Newspaper Page Text
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olciilPaper ot Spalding Co.
•! «>« Cll, 7 Griffin
Adrortl»ing Rato*.
DA riil —Ono andtfty dollar par oan<* wjuara *or *? r l ^ e
•nilu**« • Mon, Too liiM leaaAo b« ooont-
.>;!». or
NOTICES 10 eenta per line
lac KUS'S |«m ^ tn oat dollar AST&SSr mast b« paid for 10
*iuTbwnl rate* eoallSM will be their made advertisement* with parties
|o
* 0 g g*pYeratea>«fotH-c DaHv^_
Fifteen aeree of • Canadian ferm
have sank forty feet. Let this be a
mating to aB twwew wbo put in
%mry crop*. *
1 * *
•% "
Tbanks to Mr. Cleveland's bold
and strong mesesge on the tariff
qosstion, the Democratic party is
now more unanimous as to policy
and candidate than it has ever been
, * in***.; * *
---Mt-
Tammany was ninety and nine
m years old Monday. It is a modest
and diffident Organization, and will
ammfore indulge In no eulogy of it
f| W nntft it reaches its one bondredtb
4 at which time it proposes
to ro»k A a notable exhibit of scalps,
tomabawka, war paint and patriotism.
ft I Atlanta has generoaslydetermined
not to iioldl ftje Piedmont Fair next
falL Macon,' Angnsta, Colambns,
Borne and Gainesville all are making
efforts to bold fairs, and the manage
mot of the tMedment has withdrawn
from, the field, giflng these cities a
clear track.
11 nil 90 m ----
The Colambns Enquirer sounds
ibis note of warning; The people
* must keep an >*yo on tbe state toad
question iu tbeir selection of repre
eentatives. The question is too impor
tunt to be ignored. The state road
ia a magniffoent profcorty and the
people should be wide awake in dis
* posing of it
m in i — •* 1 ■ - 1 —
Judge Lynch has made eomo inno
.rations in bis way of doiDg business
at Bfdticsville, Ohio, wl efe a mob
took from jail a negro, and carrying
him into a field, polled a vote upon
the questson of banging him. The
vote resulted in saving his life, but
be was stripped and unmercifully
whipped, after which lie was returned
to jail. ,
In bis recent speech at Brooklyn
Secaet&ry Fairchild said that on the
3tb of April last there was about
$700,000,000 in the custody of the
Treasury Department. Of this huge
amount only about $300,000,000 be
longs to the United States, the rest
being held on deposit to redeem
gold, silver and legal-tender certifi
cates and national bank notes. Of the
$300,000,000 belonging to toe United
States, $100,000,000 is held to re
de*m greenbacks, $60,000,000 is
held snbjeet to checks outstanding,
disbursing officers’ drafts, matured
and accrued interest, called bonds,
etc., and $36,000,000 is in subsidiary
silver coin. Thefe remains still the
vast sum of $110,000,000 free end
•'ear from any possible liability—a
nseless surplus forced out of men’s
pockets by reason of excessive tariff
taxes. It ia wrong, in Secretary Fair
obildsppinion—and in the opinion
of a good many other people—that
all this large sum of money should
ffiffjyftftr be taken ont of cirenlatiou
to serve no purpose but that of the
protectionist manufacturers and con
cocters of trusts.
An Imperative SeoesMiT.
What pure air ia to an unhealthy locality,
what spring cleaning ia to the neat house¬
keeper, so Is Hood’s Sarsaparilla to every¬
body, at this season. The body need* to be
thoroughly renovr.ied, ?<$#• the disease blood purified destroyed. and
vitalised, U»e ot
Scrofula, Salt KneUm, and alt otAr blood
(Reorders are cured by Hood’s .Sarsaparilla medl
the most popular and euoceeefujl spring
Dr. Moffett's TEETHIMA (Teething Powders)
A, „ti>v ss Cent*, leethln* eqoal* care* It for
wtA B'Tft. a««l nothing
wj*F,wTTKrnh>. v«T iTloffif Hand Mt there child-
art
tea ia the lluoar- Ark yrmr DM strut.
Wist the Colored Xm is Doiag.
The Northern people don’t want
anything to do with the colored peo¬
ple, and are glad that there are so
few of them in their section. They
Mem to be very snxioas, however,
to advise the Southern people how to
deal with them, and the Northern
man who visits the South for pleas¬
ure and observation is very apt to
ask after he begins to get acquainted
how the colored people are getting
•long. The question is generally
based upon a sincere desne iorinfor
rnation, but it is infrequently
tended to open a way for an ex¬
pression of opinion respecting the
rjgflts of the colored people.
The colored man, it e»n bo safely
said, is getting along fully as well as
conld be expected. In view of the
fact that he has only lately started in
life on his own account, it must be
admitted that he has made commend
able progress. lie is found in about
all the profegsions and occupation*,
and in the business world he is
beginning to make his appearance.
In the Southern coast cities his race
comprises from one third to one
half of the population, and be is
seen laying bricks, shoving a jack-
plane, wielding a hammer, keeping
the fires going in locomotives and
steamers, and laboriug on the
wharves and waiting in the hotelsj
in fact, be is seen in about every
place where labor is needed, and he
manages to get along about as well
as the white man. But it is not
aloqe as a laborer that he is seen.
He fills a big space in the pulpit,
and though be may not be very
learned, he is often eloquent aud.al
ways effective. He is now and then
seen in a lawyer’s office, and the in¬
dications are that in a few years be
will make his appearance in the
court* with a green bag under bis
arm.
It can be quite safely said that
the colored man is seen in about
everyplace in the South, and he has
no occasion to complain. He is be
ing educated in a practical way, and
as his teachers now are Democrats,
the probability is that he will have
instilled into bis mind a good many
sound Democratic ideas. He is
slowly improving, but it will be good
while before he reaches the plane ot
the wmte man, if, in fact, he ever
reaches it. Bntitmust not be for
gotten that the white man had a
good many years the start of him.
His future depends upon himself,
however. If ha is capable sutfic
ient development it may be a bright
one. He has a free track, and if he
fails to reach the goal it will be his
own ianlt.—[Savannah News.
The Germs of Oonsumption.
Dr. Brown Sequard, who lias been
preaching that bad ventilation of sleeping
rooms and poor and monotonous food are
the great causes of pi this is, treated ol
that disease at the hist meeting of the
Academy of Sciences, in Paris, taking
many of his examples from England.
Wherever population is dense, and sleep¬
ing rooms ill aired or overcrowded, con¬
sumption prevails. Dr. Bailey reported
that in M iBank prison there were, out ol
100 deaths, forty-five from this disease.
According* to the illustrious French
doctor, a r<x>m in which a consumptive
person sleeps is reeking with contagious
germs if the air he exhales is not carried
off. But how get rid of it in ill built
houses or’ very cold weather, when it i»
as dangerous to Open windows as to keep
them shut?
To meet this difficulty Dr. Brown £e-
quard showed the academy an apparatus
of his invention. A reversed funnel, the
shape of a lamp Bhade, is placed at the
end of a tube, so arranged in its curves
and angles that when it is placed besidg
a bed the reversed funnel will be abova
the sleeper, and draw up the uir he
breathes. The other end runs into the
chimney of the room. If there is none
it is taken hole. through a heating apparatus
to an air The heat is great enough
to burn the disease germs. —London
Standard.
An Aktromnupr In Command.
Gen. Mitciiel was at this time 52 year*
old. He was of an extremely wiry
frame, and was possessed of wonderful
endurance. His hair had lately grown
gray, which made him look older than he
really was. He Was accustomed to ride
a horse whose gait wa.s»v pace Ou this
horse he was all over the camps at all
hours of tbe night and day. The guard*
were never certain of his coming. The
men soon learned of his previous occupa¬
tion, and called him “Old Stare.” A
sentinel who had been repeatedly visited
while on duty once remarked that he
“never could look up without seeing
‘Old Stars’ coming ;dong ou his screw
proptellcr.”—“Life of O. M Mitchel, As-
tmnomer and CiCnern].”
Notice lo Debtors and Creditors.
All persons lndecticT to the estate of S. W
M.ingham, late ot Spalding noUtied Gounaty,Georgia
deceased, are hereby settlement to call on the an
debtedness dereigned and make and%U of such having in¬
at oucc; parsons
deiuaads against said estate ar« notified to
present their J. claims MANGTIAM, properly Administrator. proven.
J.
apr7wG.-f7.70
m
Were all wi*e enough to heed this advice Is
season, a world cf suffering would be avoided.
The best ms. *T»s in which to take Hood *
Sarsaparilla, tl. :reat blood purifier, are
Ma it. April May
At no os it season is the body so much in
need of, i r so susceptible to tbe benefit to be
derived from Ilood’s Sarsaparilla, as now.
The impoverished condition of tbe blood, tbe
weakening effects of tbe long, cold winter, tbe
lost appetite, and that tired feeling, alt make
a good Spring medicine absolutely necessary.
Try Hood’s Sarsaparilla and you will be con¬
vinced that it i* the ideal spring medicine.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
.Sold by all drvpcWts. gl ;*Ix for g5. Prepared only
by C. h HOOD A CO.. Ape”'. . carter,Lowell,ll*»-
IOO Dcr Jne Dollar
IF YOD ffl rr
Aught,
Boarders, To be Bought,
Agents, Silver or Gold,
Orders, Merchandise Sold.
Servants or Pi Goods to Appraise,
Lawyer or Cas. Opening Days
Mus i c ai Teae i e re, To Announce,
Popular Preachers, Houses or Acres,
Cooks, Butchers or Bakers.
Books, Boats,
To Hire or Let, Votes, flounce
Offiees, Dress skirt or
Basement, A cure for disease,
First FIoot, A Handy MnslinChemise, Valise,
Casement, A
To Purchase a Pet, Cheese,
Horee, Teas,
Mare, Bees,
Monkey or Bear, Peas,
Bloodhound or Spitz Or Are Prone
Free from Fitz, To Make Known.
To Hire a Hall, Pour Store,
Driver or team, Hosiery, oods,
An Opulent Elegant Carriage,Dry Upholstery,
An Marriage, PienicSj
Play .Concert or Ball, Excursions,
Skates, Plates, Knick-Knacks,
Toselito gaycreatux’sDiveisions, Clothes KeadyJ Made,
Diamonds, Increase of Trade,
Pearls, Coal, Coke and Wood
Kings, Curls, Pictures,
tVash for Features, Lectures, Food
To buy Odd Things, All Kindsof
Or sell Odd Things, Works on Theology,
Cats, Magic. Wealth Astrology,
Rats, and Felicity,
Mats, World-wide Publicity
Flats Flags,
Bats. Bags,
Pantaloons, Bags,
Hats, Nags, collars
ResplendettCravats, Dress shirts or
Mutton or Beef, Almighty Dollars,
Financial Relief, House for Rent,
Stocks, Store, Tenement,
Clocks, Cash to be L;nt,
Locks, Cash to be Spent,
Socks, Scent,
Portmonia or Roi, Tent,
Pig, Sheep or Ox, Homan Cement,
Or Even a Beau- Go—
Then In a Trice, Read the Advice,
Take the Advice Far Beyond Price,
Written Below— Written Below—
ADVERTISE
-IN TIIE-
Daily News
To Business Men.
XT o LABORED ARGUMENT IS NEEDED
JEN in these days to convince INTELL1
GENT men that it
Pays Well to Advertise
Administrator’s Sale
By virtue of an order granted by the court
of Ordinary of Spalding county, I will sell
at public outcry before the courthouse June door,
in Griffin, on the first Tuesday in next,
between the legal hours of sale the follow¬
ing property: Two ac^es of land, more or
less, upon which there bouse*, is in a the dwelling city house
and three tenant of Grif¬
fin, situated on Broadway Maberry 8cett, street-. Bounded
east by land of south bv an
allay, west by alley running from Broadway
to Solomon street and north by Broadway
street. Said property belonging to estate of
J. C. Mangham deceased, and lying in the
eastern portion of tbe city of Griffin. Sold
for distribution. Perms cash.
J. J. MANGHaM, administrator
$6.00. de boni* non, J - C. Mangham.
■ a.”cr
ADVERTISERS
:<m learn the exact cosf
:>f an} proposed line o>
advVrtJsn'ief in America!
p i:’crs* by addressing
(Do P. RmvelHi Co.,
: .’v* - oktisisV?' *rur<sau,
iO * \m-' *» , New VArk.
V.;. v if' * »*.?** 100-P*a^nJ c't-v.
I.vfe.t *iife xr.la!wa rfieffcHBtl. , kLgl KererMlta
v : FartYularaf
’
-
V- il tn < <» DilU^i Iplila, Ba.
irgia MM MR!
* V
_
SCHEDULE.
Taking Effect Sunday, May 27,1888.
SO. 51. PA BSE MGER—NORTH.
Leave Columbus.................. $*!£> a m
Leave Warm Springs ..........10.06 a m
Leave Woodbury, Moleria,.....................10.3Sam ... ...............W.27 a m
Leave
Leave Neal,........................10.43 a in
Leave Concord,,...................10.53a Williamson s,...............11.12 m
Leave a m
Arrive ®ri3lu,.....................11 30 a m
Leave Griffin......................11.35 a m
Leave Lae McDonough...............12.15 11 a,.....................11-59 am
Arrive p m
NO, 52. PASSENGER-SOUTH.
Leave McDonough,... .......3,15 p m
Leave Luella,......... ........3.22 pm
Arrive Griffin,.,...... ........3.57 p m
Leave Griffin,......... .......,4.10 pm
Leave Williamson’s,.. ........4.28 pm
Leave Concord,....... ........4.48 p m
Leave Neal,........... ........4.58 p m
Leave Molena,........ ........5.04 pm
Leave Woodbury,..... ....... ,5.16 pm
Leave Warm Springs. .......5.39 p m
Arrive Columbus,.... ........7.16 pm
NO. 53. PASSENGER-NORTH.
Leave Columbus,...... .....4 45 p m
Leave Warm Springs.. .....6.20 p m
Leave Woodbury,...... .....6.41 p m
Leave Molena.......... .....0.52 p m
Leave Neal............. ..,.6.57 pm
Leave Concord,........ .....7.07 p m
Leave Williamson's---- _____7 27 p in
Arrive Griffin.......... ____ 7.45 p m
Leave Griffin.......... .....7.55 p m
Leave Luella........... .....8.21 p m
Arrive McDonough — ....8.40 p m
NO. 50. PASSENGER—SOUTH.
Leave McDonough..... ..7.30 a m
Leave Luella.......... ..7.4S a m
Arrive Griffin.......... .. 8.15 a m
Leave Griffin,......... ..8.25 a m
Leave Williamson’s,... . .8 42 a m
Leave Concord,....... . .9,01 a m
Leave Neal,............ ...9.11 a m
Leave Molena,......... ..9.16 am
Leave Woodbury,..... .. 9227 a m
Leave Warm Springs.. . .9.48 a m
Arrive Columbus,..... .11.20 am
\gT All passenger trains are daily includ¬
ing Sunday*. M. E.GRAT, Supt.
C. W. CHEARS, Ga.
Gen’l Pass. Agt; Columbus,
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
leak’s collecting and protective agesct.
S. C. LEAK,
ATTORNEY AT LaW,
Office, 31>£ Hill Street.
GRIFFIN, - - - - GEOBGLY.
Prompt attention given lo clerical work}
general law business and collection of claims,
may9d<fcw8m
D. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
WOODBURY, : : GEORGIA.
Prompt attention given to all business.
Will practice in all the Courts, and when¬
ever business calls.
ggr Collections a specialty. aprftdly
DR. JOHN L. STAPLETON,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
GRIFFIN, : : : : GEORGIA,
Office—Fron5 Room, up Stairs, News Build
ing. Residence, at W. H. Baker place on
Poplar street. Prompt attention ian21d&wCm given to
calls, day or night.
HENRY C. k PE EPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
HAMPTON, GEOBGIA,
Practices in all the State and Federal
Courts. oetfiditwly
"
JNO. J. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
GBIFFIN, GEOBGIA.
Office, 31 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J. II
White’s Clothing Store. mar22d&wly
D. DISMUKK. N. M.
DISMUKE & COLLINS,
LAWYERS,
GBIFFIN, GA.
OCice.fi rat room in Agricultural Building
0p.Stairs. marl-d&wtf
ITHOS. R. MILLS,
TTORNEY AT LAW,
GBIFFIN, GA.
Will practice in the State and
Courts. Office, over George &
c iruer. nov2-tf.
ON D. STBWi-i. BOBr. T. DANtBL
STEWART & DANIEL,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Over George & Hartnett’s, Griffin, Ga.
Will practice in the State and Federa
^ourta. ianl.
C, S. WRIGHT,
WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER
GBIFFIN, GA.
Hill 8treet, Up Stairs over J. H. White
Jr., A Co.’s.
J. I s - NICHOLS,
AGENT THE
Northwestern Mutual Life In¬
surance Company,
Of Milwaukee, Wis. The most reliable In
urance Company in America, aug28dly
HOTEL CURTIS,
GRIFFIN, GEOBGIA.
Under New Management.
A. 6. DANIEL, Prop'r.
*5gr Porters meet all trains. feblodly
OR. MOFFETT'S
FEMALE MEDICINE
By giving tone to and .trengthenlnv th. Vt.r-
lne System and building up th. g.n.r*! h^*:th,
INDIAN WEED
correct* *11 irreetdarlUes and *nno, !iv ’ ?
from which *o many Udles mffer. it trice--
we»k,debHtt»ted woman hctlthand :■ i!
make* cheerful the despondent, >i -re-~.\ I
(Pints. Inebanirtofltfeno!»d>shc.u,.
oatlNDIAN WEEIX Jti± i.yeaod {.'a/J •
Ask yonr Druggist. *
E. R. Anthony, Griffin, and M. F. Swint,
Orchard Hill Ot.
ESTEY PTANOS l
ORGANS 0
CASH. OR ON TIME, AT .a
DEANE’S ART GALLERY
I
WHIPS, WAGONS, BUGna
AND HAPNKSS
-)••(- -
Studebaker Wagon i White Hickory Wagon I
Jackson G. Smith Wagon i
Jackson G. Smith Buggy j
Ar.d the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lc ?st Prices possible. Renair.
eld Buggies a Specialty. 0n
W. H. SPENCE,
aug28«lAw0m Cor. Hill A Taylor 8treets, GRIFFIN, GA
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED f
A fresh lot of preserves,
fellies, Apples,
Oranges, Banannas,
Cocoanuts,
AND IN FACT EVERYTHING A HOUSKEEPPER WILL NEED:
McFarland, Boyles & Co’s.
G. A. CUMINGHAM,
GRIFFIN, : : : GEORGIA,
Has Been Appointed Land Agent foi
Spalding County,
by the Georgia Bureau of Immigiation, and
all parties having land for sale can expedite
the sale by placing their property iu his
hands.
f Full particulars in regard to the most val¬
uable lands in this county can be obtained
by addressing him as above. A full list o
houses and lands and lots of all description
New Advertisements
THE MOST
EFFICIENT
Morning Laxative
Tnrrnnt**
Seltzer Aperient.
Sold by Tarrant & Co., N.Y.,
and e ry where
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
All persons indebted to the estate of
L. Butler, late of Spalding notified County, call
deceased, are hereby to on
undersigned and make settlement of such
debtedness at once; and all persons
demands against said estate are notified
present their W r claims BUTLER, properly Adxiaistrator. proven.
J, .
niay~w6.—83.70.
MAN WAN!, BUT LITTLE
Here below, but he Wants tha 1
mighty quick. A
n
or a big one if. or ..iiy tilled by
vertisr j ..i the Daily or
Weekly LEWS,
S ». Ukfil *
I wants agency,
GRIFFIN,
Strongest
Lowest Rates,
Prompt
THE FINEST
IN GRIFFIN!
24 HILL STREET.
-----
Having purchased the stock and
of Jas. Campbell, we propose to run
Finest Bar in the city, with the largest
best assortment of all kinds of
Wis, Lipors aii
and pIso an elegant line of Domestic
Imported Free Cigars. Lunch day
Lvf every during
season.
Z£f~ An experienced fancy drinks mixologist always kinil*.
hand to prepare of all
Please give us a call and we will
you.
O. H. StSfffiRER & €0.
may l.’idAwlm
Tax Receiver’s Notice
FOR 1888.
I will be at the different precincts on the
dates mentioned for the purpose of receivii*
State and County Tax for 1888:
I At Sunny Side, Tuesday, April 3rd, May hi
and June 5th
and At June Union, 6th. Wednesdday, April 4th, May 2na
At Mt. Zion, Thursday, April 5th, May 3rd
and June 7th.
At Line Creek, Friday, April Cth, May 4tb
and June 8th.
and At June Cabin, 12th. Tuesday, April 10th, May 8th
and At June Akin, 13th. Wednesday, April 11th, MayVtli
At Griffin every Saturday until the boob
are closed on July 1st. Office at Briok Ware
house. R. A. HARDEE, T. R., tt-C.
mar25-3m
mm HOUSE RUM DF
' COLUMBUS, - GEORGIA,
JOE MeGHEE, Prop’t
-- )0 ( -
'The best place in Columbus to get a bath
or clean Shave. Give us a call when in th
city. JOE MeGHEE
Application for Charter
GEORGIA, f /
Spalding Countt.
To the Superior Court of said county:
Your petitioners, A. G. VanDyke, John
and tV. Warder, pray that they and such oth
er persons as may hereafter be associated
with them, may be by order of said court con
stituted a body corporate with the privilege* fourth
and for the purposes berin after set
to-wit:
First, The name of said corporation shal
“The Middle Georgia Ship¬
pers Union,”
its place of business at Griffin, or some otifipt
point in said county; its capital stock Tifo
thousand Dollars, with the privilege of in
creasing the same without fuither order o
said court, to a sum not exceeding twenty
thousand dollars; and the period of such
corporate existence shall be twenty years the
with the privilege of renewal in terms of
statute. and
Second, It shall be the business pur¬
pose of said corporation to buy, market and
conserve fruits and other farm products; to
purchase and sell supplies for its members
and otners; to purchase and sell fertilizers
and to manipulate ingredients for such pur
pose. To own and run such machinery as
shall be necessary to carry on their business
and to have such other privileges, not mcon
sistent with the laws of Georgia or contrary
to public policy,as shall further and advance
the purposes They of shall the organization. have the right to bor¬
Third, and pledge the faith of the cor
row? money of liability not exceed
poration to an extent and to
' ing fifty per cent, of its capital stock,
this end may issua bonds or other *vldence»
Fourth, They shall have the right to sue
and be sued, to use a common seal, to pas
such by-laws not inconsistent 'with law o
public policy as may be advisable term®
government and management of th# °® a ri
which by-laws may fix the number ana
names of its officers their duties and ooiiga
tions, and also the privileges of the moc*
holders. shall have ,.
Fifth. 8aeh corporation of such property
right to own and personal dispose and mixed, as m*y
both real and on u®
be business necessary protect or expedient its interests to carry from loss.
or and
Sixth, Such other privileges to properly car /
ties as shall be necessary
on said business, yonr Pj f8 '
Attorney for Petitioner*.
I certify that the foregoing application the mmutc* to
charter is a true extract from
Scalding Superior this April Court. lltb, Witness 1'88. my o® -
cial signature S. 9. 8. C.
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk
- ——-h-t---
PARKER’S GIHGER TONI 3E
liiiiiM 11 is ne«r life and strength to the &gedL K. T. •*
guts Hiscox & Co., 1G3 William Street,
wsmstmxK