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About Schley County news. (Ellaville, Ga.) 1889-1939 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1895)
l m 4 N k / % - L 0 U ♦ N# A VS K. B HORNADY’, Broprietor. | Stop crying 1 hard times You can make times good, if you will buy from merchants who get their goods from first hands and pay spot cash for them. One Thousand dollars worth of ladies and men‘s 1895 cut shoes, jusr in, at a lowe price than ever before. Spring dress goods coming in jevery week, There are but few articles sold in Ga. that we do not sell. We have now on hand groceries, dry goods, notions, hoots, shoes, hats, hardware, tinware crockery, harness, brick, lime and shingles that we will sell you cheaper than you ever bought them before. Thanking vou for past patronage, we are for low prices. Collins Williamson – Company. Do You Like To Read ? We wish to make you a present of the American Farmer A first class agricultural Journal, full cf bright and original matter to please every member of the fam ily. To appreciate this offer you have only to call at The News Office and secure sample. To all paid up subscribers, we will send this valuable Journal and the Schley County News one year for only one dollar, Country produce will count the same as muney. Now is the time to subsribe I r PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT AND POTASSIUM Makes Marvelous Cures in Blood Poison Rheumatis m r——MU niff i n—1 irsrnr** and Scrofula P. P. P. purlCoa the blood, builds up a,;<1 debilitated, Rives , “““ 1 ,, Primary . ■ si-conoary and , tertiary •TPhilis, _ rlat - for Mw)d poinoninjr, mercu- and in poison, malaria, dyBpepsta, liko all blood and skin diseases, blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcers, tetter, scald bead, bolls, erysipelas. fear of eciem*-we may say, without contradiction, that P. P. P. Is tho best blood purifier In tho world, and amkes positive, Iu all speedy and permanent cures cases. ^ n Cadies whose systems are poisoned condl end whose blood lain an Irregularities, impure Won, due to tuenatrual Root and Potassium. -RS2SSk8SYIS6A 4 SfclS1i your knowledge. medicine I wasaffeoted from my own with personal heart disease, pleurisy and rheumatism for 8– years, waa trented by tho very best Sites WoorVlT^n^SS has cheerfully say It done me more good than anything I have ever takes. I aaa recommend your medicine to ak aafarera of the above dlaeaae*. _ •(lUtaS–sninWMr.lio- DEVOTED TO GIVING THE NEWS, ENCOUHAGING TIIE PROGHKSS AND AIDINO THE PHOSPEIIITV OF SCHLEY COUNTY. ELLAVILLE GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING JUNE Cth 1895 . PIMPLES, BIOTCHES AND OLD SPUES CATARRH, MAlftRlft, KIDNEY TROUBLES and DYSPEPSIA Are entirely removed by P.P.P* —Prickly Ash. Poke Boot and Potas sium, the greatest blood purifier 00 earth. Abbrdbbn, 0.. July 21 Sayannan. ,1891. Mnssna Lippman B.-»o 9. , bottle of Go.: Dear Sibs-I bouitht a Ark., and your P. P P- at Hot Springs, (rood than three it lias done mo more Springs. mouths' treatmentat the Hot Band three bottles 0. O. D. Be»P.otr«U^oura kEWTO Count/, </• Aberdeen, Brown CnpS. J. P. Johntlon. - „ hom i( mny eonet rn: I here srmwssffiatsicBei sfe.jyisES^sa–'X my go face, I tried every known reme- used, »£ Ta ta,until P. P- P. waa *^ d *m now entirely cured, JOHN8TOW. fl ._ n6d p-v J,D. Savannah. Ua. Bkln Can per Cared* /Siqvtn,TtX, , _ Tsttimony fromlht Mayor 0 Sequin, Tex. January _______ la.issa. , oam Lippman , Bros. Savannah, Messrs. Gentlemen—1 have tried . your P. Ga.: rtncer* rtyVeira^ J 1 '™,? n°* sVk in* found (treat of th 1 relief: It Toirifleatliablood and removes all lr “irSSSSj'aVSa feel confident that another court* sr)( ] It has alao relieved will efteot a Indigestion cure. and atomnoa mo from Tomtruty trouble* M ^ Attorney mt Lsff. Book on Blood mm foiled _ „ . Free. ^ MUOOWW WU. W. LIPPMAN BROS, PJtOPBJITOBB, — 1(1 ®RMiRs. Commissioner Nesbitt’s Regular Letter About the Crops. THE COVPEA AS A FERTILIZES. Results at Sointt Recent Experiment* MaUe »t Home anil Aiicuuiit. »f TrlU Abroad Wlilcli Are of lutrrmt to Kriirjr Ullor of tho Soil—Uinta About What to l)o lhU Mouth. Tho cool weather during the second and third weeks in May and more es whlt^etar^ed^rogrTsstn wording some- j out the young corn and cotton, but the es cape from a killing frost enables us to bear the lesser evil with equanimity; the more so when we realize the total destruction of every green and tender plant farther north. The fruit iu high er latitudes is reported as entirely lost, and truck gardeners are again bemoan ing the destruction of their hopes. In Georgia, the fruit and truck crops are still intact, and while there may be some loss from falling off of the fruit, this, owing to the very heavy crop, mav not be considered as altogether a disad vantage. rule Throughout the state the crops as a are, if somewhat back ward, in good condition, and we are encouraged by the hope of a bountiful harvest. Owing to uuusul conditions, June has come upon us almost unawares. It is in this month that the critical work on the corn crop must be completed; the small gram crops harvested; the earlier planting of various minor crops, pota toes, peas, Spanish ground peas and for age crops given proper cultivation, the cotton kept clean and the later planted crops of the several varieties granted an The encouraging beginning. work on the main area in coax wfR be finished up this month. After this, it mutters not what our mistakes iu cultivation may have been, they cannot be remedied. The man who has given time and care to thorough preparation has now a comparatively easy task iu “laying by” his corn crop. The plants will be growing rapidly, aud whatever plowing is necessary can be dona with a shallow plow, thereby leaving the roots undisturbed aud kill ing only tho grass and weeds which may have sprung up. At this season the corn is bunching, and between this and the tasseliing pe riod tiie last plowing should be given, unless the hard, dry nature of the land makes a later plowing an absolute ne cessity. This should, however, not be deferred later than the appoarance of the tassels, as any disturbance after that tMne means injury to the crop and diminution in the yield. If the corn crop is dismissed the last of June in t a clean condition, any subsequent growth of weeds or grass will not materially injure the forming ears; but as this growth will inevitably occupy the in termediate spaces, why not keep it down by broadeasting peas ? They take very little more of the food and moist ure than the spontaneous growth would, and return full measure and more for everything which they appropriate. About a bushel to the acre broadcast at the last plowing will distribute tho peas evenly over the land, and thus the nitrogen and humus, of which most of our laud stands so much 111 need, and which the peas furuisii in such abun "J 1 m ^ asUre i » r e more uniformly dis JU e< mn if a single row is planted • tae T u bome low <? r °wing va ru-ty . wmeli , will ., not run up 011 the stalks of corn is to be preferred. If the corn was planted In the water furrow, aud during the cultivation the dirt has gradually been thrown towards the stalks, it cau now be laid by porfecDy flat, thus exposing less surface lor evup oration; tho brace roots will have taken a deeper hold, and when tho peas begin to shade the ground the crop is leit in the very best condition to resist ail tho variations of wind ami weather. PEAS. This crop ns a renovator of worn soils, aud as furnishing stock food of the very highest value, may well be termed tiie l__ agricultural nope of the south. It is not exacting in its detaaud-, neimer very nice preparation nor very rich Inna 1 * calleu lor. »v 1 h the help 01 a little phosphate aud poiasn it win grow a remunerative crop on mud wnich will scarcely pay lor the sead and CUltlVU non 01 any oiuer crop, aud b.-eides uavu in the soil a rasidiuru 01 niirugou and humus, by Wnich other uud sue coeding crops can be successfully bant up. Inure has beon issued from the Geor gia experiment station through the Horticulturist, Mr. H. N. Star nos. » most valuable bulletin 011 fertiliser and variety tests of cowpeas, Ha *7, whioh cent larincr. Writo to Captain R. J. Redding, Experiment, Spaldingcounty, lor it free copy. From Mr. Starnos’ report wo quote the loilowing, trusting that it may reach and influence those farmers who have not received or applied lor the bulletin: The experiments by Prof. Hallriegel at Pern hers, Germany, have tnrown a flood of light upon the subject. The discern ry has there been made of a defi nite relation subsisting between certain microorganisms and the acqui.-itiou of nitrogen by legumes. By a series of careiully planned and skillfully execut ed tests with sterilized sand, Prof. Hell riegel has established almost beyond question that the rootgall or tubercles n ly fleeting the roots of the legume fami are the product of microbes or bacte ria, through whose instrumentality and operation atmospheric nitrogen is ac quired and stored. This function of tne microorganisms forming the root galls is beyond dispute, whether these organisms are bacteria or not. Their mode of obtaining and transferring tne nitrogen, however, is as yet unrevealed. The fact lias been definitely estab lished, also, by the tests alluded to, that wherever these bacieria or mi crobes are present—and they exist in nearly ali cultivated soil—the legume is pruciically independent of a supply ol nitrogen, either in the soil .or admims tered as a rnanuro. In sterilized sand (supplied, of course, with all the other elements of plant food except nitrogen) the youug plant will germinate and grow vigorously until it has exhausted all of the nitrogen in the seed, when the growth is checked or suspended for awhile until Che roocgails or tubercles have an opportunity to form, aud the microorganisms begin to get in their work, when the plant at once com mences to change color, and again grows vigorously to maturity, even where the sand is sterilized by a hear, of 3 18 degrees F. In tins treatment no attempt is made to «-xc udethe bacteria. Where the apparatus is so arranged as to prevent their access, the Oiam droops and dies. The fact being thus established that the Jegunn-s are capable of deriving their supply of nitrogen from the air, four fifths of which consists of this element, chemically uncombiued, it should materially encourage the agri culrurist. Willi some 38.000 tons of pure nitrogen resting on every acre of his farm, never diminishing Or chang ing, and renewable as fast as used, he has thus presented ready to hand, a supply so exhaustless that the Chilian nitre beds sink into utter insignificance beside it. He need no longer dread the ultimate cxnanstion of his pitilu.l sub soil reservoir, but rest calmly in the faith that a* long as the heavens en dure, his chief and costliest element of fertility is secure. Nor is this all. Formerly it. was sup posed that by far the greater portion of the mauurial legumes, especially of the cowpea, was contained in the vnws, and only a relatively small proportion it remained iu the roots and stubble, was hence deemed necessary to return the vines direct y to the land in order to secure a maximum benefit, their val ue as feeding stuff being thereby lost. This misconception, however, has now beeu quite effectually corrected by observations and experiments conduct ed by both the Connecticut (Storrs) ex periment station and the Georgia ex periment station. The former station Has shown that a much larger propor tion of nitrogen than was at first sup posed is contained in the roots and stubble, and that tho vines may be us for forage with economy, provided tho stubble is plowed under. * This being the case, the mission of the cowpea broadens, and its value and importance increase proportionally. all That it stands today at the head of soil renovators—at least for rite south —is beyond question. Its preeminence over clover mid other legumes is oue mainly to the fact that it will grow aud thrive on the poorest sous, which clover will not do. When land at the south will grow clover successfully it doesn’t need reno\*jUion; it is the worn out. thin, galled land, of o.,urso. that most requires manuring. Clover would undoubtedly build up such land if it could bo induced to grow flicre, but it will not grow iliere. Cowpcas wul. 1. The best disposition of n crop 0/ cowpeas is to convert the vines into hay (or euaiiage.) the 2 . The next best is to permit peas to ripen aud g.ithor (or pasture them ) 3 . Mowing tho vines and pormirtiuij them to lie on the surface and p.owing under iu November was decidedly bat ter than turning the vines under 111 August. under 4 . Turning the vines green gave the poorest economical results. 1 . It is money thrown awvr to apply any form of uitrogeuoui fertilizer to the cowpea. it is possible, however, that a very light top dressing of nitrate of soda mar prove an exoiptniM if sea sonably applied at the period of *uv -jeuded growth. Constipation – Biliousness Sick-headache, Cause Pains in the back, Sallow complexion, Loss of appetite and Exhaustion. There is only one cure, which is Pi pONSJf# ^' –Tonic Pellets. One Pink Pill touches the liver and removes the bile. One Tonic Pellet nightly, acts as a gentle laxative in keeping the bowels open, restores the digestive organs, tones up the nervous system and mikes new rich blooa. Complete treatment, two medicines, one ^riee, 25c. Treatise aud sample free at any store. naoWM MF’O. CO.. Now Vork. Notice to Land Owners. The Georgia Immigration – Invest inent Bureau, W J Northen, matiager advertises your real estate free and sells it to best advantage. Address me at Putnam. J M COLLUM, • ■ ’Agent for Schley County. Ramon’s Relief cures Sick-Headache, Neuralgia, Cramps, Cholera Morbus, Diarrhoea, –c. 25c. for large bottle. Newnansvllle,|F!a. Messrs Lippmnmn Bros, Savannah, Un. Dour Sirs—I wish to give my testimonial in regard to your valuable medielne.V dyspepsia, P P foa tho " > cure of rheumutism, neuraliriu. bll liousness, etc. lu 18U1 I was attacked with Mi lieus and muscular rheumatism, and have been a martyr to it ever since. I tried all medicine,, lever heard of. and all the doctor* In reach but 1 found only temporary relief; the p-.iiiM were so bad at times that Id|d notcrewheth erf lived or died. My digestion became so im paired thut evert thing I ate disagreed with mo My wife also suffered so inten ely with dyspep sia that her life wus a burden to her; she timetahe would be confined to her bed for weeks at a also suffered greatly from March giddiuessand advist loss d of sleep. Some time in 1 was to take 1* P P and before we, my wife and I. had finished the second bottle of P P P our diges tion began to improve. My pains subsided so much that I have been able to work and 1 am feeling like doing what I haven't done before in a number of years. We will continue tak ing PPP until we are entirely cured, and will cheerfully reccommend it respectfully to all suffering humanity. Kours very J S DUVU1SR. For sale by Munro – 'Nall. Bueklens Arnica Salve. Bruises, Sores. Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fe ver Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands. Chil blains. Corns, ar.d all Sk 11 Eruptions, and positively cure Biles, no pay re quired. It is guaranteed to give perfect iati K faction or money refunded- Brice 25 c 5 >er box. The Best Blood Remedy C, A . Tompson. Seymour Ind write?; My sister Jennie when she was a young girl, suffered from white swelling which greatly impaired her genera’ health and m.-de her blood ~ery impute In the pi ing she was notable to do ty thing anb ould scarcely get about. More than a year ago she took three bottles of Bo. anic Blood Balm, and now e is cer tainly cured TUB MISSING LINK. Wlw «-the link between milkers and ustrs of II . scboltl Furniture. Wholesale prices guaranteed. We sell for the world’s largest factories. Send for catalogue. Postage six cents. American Furniture Agency, Galena, Kansas. “DON’T TOBACCO SPIT YOUR LIFE AWAY. ' The truthful, startling title of a book about No-to-bhc, the only harmless, guaranteed tobacco habit cure. If you want to quit and can’t, use “No-to-bac.” Braces up nicotized nerves, eliminates nicotine poisons, makes weak men gain strength, weight and vigor. Boeitivo cure or money refunded. Sold by MUNUO – WALL Book at druggist, or mailed free. Address, The Sterling Remedy U«*. l-hioago office. 45 Randolph St.; N«w York, 10 Spruce St.