Newspaper Page Text
B AXIS GOB.HTTC ■*. ZITTK
■-Merrs kvri ,• tH* ;e ; at.
Jin ter ed at the i'or.tojflct ut J+otntr
oft., *i terond elate mutter.
Ratal at Rfccrl*tl**—Cwh:
year W
•ixvealtf 2. r >
SL. COX, KwTiiS A I'tJfiLISHi.R
HO M Ell, ttA.. J*N. ibl. ISO 6.
The National l.)nuMT;!tie l onven
lion will bo i M in C'hicugu on the
7tli of July.
Thera him Wen no mention of any
name for t)ic presidential nomination
yet.
Mr. II . Brewttter has disposed of the
Bank* County Gazette to Mr. S. L.
Cox. who is now its etlitAr and jiuh
Usher. We wish him much success
in the journalistic field.—Toccea News.
The Northeastern railroad is ndver-j
tised to be sold next month. The
price which the road mnst bring is
fixed at $288,000, and if this is not
realized, the toad will he leased or
run by the State. If leased, it will
probably be to an Athens company.—
Jix.
Miss Maggie Stevens, of Tcocoa,
Ga, sent to the Exposition a quill
made by her own hands, that con
tained 16,44-1 pieces. She received a
letter from the officials of the Exposi
tion, since the close, stating that her
quilt was ahead of' ali others by 8,000
pieces-—Ex.
This year is a political year. Every
election office from president to con
stable is to be filled The first elec
tion will he for governor and state
house officers, and will take place the
first week in October, the law regula
ting elections having changed the time
for tho time for the election of the
conty officers from January to Octo
ber. The next election Is for presi
dent end congressmen, and will be on
the first week in November.
Mr. S. L. Cox has purchased from
Henry Brewster The Banks County
Guzutte and will conduct it in the
luture as a democratic jour al.—At.
luma Con dilution.
Mr. S. L. Cent has purchas'd fretn
Henry Brewster the Bunks County
Gazette anil will conduct it in the fu
ture as a Democratic journal. We
welcome Mr, Cox to the fraternity in
the ‘Jth District. —Gwinnett Herald.
From the above items one not
acquainted with the facts would u
thul the ilazelte was unmet i.i >r uV-t i
than a democratic journal during Mr.
Brewster's inan.genieti'. Tim fact
is, ho bought the paper IS, I .', then a
strong Populist organ, and converted
into a conservative democratic jour
nal. Mr. B. respectfully asks that
those who have made this errone
ous impression kindly correct it.
Thu Facts About Cuba.
The Constitution’s letters from
Cuba, furnished by its special staff
correspondent, throws a good deal of
light npon tiie situation.
Gomez with about 30,01)0 men is
euccessfully holding his own against
Campos, the ablest of the Spanish
generals lie is waging war against
a well-equipped army three times the
•ire ef his own. During the past eight
months the Cuban lender has rivaled
the most brilliant exploits of Stuart,
Mosby, Morgan and Forrest in our
civil war.
An irregular warfare is the policy
of tlie Cubans. It ilrorc th# French
out of Spain. It insured the success
of the South American republics and
overthrew Maximilian in Mexico.
It is the wisest policy. Pitched
battles will be avoided and no attempt
will be made at present to besiege
Havana. Gomez will continue to de
stroy villages and mtgar plantations
and devastate the country. This was
the policy of Washington. He fought
a few battles, but his policy was to
wear out the British, and lie suc
ceeded.
Spain is already bankrupt and she
raises money and recruits soldiers with
the greatest difficulty. The yellotk
fever season in Cuba will begin again
in the early spring aud the invaders
will be at a disadvantage.
With a little help, even in the shapo
ot reoognitien by the United States of
their belligerent rights, the Cubans
will speedily win.
What Work W ill l>o.
Mr. J. J. Wood, near Columbus, in
this state, in renewing his mhscrip
tion to The Weekly Cos t Ration,
tv".les >sr<)lj*>ws:
1 ightecu hundred am! ninety-in
closed lay filth year of farming. J
planted the first crop ef inv life in
April, 1891, and 1 never, up to that
date, saw a grain of corn, a ‘ red of
cotton planted, towed or cultivated,
and after the first year I have not
Usui to buy anything I could grow
on the farm. 1 have raised every
thin..' I used and 1 have the farm as
well stocked as the average farmer.
Ilrddes, I have a young peach or
chard of five hundred trees and I may
s iy in hearing; half bore last year and
the other half will tins. Besides 1
planted out. two hundred more in
November hist. I think 250 apple
pte- and Bcvcntv fivi kiefi r pear trees
wdl bear some fruit th s year; aiso a
fair sized vineyard that born last year
I have 300 pecan trees growing nice
ly.
I and my wife do the work, htrimr
no regular help, but do him some dir.
labor to help us in very busy times.
I am an old confederate soldier, and
| a disabled <ni at that—draw tip pen
sion either; lid not go into the army
forth# money that was in it.
I had m> money; 1 bought the farm,
ICO acres, on credit; it is ali paid for
and all, everything is mint' and f owe
no one not one dime, free and inde
pendent.
It would be bard to make a better
record in anv state in the union under
even the most favorable circumstan
ces.
And yet all tills occurred in Geor
gia, which Tli<j New York Press said
the other day was ft good state to
leave on account of its poor land, etc.
When a disabled confederate sol
dier without a pension can buy 180
actus o!i credit and in five years, with
no experience as a farmer, get out of
debt and have a wcdl-stocked place, it
strikes us that t.h# outlook id very en
couraging.
mAKKEI) BIRRS.
Rev. Luther MeSweeney in the
Cal Indie, World, says, in a Ma.,:i
chusetts manufacturing town recently
the workmen were paid 700 marked
ten dollar hills one Saturday evening. :
By the following Tuesday MO :>■. '<
these marked bills vrero <!■■• o • ' n
tbo bank by saloon kccpc:
(Texas) Call.
In all probability those vvM.i. ;
met. will hold a public met lu.m
time during tins year of elections, am
lenotince both of tin- old polo.. ~i
I>.uti< s as being responsible for thou
wretched condition m lile. They
will probably resolve and declare
that the politicians, the plutocrats
and bankers ar branded together in
conspiracy to oppress anti rob tbe
workingmen, their wives and children
of their hard earnings, w lien it is tbe
giloon !<i p. i and their own folly.
It, is reported that during a Social
ist celebration and picnic at Chicago,
it year or so ago, they marched the
streets in long procession by the
the thousands, man, women and
children, carrying banners bearing
the inscription, “Bread or blood,"
and then marched out to tbe picnic
grounds and diank the contents of
several hundred kegs of lager beer.
Their earnings went for b<‘er and
not for bread, and they wanted to
spill Mood on account of it.
The appetite? of men and tkeir
sbivish love ot beer and whisky are
responsible for the wretchedness and
rags and poverty of wifi- aud children.
Beer and whisky arc greater burdens
than the ‘■protective tariff tax' or th
“demouilization of silver.”
Some men m their lazziness. dissi
pation and wastefulness, blame the
government, some political patty >r
somebody or something else for their
failure to accumulate property, when
in most instances the fault is m Meni
sci ves.
As illustrative ot this fact, a well
known Marietta citizen, now wealtuy,
when the late war ended stopped in
Richmond, Ya,, and worked at his
trade, alongside of other men. All
received tl e same wag- ■ and hid
the same opportunities, but at the
end of a few months, when the work
ended and he made up Ills mind to
come home he found that he had
saved over S*JOO in gold, while his
co-laborers bad not a dollar to show
for their expenditure of time and ex
ertion of muscle and brain. They
had “blowed in” their mouey in drink
and having a good time, while he
,1 ;."re '•( fr ; / . I ; f v g. and
I)prn.; gogues for political se!f
--’ aggrandizement preach strife and
! c istoatent to the laboring masses
when hey should nreafcb industry,
!. . ,
sol nety and saving.
Tin- saddest failures in life are
seif-wr- : grit. —Marietta journal.
Why Kissing is Pleasant.
The rcr.son kissing is so pleasant,
says au oscillatory expert cf scientific
tendencies, is because the teeth, jaw
bones and lips are full ot nerves, and
when the lips of persons meet an elec
tric current is generated, and you
doiPt nave to have ad . n'unro machine
nor a battery in the house, nor a cail
box, nor a button to touch to ring up
the central office, and there is no pat
ent o.t it, and the poorest person iu
the world can enjoy the electric cur
rent better than the inibiomiire, and ;
it never gets out of order. "If Edison
had invented kissing it would cost
SIOO a y ear, like the telephone, and
then extra kissing vvoul j be charged!
up extra, and if you didn't pay for it
they would take out your kissaphonn
and disconnect you from the central!
office.
Among the fruit and flower novel
ties which 1896 brings us, we n ti< e
that tin; enterprising and reliable firm
of J ami;s \ ick’s .'■.Mu's Rochester, X.
Y., are already t ailing attention to
three, which .-e mto have won great
favor where known. They are ll.e
double sweet pea, the only
out: iii ihe world tine to runic, ‘•Bride
of Niagara,” thu “Early Reader Tom
ato, ’ Urn earliest ot all the early tom
ato family and sure to become a grc.it
lavbrite, and already famous Black
berry, the “RAT 1 1IJUX, ’
From the praise and compliments
_,avcii so abundantly to the “Bride o.
Niagra, tins sweet pea inn -i be mine
than churning ami bum the eiieam
mins lavished on both the new tome.■ .
and this new blackberry, it is p ret tv
contain no garden desiring to haw
the first wud best of every thing, can
he without these three new com -rs.
Cv the wav, —aders. arc any ut you
so far behind tbe times as not to know
“Vick’s Fioral Guide,'” 1: any of you!
have nevei seen it, send 10 cents t
this film at Rochester, X . V'., and .cl
a copy You can deduct this from
the liril order tot seeds and the pleas
ure :*inl information their Guide w: I
give yos will cent.On v induce you to I
keep up the aequ alliance.
Why not he your
own iidJle-ntan?
Pay but, ono profit between maker and
user and that, a small Just ono.
Our Big TOO Page Catalogue and Buyer*
Oulde proves that It’s pos able. V/eighs
pounds, 13,(W) 111 list rations, descrioes
au(l tolls the one-profit price of over 40,000
articles, everyt liing you use. We seud It
for 15cents; that's not for tbe book, but
• to pay part of tho pot* ' .cor ev prrcsage,
and keep off idleiv. You’can't got It 100
quick.
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.,
The st.rc of All the People
iii-is 6 Michigan Avc., Chicago,
ri:Acms. • i
RXPMSATION iiK (hi rii'tA lut, mviin df Ta |
|i**t > , 2*l. f: oiiri or , n I, !<io r
l*f Mt ati; 4lh. ho tion ; fth. mo Ujiiwalutiig c*l
Uin id* Ihe pj;io:i<, nio.
AHVtotKVI A rldM C'tlMA K, ft(*3t.ltlfl; ,(’
i ‘*jtU -W, white j \ , yil.., K, rd.
tirttiuu K, *■ *vri v ; V fc, va:\ it.ifly ; M. ih-'Glhuj
|., IwtO, VI., very Utu / '%• V, for Rini'i ua
only; M. the nunt vs' .ii' n foi markoc,L>, tbo
U<oAt >le*liaß’ f. clryi*{j
j J 7
j3< I'u’s r,. ■
i **' 1 v r. IT *?
*AJtE " .J I • ■ neunu
S A (3- k'-i
t 1 ' : t 1 ■
a ..j ii ;m j
Air.," t. ■' ■
or Au.
den K N\ V!j M o u oio (J ood; bright
Color.
An.elu HV I. F > o Vrj iarp;
An*t!n V V, VI. .* o' \ r.xooVt <>c-
Bu*tt<Ai)'a 1 ; t> i-r cltn<
October V W VI. I M o> !'. .'Mom l.u
Haiti\riii’b -ltf.
La<o I* : W VI. | a o ,t.ot'! lute free
Vhiiicie Louc
t'iiitj;. 'W r K M i) n o > Facoflcnt and
lftr t ;o
R. R Lew |i W K M o■>o I. u r r th R c
| | i : i UlncAoclln*;.
4’h'4r*h t W i. M'o ■ I Cou<l St* ; tem
j Lodimhia | i 1 j her free a tone
I or ln!ia i,T V M iML>'o i> o Kicclicnt fot
! Craw Mh • ii all purpose*.
Lai iv i \ E 1 M o< o o Wv.' an J
’•tatuluul v
1 ■ j i : rlety
Parby C \V VI. M o o . LxceHant Oo
Early TH- t uU*r clinjr.
lotson F R VIC M o o > • Vo: v us-Hrabli)
Eaton’*
lioUion Cl Y Lil> oo . Superior for
| pr curving.
Elbert.* ... F Y tl iMo ,o o Yen largo aud
Fiesta *Bt. j tiHDtUome.
Johu |f! YVEM !o 1..!. .'o Vt v aood :
early.
(*lob ... 'F V 1 I. o o Very .urge.
Hale's. !F:\V \ E M 0000 Vatiiibloj apt
Heath’s j to rut.
\s Liiie or :
W hire j
English. jC'w L M 000 [o Excellent for
Indian preserving.
ltlo.nl I
Cling. C, K M Mo o . Very juicy and
Lemon i
Clinjj- C Y M Vl oo c Superior cling ,
Lout ho
(Kitar's) F\V VE vi o ;. Very pood.
Mountain
K •-* F\Y M M o i> o b -Super! or tc
Obi Mixon Early York !
i , V’oiiß. FVV M M o o jo Excellent
Old M:\ou m’ket variety {
y £>i’n©C A* M M oo 1 oKi co 1 lent
I’it (plot's m’ket xarieij
Laie . F V L MDo o o o Res: freenion*
of its season
Hirar’a .FW V K Voo o o Heat Quality;
too tender
Rtumpthe for market.
World F\Y M Mo o Super! ?r ru’ket
8 •*! o- variety
hauna. F Y M Mti o .Super lor tc
la kj Crawford
Thurber . V' W M F*ojo o o Very irgebust
Tinsley's : quality.
October i ; ; j
Cling.. .jCiVT ,VL ....o k> Go oit let)
PicAfta.
©y COHTM2CS—r"PP cf W
•i Jd. se&yon; :<d, o**;*uh. toj*c upep v.;o. !i
f t-, variety tucc.ee : best* Oh, o. t -.:h at};;
the iegica in which the varieties rccoir**
tueodca.
A-.^ksviatiosh—Season and tu same as
those lor Appits.
’ * Q, quince; H. pear nfoclc. Where r.ci
r - . the varieties thrive tqaa >y u;*ou quince
o. t ,e<ir.
NAME. j-S ~ j; RbiabU.
c . 5, c **
e -* *
U c '
fsVtVtT ,‘j .vi ■> o o . r ry?-'?'!, hut a ii T>-
l' - - Euora- ' jeoc to ?•.:*:?.?.
* lv<s •• | S ;..iS o o o (*'.?i for iuuauy
iJti*j’ro | u-io.
d’A rijou ..jS MIQ o *? '.Jo Yot't good.
Uuer: e
iff ant j I£S Q o <> . y Very cmr’.y.
_ • i hns.. s M . o o ..o Excellent, but
' ,/ ’+'•' 1 rots at the com.
i 'V.rite. , 5 M j$ o ,o ! :o Vorv rood: f.ae
2> i h ••*•*? a* } •; ( j coior.
Angotileme: S;MQ a v o Most proCtahle
' i : i 1 • ofAilcnquir.ee
i.u.uty ... } 3 V S o o ...!o J flood, hut'li&hl*
1 j t*. rot at core. 1
jrii*r j 3 M3 o o |0 t> I O.noaial trpj; ;
good.
I 1 w **l ....I H M o i) co Very good
*‘ r ••■ f •' >J H o o o o Productive, late, ;
• ! Ii valuaLla.
(.aureus ...( if. M S o jo ; o and H r ; j
! | | heat cn atv;.- j
j ; dard
i.‘;< OlJ'a . . 1 S M S C O o O 1 V -x : r A b l 4 i j |
b i iwutii
Onondaga 9 MS jo p ..jOvod
▼i^oious
ht. M w-li a***| j grownr.
3 O O .. o Vh.j srowjf,
j ,%ooa fruit.
* ® ! i H M jo o o o Ti *. : quality;
; j i slow f carer.
fcnsiUi’s.. S M S o o ) . • Oriental woe;
;e,i ;r.bi La-
V i [ '*or xv . q r> o .o t'fccj er and 1
.NoO* ..... i exoedetsi.
T,TUI'KfI. j
r.irr.A*(ATK>'f <-r < oi.t mn* - lu, riAmea; 2A,
f*i,'v ,;*•!, Hf.AAdit, 4th, use;rtimziuiuj ooluruus
t<ll* v •>: i, *c ;
/iJt'if.KTiAiluv* ('’,lnr —W, whi: ; il, blu*
iff tilaA'.’k, !t, rr?*i, V fi, r.e-isonx—F.,
t ifiy, mt irlun fru* toafi of July;
'bA!ii, I % tr>nn end or July *o
A v'i lA. 1., lion, raatuilfig nfirr mltldlfl < f
A V I- er> a o. maturing a!** r ict<!A'4
•■■ntwr. (fte— M, market; X, table, W. 1
tunc.
['■ ~rv*\i s ~~ =
.. | yr.
f-' '1- 5 * USUKS
I J ,£ i, 4
L h
fo’c*. *rd V. M MW o n ooAinonx the
. i 1 'si Variative.
I*, .war* I’ll n ,TW ( o O o oAle.v. taUU lU
rlety j Blow
grewaj.
■ 1 a. .. cXMjT V. o.o| io Good roarer
anti Bblyper
llnrlford 11 K t M " o'o.°Uo'Xl lot ioar
kn'ronrly.
lv i! [ wo „io °(r rollflc and *>
j : ‘ rot.
Xa t H M °o ,o -o frufltable ae a
wbJV.markoi
grajid.
rorklna... ll K.M 0.0f... 0 Clooit boarer;
j uo rot.
l-cnoir. li M j W.o 0 f> Exrcllont for
old#; 11ai io
N'ebci’r [ I to rot
Vhah'.ia U 1- VV oo ! . c heat fur rod
vrl.lt.
Slower*—' 11 VI. VV !o ~ 0 o'IS , le.toot cf
| - the t>
1 : 1 ; ■ ori:, V. L W ■ o Ollor.l vr Ir. 0
'jape: ccr
tala (raref.
Toibjerp’lp ’ n TANARUS, WT -n (’ll 1y 1 ’.'tta.jlr-
O j log.
Thoittaa ...1‘ i 11 TVV o o r.i ei’.entearly
g I I ' ! variety.
; ■; K vv- shall I prepara uty
land ami plant my spring oats?
Av.swim s.—The seaaoa of the year
1 -.s mi: ved when the farmers are sow
ing. or nboUt to sow their spring oats.
The very c mmoa custom Is to select
for this purpose the poorest piece of
loud on the farm, scratch the oats La
v. li’u as few farrows to the acre as pos
r.blc in. ! liven await development* with
an ahiu.ug faith tlmt Providence will
hc'p 'Ut that particular field. The r
w. U>. aa.l always Is, a very jaw
oat crop.
A much better way is as follows : Se
tt i the best land on the farm (which,
of c uirticj, you had in cotton last year),
break it up as deep as possible, either
with a 1 or 3-horse plow, diagonally
across the cotton rows. If you ttse a
fertilizer on vour oats, as you aho-uid
do, , sure to broad ast it on the land
ami plow in with the oats.
Sow now from l s .j to 3 bushels to the
acre, of any good variety of rustproof
outv. am! go over tho land with a disk
or any other gfHxl harrow. This will
cores- the cals sufficiently, break up
cl. dtv and leave the land iu good shape,
not only to nuke the crop, but to liar
vest it. Pm vtdenev -will, with very
much more certainty, bring about a
good yield from a tir'd prepared usd
planted iu this way than from one pre
pared and planted iu tho usual manner.
Plant not less than one-fourth or even
one third of your land iu this most val
uti! --rop, atvl if put in properly, you
will find it pr ! vbia
After taking off the oats, sow the
land in field pous, which will leave It in
good heart (.os we farmers say), for a
crop the next year.
Qckstiov C-—What is the difference
in value of cottonseed meal aud cotton
seed as a fertilizer '!
Answer: 2.—To compare the feeding
value of the two it is best to give the
food analysis of each, as made by Dr.
Ray lie, state chemist:
xvjior.K cottoxsejeo contains
Carho hydrates. .24.U’ 1 per ct. value. $ 9.81
Oil . ' 2103 " “ T. 03
Protein DiT ” * e.TS
$15,09
COT*TONSItED XT.: AT, CO XT At S3
Carl o hydrates. .24 si) per ct, value, $ 8 0S
Oil 0.20 '• " 8.01
l’roteiu 42.20 “ “ 14. b
S2O 2
If the whole seed and meal are vain,
up.-n their food analysis alone, -.
whole seed r- > worth over three four,,
the value of the meal, hut- as the nmal
is twice as valuable as a fertilizer in the
manure it makes, therefore one ten of
whole seed will be equivalent- to 1,220
pounds of the meal.
Untold Agonies
Evory Limb Ached With Muscu*
!*r Rhaumatism
A Perfect Cere by Hood’a Barea
vsarlfia.
The ceties cf rheumatism is la-tie
acid in the blood, which accumulate*
in the joints, and give* the victim such
dreadful pcins and aches. Hood’s Sar
gaparilli neutralizes the acid, purifies
the blood and thus cures rheumatism.
“ Piv* yearr ago I fcsd my first attacir
Cf lorabago or museuiar rheumatism.
I was ia bed two
B© weaks. I had a
good physician
but ha did aot do
me any geod. A
friAnd recom
mended Hood’s
Sarsaparilla and
I sect for a bot
tle. At that tlm
I ached in every
limb, especially
v In my back and
hip. I fait aa
though I had s
! ; A v fever end for a
ESS? few hours at
Abbertua, 8. c. night it was im
possible to sleep. I suffered untold agonies.
Constipation was not tho least of my
troufcler. I oommeneed to take Hood's
Barasp-ariUa and felt a decided change in
three days. I waa able to get out of bed
Rood’s Cures
Bit n* flr in nf<7Tst a week,
oaa recommend it 6* tho best remedy for
und dvqocpsia I cvtc’ ir{*d.**
T. 8. PaIaMEP-, Abbk>. iH®, S. C.
Hooci r e Pll!3 G3fO tb<s best ?/ier dinac
oSUjI. b&xui tflgsstioti, proT-iLt coiis
<%-> r -' • ' '
v“
jf*
PIEDMONT air line.
7 V• > lib V-AL- ■ 1 LI f. V TKif ZN G F.U TP \ TK3*
Srttkas4 KUilv V.ti ■ ' ; '-ls!:;.S*
OaUbar I, IHI ,• ,i | n..|y
h. AtlanuC 1 jl.tl 1 It; 7 50* 45Sp[ 400 p
** A’.kr.ia E. T ■’*-. 2 I*i *. l r • j SOCp
* Norero*;... . i; _ S C 2
“ Buford K I(.| - It
" UsiuetrUlt nr. f1: , i 6 32*
" Ltii. i -jM*hi(4* (.)■ _
“ Coruall* . . ... ! 'll IStaj l’|.|
*• Ml Airy :i in !l 7 Sip
“ Tmom ! 3 15* II IS,. DMlgl
- Waatmiuater. i j :gi 12 Mg! a 2p
“ Bnnac*. j ’ 4' 13 42’ *4>p
” Central ... 4 41-j i*' 1 i■>: .p
"
" Bpsruiibur*. 6 !:•; |C 1. 3 U., 1 I3u
" ti.tTnej* j f t i . |
- Bl*ck*r.,urr... 7 o*pi - t;■ i ; .
“ ICuig's 111 : 7 m .. !
“ OIUIOUIE | 7 ... 1
Ar. Cbrlout. .}■!.. s ... c , i
Ar. PaßvUla
Ar. Richmond.,.. |6). nj 6 41; ■ s a
Ar. W.ar :r r'.< '. . US.
“ Bal'm'a • i <’.• 11' , i . . p
“ ghlladalpble 0 .a, 3■■ 1 i . 47p
" New York. . .•; C ... ...i j t ij.•
' 1 .(V ,
Soethbdaait. t,'; ' 0.. Iw -*' °’ • ’ •'
llu..y jldai T > .ril.M ILiiiy
Lt N. T.PRP ~j Li; .’ : *
44 Philadelphia I 6 j " aVr. j I 1 l*r>
44 Balvlruore. !15 and ; 9 4.*’ j ! lp
44 Waahlnjtuu . j u 4-; , 11 I * .xp
44 lUchunoud.... 2 Win: 12 .SVej 2 j 7 iip
* iMnTtlie S 60a] ftftpj G Xvj 11l 4Cp
** Chariott® .I 9 , i : •J' . 3-* a
44 Gasionu... . bf.*
44 Xiaa'a Mt. ',l i
* Blacaaburf .. |1049a l 2 10a! 2 ... 437a
“ Oaffiitya : j rr. 2 Is: ,
gpartanbnrg. 1 3"a'S(V.p . •
44 4*reenTlU# .... 12 2 s ’ : 1 .-ui’ -1 . i i la
* Oautral l lfcp 1 5 tiij ; 7 10a
44 fteneca j 3 Uof 6 06i>!..
*" We#LniinLr j .. ‘6 :r
" Wt. Airy I • 7 4"; 6 30a 9 12a
* Coma Pa | M i ? :.v
44 Lula •; 41c, .b i \ f.
** dfefoarrlUa
44 Buford j 9 07p! Abh
*• Hororoee.. 9l . < i:>
At Atlanta E. T. 4 y-p 6 2<'n 10 >•. 9 :>>•■ ,i■
!*▼ Atlanta T 3 &.sp r . 9 3Pp! 8 02<.n
4 *A" a. m. “P” p. m. “ M ’ noon. “N” nlfht.
Soa 37 and and smliw- D.cm
Vealihulad Limited, 1 hroi.Rh 1’ iHiiia i riii'f-oc-rs
bat ween New York and New ‘rit. ■ * \\ VV j
isgteo. Atlanta and Montgoi. e!y • and , * *.
twe©n New York and !I n.. . •>. ’■ . .. r ion.
▲llautA and Birmi. -u.v:u i) • 1
Koa. X, and 36 Unit, and .Stalt-s r-..s* Ma: !’ *nai.
Flaeping Caw between All ..ia, Ntrv- • ‘ and
>’aw York.
Vek. 31 and S2, Expc*Hillon Flyer. li. v.i F’tF
pan Sieeper* bctwfv n- v Y.. : , 1 • v,
Waaklnftou. On Tor-dkj ■ i ;-r. .* 1
naction w lit be wade f-. ' hr.; r N*
31, &K.d on thee* jßr * kr
be ojr>rated fc<t’n-te;.’" . ... :* m;u and
Wedatadar* Fn;. . ..5 ■
kasta to Rich nr* a I o!u ; - ■ . ■
will ba to ioaie Atlanta by uaii,
Koa.il and is, Pnllc'.au -. : 1 r.r between
lUciimond, LaxivlLt- siiid * i- . -oort).
W. A. TURK, 8. II IIAP.T’"iVI 'K,
•iec l IVw A.£f*t, Als’tCeu’l 1 .i-s. Ag t.
W AHIKGTON, D. C. AT LA.Vi A, Ci A
W. B. RTD *.R, Superintendont, Chap.ioi v.
KOBTH L AItOUNA.
W. E. CRETIN, J. M. ci ;.r,
olwTßmpL, Trail: 0 . r,
p. c.
.T. < . KS.ISi.Ct. W. C. OUVKB Vice-Pvcsv. l.K.itr !,C3.
. vi, i: ■■
nwYw BißPiiior lurnuni
JIIIiS MB (l ilih iLili lku i LsL I 0,
(INCORPORATED)
11,-n is ;>
GENERAL K¥RDWA~.£ AND F&F.IIKG IMPLEMENTS
OF ALL KINDS.
Such as the Osborne Mowers. Hay Rakes and Disc Harrows, Olive
'milled Plows. Also Wagon and Buggy material. Guns, Ammunition. Belt
lgs, Axes. Table and Pocket Cutlery. The Famous
■‘NEW ENTERPRISE COOK STOVE.”
Over 3M.9M in daily u>e. evry ouo ?. : vinjr perfect sa:i<fvti*n. A fall line cf latest improved
ioathis Moves. in 'fact a general line of Marti a are. &' of which \*are offering at nw-k bw* nx><
;vfs.' TVt also funiisii you with any kind of iiacluneiy. (-'ail ami txaicii.v osr .© r. nsvl
e cauviuced.
Coner. f Carnesviile ar-': I : . s r ets, next door Qo -> A ?
HARMONY GROVE, _ _ _ GEuCGiA
ONE CENT T WEEK
The Atlanta Weekly Journal's
Great Offer-Clubbed With
This Paper for a Nom
inal Sum.
Onn you afford to pay 6ns cants a fiiontk
er one cent a weak tor th* news of tha
world? You con get the Ationta Weekly
Journal for lesa than that. It .sthe chaap
est pa tier in tha south.
The Weekly Journal has been vaatly im
proved of isle and new goes out to its
readers r. lire, clean, complete, up to data
family newspaper, equal to the beet is tbe
United Stales.
!■ ccn'iiins ten page- and is brim full of
right feeding all *!ie way through. The
irciiy Journal’s news service covers the
world and ti e cream of it all comes in tbe
s Veekly
With Sam Jones’ philosophy, Bill Ilya’s
■Mjmur, st r.rj from the best writers in the
country, profitable hints for the farm,
’ ..id,in-. .'r goaaip for the women,
Tlie Jurenns Journal, ae a part of it, for
tha eh'ldmu and attraefire miscellany for
the entire hourehoid- :t con.ee to you at
only 50 cent* a year.
You can send this to The Weekly Jour-
nal, Atlanta, in stamps, or si you please.
Sample ■■ ; irs will b sent you free.
The .0r..: year is going to be alive
w,: , in'. ■ ■}•. i happenings To keep up
with t'.crn r r need the Atlanta Weekly
Jourpa And by a special club
bing ~-■. u.ent, we ure now abla
to J . '.weir* month’s sub
“O.-ipt;. to both that pepwx an*
tbe 1 :iiks County Gazette tor Si-cts
it Vtar.
PROTECTION from tho grip,
E pneumonia, diphtheria, fever and
epidemics is given by Hood’s Sarsapa
rilla. It mokes PURR BLOOD.
A Man with a History.
Hit 71* iy rovfwl with Lamps. Cos aid
not rat and Th he was
g***B op.
(From * ‘it' .\‘ishn{lt\ 1 - m. t Banner.)
Mr. .!• hu \V.Thff.:. . of I.t :t<, 'l ean.,
b a i nan with a most intsrefUng hirtory.
it ill .s t. ■ : i.c to a rep r?*r
v : io bid ask- l hiio Or the : yuf hie Jili\
v . ■ : i was working in to.- r nines* of
Kcw Mexico, that my trouble* begati.
“ From aim] ly dc
re!-m •• i.Uo a clrom • ibility take huj
i ■
a
f 1 . -and
i • > utile c:'i;i'd drink.
* l 1 1.1. :ii r would
* t;:.i ou I*. v atom.* i, u’lil it srems-J that
i dry up hef fi"* many more days had
piv- ‘d.
“ l made anitb*r r.vj- lof the physician*,
"i ...ly in <• i • after f • • iher, a. i by the
* lof morphine and- l vr • •.! : :ic tuey
g i in *. I rn *.n trl to .. e thou ~i bar ly
ihrougn the fall."
• > • • 'i’aoma- ♦!: i?*layer! hi : arras,
• •■ lh r •• 'f. i•: rc was
A ■ ' •••! tb : palm
* ' * i ) i -.-’a 1 ir:I? e and r, the *poce
c • ■ -j. t ■-m vv . '* nearly to
“ i*
V"'• tt ti. *• doct:* in : i•mting in :rphia
' ’ ‘ ' ' It I ', of D ?iher. l ßr *o, jti t *ight
;lt . . .v i , b*d -I
* .. ; rget t.: .• my t u?.-n t Joe
‘ i .-.n iut; and
< x of Dr. ... :n-' ‘.’ink Phis
t’r V:.' • Pop:*. .ay : y had c.r J him
ur ‘ ‘ tv it; > i , t-; whe
h . . i l *d his dir .r. *ns
a !•; ' ! '• 1 : • . o i•. •. oa r alt
l . n ir* y .-a ;.•>*-! -. the most surprised
ra -ii a • <“* . 1 .kt my hand, it Dt as
steady as yo-v-r. ray face lias a healthy
. ■ .i it; I * t • ij.-oq a’i'T, i.ug to my
' . • • * p na
‘ ' 1 All the knots ve d’ -.p.
peart' it n, b>iy except ;hi Lttie
o. i- * l b - in nyrihn. 1 have a ;d
r 'and i . r. n. . <' i vei
fft!
' • •rd-'r I r•> * {.• ‘hy-'-pren railet oa
bar.: •■v, i ; -uy but d*‘C sick.
It. - • . o- i. r - no. - -of
h. If: ’ :!pi: . , bf, • . ii, gan
t; * ‘ * !d - 1 L.-.ve hivi but font
gp *! albKr--*thcr.
" v =• kit I wr, -j cured by
D ' J , end I be: va
fir wonderful reiuody
. -.id fVi-y ! i l care
* m\ ..njubi n
ceriilY to
* -• .hie eu-re, M
POOR DIGESTIOfi h’ads to
■ nervousness, chrouic dyspepsia and
great tniserv. Tiie best remedy ia
fcQOS’S SARSAPARSU-A.