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™J SEVERE ATTACK OF GRIP
Cured by One Bottle of Chamberlains
Cough Remedy.
“When I. had an attack of the
•grip last winter (thasecond one)
I actually cured myself with one
bottle of Chamherlain’s Cough
R-mody,” says Frank W. Perry,
Editor of the Enterprise, Shorts*
: ' ville. N. Y. “This is the honest
triith. f at times Kept from
coughing myself to pieces by tak
ing a tcaspoonful of this remedy,
•and when the coughing spell
would come on at night I would
take a dose and it seemed that iu
the briefest interval the cough
-would pass off and I would go to
•sleep perfectly free from cough
and its accompanying pains. To
say that the romedy acted as a
most agreeable surprise is put
ting it very mildly. I had no
idea that it would or could knock
«>ut the grip, simply beoause I
had never tried it for such a pur
pose. but it did and it seemed
with the second attack of cough
ing the remedy caused it to not
only be of less duration, but the
pains were far less severe, and I
had not used the contents of one
bottle before Mr. Grip had bit}
me adieu.’’ For sale by all drug
gists.
bo
About Velvet Beans.
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BBS, -
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Perfect and Peerless
<DUKQ®r
leunualism
and nil Liver, Kidney and Blad
der troubled caused by uric acid
iu the system. It cures by
cleansing and vitalizing the
blood, thu9 removing the cause
of disease. It gives vigor and
builds up the health
tone and
and strength
of the patient
while using the remedy.
(JRICSOL is a luminary in
the medical world. It has cured
and will continue to cure more
of the above diseases than all
| other known rcmediea, many of
P which do more harm than good.
This great and thoroughly tested
and endorsed California Remedy
never disappoints. It cures in-
<1 fallibly if taken as directed.
Try it and be convinced that
it is a wonder and a blesBing to
suffering humanity.
Price $1.00 per bottle, or 6 bot
tles for $5. For sale by druggists.
Send stamp for book of partic
ulars and wonderful cures. If
URICSOL CHEMICAL CO., Los Angeles, CD.
LAMAS A RANKIN DRUG CO., Atlsnts, Os.
Distrusting Agents.
We promptly obtain U. 8. and Foreign
-Send model, sketch or photo of Invention for
free report on patentability. For free book
An| ?-MARKS w ?o°■
fronts and
^ Opposite U. S. Patent Office <
-S WASHINGTON D. C.
Macon Tclograph.
To the Editor of the Telegraph:
My recent article on velvet beans
published by you has caused many
of your readers to write me asking
if I knew whether farmers in the
states north of Florida have as great
success as I do. As it is impossible
to answer all these letters personal
ly, I have prepared Borne data com
posed of reports from farmers in
othor states, and will ask you to
give it space in the next issue of
your valuable paper. The velvet
bean is such a grand crop I want it
tried largely in your state this year,
and I would like for others to give
their opinions as well.
Mr. Alfred Aldrich, Barnwell, S.
0., writes: “Never in my whole
farming experience have I made so
satisfactory an experiment as result
ed from the velvet seed you sent last
year. The amount of vegetable mat
ter is simply enormous and yield of
beans wonderful. The vines matured
a heavy crop before frost and I
gathered enough to plant 100 acres
this season, ail from the little 25-
cent bag, and did not gather all
that ripened either, as I only wished
to save enough for planting. If the
farmers of the south will hood your
advice they will prosp^.”
Mr. John B. Gadsden, Charleston,
S. 0., writes: “Our views most de
cidedly agree on velvet beans, and it
is away ahead of the oow pea in ev
ery reBpect. I have two acres from
which I out at least 12,000 pouuds
of hay. Planted oats in October and
I never saw better oats. I counted
sitteen to thirty stools to each seed
and yet they have just started.”
Mr. W. 0. Swanson, cashier Tus-
kegeo, Ala., Bank, writes: “Am very
much pieased with results last year.
I let a friend have 50 cents worth of
the seed got from you and he sold
$12 worth of hay from them.”
Judge W. D. Johnson, of Marion,
S. 0., a very large farmer, writos: “1
can bo little less enthusiastic than
you are ora velvet beunB, I had thir
ty aores last year and on twenty
acres made more forage than I could
gather or had use for, besides killing
out a bed of nut grass and muking a
poor sand hill rich. I am sure of the
latter assertion, beoause I had four
acres of the same land planted no
beans in 1901 that did not attain
more than half the growth and I
gathered five bales of cotton from it
last fall. This land was poor and
600 pounds of seed cotton was the
best I oould have hoped for with
some fertilizer before planting it to
beans. The beans you seut me last
season were the most luxuriant
growing plants I have ever seen and
at pne time were as high as my bug
gy wheels and so dense I oould not
get my baud down through them
without great difficulty. My mules
at first did not like the vines but
soon learned to eat them and now
prefer them to fodder or peavines.
It is soarcely necessary to give my
mules or horses auy corn, as they
seem to do just as well on the beans.
Two aores of beans will make as
muoh lmy as five acres of peas. I
am satisfied that with such vigor
ous growing legumes as the velvet
bean any land oould be made as
rich as desired by planting them
one year and giving them a liberal
application of acid phosphate and
potash. The plant will gather from
the air above it a sufficiency of ni
trogen.”
Judge Johnson will plant several
hundred acres this year to kill out
nut grass and to fatten cattle.
Mr. J. B. Clemens, Little Bay,
Ark., writes: “I mowed four wagon
loads of hay from the little package
you mailed me. From two vines run
on poles I gathered a half bushel of
860CI* 1 ’
Mr. J. C. Land, Mt. Zion, N. C„
writes: “I am well pleased, and am
satisfied they will yield more feed to
the acre than anything we can plant,
and as a fertilizer plant are far ahead
of the cow pea. I planted corn with
the beans, which grew at least fif
teen feet high, and the beans climb
ed to the top of it and back to the
ground, making a solid mass of vines
all over it. I am satisfied they are
going to be of vast importance to
the south, and I thank you for call
ing my attention to them.”
v I have received hundreds of such
letters, and every southern farmer
should test the beans for himself.
Kline O. Yarn.
Fort Meade, Fla., March 11,1903.
Second Stage of Railroad Building.
Savannah News.
Here in the south and in portions
of the west t new railroads arc still
being built,* but in the states in
which the construction of new roads
is practically over the work of re
building the roads already in exist
ence has been going on for some
time, and is being prosecuted with
more vigor now than ever before. It
looks now as if the great railroads,
such as the Pennsylvania, the New
York Central ancl the Baltimore and
Ohio would be almost reconstructed.
These great and rich corporations
are being improved until they will
be almost new when they are com
pleted, and they will be far better in
every respect than they are now.
They will have, in some of their sec
tions, three or four tracks, perhaps
more. They will have bridges of
the latest pattern and of the finest
muterial, and will be equipped with
the very best rolling stock that can
be procured.
In the annual statement of the
Pennsylvania railroad published a
few days ago, it was stated that on
its lines east of Pittsburg as much
as $67,000,000 would be spent with
in the next two or three years, and
it is ostimaten that this company
will spend as much as $100,000,000
in the improvements it is making to
reach the center of New York city
by means of tunnels. All the rail
roads in the couutry were not worth
a great deal more a few years prior
to the civil war than the Pennsylva
nia is going to spend on improve
ments inside of the next five years.
[t is stated that the New York
Central is going to spend as much
as $30,000,000 as fust as it can in
making new approaches to New
York city. There are other roads—
the Wabhsh, the Baltimore and
Ohio, and the. Union Pacific—which
arc scheduled to spend anywhere
from $10,000,000 to $20,000,000
within the next year. According to
the Railway World it is known that
the principal roads are preparing to
spend aH much as $270,000,000 this
year iu improvements.
, Of course these improvemehts will
require a vast amount of manufac
tured steel—steel rails, steel bridges
and steel cars. It is not to be won
dered at therefore that all of the
steel mills are busy, and that they
have orders for many months ahead.
And these railroad improvements
are an indication of the wonderful
activity in other improvements that
are being made in other parts of the
couutry. It does look as if the pres-'
out period of prosperity would con
tinue for several years. It is difficult
to see how there can be any decline
in it in the very near future.
-
An Expressive Sentence.
Hon. James Beck, assistant attor
ney general, tells the following st6-
ry of an argument made by a rural
barrister before a justice in a court
in Pennsylvania, says the Philadel
phia Ledger.
The case was one in which the
plaintiff sought to recover damages
from a railroad company for the kill
ing of a cow. During the course of
his argument, the country lawyer
used this axpressive sentence:
“If the train had been run as it
should have been ran, or if the bell
had been rung as it should have
been rang, or if the whistle had been
blown as it should have been blew,
both of which they did neither, the
cow would not have been injured
when she was killed.”
If it’s a bilious attack, take
Chamberlain’s Stomaoh & Liver
Tablets aud a quick reoovery is
certain. For sale by all druggists,
/
VIRGINIA-CARQLINA
CHEMICAL COMPANY,
ATLANTA, GA. RICHMOND, VA. CHARLESTON, S, C.
Largest Manufacturers of
FERTILIZERS
IN THE SOUTH.
Importers of
PURE GERMAN KAINIT, MURIATE OF POTASH,
NITRATE OF SODA, SULPHATE OF POTASH.
In buying fertilizers it is important, not only to secure goods of estab
lished reputation and k“ \ grade, but to buy where
YOUR WANTS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION CAN BE SUPPLIED.
We are in position, with our unparalleled facilities and our many plants
located all over the territory, to furnish all classes of goods and in such
quantities as buyers desire. When you buy of us, with our immense
capacity, you know you can get the goods, and all you want of them.
See our nearest agent to you, or write us direct.
Address VJRGINIA-CAROLINA CHEMICAL CO.,
ATLANTA, GA.
Send tor the Vlrglnla-Carolina Almanac. Free for the asking.
TDfi need' a Stove or a Range? If
A w j c .. m fjj] yom order and guaran
tee to do it satisfactorily. i oarry a complete line of
■ National '^teel parages
Excelsior Stoves and Ranges,
New Enterprise .‘-toves,
Grand Oak Stoves (JrJ
inch oven with full“l
of furniture, $8.50.J
My fall stock of (.rookery and Housefnrnisnings is even
moie complete than it has been heretofore
Triangulau Block.
MACON. | EOjRG.
YOB CAN READ ALL THE BOOKS
A.t a nominal cost by joining
COLEMANS OlttOULATINU LIBRA KY.
Fifty oents per month, $3 00 for six month.-), or #6 00 for twelve months.
Write for new List of Books aud further ps»menhirs.
I also handle a Complete line of BOOKS AH'S ST VTtON.VttY, and give
speoiul attention to Mail Orders,
My Foustou County Friends are Invited t > Call Winn In MacoNf.
T. A. COLEMAN,
3C8 Second Street, MACON* GA.
Ais .
Sa
Malarial
Weakness
Dr. Uonan Doyle, the creator of
“Sherlock Holmes,” has just entered
into a contract with certain publish
ers under the terms of which he is
to write twelve stories of 10,000
words each and for each of which
he is to receive $9,000. That is at
the rate of 90 cents per word. This
is believed to be the highest price
ever paid to any author.
» ~4
More Riots.
Disturbances of strikers are not
nearly as grave as an individual
disorder of the system. Overwork,
loss of sleep, nervous tension will
be followed by utter collapse un
less a reliable remedy is immedi
ately employed. There’s nothing
so efficient to cpre disorders of
the Liver and Kidneys as Electric
Bitters. It’s a wonderful tonic,
and effective nervine, and the
greatest all around medicines for
run down systems. It dispels ner
vousness, rheumatism and 'neural-
gia and expels Malaria germs. On
ly 50o at Holtzclaw’s Drugstore.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
-A
t takes the joy of life away and opens
, the system to disease. Assist Nature,
avoid strong drugs, use a gentle Treatment. \
OH'5
OVER
and Tonic Pellets will help the natural forces
\ t0 restore perfect health, feed the blood and /
^paint the bloom of health on the cheeks. /
S&jA Treatment that Oures *
without unpleasant effects.
Complete Treatment
fnsc o., Nel'J*#'
'S
GUTTENBERGER’S PIANO CLDB.
carmimre jbb^
Easy Way to Purchase a Firstclass
Piano at Lowest Prices aud
oil Very Easy Terms.
1st. Join the Club for very best Pianos
(prices from $350 to $500) by paying $10 and
then $2.50 per week or $10 per month. Pian
os delivered as soon as you join club.
3nd. Join the Club for good medium Pi
anos, fully warranted (prices from $250 to
$300), by paying $8 to join and $2 per week
or $8 per month.
These Pianos are all the very best makes.
Cull at once and join the Club, and make
you r selection of one of these celebrated
makes of Pianos.
F.A. GXJTTENBERGER.
452 Second St.
Macon, Ga.
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wife
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