The Georgia register. (Talbotton, Talbot County, Ga.) 1877-18??, June 21, 1881, Image 1

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REGISTER All STANDARD. I'L’BI.ISIiEi) EVERY Tuesday Morning. nfflcs in Borman’s Brick Building. rj L >rin!i per Tear, SO o<>, C' isli. .1 Six Months, r>o<*. “ (g- Advertising low in proportion. J. I*. GOItnAM li-op*r. joh.n MoGsugli C?o., Broad Street, Columbus, Ga. Come to the front with Bargains for all- Dry Goods for the Spring and Summer Trade. Complete stocks, prices a little lower than the 1 west, with most DECIDED BARGAINS. in many beautitul specialties. In Gents Fnrmshing Goods ! ma yd a " dont YOU FORGET IT." V riii >. „ -l '~h-~ >-*———*®- E2a= ”““ • I OFFER UNUSAL INDUCEMENTS IN (J roceries and I *ro visions TO CASH BUYERS. CORN. FLOUR. HAY. OATS. BRAN. NEW CROP GERMAN MILLET SEED I have a few tons Old Relible CHESAPEAKE GUANO j. H. H AMIIjTO3>J, f i'lip T r [>-T‘>" it (Jroeer. jan6bl-mar22 COU'MIRS. GF.OUQIV NEW YOOK STOKE," (JONES’ OLD CORNER. COLOUR'S, GEORGIA. * Rolandi<l now line of dre-n in ,- ■ v.,:ty qu .lily price- re A Aired and arc off red the people . £ Tul- t an- -dj -out fonnties at H-niptm- DRY CDODS, NOTIONS, FOR SALE CHEAP CALL A' D SEE ME BEFORE IH’YIMG. LOUIS BANNER, on-20 b l J ones' Old Corner Columbus. Gri H“^ = P mmt i M GUNBY'S BUILDING, ST. CLAIR St. Oolxxm.toxx, Ga. dealer i>. Boggy' nrellas, Harness Leather, Etc. nee. l . Wa.on.^ Agent for James R Hill & Ou*s. . celebrated ban 1 made Concord llar ness and Wool Collars. ap r > El), T. LO.SU. HOBI. B. FAKLEY CALL and EXAMINE LONci & FA IIIj !j \S. NEW STOCK OF Fancy and Family Groceries. Plantation Supplies, Tobacco, Cigars, &c. WE are openine anew an 1 complete stock of Grower is anT will continue to keep R ‘Ul! assortment of the best Go in mr Hue that um be purchased. WINES AND LIQUORS OF SUPERIOR QUALITY. Oui- Prices W ill !>e tlie l.jO\vesst, think onr friends wii! find :t to their me rest to give ns a cal: before pureha>r.ig. Swift's New Building. Uppir Broad St., Columbus, Ga. VOL 5. fg /-tfY $ /Aj-A * ®)e wtmwm Mt&ttfttt. HEADQUATERS FOE CLOT! I TNG, is the only clothier iu Columbus, allowed to sell tho celebrated W. &. G. Yacht Cloth Suits. They are every wav superior to the ordinary ll.mncls, which arc barely imitations, are durable, hold Ihtircolu and are most oeonom.eal in we t'', and beautitul in tit. THOMAS most respectfully solicits before buviiu; elsewhere,an examination of his Fine and Extensive stock ot New Spring Clothing, In make superb, in lit unexcelled, in excell'-ncc of materials unsurp.t.sso I. Furnishim*- Goods and Hat Department, Has all the latest novelties and standard goods, including the celebrated Keep Mttgmim n<>muii Shirls, smd tSt ot won S I ATS. Bab Special orders mad*’to measure at short no*.iee, and only in first clam style WEDDING SUITS A SPECIALTY- Don't f-*rget that Thomas has bought his goods ohc ip aud is going to sell every customer that comes in the lions • IVic s will suit. Don‘t forget it, I keep no shoddy ods, api-19 it l G. E. THOMAS, Columbus, G-c. in t ini r -rir ii r~r i'~‘ r~T dj. 3■—inwmr-cwAwigwiTw nwwi—i Grain Cradles, Grain Cradles, J&MF TJBCITS Talbotton, C-.Vix. ALSO. L.YKtiF. ST OCK OF Plow Hoes,Plow Slocks, Smell Hoes, ami EVERYTHING USUALLY KKFT fN A FIRST CLASS Hardware Store, ill of which will be '.-old at ROCK BOTTOM PRICES for the CASH. AND DON’T YOU FORGET IT. Call before purchasing and be Convinced. Keep constantly nn hand a stock ot tin; best COOKING STOVES, Manufactured iu the country. Call and boo them. may2l H L. McLENDON, Talbotton. Ga IRON p| ™ A TRUE TONIC A PERFECT STRENGTHENER.A SURE REVIVER. IKON BITTERS are highly recommended for all (lineages* requiring a certain and efficient tonic?; especially Indigestion, J)y*pepin, Intermittent Fevers, Want of AppeUte t Lofis oj Strength. /nnh of hnerepj,etc. Lnrichcs the blood, strengthens the muscles,and gives new life to the nerves. They act like a charm on the digestive organs, removing all dyspeptic rymptonu>, such as Tasting the Food, Bricking, I I eat l7l f/t-c Stomach,Heartburn,etc. The only Iron Rropartition that will not blaoken flic tooth or give headache. Hold bv all druggists. Write for the ADC Rook (32 pp. of useful and amusing read ing).vntfrrr. BROWN CtIEAIICA Jj CO.,Baltimore,Md. Soothat all Iron Bitters aro made by UrowkOitkmicai.Co. and h" vo croßr.od red tinea on wrapper. BEWARE OK IMITATIONS. BITTERS tiii,w i I r -r-r - N ri <mi Trrmr->ii mr t my3 b I Steam Planing IVlills & Lumber Yard T. J. UUDDEY, MA.NTFACTUREI! AND DEALER IN 1%/Tzxt€sJ?±<E& 1 ! KEEPS coTistiutlv cii hand all Ii gulai Hi/e -of Sash, Doors. RJi’.d* and Moul t inu-, Flooring and Ceiling d< - r-r\ ud matched, and It bmd of rough and dressed Lumber, Door r - lame*. Windo ' Pram Mouldings, Scroll Works, Pickets La-ti **, A:-:., got out to or ier. Ad work doue.and in&ten;d iurnislied at bottom price** Apsis for tlie Centennial Patent Sasii Balance. : it? sfm I<* c't!iv*nh.rt -m-1 can loold wind.iw.s without changf- oi frames, answer i ry tii?wiad mti*i 'ah, aud uui Go ha i for leBA than oae*fourtii tut usual coat. Cal! and i irl a* 4 (IILL or a*v*r OeiicraJ Passenger uittiu COLUMBUS GA TALBOTTON. TALBOT COUNTY, GA., TUESDAY, JUNE 21 ,1881. • Southern Corn and Oat Cul ture. The S mtheni Furuier'a M itilhly gives some experiments and opin ions by Pruf. Browns, which are worthy of attention not only in Georgia but iu other States, The Professor says: Ima le some ex periments iu corn iltiring the past two years which, as the experience of the last year veriSei! that of the year previous, authorize ms to at tieh some importance to them. Bust, as to manure: I made four plats. 1. Manured with stable ma nure; 2. With rotten seed; 3. With green cotton seed, and 4. With umuioniuted superphosphate. Ol these,that with the superphosphate produced most; next that with rot ten cotton seed; next that with green cotton seed, and last that with stable manure. It is proper to state, however, that the burning of my stablo with my manure collar last year, and the absence of such a convenience the previous year, caused me to usu manure which had lost most of its am mourn there fore the test of tlio coiuparn‘ive value of stablo manure cannot be said to be reliable. SECOND KXI’KIUMKNT, AS TO HIST INCH BKTWEKX THE HOWS ANI) BETWEEN THIS HII.LS IN THE ROW. ltows four feet w ide produced at the rate of 151 bushels per acre - live feet, 15 J bushels; si A feet, M j bushels, and seven feet, 14 bushels 7ho laud was tvell prepared aud well manured, and tho hills about three feet apart in the rows. For ordinary upland, properly sulliva t.od, with good seasons, I would ro comtuend live loot us tho best diss lance between the rows. THIItl) EXl'lJtlMliNT, I have carefully tested subsoiling land for corn ns compared with that not subsoilnd. A plat well plowed with a two horse turn plow followed by a snbaoiler, produced at tho rate of lti 7 8 bushels per ae.-e, while an ndjoiuing plat plow ed, manured and cultivated in Um same way, but not subeoiled, pro duced barely 15 bushels. I ■ 1 1" Il l'll EXBKIUSIKNT AS TO HEKV AN!) SHALLOW CVLTUhE PE COHN. On one plat, plowed with a long shovel,and on another with a sweep, af or Hie first plowing. I gathered from tho first 16.01 per pore, and from the second 15 71 bushels. On still’rod land 1 would always advo cate deep culture, for 1 behove that though a few rootlets may bo in jured by it, the improved tilth and tho consequent permeability by ab end moisture, will far more than compensate for any such iujuiy. On light sandy lands,once well pro ed, deep culture is eutiroly mine ceasary. FIFTH EXl'LlttMl£N 11,I 1 , As to whether palling fodder af fects injuriously tho quantity or quality if the grain. One plat, on which tho fodder was not pulled, yielded 16.50 bushels per acre; the adjoining plat, on which it was pulled, yielded 15.80 bushels. It is manifest that tho value of the fodder fur exceeded that uf and ffer etiee in the yield. J obsorved, that the corn where tho fodder wiis not pulled exceeded in weight that from which the fodder was pulled by a fraction over one pottud per bushel. Before I leave the subject of corn, 1 feel it my duty to make a remark which some of you may, perhaps, think heterodox, or id considered It may, of course, be erroneous,but it is my deliberate conviction. It is that on our upland in Georgia, on an average of years, raising corn as our prihcipal food for stock does not pay. Owincr to the al m- :-:t constantly recurring drouth in may and June, when the growing crop needs moisture most, I regard corn as a more uncertain crop than any that we raise; aud, therefore, for a food crop for stock, I am re solved to plant oats chiefly, which, if the land be good and well pres pared, the seed rust-proof and sown in September or October, I consid er as certain a crop as rye, and as to the comparative value of oats and corn for work animals, person ally I prefer as food the whole year round. It is unnecessary to point to the ec nomy of time and labor in raising oals as compared with corn, - 1 “Barefooted belles are seriously promised for next summer at the seaside resorts. Tlie Vrincnss Beatrice slipper, of beaded satin, dainty and delicate, and shaped like a sandal,is intended to be worn without stockings. It appears that tho national bank circulation is greater to-day than it ever was before, and steadi’v in cieasing. It is no v $364,000,000, having increased $42,000,000 in the fast two years, an! the C >ri.ptroller ol the currency expresses Pis belief th.t it till go to $375,000,000. Wise and Otlierv/ise- A prize drill his been anang and * between the LaGrange and West | I’oint military companies. Early cou ity has developed a turnip which measures 21 1-2 inch es in circumference and weighs four pounds. The Figaro asserts that of twen ty marriages in the higher aud mid dle classes iu Paris, live are tho work of professional matrimonial agents. There is half as much capital in vested in cotton ginning and press ing in tho cotton states as there is in all tho factories for spinning and weaving iu all tho United States pul together. Alexander Stephens, Walter T Colquitt, Robert Toombs, M illiam C Davy'son, Eli S Shorter, Thomas —’Aj'ster, Bishop I’ieroe, Stephen Willis Harris, Thomas W Cobh, Howell and Thomas Cobb, with the threo brothers Dougherty, were all born within tho radius of a few oouuties, and all were nearly of the same age. Tho Cherokee furnace is making a daily cast of thirty-five tons of splendid iron, Ituv Thomas .V Grflith, a well known young Episcopal minister of Georgia,has gone to California. Tho Georgia legislature will as semble July 13. All local bilh will have to bo advertised thirty days before their introduction into either house. There are 42 000 postmasters ap pointed by the postmaster general and 2,000 by the President, Add to this the army of clerks and ein. ployes aud one can got an idea of the patronage of the post-ollleo de partment,. The only form of oath among the Shoshone Indians is, “Tho earth hoars me. The sun hears me. Shall I lie ?’ A Chattanooga dispatch describes a boiler explosion which lulled a man half a mile distant with a nine pound piece of iron, and hurled another piece weighing 200 pounds through two cars loaded with grain with such force that it knocked down tho corner --f a linns' 1 . Chat tanooga steam must, bo murvolo is’y powerful, or ols-,: the city has a story teller of extraordinary vigor. The defeat of the M ihonoitos in the Virginia elections, and the re buff their loa lors received from the president,ought to settle iho party. About Advertising- Advertising is the oil which the j tradesmen put in their lamps. They that, are unwise put no oil in. It's as true of advertising as any thing else in life, that if it is worth doing at all, it is worth doing well, Newspaper advertising promotes trade, for even in the dullest time advertisers soeuro by far the largest share of what is being done. Don’t he afraid to have a small advertisement by the side of a 1 r gar competing one. The big one can't oat it up. An advertisement is a window through which all the world may look into your store and seo just what you wish them to scejno more, no loss. Newspaper advertising is a per manent audition to the reputation of the goods advertised, because it is a perinamcnt influence always at work i 1 their intern t. People are quite apt to go where their attention is called, and, it they find things as represented, will purchase there m preference to spending their time seeking else where. Lessons in Love Making- Don't love too many at ouee. Don't do your spooning in pub lic. Give your li'tle brother tolly and get him to tied before your chap calls. Try to find out by some means if vonr intended knows how to earn a decent living. Don’t be afraid to show the man of yonr choice that you love him-—- provided, of course, he loves you. Love is a double-sided sort of con cern, and both hare a partial P'av. Don't try to bring too many suit ors to your feet at once. They have feet as well as yon, and you may see one pair of feet walking off irom you some day that you would be glad to c.dl buck. If it is possible, try to suit yonr sisters, cousins, aunts, grandfath ers, neighbors, friends ami acquain tances when yon happen to fall in i love. If you can't please them ail i don't worry, the thing has never | been and lie jet. NEW SPK CLOTHING! WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED OUR FIRST INSTALLMENT < > I’ Gents’, Youths’ and Boys Spring Clothing, And if you wish somutbing nice, Hobby and beautiful, call and see them. W have received a largo line ot SPRING AND SUMMER SAMPLES, and can get vp Suits to order ol any kind, at exceeding low price*, aiul guarantee a per.’ect fit aud Hiitisfaction. Wo me *lho Agents for WARD'S CELEBRATED SHIRTS and take measurea for th) same. Our bPKING HATS are ou the way, and we respectfully invite an inspection of our Goods. J. C. HARRIS & SON, net 2fi l I—#l-1.-, C 2 BROAD STREET, COLUMBUS, GA W, W. COLLINS, Manufacture rot CM, SUCGIES I MIS V < > , A 7 *1 Second Street. MACON, - - _ GEORCIA XjXT tSWOOKL AND FOR SALE LOW Carriages, Plmtous, Cabriolettes, Rockaway3, Ladies ana Pony Pine tons, Pop and No-top Piano Sox and Coal Box Buffgies- Webster Wagons, milburn Wagons, Stnderbaker Wagons, One-Horse Wagons, Harness, Baby Cabs, etc., etc. GALL AND BE CONVINCED. I ha,idle more goods in my line than any other housejiu the State* oi Georgia, Florida, or Alabama. My facilities are such that we doty competition, I will treat, you right. nov2s bl W. W. COLLINS, Macon,Ga C3r. rj, PEIACOOK., CLOTHING MANUFACTURER, 1 (54 Broad St„ - - Columbus, Ga. K.-fipsa splcudi l’liuc of I’IKC'K (iOODS You enu have any kind of suit mails tiers to YOUR OWN TASTE and in thr U test style, fca. Give tin. atrial. a i ,fo a [<* -T PEACOCK. DIXIE WOB KS. MACON, GA < O BARTRAM, HENDRIX & CO, I'KOPItIETOfiS \T ANUFACTURHS of the h*st Sftsh, Door* nd Bliuds made in th# Stae ars i▼ JLoll other house building material tmcha.K Wmdo. and Door frames. Moul ling Stairs Balliibtern Newels. Scroll-sawed and Turue l work. Send for urice list up 18 bl Mix & Kirtiioid, No. 3 COTTON AVENUE and GO THIRD STREET, SIACGN, - - Georgia DEALER IN Boots, Shoes and Hats. XJCJT. HXVEnowin store one of the best stooke we have erer offered, and la VV pries which e iunot fail to give satisfaction. Ft comprises Goats’ and La ■lies Boots and Sh 'nu, of Ihcbest nakes; the celebrated Philadelphia Yoaths’a'id dre-uj’ s ioes -superi >r t-d a'l othera; M *. lV u id otueus’ heavy kip Boots aud rfh ea J •u li i , everythiug to k nt Hit* w mts of tlio purchaser. We have, also, at OH Third N(roet.i n good line of FI.A.T£b We invite attention if Siioc?makers to our tck of FINDINGS. S nd ns yt>at orders -'.vc will execute th m with as much satisf lotion a* though bonght in person JXIX Ac Kill r IN l>, npMo if Macoui Cii< Job W ■ Ali -.h>suof J<-1> AV >j li done iu the lvosststyle*end atthelo-wost IWf-C'W, st the REGISTER JOB OFFICE. Oar Job Devabtmjuit in lur nisheci with a fine row eh i-hess tmd .1 the Intent and moat approved atjlm o type. IVe do better worktor lr*s money ilianauj offict in Hi State Give us your orders aud we will pUaa* yea. NO. k 2f>,