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1 Tt ||j Is the Only Pla< II Dr w ^ The unparalleled s c* as good," etc. f Remember, we are Eeeley Cure. Our Institution, wl JjSg ditional improvements * An attractive dinii ffi ed, making the surroum V; which insures the best i gag For a period of thi 2&S dorsement of the medic ands belonging to ever all times to testify to tt v Sag Persons contempla ! GENUINE KEELEY ii j WE CUBE WHISKI I THE KEI v- * ? ??????? ? == Broom Corn. son as y germinat The following information in ref- What the erence to the growing of broom corn necessary has been sent out by the agricultural always t department of Clemson College: mulched - i Broom corn is a species of sorgum cultivatic grown especially for its tops which ments. are used in manufacturing brooms, thirty 01 The crop is one about which inquiry acre one " is frequently made by farmers and be left e the following is written partly in an- thinner i . swer to such questions. It is not a ductive. great money crop, not' more so than fun stan Cotton if equal to it, and requires ency to more in the way of equipment for its too thin handling, more labor at harvest time, from sue ^and more skill in preparing it for an(j is * market than does the cotton crop, the rema It is a crop in which the profits de- The to rpend very largely upon the quality below th of the product offered for sale,~the falling a - pi^ce rangipg from $25 up to about 0ut, if t 4 $100 per ton according to the quali- obtained, , ty. Five hundred pounds of cured hauled o brush per acre is considered a fair the same > < yield. a large i The best quality of broom corn that ma: must be straight, of good length, facturers line texture and cured in such a man- the curr; ner as to be a good green color when steel spil put on the market. There are two or side kinds grown, one known as the stand- where tl - y ard broom corn and the other as ty of bri dwarf. This latter is grown exten- The c t sively in the central west. the gree > In order to secure the quality of a roof a stalk mentioned above it is very im- The topj r portant to have well bred seed and it been rei Is almost impossible to buy such seed three in . in the open markets. One going into where tt the business of growing the crop When n< - should begin at once to select seed the stalls -with the view of improving the plants ing is co from year to year. be remo Any soil that will grow sorghum will reqi will produce broom corn and the It is the: fertilizer applied need not differ from weeks tc that used on the corn crop when the is readj same quality of land is cultivated, should t Since the object in view is a uni- different form product in quality and time of never se maturing, great care should be taken with a 1 in preparing the soil. It should be are lapp< well plowed and then harrowed and the bale reharrowed until a fine seed bed is each end secured. three hi Late planting is best on account The ci > of the fact that the young plants prompt make a very slow growth when the siderable weather is at all cool, and the crop ment is will come into-,head at a season when no expe there is not liable to be much. rain, broom c< The seed should be fertilized with a on a si planter that is adjusted to drop a things 1 few more seed than you want plants business (four to five pounds per acre) and any oth< under such conditions of soil and seaf > - IE KEE ce in the State Whe ug Addiction, Neui m 1 I obacco uccess of the World Famous Keeley l the PIONEERS, and others unconsc lich is situated in the best residential added that will insure conveniences og room is among the additions and lings comfortable and home-like. A care and attention to each and every irty years the celebrated Eeeley Cui :al fraternity, the Church and the er j r class and calling have been treated le efficiency of the Eeeley Cure, ting taking treatment for these mal; CURE. !Y, MORPHINE, TOBACCO AND TREATMENT WITHOUT PUBLIC \ J iLEY INSTI ady Street Phone vill insure good and quick ATLANTA ROB] ion. Cultivation similar to ? ! corn requires is all that is Speedy Trial for r. Weeds and grass should ' XJp Sti >e kept down and the soil Atlanta( Ga, with loose earth by frequent county poUce vi|| m with small toothed imple- gr6gatlng $3>000_ On land that will produce re8t Qf tbe negr0 forty bushels of corn per tw0 weeks ago t stalk of broom corn should street car ,n an very four or five inches and kmed Motorman is the soil becomes less pro- Conductor w H It is important to have a bjng the tWQ 0{ d, as there is a great tend- valuable8 xh6 sucker when the plants are committe<1 the , on the land and the brush confessi0ns made :kers is rarely of any value, are ,n tte tower t not ready to harvest with ed t(j glye them a ilnder of tne crop. der p0pU ps should be cut eight inches be anayed> The: te head when the broom is gjjghtest app nd before the seed are filled attempt t0 lynch he best quality of brush is made . The brush is immediately Charley Walke ut and the seeds stripped off t f the hold_, > day. The seed stripping, on pleteJZs! scale, is done by machinery th H j. B] r be purchased from manu- ^ i. Improvised methods like nlRhpd hv neero y comb with long teeth or a theTn, *.ed comb attached to a frame negroes, and the < of a box answers very well that the quartett iere is only a small quanti- speediiy and each ish to be stripped. ajty . uring in order to preserve n color, must be done under A Thistle in .nd away from the sunlight. "if I were a fai 5 from which the seed have wouldn't let any noved are spread in layers my fields." ches thick on latticed racks "But how ab iere is free circulation of air. own?" asked the ) juice can be sqeezed out of "i thought I saw ;s by twisting them, the cur- Up in it the other mplete and the brush should "The field I o\ ved from the racks. This "The other da lire from four to six weeks. 'Plague take it!' i n bulked for a period of two er heard you us i go through a sweat when it 'Some one has sov t to be baled. The tops heart.'" >e very carefully sorted into our hearts are grades, as mixed brush God. We should Us well. The bailing is done them so that nc iorse power press. The tops good may grow ir ed together in the middle of jng this? Junior and the butts stand out at [. Bales usually weigh about An indred pounds. *s Patent, even v _ , , for he knows she op requires very careful and ^ s0 nervous and work at every step and con- that trifles annoy > nntiav in wav of eauiD- choly. excitable, t necessary. If one has had aPPetite, headachi _ . +. A stipation or fainti rience m the growing of ghe needg Ejectr 5rn, it would be well to start wonderful remed1 nail scale and learn many Thousands of su from experience about the troubles, nervous that it is impossible to get become^heaUhy8 ?r way. them. Only 50,c. W. R. PERKINS, anteed by Peoples LEY INS! ?re the Celebrated Keele rasthenia (or Nerve Ex] Habit are Administer Sure has induced many imitators who claim to iously acknowledge that we are the STANDS 1 section of the city, has recently been thoroug i and comfort to our patrons. the best of meals are furnished in the Institu full corps of trained assistants and the physic case. *e has been administered in this and foreign < itire world. We need no published certificate , and in every city or hamlet in the land can b idies or sending friends or relatives for treat] i ALL DRUG HABITS, ALSO NEURAST JITY. CONSULTATION AND CORRESPi TUTE OF SOI 353 P. 0. Box 75 I 3ERRS CONFESS. DYNAMITE AND ICE. * Negroes Who Held A Strenuous Day In the Arctic With eet Car. Peary on the Roosevelt. May 7.?City and i share rewards ag- i think that none of the members offered for the ar- 1 ?' tbe Peary expedition will ever fori highwaymen, who set the 30th of August. The Rooseo-night, held up a ve1t was kicked about the floes as Atlanta suburb and ^ sb? bad been a football. The game S. A. Brown, shot begun about four o'clock in the mornBryson, after rob- in&* 1 wa? in my cabin trying to get all their cash and a little sleep with my clothes on, for four negroes who 1 had not dared to remove them for a leed, according to week- ^ rest was cut short by a by two of them, sbock so violent that before I realized o-night It is plann- that anything had happened I found speedy trial, in or- nayself on deck?a deck that inclined ilar excitement may to starboard some 12 to 15 degrees, re is, however, not 1 ran, or rather climbed, the deck to rehension that anv the port side and saw what had hapthe negroes will be P?ned. A big floe rushing past with the current had picked up the r and Ed Weaver, grounded berg to which we were at2p have made tached by the hawsers and dashed ons, implicating in It against the Roosevelt' and clear lack, as the leader, al?ng ber port side as if that thous>n. Evidence fur- and ton berg had been a toy. The women corroborate berg brought up against another just Sessions of the two sft of us, and the Roosevelt slipped )flicers are confident from between the two like a greased e will be convicted pay the death pen- soon as the pressure was relaxed and the ship regained an even ? keel we discovered that the cable Jack's Heart. which had been attached to the floe :mer," said Jack, "I berg had become entangled with the old thistles erow in propeller. It was a time for lightn ing thought and action, but by at-| out the field you taching a heavier cable to the parted i, ( mother, seriously, one and .taking a hitch around the i a thistle sprouting steam capstan we finally disentangled ' day." it. yn?" asked Jack. This excitement was no sooner over y I heard, you say, than a great berg that was passing an expression I nev- near us split in two of its own accord, se before. I said, a cube of some twenty-five or thirty ra a thistle in Jack's feet just missing our quarter by only a foot or two. "Bergs to the right of ! fields given us by them, bergs to the left of them, bergs I sow good seed in on top of them," I heard somebody >thing but what is say as we caught our breath at this l them. Are we do- miraculous escape. The ship was World. now quite at the mercy of the drift ing ice, and with the pressure from il Huband the outer pack the Roosevelt again rith a nagging wife, careene(j to starboard. I knew that needs help. She may ... ... run-down in health lf she were driven an^ hl&her on to her. If she is melan- the shore we would have to discharge roubled with loss of a large part of the coal in order to 3, sleeplessness, con- lighten her sufficiently to get her off tng and dizzy spells, . _ j ^ j ? ^ ic Bitters-the most a*ain' 30 1 decid?d to dynamite the Y for ailing women, ice. Pfnraa frnim femalp T Rartlott tn srfit. out his hat U.V1 VkJ it VUi AVWM* v A VWAVA V?w?v v? {-, troubles, backache terjes an(j dynamite and to smash the ^and "happy6m Try ice betweea the Roosevelt and the Satisfaction guar- heavy floes outside, making a soft ; Drug Co., Bamberg cushion 'for the ship to rest on. The t ? \ J.. . 'ITUTE y Remedies for Liq I haustion), and id give a treatment identical with ours lRD by comparing their treatment hly renovated and refurnished, and i te. Rooms are large and airy and we :ians in charge are in constant at countries, and to-day has the onqui 3 to establish our cure. Hundreds e found living 'witnesses ready and nent should be sure that they are g HENIA (OB NEBVE EXHAI ONDENCE CONFIDENTIAL. JTH CAROl Columbia, S. C. batteries were brought up from the LADY lazaret, one of the dynamite boxes lifted out with caution, and Bartlett Mrs. Th< and I looked for the best places in the ice for the charges. Several sticks of dynamite were wrapped in Greeir pieces of old bagging and fastened dore pa] on the end of long spruce poles, lightning which we had brought along specally home, i for this numose. A wire from the " " *" ovauuiug battery had, of course, been connect- h0U8e ed with one of the primers buried in burn, th the dynamite. Pole, wire and dyna- just a f( mite were thrust down through a ger b crack in the ice at several places in ^er arm the adjacent floe. The other end of chj each wire was then connected with the battery, every one got away to a Ki respectful distance on the far side of Sparta the deck, and a quick, sharp push on nedy, a ] the plunger of the battery sent the lived on electric current along the wires. line, bet Rip! Bang! Boom! The ship counties, shook like a dish of jelly, and a col- brother, umn of Water and pieces of ice went noon ab< flying a hundred feet into the air, The s] geyser fashion. The pressure of the pute ab ice against the ship being thus re- Hayes a: moved, she righted herself and lay In-law, i quietly on her cushion of crushed ice, between waiting for whatever might happen came by next.?Commander R. E. Peary in went ho: Hampton's Magazine. turned a 1 ' was aim A Good Start. ? ? If yoi A good start may become a dan- permane gerous snare. This is not the fault have got of the good start, but of the person The char who, having made it, rests comfort- with the ably on the idea that things will now That api take care of themselves. Almost any- who ten body can make a good start. About which i one in a hundred holds it. Printers checked know this by costly experience. They dition t know that the good pressman is not when th< the one who can turn out a fault- ,T No nj lessly printed sheet just after the average make-ready and the color and the happy c register have been satisfactorily ad- are . justed, but the one from whose work ierely you can p:.ck out at random a parents sheet after a thousand, or ten g^ thousand, or a hundred thous- Rooseve] and, have been run, and find it _ difficult to say from what part it > A Nev came. The man who holds through machine the entire job, whether it be print- door. T1 ing, or preaching, or living life in piece to any other of its searching, testing hour the forms, is yet in the minority. A the hust good start is good for just as he must long as it lasts?no longer.?S. S. order to Times. husband Those sample tablets and box pa- Don't pers at The Herald Book Stork are estate d< great bargains. Get them quick, as Denmarl they are going rapidly. HOUs, 1 : M- - . uor and ^ with the II furnish.tendance, Syj ilified en- ||5 istion). j ^ KILLED BY LIGHTNING. K)dore Parker, of Greenville, Victim of Stroke. ' ville, May 7.?Mrs. Theo- pvlJjsB ker, aged 28, was killed by ; here this morning at her ^ lear Brandon Mill, while \}x on the back piazza of her ^ watching two milL houses. at were struck by lightning ? ?. 3w minutes before, aby girl was knocked from s, out was not Kinea. ine Id will live. lied by His Brother. mburg, May 6.?Peter Ken- ^|aSB prominent young farmer -Who . Pair Forest creek on the ween Union and Spartanburg , was shot and killed -by hit David Kennedy, this after- J*|j3 DUt 1 o'clock. footing occurred over a dis- , out a land line. Edward $f|i ad Peter Kennedy, brotherswere disputing about a. line \ their land. David Kennedy and took the matter up. He me and got his pistol and rend shot his brother.' Death ^ Vjl ost instantaneous. i are going to do anything nt for the average man you to begin before he is a man. ice of success lies fn working ['"W, boy and not with the man. 1 plies peculiarly to those boys d to drift off into courses uean that unless they are ; they will be formidable ad o the criminal population By grow older. ttion is safe unless in the ' ( family there are healthy, hildren. If these children v * brought up well they are not curse to themselves and their but they mean the ruin of e in the future.?Theodore ??gj 7 York woman has had a slot lock attached to her front le machine requires a $5 gold open it, and at a certain > lock is set for the coin. If >and stays out past the hour, deposit a coin in the slot in ^ get in. It is said that her stays at home at night now. commit suicide if your real )es not sell. List it with the s Realty Co. C. H. MIL- ^ Manager. ' * i : ' ''iSi' flste-i;