Newspaper Page Text
— Ml- ■
The Remarkable Way in which Adam Salm
Acquired Success and Happiness,
From the Vernon Timet, Vernon, N. T.
Every one in Vernon and for miles around
knows honest, good natnred Adam Salm, and
not only in Vernon Center, N. Y., where he
has resided for twenty-eight years and con
ducts his large and well-kept farm, but wher
ever he is known his word is respected.
His happiness, success in life and even life
itself was due to a victory over disease.
“ It was a wonderful victory” he says,
“from the dreadful disease which threatened
to vitiate my life and one that has made life
miserable for thousands and filled innumer
able premature graves. It is that form of dis
ease known as rheumatism, and which held
undisputed sway until its conquering enemy
came in the form of Dr. 'Williams’ Pink Pills
for Pale People.
“For a long time I experienced untold suf
ferings from the ravages of this fearful ail
ment All kinds of remedies were resorted
to for relief, but it was the same experience
that had come to countless victims of rheu
matism—immunity from excrnciating pam
for a time, but after temporary relief came
suffering once more, as the insidious malady
took a new grip on its distracted victim.
“I happened to learn of the wonderful
power oif Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale
People in conquering rheumatism, but long
suffering had made me incredulous as I had
spent many dollars for other remedies, with
out finding relief and this experience had
embittered me against proprietary medicines.
I finally concluded to try these pills and
bought one box of them, and before they were
all used I experienced a relief such as I had
not enjoyed since my affliction began. With
the depletion of the first box came another
and another until twelve boxes had beat <
sumed.
“Just six months from the time the first
box had been taken I was a cured man, and
with the consumption of the last pill went out
my blessing to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for
Pale People and to the management which is
spreading its efficacy throughout the world
relieving suffering humanity from the chains
of disease. This is no fairy tale, but a true
story prompted in the fullness of a grateful
heart, and given for the benefit of those who
may be similarly afflicted.”
This is to certify that the article published
in the Vernon Times of December 17, concern
ing my cure of rheumatism by the use of Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People is true
and published with my sanction.
Adam Salm.
Subscribed and sworn to before me.
Geo. L. Bowers, Notary Public.
The blood is the vital element in our lives
consequently it must be kept pure, rich and
red in order to have perfect health. The
cause of Mr. Salm’s sickness was impure and
impoverished blood. He had skilled medi
cal treatment and used many remedies, but
derived no benefit until he commences! to
take Dr.Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People
and these cured him.
This proves that this remedy is the best
means of imparting those elements that purify,
vitalize and enrich the blood, thus aiding
bodily functions and arousing every organ
into healthful action and in this way restor
ing the entire system. -
That is the reason why Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills for Pale People cure so many diseases,
why doctors prescribe them, why druggists
recommend them and why they are so umver-
ally used.
If You Want
HOUSTON COUNTY BUSINESS,
ADVERTISE IN
The HOME JOURNAL,
PUBLISHED WEEKLY, AT
PERRY, GEORGIA,
TJclo Oo , uirLt37‘ Slte.
OFUICIAL ADVERTISING MEDIUM OP THE
COUNTY OFFICERS.
COEEECT PBICES.
T j HE delights of an evening spent around a well-lighted read
ing table are not half understood. An illustrated magazine
, with its wealth of illustrations, its stories of adventure and
' love, its descriptions of travel which carry you to the remotest
ends of the earth, and its instructive articles for young and old—these
are the first requisites for your own enjoyment and the entertainment
and proper education of your children.n '
To secure for you the best and most interesting of the great illus
trated magazines at the lowest possible price has been the aim of the
editor of this journal. That we have succeeded we leave our readers
to judge. A special contract recently entered into with The Cosmo
politan, which seeks to become better known in this neighborhood, has
enabled us to offer you a year’s subscription to the greatest of the illus
trated magazines together with a year’s subscription to this journal,
| BothTogetherOnelejrfo[|filf$]2,05,
In this way you secure your own home paper and an illustrated
magazine at a price that is only about a fourth of what some of the
illustrated magazines sell for. For three years The Cosmopolitan has
undisputedly claimed that it reached the largest clientele possessed by
any periodical, daily, weekly or monthly, in the world. It was The
Cosmopolitan which sent Julian Hawthorne to India to let the world
know the real horrors of famine and plague. It was The Cosmopol
itan which established at its own cost a great Free Correspondence
University which now has over 20,000 students on its rolls. It was
The Cosmopolitan which offered a prize of $3,000 for the best horse
less carriage and prizes for best plans for public baths, and best arrange
ment of sewer and pipe systems for cities. It was The Cosmopolitan
which set the presidents of great schools and universities seriously
discussing the defects of existing educational systems. It is The
Cosmopolitan whose enterprise is always in the lead in advancing the
world’s civilization.
QUERIES AND
INFOR3IATIOX KOR FARMERS AS
FURNISHED BY COMMIS
SIONER STEVENS.
LIGHT ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS
How “Worn Out*’ Land Gan Be Be»
stored, the Eradication of Bor*
muda and Other Grasses.
Question.—I am a new comer to
Georgia and have just bought a farm in
Cobb county. One field of abont 80
acres, fairly level. Is covered with a
growth of young pines, and the land is
said to be worn one Can this land be re
stored,and if so how? It has a clay subsoil.
Answer. — No land in Georgia is
“worn out,” if it has a clay subsoil,and
the top soil Is not all washed away. By
continnons planting of a single crop the
plant food preferred by that crop may
be so reduced in the soil that good re
sults can no longer be attained.
Or a long succession of clean
culture crops—such as cotton—might
so exhaust the bnmns in the soil
as to render it for the time being almost
barren. Snch conditions, however, do
not mean that the land is worn ont by
any means, for judicious cropping for a
few years will make it fertile. My ad
vice is to ent down the pines at onoe
and bum them on the land. Then
break the ground close and deep, and
afterwards barrow in a bushel of “Burt”
oats to the acre, harrowing in with the
oats 200 pounds of a good, complete fer
tilizer. As soon as the oats axe har
vested broadcast and plow in 4 to 5
pecks of field peas to the acre, tnrning
under with the peas 200 pounds of aide
phosphate and 100 pounds of kaihit.
This will insure you a fine crop of peas
and a good growth of vines. Gather
the peas when ripe, but let the vines
remain upon the land. Abont Nov. 1
turn under the dead pea vines and sow
6 peoks of Georgia raised rve to the
acre, to be turned under in the spring
before it rnns up to bead.
The turning under of the pea vines
and rye will furnish sufficient humus to
the Boil to warrant the planting of a
corn or cotton crop afterwards. Humus
is the great need of most of onf lands'
that have been cropped so long in cot
ton, and without its presence the appli
cation of commercial fertilizers is money ■
thrown away. A judicious rotation of
crops, in which the sowing of field peas
should always hold a prominent place,''
will prevent exhaustion of humus in the-
soil, and would diminish the amount of
socalled worn out land in Georgia.—
State Agricultural Department.
Pay From 91111c and Butter.
Question.—I can sell the milk from
several cows at 20 cents a gallon, or I
can sell the butter made from the same
milk at 30 cents a pound; which Will
pay the best?
Answer.—The sale of the milk will
be much more profitable than the sale
of the bntter at the prices mentioned.
The milk from an average dairy cow
will contain from 3 to 5 per cent, of but
ter fat. One pound of bntter fat will
make a little more than 1 pound Of bat
ter. Therefore it would take 83M
pounds, or 4 gallons of milk testing 8
per cent of bntter fat to make 1 pound
of bntter. It would take 25 pounds of
milk, or 3 gallons, testing .4 per cent of
bntter fat, and it would require 20
pounds, or 2% gallons of milk testing 6
per cent, of bntter fat, to make 1 pound
of bntter. You would thus get in the
first place SO cents, in the second 60
cents, and in the third 50 cents for the
milk, which if converted into bntter in
each case would only bring yon 30
cents. Of course, in making the bntter,
you would have the buttermilk left,
but adding its value to the butter would.
apt make any material difference. The
following table will give the exact num
ber of pounds of milk required to make
1 pound of bntter, according to the per
cent of bntter fat contained in the milk:
Per Cent. Lbs. Milk for
Fat in Milk. 1 lb Butter.
Circnlar No.-2. Jan. 18th,’ ’99.
To Nurserj men and Florists who are
shipping or may ship trees, shrubs
and other plants into the State of
Georgia:
- Yonr attention is called to seotion 13
of the Act of the General Assembly of
Georgia, approved Dec. 20, 1898, en
titled “an act to require the Commis
sioner of Agriculture to 'establish a
special department of Horticulture and
Pomology, to employ Entomologists,
eta, eta,” approved Dec. 21,1897, whioh
seotion reads as follows:
“Section 13. Each and every person
residing in states or countries outside of
the State of Georgia, dealing in or
handling plants, cuttings, trees, vines,
shrubs, bulbs and roots in this
2.8
31.1
3.0
29.0
3.2
27.2
25.5
3.6
242
3.8
22.9
4.0
21.7
4.4
4.8
5.0
5.4
5.8
6.0
145
7.0
12.4
A quart of milk weighs 2.15 pounds.—
State Agricultural Department.
Eradicating Bermuda Grass.
Question.—Bermuda grass is about,
to take one of my best fields in spite of;
all my efforts to get rid of it. Can yon!
give me directions by which I can exter- :
minate it?
Answer. —If the grass is confined .-Op!
one field I would not try to eradicate^,:
but would rather encourage its growth.
It will furnish yon for seven months in
the year the very best pasturage that
you could possibly have for all kinds of 1
stock and would in that way pay
better than any land on yonr farm. _
farms in this state have too little land
devoted to pastures, and therefore it Is
feed, feed, feed, for 12 months In the
year, to the detriment of onr pockets andi
the injury of our stock, that are never so
healthy as when on a good pasture.
If you are determined to get rid of.
the Bermuda grass the folloyjjng plan
will answer the purposes, living as you
do in North Georgia:
As a freeze will kill the
grass roots, yon should at once
them to the surface by running Under'
a tnrning plow, just'
them with
deep enough
roots. After
ing under'
to get
freeze,
under
harrow
thei
the
ground thoroughly and sow in oats,
the “Burt” variety being preferable ati
this late date in the season. As sfion as
you harvest the oats, sow down In cow
peas at the rate of five to six pecks to the
acre. The grass roots that escaped the,
freeze will be so shaded through the'
spring and summer by the oats and pea-
vines that most of them will die
ont and the remainder will be veiy
much enfeebled. Bright sunshine tt
essential for a vigorous growth qf {his
grass, and continuous shade result* in
its certain death.
If necessary, repeat the treatment a'
second year, only turning the grass
roots to tqe surface after eaeh hard
freeze and then sowing in spring oats,
from the middle to thelasfrof February.
This plan will completely eradicate SQ8
Bermuda grass. — State Agricultural
Department. '
We Have a Complete Stock and
Full assortment of Commercial
tationery, and duplicate Macon or
Atlanta prices in this class of work
Satisfaction guaranteed.
GIVE VS A TRIAL ORDER
An Honest Medicine for La Grippe.
George W. Waitt of South Gar
diner, Me., pays: “I have had the
worst cough, cold, chills and grip
and hav<*taken lots of trash of no
account but profit to the vendor.
Chamberlain’s Congb Remedy is
the only tbiDg that has done any
good whatever. I have used one
50 cent bottle and the chills, cold
and grip have all left me. I cod
gratulate the manufacturers of an
honest mpdicine.” For sale by
HolfzcJaw & Gilbert, , Perry, and
L. W. Stewart Myrtle, Ga.
shrubs,
shall register his name or firm, and file
& copy of his or its certificate of inspec
tion, furnished by the Entomologist,
Fruit Inspector, or duly authorized Gov
ernment Official of his state or country,
with the Chairman of the Board of Con
trol (Commissioner of Agriculture, At
lanta, Ga.). Upon failure so to do, said
stock shall be liable to confiscation upon
order of the Inspector.”
Attention is also directed to rules 6
and 6 of the rules and regulations
adopted by the Georgia State Board of
Entomology Jan. 18, 1899, acting in ac
cordance with the above cited act,
which sections read as follows:
Rule 5. Each and every ■ box, bundle
or package of trees, shrnbs or other
plants commonly known as nursery
stock, shipped in carload lots, or less
than carload lots, into the State of Geor
gia from any other state or country,
shall be plainly labeled with a certifi
cate of inspection fornisheg by the En
tomologist, Fruit Inspector, or other duly
authorized official in the state or coun
try, in which said stock was grown, and
also with the official tag of the Georgia
State Board of Entomology, hereinafter
provided for, said certificate and tag to
be valid for only 12 months from the
date they bear, in accordance with sec
tions 9 and 13 of the act cited above.
Snch shipments not so labeled, shall be
liable to confiscation upon the order of
the Inspector.
Rule 6. Upon the filing of the proper
certificate as above prescribed in accord-
ance with section 12 of said act, and
upon request of any person or persons
residing in states or countries outside of
the State of Georgia, dealing in or hand
ling trees, shrnbs, or other plants in this
state, the certificate of the State Board
of Entomology will be issued to the same
without charge, and official tags bearing
a fac simile copy of snch certificate, and
the seal of the said Board will be furnish
ed such applicant at cost, viz: 60 cents
for the first 100 or part thereof and 25
cents for each aditional 100.
It is not the purpose of the Board to
interfere in any way with the sale of
healthy, uninfected plants in this state,
but it is insisted that these require
ments must be complied with, and it is
hoped that we will receive yonr hearty
co-operation. O. B. Stevens,
Chairman of the Board.
Circular No. 3. Jan. 18th, ’99.
To Railroad, Express and Steamship
Companies and Common Carriers do
ing business in the State of Georgia:
By virtue of an act of the General As
sembly of Georgia, approved Dec. 20,
1898, creating a Board of Entomology
and authorizing and directing the same
to enact rales and regulations for the
prevention of the further introduction,
increase and dissemination of insects
and fungous diseases injurious to plants,
and for the government of common
carriers in the transportation of plants
liable to harbor snch pests, your atten
tion is called to rules 7 and 8 of the
rules and regulations adopted by said
Board Jan. 18, 1899.
Since no penalty is prescribed for vio
lation of rules 7 and 8, it would be diffi
cult to enforce them without yonr co
operation, and inasmuch as the general
interest and prosperity of. the state in
volves yonr interest, and since it is one
of the objects of the Board to protect
and bnild up the plants and other agri
cultural interests along your lines of
road, we request that you faithfully
observe these rules, and we -hope and
believe that yon will heartily co-operate
with this Board in the discharge of the
duties devolving upon them in the en
forcement of the above cited act. These
rales follow:
Rule 7. No transportation company
or common carrier shall deliver any box,
handle or package of trees, shrnbs or
other plants commonly known as nurs
ery stock, shipped from any other state
or country to any consignee at any sta
tion in the State of Georgia, unless each
such box, bundle or package is plainly
labeled with a certificate of inspection
furnished by the official Entomologist of
the state or country in which said stock
was grown, and also with the official
tag of this Board herein tofore provided
for. Snch shipments of the nature
designated above originating in the
State of Georgia, need only bear the cer
tificate of the State Entomologist (At
lanta, Ga.). When by oversight, negli
gence or otherwise, any shipment of un
certified nusery stock is received at
any station or wharf in this state, It
shall be his duty to - proceed at once to
investigate and dispose of snch stock as
provided for in the act cited above.
Very truly yours,
O. B. Stevens,
Chairman of the Board.
Ground Cobs as a Food.
Question.—‘Are corncobs,' ground into
meal, or-crushed into small pieces, of
any value as a feed stnff for horses or
cattle?
Answer.—Ground cobs are valuable
as food, particularly for cattle, as the
following table will show:
Per Cent
Digestible
OTTON is and will con
tinue to be the money
crop of the South. The
Com cob.....
Cottonseed hulls....
Rice hulls
Sweet potatoes...,..
Turnips.
Sugar beets
Oat sti
straw
Wheat straw.
Cora silage
Corn and cob meal
A
1.643.9
1.026.2
1.644.5
.916.1
.6 5.5
l.tp9.3
1.641V
.8,37.1
1.314.0
6.5156.3
The Antiquity at Wigs. |
' A passage in Polybins has been
cited- to prove that Hannibal wore a
wig. Wigs were probably invented ;
about the time of the first Roman | , ,
emperors, for we are told that Qtho planter who gets the most cot-
bad a scalp of fine leather with locks ^cm from a given area at the
of hair upon it so well arranged as . , , .
to seem natural. j least cost, is the one who makes
the most money. Good culti
vation, suitable rotation, and
■£ Mr. S. A. Fackler, Editor of tbe
kS Micanopy(Fia,) Hustler, with bis
i wife and childreu, sufFerered terri-
L_ 1 bly from LaGrippe. One Minnte
Cough Cure was the only remedy
that helped them. It acted quick-
ly. Thousands of othe - s use this
.1 remedy as a specific for LaGrippe,
olid its exhaustiug after effects.—
Cooper’s Drugstore.
You will see from the above table that-
ground cobs are more valuable than a
number of other feed stuffs that are hr
common use.
The protein substances in the above
table supply the material for the mak
ing of lean meat, tendons, ligaments,
horns, hair, eta, and also the casein of
milk.
The carbohydrates, commonly called
heat producing substances, Include
starch, sugar, gums, ets.
The ether extract is the crude fat or
oil dissolved out by ether in the analy
sis of foods.—State Agricultural De
partment;
NOT THE ONLY ONE.
Subscribe for the Home Journal . ^ ustra ^ e ^-
Loose clothes and downy cushions
bring only a negative sort of comfort
to the woman who is suffering with
some disease or derangement of the
organs distinctly feminine. Some
clothes and some positions make the
pain and the discomfort seem less.
Perhaps, the nerves are most affect
ed and this in turn disturbs the di
gestion. Nothing will ever complete
ly relieve but a radical cure. The
start of so-caJled“female complaints”
may be a very slight thing indeed.
It may be that in the beginning some
small hygienic measures would stop
the trouble. Certainly at this time
a little bit of the right medicine
would stop it. When the trouble be
comes worse it is harder to cure, but
still it can be cured. Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription will positively
cure any trouble of this character. It
maybe absolutely relied upon. It af
fords lasting relief to a woman whose
natural modesty has kept her from
consulting a physician.
Send 21 cents in one-cent stamps
to World’s Dispensary Medical Asso
ciation, Buffalo, N, Y,, and receive
Dr. Pierce’s 1008 page “Common
Sense Medical Adviser,” profusely
Spencers In That Locality Were as
Thiele as Blackberries.
*4.
A half yearly meeting of the directors
who manage the Northampton private
asylum had just broken' up, and Lord
Spencer, a member of that body, desir
ing to reach Althorp Park somewhat
more quickly than customarily, deter
mined to return home by a route which
intersects the grounds of the asylum
and which is rarely used save as a sum
mer parade for the unfortunate lunatics.
Arrived at the gate which separates the
asylum from the outer world, Lord
Spencer, much to his annoyance and
disgust, found it securely locked. A
keeper, however, happening to come in
sight jnst at that moment Lord Spencer
lost no time in explaining to him the
nature of his wishes.
The man surlily replied that his or
ders were to the effect that no one
should pass through that gate except
due notice were given to him to the
contrary by the authorities, and that,
being a married man with a wife and
a large family, He failed to understand
what special advantage was to be gain
ed by transgressing the rules and thus
placing his situation in jeopardy. Ob
serving that the fellow was growing ob
durate, Lord Spencer thought it best to
reveal his • name and rank, imagining
that a knowledge of the same would re
call the man to his senses. Nothing of
the sort happened, however.
The stolid features of the keeper sim
ply relaxed into a broad grin, and as he
turned to depart he gently explained
that Lord Spencers in that particular
locality were as plentiful as blackber
ries in the autumn time. Explanations
and expostulations were useless, the dis
comfited earl being forced to return the
way he had come.—Wit and Wisdom.
Her Opinion.
“ ’Mandy,” said Farmer Comtossel,
who had been reading the hack pages
of a magazine, “ef a cannon ball goin
at the rate of 60 miles an hour was
shot from the hack of a train goiu 60
miles an hour, where would the cannon
ball light?”
“I dunno exactly where ’twonld
light, ” she answered, “but I kin proph
esy that it ’ud do a lot o’ damage. It
couldn’t hit nowheres without hurtin
a lot o’ people that was standin around
without anything better to do than
speckle-ate on jes’ sech doin’s. ”—-Wash-
ington Star.
Juvenile. Diplomacy.
Mother—I gave each of you hoys an
orange. Charlie, yon said you wouldn’t
eat yours until after dinner. And yon,
Jack, said the same. Have yon deceived
me?
Charlie—No, mother; we didn’t eat
our own oranges. I ate Jack’s and he
ate mine.—Sydney Town and Country
Journal
Inimical Plants.
Two well known English plants, the
thistle and the rape, are so inimical that
if a field is infested with thistles, which
come np year after year and ruin the
crops, all yon have to do is to sow it
with rape. The thistles will be absolute
ly annihilated.
LaGrippe is again epidemic. Ev
ery precaution sbould.be taken to
avoid it. Its specific cure is One
Minute Cougb Cure. A. J. Sbeperd
Publisher Agricultural Journal
and Advertiser, Elden. Mo., says:
“No one will be disappointed in
useing one Minute Cough Care
for La Grippe.” Pleasant to take,
quick to act. Cooppr’s Drug Store.
The Germans Lave introduced
what amounts to slave labor in
their east Aftican colonies. Each
native village must furnish a cer
taiD Domber of inhabitants to la
bor for the imperial government,
on plantations or elsewhere with
out pay.
Nollilng Special.
Library Assistant (to visitor who is
wandering about in a puzzled manner)
—Can I help yon ? Are you looking for
anything special ?
Visitor (absently)—No, thank you. I
was only looking for my wife.—Library
Journal
Bab
Comiifi
beans pain, danger and
possible death for some
wives. For others it
means practically no
iiscomfortat all. There
a no reason why child
birth should be a period
»f pain and dread. Sev
eral months before a
woman becomes a
mother she should
prepare herself for
the critical ordeaL
rhere is a prepara-
don made which is
intended for this
purpose alone.
The name of
this wonderful
preparation is
Friend.
It is a
liniment
to be ap
plied ex
ternally.
It relaxes
the mus
cles and re
lieves the
distension,
gives elastici
ty to every
organ con-
v . cerned in
childbirth, and
takes away all
danger and
nearly all suffer
ing. Bestresulls
follow if the
remedy is used
during the whole,
period of preg
nancy. It is the
only remedy of the
kind in the world
that is endorsed by
physicians.
$1 per bottle at all
drug stores, or sent
by mail on receipt
of price.
Free Booes con
taining invaluable in
formation for all women,
will be sent to any ad
dress upon application.10
The Bradfletd Regulator Co,
Atlanta, Ga.
liberal use of fertilizers con
taining at least 3% actual
Potash
will insure the largest yield.
We will send Free, upon application,
pamphlets that wUl interest every cottoQ
planter in the South.
GERITAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
STEAMSHIP SERVICE.
The Central of Georgia Railway Com
pany and the Ocean Steamship Compa
ny are offering increased facilities for
passenger and freight traffic between the
south and east.
There will be sailings 5 times each
week from New York. A steamer will
leave Savannah each Thursday for Bos
ton, and leave Boston each Wednesday
for Savannah.
For specific information apply to near
est depot agent, or write to J. C. Haile,
G. P. A. Savannah, Ga.
"Webster’s
I InJpra&tionalI
fMetioiiary
Successor of the. " Unabridged.”
The One Grco.t Standard Authority
vriti'S I Ion. I'. J. J'.rewer,
Justice i . S. .Supreme Court.
i standard
of tiic-r. iLGov’tPrint!hr <
i »!*!«•**, Llie l 7 . S. Supreme <
Court, all the Stale Su- .
Courts,andof near- '
ly all llie Schoolbooks. '
Warmly
j Commended
i 1>7 Stale Superintendents <
* or Schools, College Presi- f
j dent8,sm«lotherEduci»tor8 3
almost without number.
J Invaluable
in the household, and to <
Up; teacher, scholar, pro
fessional mail, aiul self-
educator.
i tf&~"Sj>ecimcii jut yes sent on. application to j
5 G.St C. rrlerriam Co., Publishers, (
J Springfield, JSSass.
Mrs. Nancy Hichcock, Stanford
villft, Ga., ' writes: My husband,
Elder D. S. Hitchcock, used Dr.
M. A. Simnu ns Liver Mediciue for
Indigestion, and think its medi-al
properties far exceed ZeUin’s Reg
ulator and Black Draught.
Uncle Sam remembers the Make
in a practical way by laying the
keel of a splendid Dew battleship
on the anniversary of tbe day on
which the first ill fated Maine was
blown np in Havana harbor.
A two or three weeks’ coarse of
Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine
will so Regulate the Excretory
Functions that they will operate
without any aid whatever.
has demonstrated ten thousand
times that it is almost infallible
FOB WOMAN'S
PECULIAR
WEAKNESSES,
irregularities and derangements.
It has become the leading remedy
for this class of tronblcs. It exerts
a wonderfully healing, strength
ening and soothing influence upon
the menstrual organs. It cureB
“whites” andfallingof the womb.
It Btops flooding and relieves sup
pressed and painfnl menstruation.
For Change of Life it is tbe best
medicine made. It is beneficial
during pregnancy, and helps to
bring children into homes barren
for years. It invigorates, stimu
lates, strengthens the whole sys
tem. This great remedy is offered
to all afflicted women. Why will
any woman suffer another minnte
with certain relief within reach?
Wine of Cardui only costs $1.00
per bottle at yonr drag store.
For advice, in oases requiring special
Chattanooga .
tanooga, Tenn.
Rev. 1. W. SMITH. Camden, S.C., says:
“My wife used Wine of Cardui at home
for falling of the womb and It entirely
cured her.”
WINE or CARDUI
Sain Weichselbaum
416 Third Street,
MACON, GA.
PRICE list
Per Gal.
Kentucky Bine Grass §2.00
Kentucky Elk Run 2.50
T. B. Ripey 3.00
Kentucky Mellwood 3.50
Pembroke Pennsylvania Rye 400
Best North Carolina Corn 2.00
Old North Carolina Corn 2.50
New England Rum 2.00
juniper Gin 2.00
Imperial Holland Gin 2.50
Sweet Wines 1.25
SEND Y0U3 OEDEES EASLY.
S^Express charges paid on all gallon
orders, and over.
From all accounts, the grain crop
of 1899 will be the greatest Gpor
gis has ever produced, and this
means greater prosperity for the
farmers of the state.
BearingD.iwu Sensations, Inter
nal Heat and Female Weaknesses
are cured by use of Simmons Squaw
Vine Wine or Tablets.
SO YEARS’
-.EXPERIENCE
Patents
I HADE IY1ARKS
Designs
Copyrights Ac.
Anyone sending s sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention is probably patentable. Communica
tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Hnnu & Co. receive
special notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir
culation of any scientific Journal. Terms, <3 a
year; four months, (L Sold by all newsdealers.
MUNN&Co. .SGIBroadway, flgtf York
Branch Office, 625 F St, Washington, D.C.
1 CAUTPSOK. Do not be deceived in i
buying small so-called i
‘Webster’s Dictionaries.” all authentic <
THE
OF BALTIMORE, MD.
PUBLISHED BY
Manufacturers' Record Publishing Co.
A Monthly Illustrated Journal devo
ted to Southern Agriculture, dealing
with all matters relating to General
Farming, Live Stock, Poultry, Dairying,
Truck Farming, Fruit Growing, nud ev
ery farm interst and pursuit iu tho
South.
It is widely read by Northern and
Western farmers con ten: plating mov
ing South.
It ought to be in every Southern
family, for it is “of the South, by the
South and for the South.”
EDITORIAL CONTRIBUTORS.
Chas. \Y. Dabney. Jr., Pk. D., LL. D.
Ex-United States Assistant Secretary of Ag
riculture, Ex-Director United States Agri
cultural Experiment Station in North Caro
lina, President University of Tennessee and
President of United States Experiment Sta
tion in Tennessee.
J. B. Killebrew, A. M.. Pk. D.
Ex-Commissioner of Agriculture for Ten
nessee, author of “Culture and Curing of
Tobacco” for U. S. tenth census, “Tobacco
Leaf,” “Sheep Husbandry,” “Wheat Grow
ing,” “Grasses,” and other agricultural
works.
The regular subscription price of the
Southern Farm Magazine is §1.00 a year,
but we offer it with the Home Joubnal
together one year for §1.75, cash in ad
vance.
Excursion tickets at reduced rates
between local points are on sale after
12 noon Saturdays, and until 6 p. m.
Sundays, good returning until Mon
day noon following date of sale.
Persons contemplating either a bus
iness or pleasure trip to the East
should investigate and consider the
advantages offered via Savannah and
Steamer lines. The rates generally
are considerably cheaper by this
route, and, In addition to this, pas
sengers save sleeping car fare and the
expense of meals en route, as tickets
inelnde meals and berths aboard ship.
We take pleasure in commending to
the traveling public the route referred
to, namely, Tia Central- of Georgia
Railway to Savannah, thence via the
elegant Steamers of the Ocean Steam
ship Company to Yew York and Bos
ton, and the Merchants and Miners
line to Baltimore.
The comfort of the traveling pnblic
is looked after in a manner that defies
criticism.
Electric lights and electric bells;
handsomely furnished staterooms,
modern sanitary arrangements. The
tables are supplied with all the deli
cacies of the Eastern and Southern
markets. All the luxury and comforts
of a modern hotel while on hoard ship,
affording eTery opportunity for rest,
recreation or pleasure.
Each steamer has a stewardess to
look especially after ladies and chil
dren traveling alone.
For Information as to rates and
sailing dates of steamers and for berth
reservations, apply to nearest ticket
agent of this company, or to
J. C. HAILE, Gen. Pass. Agt.,
E. H. HIXTON, Traffic Manager,
j Savannah, Ga.
1 ffOB WORE
i
j N tcJfi rLY EXECUTED
\—| AT THIS OFFICE