Newspaper Page Text
Winter Pears.
A young cultivator wishes to know
what variety of winter, pears will give
a supply from the first of winter, for
two or three months —such sorts as
have been sufficiently tried to be of
established character.
He has a good supply of autumn
pears, but has overlooked those for
winter. ... In'answei’ to this inquiry w r e
may state that we are now enjoying
the Anjou, which is unquestionably
the best of this season, the Winter
Nelis and the Lawrence, these will
probably furnish a good supply till
about the first of the year—sometimes
the Lawrence lasts nearly into Febru
ary. Very much depends on the man
ner in which the fruits are kept, and
the fitness of the apartments for stor
ing them. Keep the specimens in as
cool a place as possible after they are
gathered, and before they are placed
ia the cellar. A cool out-house, or a
suitable apartment in a carriage house,
fronting the north, answers a good
purpose. A fruit room, built above
ground on purpose, is best where there
are large quantities to be stored; or
in the absence of this building an
apartment may be divided off by
double boarding in some other build
ing and covering the boxes
in which the fruit is packed with
chaffer fine straw. This protection
will often be sufficient until the time
has far advanced into December; and
there, will be no danger until intensely
cold weather sets in and it will be some
days before the first can pass the bar
rier of double- partitions and the thick
stratum of chaff. After they go to the
cellar, keep the apartment well venti
lated and regulated to a low tempera
ture above freezing by the thermome
ter.
We have mentioned the Anjou as
the best early winter pear. If kept in
aw: rm apartment, it will ripen in au
tumn, even as early as the first of Oc
tober; but by keeping cool, according
to the mode just mentioned, they may
be had oven as late ns the first of the
jdar. There will be some variations
in different seasons. We have known
the \\ inter Nelis to ripen fully in No
vember. when the autumn has been
warm, but the period was retarded
some weeks by keeping the pears in a
cool place.
•After the Anjou, Winter Nelis and
Lawrence, the Josephine de Malines is
the best ripening in January, and
keeping till February. Doyenne d’Al
encon ripens about the same time, but
is not quite 80 good in quality. It is
however a a hardy tree and good
bearer, and is on the whole a desirable
sort. The Faster Beurre, when it ma
matures well, will keep into April, and
ripeu into a delicious fruit, but on the
whole i. is rather an uncertain sort.
Jos phi) o do ALiliues is poor inborn o
places, hut is mostly delicious and ex
cel! nt. It grows well on quince.
(’otuifr', l
The Kansas City (Mo.) Times calls for
a union of the South and West in the poli
tical and materiel questions of the day. It
says “Sooner or later the two sections will
be forced to unite, or go into inevitable ami
involuntary bankruptcy. It is tinio that
the i-.t:es of the war were buried. Hav
ing well nigh destroyed Republican institu
tions, there is ne rea<on why they should
destroy every material pecuniary manufac
turing and agricultural interest as well.
As a sentiment, loyalty, perhaps is sweet
enough to those who are fond of such cm- I
braces, but as a substance it is us bitter j
and a> steril > ns the ashes upon the .shor
es of tin' I)ei<] Sea."
How Te Keep Weevil* (h rof O n.
Fp< ; t'.o authority of Col. Jas. Wilson,
oi beeitur county, the IbnnbtiJge Demo
crat publishes the following.
l‘k •<) conimon ; lieepkins, with woo! on
then’, in your corn cribs at the rate ot
one skin to 3UO bushels of corn, mid your
grain will never be destoyed by weevils.
Strange as it may appear, it is nevertheless
a fact.
The “Captain Jack paper collar" is
anm um-.-d by the New York mer
chants. Wonder if thet will make
everv hair stand on its end as the old
Mudw did?
A Kentucky paper in reporting a
we dding says that the bride was not
particularly handsome, but the father
threw in seven mules, and the husband
was satisfied.
There is said to be a man in Cin- '
cinnati who is in possession of such a
wonderful memory ..mt he is employed
by the humane society to remember
the poor.
A man w ho bought new pair of boots
says ft ship may stand on one tack all
night if it wants to, but he finds an
hour and n half to bo an elegant suffi
ciency,
"■<l O ——■
Sydney Smith once rebuked a swear
visitor by saying, “Let us assume that
everything and everybody are damned,
and proceed with our subject
Being very desirous to have every Lodge, as a Lodge, in Georgia take at least one copy of the PEOPLE’S FBI EM), we will for two
dollars in cash send the paper one year and present the Lodge with two dollars worth of Odes free by mail.
Remit by Post Office order, Express prepaid, or Registered Letter.
Office of J. & S. Bones & Co.,
Wholesale Hardware House,
Corner Broad and Howard Streets,
ROME, GEORGIA.
TO THS PUBLIC.
Your special attention is invited to our ample stock of everything
strictly pertaining to
HARDWARE, .
of which we offer heavy lines, both in Foreign and Domestic Manu
facture. All English Goods are imported direet, and sold without
intermediate profit. Satisfactory terms to merchants. Freight arrange
ments perfected to all important points in the South.
I:Q=* The Retail Department’ is now conducted strictly for Cash.
We represent HALL’S SAFE AND LOCK COMPANY.
Samples in PERFECT
Store. No Pf OtCCtlOll
Charge EfrfcEHpßfesi 1K r
from
I.GX? Xieutid?" 6i b'!'*i (’i iii "E* T TO U*
Ml '■ <a!w riKE
xn g . Your
Freight jgjfej BOOKS
Added - and Papers.
May 31, 1873 F Gm
Good S Gfnplarßegaua
MILS. Al. CLARK,
MANUFACTURER OF REGALIA
Pont Office Box 3205.
Cincinnati, Ohio.
Would call attention to the following list
of prices:
No I—Delaine,1 —Delaine, trimmed with tinsel .
lace, full set for officers, $lO 00
No 2 —Delaine, trimmed with bet-
ter lace than No 1 15 00
No 3 —Same as No 2 with the ad-
dition of Braid Star on the
highest four officers 25 00
‘«4 —Merino, with Bullion Fringe
on highest four officers 30 00
“ s—Same5 —Same as No 4 except trim-
wing , 35 00
6 —X el vet (cotton back), with
good trimming 40 00
‘‘ 7—Silk Velvet, with good trim-
ming . , 50 00
And the same with finer trimming
up to ‘ 100 00
11 oputy and Hepre cKtatives' Regalia.
No I—Delaine wed trimmed $3 00
“ 2—Marino, ‘‘ “ 5 00
“ 3—Velvet. “ “ 10 00
‘‘ 4—Broad cloth better trimmed 15 0!'
“ s—Velvet5 —Velvet or cloth elegantly trim-
med 20 Ou
“ 6 —Silk velvet, with embroidered
wreath and initial letters
11 7 —Elegantly embroidered, from
S3O to S6O,
Ro-etts from $2 50 to sl2 per dozen. Ini
tial Letter.-, $3 to ; 30 per set. Emb cm
of lie order from S2O to SIOO per set.
S.ns of Temperance, Odd Fellows,
Masons, and all other or lers supplied with
Regalia. Satisfaction guaranteed. Orders
promptly filled.
I.i n it, sets —J .1 Hickn.tn, R W G U, Loui.-viilc,
!<• W Bain.G 'A CT, of Kentucky, L« xi )gt'>n;Tim
Iln.m.G IV S. 2. >,iisvli< : J d o'.-ne. PR W G T,
'1 . head, Mass., .1 A Spencer, GW S. < tev
Ohio, EJ* Reyu.ihL, G W C'F, Winchester, Jn.limm.
FAR. WILLIAM A. CARSWELL.
Physician and Surgeon,
office over P. 11. Hnr.lin’s store, at the office of Dr.
Hoyt. During th. summer months he may be found at
i.lg'it it Ills n sidenee on Cave Spring r< •■<!.
Night caiis in Um city will lie kindly attended to
b. Dr. Hoyt. Fly.
sTTwjochanTsons;
?lanufacturera and Dealers in
SADDLES,BRIDLES,
HARNESS,
AND ALLGOODSIN THE SAD
DLERS’ LINE.
92 BdoADgSTREET, Corner of Oostanaula,
ROME, GA.
IVL WILL be prepared to fill bills in
* )ur Line to D 'ai rs, as t’luap ax can
be B night at the North or 117*/ /
Are also Agents for the celebrated Vaca
urn Od Blacking, for Boots, Shoes, Buggy
Tops, Ac., rendering the hardest leather
Soft a- N -w.
ALL Kinds of Job Wobk
NeatlyJ aid Cheaply ' Execvtid at
els Ohul
CONEI.It'S D. FOPsYTIT. JOHN H, REECE.
Forsyth & Reece,
Attorneys at Law,
No. 82 Broad St, Rome, Ga.
WILL practice in til the courts of the Rome tit
in the Supreme Court of Georgia, and in the U ted
States District Court for the Northern District of Geor
gia.
(K?-.Special attention given to Collections. Fly.
■ami
If you arp Suffering from any
CHRONIC DISEASE,
Broken Down Constitution,
Or require a Remedy to
Purify and Enrich the Blood,
Y ou will find fr. Crook’s Compound Sy rnp
of Poke Boot to noxeese greater merit, cure
you more speedily, and do you more good
wan any and ail other remedies combined.
That Pnle,Yellow. N'chlv-lookina Uh in
bl changed to 0110 of freshness and health.
Those Dieeasrs of the Stain.Ptmples.Pnu
tuleN. IPctchcH and Erupting vre ro
inCv-'il. /krofulA, ficrot'nlous Diseaua
of the Eyes, White Swellings, Vlcers.
Olrt Sores or any kind of Humor rapidly
dwindie and disappear under its influence.
’• hat «s it? It is nature’s own restorer! A.
soluble oxyd of iron combined with the
medicinal properties ol Poke Root divested
of all disagreeable qualities, it willcureanv
Disease whose real or direct cause is Bnif
Blood. llbenmntlsm. Patna in I.intbs
or Bones. Constitutions broken down
by Mercurial or other poisons, are all cured
by It. Voi Syphilis, or ISvphilitic taint,
there is nothing equal to if. A trial will
prove it. Bold by 1
.A.ltK YOU
FOOR & HONEST
iF #<•, do not waste time on and be swindled by irres
ponstb <• advertisers. We will pav you a CASH
.- \I.AKV of A<s | r week, and furnish everything, in
<»i 0 1’ !•■ and first claw bttsifieM. We arc own
v. imrr w live, nd guarantee honorable treatment. A
s|’< c ' I offerfbr poor men and women.
G.VA BUBER k CO.. Marlon, Ohio.
rreni eFofgentTiSe
At Appomattox C. H. Va. April 9th, 1865.
r* MAGXIFICE’ T H X 18 luch Engr vittg
•mik of'he surrender of Gen. Lie, beautifully colored
Ecgnived in the highest style of the art and printed on
m ;.vy plate paper. It is truly a gent of art. one which
-in il! i'.ang 1,, the parlor of every Southern home.
Sen' by tnr.il, mounted on a roller and post-paid, 0:1 re
ceipt i. 20 e. nts. or 3 lor 50 cents. Aofxts Wasted.
Adi J. C. & VV. M. BURROW,
!’'i>' il.Ti n .
k'.’lw] Catalogues >f Pictures. Rook.*, Sc., sent free
U. S. IAIL PACK ET LIN E,
Coosa River Steamers.
0 V AND AFTER JULY Ist, the Steamers on the
Coosa River will run as tier schedule a« follows
in.- ' • Post Offices 0:1 Mail Route No. fileJ
Le •> Rome every Tuesday at '■ A. M
LrriV'i at Gadsden Wednesday at 6 A. M
Leave Gadsden Wednesday at 7A M
Arrive at Rome Thursday at 7 P M.
I. '.'ive Rome every Friday at P. M.
Arrive at Gadsden Saturday at 7 A. M.
Leave Gadsden Saturday at. A. M.
A'rive it Rome Sunday’nt 7 P. M.
J. M. ELLIOTT, Gen isupt.
en-25 1
Rome R. R.Company
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
ON AND AFTER SUNDAY. OCTOBER iffib,
1872 Uie trains on the Rome Railroad will r n as
follows:
MOR.XtXO TRAIX.
Morning Train leaves Rome at : : 8:30 a. u
Arrive at Rome : : : : : 1:00 1. M.
SIGHT TKAtX.
Night Train leaves Rome at : : : 6:00 r. *
Arrive at Rome at : : : : : 9:00 r. M
Night train makes close connection at Kingston tor
New York and all points North. Also make close con
nection at Rome with Mail train on Selma, Rome and
Dalton Rai) R>>ad for ail poinla South. M< ruing tran
niakes close connection for Chattanooga, Naslivi.'l anol
ail p< »nia West. Both train, make close connection,
f<< AUBlla
W. 8. COTHRAN. Pres idem.
Macon and Western R. R,
Leave, Arrivfi
Macon 7 10 * x 730 a
4£5 p m 611
AtIMU 2 00 a m
. 1 JO r