Newspaper Page Text
riFFin Qaily Hews.
* OLUMK I?
Griffin, Ga.
Gridin is the liveliest, pluckiest, most pro¬
gressive town in Georgia. This is no hyper¬
bolical description, aa the record of the last
five years will show.
During that time it has built and put into
most successful operation a $100,000 cotton
actory and is now building another with
nearly twice the capital. It has pnt up a
a ge iron and brass foundry, a fertilizer fac¬
tory, an immense ice and bottling works, a
sash aud blind factory, a broom factory
opened up the* finest granite quarry in the
Ui.ited States, and has many other enter¬
prises in ontemplatiou. it has secured
another . .a 1 road niHety miles long, and while
located on the greatest system in the South,
the Central, has secured connection with its
important rival, the East Tennsssee, Virginia
aud Georgia. Ithasjust secured direct inde¬
pendent connection with Chattanooga and
the Wi st, and has the President of a fourth
railroad residing here and working
to its completion. With
its live white and three colored
o'iarches,it is now building a $10,000 new
Presbyterian ohuroh. It has increased its
population by nearly one-fifth. It has at-
1 ra - ’ .* ’ a-ound its borders fruit growers from
nearly every State in the Union, until it is
now surrrundedon nearly every sido by or¬
chards and vineyards. It is the home of the
grape an.) its wine making capacity has
doubled every year. It has successfully
inaugurated a system of public schools, with
a seven years curriculum, second to none.
This is part of the record of a half decade
mid simply shows the progress of an already
admirable city, with the natural advantages
of having the finest climate, summer and
wiutor, in the world.
Griffin is the county seat of Spalding
county, situated in west Middle Georgia, with
a healthy, fertile and rolling country, 1150
feet above sea level. By (he census of 1890; it
will have atalow estimate between 6,000 and
7,o00 people, and they are all of the right
sort—wide-awake, up to the times, ready to
welcome strangers and anxious to secure de¬
sirable settlers, who will not be any less wel¬
come if they bring money to help build up
the town. There is about only one thing we
need badly just now, and that is a big hotel.
We have several small ones, but their accom¬
modations arc entirely too limited for our
business, pleasure and health seeking guests.
If you see anybody that wants a good loca-
tioufor a hotel in the South, just mention
Griffin. the Gbufix
^ Griffin is the place where
N bws is published—daily and weekly—the
vest newspaper in the Empire State of the
Georgia, Please enclose stamps in sending
for sample copies.
This brief sketch will answer July 1st,
188S. By January 1st, 1889, it v. ill have to be
changed to keep up with the times.
PKOKtSSIONAL DIRECTORY
UFA It’s COLI.ElTINO AND PROTECTIVE AGENCY.
S. C. LEAK,
ATTORNEY AT 1*4 w ,
Office, til Yi IIill Street.
GRIFFIN, - - - - GEORGIA.
Prompt attention given So clerical work,
general law business and collection of claims.
may9d&w8m
D. L. PARMER,
A T TORNEY AT LA \V
WOODBURY, : : GEORGIA.
Prompt attention given to all business.
Will practice in all the Courts, and where-
ever business calls.
Collections a specialty. aprGdly
DR. JOHN L. STAPLETON,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
GRIFFIN, : : : : GEORGIA,
Office—Fronj Room, up Stairs, News Build
ing. Residence, at W. H. attention Baker place given on to
Poplar street. Prompt jan21d&w0m
calls, day or night.
HENRY C. PEEPLE S,
A TTO R N.E Y AT LAW
HAMPTON, GEORGIA.
Practices iu all the State and Federal
Courts. oct9d&wly
JNO. J. HUNT,
ATTORNE Y AT LA W
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
Oflioe, 31 Hill 8treet, Up Stairs, over J. H
White’s Clothing Store. tnar22d&wly
II. DISMUEE. N. M. COLLIN'S
DISMUKE * COLLINS.
LAWYERS,
GRIFFIN, GA.
udice,first room in Agricultural Building
Stairs. marl-d&wtf
.THOS. R. MILLS,
TTORNEY AT LAW,
GRIFFIN, GA.
Will practice in the State and Federal
Courts. Office, over George & Hartnett’s
corner. nov2-tf.
ON D. STEWART . BOBT. T. DANIEL,
STEWART * DANIEL,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Over George & Hartnett’s, Griffin, Federa Ga.
Will practice in the State and
oxrts. ianl.
C. S. WRIGHT,
WATCHMAKER and jeweler
GRIFFIN, GA.
Hill Street, Up Stairs overJ. H. White
Jr., A Co.’s.
GRIFFIN GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 14 i888
THE STAR.
A GREAT NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC
NEWSPAPER.
Ihe Stab is the only New York newspaper
possessing the fullest confidence of the Na¬
tional Administration and the United Dem¬
ocracy of New York, the political battle
ground of the Republic.
Jeffersonian Democracy, pure and simple,
is good enough for the Stab. Single hand¬
ed among the metropolitan press, it has
stood by the men called by the great Democ¬
racy to redeem the government from
twenty-five years of Republican wastefulness
and corruption and despotism to the South.
For these four years past ithasbeenunswerv
ing in its fidelity the administration of Grov¬
er Cleveland. It is for him now—for Cleve¬
land and Thurman—for four years more of
Democratic honesty in onr*national affairs,
and of continued national tranquility and
prosperity.
For people who like that sort of Democracy
the Stab is the paper to read.
The Stab stands squarely on the National
Democratic platform. It believes that any
tribute exacted from the people iu excess of
the demands of a government economically
administered is essentially oppressive and
dishonest. The scheme fostered and cham¬
pioned by the Republican part-of making the
government a miser, wringing millions an
nually from the people and locking them up
in vaults to serve no purpose but invite waste
fulness and dishonesty, it regards as a mon¬
strous crime against the right of American
citizenship. Republican political jugglers
may call it ‘‘protective taxation;” the Stab’s
name for it is robbery.
Through and through the Stab is a great
newspaper. Its tone is l are and wholesome,
its news service unexceptionable. Each issue
presents an epitome of what is best worth
knowing of the world’s history of yesterday.
Its stories are told in good, quick, piotur-
eque Edglish, and mighty interesting read¬
ing they are.
The Sunday Stab is as good as the best
class magazine, and prints about the game
amount of matter. Besides the day’s news
it is rich in spesial descriptive articles, sto
ries, snatches of current literature, reviews,
art criticism, etc. Burdette’s inimatible hu¬
mor sparkles in its columns; Will Carleton’s
delightful letters are of its choice offerings.
Many of the best known men and women in
literature and art are represented in its col
nm ns.
The Weekly Stab is a large paper giving
the cream of the news the w >rld over, with
special features which make it the most
complete family newspaper published. The
farmer, the mechanic, the business man too
much occupied to read a daily paper, will
get more for c his dollar invested in The
Weekly Stab than from any other paper
It will be especially alert during the cam
paign, and will print the freshest and most
reliable political news.
Terms to Subscbibeiss, Postage Free:
Every day..................................$7 day for one year (iueluding Sun
00
Every Daily, without Sunday, one year...... 6 00
day, six months.................3 50
Daily, without Sunday, six months____ 3 00
Sunday edition, one year............... 1 50
M eekly Star, one year................ 1 00
A free copy of The Weekly Stab to the
sender of a club of ten .
Is if" Srecial Campaign Offer—The
Weekly Star hi clubs of twenty-five or
more will be sent for the remainder of this
year for Forty cents for each subscription.
Address, THS STAR,
Broadway and Park Place, New York.
Georgia Miami HIRE
SCHEDULE.
Taking Effect Sunday, May 27,1888.
NO. 51. PASSENGER—NORTH.
Leave Columbus,.................8,25 a m
Leave LeaveWoodbury,..................10.27 Warm Springs..............10.06 a im
a m
Leave Molena,.....................10.38 am
Leave Neal,........................10.43 a m
Leave Concord,....................10.53a m
Leave Williamson’s,...............11.12 a m
Arrive Leave Griffin......................11.35 Griffin,.....................11.30 a in
a m
Leave Luclla......................11.59 McDonough...............12.15 a m
Arrive p m
NO. 52. PASSENGER-SOUTH.
Leave Leave Luclla,.......................3.22 McDonough,................3.15 p m
p m
Arrive Griffin,............ 3.57 p m
Leave Griffin,.......................4.10 Williamson’s,................4.28 p m
Leave p m
Leave Neal,.........................4.58 Concord,....................4.48 p m
Leave p m
Leave Leave Molena,......................5.04 Woodbury,...................5.16pm pm
Leave Warm Columbus,............*....7.16pm Springs..............5.39 p m
Arrive
NO. 53. PASSENGER—NORTH.
Leave Columbus,.............. ..4.45 p m
Leave Leave Warm Woodbury,..................6.41 Springs...............6.20 p m
Molena......................6.52 p m
Leave p m
Leave Neal....................... 6.57 p m
Leave Williamson’s................7 Concord.....................7.07 27 p m
Leave p m
Arrive Griffin......................7.45 p m
Leave Luella.......................8*21 Griffin......................7.55 p m
Leave p m
Arrive McDonough................8*40 p m
’ ~
NO. 50. PASSENGER-SOUTIL
Leave McDonough.................7.30am Luella.......................7.48
Leave am
Arrive Griffin....................•• 8.15 a m
Leave Williamson’s.................8-42 Griffin..................... a a m
Leave Concord.....................9-01 m
Leave a m
Leave Neal,.........................a Molena,......................9.16 m
Leave 9.27 a in
Leave Woodbury,........ Springs...............9.48 a m
Leave Warm Columbus,.................11.20 a m
Arrive a m
J5gT All passenger trains are daily inclndJ
ing Sundays, M. E.GRAY, Bupt.
C. W. CHEARS, Columbus, Ga.
Gen’l Pass. Act.
PNEUMONIA A GERM DISEASE.
Baitl to He Infectious) but Not Contagious*
Fresh Air aiwi Exercise.
Ami now the theory is held that pneu¬
monia, too, is to be classed as a germ dis¬
ease. The authority for this opinion is
Dr. A. G. Siebert, a German-American
physician of New* York, one of the most
competent authorities on the subject in
America, and an indefatigable investiga¬
tor on modern scientific methods of the
causes of pneumonia, and especially the
degree to w hieh the weather furthers this
disease.
‘•It is my lielief, certainly,” said Dr.
Siebert, “that pneumonia is an infec¬
tious, though not a contagious, disease.
People do not take it from each other,
but they may take it from the sain*
place. In my practice, as a very com¬
mon thing, in the same family, two or
more would have it. In a Bavarian
prison, out of 500 inmates, sixty-two died
of pneumonia in one year in one ward.
Not another ward was touched. Dr.
Emmereich was the physician attendant.
He ordered the floor of this ward to be
torn up. Beneath it there was found a
filling of refuse, impregnated with moist¬
ure in the proportion of 27 per cent, to
the whole mass, from the washings which
had dripped through the boards. The
rubbish was analyzed under powerful
microscopes, and in it were discovered
miasms, which a few years ago Dr.
Friedlander had pointed out as being
found constantly in the lungs of people
who had died of pneumonia. This is one
indication.
The infectious diseases begin with a
sudden chill. So does pneumonia. Pneu¬
monia lasts generally from seven to nine
days, disappearing with a crisis and a
profound sweat, and when the crisis is
past, the patient, though weak and ex¬
hausted. is otherwise perfectly well.
This is the character of fever and the in¬
fectious diseases. Again, among people
exposed even to the severest conditions of
winter weather in the open air pneumo¬
nia is a thing almost unknown. The
Arctic explorers in the extremes of ice
ami snow and in pure air had no pneu¬
monia. They had many other diseases,
though, incident to cold and hardships.
Pneumonia occurs in summer as well as
in winter, proving that cold is not an in¬
dispensable cause. All physicians of
much practice have found cases of pneu¬
monia originating in the same house at
different times of the year, and it is fre¬
quently the case that those who have it
once liavo it again. The latter fact is
well known. An explanation of this,
which is at least allowable, is that the
locality is the cause of the disease rather
than special susceptibility in the people
attacked by it.
“Pneumonia is a house disease, as is
the case, according to my belief, with
inflammatory rheumatism and diphtheria.
In the warm air of the house the system
is mad® sensitive to the cold, but the cold
is only the producing cause. It prepared
the coddled lungs for the pneumonia poi-
lon which had its real origin in damp and.
dirty rooms or cellars.
“What is the cure? Well, the steps to
the cure h.Tve unhappily advanced but
little. But the relief and the prevention
are—no medicine and plenty of fresh air.
[f you have consumption, a dangerous
told, or the fear of pneumonia, I should
lay, if you cannot fresh air anywhere
else, go to the Arctics for it; but get that,
at all events, if you want to live. A con-
lumptive who followed my advice lived
two years longer than any expectations
had been held that he could live. What
was the advice? No medicine and a voy¬
age in September down the Atlantic
Boast, with directions to keep on deck as
tong as was up, rain or shine, and to
ileep with the porthole open, except when
It rained. His friends prophesied that lie,
being seemingly in the last stages of con-
mmption, would come back in three
weeks a corpse. In three months he
Dame back with an added weight of fif¬
teen pounds. He lived two years longer,
pursuing the fresh air regimen. On his
deathbed he told me that the open air
aad given him those two years. His was
a genuine case of tuberculosis, too.”
“What, then, is the connection between
the weather and the cause of pneumonia,
if, as you believe, pneumonia is a germ
disease? ”
“No poison can enter the blood except
through a raw surface; and it is only
where the respiratory tract has been irri¬
tated that the poison germ can enter the
’ungs.” the
“What weather, then, prepares
lungs for the reception of the poison
leed?”
“Whenever you find three things—
humidity, cold and a wind of over fifteen
miles an hour—look out for pneumonia.
February is pneumonia’s carnival month,
and by actual statistics, I have compared
the weather constituents for each day for
a space of three yeara, with 600 cases of
pneumonia occurring during that time.
In this comparison the facta are that regu¬
larly on the days of humidity, cold and
high wind the pneumonia statistics reach
their top mark. This is not theory; there
is the record. The worst pneumonia ac¬
count is not necessarily on the coldest
days, for with extreme cold there is very
probably no extreme humidity. It is the
two together that ravage. Dry cold
makes no such score. Consumptives who
thrive well in the iiigh and dry cold of
Davoes, Switzerland, in winter, suffer
most in May.”—Chicago Times.
Distilled from the richest Malted Barley
Chase’s Barley Malt Whisky is full of nutr
ment, mild and excellent and absolutely
pure. George & Hartnett sole agents fo
Griffin, Ga
The many remarkable cures Hood’s Bar?a
parillo accomplishes are sufficient proof
tliatjit does posses'* peculiar curative pow
ers.
THE TOBACCO INDUSTRY.
Taking the Leaf to Market—The Process
of Curing the Weed.
There is no happier being on earth than
the negro farmer riding into a southern
town behind a half starved steer, with a
load of tobacco in his prairie schooner.
It represents the product of a small patch
in a favored part of his farm, but it may
bring him $1,000 or more.
At one of the sales at Durham, the
busy little town in the center of the
bright yellow North Carolina tobacco
belt, or the Golden belt, as they call it,
a gray haired old colored man stood
watching the crowd of buyers as they
bid against each other on the piles that
represented his crop. As the amount
rose higher and higher his eyes grew
larger and larger, his limbs shook, and
he changed his quid of tobacco from side
to side so quickly that he didn’t have a
chance to chew it. When the price
reacljed liir $1,300 ho could no longer con-
tain in himself, but shouted: “Stop right
there, gemmans; dat’s enough! Dis
nigga can’t 6tand no. more. Never had
so much money in all my born days."
And he might well bo surprised, for bis
old steer had drawn it all to the sales
-warehouse at ono load.
These tobacco auctions are lively spec¬
tacles. In one of the largest warehouses
in Durham as many as 1,000 piles of to¬
bacco are laid out at one sale. The auc¬
tioneer steps from pile to pile as he sells,
the buyers following him. He never
says a word about the quality of the leaf,
but simply rattles off the figures, never
stopping till the pile is knocked down.
The buyers know the quality as soon as
their eyes rest on it. Occasionally they
will run their bands into a pile, select a
bunch and feel of it, but usually pile
after pile is sold without a person touch¬
ing it. The rapidity of the selling is re¬
markable. The bids run right along,
each bidder knowing just what lie is
doing. These bidders are the most ex¬
pert men in the business and represent
houses in tho surrounding section and
distant manufacturers and dealers. The
New York and all the foreign markets
are represented at all the tobacco sales in
Durham, N. C., and Lynchburg and
Danville, Va.
The North Carolina bright yellow to¬
bacco industry has proved a mine of
wealth to the planters. When Sherman's
army stopped near Durham the boys got
some of the tobacco to smoke in their
pipes. They were so delighted with it
that when they reached their homes they
sent for more. The tobacco thus got the
best kind of advertising.
The crop is a troublesome one to han¬
dle. There are three kinds of worms that
like to feed upon it; of these the horn
worm likes the plant so well that it has
to be picked off by hand, and the field
hands go searching for it by lantern light
at night. Then the matter of curing the
leaf is a very delicate one. A whole crop
may be spoiled altogether or precipitated
several grades lower in the ’ scale by a
little carelessness or unskillfulness in reg¬
ulating tho heat. The barns are usually
seventeen and a half feet square, just
holding 450 sticks. The heat is raised
from the yellowing heat at the rate of 5
degs. every two hours. When the heat
reaches 135 degs. it is kept there twelve
hours. It is then raised 5 degs. every
hour and a half until it gets to 180 degs.,
which cures both stem and stalk in a
short time.
Kentucky, with her 171,000,000 pounds
of tobacco, equals the next four highest
states. Leaving out Virginia’s 79,000,-
000 pounds, Kentucky’s product equals
those of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Tennessee,
North Carolina, Maryland, Connecticut
and Missouri, which are the principal to¬
bacco states, although New York looms
up with the respectable product of 6,481,-
431, Massachusetts 5,369,436, Indiana
8,872,842 and Ulinois 3,935,825 pounds.
—New Yo:!c Press.
u.»Tv to Cur* a Hradaciic.
The other night, about midnight, Offi¬
cer Mercer, of Allegheny, noticed a wo¬
man go into tho middle of Main 6treet
and dig a hole with a hatchet- She
placed an object in the hole and carefully
covered it up. The officer unearthed tho
object and found a small hand mirror
with writing on it which he could not
decipher. Taking it to tho woman’s
house, she explained that the writing on
tho glass was: “Father, Sou and Holy
Ghost,” and that it was a charm to drive
away an ailment in her head. It was a
Swiss custom, and sho wanted to keep
the mirror buried for three days. She
wa3 allowed to reinter it.—Pittsburg
Commercial.
A Slippery Elm Oath.
“I swcai by those tall elms in yofider
park,” he commenced, but sho inter¬
rupted him.
“Swear not by them,” she ^<ki im¬
ploringly.
“Why n.,ti” slippery elm.;, ”
“Because those trees are
she BaitL—Merchant Traveler
Oy*t#ir* for u t'ouuli.
Am experienctxl vocalist has, it is said,
during fourteen years, cured nny num¬
ber of cases of obstinate cough by pre¬
scribing tho free use of raw oysters us a
diet. The remedy is easily tried.—Ex¬
change.
Gen. Booth announces that the Salva¬
tion Army eonducts 9,100^ processions
through the streets of the United King¬
dom every week, or an average of 1,300
daily. *
The latest figures show that there are
16,447,990 Sunday school scholars in the
world.
Wood carving is taught in the Minne¬
sota State nnivi trity
ISM MI HiSS!
JUST HECEIVfJD.
C* W. & Son.
ASTROLOGY FOR JULY.
What May be Expected by Those
Who Believe in Such Vacti-
cination.
The New Orleans Picayune says;
The astrological indications for July
are complicated with two eclipses,
one of the suti on the 9th inst., and
the other of the tnoon on tho 2Jd.
The former was not visible in the
United States or in the inhabited por
tions of the earth, but chiefly m the
Southern ocean. The eclipse of the
moon will bo total in the United
States and Europe, According to
Zadkell,the eelpise of the sun falls in
Cancer 17 degrees 24 minutes, the
luminaries being in close conjunc
tion with both Mercury and Venus,
which planets are conjoined at 2b.
0m p. m. of the 9th instant, Saturn
rising and Mars in the fourth house
at the moment of the new moon at
Greenwbich; the second of the moon
falls in Aquarius 0 degree 44 minutes
Saturn rising and Mars being in the
fourth house, this time in his own
sign Scorpio, at the moment of full
moon at Greenwbich. This singn
lar resemblance of the two figures
of the heavens for these eclipses will
bring some Double in Great Britan
—a crop oi accidents and great fires
in London, seme blow delivered
against the power aud prestige of the
British empire.
There will be shocks of earthquake
iu the south, east and north of En
giand, aud many accidents in mines.
Spain will suffer from external trou
blcs and there will be, in alt proba
bility,a most disastrous earthquake at
Madrid, for Saturn will be just rising
there at the time of the full moon, In
South America, chiefly in Ecuador,
Peru and Bolivia, the worst effects
will be felt, as the moon will be in its
zenith and Saturn in the nadir at the
middle of the eclipse in those coun
tries, and there is too much reason to
fear a great catastrophe in Ecuador.
BAH ROOMS OK NO BARROOMS
That is the ({ocstiou iu RaruesTiHe,
Which is Now Under Discussion.
Next month Barncsville will again
vote on the iseue of barrooms or no
barrooms. In 1884 this issue wa#
squarely made, aod the towD, after a
most boated contest, voted no bar
rooms by a majority of 200 to 140 f
For for four years Barnesville Las
been u dry town. The coming con
test will be formally opened on Tnes
day night, the 17th inst, with a
speech by Hon. Walter B. Hill, of
all cod, when a regular anti barroom
ch b will be organized for the cam
pai^n of one one month, The pres
eut city council stand three for bar
rooms, and three for no barroomB,
with the mayor against barrooms.
The mayor and one anti barroom and
and two barroom aldermen hold over,
three long term aldermen are to be
electt dr The anti barroom crowd
propose to hold the fort.
l’hu’ghitig the Waves.
A storm.at sea means inevitable sea-sick
ness for occeas travelers. The vibration of
a steamer's screw, even, is a sore trial to any
hut the f trongest stomach. “8pHcing the
main baace,” termed as theimbitioaof sailors, a glass sabetitut; if joc
ularly by is that apooa incompa* i‘ h:
for the swallowing of
tranquillizer of sea-sick stomachs, Ho- t
terV Stomach Bitters, which no eomm< • a!
traveler, tourist or invalid briny," afaould lurking be uith-
ont iu i rossing the «r a te¬
dious 1 ..ml j mrney. No unmedlcatcd stimu¬
lant of commerce is comparable Emigrants for efficacy to the
to the great inuigorant. reliable preventive of malari.
pronounee it a
al infection, hardship, as well impure as other water complaints and miasma- to
which It rendeas brackisH
tainted vapors give and rise. harmless, and is fine
water drinkable stomach a and
remedy for disoeders of the
bowels, and for kidney troubles and rheuma¬
tism.
NUMBER 14 r.
List el .Jurors.
The following jurors have been
drawn to serfe during August Term,
1888, Spalding Wnpeiior Court:
GBAsT> intents.
James C. Pope, H, T. rattersou,
Mario i J. Patrick, Geo. I. Jones,
Win. Anderson, J. G.Rbea,
J. Y. Patterson, W. J. Duke.
W, B. Hudson, W. .7. Kincsid,
G. S. W. Parker, Win. H. Powell,
H. P. Oglatree, R. H.Williamson,
J. D. Williams, W. R. Hanleiter,
W. S. Colbert. J. II. Barnes,
D. E. Drewry, T. J . Moore, (Orr’s)
W. L. Bowers, ■Ino. JI. Keith, ......
W. H. Dupree, A. O. Gay.
II. C. Burr, C. H. Johnson, Jr.
David D. Peden, J. T. Manley,
A. J. Maddox, A bei Lower.
THAVEIISE JUltORS — FIRST WEEK.
John N Storman, Chas. T. Spruce,
W. W. Head, L. tl Norris.
N.J. Bolding, R t Yarbrough,
Jos. C. Darsey, \ Heck.
8.8. Gaillard, iuvted,
J. J. Norton, Jr., j A. Jones,'
A. J. Welden, J. H. Callahan.
D. A. Oxford, Bcnj. 8. Hammond,
John W. Travis, ■Jonas Boyd,
Giles B. Pate, W.C. Manley,
J. H. Jackson, R. <4. Rivers,
J. N. Doffice. W. L. Jackson.
C.8. Bhattuc, JepthA Pullen,
Thos. F. Haywood, E. P. Maddox,
J aines O. Prothro, Jerry J. Thornton
Isaac T. Thrash, James P. Vaughn,
Philip Smith, J. O. Mercer,
TItAAEltSK iritORS—SECOND WEEK,
W. T. Latta, W. B. Crowder,
G. AV. Wood, D. R. Be thun e,
J.W. Leach. T. II. Benson,
E. 8. Tucker, J. K. Freeman,
J. R. Lindsey, A. J. dhamptOB,
W. T. Bates, Jr. Walter C. Bates,
F. M. Kincaid, James R. Reeves,
Robt. D. Ogletree, B. F. Cnlpeppsr,
W. H. C. Hammond, J, D. Touchstone,
Clias. Floyd, IV. P. Walker,
A. W, Blake, J. C, Bridges,
J. P. Bledsoe, U. ti. Beecher,
H. C. Horne, J no. Asher,
J. II, Clark, W. T. Coppedgc,
J, O. Stewart, T. C.McLaurin,
Henry llattou, C. A. Head,
J. W. Bullard, W. C, nead,
J. J. Chambers, T.C. Andrews.
j j
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This Powder never vanes. A marvel
purity, strength and wholesomnees. Mor
economical than the ordinary kind*, and eaa
not be sold in competiton with the multitude
of low teat, short weight, alum RoTatfBAJnva or phosphate
Powders. Soi l oa’flm cans.
Powdeb Co.. 106 Wall Street, New York
ct' 2 -divwly-top column let or 4th pare.
\ R o E u CONSUMPTIVE
iy of the wo---------
for all affections * the throat aod tasf*, and i
arisinw from impure blood and exhaustion. The reebie
____... ick, strusrjhi linn against di aceen , aad slowly their health drifting by
to the grrare. will in many canes raoorer
SMS <1 SfSK Me. Umgirief
and disorders of stomach and bowels. at
mm ii« mm shop
COLUMBUS, - GEORGIA,
JOE McGHF.E, Prop'*
-}o(--
The best place in Columbus to get* batti
or clean Shave. Give ns a call when in th
city. JOE McGHER