Newspaper Page Text
__________g weil known that
It i» now moat
ka rt»*'5 Un«, not to ovrtr-almiu lance,
t«, of tli« Blood ; and it
t'.iijo la ao WHtiaoioui^w
«Omo of my children had a lurip, sora
yak out oil till! Ini' Wo anidiwl
ftiv v‘,rs-. WitfBfKv W.t sotinmtlu-nl J»«*ti,!. Itui hi,-,.. *rvV* inl
| X ;■ U
I winK U»hl *k»t an afto»iw,n n-lii-ine
s,rr?'
Sti-xiitatt Recommended
health J, and Armstrong, fflfengtii Weimar, raiiiifly Texas. returned.”
„J.
“X find Ayer’s remedy SaiwnjmrJIla the to be an
admirable for cure of blood
SSSUS^il^SStti ■n fc y g R ;
here for oyer it when thirty years and always
recommend Mood-ouriHer.” asked —.W. T, to name the
best Druggisi, Augusta, Ohio. MeLean, '
petition.’' ,:aatTft.7r r-T> VV. Richmond. be'the
Be e*r
Ayor’s Sarsaparilla,
Or. J. C. Ayo. 4 ™o.. U»,n, Mu.
price Hi six bottles, $5. Worth *5 a bottle.
Mils
FOR TORPID LIV^R.
a torpid SiorS*eada live* deranges the »1 '/a*
U
Dyspepsia, Costiveness, She, Rheu-
matism, Salloiv Skin and Piles.
There ts no better renady far theee
common disease* than Tntt’s User
n rtlle. MU trial wilt prove, Frlee, 25c.
Sold Everywhere.
r ^ \ ~ ^wT -
dew Advci jsementef
/) /. , a busim^b
AT HOMK. For circulars, a4-
dress CLARK’S COLLEGE,
---:-—
I DEAFS—i
IK t-Uv oi-.i-.i .•*. •«.«'» r..»j iv.'i isuir.
.
‘\iX.ilhtBt growth.
SriruA •<M»U
l v frlT
,A **.
HlHCt£fiCO«li8.
UMI
Exhausted Vitality
. Untold Miseries
ResnUing^from *VnreYiiblc theRrror^of “»nd Tooth, Pony.T^Ig- * *”
ttomMeatlaL ~
Shsmksf* DEDERICK’S HAY PRESSED
Por jet^rother proof order alongside on trial, tf to ke,
jzm PrtiSM,'. can. all sizes. ,
— 11 | , 1 1 1
PI&ilYfSQYAL CfHCHtSTER’S ENGLISH
SIB CSOSS BUJfORB PILLS
BSAHB. ♦
_ CkleheUer JBSUgs
Chemical €<)„IU<ltion Su.,Phll»,Pa.
«• HIRES’! ■ROVED Me
ROOT BEER
IN LIQUID N0B0IUNC EASILY MADE
TipPACKACE MAKES FIVE GALLONS
~7
r- dftte#r BE E
R
»A«h rstr oreg gut o r Onnt the It. * ’
C. E. HIRES, PHILADELPHIA.
IQLAS
*
•kntlemen. for
•3 8HOE FOR LADIES.
*OE.
ICE.
.
What th, e South Can Or rtf*.
Daniel Dennett, of Lincoln county,
Mississippi's ricultfpist, ^ v»me in the h*y,thebre«* American American Ag- Ag-
inf^oPiornip, wine
e and goats, and
should be the foundation T _____,_. w
of South¬
ern agriculture, and the superstruct¬
ure should be live stock in the great¬
est abundance, including all farm an¬
imate; also dajryiug, grass made but¬
ter and bay for Northern markets;
pork, lard, beef, Hob ,cattle, homes
and mules for home and Northern 1
markets; early vegetables and fruits
for Northern and Southern markets;
dried, canned and preserve^, jellies
ffresecies, rrodfe.rMa.gS.t honey and .hoj^ultur k
Northern and Southern cities. Large
plantations, negro labor and great
staple crops can never make South¬
ern agriculture a success. The white
| ■farmer, stock-breeder, truck-farmer
and horticulturists -must save the
South and make it prosperous. The
negro i« adapted only to gang labor
and large plantations, under the eye
of an experienced overseer.
In 1879 the Southern States had
about 19,135,000 head of grass and
Pltina- (AH Southrm swine should
be or the best grass-eating breeds).
411 these States in 1879 made but
2,437,000 tons of hav. The States
south of Missouri, Tennessee and
North Carolina, most of them bor¬
dering on the Gulf of Mexico, had, ip
1879, about 12,000,000 horses,
mules, asses and cattle, 4,500,000
sheep and 11,000,000 swine. These
States made, in 1879, but 396,000
iphgrass-
<he*p,
goats and hogs. Yet while the North
has compalrotively few varieties
of grasses, the
many, somfr w of
cellent winter grasses; these last,
with rust-proof oats and winter rye,
w ill keep stock in fine order all winter
with no hay whatever. Howard, in
his excellent book on Southern grass¬
es, said that he had eaten beef, of 3-
y<ftr-old “steers, that had never paten
a pound of hay, and were kept fat all
winter on winter grasses alone. We
have Kentucky: blue grass, Texas
blue grass, orchard grass, Virginia
lyme grass, white and red cLover,"fes¬
cue grass, Virginia lyme =grass *uftF
at least half a dozen other grasses;'
most of them grow all winter. Les-
pedeza is November a semi-winter grass. It is
killed by frosts, butlbave
seen the seeds germinate and growth
commenced lute in January in lati-
tute 30 degrees 80 minutes. It al¬
ways starts in February in Mississip¬
pi, and if bitten by hard frosts it
springs up again after a few days of
warm weather. Bermuda is one of
the best grasses in the South for hay
and grazing. It may be cat three
times a year. Thomas Affiect, the
noted horticulturist, made four tons
of Bermuda hay to th# acre 'in .Mis¬
sissippi. Mr. St. Juliw mad#'in
South Carolina at the rate of
eleven ton# of Bermuda hay to
acre on a small patch fe '
tifically as an experirn
the possibilities of Berm’
grass may be cut two or t
on rich land, makes hay equal
ue, ton for. ton, to Northern hay hold
in the South. A ton of this hay may
be made'to the acre on land that
made a fine crop of corn the same
year. It te self-seeding and grows
from May until No vember frosts. Hay
may be made in the South during
June; July, August, September and
Gc to bertha best is squally made in
July and August. Lespedeza or Ja¬
pan clover, on rich land, makes fine
hay and large crops. Bed clover does
well in the ^0ath on lands containing
plenty of lime. Pea vine hay is about
Northern red clover. It may
baquade# tpR, lie ormofe to is the acre
among June, cera. bushel ^d sown in in
a to the acre, corn
early in March. Sweet pota¬
vines makegood hay; cattle are as
of them , green or cured, as they
of pea vines, which ate equal to
clover. Sedge grass, if cut in Au¬
makes a much better hay than
“meadow hay,” natural
growing in wet meadows in the
States. Buffalo and Mes¬
quite grasses cover large areas in
and are highly esteemed. Vir¬
lime grass may be cut twice in
winter and spring, and will con¬
to grow until June. Johnson
of 1 Means grass, may be cut
times in one season, and on
land will yield four tons of good
to the acre. In Mobile this hay
sells for about f 15 a ton.
planters cry down Johnson
and Bermuda, and indeed, crab
and ail other grasses, because,
they injure the crop. Cattle, mules,
sheep and swine are less liable
diseases in the South than in the
Nafcth when «s W^i fed And cared for
as Northern farm animals.
The possibilities of the Southern
in the production of grasses,
forage crops, inciudinghay, sorghum,
Kaffir corn, pearl millet,
v — lesnedp- #VV * V I
‘
and grasses, with rich soil, fate
to falfifJSrt SnBmited.^ 011 M ’ 1 seem
They “Mwm Business.**
not ssAj&sSSasz beet cured thereby, the mantifac-
&2ks&£i
able, SSUjflSTM to make good their guarantee
learn 1,arnby by
sold sold by by all al l druggists,'at druggists, at i 50 tcents
Th» GrMk Aotor.
cothurnus or buskin—a kind of high
boot, ornamented in frost, three and taaT-
MW fag thick. a ‘ layer Lf The The < of cothurnus ‘ soles some #*u inches
addition • therobB
whole head over to conical SHEr masks foentev go
tad have dignity added coiund^ltc of acsbr
mask there seems to
eon*____ ’toSl
,ri s
Bell shaped vessels of bronze are i
to have been placeAS
th. theatre
the actors were subjected to a severe
course of training both as i to power
and modulation ation of’ r voice.
Many y 'andI of of the the acton at were teMllW men of
sition and faftu influence
and more ore than than one one had had been been uxtrut
with diplomatic and other
nis own compositions, as
said to have done. It ]
some of tiie craft of the present
learn that as much as a talent (
£250) has been paid-to an actor
for tv There were
the S^pSThtt. principal actor itor and and his the two orifice wornhy subor- of
dfaates were «mi tTsSp^t^S
mouth open in the
N» . allowed to act, the
women were
female paris’being taken, as fa Bhake-
spearean times not with only us, th( by *
self, young men, in the chorus. on L_
but
when a youth, was selected Tor his
grace dance at ana the beauty festival-given to lead in the honor choral of
the victors at Salamis. The dresses
worn on the stage bore no resemblance
to but the ordinary probably Anthenian modification costume, of the
were a
festal robes worn fa the old Dionysiac
procession, and consisted of flowing
robes brilliant of hues, purple and yellow
crowns
robes broad, • embroidered lengthy
were so
feet, ters^male and werecommt aa^well female.—Gham-
as
“What’s In ft Name” ?
.
but Shaksyeare there is. Would said tberewas have nothing, had
Deesar
such Caleb notoriety if his name had been
WT Pickersgill ? Think of Patti
drawing boards announced $7,000 a night J if the bill¬
her as ane Brown 1
The idea is absurd. Dr. Pierce’s'
Pleasant Putative Pellets is a name
that t.nat has nas made maue a a record. recora. These xnesetiny, tiny,
sugar-coated ious headache, puls bowel cure complaints, sick and bil¬ in¬
ternal fever and costiveness
tiful Memorial drop curiam hall, Ehs^orCbltea of which the b«&t- citi¬
zens The View bavqgood painted reason thereon to be is wand.
one of
the finest'and also one that all can ap-
cro, I A. i 5S,“ ta n , ^ i a
Maine scenery, giving a of
Todd’s Head near Eastport with the
New Brunswick hills i distance,
taking in Indian, Thumb Gap, Spruce,
White Horse and other islands, with
> the ^jjson’i cluster _
ing - - — - , the Gampohello, water.—Lewiston and glimmer¬ rrlimmei*- Journal.
on
TU Often Thai.
In the drygoods house: Mrs. Dove-
id there are more man you
chief delight to bear vow burdens, my
dear. (Admiring glances and mur¬
murs from all the other women.)
At home: Mr. Doveleigb—Maria, go
\* hod ol coal and be quick
And say! The next time you
Abbott’s East Indian Corn Paint
removesiril Corns, Bunions and Warts
speedily without pain. For sale by
mujl'/liiwly.
BY FAK
I^Muilk^ltapItoiiii
NEW YORK OR BOSTON
-IS VIA-
SAVANNAH
-AND THE-
OCEAN ! STEAMSHIP: LINE
* -or THE-
Central Railroad of Georgia*
SUMMER EXCURSION TICKETS
Now on sale at reduced rates. Good to re-
tarn until October 81st, 1889.
’ree Magnificent Steamer odd and elegant
from the the heat heat dust, Incident tn Ag¬
nail Bouteo.' H you are sick the trip wjl in¬
vigorate and bnUd you'up.
Go East by Sea and You’ll not Regret It
other Passengers, scald More do purchasing well ticket*
routes, to *
ier
the merits merits of the Route via 8a
ther information may be had hy applying to
the Agent at your station or to let-i i PP
II. S. BRUOTAP --“- 1 '-
^
To th* honest inquirer after truth, who,
troubled with Botpe contagious blood dia-
ease, seeks a remedy which will com¬
pletely eradicate from his system every
germ of blood poison, that the ones he
loves—his wife and his children—may be
&SZSS? &££ sense comes,as tells
e proof
Of curative virtu*. Read toe following
inis testimony;
contracted a tetri-'
ble case
of the leading physicians of Atlanta;
trly every blood remedy adver-
■ohi±i —: - v ), e re I re-
ng no ben-
disease still clung
tome.
Tfrtoe years ago I was hud up with
cumatisav. My knees S' were drawn up
such a position Iw could not leave
seemed to re-
new its attack upon i- with silt!
and Westmorland, Dr. Knott, Garrett know & Bro.,
nur.i.rous others who of my
case. 1 cheerfully recommend B. B. B.,
for I really believe it is the bcstmedKine
During the month of February I bought
boy, who had whi
tary blood pr*-““ y V utter aston-
ishment on e In Feb-
ruary was literals my ejpFloh. covered ......... tweft will •ears ;ly sores of age,
on
.£<1^1 | r o ition bottles on his of
B. B.B. anser it has
no equal. lanta, Ga.
For sevi
from a coi _,
has resisted the t
ans, and toe use of the most noted
Irered with a copper-colored
— J “ana limbs, with
w,«»«.. uw,«Jng pains in my
aching of my joints, oiiny general debil-
,, emaciatoun falling off hair, sore
incredulous, iroat and gTeaf but 'lervousness. beiqg told that I B. became B. B.
was a sure enough blood purifier and that
it did not require a patient to use a gross
£
proved. I have taken about ten bottles
and feel as well and sprightly as any.man.
My and appetite hair and strength tall have out. returned
my does not I do not
hesitate to say blood that B. B. B. has no equal
who as a general will only purifier, bottle and will any be one
use one con¬
vinced that it has no equal in these parts.
I Still continue its use, as it is a splendid
tonic and keeps my system in a fine con¬
dition. You nave the liberty to direct any
sufferer toltne in person.
hA tlanta, Ga.
4 had 24runnlng ulcers on one leg, and
6 on toe other, a»a felt swallowed greatly prostrated.
I believe I Actually a barrel of
medicine in vain efforts to cure the dis¬
the ease. urgent With advice little hope, Of friend, 1 finally and acted got on
a a
bottle of B. B. B. I experienced a change
pelled. and my despondency I kept using ft was until somewhat I had taken dis¬
sixteen tism, and - bottles, other and all toe of ulcers, rheuma¬
hortors blood poison
have disappeared, and at last I am sound
and well again, after an experience of
twenty years of torture.
A. P. Bronson, Atlanta, Ga.
B. B. Kennesaw, B. Company—M Ga., Sept. Dear 11,1887. Sir:
y
the I . take great benefit pleasure wife in has acknowledging derived from
great and wonderful my medicine, B. 8.
yonr B. great she suf¬
For two years was a great
ferer from Scrofula, or tome blood dis¬
ease which had lain dormant all her fife.
We had attention from some of the most
her. ever recovering.
solid ulcer, and for two months or more
her body was broken out with sores until
she lost a beautiful head of hair, also eye¬
lashes and complete eye-brows; wreck. in fact, she seemed
to be a
Now comes the great secret which I
want all toe world to know: That three
bottles of Blood Balm medicine has done
the work which would sound incredible to
.now has a three-month-old babe, alsoper- a
fectiy healthy. Very respectfully L. Cassidy.
Glen Alpine Station, N. C. J )
February 18th, 1888.
by blood poison
After it was ampu¬
tated there came a running ulcer on the
end of it that measured SJ4 inches one
way and 4& inches the other, and core
touted growing worse every day until a
that. My weight at toe time I com¬
menced -need B. B, B. B. tows B. was 120 pounds. When
had token weight; three bottles when I I .had gained tak<- 37
pounds twelve bottles in sound and well. I
1 was
continued taking until I had taken fifti
bottles. T now feet weigh and three 180 inches pounds high. s
measure five medltinphaa
$ contend blood that purifier. your It certainly noequa. worked
as a J- ft.
like a charm. (12) Wilson.
tmm
j»teon«
i** ’™**‘'*n *ii f Ti. 7 fi * Bn 5
teftapw*. «w!v «*4 »,iv.w; to
Jn return nt «sk thti von
all 9jha!| become your own
machine fe
— petonti,
5J5; (pertut*
___ Sta'wTSapAnT;
~ am
CONSUMPTH/E
————~{o}-——T-
OPENING OF SUMMER CLOTHING I
I havtfwcfi rebrdtbelltrtted
Htntto fog fiire-fltete:, tfaiu-
: B , W ; *
tiUmnUln X
+ CLOTHING
1
l Un v»* fantul it in (ho Hum-
m<-r Goods of Alfretl llonja-
mfa & Co., of New York. I
Htitite the Inrjftwt Stock, and
Imt m\t nit«t desirable
nssonmeut t have ever car-
! rum $1 to $18. f.
Wlmtt
i5rMEnnrL 9
L come and examine.
GEO. It. STILES,
d«tw to jnly 1 3fi HILL STREET, GRIFFIN-
■*r | ir
~w -
1845. Life Insurance. I88J.
--)o( ------— -
—- T HE —
NEWARK, NEW JERSEY.
. - ——)oi-■■■■■■ . - ■ ■ ■
Purely Mutual. Assets over FORTY TWO MILLION DOLLARS. Annual
Income over Seven Million Dollars.
La ge and Annual Dividends, No ‘Tontine Estimate*.”
The best Life Contract on the market. We invite a comparison of our
Policies with those written by jther Companies.
S. W.kMANCHAM & SONS, Agents,
GEIFFIN, GEORGIA.
CLARENCE V ANGIER, State Agent, Atlanta, 6a.
dAw to augl.
«*
For )-( Chean )-( Goods
....... CALL ON........
W. M.HOLMAN ^CO
v We Standard A Sugar for making cake Citron, Currents, Prune* and at
kinds of Extracts for Flavoring. The he be best Pat. Ffour, Mince Meat, Jetties
and in fact anything you want. 4
★ ^TURKEYS, FISH AND OYSTERS.
i&~ Leeve us your order and it will be attended to.
fa—
BOOTS, SHOES AND LEATHER AT ’
JLV HASSEIKUS’ SHOE STORE
Home-made Shoes and Leather a Specialty.
and Slippers ol aJl kiads.
«r- *4 per «ord paid for 200 cords of Tan-i,ark. H. W. HA8SRLKU8.
A if IROGM Slips CLEAN
;--j oS ---
SPENCE & SMITH,
OFPOSITlfi BRI€R WAREHOUSE,8OL0MOIV mt
Drays, tar find He Dt-hv UbhTfty will huild: W J. t .t jtl’tp, ^ it* i v),. ttiirU* I» ?. t« t,. f ti, ,*
et y *. p* 1 \ p f . i i
N ot ft itu? but v co d U*it v < <t fc + i\i ’ lil'.biVi ,V t,' ,!
H, Si cn< e at tfro be le)th J..n c*a cnBi t i: , ut
SPENCE & SMITH\
Solomon Street,*Griffin, Ga.
—-
PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRIES. ■
'• I','.,-- ■> FI
‘■ -
is
■
.MAXUFACTUREBS.
Sash, Doors, Blinds,
Mantels, Monldings, Ballusters, Newells, Elc., Etc.
Dresseo and Rough Lumber, Laths and Sfting es
Faints, Oils, Window Glassiand Putty.
GRIFFIN, : » s s * GEORGIA.
We iniunifseliire tdl our good* and ahail endeavor t« pleaee alii both '*■»*&** as to crioe
08
You paid for 8x10x12 light Sash $L10 OwjtfiwJWi
“ 8x10x18 “ 1.75?
10x16x12 “ 2.00.
“ Doors $2 00 to S2 50. a : T ’
“ “ Dressing “ Weatherboard and Matching 25o- 35c. S&. to
Wank one T50tof1. side 20c
Amiu<i!i>ruwin
control (ery Comyi the
the .wn* are
and m good h
autosnreth,
it. Adv.
>
''''''♦siMigiaiw-
M
'
Att
1 PmzKOvi
25 or
.100 Phizes Pbkbs or
200 or
500 Prizes or
100 do! 0
two ;
1,998 Prims t
8,184 i
derived, dearly Write '
eta
County, mail 8t
turn i
an Envelope I
orM.A.pA
teued°by. Exchange,
jtrwvr ■
BE
highest (
For Sale]
I
(fridtlyl
SYP
ondaHi
ji
;
i
: