The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, July 25, 1888, Image 2

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I nieJHens ! j MUttLAJ ©LMKII*« MUr M Ynfr •AM.JLH. kf.OMlW • *•*••*»*#* eewito, J*ly Si, m ■ MWti ftp® «f Spalding Co. MMftl ?oer *1 the City tf Grifim Bat<n. **ULY-'bw dollar per mu* Jw tt* «a*|MKt •M UntImw, T«« u 4 IUM*OTl«WiOb« Iftj oanto forjaefc MUt- «»b- OQ*. ft Marta It to KtmCW JioiaMrtUwand«rU»« MS p«r stttoa. AUuuertieet iter tea (tea SDooat*. (dollar mo« tbe paid for io "XJbetsi rate* will be made advartMeraenD with parties te eoolifice their t Wen- raioaaafor the Dwiv. DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For Fnaedeot, GROVER CLEVELAND, wHr fit New York. For Vice Preetdeet, |ALLKN G. THURMAN, of Ohio. For Member of CooKress, 5(h Di*f„ i___JOHN IX STEWART. of Spalding, For RepiweoUtive, N. M. COLLENS, of Spaltliog. The News stated beforehand (hat Mr, Carlisle would not come to the Chautauqua to be used as the stool pigeon of a handful of speculative pro tectioiiiaU. 'Tn vaioie the Det spread in tight of the bird,” and it was a wry clumsy spread, though the net wee neat. "All tbair troubles. over' ic the way the Louisville Courier-Journal beads a sensational account cf the elopement of two Kentucky young lovers. And the Albany News says that tbe romantic, child-like bland ness of tbe fresh young men who sometimes get to be headliners on tbe big daily papers oftimes, no doobt, makes tbe angels weep. Edison has invented a new dinner clock which talks. Instead of striking tbe boar it speaks it. At dinner time a voice issues from the clock and «eys k< JDioner time ,, slso < *One o’clock,” “Two o'clock,” etc,, as the esse may be. Another device which be is per fcoting iu connection with the clock is that of a female face, which be pro poses to set in tbe face of the dock The lips of the figure will move at tbe hour, the bead will bow and the fictitious lady will say, “Good eve niog, indies and gentlemen, it is bed time.’* KIETlNb IT WITH THE TIMES. The Central railroad, under its new management, is an enterprising sod progressive corporation. It rcaliz es the tact that this is an ago of pro gvesa and invention, and that old things anti old methods are passing awegr. In order that its employees may keep up with the times and leam-nli thauew tricks in railroading General Manager Belknap is making up a party of two supervisors from each division, who will in a special car make an inspecting tour through tbe North and West, for the purpose of studying the methods adopted by the railroads of that section, and ap plying them so far as practicable to the Central railroad. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER. Tlw eoafirmaUon of Chief Justice Fuller ie a great event for the Atneri can people. I j Personally, tbe victory over a i :» ■ ter factional opposition is a triumph won by a life of blameless and cease less devotion to a noble profession Had it been possible to find in the career of Mr. Fuller anything that would bare afforded to bis political opponents tbe slightest excuse for ie jeering hie name, be would not have been allowed to occupy tbe high place for which tbe President designated him. But jealous scrutiny only re suited in proving that peisonnlly as well as professionally Cleveland's choice for the most importaut posi lion >□ the gift of an American Presi j dent . . to a mao eminently . , w.ntby . of | the honor, Of even greater consequence than any mch considerations is the fact r that during a bested political content parts spirit bae not availed So leave unfilled the highest jailicui rffice in the country. It is eminently proper that in the court that ie charged with the final determination of constitutional qae* j tic&B the presiding judge thou id j cberieh principle* like tboae of the majority of hie fellow citizens. That the minority should prevail in om supreme tribunal longer than ia re quired by the natorsi operation of kw would be e discredit to ib-s eoun try end cast a reflection on its in stitations. It is on the orderly sod decorous operation of those institutions at such a time, and on the fact that lees than one-third of the Senate oppos ed the confirmation, that the people of the United States are chiefly to be congratulated, I'be liepnklicen Senators who rose above narrow partisanship and join ed their Democratic colleagues in ap proving this wor*by appointment de serve the appreciation and thanks of the people. RET. E. P. ROE. Rev. E, P, Roc, whose death was announced Friday, was without ques tion the most widely read novelist in A meric*. There has been plen’y of speculation as to why this was so, for even his most ardent admirers were willing to adroit that his great tuc CC£S was not justified by the m*rit of his booh*. Still, it is a fact which be gainsaid. . . , cannot Personally, Mr. Roe was a most lovable man, full of charity and affec tK>ti fur mankind, and sincere and conscientious in evuy part of his life. If there was any one cause more than another which won him his large circle of readers, we sup pose it was this spirit of truthful* ness that shone imperceptibly through all his work. He described tbe life of the common people, hut he did so with faithfulness, even in the smallest details. If he was unacquainted with any scenes or type of life that he wished to incorporate into one of his books, he studied it with the zeal of a young reporter on his first assignment. It is a strange coindidence that of all the modern novelists there are no two whose msthods were so similar as Mr. Roe’s and Zola’s. Both were conscientious in their literary work to the highest degree: both believed that the novelist was nothing more or less than a reporter of the highest type, and both went out into the world to gather their material for their works. But the American found truth and virtue predominant, because those were characteristics of his own life; the Frenchman, with a different education and among a different people, believed that vice and crime and lust were the main¬ springs of the world’s history. Mr. Roc was a man of whom it may be said, with especial truth, that bis was a life well spent. His talents, such as they wore, he devel oped to their fullest extent,and they were always arrayed on the side of justice and humanity. Peculiar In the iombinotUin. proportion, and prepa¬ ration of it* ingredients, Hood'? preparations Sarsaparilla acc omplishes cores where other entirely fail. Peculiar in its good name at home, which is a “tower of strengh abroad," pe ulia in the phe nominal sales it has at¬ tained, llcod'a Sarsaparilla is the most »uc. cessful ineeicine for and purifying th.> appetite, bloed, giving strenghtb, creating an c. Uf All Things in the World A tonic is what nervous people reunite To impart strength into the nervous provided organism i* to inspire its tranquility, avoided. causes of unhealthful excitement are A medicinal tonic tlia' —like Hostetler'* Stomach Bitters—commands healing profession, the unquali¬ fied sanction of the arid which institutes a general reform in a bilious dyspeptic and debilitated condition of triai the system, "intelligent is surely entitled to a careful by people, medicine, capable from of form¬ ing a due estimate of a eta. phiitie and often recorded professional evi- denee io its behalf. Not only are tbe nerves and stomach invigorated also endowed bv the with Bitters, unwonted but ihe system is power of resistance to influence* in air, water or daily avocation subversive of health, i’ronnnently dangercu* among the tirst named Hostetler's of these i- malaria, affords against which Stomach Bitters n competent safegua.d. also Rhenniatism prevented and and kidney troubles are overcome by it. 5h Moffetts TEtTHINA (fretting Powders) A*Uy< Irtfti Ir'ltithn AM* Direction* Trdbitig th® • *» ir**t r# * £ibfris its*" <‘hUd. make« P rupH si« ; s* r. * ft -t p^xhinn eottals it for Uf: . .. .v.- trout*** *of Cttl’Jreo qf any age* Jt jji • * c'.vti fttre. 1‘7 it Too Nnriil b* ' KKTlIJiw Jonf tb*?re cIjU4* * . -; 7 v s5 at are t -i rfliou c. Ask jvut Droggi'L The Oldest Nuise in Georgia. Mrs. S. E. Kenhedy, one of the olde*j known enrses in Georgia.sta'cs that it* all her experience with bowel troubles aud children teethmg, Dr. Big gere‘ aemedv. Huckleberry Cordial is Ihe best ’ A CreatVietory I A Terribl* Case of Scrofula Cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla * la winter cf 1 ST} I was attacked wtl* Serela mw el Uw mo** MX*sv**fe; ***** tin* I *urtMto»aMWttort**» taw* 4»<a** * ever mi ar.^odmyweekaca tk? • ■: -«B{lea»Xty exedto* as efcsalve cars <"! iooCj wac dMewttog to behead, »ad ^nam: mtoiera&to lie estate, It to so luSj detent* m softwto**, a* the east wa*o:®pllc*todwttkasmtoeC«arTJs. Alter three years of *toe»y. karlag been treated Vy tfcrt* pfcystefeHS*, 1 w»« wwto tbas erer. Fmsily, <* tbs reeewmwwiattt* t-l tv J Huntley. druggist, ol Lock port. I was induced io try Boa*'* Sa mtordto . Alto sow. after hiving taken twelve bottles, within the last entirely iwrire months, ceased. the acd i . cto—to U»e ttmewo w *toftto have wjaw *Z aunetmi. * t .he unsightly Karr,able* ato MwtUilv h- «wti. 'mailer by derm*. what hesattftaiy less s not know It nay dave dace 1 r < Ui hat I do know that •« my ease, It fs -vrt. 4 «r 01 * ha* evjdrtaseo. proved av rtfeetive emits. n ?e I *t *i these Am lacia sn Easollelted my I . to terUy tbe aatlsenttcay.w and am t' y persA’.'iiaJI MMftiMftdCftcc wtb tfeU r&if, t v <fo«Ws Boa* any *®e wl*-' U." CttAWLis A. kwts. East Wilson, K. Y. This statetrw t!'. is tmtrstei by W. J. Ilaav ley, druggist, of Lotkport, S. Y.. who rails the tare a freat vietory lor Hood's Sarsaj^r.:.» Send lor book girisg statements til Busy curet Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all dragglsts. Si; six l.*r S3. Made cely by C. 1- HOOD i CO-. lotrell. Mass. 100®Doses Or v Oollw- If YDI] W Customers, Aught, Boarders, To be B*>ufiht Agent*, SriTer or Geki.' Orders, Merchandiee S- '•!. Servants or P!*c« ;*ods to Ap; rai'e, Lawyer or Case, 'peeing Days Musical Test- lers, To Annonncf, Popular Preacher?. Houses or Acres, Cooks, Buteber* or Bakers, Book*, Boats, To Hire or Let, Votes, flounce Offices, Dress skirt or Basement, A cure for disease, First Floor, A Handy Valise, Casement, A MnslinChemise, To Purchase a Pet, Cheese, Horse, Teas, Mare, Bee*, Monkey or Bear, Peas, Bloodhound or Spitz Or Are Prone Free from Fitz, To Make Known, To Hire a Hall, Your Store, Dri ver or team, Hos iery, An AnOpuk-nt Elegant Carriage.Dry Upholstery, oods, Marriage, Ball, Picnics, Piay,Concert or Excursions, Skates, Kniek-Knacks, Plates, creatur'sDivei sions, To sell to gay Diamonds, Clothee Read)- Made, Pearls, Increase of Trade, Rings, Coal, Coke and IVood Curls, Pictures, Wash for Features, Lectures, To buy Odd Things, All Kinds of Food Or sell Odd Things, Work* on Theology, Cats, Magic, Wealth Astrology. Felicity, Rats, and Mats, World-wide Publicity Flat* Flags, Bats Rags, Pantaloons, Hats, 5 ®. „ , Resplender t Cravats, Dress shirts or collars Mutton or Beef, Almighty Dollars, Financial Relief, House for Rent. Stocks, Store, Tenement, Clocks, Cash to be Lint, jL45Cks, Cash to be Spent, Socks, Scent, Portmania or Box, Tent, Pig, Sheep or Ox, Roman Cement, Or Even a Beau- Go— Then in a Trice, Read the Advice,’ Take th* Advice Far Beyond Price, Written Below— Written Below— ADVERTISE -IN THE- Daily News To Business Men. XT t > LA BORE D ARGC M ENT IS 11 in these days to convince INTELL1 GENT men that it Pays Well to Advertise Rule Nisi. B. C. Kinard A Son J. W. Ward ALL Ward, j State of Georgia, Spalding County. In I Superior court, February Term, 1888. petition It being represented Kinard to Son the Court by Deed the of B. C. A that by of Mortgage, dated the liith day of Oct. 1887, d.W''Ward A 1. J. Ward comeyed to the *aid B. C. Kinard A Son a certain tract of land, to wit: Fifty acres of land, situated in Akin* District, Spalding county, Ga,, and bounded North by the lands of Bill Wise, East hydno. Ward, South by Barney Mad¬ dox ami West by Zed Gardner, for tbe nur- j>ose of made securing by the the payment said J. W. of Ward a promisso¬ <fcl. J. ry note Ward to the said B . C. Kinard & Bon due on the 1st day of November,la87, for tbe sum of Fifty Dollars (foO,‘,Vj) and Ninety-six unpaid. Cents, which note is now due and It is ordered that the said J. W. Ward & I. «T. Ward do pay into this Court, by the first day of next term the principal, interest and and costs, due on said note or show cause, if any they have to the contrary, or that in de fault thereof foreclosure be granted to the said B. C. Kinard A Son of said Mortgages and the equity of redemption of the said J W Ward & I. .1. Ward tUeirin be forever barred, and that service of this rule be perfected on -aid J. W. Ward A I. J. Ward bv publication in the Criki-is News or service upon them I v the Sheriff of said county three months bedore the next term of this court. JAMES S. BOYNTON, JudgeS..C. F.C. Frank F’ynt and Dismuke A Colleos, Peti¬ tioners Att’#. A trne copy from the Minutes of this Court aloamtm Wjj. M. Thomas Clerk. PARKER’S GINGER TONIC The Best Cure for O imtirm. Invert] I‘•in,. feT* v •lusta* !..jGdii roes vitli Jvnacta 1 linjrvr, it exert* a nA Wed* po*«r over unknown bi other remedies. Lungs, lineumasinn, Irtualo Comptatalfc *ad CM rihUw Strret, S. V. ' IfMPRECEOEIfTED ATTRACTION f || Over a Million Distributed L.S.L. Louisiana Siaie Lottery Company Incorporated by the Legtototare in 1868, for Edscationvi and ChaHtabie purposes, ill franchise made a part of the picocui State ConstiUition, in 1879, by an over- ■*helming popular vote. IMORAKD EX1BA0BDIXABY DRAW- BEB DBAW1.NGS take place on each of the the other tan months in the year, and are a* drawn in public, at the academy of Mosie New Orleans, Da. We do hereby certify that we supervise the arrangement* for all the monthly and Qnar- ter’.T Drawings of The Louisiana £Ute U* tery Coropanyi and in person manage Mid con tool the Drawing* themselves, honesty, and that fainieee the Rjne are conducted with and in good faith toward ali partk«, t -to w« anthorize the Company to use this certiBe».« with onrsijgn&tTsi^ attACflCdu its advertUements.^ We the undersigned Banks and Bankers will pay ail Prizes drawn in The Louisiana State Lotteries which may he presented ,8t ouroemnters: f *AV^:VZtttSZVlSS, SiSiSFUS-SS: Grand Monthly : Drawing Ih tbe Academy :my of of Music, Music, New Orleans, Tuesday, day, August August 7,1S88, CAPITAL PRIZE, $300,00 , 100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars each Halves $10: Quarters $5; Tenth* ii: Twen¬ tieth* $i. LIST Of PRIZES. i Frizz cr $. 500,000 i*........ $300,000 100,000 1 Prize of 100,000 is........ 50.000 1 Prize of 50,000 is........ 25.000 1 Pbize of 25,000 10,000 is........ 2^,000 2 Prizes of are....... 25.000 5 Prizes of 5,000 are....... 25 Prizes of 1,000 arc........ 25.000 100 Prizes of 500 are........ 50.000 200 Prizes of 300 are........ 60.000 500 Prizes of 200 are........ 100,000 APPROXIMATION PRIZES. 103 Prizes of $500 are........... .. 50,000 100 do. 300 are........... .. 90.000 100 do. ‘AlOare........... .. 20,00 terminal prizes. 90S do. 100 are............... 09,900 999 do. 100 are............... 99,909 3,134 Prizes of amounting to......f Capital 1,054,801 Prizes Note. —Tickets terminal drawing Prizes. are not entitled to For Club Rrates, or any further informs tion apply to the undersigned. Yonr hand¬ writing must be distinct and Signature plain More rapid return mail delivery will be as-' surred by enclosing and Envelope bearing your full address. Send POSTAL NOTES, Express Money Orders, or New York Exchange in Ordinary letter. Cuirencyby Express (at onr expense) addressed to DAUPHIN, M. A. New Orleans La or M JA. DAUPHIN, Washington, D. C. Address Registered Letters tc STEW ORLCA.VA It ATONAL BASH New Orleans, La. REMEMBER ZSZSZ.Z and Early, who art tn charge fairness »f the drawings, is a gnaantee of absolute and integrity, that the chances are all eqna', and that no one can possibly divine what numbers will draw a Prize. REMEMBER that the payment of all Prizes is GUARANTEED BY FOUR NATIO NAL BANKS of New Orleans, and the Tickets *re signed by the President of an In stitution whose chartered rights are recog nized in the highest Courts; therefore beware of any imitations or anonymou schemes. Rule Nisi. Writer T. Miller, ] February Mortgage, Ac. versus Term, 1888. Adolphns£C,8chaefer, surviving partner of ; Superior Spalding Court County of A. C. Schaefer A Co. j Georgia. Present, the Honorable James S. Boynton, Judge of said Court. It appearing to the Court by the petition of Walter T. Miller that on the first day of April in the year of our Lord Eighteen Hun dred and Seventy-two A. C. Schaefer <t Co, a firm composed of A. C. Schaefer and Geo Y. Barker, made and delivered to said Wal¬ ter T. Miller a certain mortgage in which the sum of Six Thousand Dollars was ac knowledged to be cue the said plaintiff, which said mortgage deed bears dale April 1st, 1872, to secure the payment of said amount due, whereby they conveyed to said Walter T. Miller ihe following described property,to-wit: That tractor parcel of land Monroe, lying or being Pike, in the 3d District Spalding of originally then now County, said and known and Nos. distinguished Forty-seven in the plan of district as (47), Seven ty-nine (51), (79), each Seventy-eight containing Two (78), and Fifty- ODe Hundred and Two and One-lialf (202>4) acres; also, Seven, fi ve (75) acres in the northwest corner of lot No. Seventy-seven (77); also, Fifty (50) acres in southeast part of lot No. Forty eight (48), all in same Nine district, Hundred containing Thirty-five in the aggregate and (935) acres, more or less, in tbe entire tract bounded north by land then known as Jno G. Lindsay’s land and others, east by Jan then known as land of Dr. Pritchard an others, south by Buck Creek, and west b land of Squire Massett and others, bein premise* conveyed by Philip E. McDaniel said defendants February 4tb, 1868. as descri ed in foregoing petition: conditioned that said firm of A. C. Schaefer A Co. (of wliic A. C. Schaefer is now snrving partne •tiould pay off and discharge said debt o Six Thousand Dollars according to its tenor and effect, that then said Deed of Mortgage should be void. Andit further appearing that said debt re mains unpaid; It is therefore Ordered, that said A. C. Schaefer, surviving partner as aforesaid, day pay into this Court by the first of the next term thereof, the principal, interest and cost due on said Mortgage, or show cause to the contrary, if there lie any; and that on failure of said A. C. Schaefer, surviving partner as aforesaid, so to do, the equity of redemption in and to said mort¬ gaged premises be forever thereafter barred and foreclosed. Audit is further Ordered, That this Rule be published in the Griffis Nrws once a month for four months, or a copy there of served on the said A. C. Schaefer, surviv¬ ing partner as aforesaid, or hisspeciaLaavut or attorney, at least throe months before the next term of tl.is Court, By the Court, February JAMES 6th, BOYNTON, 1888. 8. Hall A Hammond, Petitioners Judge 8. C. F. C. Attorneys. Superior Court L W. M. Thomas, Clerk of the of Spalding County, Georgia, do hero- by certify the above to be * true T” ____ r * ot from the minutes of said i Court at February l’erm, MAmortm 1888. Clerk 8. C. « AN I¥OUN€ KJHE 1 VT THE CAMP IS NOW OPEN! YSv . j <*- 7 ~C“ »*.: v v. vice ron phesiocnt. i rwcsit PER CLEVELAND iliincthurman! Of NEW YORK. onto. 'Tp THE GRIFFIN NEW Is in the fight, and should be read by every TRUE DEMOCRAT who desires to keep posted on the jH tuts of the greate*t political struggle ever kno this republic, in which net alone j- .■ ly supremacy is involved, but in the langnagi of! President "We struggle to secu*e and save cherished institutions, the welfare and ness of a nation of free men.” The main battle grounds of this conflict will be New York and Indiana; and the $M has made special arrangements to present irom time to time the progress of the camp in the Empire State of the North, as viewed from the most absolutely trustworthy 1 cratic standpoint, and will also have special service from Indiana, Appropriate and| ed political cartoons will appear from time to time. In State affairs a: he politics of Spalding and surrounding counties, the people willh kept fully posted 1 . .. . editorial utterances and by special correspondents, being prepared to do this tl.au any other paper in this section. The News is the official orgass the State in this county, of the county itself and of the city of Griffin, and enjoys the toll confidence of the ; arty and its leaders. With all this, 1 s recognizes that there i- -omelhing besides polities even in*! Utical year, and ‘ - bright and newsy as ever. Renewed attention will be paWt attracting itnmL . , co-operation with the great Democratic newspaper of tha 1 tropolis, tlieNew >: •. The most eminent of Southern statesmen will be invitrii discuss the po' . aspects of the South; lL mo.-t successful business men to portrajkj industrial conditions and dt mands. In this, the News should receive the substantial* and encouragement ■ ?« very citizen of this section. The farmingd, 1 .»i tment will appear regularly as at present acd illustrated each 'to’M Illustrated novelette- v ill also continue to be an interesting feature. The price of the News i laces it within the reach of the humblest voter, while its cha ter is eqnal to that of papers three times the price. • The Daily News will bo sent W now until January 1st next for |2.50, from August 1st to January 1st for $3.10, from 8ept« ber 1st to January 1st for $1.70, and from October 1st to January 1st for $ 1.25. The Weekly News will be sent one year for 50 cents, six months for 25 cents. the office, or subscribe through your postmaster or any of our many correspond through Judge R. H. Allen, our Pike County Editor, or through DOUGLAS ULESSNFR, Publish**. Griffin, G*| GET YOUR NEIGHBOR TO SUBSCRIBE. New Advertisements Regular & Perfect DIGESTION PROMOTED BT CSE OF _ Seltwer . Tarrant’* Aperient. Sold by Tarrant & Co., N Y., and Druggists every wn*r*. goats preferred who can furnish their own and give theif whole lime to the bust- 8 ?* re moments may be profitably em- , also. A few vocaneies towns B- F• Johnson in and & Co., 1000 Main St,, DR. MOFFETT’S_ FEMALE MEDICINE corrects From which *11 IrreewlarUIrs Utile* and srifb-r. annojrloit It t l, trjjfl v. somanr andstrensw weak, dentUUted woman booth dtT makes cheerful tbe despot nent r '"_« , , , J spirits. In change of life » »!«<!» So/sa»d tboem Vn, out INDIAN "WKICD. itis Ask your Druggist, E. R. Anthony, Griffin,* «nd M. FJ Oehard Hill, Ga,