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An Ordinahce.
An ordinance to prevent the Spreading
of diseases through the keeping and ex
posing for sale ot second hand and cast off
clothing, to provide for the disinfection of
such clothing by the Board ot Health of
the City of Griffin, to prescribe fees for
the disinfection and the proper registry
thereof, and for other purposes.
Sec. Ist Be it ordained by the Mayor
and Council of the City of Griffin, that
from and after the passage of thrsj ordi
nance, it shall be unlawful for any P««o“
or persons, flrm or corporation to Beep
anaexpoee for sale any ° r
cast off clothing laki
the City Os Griffin, and the
certificateof said Bo ard °* Health- giving
the number and character of the garments
disinfected by them has been filed in the
office of the Clerk and Treasurer of the
City of Griffin; provided nothing herein
contained shall be construed as depriving
individual citizens of the right to sell or
otherwise dispose of their own or their
family wearing appaßfl, unless the same
is known to have been subject to conta
geous diseases, in which event this ordi
nance shall apply.
Sec. 2nd. Be it further ordained by the
authority aforesaid, That for each garment
disinfected by the Board of Health of
Griffin, there shall be paid-in advance to
said board the actual cost of disinfecting
the said garments, and tor the issuing of
the Certificate required by this ordinance
the sum ot twenty-five cents, and to the
Clerk and Treasurer of the City of Griffin
for the registry of said certificate the sum
of fifty cents.
Sec. 3rd. Be it further ordained by the
authority aforesaid, That every person or
persons, firm or corporation convicted of
a violation of this ordinance, shall be fined
and sentenced not more than one hundred
dollars, or sixty days in the chain gang,
either or both, in the discretion of the
Judge of the Criminal Court, for each of
fense. It shall be the duty of the police
force to see that this ordinance is strictly
enforced and report all violations the
'Board of Health.
Sec. 4th. Be it further ordained by the
authority aforesaid, That all ordinances
and parts of ordinances in conflict here
with are hereby repealed.
An Ordinance.
Be it ordained by the Mayor and Coun
cil oi the City of Griffin, That from and
after the passage ot this ordinance, the fol
owing rates will be charged for the use of
water per year:
1. Dwellings:
One f-inch opening for subscribers’
use only $ 9.00
Each additional spigot, sprinkler,
bowl, closet or bath. 3.00
Livery bars, soda founts and
photograph galleries 24.00
Each Additional opening 6 00
2. Meters will be furnished at the city’s
expense, at the rate of SI.OO per year
rental of same, paid in advance. A mini
mum of SI.OO per month will be charged
for water white the meter is on the service.
The reading.of the meters will be held
proof of use of water, but should meter
fail to register, the bill will be averaged
from twelve preceding months.
8. Meter rates will be as follows:
7,000 to 25,000 gals, month.. 15c 1,000
25,000 “ 50,000 “ “ 14c “
50,000 “ 100,000 “ . “ 12c "
100,000 “ 500,000 “ “ 10c “
500,000 “ 1,000,000 “ “ 9c “
The minimum rate shall be SI.OO per
month, whether that amount of water has
been used or not.
4. Notice to cut off water must be given
to the Superintendent of the Water De
partment, otherwise water will be charged
for full time.
5. Water will not be turned on to any
premises unless provided with an approved
stop and waste cock properly located in
an accessible position.
6. The Water Department shall have
the right to shut off water for necessary
repairs and work upon the system, and
they are not liable for any damages or re
bate by reason of the same.
7. Upon application to the Water De
partment, the city will tap mains and lay
pipes to the sidewalk for $2 50; thd rest
of the piping must be done by a plumber
at the consumers* expense.*
TAX ORDINANCE FOR 1898.
Be it ordained by the Mayor and Coun
cil of the city of Griffin and it is hereby
ordained by authority of the same, that
the sum of 25 cents be and the same is
hereby imposed on each and every one
hundred dollars of real estate within the
corporate limits of the city of Griffin and
on each and every one hundred dollars
valuation of all stocks in traie, horses,
mules, and other animals, musical instru
ments, furniture, watches, jewelry, wag
ons, drays ana all pleasure vehicles of
every description, money and solvent
debts, (except bonds of the city of Griffin)
and upon all classes of personal property,
including bank stock and capital used for
banking purooses, in the city of Griffin on
April Ist, 1898, and a like tax upon all
species of property of every description
held by,any one as guardian, agent, ex
ecutor or administrator or in any other
fiduciary relation including that held by
non-residents, to defray the current ex
penses of the city government.
Section 2nd.—That the sum of 65 cents
be and the same is hereby imposed upon
each and every one hundred dollars valu
ation of real estate and personal property
of every description as stated in section
First of this ordinance, within the corpo
rate limits of the city of Griffin for the
payment of the public debt of the city and
for the maintainance of a system of electric
lights and water works.
Section 3.—That the sum of \2O cents
be and the same is hereby upon
each and every one hundred dollars valu
ation of real estate and personal property
of all descriptions, as stated in section
First of this ordinance, within the corpo
rate limits of the city of Griffin, for the
maintainanoe of a system of public schools
The fends raised under this section not to
be appropriated for any other purpose
whatever.
Section 4.—That persons failing to make
returns of taxable property as herein pro
vided in section First, Second and Third
of this ordinance shall be double taxed as
jamyided by the laws oi the state and the
werk and treasurer shall issue executions
accordingly.
Section s.—That all ordinances or parts
of ordinances militating against this ordi-
Mnce be and the same are hereby repeal-
Con » t, P“«“« Former.
THE EPES WE FACE.
THE SINS THAT BESET THE END OF
THE CENTURY.
God Comes Before Man, Sara Dr. T*l
mace -The Prevalence of Blasphemy.
The Sins of City Life—And the Vinal
Judgment.
(Copyright, 1898, by American Press Asso
elation.]
Washington, Sept. 18.—This arousing
discourse by Dr. Talmage will excite inter
est by tl»e manner in which it assails some
of the great evils now abroad. The sub
ject is “Enemies Overthrown,” and the
text Psalms Ixviii, 1, “Let God arise, let
hie enemies be scattered. ”
A procession was formed to carry the
ark, or sacred box, which, though only 8
feet 9 inches in length and 4 feet 8 inches
in height and depth, was the symbol of
God’s presence. As the leaders of the pro
cession lifted this ornamented and bril
liant box by two golden poles run through
four golden rings and started for Mount
Zion all the people chanted the battle hymn
of my text, “Let God arise, let hie ene
mies be scattered. ”
The Camoronians of Scotland, outraged
by James I, who forced upon them reli
gious forms that were offensive, and by the
terrible persecution of Drummed, Dalziel
and Turner, and by the oppressive laws of
Charles I and Charles 11, were driven to
proclaim war against tyrants and went
forth to fight for their religious liberty,
and the mountain heather became rod
with carnage, and at Bothwell bridge and
Aird’s Moss and Drumolog the battle
hymn and the battle shout of those glo
rious old Scotchmen was the text I have
chosen, “Let God arise, let his enemies be
scattered.”
What a whirlwind of power waff Oliver
Cromwell, and how with his soldiers,
named the “Ironsides,” he went from vic
tory to victory I Opposing enemies melted
as he looked at them. He dismissed par
liament as easily as a schoolmaster a
school. He pointed his finger at Berkeley
castle, and it was taken. He ordered Sir
Ralph Hopton, the general, to dismount,
and he dismounted. See Cromwell march
ing on with his army and hear the battle
cry of the “Ironsides,” loud as a storm
and solemn as a deathknell, standards
reeling before it and cavalry horses going
back on their haunches, and armies flying
at Marston Moor, at Wlnceby Field, at
Naseby, at Bridgewater and Dartmouth—
“ Let God arise, let his enemies be scat
tered!”
What Battlecry?
So you see my text is not like a compli
mentary and tasseled sword that you some
times see hung up In a parlor, a sword
that was never in battle and only to be
used on general training day, but more
like some weapon carefully hung- up in
your home, telling Its story of battles, for
my text hangs in the Scripture armory, ■
telling of the holy wars of 8,000 years in
which it has been carried, but still as koqp
and mighty as when David first unsheath
ed it. It seems to me that In the church
of God, and in all styles of reformatory
work, what we most need now is a battle
cry. We raise our little standard and put
on it the name of some man who only a
few years ago began to live and in a few
years will cease to live. We go Into con
test against the armies of iniquity, de
pending too much on human agencies. We
use for a battlecry.the name of some brave
Christian reformer, but after awhile that
reformer dies or gets old or loses his cour
age, and then we take another battlecry,
and this time perhaps we put the name of
some ctie who betrays the cause and sells
out to the enemy. What we want for a
battlecry is the name of some leader who
will never betray us and will never sur
render, and will never dla
All respect have I for brave men and
women, but if we are to get the victory all
along the line we must take the hint of
the Gideonites, who wiped out the Bedouin
Arabs, commonly called Mldlanites.
These Gideonites had a glorious leader in
Gideon, but what was the battlecry with
which they flung their enemies into the
worst defeat into which any army was
ever tumbled? It was, “The sword of the
Lord and of Gideon.” Put God first, who
ever you put second. If the army of the
American Revolution is to free America,
It muwt be, “The sword of the Lord and of
Washiu o ton.” If the Germans want to
win the day at Sedan, it must be, “The
sword of the Lord and Von Moltke.” Wa
terloo was won for the English because
not only the armed men at the front, but
the worshipers in the cathedrals at the
rear, were crying, “The sword of the Lord
and of Wellington.”
, God First.
The Methodists have gone in triumph
across nation after nation with the cry,
“The sword of the Lord and of Wesley.”
The Presbyterians have gone from victory
to victory with the cry, “The sword of the
Lord and of John Knox.” The Baptists
have conquered millions after millions for
Christ with the cry, “The sword of the
Lord and of Judson.” The American Epis
copalians have won their mighty way with
the cry, “The sword of the Lord and of
Bishop M’Dvaine. ” The victory is to those
who put God first. But, as we want a bat
tlecry suited to all sects of religionistsand
to all lands, I nominate as the battlecry
of Christendom in the approaching Arma
geddon the words of my text, sounded be
fore the ark as it was carried to Mount
Zion, “Let God arise; let his enemies be
scattered.”
As far as our finite mind can Judge, it
seems about time for God to rise. Does it
not seem to you that the abominations of
this earth have gone far enough? Was
there ever a time when sin was so defiant?
Were there ever before so many fists lifted
toward God, telling him to come on if he
dare? Look at the blasphemy abroad!
What towering profanity! Would it be
possible for any one to calculate the num
bers of times that the name of the Al
mighty God and of Jesus Christ are every
day taken Irreverently on the lips? Pro
fane swearing is as much forbidden by the
law as theft or arson or murder, yet who
executes it? Profanity is worse than theft
or arson or murder, for there crimes are
attacks on humanity; tK> tean attttok on
God.
The Career Cursed.
This country is pre-eminent for blas
phemy. A man traveling in Russia was
supposed to be a clergyman. “Why do you
take me to be a clergyman?” said the num.
“On,” said the Russian, “all other Amer
icans swear.” The crime is multiplying
in intensity. God very often shows what
he thinks of it, but for the most part the
fatality is hushed up. Among the Adiron
dacks I met the funeral procession of a
man who two days before had fallen under
a flash of lightning while boasting after
a Sunday of work in the fields that he had
cheated God out of one day anyhow, and
the man who worked with him on the
same Sabbath is still living, but a helpless
invalid under the same flash.
I Years ago in a Pittsburg prison two
meh were "talking about tU liibie and
Christianity, nrfl me of them, Thompson
by name, applied to Jesus Christ a very
low and villainous epithet, and as he was
u'. t ring it i.j fell, A physician was called,
but no help could bo given. After a day
lying with distended pupils and epalsied
tongue he passed out of this world. In a
cemetery in Sullivan county, in New York
State, are eight headstones in a line and
all alike, and these are the
diphtheria raged in the village, and a
physician’ W.-A remarkably successful in!
curing his patients. So confident did he
become that he boasted that no case <rf ;
diphtheriA-eould stand before him ana
finally defied Almighty God to produce a
case of diphtheria that he could not cure.
His youngest child soon after took the
disease and died and one child after an
other until all the eight had died of diph
theria. The blasphemer challenged Al
mighty God, and God accepted the chal
lenge. Do not think that because God has
been silent in your case, O profane swear
er, that he is dead. Is there nothing now
in the peculiar feeling of your tongue or
nothing in the numbness of your brain
that indicates that God may come to
avenge your blasphemies 'or is already
avenging them? But these cases I have
noticed, I believe, are only a few cases
where there are hundreds. Families keep
them quiet to avoid the horrible conspicu
ity. Physicians suppress them through
professional confidence. It is a very,
very, very long roll that contains the
names of those who died with blasphemies
on their lips. _
Still the crime rolls on, up through par
lors, up through chandeliers with lights
all ablaze and through the pictured cor
ridors of clubrooms, out through busy ex
changes, where oath meets oath, and down
through all the haunts of sin, mingling
with the rattling dice and crackling bil
liard balls, and the laughter of her who
hath forgotten the covenant of her God,
and round the city and round the conti
nent and round the earth a seething, boil
ing surge flings its hot spray into the face
of a long suffering God, and the ship
captdin curses his crew, and the master
builder his men, and the hack driver his
horse,-and--the traveler the etone that
bruises his foot or the mud that soils his
shoes, or the defective timepiece that gets
him too late to the rail train. I arraign
profane swearing and blasphemy, two
names for the same thing, as being one of
the gigantio crimes of this land, and for
its extirpation it does seem as if it were
about time for Goff to arise.
The Day of Drink.
Then look for a moment at the evil of
drunkenness. Whether you live in Wash
ington or - New York or Chicago or Cin
cinnati or Savannah or Boston or in any
of the cities of this land, count up the sa
loons on that street os compared with the
saloons five years ago, and see they are
growing far out of proportion to the in
crease of the population. You people who
are so precise and particular lest there
should be some Imprudence and rashness
in attacking the rum traffic will have your
son some night pitched into your front
door dead drunk, or your daughter will
come home with her children because her
husband has by strong drink been turned
into a demoniac. The drink fiend has de
. spoiled whole streets of good homes in all
our cities. Fathers, brothers, sons on the
funeral pyro of strong drink! Fasten
tighter the victims! Stir up the flames!
Pile on the corpses! More men, women
and chtkfren,ter the sacrifice! Let us have
whole generations on fire of evil habit,
and at the sound of the cornet, flute, harp,
saekbut, psaltery and dulcimer let all the
people fall down and worship King Aloo-1
hoi, or you shall be cast into the fiery fur
nace under some political platform!
I indict this evil as the regicide, the
fratricide, the patricide, the matricide, the
uxoricide, of the century. Yet under what
innocent and delusive and mirthful names
alcoholism deceives the people! It is a
“cordial.” It is “bitters.” It is an “eye
opener.” It is an “appetizer.” It is a
“digester.” It is an “invigorator.” It is
a “settler.” It is a “nightcap.” Why
don’t they put on the right labels—“ E
ssence of Perdition,” “Conscience Stupe
fler,” "Five Drams of Heartache,”
“Tears of Orphanage,” “Blood of Souls,”
“Scabs of an Eternal Leprosy,” “Venom
of the Worm That Never Dies?” Only
once in awhile is there anything in the
title of liquors to even hint their atrocity,
as in the case of “sour mash. ” That I see
advertised all over. It is an honest name
and any ono can understand it. “Sour
mash!” That is, it makes a man’s disposi
tion sour, and his associations sour, and
his prospects sour, and then it is good to
mash bis body, and mash his soul, and
mash his business, and mash his family.
“Sour mash!” One honest name at last
for an intoxicant! But through lying la
bels of many of the apothecaries’ shops,
good people, who are only a little under
tone 1 n health and wanting some invigo
ration, have unwittingly got on their
tongue the fangs of this cobra that stings
to death so largo a ratio of the human race.
The Deadly Cup; K
Others are x ruined by the common and
all destructive habit ot treating custom
ers. And it is a treat on their coming to
town, and a treat while the bargaining
progresses, and a treat when tho purchase
is made, and a treat as he leaves town.
Others, to drown their troubles, submerge
themselves with this worse trouble. Oh,
the world is battered and bruised and blast
ed with this growing evil 1 It is more and
more Intrenched and fortified. They have
millions of dollars subscribed to marshal
and advance the alcoholic forces. They
nominate and elect and govern the vast
majority of the officeholders of this coun
try. On their side they have enlisted the
mightiest political power of the oenturies,
and behind them stand all the myrmidons
of the nether world, Satanic, Apollyonio
and diabolic. It is beyond all human ef
fort to overthrow this Bastille of decanters
or capture this Gibraltar of rum jugs. And
while I approve of all human agencies of
reform I would utterly despair if we had
nothing else. But what cheers me is that
our best troops are yet to come. Our chief
artillery is in reserve. Our greatest com
mander has not yet fully taken the field.
If all hell is on their side, all heaven is on
our side. Now “Let God arise, and let his
enemies be spattered. ” « , _ ,
Then look at the impurities of there
great cities. Ever and anon there are in
the newspapers explosions of social life
that make tho story of Sodom quite respect
able, “for such things,” Christ says, “were
more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrah”
than for tile Chorazins and Bethsaidas of
greater light. It Is no unusual thing in
our cities to see men in high positions
with two or three families, or refined ladies
willing solemnly to marry the very swine
of society U they be wealthy. The Bible
all aflame with denunciation against an
impure life, but many of the American
ministry uttering not one point blank
word agafost this iniquity lest some old
libertine throw up his church' pew. Ma
chinery organized in all the cities of the
United States and Canada by which to put
yearly in the grinding will es this iniquity
♦houaands of theiiu n usiH>utiil£df tikeoonn.
try<rmhoures,onepZ—X
In the courU that she had l applied the in
fernal marks* with 150 victims in six
months. Oh, sos SOO newspapers in Amer
ica to swing open the door of this lazar
house of social corruption! Exposure
must come before extirpation.
The City of Bin.
While the city van carries the scum ot
this sin from the prison to the police court
morning by morning it is fuDtlrac, if we
do not want high American life to become
like t hat of the court as Louis XV, to put
miUlonaWfitothiwiosand the Pompadours
of your brownstone palaces into a van of
popular indignation and drive them out
ofYtospectablo associations. What pros
pete of social purification can there be as
long as at summer watering places it is
usupl to see a young woman of excellent
roaring stand and aimpor and giggle and
roll up her eyes sideways before onec*
those first class satyrs of fashionable Ute
andon the ballroom floor Join him in the
dance, the maternal < haperon meanwhile
beaming from the window on the scene?
Matches are made in heaven, they say.
Not such matohe.s, for the brimstone indi
cates the opposite region.
The evil is overshadowing all our cities.
By some these immoralities are called pec
cadillos, gallantries, eccentricities, and
are relegated to the realms ot Jocularity,
and few efforts are being made against
them. God bless the * ‘White Cross” move
ment, as it is called—an organization
making a mighty assault on this evil I God
forward the tracts on this subject distrib
uted by the religious tract societies ot the
land 1 God help parents in the great work
they arc doing In trying to start their ehil
dren with pure principles! God help all
legislators in their attempt to prohibit
th is crime!
The Day of Judgment.
But is this all? Then it is only a ques
tion of time when the last vestige of puri
ty and home will vanish out of sight. Hu
man arms, human pens, human voices,
human talents, are not sufficient. I begin
to look up. I listen for artillery rumbling
down the sapphire boulevards of heaven.
I watch to see if in the morning light
there be not the flash of descending sclm
iters. Oh, for God! Does it not seem timq.
tor bis appearance? Is it not time for all
lands to cry out, “Let God arise, and let
his enemies be scattered?”
I got a letter asking me If X did not
think that the earthquake In one of our
cities was the Divine chastisement on that
city for its sins. That letter I answered
by saying that If all our American cities
got all the punishment they deserve for
their horrible impurities the earth would
long ago have cracked, opening crevices
transcontinental and taken down all our
oitiei so far under that the tip of our
ohurich spires would bo 500 feet below the
surface. It is of the Lord’s mercies that
wo Have not been consumed.
Not only* are the affairs of this world so
a-twist, a-janglo and racked that there
seems a need of the Divine appearance, but
there is another reason. Have you not
noticed that in the history of this planet
God turns a leaf about every 8,000 years?
God turned a leaf, and this world was fit
ted for human residence. About 2,000
more years passed along, and God turned
anqthcr leaf, and It was the deluge. About
v, TOO more years passed on, and it was the
Nativity. Almost 2,000 more years passed
by, and ho will probably soon turn anoth
er leaf. What it shall bo I cannot say. It
way*be the demolition of all these mon
strosities of turpitude and the establish
ment of righteousness in all the earth. He
can do it, and he will do it. lam as con
fident as if it were already accomplished.
How easily he can do It my text suggests.
It does not ask God to hurl a great thun
derbolt of his power, but just to rise from
the throne on which he sits. Only that
will be necessary. “Let God arise!”
Redemption.
It will be no exertion of omnipotence.
It will bo no bending or bracing for a
mighty lift It will be no sending down
the sky of the white horse cavalry of heav
en or rumbling war chariots. He will
only rise. Now he is sitting in the ma
jesty and patience of his reign. He is from
his throne watching the mustering of all
the forces of blasphemy and drunkenness
and impurity and fraud and Sabbath
breaking, and when they have done their
worst and are most surely organized he
will bestir himself and say: “My enemies
have denied me long enough, and their
cup of iniquity is full. I have given them
all opportunity for repentance. This dis
pensation of patienoe is ended, and the
faith of the good shall be tried no longer.”
And now God begins to rise, and what
mountains give way under his right foot
I know not; but, standing in the full radi
ance and grandeur of his nature, he looks
this way and that, and how his enemies
are scattered! Blasphemers, white and
dumb, reel down to their doom, and those
who have trafficked In that which destroys
the bodies and souls of men and families
will fly with cut foot on the down grade
of broken decanters, and the polluters of
society that did their bad work with large
fortunes and high social sphere will over
take in their descent the degraded rabble
of underground city life as they tumble
over the eternal precipices, and the world
shall be left clear and clean for. the friends
of humanity and the worshipers of Al
mighty God. The last thorn plucked off,
the world will be left a blooming rose on
the bosom of that Christ who came to gar
dCnize it. The earth that stood snarling
with its tigerish passion, thrusting out its
raging claws, shall lie down a lamb at the
feet of the Lamb of God, who took away
the sins of the world.
And now the best thing I can wish for
you, and the best thing I can wish for my
self, is that we may be found his warm
and undisguised and enthusiastMMends
in that hour when God shall riseVK his
enemies shall bo scattered.
Modernising His Metaphor.
A farmer who had lost a son in the war
employed the village poet to write an obit
uary, which ran as follows:
He for his country fit an font
Until Death blowed his candle out.
"That won’t do,” said the bereaved par
ent, “kaze they don’t use candles now.
Take arothpr whirl at, it, ”.
The poet squared his jaws and presently
produced the following:
He fit an font with gun an knife
Till Death blowed out the gas of life.
“That’s better, now,” exclaimed the
farmer. “I’ve blowed out the gas myself
a many a time!’’—Atlanta Constitution.
An Editor's Mishap.
A recent issue of the Hardeman (Tenn.)
Free Press contained the following para
graph: “We wish to explain our lack of
editorial this week. We was down to Mem
phis, and a smart Alec at the tavern put
train oil on our greens and said it was
vinegar. Os course we were horse dew
comhaw for three days, and now that we
arcrabie to talk our language is not fit fur
publication.''
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—GET YOUH —
JOB PRINTING
DONE A.T
The Morning Call Office.
We have just supplied our Job Office with a complete line ol Btetioner*.
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way or ;
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS
STATEMENTS, IRCULABB,
J 'Li
ENVELOPES, NOTES;'
MORTGAGES, PROGRAM)* f
JARDB, POSTERS’
DODGERS, >.G KTO * 1
We erry toe bret ine of FNVELOFES to iTtred : thistrada
Aa ailrac.tie POSTER cf aay size can be issued on short notice. •
Our prices for work of all kinds will compare favorably with those obtained Too
any office in the state. When you want fob printing o!”srj ’dftcrft'Ai trte
call Satisfaction guaranteed.
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SLAJLL WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch.
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i
Out of town orders will receive
prompt attention.
J. P. & S B. Sawtell.