Newspaper Page Text
*
i (M»
Paper of Spalding to
rttoias us m
LY~-t)ne dollor Iter peroquore forth* flret
iuwrUntt, «fd fifty rente for ench noontmi nabwxjuent
ow. TbnBaea w lew t« lie ae a
NOTICES-10 ^u pre lire far
»n. No noirrtionnmk.rthi.MHO
rate* an for th# Daily
Everf family in tbe country i* hav¬
ing an experience with the rraalte of
a high tariff and traata. Tbe soggy
uugar that to now retailed at ten
eeate a pound waa retailed at seven
cents a pound four montbe ago.
There to a dttty.au sugar of two
cents a pound, creating an annual
income of $58,000,000. Becanee of
tbe tariff the sugar pool here has had
a dear advantage of two cents a
pound over foreign competitors.
Consumers are eating protection su¬
gar which -cost* them ten cents in¬
stead ofssvcu cents a pound, and
costs the pool no more than it did
when consumers bought it cheap. If
Congress has the power to regulate
eommerce, the trust business, which
Blaine said were private affairs in
which the public have no interest,
should be disorganised.
The New York^Herald has the fol¬
lowing to say in rsgard to the life in
tbe Whits House; Heretofore the
record of the Hayes regime at the
White House has boras the bell as the
digraeeful example of two penny
greed in the management of the pres¬
idential household—a display of raw
avarice tbatjnust not be dignified by
dubbing it parsimony. But it is now
openly changed in th* public prints
that in comparison to theHen-rtoonto
dispensation the stingy system of the
Hayes family was extravagance it¬
self—for tbe Buckeye was never guilty
of starving the servants. It may be
i«« an excuse, although ibis no
4SrwS&BSIhnR&UoM ■ l88«aKr"" get all the
grab on his frugal board, just os
crowded tbe executive mansion until
now Mrs. Harrison is clamoring for
congregate build additions to catch
the overflow
—--«*■_———
It is with some surprise thut wo
learn from the Indianapolto Journal
that “no American now in public life
surpasses Gen. Harrison as an ex¬
temporaneous speaker.” “Few men,
living or dead,” continue* the Jour¬
nal, “have equaled him in the gift of
thinking on his feet and in the art of
clnar, strong, earnest, apt expres¬
sion.” As the Indianapolis Journal
never makes an assertion in regard
to the administration without direct
• from the president,
j, ___that General
staudingas an orator may be
ed as settled. We recall one
on which he shone brilliantly ns
extemporaneous speaker.
his reception in Boston, while
loyal Bostoniaus were wuiting
eager expectancy to catch the
oi oratory ns they dropped from the
great man’s lips, he rose to his
five feet six and in that clear, “strong,
earnest, apt” style of which the
reception nal speaks, committee, addressing spoke himself asfollows: to
“lam much pleaded with the arrange¬
ments.”
_______
LOOK TO lilUGEK THINGS.
It is something over a year now be¬
fore tbe next election comes off, arid
it strikes us that all this political just
talk is A little too previous;
about Bix months ahead of time. It
will do for the summer of '90* but it
is entirely out of place in the summer
of *89. Let’s go ahead and lay one
or two more trusts in the cemetery
alongside of old jute.—[Warren ton
Clipper.
There is a deal of good sense in
Jthis. Georgia has plenty of politics
without going down iuto the districts
or prospecting about the next gov¬
ernor. The biennial legislature Is
supplying diversion enough in that
line; why anticipate the next enm-
jpfgnf What’s - the <*. with
matter cotton
bagging and the great crops? These
are enouge to engage a people. Let
politics alone. The Clipper is not
only right, butentirely right.
State or LfOAfiCovvr*, Omo, City or H.S. Tousdo.I f
■
F.ank J. u
WSH*V VWHUWV w
Hue’s Cstamh Cu*r.
FRANK J.UHENBY.
Sworn
J . A ffetsry PnMic.
» Obi* i* take* intemaBy and
- the nlootl and mncussnrfaree
■.MSWttatfs:
mfo w«|
buy Cuba
colinhwtionof the colored peo]
J says it would bo a little
thl present generation to
laborer*, but would be for the
ol good in the end. It is true
South,would lose some the electoral congressmen col¬
and some votes to
lege, but the Carolina Senator is will-
log to give up some political strength
,or th “ solut,0a of th ® race question.
This question assumes unusual
prominence when a man as distin¬
guished and beloved as the gallant
Hampton expresses himself so
strongly. We do not believe tbe
South is yet ready to give up the ne-
g ro ite best acclimated and roost
reliable farm laborer but if the race
issue is kept alive and is stirred by
^ Bnw j 8a am j incendiary leaders of
the co j ore( ] people, like the Alabama
negro editot and others in t his state,
and if voodooism and lazi¬
ness shall continue to depreciate
the value and efficiency of la-
bor, we shull begin to think like
the senator that colonisation is the
best and safest solution of the mut¬
ter. In other words, when the negro
becomes inefficient os a laborer and
forgets his place as a servant, we
shall be willing for his removal.
And Cuba would be a paradise for
the colored people. It* rich soil and
its genial climate would suit the race
and give them the best and fairest
opportunity to prove their ability
to work out their destiny. There
they could prove their fitness for ad¬
vancement, or ,tbey could pass back
into their original state under the
sunniest conditions which could be
asked or imagined. We should think,
too, that self-respecting, sensible and
ambitions negroes would prefer this
solution; for knowing as they do,
and as they ail must know, that the
two races can never be equal, or lire
on equal terms in the same section,
we Bhpuld imagine they would perfer
this chance for independent life, and
an opportunity to show the world
what they can do for themselves.
The Philadelphia Press keeps up
ft» brilliant attempts to be witty by
misrepresenting .the South. It into
question whether stupidity or malice
prompt* its efforts in that direction,
but we incline to the latter. In a late
issue it said:
“Georgia is making vigorous efforts
to raise enough corn to supply her
needs, something she fra* n»v*r yet
succeeded in doing.- Her chief diffi¬
culty heretofore has been that she
converted too much of her corn into
.moonshine whiskey, and too Uttle
griddle cake? — J
.«w««i» raised last-year 28,069.000
bushels of corn, or an average of 1,0.8
bushels per capita, based on her pop¬
ulation atthelnstcensus, while Penn-
svlvanin raised 45,414,000 bushels,
or 10,6 bushels per capita. In other
words, in proportion to population,
Georgia raised more corn than Penn¬
sylvania. Georgia had at the time
of tbe census $106,000 invested in
the manufacture of liquors of all
kinds, whhilePennsylvania had
370,000. Pennsylvania does not
raise near enough corn to supply
own want*. * > ■ , ■
•' %A . ftp If4 0 . J - "•""J. ' 'Lf. '• ‘ *.
At first a little, hedging congn, • '
They ’Tie nothing but a At*M, off.”
! They «ay, soy, “ “ ’Twin ’Twill very very goon i wear
Alas, the story old!
The hectic cheek the failing strength,
The grief tvari that cannot save, out, length, !
And life’s flame goes at
* in a ('onsinnptwe’s grave.
If persons would use Dr, Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery, when
tation of the lungs is indicated by a
cough, it would be an easy matter to
avert consumption. 1 Be wise in time.
The “Discovery” ail is diseases guaranteed for which
eure in cas»s of
for it is recommended, or money paid
it will be promptly refunded.
Mercurial Poison. ■
Mercury is frequently injudiciously used by
quack doctors in cases of malaria and blood
poison. Its aftereffect is worse than the
igialdisease. B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm)
contains no mercurj', but will eliminate
curial poision from the system. Writd to
Blood Bulra Co., Atlanta, Oa., for book
convincing proof of its enrative virtue.
____________j. and t mysys hod In mouth
md _____poison, knot* tongue. sores I got two »y bottles
on my
a. B. B., which which henletTmy healed of my tongue ton and mouth
and make a new man me.”
. Wm. Richmond, Atlanta, Ga., writes: “My
wifsconld hardly see. Doctor* called ft syph¬
ilitic fritie. Her eyes were in dreadful condi¬
tion. Her appetite foiled.. She had pain in
lints and bones. Her kidneys were de-
rastored.
Tas K. P. B. Jones, Atlanta, (ia., writes: “I
troubled with copper colored eruptions,
loss of appetite, pain in the back, aching
joints, debility, emreiation, loss at hair, sore
throat, ami great nervousness: B. B. B. put
my system in fine condition.”
ADVICE TO MOTmHRS.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,
or children teething, is the prescrip¬
tion oi one of the best female nurses
and physicians in the United States,
and has been used for forty years
with never-failing success by millions
of mothers for their children. Dur¬
ing the tih» process prucwsw of ui teething iwtmittr its iws value yuiuc
is fa incalculable. incalculable. It It relieves relieves the t he child child
fronr pain, cures dysentery and diar-
-t.— —i-j— <- bowels, and
health to the
t, price 25c.
a bottle. aug2eodJtwly
A Fish Valued by ugfcady.
What fish to most valued by a lady ?
Her-ring. Let her HtosHeWry ring the glad Cordial, news
<rf»r. soying aggw*’ her child trom of
it a teething. case cramp
•wife, and relieving / j
• 1
= -» -
=
18 . I
Thursdiy
iminatiOn
In the
iprovsl is ex-
:an tariff poli-
C j, wm vu ™.un. necessary the re¬
peal of war taxes tobacco and
fruit uii brandy. oranuy. planks the plat-
Other important to
form read aa follows : ^ $
We are to favor of t*e full apeedy monetary res¬
toration of silver to its unlimited
functions by its full and and
at the national mint*,
r toward such action we nc~
aaS S!»Bttg gS-ss:
wUlX* tieojBm and and
fishing intereste of onr State,
protect the natural oyster beds for
the sole use of onr own people,, mid
toanytom, i^drapccially advocated by to foreign
fishermen, as the Ca-
Cleveland in bis meesage on
nudian treaty. of all laws,
We are for municipal, the repeal whereby
State and our
fanners and truckers are sale required of their to
pradtRteto^ pay a special tax for tbe
in the cities of the common-
wealth.
woum UV you rnvuw nxsi i “““
strong? If you continue feeling mis¬
erable and yourself good-for-nothing blame, you for
have Brown’s only Iron Bitters will to sorely cure
yon. It is a certain cure for weakness, dyspep¬
sia, indigestion, malaria, affections.
kidney, tang and heart
Weaker than Water.
A man is never in a more debilitat
ed condition than when he has weath¬
ered a case of measles. The system
finds it hard to beaT up under the
weight of the disease and almost re¬
bels against the strain upon it. And
yet there is a remedy which answers
the requirements of sneta a case. A
prominent druggist and physician
writes : C.
Dahunston, S.
Gentlemen—Your tonic has been
goimcYery well this spring. There
has been a good deal of measles, es¬
pecially amon the faetoy debilitated operatives,
which left them in a con¬
dition, Jor which your tonic seems to
be the very thing, and it has sOld
well. » : Yors truly, A. Boyd, * * M. D.
... ;«■ s> John
For sale by E. R. Anthony.
<*?* . - ■ -_:- *
« H '■ f.rt'::'* «'
A B AP'BEGINN ING.
full Train an » New llallroad Wrooted.
Three Killed and Many Injured,
KNOXvmaB, Tenn., Aug. 24.—In the
celebration of the completion ei the
Knoxville, Cumberland Gap and Louis-
isville milroad an excursion tram was
=--S^?4a®3f Alexander Boeder and
a. T. Powere, Knoxville,
Judge George Andrews, of
were killed, and over twenty-five others
were injured, seventeen of whom ware
seriously hurt. John T. Hearn, editor
of The Sydney, livening O., received Sentinel, and bad formerly scalp
of a
•wound. ________
Value of Advertisements.
“Po I believe in ad vertising.” said
a prominent lawyer, and a day the or two hid¬
ago. “Well, rather; in
den advertisement more than any
in S3 what I took to be puff for Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets.
I threw down the paper in a rage.
Note week after that I needed some
medietae of that kind; little and pilft.” went “Did and
bought those game
I find them qf good”? the kind “Why, I yes, but the
best that thing lias nothing tod withfirst ever saw,
and o joteon ques¬
tion, I only that mention advertising the
myself lo show (foes
pay’" ,
A Very Large; Percentage
Of the American people are troubled
with a most annoying, troublesome
and disagreeable complaint called
“Catarrh .” It is not necessary to be
troubled, ft is demonstrated beyond
question that Clarke’s Fxtract of
Flax (Papillon) Catarrh Cure imme¬
diately Catarrh. relieves and thorough permanently and fair
cures A
trial will convince you. Use Clarke’s
Flax Soap for the Skin.. Catarrh
Cure, $1.00. Soap 25 cents. At Dr.
N. B. Drewry’s Drugstore.
A Keetor of Grace Chureli.
Dear Sib— In T8611 brokeout with
an attack of Poison Gak. Whether
or not it came back on me during the
next three or four years I do not re-
mem her,but from a bout1865 to1885
I suffered mos severely from repeated
attacks of this eruption. The use of
someexternal remedies gave a relief—
’twas only temporal^—till in 1879
I found that Iodide of Potassium and
Syrup of Sarsaparilla benefltted me
not a little. However, even then I
was not cured, for from 1882to 1885
the attacks were more severe, pro¬
longed and frequent than ever, com¬
ing upon me as many as four, and
even five times during the year. In
the Spring of 1885 I took a Bourse of
P. P. P., and from that time to the
present (June 25,1886) I have been
free from eruptions this of month, this poison. few
Only once, early in a
*»« •* — - --------
ried and loathsome disease. After
being plagued for about twenty-five
years with Poison Oakl consider my¬
self cured, and by the use of about
one bottle of P. P. P. Y
D. WATSON WlKN, Ga,
Eector Grace Church, Wayorora,
■ ter
Abbott’B East Indian Corn Paint
removes speedily all Corns, Bunions For and sate Warti by
Without pain.
WaVl^SGrlv. « f|
ia^Mg
W « -Wl ?V
- ■ •
*&; & i
X
s
»• Cfcfa* Mtmmr tor
MM or Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is found to toe
article Itself. It Is merit that wins, and to*
fast tort Hood’s Sarsaparilla actually a^
IneS^* popularity «»d
Ml* greater toon that of soy other sarsapa-
Merit Wins SiSfJS
Hood’* Sarsaparilla cares Berofula, Salt
Rtaeom and oil Huokw. Dyspepsia, «ek
Headache, BDtoasneis. overcomes YkM
Tired FeeUag, creates an Appetite, strength-
res toe Nerves, boiWs op toe Whole System.
Hsii’r H*nai«|IHs Is sold by all drug-
A PHYSICIAN'S
WARNING!
~
i i
Of aU the terrible, soul affrightenin* curses that
sfBlct ail classes of bnmanlty, nothing in all ages
has ever approached comparison to the ravages of
POiSOW ___ „ „ that slow, insa
BLOOD tj ate destroyer
uf flesh and life. Alas! Dow often just such an
affliction loves to effect a rtoble life with its poisonous
Mint It strikes with destructive aim the most
notable, sparing neither
SCROFULA king nor statesmen.
Even unto the third
generation are tie sins of the father made manifest.
Wl.1t a fearful lerltage to bequeath an innocent
child I Ah! the horrible ravages of this affliction!
To its activity is due sore throat
SORES swe liver, sore kidneys, sore lungs,
sen dfe, great ulcers, internal, ex¬
ternal and eternalnnless proper treatment is applied-
The bast remedy is a prescription Used extensively
m private practice by an old Atlanta physician, it
is now prepared a thousand gallons at a time, and
is sold in large bottles at
Pl M P LES only one dollar per bottle.
! '» is called d. a B. or Bo¬
tanic Blood Balm. .Under its peculiar influence the
blood poison first becomes passive, then divided,
and lastly is exuded through the liver, through the
kidneys, and (hroagh the pdtes of the skin.
It is clearly tlie duty of every one who suspects
the least trace of syphilitic or scrofulous poison in
■heir blood,whether recently fromeontaglbn thoroughly, or from
inheritance, to get it out of their System
PAIN by to* use of this great remedy so
’ “ * lx t))at pimples, sbres,aches, pains, weak
kidneys and other symptoms Will not be transmit¬
ted to innocent posfierity.
Demand it of your druggist and take no substi-
date. Testimonials from those who have used it
Atlanta. Go. to
MERCER UNIVERSITY.
MACON, GA.
FtjLl FACULTIES. FIVE SCHOOLS,
_. Phe Department >gy-
5. Tbe Iiaw School.
TUITION TUITION FREE FREE in in the the Department Departed of Lib-
3®aS£ day • ^ For FALL (2i5th) Catalogue TFRM in September. begins and ..... other on I ?F information i - Wednes-
drees i, Rrv. G. A. NUNN BRANTUY, ALLY, D. D., P
dent,____ , or JOHN J. Sec. pro t
Macon. Ga. jull7wed&BU<
Georgia Midland & Gulf HR.
Time Tafife, Taking Effect Aug 11, ’89
No. 50 .—-Pashknukr, Soi th, Daily Except
Sunday.
„ Arrive. I.e
McDonough.................. 5:00a.m.
Griffin.,..,.;....................5:40 a.m. 5:45 “
Warm Springs.............. 7:09
ColllBtiBiu'i...............8:48 “
No. 51 .—Passenger, North. Daily,
Columbus,................... 1:05 p. m.
Warm Sprttjg................ 2:34 •’
Griffin.........—..............3.-50 p. m.
No. 52 .—Passenger, South. Daily.
Griffin..™,.................... 4:05 p. m.
Warm Springs.............. 5:28 “
Columbus..— ; ..............7:00 p. m.
;gf.r, 5
Sdnray.
Columbus......... 5;10 p.:
Warm Springs.. 6:49 ’■
Griffin........... .....8:15 p. m. 8:20 ”
,
McDonough...:................9:00 n a
No. 54 .—Passenger South, Sunday .Only
McDonough..............«... 7:30 a. m.
Griffin...........................8:10 a, m. 8:15 “
Warm Springs..../......... 9:85 “
Columbus......................11:10 “
No. 55 .—Passenger Nobth. Sunday Only.
Columbus...................... 7:40 a. m.
Warm Springs...™........ 9:14 “
McDonough.................11:40 Griffin...........................10:88 a. m. 11:00 •*
“
£No. 1.—Freight North. Daily Except
Sunday,
Columbus.....................»■ 6:45 a.m.
QriffiUv...................„,..12:29p.m. Warm Springs™.....,— 3:00p. 9:45 “
m.
McDonough..............-.3:00 11
No. 2 .—Freight SundaT. South. Daily Except
McDonongh______..... 7:00 a.m.
Griffin..................,»,is™8:06a.m. 9:15 a. m.
Warm Springs,.!,™.,.™. 12:02 p.m.
Columbus......... 3.50 _
p. m.
Miw Advertisement!
TO ADVERTISERS
A list of 1000 newspapers dfvided into
STATES AND SECTIONS will be sent on ap-
pCcatioa—FREE, To those whowanttheir advertising to
pay
Newspaper Spruce Advertising New Bureau, York
10 street,
September Sheriff's Sale
101% acre* more or Ices. Bold »a (he
E. Block vsf £. R. Rob*- J.. H. Hon-
Crainary’s Aavcrtisentento.
„ sums Uotnc-
■jna, 1889.—T. C. Mc-
nennur ui Jin. Janett Bethone,
applies to me lor fetters of Dismis-
show cause before
leCourt of Ordinary, ** ** w
a. m., on the flri
why such letters
HAMMOND, Ordinary,
HJ Uiut-Oj in Septem¬ MJJ
a. m., on the first Monday 8f dismission
next, why such fetters
n0t be Cw. t HAMMOND, Ordinary.
*A15
Executors’ Sale.
By virtue oi an order granted by the court
oi Ordinary of Spalding county, will be sold
before the Court House door, on the first
Tuesday ol September next, during the legal
hour* of sale, all the real estate of R. R.
Brewer, late of stud county debased: consist¬
ing of one lot corner of Ninth and Poplar
feet to air auey. parcels xub to-wit:
__________„ fronting into three less,
one lot 105 feet, more or on
Poplar street running bank 420 feet, more or
fees, to College street. One lot with dwelling
*—nting 105 feet, more or less, feet, on Poplar
eet and running back 210 fronting more or
s. One lot 105 feet, more or less,
on College street and running back 410 feet,
more orless. Sold for the purpose of distn-
bnt on and payment oteale
W. H. BREWER,
J. C. BREWER.
Exeeutors of L. R. Brewer.
Administrator’s Sale.
thehighest bidder before----- legal -
________ __ Griffin, Ga., during tbe
House door in
hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in Septem¬
ber 1889. the undivided one-half interest m
half acres of land more north by
Griffin, bounded asfollows: i on the
Broadway street, south by _• Flemister and
Arnold, east by second street rcet and and west west by by
the Brown place. Sold forthepnrp?® 6 5> f Pay¬
ing the debts of deceased and for distribution
among his heirs. Terms of safe “
|6. Adm'r W. 8. Brown.
Notice.
Notice Notice is herebo herebo given given „------------ thot t application will
be made to the the legisiat legislature now iow in in sessioi session to
; requiring the recording m the
bounty Commission-
count to be specially kept by Treasurer and
for kindred purposes
Notice to Debtors and Creditors
Notice is hereby riven to all who are indebt-
ed totheestate_____ lofL. R. . Brewe
call and settle at once. All
claims against the estate of ft
notified to present them at r- Horn
tD TV'll jno.cbrewer;
Executors Estate L. R. Brew
ang22w0.-f8.70.
Honey Wanted (or the
Stark Plantation.
707 ' acres land, well wanted and Midland timbered,
4% m------ [iles from Griffin, on Ga. RR.
Good neighborhood. neight
Stark horn
trallj
rent i________
Other hous
city and
before i1
will. «gain, ogain, Property
be be
55 ACRES near city limits, part wood¬
land openings, branches, &c. Frnit of al
kind. Large, beautiful dwelling and out-
houseft, Ac. Also 1250 acres, good dwel¬
ling, ont-houses, mules, corn, fodder, Ac.
Gin house, corn mill and present growing
i said pi
G. A. CUNNINGHAM,
Real Estate Agent,
-VIA-
BRUNSWICK. JESUP.MACON, ATLAN¬
TA, ROME and CHATTANOOGA
ONLY LINE
Double Daily Sleeping Car Service
Between
Cincinnati and Jacksonville.
Solid trains between
Chattanooga and with Jacksonville, double trains
Closely with connecting Pullman Sleeping Cars
to and from
Memphis, Nashville, Kansas Ci y
and the West and
Knoxville, Washington, New York
and the East.
THE SHORT LINE BE! WEEN
^ Atlanta and Jacksonvillo, Savannah,
Atlanta and
Atlanta and Brunswick,
Atlanta and Macon,
Atlanta and Borne.
For rates, Time Cards and other
information apply to agents of the
East Tenn., Va. and Georgia fl . lt
B. W.WBENN.
Gen. Pass. ATicket Agt., Knoxville.
S. H. Hardwick,
Asst. Gen. Pass. Apt., Atlanta,
THB NEWS, rmsm
TJ* EOTAftUSHEO 1871. E8TAH1
[
i - J;,/'' f »\ ~ •; f'; i
# -/ u ;
Griffin News and Sui
daily asd weekly,
.Ale-'
(CONSOLIDATED MAY 26, 1889,)
OFFERS -
More Value
To Advertisers
In proportion to prices charged, than any
other medium in the South.
With the combined circulation ot two old
and well established papers, it charges the
prices of only one.
It is published in one of the agricultural,
commercial, manufacturing and railroad
centers of the most progressive State in the
South, with a large and intelligent surroud-
ing population and extra facilities for dis¬
tribution.
r-;
Being a first-class newspaper, fully up to
all demands of the times and the require¬
ments of its constituency, it is read not only
by nearly every family in Spalding County,
but in the eight surrounding counties, with
a good general circulation in the State and
other States.
IT COVERS ITS WHOLE FIELD.
and covers it completely.
-tot-
Prlces low. Write for rates and sarnpl
copies of Daily and Weekly to
DOUGLAS GLESSNER, Publisher,
Griffin, Ga.
SB
!• 'I Y.TLLT COMMXSSIONBB KOLB SAYS,
0 ,-ncr CONSHHKOSXB OF AORICULTUK*. A 0 OT**« AU-
. Ui*>i»ex,£tWtA»T CBLWareiJ-viiustffiiq'fift*i OBttwAtoa to g,, m m
-j -1 ean and 0* nuwt hoartBy riw-ffitatnd Ta« Sorannx
• .labima *3 a farm jiunml of Tory ouperior merits. It should be in the home of overt fi
*/omLo agricultural Very truly jouri,
200,000 Headers! Established 1843. . Leftdta* to 18801
T1 SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR Al M FARMER,
OEOEA3-XA.,
Now lit it* FortyTTaaor ofFTitollca-tloxx.
The reeoreUed of Southern egrfeulture ond the induotrial pro«re«* ef toe Seuto, ’ ri4i
or*en
a guaranteed eireuletion In every Southern ond W of tern State.
A BRILLIANT CORPS OF WRITERS.
The editorial oorpe of writer, and contributor! i« cniurpaMed, if ovnallod, hr thotof
Her publicetion in all tbe Union. HON. W. J. NOSTHttN II too *ro«Mont oftfce-Goorgia
Agrioulturel Society, and a practical former of tho moat thorough culture, pad W»
Kid meet ioku _
alwayi iustrucUvo to firmeri. DR. DANIEL LEE ia not only one of the ableat
ed agrienlturaljonrnaliat in the eountry, but he mi for few year* TirtaaUy Commiaaio
Waabington, D. C„ and later, Profo.ior ot .tgricdltdre at tho e*orgWStoteff#W*r*it*.
B. i. REDDING ia too able and thoreajhly equipped Aniileut CommUaionpt of At.: ;
the State of Georgia, aa wallas an axperikerod witter. Taoy. 3. S.NEWMAN fe In r-* sr t» ,
Alabama State Sxporiraeut Station eadatocdaln tbo front rank o( agrioultural eda<»o.»
wrttan In the South. With thtao eminent wrltera are ooaociatud a aaoreor ts oro it retire
male eontribu’.era—including not a few pro'euional agrienltural writers-wboao moute.y
ties cover ovary department of farm management and household work, making Tna-CULT
tor the most eem^ete, attractive and valuable agricultural Journal In the South.
being worto more than a whole yew’s subscription to asur fannerwho mads aad thi*»* »•*
noetfen with hta work. wi . ®
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ter to instruct, enlighten and entertain. Beck numbtr Is worth too turn eborged far
g< Now Is
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Manager, J W f»r sample copy.