Newspaper Page Text
| THE
I £pring
tonic
As winter passes &w&y it leaves
feeling weak, depressed and easily
many (fc
iiv ^
c ))
year. Purgatives are ^4
— they weaken
insteadlT'
people
tired. 'This ‘'means that the blood needs
attention and sensible people always take
a tonic at this time of
not the right medicine
of strengthening.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for
the best tonic medicine in the
not act on the bowels. They
appetite, enrich the blood, strengthen the
nerves and make people feel bright, active
and strong.
Do not accept a substitute. Look
the full name on the package.
Pale People are
world and do
stimulate the
for
Many women a*e languid, peevish, sallow, no appetite, full of aches and pains,
and generally.out of sorts. This condition prevails because the blood has become
impure. No one is better able to speak of this fact than Miss Hazel Snider, a
charming young woman of Arlington, Ind. To-dav she has rosy cheeks, sparkling
eyes and a plump form, which prove that she is in good health. A year ago
Miss Snider did riot look so. She was very thin, her cheeks were pale, her eyes
She was troubled with nervousness and general de"
sunken and dull. She was troubled with nervousness and general debility.
‘I had been sick some during my life,” she said, “but not any more than
the average girl, and was considered strong and healthy. I had prepared to teach
' ' ' I did not feel like teaching, and gave it up.
school, but became so run down that
I disliked to do this, but my mother and physician urged it.
I began to grow
pale, weak, lost several pounds of flesh, was stupid, and had no ambition. My
appetite failed. My- blood was in a bad condition, having become thin and watery.
After several months’ treatment from the family physician we saw he could do
me no good. I was discouraged and did not know what to do.
“One day I read an item in a paper of the wonderful curative qualities of
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. Shortly afterwards a neighbor came in
and told me about her experience, and how they cured her. I finally tried the
medicine, and when nearly through with the second box noticed a change for the
better. After I had taken eight boxes I was cured, and have had no occasion to
take any kind of medicine since. I feel that I owe much to Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills for Pale People, probably my life, and I advise any one suffering with
troubles similar to mine, to take these pills.” Miss Hazel Snider.
Sold by all druggists
or sent,postpaid,by the
Dr.Williams Medicine Co.,
Schenectady, N.V., on re
ceipt of price, 5o cts.
per box*, 6 boxes, $2.50.
If Toia Want
HOUSTON COUNTY BUSINESS,
ADVERTISE IN
The HOME JOURNAL,
PUBLISHED WEEKLY, AT
G-EORGIA,
Tih.e CouLr^t37* Site-
OFFICIAL ADVERTISING MEDIUM OF THE
COUNTY" OFFICERS.
COEEECT PEICES.
Job Work.
Points on Upland RlCf.
Question.—I want to plant a few
acres in upland rice. Please give m«
some information on the subject.
Answer.—It is a matter of surprisd
that more upland rice is not planted in
Georgia, as it is a healthy food product,
liked by most people, easy to raise and
productive in yield. Any land suitable
for corn or cotton will answer for rice,
though new ground is preferable be
cause of greater ease of cultivation.
Prepare the land well, lay off rows 1!
inches apart, use a good, complete com
mercial fertilizer at the rate of 200 oi
300 pounds to the acre in the row
and cover it so as to leave a low,
flat bed. When danger of frost is over,
open a shallow furrow and sow the seed
either in a continuous row, or what ii
perhaps better, drop 3 or 10 grains every
10 or 12 inches in the row. Covel
lightly, cultivate shallow, only being
sure to cut down all weeds and grass,
as rice is a tender plant when young
and is easily crowded out by any othei
growth.
Harvesting should be done When th<
upper half of the head is ripe. The straw
will then still be green, and after par
ing makes fine forage for horses and cat
tle. Cut and place the “hands” on the
stubble to dry. In 24 hours of good
weather it will be Sufficiently cured t<j
tie in bundles and honse or staob.
Never tie in bundles while the straw u
damp. The grain can be separated
from the straw either by flails or thrash
ing machines. The great difficulty
with most farmers is the cleansing ol
the hulls from the rice. This can bs
done in a wooden mortar with a wooden
pestle, but this process is very slow and
laborious. Small rice mills can now be
bought for about §300, and there should
be one in connection with every large
ginnery in the state. The knowledge
that rice could be cleaned for a moder
ate price would very much encourage
the growth of this valuable grain, and 1
believe such mills would be profitable.
By planting and cultivating as di
rected, the crop should yield, with aver
age seasons, from 13 to 20 bushels to the
acre.
Bice is the principal food crop oi
more than half the people in the world,
—State Agricultural Department.
We Have a Complete Stock and
Full assortment of Commercial
Stationery, and duplicate Macon or
Atlanta prices in this class of work
Satisfaction guaranteed. -
GIVE US J 1RIAL ORDER
Too Much of It.
A high army officer whose fad was
ventilation was one day making an in
spection of a frontier post which was
much in need of repair. In some places
the roof showed the bine sky overhead
and the walls were ornamented with
gaps.
The brigadier general was escorted
through the building by the colonel in
charge, a sergeant going-on before, as
is the custom, to warn the men to stand
at attention in honor of the general
As they proceeded the general asked:
“And how is the ventilation, colo
nel?”
Before the colonel could reply the old
sergeant, with a familiarity bom of
long service, said:
“Snre, general, and the ventilation is
bad, sorr, verra bad, sorr. The place is
all full of holes, sorr.”—Detroit Free
COW PEA VINE SILAGE
PLAN FOR BUILDING THE SILO
AND BEST 3IE THODS OF
RAISING SAME.
early in January of this yea-. I found
the silage in a perfect srp.te of preserva
tion, with only‘about 15 inches on top,
including the covering, unfit for use.
As 1 feed-downward, I find the silage
perfectly sonnd on the sides and next
to the walls of the silo. My cows soon
learned to eat cow pea vine silage.
Rinsing “Broom Corn.”
Question. — I have decided to grow
“broom corn” for the market.
Please give me all the infor
mation along this line possible.
OLQR and flavor of fruits,
size, quality and ap
pearance of vegetables
HETS'-lM j weight and plumpness of grain!
Indies. The introduction of this plant : are all produced by Uotash.
r-AT-ri c CAT IT uiiTH DRTiCHi — — is attributed to Dr. Franklin, who, find-I
CATTLE EAT IT WITH Kh Libit - -phey now take it with great relish and ‘ in g a see d 0 n a whisk broom that had
are as fond of it as a child is of candy, been imported, planted it, and from this
State Agricultural Department Quotes
Railway Commissioner Crenshaw
In Answer to a Question.
vine silage be
made a success in Georgia? Write me
in full, as I wish to try the experiment
this year.
Question.—Can peavme
' Georgia?
It is a most excellent feed in every par
ticular, and there is nothing better as a
butter producer. I consider its feeding
value equal to if not superior to any
thing that can be produced on the fame.
The richness of cow pea vine silage in a
large measure depends upon the quan-
Potash,
Answer. — Railroad Commissioner tity of cow peas on the vines at the
Thomas C Crenshaw, who owns a farm ; time they are harvested. The cow pea
in the county of Bartow, was recently ! vines I ensiloed the past season were
interviewed as to the plan he adopted very full of peas. I generally sow two
for building the silo, his method of rais- ' varieties, the Clay pea and the IJn-
: ing cow pea vines, his experience in the known pea. Any cow pea will answer
' ensiloing of the same, and the feeding r for silage that will produce long vines
: of silage to cattle. This interview ap- j and a heavy crop of peas. In order to
originated the culture of “L-room com”
in the United States. The average pro
duct of brush per acre is about 500 .
pounds. There has been produced from properly combined with Phos-
very fine soil and locality as high as phoric Acid and Nitrogen and
J,000 pounds per acre. - ~ *
. As there seems to be no substitute for liberally applied, Will improve
broom corn brush, there is always a de- eyery soil and i ncrease y j dd
maud for it, and it is a crop that can be J *
and quality of any crop.
appeared in the Atlanta Constitution a
few days since.
“I have,” writes Mr. Crenshaw, “an
all-wood round silo, 27 feet high and 20
feet in diameter inside. I built my silo
to the plan given on page 16, bulletin
No. 59, issued by the Wisconsin agri
cultural experiment station. The sills
are of post oak, size 4x6 iuches, cut in
2-foot lengths of the circle of the silo,
the sections of the sills being ‘toe-nailed’
together, making a circle 20 feet in dia
meter, which is then bedded in cement
mortar and leveled. The timbers for the
plates are cut in like manner, except
from yellow pine, size 2x4 inches, and
in lengths of two feet. The studding is
of yellow pine, size 4x4 inches, cut in
lengths of 27 feet, ‘toe-nailed’ to the sill
every 12 inches from center to center.
The sections of the plates are spiked di
rectly upon the tops of the studding,
doubling them, and thus making the
plates when completed 4x4 inches. In
framing my silo I put a round post 12
feet long and 8 Inches in diameter in
the center of the silo, abont two feet in
the ground; and as each stud was ‘toe-
nailed’ to the sill it was made plumb
and secured by nailing a board to the
center post. The lining is made of kiln-
dried cypress boards, one-half inch
thick and five inches wide, dressed on
both sides and edges to a uniform width
and thickness. This lining is nailed on
the inside of the studding with 8d. wire
nails, horizontally, close together. A
layer 3-ply giant P. and B. paper is
tacked on horizontally to the first layer
of cypress lining; then a second layer of
cypress boards is nailed on horizontally
with the same kind of nails as before,
breaking the joints of the first layer. A
second layer of paper similar to the
first is tacked on the second layer of
cypress boards. Then a third layer of
cypress boards is nailed on horizontally,
with lOd. nails, breaking the joints of
the seoond layer. I have three feeding
doors, size 2, 8x8, with a dormer win
dow of the same size, for filling the silo.
It is weatherboarded on the outside
with the same material as the lining.
The roof is of tin and of a conical shape.
I think I have as complete and as nearly
perfect and well-built silo as there is in
the south. When all three of the feed
ing doors are closed my silo is abso
lutely airtight, and will hold water
equal to a barrel.
“I sow cow peas early in June on my
wheat and oat stubble broadcast; about
one and one-half bnshels to the acre.
I have them turned under with a one-
horse turning plow, then drag the land
with an iron-tooth ‘Thomas’ harrow,
nothing more is necessary nntil the
vines are ready for the silo. The time
to harvest the cow pea vines for silage
is when one-half or more of the peas
the vines are ripe. Care
should be taken not to harvest the vines
before they are fully matured, as when
green they are very snconlent. If cow
pea vines are put into the silo when
too green or when they contain too
much moisture, the pressure in the pro
cess of settling is liable to express the
juicess from the tissue and cause it to
filter away, thereby entailing great loss.
I use a McCormick mower to cut the
vines. I then pile them at once in wind
rows with a two-horse steel rake and
haul them immediately to my silo,
where they are cut with a feed catter
made -by the Silver Manufacturing
company at Salem, O., and called by
them ‘Ohio No. 16.’ It has a carrier
feed and also an elevator. The vines
after being cut in lengths of from one-
half an inch, up to three inches are
dropped into the elevator and carried to
the dormer window and emptied into
the silo. I keep two stout, able-bodied
men in the silo all the while it is being
filled, one man with a pitchfork to level
and evenly distribute the vines as they
are put in and the other to tramp them
down while the filling is going on. Af
ter the silo is filled and while the settling
is going on I have two men to tramp
the silage down thoroughly a few hours
every day for about ten days. I then
ran green marsh grass through my cut
ter until I get a layer on top of the
silage six inches or more in depth for a
cover. This cover I wet quite liberally,
using a pail full or more of water to the
square foot of surface, which soon de
velops a thin, well rotted top layer,
making an almost airtight cover for the
silage. I then leave it alone and trust
to providenoe.
“I closed my silo containing about 125
tons of cow pea vine silage the latter
part of September, 1898. A thick mold
soon came over the entire surface and
remained intaot nntil I opened my silo
The Curative Properties,
Strength and Effect of Dr. M. A.
Simmons Liver Medicine are al
ways tbesam^ It cannot be equal-
led.
I have been afflicted with rheu
matism for fourteen years and
nothing seemed to give any relief.
I was able to be around all the
time, but constantly suffering. I
bad tried every thing I could hear
of and at last was told to try
Chamberlain’s Pain Balm, which
I did, and was immediately reliev
ed and in a short time cured. I
am happy to say that it has not
since returned.—Josh Edgar. Ger
mantown, Cal. For sale by Holtz-
claw & Gilbert, Perry, and L. W.
Stewart, Myrtle, Ga.
have a luxuriant growth of vines and
an abundant crop of peas, I would ad
vise (for Georgia) that the pea be sowed
as early in June as possible. The cow
pea is a wonderful land improyer.
“I only came in possession of my
present plantation three years ago. I
found it greatly impoverished, and I
am now building it up quite rapidly by
sowing it down in wheat in October and
in cow peas the June following. If my
land continues to improve hereafter as
rapidly as it has during the past two
years, in five years it will almost, if not
quite, double its yield. I never turn
under cow pea vines. They are too
valuable for silage. I only turn under
the cow pea vine stuble and roots at the
time I prepare my land for oats and
wheat in the fall. In filling a silo with
cow pea vines, I wouldnot advise letting
it stand too long between intervals of fill
ing. Long standing allows molding to
start, which tends to produce a waste,
even after the next layer is put on. I
consider it best to fill gradually, as well
as continuously, after the filling be
gins.”—State Agricultural Department.
Manufacture of Guano.
Question.—We are forming a club of
farmers with a view to manufacturing
our guanos instead of buying from the
dealers. Please give us all information
you can about the various materials
used in the manufacture, where we can
buy the same, what they are worth and
how to mix.
Answer.—In reply to your inquiry as
to the price of fertilizer materials, etc.,
will recommend that yon refer to brok
ers in these goods. Even the largest
fertilizer companies find it to their ad
vantage to buy from the brokers, who
make it their business to keep con
stantly informed by wire of all the vari
ations of prioes of the varions materials
used in the manufacture of commercial
fertilizers. I recommend that you
write A. A. Smith, Temple Court, At
lanta, Ga., H. M. Tucker &Co., Charles
ton, S. C., and J. H. Lang & Co., Sa
vannah, Ga. My latest inquiries show
that acid phosphate can be bought iu
Charleston, S. C., at §6.00 per ton (2,000
pounds) in large lots, guaranteed 13)4
per cent of available phosphoric acid.
Dry blood is worth §1.80 per unit of
ammonia, delivered in Atlanta. In
other words, if it shows 16 per cent of
ammonia, it is worth $28.80 per ten,
delivered in Atlanta. Tankage is worth
§2 per unit of ammonia, in Atlanta, and
10 cents per unit of bone phosphate.
Murate of potash contalning,’50 per cent
of potash is worth $1.80 per 100 pounds.
Kainit is worth §9.50 per ton, and it is
abont 12 per cent potash. Both the lat
ter prices are at Charleston ex vessel.
Mr. A. A. Smith is a reliable broker,
and can sometimes even sell yon cheaper
than you can buy in Charleston, freight
added. Freight to Atlanta from Charles
ton on most fertilizer materials Is $2.57
per ton.
In buying for home mixture, I would
advise that you stipulate the acid phos
phate be dry and screened free from
lumps. Also, the kainit yon buy be
fresh. Old kainit often turns into hard
lumps.
I would advise against the purchase
of tankage unless it be fine ground, as
it would be impossible to pulverize the
ordinary sort without special machinery.
By following out the directions, put
ting your materials down in layers, one
upon the other in proper proportions,
then cutting down with hoes and spades
and passing through a screen and then
mixing thoroughly again, yon ought
not to have much trouble in making
np a good fertilizer.
In case you buy and need further in
formation, will be glad to supply any I
can.—Chemical Department.
Sometimes it seems to weary wo
man that she must certainly give up.
The simplest and easiest work be
comes an almost insurmountable task.
Nervousness, sleeplessness and pain
harrass her and life seems hardly
worth the living.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
was made for her. Dr. Pierce’s Gold
en Medical Discovery was made for
her. The former is for-ills distinctly
feminine, the other for her general
system. Together they supply a sci
entific and successful course of treat
ment. The “Favorite Prescription”
restores healthy, regular action to
the organs distinctly feminine. It
forces out all impurities, strengthens
the tissues, allays inflammation. The
“Golden Medical Discovery” makes
appetite, helps digestion, promotes
assimilation, fills out the hollows in
cheeks and neck with good solid
flesh and brings back the gladsome
glow of girlhood.
Send 21 cents in one-cent stamps
to "World’s Dispensary Medical As
sociation, Buffalo, N. Y., and receive
Dr. Pierce’s 1008 page common sense
medical adviser, illustrated.
easily cultivated. It is a profitable one
for the farmers to raise in those sections
to which it is well adapted.
The seed make very good food for
horses when mixed with oats. It is
also fine food for poultry after the
chicks are two or three weeks old, when
fed with other food. When ground
with our common Indian corn in pro
portion to three bushels of broom com
to one of Indian corn, it makes good
food for cattle, hogs or sheep.
Generally speaking, broom corn grows
best where our native com grows best,
and the preparation of the land is similar
to that for corn. Good river or branch
bottom land is best suited to thri plant;
but any good land well drained will,
with barnyard manure, or a good fer
tilizer, make a good yield. The better
plan is to broadcast the manure, plow
and harrow the same so as to pulverize
the soil thoroughly. Plant in the drill
or in hills. The rows may be from
three to four feet, according to the va
riety to be grown; the dwarf varieties
in three feet rows and the larger varie
ties in four feet rows. The hills may
be two or three feet apart. When the
seed are sound and well-ripened, two
quarts will be sufficient to plant one
acre. Be sure to get good seed. You
can use the seed drills that will plant
small seed, or if only a few acres are to
be planted, yon can plant with the
hand. The cultivation is similar to
that of corn, only you have to use more
care and skill because of the smallness
of the plant. Thinning should be done
when the plants are two or three inches
high, leaving five or six in the hill, or if
drilled, the stalks should be left three or
four inches apart.
As to the harvesting and curing -of
the broom com, I will take pleasure in
advising you later if you desire such in
formation.—State Agricultural Depart
ment.
Write and get Free our pamphlets, which
tell how to buy and use fertilizers with
greatest economy and profit.
GERITAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St, New York.
Mrs. J. Silvers, Doogan, Ga,
wiihs: Rev. IJ. C. Haddock bad
Torpid Liv^r so bad he could
scarcely leave his room, and was
cured by Dr. M. A Simmons Liver
Medicine, which he recommended
to me, and it cnrpd me of Indiges
tion. I think it better than Black
Draught.
STEAMSHIP SERVICE.
The Central of Georgia Railway Com
pany and the Ocean Steamship Compa
ny are offering increased facilities for
passenger and freight traffic between the
south and east.
There will be sailings 5 times each
week from New York. A steamer will
leave Savannah each Thursday for Bos
ton, and leave Boston each Wednesday
for Savannah.
For specific information apply to near
est depot agent, or write to J. C. Haile,
G. P. A. Savannah, Ga.
>0000000000000000009
'Webster 9 ® l
: International |
Hl^iloaiary l
Successor of the “ Unabridged”
The One Great Standard Authority, ‘
So writes lion. 1). .T. Brewer,
«j nstice L. S. Supreme Court.
Standard
of tlieC. S.Oov’tFrintinK <
Oillce, the U. S. Supreme
f ireineCourts.jinaof nea
y all the Schoolbooks.
Warmly
Coissmenclecl
by State Superintendents <
or Schools, College J’resi- (
donts,an<iolherEd ih*m tors
almost without number.
Invaluable
in tlie honseliold. end to
tlie teacher, scholar, pro
fessional man, :unl self-
educator.
j Specimen pages sent on application
?G.&C. Merriam Co.,I*nl>IisIiers, (j
? Springfield, Mass.
0 CAUTION. Do not be deceived In i
A buying small so-called '
Webster’s Dictionaries.** All authentic <
THE
SOUTHER! HM MaGAZIKE,
OF BALTIMORE, MU.
PUBLISHED by
Manufacturers’ Eecord Publishing Co.
The largpst subscriptions to the
Pope’s Petei's peuce for the year
1898 came from the IJ cited States,
Hucamouuted to §142,200. Great
Britinn aud her colonies came next,
with §125,000; France, will! §99,-
000; Italy, §74,000; Austria, §60,-
000; aud Germany, §36,000.
Ladies desiring a contented aud
happy old age should use Simmons
Squaw Vine Wine or Tablets,com
meueiog at 40 years old aDd con
tinue during “ChaDge of Life.”
SEmi-Weekly Atlanta Journal and
Home Journal one year for §1.75.
The sympathetic tenderness of a lov
ing husband is everything to an expec
tant mother, especially during her first
ordeal. George Layton, Esq., a promi
nent druggist of Dayton, O., gives the
following case:
A customer of mine, whose wife has used
four bottles of “ Mother’s Friend ” before con
finement, says, after s<A:ig the effects of the
remedy, that if she had l” go through the ordeal
again, and there were but four bottles on the
market, and the cost was $100 per bottle, she
would have them.
Mother’s Friend ” is a scientifically
compounded liniment which affords cer
tain relief in the various ailments pre
ceding childbirth, and assures proper
elasticity to the cords and muscles in
volved in the final ordeal.
“Mother’s Friend” is sold by drug-
ists, or expressed on receipt of one
gists,
dollar.
Valuable book, “Before Baby is
Bom,” mailed free on application.
THE BRADF1EL0 REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta. Ga.
50 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
ThpJuroiture of the batth-ships
Kpp.rFargf* and Kentucky, r.p' : er-
for the makiDg of which have been
received at the Portsmouth Navy-
yard, is to cost nearly §100,000.
—Shorten the timp of Confine
ment, Strengthen Mother and sup
ply Breast Milk for Child by us
ing Simmons Squaw Yine Wine or
Tablets.
Marks
Designs
Copyrights &c.
ivention is probably patentable. Commnnica-
ons strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents
>nt free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive
•eciol notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A Monthly Illustrated Journal devo
ted to Southern Agriculture, dealing
with ail matters relating to General
Farming, Live Stock, Poultry, Dairying,
Truck Farming, Fruit Growing, and ev
ery farm interst and pursuit- in tlie
South.
It is widely read by fort hern and
Western farmers contemplating mov
ing South.
It ought to be in every Southern
family, for it is “of the South, by (he
South and for the South.'’
EDITORIAL CONTRIBUTORS.
Chas. W. Dabney. Jr., Ph. D., LL. D.
Ex-United States Assistant Secretary of Ag
riculture, Ex-Director United States Agri
cultural Experiment Station in North Caro
lina, President University of Tennessee and
President of United States Experiment Sta
tion in Tennessee.
J. B. Killebrew, A. M., Ph. D.
Ex-Commissioner of Agriculture for Ten
nessee, author of “Culture and Curing of
Tobacco” for U. S. tenth census, “Tobacco
Leaf,” “Sheep Husbandry,” “Wheat Grow
ing,” “Grasses,” and other agricultural
works.
The regular subscription price of the
Southern Farm Magazine is §1.00 a year,
but we offer it with the Home Journal
together one year for §1.75, casli in ad
vance.
f any scientific Journal". Terms, S3 a!
year; four months, ¥L Sold by all newsdealers, j
MUNN& Co 4561 Broadway, New Yorkj
Branch Office. 625 7 St, Washington. D. C. ;
Excursion tickets at reduced rates
between local points are on sale after
12 noon Saturdays, and nntil 6 p. m.
Snndays, good returning until Mon
day noon following date of sale.
Persons contemplating either a bus
iness or pleasure trip to the East
should investigate and consider the
advantages offered via Savannah and
Steamer lines. The rates generally
are considerably cheaper by this
route, and, in addition to this, pas
sengers save sleeping car fare and the
expense of meals en route, as tickets
include meals and berths aboard ship.
We take pleasure in commending to
the traveling public the route referred
to, namely, via Central of Georgia
Railway to Savannah, thence Tia the
elegant Steamers of the Ocean Steam
ship Company to New York and Bos
ton, and the Merchants and Miners
line to Baltimore.
The comfort of the traveling pnblic
is looked after in a manner that defies
criticism.
Electric lights and electric bells;
handsomely furnished staterooms,
modern sanitary arrangements. The
tables are supplied with all the deli
cacies of the Eastern and Southern
markets. All the luxury and comforts
of a modern hotel while on hoard ship,
affording every opportunity for rest,
recreallon or pleasure.
Each steamer has a stewardess to
look especially after ladies and chil
dren traveling alone.
For information as to rates and
sailing dates of steamers and for berth
reservations; apply to nearest ticket
agent of this company, or to
J. C. IIAILE, Gen. Pass. Agt.,
E. II. HIXTOX, Traffic Manager,
Savannah, Ga.
JOB WOB.K
—— j NEATLY EXECUTRD
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