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The Oglethorpe Echo
LEXINCTON, CEORCiA.
A GREAT SUFFERER
—FROM—
Liver Complaint
Cured by tlie Use of
Ayer’s Pills
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issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by
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V A 5 H.SCTtH ^0
THEIOGLETHORPE LEXINGTON, GA.: FRIDAY , APRIL 12, 1895.
COMMISSIONER
NESBITT’S TALK.
His Regular Monthly Letter to
the Farmers of Georgia.
ENCOURAGEMENT OFFERED ALL.
Suggestions concerning the Crops of This
Year That Should Be Well Considered
and Carefully Digested—The Founda¬
tion For Successful Fannins—Interest¬
ing Topics Discussed.
Department of Agriculture,
Atlanta, April 1, 1895.
At this writing, March 20, the pros
pect for the preparation and planting
of the crop of 1895 seems most dis¬
couraging. The few bright days dur¬
ing the first part of the month have
been succeeded by almost uninter¬
rupted rain, aud farmers who were
beginning to see light ahead are again
overtaken by despondency and gloom.
The cases are exceptional where any
material progress has been made in
farm work. But, with a few bright
days, hope, that blessed boon to strug¬
gling humanity, will spring into life
again, and all through the state will be
heard the cheerful hum of busy prepa¬
ration, the land will once more respond
to the invigorating touch oE the plow
aud hoe and all nature will awake to
life under the influence of the warm
spring sunshine. Incredible as it may
seem, there have been spring seasons
just as disappointing as this, perhaps
more so. At any rate, bemoaning our
sad condition will not mend matters.
The only remedy is contained in the
aphorism, which applies with force to
farm as well as other matters. “Turn
to the right—then go forward. ” How¬
ever much we may differ as regards
what is the “right,” each individual
has, let us hope,decided conscientiously,
and it is useless now to speculate as to
the probable effect of chosen this decision path, ou
our future. We have our
and from this time until our crops are
all gathered, we must go “forward.”
Whether we Ij^ve planted much cotton
or little the duty is the same. We
must steadily press on to the comple¬
tion of the year’s work.
It is now too late to sow oats, which
fact falls with heavy force on the man
who is short of corn, and who lias been
prevented by all these drawbacks from
getting the oat crop under way. But
there are other early maturing crops
which can, in a measure, be made to
do duty in this important matter of
stock feed.
SORGHUM, MILLET, PEAS, FORAGE CORN
and other forage crops, if planted
early, the ground being thoroughly
prepared and highly manured, in order
to increase the yield and hasten matu¬
rity, will be found a wonderful help in
the late spring aud summer when feed
runs short.
On this subject the Louisiana expe¬
riment station has the following:
Pearl, or “cattail” millet, as it is
sometimes called, is used as a “soiling”
crop. A few rows planted iu rich soil
will afford sufficient green feed in the
spring for several head of horses. It
grows rapidly after being cut and is
one of the best early green feeds of its
kind.
The non-saccharine sorghums
excellent forage, and may be used as
soil crops or cured as hay. The bush¬
els of grain they yield per acre make
them valuable adjuncts to the grain
producing Jerusalem crops. has large, compact,
corn
drooping heads of white grain. The
stalk is low, stout and stocky, and not
so good as the four following.
Yellow and white millo maize grow
large and tall, making large tonnage of
forage, large, straight heads of yellow
and white grain, yielding in favorable
years many bushels per acre.
Large African millet is very much
like the white millo maize, except it
grows much larger both in stalk and
seed heads. It is equally as valuable
for forage and soiling, possessing the
advantage over all of greater tonnage,
and more bushels of grain per acre. It
will certainly produce more forage per
acre than any forage crop ever grown
at the station.
The Kaffir corn is low growing, but
produces many heads of white grain,
as well as a fair tonnage of forage. The
seeds are excellent poultry feed.
German millet is too well known to
mention any of its characteristics. It
is a valuable forage and soiling crop,
and should be more extensively planted.
French millet bears a long, drooping
head of red grain and bids fair to out¬
rival the German variety in produc¬
tion.
Soja bean is a leguminous plaut, forage and
aside from its qualities as a
plant, like others of the leguminous
family, it renovates worn land. It re¬
sembles the bean, grows treelike, 18
inches 3 feet high, and bears a heavy
crop of short pods, well filled with
small, round, white berries, resembling
very much the sweet pea of the garden.
If cut just as the pods begin to ripen it
cures readily into a good hay.
These crops or whatever are necessa¬
ry to supplement the shortage in feed
stuffs, being arranged for, we must
turn onr attention to the principal crops
of the farm. Perhaps we have never had
more forcibly illustrated the impor
tance of fall plowing than is just now
being brought home to our understand
ing. The almost unprecedented cold,
the long continued rains, the late sea¬
son, all combine to crowd into one
month the work of two or more, and
on the fall plowed lands, particularly
if snbsoiled, even where it has been
packed by the winter rains, the work
is found lighter, more rapid and more
satisfactory than in the fields, which
have remained nnplowed since the
crops were gathered, and which have
been in many cases beaten hard by the
tramping of cattle.
This question lies of proper the and well founda- di
reeled plowing in at farming, very
tion of our success yet how
few farmers study it beyond the mere
breaking and bedding, absolutely nec
essa ry in the ordinary preparation for
planting a crop. For some crops it is
important to plow much deeper than
for others, but on how many farms do
we see any variation in the depth of
plowing, all crops being prepared plow¬ for
alike, An ignorant or indifter t
man has no idea of the importance of
his work. Crooked or uneven furrows,
varying as to the width and depth,
make the work hard on the man and
hard on the mule, while a failure to as¬
certain 011 this point the requirements planted of¬
of the different crops to be
ten entails much unnecessary work,
With painfully inadequate returns.
Good plowing not only requires prac¬
tice but observation as well, the close
scrutiny, which will enable the farmer
to profit by error as well as by success.
In their eagerness to push on the
work, farmers often under present ur¬
gent conditions, are tempted to plow
the land when too wet. No greater
mistake was ever made, for while some¬
thing may be gained in present speed,
the end is no amount of bother and
worry. Land once plowed too wet
does not recover during that crop sea¬
son, and often its disastrous effects ex¬
tend into the following year. A mis¬
take of almost equal gravity is to allow
the unplowed fields to stand after a
rain until a hard crust is formed. If
possible ruu a heavy harrow over the
surface before it becomes too dry. This
will prevent the crust from forming,
prevents evaporation and keeps the
laud in good condition until the regu¬
lar plow comes along.
Another important point is to ra
member that at this season it is of no
benefit to turn any quantity of the
subsoil to the surface, that should have
been done in the fall. It is too late
now for it to be acted upon by sun and
air and rain, that it may furnish addi¬
tional plant food for this year’s crop. of
For corn, plow deep, but instead
bringing the subsoil to the surface, use
a subsoil plow, or follow the ordinary
turning plow with a long scooter in
the same furrow, thus leaving the
subsoil broken, but in the bottom
of the furrow. This may seem slow
work when one is pressed for time, but
thorough work in preparation pays the
biggest returns. It has been repeated¬
ly demonstrated that half the area,
with proper and careful attention to de¬
tails, yields a greater profit and with
less hard work, than twice the number
of acres poorly prepared, insufficiently
manured aud hastily and carelessly
cultivated. With the low prices which
now prevail for all varieties of farm,
produce, we should direct our energies
more than ever to increasing the yield
of each acre, for the cost of production in
can be decreased more effectually
this way than in any other.
Let us glance for a moment at some
of the advantages of this plan. First,
less horse power and consequently a
smaller plow and blacksmith bill. Sec¬
ond, the improvement to the land,
which instead of becoming poorer and
poorer each year, is steadily building
up utuler the heavier application of
manure and the more judicious man¬
agement. Again, a smaller outlay in
the matter of labor, just now a very
heavy and risky item, also, the ability
to select better land and better labor,
having the privilege of choice. In the
substitution of manure and improved
machinery and implements for labor
much can also be done. In other words,
the true policy on the ordinary farm
lands of Georgia is to select the best
and concentrate on them the effort and
the manure which we have been in the
habit of spreading over twice the area.
The time for planting delayed, all crops but has af¬
been of course greatly
ter our experience of last spring, we
should not be discouraged. In many
sections of the state the corn is not yet
planted; in others, this work is finished
and the cotton land now claims atten¬
tion.
SWEET POTATOES
should not be set out too early, though
the slips may be ready the latter part
of this month. It is better to put out
the main crop in May and June. The
labor of cultivation is less, the yield is
equally as good, and the tubers keep
better. We can hardly over estimate the
value of this crop, and even with the risk
from loss in keeping, we would advise a
heavy crop. Hogs will gather and fat¬
ten on them, and there is nothing that
makes cheaper or sweeter pork than
sweet potatoes. bul¬
Again, I would call attention to
letin No. 25, on “Sweet Potatoes,”
from the Gjorgia experiment station,
which can be secured ou application to
Director R. J. Redding, Experiment,
Ga.
HOGS.
Don’t forget the crop3 for the hogs.
A pasture of Bermuda grass cannot be
excelled; then the sorghum, roasting
roasting ears, Spanish ground peas,
field peas, etc.
R. T. Nesbitt, Com.
FARM MODELS l'OR THE COTTON STATES
AND INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION.
The department of agriculture would
call attention to the valuable object
lesson contained in the following, which
We hope thousands of farmers will
study.
One of the most interesting and in¬
structive features of the government
display in the forestry building at the
Cotton States aud International exposi¬
tion will be a set of three models, the
one to represent a 160-acre farm in the
hill lands of the south, which by bad
management, and especially by im¬
proper cutting of the forest, has become
gullied, furrowed and silted over, such
as one can see almost in every state.
The next model will show how with
bush dams, with ditching, proper
drainage, w„h tracing. .adding
and replanting, the lost ground may be
recovered, while the third model, rep
resenting the same ICO aeres I. «o .how
how, finally, the farm should look
ideally, with the fields and meadows
and forest growth properly disposed, in
good condition, the roads running at
proper levels instead of up and down,
the fences reduced to the smallest extent
practicable.
It is hoped that this object lesson will
be studied by every farmer and stimu¬
late him to improved methods.
COST OF PRODUCTION OF COTTON.
It is a fact not generally realized
and manufacture of .
that production
cotton employs more labor and capital
and more intelligence and energy than
any other known crop.
TARANTULAS, SCORPIONS AND SUCH,
Reassuring Facts Vouched For by Eminent
Hug Shares.
The bureau of entomology has been col¬
lecting some interesting information late¬
ly about scorpions, centipeds and taran¬
tulas. Respecting these creatures all sorts
of nonsensical beliefs are prevalent, and
travelers who have visited tropical regions
disagree as to the effects of their bites.
That the poison of any one of the three is
apt to be deadly has often been asserted.
The question derives particular impor¬
tance from the fact that the animals are
constantly imported into this country in
bunches of bananas and among other
fruits from It tver latitudes.
Tarantulas are simply big spiders of the
kind that build houses with trapdoors.
Their bite Is very sevoro and painful, the
scar lasting for a loug time; but, though
it produces a violent Inflammation for a
short time, it is not dangerous to lifo.
Such, at all events, Is the belief of Pro¬
fessor C. V. Riley. In regard to the cen
tiped Professor Riley says that its bite in
warm climates is sometimes excessively
virulent and painful, though at other
times, oddly enough, the poison causes
little inconvenience. That it is over fatal
is not believed.
Scorpion stings are very painful indeed.
They are dangerous In proportion to the
size of the animal, its ago and the state of
Irritation in which it may be. Tempera
ture also has an Influence upon the venom.
It may bo that the sting is occasionally
followed by death, but such cases must be
very rare. There Is no doubt that the
sting of certain species commonly found
in South America causes fever, numbness
in various parts of the body, tumors on
the tongue and dimness of sight. Those
symptoms last from 24 to 48 hours. The
effects produced diminish in violence with
repetition, so that a person who has been
stung many times may become aotunlly
proof against t he poison.
Some scorpions are much worse than
others. The rather small, slender, pale
colored kinds havo the worst reputation.
In warm latitudes certain placos are near¬
ly free from scorpions, wliile others are
ovorrun by them, for reasons not woll un¬
derstood. They are extraordinarily nu¬
merous in a valley in theTlerra Tomplada
of Mexico. Thero it is hardly possible to
turn over a stono without finding throoor
four small and wicked scorpions of u pale
color'beneath it.
It is a common belief that the legs of
the centiped are poisonous, and that they
will leave a trail that burns like fire if
the animal runs ovor the bare flesh. This
is wholly a mistake. The croaturo is nat¬
urally timid and will not even try to bite
if it can get away. The poison causes a
good deal of pain, with fover and distress
of the head. Centipeds are fond of ver¬
min infosted beds, and in tropical coun¬
tries beds aro vory apt to bo so infested.—
Washington Star.
The Ocean Storehouse.
‘ Did you over hear of tho ocean store¬
house in Taums straits?'’ asko<l an old
seaman. “It’s called Dolivoranoo Island,
though it is sometimes marked on tint
charts us Booby island. It is like a mound
rising out of tho ocean, the highest point
being about 50 feet. It is woll nigh bar¬
ren, having only a fow bushes and shrubs.
Ou one sido is a sandy beach, on tho other
a fissure forming a sort of oave in which
storos aro loft by lnon-of-wnr ships pass¬
ing through for tho relief of distressed and
shipwrecked sailors. I went In tlioro onco
from the Epsom, an English sailing vessel.
“During a calm wo lowered a boat and
pulled iu. In this cuvo wo found tins of
preserved moat, biscuit, tobacco and a
wooden box marked ‘ Postoffloo. ’ Our
skipper, Captain Vaux, wrote a letter to
bis friends in London and posted it in
there. It readied them too. Deliverance
island that day belonged to tho Dutch.
Hut wo took down their Hag and hoisted
the union jack That Is tho custom—the
last ship through tho straits hoists its llag
on this ocean storehouse and postoilioe.”
—New York Sun.
Tho Anarchist’* Utopia.
Under tho anarchist regime tho man who
works five hours a day will bo quits with
sooioty. Ho will dofruy the ontiro cost of
the support of himself, his wile and three
children. The rest of his time, therefore
—-19 hours a day—will be his own abso¬
lutely, to employ or waste as ho chooses.
When onco his task Is done, ho may lio on
tho grass and bask in tho sun by the hour
together, and no one will have the right
even to glaneo at him askance.
If he have a fancy for luxuries—fur
lined coats, silks, velvets, pate do gras,
costly wines—he will ho able to gratify It
by joining in his leisure time some group
which either produces such things, or
things for which they can be had in ex¬
change. In the same way lie will ho able
to procure books, pictures, a piano, scien¬
tific instruments and beautiful furniture.
If he have a tasto for art or literature, he
will have ample time to cultivate It when
his daily task is done.—Temple Bar.
The Thaw Hose.
Frozen fire plugs are the terror of the
firemen on cold days and nights. They
constitute a serious obstacle right at tho
time when all are anxious to get to work
on the burning building, and in case of a
bad lire aro often responsible for groat
loss. The moment a lire engine reaches
its position at a fire during zero weather
what is known as a thawing hoso is im¬
mediately attached to a valve connected
with the holler and turned on the frozen
plug. If It is found to he frozen a consid¬
erable distanco down, tho long brass noz¬
zle of the hoso is jammed Into tho hard
ground. Tho powerful steam jet soon ac¬
complishes the desired purpose. The thaw
hose, which is part of the outfit of every
fire engine, is often used to thaw the en¬
gine pipes as well as frozen plugs. —Phila
delpbta Record.
Alleged Trick In the Art Trade.
Jj
j^ked like slits, as he scrutinized a small
painting, “that people in this country pro
/ n( ] u8 t r y i v( . ry harmful to native talent,
Agents of American dealers collect In
Europe students’ sketches from all parts,
costume sketches, I mean, showing a torea
dor smoking in the sunlight or a fisher
man , nen( ii ng his nets. Ttiey buy these
sketches for a mere song and then turn
them over to some one else to paint in a
fake background. If you are a connois¬
seur, you can toll them at a glance, but
there is a market for them nevertheless.”
—Philadelphia Press.
Fans came from the east during the
crusades, being brought back by return
ing knights as presents for their friends,
A j' renc j, no bleman brought the first os
trich fan to Paris about 1100.
The price of a wife in Zululand 20 years
ago was six cows with their calves.
Of all Glasses Done with Neatness and Dispatch at the
Ekf ]0 * Jab * Prirjtirig * 0ffke.
•H-InZe WKKE TK SPECIHLTY OP KLL KINDS#
COMMERCIAL PRINTING
And carry in stock at all times a lull line of
Bill Heads,
Note-Heads
Letter-Heads,
Statements,
Envelopes,
Cards, etc.
E^iP’Wo are prepared to print anything from a Visiting Card to a Book
and will compare prices, work and materials used with those of any city
printing office in the land. Our office is well equipped with newest and
latest styles in Type, fastest and best makes of Presses and is in charge
of an experienced and tasty Printer.
HggP’Do not send your work off when you can get it done as satisfacto¬
rily at home and thereby encourage a homo enterprise. See samples of
our work, get our prices and wo feel assured that you will give us your
patronage. Address all orders to
THE ECHO, Lexington, Ga.
GEORGIA RAILROAD SCHEDULES.
OFFICE GENERAL MANAGER,
Augusta, Ga., December 23,1894.
Commencing December 14th, 1894, the following schedules will he operated. All trains ruu
by 90th meridian time. The. seedules are subject to change without notice to the public.
READ DOWN. READ UP.
TRAIN NIGHT DAY TRAIN ST A TIONS. TRAIN DAY NIUHT TRAIN
NO. 11 EX PR. MAIL NO. 27. no. 28. mail, expr.no. 12.
Xk JII 10 80u 11 80(i 7 ISffjljV .......Augusta....... At 8 80p OOp C7Y
Cl 10 B8p 11 54p...... .........lie lair........ .. ....... 1 iw :«ip
Cl 11 OOp 12 04p 7 45n ......Grovetown..... ... 8 OOp 1 (v 27p
Wi J 11 21p 12 Hip ...... .......Berne! in...... (w I6p i7a
vJ j& 11 20p 12 24p 8 00a .......Harlem....... 7 28p tw
Cl £ 11 mi 12 34[> 8 0(1« .......Hearing...... 7 20p Lw i
Ci S 11 58« 12 52p 8 10a ......Thomson...... 7 05p 11 44o CC 12m
C. ' 12 08a 1 04 p...... ........Mesena....... .....II 88m ZC
C. ' 12 1(1m 1 12p 8 8 rut ........Caumk....... 50(> 11 26m ZS
12 25m •— 20j» 8 40 a .......Norwood...... 4lp 11 19 m C2
C. 12 42m — 36 p 8 58 m ........liarnetl....... 2Hp 11 05 m ZC
<1 12 50m iZ, 50p 9 0 4a .. Crawforilville.... 17|> co tZ,
<1 1 22 m t£ 80 i i 9 25 m .....Union Point..... 1C
.... 1 88m CC 44 p 9 88 m ... .....Greenosboro .... •j-j-j-jxccccccrcc: tw
©fCk.-PwC^CCCCCCJC’iOtC^ CC lOp 10 00 m ... ... .liuekheud...... 1 87«
CC 28 p 10 12m ... ......Madison....... ^ 20m
CC 40p 10 28m ... ...... Rutledge...... ^
CC 50p 10 40m .. .....Social Circle....... Iw
4^ 20 p 10 58m ... ..... .Covington........ W
4^- 45p 11 15m . . .......Conyers......... (C
WT OOp 11 26m ... .......Lithoni*........ □ 1i -
■
CT 31 p 11 42m ... .. .Stone Mountai n.....
wT 84p 1151 m... ......Clarkston........
in 45 p 12 OOn ... .......Deeatu r.........
C OOp 12 15p Ar .......Atlanta........Iiv
i 5 m i *-* lapTiSoTv 24(> .Warrenton........ . Camak.........Ar © A —! 17m
8 47m ...
to I-* 44|>........ ..Mayfield.......... Q C C5©CcSoOO—‘ 11 iC !8p
to 56 p........ Culvert on..........
ic 10 a 9 22m . .Sparta........... Ci 11 02p
cc id . Devereux.......... CY w
cc 87m 1C 9 48m .. .Carrs............ SI 18 M O
c- iO 10 00m Miiledgeville........ 51 Q5
Co- CC Browns.......... Crl CD
..
c-t CC 10 24m Haddocks......... wl 87m CO
.
©t CC 10 82m .. .James............ GO
ca C*. 11 00m Ar.........Macon......... Ijv •fcK U© X
11 I 08m 2 OOp Lv.........Barnett........Ar - oc jo
... 7 7 05p 13(i 11 11 20 30 m m 2 2 20(i 12(1 .. ..Hillman.......... Sharon............ ODOC »:r
...
..... 7 43p 2 49p Ar Washington.......Lv i.w <1
7 00m...... 0 2 857. Lv..;... U nfoTlh.inr“~:Ar ... i 9 20m 5 507
7 18m 6 27p 2 46|i ..........Wflodvillo............... o Crt
7 36m 6 32(> 2 50p......liairdstown.............. « it
7 49m 6 45j. 8 01 p...........Maxeys................ QC
8 OOn 6 52p 3 08(i..........Stephens............... oc
8 22m 7 05p 8 19p..........Crawford..... ........ oc 30m
9 02m 7 22p 3 35p ..... .....Dunlap................ CC
9 08m 7 27p 8 39p...........Winters................. oc
9 35m 7 44|i 3 55p Ar.......Athens.......Lv ..... i
10 40m Lv,.,.. .Union Point......Ar ......
11 30m .. .Siloam................ 1
11 50p Ar White Plains.... Lv...... 1 20j
All above trains daily, except 11 and 12, which do not run on Sunday. Macon, Sleeping
Cars beteen Atlanta and Charleston, Augusta and Atlanta, Augusta and on
Night Express. Sleeping Cars between Macon and New Voik on train 27, and train
leaving Macon at 9 a.in.
Til OS. K. SCOTT, JOE W. WHITE, A. G. JACKSON,
Ceueral Manager. Traveling Passenger Agent. Gen. Freight ami Pass. Agt.
Fires Will Occdr ! 4
And it is the duty of every Property
^7 owner them. to That, protect is himself to always against
Keep Your Property Insured.
r Represent the third largest and
one of the best companies in the
world. Rates as low as any.
W. 'A. SHACKELFORD,
OGLETHORPE ECHO OFFICE LEXINGTON, GA.