Newspaper Page Text
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AMKR1CUS, GEORGIA. FRIDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 20.1882.
WTl
PUDLISHKD Jtv
Xj. CHjESSKTEn.
(rrit'E ox cotton avi:\i k.
S-aToseiiptioa. Hates:
hi-Weekly One Year, - $4.00.
Weekly One Year, - - $2.00.
Iunday Issue One Year, - $1.60,
PLAIN
TRUTHS
The blood is the foundation of
life, it circulates through every part
of the body, and unless it is pure
a:id rich, good health is impossible.
If disease has entered the system
the only sure and quick way to drive
it out is to purify and enrich the
blood.
These simple facts are well
known, and the highest medical
authorities agree that nothing but
iron will restore the blood to its
natural condition; and also that
all the iron preparations hitherto
made blacken the teeth, cause head
ache, and are otherwise injurious.
Brown’s Iron Bitters will thor
oughly and quickly assimilate with
the blood, purifying and strengthen
ing it, and thus drive disease from
any part of the system, and it will
not blacken the teeth, cause* head
ache or constipation, and is posi
tively not injurious.
Saved his Child.
>7 N. Eutaw St, Baltimore, Md.
Feb. it, 1880.
Gents;—Upon the recommenda
tion of a friend I tried Bkown's
Ikon IIittbks as a tonic and re
storative for my daughter, whom
FURMAN’S FAKM1NU.
st ? lk !*•’«“ HiBh-oa- izii...
fired Dnles Where Prevlou.ly Kluht
Cuulit Not Have Ileeu llnlactl—luter.
eelluix Kama In ltelalluu ■<> I lie
Work of lnteualre Fnrinlu,;.
thoroughly convinced '
g away with Consumption.
Having lost three daughters by the
terrible disease, under the <
eminent physicians, 1 was loth to
liclieve that anything could t
i of the disei
t surprise, before
ease, but.
the progress
my great suit
ter nad taken one bottle of
Ikon Uittkhs, she began
and now is auite restored to former
health. A fifth daughter began to
show signs of Consumption, and
when the physician was consulted
he quickly said “Tonics were re-
S uircd;" and when informed that
ic eider sister was taking Bkown's
Ikon Uittkks, responded “that is
a good tonic, take ii
Adoram Phvlps.
Brown’s Iron Bitters effectual
ly cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion and
Weakness, and renders the greatest
relief and benefit to persons suffering
from such wasting diseases as Con
sumption, Kidney Complaints, etc.
D
1 .A. m o JST
D
1)
13
ROT*
FOR THE BLOOD.
s
AR IT TAKER
DIAMOND TO CUT DIAMOND,
80 IT TAKER
Special Correspondence to the Constitution.
Atlanta. Ua., Oct. 13.—“There
has been so much talk about what
you wrote about‘Furman’s Farm,’
ami so many opinions expressed,”
said .Mr. E. C. Grier, the veteran
seoretaiy of the state agricultural
society, disposing himself comfort-
j ably on a sofa, “that I thought I’d
| respond to your request and drop
{ in and tell you wlmt 1 know about
| it. It lias certainly made a stir in
| agricultural circles and I am glad
I to be able to give you defin itc in-
! formation on the subject.”
“That’s what J want, no matter
how it runs.”
“Well, I invited Mr. Furman to
make his speech before the society.
Of course it made a sensation. That
night we had an informal discus-
| sion, and the old farmers present
j plied Furman with a great many
I questions. In this way they pick
ed out of him the whole history of
how he had built up his worn out
Georgia farm and with wlmt result.
The general feeling after this was
cnc of incredulity, and numbers did
not hesitate to express this disbe
lief in what Furman had Slid. I.
therefore, determined to go to Mil-
legeville and see for myself exactly
what he Imd done. 1 did so.”
“What was the result of your
trip?”
“When I reached Milledgeville I
see ured the company of General My-
rick. As we went out to Furman’s
plaee we passed some land which
General Myrick said was exactly
like Furman’s when he started. I
do not think it would have pro
duced 300 pounds of seed cotton
to the acre at the outside. It was
as poor land ns I ever saw. Mr.
Parker, who had known Furman’s
land for many years, said when
Furman took hold of it he thought
any man was a fool who would try
to make a living on it. At length
we reached his place.”
“And the result?”
“Was simply astonishing. I
never saw G6 acres of tmcli cotton
in my life, and I’m an old farmer.
It was almost incredible to believe
that it Btood on wlmt was live years
ago tbo poorest of land. The first
flcld we entered was one be Imd
been testing for the full five years.
The cotton was fully seven feet
liigl , and the limbs of the stalks
were completely interlocked. We
might Imve thrown our Imts in the
air in any direction and not one
hut would have touched the ground.
Indeed, you could not see the
ground. The next Imd been Im
proved only three years, and the
stalks were about six feet high.”
“Was not the growth too dense
to make a full crop?”
“If it had been a wot year it was,
but with this dry weather it will
fruit perfectly. Hereafter Furman
will plant in (our foot squares, so
as to give each plant plenty of sun
shine. He was himself astonished
at the luxurious growth ofhisurop
this year.”
“Wlmt will the sixty-live ncrcs
make, in your judgment?”
“I believe it will make from nine
ty to one hundred bales. That is
iny judgment.”
“I believe it makes a perfect
manure for cotton. He 1ms studied
it in the light of science, and he
gives back to the soil precisely the
elements tlinl the cotton takes from
it and a surplus of these elements
of his own cotton returned to him
from the gin, and compost them on
Furman > formula, we should feel
the effect In Georgia the lirst year.
Every year vfould improve the
yield of uotton seed, and consc-
bcsidcs. That is bound to be a quently the amount of compost,
perfect manure.” j For example the first year Mr.
cotton seed AND the cotton seed j Furman '’got about 150 pounds of
mills. seed to the acre, which gave him
“Wlmt about giving up the cot-; al ?° ut 600 pounds of compost. He
ton seed to the oil mills?” ; ,v,ll | tl ". s - v,!a ' - 1,500 pounds of
“That is a very Important ,,ues- T , ‘ aere ’ w, "® h W,U *' ve
tion, and I am glad you asked it. i abo " t , 5 ’ 00 1 ° l«*''nds of compost.
Plainly, wc do not want to cripple j S .°, llmt ™ cl ' acrc ° f lam "° w fl ' r -
the oil mills. We realize, perfect- I "'-hem about enough seed to make
ly, that the cotton seed is better as! ,U own . fco ’ n P° 9t - 1Ie sa >' 8 . howev
a stock lood, and as a fertilizer,
after the oil has been taken Iroin
it than before. It is therefore im
proper to bury 35 gallons of valu
able oil in every ton of seed, when
the oil is not only wasted, but is
an actual hindrance to the seed in
doing its duly.”
“Why do you not send your seed
to the mill then?”
“Simply because we never get it
back. Once made into meal or
cake it is sold elsewhere. Under
the present arrangement no seed
can be bought in my neighborhood.
As soon ns the farmer understands
how valuable bis cotton seed is. and
bow iiu impoverishes his land by
selling it off, the mills can't buy it
anywhere. As soon n« Furman’s
formula is fairly tried they will find
out that tlie cotton seed even with
the oil in it, is tbo best fertilizer
they can get, and nctua'ly indispen
sable to uotton lands.”
“What ought tho mills to do?”
“They ought to do this: When
they buy a man’s cotton seed they
ought to agree to return him bis
meal ground up and pay freight
both ways. If they would do this
they would get all the seed they
want nud at nominal figures, i
would furnish Ilium thousands of Ttltit’ir
tons at my depot at $2 a (pn if peddle
they would take it at the depot and
! er, if he gets three bales to the
| acre, which would give 3,000
! pounds of seed, or 0,000 pounds o(
! compost, lie would put every pound
! <>f it back on the ground he took
it from."
“Hasn't lie simply put hack on
each sen- the seed it grew, proper
ly composted?”
"Veryjnearly. lie has used but
little sued from outside sources.
His process of improvement has
been ulichp, gradual, and made to
pay its o.wn way. It is in this that
it is so valuable. Any farmer, no
mailer how poor his land, can fol
low his plan more or less closely.
And, doing this, lie will inevitably
achieve his result, more or less ex-
nctly.” i
A WORD FURTHER FROM MR. FURMAN.
I havo been overwhelmed with
inquiries since the publication of
my first article on this subject. It
lias been circulated everywhere. A
shoe dealer in this city, Mr. George
W. Frice, 1ms sent 10,000 copies of
it, witli his advertisement, out to
Ids country customers. Mr. Fur
man is in like manner embarrassed,
amj.l an informed that visitors to
liis'farnr pave revived the flush days
hotels of Milledgeville.
Tbqt’r nil; very ’good. The more
people tb|kt inquire, the more peo
ple interested. The more people
stable manure, (3) acid phosphate
and (4) kainit. Now, see how this
compost gives every ono ot the
eight elements needful lor tl u per
fect cotton food:
“3. Achl phosphate gives phos
phoric acid and lime.”
ing up new land, and to tho value
of his farm by increasing its fertili
ty. He says he is determined to
make his net income on 100 acres
over $5,000.
Wlint Ims the outlay been? lie
| imd *55 acres, worth $5 per acrc, or
“2. Stall manure or organic mat-, $325; a pair mules $300. and per-
ter gives ammonia and humus.” I Imps $300 Tor implements. To this
”*■ Cotton seed gives ammonia, j add a small amount for a cabin and
return to the depot the cotton meal! that so to Milledgeville, the more
ground up. They now pay from j people will bo conviliced and con-
$8 to $10 a ton for sped and pay
the freight one way. It suams to
me it would be cheaper to try the
other plan. It would certainly he
sater. For with the number of oil
mills certainly increasing, the de
mand for oil enlarging, und the
farmer constantly being educated
to the value of bis seed as a ferti
lizer, and less and less willing to
impoverish bis land by selling olf
for a mere song the substance that
is essential for their nmintainance,
the mills will Und that they cannot
get enough seed to run them. They
verted. Tho inquiries urc mainly
directed ' to tho accuracy of tho ar
ticle—"It is all true?” is the tenor
ot the correspondence.
It is proper to say that Mr. Fur-
man, in a letter of late date, sends
the most abundant proof of tho
truth of bis clainiB. The last Mil
ledgeville Recorder publishes the
certificates of two leading farmers
who say Unit his sixty-live acres
will bring over seventy-five bales.
Mr. S. I’. Myrick writes me that
he has been over the crop four
potash and humus.
“4. Kainit gives potash, lime,
magnesia nml soda.”
"Silica is always present in the
soil, is practically in inexhaustible
quantities; so wc Imve in my com
post everything essential supplied.
Kainit is one of the most impor
tant elements ofthis formula. Con
taining, ns it does, nearly onc-third
of its bulk of salt, itJs a great con
servator of moisture. I have found
it, combined with humus, a speci
fic against rust in cotton, and
owing to its contents of snlphuto
of nmgnusiu it is invaluable in the
power that it possesses in the com
post heap of fixing the ammonia ns
n sulphate and thereby preventing
its escape.”
“Now, by feeding the hind with
this perfect food you bring it up?”
“Certainly, and why should there
he surprise nt l.he result. You give
your land more every year than is
taken from it. It fattens just ns a
horse or mule would fatten. I felt
that a bale to the acre on this land
tlint produced a bale to eight acres
was just as sure under my process
as 1 used to be at college tlmt a
mathematical problem would work
out right. Indeed, I said at the
beginning tlmt I would produce 100
bales to the 05 acres, und keep it
at tlmt figure. 1 say now tlmt I
will make three bales to the acre
next year on many an acre, and I
feel sure tlmt I will get 150 bales
olf the 05 acres within two years.
Now print tills prediction.”
“Tlieic are,” Mr. Furman went
on to say, “certain incidental rules
to be observed. For example, it
does no good to your land to givq
it proper food if our tropical wash
ing ruins sweep it nut of the shal
low soil and ' take it away. We
must pul it there and keep it there.
To do this, 1st, 1 ditch all hillsides,
turning tho dirt on the upper side
of the ditch, so tlmt it catches the
washings and in time terraces my
fluid. 2d. I break my land deeper
each year, as I am able to increase
the humus, and this increases the
absorptive power of the soil and
rend, is it less liable to wash. 3d.
I Imve a succession of crops, so
tlmt t.liu earth will be kept full of
organic matter and rootlets ail the
time, und is thereby held together
and can’t wash. I plant oat - in the
fall anil cotton or corn when the
outs are taken olf. 1 therelorv not
only give my land a surplus of good
food, but 1 bold it in the laud until
it is absorbed. The result is Inex
orable. Il 10,000 farms in Georgia
were treated just as mine Ims been,
the outcome would lie just the
same."
perhaps $100 to help get the living
lor the lirst year, and there is In
dependence and prosperity ahead
of any man who will work intelli
gently. And yet strong-armed,
clear-headed boys on the farm rest
lessly turn toward the . city, and
brave and patient fellows in the
city, work day after doy and way
into the night, and look with con
tempt on the country and its re
sources.
The salary of the best clerks in
the city—those who have worked
just as honestly and just as intel
ligently for ten yenrs as Mr. Fur-
inun Ims done for live years—is $75
a month, of which they must pay
$40 for hoard for themselves and
wives. Their entire snlary is less
time one-third of Mr. Furman’s
net profits. H. W. G.
iVmi7)H,UYN.
DIAMOND DROPS TO CURE
NYPIIIltlH, IUIKUMATI8M,
CONSUMPTION, ECZEMA,
Old Sores ond all Seroruloui Taints.
Indorsed by I.cidlilK Physicians I
“III imuiid Dr**f»
md Id and i
m D mi anj
e acorn of iFNtiuionuU Ii
tlie land ho made two crops. There
was twelve acres of Ins land that
lie Imd planted in oats, gathering
1,000 bushels, worth $000, from the
patch. After taking off tl-c oats,
he planted fourneres in corn, which
yielded forty bushels to the ucrc,
or 100 bushels, worth $100, und
... ai'ie.snJi'ss ’i-ine: jht in cotton, which will yield
soed In an.l ari>iin.l Anu-ncils |ur IL# past I , , ,. . .
Dim any ..llier live slterslirc-s,” an-l nine bales, WOl'tll $4o0. BO tlmt
*f« ! he «»• $1,150 worth of crops oil
>«ie only by I these twelve acres. I lie manure
1 r. T. DAVES PORT A SOS, j for it cost him $0 an acre, or say
$120, and wlmt is best of all left
j the land stronger und richer uter
times, and his best judgment is
will iiml the farmers standing ut j tlmt it is certain to make seventy-
tin; steam gins and- bidding in j live or eighty hales. He says it
competition with them for the , sounds incredible when the poor
seed, because working Furman’s land on which I; is planted is eon-
formula a farmer cun give much sidered, and adds: “Had I not seen
more than any oil mill Ims paid, it with my own eyes I, too, should
and still make with il the best and , Imve doubted.” I could publish u
very much the clicnpest manure I column of similar certificates,
he <mn get anywhere." j Hut where is the incredible part
"You may write,” Colonel Grier j ol Mr. Furman’s work? It is no
went on to say, “wlmt von please ) miracle, and no new invention,
about Furman’s farming and you : Wlmt lie bus done is as old as
cannot write too heartily. Tlie ad- mathematics und us inexorable,
vantages of his system are manifest, i He found a piece of land tlmt
To begin with, his cotton grows so was starved,
rapidly that grass can't catch up And lie fed it.
with it. The worst enemy tVe cot-1 That is ull Just as he would
ton plant Imd was a nigger with a i Imve fed a starving mule or horse,
hoc. Cotton planted on the 7th of ] A great many farmers would have
June and seven feet high in about { rclused to feed the land, holding ! it wilt be given him.
tbreu months can’t lie hurt with ■ tlmt wlmt they gave to it would J Hut is the same old principle of
grass, and don't need hoeing. I I be wasted. Many who were willing intensive farming tlmt Ims made
1 ' feed it would Imve fed it reck- 1 France und England prosperous—
, _ lessly, tossing into its dumb mouth : time 1ms made central New York,
years ago. ,j by manuring each acre ut a cost of whatever came handiest. Mr. Fur- I Penn sly vania and Ohio tlie gar-
Al)(l tlmt Bill t Alla Un inUCII Ol £| gft lw» I nnenn uml until kn wua IIO. man fVwl 1$ intnllinniitlii Iln on m ! ilnn annla of tkiu nniintmi ■ind tli it
A l'EW LAST WORDS
Mr. Furmun is right in cluiming
tlmt llicic is nothing new in the
principle he is working on. He
has discovered new details and ad
justments, and Ims umdo some
striking results, for which all crcd-
To the Voter* of the Third Con-
yremional District: When, a few
weeks since, I announced myself
u candidate for Congress, I did so
upon principles which I embodied
in an address, and upon which I
stood immovable during my can
vass. These principles imve not,
uor can be, controverted, and to
day are more important to the in
terests of tlie producing and labor
ing classes of our district than
the patent plutfoim ot any po
litical parly or tlie success of any
political candidate. Whilst this is
true. 1 am not aware of the power of
political and party prejudices.
These arc diflieult to overcome,
even when a cool judgment is con
sulted, hut in a heated cnnvaBs,'
where they are alone appealed to,
it is impossible to do so. Recog
nizing these facts, I withdraw my
candidacy and fall back to allure
my equal burdens with tho class I
aspired to represent, and whfeh
it was my only ambition to lighten.
I have no regrets as to my course
in the canvass. I have appealed
to no prejudices—misrepresented
no one—retailed no second hand
slanders—made no bargains, and
stand to-day, as I entered the can
vass, with my self-respect untar
nished. To my many friends in
the district, nnd nut of it, who
have voluntarily tendered me their
generous support and encourage
ment, 1 return my hearty thanks.
To tlie newspapers, also, who Imve
opened their columns to me, 1 re
turn thunks and request that they
send their bills to me at Americus,
Gu. David U. Harrell.
"And this on land which mode | |, ave shown you how bis manuring ! to
only eight bales no more than live | ^ Starting lev
*!'!•!. ii i G
AMERICUS, GA.
$1.80 lie increased until he was us- man fed it intelligently. lie raw j den spots of this country, and tint
ing about $10 un acre. The cash that it hud been depicted by sue-< has enabled the New Kngiund fur-
value of the cotton crop vdth the ! cessive crops of cotton being taken mcr to live und prosper on black
$10 worth of manure on each acre j from it. rocky hillsides that a southern far-
of the 05 acres was about $4,000 Wlmt was the proper thing to j iner wouldn’t touch, and to coin-
WOMAN.
HOW SHALL MilK ritEHERVP. HER HEALTH
AND BEAUTY.
Due who has long investigated this sub
ject gives the rcHiilt, and in happy to say
iliut it islonnd in Woman's‘'Best Friend.
It t is adapted especially to that great cen
tral. all-controlling organ, the womb cor
recting its disorders, and curing any ir
regularity of the “menses," or “courses."
Dr. J. Br.idlield's Female llegulator acts
like a charm in whites, and in sudden or
gradunl checking, or in entire stoppage of
ihe "monthly, courses," from cofd, men
tal trouble, or like causes, by restoring
the natural discharge in every instance.
In chronic cases so often resulting in ul
ceration, falling of tho womb, its action
si prompt und decisive, saving the consti
tution from numberless evils and prema-
true decay. Prepared by Dr. J. Bradfleld,
* u Price;
Atlanta, <»a.
trial size, 75c; large
Tobacco and Cigars
BEST BRANDS
the lami stronger ami nciier u-ier le;lst ?(i0 an aorc or $4 000 . |
I the year’s cultivation than l^orc ||e¥e , le has gained in value $1.
It In I’fBir kinco lio linu taken linlil
net above wlmt it was when took j do? Clearly, to restore to it tlie j inaml $500 nil acre for land that I size, 81.50. For wilo by Davenport * Son.
it, without manure. The munurc j savor ond strength tlmt had boon put aiongsidu a Georgia farm, 1 - -——» •
1 ‘ 1 • ' 1 The American Public Health
Association is now in session in
Indianapolis, ludiana.
Improvement tor Mlml and Boy.
There is more strength-restoring power
io u liottle of Parker's Ginger Tonie than
in n bushel ot malt or a gallon of milk.
As an nppetizer, blood pnnfier anil kid
ney corrector, there is nothing liko it,
and invalids consequently Und it a
wonderful invigorant tor mind und body.
— Commercial.
I - _
used Ims paid for itself live times : taken from it. Hut exactly wlmt I wouldn't bring $10. It is the same-
over every year. He gives tlie lig- { elements imd been taken front it by i system by which Mr. Hardaway, of
ures to show tlmt lie made $2,750 : the wearing cotton crops. To us- j Thomusvillc—the real pioneer of
clear on his two-horse farm this certain this he analyzed a cotton- intensive farming in Georgia—has
year. To his profits must he added | plant, and found wlmt elements I demonstrated tlmt fifteen acres of
this: His farm when he commune- made it up. Then see how cure-; Georgia land properly farmed
ed was worth $5 un uere, or fur the fully he proceeds. i would support and clothe a family
05 acres $335. It is now worth ut “I found,” he said, “that a per- j of seven people and educate the
lie- feet cotton food—tlmt is one that, children, while many a family of
joo; would restore to the soil every- \ smaller size half starves on three
i- i i ,a yeur since he has taken hold of | thing that cotton took out of it— Im Hired acres improperly (armed.
.*?!!... orsc lls l ,lan ’ l “ en > 10 it. With the treatment he is pur- must have in it phosphoric acid, i what youno men can do.
EVANS & HARWELL
FOUSYTH STREET
I the full. | suing I believe it is good for one ammonia,humus,potash,lime,mag- i„ writ:,,,,,
‘Every word lie says is true; and i a|1( j a |j a |f | Ja | us to the acre year in ! nesia, soda and silica. Of these I n r
the results he 1ms achieved are eer- „ nil Vf'nr ‘ obrlit. nlffmnntR nnlv nnn aillnn in I O tLT
J all this there is no in-
■ t ii .ji ", - ; lention ui tendering advice to far-
- ,. f . . eight clement* only one, silica, is mer s. They know more about their
‘Any other farmer can do wlmt found m the soil in sufficient quail- ■ | nm | ncS9 than I do
tity
The other seven must be
Pope will likely succeed Mc
Dowell as major-general of the
United States.
_ , • -.■'“Men comlcmn in others what they
But as a young man, I might say |, rilc ti,. ( , thrmwlvea.” Those who praa-
wont to young uicn. Mr. Fur- j tiro the uko of Kidney-Wort never con-
man now in his fifth vear of fanning, »bi use by other*, bat recommend
. a . . ..1 . . . i» to ..II
tlie results ne lias ucmeveti are eei* i an j y ear 0I| j
tainly most admirable. Tlie chief “Any other
beauty of bis plan is Hint bis com-1 | |c | m s done?
j post is so cheap that any farmer | ..y e8 . j„ more or less degrees, supplied. So I determined to make | „ vnllnJ
1ESTAIIMXT and COTOTIOXERY the" “ uo . seed, n "sure that J : So . Iam ' i! \ HO l 1 ,0o, 1 tl,at il can . n .? t a ^'TTn 18 " r,1 ‘! iei ' tl,em " : " ,an no *' in '' is — - , —
umiivjiiH I. , NIC COMOII etn.il iv » «» be improved a* his has been. His "Why (licit you buy a tomraer- f » (if ,| nri , H llo wl ,‘, „, Pf . P $ h : a i it to all affected with pile*, dyspepsia,
I 1 UAMETCI CV 11 JV 1 ^ 8 b f c !f c0,t <%0U ^ 6 an< iR a thin chocolate-colored sandy * cial fertilizer?” *.» .* f i constipation and all otbordieeaaea result-
J. J. HANESLEY treble and live times over every ! aoil clflV fivG inches from the ' “Decause the best commercial fer- j | , |a *. e a tmylmndthe d^ | !"worliweiS ,rd * r * d ***** ° f kiUney8,
jM cull the attention of fnnners
UMn* a rood meal to the fuel that
|natn| "
testa
. „ . I 8ea8 ? n ' , lues cnncuiD f 1 in ,? anu ! top. lie had only one advantage, tflizers furnish only three of the fnl i Pf r fi., lllw n fiii/nvnD.. fl nu «nri
“ * '• 1 "JYoon I *"«' in . » ««••» «'.*■** clement* needful, viz-phos-1 , n?onle Jfind he puts his crop at 75 i A large number of negroes will
to take good care of his slock and
nrant Under the Barlow House
be will aerveyou on a warm ni«*al ut any
■•ur. O vet era. }'Db nud Game w-rred in tbi’lr
lie o!m> keep* a lull line i.l Conl«et|.»ns
frnit-, Clear* mnl T«»i.acc»».
p 4n»«rica», o»., Sept, ltf.ia’
rizKtT. r-e 1 r “‘""f «-• ^i , ’ i ‘° r . ic -r‘1 an “ p r"• : ****wir^sOT'™ e
file manure for the ISA , 11'SSZ , i that j the ist of November.
to buy more
needs the stable manure iur Ultf I him a sufliciency of the basis of his j that bone of them do better than to . .
compost heap. compost. Uut if each farmer would ( furnish three of the needed cle* i ,nuc ' 1 * * et 1,8 8a - v " e
“What do you think of his for-1 only save the droppings of his j menu. So 1 made me u compost,; makes $3,000 this year. He is add- j
mula for composting?’’ j stock and insist on having the seed j made up of (1) cotton seed, (2) | ing to his acreage yearly by bring- ;
Weak musnloH and nerves, uluggiibnesii
of tlionuht and inactivity, cured by
Brown's Iron Bitters.