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CROWING
PEACHES.
_ i
!
Proper Method of Thining and Fer
tilizing Orchards-
A PRACTICAL PEACH GROWER.
Writes Interestingly on the Care of
Orchards From his Own
Experience,
The following article, from the
pen of Col. C. W. Merrill, of Ma
con, who is a large peach grower
and a man of practical experience
in the culture of fruit, will no
doubt be read with much interest
by all in this section who are in
any wise interested peach growing.
The article was first published in
the Macon Telegraph. Col. Mer
rill says:
“The trimming of fruit trees in
order to keep up vitality, a contin
uous production of new wood,
keeping the trees within bounds as
to height and bearing wood, and
power of root growth for the pro
duction of fine fruit, require some
knowledge of horticulture. There
are some principles that must be
followed from the start, or failure
will result. Successful orchardists
have found this true, and that is
why we see such a difference in
the vigor of trees, production of
new wood, and productiveness of
fruit of different commercial or
chards.
“It requires judgement to know
how and where to cut in trimming
superfluous wood of fruit trees.
Like the g r ape, the finest fruit is
grown on new wood of the pre
vious year’s growth, and in order
to have as much new wood as pos
sible a safe way would be to cut
back every year from the start one
half on each year’s growth. Some
follow the plan of cutting out some
of the leading strongest growth,
that the weaker shoots may ma
ture and produce strong buds.
However, this principle should be
born in mind, that the trimming
should be to that extent that the
trees, when they become of bear
ing age. not earlier than three
years, should have low, open heads
to admit of free circulation of air;
and not so nigh that it would re
quire a step-ladder to gather the
fruit. My experience is that a one
year-old tree with a trunk one-half
inch in diameter, branched about
two feet from the ground after set
ting is about right for a commer
cial orchard. Ido not like small
trees for June buds to start a suc
cessful orchard. From my obser
vation while visiting several or
chards this summer I am still of
the opinion that there are more
ruined by the borers and want of
proper fertilizing than for any
other cause. You cannot produce
fine fruit from trees with the roots
eaten up by borers and where there
is no production of new wood.
THINNING OF FRUIT.
“Imagine yourself standing in a
peach orchard of several thousand
trees, as I have this summer at
several points in Georgia looking
at trees loaded dowm with fruit
clear out to the extremities of the
limbs, and while watching the de
velopment of the fruit, perchance
find an extra large peach on some
twig which has only one or two,
while the balance of the tree did
not develop enough for shipment
you wonder with me w T hy this fruit
was-not thinned ont in its earliest
stage so that all could have devel
oped into fine, large fruit. In the
growing of fruit we must study
nature’s laws. A mind dwarfed by
a wrong principle of reasoning
cannot grasp the highest ideas of
life. No child can grow and be
come strong without proper nour
ishment. No tree can produce
perfect fruit beyond its power of
root growth. This crop should
have been thinned after the fruit
was all set, to a distance of not less
than six inches apart, picking off
BEST FOR THE
BOWELS
It you haven’t a regular, healthy movement of the
bowels every dav, you're ill or will be. Keep youi
bowel? open, and be well. Force, in the ehapoof Jio
lent physic or pill poison, ib dangerous. The soiooth
est, easiest, most perfect v ay ol keeping iho bowels
clear and clean is to take
EAT ’EM LIKE CANDY
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good, Do Good,
Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, I®. 25, and aO en ~;
per box. Write for free sample, and bookie*
health. Address
STERLING REMEDY COMPANY, CHICAGO or NEW YORE.
KEEP YOUR BLOOD CLEAN
all defective fruit; the result would
have been a uniform development
of the balance and all would have
been of marketable size. This re
quires time and expense, but from
the experience of those who pract
ice this method it pays to do this,
sot only the increased bulk of fruit
of marketable size, but there is less
danger of rot and less strain on the
vitality of the tree by overbearing.
It is the production of the stone
that strains the vigor of the tree.
Such varieties that have a tendency
to overbear, like the Triumph,
should always be thinned, part of
this can be done by trimming, not
allowing too much wood growth,
being governed in size of top by
power of root growth.
fertilizing the orchard.
“How that any orchardist could
expect to grow fine flavored, well
colored fruit, and productive new
wood without fertilizers to produce
these results is beyond my compre
hension. To produce wcod growth
requires nitrogen; to produce the
stone and pulp requries phosphoric
acid, and to produce the color and
flavor cf the peach requires potash,
and we cannot have these years |
after years without we apply these I
elements of plant food or have an j
abundance already in the soil. The
fruit will degenerate in size, color
and flavor, and the trees will finally
become non productive, and, for
the want of vigor, less able to re
sist the attacks of insects and fun
gous diseases. With cow 7 peas to
furnish the nitrogen sown in rows
so as to be cultivated, which will
also give cultivation to the trees,
fine ground bone at the rate of 200
pounds per acre, will keep the trees
in vigorous condition. Frcin my
observations the present season,
trees under normal vigorous condi
tion there was more defective and
wormy fruit.
“It is a well known fact to all
horticulturists that potash gives
color to all stone fruits either
in the form of hard wood ashes or
in the form of muriate, which is
cheapest. One orchardist here in
Georgia used fifty, tons of muriate
the present season. Now, for an
illustration, take the Elberta peach
when it is full ripe, grown under
proper conditions —it has a golden
color on one side, with a deep
maroon red on the other, but at this
stage they all are too ripe to ship
north by carload shipments. Now
the question arises how to get as
much of this color to make the
fruit attractive to the eye before
the shipping stage arises. Can we
do it by depending upon the natur
al conditions of the soil and culti
vations? I think not without ap
phing potash in some form to the
orchard every year, if we expect to
grow extra fine, well colored fruit.
SPRAYING for brown rot.
“Having been somewhat inter
ested in the gathering and shipping
of some thirty cars of peaches, as
fine, probably as were shipped from
Georgia this season, from an or
chard that was sprayed some four
times, from a dormant stage to
nearly full grown fruit, finishing
up with copperasetate, I think that
I am in a position to judge fairly
of the benefits of continuous spray
ing. In a work that I have, treat
ing of French horticulture, there
is this passage speaking of the
Bordeaux mixture, that the action
of the remedy is preventive. Only
the preventive application can
check the invasion of all fungus
diseases. Let us diagnose the dis
ease of brown rot, as the doctors
say before we begin to effect a cure.
In my opinion it is a disease
among fruits like yellow fever or
typhoid fever with the human fam
ily; it is brought by atmospheric
and somewhat local causes. In
my perambulations through an
orchard of 45,000 trees this season
I observed that in low places,
where there was not proper drain
age, there was an unusual amount
of rot over surrounding trees than
where there was less moisture and
the soil of more sandy nature.
This would lead us to the conclu
sion that a high rolling, well drain
ed land would be the ideal location
for a peach orchard. I also ob
served that even one rain storm
would start the production of rot,
AN OLD ADACE
SAYS
“A light purse Ls a heavy curse’*
Sickness makes a light purse.
The LIVER is the seat of niae
tenths of all disease.
Tint's Pills
go to the root of the whole mat
ter, thoroughly, quickly safely
and restore the action of th e
LIVER to normal condition.
Give tone to the system and
solid flesh to the body.
Take No Substitute.—
and when clearing weather came
the rot would cease to be renewed
again at the first precipitation or one
or two foggy nights. I alsj observ
ed that where trees were not prop
erly trimmed, having too close a top
not giving free circulation of air,
there was more rot than trees right
side by side, where the trees were
open, getting sunlight and air from
all sides. lam forced to this con
clusion by close observation in this
orchard for two months that if
there had been as much precipita
tion as we had last year there
would have been as much damage
by brown rot this year as last with
all the spraying that this orchard
received.
“I believe the brow'n rot to be a
disease that comes and goes like
diseases that affect the human fam
ily. This may be its last year in
this vicinity; we may not haye an
other visitation in ten years, cer
tainly need not deter any one from
getting out commercial orchards in
proper localities.
“In conclusion of this article, I
presume that my brother horticul
turists will disagree with me as to
the benefits of continuous spraying,
but-my views as here given are
the results of those observations
and honest convictions. In lieu of
the expense of continuous spray
ing, that if the money was expend
ed in more liberal fertilizing,
proper trimming of trees, and thin
ning of fruit where varieties have a
tendency to overbear, keeping up
the full vigor of the trees, shaping
the head to conform with the power
of root growth, there would be less
rot and the results would ke more
satisfactory.”
W. T. Wesson,Gholsonville, Va.,
druggists, writes: “Your One
Minute Cough Cure gives perfect
satisfaction. My customers say it
is the best remedy for coughs,
colds, throat and lung troubles.”
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
Dinasts what you eat.
IT DAZZLES THE WORLD.
No Discovery in medicine has
ever created one quarter of the ex
citement that has beer, caused by
Dr. King’s New Discovery for
Consumption. It’s severest tests
have been on hopless victims of
Consumption, Pneumonia, Hem
orrhage, Pleurisy and Bronchetis,
thousands of whom it has restored
to perfect health. For Coughs,
Colds, Asthma, Croup, Hay Fe
ver, Hoarseness and Whooping
Cough it is the quickest, surest
cure in the world. It is sold by
Young Bros.’ who guarantee satis
faction or refund money. Large
bottles 50c. and SI.OO. Trial bot
tles free
It is a remarkable coincidence
that two pre-idents from Ohio
should have been assassinated,
both shot w'ith a pistol, both
wounded in a similar manner and
both died within a day or two of
the same date in September. Both
were inaugurated in March preced
ing the year in which they were
assassinated. Both served in con
gress together and were soidiers of
the same division of the union
army. Both the Ohio presidents
who were killed w’ere succeeded in
office by the vice presidents from
New York, Garfield by Chester A.
Arthur and McKinley by Theo
dore Roosevelt. Of the four pres
idents elected from Ohio only
three have served out the term for
which they were chosen. Harrison
died in a month after his inaugura
tion. Garfield is six months and
McKinley in a similar period after
his second inauguration. Of the
two vice presidents who became
presidents both were closely allied
to the south. Arthur’s wife was
the daughter of Capt. Herndon, a
North Carolinian, while Roosevelt’s
mother was a Georgia lady.
The Royal Month and the Royal
Disease.
Sudden changes of weather are espe
cially trying, and probably to none
more so than to the scrofulous and con
sumptive. The progress of scroiuia dur
ing a normal October is commonly great.
We never think ot scrolula—its bunch
es, cutaneons eruptions, and wasting of
the bodily substance —without thinking
ol the great good many sufferers from
it have derived from Hood’s Sarsap
arilla, whose radical and permanent
cures of this one disease are enough to
make it the most famous medicine in
the world. There is probably not a city
or town wdiere Hood’s Sarsaparilla has
not proved its merit in more homes than
o*w, in arresting and completely erad
icating scrofula, wnieh is almo s t as se
rious and as much to he feared as its
near relative. —consumption.
World’s Great Fever Medicine
Johnson's Tonic does in a day what
slow Quinine cannot do in ten days.
Its splendid cures are in striking con
trast with the feeble cures made bv qui
nine. , ,
If you are utterly wretched, take a
thorough dose of Johnson’s Tonic and
drive out every trace of malarial poi
soning The wise insure their lives and
the wiser insure their health by using
Johnson’s Chill and Fever Tonic. It
costs 50 cents if it cures; not one cent if
it does not
Korfol Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
Gontagimts
Blood Poison
There is no poison so highly contagious,
so deceptive and so destructive. Don Ibe
too sure you are cured because all external
signs of the disease have disappeared, and
the doctor says you are welL Many per
sons have been dosed with Mercury and
Potash for months or years, and pro
nounced cured —to realize when too late
that the disease was only covered up
Uk. Bogets uko. ES2E
out again, and to their sorrow and mortifi
cation find those nearest and dearest to
them have been infected by this loath
some disease, for no other poison is so
surely transmitted from parent to child
as this. Often a bad case of Rheumatism,
Catarrh, Scrofula or severe stein disease,
an old sore or ulcer developing in middle
life, can be traced to blood poison con
i nearly Of iho Patent.
life, for it remains smoldering in the sys
tem forever, unless properly treated and
driven out in the beginning. S. S. S. is
the only antidote for this peculiar virus,
the only remedy known that can over
come it and drive it out of the blood, and
it does this so thoroughly ami effectually
that there is never a return of the disease
to embarrass or humiliate you afterwards.
SA73fe cures Contagious Blood
aTh Poison in any and all
N&x Cfis. stages; contains no
jL jjra mineral to break down
'kmP your constitution ; it is
purely vegetable and the only blood puri
fier known that cleanses the blood and
at the same time builds up the general
health.
Our little book on contagious blood
poison i3 the most complete and instruc
tive ever issued; it not only tells all
about this disease, bnt also how to cure
yourself at home. It is free and should
be in the hands of everyone seeking a
cure. Send for it
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATtAHTA, OA.
Wise or Otherwise.
Don’t meet trouble half way; it
isn’t worth the trouble.
Charity gives itself rich and cov
etousness hoards itself poor.
A woman may love flattery and
yet despise an awkward flatterer.
It isn’t always the clock with
the loudest tick that keeps the best
time.
In eleven cases out of a dozen
the charity that begin at home
stops there.
He that lacks money, employ
ment and content is without three
good friends.
A man’s idea of a phenomenon
is another man who never loses
his collar button.
The value of a man’s advice de
pends upon the success he has
achieved in following it.
Foitunemay knock once at every
man’s door, but misfortune crawls
in at the window.
The woman who is unable to
run her own house sometimes goes
forth to reform the whole world.
There is in the heart of most wo
men such a deep well of love that
the winter of old age cannot freeze
it.
Men are born with two eyes and
only one tongue in order that they
should see twice as much as they
speak.
The man who looks as wise as J
an owl when giving others advice
is apt to make a fool of himself by
not using some of it.
Don’t place too much confidence
in the smooth individual. It is the
rough cogs in the wheel that make
the clock reliable.
Pleasure is often but a change
of pain. A man who has had the
gout feels first-rate when he gets
down to ordinary rheumatism.
There is an element of success in
every man, but he seldom gets it
in operation until some smart wo
man begins to tread on his heels.
Girls Should Remember-
That the home kitchen, with
mother for teacher, and a loving,
willing daughter for a pupil, is the
best cooking school on earth.
That “the most excellent thing
in woman”—a low voice—can only
be acquired by home practice.
That true beauty of face is only
possible where there is beauty of
soul manifested in a beautiful
chacter.
That the girl everybody likes is
not affected, and never whines but
is just her sincere, earnest, helpful
self.
And finally, that one of the most
beautiful things on eatth is a pure*
modest, true young girl, one who
is her father’s pride, her mother’s
comfort, her brother’s inspiration,
and her sister’s ideal —which girl
we should all try to be.
Do you suffer from piles? If so
do not turn to surgery for relief.
DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve will
act more quickly, surely and safe
ly, saving you the expense and
danger of an operation.
A Wouderfnl Discovery.
The last quarter of a century -ecordg
many wonderful discoveries in meuicine,
but none that have accomplished more for
humanity than that sterling old household
remedy, Browns’ Iron Bitters. It seems to
contain the very elements of good health,
and neither man, woman or child can take
it without deriving the greatest benefit.
Browns’lron Bitters is sold by all dealers.
OASTORIA.
Bears tie Th Kind Vou Haw Always Bought
r\R. STEVENS’
CROP TALK
Some Valuable Suggestion* For
Georgia Farmers.
CUT ALL GRASSES FOR HAY
laipoiUuiM of Klee Culture—lts Con
sumption In tiie tinned Statei
largely on Me Increase.
Other I’roiluols.
c" Agricultural Department,
Atlanta, Sept rQ, 1901.
In view of the crop condition of th
west and the northwest it behooves thi
farmers of Ctoorgia and the south gen
•rally to allow bo waste upon the farm.
Many of oar people depend in geeaf
measure upon western hay. Bat eo an'
favorable has been the condition in tut
west throughout the eutire season ol
1901 that their dependence will prove 8
broken reed. In other seasons hay which
cos# fh or 99 dollars a ton in the we9r.
ern market, sold in Georgia, by reason
of transportation, at from lIS.OO tc
sl6. OQ a ton. The present season hai
been so unfavorable, that Western haj
brings on the farm where it is grown
and mowed SIO.OO a ton. Now th
farmer, judging by the past, can make
hia own calculation as to what western
hay will oost him by the time it reaches
the Georgia market, In view of this h
most see the necessity of supplying tin
needs of his stock from his own farm.
Every mower should be put to work al
once, or, if the farm is not equipped
with such an implement, bring the hand
Bcytho into active play. Every available
blade of grass should be cut. Gathei
in the crab grass, crow-foot and tvire
grass. Cut all the Bermuda on youi
plaoe, and‘fail not in utilizing all you!
pea vines. Mow also the swamp grasses
and all the broom sedge, that is not tod
far matured to be used for hay. Though
the two last named do not make the besl
hay, they are better than no hay, 01
than paying excessive rates for the
western article. If a shredder is to ba
had, have your cornstalks shredded aud
stored away. Make good use of you!
cane. Let norhing escape your notice
that oan be used for food for your stock,
Thie is a time which pats to the se
verest test a farmer’s scientific know!
edge aud ability to make his farm a
success.
This is no time for a man because oi
the cLHßouleies that beset him to fold
his bands and, saying, “all is lostf"
give up the fight. Though in many
sections 001 ton has been seriously dam*
aged aud the corn crop is below the
average, minor crops, such as peas and
potatoes, are doing welL
Some report the fields overrun with
grass. Out all that grass and turn il
iato hay. Use all means to avoid th<
loss of any part of any product that can
be stored away for the use of man 01
beast.
The cry of disastrous drouth over a
large section of the Union is, alas! t<u
trua. A short grain and grass crop in
the west uterus bign grain and meat tc
the southern farmer wbo does not rais3
his own supplies. Will Georgia farm*
era, under these conditions, allow their
barna to remain empty, while the fields
are covered with valuable native grasaei
which oan now be saved aud boused al
* nominal oost? Or will they wait un
til next spring and pay twenty to twen
ty-five dollars per ton for western hay 1
GXT READY FOR YOUR WINTER CROPS.
A* soon as ibv grasses aud peavioM
have been out aad stored away for hay
befqii to get your fields ready for oats,
barley, rye, wheat, clover and the pe
rennial grasses.
In the upper half of the cotton bell
September is the proper mouth for seed
ing ail these except wheat, the sowing
of which can be deferred until after the
first frost. Early seeding guards against
the greatest dangers to these orops, via:
winter killing and spring drouths. The
former of these perils is avoided by sow
ing in time for the plants to become
deep- boo ted and strong before the win
ter freezing. The spring drouths do not
prove disastrous to early-seeded crops,
tinoe they have tune to mates* aed are
ready for the harvest be tor* the drouth
sets jn and before the %nrture. that
bad Hfoaiulated during the winter, has
been exhausted.
An early oat crop rarely fails excepi
from winter killing. This crop should
be put upon good land liberally fertil
ized. We do not deem it necessary to
plow in oats very deeply, provided they
follow a crop that has been well culti
vated during the year. Two inches
would sufficiently deep, and they
should plowed in with a cultivator
oAhort turning plow It is best to seed
heavily, thus allowing for the loss ol
some grain by freezes.
We regard barley a most admirable
crop for early spring giaztng, valuable
both in contributing to the health of
stock and in the saving of corn and
fodder. An acre of barley well fertil
ized will feed two mules for five or si*
weeks. On thinuer land yon oan seed
rye, which will always grow and make
a good-paying green food crop. While
not the best feed, it is reliable, always
ooming in when most needed. Colonel
James M. Smith of Oglethorpe county
•aid that he would hardly know bow tc
farm without raising barley and rye tot
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Get What You Ask For!
When yon ask for Cascarets Candy
Cathartic be sure you get them.
Genuine tablets stamped C. C. C.
Never sold in bulk. A substitutor is
always a cheat and a fraud. Beware 1
All druggists, ioc.
Dr. Cw-dy’s Condition Powder
are just what a horse needs w hen
in had condition. Tonic, nlood pur
ifier and vermifuge. They are not
food but medicine and the oest in
use to put. a horse in prirja condt.
tion. Price 2L cents per package
For sale by alldruggists.
Ladies Can Wear Mlioes.
One size smaller after using Allen’*
Foot-Ease, a powder to beslaken into
the shoes. It makes tight or new hoea
feel easy ; gives instant relief to corns
and bunions. It’s the greatest comfort
discovery of the age. Cures and pre
vents swollen feet, blisters, callous and
sore spots. Allen’s Foot-Ease is a cer
tain cure for sweating, hot, aching feet.
At all druggists and shoe stores, 25c.
Trial package Free bv mail. Address,
Allen S, Olmsted, Le Roy. N. Y.
OASTOXIXA.
Barth yThe Kind You Haw Always Bought
Chronic Constipation Cured.
The most important discovery of
recent years is the positive remedy
for constipation. Cascarets Candy
Cathartic. Cure guaranteed. Genu
ine tablets stamped C. C. C. Never
sold in bulk. Druggists, ioc.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
New Shipment
Of '‘Rogers Bros. Famous
1847 Knives and Forks
just received. Will sell un
till -this lot is gone at
54.30 for 6 Knives and
6 lorks. Remember there
is but one qualitv of Rog
ers Bros. 1847 Knives and
Forks in the round
handle, no matter what you
may be told to the contra
ry. I guarantee everything
I sell to be exactly as rep
resented. Better secure a
set this week.
F. CRESHAM, Jeweler,