The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, February 11, 1904, Image 3

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( j I SOUTHERN i 7W>/CS Of INTEREST TO Thi PLAN ' K Growing Strawberries. I first plow my laml iu the spring o fall. Sow to cow peas about two years mowing off the liar. Then in Octobe or Noveraoer I prepare my land wel by plowing. I apply all the stabh manure I ran to the land, at the rut* of twenty or thirty loads to the jut* I also apply UOt) pounds arid phos phate. pounds cotton seed meal fifty pounds muriate potash to tin aero, in (he drill or broadcast. I ?'.< nut give much commercial fertilizer ii the hue tall, as it will waste tliroiisrl tin* winter months if we have mud rain. I }.ru front 200 t.? :;<?n pound; acid phosphate. l.~o pouutis nitrate o soda. 1'ic pounds sulphate of potasl unless tin* land is very rieli. I firs break !ar.u well, then throw up liigl beds froitt two and a half to thix feet apart; then take a board and rtti over the beds, making them level ?: top. and not too high. 1 cultivate bu little until early spring. As soon a: the grounds get dry. I then work an; put on spring fertilizers. When tin blooms begin 10 eouie I stop euitira tion. If possible I cultivate three o; four times. 1 then get pine leave; which cost from six to eight dollar: per acre, and mulch. 1 only mulch tin top of the bed. and not the middle, as 1 p.-tiiul the mulch a g<><>;! place for tr.< ytay beetle .o deposit her opr.-;. whirl makes the wlilto jrru?>. The only waj 1 oan set rid of them is to dig then out afnl * ill theiu. 1 have to depent on children to a largo extent to do uij picking and I superintend the worl myself. I use checks to keep the umu her of quarts each hand picks and w? have 110 irouMe t<? settle after we nr? done gathering. We cash tlu^e check; every morning. 1 have shipped ten miles and had m\ berries on tiie market by i? o'clock After the gathering season is over 1 cultivate by working the mulch in tin soil. By so doing I can keep a vogeta bio matter in the soil, and it docs no! burn by the fertiliser. 1 do no{ feral ize at once, if dry I was, until Augus to fertilize my vines. Titoy will d<? lor litile until tli?* w on i Iter gets cooler, am' then they make up ail lost time. 1 use for this fall manuring 'J-'"1 pound: acid phosphate, 1<>.) pounds nitrate o! soda, seveni.v-ii*e pounds sulphate 0| potash per acre. Keep well cultivated and surplus runners cut out and an: sure to get a crop if you can get mois lure.?1\ I*. O'Slti-'lds. .Tones\i!h\ S. C Why Cnlltin I'sitls to I'rrcit. Touching the experience of W S Wheeler, with deep breaking am: broadcast manuring, i have to say tha bis failure was surely not due to tin t>ro *i.*ir.rr ritul n:ani-r:Ti<? I have ltd lowed practically the same method sov ernl times with excellent results. Tlx host cotton that lliave this year grow on land that was deeply broken lasi fall will- a (list; plow and inanurei broadcast vitli pounds cotton sect meal and tJPO pounds acid phosphate per acre. About l.~n pounds per aer< s?? - of.lire same mixture was applied witl the seed. I suspect that Mr. TThceler's fail rire is due to some insect or to sonn disease that' destroyed the younj squares. In a large part of tlx COttjm oil this farm and in this neigh borhood failed t ? set squares. Tlito would fall off when first formed whether they were pnm aired 1 somt Insect or were affeeteil l<y li~ ? dis ease, wo could not toll. X:v. v?ri year since then portions of i have been a fleeted aiinih.rly. ' 'hi: year an eight-acre field lias fa:: .t P fruit. The little squares could ;>nu instances be found dead on the stall or on the ground. A neighbor asked ini to look at his cotton and toil him win it did not fruit. It iook? d very mud like mine on the eight-acre field, v-' could not toll him because I did no know. This trouble happens on var ious typos of land, and seems not to do pend on how the land has been ma uured or prepared. I have examinee many stalks to find out what insect If any. was doing the mischief. Sev eral small Insects of different kind: were sometimes found on a stalk, bu I could not deteriniue whether any on< of them wire doing harm. Of lati years I am always fearful that my cot ton is not go'n<r u? fruit.? A. C. Jack son. iu Southern Cultivator. I.ook te the Kt.ofiUf. If there ever was a time when tin farmer should own his own crop, fre< from inortages and liens, it is now. I we own the next crop we can set tin priee and get it. I?ut if we rush inn debt to make a large crop, because tin price is now lush, we will be forcei to market it at prices set by others ' ^ .Vbd that price may be L low the cos of raisins the cotton. We are greatly interested in thi: point, because the future prosperity of the ^onruern larmer ai sui&v ami the temptation to plant largely o; cotton is very strong. To plant largely of cotton means buy more mules, contract tor mori News of a General Nature. "Washington, Special.?Plans hare been completed for the *12.003 rifle range or the naval reserve'-a n at Pen sacola, Fla, It is hoped by the authorities to have this 600-yard ran:. > sufficiently advanced in constru tio:i for the use in March of the naval vessels of ttfc Xorth and South Atlantic and the European squadron v.-ften those vessels are in Pecsocola harbor for targett practice. ?^ FARM fiO TFS, [ ? '09BE TEH, STOCK,:!AX AND TRUCK GROWER. I 1 labor, go in tlol?t for more fertilizers "I ami supplies. It means to out down j the crops of food. All of these and i other incidental expenses will bring 1 :is tinder heavy obligations and to meet ' these we must sell these upon a glutt" ted marker, and that means a lower price. j There never was a time when it was ! *o important to plant large crop- of a ; food plants and raise full supplies of j farm animals. If the next crop is 1 raised ou a cash basis, and is ours 1 when gathered, the result will make ! | us better off than we have ever been. *: We wiil have more money and be in - j better shape to use it than we have 1 i ever been. I Look closely to your expenses this II year. As far as possible have some'! thing to s?di coming in all along, to ' ' pay your way. Plant vegetables and 11 fruit, bay and grain, peas and potato toes, liaise ln-gs and elm-kens, eggs ; and butter, sell enough of these to ' buy what you must have. Do this. *! and the new year will be one of great ' ' prosperity 10 yon. Don't think that j you ran afford to make yourself an ex' ecptinn. ? XV h *r?* Beef Feeding is ?w. i TIi.? lii.'f iiulnstrv hoimr a ' new cue in the South, these matters 1 have not been studied ns closely as they will he in the future. On the i Tennessee station farm the present 1 j year. the trains from silajre, eoiton | seed meal, ami corn and coh meal ap; proximated very closely those than can - he made on a cood blue crass pasture. ? and the carrying capacity of Bermuda .? crass has also been shown to lie consitl{ rahly in advance of the blue crass sod. As a cost of inakinc a pound of pain, and the consumption of concentrates . required therefor, have been very low. [ there i< every reason to helieve that > beef cattle on the cheap lands of tin? South, with the abundance of food t crops that may he utilized, can be pro-; duced for less than almost anywhere t ' else in the country, t Tlie Southern far titer him every ren1 son to be en con race.l in the production [ of po?*k. His natural ndvamn.Cis are ! such that he can produce pork very F cheaply indeed throuch the medium of [ crazinc crops which can be so crown . as to produce a succession tlwonchout i the whole year. By puttinc down - : winter cereal crops in the early au. ' tumn. say about the first of Scptemj her. he can secure a cood deal of craz| inc throuch January and February, . and certainly all that lie needs throuch i March. April and May. Sprint* sown t v.vgo. seeded about the fir<t of March. > will he available throuch .Tune, and - by thru I into such early varieties or tno . cow pen as the New Era and Warren's ? Extra Early can be had for July and August pastures. Soy beans will then t be available for September and Oeto1 bor. and after that peanuts and arti1 chokes. - Southern Cultivator v fcsch Trees in Fence Corners. ( All observers know how hardy the tree and how .sound and good the peaches are when an isolated tree in a fence corner, here and there, is left to itself. The reasons are obvious. A ^ fence row. particularly an old one. enriches the ground by shading and keeping down the growth of grass and weeds I'nder the lower rails the ' ground lies fallow. It is black and rich, sweet smelling and friable. Trees | in the fence corners naturally spread I their roots under this mellow strata. ' | They feed on it the year round. Then j on e: ii side of a fence the ground is ' I getter: ily trodden or walsed over out ! s i:u-' iittle distance from the tree's * | foothold. cenv..,juently cureulio are I destroyed, i hey have a poor chance to deposit their larvae in the soil, as it 1 is trodden and hard. The trunk of the I 1 ^ento.do/l fr/itti tlio 1 ill 1*11111 ?1111 1 oi" summer, and the intense cold of winter by the fence. Peat h trees in fence corners do better than the crops they may happen 1 to shade. Their roots also rob the ' ground in a small degree, to the detriment of the crops. An overhanging peach tree loaded with Elbertas, 1 Clings. Annie Wylies. or any of their ? equally Ineious cogeners, is a temptation very few way-farers can withstand. No better fruit ever refreshed the plate.?Old Fogy, in the Southern Fruit (5rower. An Vtistialian Aqnedart. t? In order to supply the Coolgardie and r> Kalgoorlie g*id tields in Western Ausf tralia with water, an aqueduct is un? der construction, leading from a resj ervoir on the Helena tiver. iVJS mile* > distant, and .'700 feet below the level - '- ? * * - I - ?1U.1 T1,a n o 1 UI IIU? UlSll'l*'! I >J in* Mipi'UVlL 1UV . tor Is to bo carried iu a thirty-inch t pipo. and elevated fivin tableland t<> tableland by means of oiirlit pumping * stations Tim cost of the work is ostinmtod at si.V?iR>.000, and the annual expense for operating and interest at f $1.7"<0,0?R?: but those who have undertaken it -believe that the gold fields, for the benefit of which they are work> ing. are the richest in the world. Minor Mention. : Joplin. Mo., Special.?!u an exi change of shots with two marked men who had rifled the depot sr.fe of "William H. Broadstreet, the station agrr.t on the 'Frisco system at Granby. near i:ere. was fatally wounded. The men escaped. Bloodhounds ha; u keen sent i to the scene from Jopnn. It has i con settle I that Mrs. Rus' I sell will not be appointed to the Wil; mington, N. C.. pcstoGco A Moneyless Monarch. ; The ereci: of Servia in Europe : etands at the present moment at the | lowest ebb. Wherever King Peter ! turns to obtain money with which tc I establish the stability of his throne ! he is unable to obtain it. I Driven to desperation, a representaj tive of the Servian Government caliecl j at the branch office in Vienna of the Gresham Life Insurance Company i with a view to obtaining a loan on i the security of the king's life. His ef ' forts, however, were unsuccessful. ! The unfortunate representative of the discredited monarch had made the rounds not oniy of all the bankc in Vienna, but also the private millionaire money lenders, in a vain endeavor to obtain a loan, and the fail ure or h:s last errort to obtain $4iw,000 on the frail pledge of the king's life was the last straw. It will be remembered that Kinc ; Peter sent Prince Arsene to Paris. I hoping that his influence would obtain ! for him monetary aid; but the banks 1 refused to accede to his request, and J he was obliged to appeal without sue; ccss, to some well-known millionaires. THE GENDER OF ARKANSAS. | Small Bey Claimed It Was Female, and Proved It "The life of a school teacher would be sorely monotonous," said a teacher of a boy's school not a hundred miles from the City Hall, "if it were not for his sense of humor and the really funny things which happen every day in the school room. One day, for instance, I had up my smart class in grammar and set the boys parsing. I called to Moses, a colored boy, to parse Arkansas, and he said 'Arkansas.' with emphasis on the second syllable. I corrected bis pronunciation, and he went on: " 'Hark-cn-saw is a noun, objective case, indicative mood, comparative degree, third person, passive, and , nominative case to scissors.' I " 'You haven't : aid what gender, I Moses,' I remarked. I " TrvtM.w.'wA OPAn/lAM ' rtniftl'lv fAi r Ciuiuiur ftCUUCl, ^Uivni; marked my smart scholar. " 'Why, sir?' I asked, somewhat puzzled. " 'Becos It's got Miss Souri on the r.orf, I.ouisa Anna cn the souf. Mrs. Sippi on the east, and ever so many more shemales on the west.' "It was so well done I joined in and encouraged the laugh which followed the smart boy's burner."?New York Press. Music Taught by 'Phone. A pupil of a Utica cornet player, who lived many miles from that city, broke his leg and was unable to leave his home. The teacher determined that he would give his pupil in town his usual lessons and proceeded to 'rar.smit liis musical instruction over the telephone. The experiment worked meet satisfactorily, the notes of rhe cornets of both instructor and pupil were heard distinctly at the receiving end. and whatever verbal suggestions the professor had to make were sent, cf course, just as readLy over the wire. ].obsters cannot be persuaded to grow up together peaceably. If a dozen newly hatched specimens are put into an aquarium within a few days there will be only one?a large, fat and promising youngster. He has eaten all the rest. A WOMAN'S MISERY. Mrs. John LaRue, of 113 Patorson Avenue. lauerson. ?j~ i >?.itroubled for about nine years, and ^ what I suftij&C fered no one the house the back ache has boon so bail that it brought tears to my eyes. The pain at times was s"> intense that I was compelled to giv< up my household duties iind lie down. There were headaches, dizziness and blood rushing to my head to cause bleeding at the nose. The first box of Doan's Kidney I'ills i benefited me so much that I continued the treatment The stinging pain in the small of my hack, the rushes of blood to the head and other symptoms disappeared." Doan's Kidnev Pills for sale by all j i: fillers. *> i-ems jjei i?oa. | Mi lb urn Co_ Buffalo. N. Y. Putnam Fadeless Dves color more ! goods, per package, than others. i Peonle seldom appreciate anything they ! can afford. For Sl.ti.t Money Order. The John A Salter Seed Co., La Crosse, Vi'is., mail postpaid In trees, consisting of Apricots, Apiilts. t rabs, Cherries. Phimr. Peaches and Pears, just the thing for a <ity or country garden, including the great Bismark Apple, all hardy Wisconsin stock, are aent yomi#ee upon receipt of ?1 X5. ANI^ -rt ICC. AND TICIS NOTICE on got sufficient seed of Celery. Carrot. Cabbage. Onion. Lettuce. Itadish ar.d Flower .Seed; to furnish bushels ni choice flowers nnd lots of vegetables for a big family. to ;cth?r with our greet plant and ced catalog. J'A.C.L.] Ti:e path nee of those *vh > si; down and v.v:, for a dead a: ..-da shoes is not a viri tuc. Enciiii'cri'ij in Montana. | Henry i. McDanieL tt-Gity Eogiseer I of Atlanta, now in charg-i of OovernI mcnt engineering in 3t ln'ai.a. says that J lio contracted a trrviMo eon ;h which no 1 physician could re v., but was cured by' 1 tylor's Cherokee ilenn dy of Sweet | J Cum and Mullein. At druggists, 2uc., r>0c. and S1.0? a bottle. J CAUGHT E\ RELE ?| Oriv a* nidmic ' catarrh.''" i ' Medical Talk. 5 ~~ I LA GRIPPE is epidemic catarrh. It'at spares no class or nationality. The cul- el. ! tnred and the ignorant, the aristocrat andj at , the pauper, the masses and the classes are a j alike subject to la grippe. None are exI empt?all are liable. -?c | Have you the grip? Or. rather, has the ot I grip got you? Grip is well named. The' j | original l'rench term, la grippe, has been ; shortened by the busy American to read; i "grip." Without intending to do so a new i wuro has been coined that exactly describes (.1 the case. As if sonic hideous giant v.:;h 1 ' RuARANTEE^CUREfo^^b^elb^ubtM!^ I biooS, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, fou 1 pains after eating, liver tronble, aallow skin and 1 I regularly you are sick. Constipation ldlla more ] I starts chronic ailments and lone yearn of aufferin I CA3CARET3 today, for you will never get well I M rirbt Take our advice, start with Cascarets t 1 money refunded. The Renuiae tablet stamped booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Compan ?an?*i""" ?.-ztcsna??bm^m HB " " ?y To Cure Your Hesdach. I Ta^ CA WR Immediately while you wait -and bas no ^uoum. Cures Colds j nftrnii?m?i??r^a?maea ? A Golden Rule t of Agriculture: | 8 3e good to your land and your crop I ; I will be good. Plenty of Potash inthefertilizerspellsquality f I j and quantity in the liar- , d tyfflT.-1 vest. Write us and J we will send you, ft B free, by next mail, r''&?1j f our money winning MBwJllLfi ' ~ 5 books. SKA^KJ : v | GERMAN KALI WORKS. * New Yftrt?$7 N<fUB "si 41 ! i ^ ShmcoRPOsxzD) V? ? AP1TAI. M'iO? li J*ft0,000.00, Ku?!nr???^ li**n v<?n ^-iinK <>f uolii.! off ioi"h<">:. ' w; it-for College Journal atnl social ' iTer of tin < I Iflidlii;Bnflcttt ac<i Shorthand I'cboiilk. \ddn-iu j KI\G".S RmiKm COM.EGE. Kaleich. v j A. C., or C'bnrlotte? X. J O'e an > teach Bwua keeping, shorthand. Etc.. by tnaiL] at >0- 7' _ 1 M fSAWMILLSSlSl, I Mcoel-Kinir Varitllo Feci U'o-t- are unei- SI | I Hoelle-2 for ACCt'EAcy, ?iv? licitr. m rahii- Bp ; JglTTAXD EASE OFOl'ZEATMN. W f te for full Kj ! t^deaerlytive ctrrHla---. .Va :uftrrnroiithe ffl{ ; jg.SALE-l IKON WOKNrf.UiL-t : >: ?t?.K.C- g <Q? OAA 13 d I A >rf ???a c^tf%. f i ^ a i -' a&ilw iillllSjThe DcLorch Patent Variable Friction Feed < ?2vy Mi!.' with a h. \>. cuts .,cjo icct ;>er d.~.y A : 1 size* and prices lo suit DcLoach Shiujle Mills Kdeers. Trimmers. I'laners; Corn and Buhs Mills. Water Wheels. X,ath Mills, Wood Saws ' ? Our handsome new Catalog will interest you DcLosch Mill Mfg. Co., has fy.1, Atlanta,'Ca | > I THE GRI 1ASED BY WWW'-.. Villi Grip i?j dottlifj "! !t?. asp. Men, women, children. wnotc w?i.? ;d cities are caught in the baneful grip of terrible monster. The following letters spea!: for them Ives as to the elKcaev of Perunu in case* ia grippe or its after etn-'-ts. per KffvvtHof La Grippe Eradicated by Ve-ru-na. Mrs. Fred Weinberger, Wcaterlo, Albany j-tnty, N. Y., writes: "'Several years ago I had an attack of la appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad 1 mouth, headache, Indigestion, pimples, diuiness. When your bowels don't move people than all other diseases together. It ig. No matter what ails you, start taking and stay well until you get your bowels oday under absolute guarantee to cure cr C C C. Never aold in bulk. Sample and ijr, Chicago or New York. 503 H With Nauseous CatKartici n JVE. It Ctires SI 1 bad effects on the Stomach. IT IS flf IsO ^ * bottle. Cotton Gin Machinery RATT. MUNGER. WINSHIP. AGLE. SIMTH We make tbe tco?t complete line a ac> ncfa u the world. We also make ENGINES and BOILERS. LINTERS for OIL MILLS. e sell everyUuck needed about a Cotton Gin Write for Illustrated Cata-logue. 'onfinental Gin Co., Birmingham, Ala. T /Twine BUYS A J i ?3 SHARE i<! positive <>? 11- r-h;p :u Mill C'cucentratln^ lain and Orriu;i?' U- Id 2Mn?-s Mill now grlndtug it cold contlRually. Look* like speedy and eonauout dl*t<ieiiu.-. Sew company Just s>rart!uir cturp!.. prospectus. COZ.I) URG free. KIWHF.T CO I II COUPASY, 06 Mack Block. UFSYEB, COJ.O. nrnncv Ell Up5 J !&$. /' Rcracrc." n!l rwellii;^ ::: S to 20 / <L;. s; effects a pe: ra it c - 4>er* A ' ,1:-v ,Tr' ' -r-'T,Vt> & *\ fiwnfree. Nothitn oaji . . 0S ' W . Write Of.H.K.Gw'3 .W7 ' SrKciBox jj ..:ia.-t2. t.j SgaESHanaaEa# CURES WHERE All ELSE fAIU.jST Best Couch byrup. l'aj tea Good. Lie \--'i la time. Sold by drufftrhts. fM p. PE-RU-NA. grippe which left my i.erves in a prostrated condition. Then I had another attack of ia grippe which left me worse. I had tried three good physicians, bat all in vain. X sjave Peruna a trial. In a short time I wtMfeeling better, and now I am as well as any one."?Mrs. Pred Weinberger Hon. James R. Guill, of Omaha. Hon. James R. Gnill is qne of the oldest and most esteemed men of Omaha, NejjL He has done much to make it what it & serving on public boards a number or times. He endorses Peruna in the follotrin 2 words: I am 68 years old, am hale and heartjv and Peruna has helped me attain it. Tw? years ago I had la grippe?my life was despaired of. Peruna saved me."?J.. R. Guill. .4 Relative of Abraham Lincoln. Mr. fjilas S. Lincoln, who resides at 913 1 Street, X. W., Washington, D. C., has tho . honor of being third cousin to Abraham Lincoln. He writes: "I had !a grippe five times before using your medicine. Four years ago I begaja the use of Peruna. since which time I bail not been troubled with that disease. I can now do as much work at my desk aft 1 ever could in my life. I have gained more i than ten pounds in weight."?8. S. I-incpln. , Pe-vu-na Sot Only Cured La Grlppm \ But Benefited, the Whole System. Miss Alice M. Dressier, 1313 N. Bryant Ave., Minneapolis, Minn., writes: "Lost spring I suffered from la gnpp* and was partially cured, but the bad altar t effects remained through the summer, ana somehow 1 did not get strong as I was before. One of my college friends who was j visiting me ashed me to try Peruna and I did so, and found it all and more than 1 had expected. It not only cured me of th* catarrh, but restored me to perfect healtlL built up the entire system and brought It happy leeling of buoyancy which I hau no4 known for years."?Alice M. Dressier. ? An Actress' Testimonial. Miss Jean Cowjjill, Griawold Oper^aHouae. Troy, N*. is the leading tady with the Aubrey Stock Co. She writes tbi following: "During the past winter of 1901 1 suffered for several weeks from a severe attack of grippe, which left a serious e?; tarrhal condition of the throat and head. "Some one suggested Peruna. As a laat resort, after wasting much time and money | on physicians. 1 tried the remedy f&itb1 fully, and in a few weeks was as well a* J ever."?Jean Gowgill. A Southern Judge Cured. 1...1? I Tlartwell. .Ga_ MlliKC ~ , writes: Some five or six years ago I had a very severe spell ot gnppe, which left me wiik systemic catarrh. A friend advised me t* try your Poruna, which I did, and was im! mediately benefited and cured. The third bottle completed the cure."?H. .T. Goss. ? If you do not derive prompt and satisfao! torv'rcsults from the uce of Peruna writ* 1 at imce to Dr. Hartman, giving a full state* j ment of your <ase, and he will be pleased to give von hi- valuable advice gratis. . Address Dr. Hartman, President of Tht| Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. I $? ISl J proline Oats on earth. The ^ Ihfton, says: "Silzer's 0.?ts are the H jft. IjjT* best out of over four hundred 6<>rta H r ? ir\ \ te,,eJ b? us-" Tbl* (rami Oat H ' mtv I ylet't'd 'n Wisconsin 154 bu., Ohio H ' I lkV? *"** bu., Michigan 231 bu., Missouri I ;l ;5^\l 555 bu.,and North DalcoUSlObu. per H 8 AWlw , acre, and will poeltlvely doaa well by I S /'I iV 70U* S'r 1111(1 ** conTillce<b 'Ml A Pcuf Cwnrn to VleMe. | ULI /if lilur'i Beardless Barley, 1!1 ki. iu I. I I W la lalier'i BsaeSaiHer Ckb, 104 ka. per L I if 8aher'i Blj fur taU, til ki. yer 1. 1 1(1/ lilur's lew IitUsal Oati, 111 M. psrL i ay Haiur i F?ixU?i. 31 ka. per I. II StJur'i Ocleai, l,m bi. per i. B J All of onr Farm and Vegetable Seeeliai'a , P jj pedigree ?u>:k, bred right up to big ytelda. ||k Salzer's Speltz 'Emmcr!. IB.W Crratnt renal wonder of tlie age. It la Mil a not com nor wheat, nor rye, nor barley,nor J? M \ oa's. bit*, a poWen combination of tlicinall, yj yielding HO bu. of grain and 4 tons of rich |9 Straw bay per ?Tf. (.rcarrst stock foodoa }Ti earth. lioes well everywhere. > (H Salzcr's Million Dollar Grass. Stoat talked of grass on earth.. Editors and. > KI Co'.leg- Professor* and Acncultnrtl Lecturers Jj| ft v/ithout Hint; Tfridi 14 ion* cf rich |j luy and lots of pasture bckides, per acre. ' j S alzer'a Teoslnte. (fl Raiser's Teoslnte n'odares lit rich, Jaley. _i> sweet, leafy stocks from one kernel of teed, 14 ' S fi-et li kti in 'JO days; yielding fully 10 ! if 5 t^i.s of gteen fodder per acre, doing (Sm?\ w-ed every where, blast, West, Socll^^|^>ry a Grasses and Clovers. H Only large growers of graeec and I 53 clovers for seed in America. /^/// I operate orrr S/>x> acre*. Our (X jlxtt aeetia are warranted. We make Vj^X'W a Knat ii?-eia:tjr rt i:rasiuy and Clovera. Krx'.der Plant*. Com.t'o-^7^:'' Ut?v-*.i miprie, est hepe.an i til orta of Vegetable Seed*. f^JU// For 10c In Stamps Sxj' -iwsfjBW ar.it tl.e name of lb:s paper, we f AwBM will iead too a lot cr farm teed tampfc*. in<-I tiding tome of fct^iee. together aitii our page Tift f f05PS!CUN VflSEUHEl 9 (PPT CP IN COLI.APSIBLETUBK6) ? J a ?nhstitute for and stmorlorto mustard or 1 Sniiv other plaster, anil will not blietertha ! ciostdelioAti skin. The pain-allaylngand c ti rati vequalitiesof thi sarticleare wonderful. It will stop the toothacheatonce,antJ ? , relieve headacne and sciatica. W'ereconamend it as the best and safest external ! | touiiter-irriun! it uowu,also asanexternal . i remedy for pains inthe chest audstomach audalirlieuroHtic.neuralirieand jjoutycoinpiaints. A tri il will prove w hat weclaisu forit, and it will be found to be invaluablt in tlio househoM.Manypeoplesav'ltisth t , be<tof ail of your preparations." Price ?3 ' 9., at all dm'snrists or other dealers, or by 2 seadinijthisamouut tousinpostaeeatainpa 3 we will send yon a tube by mail. No articlr should be accepted bytbenublicnnlesetbe-' |?nmecarriosnurlabel.asnthenvi8eitlsn?t, dsenuin*. CHESEBROIUI1 Ml-U. CO., :: Stato Street. New Yohk C itt. J r\ CROUCH vJ Marble and Granite Co. r:\MTA.TrTtERs or? M G N 5J fit IB NTS , , Vonili, Statuary, Headstone** etc., l.i a::y 1 riauile or Marble. Death Masks a Specialty. (&&-Mention this paper.) ATLANTA, SA, ZSSo^uac Thompson's Eye Water