Newspaper Page Text
Ayer’s Pills have
i that trouble wad also
__ ____ If victim ol this dia-
rom Gout. every only
Mt would heed three words ol
sine, I could banish Gout lr«a the land.
These words would be—'•Try Ayer’s
Pills.*" 1 Ayer’s Pills
f the use ol alone, I
myself had permanently troubled ol rheuma- several
wiOch “E95P®S! me
'
leumatism.
medicine could W*e sWtvdd me in
c they are the best Pills
ir 'MSSmdisjiS^Si havo been
^frgip^Meromplaiiito." s«n«L »w*i , 5s
i
a token illwijh rheumatism that I
so was
sasasga unable to do any work. I took three
}• . lUIttto BT
Dr. J. C. Ayer A Co., Lowell, Mass.
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HINDERCORNS.
Hra jssks smSMsnesuse
Exhausted YiTAiin
Untold Miseries
a ItSSte
,300 page*, only til
sc Pa WJUParker,; i St.,Boston,Mass.
.Esnsasi’ _ orks. P. Wettern JC ” DEDERJCK ALBANY, and Southern s.T.r" A CO* A "<
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— MB CSOES B1AKSHS BSAOT.
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HIRES
HIKES* IMPROVED Me
BEER
BOIufc^TClLYMAK
MAKES FlirtS GALLONS
fJVMP'CAUOVT
YazMm'wjxM&ey
•he Skoal AFPUT gSW g and WHOLXSOMB
rZMPaRAKCKCHINK lame world. TOT IT.
*A»k year Drag glat Groear for It. *
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C. E, HIRES, PHILADELPHIA.
Wt Im
S3 SHOE CENTVMIEfl.
ISIHOt FOR LADIES.
SHOES.
fisar'tx.i irice »rf not not stamped si Mass.
Ertmine W. L. *a.«o she Shoes tor
entlemen and 1
#Hb _ jJMIjAIiE BT
0EBMAN & WHITE.
CRIPTIN.
■ 1 in ,mnw» Advertisements. lin«e«'.iML --g
New
waw-*
tojnjKIcc umnnoo
kinds. All the “Rogers’ Groups,” Card and
Cabinet mzog of frames, choice Etchings and
Engravings, SpBtSvw fromtpno of the largest and best,
JAMES I. EARLE * SONS,
& PHILADELPHIA, PA.
on receipt of stamp.
iJM'P-TfVE I
FARM Alfb GARDEN.
SUBJECTS THAT WILL INTERE8T
agricultural READERS.
Important Paint* Ip Sowing Winter Wheat.
How to Secure Prompt Vegetation bjt .
Careful and Thorough Preparation of the
Soli.
The importance of fine pulverization
of the soil in preparing for the wheat
crop is well known. One of tlio advant¬
ages of n fine preparation is in avoiding
deep planting. Fanners who deem tt
necessary to give much depth to their
sowing in order to get down to the mois¬
ture Are suffering a loss every year.
m
m Am
n g .t.
'A
no. 1—GERMINATION OF WINTER WHEAT.
A satisfactory and instructive experi¬
ment, teaching^ valuable and durable
lesson may be made, says Country Gen¬
tleman, by preparing thoroughly a strip
of land, and especially with a mellow sur¬
face, and sowing the grain on it just deep
endugh to germinate freely; and on an¬
other strip without good preparation set¬
ting the tubes of the drill six inches or
more in depth, and then observe the
difference.
Or the experiment may be tried on a
more limited scale. The seed covered at
a moderate depth will start at once and
grow freely, as shown by Fig. 1; the
deeply covered seed will be several days
longer in coming up, the time will do
lost, and before it can get a strong hold
of the soil it must throw out a new set
of roots nearer the surface, as in Fig. 8.
In experiments made by Country;
Gentleman, seed buried one inch, deep
came up in six days, two inches deep : in
seven days, and four inches deep in ten
days. A month later the one inch plants
were stronger than the two inch and
much stronger than the deeper plantings.
r/g. 2 . Fig. 3 . Fig.i.
FIG. 2. COMPARATIVE STRENGTH OF DEEP
® AND SHALLOW PLANTING.
The figures in the second cut show
the comparative strength of the deep
and shallow planting as these crops
approach maturity* No invariable rule
can be given for the best depth. It must
vary with-the character of the soil and-
of the season. If the surface soil is
moist enough, one inch would be better
than two, and two inches better than a
greater depth. But if a sufficient prepa¬
ration Iras been given, it is only on the
lightest soil that a greater depth than
two inches will lie required. With
rough land and clods, it may be neces¬
sary to give a greater depth.
Gardeners have found it ’important to>
firm the soil in order to insure the ger¬
mination of fine seed sown slightly be¬
low the surface. For large seed this
Operation is less essential, but cases may
occur when with a dry or loose soil, roll¬
ing Bui the whenever ground may be of advises much use.
resorted to, the
authority quoted, the farmer should
carefully observe if it makes the parti¬
cles of soil adhere together, in which
case it will do more harm than good.
The same care must be used whether to
sow before or after rain, where the
farmer has the choice.
If the soil is granular or cloddy a
shower may aid in making it mellow
when worked and better fitted to com¬
press all the sides of the seeds. On such
land, sowing before rain may leave the
seed lying loosely among the clods. But
a long and heavy rain may render the
soil unfit to bo worked, and preceding it
would be a better time. If is absolutely
necessary for the farmer to use his judg¬
ment in all cases of the kind.
i £ , What Other* S«j-.
"Let any dairyman who finds it neces¬
sary to_keep several skimmitigs of cream
to Collect enough for a churning submerge
it Until a sufficient quantity is obtained,
then ripen it all at emee, and my word
for it he will find a safe, practical and
profitable solution of the oxidation, aera¬
tion, stirring bugbear,” says John Boyd.
Examine 'young fruit trees of all
kinds, and , if borings or sawdust are
seen on the ground hunt for the Jioleand
probe out the grub with a piece of wire,
advises American Agriculturist.
Any land upon which water stands
more than twenty-four hours after, a
rainfall, however heavy, is pronounced
by excellent authority to be unfit for any
orchard without thorough tile draining,
and not safe even with it, because being there
is always the risk of the fifes ob¬
structed with roots, and the trees be¬
coming unthrifty in consequence.
A horticultural and a botanical con¬
gress will both be held in Paris during
the month of August this year, in'con¬
nection witlj the International exhibi¬
tion. An agricultural congress will be
held durin g the month of July .
Seemingly* Eradicated
With repeated and powerful doeee of quinine,
chills and lever, in some one of its various
fronts, springs into active existence again,
often without the slightest theBmoulderingernbars apparent provo¬
cation. ol obstinate Tbextinguish and recondite malady,no Ww
this fiercely in the
than to subdue it when ii rage*
system. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is all
sufficient. When every resource of the
pharmacopoeia has been exhausted againstit
in vain, the Bitters conquer it—will remove
* fiTprotecttfose. re °I it. Nay, within more, Hie die
Bitters brought
influence ot atmospheric • poison poison tl that beget*
disease, from its attacks. attacks, Disorders
imtu-h, liver and are among
be. 1 from the
Ct-‘ ... . ;
CARE or A FEET,
Keeping th* Hoofs Clean— A Popster Pal-
lacy—When to Shoe rusk.
Tho hoofs should ho kept clean by be¬
ing “picked out" as often aa possible to
prevent any dirt or hard substance being
buried in the fissures of the feet, they
should be examined from time to time
(aay every ‘six or eight weeks) to de¬
tect any defects of shape that might be
taking place,
A popular fallacy indulged In by
many is that wot, soft ground and even
manure yards are the best places to
keep young horses, and some 1 even
have the frogs and soles pared thh* to
allow the moisture to penetrate more
easily. No greater mistake exists, for
the preservation of the hoof depends to
a great extent upon tho soil the animal
was reared on. We find the best footed
horses are those bred on dry soils, and.
that i* undoubtedly the kind of ground
best adapfqd to the healthy growth of
horn. Young horses require plenty of
exercise, and unless they are allowed it
the growth of the horn. etc., is sure to
be defective. . •
In reply to the query when ought a
horse to be first shod, the sensible reply
seem to'be: when the work required of
the animal wears the horn away faster
than it forms, or, in other words, so long
as the horn of the foot can stand t}ie
wear required, it will need protecting
(shoeing). Moreover, if young horses
were not shod so early, they wonld not
be worked so hard, and fewer would be
ruined in their youth, as is too often
the case at the present time.
The (1) principles To keep of preserving dry possible, the horn
are: it as as (8)
to keep cleanliness—keep the animal on a dry floor or bed,
(8) the feet well filthy “ptoked
out,” and never use that stuff
“cow dung” for “stopping” the feet, (4)
prevent the feet becoming too dry or
brittle by an emollient hoof dressing.
Fattening Sheep.
On the subject of fattening sheep one
of our wideawake farmers says: “A good
grain for fattening sheep is shelled corn
one-half, barley or rye one^qwarter, and
oats one-quarter. Years unless of experience mills
satisfied us that it pays, the
remote, have all grain 4 ground,
are very to
even for sheep, and the finer the better.
The process of resalivation will be just as
well performed with meal as with grain.
There is much grain that will escape the
act of regurgitation and remastication,
and, most important consideration of all,
the particles of grain have to be reduced
either by the mill, the teeth they or the
stomach, infinitesimally before will
lend themselves to the great work of
nutrition. We would have cornmeal
ground nearly as fine as wheat flout if
possible; then the waste will be reduced
to a minimum and the process of ali¬
mentation will be promoted.”
For Best Results In Batter Making.
It is generally conceded that the for milk best
results in butter making, where
is set In deep Cans, the milk should be
placed in the creamer as nearly as poasl-
bf§ drawn at the temperature the there at being which it is
from cow, a con¬
siderable loss of fat in skim milk if the
milk is allowed to cool to any great ex¬
tent before being set. Of iate there lias
been considerable controversy as to
whether it is advisable under any condi¬
tions to warm the milk before setting,
and as to the limit ot temperature be¬
yond which it is not safe to go.
Mr. I. P. Roberts concludes, as the re¬
sult of investigations at the College of
Agriculture at Cornell university, that,
first, there is a loss of butter when the
milk is allowed to cool much below the
normal heat of the cow before being put
in the creamer; second, while there may.
not be any very great increase of butter
when thwmilk is heated, there is nqjisk
of injuring the quality of the butter by
incorporating an excess of caseine', even
when the milk is heated as high as 135
degs. ’
;
Filling the SUo.
'Professor S. Johnson, of Michigan, al¬
ways keeps a man in the Silo to insure
the silage being leveled and solidly
packed. Some think that this careful,
solid packing "I is unnecessary, but the pro¬
fessor says: am convinced, after years
of experience, that when this has been
most carefully attended to, everything
else being equal, we have bad the best
ensilage. f(€m It is well to throw the cool en¬
silage the corners,and about the
walls of the silo into the center and re¬
place it with that which is warmest, thus
preserving an even temperature.
A Convenient Fence.
Ohio Farmer furnishes the accompany¬
ing-sketch of a useful and cheap post and
rail fence. Oak posts 71 feet long are set
2i feet in the ground and KH feet apart
USEFUL AND CHEAP POST AND RAIL FENCR
After the posts are set, place flat stones
or chunks of wood at the tides of the
posts, on the ground; lay the rails on
these, lapping them about six inches at
the . post. Saw pieces of the same length
as the post above the stone or chunk, and
wire them to the post at top and bottom,
as shown. Seven or eight rails to the
panel make a good fence.
At the Wisconsin dairymen’s annual
meeting Professor Robertson said he had
proved there rather was' a leas in churning
cream sweet tuan slightly acidi¬
fied. In 100 parts ot butter in cream 07
were obtained in add cream, while but
77 parts were secured in sweet crease.
Blair Says It’s AH Rignt.
Mr. S. 0. Blair, Chicago, yy*: *‘We
coaid not keep house without your
Clarke’s Extract of Flax Skin Cure
and Cough Cure. We have need both
for numerous troubles,
onr child. Werecomttl
Cure to every family ha'
We used it for Whooping
results, remarkably and quick it for and i and
use any every
cough the family may have.”
' ’
one sice,
If
Father Itemeul
Dental Trade a —cation i" in—(onto
u ” ava’k, iU
Damocr&tg of ti, Ohio
nominated Virgil C. Lowry for
OmRleton’a *aw mill burned near Frank,
fort, Ky. Iamb * 10 , 000 ; insurance *5,000.
" Tho murderers of Peddler Lavius at Low-
isviile havo beoii identified by their dying
victim.
Eiyht young men iu various-parts of tlto
country were v drowned Thursday White
bathing, downed
Edwurd Duwal was whila bath¬
ing hi tha 8t. Joe river, near Fort Way ns,
Indiana.
W. C. Lolly, postal clerk, is on 1 trial at
Chicago for stenting eightywix registered
package*.
John Larnoy, alios Mollio Matches, Cleve¬
land crook, wifi recuperate in tho pen for
four years.
Mrs. John F, Smith,.pf F.qtu, O., hanged
herself Thursday. She had been married
but two weeks.
May blossoms a:nl December snows were
combined at Marion, O., in tlje marriage of
Mite Moiiie W.tr, ng l-l 33, and Boding Car¬
penter, aged 78.
A mail pouch, the content* of which a*#
supposed to have been very valuable, woi
stolen at Naihrille, Tend., between the poate
office and the depot. .
Hon. T. E. Stout, a Bapublican lawyer of
Huntington, Vn.. was brutally assaulted
while taking depositions in Wayne county
in a congressional contest.
H. A Butcher, sent to the penitentiary for
forgery, from Ripley, O., is recognised a*
Grant Hobbs, a distinguished member of
Cincinnati crooked circles..
Son. Calvin S, Brice’s son has been ex¬
pelled from Exeter academy because of too
great liberality with his money, setting an
example which tended to demoralize tha
poorer students.
The sheriff of Fayette county, 0„ i* exon¬
erated from complicity in the escape oI
Bunko Carter, but John T. Norris is invited
under pressure of a gilt-edged indictment
for perjury to explain some things.
Two I3-yaa« “
der arrest for
hfutgmsn with
_ ..........
solemnly pronouncing the question. “Have
you anything to say why you should not be
hanged." Service Rule No. 10, “* modified
Civil a*
by President Harrison, reinstatement makes ex-federal
soldiers eligible for in the
classified servivice without regard to tha
time about of .their dismissal. This wifi provid*
for 1,000 reinstatements.
Ex-Oototy Treasurer Miller arid Smith
Williams, superintendent of the county poor
bouse, pleaded guilty, before Judge Wood*
at Indianapolis the to voting insane and ldiotlo
paupers at last election and were fined—
the first *250 and the second *50.
E. J. Dowdall has been expelled from the
Ohio Democratic state central committta
for giving to the Republican press a state*
ment purporting to be a “minority report
of an auditing committee appointed by tb*
chairman of this committee, but which, in
fact, was not such report, but upon ample
evidence of honorable men, and his own
confession was his own declaration, con¬
ceived in malice, lying and revenge,' for tha
purpose of traducing and vilifying the char*
acter of Hon. James B. Townsend, cha”
man ef the Democratic state committee."
The Wi atlier.
Indicatious-Bhowcrs; cooler winds, be-
chining noinU\vi\s.eidy.
“Deatii has so many doors to let out
Hfte,”
eaagan old time poet. In those
days theyhadnotdis that shut these discovered How rem¬
edies doors.
different is Dr. Pierce’s Golden. Medi¬
Consumption cal Discovery, from lung-scrofula, tho old time doaea.
or is one
wide door that it shuts, if taken in
time. Don’t waste a moment then,
lest life Blip through that open door.
It is guaranteed to cure in all cases
Of diseases for which it is recommend
•d, or money paid for it will be re¬
funded.
'The Blooming Heathen.
In China there are no bankrupt laws, but
it is considered such a disgrace not to pay
your debts in that benighted land that a
‘•beat?’ is practically drummed out of busi¬
ness. Ah, daar; it will he a long time before
we can civilize ail these heathen. They hate
such queer, old fashioned notions about busi¬
ness. However, lest the heathen should be
eXaited above measure when they get this
copy of this paper mid read this flattering
paragraph, let us add, for their edification,
that the only coin of China is the “cash,"
that it takes 1,500 cash to make a dollar,
and that the ignoble, little minded; small
settled, greedy heathen actually counterfeit
the “cash.” Cheer up, Christian brother;
we are not so much worse than the heathen,
after all.—Bob Burdette.
Peculiar
la the combination, proportion, Sarsaparilla and prep*
ration of it* ingredients, Hood’s
acoompfishee cures where other preparations
entirely fail. Peculiar in its good name at
home, which is a “tower of strength abroad/’
peculiar Hood’s in'the phenomenal Sarsaparilla sales it has at¬
tained, is the most sue.
cessfnl medicine for purifying the blood, giv¬
ing iag strenghth, atrenghtb, and and treating treating an appetite, (c) (c)
—
DID YOU KNOW IT?
DM you know catarrh is a blood disease? Well it
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 active and the disease
at once sever* and troublesome.
N. C. Edwards, Lampassas Springs, Texas
writes: "For over four yean I have been a great
sufferer from a terrible form df Nasal Catarrh. Iwas
greatly annoyed with aconstantroaring in my bead
and my hearing became very much impaired.
The discharge from my bom was profuse and
CATARRH .....a.. »«7 offensive, and my general health
impaired. I tried most all prominent
physicians, bat they did not cure me,
kad I ased various advertised preparations without
I then sent to the drug store of T. E. Smitii &
Bra, and purchased B. B. B^- and to my
astonishment and satisfaction, the use of ten bot¬
tles ha* restored my general health, stopped the
reading sensation, entirely healed and cured the
nasal catarrh, anfl I am proud to recommends Hood
remedy with such powerful curette* properties.
1!W Business men of our town know of my case.’
W. A Parvis Fredonte tii^fiingytMi Al*.,w
not refrain from wbataglo-
bATARRH medicine mother you have. suffered For with two
years my has a
severe Catarrh of the head and ulcerated sore threat.
She resorted to various remed l e e without diarrh. efl
until she used B. B. B, which cured her
bested her sore throat."
XX. Kikxakd A Son, Tameflgn, Go, writes
"On* ti our neighbors ha* been suffering from
catarrh for several years,which resisted
CATARRH all treatment finally and medicine retorted to.
Ws "Induced him to try
cured MtetiartweS,"
v;
,
1 ~
PENINfi OF
J
for otcfHltting,
Ute.pteowiat j
SUMMER ★
\ t; * CLOTHING.
t haw found it in tha I
riot!.
What comfort.
Goat, when the thermometer
is reaching upward these sul-
"SS^reTFTwu* and .o
come exa
GEO. R.
80 HILL STREET, GRIFFIN.
diw to inly 1
---------.....te-v
1845. Life Insurance. 1889.
Mill THE
Bsisfit Life Irar» Cl,
m w & ^
NEWARK, NEW VM:
JERSEY. 5 -t J
-) 0 <- ■■if- &
Purely Mutual. Asset* over FORTY TWO MILLION DOLLARS. Annua)
Income over Seven Million Dollar*.
La ge and Annual Dividends. No “Tontine Estimate*.”
The best Life Contract on the market. We invite a
Policies with those written by other Companies.
S. W. MANCHAM & SONS, Agents
GBIFFIN, GEORGIA. GSMPji»Ikjffi t-vji
CLARENCE V. ANGIER, State Agent, Atlanta, 6a.
direr tosuffl.
*
A 111 Bli SWEEPS CLEAN
SPENCE & SMITH,
OPPOSITE BRICK WABEHOUSE,®OLOMON «t
their buBineap, Are now ready whleb to skilled do jour laboronly weik. Is Repairing uaed. Bring boggiee and wagons work. Is a feat
ty fte will on build srythlpe wbceJi- BDagl*f,Il,»«lei us your Fnir.ie. V ago
Delivery icu m t,
Nothing Drtys, and bnt Wagoi s. Sign ] stating Will kill be « U-stv-it (Vtobtoi <f it tittle- pith. in.
poor! uork will be flinr. i.r-t like sri o. lefov ani
H, Epence.*it Ihe helm jon cannot fail to get fair dialing. Cull c n of t J < t i.
SPENCE & ,
Solomon Streets Criffin, Ca.
PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRIES.
. MANUFACTURERS.......
Sash,Doors, Blinds, l
K&ntels, Mouldings, Musters, Mis, Etc., Eta.
Dressed and Rough,Lumber, Laths and Stand
t
Paints, Oils, Window Glass and Putty.
GRIFFIN, j ft i. it GFORG1
We mannfoeture all onr goode and shal^ideavor to please alk| both a* nu^ga \p prioe
quality, W« will give yon a few reasons why you .houldtwy from as bj'
prices that yoa lormeriy paid and price now paids f. ; 11 r s ^ 7r —
You * paid “ for 8x10x12 8x10x18 8x10x18 light ' “ “ Sash $1.10. 1.75. 175. Our ‘ r pHca $1.41 90 c.
'
Dressing 10x16x12 Door* $2 and 00 to Matching “ $2 50. 2.00. 35c. to 40c. Our ■h m
“ Weatherboard 25c. to 30c. Our Price 20«.
” Plank one side 20c. to 25c. Our Prioe ISe
nov2fri.Awly
Pniknim mmm,
- by asamtsTniH **. baikv atusa
li can be girt* I* a cup *» ceOw er tea. ertofite
effect the patient a permanent U moderstewnker and speedy ease, elcob whether l l
a or am o e
mUi splclnc Ctetl—H, 0 .
Ms Pills
Try Them F: a flre
- ! vVf,
..............
f0\m
ary f ffp y r myra
„
<
ForCJttbl
desired, J
■
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Addre*. «
rREIvr.
1* OUA
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