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Bale of Cotton to Every Acre.
Macon Telegraph.
“My cotton ne\er suffers frqm ex
cessively hot weather,” said Mr.
Frank Woodall of Jones county.
“For twenty years I have been
planting my cotton in the water
furrow, just as corn is planted, and
in the last plowing I have to be
careful not to throw dirt on the
bolls. The effect of planting down
N against the hard dirt iB that the tap
root quickly strikes moisture and it
goes right on to growing, and then
the lateral roots spread out in the
soft earth and thej are never dis
turbed during cultivation.”
Capt. W. A. Davis heard the con
versation. He remarked: “Mr.
Woodall rarely makes Iobs than a
bale to the acre, either,”
“Yes, our farmers make their big
mistake in cultivating cotton,” con
tinued Mr. Woodall. “They plant
it wrong to start with, and then
they cultivate it wrong and plow it
too late. My cotton is as fine as
any that grows anywhere in the
world. Frequently one limb of one
of my v stalks will have thirty to forty
bollB, and when my 'neighbors’ cotp
ton sheds and turns brown, my cot
ton continues to flourish and make
fruit. I have occasionally experi
mented, planting some of my cotton
on the beds as my neighbors have
done, and some in the water furrow,
and the weather would ruin one
field, but the ootton in the water
furrow would thrive. I have made
as high as thirty-three bales on
twenty-six aores.”
“Don’t your neighbors learn any
thing from your exaniple?” inquired
the reporter.
“Oh, yes; some of them adopt my
method, nud they, make fine cotton.’*
“What caused you to try the wa
ter furrow?”
“About twenty yearB ago I put
some green cotton seed under my
corn, which was planted in the wa
ter furrow. The corn was away
down below the level, and the
ground was moist down there. The
cotton seed sprouted, and I told my
hands to cover all of them so as to
give the corn a ohance. They work
ed at it, but a very good stand of
cotton was left. I continued to try
to kill it out until it got up to con
siderable size, and it grew and flour
ished so well, in spite of my fight
against it, that I gathered about
three-quarters of a bale to the acre
on the lund, besides a good corn
crop. While that cotton was doing
so well other cotton was turning
brown and was shedding. This
stood the hot woather or the wet
weather without a sign of deteriora
tion, and I decided that I had dis
covered the proper way to grow cot
ton, and I planted some that way
the next year, and after that I aban
doned the old plan of bedding for
cotton. I go down deep to put the
seed next to the moisture every
time.”
“How do you cultivate the cot
ton?” 1
“I use a double plowstook which
carries a couple of soooters at a
time. The first plowing I use a
two-inoh scooter next to the ootton
and the rear stock brings a three-
inoh scooter; at the next plowing I
put a three-inch soooter next to the
cotton ayd a four-inch behind that
one; and then I use a four-inoh and
a six-inch scooter at the third
plowing. From that time on I use
the biggest scrapes I can find. My
cotton is planted in five-foot rows,
and the limbs always lap. I never
break the middles deeply, because I
want to be sure never to disturb the
roots. My hoe hands never have
anything to do but chop to a stand.
The plows keep out the grass.”
Rev. Max Halpern, cantor of Beth
Israel, the mother of orthodox Ju-
daism in Boston, iB reported to have
brought to light the true old He
brew tunes, which for centuries have
been forgotten or kept in false
forms. His unearthing of these
tunes makes possible to the Jews a
worship which was in pracetice
thousands of years ago.
Since Cuba took her tariff gun
and went pot hunting for revenue
birds, her financial estimate looks
more hopeful. She now figures that
her annual income will be $18,000,-
000, against an expense of $15,000,-
000,--Constitution.
- ■ 1 m *
The Only Guaranteed Kidney Cure
is Smith’s Sure Kidney Cure. Your drug
gist will refund your money if after tak-
iiii one bottle you are not satisfied with
results: 50 cents at Oater’s Drugstore.
Subscribe for The Home Joobnap.
Many Cubans Want Office.
New York.—Captain Boyce of the
schooner Montana, which arrived at
this port recently from Baracoa, Cu
ba, with a cargo of 570,000 cocoa-
nuts, after a voyage of ten days, re^
ported a strange state of affairs in
that city, which is "causing a lot of
trouble to. the new Cuban govern
ment.
Recruiting was begun all over Gujj
ba for the formation of a native mi
litia, to be modeled somewhat after
the fashion of the national guard,
but the martial spirit has taken such
a hold on thp people that the native
“veterans” of the late trouble with
Spain are clamoring for recognition,
to the exclusion of the younger ele
ment, and, while not organized, the
“veterans” are demanding privileges
similar to those aocorded to the
Grand Army of the Republic.
Capt. Boyce said: “Most of those
fellows down there worked on sugar
plantations, in refineries and in to
bacco fields, and they are the most
ragged looking lot you ever saw.
There is no doubt they fought all
right—-when they had to—and now
they are fired up again to go to war,
but they don’t know who with, so
they are fighting among themselves
for military rank and preference in
the new Cuban national guard.
“There are only about 2,000 peo
ple in Barkcon, which is in the
northwest corner of the island, and
they get little news from the out
side world, not having cable com
munication.
“When the movement started,”
said the captain, “all those fellows
wanted to join right away, but no
one wanted to be a high private.
There were twenty would-be sol
diers who claimed the right to be
generals, sixty or seventy wanted to
be colonels, two or three, hundred
majors, and captains and lieutenants
in crowds. There were a few who
expressed their willingness to servo
as sergeant majors, and I believe
three sergeants were enlisted up to
the time I left, but there was no one
in the port who would allow ra*-*
dignity to bo insulted by enlis' 1 ■.
as a private. Several colored “g •-
tlemen” wanted to lead the pro- -
sion as drum majors, and I daiu
they can scare up a few drumixiip
aud buglers, but from what I saw
up to the time I sailed I guess the
national guard will look more like a
procession of New York barbers on
a field day—all officers.”
The Wrong Citation.
The retirement of Justice Gray of
the United States Supreme Court
has furnished a text for many rem
iniscences of his earlier days, says
the New York Tribune. While he
was a member of the Supreme court
of Massaohusetts^he had an amusing
experience with a certain Boston
lawyer,' an exceedingly pious man
with a taste for evangelization, who
had his letterheads printed with a
verse from Scripture in large type
following the name and address. On
one occasion, having to make an ex
parte preliminary argument before
Justice Gray in chambers, in whioh
it would be necessary to disclose
certain parts of his client’s case
which he desired not to make gen
erally public until the trial, he wrote
the judge a note, asking that he be
allowed an opportunity to speak to
him in private. He was somewhat
chagrined when his note came back
to him with a scrawl across the bot
tom: “Request deolined, with a
suggestion from the court that
oounsel base future petitions on a
more appropriate citation.”
For a moment he could not make
out the meaning of this, as he was
not aware that he had quoted any
law; but glancing up the page he
discovered that he had written his
note on a letterhead bearing this
text:
“Ye, are bought with a price.”
Two Mammoth Buildings.
World’s Fair, St. Louis.—The con
tracts for grading the sites of the
Palaces of. Agriculture and Horti
culture at the World’s Fair has been
let. The work will require the
handling of 252,000 cubic yards of
earth, carrying it an average dis
tance of 600 feet. The agricultural
building, according to revised plans,
will be 600 by 1600 feet, covering
an area of nearly a million square
feet, or more than 22 aores. In this
great building will be displayed the
extensive exhibits of foods, dairy
products, bees and bee produets,
farm machinery, and the agricultu
ral exhibits of states and nations of
the world. The location of the
building is near tHe central part of
the Exposition grounds and its im
mense size, upon the elevated site
which has been allotted to it, will
make it perhaps the most prominent
of the fifteen great exhibit palaces.
The Palace of Horticulture will
stand directly south of the Palace
of Agriculture and will be 400 by
800 feet, having an area of 320,000
square feet or seven and a half
acres. One room in this building
400 feet square will be devoted to
fruits and fruit products, another
room 200 by 400 feet to a conserva
tory with floral display, and still an
other room 200 by 400 feet to the
accessories of, horticulture, such as
implements and applianoes for the
cultivation and handling of fruits
and flowers. The elevation of these
palaces is such as to afford opportu
nity for terraced gardens and other
beautifuUandscape effects, while the
outdoor exhibits of agriculture and
horticulture will be very extensive
andinteresting both to the general
visitor and the practical grower or
expert. Frederick W. Taylor is the
chief of the department of agricul
ture and acting chief of horticul
ture. The plans for both these
great palaces are now being prepar
ed in the Apartment of works under
Isaao S. Taylor, the director of the
department, and it is the expecta
tion that they will far surpass in
• >nty and arrangement the similar
i>,tMhh at any former exposition.
——
Things to Know.
Stain of fruit, etc., may be taken
out of wash goods by first saturat
ing the spot with coal oil, then
washing as usual.
To make sugar syrup so that it
will not crystalize add a pinch of
grated alum the size of a small pea
to each pint of sugar. Cover with
hot water, and let boil five minutes.
This can be flavored if desired.
A pinch of salt will make the
white of an egg beat quicker, and a
<j!finoh of borax in cooked starch will
make the clothes stifter and whiter.
Take peeling from lemon and or
anges, throw into cold water, place
on the stove, and when they come
to a boil drain the water off and
cover again with cold water. Let
them boil fifteen minutes. Make a
syrup of * sugar and water, put the
peeling into this, and boil until
transparent. Roll in sugar, then
place on a plate to dry. This is fine
in fruit-cake. September Woman’s
Home Companion.
0-4 ■
A great Boheme is suggested by
the Figaro of Paris for the utiliza
tion of the rainfall of the Pyrenees.
It is proposed to dam the valleys all
along the ehain, hold up all the
mountain torrents in a series of ar
tificial lakes, regulate the overflow,
run it through turbines, and so gen
erate electric power. It is calcula
ted that no less than 10,000,000
horse-power could be obtained from
the Pyrenean range, and this power
oould be supplied at about one-sixth
of the cost of that produced by
steam.
A Parson’s Noble Act,
“I want all tho world to know”
writes Rev. C. J. Budlong, of Ash
away, R.J., “what a 'thoroughly
good and reliable medicine I found
in Electric Bitters. They cured
me of jaundice and liver troub
les that had caused me great suf
fering for many years. For a gen
uine all round cure they excell
anything I ever saw.” Electric
Bitters are the surprise of all for
their wonderful work in Liver,
Kidney and Stomach troubles.
Don’t fail to try them. Only 50
cents. Satisfaction is guaranteed
at Holtz,claw’s drugstore.
Prof, Alexander Graham Bell of
telephone fame is reported, accord
ing to the Western Electrician, to
be interested in the construction of
an airship, the building of which he
is at present supervising. 'It is said
the machine will utilize many prin
ciples of the kite.
The adoption in Mexico of Amer
ican styles in clothing has been very
marked in recent years. Well-to-do
Mexicans are discarding the old
“Charro” suits, high sombreros and
pointed shoes for American style
clothing, hats and shoes.
Stops the Cough and Works off
the Cold.
Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets
cures a cold in one day. No cure,
No pay^ Price, 25 cents
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