Newspaper Page Text
==
MRI . .*5.00 1.00.
ini; i
' 0, 1889.
■■* "3"" el Spewing Co.
Bates.
r ___._______. are ter the first
fifty rents for each counted subsequent
• or fees to bs ae a
r in advance.
»wl*h-
rate, a* (or the Dally
gjaiwtagB i
Record, a-great
ably dfetcossee the
This is much bet-
politic* in the
fert M '
...... . ’i -g ^
has been .........., expressed
" J* ^ Washington
»t t the the Wash- Wash-
n f ,
in New York. This
n; Miss Washington is
assistant postmaeier-
and is too poor to
in New York, but
to be keenly alive
other great kinsman,
she bears with dignity
pride. It is said
Kembles the “Im-
.n any of the race
L -hi springs. She is the
hter of Samuel
brother of George.
, George Stephen
was raised and educat-
I Washington, and was
five nephews named by
as executors of his win,
loro be willed one of his
Miss Washington is a
of the Hon, William Tern
ngton, and a great-niece of
“After the war” self-
was her only estate, and she
the government treadmill,
felt It not only a duty,
wish is to remain undis-
her position, and let those
able do herkins-
honor. 7
I IB THE WAY OUR EXPORT
m
TRADE IS LOST.
“ ‘ the trust was organ-
re sugar
lie country’s export trade in
I sugars had risen to more than
1 a year, in spite of the
i of the beet root product
But the sugar refiners
more could be gained by
tariff against American
rbehind the and as a result
trade in refined sugars
been destroyed. While refined
i come in over the tariff
> trust has forced up the price
i that none can go out.
i is but one effective way of de-
j the Sugar Trust, and that is
r reducing the duty cmrefinedsuga
a revenue standard. Then, should
I home monopoly send up the price
0 high, the foreign sugar would be
jfht in to redress the balance in
■ of’American consumers. Under
i American eon-
i are at the mercy of the Sugar
t, add will continue at its mercy
»long as the prohibtory duty on rs-
i shall stand.
CURRENT ITEMS.
Pro*reive Chicago.
(Ihicogo Time*.
The Tramp m the Garden Racket.
Oil City Blissard.
of the year when
never labors
i then get drunk and forget all
, the g arden.
Wise m Yew <««.
Jer«ey shore Vidoite.
i not always the man who looks
knows the most, but
n’t know this so it
to look just as wise ns
r CEB.
Spring Poet Missing.
b? We
on this
inspires
no
I skies—not a line con-
i Tees Are SOU Cold.
; Patriot
Which President
recognise paignof the Bon- ser-
Yt remind one
by any
fa: -■ *. -
.
sisffaUre _______ _JfoS™
.......
and through it upon the nerves and
* body here stocks * meant of or grain a man! eepeciall; on “ the By £5»i SnAfiUlfttlOQ 1£|
... ex-
tremely generic, and would admit j of
a volume in reply and ______ then not ex-
haust ___ suited __ the subject medical i» practitioner • question
more to a
who has had a stock exchange
clientage than to one of the victims.
But as yo
terest SsSrdrtssrttor: your reader*, I will speak a*
buys more than he needs for his
for the use of his element family of is
and there is an
failure in any business
where a man buys more than he has
ready engaged cash to in pay general for. merchandise Every mer¬
chant retail, is
business, at wholesale or a
speculator, is and in one who lew buys dan- on
credit always more or
ture is to become successful, what was
anxiety becomes in part exhilaration
at success, and if a loss is developed, and
actual or increased. prospective, All the mental anxiety anxiety
care are
tells on the nervous system. If it is
great enough fast. But to cause if the sleeplessness sufferer has it
wears fast. But
good digestion, avoids strong and equable of eat-
circulation and excess long
ing and drinking, he can fora it fi
time chronio defy acute. anxiety, Now, whether the only dif¬
or
ference between and stock speculation on
the exchange invoice of general a country merchandise store
it upon that the amount bought sold in
or
stocks is generally larger In propor¬
tion to ant capital still, employed, the stock and, exchange more
furnish a constant barometer
that speculator can con-
asuro his losses or his
profits, which white he constant notices, fluctuations, keep him
all a
constant pendulum between a smile
* ir. If a merchant goes into
on (10,000 he can buy from
If speculator o #25,000 in worth with #10,000 of goods. he
a buy #100,000 goes worth of stodks. The
can months
merchant wants two to four
before he can estimate his profit or
loss. The stock speculator finds that
in an hour he has a profit of say #10,-
000 which he may take j the next hour
the profit is all gone, the next he sees
a loss market of #1,500. full and at night with he prob¬ quits
the of anxiety the
ably a loss of #500 to commence
But next added day’s to watch these daily of fluctuations. and normal
fluctuations there is the effect of
panics, which usually occur at the end
of a protracted season of RT'--- !i ~
and the profits of weeks are
swept away in an hour. N
if I were a medical man I should not
bo afraid to express the belief that
quick transition from a Panama sun
bath to a Dakota blissard would have
a tendency hid to produce colds and if the
ally victim end in phthisis weak lungs pulmonalis, it might unless natur¬
death occurred from shock and gave a
more speedy exit lathe wuheway, always
reasoning ■JL..... a prion, I would
guess that a nervous man' would come
out of a series of panics with shattered
nerves. nerves, This ims reasoning reas is well backed
up by the tho record record of men in active
speculations whom who I have known
within tho the last called twenty-five successful yeans
Among probably the so wealth which others men
covet dear *---jj may ave if been corroding bought at too
be a cost, paid d even for by -Brook- care can
ever lyn Eagle. money.
There is more Catarrh In this section ot the
country until than the last all other few diseases put supposed together,
and years was to
falling to with sdies, local treatment, and by constantly pronounc¬
cure
ed it incurable. Science has proven catarrh
to be aconstitntional disease, and thereto]
requires constitutional treatment. Hal)
Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney
A A Co.. Co.. Toledo. Toledo. Ohio, Obu„ Is the only constitution-
al cure on the market, ‘ Set. * It Itis is taken taken Internal! internally
in doses from 10 di rops to a teaspoonful. ft
n the blood and mucus mu
Her one h butt-
>oure. Send
for circulars and testimonials. Address, P.
J. CHENEY Sold A CO., Toledo, O.
«r by Druggists, 75c.
The Invalids U»p«.
Many seemingly insurable eases of blood
poison, catarrh, scrofula and rheumatism
have been cured by B, B. B. (Botanic Blood
Balm), made by tee Blood Balm Co., Atlan¬
ta, Ga. Write to them far book ailed with
convincingproof.
0 W. B. Snider, living sevenmiles from Ath¬
ens.,Ga., writes: “For several years! suffered
and with pronounced running ulcers, incurable. which doctors X single treated bottle
of B. B. B. did me more good than ail the
doctors. I kept on Using it and every nicer
fc incurable, as it
had resisted all treatment, It delighted him,
and continuing its use he was was cured sound
and well.”
wife R. had M. Lawson, scrofula East 15 PolntGi She writes! kept “My
She fast years. her hair and grav¬ skin ■W-
en* won#, her
and broke out appetite fearfully. followed. Debility, After emaciation physician*
no
and numerous advertised medicines tailed. 1
tried '“^“Sj^r, B. B. B., and her recovery was rapid
Baltimore, Md., writes: “I B
suffersu... m weak back and rheumatism.
B. B. has proven to be the only medicine that
gave me relief.”
Advice to Mothers.
U.4. WikslowV texwaixa By kit
for children teething, is the prescription
nt ..a* of the twat female nurses and
ph ■ snunns in th«- United States, aud
ha* been used for forty year* with i
failing sttCMMs children. by million* of mo
tor tin it During the proas*
of t< -thing its value is iucaleulablo
•v*w v >*
health r th-il lldaal reets tbe moth r
Prior 26 oestg a bottle. nugaortftwly.
A Fish Valued by a Lady.
- v > • - -j? #
>L %5Hi
„ ___'to stand on a
fl'erod from lum-
i used to crawl in-
.
foure, rear up when
_
he came dose to a boy beat standing Him savagely on a
form with and proceed I believe to ho thought tho
a cane.
exercise was good Eton. for his Dr. lumbago. llawtry
Then I wont to
whs the head master. Ho was an
amiable and kindly man and a fine
gentleman. Ho probably flogged about
twenty He did boys it with every exquisite day on an politeness, average.
and, except on rare occasions, the
whole thing was a farce. Four cuts
were tho ordinary exceeded. application The and ten
cuts were never pro¬
ceeding* boy took hau place taste in public, for the and thing any
who a
might be a spectator. If the victim
flinched there was a howl of execra¬
tion. Far from objecting to this the
doctor approved or it, I remember
once thata boy fell on his kuees and im¬
plored him to spare him. “1 shall not
condescend to flog you, but t leave
you to your young friends,” to be said of the the
doctor. 1 happened one
friends, and I remembers ’ *'
young kicking the boy round the
in
rangle for about half an hour.
Laboucbero in London truth
•‘Can’t sat a thing.” Hood’s Soisaparilla
U a wonderful medicine tor creating an appe¬
tite, regulating digesti on,an d giviugstrengtli.
The Georgia Midland RR
•^hertest *»u«l Best Line
With Through Coach
es Uotween
COLUMBUS and ATLANTA.
i VN LY ONE CHANG E TO
Washington, Mew York,
Nashville or Cincinnati.
Schedule in Eflect Sunday, Jan. 8,1888.
TRAIN NORTH
Arrive Orlffin DePOt ’ C ° 1UmbU9 ' * ’ ‘ 'NT
Amy#liraon ...#**«.»»• **««»,*»• . 0.00
Arrive Atlanta............ 6:40 “
SOUTH BOUND TRAIN
Leaves Atlanta....................8:lBp. Griffin................*...4:05 “ no.
Leaves
Arrives in Columhns........ ..7.-C6 “
ACCOMMODATION TRAIN
SOUTH BOOHD—(DJ.ILT KTCKPT SUNDXV).
Leave Columbus—Midland depot, 6:50 a.
Arrives at Griffin.................3:60 p.
Arrive* at McDonough......... .3:31
aoUTU so »d -(duly bxoept Sunday).
Leave AUwita ...............-.....6:50 a. nc
Leave Leave McDonough................6:50 Griffin.....................8 SO *• “
Arrive Columbus, Midland depot, .2:05 p. ip
BPECIAX TRAIN - Sunday Only.
Leave Colnmbus—Union Depot, 8 ,35 a.
Arrive Griffin.............. ,11:40
Arrtvs Arrive McDonough.............12:20 Atlanta......... 1:10 p. u
at
RE vURNING-South Bound.
Lesve Atlanta....................6:50 a. m.
l^ave MCDonoogh.......... .7:35
Lojsve Griffin........ 8:28 “
Arrive Ootembue—Union Depot, 11:25 “
Ask for tickets to Atlanta and points bc-
‘ “ a Midland UR. Tick-
and at the office
M. E. GRA V , Snpl.
C. W. GIIEARS, Columbus, Gn.
Gen’l Pass. a-»t.
If You Have
gssac 1 ® 8
Ms Pills
rellel' from tueui. Bflcely »ns»r ceateO.
SOLD EVERYWHERE,
HINDBRCORN8.
PARKERS GINGER TONIC
The best of ail remedies for
the moat TffcrlWe euro for.
Coughs, Cei4»« of tha llronchitb brtathing and I
affcctioas proraousrefrwihing \
organ#. It
•letp improve# tho appetite,
overcomes gives nervou# life and proNtratioii, strength
and pew
to the weak gpd ggod, 50 c, m»d $x.po« St Drggutats.
.''3V, \^v«rtisen?nu
Road Carts m
Ten per than cent, anybody- cheaper Buggies!
*ar- Don* buy before getting our price* and
catalogue*.
$75 to who $250*SS?To? tarnish A working MONTH for horse ns. can and be Agent modi give
their preferred whole time can the business. a Spare
to mo
meats may be profitably employed also. A
l&WWTw, N. B.—Ladies employed also. Never mind
about sending stamp for reply. Come quick.
Youre ter Ids. B., F. i. A Co. npSwedfim
) fit. NAIMS’ aoiDCK JPts:* :
» of eofiee er te;. .i ,n e
-___ SSS^ H assy L.
r
i trtCIFIC CO, 186 INacs’st.. BaceSI .!
~tL k* sfcpiiflat --
^3#
A. FAHNESTOCKS JT
Make*
Li (Stress tarity of tlie bowels, are
sot,ic of the more common
Eating **" ■ ^rJTTSlfS
,
attention, and a remedy I
parlUa, which acts gently, yet
efficiently. It tones tho stomach
organs, regulates the digestion, ----
good appetite, Mid by thus
overcoming the local symp- Utta j a _i,a
toms removes tee sympa- tb*
tlicttc effects of tho diseaso, banishes
hecdaelio, and refreshes the tired mind.
•• I have been troubled with dyspepsia. I
had but little appetite, and what I did eat
u distressed lac, or did me
Heart uulc guiftt, I.i ail hour
bum after eating I would expe¬
rience a faintness, or tired, a&gmte faffiiug.
as though I ha^ittot agjfavatvd esten any t-£ thing. toy My trou¬
ble, X tidiifc, was and from being
which is ilu.t of a y.ilnter,
more or less fe!a:t irp in * QOUP
ream wUbf««a-imi:.t Lint c .
spring I took Uotm ffiirte- OMWiwqn
rJBa—took three tettJcs, It did m in
immense anwuot <•( grs-d. 1 1 g::va me an
appetite, and my tori i,..shed and aarisSS#
the craving f X A \ .OCftown, . '-i '-L axjicf.-jeud., Muni.
GXOLCL A. rndS, ¥
Hoorf’s Scffiiapcirilla rroimrcd out
SoMbymlAm-^-:t #1. fix for ?i. .
byC. t HOOD <= «.»•, Ah',the :wtos.Lowell, M**=-
IOC DoBtif Cno Dollar
Tint's pais LIVER.
FOR TORPID
A torpid liver <1 .ranges the wl: >-*>
Sum, and produce.
Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Costiveness, Rheu¬
matism, Sallow Skin and Piles.
SHSSs
Sold Everywhere.
THE GRIFFIN OIL MILL
Application tor Charter.
Spalding GEORGIA, County. I
To the Superior Court of said connty:
The petition of M. L. Bates, H. B. R. Blakely,
W. A. Bates, T. P. Boll, R. Drake and J.
P. Nichols, for themaelvea and such others as
may be associated with them, desire to be in¬
corporated and made a body corporate under
the name of
“The Griffin Oil Mill.”
privilege hundred of increamngtbesameto thousand dollars, divided ($100,000) into
one
shares The of (#100) said one hundred dollars each.
business of company not to com¬
mence until 15 per cent, of the capital stock
has been paid in.
The officers of said company shall consist
of five directors to be chosen annually by the
stockholders: from said directors there shall
be elected a President, Vice President, Secre¬
tary and Treasurer.
The objects et said corporation shall be to
erect ana operate a cotton seed oil mill and
an oil refinery; forms the said manufacturing of desire soaps
into such as company may
and and the selling other of the same, and to successfully do each
every act necessary to
carry on and conduct a cotton oil mill.
To buy and hold such real estate and per-
other securities for goods and property soli
they To see proper. and nnpleaded
sue be sued, plead and be
and have a common seal.
Wherefore, filed petititioners in the Clerk’s pray that this Supe- pe¬
tition be office of the
incorporating aforesaid
corporate name with the said right for to: of the renewal, tall term with of
tall twenty years to such business afore¬
said power and to exercise cary on all as to
successfully accomplish the powers objects neeessary and ends
contemplated will by such corporation. And pe¬
titioners ever pray, etc.
U. L. BATES,
B. B. BLAKELY.
W. A. BATES.
T. P. BELL,
R. H. DRAKE,
J. P. NICHOLS.
GEORGIA—8PApptffs I certify that the tpregoing County. is
a true and
complete copy of the application for charter
filed in Clerk’s office Superior Court, April 4th,
1889, and duly recorded on tee minutes there¬
of, Witness my hand and seal of said Court
dqte above written. W. M, Thomas, Clerk.
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
v/ /ORDINARY’S Geobgia, March OFFICE— 22nd, Spalding id, 1889,—Joh 1889,—John Coun-
B. TV, administrator
Mills, te^riia^capitaf as of “ Elisabeth <L
reh to me for leave
to stock of Central RR.
and certificate Banking Company of Georgia, one inter¬ dol¬
est amonntingtofour hundred
lars Let due all by same Company, show for distribution. before
persons Opdinary concerned cause
the Court of of said county, at my
office in by Griffin, on the first Monday in May,
should 1889, ten be o'clock a. m., why rack leave
not granted,
#8.00. E. W. HAMMOND. Ordinary.
U / xBDINARY’S OFFICE— Spadwng Cora-
J. Jordan, TV, Geowiu, April 3rd, 1889.—To John
The executor of P. P. Smith, deceased t
cite heirs and W deceased bare applied to me to
of Ordinary yon of your this coexecutor before the court
connty, tor a settlement
of your accounts as executors,
You are therefore notified to appear at said
Court on the first Monday in May 1888, by
ten o’clock a. m. and submit to such settle¬
ment as in default the Court will proceed in
your absence to make such settlement.
S3,DO, E, W, HAMMOND, Ordinary.
POSTPONED
Administrator’s Sale.
the Court first bouse Tuesday door in Spalding May, 1889, Connty, before tee
between in Gcor
gia, lot in the legal ealp hours, a certain
Georgia, lying k’ tea city of Griffin and State of
ipW own and diatlnguishei Tot in the
plan pf city of Griffin a* number four
(4) in rquara number twenty-nine t*9), oon-
taining be one divided half acre more three or less. Said half
acre to Into lots of of equal equal
sbse. Two lot* running north
from Chapel strept, tea remaining one-third
embracing a two-room house on ooruer of
All known aa the Betty Tay-
tof the eetateof said Betty
e e<
fiSR,
Spppppffipm IN!
M
Liuitiana ; I 1BBI - State oinpar.)
Incorporated by
OTH DRAWINGS take place its
.(Juneand December),and
year and are all drawn in public, at the Acad¬
emy of Music, New Orleans, La.
FAMtO FORT WENT: YEARS,
For Integrity of its Drawings and
Prompt Pay me t of Prizes,
Attested ok follows:
(supervise the
ily and 8emi-
|RJ______ Company, _ and f The In Louisiana State Lot¬ and
tery control the Drawings themselves, person manage and that
the same are conducted with honesty, fairness
undersigned Banks and Bankers
will pay all I Prizes Prizes drawn drawn in in Thi The Louisiana
State Lotteries which may be presented at
our counters:
Grand : Monthly : Drawing
At the Academy of Music, New Orleans,
Tuesday May 14, 1889,
(Capital Prime, #800,000
100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars Each.
Halves #10; Quarters #5; Tenths #2; Twen¬
tieths #1.
LIST OP PHIZES.
1 PuttE OP #300,000 is...... ....#800,000 100,000
1 Pjuzk op 100,000 is...... ....
1 Prize op 50.000 is...... .... 50,000
1 Pjuzes Prize op 10,000 25.000 is...... ::::
2 op are...,
5 ~ 5,900 are... 25.000 25.000
25 Prizes < 1,000 ate...
100 Phizes < 500 are... 50.000
200 Prizes < 300 are... 60.000
500 Prizes < 200 are... 100,000
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
100 Prizes of #500 300 are................. 50.000 30.000
100 do. we.................
100 do. 200 are.................. 20,000
Terminal prizes
99 Priiee of $100 are.................. I 69,900 99.900
999 do. 100 are.................
8,184 $1,054,800
Note— Tickets drawing Capital Prizes
not entitled to terminal Prizes.
For Club Rates, or any further information
desired, write legibly to the undersigned,
clearly stating your residence, More with State,
Connty, Street delivery and Number. assured by enclosing rapid re¬
turn mail will be
wi Envelope bearing yonr tall address.
IMPORTANT.
Address M. A. DAUPHIN,
New Orleans, C. La.
m. D.
mey Order
issued by all Draft Express Postal Companies. Note. New We York
Exchange, Currency or by Express pay in
chargee of $5 on sent to ns
sums or over.
Address Registered Letters Contain*
ing Currency to
HEW OftUUll IaTOIAL bask
New Orleans, La.
is REMEMBER, GUARANTEED that the FOUR payment of Prizes
BANKS BY NATIONAL
signed by of New the Orleans, President and of the tickets are
an Institution
whose chartered rights are recognized in the
highest tions Courts; therefore schemes. beware of all imita¬
ONE or DOLLAar anonymous
is the price of the smallest
part in or fraction of a Ticket ISSUED BY US
ered any for Drawing. less than Anything Dollar in our name of-
a is a swindle.
May Sheriff’s Sales.
VST ILL BE SOLD ON THE FIBST TUBS
the TV Court day House, in May next, before Griffin, the door of
in the city of Spald¬
ing County, Georgia, tee following described
property, to-wit;
Lot of land «o. 35, containing 00214 acres
of land, also north half of lot No. 34, contain¬
ing ing one Connty, hundred Georgia, aeree.said bounded land being in follows: Spald¬
as
north by land of C. S. Westmorland, east by
land of W. J. Ellis, sonth by ths Savannah,
Griffin ft North Alabama Railroad, west by
land of W, J, EUis. Levied on and sold to
satisfy Court in one fi fa issued from Spalding Superior
favor of Frank W. Stanley vs, Mary
E, Ellis, administratrix of W. J. EDis, deceas¬
ed. ly notified. Mary E. Ellis, tenant in possession, #6.00. legal¬
Also, half at the same time and place, willbesold
weet of lot No. 82, about two miles west
of Griffin, bounded north by Mt. Zion road
and land of Geo. C. Stewart, on ths east by
Mrs. McDowell and D, p, Johnson, on tee
south by Ipnds of Mrs. L. C, Johnson, on the
west road by a road running from ^ rtfieMt. Zion
hundred to tee Allen Th containing
one acres. I on and sold by a
Justice Court fi fa issued f n 1065th District
G. M. of Spalding Coi i favor of Patrick
ft Brooke vs. Robert F Levy made by
Geo. D. Johnson, L. C., and turned over to
me, Robert Skinner, tenant *in possession,
legally Also, notified, #6.00.
at the same time and place, will be
sold, house one undivided one-third interest in one
and lot known as the Wright Bowdoin
place by fronting William on Bishop Solomon street, bounded
west place, east by Willis
Sofomon Scandrett, sonth by an alley and north by
street, la East Griffin, containing
ed qne-haB one-third acre more interest or less; and one of undivid¬ land
in one tract in
North Griffin, containing three or four acres,
bounded east by what is known as Bussell P.
Johnson place, north by an alley, sonth by
an aBey and of west by a new street, bang an
extension Sixth street,land White^and the property of
T. W. Thurman, McLeroy, J. D.
Boyd; vhnt and known one undivided John one-third interest
in South ia as the Neal place in
bounded Gnffin containing one acre more or
less, Isaac Malone, west Henry by Fruden Handy and Moore, Sam east by
Warn¬
er and south by Stroller. Levied on by vir-
Justice Court of the lOOIstDist.G.M., Spald¬
ing and county, turned Levy made by J. C. Little, L.C.
over to me. Tenanteta posses¬
sion Also, legally the notified. #9.00,
at same time and place, wffi he
sold one undivided H interest in one house
and lot in tee city of Griffin, known as the
B. W. Doe home place, fronting on Solomon
street, by Solomon containing street and west and one-half by Thirteenth
Levied one acres
on and sold as the property of Charles
R. Doe by virtue of a A faissned from Spald¬
ing Connty Court fa favor of L. Cohen ft
Co. vs. Charles B. Doe and other fi fas ip my
hands. Tenant in p o s se s sio n, Mre.Mollic if
east corter of lot No. 180 in the 8d land dis¬
trict north Of by Spalding bafaaesot County, lot No. Georgia, bounded
Horne, Beeks 180, east by J. U.
south by estate land, and west
by Kincaid Manufacturing Co. Levied on
«U«Mhy sued from 1001 virtue of a Justice G. M. Court 8 fa is¬
st District of
Ks
ofAlaba
f.-etaire %
300,000 Readers i iff mmm Leading in 168«
mnmm FI
A.TLAJtfrrA., QBORO-IA,
a&fow iXL It* P’ort3T-*«nr*5Q.t3a. TTmar of*»ti.'teXleatlosx,
„ „ » -
Ths r.n i t - 1 **' 1 organ of Sonthsrn acrtcultare end the industrial protrass ef tee Sonth, i
n guaranteed circulation fa every Southern and Western State.
A BRILLIANT CORPS OF WRITERS.
;sggasgijssi^SB^ ed agricultural Journalist in the country, but he w.s for four years vlrtuilly Cemabsh
Wsshfagtan, D. C., and later, Profezsor of Agriculture at the Georgia State Unlv.rilty.
B* J. REDDING is the able and thoroughly equipped A i dstznt Commissioner ef Atr’cu,
sess ths South. With theeo eminent writers are azwoiated n eeore or more of melt udf
writers to profeszional agfieoUnral writer*-whose monthly
male contributor*—including not a few «•_
etna cover every department of farm management and household work, making Ta* Colt.u
MB the most complete, attractive and valuable agricultural journal fa the South, each in.,
being worth more than a whole year’s .ubacrlptlon to any farmer who read* and think* in eon
Dffietion with felt work. bo fonnd A tal! ■ :
It* illustration* are luperb/and every department wUl to overflowing with a
ter to instruct, enlighten and entertain. Kaoh number is worth the sum charged fcr tee yw
STaStoaen afiordtebe without One THE Dollar SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR. tho twelve number* Now it constituting the time j
*ond to year subscription*. Only nil olaue*. por annum, f«W fa Frem «<f Freku* iournft g
volume ot exten.iT. information u.eful to
for tho farm, fireside and counting-room. Subscription, $1 per year. For tdrerttiing r ‘
etc., address - CULTIVATOR PUBLISHING CO,
TH E J
Geo. W. Harrison, Y Drawer 8* Atlanta, Ga,
Manager. J bend for sample copy.
'
4
THE
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* WILL CONTAIN DURING 1889 *
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