Newspaper Page Text
Jgerald and ^teti8ct[.
Newnan, Ga., Friday, Mareti 23, 1888.
What Will Save Our Farmers?
Southerly Cultivator.
This is a very important question,
and one that is asked almost every day
by thoughtful men, as they gaze over
that business life is not the work of a
day or a few years. It lasts through
life, and the man who is best prepared
for the long race comes in ahead at the
Statistics of suicide show that, after
all, the poor man rarely commits suicide
on account of poverty. Hundreds of good
fellows, with rarely *50 ahead, and five
end. Those who are not trained, puff or six in the family to clothe and feed,
and blow. Their flesh is soft, their go on with more equanimity than men
muscles are weak, and they fall behind | with good bank margins. They are gen-
j when zeal, grit and ability are needed, erally looking for a job, and frequently
Many men have succeeded who have have no work ahead for longer than
- «. , had but little schooling. Ask them, ' one to sLx months Tens of thous-
t * 6 9c °P e of our farming coun- an( j they will tell you that thev could ands of day laborers in the United
try, and that was once beautiful, level, ! j iav
nch and splendidly cultivated, but
which now presents year after year an
aspect of declining beauty and fertility.
There are two important questions for
all those who feel an interest in the
welfare of their country, to consider
first what is the real cause of certain
paits of our country so declining?
Second, what will save the whole coun
try from becoming worthless? In re
gard to the first, is it because the farm
ers do not work as hard as they’ former- j
ly did, or as steadily as they should?
Such cannot bo the case, for almost ev
ery fanner will tell you that he works
much harder now than he did ten or
fifteen years ago, or before the war. Is
it because the general drift of things in
these declining sections seems against
the farmers? Certainlyjiot.
To express it in the fewest words, it
is simply because the farmers do not
cultivate intensively and scientifically.
The remedy, then, to restore such coun
tries, so as to make farming profitable, is
simply to farm on a scientific and inten
sive scale; or, in other words, to culti
vate less ground and cultivate it better,
adopting and using all the most improv
ed methods of cultivation. While it is
true that it will take many years of
seemingly apt] perhaps unprofitable la-
Ibor bo restore such worn-out sections,
yet there is but one way to succeed in
•doing so, and that is, as the old adage
says, to stick to it, and finally by inten
sive and scientific work, and by the
^necessary restoratives, the farmer may
bring his land back to its former fertili
ty, and instead of decreasing in value,
as now, it will yearly increase until it
shall bloom like a rose, and the farm
er’s home spread an influence for in
dustry, education and Christianity
throughout the length and breadth of
the land.
e had their minds disciplined by
studies instead of business mistakes.
Stick to the books and the schools aud
States rarely know what their income
is to be three months ahead, yet they
are neither depressed nor miserable.
teachers as long as you can. Put hard They readily spend their last dollar;
work to it. Make a business of your eat liberally, as long as food can be had.
school. Then, when you leave the and economize when they must. The
school doors, with powers well polished : terror of poverty is not so overpowering
and exercised, you'll find the business as the terror of riches. The fear of
world only another kind of school, i losing is greater than the‘fear of not
With that tine tool of a mind, quick getting.—St. Louis Globc-Dtmocrcit.
and strong to take hold of new ideas, j g jxty m iilions of people in the United
you 11 make rapid work and forge ahead i want cheaper woolen goods,
of those boys who have not been for-i ( .j iea p er coal, cheaper lumber, cheaper
t unate enough to have had your men- cheaper crockery, cheaper iron,
tal training. School won t put a busi- j cheaper groceries and cheaper clothing,
ness mind into a boy if it isn t there at i q-Q j 0 you must lower the war tax,
the start; but it will take that mind
and give it such training that the boy
at the end of five years’ business will
be ahead of where he could have been
without the school discipline.
Sugar Cane.
A-mericus Recorder
‘Sugar cane culture is very profitable
?to Southern farmer in some por
tions of the South. It gives him a better*
; pvofit than cotton and it should not bo
.neglected. It is necessary to use a good
supply of fertilizer to produce good
• cane.
Cotton seed and a good grade of gu-
. ano.give the best results. Stable ma
nure .i6 not good for cane. It produces
a dark and strong syrup which will not
bring a good price. On ordinary upland
100 bushels of cotton seed and 200
pounds of guano are sufficient for an
acre.
As a general thing, fanners use too
much seed on the land. Cane should
have distance as well as other crops. It.
should be cut fifteen inches long and
put twelve inches apart in the drill, and
it should never be lapped, as lapping
causes it. to dry out or rot at the ends,
and very often wood lice will trouble it,
and the"stand will be poor. If given
good distance the soil will settle down
between the pieces of seed, and all
the good eyes will come up. 3 he stalks
will be larger, and there will he more
suckers, consequently a greater num
ber of stalks to the seeds. If planted
thicker, the stalks will be smaller and
will not sucker.
Care should bo taken when the seed
is cut, to avoid splitting and bruising
the eyes. A sharp hatchet is the best
instrument to cut with. Use a block
about four inches wide to chop on
Cane should not be planted until the
eyes swell sufficiently to tell the affect
ed stalks. If planted before that, af
fected stalks are put in and a poor
stand is the result. Land should be
well prepared to receive the seed, and
is cultivated shallow.
The Art of War.
The command of a large army tasks
the resources of the greatest mind. It
is one of the highest of human achieve
ments, ijml by common consent the first
rank of fame is accorded to the great
est generals. To move an army and
feed it on the march requires a higher
order of generalship than to fight it.
Thirty hours without supplies would
reduce the best army to a helpless
mass of disorganized humanity. Food
for the men, forage for the animals,
must not only be provided, but must
be at the precise spot when wanted.
Napoleon, the great master of the art
of war, had a score of marshals, any
one of whom could fight a great battle,
im l scarce one who could lead an
army on a march. An army on the
march resembles nothing so much as an
enormous serpent, stitched out mile
upon mile, and moving, alert and watch
ful, with steady and irresistible force.
Let danger threaten and it hastily coils
itself together and prepares to avert or
overcome the danger. Shrunk to a
fraction of its former dimensions, it
shows its fangs and is ready for attack
or defense. The danger overpast, the
great mass unfolds its coils again and
stretches out its huge proportions in
progressive movement. The brain of
this mighty animal, the supreme mind
that controls its every motion, is the
general in chief.
A Tale of Life.
Where, oh where, has the young
man gone who graduating clothes put
on some time along the last of May,
and owned the wide world for a day ?
\nd where is the sweet girl graduate,
who chanted an essay dread with fate,
and started out with a giggling frown,
to turn this world upside down ? And
where is last year’s candidate, who had
things fixed for this year’s slate? W ho
carried around, as you’d believe,
couple of counties in his sleeve ? And
where is the scribe with the vaulting
will, who tried a long felt want to fill,
and courted shekels and renown with a
minion paper in a bourgeois town?
The lad has divided the world up fair,
and owns but his eight-millionth share
the sweet girl grad, is a grand surprise
and conquers the world with her well
made pies; the candidate with his
deathless “gall” is fixing himself for
another fall; while the journalist with
the haughty crest has gone the way of
last year’s nest. So, year by year and
dav by day. the world rolls on the same
old way; the balloon that's the biggest
round about is the flabbiest rag when
the gas goes out.
and manufacturers must not expect to
become millionaires in a year. In doing
this you must take off the tax on all raw
materials, and then we can compete
with the world. In doing this we will
build up manufacturing, help the home
markets and give employment to thous
ands who are out of work to-day. In
doing it we would not have to impose
a heavy tax on the many to make the
few rich.— Delphi (Ind.) Times.
The month of February, 188tf, was in
one respect the most remarkable in the
world’s history. It had no full moon.
January had two full moons, and so had
March, but February had none. Do
you realize what a rare thing in nature
that was? It had not occurred since the
time of Washington, nor since the dis
covery of America, nor since the be
ginning of the Christian era, nor the
creation of the world. And it will not
occur again, according to the computa
tion of astronomers, for—how long do
yon think ?—2,500,000 years. Was not
that truly a wonderful month?—
Golden Days.
“Well, does your husband still
drink?”
“Yes, mother, and it is worrying the
life out of me.”
‘Did you try the plan of breaking
him of the habit that I suggested to
you?”
“Yes.”
“Did you put the whisky in his cof
fee?”
“Yes.”
“What, did he say?”
“ He said I was the only woman he
had seen since his mother died who
knew how to make coffee as it should
be made.”
Spilkins came home the other day
with a new coat on.
‘Where did you buy that coat?” ask
ed his wife.
“At a second-hand clothing store on
Austin avenue.”
“Why, that is your old coat I sold a
peddler last week. He has fixed it up
and palmed it off on you for new.”
“By thunder! Now I know what the
hyena meant when he said it fitted me
like it had been made for me. I
thought at the time he was lying, but I
see I was deceived in him.”
Southern History Denounced.
Monroe Advertiser.
The following squib from an ex
change is a pointer to the fruits of j
the Blair bill, should it become a law—
to-wit:
“At a recent grand army convention
in Wisconsin a committee reported in
favor of the Blair educational bill and
denounced the histories now used in
some of the Southern schools.
“The committee’s report declared that
‘it is time to cease toying with treason
for policy’s sake,’ and demanded his
tories that would educate our children
in the spirit of loyalty and teach them
that secession was treason. The re
port was adopted amidst great enthu
siasm.”
Such would be the fruit of any law
that requires the payment by the gov
ernment of the tuition for the educa
tion of our children. When the mon
ey is furnished by the government for
this purpose, the next centralizing i
step would bo to dictate what books j
should be taught in our schools, and j
how these should he taught.
We are a strong advocate of eduea-1
tion, and favor a wise public school
system, that all children may have the i
benefit thereof, but prefer that each j
State shall adopt its own system and
pay its own tuition, aud to have no ,
centralizing bosses to dictate how. and i
the manner in which, it shall be done, j
School Days.
Boys, don’t be in a hurry to end j
them. You may want to get at busi
ness right away, feeling that you are j
falling behind those who are earlier in ;
business than yourself.
j «uc laim i in f
But remember i
The fact that this is a very big coun
try never strikes one so forcibly as when
he has traveled a couple of thousand
miles due west and still finds the prairie
stretching out before him. A young
sprig of British nobility was over here
last summer, accompanied by the inev
itable “Teems.” They saw the sea
board cities, tarried for a time in Chi
cago. in St. Louis and in Kansas City,
aud then struck out into the great
West. Somewhere near the edge of
Colorado the train was delayed at a
small station, and the passengers got
out to stretch their legs, among them
his lordship and "Jeems,” who seemed
in a brown study. “What is it!” asked
his master “1 was just thinkin,’ me
lud,” said Jeems, "that Columbus
didn't do such a mighty big thing when
he discovered this ’ere country, liafter
hall’s said and done. 'Ow could *e ’elp
it!”
Pat Hoolihan, while slating the roof
of one of our highest buildings, lost his
foot and fell.
Over and over he went until within
twenty-five feet of the pavement, when
he struck a telegraph wire and managed
to grasp it, first with one hand, and
then with both.
“llang on for your life. Pat!” shouted
his fellow-workmen, and the bystand
ers rushed to the nearest dwelling for a
mattress.
Pat held on for a few seconds, when
suddenly, with a cry of “Shtand from
under!” he dropped and lay senseless
in the street.
Whisky was used, and Pat finally
came to.
When asked why he did not hold out
longer he feebly replied:
* <)i wuz afraid the woire 'ud bieak.”
ne recovered.
Farmers and gardeners should gath
er up all the bones scattered about the
yards, and prepare them for use in fer
tilizing their lands. There are various
ways of doing this. One is to mash them
with an old ax or sledge-hammer, the
finer the better, and place the broken
pieces into a barrel or other vessel, iu-
terposed with layers of good hard
wood unslacked ashes. Keep the mass
moist, not allowing the lye or potash to
escape. In a few months the bones be
come jelly.
“For ten years past,” said the new
boarder, “my habits have been regular
as clock-work. I rose on the stroke of 6;
half an hour later I sat down to break
fast; at 7 I was at work, dined at 12, ate
supper at 8, and was in bed at 9:30, ate
only hearty food, and hadn’t a sick day
in all that time.”
“Dear me,” said the deacon, in sym
pathetic tones, “and what were you in
for?”
And in the awful silence that followed
you could hear the hash grit its teeth.
It is said that at a recent revival meet
ing the minister asked all those who
were in the habit of paying their debts
to rise. Nearly everybody did rise. He
then proposed for all that did not pay
their debts to rise. One solitary indi
vidual stood up and explained that he
did not pay because most of the au
dience were in arrears on their subscrip
tion. He was a newspaper editor.
“Mamma,” inquired little Emerson
What is this Disease that is Coming
Among Us?
Like a thief at night it steals in upon
us unawares. The patients have pains
above the chest and sides, and some
times in the back. They feel dull and
sleepy; the mouth has a bad taste, es
pecially in the morning. A sort of
sticky slime collects about the teeth.
The appetite is poor. There is a feel
ing like heavy lead on the stomach;
sometimes a faint, all gone sensation at
the pit of the stomach which food does
not satisfy. The eyes are sunken, the
hands and feet become cold and clam
my. After a while a cough sets in, at
first dry, but after a few months it is
attended with a greenish-colored ex
pectoration. The patient feels tired all
the while, and sleep does not seem to
afford any rest. After a time he be
comes nervous, irritable and gloomy,
and lias evil forebodings. There is a
giddiness, a sort of whirling sensation
in the head when rising up suddenly.
The bowels become costive; the skin is
dry and hot at times; the blood becomes
thick and stagnant; the whites of the
eyes become tinged with yellow; the
urine is scanty and high colored, de
positing a sediment after standing.
There is frequently a spitting up of the
food, sometimes with a sour taste and
sometimes with a sweetish taste; this
is frequently attended with palpitation
of the heart; the vision becomes im
paired, with spots before the eyes;
there is feeling of great prostration
and weakness. All of these symptoms
are in turn present. It is thought that
nearly one-third of our population has
this disease in some of its varied forms.
It has been found that physicians
have mistaken the cause of this disease.
Some have treated it for a liver com
plaint, others for kidney disease, etc.,
etc., but none of these kinds of treat
ment have been attended with success;
for it is really constipation and dyspep-
It is also found that Shaker Ex
tract of Roots, or Mother Seigel’s Cu
rative Syrup, when properly prepared
will remove this disease in all its stages.
Care must be taken, however, to secure
the genuine article.
IT WILL SELL BETTER THAN COTTON.
Mr. John C. Hemptinstall, of Chula-
firmee, Cleburn county, Ala., writes:
“Wy wife has been so much benefited
by Shaker Extract of Roots or Seigel’s
Syrup that she says she would rather
be without food than without the med
icine. It has done her more good than
the doctors and all other medicines put
together. I would ride twenty miles to
<£6ucational.
I88»" r
PALMETTO HIGH SCHOOL,
PALMETTO, GA.
SPRING TERM WILL BEGIN THE FIRST
WEDNESDAY IN JANUARY, 18SS.
Intelligent people, healthy location.experi
enced and conscientious teachers. Due atten
tion paid to the primary grades.
TUITION.
Primary grades, per month $1 20
Intermediate glides, per month 2 00
High school and collegiate grade*, per mo 3 (O
Board, per month <8 Ou to $10 0u
For particulars, address or consult
THUS. H. M EACH AM, Principal,
Palmetto, Ga.
WALKER HIGH SCHOOL,
1888.
The Spring Session Opens on the Second
Tuesday in January.
Professional Carbs.
Thom*** C. Carleton. Hewlett* A- Hah.
CARLETON A HALL,
Attorneys at Law,
Newnan, Gkt.
Will practice in all the Courts, both 8tai>
and Federal, giving special aJU-ntion to th<
management of estab * and litigated cause*-.
Office No. 2, Cole building.
j, P. BARNES,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga
Office up-stairs over B. S. Askew & Co.’s.
PAYSON S. WHATLEY,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga
Will practice in all the Courts and gj v
prompt attention to all bustness placed in m
liamls. Examination of titles, writing deco*,
mortgages, contracts, etc., will receive spe
cial attention. Office over Askew’s store.
THE COURSE OF STUDY
is such as to prepare tor the higher classes in
Colhge, or for practical life; and its comple
tion enables the student to take charge of the
advanced schoolsot the country.
Girls are boarded by the Principal. They
study at night under liis supervision, and thus
not infrequently are doubly benefited.
REGISTER FOR 1887.
First session, 105 pupils. Second session,
122 pupils. For the year, 162 pupils.
As public schools will go into operation next
venr, our number must necessarily be limited.
The entire school will be taught by the Prin
cipal.
RATES OF TUITION.
From $2 50 to $4 00 per month. Board and
tuition, $13 per scholastic month.
No room tor loafers.
DANIEL WALKER, Principal.
L. M. FARMER,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
(Office over First National Bank.)
Will pracMce in all the Courts of Coweta
Circuit. All Justice Courts attended.
£g|j^ Money to loan on real estate at 8 p- •
cent, per annum. Interest paid at end of lh<
year.
p. s. Willcoxon. W. C. Wrighi..
WILLCOXON & WRIGHT,
Attorneys at Law,
Newnan, Gt».
Will practice In all the Courts of th* Dp-
trictand Circuit. AU Justice Courts attra
ded. Office in Willcoxon building, over 1.
E. Summers’.
THE
PUBLIC SCHOOLS
OF THE
CITY OF NEWNAN
Will be opened for white pupils the second
Mondav, and for colored pupils the third Mon
day, in January, 1888, with the following corps
of teachers:
superintendent:
LYMAN H. FORD.
teachers:
JOHN E. PENDERGRAST,
MISS ANNIE ANDERSON,
MRS. D. P. WOODltOOF,
MRS. W. P. SIMMONS,
MRS. J. E. ROBINSON,
MISS CONNIE H A RTS FIE LD.
colored teachers:
c. V. SMITH,
G. J. BURCH.
supernumeraries:
SADIE E. BEACH.
FANNIE L. CARRINGTON.
One-fifth of the matriculation fee will hi
equired every two months, in advance.
Tuition for non-residents will be, in the
Grammar Schools. $1500 per annum; in the
ligh Schools, $25 00 per annum—one-fifth ti
ne paid every two months, in advance.
v J. P. BREWSTER,
Sec’y Board of Education.
GEO. A. CARTER,
Attorney' at Law,
Grantvllle, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of the Cir
cuit, and elsewhere by special agreement.
J. C. NEWMAN,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Georgia.
Will practice In the Superior and Justice
Courts of the county ami circuit, and els. -
where by speciul agreement.
G. & N. A. R.
/ • ■ -*r£
Leave Carrollton 5 m S 5
VrrlveAtkinson, T. O • a n
Banning B1 “ a I ’
Whitesburg £ 20 a it
Sargent’s ® an
Newnan * a R
Sharpsburg.. ” V, a ni
Turin 8 12 are
Senoia Jj jJ2 a 10
Brooks 8 05 are
Vaughns jf a ip
Griffin 0 o0 a re
No. 2—
Leave Griffin HI P ^
Arrive at Vaughns 12 18 p re
Brooks 12 36 pm
Senoia 1 1° P 111
Turin 1 p m
Sharpsburg 1 50 p re
Newnan 2 28 p ir.
Sargent’s 3 25pm
Whitesburg 3 ijj p n:
Banning ,, $ 00
Atkinson, T. O.
O
"firrollinji
Jt- Me
W. A. TURNER,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
Practices In all the State and Federal Court*-
Office No. -I Opera House Building.
w7y7 ATKINSON,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, G«.
Will practice in all Courts of this are 1
adjoining counties and the Supreme Court.
W. PEDDY, M. D..
Physician and Surgeon,
Newnan, 3a.
(Office over W. K. Avery’s Jewelry Store.
Offers his services to the people of Newnw*
and surrounding country. All calls answen-c
promptly.
T. B. DAVIS, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
Newnan, Ga.
Offers his professional services to the cU :
zens of Newnan and vicinity.
DR. THOS. COLE,
Dentist,
Newnan, Ga.
Depot Street.
„ dr.
Extract
HENLEY'S
elkwap, Gen’l Manager.
k Most Effective Combination.
This well known Tonic and Nervine Is gminln.'
great reputation os a cure for Debility, Dyapep ;
sU. and NERVOUS disorders. It relievw ab
languid and debilitated condition* oMmsj.
tem : strengthens the intellect, hedtly function?;
asj’.saagarwaerawsgjg
$he Ijrprawtng Influence of Malaria.
Brice—$1.00 per Bottle of *4 ounce**.
FOE SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
MATTRESS SHOP.
Jackson Street,
(Fronting the Robison Hotel,)
NEWNAN, GA.
New Mattresses of all class
es made to order.
Old Mattresses repaired and ;
renewed as ordered.
All work first-class. Satis- j
faction guaranteed.
Your orders solicited by
WYLIE H. SIMS.
get it into the hands of any sufferer if
he can get it in no other way. I be
lieve it will soon sell in this State bet
ter than cotton.”
TESTIMONY FROM TEXAS.
Mrs. S. E. Barton, of Varner, Ripley
county, Mo., writes that she had been
long afflicted with dyspepsia and disease
of the urinary organs and was cured
by Shaker Extract of Roots. Rev. J. J.
McGuire, merchant, of the same place,
who sold Mrs. Barton the medicine,
says he has sold it for four years and
never knew it to fail-
. 5HE WAS ALMOST DEAD.
I was so low with dyspepsia that
there was not a physician to be found
who could do anything with me. I had
fluttering of the heart and swimming
of the head. One day I road your
pamphle.. called “Life Among the Shale,
ers,” which described my disease bet
ter than myself. I tried the Shaker; ate suit yji a L,lctL 1 U “ J I The undersigned offers bis services to tl-
Extract of Roots and kept on with it, well, wears well, and will keep i
fully solicits their patronage. House-pair/
j ing a specialty, either by contract or by tl -
day. Old furniture, organs, pianos, etc
cleaned, painted and revarnlshed. Addr<--
me at Newnan, Ga. ALLEN LONG.
CLOCKS.
When I say Cure I do not mean merely to
stop them for a time, and then have them re
turn again. I mkan A RADICAL CUBE.
I have made the disease of
FITS, EPILEPSY or
FALLING SICKNESS
A life long study. I warrant my remedy t<-
Cure the worst cases. Because others have
tailed is no reason for not now receiving a cur*
Send at once for a treatise and »Fbkk Bottli
of my Inf a llible Remedy. Give Expres
and Post Office. It costs you nothing lor a
trial, and it will cure you. Address
H.C. ROOT. M.C., 183PemlSt.,NewYo&v.
Buy your Clocks from W. TXTmTikT>s1
E. Avery, the Jeweler, and you j J- -N X vJT!
are sure of a clock that runs j
111* juil CH llbllU J jl L1C i 'OU ! » m • Till J* T
Waldo, a Boston lad with a taste for j Ull til to-day I rejoice in good health, good time. E\ erv one war
scientific research, “everything that Mrs. M. E. Tinsley, Bevier, Huhlen- ranted. Prices low.
runs must have some kind of motive burg countv, Kv.
-.4 ’A .’l O*’
For sale by all Druggists, or address
the proprietor, A. -T. White, Limited,
Icon? Ctbrertisemente.
power, mustn’t it ?
“Certainly, Emerson.”
“Well, what is the motive power,
mamma, that makes little boys’ noses ; :>4 Warren Street, New \ork.
run in cold weather ?”
“Did she have a raw hide when she
assaulted you ?” asked his honor of a
' meek gentleman who accused his wife
; of assault with intent to kill. “No, your
honor,” said the poor man. feeling of
■ himself tenderly; “I’m the one that.
; had the raw hide: in fact, your honor,
' I have it still.”
A/WW-V. V WvVAVW-VA
FREE!
-4 cleer's Blood Elixir is t lie only Blood
Remedy guaranteed. It is a positive
cure for Ulcers, Eruptions or Syphili
tic Poisoning. It purifies the whole
system, and banishes all Rheumatic
and Neural i^ic pains. We guarantee
it. Sold by W. P. Broom, Newnan, Ga.
A 26-PAGE
ILLUSTRATED
PAPER.
Descriptive of the Soil. Climate, rrodur-
tions, Manfaoturing luduetries and Min
eral Wealth of Virginia aud other Southern
States. Write to
W. B. BEVILl, Gen’l Pass. Agent,
ROANOKE, VA.
Enclosing 2-cent stamp.
w Fruit Trees, Vines, etc., in every county
In the South, on commission terms. Large
commisions given. Write at once for terms,
J. C. LINDLEY & BRO., Nurserymen.
Greensboro, N. C.
Fitten Building. Atlanta. Ga. Most practi-
tical Business College South. Best course at
least cost. Business men and bookkeepers
commend its course of study ns being the best
ever devised. Send for catalogue.
Bfg G has given univer
sal satisfaction in Che
cure of Gonorrbcea and
Gleet. I prescribe it and
feel eafe lurccc^r tend
ing it to mil nur.erei*.
A. J. 3T05EB, B.D_
Doctrfr.r, 111.
PRICE, 01.OO.
Sold by Druggists.
A. J. LYNDON, Agent, Newnan, Ge.
Naples’ liniment;
fc'Hres Toothache, Headache, Neuralyi:
Rheumatism, all pains of Nerves and Bon* -
by external application. It cures Colic, Cl a •
Iera Morbus, Cramps and Pains of the Bov
els, by taking from 5 to 10 drops internaH;.
diluted with water. E. J. B1IADLRS,
Proprietor and Patentee, Newnan.
On sale at J. I. Scroggin’s. west side Pafel ••
Square.
Le Conte Pear Trees.
I have the original and genuine LeCo-:
Pear trees for sale. This is the season i-
transplanting. Order now, and in a le
v-ears you will have the finest pear th .
grows.' It is hardy and prolific.
b W. B. FAMBROUGH,
Boston, i :
PAINLESS CHILDBIRTh
HOW ACCOMPLISHED. Every Mr should know
Send stamp. BAKER BEM. CO.,Box 10* Buffalo.h A.
P ERSIAN BLOOM.8**tCeaplenwSen:-
tlfler. Skin Core and Blemish Ermdfcator known,
grad stamp for trial pn*M*. Add**** a* above.