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BETTER THAN THE AVERAGE
Food Value of Georgia Wheat Shown
by Analysis.
Box. O. B. Stevens, Commissioner of
Agriculture. -
Dear Sir—Last year I reported to yon
the analyses of a number of samples of
Georgia wheat, giving their, food value
is compared with other American
wheats of the best quality as exhibited
at the World’s Columbian Exposition at
Chicago.
As you may remember, the Georgia
wheats compared very favorably with
these wheats, in fact, the average of the
Georgia wheat analyzed by this depart
ment showed a somewhat better analy
sis than the average of the American
wheats of the best quality exhibited at
Chicago.
For the purpose of comparison and
refreshing your memory I repeat below
the table of analyses then reported, to
you:
jioyal Anointing Oil.
to the records, £100
B According . .
I^ p8 id to the royal apothecary
■ for the anointing oil, writes the
| york CommerciaPs London
B^gBpondent, which it is his bus
ing to provide. When the Arch-
I bishop of Canterbury has placed
Kfbe crown on the King’s head the
i crowd assembled in the Abbey ac-
Haims him loudly, shouting: “God
Ijave the King!” In fact, the fals
ify of coronations proves that
I the ruie of silence in church is by
I do means observed at Westmims-
I ter on these august occasions. As
I goon as the sovereign is crowned,
[the peers and peeresses put on
I their coronets, and the Bishops
[their miters. Each peer’s coronet
[has been previously borne by a
[page not above 14 years of age,
[who carries it on a cushion and
[walks behind him. The peeresses
[do not have pages to carry their
[coronets. Hundred# of corona-
[tion medals are struck in gold and
silver, which the Treasurer of the
Household scatters among the
ispectators in the Abbey. Twelve
[new peerages were gazetted to
|commemorate the coronation of
the late Queen Victoria.
ARE.YOU FEELING BADLY? 4
RIO^rkStipBITTER
■B WILL CURE' YOU. *
You know all
about*jt. The
rush, the
/\ worry, the
f exhaustion.
You go abbut
Tyr with a great
weight resting u|>on
^ you. You can’t throw
off this feeling. You
are a slave to your work.
Sleep fails, and you are
On the verge of hervous
exhaustion.
-What is to be done?
Take m
E. E. DIXON & CO
Marquis and a Count, both Span
iards. The Count was a deadly
shot, and as the duel was to be
fought with pistols the mother of
the Marquis, who was passionate
ly attached to her Bon, visited her
son’s opponent on the- eve of the
fight and prayed him not to aim
at her son. The C Hint yielded to
her entreaties and promised to aim
away from her son. The duel
came off in the morning, and the
Count, true to his promise, aimed
away from his opponent, but the
bullet, striking a stone in the
ground, rebounded and hit the
Marquis in the head killing him
instantly. The mother, on hear
ing the news, went raving mad,
and the Count was so overcome
that he has entered a monastery
of the White Friars, with a view
to taking the vows of that order.
The story of the duel has caused
a great sensation in Spanish socie
ty, but the names of the persons
concerned are so far kept from
public knowledge.
Chemical Auaiyses of Georgia Wheat.
For fifty years it has
been lifting up the dis
couraged, giving rest to
the overworked, and
bringing refreshing sleep
to the depressed. f;
No other Sarsaparilla
approaches it. In age
and in cures, “Ayer’s” is
“the leader of them all.”
It was old- before other
sarsaparillas were born.
SliOO a bottle. All druggists.
' Ayer’s Fills aid the ac-
tion of' Ayer’s Sarsapa
rilla. They cure bilious
ness. 25 cts. a box.
*' I have U8ed Ayer’s medicines for
more than 40 years and have said
from the very start that you made
the best medicines in the world. I
am sure your Sarsaparilla saved my
life when I first took it 40 years ago.
I am now past 70 and am never
without your medicines.”
Skin troubles, cuts, hums, scalds and
Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve. It is imitat
ed. Be sure you get DeWitt’s. Geo
H. Fuller Drug Co.
Samples of Chicago Modesty.
“I have an aunt,” said the Oak
Park girl, according to the Chica
go Record-Herald
who is an old
[maid, and Til bet you she is the
[most modest thing you ever heard
Of- you r fcudw #hat she did
one night not long ago . when we.
had the curtains down in her room
f?he stayed up three hours, waifc-
1.j, 'fd&Tear
Kansas,
It will be seen from the above that
the Georgia wheats show, un well In
addition came the following kind letter
from Dr. Wiley, the effect of whioh
should be very helpful td the Georgia
Wheat growers.
\ £■■ Jxo. M. McCandless,
If-M it : B i ISfcate Chemist.
ing for the moon to set.
the man m it might see her when
she undressed for bed.”
“That’s pretty niSdes^ hut I
have a cousin who bents her,” the
Keenwood girl replied. “She nev
er eats potatoes that are boiled
with the skin on, if men happen
FRANCE THE TEUTONIC,
ried women. One of these was en-
dowed.more than 200 years ago by
a man who left the bulk of his
fortune to his spinster descen
dants
CATHARTIC
Parts of the Republic Are as Mach
German as the Fatherland.
The northern third of France and
half of Belgium are today more Teu
tonic than the south of Germany. This
should not occasion surprise when we
remember the incessant downpour of
Teutonic tribes during the whole his
toric period. It was a constant pro
cession of Goths from all points of the
compass — Franks, Burgundians and
others.
France was entirely overrun by the
Franks, with the exception of Brittany,
by the middle of the sixth century. All
through the middle ages this part of
France was German in language and
Customs as well. The very ^iame of
the country Is Teutonic. It has the
same origin as Franconia, in southern
Germany. In 812 the council of Tours,
away down south, ordained that every
bishop should preach both In the Ro
manic and the Teutonic languages.
The Franks reserved their German
speech 400 years after the conquest.
Charlemagne was a German. His
courtiers were dll Germans. He lived
and governed from outside the limits
of modern France. The Abbe Sieyes
uttered an ethnological truism when,
in the course of the French revolution,
he cried out against the French aris
tocracy, “Let us send them back to
their German marshes whence they
came!”—London Express.
comparative food values adopted by
the judges at the World’s Columbian
Exposition at Chicago, the average
Georgia wheat Would have been rated at 109.25
The average of the samples exhibited at -
World’s Fair would have been rated at 108.54
*Lh these tables the moist gluten and dry
gluten do not constitute a part of the 100 per
cent, but are independent estimations, in
tended to show the quality of the flour as a
bread maker.
The bonqe Ta managed by
salaried trustees, and the unmar
ried woman who can prove kin
ship to the founder is entitled to
a home there. V
Continum r this investigation, I ob
tained from Mr. T. C. Martin samples
of the whe: exhibited at the last State
Fair, held in Atlanta. The pressure of
the •'state’s work and ..various causes
conspired to delay work on this lot of
samples so that I am only now ready to
report. After analyzing the samples
and finding that the Georgia wheats
still compared very favorably with those
from other parts of the union,.I decided
to send, on portions of the samples to
Dr. H. W. Wiley, chief chemist of the
United Stages Department of Agricul
ture for analysis, inasmuch as in one of
the publications, of his department on
the oereals, it was stated “that the
poorest wheats were grown in the South
ern states. ” As the result of my analy
sis had proved to me that this statement
was too sweeping, at least for the upper
half of Georgia, I wrote to Dr. Wiley,
who kindly consented to analyze the
samples of wheat I had on hand. The
samples of wheat were forwarded' to
him, with the names of the" growers and
the place where grown. In due time I
received a report from him which I ap
pend in the table given below- .
ed on will he found in Prtcexy Ash
Bitters. It heals and strengthens.
Db. E. K. DIXON & CO.
Four tenement bills have been
passed by the New York legisla
ture. They provide for a perma
nent bureau for the inspection
and regulation of tenement house
construction and operation, for
certain restrictions as to light and
air supply and for safeguards
against further fire. One of -the
bills provides that landlords shall
be held responsible for disorderly
tenants. dg
Sweeden and Norway bo11
boast several homes for unmar-
own gas, electricity, water and*
street car service, the city of Glas
gow proposes to dispense its own
liquor, and municipal saloon is
talked about. A committee ap
pointed to consider the question
has reported in favor of an exper
iment and Parliament is to be
The blood may be in bad condition,
yet with no external signs, no skin
eruption or sores to indicate it* The
Symptoms in such cases being a variable
appetite, poor digestion, an indescribable
weakness and nervousness, loss of flesh
and a general run-down condition of the
6ystem—clearly showing the: blood has
lost its nutritive qualities, has become thin
and watery. It is in just such cases thai
u.S. S. has done some of its quickest and
*nost effective work by building up the
blood and supplying the elements lacking
to make it strong and vigorous.
as a blood purifier and
0 -one up a weak and
emaciated system, with \
^ry marked effect by
fcay^of improvement.
5e°” iC
I had. piles so bad I could get no
rest nor find a cure until I tried De-
Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve. After us
ing it once, I forgot I ever had any
thing like Piles.” -E. C. Boice, Somers
Point, N. Y. Look out for .imitations.
Be sure you ask for Dewitt’s. Geo. H.
Fuller Drug Go. \
Spring coughs are specially danger
ous and unless cured at once, serious-
results often, follow. One Minute Cough
Cure acts like magic. It is not a com
mon mixture but is a high grade reme
dy. Geo. H. Fuller Drug Co.
“The Noblest Avocation of Man.”
Such the old Romans called agricult
ure. From the plow Cincinnatus was
balled to the helm of state at a time of
imminent peril, and throughout the days
of the republic and the early and better
times of the empire orators, statesmen
and poets cultivated fields, gardens and
and wrote beautiful essays
fruits, flowers
<f Nervous prostration caused the most
severe pains which would move around in
different parts of my body. Everything
I ate caused me distress and at night I
suffered so much with my head that I
could not sleep. Several physicians pre
scribed for me and at last one doctor
advised me to take Dr. Miles’ Nervine.
I did so and was helped from the first
dose. Six bottles restored my health.”
Mrs. K. J. Prunty, Martinsville, Va.
The remedies they think best suited to
the needs of their patients. When the
disease is of a nervous nature, with head
ache, sick stomach, failing appetite, indi
gestion, restlessness, loss of sleep and a
general run-down condition, a nerve tonic
and brain food is an absolute necessity.
The best of all remedies for weak, debili
tated, exhausted nerves—best for the doc
tor to prescribe and best for the patient to
take—is that incomparable restorative,
orchards,
and poems about fields,
and bees.
In the old time days before the civil
war some of our most successful farm
ers were retired merchants and eminent
lawyers and statesmen. It seemed in
those days to be the ambition of men to
acquire money in mercantile pursuits
and in the learned professions that they
might have money with which to buy
land, and spend the evening of life in
peaceful retirement on a well stocked
and well cultivated farm. They had
not the advantage of the improved im
plements of today, but they used the
best then known.—State Agricultural
Department.
Educate Your Bowels With CaBcarets.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
10c, 25c, If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money.
Keeton, Mo. f
R * s tbe greatest of all
tonics, and you will
Lj|fin d the appetite im-
Tjjp V&gP proves at once, strength
‘jrcnis, and nervousness vanishes as new
« * mre once more circulates
aU parts of the system,
blooft** ^ * S *k e OR iy purely vegetable
erai° ^ Ur ^ er known. It contains no min-
011 ,. wba tever. Send for our free book
an ^ skin diseases and write ©us
^° r an y fiff orma tion or advice
' ' N° charge for medical advice.
E SW,FT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
It makes the nerves strong, the brain clear, the appetite keen and the digestion perfect.
It rebuilds the failing strength and is an unfailing cure for nervous prostnftion.
Sold fey all droggists on a gaanntte. Dr. Miles Medical Co., Hffrhart,