The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, August 25, 1888, Image 3

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rheum»tl»m ana bolls for kinds about two SaViirw w» gave her various of m«dl- ”, 5irl aha Is now a hale, old. hearty Another and healthy twelve years child has im hist become amloted In the same way, and I using the 8.8. S. and anticipate a prompt ind ptrmaaeat cure. K. C. Wseoo.v*». IUch Hnx, Mo., July Oa—Gentlemen: 7, 1888—The Swift gtieclflc Co- Atlanta, Our Httle girl when but three weeks old broke out with ecsetna. Wo tried the prescriptions Inecial from several benefit. good We doctors, tried S. but B. 8- without and by any tho time one bottle was gone her head began to s M i and by the time she had taken six bottles she was completely cured. Now gho h»j a full slid heavy head of hair—a robust, hearty child. I feol It but my duty to make this statement. Kcspectfully, H. T. Shobe. (burrsXQoa-i, Specliio Co- Trkh., Atlanta, June G*.—Gentlemen 77. 1888—The Btelft "I peon : linmedlately iilUg Ul^cni! A after new taking nw'tntivt It w 1^commenced hj sj. o, o,, «uu to afterwards, 0 remained trouble. said soon My nothing blood te thor¬ to tell of my and now oughly and cleansed, iny system free Rom tilut, J owe my present condition—a cheerfully [(ve perfect cure—to your medlolne. I th's statement that others who hare • .acred as I have may Burt, reap the same benefit. Hakdi if. It WeetHinthSt. , Homes, La- May Ga.—Gentlemen 25, 1889—The Swift gpeclfio Co- Atlanta, general health i About two veurs i .rely. ago I my debilitated that gave I Way almost en- was so despaired physicians of over feeling done welt again. All that permanent the relief. Friends for Insisted me brought that no | 6Jioul<l g' .’O would S. 8. be 8. a fair trial, although I thought taking It thorough throwing away money, health after strength a course, my and 8. 8. alone returned, cured and I I must discarded say that 8, while me, as all others heartily using It. It; As a tonic I can most recommend for general debility, I! certainly is a specific. W. F. Bbidqks, J. P. Houkr, La.—I know Mr. W. F. Bridges, and v Ulray that his statement Is correct. Joaui'H 8 b*ltoh, Druggist. Treatise on Blood nud Skin Diseases mailed 1 , e thk Swurr Brucwio Co- Drawer *» Atlanta, Ga. . - •- , Oicinrry’s Advertisements. V . Kill': Oeobgia, \RY’S OFFICE, Sp addins Coun- > ii, administratrix May 26th, 1888.—Mrs. Katie Martha Darnall, letters of Darnall, lias applied to me for of Dis¬ mission on the ostate of Katie Darnall, late of aid eourdy, dccascd. hi t ail persons concernrd show cause be fun the Court Griffin, of Ordinary of first said Monday county st nr, office in on the in hroi in her, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. mwhy am li h-t'ers should not be granted, itii,If, E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. /AKDINABY’S U OFFICE, Spalding Coon it, Geoboia, May tilth, 1888,—Mrs. Martha A. Darnall, executrix of Thos. M, Darnall, has applied to me for letters of dis mission from the executor /ship of said estate. I.et all persons concerned show cause be¬ fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in September, should 1888, by ten o’clock, granted. a. in., why a ;h letters not bo *6.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary, ( YROINARY’S OFFICE. -Spalding Cou.v- V^p tv, Geokgia, Angus' 3, 1888.—Mrs. Lei la It. Lamar, Guardian of Arch M.and James Nall makes application to me for leave to sell one undivide 1 half interest in house and lot belonging to her wards for distribu¬ tion. Let all persons coueer-d show canse be- tore tlie court of Ordiunry at my office in Griffin on the first Monday such in September application by ten o’elork a. ni., why should not he E. granted. W. HAMMOND,Ordinary. *3.00. Executors’ Sale. GEORGIA- Spalding County. By virtue of an order granted us by the Court of Ordinary we highest will bidder, sell before at Griffin the Coin t house, to the Georgia; in said county, on the first Tues¬ day of September next, between the legal hours of sale, eighteen and three quarters (18%) shares of the capital stock of the Sa¬ vannah, Griffin and North Alabama Railroad Company. Sale for distribution among 6th, 1888. leg¬ atees, Terms of sale cash. Aug. K. IV. BECK, J. II. MITCHELL. f.'Vtfl Executors W. D. Alexander. GRIFFIN LIGHT AND WATER CO. Application For Charter. GEORGIA— Spalding County. To the Superior Coart of said County: The petition of VV, J. Kincaid, 8. Grantland, Jas. St. Brawncr, A. Randall arid others of said State and County, their successors and as signs, shows that they have entered into an i ssociation under the name and style of “Oriffin Light and Water Company”: that the object of said association is to erect and operate Electric light and power works, Gas Works and Water works, all or any part thereof, in the City of Griffin, Georgia, and vicinity and conduct other business thereto appertaining as they may see proper, with power to purchase and hold property, real and personal, to sue and b# sued, and to exer vise all powers usually conferred on corpora- tiongof similar character, as may bo consis¬ tent with the laws of Georgia. Said company is to have its place of business in said Boun¬ ty. The capital stock of said company shall be 125,000, wiih privilege of increasing to *50,000, in shares of one hundred dollars each, to ho called in as may be determined on by the directors, provided, that said company shall not commence business until at least Said ten per cent, of the capital stock is paid not less in. company shall have a board of than three, nor more than five directors, who shall elect from their number a President and each other officers as they may think best. Said board of directors shall continue in office until their successors are elected. Yonr petitioners pray the passing of an or¬ derby said Honorable Court granting this their application and that they and their suo- ecssorsbe incorporated for and during the term of noV exceeding twenty years, with privilege of renewal at the expiration of said twenty set years, for the purposes hereinbefore forth. And your petitioners will ever Pray, Ac. BECK & CLEVELAND, I Petitioners Att’ys. tract certify from that the foregoing is a Superior true ex¬ Court Aug. the 21st, minutes 1888. of Spalding Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk. feverish, CHILDRENinlRRITABlE, eating sometimes craving food and r»- •eitiessly "? us y ’ . a ^ 2tin refusing wholesome diet, tossing lifoV? 1 m in sleep,moaning know Worms and grinding sapping the at teeth, their . ay are and stock’. finally death^iU YemlMge'never ill ®^ follow. flLSUres B. arc A. ten, toll?h « spasms spasrr and see for yourself, it has stood the test FARM AND GARDEN. IMPROVED MODES OF AGRICULT¬ URE PRACTICED BY FARMERS. liow to Build a Poultry House and Give the Largest Amount of Ground Room, That Shall He Cool In Summer and Warm In Winter. In building a poultry house a loading consideration with the average farmer is economy. It is claimed that the choapest way to build a poultry liouso and give tho largest amount of grouud room (which is what counts with poultry) is to make but one roof and have that meet the ground. In accordance with this idea II. II. Stoddard illustrates and describes in his work on poultry architecture a poul¬ try house for tho farmer. In tlio cut given the building, nine feet wido at tho underpinning and nine feet high at the highest part, gives as much Boor room for the fowls to move about in as if the walls were high on all sides of tlio structure, and with great economy in building materials. Sj \ J Z I.-' »—/£'/ mm ■m POULTIlY HOUSE FOR T1IE FARMER. Tlicrc should bo twelve doors in the the building, windows beside the small opening under for the use of the fowls, and the ventilator (represented open) near tho each peak. There are three hoard doors in end, the tallest being for an attend¬ ant to enter and tho other two for ventila¬ tion in extremely hot weather. Tho door ways of the board doors aro furnished with another set of doors made of lath One of these may be seen In the cut, where a board door is open. When the board and the doors lath are doors all opened shut, in there hot weather Is a tine circulation of air. It may seem as if there were an overplentiful tried allowance of doors, but wo have as many to a building with satisfaction. To make tho house as warm in winter os it Is cool in summer, keep all the board doors closed but one, and liavo a package of straw between each lath door and tho corresponding board door, excepting, of course, tho full¬ est ters. pair of .^oors where tho attendant en¬ Solution of the Gapes Difficulty. A Now Hampshire correspondent in Poultry World says: For the past five years we have been entirely exempt frqm it. I saw it stated in an English journal that the gapeworm sprang from tho louse that infests the heads of chickens the hen first ten entirely days after hatching; flee and while if the was free from sit¬ ting, tho chicks would not have the gape- worm. Since that time we have made sure that lice were exterminated from all sitting hens and their nests, and the gape- worm has given us no more trouble. So far as can be judged from what has fallen under my observation, tho above is the real solution of tho gapo difficulty. I never saw gapes among chicks hatched in an incubator. Tho chicks get the lice from the hen, and the hen can, by the proper treatment ’>e made as free from lice as an iucul -** • When the hen is first given tho clutch of eggs, dust Dal¬ matian insect powder among her feathers, and repeat the operation a few days be¬ fore tho eggs hatch, and the lice will be disposed of. Tobacco dust is also a sure and cheap destruction for lice, but not quite as suitable for the incubating hen as Dalmatian nowder. Home Made Fertilizers. From the Connecticut Experiment the sta¬ tion has been received a report of re¬ sults of 887 samples of home made ferti lizers analyzed, together analyses. with The conclusions valuation drawn from these per ton set on these homo made fertilizers runs ali the way from *41.23 to $26.53; the cost of tho chemicals (unmLxed) of from $37.38 to $28 pj:r ton. the Examina¬ table of tions of the samples and of analyses make it seem that: First—That tjvese home mixtures com¬ pare favorably in composition with tho best commercial fertilizers. In all cases but one the valuation is higher than the average valuation of factory made super¬ phosphates Second—While or specials analyzed last year. the home mixtures are not as finely ground as the best factory made fertilizers, they aro yet satisfactory in this respect. Third—In only one case does cost of materials exceed valuation. If wo add $3 per ton for cost of mixing tho the valuation and the cost will still bo about same. The cost of factory made fertilizers usually exceeds valuation 20 to 25 per cont. These analyses seem last to justify that tho Statement made in the report while it is oftener cheaper for the pur¬ chaser to buy the best commercial mix¬ tures, ammoniated superphosphates and special manures, than to buy tho chem¬ icals and mix them, yet the experience of a yearly increasing number of farmers shows tliat often money may bo saved by the seasonable purchase of raw materials and their use in home mixtures. Hods for Catttc Feed. A careful consideration of tho II. subject in all its bearings by James T. Gregory, Marblehead, Mass., has decided this prac¬ tical cultivator that “beets for cattle food are well worth fully as many cents per bushel as good hay is worth dollars per ton, without taking into considera¬ tion tho increase of the manure, and that the average cost, when stored in the cel¬ lar or put into pits, with every item of expense included, need not exceed eight cents per bushel. A Profitable Cow. Professor E. W. Stewart says that if a cow only produces 3,000 pounds of milk per annum, she is kept at a loss. A good cow, well fed, will yield 6,000 pounds of good milk, and the cost of producing than this will be only one-eighth the more the 8,000 pounds from poor cow. Without selection dairymen of cannot cows, and judicious any¬ feeding, receive thing worthy of their labor. A Cherry Experiment. In a cherry experiment, conducted by the Ohio Experiment station entomologist, Clarence M. Weed, 23,500 cherries were individually cut open and examined, and the conclusion reached that three-fourth3 of the cherries liable to injury by the cur- culio can be saved without danger to tho user by spraying with a solution of Lou¬ don ♦ ;rple soon after the blossoms fall. SMUTS AFFECTING WHEAT. Remedies That Hare- Proven Successful 111 Various Section*. wheat Large losses through recur tho annually to tho of crop The disease injurious agency smuts. variously termed hard smut, bunt; smut boils, etc., causes not only a largo percentage of loss in grain, but reduces tho value of what is grown odor, which by imparting has given to the crop a fetid rise to the name wheat “stinking smut" in some localities. While is growing it is difficult to distin¬ guish kernel hard smut, as it is in the young of the wheat, which is hidden by tho chaff, that the characteristic black have spores aro produced. When hard wheat grains been destroyed by smut they present an unusual external appearance; they aro shorter and more swollen than are ish drab healthy seeds and are of a dull green¬ color and are frequently cracked. Smut, or, as it is generally "from called, “loose smut,” to distinguish it bunt or hard smut, is not only injurious to wheat, but to barley, aud especially to oats. As with bunt,so with loose smut,the dis¬ cs: i begins at tho bottom and works up¬ ward. This smut is not restricted, like bunt, to tho seeds alone, but the whole ear is destroyed. Tije above facts, presented by Professor Fletcher in a bulletin issued from tho ex¬ perimental farm at Ottawa, Canada, havo little practical bearing, unless one can draw from them something which may suggest where to look for a remedy. This they do, explains tho authority quoted from. Everything points to tho infection coming from the ground and traveling upward. Remedies which havo been most suc¬ cessful aro those in which methods have been adopted to destroy tho spores adher¬ ing to the seed wheat previous to sowing by washing or steeping the grain In some weak poisonous solution. A common remedy and one a:Jvised by Professor Fletcher, Director Scovell, of others tho Kentucky Experiment station, and is a solution of sulphate of copper, also called bluestono or bluo vitriol. Some advise merely wetting tho seed. Others say to soak the grain. An English author¬ ity advises: “One pound of bluestono dis¬ solved in five quarts of boiling water is sufficient for a sack of four imperial bush¬ els. Tho wheat is soaked for teu minutes, or the ten pints of solution may be poured over till ail is absorbed.” -A Manitoba farmer says the following has proven suc¬ cessful in his district: “One pound of sul¬ phate of copper is dissolved in a pailful of hot water, which is then sprinkled by one person over ten bushels of wheat placed in a wagon box, while someone else keeps tho grain well stirred. Should a large amount of smut bo detected in grain re¬ quired for' seed tlie solution is made being stronger, double the quantity of bluestono used.” The chief advantage claimed for this method is that in a few hours the grain drill. is sufficiently dry to sow with the Mr. Plumb, while at the New York Ex¬ perimental sulphate station, used four ounces of of copper in one gallon of water, and reports that “seeds soaked seventeen and a half hours in this solution were fonnd to produco a slight amount of smut. Soaked forty hours all germs of tho fungus were killed.” It ought to bo told that his experiments were with oats, in which, from the fact that the seed is contained inside a comparatively loose husk, there is much more difficulty in re¬ moving than or the destroying all tlie smut pores is case with the smooth aud naked grain of wheat. applying At tho Kentucky tlio station the method of solution of blue vitriol was as follows: Ten pounds of blue vitriol were disolved in eight gallons of water and the solution placed in a tub. Tho seed wheat was put into tlio solution and well stirred, caro being taken not to put enough wheat in to come to the top of the solution. After skimming off floating wheat and particles the solution was poured drained off and into spread a second boards tub, tlio wheat on to dry. Tho solution was re-used as often as we had wheat to treat in this manner. This treat¬ ment proved entirely successful Convenient Milk Fails. Fig. and 1 illustrates hold¬ a device for fas¬ tening ing in position a pail calf from which drink. a is to Three stout sticks aro driven into the tho ground, is placed and inside pail there. Sim- -_____ 333 pie simplicity enough, and s=3 yet virtue of is a 1.—deyick many fig. fou successful dc- fastening a fail. vices. Fig. 2 shows a milk pail cover that has been used successfully by a corres- spondent of Rural New Yorker, from . which journal tho above was taken. \\ The object of tho cover is to ■' keep the dirt from falling into the pail while tho cow is being milked. A largo piece of cardboard is cut to 2.—MILK 1’AII. tho tho skapo shown This FIG. j n Cut. coveil piece is large enough to lap one inch over tho edge of the pail; the dotted line shows where the edge of the pail comes Li! tie ear holes are cut in the sides of ti e cover to fit around the handles. A piece live inches wide and three inches deep is cut out in front to milk through. Tho milker puts the cover on the pail and milks into the pail through this largo opening. Wliat Others Say. The Dairyman, opposing tho popular clamor for small cheeses, reminds its readers that tho smaller the cheese the larger tho percentage of rind and waste. A southern cultivator says tho most salable sweet potato is one that is short and thick, and it is and to produce flat hill these ridges, that you plow shallow make so that as the potatoes grow checked they will in reach the hard soil and do their downward growth and will develop thickness An English correspondent says: “Bran will pay the milk seller, but oats the but¬ ter maker. ” An exchange says Swede turnips, if fed whole and separately, will flavor milk, but if sliced and mixed with pulped an equal aud quantity of mangolds, or impart bad mixed with hay, will not a taste. A veteran fruit grower sav3 tliat the method of catching the cnrculio in plum trees by jarring the little pests down on a white sheet is a remedy better than all of the many others ever tested. The salary of tho commissioner $5,000 of agri- culture is raised from $4,000 to a year. * LEGEND. A lore 1/ woman In an eastern ianj Ooeeawayed burdens a kingdom wttb ber stendet band; liar heavy grew and weighed her down. Upon ber lire* there pressed a jeweled crown Too cm* ' <a» tor lu lender resting place. The if ' eleht adorned a weary face; Slier l time grown tired of tny power. It * -I more unbearable each hour. •'ta-i r-ae one come that l may crow n Mm ung; iVliaii, in» lumd be must a guei Jer • That shaft by far my bom. 'Iiww u , .•coil So iiavtng It. I ll feel oo otnci Her wish won fcnotvn, and lo' from lai aud near There thronged around hot port, priiioe and peer, With offerings of dazzling beauty wrought In wondrous shapes and with deep meanings fraught They laid their gifts down humbly ai r--i tort Sho sighed “Alas! I find them Incompictu. Within these sparking stones do solace ties; l dream oi wealth revealed in human oyea.” Morn after morn a suppliant went away Until there came unto her throne one day A man «ith empty bands, yet noble face And form of matchless mold and peerless grace. The qt'ecti lookud up and asked “What gift hast thou To tender for tho crown upon my brow t" Ho gazed within ber eyes and naught replied 6ho crown cl him. saying: “l am satisfied." -New O rleans Picayune. _ The Uaaeless Fabric of Dreams. When a lady begins to dream dreams and *ee visions, look wit for her, for there is no knowing what she will do. I know a young lady who is troubled with a husband and a year-old baby, with curly,-golden hair. The other night 61 m had a dream. She dreamt that she was dressing before tho looking glass in the hack parlor. Looking into the front >arlor through the folding doors she bo- icld her husband in much too earnest conversation with two young ladies. One of the young ladies seemed greatly In¬ terested in what he was saying and their chairs gradually drew closer and closer together till it came to pass tliat the watcher on the other side of the folding doors observed her husband’s arm steal round the waist of the young lady. This was more than the indignant wif* could stand, and she crept quietly behind the preoccupied couple and aimed a slap at the girl which would probably have lifted her head from her shoulders. So powerful whole was it that it knocked the scene completely out The dreamer awoke, and so did her husband, and likewise the baby. The gas was turned up and revealed a very surprised looking group. The baby was tho most surprised of all. The slap Intended for the dreamer’s rival had alighted full on tho curly, golden head of her eon.— Brooklyn Eagle. Russian Taste in Color*. While our steamer was lying at the landing at Kazan I noted a chocolate brown houso with yellow window shut¬ ters and a green roof; a‘ lavender bouse with a shining tin roof; a crimson house with an emerald roof; a sky bluo house with a red roof; an orange houso with an olive roof; a house painted a bright metallic green all over; a house diversified with dark blue, light blue, red green and chocolate brown; and, finally, a most extraordinary building which dis¬ played the the whole of threo chromatic stories and scale within attic. compass an What permanent effect, if any, is pro¬ duced upon tho optic nervC3 of the in¬ habitants by the habitual contemplation of their brilliantly colored and sharply contrasted dwellings I am unable to say; but I no longer wonder that “prekrasni/ tho Russian word for “beautiful,” means literally “very red.’’ —George Ker.uan in Tlio G. ->tury. The past fifty-four years Great Britain has trebled her wealth. France lias nearly quadrupled hers, wkilo the United State* since 1850 has multiplied in riches six¬ fold. ______ The human heart has to do as much WQik in twenty-four hours as a machine would to lift 123 tons of iron. Paper treated with a mixture of cam¬ phor oil and linseed oil becomes water¬ proof. New Advertisements. r; UUINO 11MQ REVOLVERS, tend stamp for price list to JOHNSTON & SON, Pittsburgh, Penn. ARE YOU, has cure? many oi Uio * «>j stdiM.-* ami iathe bet-tmnedj for all affections ‘‘f too throat and luncfa, and dine&wa arising from imwire ‘.ioo-l and exlumstion. The feeble and sick, stfu^vriintr sv^mtst disease, and slowly drifting: to the grave, v> ill ■ » .my <vu ne» recover thedr health by the timely usa of latl.-us Ginger Tonic, but delay U dan¬ gerous. Take it in time. It is invaluable for oil r»un» and Uidurdera of stomach and bowels. 50c. of jJruggi*U. EXHAUSTED VITALITY M'HE SCIENCE OF LIFE, the f i.-reat Medical Work of the asa on Manhood, Xervoua and! Physical Debit tty, Premature 1 Decline, Errors of Youth, and the untold miseries consequent thereon, 300 pages 8vo, 125 prescriptions for all diseases.. by* Cloth, full gilt, onlj- $1.05, mall, sealed. Illustrative sample free Pi allyoung end middle aged men. Send now. The Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the Na¬ tional Medical Association. Address P. O. box l‘K, Boston, Mass., or Dr. W. H. PaKKEE, grad¬ uate of Harvard Medical College, 25 y ears' practice lu Boston, who may be consulted conOdiBitlaUy. SDeclalty.DI.-ca. es of Man. OfficeNo.4Bulfinch*L PARK for Cou/rhJi Weak Lunirs, Asthma, liwit- i i ;uns, l.xhau*t»un. ComWningrthe U rkr medicii.tn* * ith JamariatiinK^r. rxcrUi a CtJ c di-vtu.-o unknown t ewiifeand Uuoox strength to the N. coc Y. A Co., l«vS v.'Uiunn Street, PARKER'S HAIR BAUSAM an»*i and beantlflea the hair. Promotes a luxuriant growth. Gray N«ver Fait* to Rottoro Hair to »t§ Youthful Color. CuzvsscaJp uisufuwsAndhalr falling yv\ at PmggiFta. NINDERCORNS. st op* ai r t o cur*. TO CLASTS BUSINESS COLLEGE ! ERIE, PA., r A. f° r vineotars. Tb« best schoo, in America. Fall term begins K,' An.;. I"). MentionIhkjr;** FOR OLD PEOPLE I In old the people the narrow medical system write* fa weakened, utd that most be sirmgtheaed. One of mote prominent cl the d*y, in spanking of tbepren- lence of rheumatic troubles uneng the »ged, “The various pains, rheumatic or other, which old people often complain of, znd which materialtodtahirb their comfort, result from disordered nerves.' ’ There His in a nil* shell —the medicine lor old people anal be a nem tonic. Old people ore beset with constipation, Ada- iaacy, drowsiness, diarrhoea, indigestion, then mstum, origin. neuralgia. Paine’s These Ctlerj diseases Compound, are of nervous find great nerve tonic, is almost a specific in these disorders, and by its regulating influence on the liver, bowels, and kidneys, removes the disorders peculiar to old age. Old people find it stimulating to the vital powers, productive of appetite, sod a promoter of digestion. Sold by dniggiiu. $i oo. Six for $5 00 . Send for right pag* paper, with many SaKfaaoaiais from ■>enroll*, d-iriliut«d, aud aged propl*. who blew P«,o*'» CeUry Com pound. WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Burlington, Vt. WHIPS, WAGONS, BUGGIES ANI) MADNESS’ X- Studebaker Wagon i White Hickory Wagon I Jackson G. Smith Wagon I Jackson G. Smith Buggy I And the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. Repairs Oft old Buggies a Specialty. W. II. SPENCE, augasdAwCro Uor. Uill A Taylor 6treats, GRIFFIN, GA’ Shipment Finest Teas, CRACKERS, ALL SORTS, 15c. lb. HAMS. BONELESS SHOULDERS, ETC. FINEST FLOUR ON THE MARKET. BIG MONEY I I VK>0 AriE> ' TS wante,)at N CLEVELAND AND THURMAN By By Hon. Hon. W. W. U. U. Hsnlol; Hsnlbl; also, also, Ltfe Lite of of Mbs. Mbs. Cl*t»land; C exquisite steel portraits. Voter Cartridge ~ Box, ~ Reform Tradn Policy, Ac., complete. con AoKirrf*report • immense success. For work, apply quick and make $200 to $500 ----» m. ... vvvvrtet • iPROML best Philadelphia, Pliiladelph Pa. NO MORE EYE-GLASSES Mo re MITCHELL’S EYE-SALVE A Certain, Safe and Effective Remedy for Sore, Weak and Inflamed Eyes Pr*d*cl*r !>•■* th« “ •Ig'fetadael*. Right ef and Bedarlag Old. u the Cures Tear rops. Granulation, Ere Lash Sire, Tumors, Red Eyes. Matted ES AND PRODUCING PKRMANENTCURE QUICK RE- LIEF AND Also, equally efficacious when usedinoth er maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever Sores, Tu mors, Balt Rheum, Burns. Pile*, or wherever inflammation exist*, MITCHELL’8 SALVE may Id he used to advantage, 25cente. o bv all Druggists at A GREAT YEAR lu the history of the United SUM; is now upon us. Every person of IntelUgenca desire* to keep pare with the course of its event*. There 1* no letter w*y to do so than to *ubecrlbe for The Macon Telegraph. It* news faetlltie* are unsurpamd fullest by any Assoc!- paper in the South. In addition to the ington will be the most Important and moat in¬ teresting new* centre In the country. The Washington Correspondence of the Tb.egx*ph U ° reKnl^r correspondent fhntbbe* the latest Us in lull dispatches. Frequent fWWB and letters gossip from Hon. Amo* J. Cummings, Special member of Congre** trom Vex York, Prank O. Carpenter, and W. A. Croffat, three of the best known newspaper writers at the issue* capital, of dis¬ the cus* the lirest and most Important d Ii'ie t» Democratic Tariff Reform Telegraph It thoroughly a la line wtlt the policy pat,, r. is CMveloiid and the DemocraUc of I ■•■sklent national campaign Ui* p*rt> lu the comtn* on!/ five all the but Telegraph will not fa«thastMd- new*, will discus* *11 public km Subscribe poiut of genuine Democratic faith. •a once. Waily, one year, • • • • • W7 OO ©ally, six months, .... 4 OO Daily, three month*, . • • • * OO Daily, one month, .... .TS Weekly, one year,..... 1 00 Term*: Cash in advance. AdJree* THE TELEGRAPH. i. Qtomn. ENGINES, Gins, Feelers i Condensers. ALL FIRST CLASS, AND A NO. 1 1 Price end Quality Guaranteed. Also, the c clebrated THOMAS HARROW, both in Wood and Iron X3T A few Buggies on hand will be sold cheap. G. A. CUNNINGHAM. ..ms i r as. gEsgresa ggtfs G. A. ( UMEiGIUM, GRIFFIN,: : : GEORGIA, Has Been Appointed Land Agent let Spalding County, by the Georgia Bureau of ImmiginttoB, and all parties having land for sale can expadite the hands. sale by placing their property in bia Full particulars in regard to the most uable lands in this county can be obt&i Iqy bonses addressing lands him and as lots above. af all descrtptl A full 11 and IMAN WANTS M UTTLE Here below, but he Wants that little mighty quick. A or a big one is promptly filled by ad¬ vertising in*the 30 aily i or) Weekly^NEWS, ADVERTISERS :an learn the exact co. of an) proposed Hne advertising in America! papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., New»p»)„ r Adwartiainf, Bureau, IO S).i««De 3t., New Yark. Hesul lO&t, 10 - 100 -rtaa* iMili, MACON, GEORGIA. --Jo t - Jr Y 7 IFTY.FIFTH ANNUAL SESSION opts* September 26th and close* June SfSth. Elegantly furnished class rooms and neat, new cottages for stadents. Centrally located. Good board at Me rates. For catalogues and other information Battle, ap¬ ply Ju)yl2w4 to rev. j. a. President ~ - Afl&Y HiLLS f