Newspaper Page Text
• . .. a, so I SB
The Evening Call.
GRIFFIN, GA., MAY 23, 1899.
Olllrpover Davis’ hardware Store
TELEPHONE NO. 22.
Tub Evening Call is published every
afternoon—except Sundays.
The Mtddlh groroia Farmer, is pub
lished every Thursday.
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S. B. & J. (’. SAWTELL,
Editors and Proprietors.
Notice to Advertisers.
To insure insertion, all changes lor
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porting the tiict t > the business oftlce,which
it prompt delivery
Giio.ui Papd of ths Ordinary
of
j| Gr itin.
C,loo- ' Fighong B d>” Evane’
iiend- <r- h.iVi 'C »l it 1 fun al his
■ixp.'i se o •c'in-“ lie g"t tvrriloy seasick
on Lake Erie the other day during a
fishing trip i'i> chop, v 'resh pond
was too touch lor tdie biint- i taoned
old sea dog.
The President the other day at Hot
Springs took a long walk, and hear
the end of it jumped a fence Pre
suinubly, therefore, lie goes back to
Washington in good condition to
tackle the Philippine prob'em and the
Garter ea-e.
Thu Charleston Evening Post ways :
“Savannah is making an effort to have
Admiral Dewey’s flagship, Olympia,
visit the port, the iidniirin’a flag
officer, Lieut T. M. Brumby, isaGeor
gia buy, and the people id li s alate
purpose presenting film with a sword.
Savannah, as the chief port of the
stale, cUims the honor <d r> cniving
the ship on which the Georgian fought,
that the eword presentation may be
made upon her deck*. We hope that
Savannah will not lie disappointed ”
A Washington dispatch to the New
Yotk Evening Post save the navy des
paitment has determined to station
the double tuireted monitor, Amphi
trite, at Port Royal, S U , permanently
as a part of the defense system of the
naval station there. It l* the further
intent! mos the department to mains
(am the monitor there as a gunnery
11 aintng ship lor advanced classes of
seamen of the navy. In the latter
respect the Amphitrite will correspond
to the gunnery ship Excelsior of the
British navy
flu Boar !of Education of Mobi'e
lias disapproved id school commences
ineuts ami ha diii elod th.it Io re i i?r
the diplomas of gradual, son an up
pointed ilay without ceremony. This
stiikes us n;i an exceedingly wise ae
tmn The expense put upon the poor
by these commencement i x reisex is a
positive hardship, and it often happens
that theie is too much conspicuity
given particular pupils They dietutb
the order of school life and come to
nothing so far as tin- actu d benvfii of
1 he pupil is concerned
Senator Mason of Illinois introdm ed
»
“by request,” in the., last Congress a
bill for the payment, of a lump sum
and a small pension to al! colored peo
ple now alive who were working for
masters as slaves when the civil war
broke out. The Chicago Tribune says:
“Unacrupulous men throughout the
South have been telling ignorant old
negroes that Senator Mason’s bill hue
become a law, and that all. they need
do to get their pensions is to pay a
little something ‘fo have the papers
drawn up’ So these deluded blacks
have been handing over the few dol
lars they possess to conscienceless con
fidence operators, who assure them
that their claims will be put through
in a few weeks. The moral of this is
that a United States senator can find
more profitable employment than the
introduction of foolish bills which he
does not believe in and which he
knows cannot pass. If he had not in
troduced this bill and given it a status
which it never should have had, the
ex-slaves of the South would not have
been fleeced as they have been. The
senator will be wiser when his term
expires ”
CASTOTIIA.
Bear* tU Ths Kind You Have Always Bough*
■iM—mn r~ r TMBmSi r irn“ — it— MMi ' ’ i»
ABANDONED ARMY POSTS.
Troops Xo Longer Needed tinong «>><■
Aparlies to Curb the Savages.
It la rumored in department hendquar .
tors that there will be a rattling of dry' i
bones at-Homo of the older western pG.-tsj
in the near future An a result of the I
shakeup, predictions are that n number of j
t hem will be stricken from the list of nee- :
esaary stations and either sold at auction 1
or turned over to the Indian service for ■
agencies.
Whipple Barracks. A. T.. ttas iiban
don<>d some time ago, and but a small
handful of men are kept there under Lien- j
tenant Tupcs. As negotiations for the -
sale of this post are about, completed, th« l
detachment will probably bi) withdrawn .
in a short time, after which it will bo i
turned over to a custodian, who will look
after Uncle Sam’s interests until tbo sale
is consummated. It. may Im used as a
training ground for several Arizona
troops which urt) being filled for service
■ . 'lit
score is yet k how n.
l-ive years ago It was thought the height
of folly to think of abandoning any of tbo
Arizona military posts, which are in the
region infested with Apaches, but today it;
seems to be the settled policy of the gov
ernment to make these men self support
ing and therefore wife citizens. As rap
idly tw the Dawes bill requirements are
complied with tbo Indians are admitted
to the rights of suffrage. These require
ments are “the severance of all trilial re
lationships and the adoption of the modes
and habits of civilization." This will
soon cover the whole Apache tribe, once
so bloodthirsty, and it is not improbable
that tlio next live months will im the
übandomnent of Forts Apache. Grant and
lluachuca In Arizona and Wingate and
Union in New Mexico. The only reason
why' the government keeps troops in those
Godforsaken regions now is liecause of
fancied fear of the Indians.
It is also the policy of the government
in the Indian country to the red men, to
bo used as agencies. Thus in Utah can'
lie seen the Ouray agency, once the site of
old Fort Roubidoux; in Montana can be
seen the Fort. Peck agency, once the site
of a military' cantonment of that name,
and in Arizona the Fort Defiance agency
flourishes where once stood the sentinel
of the advance of civilization, Fort De
fiance.— I leu ver Times.
THE CAMERA FIEND.
V t oll! Blooded Proceed I nn nt the
Windsor Hotel Fire.
‘‘l witnessed the recent burning of the
Windsor hotel,” said Mr. Charles P. Jack
son, "and at. every turn through the
crowd 1 bumped into a camera fiend in
tent on taking snap shots of the tragic in
, cidents. They swarmed like bees on all
the neighboring elevations, the roofs were
lined with them, and certainly no disaster
was ever as thoroughly photographed
. There was plenty of light, at that time in
tiie afternoon, and the conditions were re
markably favorable for such work, but
■ what impressed me most was the apparent
, indifference of the kodak brigade to the
1 horrors of the scene. They seemed to bo
i so intent on getting good shots that— But
( let me tell you a little incident which il
lustrates the point exactly.
‘ Shortly before the wall fell, on the
Fifth avenue side, 1 was standing on the
edge of the throng shoulder to shoulder
with a tall, blond gill, who was manipu
lating ii good sized hand camera.. J learn-
- i d from her remarks to a companion that.
( she had only one film left, which -he was
saving, as she said, 'for something stun
' ning.’ Just tlien a woman suddenly ap
peared at a fourth story window, leaning
out and waving her arms distractedly. A
rope was hanging over the sill, and the
firemen roared at her to slide down. It
! Was] lain licit -he was mad with terror,
but site obeyed and. w ith great difficulty,
launched hersl'lf and btgan the descent.
Meantime the tall girl had covered her
wirl) (lie camera and was following her
down the rope exactly as a hunter would
I follow a moving animal with a gun.
, ‘Snap it. snap it!’ cried her companion
excitedly.
An instant later the ]s«jr woman, who
b i I been going faster and faster, lost her
i grip and fell, and. as she plunged through
space like a huge white bird, 1 heard the
metallic click of the instrument. The
blond girl tut tied around, her eyes gleam
ing, her hair awry and triumph written
all over her face
' ' 1 knew she was going to fall.’ she ex
claimed ;o I saved the film till she let.
go!’ Did y get her?’ asked the other
breathl. -1 I guess yes,’ she replied ’’
‘vevv <>rl ..ns Tim. Democrat
\ Murniun Service.
'l’he Milwaukee Journal thus describes I
tin- Mormon service hold in that city last I
Sunday: ' It wa- a unique gathering. I
Ihe room was bare and small, uncarpet- I
oil, containing a bed. a few ehairs, awash- I
stand and a small table which the preach- I
er used as a pulptti. tin the wall were a
map of Milwaukee, a looking glass, a
largo, bright ly colored Scriptural picture
and -i brighter colored face of a laughing
girl In this room there were crowded k’.s
]h tsons, 5 of whom were elders of the
church, 1? children, 3 male converts to
the strange religion, ti women, a visitor
and 1 he reporter.
" The preacher tiegnn his service at 2
o clock and preached aliout an hour. He
scored all other branches of the Christian
religion stating that they were composed
largely of hypix-rites. quoting freely from
the Bible to show how they had fallen
away from the early teaeldngs. Ministers
take pay tor their services, he said, and if
more pay is offered from one field than |
another they hasten to change and go I
where nio'iey is most plentiful, in direct I
variance with the Bible teachings. Ho I
spoke of baptism, tiH>, saying that the :
Scripture shows that complete immersion i
is required.”
I lie Prince Didn't Cnjoy It.
One day we were visited by a traveling •
Russian, Prince X., a large, blond man,
si and impenetrable, I ■introduced
him to one of tlie regular army officers, a |
capital fighter and excellent fellow, who, I
la ■.vever. viewed foreign international
polities from a strictly transmississippi I
standpoint. He hailed the Russian with
frank kindness and took him off to show
him around the trenches, chatting volubly j
and calling him "prince,” much as Ken
tuekians call one another “colonel.” As :
I returned I heard him remarking: “You >
see. prince, tile grc.it result of this war is
that it has united the two branches of the
Anglo Saxon people, and now that they i
are together they can whip the world.
Prince, they can whip the world!” Ix'ing
evidently filled with the pleasing belief *
tii it the Ivtissian would cordially -ynipa
thize with this view.—“The* Rough
ICiders. l.y Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, t
in Scribner's
THE CAUSE OF
DYSPEPSIA.
i
Loss of Vitality Known to be the Parent of this Dread
Disease—The Method of Cure thaJ Has ;
Proved Most Successful.
FVom the Republican, Scrantan, Penna.
The most common of all human ailments [
is deranged digestion : the most aggravating
disease, inherited by man, dyspepsia. In
sidious in its nature, varied in its forms it
tortures its victims, baffles the skill of phy- j
sicians and the power of medicine. |
The primary cause of dyspepsia is luck of ■
> vitality , the absence of nerve force; the loss .
of the life-sustaining elements of the blood.
It is a truism that m> organ can properly
perform its function -when the source of
nutriment fails; when it is weakened on one
hand and over-taxed on the other. When
the stomach is robbed of the nourishment
demanded by nature, assimilation ceases un- :
natural gases are generated, the entire sys
tem responds to the discord.
A practical illustration of the symptoms '
and tort ore of dyspepsia is furnished by the
case of Joseph T. Vandyke, 440 Hickory St., !
Scranton Pa.
Tn telling his story Mr. Vandyke says :
“Five yeari ftgo, I was afllluted with a;
trouble of the stomach, which was very I
aggravating. I had no appetite, could not.
enjoy myself at any time, and especially
was the trouble severe when I awoke in the
morning. 1 did not know what the ailment ■
was, but it became steadily worse and I was
in constant misery.
"I called in my fkmily physician, ami he
diagnosed the case as catarrh of the stomach.
He prescribed for me and I had his prescrip
tion filled. I took nearly all of the medi
cine, but. still the trouble became worse,
and I felt 'that my condition was hopeless.
My friends recommended various proprie
tary remedies, some of them among the best
T¥TTT A FTI DO YOU WANT'/ 11 matters not what—sprayers,
W JljLjlX 1 pumps, farm and factory machinery, canning ma
■.chinery, nursery stock, evaporators, farm and
garden implements, wire fencing, market quotations, fruit carriers, books,
fancy stock and poultry, insecticides, farm lands, any information, farm and
garden inventions, household articles —anything. \ou can advertise tor it
in the AMERICAN FRUIT GROWERS’ JOURNAL
IPron nF f ! You will get answers from many sources. It
ICC 01 * w jil sa ve you money in the purchase. It you
want to get a month’s trial subscription to the best weekly horticultural
trade journal in the world —the larmers great business paper send ten
cents to pay mailing expenses. Subscription price $2.00 a year. Address,
American Fruit Growers Journal, Atlanta, Ga., or Chicago, 111.
" ■■■■!■■■ Ilf ~ ■
Ripans Tabu les
—ONE GIVES RELIEF—
B ■■ -wF
r?
MT ■>
Jt-- <&>
Fanny R, Everythin/ I eat swells me up and m ikes me
feel m . .m constipated and have
head, r
Grace 1). Buy . .: n< a d take one when
the .. 'n ; b :.umt< t itself. You
will In. 1 that the will come to an end
in ten minutes, ami v/'ll be no head
ache that day.
.11... V K-a .r. 1.. ,-nn> ( .| . ... 1 .■■ th.mjan i tea.jnut.uls will b»
.L.s.rnu. i, ! t a.. 1 . ..u.. ChemioM .. 10 si.ru. est , s«w lurk.
—OKT YOUH
JOB PRINTING
DONE AT
The Evening Call Office.
in the market, but I tried «everal of them
without receiving benefit. After I had been
suffering several months, and had secured
no relief from any of the many remedies
which I had taken, a friend of mine, by the
■ name of Thomas < ampbell, also a ,resident
of this city, urged me to try Pr. Milliatns 1
Pink Pills for Pale People. I told him it
would be a useless waste of money to buy
them, as I was convinced that nothing could
do me any good.
“I was finally persuaded to buy a box
and began to use the pills according to
directions. Before I had taken the second
box I began to feel relieved, and after taking
a few more boxes 1 considered myself re
stored to health. The pills gave me new
| lite, strength, ambition ami happiness.
An unfailing specific is found in l)r. M 11-
liams’l’ink Pills for Pale People for such
: - locomotor ataxia, pnrtml paraly-i-,
i St. Vitus’dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheuma
‘ tisni nervous headache, the after effect of la
’ tfrinno palpitation of the heart pale and
sallow complexions, that tired feeling result
! jng from nervous prostration, all diseases re
i suiting from vitiated humors in the Mood,
I such as scroftoa, chronic erysipelas, etc. 1 hey
i are also a specific for troubles peculiar to
’females, such as suppressions, irregularities
and all forms of weakness. In men they effect
a radical cure in all cases arising from mental
worry, overwork or excesses of whatever
nature. These pills are manufactured by the
j Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Schenectady,
I N Y. and are sold only in boxes bearing the
i firm s'trade-mark and’wrapper nt 50 cents a
I box or six boxes for $2.50, ami are never sold
•in bulk. They may be had of all druggists.
LAND POOR.
A to Give Every Man a
Farm, by a Person Who is
Land Poor. i
Mr. Editor : Some years ago I took an
idea that land was the safest investment
that a man could make in Georgia, and as
a consequence, I am now land poor; have
more than I can profitably make use of,
and consequently want to get rid of some,
or all of it, and I have decided to adopt
the following measure to get rid of it:
I will say, in the first place, that the
land is the best in Monroe (founty, is fine
ly watered, and is adapted to raising cat
tle, sheep and hogs, and is the best tor
cotton, corn, wheat, oats and other grains
in the county. There are a number of
tenant houses on the place, and a home
recently built that cost me over $3,001) to
build. The land, in the first place, cost
me from $25 down to $4 per acre—saying
altogether, about $lO per acre, without
improvements ; and to get rid of it, I will
average the whole place at $lO per acre,
in the following way : I will have the
entire place, 1,600 acres, sub-divided into
50-acre lots, at $lO per acre, giving more
than 50 acres to one party, if desired, and
less than 50 to another, according to his
ability to pay for it, as the case may be,
the entire quantity to be drawn for.
In other words, the number of lots and
quantity of land to be put in a hat or box,
and drawn out under approval of a com
mittee of gentlemen, at some stated time,
so that all shall have a fair chance to get a
home at a low price, and no one has a
chance of losing their m mey, or failing to
get their value, as paid, and some get a
farm at far less than cost.
The land is 12 miles from Macon, a city
of some 50,000 or 60,000 people, and is
adapted to market gardening, and for
northern people who know how to work,
it offers a fine opportunity for a colony of
energetic citizens.
It is all together, and would make a fine
settlement, having the best of pastures,
water, springs, creeks, etc. The land is
timbered with hickory, beach, oak and
pine, and some cedar; in fact, it is the best
place 1 know of, and I am satisfied the ed
itor of the Call will vouch for what I
say.
1 would be glad to have any parties who
mean business, to go over the plantation,
familiarize themselves with the advan
tages, and communicate with me at
Barnesville, before going into the matter,
assuring them that I mean what I say.
I have also a farm of 50 acres near
Barnesville for sale, on good terms.
In addition to the terms offered above, I
have concluded to make the terms of pay
ment in four annual payments without
interest, which is tantamount to putting
the price of the land very low, The
titles to the land have been in the posses
sion of one or two parties for years, and
have never been questioned and are as
good as gold.
S. B. BURR, Sr,
Barnesville, Ga.
Excursion tickets at reduced rates
j between local points are on sale after
j IS noon Saturdays, and until 6 p. m.
! Sundays, 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 eu route, as tickets
include meals and berths aboard ship.
TVe take pleasure in commending to
j the traveling public the route referred
to, namely, via Central of Georgia
Railway to Savannah, thence via 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 public
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 board ship,
affording every opportunity for rest,
recreailon 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. HAILE, Gen. Pass. Agt.,
E. H. HINTON, Traffic Manager,
Miannah, Ga.
ronsumplion
> J and its
To the Editor :—I have an absolute
remedy for Consumption. By its timely use
thousands of hopeless cases have been already
permanently cured. So proof-positive am I
of its power that I consider it my duty to
send two bottles free to those of your readers
who have Consumption,Throat, Bronchial or
( Lung Trouble, if they will write me their
express and postoffice address. Sincerely,
T. A. SLOCUM, M. C-, 183 Pearl St., New York.
The Editorial and Business Mana<ament of
i thia Papier Guaruutvo this geouru is PruposiUou#
Corn
is a vigorous feeder and re
sponds well to liberal fertilize
tion. On corn lands the yield
increases and the soil improves
if properly treated with fer
tilizers containing nut.. under
7% actual
Potash.
A trial of this plan costs but
little and is sure to lead to
profitable culture.
All about P.ita-b—the c suits ~f it-. u , . ..
periinent oti iliv b<-J r.rm- m ft., i;,. ;
told in a little 1, -..k i* i. hw. i-ui, i.I, . , fY.! 11
tnaii tree tu any t.un...; .11 A:i ■■ . .... 'j
GERMAN kALi -.'kx
93 Nassau St., be'
■ . 50 YEARS’
T^WM|fr EXPE R 1 E N c E
tfjmrm
Trade Marks
, Designs
• fFvvn Copyrights 4c.
Anvonn spndlng a sketch and description ma?
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention is probably patentable. ('omniunica.
1 inns strictly contMentfal. Handbook on I'atents
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents
Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive
fpei ial notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest dr
culatlon ot any scientific journal. Terms. |:> a
rear: four months. 81. Sold by all newsdealers
MUNN & Co. 36,8r0ad -> New York
Branch Office. G 25 F St.. Washington, D. c.
BnHipoisON
A SPECIALT Y >
tiary 13LOOD FOISOX P . . !latl !
curedin 15t035 days. You can br.tr.-r
bomo for same pneo under eu ■■ KU'iran
ty. If you prefer tocomehere w v. j‘'
tract to pay railroad fateai d 1.
noehanre.if we fail to cure, if you have t ' 4
cury, iodide potash, and still have a. :i n s .. t
pains. Mucous ratchea in mouth, Sore Thr.■'•/
I’imples. Copper Colored Spots, i lcc-s’l '
any part of the body. Hair or Fvehrow s faili. £
Out, It Is this Secondary BLOOD PoisnQ
we guarantee to cure. Wo solicit the in. t obsta
nate cases and challenge the world for a
case we cannot cure. This di ease hvsalwos
bullied the skill of the most eminr nt nhv'j
cians. #500,000 capital behind our mu ’■ j-.
tlonal guaranty. Absolute proofs 7
application. Address COOK REMEDY ( A"
340 Masonic Temple, CHICAGO. ILL. '
WE PAY
cash for as • ■ ::•>■ like
cut! We pu. .-•■ i. . : ■■ vu<h
for many pi si - ... roio-.l
bi tw.'. ll 1-17. • : I . \
uuj i.llrold ).
of your nernli ■ ■ . • u
find Mumps v ■ s
of dollars. ' .• t
FREE ilhisl. .'
SPAKIi KTaUP ( o . -i. i
FREE! FREE! FREE!
1
A Lisa Size Portrait, Crayon, Pastel :r
Water Color, Free-
In order to introduce our excellent work
we will make to anv one sen ling usa
photo a Life Size Portrait, Crayon, Pastei
or Water Color Portrait Free of Charge.
I Small photo promptly returm Exact
; likeness and highly artistic finish euarao
I teed. Send votir photo at once to
C. L. MARECHAL ART CO.,
34s Elm St., Dallas, Texas.
I Southern Rmlwm.
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Also prompt ly ;
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S FRANKS. GANNON «’ ' ' ,r
» Third V-P. * Gen. Mgr. ■’ ' C
r Washington, D. C. J'“ s ! hu\VR K.
r W. A. TURK. S. H. HARO Ag( . uU
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•_ Washington. I). C. At k‘4sc'ket Ag eDt>
T. K. PEABODY, Passenger * oce
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