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WORLD’S CHAMPIONS
AT THE BENCH SgOW,
Four days of the Southern Inter
state Fair, to begin on October 9th in
Atlanta, will be given over to the
greatest Bench Show ever held south of
Philadelphia. World’s champions from
all over the United States will be shown
at this show, among them the kennels
of Richard Oroker, Jr., and Frank J.
Gould, valued in the aggregate at $150,-
000. Champion Rodney Stone, one of
Mr. Croker’s world winners, is valued
at $10,000 alone.
There is unprecedented interest in
the Dog Show. It is the first time it
has been held as a part of the Inter-
State Fair and premiums aggregating
nearly $5,000 have been offered. Special
classes have been arranged for state and
Southern owned dog3, so that the own
ers will not nave to compete against the
world champions. t
The Dog Show will be held during
the first four days of the fair. One fare
on all railroads leading to Atlanta will
be the special rate offered during the
Atlanta Fair.
ELEflENTS OF
Pure Pood Show at Atlanta.
In connection with the exhibits this
year in the Main Building of the South
ern Inter-State Fair, beginning in At
lanta Oct. 9th and continuing until Oct.
26th, there will be a Pore Food Show of
elaborate proportions. Practically all the
greatest manufacturers of Pure Foods, in
the country will be represented in this
show.
Scientific lectures and exhibitions will
be a part of this Food Show,, which will
be of absorbing interest to housewives
and those directly interested in culinary
economy. Space allotted to this great
Food Show is being taken so rapidly that
the original allotment may have to be
made larger. Free samples of the food
will be distributed to visitors.
GEORGIA.—Houston County.
G, L. Slocumb, administrator of the
estate of J. I. Jones,has applied for leave
to sell the realty belonging to the estate
of said deceased.
This is therefore to cite all persons con
cerned to appear at the October term,
1901, of the court of Ordinary of said
county and show cause, if any they have,
why said application should not be
granted.
Witness my official signature this
September 2, 1901.
SAM T. HURST, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Houston County.
M. A. Edwards,administrator of the es
tate of R. S. Rutherford, has applied for
leave to sell the realty belonging to the
estate of said deceased.
This is therefore to cite all persons con
cerned to appear at the October term,
1901, of the court of Ordinary of said
county and show cause, if any they
have, why said application should not
be granted.
Witness my official signature this
September 2,1901.
SAM. T. HURST, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Houston County.
L. L. Barker, adminisirator of the es
tate of W. Mi Barker, has applied for
leave to sell the realty belonging to the
estate of said deceased.
This is therefore to cite all persons con
cerne-1 to appear at the October term,
1901, of tli6 court of Ordinary of said
county, and showcausejf any they have,
why said application should not v be
granted.
Witness my official signature this
September 2,1901.
SAM. T. HURST, Ordinary.
GEORGIA; Houston County.
E. B. Hose, executor of estate of Ade
line MclDvale, deceased, has applied for
dismission from said trust.
This is therefore to cite all persons con-
1901, of the court of Ordinary of said
cerned to appear at the November term,
county, and show cause, if any they have,
why said application should not f be
granted.
Witness my official signature this
August 5th, 1901.
SAM. T. HURST, Ordinary.
iter;
Eat a,n.cl Bleep.
We can satisfy you in every
particular. o
Under new management,
well illuminated, home
like, everything selected
to afford comfort. Best
rooms and table service.
$1.50 to $?.00 PER BAY.
Convenient to business
center of the city. If you
are in search of a com
pletely satisfactory situ
ation, come this way.
G. S.
colorless like the air. Vast streams of
it are pouring out constantly into the
FYK A jVT'T' r'AAni ahv why-does it not stifle and suffocate
PL, AlN 1 POOl-A us as it would if poured into the rooms
where we live? It is because all plant
Letter From the State Chemist me Uves °“ ifc ’ the great forests absorb
it. The crops of wheat, corn and cotton
consume it; theTilies and the roses eat
it and drink it They take this deadly
; gas into their wonderful little bodies,
j and work it over and over,together with
the water which they Suck out of the
soil, until they have separated the car
bon from the oxygen with which it is
combined in carbonic acid, liberating the
oxygen and appropriating the carbon
in building the cells and tissues and
organs of which the plant is composed.
This process of the plant in taking its
carbon out of the air is a most wonder
ful one, and goes on only under the in-
: fluence of light or in the day time, and
the leaf of the plant is the only active
organ concerned in taking the carbonic
acid out of the air. The leaf of the
In Regard to
ANALYSIS OF A RICH SOIL
Ejvery F-armer Has It In His Power to
Improve His Soil by Proper
Tillage and Fer
tilizing.
LETTER NO. 3. '
Whilst, few farmers ever find such a
perfect soil as I described to you in the
last part of my last letter, yet every
farmer has it in his power to improve
the soil he starts with however poor it
may be or whatever its nature may be,
by judicious tillage, fertilizing, drain
ing, ditching, liming, sanding, claying
ditions of his soil may indicate. He
should especially consider his soil and
decide to what crops it seems to be best
suited, and then devote his energies to
raising those crops rather than others
which thrive poorly. - f
If now we proceed to analyze
a soil as we did a plant a short
while since, we should expect to
findr in it’ some of all the elements we
found in th9 plant, more especially in
the ash-of the plant. Let us take the
analysis of quite a rich soil; here is
about what we should have; taking one
hundred pounds of the dry soil, we
could, by mean of a careful and skillful
chemical analysis, separate it into the
following parts: •
pounds per hundred:
] These are elements
' which the plant is ob
liged to have, but is
not dependent on the
soil for them as it gets
most all it heeds from
the air and the rain.
Silica .. 71.55] The elements in this
and terracing, according as the con- ) plant is formed of very numerous little
cells placed side by side; on the under
side of the leaf there are air spaces be
tween-the cells, and over the whole leaf
there is a thin skin. In this skin there
are numerous small holes through which
the.air passes. When it passes into the
leaf whilst the sunlight is shining upon
it, through some strange vital power the
little cells of the leaf, under these con
ditions break up the carbonic acid of the
air, retaining the carbon and setting the
oxygen free, which passes out again into
the air. When night comes the carbon
thus obtained nndergoes a change and
passes into the circulation of the plant,
going to the various .parts of the plana
where it may be needed.
So we see that growing plants tend to
purify the air by consuming its carbonic
acid gas, which is injurious to animal
life, and by giving off pure oxygen gas
in its place, which is beneficial to ani
mal life. Animal and plant life thus
stand in mutual and beautiful relations
to each other, Plant life inhales car
bonic acid and exhales oxygen; animal
life inhales oxygen and exhales carbonic i
acid. :
The animal, in his lungs and blood,
causes carbon to unite with oxygen to
form carbonic acid; whilst the plant in
its cells causes the carbon of the carbon
ic acid to separate from its oxygen.
Analysis shows the percentage of car
bonic acid in the air to be small. Thus
a hundred gallons of air is composed of:
ASTHMA CURE FRBB
Asthmalene Brings Instant Relief and Permanent
Cure in AH Cases.
SENT ABSOLUTELY FREE ON RECEIPT OF POSTAL.
WRITE YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS P AINLY.
There is nothing like Asthmalene.
It brings instant relief, even in the
worst cases. It cures when all else
fails.
The Rev. O. F. WELLS, of Villa Ridge;
111., say-s: “Tour trial bottle of Asthmalene
received in good condition. I cannot tell
you how thankful T feel for the good de
rived from it. I was a slave, chained with
putrid sore throat and Asthma for ten
years. I despaired of ever being cured. I
saw your advertisement for the cure of this
dreadful and tormenting disease, Asthma,
and thought you had overspoken your
selves, but resolved to give* it a trial. To
my astonishment, the trial acted like a
charm. Send me a full size bottle.”
WOW TEN
YEANS
Rev. Br. Morris Wechsler, .
■ Rabbi of the Cong. Bnai Israel.
New York, Jan. 3,1901,
.urs. Taft Bros’. Medicine Co.;
Gentlemen: Tour Asthmalene is an ex
cellent remedy for Asthma and Hay Fever,
audits composition alleviates all troubles
which combine with Asthma. Its success
is astonishing and wonderful.
After having it carefully analyzed, we can state that Asthmalene contains no
opium, morphine, chloroform or ether. Very truly yours,
Rev. Db. Morris Wechsler.
Carbon
Hydrogen.. .12.67
Oxygen .....
Alumina.... 9.94
Iron 5.17
Magnesia... 1.0S
Soda 0.43
Sulph’c acid 0;04
part of; the soil are
either not absolutely
essential to the plant
f life, or the plant could
get along with very
. small amounts of
85.21 j them,
Nitrogen— 0.12
Phosph’c acid0.43
Potash...... 0.35
Lime....T... 1.22
2.12
The plant absolutely
must have all of these
to grow and thrive,
and though they exist
in the soil in small
quantity, the plant
needs them in large
j quantity.
. — *
Now let us analyze one hundred
pounds of wheat plants.
POUNDS PER hundred :
Carbon...
, . , r.
Next to Academy of Music,
MACON GA- .
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PATENTS-Hr
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,..47.69
.. 5.54
.....40.32
9A55\
Soda........ 0,09
Magnesia... 0.20
gulph’c acid 0.31l
Chlorine.... 0.04
Iron......... 0.06
Silicas . 2.75
All of this comes from
the atmosphere and
the raih.
3.45
Nitrogen.*,.. 1.60'
Phosph’c acidO.45
0.66
0.29
s:ob
r ou see these are
in small quantity
by the plant and are
Supplied an profusion
by the soil.
Potash...
Lime..
These the, plant must
have or - die. j. Most
soils are deficient in
them-and the farmer
must add them to get
good crops.
Thus you see, by a study of these-
analyses, that you find in the soil tho
saxne elements which we found in the
plant we analyzed in out first letter and
also in this wheat plant: The carbon,
hydrogen and oxygen which we find m
the; so|l are of little or no use as plant
Io6fi because the plant gets its store of
those foods out of the v ]afehosphere. It
derives its carbon from the carbonic
acid in the air. You will remember
that I wrote you in one of my letters
last year about the importance of water
and carbonic acid, and as it is apt here
I will repeat the paragraph:
“The water from which the hydrogen
and oxygen come is given us free in the
form of rain, and the carbon also in the
form of carbonic acid which is breathed
out continually into the atmosphere by
every living animal on the surface of
the earth;, by every chimney and hearth
stone which warms a happy family; by
every factory smokestack and locomo
tive which minister to our wants add
necessities. Carbonic acid forms the
principal part of all this smoke although
it is not th(T black part which we see,
but the invisible ncrfc which, is clear and
Dr. Taft Bros. Medicine Go., Avon Springs, N. Y., F< b. 1, i901.
Gentlemen: I write this testimony from a sense of duty, having tested the
wonderful effect of your Asthmalene, for the cure of Asthma. My wife has been
afflicted with spasmodic asthma fof the past 12 years. Having exhaus 4 ed my own
skill as well as many others, I chanced to see your rign upon your windows on
130th street, New York, I at once obtained a bottle of Asthmalene. My wife com
menced taking io about the first of November. I very soon noticed a radical im
provement. After using one bottle her asthma has disappeared and she is entirely
free from all symptoms. I feel that I can consistently recommend the medicine to
all who are afflicted with this distressing disease. Yours respectfully,
G. D. Phelps, M. D.
“I had long suffered from indi
gestion,” writes G-. A. LeDeis,
Cedar City, Mo. “Like others I
tried many preparations but nev
er found anything that did me
good until I took Kodol Dyspep-
Oxygen. 20.99 gallons.
_ Nitrogen ...; 78.98 gallons.
/Carbonic acid.... .00.03 gallons.
1 You say this is a very small
amount of carbonic acid. Yes, it
seems so, but when you come to
.consider the enormous bulk of the air
it actually is very large. There is sq.
much of it that the volume of air which
rests on One acre of your farm, calculat
ing for. a height of only 50 feet above
the farm would contain 90 pounds
of carbonic acid gas, and this amount
never grows less, even when the crops
are feeding on it, because it is being
constantly renewed from, other "sources.
Therefore, whilst you need never fear
any lack of the essential element, car
bon, It is well for you to appreciate
where it comes froin and how import
ant it isi I have said the oxygen and
hydrogen fouztd in the plant came also
from' the air; really they do not come
from the air itself, but they come from
the waiter which floats in the air in the
form of clouds: These descend as rain
upon the: soil and are drawn hp through
the roots of the plant, and the oxygen
and hydrogen, of which wktdr is com
posed,: are appropriated by the plant.
You, of coarse, appreoiate the import
ance of these two elements of plant life
because yon know only too well how
crops spffer in a dry season. We will
consider the other elements in our next
letter. ‘ Yours truly,
John M. McCandless,
State Chemist.
/.
Free Blood Cure.
good
sia Cure. One bottle gured me.
■A friend who had suffered simi
larly I put on the use of Kodol .
Dyspepsia Cure. He is gaining
fast and will soon be able to work.
Before he used Kodol Dyspesia
They recommend Botanic Blood Balm
(B. B. B.) for all blood troubles, such as
ulcers, eating sores, 'scrofula, . eczema,
•itching humors, pimples, boils, carbun
cles, blood person, aching bones, fester
ing sores, cancer, catarrh, rheumatism.
Botanic Blood Balm . cures all malig
nant blood or skin diseases, especially
advised for old, deep-seated cases. It
cures when all else fails. He^tls every
sore or pimple, stops all aches and pains
by giving a healthy b'lood supply. Thor-
oughlytested for 30 years. /Thousands
cured. At drug stores, $1. per large bot
tle. Our readers will receive a trial
treatment free by writting Dr* Gillam,
213 Mitehell St., Atlanta, Ga. Describe
trouble and free medical. advice given.
•Medicine sent at once, prepaid.
.- • - . 7 .
• 1 j- - ■ ■ ‘ ~
store.
UNDER A . ' "
$5,000 DEPOSIT
R.R. FARE PAID
200 FREE
Scholarships offered
Write quick to
C4.-ALA. BUSINESSCOLLECE. Maccn.Ca-
Dk. Taft Bros. Medicine Co., Feb. 5.1901.
Gentlemen: I was troubled with asthma for 22 years. I have tried number
less remedies, but they have all failed. I ran across your advertisement and started
with a tiial bottle. I found relief at once. I have since purchased your full-size
bottle, and I am ever grateful. 1 have a family of four children, and for six years
was unable to work. I am now in. the best of heal h and. am doing business every
day.' This testimony you can make sueh use of as you see fit. S. Raphael,
Home address, 235 Rivington street. 67 East 129th st., City.
Trial Bottle sent Absolutely Free on Receipt of Postal.
• J •-—-L*
Do Dot delay. Write at oDce, addressing DR. TAFT BROd.’ MEDICINE
CO., 79 East 130th St., N. Y. City.
ifP ;rt ,
PENNSYLVANIA PURE RYE*
„ EIGHT YEARS OLD.
OLD SHARPE WILLIAMS.
Pour ful Quarts of this Fine Old, Pnre
RYE WHISKEY,
$3.50 EX W
We ship on approval in plain, sealed boxes,
with no marks to indicate contents. When lyou
receive it arid test it, if it is not satisfactory,
return it at our expense and we wil return your
§3.50/ We guarantee this brand to be
EIGHT YEARS OLD.
Eight bottles for §6 50, express prepaid;
12 bottfes for §9 50 express prepaid.
One gallon jug, express prepaid, §3 00;
2 gallon jug, express prepaid, §5 50.
No charge for boxing.
We handle all the leading brands of Bye and
11 "
Bourbon Whiskies and will save yon
50 Per Cent, on Your Purchases:
Quart, Gallon.
Kentucky Star Bourbon S 35 $125
Elkridge Bourbon 40 150
Coori Hollow Bourbon 45 160
Melwood Pure Rye.......> 50 190
Monogram Bye 55 2 00
MeBraj r er Rye.. ...... 60 225
Baker’s A AAA 65 540
O.O.P. (Old Oscar Pepper)..., 65 . 240
Old ; Crow 75 2 50
Fincher’s Golden Wedding 75 2 50
Hoffman House Rye 90 300
Mount Vernon, Syearsold.......... 100 3 50
OldDillingerRye, 10years old,.... 125 400
The above are only a few brands.
Send for a catalogue. '
All other goods by tho gallon, such as Com
Whiskey, Peach and Apple Brandies, etc., sold
equally as low, from §125 a gallon and upward,
We make a speeiasty of the Jug Trade,
by Mail
and all orders by Mail or Telgeraph will
have our prompt attention: Special
inducements offered.
Mail Orders shipped same day of the
receipt of order.
Tlie Altmayer & Flatean
Liquor Company,
606, 508, 510, 512 Fourth Street, near
Union Passenger Hepot..
MACON, GEORGIA.
50 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
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