70 THE FLORIDA DISPATCH, FARMER AND FRUIT-GROWER. [JANUARY 28, 1892 aUF y out Fol s. Pecans. NEW KODAKS. yield twice the amount of feed. I haveno TIME OF PLANTING. trouble in saving my seed canes; I - The best time perhaps for plantingtrees simply bank them in the field where Soldier and Newsboy Meet. is in the fall from November they grow and cover them with a little . One night sometime before Christmas i You press the straw and a layer of earth to keep out General Swayne was down town and to middle of December, or as soon as the frost; water must not stand about boarded a Fourth Avenue car to ride they have shed their leaves in the fall. bulte". them. . home. After he had ridden some blocks the conductor came in to collect his fare. Spring pitting from February i until we do the rest. One of my two Jerseys, now three With the confidence born of over half a the buds begin to swell in the spring; years old, at the age of a year took century of practice the old soldier put the "salt sickness," and for about a his hand in his trouser pocket to get a the nuts may be planted any time to SenD Sew Stiles and Sizes she skeleton. She was a living ALL LOADED WITH Films. year coin. He fumbled around for a moment Transparent advantage from of but found nothing. Then he tried an- season ripening until For sale by all Photo. Stock Dealers.THEEASTMANCOMPAN. ate barely enough to keep the life in f other pocket, but with the same result. late in the spring, varied by con- her. I tried all kinds of remedies but The conductor was getting impatient, dition in latitude; the middle of March Send for Catalogue. ROCHESTER. N. Y. they did no good. At last I tried the and the General dove his hand first into advertised in Tilghman powder one pocket and then into another. Finally the latest admissable period usually; Cassava an All-Around Feed. your he blurted out: the greater delay in time of planting, Editor Farmer and Fruit Grower: paper and it has brought her out in "Why, bless me I haven't a penny in always remember, the greater necessity i Cassava and crab-grass hay are my I great shape; she is fine and fat. If I change about me!" for had another case of "salt sickness" I reliance thorough previous for horse soaking of the great my and cows The ill-concealed, mocking smile of in-. would not be without this powder if I nuts in from water six and alone furnishes two to days be- cassava the greater credulity that appeared on the face of the : conductor.was sufficiently exasperating fore putting into the ground;; plant in part of my chicken feed. I shouldnot had to pay $5 a package for it. in itself, but a moment later ho said, rows about ten inches apart, covering know how to get along withoutmy WM. FISHER. rather brutally" : "Well, yer know the three inches deep, put fertilizers three cassava patch. A year ago I had Clay Co. .-.-. rules; see? The most interested spea a- inches under the nuts, cultivate well a half-acre, and it was really more What folly! To be without BEUCHAM'S PILLS. tor of this little affair in ther was a one-legged newsboy. He had watchedthe by keeping the ground level and clean.If than I needed. I simply let it stand little scene from the beginning and not desirable to plant out permanently where it grew (the winter was warm) Notice of Incorporation.Notice . had lost nothing. The boy was not at one year root, prune themin and I gave it freely to my chickens all Is hereby given that the undersigned overly strong, but there was that about the row by running a sharp summer. It furnished all the persons have formed a corporation under the spade nearly him which typifies the New York street general incorporation law ofthe State of Florida. Arab, and is found in no other boy in under and cutting the tap-root eigh- feed except hay required by my horse Car The name and Manufacturing of this incorporation shall" be Its"Florida any part of the world but the metropolis.Alert teen inches below the surface as soon and two cows for six months, and pal places busines shall Company.be at Jacksonville princi-and quick, impulsive, generous, sensi- in the fall after the leaves have fallenas that and the house scraps were aboutall Green Cove Springs. The general nature of the tive to touches of human nature and# practicable, this will tend to developa that my forty chickens had for a business purchase to, sale be transacted and leasing is the of manufacturing railroad cars judgment far beyond his years. growth of lateral branch coaches rolling stock and railroad equipment of strong General Swayne's position was humili- or year.Last every description; the conducting of a general ating enough without thq conductor's roots, and when finally removed to year I planted only about a lumber of and milling busines and,and the general busi- ness manufacturing repairing coarse reminder that he would have to their permanent place either in two or quarter of an acre, because I find that carriages vehicles tools, and wood and wagons iron pay or walk and just as he gathered up three years, it can be done with littleif amount is sufficient for my stock. I work of every description including the powerto his cruthes to leavo the the hold buy, mortgage or otherwise convey real car oneP-legged any loss. If the nuts are planted bring up a big wheelbarrow load every and personal property, ship building of all kinds, newsboy opposite,called out kindly: including repairs,also house building of all kinds, where the is tree to stand other For "Say, Cap'n there's a pair of us; I'll permanently, day. my cows I cut it upa including repairs. The amount of capital stock lend you a nickel." the soil should be loosened to the little, but the horse and the chickens authorized is one hundred and fifty thousand The boy's hand was stretched out toward depth of two feet for a space of, three take the roots whole and help them- (shares$150,000), of)dollars.divided one hundred($into too)fifteen dollars hundredisoo each. Eighty( ) the crippled veteran and his feet in diameter and well fertilized. selves. I got a new horse lately and thousand ($80,000))dollars in the par value of said whole stock shall be payable in the following property. manner indicated that he did not especially around the outside. Plant he was not used to it, but by mixing to-wit: The present established business and good want to the old'hian see walk, who, like will of J. G. and M. C. Blain, Trustees,at Green himself, was a cripple. The General, three or four nuts in a place, covering it with oats in small pieces he soon Cove Springs, Fla., as manufacturers of cars, touched by the boy's natural good heartedness about three inches deep and thinningout got to like it, and now he bites into it rolling stock and other articles, including: the machinery, buildings, tools, plant stock, con- and instinctive desire to spare in the fall, leaving the strongest. as heartily as he would into an ear of tracts, leases, choses in action, and all other chat the old soldier's pride by calling it a loan, PeCans have an off therefore corn. tels and assets of said trustees now invested or took the money, and, paying his fare, year, engaged in said business,the valuation of which took a seat beside the boy. when planting a grove of 500 trees, Pecking the .roots to pieces gives said property is fixed by the incorporators at There is a Masonic fraternity among plant 100 trees every year for five the chickens the exercise all chickens said eighty capital thousand stock($80,000)is to) dollars.be paid in The in cash balance in re-of cripples that is entirely intuitive, and in years, you will then have fruit every need to keep them healthy and fresh, sponse to such calls as may be made from time to time by the direction of the corporation. The a few minutes the child and the old man and they lay all winter with year. eggs onlya highest amount of indebtedness or liability to were the warmest of friends. The two SOIL. handful of which the corporation can at any time subject talked on several subjects, in which the corn a day. itself is three hundred and fifty thousand($150,000)) boy's life on the streets seemed to be the The most advantageous soil is best My land is very thin high pine, on dollars shall, exclusive commence of its its capital existence stock.at the The time company of popular theme. The little fellow took a indicated by observing the conditions the backbone of the peninsula, righton filing with the Secretary of State of the State of great liking to the old man whom he had where the pecan or hickory the old Seminole trail, yet I raisea Florida and the county clerks of Duyal and Clay befriended but he naturally counties, Florida copies of these articles;and its was very shy regard-: thrive. Its, habitat is usually on made good crop of cassava after a vege- existence shall terminate in ninety-*inejog( )years ing any references to himself or family, table thereafter, unless lawfully extended. The busi- except that he had a widowed mother alluvial lands or river bottoms, where crop without any fertilizer. Last ness or the company shall be conducted by a and he supported her by selling papers. the soil is rich, deep, friable, moist, year, for instance, I raised my cassava board the annual of three meeting directors of the who stockholders shall be elected, which at No, he never got sick, "han't time ter." but not watersoaked, except from an where I had had Irish potatoes the shall be held at such time as the by-laws may Finally, by a dint of questioning, the occasional overflow year before, (the potatoes were ferti- provide. The undersigned shall compose its first General secured the boy's address and an event by no board of directors, who shall serve until their the two separated.On means unfavorable to its thrift when lized, of course), and I did not use a successors are elected. G. BLAIN, his arrival home General Swayne not too prolonged or of over frequent spoonful of fertilizer. It is easier to JOIIN M. C. BLAIN, related the circumstance to his wife, and occurrence, still as a tree it adapts raise than sweet potatoes and will i-7-5t GEO. G. GLEASON. they agreed that on Christmas day they itself and will succeed satisfactorily- would pay the boy the nickel and brighten up the Christmas day for him. growth and bearing, in a varying degree Acer pany'ng i h a"puitrait of the late Prof. Ett Then it was that the pathetic part of this upon everx class of soils, and the 1 wart E. Phdps, M. D., LL. D. of Dartmouth story came out. On Christmas !Irs. writer has seen good results both on Cod ege. lIe was a strong,able man, who stood Swayne drove to the house designated thin sandy lands as upon the pine high in the literary and scientific worlds. It is not by the little fellow as his home with the flats however the. f: known but it unquestionably isnevertheless intention of making the day a happy one ; generally the truth for him. Imagine her shock when she deep alluviums, or river lands, even ;' z that Prof. Phelps was the discoverer of what is was told that the bright little cripple those liable to occasional overflow, i a known to the Medical profession and Chemists who not many days before had befriended and such as are in consequence of little i universally as Paine's Celery Compound, unquestionably the General was dead and buried. value for other purposes constitute ; one of the most valuable discoveries Mrs. Swayno was deeply, affected. Theboy's of this This remarkable those of value the century. compound i is greatest to plant pecan - mother in need and was though y not a nervine, an essence, a sarsaparilla dead, he still was aiding his mother, for upon, and we draw special atten- or any the nickel he "loaned" the General tion to a fact of such deep signifi- R devised article, but a discovery, and it marks a proved the means of brightening up the cance. For the rest it is not advisableto "", -, distinct step in medical practice and the trEatment mother's life and horn-Boston Post.GONSUMPTIONP. select land to plant on with too of nervous complications the greatest of all modern diseases-Paresis. It has been compact a subsoil likely to hold surface . . "' freely :admitted)" the best medical talent in the " water or keeping the roots soaked beneath land and also the 'lf G// by leading chemists and scien- too continuously, though even tists, that fornervoin troubles, nervous exhaust- The I haVe a positive remedy for the above disease; by ltd these least desirable of all lands to Late PRO. P ELPS.;onj jnsornnilt del'ilitysenility, and even the use thousands hare been of cases cured.of the Indeed worst eo kind strong and is my of fait longstanding I' plant on* are not barren of good results -I dreaded and terrible Paresis, nothing has ever been di'Cfwered which reaches the disorder In ita efficacy that I will send TWO BOTTLES ruse;pnh ; a happy mean in respect to and restores health equal to this discovery of Prof. Phelps.DON' . a VALUABLE TREATISE on this disease to sue ferer who'W send me their Express and P.O.address.any moisture afforded is the point to , T RP FOOLED *># ftoim* of Dealers whn bare imttatum of fHa , nond Dvc hothhequa4 T. A. Slocum, M. C., 183 Pearl St., N. Y. aim at. the< />/ajnd/