Newspaper Page Text
Sacrificed to
glood Poison.
who have never had Blood Poi
fh096 --
know what a desperate con-
i can not
'! j t can produce. This terrible
IU ' P> ^inch the doctors are totally
ce, is communicated from
ation to another, inflicting its
;e;ri e
able to cur
egener
t upon countless innocent ones.
n ilo r .< aco I was inoculated with poi son
° me r<e <vlio infected iny babe with blood
» D Theiiole one was
A LETTER TO FARMERS.
Commissioner O. B Stevens TJrtres
Them to Sow Wheat.
l - ttl ibe struggle,
l u * lif- was yielded
Bt.
d ,A the fearful poison.
■ six lo»d years I suf-
J’antol* misery. I
^ weieo with sores
„?*r,lom Load to
d . and n0 language
’•/prws my feelings
^during those long
J l nad the best
wiical treatment. Sev-
^ iraicians succes-
P i/treated me, but all
el - The mer-
iic *"
^anTnmash seemed to add fuel to the
Jiflttine which was devouring me. I was
seen wonderful
Specific. We
; i flotne vrnipn uouunu
{ul ! bv friends who had s
rl ntadebv it. to try Swift’s specific. Wr
re ' a bottles, and I felt hope again revive in
breast—hope for health and happiness
I improved from trie start, and a com-
11 n ' nd perfect cure was the result. S. S. S.
L ea !r v blood remedy which reaches des-
///L Mrs. T. W. Lee.
' at< c " Montgomery, Ala.
nfthe many blood remedies, S. S. S.
the only one which can reach deep-
te d violent cases. It never fails to
b-e perfectly and permanently the
ist desperate cases which are beyond
■ reach of other remedies.
X Blood
prREbv vegetable, and is the only
|od remedy guaranteed to contain no
Ircury. potash, or other mineral.
Valuable books mailed free by Swift
bcific Company, Atlanta, Georgia.
The refusal of the President to
[erfere with the race riots and
nullification of the Federal
Institution in Illinois is sure to
yoke from carping critics the
liark that his abstention is
kbtless due to the fact that
jnoisis a Northern and a Re-
blican State. Attorney-Gen-
I Griggs says there is no war-
|t for Federal interference be
ige the Governor ha9 not called
'help. Neither did the Gov-
orof Illinois call for help when
Isident Cleveland sent troops to
down the Chicago rioters, and
the Republicans applauded
act as the bravest of his ad
oration. Is there really a
jerence in gored oxen?—New
k World.
wne one asserts that a cat’s
are larger at midnight than
|uy other time. We are pos
its voice is.—Chicago News.
MEW TRIUMPH.
Dreaded Consumption Can
Be Cured.
Slocum, the Great Chemist and
Enlist, will Send to Sufferers
pireeFree Bottles of His Newly
Discovered Remedies to
ture Consumption and
all Lung - Troubles.
| ring-coul«T be fairer, more philan-
P lc or carry more joy to the afflict-
bnij- ^nerous offer of th^ hon-
fA dlStin * dlshe d chemist, T. A.
• -'!• C., of New York City.
. nt a& ^covered a reliable and
M 1 CUre * or consumption and all
1 a - throat, lung and chest dis-
, ^atarrhal affections, general
mi weakness, loss of flesh and
ions of wasting away: and to
[ t L ?r . eat merits known, we will
L/ e * ree bottles of his newly
:r nf -p/^odies to any afflicted
■ead/, . Georgia Cracker,
gine" new scientific system of
id j f S permanently cured
boot a PP at *cntly hopeless cases.
isionoi Jr 1 _ eons * c * er& it not only his
(which L but his religious duty—a
dor, he ovves to suffering human-
0n ate his infalible cure.
iias
^•? r r d ti ie “dreaded con
st Je a cur able disease be-
lei n i • ’ ln an J climate, and has
kripo’ ,, ner ican and European
miaio y 10usan ds of “heartfelt
ited °t gratitude” from those
conL and .P^monary troubles
- r rnotf>fi m ^ 1tlori ’ an ^ consumption
tat/ ri mea ns speedy and cer-
‘-'ttiplv de i, a ^ on til it is too
HbcsZ/'/ite T. A. Slocum, M.
['“ad York ’ giving ex-
Nieinf. ' °^ 1Ce address, and the
lei) thp T i 1 be Promptly sent,
^oro-;^ f ,° c t°r you saw his offer
fpa Cracker.
Before it gets too late, I wish to
urge upon the farmers of Georgia,
particularly those in the middle
and upper sections of the state,
the importance of planting g, farge
wheat crop.
The conditions are such that
there is little or no hope for any
material advance in the price of
cotton for the present crop: and
even should there be a d< cided re
duction in the acreage of cotton
next year, so large will be the sur
plus carried over from the accu
mulation of two very heavy c^ops
in succession, that prices will in
all probability be very low for the
crop that will be grown in 1899.
With such a prospect ahead, the
thoughtful jvill seek for . some
other crop than cotton, from which
he may hope for at least a moderate
reward for his labor. For the sec
tions of the state above mentioned,
the growing of wheat seems to of
fer relief for the thralldom of cot
ton. Even in the section south of
Macon, good crops of wheat can
be grown on the stiff red lands
that are to be found in greater or
les9 amounts in every county in
south Georgia. As a money crop,
wheat i9 just as available as cot
ton, for there are buyers ready to
take it at its market value in every
town in Georgia.
My advice, therefore, is to plant
as soon as possible a large acreage
in wheat. Select your best land ;
break it deeply, (though do not
bring the subsoil clay to the sur
face ;) harrow, aud if necessary
reharrow, until you get all the
lumps and clods broken up; then
either drill or broadcast the seed,
covering lightly. For fertilizing,
apply either stable or cow manure;
or if without these, use two hun
dred pounds of good acid phos
phate and one hundred pounds of
kainit per acre; and when the
wheat starts to grow off in the
spring, broadcast from fifty to
seventy-five pounds of nitrate of
soda to the acre.
For seed, use either Bluestem or
the Fullcaster wheat, as these va
rieties have been found to succeed
best in the state. Both of these
varieties can be bought here at
about a dollar a bushel.
By following the advice given
you will not only make a crop of
wheat, but can follow with peas
sown broadcast, and gather a
heavy crop of peavine hay, than
there is none better.
In addition to planting largely
of wheat, from which our farmers
may reasonably expect a profit, I
earnestly advise a liberal sowing
of oats to supplement the short
corn crop in middle and north
Georgia. Do not delay the plant
ing of this important crop, for one
acre of November-sown oats will
as a rule, yield at least twice as
much as the same acreage sown in
the spring. Of course you must
take the nsk of winter killing;
but there is no crop that a farmer
plants that is not subject to loss
and even total destruction, from
the forces of nature, and the
dread of such calamities should
deter no farmer from planting his
crops at the present time. Should
your oats be killed by cold weath
er, sow again as soon as possible.
For fall sowing the Texas Rust
Proof or the Winter G r azing oats
are both good varieties; the latter
will best stand cold weather, but
the former will produce the heav
er crop if not killed by the cold.
Next year, by reason of the low
price of cotton, will be particular
ly bard on those farmers who have
cVade short c*»ru crops, and.ev^ry
should be used by them to
help out their scant supply. Much
can be done on this line by sowing
rye, or a mixture of rye, oats tmd
barley, which will furnish good
pasturage through the spring
months and can be turned under
preparatory to planting some other
crop on the land.
The time has come when our
farmers must abandon the all-cot
ton business, and right now they
should make a beginning in this
direction. Let each one for him
self resolve that he will henceforth
raise all supplies of every kind
that can be produced on his farm,
buying nothing that he can grow
or make, and prosperity and con
tentment will ere long replace the
gloom and despondency which
now overshadow our state.
O. B. Stevens,
Commissioner of Agriculture.
1
No organs are of greater importance to the human body the Kidneys.!
Their duty is to sift and strain the poisonous and waste matter from the blood,
and if they fail to do this, the trouble shows in the nervous system, and even in
the brain. Your life is at stake when there are pains in the small of your back
when you are compelled to get up at night to urinate—when the passing of water *
causes scalding pain—when there is a sediment in the urine in the vessel, or
when it appears white or milky. When so afflicted, you can conquer the trouble
with Dr. David Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy, the greatest medicine that
civilization has ever known for curing Kidney,
Bladder, Blood and Liver Diseases.
James Lettice, of Canajoharie, N. Y., tells of
his wonderful cure: “ Some years ago I was attacked
with pains in my back
and sides that were
Perry Rainey College and Mul
berry High School.
This educational institute was
built in 1892 and is located at Au
burn, Ga., the highest point on
the Seaboard Airline railroad be
tween Atlanta and Athens, and a
more healthful place could hardly
be found in any portion of Georgia.
Prof. J. C. Flanigan is president
of the faculty who first graduated
here in this college and then at
Mercer University. %
Prof. W. H. Maxwell, of Alpha
retta, ,who graduated from Pea
body Normal College, Nashville,
Tenn.; Miss Cora Lee Holland of
Lawrenceville, graduated Georgia
Female Seminary, Gainesville;
Miss Florine Harden, Atlanta,
graduate State Normal School;
and Miss Belle Sawyer, graduate
Salem Female College, N. C., com
pose the present faculty. The
course of instruction in this school
will be as thorough as any college
in upper Geo r gia, and all parents
who may so desire can send their
boys and girls here as board and
tuition is the lowest of any section
of the state. The moral training
of the students is the very best, .no
father or mother need fear the re
sults when their children are in
this school, as the teachers are of
highest moral type. There are
four churches located within a
few hundred yards of the school,
a Baptist church at Carl, 600
yards ;a Baptist church at Auburn,
300 yards; Methodist church 300
fearful. I could not con-
trol my kidneys, and
what came from me was
filled with mucus and blood.
An Albany doctor was to
perform an operation upon
me, and said my home doctor
could take care of me after. I
saw an advertisement of Dr.
David Kennedy’s Favorite
Remedy, which seemed to fit my
case, so I decided to try that before I
submitted to the operation. I began
its use. When I had taken about
two bottles the flow from the bladder grew cleaner, and the pain stopped, and is
a short time I was saved from the surgeon’s knife, and am now well.”
Favorite Remedy also cures Eczema, Scrofula, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia j
and Constipation. For Female Troubles it is unequaled. It is sold for $i.oo !
bottle at all drug stores. t
Sainnlj* Rut tip T or< * er that sufferers may be convinced of i
OUlll|FI€ “CC I the curative virtues of Favorite Remedy, (
a free sample bottle will be sent, prepaid, to those who send their full postoffice j
address to the Dr. David Kennedy Corporation, Rondout, N. Y. It is necessary j
to say that you saw the advertisement in this paper if you wish to take advantage
pf this genuine and liberal offer. Send today. — ' J
R^ed of Lawrenceville is the ap
pointed financial agent and any
who may wish t<» assis't in this no
ble work would do well to address
him. The members of i lue board
A member of the Postoffice Com
mission, just returned from Puerto
Rico, says: “The climate is not
fit f* r any white man to live in—
insufferably hot in the morning,
of trustees of the school are the (and damp and chilly in the eve-
most influential upright ciiizen-
of the country a id represent the
various Christian denominations
of the counties of Gwinnett, Jack-
son, Hall, Walton. Many of
them are ministers of their res
pective denominations and teach
ers of literary schools and know
the needs of the country.
Pains in the small of the back indi
cate a diseased condition of the kidneys.
Owing to-the dangerous nature of the
diseases which attack these organs it is
important that measures should be ta
ken to remove the trouble before it has
become too firmly fixed. Prudence
would suggest the prompt use of Dr.
J. J. AJcLeans Liver and Kidney Balm,
which has specific action on the liver
and kidneys, and will cause an early
restoration to healthy conditions.
Price 31 a bottle. At M. C. Brown &
Co's drug store.
mug. Then all day long you are
tormented hy fleas and mos
quitoes, and bedbugs make sleep
impossible at night. No more
Puerto Rico for me.” And yet
nearly every re-elected republican
congressman has filed an applica
tion for a postoffice in the Antilles
for one of his constituents. It
will take something more robust
than insects and fever germs to
scare off the spoils octopus.
If the legislature refuses to pass
tlie Australian ballot law, says
the Valdosta Times, “or some
thing better,” there will be a wide
spread belief in Georgia that most
of the scions are afraid to trust
iheir future political destinies to
the intelligent voters of the state.
3000 Strike.
Augusta, Ga.. N<>\
The Miinroe Advertiser says:
“Tin- hog and horn in v raisers are
yards;.Bible Christian church 200j (t ‘' “‘‘T''I OVHr ,he low P rice of
' j 1 ^ I threatening tor some days tlie 1 — ! c*»tt<»ii ”
yards, and students are expected
to attend church and Sabbath
school service each Sunday.
This school was built under the
supervision of the Mulberry Bap
tist Association w r ith the co-opera-
fion of the Methodist, Bible Chris
tians, and Presbyterians, whose
co-op6ration have been very hearty,
and are expected to continue
Therefore, strictly speaking, the
school is non-denominational and
is maintained in the interest of no
denomination, but for the liierary
and moral t raining of the children
of the entire country, and espec
ially those who are not able to
send their children -to otlur
schools.
There is now an effort to endow
this school and open this institu
tion free of tuition. Rev. L. T.
cal mill trouble culminated in an I
individual wulk-utit today. Over
three thousand empioves are idle
thr^eof, the largest mills and two
smaller being included in the
trouble. They are: King mill.
60,000 spindles, 1.085 hands; Sib
ley with 900 ha mis and 40.256
spindles; Enterprise. 33.000 spin
dles, 900 hands: Isaetla, 3.653
spindles, 105 hands.
What ohall We Do.
_ Dr. David Kennedy^
favorite Remedy
CURES ALL KIDNEY, STOMACH ^
CURES ALL KIDNEY, STOMACH
AND LIVER TROUBLES.
Coughing
Constant coughing is very annoying,
and the continuous hacking and irri
tation will soon attack and injure the
delicate lining of the throat and air
passages. Take advice and use Dr.
Bull’s Cough Syrup in time. This
wonderful remedy will cure you.
DeBuITs
COUGH SYRUP
Cures a Cough or Cold at fence.
Doses are small and pleasant to take. Doctors
Doses are smau anu : _
recommend it. Price 25 eta. At ail druggist*.
Dewey Wants them All.
Montpelier, Vt., Nov. 21.—Pres
ident Brown of the Norwich Vn-
lversitv has received a personal
letter from Admiral Dewey under
date of October 3, in which the
admiral says:
“I trustthe entire archipelago
will be retained by the United
States. Any other arrangements
will lead to no end of trouble.”
Columbus Monument
Havana, Nov. 21.—The Spanish
mail steamer Sam Augusta leav
ing Neuvitas today for Spain, car
ries theColumhu9 monument with
287 boxes of archivies. She takes
twentv-three officers and 160 sol
diers.
A serious and dangerous disease pre
vails in this country. Dangerous be
cause &o deceptive. It comes on so
slowly yet surely that it is often firmly
seated before we are aware of it.
The name of this disease which may
be divided into three distinct* stages is.
First Kidnej 7 trouble, indicated by pain
in the back, rheumatism, lumbago, fre
quent desire to urinate, often with a
burning sensation, the flow or urine be- v
ing copious or scant with strong odor.
If allowed to advance, this reaches
the Second stage, or Bladder trouble,
with heavy pain in the abdomen low
down between the navel and water pas
sage, increasing d she to urinate, with
scalding sensation in passing, small
quantities being passed whth difficulty,
sometimes necessary to draw it with
instruments. If uric acid or gravel has
formed, it will prove dangerous if neg
lected.
The Third stage is Bright’s disease.
There is comfort in knowing that Dr.
Kilmer, the great kidney and bladder
specialist, has discovered a Remedy fa
mous for its marvelous cures of
most distressing cases and known as
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root.
It is sold by all druggists.
As a proof of the wonderful virtues
of this great discovery. Swamp Root,
a sample bottle aud book of valuable
information will beseut absolutely free
by mail oa application to : Dr. Kilmer &
Co., Binghamton, N. Y. When writing
kindly mention that you read this of
fer in The Georgia Cracker.