Newspaper Page Text
R LONDON NEWS
London, December 17 .-- Sir
Fauncefote, the British ajn
jsdor at Washinffton, comes
invested _ with
R to His country
' ho nors and dignities. For
• (he last two'weeks 7 he has
,
created by the queen a mem
of her privy council, an office
t carries with it end of
,ich no
hand prestige, and invests its
lief with the right of prefixing
.Morris “fight honorable” to his
unr- minor prerogatives
Among the
■the more or less recognized right
I Liar-state invitations to all court balls and
functions in England,
L only for one’s self,but forone’s
L and daughters, provided they
presentable, while among the
awbacks must be considered the
Ivcre penalties which are entailed
l Ly the violation of the oath of se
and loyalty taken by every
lember of the council except those
ho are of roy’al ranit* .These ,ut
r are not sworn, but are merely
troduccd. At the council held
Windsor the other day, under
ie presidency of the queen, at
hich Sir Julian took the oath,
rince Henry of Battenberg was
r the first time introduced.
The honor thus conferred upon
rince Henry is looked upon as
reparatory to investing him with
peerage and a seat in the house
: lords, and is attributed to the in
uence of Princess Beatrice,as ’.veil
; to the habit into which th.e queen
as drifted of consulting the prince
aout all sorts of questions since
ie death of her former servant and
infidante, John Brown. It is
orthv of note that neither the
ike of Teck.the duke of York nor
let Queen Victoria’s other Gerfnan
bn-in-law, Prince Christian, has
jeen L-’s created member of her inajes
privy council, only one per
bn of which has an ex-officer right
p the dignity—namely, the lord
nayor of London. But he never
[ttends any of the meetings save
lie one held immediately alter the
Recession of a sovereign to the
prone, and nearly three-score
ears have therefore elapsed since
London’s chief magistrate has been
ben at a meeting of the privy
lounefi.
[ A good deal of adverse com¬
ment has been created by the elec
lion of Maj. Charles Ramsey as
member of parliament for Forfar¬
shire on the unionist ticket, his
speeches during the campaign
which preceded the poll having
been characterized by an extraordi
bitterness’ against home rule.
Maj. Ramsey js indebted for
the influence which enabled him to
secure his election, mpinly if not
wholly, to the position which he
occupies as guardian or tutor—the
latter is a Scotch word—to his
young nephew, the present earl of
Dalhousie. Maj. Ramsey had left
the army and taken up his residence
in the U. S. where he had mar
ried a New York girl, daughter of
R. Garrison, when the
suddea and almost sim
fcH'ueous deaths—it is believed by
suicide—of the late earl and coun¬
tess of Dalhousie in a hotel a t Havre
on . lanqing after a trip from New
York, had the effect of sending him
back in hot ha$tc to the old coun
fry to assume the guardianship of
the five little boys of his dead
brother.
The late earl, , , however, was an
earnest and enthusiastic home ru
ler had prominently 'identified
’
,. h,mse,t )f " .;»K TrplTiid’s cause ’ and
. .
tinder the circumstances it is tclt
that the major s use of his position
, s administrator of the late earl’s
nronertv 5 and'suardian of his chil
’ L
dren to obtain al „ p narliainentarv ry elec
tion as a bitter antagonist to home
rule is, to say the least, in ques
tionable taste’ It is only fair to
t L 9 t Mai Ramsey is a very
*
- U alike in
good fellow, . popu r so
*
and among his nepnevN 6 ten*
a-i*** a P art f *T bU
his handsome and cheery
ce must prove a welcome'acqni
Son to the drearv an
of commons.
Ifhe Lady Churchill who is now
so seriously iH th*t her re •
covery is despared of is not, as
2 ’ J
too, seem to believe, the American
wife of Lord Randolph Churchill,
but a very much older lady, who
for many years has been the fa
vorite ladv-in-waiting to the queen
and the person through whom the
major part of the gossip of the up¬
per ten is filtered into royal ears.
She is very amusing and very live
ly afrd, keeps the queen in good hu¬
mor.
Lord Tenyham, whose impend
mg mairiage to . T -^ord , Bateman , , s
pretty cousin, Miss Mabel Wilkin
son, has just been - announced, is
the only peer of the realm who is
in ’ practice as a solicitor, or" non
pleading lawyer, the difference bo
t\ve<Hj solicitor and barrister being
that, whereas the Jatter is a ger,
tleman by virtue of ins patent and
diploi?!a, si solicitor is not.. Yet
barristers may Only have dealings
with their clients through their so
licitors and receive their briefs ex¬
clusively from solicitors. Lord
i'eynham had to work for several
years as an articled clerk, or ap
prentice, before getting his marie
placed upon the rolls, and I hear
that he . doing . large busi- .
is quite a
ness, owing to the fact that the
middle classes consider that there
good deal ot social , . . Kudos . . be
is a iO
ohtaifu d by being able to casual
ly ren ar :: “My solicitor, 'Lord
i’eynham, advises me to do so-and
SO. ■> > Then, again, if.you 17 put 1 your
business into his , hands . , your soiici- ...
,or can hardly refuse to dine with
you, and thus hundreds of hungry
coiriirioners who have been pining
for years to have a real lord at their
dinner tables will at last be able to
satisfy their appetite for a coronet,
Even a summons from a lord will
be less offensive to the vast masses
of the British bourgeoisie than one
from a more commoner.
It is taking advantage of this
feeling that tlio new Lord Cole¬
ridge hac confirmed his practice as
a barrister, i:i his case, too, there,
being no precedent for a peer of
tiie realm to plead at the bar.
Lord Colerid je is now on c rcuit
and finds that bis succession to his
father’s title has had the elfccsj oi
largely increasing the number of
his briefs, the. solicitors employing
him being apparently of the opin¬
ion that juries are mere easily in¬
fluenced by the arguments of a lord
than by those of a mere commoner.
It will not be long before Great
Britain’s colonial dependencies
will commence to resent the selec
tion made , . by the , mother , country .
of the men appointed to repre eut
the sovereign as governors, com
manders-in-ciiief and viceroys.
^ Much adverse t criticism ... has been
excited by the recent choice of
young Sir Edward Grey, still in,
his twenties and Lord Sandhurst,
who is but little older, to succeed ,
Lords Wen lock and Harris as
governors of Madras and Bombay
res pectfully, each presidency hav
ing a population of from 15,000
000 to 20,000,900, ’ T whose destinies
are intrusted . , to these >oung _____ d
inexperienced sprigs of the
‘
racy.
Even still younger is Lord Hope
tdwn, the governor and co.nman
der-in-clnef der in chief of of Victoria, Victoria an an under- u
sized, beardless youth, at whose
cqmin'g'of age the parish minister
disfinguished luinsclf by selecting
aft h/s text for the sermon preached
°, th e P „ r olific
famir f which the earl . .
>’’ is
tfae head : “Brethren, the world
is full of blasted hopes.”
LeRoy.
——n—— ■ ■ » -
mi '
P“ U P lt "
dUVeFllSe -111 ill THE A
^IMES ^ STe dlwaVS *
the Cheapest .fi II 1 T 11 S tO
Jj i WltHj D8CaUS6 ■
xl, lIICj 0 „ 8vll 11 n>A IllOlt; „ 0
on account of adver
tiS < 1—i* ng a^d tllCY Call
ftfford tO Sell *, ChGRP”
_
6F. ArV OllF Bd^cr*
tisers and see.
1117fill IVPADM ™™- 1 TIfi\l
"
Answers to Questions Of Corres
pohdents on Many Subjects.
FEBTILIZERS UKDEB DB0U3SI0N.
_
Th« Rest Time to Manure an Orchard and
the 15: st A implication—Th* U-*« of fot
ash a* :t FerlHis^r—F<*e>i for < »ttl« and
ij<TO to i-Ved thn Vouuj;—M.auy Other
Valuable >ug£r&tiou*.
Department of Agriculture,
Atlanta, Dec. 1, 1894.
,
What is the proper amount of food to
give a calf six months old? In what
proportion should the quantity older? bo in¬
creased as the calf grows
Atthea?eof six m011ths a ca if ra¬
qolres from 4 1-3 to 5 pouusls of good
hay or its equivalent for every 100
pounds of live weight. When-1-year
old from 0 1-3 to 4 pounds for erery 100
pounds of live weight. Or in percent
age from 3 1-3 to 4 per cent of its live
Weight . At 3 year3 0 ld it will require
1-2 and later 3 per cent of its live
weight daily.
R should be remembered that the im¬
portant time to feed heifers intended for
the best developments or any cattle is
during tho period of growth. Rough
nsa g 0 alt( j m ,sufficient food can bo
much hotter withstood after maturity
than while younger,
FERTILIZING THE ORCHARD.
At what time is it best to apply fer
tilizers, that is commercial fertilizers,
tu nn orchard? .7, S., West Point.
In applying fertilizer material to au
orchard, flue ground muriate of potash,
i s excellent, shonld bo applied in
the fall; while nitrato of soda or ^ul
phate of ammonia should be applied
alter the growth begins in tho spring,
,md who “ th ® P ltinta havc f
tamed sufficient growth to come mto
bearing.
Iu another part of this report wo al¬
lude to applications of barnyard manure.
Tho answer applies specifically to a
young orchard on good land where too
rapid growth might be produced by too
heavy applications of rich stable ma
uury . Mady horticulturists prefer fer
tilizer mixtures to stable manure, as it
does not introduce insects or fungus
germs into the orchaid. Puro raw
bone is excellent for the oreliard.
POTASH AS A FERTILIZER.
What is'your opinion of the use of
“ * ‘““'a ATTSd” lSn dy
Wo bavo hail occasieii several times to
call attention to the value of potash as a
fertilizer, especially on sandy land. In
that case it acts to prevent rust in cot
ton, a physiological condition due to its
absence, and also other diseases due to
microbes. In grain crops it gives
strength to the straw and forms a part
of the seed. If not sufficiently supplied
the crop will suffer as greatly as from
tho absence of phosphorio acid and ni
trogen. We certainly advise 0>;peri .
meats in which larger quantities are
used than are ordinarily,supplied in our
averago commercial fertilizer. We
might also mention that it is found that
in soils abounding in humus uitrifica
tion is most active, and that the great
cst value from this nitrification is when
there is on hand a largo suDply of pot
^ ^ th@ n ig llxcdaattui .
trate of ^ tash _ a (lcsirab i 0 fonn .
composting.
What is the cheapest and best moth
od of composting stable and barn yard
ma nurel J
3 In the last report yon will find Farish
Furman’s method, than which wo can
recommend no better. For an ordinary
fertilizer use 1,000 pounds of stable ma
nuro, 600 pounds of aerid phosphate, 300
pounds <ot cottonseed meal and 100
ixmnds of kaiuit. If your laud is sandy
uso 800 pounds of kaihit.
soft Fiiosi’H ate.
I am coutiuually in receipt of circa
lars relating to soft phosphate. Do you
regard it highly a? a plant food, and
wou j (1 you ;u i v : so j ts n_ ss v
L. M. T.. Blakeley.
The department has received many
inquiries on this subject, aud shortly
af ^ ^ ion th ? of
^ P^phat^ was first raised au w
tide appeared m those reports by Dr.
p a yne ou their valua as shown by ana
lysis. Since that time the question has
been experimentally investigated at a
number of the stations, but with such
results as to prevent definite
conclu-pous. From them it would seem
tkot it would bo difficult as yet to de
fcrmino tho pomparative value between
it^ and MBt phosphate, or to lay down
g«errfruh» aa to tho advisability of
its use. --it
Other sdeutiflo questions have also
the^iscnsskm, tho principal of
wUch ^ W «o l ° bilit T of soft anfthe
phates in tbe wmls of the soils
effect of an a^hndant supply of humus
or organic matter in rendering
available *
These questions are matters to be de
termined by careful experiments, and
will govern, to a large extent, the use
of fertilizen^ad the char*
*
applied. To dotermina the effxrt of or
ganio matter on natural phosphate the
Alabama station at Auburn conducted
a series of experiments in which soft
phosphates were placed with cottonseed
mwltad fannentattoo and decay al
.t**, a.
.
chemical action at change taking place
analysis warn made to find the amount
Q f available phosphoric acid at differ
ent, periods and sta res of the fermenta¬
tion ahd do ny until the conclusion of
the rxpericwvit These analysis showed
comparative! ’ no increase in the amount
of available phosphoric acid frohC the
action of the meal. They indicate,
so far as ths phosphoric acid of natural
PH**** too**,** a«B,W. in .he
soil is concerned, that it is immaterial
whether it is used with material con*
taining organic matter, or whether as
so this particular feature of ifei ns * the
land is wail supplied with org -ic mat-'
ter or not %.
It would seem, however, tha -
tical experience indicates , t
natural phosphates can be used much
more successfully where the laud is
supplied with an abtui lanoo of humus,
For example. Charleston floats have
been used with beu -ficial remits in
Virgitiia where clover sod has been
turned under, and so universally has
this been noted by the farmers of that
state that they are ordinarily used only
whf*re Vegetable matter has been sup¬
plied, or upon sod soon to bo turned
under.
In Considering the use of any fertil¬
izer, the results to be obtained are of
paramount importance, and especially
is this true of a sloNv acting fert-lizer,
such as the soft -phosphates. Usually
we applv chemical fertilizers for pres¬
ent results, and it has baeu the policy
of tho department in estimating tho
commercial worth of any fertilizer to
be governed alone by the actual avail¬
able plant food present without regard
to what may become sloiylv availablo,
We are unable to see in Immediate re¬
sults how natural phosphates can equal
.the available. As to bow far they do
become available remains to bo fie ter
miued.
t MUCK.
Will it pay to have swamp muck a
short distance"to place on land? What
purpose does it serve and what plant
food supply? S. O. M., Cobb County.
The purpose that muck serves and the
plant food it supplies governs the ques¬
tion as to how far it can be hauled aud
pay on the farm. It is also seen that
t j, e object iu view and the other mate
r ial that is at the command of tho farm
er to serve the same purpose is to bo
considered. First, as to the amount of
p i an t food directly contributed to tho
»» il * P«K It* -tv
oeentkat foaud as it 19 uii.Ier vnrymR
circumstances, that tho amount of ni¬
trogen, the direct plant food it contains
must ' al T 'cry great y.
II1 80 sam P les of P oa ^° a11 s " rts and
-kinds analyzed at tha Ya e , laboratory,
under tiie direction of I rofossor John
sou ’ tll ° Proportion of nitrogen varied
from 4 ‘ of J P 0 ;, 00 ”* tn 2 ' ’ P ! ' 1 cent '
With such wide divulganco . in tho ac¬
tual plant foot], if that is principally
“ught instep of _ tho,orgamc , ... matter, it
periment ^ necessary before to have very intelligent an analysis action or
be taken It is well to note also
tfiht ^ far the « reater P art of l m,ro ;
Ren found in muck, is msoluble , aud
luert considered as an mi mediate source
rjf P lant food - Wheu eX ^ sed t0 the
air °' vc '. ir or Inlxei , 1 an ^ ® , m
'
’ ’
ary soil it slowly undergoes a change
^<1 gradually becomes aval able, as
boac meal would do under similar condi
tlons •
It is frequently termed acid when flrsl
taken from the hog, which is in reality
the presence of antiseptic matter. This
au tiseptic or germecide quality
h in<le r nitrification and is injurious To
correct this the muck should be exposed
t 0 the a ir for some months before using
an(1 when not acid this expomfre rids it
of the great quantity of water it cop■
tains and renders it mellow and friable,
Were there no danger of damage ftorn
« n ^ niieatinna of raw neat it is common
that the land will ... not
experience receive
its benefit until the second year, and it
j g W ell to expose it elsewhere than on
the field. -
composting.
accon " t ° f **
ammo.ua and prevent its loss, muck s
excellent for composting, oven when it
contains only a small percentage of ni
trogen. Tiffs is due to the presence of
humic aeid, a highly effective agent in
absorbing ammonia.
Storer, in his Agriculture, states that
Professor Johnson found that a swamp
muck from the neighborhood of New
Haven was capable of absorbing 1.3 per
cent of ammonia, while ordinary soil
absorbed only 0.1 to 0.5 per cent.
For tho same reason, as a litter for
farm animal*, nothing is as excellent
a* an absorbent as dried muck. And in
a lar ^ «muber of experiments nothing
ihowed as high absorbing qualities as
the better class of peats.
Taken altogether, our conclusions are
that you can use the muck alone to sup
ply organic matter and perhaps uitro
gen. Compost it oc nse it as a litter for
your stables advantageously if you have
no groat distance to haul it
MCLCHISO.
What is meant By the term mulching ?
I understand it* ordinary meaning, but
think it must embrace more than I have
contemplated. What object does it ac¬
complish? . ft. A. 8., Statesboro.
Anything placed upon the surface of
the soil to deter the evaporation of
surface water to a muloh. It may ooa
test ot leaves, straw, chips, epe *t tea-
hr A*, r: wi’vFt, r’d Icr-rdr. Cnt Ston
or stable chaff or manure, the latter
serving a double purpose.
The good‘acccmplishod in the retail
tioa of mo sturo is significantly shown
by the condition of-the earth beneath
any cl<1 logs or stones in the field. Hare
ev n in a dry soamu you find the soil
most and usually in good tilth. A
mulch also prevents the soil from be
coming encrusted after hard rains,
gRap.I PRUNING.
^
prune them. Will you r.uiu-y give me
the m oan ition. <v O. C , Rufovi.
! ; • • ' ■ * ' g '
jhv •> of :• o.s 'vr -Op. Vari m*
m UdV • O 1 1 .■ - 1 . The first
year tan n a c‘: > ;a ro allow > 0
cane to grow. ieoi. ; th * most thrifty
and promising bud, and rubbin r off all
oth iv, early m ta s 1 .nr or as soon as
snfiioivurly <1 veiop^J, L ite u th-' fall
cut this I ran *h ba it to t hr 'U or four
buds. Tim.-eeoud vo-'’--t ’ ■ two
most vigorous binl■> s ’ r :b->ff ' * oth
era as before. The fo owing nrnmor
nothing will bo liocossary except to
pinch off all inferior shoots.
In the an mum cutback the two canes
to three or four buds and allow a bud to
grow 011 tho main shoots to make n
third cane. The*third summer the two
canes can be allowed to bear a few clus
ters of fruit, taking care that they are
not overtaxed. The thinning of tiie
fruit shbitld be dono with sharp scis¬
sors instead of a knife. Pruning after
this will depend on the system of trim¬
ming adopted, remembering that the
object to bo arrived at is to havo the
proper amount of new wood and no
more for a good yield of fruit, and in
pruning bearing vines the old wood
shonld be cut away and the new wood
left, with a few strong branches each
year to provide a growth of cane.
RASPBERRY CUTTINGS.
Will raspberries cuttings? bo grown B. O. success¬ H.
fully from Decatur.
Only a few varieties of raspberries
cau be successfully grown upon wood
cuttings. Some of tho black varhtieit
will succeed if the cuttings are made
early iu the fall. Green wood cuttings
are, however, grown very readily by
the usual process used in mul tiplying
grapes. As tho fruit is so much easier
'propagated in other ways, we would
not rocommond tho use of cuttings of
tho class you evidently intoud. Roots
aud root cuttings is the best method, as
all but- ona species and its varieties
havo underground stems, which being
cut into small pieces will produce
plants readily which will prove more
vigorous.
ASPARAGUS.
Please tell me how ta. prepare an as •
parages b“d. How deep to plant the
roots, how to manure, etc.
L. O. T., Ilaiqpton.
Select for your atparagus bad a-light
sandy loam, two feet deep and perfect¬
ly drained, as this is the most suitable.
If you Jy-vo no soil of this description,
uso the most friable soil at your com¬
mand; cover tho bed six inches with
rich, well rotted manure, aud trench
into the soil to the depth of tw* feet,
as in a few years the roots will reach to
that depth. Iu tha spring set the roots
iu their natural position four inches
deep and two foot apart. As a rule, so
great a distanoo is not given, and if im¬
practicable on account of limited space,
give them as much room .as possible, an
when tho bed is thoroughly established
two feet will not b 3 found too great.
During the summer water liberally with
lif l airl manure. Iu the winter, cut down
thefitems and cover with a dressing of
manure. In the spring fill this in with
salt
A dOM-oST PORMULi ‘is'
Thp following n.rmula being sold
by farm rights in my section for 4700j
Saltpeter, 2 pompls: ’blnestone, 3pounds;
S*
] e wciio:l. 50 pounds; salt, 5 pound*.
lime, 6 pounds. It is recommended to
b 0 used iu composting, and irnthis
10 raa ^° a fRjfilizer equal, ton for ton,
to a regular fertilizer. vYheu to be usod
un der corn, it is said that lime cau bo
substituted in the place of the ashes,
Would you reedmmeud its purchase?
And is it ft good Coweta.
t
( j Q not a,} T i se the purchase of
^ rights of any patent formula Tho
departrnent8 instit uted by the
ment au(i the state will gladly lurnish
t orl nnla for any particular purpose,
w hi C h embody the consensus of experi
mental BQd Ki(int in c investigation in
that line of fertilization. At this, the
<lepartment> wo win
fnrnlsh Kp<K .ial or general formula fr*.
of char g 0 .
As to the merits of the particular
millayou gi T e, will say that it is de
feetive. Tho nitrate of ainmouia is ev
jdently intended to supply ammonia,
btU tbe effpct of composting it
ii me and unjoached aihes would cause
iu loa , Thp caastio p roport ies of tho
ashe^ and lime would also
cause the loss of the ammonia in the
stable manura with which it comrx>.u
ed. When we note that ammonia is the
most costly plant fool which the fariner
has to supply, it is well for him to eier
^ (i ue.care that it is not lost. Cc*r
taiuly be should not use such ingred¬
ients which, upon being composted.
it to salt is beneficial
for its mechanic c*CV*rt. aud at tin.?s i;
is well to us, some in composting. Blue
•tone servos a* an insecticide, and it
needed under certain conditions.
No r*ason oould offer itself for substi.
tut ing lime for ashes when tbe compost
is to be used under cow,
V 4 , BICYCLES
If you >vant a cycle 1 iV * v/i 1.3 oav
1
The Times. We cast I
to sse
. buggies* .
also save you Money on
aa( j sew'ing-ipachines^ which wc
| iaV e ta en in payment for adver
tising. Wc can sell you a good
cycle for ^ 45 —one that can be
* either by lady gentleman.
u scc } or
ft t
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1 it in half an
r iudicaiaa
a Ioto of.
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wlii fhww.
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1 Hi ; !.-•! I repio- by
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# tad Dftaorest’s Illustrated
i dmili n*s*ziM S2.7S a Year.
mmmm
wilWHL s .
A correspondent at each post*
office in Habersham jmd tit- round
ing counties. To those w i© will
write us the news from their re
spectfYepostoffices _
Ot least one
month TttE Times will be
free to