Newspaper Page Text
■
T[
i OIjKSSK Kit, Kd. * Pro»*r
, {In Advance) Per Annum.. .f6.00
LY, One Year,.............. . 1 . 00 .
(IrMHn, Georgia, Am*. 3®« 1880-
AdvertUIng B«W.
,L NOTICES—10 wt.t* |»r lln*«nr
J&3kbkjssx jSMartfWKgg t k2:
™nttnn# their advertlrennent* longer
J- rntM n» for to* Daily
Hayti was too unsettled during her
war times to warrant Minister Dong-
lass’ prcwsuce there. Now that peace
is proclaimed she doesn’t seem of
snfljdent importance to justify the
expense __ :% "of of a a useless useless representative w
: .------- -dm----
The Ivouieville Courier Journal re-
orte Congressman lireckinridge as
uAvinir that he does not think that
thl-rc will be much o! a fight in con-
gn» over contested sea ts, as the Re¬
publicans will learn early in the ses-
sion that the Demojrate wiU submit
Republican organs are calling atten¬
tion to the strong parallistn that ex¬
ists betwecnthe candidacies of Forak-
erand Muhone. Wemay.be permitted
to doubt the policy from a Republi¬
can standpoint, of reminding citi-
i of Ohio that in casting ballots
rnr Foraker they are in fact sustain¬
ing Mabonc. llut, ah the same, it is
Senatorial aspirations do not pro¬
mote logical editing. TheCincii nati
Commercial Gazette attempts to
combat the criticisms on Foraker’s
Cincinnati appointments and the
great injustice done to that city by
the'Republican State Government,
by denunciation of certain ailedged
Democratic delinquencies five years
ago. The people will be likely to
read between the lines of this very
transparent defense of the Governor,
who, as the editor ef the Commercial
suggestively remarks, “has grown
too much to be agreeable to the
Marshal Halstead I
-»
MUCH TO BE DK81KBD.
Unity of action among the leading
and moneyed citizens of a town goes
a long way toward advancing the
town’s business interest. Unity does
away with the wear and tear of dis¬
sension. Discord and strife does
more harm to n community tlinn all
outside opposition. Local rivalry
and jealousies should be buried when
it comes to the town’s common in-
tereste. Show us a united commu
nity and we will point you a thriving
i town !4 —■ and people.
-- ' ' ——*
RUSSKliL II AKKISON’S LIBEL SUIT.
It appears that Golonel Schuyler
Crosby, ex-Goyornorof Montana, in¬
tend* making thing#pretty lively for
Russell Harrison when he returns
from Europe. It will he remembered
that Colonel Crosby ha* instituted
suit against young Harrison for pub¬
lishing scurrilous articles about him
in the Montana Journal.
Col. Crosby’s friends say that the
develomentsin this case will not only
be interesting, but particularly dam¬
aging to youngIlussell, and will show
the young man in his true Montana
light. It is surmised that the pres¬
ent administration will not escape
severe handling, particularly in the
inauner in which appointments
have been made through Russell’s
influence.
A Saratdga dispatch says, if ths
pledges of Col. Crosby’s friends are
substantiated in court, some of the
richest developments in political his¬
tory may be looked for in the course
of the trial—developments not equal¬
ed by disclosures of the Belknap-
Babeock scandals of Gen. Grant’s ad¬
ministration.
’Ti* bettor not to be, than he unhappy,”
tions. Nearly nil the torpid ills tba?---- liver and
is heir to, arise from the digestive
derangement of organs
organs. I>r. Pierce’s Pleasant Pur¬
gative Pellets eorret constipation, irregularities and of
the liver, prevent health. them of
promote druggist. good Buy
jour
fluTe ?n 0 rm C „r» T 1 ™'}
S LWASCOUffTT, O. 8 8- I
FkaK* J- Chbhbv makes oath that he to
ift-SSM822?
each and every \>y case of Ci-
rrh that cannot be aired eil n: tbe use ol
!.!.> f ATABftH CrRK.
FRANK J. CBHNST.
i to before mennd subne ribsd in -
Notary PnbUc.
Halt’s Csteirh Core i» taken internally *
net* directly on the utood mid mni-uetnirf
j ^
Hived in a>i
the city, Where, tt i is is said, sa.a, there mere «r wre
nbouteighty drinkingsaloons within
a stone’s throw of each other. The
district is frequented by tbe lake sail-
oreandin^ Th^ are inertly
Scandinavians and Italian*, and tt to
said that all languages but English
can be heard in the quarter.
Mrs. Broun was herself Norwegian
by birth. Her husband was a paint¬
er, working by the day. The woman
watched the poor neighborhood
growing more filthy, squalid and
drunken year by year—drifting into
that civilized barbarism which is in¬
finitely lower in degradation and
more hopeless than the barbarism
of tbe wilds of Africa. She and her
husband resolved to do what they
could to save it.
The W. C. T. U. helped Mis. Broun
a little, and she rented a hall, not a
shade better in appearance than the
buildings around it, and began her
work. She established Gcwpel meet¬
ings, a Sunday school and a free
reading room. She and her husband
live in a part of the hall. Meetings
are appointed for each nationality
in its own language. Sailors com*
there and sing sacred words to the
stand best. Temperance work goes
hand in hand with the religious work.
and many a stalwart sailor is keep-
ing the pledge he signed for Mrs.
Broun. As manyof tbe meetings a.
Sags; possible and tbe Sunday school
foreigners that langnage. The Sun-
day school has 100 members. Mis.
Brtwai. ***!«■ Chicago. »<»*
not unlike that done for New York
years ago at the Five Point*.
DEMOCRATS HUNT NOT WEAKEN.
In discussing the narrowing of the
Republican majority in the House of
,.. r ,i„ pip ji«| ijji i
our Democratic contemporaries say
tftnt that saw any nrenf contingency 4 «irmtiAW fli that U f. WAIlM would
give a majority in the Honse to the
Democracy would be a misfortune to
our party. They argue that tt tobet-
ter “to let the tail go with the hide”
and to permit the Republicans “to
b.nMUnta(«d rop. .nough to
h,.OK 8uch then.Q-lv^. inconsiderate With talk is vsryims-
.. 0 — — — majority — —-------
The plurality of the popular vote at
the late election was on the Demo¬
cratic side, and General Harrison is
a minority President.
U the Democrats can orgar'ze the
House of Representatives without
sacrifice of principle, it is their duty
to do so. They should stand togeth¬
er and take advantage ef every op¬
portunity offered them by a situation
which was not brought about by the
unbiased expression of the will of the
people, but through the unscrupu¬
lous use of corruption funds.
The floater fund Administration
be allowed to have no Democratic
support ?n Congress or out of it.
its authority can be legitimately de-
c -eased in any direction it is the
duty of every Democrat and inde¬
pendent to aid in diminishing it, The
country is Democratic. Tbe Repub¬ “the
lican mafleu policy hand,” is and the policy of
Democrats owe
nothing to it but constant and un¬
relenting opposition.
An Off.ulv* Br a h
is most dissressing, not only to the
afliicted ‘ :tedif if hi he ' have pride,
person those with whom he any in
but to comes
contact. It is a delicate matter to
speak of, but it has parted not only
friends but lovers. Bad breath and
catarrh are inseparable. Dr. Sage's
Catarrh thousands Remedy cures testify. the worst
cases os can
Mercurial Poison.
Mercury j« frequently injudiciously used by
quack doctors in cases of malaria and blood
poison. Its aftereffect is worse than the or*
igial disease. B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm)
contains no mercury, bat will eliminate mer¬
curial poision from the system. Write to
Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga., for book of
convincing proof of its curative virtue.
with poison, and 1 bad sores in my montb
and knots on my tongue. I got two bottles
B. B. B., which healed my tongue and month
and make a new man of me.”
' “ ‘ md, At).
VGUiu tiatuij bw. wwwi* vauru ivwj pn-
s iritis. Her eyes were in dreadful condi-
tion. i. Her appetite failed. She had pain in
her »r joints j. and bones. Her kidney* were de¬
ranged also, Dr. Gillam and no one recommended thought sheconld B. B. B., be
cared.
which she used until her health vae entirely
restored.”
K. P. B. Jones, Atlanta, Ga.j writes: “I
Tas troubled with copper colored eruptions,
toss of appetite, pain in the back, aching
joints, debility, and ■ ----- emreiation, loss of B. iudr. B. B.put sore
throat, great fine condition.” nervousnees ......... h
my system in
ADVICE TO MOTHERS.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,
or children of of teething, best is the prescrip¬
tion one the female nurses
3
with never-failing success by million*
SSI of mothers for their children. Dur-
from pain, cures dysentery and diar-
* “ — *“ ‘
will
__of a
iwners of
tbe veMM>ls wln low interest in the
winner and an angry public will de-
mand safety above speed,
<MBcW . to
can v**** w# editors fctilwwiJ do '•J^^SSSSSSJ iinouia should onderataud imagine iiun^iufj why that Cor- be
excused poral Tanner’s tbe plea perform that anew hiaMgP can were
on If they had
shot off by “rebels.” might
shot his head off hi* conduct
be easily explained.
T* Be Hoped 0e.
Hartford Tf*»«* (Dom.)
The chances are that Mahons will be
tbe worst beaten of all the mVimin- guberna¬
torial candidates voted for
fa since the war. The fatuity that
induces a party leader uw* to tv ww be the we* r prin¬ . —
ci cipal pal cam candidate In a canvass man-
ass... himself rarely ra fails fail* to to illus- if
goeth - -
adagethat shat “pride
fore a fall.”
■- Why Tht* Stlftsce?
Now York Wortd (Dorn.)
The “indecent scramble for the
spoils” of which ve used to bear so
much when Mr. Cleveland first went
to Washington doss not eeemto
have been discontinued «6w that
Qen. (Jen. Harrison Harrisem is is In in the tne white wnros house. nuuse.
SSr The rtpuMioan organs db not 3 eon*
w.beartbura, menSf biliousness, etc. Re-
*'
,tddai—-- •■--- —-
or give he adache.
We , ker than Wate
SS SF3R T* under 5 the
finds it hard to bear .up
the strain npon it. g 0 *.": And
yet yet there there is is u i ,remedy w,.— lehieh answers —
the requirements of such a case. A
dru 8* i * t and P h y 81clan
Darlington, S. C.
Gentlemen—Your ------- tonic has been
^hich kft them in a debilitated co
m *
iOT 3S IJ A'.Bovo, U .D.
-
' For sale by E. R. Anthony.
i
Value- ot Advertisements.
. WtMW Ijfcftjft.
“Well, nod in the hid-
den advertisement more more than than any any
, -------- gtory, --- ■....J
in wtet I took to be puff for Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets.
I threw down the paper in a rage
Not a week after that I needed somf
medicine of that kind, and went and
bought those same little pills.” “Did
_,___them find thing them good”? good”? thekind “Why, I .. by, j yes, but the —
best uwii 1/uiug of ui UttJMUU j. ever cvrr saw, ouw, uuv
that has nothing to do wi th first ques-
thon, myself and I only mention advertising the joke does on
)o show that
Be Morcitul to Yowmelf,
Abd heed the appeal* for amintance put forth
by yonr liver, when tl
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. It is demonstrated beyond
question that Clarke’s Fxtract of
Flax (PapiUon) Catarrh Cure imme¬
diately relieves and thorough permanently and fair
cures Catarrh. 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 Rector of Grace Church.
Dear Sib—I n 18611 broke out 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 about 1865 to 1885
I suffered mos severely from The repeated of
attacks of this eruption. nse
1 found tnatiodiaeoi rotassium ana
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 iipon times me as during many the as four, and In
«vcu even live UVff Uium uuuug uuc JW year.
th# Spring of 1885 I took a soars# of
P. P. P., and from that time to the
bump* dried up appeared in a l 3 day dnv -memeS on of nr my two, two wrists, being haiMf but the the
dying throes, as it were, of thtonor- After
ried and loathsome disease.
being plagued for about twenty-five
rears with Poison Oak I consider my-
tow-j. i 0De bottle -i ~ * of - ___3 P. * P. . F. aL . f * ^ I. 4-
Rector Greee Church, Waycroee, Ga.
Abbott's East Indian Corn Paint
removes ail Corns. Bunions and Warte
----«*- without pain. For sale by
..
u__\
‘
lime
^es&ditsx
IbCUtt Hoe—* for to* great ra«
MM of HooiW Barsaparilla to found In tbft
reticle itself. It l« merit that win*. and toft
toet tbit Hood’. Sarsaparilla actually «o-
what U dalmcd for It, Is what
tu* given to this roedicln. a popularity aud
wto greater than that of any Otoe*
___ Merit ___... Wins rin * it* * bland blooi ^ nttrL
. ^ , T T J| - fler before ftowfoto, the public. Sail
Hood’* BnmpnrtUa enrnn Dyapepsla, Wck
Jthnnm and oil Humor*,
«a the Nenrre, bnlid* up thn Whoin Sr*^
a pa, ApctiwHrtH.-Dowmi. Maw.
A P H YSI Cl AN S
WR RNING!
Of »B the terrible, *onl aHrightcning enntothat
BLOOD POISON
of flesh and Ufa Abe! How often just inch u
•ffifeaowkieretoafinctanoblelitowtthitopdsononi
taint It strikes with deftructivs aim the most
SCROFULA king nor Uatesmen.
Eton onto the third
generation are the jins of the father made manifest.
What a fearful heritage t° bequeath an innocent
childt Ah! the horrible ravages of this affliction!
To its activity to doe sore throat
SORES “*“> sore kidneys, sore lungs,
•ore skin, great ulcers, internal, ex¬
tent*! and eternal untose proper treatment is applied-
Tbebest remedy to s prescription used extensivelj
in private practice by^n old Atlanta physician. It
is now prepared t thousand gallons at a time, sod
to sold in large bottles at
PIMPLES only One dollar per bottle. Bo¬
It to called *». B. B. or
tanic Blood Balm. Under its peculiar influence the
blood poison first becomes passive, then divided,
and lastly is exuded through the liver, through tbe
kidneys, and through the pores of the skin.
It to dearly the duty of every one who suspects
the least trace of syphilitic or scrofulous poison in
their Wood,whether recently from contagion or from
inheritance, to get it out of their system thoroughly
PAIN Mr the use of this great remedy so
' that pimples, sores,aches, pains, weak
kidneys ana other symptoms will not be transmit¬
ted to innocent posterity.
Demand it of your druggist and take no substi¬
tute. Testimonials from those who have used it
may be foundln the illustrated “ Book of Wonders’-
sent { re* to any address by the Wood Balm Co.
Ill HiwMto if ' iMT---—------------ -
MERCER UNIVERSITY.
MACON, GA.
FULL FACULTIES. FIVE SCHOOLS.
1. The Preparatory Department.
2. The College of Liberal Arts.
8. Tbe Seietific Department.
4. The Tbe Tbe Departmen. Law Law School. School. of Theology.
5. 5.
TUITION ________„____J3 FREE in in the t Department of Lib¬
eral ,-rnl Arts, Arts, Science Science and and Theology. 1 ____ Wednes-
FALL A AHAJ TFBM A A AVixA UVgmo begins on UU tl tUC 10OV *t ii vuuvo-
lay (2oth) in September.
For Catologne and other information ad¬
dress, dress, Rkv. Rbv. G a. 7 A. j NUNNALLY, D. D., Presi
dent, or JOHN J. BHANTLY, LY, Sec. Sec. pi------- pro tern -
Maeon. Ga. jull7wed*su8w
Georgia Midland & Gulf RR.
Time Table, Taking Effect Aug 11, ’89
JfOEB,
SCNPAY.
Arrive. ________ Leav<
McDonough.................. 5:00 a.m.
Griffin .................5:40 a.m. 5:45 “
Warm Springs.............. 7:09
Columbus......................8:48
No. 51 .—Passenoeb, NonTn. Daily.
Columbus..................... 1:05 p.
Warm Spring................ 2:84
Griffin..........................3:50 p. m.
No. 52 .—Pabsbnoeb, South. Daily.
Griffin...,....................... 4:05 p. m.
Warm SpringB.............. 5:28 “
Columbus......................7:00 p. m.
Ho. 53 —Passbkoeb, North. Daily Except
Sunhay.
Colifmbns...................... 5;10 p.
Warm Springs............. 0:49 1
Griffin.........................8:15 p. m. 8:20 1
McDonough....................9:00 “
No. 54 .—Passbwokb South, Sunday Only
MeDonough................... 7:80 a. m.
Griffin...........................8:10 a. m. 8:15 “
Warm Springs.............. 9:35 “
Colnmbne...............i......11:10 “
No. 65 .—PassengBB 'North. Sundat Only.
115*"
Griffin...........................10:38a. m. 11:00 ”
McDonough.. .............11:40 “
|No. 1 .—Freight Nobtb. Daily Except
Sunday.
Columbus...................... 6:45 a. ra.
Warm Springs.........«... 9:45 “
Griffin............................12:29 ...............................a*:s p.m. 2:00 p. m.
McDonough.................8:00 ft.no •<
No. 2—Freight Sooth. Daily Except
Sunday.
McDonough.. Griffin....................... .............- ...8:05 . 7:00 9:15 a.m.
a. m. a. m.
Warm Springs.............. 12:02 p. in.
Columbus.. ....8:50 __
p. m.
■sew \ ivertisements
TO ADVERTISERS
aaKSESsEHS Select Local
our List. ROWELL T k t ^ CO.,
GEO. P. Bureau,
Newspaper Advertising New York
lOSprueestreet,
Sheriffs Sale
_ K .
LDON THE FIHHTTUES
County, rt
TK ifoi^ W haU Of lot of.Jnnd No. 112
eaet and went by original Ini eontnls-
' Uth ,^°^. _ __ 1 W
»are I»
* Court in favor of
kI^CONNELL. Sheriff 8 . tt
Ordinary’* AdverttsemenU.
ALD1NG COUN-
’ Janetit 89.—T. c. Me¬
ins. Bethnne,
e for letters of Dismis-
$. $6.15. HAMMOND. Ordinary:
ft nil* persons concerned nhow office, cause by before ten
Court t of Ordinary, at my in Septem-
a. the first Monday of dismission
such letters
Oidtouj.
Executors’ Sale.
toe (fonrtH on w door, on the first
of Septomlwr next^dnringjhe^lc^il
late of said county deceased: consist¬
oi one lot corner of Ninth and Poplar
containing two acres with dwelling
thereon; one lot corner of Eighth Taylor and
streets, fronting 29 feeton
back 90 feet to an alley. The first
will be divided into three parcels to-wit:
iUVlllg AUU leas, on ----* Poplar ’
wet and running back 210 feet, more or
1688. *. One UH6 lot lull ivu 105 feet, ixvu, more uiuso or v* less fronting — o
on College College street street and and running running back back *10 *10 feet, feet.
more or less. Sold for the purpose of distn-
but on and payment W. of debfe.^^TCTmso! B. HANLEITER, sale
W. H. BREWER. BREWER,
J. C.
Executor* of L. R. Bre
Administrator’s Sale.
W<au>, —_______ - n Die .
Broadway utreet, south by Flemister and
Arnold, east by second street and west by
the Brown place. Sold for toe purpose of pay¬
ing the debt* of deceased and for distnbutior
among his heirs. Terms oUafe cash.^
|6. Adm’r W. S. Brown.
Notice.
Notice is herebo given iven toot the application will
be made to the legislature • --------— now i m f session — to
pass an act requiring the-----—. recording in the
office of Treasurer and County Commissi immission
ere of all fine and forfeiture orders >n 8pi »ald-
ingCotmty and to have forfeiture Payments order on B£ fi ,me
de only by fine and ioa
nmisaioners on a fine and forfeiture ac¬
me to be specially kept br Treasurer and
kindred purposes.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
Notice ia hereby given to ail who are indebt¬
ed to the estate of L. B. Brewer, deceased,to
call and £bHd settle at o 4 Anna once. All All Tim-tlPfi parties bolding it file ITTCT
claims claims against aga toe estate of said deceased
notified to ____i at BREWER, once in legal form
W. H.
W. R. HANLEITER,
JN0. JISLi. C. L. BREWER, naan jc,*,,
Executors Estate L. R. Brewer.
aug22w6.-$3.70.
Money Wanted for the
Stark Plantation.
well wanted and timbered, RR.
Ga. Midland
!ood neighborhood. 8 2 story 1 acre. Cen¬
Stork hons«, rooms, for boarding, foi
trally located. Good house
rent after the 1st of Sept., if not sold.
Other houses and lots, and lands insidt
md near limits. Now is the time to bi
land
kind.
bouses, Ac. Also 1250 acres
ling, out-houses, mules, i, corn, corn, fodder, Ac.
Gin house, corn nd present growing
^Parties h'tmngproperty it, I have to applications sell will do well
tolet me know ns
ery day. Will take it on option if desired.
G. A. CUNNINGHAM,
Real Estate Agent.
-VIA-
BRUNSWICK, JESUP,MACON, CHATTANOOGA.
TA, ROME and
ONLY LINE
Double Daily Sleeping Car
Between
Cincinnati and Jacksonville.
Solid trains between
Closely Chattanooga connecting and with Jacksonville^ double
with Pullman Sleeping Cars
to and from
Memphis, Nashville, Kansas Ci
and the West and
Knoxville, Washington, New
and the East.
THE SHORT LINE BETWEEN
Atlanta and Jacksonville,
Atlanta and Savannah,
stud Brunswick,
Atlanta and Macon,
Atlanta and Rome.
For rates, Time Cards and
information apply to agents of the
East Tenn., Va and Georgia R. R
B.W.WRENN,
Gen. Pass. A Ticket Agt., Knoxville.
» 8. H. Hardwick v
Asst. Gen. Pas*. Agt., Atlanta.
j Mrfm
I moored
luuttntB. I
tlcolnre «ent
the news, .
established 'J
-I
rj ■$*•■§ v
l
Griffin News and S
daily AND weekly,
j
(CONSOLIDATED MAY 26, 1889,) ’*
,
f jtA
OFFERS -
.x* ' ■■ ..
More Value ^
1
^ To Advertisers
In proportion to prices charged, than any
other medium in the South.
With the combined circulation of two old
and well established papers, it charges th©
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.
4mi
Being a tirst-class newspaper, fully up to
all demands of the times and the require¬
ments of its constituency, it Is read not oniy
by nearly every family in Spalding County,
but in the eight surrounding counties, with
a good general circulation in the State and
other States.
If COVERS ITS WHOLE FIELD. i s mi
%
and covers it completely.
Prices low. Write for rates and sainpl
copies of Daily and Weekly to
DOUGLAS GLESSNER, Publisher,
.4 '. , Griffin, Ga.
T
r ;:T3 WHAT COMMISSIONER KOLB SAYS.
OrFlC* COMNIMIONBB OB AOBieULYUBB, An*»*»l ALA.
I, ■ ■ . IlAUKISON.BKCBBTABYCULTIVATOErmUSIILxGCo.: Thb Cultivaio* to tho * . arm ______
i„ ... i(r.—I can and do mo«t hoartlt, recommend Bouthxbn
f .vlabama al a farm Journal of very inperior merit*. It (honld be in th* horn* or •WV P
Ciusive a*TioaU«rUt Vary truly jour*, *. *•
200,000 Readers I Established 1848. Leading In 18801
11 SOUTHERN COIMTOR Al DfflE FiEMBR,
gbobgia,
ITo-w 123. its Forty-se-vezs.tlx "STsax of ^’vJ.'tolleatioxi..
Th* reeoculnd of Southern agriculture and to* Industrial progNM of too 8o*th, with
organ
a guaranteed olreulatlos in every Southern and We*torn State.
A BRILLIANT CORPS OF WRITERS.
The editorial cor,* of writer* and eontributor* I* unimpaired, If equalled, by that
Bar publication in all toe Dnion. HON- W. J. NORTHEN1* the PxeeUent of to* Ueorgia ■«
Agricultural Society, and a practical farm.r of th* molt thorough «ultur*. and hti artUU* --
alwKr* instructive tojarmer*.^ DR. DANIEL LEgUuot^ouly quo
Wuhington, R. J. REDDING D. C.. the mid able later, aud Trofrew thoronghly of Agriculture equipped Areiftaut at to* Georgia Commirefoner StaU Buiverelty. of '***"*”; ™^, *
1* J.S.HBWMANl* lo
to* State of Grorgia, a* well a* an experienced writer. Puo». *» i 'f ‘ ‘
.
Alabama SUte Experiment SUtlou. and (tend* iu too front rank of sgrieultural ed«“ * * *” *
writer* in the South. With to.ee eminent writer* are aisoclated a »*or* or Jam* of
male eontrihutora—ineludiag not a few profereioual agrioultural wrttort-who** f *
T*« .
elre never every department of fhm management and hourehold week., making
tob the mo*t eomplete, attraetive aud valuable agrioultural Journal in th* South, e*- ®
being worth more than a whole year 1 * robrerlption to any farmer who wads and think* *■* •
“t!::^, and every department wUl ho found fuU U e-rerfiewl** ohargod for ** to* J
Ur to Instruct, enlighten aud entertain. Eaefi number 1* worth the wn
Nofemffroan afford to be without THE SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR. New if too time t*
THE CULTIVATOR PUBLISHING CO.,
Geo. W. Harrisoh, { Drawer R, Atlanta, Ga.
Manager, f Send for sample copy*