover their heads and upraise the
right hand before kissing the book,
sailors stand at ‘“attention,” negroes
and foreigners very often fear to
touch the Holy Writ, while some un
believers contemptuously try to shove
the volume aside. Kissing the book
has been abolished on account 'of sani
tary reasons, but many persons still
consider their oaths to be more bind
ing if they can press moist or tobacco
stained lips against germ infected
covers. Others “swear not at all,” but
affirm,
A novel experience with a witness
about to take an oath befell Attorney
Gallagher in Judge Sulzberger’s court
on Tuesday. The cases of seven poeti
cal Chinamen who had been faring
somewhat better than ordinary poets,
because they wrote tneir couplets on
policy slips, were being heard, and
Moy Wong was called as the third Ce
lestial witness for the prosecution.
Mr. Gallagher, for the defense, chal
lenged the witness’ veracity, claiming
that the Chinese did not understand
nor revernce the Bible enough to take
an oath. Judge Sulzberger differed
with him, but the question was set
tled by the witness’ own words, calm
ly delivered in excellent English: “I
am a Christian and believe in this
book. I am secretary of the Chinese
Religious Society also.” The lawyer
did not have a word to say. The inci
dent provoked the recital of another
by a lawyer later in the day.
“In New York a woman arriving
here on one of the liners from Ger
many a few years ago wuas arrested
upon landing. She was accused of
being the most wicked female crimi
nal in Germany, and had fled the coun
try to escape punishment for being
a partner ig a conspiracy to murder
and rob.
“In her daring carecer of crime she
was said to have committeed three
murders, had punched the eyes out of
a child’s head with an umbrella, had
robbed continuously, besides acting
as a ‘fence’ for stolen goods, and had
been imprisoned on fifty occasions.
‘When detained and taken in court she
maintained that she was not the wo
‘man wanted, and swore to the truth:
of her assertion upon the Bible. When
confronted by persons who had known
her in early life, she repeated this
oath with blasphemous additions. Still
the officers were not convinced, and
finally one of them suggested that
she take her oath upon a crucifix in
stead of upon a Bible. This oath sol
emnly calls upon God to witness the
truth of the testimony about to be
given, and to record it for the Judg
ment Day.
“When the woman heard this pro
posal she paled visibly,. and tried to
uphold the little cross in her trem-.
bling right hand. But the demand was
tco much. Shrieking, lamenting, curs
ing, she broke down and confessed to
a lifetime of evil that shocked even.
the hardened officials who were
forced to listen to the recital.” .
Waste of Millions. -
Dalnay harbor, near Port Arthur,
built by Russia for an ice-free termi
nal port for the Siberian railway at a
cost of 17,000,000 rubles, is a disap
poinment, for since the breakwater
has been built it freezes over as did
Vladivostok. The nearest possible
ice-free bay is in Korean territory.
Swiss watches, according to a re
port just published, are becoming pop
ular in China. Those with fantastic
designs on the face find the most
.ady sale.