Newspaper Page Text
lEjjeHS
MC6LUB 6LK88IEK, Editor * m»T
«AlftY,(lsA4«MM>Vnr i
, Oat Tear.....
Urttta, 6c«rvU, Atrnit.i,
Official Piper of Spalding Go.
McM Paper ef the City at 6riKn
;0Lili.. .....L. ... 1 ......" lnl -
A.«l rnrtiiing Rftte*.
SAIL? -<Pn« dollar p*r *qi*»re f*r Oh*
Cm ituwrUou, nod fifty ontotor mob sab-
o o wwit OM Tm lino* oriMstob* mmwO-
10 -U p*r U«
• «r Malt inanition. No inMrtioa under Uua
(ITme |Md (or UtM thus 60 eenU. All insertion*
then one dollar moat be paid for in
"ibtoenU to rotas will be their nude advertteemeuU with partiee
Vkdxitt* oontinue
•TBSSS^SSft—
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
Far Preoident,
GROVER CLEVELAND,
of New York.
For Vice President,
ALLEN O. THURMAN,
~7 ? of Ohio.
For Member of Congress, Gth Diet.,
JOHN D. STEWART,
of Spsiding,
For Senator—26th Districf.
JOHN T. HALL,
of Spalding.
For Repiesentittive,
N. M. COLLENS,
of Spalding.
The Christian Union Temperance
Republicans cannot consistently sup
port the free whisky policy of the
Republican party this year.
Col. Dick Tbompsou should by all
means be placed on the Indiana
Repolican ticket. Who bnt a tried
■alt water mariner can safely con
duct his party along the dangerous
windings of Salt river’
It ta Mid that the excursion par
Um tbit visit Indianapolis to see
Gen. Harrison are tbe result of the
•hrewd schemes of the industrious
railroad passenger agents, who are
mtkiDg bay while tbe sun shines,
without earing whether Harrison is
elected or uot.
The Cleveland Leader, one of the
bitterest and most radical Republican
newspapers iu tbe country, says that
tbe decisive action of tbe Democrats
in Congress in placing wool ou tbe
free list has stiffened tbe market
and advanced tbe price of wool full
one-balf a cent a pound.
Senator Palmer, of Michigan, is no
bog. He declines to be Senitor again.
He ie willing to give some other mil
lionoire a chance. It is tbe aim of
nearly all millionaires to become Sen
liors, and if they could be content
with one term, more of them might
be honored and enabled to obstruct
honest legislation.
Trading Ben Harrison for Con
gresemen would be a very mean thing
to do but tbe war tariffers are not
going to spare a man merely bec&uso
bis griodsatbor was a prominent per
son. The Tippecanoe veterans are
not numerous enough to elect any
body, and the tariffers have got to
do something,
........ «► * ' — i » —■ i •
The Republicans will introduce a
substitue for the uilts bill in the Sen
ate, but they dare not draft one in
conformity with the Republi
cm platform. If they did so they
: would scarcely carry a State iu the
Union. The people are awake on
the tariff question and they will no
longer be satisfied with glittering
promises. They demand to be re
tiered of some of the unnecessary
burdens of taxation.
The Republicans prate shout a
“protective” tariff for the bcuefit of
American ‘laborers, yet it is a well
known fact that the highest protect
ed industries of this country have im
ported the cheap laborers | of Hun
fjary, Poland and Italy to supplant
American laborers and reduce their
wages. The unnecessary and un
bol/ tariff benefits only tbe manufac
Hirer.
’
HS5HS
The Republicans are hasty to as I
sums that tbe passage of tbe Mills
bill will cause a fall in tbe price of
wool. Will they, then, kindly tell ns
the cause of the fluctuations in tbe
price of wool between tbe years 1868
and 1881. There was no change or
talk of change in the tariff on wool
during those years, and yet tbe mar
ket fluctuated from 3 to 10 cents a
pound every year, and daring tbe
ten years between 1872 and 1882
there was s fall in prices of 27 cents
a pound. And all this, remember,
without any change in tbe tariff. We
are afraid our Republican friends in
their attempt to deceive tbe public
are getting themselves badly tangled
on tbe wool question. They will not
be able to pull tbe wool over tbe
•yes of the people this year.
Representative Tarsney, of .Micbi.
gsn says: “Michigan, in my opinion,
is not as doubtiul as it was even two
weeks ago. Tbe outlook is decided
ly in favor of Democratic snccess,
Cleveland’s message on the tariff is¬
sue is enough for our people and
they are using it with telling effect.
As things look now, I should not be
surprised if Cleveland and Thurman
should carry Michigan by a majority
of from 5,000 to 8,000
The Republicans in Washington
are much execriaed over tbe refusal
of Ex-Gov. Porter, of Indians, to
accept the Republican nomination
for Governor. Gov. Porter, who is
said not to admire Gen. mrrieon. is
not in tbe cat’s paw bnisness this
year and it is a bad thing for irarr
son and Morton that he is not.
m»r* Eel* An Cangbt.
Very early In the spring men go out
with speara in the swampy meadows that
border the little creeks and tread about
with bare feet until they como upon a
place where the mud is soft. In such a
spot thero Is likely to be a spring of fresh
water, and the spears thrust down through
the ooro bring up at every stroke between
their prongs writhing eels. It is nothing
unusual to get three or four bucketfuls
out of one hole. Most of the eels mar¬
keted, however—and vast quantities of
them are brought here—are taken by the
familiar process known as “bobbing.”
In othcrl words, they are fished for at
night with bunches of worms done up in
loops at tho end of a string. Many pots,” are
caught in traps known as “cel
from which tho poor victim is unable to
make his escape, having once strayed in
after the food set as a bait Eel skins
are worth $8 a hundred for flails. They
are [also used as bluefish bait, and by
rheumatic natfenfc* to tio around tbe limb
affected.—Boston Cor. New Orleans Pica¬
yune. _
ltd the Favorite Color.
It is a curious circumstance tliat red,
the unseer, color of s6 many, is the favor*
ite color, and may be called the king
color, of the normal eye. It was espe¬
cially so in ancient times. If wo exam¬
ine the Bible we shall find tliat the He¬
brews scarcely ever use color as an epi¬
thet, as wo do when we say “the blue
sky," “the purple hills.” They say, in¬
deed, “the Red sea;” but blue is scarcely
mentioned as seen in nature, only in the
“blue and purple and scarlet” of the
tabernacle hangings, or the high priest’s
robes, or the pavement of tho king’B
palace of “red and blue nnd black and
white marble, ” in tho Book of Esther.
Yellow, excepting as a sign of disease, is
mentioned but once or twice; “her
feathers like yellow gold.” But red is
largely spoken of as fa later times, and
perhaps as incorrectly, for we did not
invent, we only inherit, the expressions,
“red gold,” “red wine,” ono of these
being merely orange, and the other a
ruddy purple. “Red hair” is a modern,
or rather mediaeval, inaccuracy; “red
cow” wo got from tho ancients. These
epithets all appear to show a certain
fancy for calling things red as the more
kingly and costly color. —Good Words.
Peculiar
In the eombinotion. proportion, and prepa¬
ration of its ingredients, Hood's preparations Sarsaparilla
accomplishes cures where other
entirely fail. Peculiar in iU good name at
home, which is h “tower of strerigh abroad,’
pe 'ulia in the pbe nominal sales it has at¬
tained, Hood's Sarsaparilla is the most bleed, suc¬
cessful mceicine for purifying tho
giving strenghth, nnd creating an appetite,
c.
W Iren They Leave Us,
The exodus of onr bodily troubles is doubly
welcome if t heir departure is unaccompanied
by pain. It is the fault of the best of com¬
mendable cathartics, which act solely upon
the bowels, that in operating they gripe and
weaken these organs. Hostetler’s Stomach
Bitters produce a laxative etiect, but neither
causes pain nor weaken the abdominal region
or the stomach. This is pre-eminently the
alterative which a constipated, billions or dys it
peptic person should use, since a resort to
involves no bodiiy discomfort nor produces
a violent reaction. The liver is aroused, tb
stomach benefit ted, and the habit of body
speedily Fever nnd and ague, permanently rhenmntism improved and kidney- by it.
troubles are among the maladies for which
recorded experience has proved it to be effi¬
cacious. It ts a wholesome appetizer,and a far
more reliable tranquillizer of the nerves than
stom ach-disturbing narcotics and sedatives
Dr. Moffett’s TEETHINA (Teething Powders)
Itewels. AUayt Irritation Aid, Division, RegulatesUio
Strrugtbens tb« Child, make* Teething
Eruption* b»*y and Cost* owlv SS Out,. Teethlna cure*
the ai d Sores. and nothing equal, it for
.'unimer troubles of Children any age, It
it soft «r.<! si’re. Try it ettd von will never be
without ITtKTItlA’ K as Ions as there are child-
feu la tae Uouic. A.k your l>rugx.tt.
. r- 0 CLARK S BUSINESS CCLL? ;.
(Mi& . Ang. for In America. arcolars. i«). ERIK, Mention Fall The FA., term best this jmjs-r. begins schoo.
B5HS
IOO Doses
Hollar- Hood'* Sarsaparilla U t!* only
of which this can be truly tool;
It ts an unanswerable argument as W
strength and positive ertmomy of this
medicine, flood's Sarsaparilla ts made
root*, herbs, barks, etc., long and favorably
for their power tn purifying the blood;
in combination, proportion, and process.
Sarsaparilla is peculiar to itself.
“ for economy and comfort wo use Hood i
Sarsaparilla." Mbs- C. Brewster. Buffalo
Hood s Sarsaparilla takes lets time and
quantity to show Us effect than any other
preparation I ever heard of. I would not be
without It In the house." Mbs. C. A . M.
HlBB-tBP, North Chfti, V. t- Dotes
One Dollar
Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures scrofula, salt
rheum, all humors, boils, pimples, general de¬
bility, dyspepsia, biliousness, sick headache,
catarrh, rheumatism, kidney and liver com¬
plaints, and all affections caused by Impure
blood or low -mn of the system. Try it.
I was s vcrei. iicted with scrofula, and
for over a > ar ha- <o running sores on my
cock. 11 I've ties of Hood's Sarsapa-
nlla. and « sid r myself entirely cured.’’
?. E. Lovi r, L well, Mass.
“Hood’s hursapanlU did me an immense
imount of good. My whole system has been
auilt up and strengthened, my digestion im
proved, and my head relieved of the bad reel
l .g. 1 consider it the best medicine I have
ever used, and should not know how to do
without it.” Many L. 1 ’eble, Salem, Mass.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Bold by ail druggists. «1; fix forfs. Made
scly by C. I. nooD & <■ >., I-owell, Mas,
IOO Dost - ' a Dollar.
(i n m
Aught, Bought,
To be
Silver or Gold,'
Merchandise gold.
Servants or PL Gaods to Appraise,
Lawyer or Cas. Opening Days
Musical Tear re - To Announce,
Preache. - Houses or Acres,
Butchers or Bakers,
Books. floats,
To Hire or Let, Votes, flounce
Offices, Dress skirt or
Basement, A cure for disease.
First Floor, A Handy MuslioChemiae, Valise,
Casement, A
To Purchase n Pet, Cheese,
Horse, Teas,
Mare, Bees,
Monkey or Bear, Peas,
Bloodhound or Spitz Or Are Prone
Free from Fit*, To Make Known,
To Hire a Hall, Your Store,
Driver or team, Hosiery, oods,
An Elegant Carriage.Dry
Ptay.Concert AnOpuIent Marriage, Ball, Upholstery, Picnics,
or
Skates, Excursions,
Plates, Knick-Knacks,
To sell to gay creatur’sDivei sions,
Diamonds, Clothes Ready Made,
Pearls, Increase of Trade, d
Kings, . Coal. Coke and Woo
Curls, Pictures,
Wash for Features, Lectures,
To buy Odd Things, All Kinds of Food
Or sell Odd Things, Works on Theology,
Cate, Magic, Wealth Astrology, and Felicity,
Kate, World wide Publicity
Mats, Flags,
Flats
Bats, Rags,
Pantaloons, Bags, Nags,
Hate, Dress shirts collars
Respilender.tCravats, Beef, Almighty Dollars, or
Mutton or
Financial Relief, House for Rent,
Stocks, Store, Tenement,
Clocks, Cash to be Lint,
Locks, Cash to be Spent,
Socks, Scent,
Portmonia or Box, Tent,
Pig, Sheep or Ox, Roman Cement,
Or Even a Beau— Go—
Then in a Trice, Read tbe Advice,’
Take tli# Advice Far Beyond Price,
Written Below— Written Below—
ADVERTISE
-IN THE-
Daily News
To Business Men.
XT<) LABORED ARGUMENT IS NEEDED
IX in these days to convince INTELL1
GENT men that it
Pays Well to Advertise
Rule Nisi.
K. C. Kinard & Bon j
J. W. Ward A I. J. Ward, f
State of Georgia, February Spalding Term, County. jS88. In the
Superior court,
It being represented to the Court by the
petition of B. C. Kinard A Son that by Deed
of Mortgage, dated the 16th day of Oct. 1887,
J. IV. Ward A I. J. Ward conveyed to the
said B. C. Kinard A Son a certain tract of
land, to-wit: Fifty acres of land, situated in
Akins District, hpalding county, Ga., and
bounded North by the lands of Bill Wise,
East by.Tno. Ward, South by Barney Mad¬
dox and West by Zed Gardner, for the pur¬
pose of securing the payment of a promisso¬
ry note made by the said J. W. Ward A I. J.
Ward to the said B. C. Kinard A Son due on
Fifty the 1st Dollars day of (150,96) November,1887, for the sum of
which is due and and Ninety-six unpaid. Cents,
note now
It is ordered tliat the said J. W. Ward & I.
J. Ward do pay into this Court, by tho first
day of next term the principal, interest and
and costs, due on said note or show caase, if
they have to the contrary, that ’ de
any or in
fanlt thereof foreclosure be granted to tbe
said B. C. Kinard A Son of said Mortgage,
and the equity of redemption of the said J W
Ward A I. J. Ward therein be forever barred,
and that service of this rule be perfected on
J. W. Ward A: I. J. Ward by publication
tbe Gbiffin News or service npon them
by the Sheriff of said comity three months
the next term of this court.
JAMES 8. BOYNTON,
FJynt and Dismuke Judges. C. F.C.
tioners Att’s. A C’ollens, Peti¬
A true copy from the Minutes of this Court
aloam4m W*. M. Thomas Clerk.
IIOISE (MURED SIP
COLUMBUS, . GEORGIA,
MeGHKE, Prop-i
-)o(--
The best place in Columbus to get a batb
clean Shave. Give us a call when in tb
JOE McQHER
ATTRACTION!
Over a Million Di«triba f 1 3
L.S.L
State Lottery Company
Incorporated by tbe Legislature in 1868, for
and Charitable purposes, and
franchise made a part of the present
Constitution, in 1879, by an over¬
popular vote.
Ils GRAND EXTRAORDINARY DRAW¬
take place Semi-Annually, (June and
and its GRAND SlMiLE NLM-
DRAWINGS take place on each of the
other ten months in the year, and arc a.
in public, at the Academy of Music
Orleans, La.
“We do hereby certify that we supervise the
for all the monthly and Quar¬ Lot
Drawings of The Louisiana. State
Company^ and in person manage and con
the Drawings themselves, ana that the
ame are conducted with honesty, fairness
In good faith toward all parties, t < w*
the Company to use this certitic*.*
fac-similesof onrsignatuie* attached ir
advertisement,.”
We the undersigned Banks and Banker?
pay all Prizes drawn in The Louisians
Lotteries which may he presented al
counters:
R. JI.WAlMStf l «*•
p, Irilit X. PrMlMIs Bs.J ,
A. BAI.nWIX.Pm. n. ».*.«
UHL HOUR. Pm. X Vl»»*k
Grand : Monthly : Drawing
111 the Academy of Music, New Orleans,
Tuesday, August 7, 1888,
CAPITAL PRIZE, $300,00 .
100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars each
Halves f 10: Quarters $5; Tenths 62; Twen¬
tieths fl.
LIST or PRIZES.
1 Pbizecf *800,000is ..... ..... $300,000 100,000
1 Prize ot 100,000 is ..........
1 Prize or SO,000 is.......... 50,000
1 Prize of 25,000 is.......... 25,000
2 Prizes of 10.000 are......... 20,060
5 Prizes of 5,000 a re ......... 25,000
25 Prizes of 1,000 are ......... 25,000
TOO Prizes of 500 are......... 50,00o
•AjO Prizes of 300 are......... CO,C00
500 Prizes of 200 are ......... 100,0CO
approximation prizes.
100 Prizes of f500 are............... 50,000
100 do. 300 arc............... 30,000
100 do. 200 are............... 20,00
terminal prizes.
90S do. IOO are............... !)0,!*00
909 do. 100 are............... 99,009
3,134 Prizes of amounting to......$1,054,806
Note..—T ickets drawing Capital Prizes
are not entitled to terminal Prizes.
KorClub Rrates, or any further inforina
tion apply to the undersigned. Your hand¬
writing must be distinct and Signature plain
More rapid return mail delivery will be as-
gurred by euclosiug and Envelope bearing
your fall address.
Send POSTAL NOTES, Express Money
Orders, or New York Exchange in Ordinary
letter. Cuxrcncyby Express (at our expense)
addressed to DAUPHIN,
M. A.
New Orleans La
or M.fA. DAUPHIN, Washington,D.C.
Address Registered Letters tc
KEYS’ OBLKAKI KATOKAX BAKU
New Orleans, La.
REMEMBER ZSZSf.
unit Early, who are iu absolute chargu fairness of the
drawings, is a guaantee of
and integrity, that the chances are all equa',
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 -ire 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.
Walter T. Miller, 1 | Mortgage, Ac.
versus ]■ February Terra, 1888.
surviving AdolplinsIC.Schaefer, partner of I Superior Spalding Court County of
A. C. Schaefer & 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
died and Seventy-two A. C. Schaefer <fc Co.,
a Y. firm Barker, composed made and of A. delivered C. Schaefer and Geo
to said Wal¬
ter T. Miller a certain mortgage in which
the sum of Six Thousand Dollars was ac
knowledged to be aue 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 the following described
property, tow it: That tractor parcel of land
lying or being in the 3d District of originally
Monroe, then Pike, now Spalding County,
and known and distinguished in the plan ot
said district its Nos. Forty-Beven (47), Seven
ty-nine (79), Seventy-eight (78), and Fifty-
Two one (51), each containing Tw o Hundred and
and One-half (202%) acres; also, Seven-
No. five (75) acres in the northwest corner of lot
Seventy-seven (77); also, Fifty (50)
acres in southeast part of lot No. Forty eight
(48), all in game district, containing in th
aggregate Nine Hundred and Tbirty-fiv
(935) acres, more or less, in the entire trac
bounded north by land then known as Jn
G. Lindsay’s land and others, east by la
then known a3 land of Dr. Pritchard a
oth ers, south by Buck Creek, and west
ian d of Squire Massett and others, oe
premises conveyed by Philip E. McDaniel
said defendants February 4th, 1868. as descr j
ed in foregoing petition; conditioned that
said firm of A. C. Schaefer & Co. (of wine
A. C. Schaefer is now surving partne
should 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.
And it further appearing that said debt re
mains unpaid; It is therefore Ordered, that
said A. C. Schaefer, surviving partner as
aforesaid, the pay into this Court by the first
day of next term thereof, the principal,
interest and cost due on said Mortgage, or
show ( nusc to the contrary, if there be 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 foreciosed. premises be forever thereafter barred
ana
And it is further Ordered, That this Rule
be published in the Griffin News once a
month for four mouths, or a copy there
of served on the said A. C. Schaefer, surviv¬
ing partner as aforesaid, or his special agent
or attorney, at least three months before the
next term of this Court,
By the Court, February 8th, 1888
JAMES a BOYNTON,
Hall A Hammond, Petitioners Judge 8. C. F. U
I, W M. Thomas, Attorneys.
Courtof Clerk of the Superior
by certify Spalding the County, Georgia, do here¬
above to be a true extract
from the minutes of said Court at February
term, 1888. W. M. Thomas,
fehftoamtm Clerks. C. S
« ANNOUNCEMENT.”
THE CAMPAIGN
IS NOW OPEN!
THE GRIFFIN NEWS
Is in the fight, and should be read by every
TR ITE DEMO CPA T!
who desires to keep posted on tire- points of tlie greatest political struggle ever known io
this republic, in which n i alone p ij .supremacy is involved, but in the language of the
President “We struggle to seeu-e and -ave cherished im litntions, the welfare and happi¬
ness of a nation of free men.'’
The main battle grounds of this confiiet w ill be New Y’ork and Indiana; and the New*
has made special arrangements to present from lime to time the progress of the campaign
in the Empire State of the North, a? viewed from the most absolutely trustworthy Demo-
ratic standpoint, and will also have special service from Indiana, Appropriate and point
ed political cartoons will appear from time to time.
Ia State affairs r- •: politic? of 8; aiding and surrounding counties, the people will be
kept fully posted editorial utterances and by special correspondents, being better
prepared to do th:.- loan any other paper in this section. The News is the official organ o
the State in this county, gf the county itself and of the city of Griffin, and enjoys the fulles
confidence of the party and it- leaders.
With all this s recognizes that there i ; something besides politics even inapo
litical year, and bright and newsy as ever. Renewed attention will be paid to
attracting imir.i i. co-operation with the great Democratic newspaper of the Me¬
tropolis, the New 1 .. ar. The most eminent of Soutiiern statesmen will be invited to
discuss the po’.ti.- a. aspects of the South; iis most successful business men to portray it
industrial venditions nnd (b mauds. In this, the News should receive the substantial &
and eceourageiner.' f cv: : y citizen of this section.
The farming dtp. t ment w ill appear regularly as at present and illustrated each week.
Illustrated novelettes v I! also continue to be an interesting feature.
The price of the New- ; . c-s it within the reach of the humblest voter, while ite charac¬
ter is equal to that of papers three times the price. The Daily News will be sent from
now until January 1st next for #2.50, from August 1st »o January 1st for #2.10, from Septem
ber 1st to January 1st for #1.70, and from October 1st to January 1st for $1.25.
Tbe Weekly News will be sent one year for 50 cents, six months for 25 cents. Call *
the office, or subscribe through your postmaster or any of our many correspondents
through Judge Till. Allen, our Pike County Editor, or through
DOUGLAS GLESSNER, Publisher,
Griffin, Gi.
GET YOUR NEIGHBOR TO SUBSCRIBE.
New Advertisements
Regular & Perfect
DIGESTION
ROMOTED ET CSE OF
_ seltzer . Tarrant’*
Aperient.
Sold by Tarrant • Co.. N.Y.,
and Eruaglsta every wbar*.
$100 spiuv to W $200 tP£ W made A ^ working NT>r can for
Agents preferred who furnish us,
can their own
horses and give theif whole time to the bust-
ness. Spare moments may be profitably em-
ployed Stoif, also. A few vocaneies in towns and
* «*- ** 31 "
E MEDICINE I
_ FEMALE
toe By pfvlng tone to fcnd 8tren*tbenlnir lii*
System and bulldlm? un th*
IXDIAIV WJ3TCIT w
corrects »tl IrrcgaterliSe* an! on- oylnz 'r--<’-
from which dehliltsfed s-omanv ladle- snfler. it ■d*-.’ ,
wc:/t, woman hcnltti *-■>! st f ri!
mnkt-s cheerful the desj ihaulu l* ' rl M ,
spirit-- In Chanae of liieii.»lad% CnfaJii.y. .
out INDIAN WEED. It is S'feanJ .
Ask your Dra^jis;.
E. R. Authony, Griffin, acd M. F, Swi»t ,
Ocharel Hill, Ga.