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3 I.' U Y YO i r® & ?w
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Of me. I called your attention to this clothing last
tv • sk but foe hi 8 so thoroughly convinced that you
e; ould see i:iy goods and note the quality, the finish,
thous trr > o and I > . . c\ \y price before you buy,l again you
a wiig tli Is line for your own profit. We lead all others
in clothing for men boys or children. Get your Oper¬
coat i 1 X\sJ. Q]’h w and save money.
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4 ’ THE N pi lli
(MRS.HOPKINS yip
MAKE i
C VNTGXLKT) FI.O i LAST
WKICK’S TALK BY COM.YIS
. SIGNER STEVENS.
tvhat as. John ton" says.
Air. Mark W, Johnson, in an r.rflfTt
v!.i. i njipearod i:i th • Southern Culti
vator of Oec. i, said:
“’i his gnus is eouinaratb ly a stran¬
ger t-» the cotton .-tfli.M, yet iu somo io
ct ill ties it is well known and has been
Cultivated for wauy years. It has s«tf
eml looal natne, , vrroneou-lv given to
it, such as ‘Lvrario n ,, 0 ,
grn-V’ Dani.Ji I :s t.ud'iri
Dtunc, hovvev- r, i< Km- -,v\ grasi
botanical mime is Jir-,;;ms s.-in-adi-n. it
kv.-pY itlenuK L.'bVtl ■ !! ; ' MoilK ! tm.ly, ’llbnll'pra. o; widen
tv all of t isn being more , i les:i
v Pi ude lor i-ay and winter ] >.-• :r-:igo. !
?, t lo:v . i.;u»np l "‘ v 1 a.ro !;,U auuuul ' 1 : p aud : «v>'<>1 ivtoiv
k T L «• -nnx m .iry, arid -oils,
w . ! m , ot.iv ■ gi-i" >; Wiotld fail
in. . " - - '•'‘"'■‘.u t.,e p-.Timi.ils me r.romu*
■ ■ is is pn i.iblv the be-r, a-it grews
fr, ly :y,',ive : ,rd ;G!mK
V> I the l.v; , gru- •„ . won it tail,
Tile ii 1 nunti.tl, grow.eg from
• u ! ,! ‘ ’ '•"uarknV.e.
Y ' Y • , 'tie \ 1 I n L • • !■',>!• M, '
pa.uum until hitter hi'nlifyi, part m .
Jur i ir ve.i.-.c to whtui it
Py : 5 ’ ■■ Gfi.l •!. 1 nvn,i d ioiy it.i
L, km . . !. ; ■■ '.'I 1 ’I’ 1 *
After it sheds its seed the ground may
be planted in some other cultivated
crop, such as will b> hid by not liter
than July, aud after cultivation cease*
tuc Restuc will cone again, In order
that it may r .-l fine ground the pas
taring sh uhl <\ use ab rat- May 1. A pot
tious... t. ,, , ..ip may be r-.-erved^ tor
continued muciflmiyor < ’ 0u ‘' ! **
••l.ik-- t:ll t:>e Pf.i-iin* f tmily. the Re*
l '“ ' 1 ; .• • ly during th,
from •inH'.p'Jfe
... : . ,ii ,
Cett t.i; hr- ; ,k soil luiv. In- --.dv-at: and
cover with harrow or a tree op drag.
Rescue grass will grow well on the gray
and sanity soils of the cotton belt, where
succeed, e, Timothy and clover will
not and ;:ie c ildest winter does
not injure it at all. Its chief value i«
for winter grazing, or cutting and fee l
ing'preqp, in such : >• v ions where thecli
mate and soil are not suited to the finer
AXiiSSOS. When winter’s chilly frosts
bite all other vegetation off the field
this grass remains green and sa a-ulent
rescuing the cattle from hunger, honcc
the mime."—State Agricultural Depart
SiGge *i«* CO YEAHiS'
EXPERIENCE
P sue
m
|*Y'A {A Trade DF.SiQiVS &1arxs
rrnd!”3 CCPTftlDRTS AC.
atketcH 2 n<5 <*e5C“}rt‘‘ .r i«a?
mro! us n er. pr.'hfitRy tifi onr cium- n fruc whftLitter •r m n
lions l*V rlL *u iViivntabie. Cn *rtt mu tile:
tent t • Y Hiuidbookon Phi Fater.u
MSSWSSSSRW Haieilcaii.
uiiiii'Sn -•AaMmSSSSi JSffi- l- ,CF -'.T
W mr«ra ik> you hear of our clothing
w Jttm v-% ■*> wmm * M ' * * our Ml •ess broods » am jacoaccS
' J
t een’s
* - •i V t LKitJ <i y.<< * P* 4 V C ;I! uan v mm prja* nml K',-2 ■BBHQR > I i/ N. Qi v*&vt
9
Her shoes, ’AT7."CCR» nfs f § i •*
taste. our t99* etc w
is tli? ,4 phice to buy economical! MP rf
YOurs for good goods,
CHAS. B. HUDSON.
BREEDING OF
DEPARTMKXT R ICl’L'KS TO SOM3
QUESTIONS ()\ Til IS INTER.
KSTI.NC, U'lUKCT.
3 FOR BESS
About 100 ol I bis lireed atul Short,
horns Have Recently IJoen Ir»«
ported Into the State.
QVESTlONk.-1. What is being don)
to secure for the farmers of Georgia
pure bred cattle that have been so thor
onghly ncolimatized that they will mil
'^'l^'inaturoly upon the farmers’ hands
3 Would it not pay s unoeuterpriaitH
person or firm to ostablish a stock lurm
a,Kl k ‘/°G l'-ure bred cattle that have
como xmmuue asniinst tHe disonsefY ihi l
have caused such discouragement to tb!
breeders of improved entile ‘ in Goo-©'
a „ would ,, uot , tho . Prison _ Connm.-moi ,
-
do something on tin < lino by pure', asm i
a herd of purebred cattle for urn pur-
8 pose of selling them between the ages G
aud 13 months to only those person)
iu Georgia who will be bound by law t<
us0 SUv ' h c “ttle for breeding purposei
al °ue, aud iu this state?
Axswkk— 1. The Agricultural Depart
n '-eut, in co-operation with Mr. Wade ol
tho Southern railway, Mr. Saw tell, Mr.
T. H. Martin, Dr. Ilunuicut and
caused to bo brought to Atlanta during
the lace Interstate Fair more than IOC
Hereford and Shorthorn beef cattle ol
from four to 12 months old. Comini
from an infected section of
they are considered acclimatized
immune. Somo of them were purs
breeds and others from three-fourths t«
br « ed ; J« d ^
nounoed them as fine beef cattle as werj
ever cxluoited m a southern state. Prol>
ably one-half of the Herefords wer*
bought at cheap rates nml sold at from
|555 to if ) each. About three-fourths ol
these cattle were sold during the fair iu!
Atlanta aud tho remainder at the Yal
dosta fair and distributed over various
sections of the state. Good results art
hoped for from this fresli importation
and distribution of improved cattle.
Answer to 2 and 3. It has been sug-1
Rested by some of our correspondents in ;
tereste.l in this subject that the j e gis-!
able lature fund might and well authorize appropriate the a reason j
pi Lou
commission to purchase for the prison
farm near Mdledgeville a herd of pur*
blood beef cattle, to be sold whip be
tween the ages of 2 aud 12 months
only those persons in tho state of Geor
gia who will bind themselves to use such
Cattle for breeding pnrj>oses alone auJ
only in this state. We think this a good
suggestion.
Here we would urge that Hereford)
be bred for beef and kept separate from
the Jerseys, wijicti should be reserved
for dairy purposes. It should bo remem
bered that tho pure dairy strain is fat
removed from the pure beef strain.—
State Agricultural Departrucnt.
WORN OUT LAND.
It Can lie Restored to i'ortIHty by
Jiulityou, R'crtlJfziir'.
Question. — What can be daua to re¬
store liiv worn out laud?
A gentleman, who removed to Geor.
gia from one of the states of the great
west a fe\Y years ngo, visited Atlanta
during the Inferstn o Kii-, held in Octo
bur. In speaking of worn out lands lm
said that Georgia farmers were not tbs
only ones who by an exhaustive system
of caltivutiou h vl deprived good lands
of their fertility. Waen people began
to settle up the western states and found
lauds that gave yield< of id and 50
bushels of wheat to the acre, they
used the same land year after year with
out returning anything to the soil, wifi
the result that the vield diminished nn
*
!' n ’ u , i frV ^ *« ° a . JM W W t . 1J . J 33 *
‘ ‘ '
,lial: couhl bo obtamed. , , Somo ot them
quit farming aud began the raising oi
blooded hinnSn.i catdl3 Aor ^ liair -' aud ,, f ° l . kec * .
8RV1U * tho manur e and applying it to
the lau d 1x1 order to im prove the pas
-
ture grounds. It was soon
that wherever cattle were kept the land
was being rapidly restored to its origi
ual fertility. Now there is no such
thing as worn out lands among good
farmers in the west. Skillful fertiliza
tion and rotuviou of crops keeps the
laud productive.
This gentleman purchased a plr.co in
Georgia on which most of the land was
what is called worn out. He went to
work to build it up according to the
methods so often recommended bv this
department, viz: judicious fertilizing
with both commercial aud homemade
fertilizers, studying the nature of his
soil and trying to supply it with the. ole
meats most necessary for its renewal.
Among other things he purchased
eral fine Jerseys, which supplied him
with milk aud butter uot only for homo
consumption, but also for sale. The
droppings from these cows were care
fully collected and applied to rite land in
some places alone aud iu others in corn
bkiation with other fertilizers. He
rotated his crops also and now considers
his farm among the best of its size in
middle Georgia. He regards the pea
vine hay as one of the best restorers of
laud and thinks highly also of the
beau. This gentleman says that no land
that has evor been good can become
exhausted that its fertility cannot be re
stored by skillful farming.—State Agrl
cultural Department,
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the * ■Zi.
SbWature of
*
Tho business man who moves
on overtakes the $.
r&k~ m -•-.V
[ r '~ ef& rfftMpi mmSm i m i
M m
f V A s j -• piP f
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MRS.HOPKINS
V MAKE Jt &$-<■>/ **
/
PTfSTs 53 K; *,*t nmi may be scoured Good by Ideas
gj f I US © our aid. Address.
u THE CAT ENT RECORD,
_ Baltimoie, Md.
Subscriptions to lira Patent Jteccra 00 ncr annum.
A FRICANA will cure Constipation and
a wonderful Liver medicine . T “y !♦
Georgia
Railroad.
For information an to Routes,
Schedules, and Rates, both
■nai L» 1 m-tB cw if i.
a 9 9
write to either of the undersigned,
You .. wul receive prompt reply and
reliable, information.
O C MeVILLKX, A G JACKSON
G A Pass. Dept. G P A.
G II WILCOX, S A.,
Atsgissta, Gn.
S K Magi 11, C. I) Cox.
Gen’I Agn, Cen’I Agt,
Atlanta, Athens.
\y yy ardwick, W C McMilleu
Gen’l Agt. * S. F, & P A.
Macon. Macon.
MR Hudson, W M McGovern.
T. P. & P. A, Gen’I Agt,
'Atlanta, c.n. Augusta
l‘oi- Sale..
j am prerared to fill lumber bills
on sllor: , r . oticc . if yon „ ee d lumber
‘ k
•
M L Wood.
H. H- MCDON A L. & SON
■PRESIDE:.NT DENTISTS.S6,
AH work guaranteed to please
Office Up Stail’S OV6r J. II. Al
, N store.
1 ' b.
. . . . . Ga
CITY ME irxj SHOP
HENRY REAGAN
PROPRIETOR.
My shop is comfortable.
My towels are clean.
My toois are always keen.
My attention is respectful.
Mv aim—to please all.
Give me a call when you need
dreesing up.
sew ng fgjP L' |i ■ y
liadi n o III£l cro
I ft »
i have opened up a meat market in Coen;->r store room
in Night building,
WWW v<.e©3 p n'\G3, \resh rnesp:
eiW. n ad r 2iBQne:j\
pr\G0s.
\ so\\c\ith © uairor
©2© \ t On© ©^ on\e.
Give me chi f a ei ii.
M . ih 6ia^
•MM r^ws c©-:. i-jT'dc'S Jla.
\A/
D
HE A SI®* ISrl quarters
FOR Sfis W iSM SPECTACLES
A.1N"D EYE GLASSES.
| .fly
m
The s n? r gn LU 7 Brag ompaoy.
STILISH. M hnrwmH u LINER!
good’s bought out Mrs. Genie Hay
miliinery business I expect, to offer
to the people, tills season, a handsome line
ot new an 1 siylisii millinery at low prises
——It sliali be my aim to please all custo
mers and i invite all to call and see me.
----—------=
--1 have engaged Mrs. J. A, Guinn as
trimmer and feel sure that perfect satisfac¬
tion will be given all. Hoping to have
your trade, I am
A *Ar.V.W AAM^tW-w/, ♦AV-’stftVAA ♦ AAibVU
......
RESPECTFULLY,
M Lena Bislinp^
I
F is
111* 111 gHBBOBfs rmvfsmk isuaMaiifi E 3 t2T®l3SS «ks*s3 si 4 B it
CONYRS OIL GO’S CtM.
Latest MUNGER System.
Makes best TURN OUT.
Makes REST SAMPLE
Buyers prefer and pay more for it.
Highest price paid for sound seed,
TRY us and be CONVINCED.
Conyers Oil Co’s. Gin.
John D. Scott, Mgr. Gin,
i
For the cheapest cash
grocery store in town call
On N. P. Richardson.
c vv/^ s M w MM s. Ji Va ^ ©
Corner D. M. a imand
Building.