Newspaper Page Text
, JP Biftrer B’i and Errs.
lot Fresh
Frying Chickens.
Motts Pure Apple Vinegar.
G. Clark W. &
-AMD—
OiMta, Go., Aug. *#•
HBUKJUABT1SB8
- 4 . £,
— FOE-
Fttlktarit!.
HAETHSTT - A - lALOEfl
»t®M? S' * W - »
. ttSp
Rear, Ham,
•*' -
Grennlsted Sngsr,
N. 0. Syrup,
O^PaeWaHieme.,
»na. hum «f-
sh Canned Goods,
Water Ground Heal.
fine Cigars and Tobacco.
.
• MacoRaMle* wffl**l5?what ire tea
** *2000 WV ^ Manjhtm plsce Half mi
South HNUtrwt acre
lot and good comfortable
building. Terns easy.
" ra vacant lot an Poplar h
..*$ of land situat-
onemile of town,
rsns
„ with bams,
«a for bargain- the Damall
_ fartabie 6 room
and large let
i piaea TO an
3r" year
„J an saath
at. < k |. aaj| ya|h«
‘ 7
# .
itl* H. DRAKE.
Attention Spalding Greys!
An otaceion tor Captniu will ba held
at your armory between the hours of
8 and 10 o’clock p. u., Aog. 32nd
1S8S. 0. J. Lower,
i. M. Bea ks 0.8. Lkut. C om’dg
There I. Wo Berth. M Clay.
Readers of BerthaM. Clay’s novela
wtHbaaarpriaed to learn that there
la newspaper no Bertha says II : “An Oa^A English Chtajgo writer
nnwd ' lire. Charlotte U. Braeme
wrote atories tor an English family
popsr. As last as tiwgr appeared
they were stolen by a story paper in
New York, who attributed them to
•Beslidlf. Oay,*» fictitious name
which they invented, and without the
knowledge of the author, lira.
Breams <tt*d in 1883, but so popular
had the stories of ‘Bertha M. Clay’
become that the propristore of the
paper hired a number of writers to
_ __ _ ... w . k tort the* jhaoo;
kept tiw name before their readers
eter since.” „
A Worn***. Discovery.
•‘Another wonderis; discowy ha* been
■-
. - ■
’BOUND ABOUT.
CHgrVot<MMl Hews Frow TU» *»<1
a matos.
As /on trudge of Hoag orer HJ.'i rugged road,
Makes note thm d-oS pa -ado?: -
That the way orsr rare:/ mw p’slne ol his
If on'jr we i laden with * rock*.
Alim Bates went toAtlantoyeeter*
day.
W. H. Spence went to Newrnn yea¬
ter day.
Ifise Bessie Kellisvteit' tg relatives
' n this city.
Bob Hester, of Atlanta, spent Sun¬
day in this city the guest of his
friend Bryant Collier.
Miss Genis Speer is visiting Miss
Sarah Tibbie Kell at Sunny Side.
She left yesterday afternoon.
Wi?’ Redd eg, of Macon, who ia
visiting this city, went to Warm
Springe Sunday afternoon.
Miss Minoie Blanche Huen, a most
charming young lady of Newnan, is
visiting relatives and friends in this
city.
E. L. Roge a cams up from Barnes-
vBle on Sunday Morning and spent
the day with his father and family in
this city.
Miss Mattie Moss has returntd
home from a most delightful visit to
friends an Haraison, Greenville and
Grantrffle.
Capt.J. A. Gotten and Dr. E. A.
Flewellen, of Tbomaston, spent a lew
hours ’a the city yesterday en route
to Atlanta.
J. G. Rhea has returned from a
visit to the mountains in Virginia.
Bis family will remain there until
the season of heat is over.
Sam Howell, of Anlanta, one of the
clerks in the State Legislature, spent
Sunday in this city, the guest oi A.
W. Jones and family.
M*w Mauds Flynl left yesterday
morning for Fort Valley, being called
there by the serious illness of her sis¬
ter, Mm. Dr. Newman, who lives near
there.
An important change in the sched¬
ule o< the Georgia Midland freight
trains took place yesterday and will
be found in tha time table printed in
today’s issue.
Prof. J. D. Garner, after a stay of
some weeks with friends in this city,
left yesterday afternoon for Tennflle,
where he will resume tbe exercises of
his school.
Miss Genie West, who has been
visiting her aunt Mrs. Lucy West
and Mrs. Mattie Blood worth lor the
past two weeks, returned to her
home in Atlahta yesterday.
, Rev. and Mrs. G. W. Garner, of
Ft. Valley, is spending several dayB
with Mr. and Mrs. B. (J. Randall.
They are on their way home from
Molena, where they have been visit¬
ing for some time.
Mrs. J. G. Pope and son Jesse, of
Americas, and Mrs. E. P. Johnson
and little daughter Jauie. of this
city, are visiting Mrs. J. J. Dennis at
Senoia. They went over yesterday
morning.
Col. and Mrs. E. W§*Beck went to
Indian Springs yesterday, where they
Will make an extended stay, on ac¬
count of Col. Beck, who is rapidly im-
proveing from the use of the water
And the treatment and hopes to be
entirely restored to health before re¬
turning.
Tbe first open boles of cotton seen
in this section were laid on onr table
yesterday. They were from the farm
of G. W. Clark out on the eastern
suburbs and wers wide open and ready
|to pick out. Mr. Clark has been,
prior to this year, the first bale man
of this county, but this year will
probably not get the first bale on
account of having most of h’s open
land sowed down, thsreby not giv-
fog such an area to pick from.
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve.
Tbe Beet Salve in the world ior Cute,
Bruises, ___ Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever
_______intions, ’Tetter, - all ir, Skin Chapped Chapped Ernp' Hands, and Chilblains, positive!
Corns, and Ireqnired. Itieguar-
lycnre ire* Piles, perfect or no pay gatisaetion, mousy
funded. funded, teed teed U to give Price its box. or For sole re¬ by
rnce 2 cent* per
E. R. Anthonr.
A Flsli Valued by a Lady.
What fish is most valued by alady i
[Muring. H HP Rogers’ Let Let her —. —-—I ringthe ^ glad Cordial, news
of Dr, Huck'e ek'eberry
aWKaass
fell’s
Elega nt
‘V— Flour.
BLAKELY.
A WEIBD SPECTACLE THAT 18
OFTEN SEES.
•V
Haw Calhoun and WUllnmaon Fit for
Their Honor, and Haw It Looked
to a Mm Vp a Tree.
IrlR. Hlcke having prophesied a
deadly calm on Saturday, August
10th, our war reporter knew by the
pains fn his scars that something
was up, and from reports in tbe At¬
lanta papers strongly surmised that
there was trouble brewing between
Mercury and Mars. This was taken
for all it was worth by the manager
of the News ahd Sen, who would
have seen him off when without any
defined reason he started off that
day on the Carrollton freight train,
only that it was tbe managers dinner
hour. But the war reporter started
oil regardless. •
The afternoon mails brought
nswB that John D. Williamson,
president of the Chattanooga, Rome
and Carrollton railroad, and Pat.
Calhoua, representative of the Cen¬
tral railroad in Atlanta, bad started
off to Alabama to fight a duel ou
account of Words that had passed
between them in a controversy be¬
fore the railroad committee of the
legislature. This confirmed the pro¬
phetic intuitions of onr reporter, and
we expected a full report for Sunday’s
paper, bnt were disappointed. The fol¬
lowing telegram costing a large sum
of money for this time of year, will
explain the whole matter: *
Chattahooga, Tenh., Aug. 12—
[Belated Speeiel.]—This may or
may not reach yon in time for the
weekly edition of ten thousand, de¬
pending upon whether Operator P.
H. McDowell’s baby has the colic
bad enough to keep him at home. I
regret that it (the telegram, not the
colic,) did not reach you sooner.
I arrived all right at Creswell on
last year's Sun pass because
Captain Croft did not look on until
then, but after that had to hoof it
to Newnan. [Please send some arni¬
ca and vaseline.] At Newnan I found
a large crowd assembled lor a bal¬
loon ascension and volunteered to
go up with the aeronaut, who kindly
accepted my companionship. After
getting up a little ways, I told the
purpose of my mission and showed
him my credentials as a reporter for
the News and Sun, when he at once
took a tumble and dropped graceful¬
ly out.
After the bespangled professor safe¬
ly landed at the bottom of a frog
pond, where he was at once arrested
for trespass by the vigilant sheriff
of Carroll county, I took a bee line
fora wild, weird spot just off the
line in Alabama which I knew any
duellist would naturally select. Ar¬
riving here just before sunset, I hov¬
ered around in the gathering dusk,
which I found very unsatisfactory
to quench an unusual thirst, doubt¬
less created by the hot sunshine.
Bnt shortly after a thick and impen¬
etrable darkness had enveloped the
glen, I was gratified to see the ex¬
pected party approach and take posi
tions. As they stood in the wild
weird and ind istinguishable darkness
relieved only by the fitful glimmer
of the lightning bugs and the hot
breath of the dueling party, I dis¬
cerned a flask in Captain Jackson’s
hip pocket, and swiftly descending I
jerked it neatly out, when tbe Cap¬
tain said “If you don’t get away
from here, I will shoot you.” I drop
ped a sand bag in order to rise again,
and it hit Col. Seay, of Rome, square
on the bace of the aeck, who at once
exclaimed,“I yield!
As the balloon arose. I strove to
guide it over one oi the principals
as the safest place, but unfortunate¬
ly it diverged about thirty degrees
to one side of Mr. Calhoun. Just
then the word “Fire!” was given,
and in an instant the forest was
luminous with the pistol shots and
dark with the smoke of the
cartridges, presenting a spectacle
beside which the battle of Waterloo
and the fight above the clouds was
nowhere. It reminded me of the
weirdly grotesque early morning en¬
gagement that is spoken of in Au¬
gusta Evans “St. Elmo,” which so
badly scared a ten year-old girl. But
my own deadly peril at once detract¬
ed my attention from everything else,
os the first shot from Mr. William¬
son's pistol took off the small toe
from my left foot and caused the
clouds all the while to run blood,
creating a nameless horror in the
crowd below every time they struck
a match to light a cigar. The other
four shots cut all the cords
of the car attached to the bal¬
loon, causing me to fall into the
branches of a tail pine tree, still des¬
perately clutching the ropes of the
balloon which came down with me.
Owing to this unfortunate catas¬
trophe, I most report the rest of tbe
os it looked to a man up a
Heavy dark clouds obscured the
until the man in the moon conid
see two inches before his nose.
overworked lightning bugs look¬
weary es they went around light
up ti» saws, and the thir¬
county sheriffs t’imly visible on
outskirts of the woods all went
steep,to be called early in the morn¬
In tbe midet of this sepulchral
the two principals loomed
like s’fent white marble statues in
sack coat suits and brow*
hate, presenting a sesne
worth!tty cent* general admission,
there seemed to be standing
stay. Asllooked above I could
see tbe shade of Joh 1 Cal¬
and General Jackson cavorting
While I had not eonsieusly
either one of them, I hope
to see the same again, having
tbe jimjems twice already.
Just then Jack King, of Rome,
over to see whether Mr. Wil¬
pistol was not a six-shoot¬
and if he didn’t have one load
“If you stir a step I will shoot
said the martial voice of Harry
“But I have the right to go to my
principal,” said Mr. King.
Ob, well, I believe you have,” said
Jackson. A
King went, but fortunately for me
found the pistol empty.
Upon ascertaining this, Mr. Cal¬
houn at once spoke up and said:
“Mr. Williamson, I have four shot#
left and you had better take back
what you said.”
Mr. Williamson said, “Under the
circumstances, I will take it back if
you will say you didn’t mean me
when you said what you did.”
After a little further parlying, Mr.
Calhoun said, “When I said what I
did I am sorry I spoke. I was not
thinking about you at all, but won¬
dering whether my ticket iu the
Louisiana State Lottery would
draw anything Tuesday.” With
this he shot four times up in my di¬
rection, but being on the off side ol
the tree only took off the tip of one
ear and made a hole through the
balloon that caused it to collapse
with a wild despairing shriek.
At this point, before the blood¬
thirsty seconds could interfere,
Messrs. Williamson and Calhoun fell
on each others neck and wept
tears that could be audibly heard in
the darkness as they fell with a dull
thud to the ground.
“You are the bravest man I ever
saw,” said Mr. Williamson, “and so
am I.”
“We are,” said Mr. Calhoun brok¬
enly between sobs.
“We will let this settle it,” said
they both together.
But it didn’t settle it. For I wore
out a pair of Ringer’s summer jiants
and skinned both legs as I slipped
down to the bottom of the tall pine
tree and limped off to this place,
bolding my crippled toe in both
hands.
P. S.—Around the cork of the bot¬
tle I took from Capt. Jackson’s hip
pocket, firmly wound to make it fit
in tight, I find a ___ slip r of __ paper with
these words, “Though ‘Though sometimes sometimes
necessary to prevent bloodshed,
duels are always to be deplored.” I
think so myself. I. N. Abbore.
The Verdict Unanimous
W. D. Salt, Druggist^ Bippaa^Ind., teatiflee:
“I can recommend Electric Bitters as the
very bestremedy. Every bottle sold has given
relief in every case. One man took six bottles,
others have added their testimony, so that
the verdict is unanimous that Electric Bitters
do cure all diseases of the Liver, Kidneys or
Blood. Blood. Only Only a a half half dollar a bottU at E. R.
Anthony’s Prugstor
COTTON’S FINE CONDITION.
Favorable reports of the Crop Coming
In From All Sections.
The tenor.of ths planters’ advices
to actors about the cotton crop con¬
tinues very favorable. It was thought
that the frequent rains of the last
two weeks would briug out caterpil¬
lars, but there are no reports of the
appea ranee of the worm in this section
as yet, and besides, the rains were
not as frequent or as heavy in the
interior as on the coast.
New cotton is arriving at the inte¬
rior towns and the general appear¬
ance ol the cotton is said to be very
good. The first two bales of the new
crop were received here last week, and
the staple was of good color and
preparation.
Travelers along the lines of the
Central and railway!report Savannah, Florida end
Western tll| the general
appearance of fields as splendid
and the bolls opening finely. A con¬
tinuance of the favorable weatherfor
the next forty days, it is believed,
will tide planters over the danger
period and will result in a good dean
crop,; In the southwest new cotton
is arriving very freely, 77 bales hav¬
ing arrived at Galveston last wsek.
Much injary i* don* bf the are of inflating
griping compound* taken a« purgative*. Ia
Ayer’* Pilta, the patient ha* a mild bet effec-
tjv* cathartic, that caa UconSdeaKy rr-om.
mended alike for the **wt driest* patient.
a* well iwi the moet rob»*t> / ^ /v
..—*—”—4
THE COMMONWEALTH.
The New* a* t.attrered Over Georgia
Mr. Wycheis to be DuPont’s future
postmaster. rains
It is feared that the constant
will damage cotton ’ 1 Emanuel coun :
tr-
Will McG *1, the son of a V esb -
tertan mtaister living two or three
miles from Dalton, was drowned a
day or two azo wi'V bathing in
Fora’s fish pond.
At Alapaha Wednesday night a
sneak thief entered the residence o?
Capt. J. H. Bake.’ and relieved b ; s
pocket 1 of a va’uable gold watch and
several dollars in money.
At Albany, Friday, Mayor McIn¬
tosh issued an order to tbe pastors
cf negro churche* Li the cLy di¬
recting them to doae services by 11
o’clock at taght. The continued re¬
vivals, causing lengthy services at
u’ght, were tbe sonree of numerous
complaints from large numbers of
citizens, and tbe mayor has request¬
ed the negroes to confine thei- servi¬
ces to respectable hours.
A negro died near Alapaha last
week of a rather mysterious ailment.
His case excited some suspicion, and
the coroner ordered an inquest, at
which an autopsy was made by Dr.
Smart. In the negro’s stomach the
doctor found a live rattlesnake with
nine rattles and a button. Just a
they were about to bury something
was discovered movtag about under
the skin of the flesy part of the left
arm. An incision there with the
doctor’s scalpel revealed a live scor
pion crawling around between the
flesh and the skin.
A Charivari Extraordinary.
Charlie Sbattuc tells a good story
of the way a bridal party were sere¬
naded or treated to a charivari in
Kansas some years ago. An old fel¬
low had married a girl not half his
age in the town were Mr. Shattue was
stopping, and the boys determined
to give him a royal send-off. They
paid the driver for a slaughter house
a couple of dollars for two big pails
of fresh blood, and after the newly
married couple had retired, and all
was dark about the house, some of
the fellows slipped into the yard and
poured a stream of blood on the
ground clear around the house.
Having accomplished this, they drove
half a dozen cows into the yard, and
then the fun commented. The cows
no Booner sniffed the blood than they
commenced bellowing, and their loud
“w-o-o-o-f-s” could be heard for a
mile or two. Other cows heard it,
and soon there came a procession of
bo vines from all quarters of the town,
all bellowiug at the top of their
voices. They fought, and stamped,
and powed the'ground, and bellowed,
until the bridal couple fairly went
wild. The old man came out with a
club and attempted to drive the cat¬
tle away, but could make no impress¬
ion upon the herd. Again and again
did he make an attempt to disperse
them, but each time they returned to
thebloodytra.il. And all the time
1 their numbers were becoming greater.
Away up on the mountains could be
heard the answering bellows of new
accessions, and the clatter of bovine
hoofs as they came down into the val¬
ley to join the crowd. Not a wink o!
sleep cheered the bridal couple that
night, and by early morning the old
man was up with a spade and cover¬
ing up with dirt the line of blood
which created all the disturbance.
That night’s charivari has never
been forgotten in that town.
No medicine in the world is i.i better repute
or mo e wide known than A /si ’s Sarsaparilla.
As asafe ann certain remedy fo-ah manner
o? Wood disorders, leading physlc ans and
Sfruggifrts everywhere -ecommecd it in prefer¬
ence to any other.
The Luck of an Arha .bus Druggist.
New York Times.
Opposite Memphis and about
twenty miles inland I stopped at a
general store to rest and get a bite
to eet. Besides keeDing hardware,
wood-ware, dry goods, groceries,
saddlery, notions, boots and shoes,
smoked and salt msats, there was a
stock of drugs in the rear. I got
some crackers and cheese, and while
eating there came in a colored man.
He complained of pains in the chest,
and wanted • remedy. Tbe merchant
scratched his nose reflectively, look¬
ed along the shelves, and finally
took down a bottle, poured a two-
ounce phial full and corked it up and
handed it over with tbe remark:
“Take five drops of that in w ater
every four hours. Fifty cents.”
The negro paid and went away,
and in a few minutes a woman came
in for something for dyspepsia. He
took down a chance bottle, poured
some of the contents into a phial,
and charged her 60 cents. Then I
inquired if he was a doctor.
“Well, sorter,” he replied.
“And you know drugs?”
“Yes, tolerably fair/’
“You put up queer remedies for
tboee two complaints.”
‘Did I? se^ed Do you know drugs?”
-iSTS? “1 have 1 fiYS " veara at ore- p
“Joat the bm® I’ve been BtL.aSAa. aching to
gee - *-----.V for a month l I I 1 took this stock
/ A,: CAR 1/>AD OF
WATERMELONS
TODAY, AT
J, H. Keith & Co,
THE FINEST
HAVANA CIGAR IN THE MARKET.
W. D. DAVIS, wi 'wj
Stoves.
And Farming Implements.
..........- -
Have just received a nice line of CEDAR BUCKETS, POT-WARE and
PISTOLS.
if if if PISTOLS! PISTOLS!! * i,
Come and see me.
A. LOWER, ■A
Mill Junto 111 Mid il DIHU ffalcfes
JEWELRY, CLOCKS, &C.
Special attention given to Repairing. 20 Hill Street GRIFFIN, GA
SOOTS, SHOES AND LEATHER AT
JAo- HASSELKUS’ SHOE STORE 22
Home-made Shoes and Leather a Specialty.
SS®~ We warrant all work and shall make it a point to misrepresent nothin. Just rnwreO
large shipment of Gents’ and Ladies’ and Misses’ fine goods, and school shoes for Cbildw*
and Slippers of all kinds. H. „ „ W. HASSELKUS. . _______
■Of $4 per cord paid for 200 cords of Tan-bark. „ , ,
■w
Drewryfs : Drug : Stori
, IBB
Has just received a tall supply of Landredth, Cleveland and Johnson & Reh-
bins’ Garden Seed-also field sesc’-allfresh. Guaranteed /r ' m
EASTERN SEED POTATOES.
STOCK POWDERS!! NERVE AND BONE LINIMENT 111
N. B. DREWRY.
=*
For )-( Cheat) )-( ‘ | Ifl
■
....GALL ON.
W.M. HOLMAN -*C0 * 1
We Standard A Suyar for making cake. Citron, Currents, Prunes and al * 1
kinds of Extracts for Flavoring. The best Pat. Flour, Mince Meat, lelliei
and in fact anything you want.
★ TURKEYS, FISH AND OYSTERS.
Leave us your order and it will be attended to.
on a debt. The fellow agreed to
write on each bottle what the con¬
tents were good for, but he missed
over half of’em. I have been deal¬
ing out sorter on my own judgement,
and I’ve had mighty good luck so
far.”
“Haven’t you killed any one?”
“About a dozen, I reckon; but all
but one have been niggers, and the
one white man was no ’eount any¬
how. Now you just put iu the after¬
noon marking up them bottles, and
I’ll keep ye over night and hand ye
two big dollars in the morning.”
List of Letters.
Advertised letters remaining in the
yostoffice at Griffin, Ga., Aug. 12th,
1889, which will be sent to the Dead
*etter office if not called for in 30
lays: W. Apple.
C.
Martin Blewitt.
Jordin Bogin.
W B. Campbell.
Lee sly A. Cullard.
Isliarn Dariel.
P. M. Elder.
Lizzie Gildert. <
Willie Goins.
Mrs. Emma Gresham.
James Hollingsworth.
Miss M. W. Janes.
B. N.Johnson.
Mrs. Mary Jonson.
Lorena and Minnie Kilgore.
Miss Juliah Lesly.
A. H. Lindsey.
Miss Randa Murfer.
Miss Leotie Reeves, care L. Hood.
Lncious Beeves, col.
Miss Ida Walker.
M. 0. Bowdoin, P. M.
ADVICE TO MOTHERS.
Mbs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,
for children teething, is the prescrip¬
tion of one of the best female nurses
and physicians in the United States,
and has been used for forty forty years years
with never-failing their success by millions
of mothers for children. Dur-
is tag incalculable. the process of It teething relieves its the value child
from P^’ care « dysentery and diar-
child it rests the mother. Price 25c.
o shnML bottle aug2cod&wly
Where Shall We Summer IL
This is an important question,
both to the invalid and pleasure
seeker.
Bowden Lithia, Georgia’s wonder¬
ful Mineral Spring, probably offers
the best advantages to both the
health and pleasure seeker.
Only twenty miles from Atlanta,
situated directly on the Georgia
Pacific railroad. Trains several
times daily; full mafl and telegraph
accommodations. hotel; Hot A magnificent bath¬
Springs system of
ing. The finest mineral water in the
world; cool mountain air, and the
great Piedmont Chautauqua holding
its summer session there tills season,
make it especially attractive.
Send your name to E. W. Marsh
& « Co.. CO., Salt oam Springs, springs, Ga., Ga., and ana they
will phlet send on this you great an illustrated health and a££ j i
ure resort.
MBMllrtiAII W.
OF NEW YORK.
000, Organized Paid in 1843. Aesetsaver >126,000
memllere since organisation over
WOTO $272,000,000 AAO AAO Pain _____,___ member* in • .UUD 1888, $15>- «1S .
727,550. This company v is thef „„„ b tbe ... - largest ------ in _
tbe iue world, worm, and ana th* me________________ advantage* it ofler* to >“•
surer* make it the safest, cheapest and best.
S. W MANGHAM’8 SONS. Agfa.
july7d4w6m4p.
NEW CROPlllRHIP SEED!
Ill tbe beet varieties, bought direct from
the grower*.
Largeloi Large lot P UNT8 and OILS at the low
Everything in the DRUG LINE. Call a»d
see us. J. N. HARRIS * SON.
ju!23d3m
Notice to the Public.
Tbe firm of Woil & Sherman is from now, k
henceforth and forever dissolved. Tbe **e«
of good*, notee and accounts dnetbe firm be-
Ksr" 1 *" ssir-ffi
augHdtt
CW trie* msm .n’t be *"55
cun lieh relieved 'Visa by uy su-bOMsu wo *“ —;
gvn «vh only I? iteide tickle the tliepwUte. {.date. Thc 1 tOw*- 1
te-.cd core is
_
vow v»h*» tbe i-.cmStfaelSS' Ui'e
VrS*4M V« ami win it, MS*
raHah!* reaiedv u oarer ft nrrer