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THE
THE SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR
TIio Great Farni, Indus trial and Stock
Journal of tlie South
ONE YEAR FOR $2.75
CASH £N ADVANCE.
Sample copies of the Southern Ctilti
ivator.'walL be mailed FREE on applica
tion to Jas. .P, Harrison & Co.) Drawer;
Atlanta, Ga. ■
job work
^ratly executed
-at THIS OFFICE.
josfiv H. HODGES, Proprietor. Devoted TTOfcie interests aid Culture. TWO DOLLARS A Year in Advah
yDl. ■!
fEfcRY, GEOEGll, YirtTESbAt JULY 26, iBsS.
NO. 30.
A- C- KILEY
Attorney at LaWl
FORT VALLEY, GA..
(Office oyer Dow Law Bank.) . |j
Practice in the counties of >the MaccA
Circuit; in Macon and Taylor countie
anil in the Federal Courts'
1 ft "H.
—The Home .Journal Job of
fice is fully prepared to do anjf
kind of Commercial job work thajfc
may be .needed. All nicely pad
ded, anti at. prices that will, eon^-
pete with any city. Call and look
at our samples and get ouip. prices,
and ydu willjeare your orders. _
'About the Georgia,. School
'Teclmolegy.
Atlanta Constitntion.
The Georgia school, of technolo
gy is now organized thoroughly .in
'all its departments. .
It will be formally opened Octo
ber 3rd. Thri session will end
June 19th, 1889. It will be di-
,Vided into two terms of equal
length.- The first half year will
end February 13th. There will be
an intermission of two weeks, ex
tending from December 21fit, 1888,
to January 4fch, 1889.
buildings] and facilities.
The school occupies a beautiful
pite, in a campus of nine acres,
lying at the junction of North ave
nue and Cherry street, easily ac
cessible by street car lines on Ma
rietta street and North avenge.
The academic building is a splen
did edifice of brick, trimmed with
granite and terra cotta slate roof.
It has one hundred and thirty feet
front, is one hundred and twenty
feet deep, and is four stories high
above the basement story. It coh-
taihS Hiriple accommodations in
halls, offices, apparatus rooms, rec
itation and lecture rooms, library
land chapel.
The workshop is also of brick,
two hundred and fifty feet long by
Eighty feet wide, and .two stories
high. It is beautifully designed
yrith reference to its use, and af
fords ample space for the various
departments of instruction pur
sued in it. It contains boiler and
engine rooms, wood shop, machine
Shop, forge room and foundry.
It has been equipped with a full
Assortment of tools, both hand and
machine) by the best manufactu
rers. The shops are organized and
managed as a manufacturing es
tablishment, and the facilities are
Such as will necessarily give the
best possible results.
MOW IT WAS ORGANIZED.
The folldwing extracts from the
^‘Act to Establish a Technolonical
School,” will show the purpose and
general plan of the school:
. “That there shall be established,
in connection with the State Uni
versity and forming one of the de
partments thereof, a technological
BC.kool.for the education and train
ing of students in the ihdhstrittl
and mechanical arts. ,
“That there siiail be one benefi
piary for eafch representative in
the general assembly front every
county in this., state, selected by
the board of education in each
county on competitive examination,
and.who shall be first entitled to
the benefits of said school; that the
tuition in said school shall be free
to. all students who are residents
of the state of Georgia.' The rates
of tuition to others than residents
of the state Shall hot exceed one
hundred and fifty dollars per an
num.” , ,
,The competitive examinations
Ihall be Held by the county school
' commissioners at such time and
place as they appoint and on topics
furnished by the faculty of the
fechool;
ThE general plAN.
In conformity with this act of
the legislature, the leading object
of the school will be to teach the
principles of science, especially
those which relate'to the mechani
cal anil in'dhsfcripl -arts/ ;
The school offers an education
of high gfade, founded on the
taathematics) the English lan
guage, the' physical sciences and
suit as will enable tlie graduate"
to earn a living: '
4 . There will be no elective courses,
each student being required to fol
low the prdsbribed course, both
luechanical and scholastic. The
hih'^ and attention ofstudeuts will
be duly proportioned between scho-
las tic and mechanical pursuits, and
special prominence will be given to
ffie element of practice in' everv
department.'
, -^be methods of the school will
e in the main such as have been
found advantageous in the poly-
^hnic schools of Europe and at
orcester free institute, with such
modu~t; ORS ag wil j adapt : to
of the peculiar needs of this sec-
tion.
To thorough supervision and in
struction in. handicrafts will . be
added the stimulus of production
for the market, and such other
conditions as are likely to be met
with in the .active BdsineSs of life.
Students will not receive money
compensation for their work.
The departments are: Mathe
matics, English language, draw
ing, mechanical engineering, phys-.
ics, chemistry, and geology and
mineralogy.
There will be no charge for tui
tion lo residents of the state of
Georgia. All others pay a fee of
8150.
Every student, of whatever place
of residence, pays an annual fee of
$20 to cover Contingent expenses.
Half of this amount is payable on
the opening day of each term in
advance. _ <
A contingent fee of $6 will be
required to be deposited with the
treasurer on entrance, to cover in
jury done to college buildings or
furniture; which sum will be re
turned to the student on leaving
the college, if not forfeited.
Books, stationery, drawing ma
terial and drawing instruments
may be estimated to cost $25 the
first year; and then from $5 to $10
thereafter.
The faculty is:
Isaac S. Hopkins, Ph., ©., D.
D.-, president and processor of
physics.
Lymah Hall, graduate of West
Point, professor of mathematics.
Leo D. Minor; United States
Navy, prefessor of mechanical en
gineering.
Milton B. Higgins, B. S., super
intendent of machine shop.
Rev. Charles Lane, A. M.; pro
fessor of EDglisli language and
literature.
R. T. Shepherd, A, M., profes
sor of free hand and mechanical
drawing.
‘*Penny Wise arid Poiiud Fool
ish.”
That’s what hdeU are .who plod
along—trying to attend to their
bnsihe^s when they feel half dead.
Their eyes are dim and throb;
thrir beads ache; the Cbildren an-
nby theni; their wives lose their
charms; they lose their ambition;
the make mistakes in their ac
counts, and the whole world looks
blue; they Hate themselves and ev-
erp one else. And why? If you
feel so, why don’t you stop and
tkihk a iriinute—of ate yoii too
stupid? Your liver and blood are
out of order; that’s all, You need
a good regulator and tonic. Take
a bottle of Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery, and you will
feel like a nb# man. In three
days your wife will be the prettiest
and sweetest woman in the world; 1
your children's dispositions will
be exactly like foiir own; your
business will improve, and you
will make money enough to pay
for Ihe Golden Medical Discovery
a hundred times over. Don’t be
stubborn, but tfy it.
IfJyou suffer froni “cold in the
head,” or from nasal ; catarrh, use
Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. It cares
when everything else fails.
The people of this country
should be very grateful to Claiborn
Duff; of Breathitt, Ky,” declares
the Courier-Journal, “for the dis
covery tliat sorghum seed, hereto-
re almost worthless, m’akes a’ flour
'superior to buckwheat for batter
bread. We have tried: tins flour,
and would advise all others to do
sol Those who have the seed
should: get a grist ground at oncm”
The New York Chamber of
Commerce is the ipost prosper
ous institution of the kin'd in the
United States. It now has nearly
1,000 members. .
CdhSUaPTlON SURELY CUBED.
. To mu Editor—Heaae inform your read,
ers that I have a positive remedy for the above
named disease. By its timely wse thousands of
hopeless cases have been permanently cored.
I shall bo glad to send fsyo bottles of my reme
dy free to an v of your readers who have con
sumption if they will send me their, express
and post office address. Respectfully,..
T- A. SLOCUM. M. C-, lSlfearl st.,NewTorir.
The Home Journal serves all
the people without partiality.
About Living Queens.
Philadelphia Times.
Queen Victoria has now reigned
over England longer than any
monarch but two—Henry HI. and
George HI. She overtook Queen
Elizabeth six’years ago, and has
outdone Edward ILL, who only
reigned 148 days over half a cen-
tiiry. If she lives a few years
longer Victoria Will Have reigned
longer thrih any other Royal per
sonage of history.
Queen Elizabeth of Roumania
is intensely musical, fond of danc
ing and has written a ballet.
Queen GJga, of Greece, is prac
tical, dresses plainly and goes in
for domestic economy, etc., even
making her own bonnets; it is
said.
Dagma of Russia, the Princess
of Wale’s sister, is said to be po
litically sniart, thodgli not very
intellectual otherwise. Like all
her sisters, she is very clever with
her needle; as they liad to malfe
their own. clothes before their
father got to be King.
Old Eugenie, ex- . Empress, is
said to have developed strange
idiosyncrasies, besides being a
recluse. Onejis a tendency to
Spiritualism and a belief that she
can communicate with her dead
Prince Imperial. It is. well Un
derstood that she intends to make
Princess Beatrice of England her
heiress.
Queen Natalie of Servia; after
being long banished, is going
back to her husband, it is said, the
trouble .being patched up. It Was
charged that she was trying, to
crowd her lord and master off the
throne.
The exQiieen of Hanover; an
almost forgotten personage, is now
in her seventieth year, and lives
in a secluded, out-of-the-way spot,
where she spends most of her time
quarrelling with her son,.the Duke
of Cumberland.
The Queen of Spain, recently after
theperformance,called Sarah Bern
hard into the box and gave h,er £
bouquet tied id ribbon and se
cured by a splendid sapphire;
mounted with diamands.
Marie, the daughter of the
Empress of Austria, is about to
marry Prince Ruprecht, of Bava
ria, who is according to the loyal
Jacobites-, the heir apparent to the
EngliSh throne.
Vitoria of Germany, it is said,
tastes portions of every article of
food intended for the Emperor,
and superintends the preperation
of most of it herself:
Queen Marguerite of Italy shows
more and more fondness for Amer
ican literature, and, . it is said,
gets all the leading magazines
published in the United States.
The Queen of Sweden, .since she
learned and began cookidg by the
advice of her physician for her
health, takes long walkes and often
goes into the peasants’ houses and
shows them ho# to make good
dishes. .
Olga, of Greece, is the most
beautiful Queen of Europe, and is
sister-in-law of the Empress of
. Russia andjthe Princess of Wales.
The Queen of Denmark is in
tensely deaf, but fond of music,
and has a big and powerful organ
that .she can Leaf.
Elizabeth of Austria has de
veloped an unfortunate skin dis
ease and wears a veil continually.
Isabella, ex-Queen of the Span
iards, when she appears abroad
wears a costume very much the
same as that of'a nun.
The Queen, of England’s grande
son, George “Collars, and Cuffs,”
is irreverent. He was dancing at
a ball recently with a pretty but
plebeian partner, when bis brother
called him to account. “You . can
go and hum, God save . grand-
npfotfifec’v . was' Ids rotort, “I’ll
dance With whom I please.”
The Queen Regent of Spain
chooses the word daily .for the
countersign, without which'ho one
is admitted to the palace by the
many guards. This is communi
cated to the highest military of
ficial, who happens to be Marshal
Campo, who proclaimed Alfonso
Men of One Idea.
The Georgia Watermelon Crop. The Mysterious Boonierans
A Self-Pouring Teapot.
A Very large delegation of these I a*^*««* ***** . I j he fo UoTr i D p notic e G f a - ne w
men,/says the Mobile Register, The experience of melon ship-J Some GermahlfWientists, seek- ’ invention is taken from an Eas-
visit the south every season, look-; P ers this season has demonstrated j ing to discover the secret of the! te'rn paper: “A self-pouring teapot
ing for farm locations, and they
almost invariably go back] dissat
isfied with the .country, One man
is from an apple’prodncing rigion
Up north; and when he sees very
little doing with apples in tlie
lower south he gets discouraged
and goes home to stay. Anotiier
Has wheat on the brain, another
hops, and anotiier hay, and all go
back in disgust. The grass or
hay man is usually in the large
majority, and he cannot think of
hay made from any other than
such growths as are prp.duced “up
to hum.” Talking of these grass
men, through the Southern Plant
er, Mr. Isaac H. ChristiaU says':
Of course, everybody ought-to
iraise some grass, and all they caU
(and it won’t take much “study to
do it); but to,advise the people of
the south to put their sandy pea
nut, and cotton and gardening
lands and their tobacco lands into
small grass, and let go as the main
idea the great stapled, and go in
competition in the cattle and
milk business with people who
can’t do much elsfe, brings a smile
at the recollection of the turnip
man who went to be employed by
Holden Rhodes on thfe great “Fall
Plantation”’ near Richmond, Ya,
Rhodes advertised for a manager,
and the man applied. Rhodes
tolcl him to go over and stay
Week with Mr. Waddill, his then
manager, who nraS going up the
country, and if Mr. Waddill liked
Him he would employ him. The
maii had turnips on the brain;
He walked out with Waddill and
remarked that a lot of five ahresj
prepared for clover seed, would be
“an excellent pihee to put turnips.”
Further on he came to a heavily
manured plot prepared for truckr
mg. “Ah,” he said, “tlifs would
make magnificent turnips.” And
further on he came to a
splendid alluvial field of sixty
acres, prepared fdr com. “Now;
Waddil,” said he, “I would raise
turnips enough on this land to buy
it in one year.” Well; so it went
on; and in a week Rhodes came
imd asked Waddill what he
thought of the new man. “Do
you want to go in the turnip busi
ness?” “Noj” said Rhodes; “what
oh earth put that idea . into your
head?” “Oh, I was thinking that
if yon did yon hqd better, catch on
to that fellow; you will never get
another such a chance.”
. The Southern News says: The
growth of tjb.e Farmers’ Alliance in
this State is wonderf uL The or
ganization now has 60,000 mem
bers and is growing rapidly. It-
will take wisdom and prudence to
successfully, g jveren such a lairge
organization.
very clearly the necessity fdr a j boomerang’s curious flight, caused : jg one 0 £
change in the method of Marketing! by a party of Australian natives to j g] 0 | ^
tbe newest and most nov r
tbis fruit. The business has
ceived a severe shock,, and the
growers ard bind over their fail
ure, and we see nothing to encour
age hope for the future under ex
isting methods of marketing.
The greatest, but by no means
insurmountable, difficulty with
which growers contend is the av
erage character of commission
merchants. At one time the irre-
i-- * - , P • ® . | household utensils. Why in
re-1 give an exhibition of bpomerang tii ese days of mechanical
ments used were of two sizes, the
larger being - a : slender crescent
about two feet long, two and a
quarter inches, wide and a. quarter
of an inch thick, made of an extra
ordinary heavy Australian iron
wood. , This boomerang was jerk
ed rip into the air about one hun
dred yards, when it flew straight
sponsible and... unreliable dealers away, then turned to the left and
The influence of. the moon upon
vegetation is an interesting pfob-
lep {awaiting lolntion. A recent
writer upon the subject mentions
that wood-cutters in Gape Colony
arid in India insist-that timber is
full of sap and unfit to be cut at
fall moon. Another observation -
of luna influence in Cape Colony
is. the rapid spoiling of meats and
other provisions when exposed to
moonlight, though this may be
due to the feet that the light serves
as a guide td insects.
Miss Belva A. Lockwood, in a
letter to the New York Sun oif
the definition of man, says:. “Man
is a Comprehensive term, embrac
ing woman,” We may not enthu-
sirstically concidejivith Belva on
all political points, but when it
comes to dictionary definitions we
ae awi.th '.her ; body and
—Washington Critic.
were weeded out, and many mar
kets were opened up through the
labors of the South Georgia Melon
Growers Association; but the curb
stone brokers have multiplied, and
send down their soliciting agents
and are about to monopolize the
market and absorb the crop.
Several of tlie most experienced
shippers in this section have been
badlj beaten by houses represent
ed by agents, and the sentiment is
growing that no house which sends
an agent into the melon fields
should ever be patroriiZeA
Local agents, too, are regarded
as a drawback to the business, and
in the effort to benefit their.friends
they lose them money. This is
not alone the .opinion of this jour-
rial, but many shippers, and some
of the best local agents themselves
say that it is a drawback to the
business. . .One of ttye most active
and prominent local .agents in
Southwest Georgia expressed it as
his belief, and signified his intea
tiori to withdraw froni the busi
ness.
The carriage charges on melons
are excessive; wholly dispropor
tioned to the value of the freight.
But that in itself has nothing to do
with , the unsatisfactory returns, as
the growers haye based. their ex
pectations on these fixed rates,' arid
if they receive a reasonable per
cent of the gross sales, or what
they should be and really are, they
will be satisfied.
There are many considerations
which enlluence the growers to be
lieve; #hick belief amounts to a
moral certainty, that the markets
this season have not jbeen so glut
ted with their products as to j usti-
fy the returns, . with which they
are dissatisfied. It is , useless to
discuss this phase of business at
this juncture; the excellent and
wide distribution together with in
dividual local information confirm
shippere in this belief;
A remarkable story cobles from
Princeton; 111., to the effect that
the two grown daughters of Jacob
Nye, a well-to-do farmer, living
eight milesKsouth of Princeton,
have been adjudged insane, arid
will be sent to Jacksonville for
treatment. The father and moth
er and another daughter ate also
insane. The family of five were
a]j stricken with this strange-maL
ady on the same day, and physi
cians are unable to account for it,
as all were as usual, a .few
days ago, and there had been no
unusual excitement in the neigh
borhood. They spend their time
singing and praying, and seem to
fear being poisoned.
Uacklen’5 Arnica Salve
The Best Salve in.tne. world for
Cuts, Braises,.Seres, Ulcers, Salt
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chap
ped Hands,' Chilblains, Corns, and
all Skin Eruptions, and positively
cures Piles, or no pay required.
It is guaranteed to give satisfaction
or money refunded. Price 25 cents
per box. For Sale By all drug
gists.
The following comes from Chi
cago, and people who are disposed
to doubt its authenticity, may
write to. Mr., Goodwin, of San
Francisco, and grit His' Version of
the matter:. When Frank R.
Goodwin was twelve years old his
mother started with him to New
York, but by mistake hs was sepa
rated from her a* some point en
route and was carried to Buffalo.
Some one on hearing his sfory,
gave him a, ticket to New York,
but on arriving there he could not
find his mother or any. of his rela
tives. _ He finally got work, and
supported himself as an-, errarid-
koyiri ri store for .six years, when
he went west to look for his moth
er, but again failing-lo find heriie
v/erit to California, .where he be
came wealthy, and whore he still
lives. He was a delegate to the
recent Chicago convention, and the
day Harrison was nominated, just
as he was coming out of the i hall;
a patrol wagoa with.an..old lady in
it passed by. The woman was
being taken to the poor house.
Mi. Goodwin got a squint at her,
and as he was a Californian,’ and/
therefore, not blinded/ by enthu
siasm for Harrison; he- recognized
her as his mother. A fe# days
ago, according to the dispatches,
the re-united son and mother went
to San Franelsco.
- - innl ! JBMMMM
throwing at Munster. . The instrn- should it be considered necessary to
lift a heavy teapot to serve tea?”
Why not make - the tea T pot. pour
its Own? lYpuld that the.individ
ual who invented . this pot ; migbii
go further apd invent self-lifting
pots, automatic heaters, etc.,. .then
one might simply sit in tpekjtchnn
and direct the nlensils to, unova
The greatest advantage, of - thip
self-pouring teapot is,, the tea . is
drawn from the bottom of. the-pot)
thus .enabling you to get. the. b^s(
of the. infusion; which „ is . icp
often left in the pot if yon ; pour
off from the top. It is sinaple ip
construction pnd easily pianaged
You simply raise the cylinder with
Weimer manufacturer, who has j the thumb ahd second finger thep
made some eleven thousand toyl c l ose the hole in tlie knot with
boomerangs, , believes that the ’
mystery of the shape lies in the
sharper curvature in the middle,
with unequal length of the two
arms, which must be made of
equal weight by unequal thickness.
The peculiarity of motion is due to
the difference in the, arms which
diverges the curve of rotation frorii
the circulrii'. : .
returned in a curved line back' to
the thrower, whirlipg around con
stantly and whizzing unpleasant
ly. - ; • - -•. -V
One badly directed projectile fell
through a spectator’s hat with a
cut as clean as that of a razor! A
According to a recent story, jus
tice is liberally dealt out in China,
and visited upon both parties to a
controversy. Two clans or fami
lies in the Prefecture of Yung-
How, in Hunan, recently- foright
for the possession of a certain hill,
and twenty-seven were killed. The
government thought such a pro-
deeding: irregular; and sentenced
the leader of the victorious party
and fourteen of his followers; with
the one of the defeated who fired
the first shot, to decapitation. Sev
eral members of the two clans,'
who took no active part in the
row but enedtiraged. it, were sen
tenced to receive one hundred.blows
each, rind the. elders of both fami
lies were sentenced to receive
eighty blows, each, ,6n. general
principles, for .not having prevent
ed the fight*
Jean Bonnet, a presumably crazy
Frenchman, mounted, a few days
qgo, to the top of the famoris July
column, in the Place de la Bastille,
Paris, and proceeded to undress
himself in the presence of a party
of ladies who were there sightsee
ing. Some men arrived in time to
pull him back, just as he was about
to leap . to the pavement; and held
him until the police came.
the first finger and press, gently;
the air thus compressed forces out
the tea. It also iriay be .used for
coffee by simply placirig . th^
ground coffee in a bag in the pqt
and pouring oyer it boiling water;
—[St Eonis Sayings.
1 • —:—||jj|:—; -. |
< “When the new congressional'
library buildiug , is completed,”,
said Librarian Spofford. to a re
porter, “it will have capacity, fog
accommodating oyer. j^QO(j,00(j
volumes, which is,about fo’ir time^
the ntunber collected iii.the jrirgest
library in the r worid. The latter
is the national -library, in. Paris.
It containes 2,500,000 volumes.
The British museum hap l,500, r
000. The Congressional libraiy. at
present has about 600j.000 bound
volumes; besides 350,000.. .musical
compositions, 200,000 pamphlets
apd 300;000 works of graphic art.
We have, oVf.*r ( l|,'000 botind ; ,yoL
umes of newspapers,, including
complete files of leading Amerfi
can newspapers from their first
issue up to date, -
Lord TenrLyeou.intendri to pass
the next winter cn the . Riviera.
He will put the finishing touches
to an extensive poem while there.
Tobacco growing in Florida is
becoming a.very important indus T
try in that state. There has keep,
a very marked increase in the ex-,
tent of its culture iri the past two
years, and it is found that the leaf
is of a very fin.e quality, and cai^
be'ean be grown to work up as
satisfactorily as the. tobacco : . of
Cuba or Sumatra. Important *ex->
periments are being made this
year by two tobacco growers iri
the statej. The.ie will, no doubt,..be.
a very decided increase next year.
— — •
Senator Sonza Queiroz, of Bra
zil, discounts .even our bonanza
senators ill tlie matter of non-at- -
tendance. He has not., appeared
in the penate for forty years, ;ind-
his salary, which he has • no{
drawp; now amounts to $923,189,-
53, .including interest at 7 per
cent The salary is calculated at,
$3,600 per^ annum from 1848 to.
1873, and $9,000 per annum sinc6
the last named date.
A few clayspgoa retired buis-j
ness man of Boyertown presented^
a check at the Farmers’ national,
bank which he had carried for
fourteen years. It was in a vest
which had hung away that length
of time. The check was honored.
There are about twice, as. many
women.as men in- Yucatan, not
withstanding which fact the whole
social system, of the country seems
tp be constructed for tiie especial;
benefit,.of. the mas.cnlin.. third of
This remedy is becoming so well [the community. If. B.—Tlie men
known and so popular as. to need I made it
JSE'.ctrjc Sitters'.
no, sp'edlal mentiofc • All who have}
u3e<I- Electric Bittei ; s .sjng. tbe [.Princess.
Same song of. praise. A ;parer'
medicine does, not exist, and ~-ifc. is .
guaranteed, to do all that is claim- e na outward .met.
'■Wk
ys,
v/ill remove pimples-, boils, salt
j rheum, and other affections caus
ed by impure blood. Will drive
If we hope for things of which | malaria from the.system and pre
we have not thoroughly consider
ed the value, our disappointment
will be greater thau our pleasure
in the fruition of them.
Renew your subscript
•, x iiifcess Beatrice fit Batten-,
burg [shaking a variety.of inter-,
oc:s for the,
which
ormal.
Cr. :-!off2ffs TEETHIKA (Teething Powders)
Allays Irritation*' A(d^ Bisrpstion, Ee^uTatpa t
25 Cents. Teethina currs
and nothlus: equals It for
Bowels,
vent as well as cure all malarial „„„
fpv©rs For r*nrp of lipailanho tie snaunertroublna cf Children of any age. It
le ' e ■ ,. r c “ re . Or neaaacue, \ ifsaf* and sure. Tryltand J-OU irillntViT
constipation and indigestion try chlw '
Electric itters. entire satisfac-; Holtzclaw & Gllbbut, Feny,.Ga.
tion guaranteed oi; money refund-r v ==;. —-
ed. Price SOc..and $1 per bottle: —Subscribe
i all drug' stores*