The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, August 28, 1888, Image 3

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Si £? rar »I bottle* the hate, diseases all disappeared, fill twelve she is now yeara % old. hearty Another and child healthy has ' fiat im become the afflicted 4 8. S. and la the anticipate same way, a prompt and I Jnd using permanent cure. K. C. WaoooHsat. S’S' when but three weeks fouJ little " girl old broke u t with eczema. We tried t he prescriptions tlmo one and bottle hy the was time gone she her had head taken began six to heal, «ho was completely cured. Now aha bottles his full and fceuvy head ot hair—a robust, a Child. I feel It but duty hearty lay to make pda statement, llespectfully, H. T. Shobk. C*attaxoo<h, Specfflo Co., Tkxji., Atlanta, June Ga__Gentlemen 17, ISM—The girlft I contracted blood poison, and : is is»r, physician, who at once ■ sought a By his treated me for sev¬ er*! months. advice I went to Ciab orchard Springs.^K^t,^where his.courte of illn* '’hese gradually'increased I was advised to to try sorea & 8. and S., run- and Immediately ulcers. after taking it I slowly first, but commenced to improvo, at more rapidly afterwords, and soon nothing remained to toll of my cleansed, trouble. and My blood is now thor¬ oughly I my system free from taint, and owe my present condition—a five sorfect cure—to your medicine. I cheerfully this statement that others who have • ittv: e 1 os I have may reap the same benefit. Mabdy M. Bust, 24 West Ninth St. , BoMKB, La., May Ga.—Gentlemen 2S, 1888—The Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, general health : About two years aso my debilitated gave way cn- iirely. I was so that I almost despaired of ever feeling well again. All that the physicians done for me brought no permanent relief. Friends Insisted that I thoalil g’vo S. S. S. a fair trial, although I thought It would be throwing away money. Alter -----.. taking ...---thorough a thorough course, course, my my health health and strength alone returned, cured and I I must say that S. a S. while me, as discarded all heartily others using It. it; As a tonic I can most j; recommend for general debility, certainly Is a specific. W. r. Bhicoes, j. P. JTojieb. I.a—I know Mr. W. F. Bridges, and rill my 1 at his statement is correct. JOSEI'U Sheltob. Druggist. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed I .ve. The Switt Sr ::civic Co., Drawer S. /ktiftlltUs 03* _ _ —____ r Groin: ry's Advertisements. i \ uiv: IRY’S OFFICE, May 20th, Spaldins Coun- \ f ir, Geojioia, 1888.—Mrs. Martha V, Darnall, administratrix of Katie [hirnail, has applied to me foe letters of Dis¬ mission on the ostate of Katie Darnall, late of aid county, decased. i.et all persons concernrd show cause be f,.re the Court of Ordinary of said county » m;, office in Griffin, on the first Monday in Not tuber, should 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why so ,'i let'em not be granted, in,If. 1£. IV. HAMMOND, Ordinary. \J /V.IDINARY’S OFFICE. Spalding CotfS* Martha TT, A. GeobgiA, Darnall, May rii’.h, 1888,—Mrs. executrix of Thos. M. Darnall, has applied to me for letters of dis mission from the eiecutorship of said estate. Got all persons concerned show cause be¬ fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at my office in Griffin, on the iirst Monday in September, ach letters should 1888, by not ten bn o’clock, a. m., why "ranted. *6.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary, /ARDINARY’S OFFICE.- Sp adding Coun- V tv, Georgia, Aligns" 3, 1888. — Mrs. Lei la 11. beraar, Guardian of Arch M. and James Nall makes application to me for leave to sell one undivide ! half interest in house and lot belongii.o to her wards for distribu- tion. Let all persons coneered show canso be. fore the court of Ordinary at icy office in Griffin on the first Monday in September by ten o’elock a. anted. m. f why snob application should not be g) *2.00. E. IV. HAMMOND,Oidinary. Executors’ Sale. GEORGIA- Spalding County. By virtue of an order granted us by the Cjurt of Ordinaty we will sell before the Ccint house, to the highest bidder, at Griffin day Georgia; in said county, on the first the Tues¬ hours of of September sate, eighteen next, anil between throe legal (18%) capital stock of quarters Sa¬ shares of the the vannah, Gridin and North Alabama Railroad Company. Terms Sale of sale for distribution Aug. among (ith, 1888. leg- Rbi's. cash. E. W. BECK, J. II. MITCIIELL. m.(l) Lxecntors \V. Alexander. GRIFFIN LIGHT AND WATER CO. Application- For Charter. GEORGIA— Spalding County. To tho Superior Court of said County: The petitio M. 11 of \V, J. Kincaid, S. Grantland, Jas. said State Brawncr, and A. Randall and others and of Comity, their successors as signs, shows that they have entered into an twociation under the name and style of “Griffin 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 vicinity thereof, in the City of Griffin, Georgia, and and conduct other business thereto appertaining as they may see proper, with power to purchase aud hold property, real and personal, to sue and be sned, and to cxer rise all powers usually conferred on corpora¬ tions of similar character, as may be consis¬ tent with the laws of Georgia. Said company w to have its place of business in said coun¬ ty . The capital stock of said company shall he *25,000, wiih privilege of increasing to 150,000, to be in shares of one hundred dollars each, the called ip a» may be determined on by Mali directors, not provided, that said company least ten commence business until at 110 per cent, of the capital stock is paid loss in. Jr tnan company three, shall have a board of not nor more than live directors, who Shall elect from their number a President such other officers as they may think best, gaid board of directors shall continue ># office until their successors are elected. Jonr ,® r by petitioners said Honorable pray the Court passing granting of an this or- their application and that they and their sue Lessors be incorporated for and during the term of no) exceeding twenty years, with Privilege twenty of renewal at the expiration of said tel forth. years, for the purposes hereinbefore And your petitioners will ever prby.Jte. BECK A CLEVELAND, 1 . tlf Petitioners Att’ys. , ( : e ; y that the foregoing is a true ex- Jract t-OHrt. from Ang. the 21st, minutes 1888. of Spalding Saperior Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk. ___ ./HELDRENarelRRITABLE, sometimes craving food and eating i ra* ■ «£r*us rely, n^ain refusing wholesome diet, tossing jSiy in Steeo.m^'imno* 1 ecpoanui g nnA andgrindingtoeteetm nrv-inHintr th#» i.rl'A^ m . z y know Worms are sapping etaken, at their PEACE. Winds and wild waves in headlong hugs comma tion #cud, dark with tempest, o'er the Atlantic breast; while underneath, few fathoms deep in ocean, Ue peace and rest. Storms in mid air, tho rack heft re them sweep^w Hurry and hiss, like furies hate possessed; While over all white cloudlets pure are sleeping In peace and rest. Heart, O wild heart! why in the stt.-m wcfM raging FHfst thou thus midway, passion's slave and jest, ” hen all so near above, l>elow Are heaven and unchanging, rest? “C. YV. Willis in Youth's Coin par. low WAITING ON A BIRD. An Incident in the Life of Inventor Cor¬ liss—A Toucli of Humanity. The late Edward Corliss, of Providence, the inventor tuid manufacturer of the great Corliss engine, was a man who valued his business largely for the op¬ portunities which it brought him of doing thoroughly and unpretentiously humane acts. Very many stories are told at Providence of his generosity to people in hi-, employ, and especially of a way he had of coming to some employe or workman who looked ill or overworked, or who had complained of having a hard time, and saying to him,.“Now, look I sere: you are not looking well. You had better go off somewhere for a rest of a few weeks, and I will take care of your family while you arc gone.” And tho man was started off on a vacation of months, if months were needed, without any apprehension on his mind as to tho needs of his family. But other employers have done the same thing, no doubt, and the Listener would not have had occasion to note the matter if it had not been for the true storv of another generous deed of Mr, Corliss', lately told him from a most authentic source, which is so exceptional, and so quite idyllic, that it merits special relation. More than that—it merits such a setting of incident as the story telling genius of a Hawthorne or a Hale would give it; but as the Listener can give it no such setting, and as, moreover, he lias no right to do more than tell the tale just as it was told to him, he will narrate it in its simplest form: Mr. Corliss, not very long before his death, had occasion to build an addition to ’ his manufactory—a big “L,” for ad¬ ditional machinery. To prepaid the foundation for this L it was necessary to remove a ledge of rock by blasting. The men to do the work on the addition bad been employed and put on tho pay roll; the materials had been purchased and brought to the building, and the work of blasting had begun. The next morning Mr. Corliss passed by the place where work was proceeding, when the foreman in charge, knowing bis interest in pretty things, called him. “See here, Mr. Corliss, ” said he; “here is a bird’s nest that we’ve found, aud that’s got to go. ” He showed the manufacturer a robin sitting upon a nest that had been built, fast and snug, in a crevice of the rock, among some bushes that grew there. The bird flew off lier nest as the men came near, and showed five blue eggs, that looked as if they had just been laid. “Can we move that nest somewhere else?” asked Corliss. “I’m afraid not, sir. We’d tear it to pieces getting it out, and it isn’t at all likely that you could get the bird to go to sitting again anywhere else. We’ro got to go on, so we may as well rip it out and throw the eggs away. ’ ’ ‘■No,” said Corliss. “We won't dis¬ turb her. Let her bring out her brood right there.” “Put we’ll have to stop the work on tho building!” “Let us stop it then.” And so orders were given that opera¬ tions on the addition should bo suspended. They were suspended; and the hands stood still, drawing tlieir pay for doing nothing, or next to nothing, while the robin sat on her nest with her air of great consequence and zealous attention to business, and had her food brought her by her mate, and at last hatched her brood. And then there were three weeks more to go by, at the least, before the young ones could fly. Corliss visited tho nest frequently, not with any uneasiness or impatience to have the robin and the young ones out of the way, but with a genuine interest in their growth. The old birds bad all the time they wanted, and when at last they had sternly helped the clumsy, reluctant youngsters over the edge of the nest, and they showed them¬ selves to be able to get about on their own hook, orders were given to resume the building operations; and tho dull boom of the gunpowder, tearing live rocks apart, was heard where the birds had peeped. It was an idle freak, a practical man would say, of a man who may have had more money than ho knew what to do with. Perhaps it was a freak, but it was one of the sort of freaks that make the world better .—Boston Transcript “Lis¬ tener. - ’ The Potency of Facts. A fact is always a fact, whatever may be the consequences. The question is, whether it is true; the student should recognize uo other. Many of the facts encountered in our studies are obscure and hard to explain, but that does not prevent tlieir being facts; or, at least, the chief question should be to learn whether they are facts. Besides, contradictory 1 facts are the ferment of science. once asked a distinguished man of science how a certain discovery ho had made getting on. “It is not getting on,” he replied. “What is tho matter with it?” I anxiously asked. “Why,” he said, “I find no facts except those which are fa¬ vorable to it; and,” he added, “it takes contradictory facts to teach us.' ’ This is true. The theory will either explain the contradictory the' facts and be fortified by them, as Newtonian theory has been by all the exceptions that have been op¬ posed to it and which have entered into it; or it will be replaced by a vaster aud more comprehensive theory, Iu both cases there is a gain for science, which would not have been obtained if we had hesitated, on account of vain Bcruples, to seek out and verify the facta in ques- tiqn.—Paul Janet in Popular Science Monthly.__ ' Cats Vorsus Babbits. Cats are found to be the best extermi¬ nators of rabbits in New Zealand. They do great havoc among tho young ones, and in some sections scarcely a rabbit was to be seen. IN moonlight. The white moon Alls the silent sky And stirring at ber feet The white floods rise sad leap the shore- Bold lovers, rash and Beet But a swifter flood to tael her sway. And rush In a restless tide, Is the lore that leaps from my heart lu words For her whom I walk beside. The white moon slips from the rtleol sky. The sea slips from the shore, And back to my happy, silent heart Sweeps the flood of words once more But not till the waves have kissed the beach. And the moon lias kissed the sea. And not until, sweetheart, I too Have kissed—been kissed by thee -A. \V. It AUBREY'S GREAT RIDE. Itemarkable Journey on Hortebuck Across the Western Plains. Among the deeds of early life in the west the famous ride of F. X. Aubrey from the plaza of Santa Fe to the public square cal achievement of Independence, Mo., as a physi¬ stands without an equal. Indeed it is doubtful if the history of tho world can present a parallel to that great ride of 800 miles, through a country overrun with hostile Indians, a large part of the distance being through'sandy deserts and leading across rivers, mount¬ ains and prairies, with only the sky for a covering and the earth as a resting place. 'lu old resident of this city, who used to know Aubrey very well, in con versa lion recently said: “When I first met Aubrey, about 1243, be was a young man of 85, the perfect picture of health and strength. Short, rather pounds, heavy he bad set, weighing about 100 an honest, open counten¬ ance, and was one of the rising men of the plains. He was a French Canadian, came to St. Louis in 1840, and very soon afterward engaged in business as a Santa Fe trader, making trips to Santa Fe from Independence, Mo., and Bpending the larger part of his time in the saddle. He was a noted horseman, and spared neither man nor boast when on a journey. Every tiling he did was done with a rush. “Aubrey made two rides alone from Santa Fe to Independence. The first was on a wager of f1,000 that he could cover the distance in eight days. He succeeded hi reaching his destination three hours before the expiration of the time. He killed several horses in the ride^ and it Is said that the death of one horse on the way obliged him to walk twenty-five miles to Council Grove, carrying his sad die on his back, before he found another He was the lion of the day at St. Louis and Independence after that ride. There were many powerful men and many good riders in those times, but not one of them dared to attempt to beat Aubrey’s record. He determined to beat it himself, and on a second wager he left Santa Fe In 1851, and gave the severest test of human en¬ durance I have ever known. “I was on my way to Santa Fe (It was thirty-seven years ago) with a train of twenty-five wagons filled with merchan¬ dise, and knew nothing of his design. When we were at the Rabbit Ears, about 100 miles from the old Spanish city, we saw a man approaching in a sweeping gallop, mounted on a yellow mare and leading another. As he came nearer, mistaking ns for Indians, he whirled and retreated take fifty or sixty yards, Our then turned to a second look. wagons com¬ ing round a hill proved that we were friend^ dashed and, putting spurs to his steed, he past, merely nodding bis head as the dust flew into our faces. It was a great surprise to me for Aubrey to treat a friend in that style, but when I reached Santa Fe I understood it. Every mo ment was precious. It was tho supreme effort ot his life. Night and day he rushed on. Six horses dropped dead as be roda them. “His own beautiful mare, Nellie, the one he was riding as he passed our party, flesh and one of the finest pieces of horse I ever saw, quivered and fell In the agonies of death at the end of the first 150 miles. Several splendid horses had been sent ahead, and stationed at different points on tho traiL No man could keep up with Aubrey. He would have sacri¬ ficed every horse in the west, if necee* sary to the accomplishment of his design. It was not money he was after, but fame. He had laid a wager that tho trip would be made in six days. “At the end of five days and thirteen nours, exhausted and fainting, he was taken from a horse that was trembling from head to foot, and covered with sweat and foam, at the southwest corner of the present square of Independence. He sank into a stupor, from which he was not aroused for forty-eight boors.” —Kansas City News. Csefalnea* of After Life. It is a great mistake to suppose that the usefulness of life ceases with the power of active service. When the tired hands aro folded in tho repose which their toil has rightly earned for them; when the weary brain is relieved from the burden of cares and perplexities which it has nobly borne, there should be a season rich in blessings and in influ¬ ence, which no one would willingly forego. Then should come the leisure vainly longed for in past years, and the opportunity to attend to many things, and to enjoy much that was before im¬ possible. If life has also been hon¬ the busy an orable one, there are sweet memories, cherished friendships, the devotion of children, the respect of society, the power cf helping others through the accumulated experience and intelligence of many years. Tho very presence of a venerable and beloved face is a blessing to those who look upon it, bringing sug¬ gestions of well earned peace and calm to the busy toiler, and calling up emo¬ tions of tender reverence in the eager and buoyant youth. — Home Journal. Had Practices of Confectioner*. The British confectioners have invited all “sugar workers, licorice refiners, chocolateers, fruit preservers, pastry cooks and fancy bakers” to join their association and enter upon a combined crusade against "immoral practices.” The immoral practices consist of putting short measure and bad butter into con¬ fectionery, and “illegal trading and im¬ moral manufactures,” such as conceal¬ ing small coins in candy drops as a temptation to the youthful buyer. They have started 3 journal called Tho Con¬ fectioners’ Union, and the grand organ¬ ization is known as the United Kingdom York Confectioners’ association.— New Bun. FARM AND GARDEN. EVERY Day LESSONS OF VALUE TO FARWIRS AND GARDENERS, Ah ’ ’> >tmt Point In Horticulture That I- ' •» ignored In the Endeavor to ti-»» Shapely Tree* and Induce t'ni- lotoi (iroartb of Vine*. Pruning 1 s one ot the no t important operations connected with tho manage¬ ment of trees, shrubs and vines. We prune one part of tree to reduce i;a vigor and to favor the growth of an¬ other and weaker plant. We prune a branch, or a shoot, to produce ramifications o t these parts, and thus change or modify forms tdi the e of whole. We prune to induco fruit¬ fulness and to diminish it. We prune In the growing as well as in the dormant season, we prune and finally both the roots and branches. Thus we see that prun¬ all ing is applied to parts all of a tree at seasons, and to produce k COLUMNAR PEAK tho most opposite THEE results. How im- portant, thore- fore, to know how to prune, what to prune and when to prune. A horticulturist in Country Gentleman calls attention to a fact often Ignored, via , that pinching back a growing shoot oi pruning This a growing branch weakens the same fact must bo borne in mind when our is endeavoring to make a tree shapely oi Ghi get a uniform growth of vino. In the World use is made of this principle into various in training forms fruit Some and fruit other trees trees aro trained so us to make perfect trellises, fiat as n pale fence, these aro called es|«ilier Others are erect, round and shooi up like Ixmibardy poplars, colum* Hat trees Appended is an illustration of a columnar pear tree To make this tree, explains the horti¬ culturist quoted from, the grower has to pinch back all the strong growing shoots toward the upper portion of the tree, as the season progresses, and any shoot that seems stronger than tho rest, anywhero, In the fall and winter, when the finishing time for pruning arrives, tho upper part of tho tree is still severely pruned, as shown in the illustration. Attention lias been called to this form of principle tree simply that to illustrate the general shoot weakens pruning or It, pinching and that back a strong the Weaker ones profit by what to tho strong ones has been denied. In conclusion adds this horticultist: If the shoots on a grow¬ ing and vine few are all woakish at the bottom, a strong pinch ones are these pushing at the top back we should strong ones and take out the growing point soon after it starts, or as Soon as it occurs to Us that the lower branches need strength¬ ening. If It be an evergreen that we Would thicken at tho bottom, pinch out the growing points of tho stronger branches, but lot alone the weaker ones. If it be a pear tree that wo would train to any branches special and form, keep the back weaker the stronger let ones grow. Only in lids way can v.e get branches where we need them. From Birth to the Grave We carry wjth ws certain physical traits as we do certain mental characteristics. Inso- ignate much that by psychologists generic titles have striven to des¬ certain tempera- inents—aa the bilious, the nervous, the lym¬ phatic. is The individual down with a sallow com ¬ plexion If the set saffron in as bilious, often rightly so. the hue of his skin is traceable to bile in the blood, its presence in beevinoedby the wrong plaee fur instead of the liver, will also on the tongue, pain be neath shoulder-blade, -he right ribs and tlirongh tho right indigestion. sick headache, constipation, flatulence and For the relief of this very common, but not essentially peril¬ ous oomplaint, there is no more genial and thorough remedy than Ilostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which is also a beneficent tonic and strength yroniotter, and a widely esteemed remedy for and preventive bladder of fever and ague rheumatism, kidney and troubles. New Advertisements. niWQ UUilO REVOLVERS, tend stamp for price list to JOHNSTON ,V SON, Pittsburgh, Penn. a r e consumptive y o u Have PARKER'S you Coufirh, GINGER Bronchitis, TONIC Artlima, without Indigestion! Ulfi It ban cured of the worxtcaae* and the best tk-lay. dy many in reme for all affection* tt the throat and lunsr*, and diiw Arising from impure blood and exhaustion. The fer tile and hick, struKfriin# will in against disease, and slowly health drifting to the gr*T*, many ca*e8 recover their by the timely ime of Porker's GintrerTonic, but delay is dan- gerotis. Take it in time. It is invaluable for all paina and disorders of stomach ami bowels. 60c. at jOruKKists. Txhausted VITALITY rrHE 1 SCIENCE OF LIFE, the peat Medical Work of the age on Manhood, Nervou* and I Physical DeMIity, Premature 1 Decltiie, Errors of Touth, and the untold miseries consequent thereon, 800 pages 8vo, 125 [iroM rlptloixs for alt diseases.. Cloth, full gilt, only *1.09, by* mail, sealed. Illustrative sample free to ail young and middle used men. Send now. The Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded to the anchor by the Na¬ tional Medic.d Association. Address P. O. box J895, Boston, Mass., or Dr. W. H. PARKER, grad uateof Harvard Medical College, 25 years’ pracUct In Boston, who may be consulted cunfld*tlaUy- Sneclalty. Disease* of Man. Office No. IBuinnehst. PARKER'S GJRdER T •HE tuns. cAiinuNiujii. i”'- frnri- “ w diaflwe’’inknowu With Ja.ni.trm t,\ngrr, it exert* a tr. e power over to other iphd ;• •• eak Lunjru, Rheuitmti-m, ttmaaii^m. Female Female Complaint*, Complaint*, an ai i the distrewiiuriluofth* Stomach, I/ver, Kidneys and Howt i* are tboux&ndi* to the grave who * recover ibeir ythe t iwriy use of PiBKRft’3 Given Tonic. It 18 ne w Uiftcox life and strength to the a ee*L N. 60e. at Lnrtsft fitftf A Co., m William street, Y. PARKER'S ■a HAIR BALSAM Ctauisrs and beautifies the hair. Promote* a luxuriant (rroath. Gray Ntver Fails io Beilora Hai** to »tf Youthful Color. Otm9Acalp ilia—if Bond t*ir failtn# mimmmSSSimm HINDERCORNS. tsar* gfeJSsuSuf »« ■itOngfistt Lactated Fooi Endorsed by 10.000 Physicians As ii fumrfoot foots for tnvcfld*. In OfOpmpoia, flavor*, stele homdooho, diarrhoea, femblo digestion, and Mi w«siting diseases, and for Infanta deprived of mother’s milk, or whan weaning. The Favorite Food in Hospitals Hahnemann Hospital. Hew York Infant Asylum. Njtw Ye** Cut, Kr. \ taxon. V. Y. “ We bare been talas Utcteted Food tot sever, “We are man* row Uetessd Food la oar to. s! months part to eases of ilyspejKla, after opera¬ font aaytum whenever we reqraireth* a«e of »rti tions, and with chtidnm, and le all earns it tuui Octal have toad, used. and Sad Being tt superior pl to an? the which w • answered artralrahly. Wo would gladly recom¬ ever ias snt to taste, it mend it as a food easily disrated. rntrUtaos, and Is spadallr adapted to children. ehfUrea.” We have in not disagreeable to the patient." our omc-A Institution am WO Mr*. L M. Bam, F. a. Fulton, M. I>„ Houms Burgeon. Chairman of ML Vernon Branch. The Most Palatable, Nutritious, and Digestible Food Tar* new km urn r Ecwroanuj, Yoon. j gar A valuable pampfaMt on “The Nntrfttan ot ISO MoalS for an Infant for tt.OO. j Infonaand Invalid*," tree on application Easily prepared. Attouggisw J WflU, mClWftWM A8S^»8ttWtTSII,¥T. WHIPS, Wi I BUGGIES AND IIAPNESS >"(- - Studebaker Wagon - While Hickory Wagon! Jackson G. Smith Wagon f Jackson G. Smith Buggy ! And the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. Repairs on old Buggies a Specialty. W. Hs SPENCE, aug 28 d<lw 6 n} (Jor. Hill &. Taylor Streets, GRIFFIN, GA' Shipment Finest Teas, CRACKERS, ALE SORTS, 15c. II). HAMS, BONELESS SHOULDERS, ETC. FINEST yif FLOUR ON THE MARKET. D. BIC MONEY! ! " ,u CLEVELAND AND THURMAN By Hon. W. U. Hexlel; al*o, T.tfe of Mita. Cleveland: exquisite steel portrait*. Voter Car'ridgc Box, Reform Trad make i i’oliey, Ao., ^500 complete. Ai i Nr* report immense HUBBARD sui rea*. F»r best work, apply quick and t»00 to a month. Outfit 35c. BROS. Philadelphia, Pa. NO If ORE Mo re MITCHELL’S EYE-SALVE A Certain,Safe and EflectiveRc-mcdy for Sore, Weak and InCamed Eyes Prmlnrlng l ong - MlghtolnrKo. of unit llrMtorinir >h. Might u the Old. Cures Tear rops. Granulation, Tumors, Rod Eyes. Matted Kye Iaisli E8 AND PRODUCING QUICK RK- LIEF AND PERMANSN'TCURE Also, equally efficacious when used io oih er maladies,such as Clcer?, Fever Sores, Tu mors, Balt Rheum, Barn*, MITCHELL’S Pilea, or inflammation exists, may be used all Druggists to advantage, o id bv at '.‘.V-ents. A GREAT YEAR fn the history ot the United States Is notv upon us. Every person of intelligence deeirea to keep pace with the course of it* event*. There is no tetter way to do *o than to subscribe for The Macon Telegraph. Its news farilltica are unsurpassed the fullest by any Associ¬ paper in the South. In addition to special correspond¬ ated Press dispatches, letter it has ence by wire and from all Important points in Georgia and the neighboring State*. During the present session of Congress Wron- iugttrn will be the most Important and most in¬ teresting news centre In tho country. The Washington Correspondence of tho Telegraph m the very best that can be had. regular correspondent famishes the , latest , . Us full dispatches, i Mews and gossip in requeti t <pe< ial letters from Hon. Amos J. Cummings, member of Congress trom New three York, ot Frank the best G. Carpenter, and W. A. CrotFat, tho capital, dis¬ known newspaper writers at of cuss the live-at and most important issues the ^T-’;o Telegraph is a Democratic wuh Tariff the Reform policy pni It is thoroughly .and in and line tho Democratic of i esident Clave campaign the pm In Use coming national Tei raph will cot only give all the news, but wii, discuss all public issues from the stand- po: it of genuine Democratic faith. Subscribe 6) once. ?Saily, ono year, - • . * • S7 OO Gaily, six month*, .... t OO Daily, three months, . . . - i! OO Dally, one month, .... .75 Weekly, one year,...... M Term*: Cash in advance. Address THE TEDEGRAI’H, Uacbn. Gcobgia. ENGINES, (is, Mm i ALL FIRST CLASS, AND A NO. ?I Pf -J Quality Guaranteer. At- ’ rated 1HOMAS HARROW, both iu 1 and Iron A few ISut'tries on hand er:11 be «old cheap. G. A. CUNNINGHAM. tsepi sms FAixia .... f... . ' 0. A. CUNNINGHAM, ■ il GRIFFIN, : :: GEORGIA, Has Been Appointed Land Agent foi Spalding County, by tho Georgia Bureau of Immigtation, and all parties liavin^ land for sale tan expedite tho saic by placing their Property in hla hand*. Full pnriicnlars in regard to the most nable land* in this county can lie obta houses by addressing him as above. A full and Lads and lots cf ell desert p MAN WANTS BBT LITTLE Here below, but he Wants that little mighty quick. A or a big cne is promptly filled by ad vertising in’the^iDaily . or* Weekly ;NEWS, ADVERTISER- p :an learn the exact c< * >' of any proposed line , advertising in America, f papers by addressir- Geo. P. Rowell & Co*' Newspaper AdvrwrtiatnS Bureau. IO SpritM) St., New Y®rk. lend lOct jj Jo* lOO-Pwfl* Fww.phte- MAC0N. GEORGIA. --*ot- litlFTY.FIFTH ANJiCAL SESSION opens x. September 2fith and doers /one ’ Elegantly ottagcs furnished for class rooms and neat, new l students, Centrally located. Good board at ressoas- i rates, For eatalouvn * acd other information sp- P - v to RK\ . J. \ . BATTLE, ialyV»wT rresident ?T3 m s BUSINESS CGILE8E EH IE, PA., for (iretdam. The brats , in America, Fail term t Aas.se. Mention thlaj t