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How to Plant Melon Seed.
The best plan known for planting
watermelons, cucumbers, and cante
loupes, is as lollows:
First, dig holes twelve feet apart
each way, large enough and deep
enough to insert a usual size barrel.—
Take out the upper head and place it
down in the hole within two or three
inches of the top. Then pack the dirt
well around the barrel.
Fill the barrel one-third full of lime
stone rock, one-third full of wet straw,
well tramped in, and the other third,
on the top of the straw, with as rich
loam or dirt as you can get. About
the 25th of April, soak your seed in
warm water m which soap has been dis
solved for twelve hours. Then plant
three hills in each barrel, with the
small end of the seed down, and
two seeds in the hill. They will need
no cultivation, and from the time they
.commence bearing, will continue until
frost in the fall, and will yield ten
times more than the usual way of
planting
Seed Corn. —No one will deny that
great care should be observed in
selecting seed corn to plant, and yet
numbers of farmers never see their
seed corn until it is carried to the field
at planting time. We think-the best
plan is to place a barrel in a corner of
the crib and throw in it every large
and vigorous ear. Shell off about two
inches of the laige ends, in order to
get the largest and most prolific grains.
This produces a large and healthy
plant that grows much faster than
small ones do. Many farmers may
think it quite a tedious job to select
every car of corn planted in this way;
but they will not think so after giving
it a trial, and selecting as much as
possible on rainy days. This plan
once adopted, will ever be adhered to
afterwards. Try it—you will never
regret it but find it remunerative.
TnE Secret of Large Crops. —An
exchange says:
Plough deeply and at once, plant
good seed only, and then cultivate well
Do not be afraid of frost. It it comes
and bites down a part, do not plough
up, but save what is left and replant
only where killed. Many a crop has
been ploughed up when four-fifths of
it would have come out again. And
if all be killed it will not be labor lost
to have planted, as it will only make
your ground better tor a second plant
ing. Plant early and you will, with
good cultivation, be sure of a bounti
ful yield.
Apples Growing at the South.—
Prof. Colton showed specimens from
an orchard of 4,500 trees in Calera,
Alabama, planted in 1864 and 1865,
by Mr. Adams from Massachusetts.—
Mr. Adams informed him that he could
sell all he had on hand at $5 to $6
per band in Selma and Montgomery.
The orchard contains beside the apple
trees, about 400 pear trees of all the
best varieties, yielding fruit which was
sold to the railroad passergers at $7
per bushel. The success of this orch
ard shows that fruit of good quality
can be grown even that tar South
The soil is limeston, and the growth
of the woods oak and yellow pine.—
The orchard is fenced with a thrifty
hedge of Cherokee rose. Mr. Adams
has also made some experiments with
grasses, and proved that timothy,
orchard-grass and clover would all
grow' luxuriantly, also some other
grasses liertofore only fit for more
northern climates. The pla-ce is&bout
600 feet above sea level, and is as
healthy as any plaoe in the country.
To Make Ground Peas.— Break
the land well with a turn plow, run it
off three feet each way, drop two peas
in each check, and cover with a hoe.
As soon as the crop is well run around
w r ith a rooter, and draw' the dirt up
with a hoe. Next time with a sweep,
again drawing the dirt up to the vine
with a hoe Put no dirt at all on the
vines.
The above work is sufficient to
make the crop. I think a small quan
tity ot good Superphosphate in each
hill would largely increase the crop.—
The fifteenth of October is not too late
to gather the crop. Plow up the
vines just before frost, turn them over
and expose the peas to the sun for a
day or two, haul them in and put them
under shelter, and pick the peas at
your leisure. Turn your hogs in the
patch and they will get all you leave.
Sandy soil is the best.
WEIGHTS A£D MEASURES,
BUSHKLB. LBB .
Wheat, 60
Shelled Corn ' 56
Corn in ear. 70
Peas 60
Rye 50
Oats 32
Bariev 48
Irish ...» 60
Sweet Potatoes ... 60
White Beans 60
Castor Beans 45
Clover Seed,. 60
Timothy Seed 46
Plax Seed 56
Hemp Seed 44
Blue Grass Seed. .... 14
Buck Wheat.... .............. 52
Dried Peaches.. .7, 40
Dried Apples 24
•Onions 50
Balt ...7 50
Stone Coal 80
Halt 38
Bran 20
Turnips 58
Plastering Hair. 8
Unpacked Limeßo
A Great Farmer’s JM axims.
The successful life of Mr. Jacob
Strawn, the prince of American farm
ers, is attributed to the close obser
vance of the maxims, origi
nated by hiinselt:
When you wake up do not roll over,
but roll out. It will give you time to
ditch all your sloughs, break them,har
row them, and sow them.
Make your fencing high and strong
and tight, so that it will keep the cat
tle and pigs out.
If you have brush make your lot
secure, and keep your hogs from the
cattle; for if the corn is kept clean
they will eat it better than if it is not.
Be sure to get your hands to bed
by seven o’clock—they wrill rise early
by force of circumstances. Pay a
hand, if he is a poor hand, all you
promise him; if he is a good hand
pay him a little more; it will encourage
him to do still better.
Always feed your hands as well as
you do yourself, for the laboring men
are the bone and sinew of the land,
and ought to be well treated.
I am satisfied that early rising, in
dustry and regular habits, are the best
medicine ever prescribed for health.
When rainy, bad weather comes, so
that you can’t work out of doors, cut,
split and haul your wood.
Make your racks, fir your sense, or
a gate that is off its hinges, or weath
erboard your barn where the wind has
blown the siding olf, or patch the
roof of your house.
Study your interest closely, and do
not spend your time in electing presi
dents. senators and other small offi
cers, or talking of hard times w'hen
spending your time whittling store
boxes, etc.
Take your time and make ealcula
tions. Don’t do things in a hurry,
but do them at the right time, and
keep your mind as well as your body
employed.— liuralist.
A subscriber asks the best way to
prepare fence posts with a view to
their preservation.
1 t
Ahvays put the upper end of the
post in the ground, reversing the po
sition in which it grew. When it is
thus placed, the moisture from the
ground w ill not rise so readily as it
would if the post w r as placed in the
position of root end downward. The
.rising of moisture tends to decompose
the w r ood.
A .further preventative against de
cay is to burn the low er end of the'
post, and, while hot, plunge it into
melted tar, -coal tar wall suit the pur
pose.
By taring the tops of posts after
they are in the ground, the heat of
the sun will cause .the tar to enter the
wood thereby protecting it against in
sects and .rain.
Should it be inconvenient to tar the
whole Os the post above the ground,
the application of tar to the sawed
end will have an excellent effect.—
Farmer <& Gardner.
[One of the best, if not the very
best, ways to preserve posts, is to
buru out the post hole before setting
up the post. Make the fire in the
hole hot and quick—rich pine or
light trashy wood is the best to kindle
the fire, as‘it makes the fire quick and
very hot. The quick heat bakes a
crust on the inner surface of the hole
through w'hich the dampness of the
ground cannot penetrate; the post is
thus kept dry, and, of course, preser
ved.—McDuffie Journal.
Propagating Cabbage from Buds.
—A correspondent. of the Pacific Ru
ral Press says “Take a large head of
cabbage, strip off the outer leaf and
slip oft' the bud fouud at the root of
the leaf. Take this bud and simply
set it in tlve rich dirt, like any other
plant. The result will be a fine
growth of early cabbage plants with
heads larger and sounder than can be
raised in the ordinary way.”
Voices of the Loved Ones.
In the mountains ol the Tyrol it is
the custom of the women and children
to when it is bedtime to sing
their natural songs until they hear
their husbands, fathers and brothers
answ r er them from the hills on their re
turn home. On the shores of the
Adriatic such a custom prevails.—
There the wives of the fisherman come
down about sunset and sing a melody.
After singiug the first stanza they lis
ten awhilefor the answering strain from
off the water, and continue to sing and
listen till the well-known voices come
borne on the tide, telling that the lov
ed ones are almost home. How* sweet
to the weary fishermen, as the shad
ows gather around them, must be the
9ongs of the loved ones at home, who
sing to cheer him; and how they
strengthen the bonds that bind togeth
er these humble dwellers by the sea!
Truly, it is among the lowly in this
world that we find some of the most
beautiful customs in practice.
~■ .
A colored friend gives the account
ol a sermon he lately heard: “Well.,
sah, de sermon was on de miracles of
de loaves and cb fishes. De minister
said how de seven thousand loaves
and de five thousand fishes was divid
ed between twelve apostles; and de
mbatle was dat dey didn't, bust!”
Scicnlic Amcricairfor 72.
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The beat way to obtain an answer to the ques
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Arrangements have been perfected to se
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The January Number will be especially at
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Three Tboasa> and Pages, more than Five Hun
die ! Briiiiantlv Wr ttrn articles and iVearh
Oi ie Hundred completed Stories. Tales of
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combining with these the ablest editorials
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■flfth year.
A Representative and Champion of American Art
Tlx 3 Ald.in.9i
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the hansonnst Papeer in the World
•‘(Jive my love to the artist workmen of
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The Aldi.ve while issued with all the reg
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al* It is an elegant miscellany of pure,
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Aldine will be most appreciattd after it has
>eeu hound Ur at’the close of the year. —
While other public publications nmy claim
uperior cheapness as com pared with nvalsof
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the press is so great that vepri ,tmg is out of
die question* V\ ith the exception of a small
number specially reserved for binding, ihe e
•iitn nos 1871, is already exhausted and it is
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NEW FEATURES FOR 1872.
ART DEPARTMENT.
The enthusiastic support .-o ;eadiiy a< od
ed o their i ntetpr se. wh tever it lias tarn
introduced, has convinced ttie publi hers of
' he Aldineot the soundness of their theory
hat the American public would reegn z
and heartily supp.at any sincere eIL rt toele
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W T Ric ! ards«, Granville Perking, Jamee Smiley
Wm liar., F O C Dari- y, |< E Piquet,
•Am Beard, Victor Nehlig, Frank Beard
George Smiley,Wm H Wilcox, Paul Dixon,
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LITERARY DEPARTMENT.
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Mr. RICHARD HENRY STODDARD,
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THE VOLUME FOR 1872
will contain nearly 300 pages and about 250
fine engravings Commencing with the nnm
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at sl. will without extra charge
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ACIIROMO TO EVERY SUBSCRI
b r was very popular feature last ypar. and
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The publishers have purchased and reprodu’
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ing hy SKIS, entitled "Dame Nature’s school.'
Ihr chromo i 11x13 inches. and is an exact
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TERMS FOR 1872.
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Hoad IST otice.
NOTICE it* hereby given that I have re
ceived a petition asking that au order be
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the fifth District of Carroll County, said
road to leave th. Villa Rica and Moore’k
bridge road. about one and a half miles south
of T. P. Dingier*. running the most practi
cable route in the dirvc'iou of Amies’ mills,
thence across Snakes creek, intersecting the
Carrollton and A r ewnau roa i at or near Wm.
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A-ow I wii: pass upon said |»etition on the
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mg to interpose objections will tile them oe
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‘D, B. JUHAN.OrdV.
Jan. 26tb, ’72,
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Be autiful Steel Plates.—Of these
the Link’s Book gives 14 inch \>ar
( >rk?iNal Uf»e. GtHßs is #he only
magus ne in which rite ic prepared expressly
for it appears
]Moi)EL Cottages.—The only mag
azine in this e untry that gives these designs
is ti e LnlyV Book.
Drawing Lkssovs.—lit this we aie also
ulone
VVe have also a Ch ldren’s a Horticulture
and a heal h department.
(Jody’s Invaluahle Recipes upon even
subject, for the Boudoir, Ninacy. Kitchen
House .& L;»Hi«irw
TI.VtTK© KfiGRAWTWW.- TUlis is a series of
engravings that no one ha* attempted but
nurse ves.
Ladies fancy Work department.- Some of
t e d< in tliis and partm nt are printed m
cohos, in a style unequal cd
In aditiou to a i tlie above nttructio s,
tl»ef • will In* piibiisiied. monthly, a doubj.
page engraving, the general tit 1 of which
wifi be M s Lohpops’ Party. VVe promise
these sketches (outline in ilieir character) to
be superior to any of the kind heretofor<
published.
TERMS,
One copy, one year $3.00
Two copies, one year .5 00
Three copies, one year 7 50
Four copies, one yoar 10 00
Five copies, one year, and an extra copy to
the person getting up the club, making six
copies. 14 00
Eight copies, one year, and an extra copy
to the person getting up the club, making
nine copies. 21 00
Eleven copies, one yeaj, and an extra copy
to the jierson getting up the club, making
twelve copies. 27 50
To accommodate our subscribers, we will
club with Author’s Moaic .Magazine andClnl
cren’s Hour at the following prices:
The receipt of $4, 00 will pay for Godev’s
Lady’s Book and Author’s Home Magazine
for one year.
Five dollars will pay for Gody’s Lad’vs
Book, Author’*- Home Magazine, and Chil
dren’s Hour for one year.
l h mmi'y miut all b* sent at one
time for any of the clubs and additions may
be mad-* to Clubs at club rates.
S®' Panada subscribers must send 24
cell’s additional for every subscription to the
Lady’s Book and 12 cents for e <her of tbo
other roag.tzkuos to pay‘he America post
age How to Remit. In remitting hv mail,
a Postoffice Order on Philadelphia, or a* Draft
on Philadelphia, or New York, payable to
the order ot L. A. G'dy. i« preferable to bank
notes. If a Draft or a P*>st Office OrdeT can
not be procured, send United iSiatais or «t
tional Batik notes.
Address L. A • GODY.
s. k. Corner Sixth and Chestnut Streets
Philadelphia.
CHAEP BEaDING
the
Atlanta New Fra.
CLUB RATES.
In order to place the
WEEKLY NEW ERA
within the reach of all, the proprietors have
determined to offer the following
SPLENDID INDUCEMENTS:
Oue copy, one year, - - $3 00
Ten copies «ne year, $1.50 each 15 00
Twenty copies, one year, .25 each 25 00
Thirty copies one year, SI,OO eaeh 30 00
Ibe Weekly Era «otita'n« nearly twenty
eighi columns of choice reading matter each
issue. e«insisting o. Polit-cs. Literatuie, Mar
ket Reports and General News.
Make up your clubs at oi ec.
Postmasters are authorized and requested
to act a*s Agents Address
NEW ERA OFFICE,
Atljvnta, Ua.
CARROLL COUNTY TIMEj
IS PUBLISHED
EVERY FRIDAY MORJSriAj^
If
CARROLLTON GEORGIA. I
AT THE LOW PRICE OF
AS, f*er Amuu, or
$125 for six Months;
Now is the tittle to subscribe, so
that you can commence with
the new r year 1872;
SUPPORT nOME INSTITUTIONS,
jk fIU -• j W Mtj, *-j J
Every citizen of Carroll county
who feels an interest in the wel
fare and prosperity of his county,
should take his
CO l T * I* I**l PER. j
«
So come along with your $2,00j
and let us enter yeur names for
the year 1872.
ALL KINDS OF JOB WOBK, SUCH Atl
Posters*
Blanks*
- Letter Heads*
Bill Heads*
Cards* Ac*t
Neatly and promptly executed 11
the office of the
CARROLL COIJJVTV Tt
SHARPS and: MEIIOS*