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NESBITT REVIEWS
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arm Uw i«i*atli «ff m #*f >»■■**
nwl r*s»d)y iMW«ii'"l Mto#nni|ffir» «
bulk alia amt iraUmk f« Sto®
an iwima •#» mm* to •»•
•taut, law of lb* state. A. aaauilMl
taats*! j***t* Ilk* At kb to ’-if ft***®*tk,
Iftdnv Uui antitk ts m® t Aft ftVW or
lio.an aaaoaUy wata iw«*wJ Jr **dl
aitaal toepeftoc# of <4l* aad fartlUarra.
lim two ofttoto ta la* •< Ibal Uiua oou
a Tfca* u. «ma •*■
cant i!«M aa flan b aa lb* taiua •■•
ataata Jadinaty of lb* l **»*• l» l***-
whan l ton* < baraa. th<> Carman, whnau
tamaaN warn aa*adwUy la ha -mt br
ta 4*pa»mawi. brat ftmajl I tn
la rtT aaaalal aa abumUnn* at wbaai,
an* ta tha fr.jat raaka ml iboaa waa
wart- wQitsa %•■ taar 4mrn aa taatua-
Wcai wbH-b had twaa Imitt up mainlr
Ik Ila.tr prutavHuu aal (rakUara I
taa't (bilk 1 am aaMMata* 100 waoa
wb« u I atata that ta th<* atifM r*mi» of
ts m#tbftorjr the dejt®rtm#*it ha®
gradually baaa artmtag ta fat.a with
tb- far man and that tut aaraaat afforla
to autke it rfaotmly and artittlt om
fnl to them an* twa now haaruig fruit.
The a tab lagtalatara waa ia araain
Wbeu i took rharf* in IHO, and I u»-
madlataly aantdol and oricad the abol
lab mao l of toe ayattiii by which allia
apat-tora wen nreteiaif aueh eihorbt
rant fan. An act allowing them to re
tain only |l-*» per uiontb out at inapeo
ton' receipt a aad requiring them to
mak. monthly retnrna to the aUti
treasury of all *uma in alien of
thtk amontit. waa approtred Dec,
SO, l*«0, and wnoa then by thia in
hoTatum |lt>'.oou from oil ami |lij,twO
from ferwUaera bara been need to the
atata and placed in the treasury.
In December, IS9I, following thr
same line of retrenchment, the fired
ahlariee of the 18 guano Inapcctors were
reduced from fltfiOO to (Kidd per
month, and only four of theta were kept
on duty the whole year, the other* from
four to air month*. Here whs another
aavlng of several thousand dollars. The
office expenses were also reduced by the
Wlary of one clerk *1,800.00 annually,
aad although the otliue duties bare
steadily increased until they have been
more than doubled and trebled, the work
ha* been carried on by the original
number of clerks, with a alight increase
of salaries.
During my administration the whole
plau of fertilizer inspection has been
revolutionized The old nlan wu in
bulk, and brfr.rr leaving the factories.
The new bill, which is now the law,
was most can-fullv planned to give full
protection to hath buyer and seller. It
provide* that the inspecting shall be
dom only afur the fertilizer 1s shipped
to different points and put upon the
market in separate (jackage*. The uro
visiiMit of this kali are such a* to place
Georgia in the lead a* to the judicious
and au-eful supervision of h*r immense
fertilizer tnulu. This law, as comiwred
with those in force in other states, is
superior, which ia evidenced by tho fact
that many inquiries have come on this
subject to thi* department from differ
ent southern atute*. The Georgia fer
tilizer law has finally become tile Uuus
for similar laws ih her sister states.
Another important change has been
the removal of the state laboratory from
Athens to the capital, where the impor
tant work of analyzing every brand pnt
on sole in the state, is carried on under
the immediate supervision and insi-eo
tiau, of the commissioner of agriculture.
This affords increased advantages and
facilities to the state chemist in his
daily routine work which has increased
tremendously since 1880.
Another innovation which has made
the department the medium of eommu
cating valuable information to the farm
ers throughout the state is the substitu
tion of plate matter, furnished to the
weekly press, in lieu of the circulars
and bulletins previously issued. Tho
‘•monthly talks” and answers to ques
tions containing practical hints on topics
connected with the farm, the garden,
the dairy, the orchard and kindred sub
jects, carefully arranged as to time and
season of the year, are published in the
weekly papers of the state. These go
to the remotest sections each month and
thousands of farmers, who are prae,ti
eelly cut off from the usual sources of
information, are thus reached and placed
in touch with the busy world and kept
informed on many subjects most valua
ble in the conduct of their farm opera
tions Besides these publications tha de
naatment has issued a handsomely iiftm
trated manual entitled “Georgia, a
Fair Field For Homeseekers and In
vestors,” and in addition to this an
•ther larger volume has been prepared
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fmilMi tki faiftvr vt®*ld dl® o*t Mi till®® i
g«®anU(®ft . . .
It It** ha*n Mild !►*' lit* t*f®®*t m *
*®uu® i* RtHft«ra<i tra Ikft n*4itK* of ;
Ua agrwa liars Gran'mg tku to to
itftMta bo* *ll i*icMrt®Ai tftua *^#f y i
iitPftii, iirkiiltArtl d«*jj*rtfn*i»i*. *»• |
nm*®t «r*tt**t. fmrmer* i**ttr*t®*. |
i agrv aUural aad me«*ton leal wllipa
j agvtcultoral aortnltoa, favtovta < laka,
i tvuaty aad stoto ftora. m otto wwm I
t every edacaUowai ewgtae etoaU to aaad
! to elevate aau le odea mr agru altural
' laiereeta 1 totow tbet Georgia te uo
the ft reahold «f e wonderfoi agricalt
' oral ora May tot- pooftto, ftotn Ito
i govaraor dowa to lio baaMee* rtttana
I within tor harder». work herroowioaelv
aad together to ercore tho advantage*
I which will wefto to each and ovary oao
of them, whrn Georgia tocomea a aalf
rartamlng state, buying largely, per-
I hapa. but selling more.
I R T NreaiTT, ('ommlseiooer.
Huger Heete.
Qrmerio> Can sugar beet* be grown
aueraesfally ia Georgia, and out tha
sugar frtgn them be manufactured in a
t email way by the farmer*.
Aaewca. According to the depart
! meat of agricaltore, at Waablugtuo,
I sugar beets can not be grown prulltablv
|ia the aoutbern et*t s I quote you
what that department aay* on tha tub
i c * :
“Experience has shown that the sugar
tori reaches it* higheat development in
I north temperate latitudes. «o far aa
' the production of beet* with high ton
nage it concerned, it is found that this
‘ can be accomplished far to the sooth,
but beet* gmwn in such loralitle* arc,
upon the whole, leas rich in sugar aad
less suitable far the manufacture of
sugar than those gnwn farther north.
It must be remembered, however, that
the expressions north and south do not
| refer to any absolute parallels of lati
| tude, but rather to isothermal lines,
1 which in many cases run obliquely to
, the parallels of latitude, and in some
i cases across them almost at right angles.
! As a result of many years of rar.-ful ex
perimentation, it may to said that as
| far as temperature alone is concerned
1 the sugar beet attains its greatest per
-1 feetkm in a zone of varying width,
i through the center of which passes the
isothermal line of 70 degrees Fahrein
! heit for the months of June, July and
August.”
If the agricultural department at
Washington is correct in the abovo
statement, and they doubtless are, the
I cotton state# arc debarred from growing
: the sugar beet profitably, as the south
i ern boundary of the belt spoken of as
suitable to their cultivation, passes
through the central port east and west
of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois,
lowa ami Nebraska, and thence dips al
-1 most due south to the bounduryof Mex-
I ice. The same authority, however, says:
! “There are doubtless many localities
I lying outside of this belt, both
. north and rourh, in which the sugar
; beet will l>e found to thrive;
| but this wilt be duo to some
exceptional qualities of the climate
! or soil, and not to any favorable influ
ence of a higher or lower temperature.”
My opinion is that the sugar beet
would find suitable soil, temperature
and moisture in the valleys of our north- j
ern counties and on the plateaus of our j
mountain ranges, but not elsewhere in
the state. The cost of growing sugar
beets is variously estimated at from
$:;0.00 to 880.00 per acre, and the value of
the crop at from $40.00 to $70.00 per
acre, according to yield and "percentage
of saccharine matter in the beets.
The latter part of your question ia
frilly answered by the Washington de
partment as follows:
“On account of the elaborateness of
the process and the costly nature of the
machinery which is necessary to pro
duce beet sugar, even in a small way,
it is not belioved that it could be profit
ably made in the way indicated. The
deimriment has no knowledge of any
Successful beet sugar factory of this
kind. There is no country producing
anv notable quantity of beet sugar in
which ‘locie apparatus costing only a
few -thousand dollars has any appre
ciable influence on the output of sugar.
Russia has been cited as an exception to
this rule, but the average annual output
of each factory!, he re is in round numbers
THBJ AXJQnSTA HITRALD
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9* 1
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«to Mibjeto Ai wtol Mam of Use y«er
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OlWto toAJ IN®*® *? ww to to® T*
**# #*Hr mmi**f |TD*t)i I* ftniiplfi**
aa4 tto winter s slate of March. *«<rat.
•»r . m estoastwl ta the wiehtag 4 f
1 nstrr twigs, frail, aew w-vvt. etc Ito
■rgamtly tto lets nmerr sod toll are
tie> pfnper immm ia which to eat
limtor Aa erataeat aaihctoly tots,
that when timber is cal ta tto spnea,
wft** lift® Miff 4* rick 4* *tft#*f. ftki fftMT*
m»fiiAii9« |Too*Aift ckAif* ft-lt® «#tf
ftaAo i* a#4 . wktok ft* U* »«ry l»»* #•«»
at decay, aad lha* early •tailed, caa it
to wuaderMt at that ptata aad cruaMto*
d« eot last a* long aa they would if ret
wtoa these ouadtliwae ceald ant ptosi
My exist, la IMO la Virginia • femes
was set wttft poets split from aa <»k
rot wtoa tto ieavs* were of fall die*
en>l vigor. Twenty two yean afmr
ward* thee* post* wemtakea on and re
set else where and meet at tbsm arr
doing duty yet after being used
more rhan 10 years Had these poets
toeu cut m March or April they w<m!d
anl have lasted over ten year* at the
utmost Away each in tto Mato at Jm
lias Ckteaar it we* found that ship* were
not durable when belli of Umber from
trees that tod been out down m tbs
spring And the Roman architect, Vt
trunue. to'd that “tree* should never
be felled in the spring ” While at that
time the want of durability in spring
felled timber was attributed to wrong
causes, still the effect was well known,
and the people ware n-,lifted of it.
Now as rugards cutting timber to to
ased a* fuel, doubtless the winter is the
beet time for that purpose, for as an
eminent writer on the subject say*
“any given number of sticks of cord
wood that have boeu cut in the winter
would natural)? weigh wore and con
tain more cornuu*Ublip heat pnalootng
matter than the sains uututor aad kinds
of sticks cut In tho summer, after the
starch, etc., had passed out from them."
Another valuable paint is that trees
cut ia tho late summer wilt send up but
few shoots and sprouts a* I'ompaied
with those cut from December to March.
This is important to those who wish to
destroy any particular bind of tree, or
to clear land. To sum up:
1. Timber for posts, mils, building
purposes, etc., should be out in the late
summer and early fall.
8. For fnel cut in midwinter, and up
to the (atting out of leaves in tho
spring.
8. Where you wish to prevent shoots
and sprouts cut in midsummer.— State
Agricultural Department.
The Pesch Crop—Canning Factories.
QtJgsTios.—Can you give me some
idea of the size of this year's peach crop
and its value to the growers? I mean
its net value.
Axt-wnK.—We can only approximate
tho size of the crop, and as the returns
are not yet reported can only form a
partially correct idea of its value. Be
sides the large amount sold at home,
and the thousands of bushels wasted
from inadequate shipping facilities, and
the long oontinued rains, there were
shipped from Georgia 8,800 carloads of
peaches. As each car contains 600
crates of 8 peck* each, this represents
450 bushels to tho car, in round num
bers 690,000 bushels in all. It is gen
erally agreed that at least one-third of
the fruit was wasted. The demand for
crates was much larger than the sup
ply. The poach crop matures and is
marketed in a very limited time, and
the delay in securing crates censed a
heavy loss of the most saleable peaches,
while thousands of bushels, of second
quality, were either fed to the pigs or
suffered to rot on the grotmd. Had
there been canning factories and evap
orators conveniently located much of
this loss could have boen prevented,
and instead of paying larger sums the
coming season for canned and evapo
rated peaches shipped into the state
from outside sources, the home demand,
always a steady one. could have been
supplied by our own people. Canning
factories .an be so quidkiy erected that
even after the crop has become set, and
a fair estimaso of its amount is thus
rendered possible, enterprising workers
may get everything in readiness for
utilizing the surplus fruit, should the
promise of the crop justify the outlay.
Under the conditions surrounding our
peach pi eduction, Georgia being ttw*
largest producer and shipper in the
Union, it will certainly pdy t-o "Mftkor
up the fragments, that fief king be lo*t.”
We trust that in the future adoqaete
arrangements will to made to utilito.ias
n-iarly as possible every 4enehel es Qqor
g_; 3 cniy wonderfni.peach.crop.—State
Agrkcitnr&l Dapartaßtmt tTV-
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Sit* I
■ I MkJ 1
I AprtftrrtAmwdy futfuMltM* J
‘ mrn Vrif Ifwwttjfiftft. j
! VVorwJCtomibauG lv vfi\h '
I I»*s and I.OWH or SUlf
tatotk »«ftas*Mv
fliy£t96?i
(UCt WW #9 OAlfOi
gERRY’S EXCELSIOR Rf|HLS
_A_TJQ-"CT3X_A., ga.
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808 WHITE -Second Patent.
GOLD MEDAL—Fancy Patent.
ABSOLUTELY PURE WINTER WHEAT FLOUR.
I fully realize the supreme disgust of consumers
for'Flour. Adulterated with Corn Flour, Corn Starch,
and other Foreign matter. On and after this Date,
August I Oth, 1898, I offer the Wholesale trade the
above Brands Flour Guaranteed Absolutely Pure
Winter Wheat, Goods of the Highest type.
Ask for prices Flour, Meal, Grits, Bran and sh ip
stuff delivered your station.
J. M. RFRRY.THE merchant miller
(•yUeorgia and Carolina Papers Report Estimate on Above Space pel month.
YELLOW FEVER AT TAVLOR
Four Cases of the Dreaded Disease
Reported There
Nashville, Tana., Aug. 31,—A Bir
mingham special- to the Banner says:
Tha officials of the Postal Telegraph
company at this point have receive 1 u
imssagc from their office at* Holly
Springs, Miss., giving information ‘hit
four cures of yellow fever have boen
declared at Taylor, Miss.
Jackson, Miss., Aug. 31.—The state
board of health in unable to locate tne
origin of tho oases of yellow fever re
ported at Orrwood, a small village of
I.afoyette county. The place was not
affected during the epidemic of last
year, and the hoard finds it impossible
*to discover the original from any out
*,:.le source. Dr. Gray, a local physi
cian. died at Taylors Station four days
ego and the doctors who atended him
pay he shewed symptoms of I>lac:k
vomit. Orrwood and Taylors Stat’on
are both tightly quarantined and the
members of the state board are hurry
ing to the scene.
. 'I * ‘
Pistols, Double Barrel Guns—Pistols,
Harrfngton H Richardson Brand new
pistols, $2.50: Harrington & Richardson
second hand-pistols. $2.00. American
double action pistol, SI.OO. Guitar, Man
dolin and Bal?jn’ Strings, 2 for 5 cents, at
L. J. Sthaufcjßeiiable Pawnbrojmr.
CASTORiA
foT |t» Din In n»d Clii.JtvM
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
j Bearn the i •
Signature w yl if
i# T|,e
\hs' Kind
V/ You Have
Always Bought.
I CASTORIA
KEEP COOH.
by using one of our odorless Refriger
ators—the Dewey just annihilates hot
weather. KUxndljce, Gurney and Eclipse
are oil good; everyone guaranteed; wa
ter coolers, cedar chests; Ice cream
freezers. See oar line of bedroom aults,
$25. Baby Carriages for $6. We will
make terms and prices to suit you.
Fleming & Bowles
i)O4 Broad Street. ~
f HE HERAIOS JTaNDARD
yyAR fITLAS
WITH MARGINAL INDEX
CONTAtNtHO MAI® OF
Cub*. PhtllJpin* Iftlandt*
West tnrtios. North Amirtcft.
Hawaii. South America.
Europe. I World,
Asia, j Oceania,
Africa. China.
Spain. _ Portugal.
AND HARBOR CHARTS OF->...
Havana, Cienfuegoe,
Santiago de Cuba, Mainila,
San Juan. Cardenas and
MAtanzas, ara Bays
Th«s« surperb Map* are beautifully printed
In five color* on heavy paper, end bound In
an attractive cover. RAND. McNALLY A
CO., those peerless Mapmaker*. prepared
this Atlas especially for THE HERALD and
our readers may secure It at a trifling coat.
WHAT YOU WANT TO KNOW
WHEN YOU WANT TO KNOW IT.
Explanation flarginal Index
The logonulty of the dertce d.**nr*e mmcUl explanation, for •*
patent ay«tem of inslantaacus referenco Tto mdlcee of «oe*
upon each map* border. The in for*, lion toe t.
Thee* wonderful pto« rompl ed by eaperu. end etoolutely up to SFe.
■re a miniature roonterpari of the world * phyatrai appvazam# to U
irta at this m.an.n' The map. are not merely «**
•teo ..xotraphiee and goaeieera combined Tto ruled border oo Ito four
•Kb s of . very map U divided Into eq.n-dUUnt IX***. *"?**'** ££-£
•Me by letter#, at tto top and bottom by nutner#.*. If li»« p ™
from iht-aa marginal point#, .mall #qunre# would to form® by
Ibcir inter seel 100 Oo the margin of torb page apptor. »
of all the principal dtvialon., cities and (owns inscribe* upon that ato
nal map. where they are claw*fled alphabellcnlly and according to ItoU
commercial importance and prominence a* centre# of population.
You ought to Have this Atlas
You Can Have it
You will Have it
If you wish to see the Atlas before buy
ing. call at The Herald. But you Must
Hurry. The edition Is a short one and will
not last many days. Mail orders filled
promptly*
Price, 3octs Price, 30cts
The Herald has exclusive control of the
I sale <n Augusta.
i^a»K
I. C. Levy’s son & Co..
TAILOR-FIT CLOTHIERS,
AUGUSTA, - GEORGIA
READ HERALD’S WANT ADS
THEY WILL INTEREST YOU.
TO SECURE A
SUIT OF CHOTHING
at a price that will surprise
you when you see the
quality, style and finish
of the clothing that we
are selling this week in
our big reduction sale. We
have cut our prices down
to the bottom on both
Boys’ and Men’s Clothing,
irrespective of cost, that
leaves no doubt as to quick
selling.
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