The Middle Georgia argus. (Indian Springs, Ga.) 18??-1893, July 21, 1881, Image 4

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FARM NOTES. Potatoes for Planting. —A mixture of lime and phosphates sprinkled over the cut potatoes a day or two before planting will increase the fertility won derfully. Bust on Melons. —lt is said that new ground soil mixed with the manure for the melon patch will prevent rust and brown patche# cm *ke melons and keep the vines green longer than usual. Ex perienced growers have discovered that melons and vines do not rust on new land as they do on old, even in seasons of extreme wet. Boot Crops.—The faults to be avoided in the raising of beets and mangels are —first, planting the seed too deep, and next, allowing the weeds to gut the upper hand. The seeds start slowly at best, and if planted too deeply it will be a month before they are well up, by which time the weeds will have a good growth. Sugar Beets. — In France it is gener ally recognized as a rule that the sugar beet should never be cultivated upon a fresh manure or barnyard manure, be cause this system of culture gives a large yield in weight, but roots so rich in for eign matters that thoy can not be w orked with profit. The beet should always form the second rotation when the ma nure is strong. Bone Dust for Melons. —An Indi ana farmer tried four different fertilizers for melons—poultry droppings, well rot ted cow manure, barnyard manure and old bones (gathered upon the farm and reduced by placing them in alternate layers with ashes the previous year,) mixing all liberally in the different hills, which were eight feet apart each way, and he says:—“Such a crop of melons as came from the hills that had the bone dust I never saw before.” Beans. —Plant golden wax and black wax for early. The former is said to be some days earlier than the latter. There is, however, very little difference in the time of ripening. Both are exceedingly good, but if we could only have one kind we should take the golden wax. The pod is longer and broader than that of the black wax. It is of a richer quality, and when cooked presents a most deli cate appearance on account of its seeds, which are nearly white. Draining. —An Ohio farmer says he has been putting in tile for the last fif teen years, until he has three farms all tiled," and his crops are much better than his neighbors’. He did not have to re plant a single hill of his corn, w hile many of his neighbors had to replant most of their corn, and while he is getting from threo to four bushels of corn to the shock his neighbors, with equally as good soil, got but three-quarters to one bushel of good corn from their shock. Still thoy cannot see why it is. Shell Lime. —There is no better way to utilize shells than to bum them. Shell lime is more valuable as a fertilizer than rock lime. But lime itself is of little value as a direct fertilizer, yet for reducing other substances to an available condi tion for food for plants it is useful. It renders stiff, clayey soil more friable and liberates salts of soda and potash, mak ing fertilizers of them. Many a barren clay soil contains all the elements neces sary for fertility, which, on account of their combinations, are not available. An application of lime decomposes the clay and liberates the salt. Mixed with muck from swamp meadows it combines with the acids and decomposes the vege able matter, making an excellent ma nure. On lands where night soil has been continuously used it will aid in pro ducing good crops if spread broadcast on the land. Scabby Legs in Poultry. — The un sightly disease which affects the legs of fowls, causing them to swell and to be come distorted, is due to a mite, a small insect which is similar in appearance to that which causes the scab in sheep. It is roundish, oval and semi-transparent, about one-eighth hundredth of an inch in length, appearing, when magnified 400 diameters, about half an inch long. If the scales from the legs of a diseased fowl are beneath the microscope a num ber of these mites may be found between them. Beneath the scales there are a spongy, scabby growth, in which the eggs and pupae of the mites are to be seen in great numbers. The pupae are very similar in shape to the mature mites, but are very much smaller, ap pearing when viewed with * the above mentioned powr about one-tenth of an inch in length. The disease being of a similar character to the scab in sheep, or the mange in dogs and cattle, it may be cured by the same treatment. If his disagreeable affection is suffered to remain in the flock while one fowl is troubled with it, it will certainly spread, as the mites will burrow beneath the scales of the other fowls. If precautions were generally used the parasite could soon be exterminated. It should be made a disqualification at poultry shows for fowls to be affected with scabby legs or feet in any degree whatever, for we know that several poultry yards are not free from this disease, and whenever af fected fowls are sent out disease goes with them. —American Agriculturist. Potatoes. —ln order to have the best success in growing potatoes, and to se cure a healthy, vigorous growth and crop free from rot, says Thorbum, it is neoessary to plant as early as the ground can be got ready. Select a rich soil and plant in rows three feet apart and the sets one foot in the rows. To kill the young weeds, run a light steel tooth har row over the field lengthwise of the rows: this will allow the crop to get the start of the weeds, besides breaking up all lumps and levelling the ground ready for the cultivator. II wood ashes and plaster can be procured sow a good dressing over the field after the potatoes are up. If a very early crop is desired it will be necessary to sprout the potatoes before planting. Cut the potatoes into pieces of any size desirable and place in a warm, light room from four to six weeks before required for planting in the open ground. During this time shoots will start out strong and vigorous, so that as soon as planted they will send oat roots and grow much more rapidly than those treated in the ordinary way. Another method is to place the sets in a hotbed two weeks before they are wanted, and then lift carefully and set out on fresh horse dung, so that the heat will cause them to start at once. If the Colorado potato beetle makes its appearance the vine® must be dusted with Paris green mixed with about eighty parts of plaster, or, what is better, mix the Paris green in water, two tablespoonfuls to a pail, and apply with a small brush or broom. Take care to stir the mixture often or else the Paris green will settle at the bottom. Two or three applications dur ing the season will usually suffice to clear off all the beetles. HOUSEEHOLD HELPS. Hot lemonade is excellent for a cold; drink it just before going to sleep. By omitting all shortening—that is, both butter aud lard—from any good fried cake recipe, and using in place of it a cup of sweet milk, the cakes will be light and almost entirely free from grease. Take care to have the lard in which they are fried very hot. To cook a duck satisfactorily boil it first, until tender; this can be determined by trying the wing, as that is always a tough part of a fowl. When tender "take it out, riuse it in clean water, stuff and put it in the oven for about three-quarters of an hour, basting it often. When cooking asparagus be sure to put salt in the w r ater; put in almost enough to season it with. The aspara gus will cook quicker and be more ten der. A solution of salt and water boils at a higher temperature than water alone; consequently a little salt should be addded to the water in which any vegetable is cooked. Hickory-nut cookies which will de light the souls or stomaches of children are easily made. Take two cups of sugar, two eggs, half a cupful of melted butter, six tablespoonfuls of milk, or a little more than a third of a cup, one teaspoonful of cream of tartar, half a teaspoonful of soda, one cup of chopped meats stirred into the dough. How to Make a Tramp. Next to spending money that you meant to save there is nothing in the world so easy to do as to make a tramp. Select any personal acquaintance who loses his situation—and there are many such—and when he comes to you to tell you of his troubles, supposing you to be a friend, devote your time entirely to explaining to him the various steps by which ne reached his present condition. Tell him you are sorry, if you like, but show him distinctly that you want to get away from him as soon as possible. When next he calls upon you, if in his desperation he forgets liis last experience so far as to call, be careful to be very busy and unable to talk with him. Cut him severely if he wants to borrow 7 money and discourage him if he unfolds any new business plan. If men in your own business circle chance to mention him in your presence speak condescend ingly about him. Advise your wife not to call at his house, for fear she may lose caste by visiting a bankrupt, and if your children have been in the habit of visit ing his family devise a method of dissuad ing them. If you see him coming along the sidewalk as if he would meet you, look the other way. Do not invite him to any little party such as he has often attended at your house. If the foregoing directions are faithfully followed and your friends act like you, as most of them may be depended upon to do, the chances are that the poor fellow, if he does not soon find employment in the city, will send his wife home to her mother, make some excuse to get out of town in search of a mythical business chance, and then slowly but surely de generate into a tramp; for what else can he do? —New York Herald. Philologists say that the word kis met came to mean fate because so many a man has by a kiss met his fate.—Bos ton Courier. We learn that Ellis & Cos., proprietors of Bailey Springs, are making prepara tions to entertain an unusually large number of visitors this summer. They are receiving communications from all over the South inquiring rates and con tracts for board. This is only their due, for not 'only are they successful hotel keepers, but their place is in every way worthy of patronage. It is one of the coolest, shadiest, breeziest places in the South ; the locality and surround ings are delightful; the buildings are roomy, airy, and conveniently arranged; the accommodations, fare and attention are first class, and Shoal Creek is the most romantic stream aud the best fish ing water you ever saw. Add to this the unrivalled power of the old Rock Spring in the cure of dropsy, scrofula, dyspepsia and diseases of the blood, skin and kidneys, and the sum of attractions is irresistible. If you have ever been there you know this is true. If you have not, try it just once. You will never regret it. Address Ellis & Cos., Bailey Springs, Ala. People who think China is a small power are surprised to know that the tonage of her mercantile marine is 4,- 100,000, exclusive of the inland junk traffic. The tonnage of the United States, including all the canal boats in the country and all the river boats, is but 4,500,000. Even England’s tonnage is only 6,100,000. So that China is press ing close after England as a sailor power. >'o Hospital Needed. No palatial hospital needed for Hop Bit ters patients, nor lame salaried talented puffers to tell what Hop Bitters will do or cure, as they tell their own story by their certain and absolutecures at home. —New York Independent. “It's mighty strange, so it is,” re marked Mulcahy, “that the tiuants av Ireland is the wuns to make all the trouble. You wtid expect now that it wud be the landlords.” “How’s that, at all? Phwat are ye giviu’ tis?” said O’Flannerty. “Why, d’ye moind now it’s the landlords that’s the proper - rioters.'* Baa ErfiTlhlng railed Von ? Then try Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Gore. It is said the man who uses snuff never has a cold in the head. Perhaps so; but it would be much nicer if he had a cold and no snuff. Spring: and Summer Diet. Green fruit and bad vegetables, which are particularly plentiful at this season of the year, almost invariably disorder the stomach and su perinduce Cramps, Cholera Morbus, and what is worse. Diarrhoea and Chronic Dysentery. People who desire to preserve their health should be exceedingly careful about their diet at this season, and at no time should they be without a supply of Perry Davis’ Pain Killer, tht- safest surest and speediest remedy for all troubles of the stomach or bowels. All drug/' gists sell it The Flying-Fish and Its Foe. One afternoon, during a voyage on a sailing vessel bound to a West Indian port, while the ship was making some four or five miles au hour, a coryphene w r as observed gamboling under the bows, going ahead a little, as if to shbw its superior speed, and then returning to its frolics. While the sailors were fastening the harpoon to a line the coryphene sighted a flying-fish. At once it stiffened itself; its whole body quivered as if with excitement; its tail was agitated from one side to another, and it started in pursuit, bounding over the surface of the sea, with leaps of some fifteen or twenty feet. Although a stern chase is held to be a very long one, this lasted less than a minute; one of the leaps brought the coryphene right under the terrified flying-fish, which seemed to hill into its enemy’s jaws. The latter re turned to its “play-ground” under the bows, and was harpooned, brought on board, and cut up w ithin two minutes after its meal. The flying-fish was taken out whole, uninjured. The coryphene is the beautifully colored fish noted for the shifting and varieties of its tints when expiring. It is commonly but er roneously called a dolphin, as in the well-known verse: “The dying dolphin’s changing hues.” Now in regard to the flying-fish, I have watched them on many voyages, and I can confirm the observers who describe its motion as a leap, not an act of flying. It springs out of the water, gradually rising to the middle of its course, then falling, de scribing a parabola just as an arrow does in its flight. I have repeatedly seen them change direction during the leap, making a deflection of about half an an gle, never more. But I cannot agree with Mr. Whitman, who estimates the length of their leap or jump to be eight hundred or even twelve hundred feet. I opine that about tw 7 o hundred feet is a pretty big jump for one of these fishes, and instead of forty seconds, I calculate the time occupied in a long leap at fif teen seconds; which gives a velocity of nine miles and a fraction per hour.— Communication to the New Orleans Times. Late researches are showing an aston ishing vitality of disease germs. Pasteur has investigated a case in which cattle died of carbuncular fever twelve years ago, and were buried at a certain spot in a walled garden. Guinea pigs have been inoculated with the matter secured by washing samples of the soil, and died quickly with well marked symptoms of carbuncle. Of seven sheep allowed ex perimentally to pass a few hours daily on this spot, two died of the same dis ease in the course of six weeks, the rest of the flock remaining unaffected. This seems to prove beyond a doubt, the ex istence of disease germs for a space of twelve years. A Great Enterprise. The Hop Bitters Manufacturing Com pany is one of Rochester’s greatest bus iness enterprises. Their Hep Bitters hve reached a sale beyond all prece dent, having from their intrinsic value found their way into almost every house hold in the land.—Graphic. In the Isle of Man the right to vote has been accorded to all women who possess an estate yielding a pound sterl ing per annum. Womeic that have bee® bed-ridden for years have been completely cured by the use of £ydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable Compound. He who who flings his pills away will live to die another day.— Andrews' Queen. But he who swallows ’em and has pain will live to have the gripes again. Guard against fever and all malarial diseases by using Kidney-Wort. Wealth may not bring happiness, but it commands respect in a police officer. Don’t IMe In tbe House. Ask Druggists for “Rough on Rats.” It clears out rats, mice, roaches, flies, bed-bugs. 15c. “Benevolent despotism” is what a Scotch court called an attempt to enforce prohibition. If you are hairless and cappy there is one way, and no more, by which you may be made careless and happy- use Carboline, a deodorized extract ot' petroleum, it will positively make new hair grow. It is impossible for a man to keep up with the literature of the age. Barnum’s monstrosity with two heads and four eyes might do it, but the ordinary scholar must imitate the human flea and—skip a good deal. REtriED FROM DEtTII. William J. Coughlin, of Sonrerville, Mass., nvs: “In the fall of 1576 I was taken with bleedings of the lungs, followed by a severe cough. I lost my appetite and lesh, and was confined to tny bed. In 1577 I was ad mitted to the hospital. The doctors said I had a hole in my long as big as half a dollar. At one time a report went around that I was dead. I gave up hope, l~;t a friend told me of Dr. William Hall’s Balsam fob tus Dungs. I grit a bottle, when, to my surprise, I com menced to feel better, and to-day I feel belter than fot three years past. I write this hoping every one atliicted With diseased lungs will take Da. William Hall’s Bal sam, and be convinced that consumption can be cured. f can positively say u. has done more good than all th other medicines I have taken since my sickness.” Indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration and all forms of general debility relieved by taking Mensman’s Peptonized Beet Tonio, the only preparation of beef containing it*} entire nutritious properties. It .Tontains blood-mak ing, force generating and life-sustaining prop erties; is invaluable in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous pros tration. overwork, or acute disease, particularly If resulting from pulmonary complaints, Cas well, Hazara A Cos., proprietors, New York. \4 ANTED. A situation by a middle aged lady as matron in a young ladies’ ' seminar?. References. Address Mrs. L., Room 13, Hawley Building, Chicago, lUi ! nois. EnglnM Reliable, Durable and Economical. tetn/umteA $ fctpe power with ruti and water than any cth*r Bng\ne bn u, not fitted with an Automatic Cut-ofL Pend for Illustrated Catalogue for Information 4 gttow, B. W. Patna & Su.vt., £ox 860, Corning, • **• Cc *‘'j • “Outfit &•*. Address Tan A Go., Augusta, M. >s to S2oraiiir,a~; fgrasalfSt Truth n • ny * rl “IT •• Marti fit* tk< !•*. / \ Bpuwk m,, > .u>l fc, Jf, z . mu w ,,k a*.. / K!M \ a*¥t -4 ••*. tot <4 hu. m 4 * <Mia • WS I >Vrn ** j.ut ikim •*,. p. J' -3, Yfc A , •-tii M 0,.. ui>. ,„*) J and SBiun. *• w !1 mi Mttoad. wfcV*gSf bMrm rwt L iuksm, te Hmt] n. JL* W PERRY DAVIS 3 Pain-Killer J*ll 111 A SAFE AND SURE tS -*if REMEDY FOR g|j| Rheumatism, . ftep, hi Headache. FOB SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS, Jfc Mil Bicycle. -A permanent practical road vehicle, f with* which a person can ride thre. miles aa easy as he could walk one. Pend 3-cent stamp for 24-page eat*' Xl'/I THE POPS M’F’O CO., 664 Washington Bt., Beaten, Min. wmMM GKXTiJCMSMi X wm inflerins from general debility to such an extant that my labor was exceedingly bur (eotomi to mo. A vacation of a month did not diva me much relief, bot on the contrary, was foliowea Dy increased prostration and sinking chills. At this time I began the use of your IKON Tokio, from which I re alised almost Immediate sad wonderful results. The old energy returned aud I found that my datura* force B* hot permanently abated. I bare used three bottles of the Tonic. Since using It I have done twice the la f that later did in the same time during my illness, and With double the ease. With the tranquil nerve Sod vigor of body, has seme also a clearness of thought never before enjoyed. If the Tonic has not dOwjj tbs Work,! XhOW hot What. Igive it the credit. J. P. WatsowlPastor Christian Church. Troy, O.—~y (’The fron Tonio is m\ preparation of Pro- 1 l<wW of Iron, Peru. I id an Park, ana I•horn- 1 phates, associated H t vith tho Vegetable E Aromatics, It serves S every purpose where w •AIBPABTBtKI BY THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., MB. SIB NBRTM MAIN STREET. ST.l8l& DrMETTAURS • Dr. DUETTAUR’S TTEADACITE PILLS cure most wonderfully In n very short time both SICK, and NERVOUS HEADACHE; and while acting on the nervous system, cleanup the stomach of excess cf bile, producing a regular healthy action of tho bowels. ••HEADACHE A fuU size box of these valuable PILLS, with full directions for n, com plete cure, mailed to any address on receipt of nino threo-cent postage stamps. For sale by aU druggists ot 25c. Solo Proprietors, BROWN CHEMICAL COMPANY, Baltimore, MJ. • • • • PILLS The Cyclopaedia War. Ju,y ’ UB, ' I wltnp th ,e completion of the largest am? most important literary work this 2™ tT Lr* 41 ? e centur y have seen. It is the Library of Universal Kuowledgi, large e lition in 1* targe octavo volumes, containing lo per cent more matter than Appleton’s Cvclopmi’ia at less t ban one fifth Its cost, and 20 per cent more than Johnson’s Cyclopaedia, at a little more than ' Sourth its cos Cyclol Tl l^'yhi , ch J or,,,s th< ‘ l,asis of !ho Library of Universal Knowledge (the last London edition of 1880 being reprinted 'erbatim as a portion of Its contents), is the laborious product of the riiiost British and European scholarship. It has developed through a century ofrvrioradta ha r, ing l)cen KCtOrV ln . an y tiinos revised, in successive years, till it has come to he universally rccojj* J nizeu, hv those <*oninetent to iq at the very front of great aggregations of knowledge, and better adapted than''any other P°R U ar „se. It contains such full and Important information as the ordinary reader or the st - r> nt ’ is i lke ii t0 v. seek ' upon about 25,Wifi subjects in every department of human knowledge S however, Is a foreign production, edited and published for a. foreign market?and could not be expected to gi\e as much rem sa ■ prominence to Ameriern tonics ps Amcr b n A^ and " r 8 deS V e To supply Por fhe F&£a£d“ler;u^!.^neie^ American editors anci writers have ® ■ I addediiiiDoriaiit art h’sunou I^ iinu CVering tbe , e P tir . e field of human knowledge, bringing tho whole number of titles nv.A r one alpKa- Sfttoal a fringe men tto about dD,OOO. Thus the work is thoroughly Americanized, and the Library of Univer w F e bee ° ra f, s at once the latest and most complete Encyclopaedia in the field, at a mere fraction if the cost of any similar work which has preceded it. ’ uu Price 2£>m e i 5 X, 01 -'I n i es . complete, in.extra cloth binding, Si 5.00. In half Russia, sprinkled edges, " rl, $20.00. 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To the professional man, and every pereon of intelligence in every walk of life, a Cyclopedia is a neressiiv. nrcflt w? old a P,£ wealt ,hy publishers who have grown rich (it is said that tho Applctons have made a ? llU,on do ars on fhelr Cyclopaedia) from the sale of their high-priced publications, are wi io, at £ heir monopolies are broken and their power overthrown. Of course the book agents and booksellers who have been used to getting from 40 to 60 per cent commission for si Uing these high-priced 4 A /WWH 0 a ,.. a U J books are not so well pleased to sell the Library of Universal I VIUvU rCcs¥¥£|B 0 Knowledge on 15 per cent commission, though those who are not short sighted discover that their own interests, after all 2?i?rv with the interests of the people, and their real profits, in the end, arc increased, by the immense SditLT*e lch i from meeting the people’s wants. The majority of booksellers, however, are better Pn? sef L to . than 1° sc, l thls anfl our numerous other standard and incomparably low-priced publh'a ®ut the Literary Revolution has always looked to the people, in whose interest it is, for its patronage and it has never looked in vain, as our more than one million aggi ■ ■ A b * volumes printed last year (this year being increased to proha- fi 3*9 p* #4 fVAntc Sly more than two millions) abundantly prove. 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Orders for the full seta will be filled by us with the utmost xS™of their by us 1 ‘ manufacture - beginning not later than July loth, orders being filled In the pages of the “ Library of Universal Knowledge" will be sent free upon reanost Descriptive our . lar Kc Hst of standard publications, with terms to clubs, and illustr- ted pamphlet describing ' • AMERICAN BOOK EXCHANGE, JOHN B. ALDEX, Manager. 7fit Now York. flOSEUllft SlfreßS Feeble and Sickly ftjfstins Recover their vitality by pursuing a course of Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters, the most popular invigorant an ! alterative medicine in use. General debility, fever and ague, dyspepsia, constipation, rheumatism, end other maladies are completely removed by it. Ask those who have used it what it has done for them For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally, LOUISVILLE HYDRAULIC CEMENT, used for Construction of Cisterns, Sewers and Foundations. Address, Western Cement Association. Louisville, Ky j|(f I _ tor; of England. || Eng. 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Because ice allow these great organs fol I become clogged or toigrid, and poisonous I [humors are therefore forced into the blood I \that should be expelled naturally. iKIDNEY-WORTvI | WILL SURELY CURE kidney diseases, liver complaints, PILES, CONSTIPATION, URINARY j DISEASES* FEMALE WEAKNESSES, j AND NERVOUS DISORDERS, causing free action of these organs muil restoring their power to throw off disease. Why suffer Bilious pains ami arlies! I Why tormented tfltU Piles* Constipation! Why frightened over uteordered Kidneys! J Why endure nervous or sick headaches! I Use K’IDNEY-WOIITaHd rejoin i n health I I It is put tip In Dry Vegetable Form.- JjGin [ can* one package of which makes six qua. ? n medicine. Also in Liquid Form, very trnted, for those that cannot readily prepare it. I I acts with equal efficiency in either form, j I GET IT OF YOUR DRUGGIST. PRICE, Bl.OOj WELLS, RICHARDSON* Cos., Trop’s, I (Will send the dry post paid.) 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