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Headache, Costiveness, Rheu
Skin and Piles.
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Jew AdvcM/senients.
A BUSINESS EDUCATION
AT HOME. For circulars, ad¬
dress CLARK’S COLLEGE,
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■ k;.*;uiiii.it growth. I
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HJf’DERCORNS.
r«nrp tMjr* lor Cora*, all pah
Exhausted Vitality
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Cr!tCHESTER’S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
mam KAitoaa bush, a
^siilSlk !uk 1
0®* m
latter, 1 » return mail. 10,009 teat!*
wdftwfrom LABIES who have used them. Kama Paper.
CfcietkMtor Chemical Co.* Madison Phil^P*
HIRES
«• HIRES’ IMPROVED Me
:00T BEER!
IN DOWD NO BOILING,EASILY MADE
tMSMCKACE MAKES FIVE CALLOKS
Ska moat appetizing and WHOLESOME
nMKSBAKOB PM Wg to tire World. TRY nr.
4 Arte Druggist Oroear tor It *
year or
C. E. HDRES, PHILADELPHIA.
lOE CENTRE*.
OK FOR LADIES.
mm
nSdLtoT* 1 " #2 °° ShOBB * 0 ’
FOB SALE BT
SUERMAif & WHITE.
-
On any land other than sod, plow
ctr^ron rrrv 11
FIQ 1—CUT and COVER ■’
ized state. But much c
y bo done by the right kii
i Country Gentleman tel..........
their are apt to hurry the matter too much
anxiety to push rapidly their
ing work. Tlteir plowing is too much,
; the old "cut ami cover" way A
whole soil by the simple and effectual
glowing of narrow furrdw cultivation, slices. All
ts turned ig. 3, where
lodsening all the soil forms a deeper bed
if mellow earth.
FIQ 2—NARROW SLICE PLOWING.
It is much better to plow off only five
or six inches from tho land than to try
to drive the work so fast as to attempt
to turn a foot and a half at a time.
Rowing narrow slices pulverizes the
whole to the full depth, and in this
respect does batter work than repeated
harrowings, which only mellow the
surface. Both when combined fit the
soil for-the seed in the most perfect
manner, and make it as fine as an onion
bed.
_
Potato Culture.
At the Agricultural college of Michi¬
gan, where experiments were made dur¬
ing the four years from 1883 to 1888, In¬
clusive, it is stated as the result of
planting five different with different amounts of seed
on plats, under the same
conditions, that while there is a larger
average yield from the whole potato,
there is a much larger per cent, of small
potatoes. The next largest per cent, of
small potatoes is found in the one eye
Tittr Bfflsnest m ine tush
plat The yearly and tho total results
all go to show that a medium amount of
seed is better than a whole potato or a
potato cut to single eyes.
The whole potato produces too much
growth above the ground, and tho one
eye does not give quite vigor enough,
especially if the weather is unfavorable.
There was a marked gradation in vigor
of growth from one eye up to the whole
potato. Where one eye was planted the
potatoes came up very unevenly, and
some of them failed to grow, proving
(bat it is unwise to take the chances ot
securing a good crop from such planting.
Unless the soil contains a considerable
amount of moisture the pieces will dry
before they can send out roots, and thus
fail to grow. In ®S88, 9 per cent of the
seed cut to one eye failed to grow. The
beetle injured the one eye plant more
(ban the others from the fact that the
plants were not so vigorous.
- The Ewe# and Lambs.
The following seasonable Farmer’s suggestions Review}
are furnished by The
The ewes and lambs are benefited by
a frequent change Of pasture and should
have it on every well regulated farm.
When the grass and the clover get ahead
of (be ewe flock as they should be allow¬
ed to fio, turn the cattle in and put the
ewes on pastures new. It is a peculiar
and interesting; fact that nature has ap¬
parently fitted the different grass eating
nnimftJa to crop the herbage at the sev¬
eral stages of its growth. The sheep is
a close ltibbler, the cow takes a full wisp
et each satisfied bite, while the horse seemingly
is well with the tops. Freshly
grown grass, then, is the most palatable
and nutritious for the ewes, aud they
thrive much better upon such pasture
than on land where they are continuous¬
ly con lined, it *a a mistake to suppose
that weeds are good enough for sheep
and that hazel brush Is all the relish they
require in such dieting.
Scours la Calves.
Calves raised by hand are apt to scour,
the efforts of on ill treated stomach to
rnaoe warm aa new lull*, muuu via
the danger of scouring will b© avoided
Cold milk is very.difficult of digestion,
as is also uncooked meal of any kind. A
diet in part of fine oatmeal, cooked until
it swells to four or five times its Original
size, mixed with water and milk, has been
found better to make calves grow than
milk alone. One or two. tablespoons of
meal stirred in water at the boiling point
is enpugh to make two quarto of por¬
ridge, and this cooled to milk warmth
with milk is better than an equal bulk
of n tffa- alone. A raw egg can he added
once a day with great advantage.
Seemingly Eradicated
With repeated and powerful doses of quinine,
chills and fever, In some one of Its various
from*, springs into active existence again,
often without Toextinguish the slightest thesmoulderingembers apparent provo¬
cation.
system. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters Is all
sufficient. When every resource of the
every Ungerin mil
Bitter* pr
influence of ai
day at the proper toe wili ki
weeds; but if used on a wet day
says; ‘'Some farmers barrow c
immediately after plowing, pla
roil und harrow over once or twi
This leaves the land in fine cond
fore:
D.
says;
ticed
i, soon after making
^rs.K»S t £ r ^» J ”' TO "
J. B. Stribling, Anderson county, 8.
C., says: “If the value of the smoothing
harrow were properly understood, audit
it were more used by the southern farm¬
and and ers, it cultivating cultivating would save the the millions by clearing
young young craps crops at at the the
busiest season of the year. In such times
a good team and harrow used at the
proper time would do more work in one
day than six plows and ton horses could
do in the same time."
Bran and Cob Me®1.
Ohio Farmer says: “I think it sale to
assmt that for all growing stock a given
weight of tern is worth more than of
middlings, and, for at least half the ra¬
tion, more than com. If'these cattle are
put on straw exclusively for rough feed
I should have half of the grain feed corn
and the other half bran. If you can get
the cob ground fine, cob and all, I should
feed cob meal. I have been feeding this
with great satisfaction for two seasons,
and the longer I feed it the higher value 7
I I place Diace on on it.” it” A VI
_
A Home Made Potato Planter.
Prairie Farmer famishes the accom¬
panying sketch of a potato planter tjie in
use for nine years. First remove
covers from the boxes of a corn planter,
then make two boxes 20 by 30 inches and
6 inches deep. Place these on top of the
seed boxes, letting them project just far
enough toward the wheel of the planter fa
to receive a sheet iron pipe 5 inches
POTATO PLANTER.
Fasten thebottpm end to the shoewith
a piece of small wire. The pipe should
reach from the top of the ground to tho
top of potato box, when shoes are in at
proper depth for for planting. planting. Now Now fill fill each each
box with potatoes, hitch on your tram,
get get on on the the driver’s driver’s seat, seat,, put a smart,
quick quick boy boy on on each each box box with wi his back to
the the horses horses and and go go ahead, ahead, and anu you you have nave
as good a potato planter as anybody
needs. \
__
News from Many Sections.
The Bose and Strawberry exhibition
to be held under the ausploes of the Mas¬
sachusetts Horticultural society, fa Bos¬
ton, is aimounced to take place. Jane
25-28.
Professor Henry, of the Wisconsin Ex¬
periment station, says: “Without any
doubt, Wisconsin has more silos within
its borders titan any other western state.”
Professor G. E. Morrow, Champaign,
Bis., is to represent the Agricultural de¬
partment at the Jubilee show of the
Royal Agricultural society of England,
to be held during the summer. *
The New York State fair is to be per¬
manently located on commodious grounds
just outside of Syracuse.
A bill is before the New York legisla¬
ture providing that cheese made from
milk from which any part of the cream
has been taken shall be branded “skim
cheese.’’
A society has been organized to build
cotton cotton seed mills throughout the south
fa opposition to (he Cotton Ofl trust and
with a view to assisting planters to get
reasonable prices for their cotton seed.
. A bill recently introduced into tho New
York legislature offers a bounty of a half
cent per pound for eirup from sorghum
grown fa that state. Tho sirup must
weigh eleven pounds to the gallon.
In consequence of the Binding Twine
trust Illinois farmers have decided to
bind with wire instead of twine. A
twister is substituted for the knotter used
in the twine binder.
According to Peter Henderson, ordin¬
ary stable manure is yet almost exclu¬
sively used by the market gardeners of
Saved from Consumption.
Asa Several B. Rowley, physicians Druggist, predict* ot Ch
would soon Ijave consumption c
by an aggravated case of Ca
Customers finally induced him
Clarke’s Extract "He of Flax (Pat
Cartarrh Cure. says: “T
suit was unprecedented. I conpr
for me
I found
my side p<
two other
tnd it out.'’
‘ **ee«U«
i lunation, proport:
is ingredients, where Hoo otb*
les cures
il. Peculiar.inSt«
ihiea “tower ofist* abroad,"
sale 25 cents. by D r.N. Cough B. Drewry’s Cure and D Soap Store. for
rug
Abbott’s East Indian Corn Paint
fShiovesallCornB,'Bunions and Warts
speedily all Druggists. without pain. For sale by
rotyylTaAwly. ,* t
DID YOU KNOW IT?
Did you knovr catarrh ts a blood disease! Wifilt
almost invariably is, and frequently is a symptom
of inherited blood poison, the tendency to catarrh
may lay dormant in the system half a man’s lifetime
and then suddenly become actios And the disease
at once severe and troublesome.
N. C. EdwaSM, Lampassas Springs, Texas
writes: “For over four years I have bees a groat
sufferer from a terrible form of Nasal Catarrh. Iwas
greatly annoyed with aconstant roaring In my head
and my hearing became very much Impaired.
The discharge from my nose was profuse and
CATARRH very offensive, and my general health
impaired. 1 tried most all prominent
physicians, but they did not cure me,
and I used various advertised preparations without
benefit *
_
• 4 then sent to the drug store of T. E. Srhith &
Bro., and purchased B. B. B., and to my utter
astonishment and satisfaction, the use of fen bot¬
tles has restored my general health, stopped the
roaring sensation, entirely healed and cared the
nasal catarrh, and I am proud to recommend a Hood
remedy with such powerful curative properties.
I fie Dusiness men of our town know of ray case.’
W. A. PurrES Fredonia, Ala, writes: “F cart-
aTARRH has suffered with
years my mother a
severe Catarrh of the head and ulcerated serethroat.
She resorted to various remedies without effect,
until she used B.B. B.,which cured her catarrh,:.-
healed her sore threat’’ ; .
R.C. Kinnaud & Son, Tavmliga, Ga, write:
“One of our neighbors has been suffering* from
We finally induced him to try (h*
efficacy of B.B.B, grid he was soon delighted with
an Improvement He continued its tuo, and was
cured sonhd and well”
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
Notice theestateotJohnD. 1* hereby given toaJl who are Indebt¬
ed to AD George, deceased,to holding
call and settle at once. parties
claims against the estate of said deceased are
notified to present them at once fn legal form
to A. L. ELLEDGE, Administrator,
junellw6.-f8.70. Columbus, Ga
i that will pay
-mlr : ::
1
T'wf'T mi' t'r A )iMMii tf fif
d&w to inly 1
-- --- -- ’
• T ^ ^'
—7—!---
~ T “ E r
The beet Life Coi
Policies with those
MANCHAM 6 l SONS, ,
jutoTWiini L gksa
CLARENCE V ANGIER, State Agent, Atlanta, Ga.
*--------
For X Chetm
W.M.HOLMi
kinds and in of fact Extracts anything tor Flavoring. want. The best PatTFlour, Mince Meat,}
you
★ TURKEYS, FISH AND OYSTERS.
«er Leave us your order and it will be attended to.
__—_•_:_ -.......- ........., v mmmrnmmMtm
AND LEATI
Home-made Shoes and Leather a Spt
JWVWe warrant ail work and shall make it a point to misreprrtw
large shipment of Orate’ and Ladies’ and Misses’ fine goods, and
SPENCE & SMITH,
OPPOSITE BRICK WAREIIODSE.gOLOMOI
Drava, Nothing and Delivery Wu S «i». fig. |i >J Ft ft * 1 » U i Hat.,, wi >« hi!', ,
hut soon uarJi wi!) 1, ,«i. V m f f, J i nl, <«j j.». to, t»\ ii;<,
0, Spence at the telPjou cantut toil i. j i' fair ilu. lit g . ( all cnCf lef> r, ju 1
SPENCE & SMIT1
Solomon Street,, Griffin, Ca.
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