The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, August 29, 1888, Image 3

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Atlanta, Oa.—Oen troubled m waa ' -*>OUt two lsra£5 of madl- d repair ----- *5 'taaonB. . a prompt pen»*o 6 iit cuir®. - HILL. _____ MO., July 7. IttR-Ths Swift o __ Co.. Co., Atl*a***» Atlanta, three Oa.—Oantlamaa: Our »•yg^SSL'^.uSa ' ■ weeka old broke SSfmMTeralpood doctor., but thTp^pSo^ without ZSSkl W. triad B. a 8 and by any tha tni bar hoad ., bottla wu ttma pona th* bad takan l>«pan to u| by tha complotaly al i U sis and WM haary head of cured. hair—a Now robutt, aba d. I foal It but my duty to make ant. ItLupectfaily, adxtiu&sr K. T. Snons. l blood poison. and at once | p ujmmma. bis who wuo-- treated me - - . for v . aev. DV . - inthf. By advice I went to Crab SnmadUtely ifjij ten. I after waa taking advlaad H to I try commenced a S. S., and to Sfarwssf improve, .lowly nt flr»t, but more «&£ rapidly atMr ciMneod, and my .yatam frra from SrsessoTJa ta&t »•“ 1 ?»* wr------- ------ {^ 0 , et a,.b ri mayra^ . Honan. man, La.. la., Kay Oa—Oentlemen Oa SS. 188B—Tha Swift About SpaolSo 00 Co., ., Atlanta, Atlanta, rater i two isr?# iSualred i«,,alred of of ever ever reeling reeling well well again. again. All 4 | » SfeMT ----...— give_B» S. B. 'one a falr^ for trial, BSSXl me brought although no _ I I _ away money. health »«. yiy oust say that - _ ------------- while ualng — - discarded all other, la An a tonic I can moat %.TtS£SSk TToarn, La.— 1 know Mr. W. P. Bridges, and « ul lay that hla atatement 1 . oorract. Joaicra BbkltO*. Druggist. Treatlae on Mood and Skin Dlaaaaaa mailed < (tea Tax swirr Srncimo Co, Dravar Atlanta, Oa. ......— ■— , Ordir t ry’s Advertisements. , t ) , Rf>, VRY’S OFFICE, Spaldinj Coun- it, Georgia, administratrix May 26th, 1888.—Mrs. Martini V. Darnall, of Katie Darnall, has applied to me for letters of Dis¬ mission on the ostate of Katie Darnall, late j 1 At aid county, decased. Let all persons conoernrd show cause be lure the Court Griffin, of Ordinary of said county »i mj office in on the first Monday n , tot mber, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., wh; »u, li letters shonld not be granted. *6,1.1 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. i kKDINARY’S OFFT r E, Spalding Codn V/ TI| Qbosoia, May 26th, 1888,—Mrs. Martha A. Darnall, executrix of Thos. M. 1 Darnall, lias applied to ine for letters of dis mission from the executorship of said estate. Let all persons concerned show cause be¬ fore the Court Griffin, of Ordinary of said county, at my offloe in on the first Monday in September, ash letters should 1888, by not ten ba o’cloclc, granted. a. m., why ; |6,15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary, f /ORDINARY’S \J OFFICE.— Spalding Coun- j UB. tt, Lamar, (iboboia, Guardian Augus' of Arch 3, 1888.—Mrs. M.and James Lei Kail makes application to me for leave to i sell one undivided half interest in house " and Jot belonging to her wards for distribu- i to. r Let all persons concertd show cause be- tore the court of Ordinary at my office in i Sriffin on the first Monday in September by ton o’elock a. m., why sucli application I should not be granted. HAMMOND,Ordinary. Jt3.00. E. W. Executors’ Sale. GEORGIA-Spalding County. By virtue of an order granted us by the Cynrt of Ordinary we will sell before the Court house, to the highest bidder, at Griffin fleorgia; in said county, on the first Tues¬ day of September next, between the legal boars of sale, eighteen and three quarters (18%) shares of the capital stock of the Sa¬ vannah, Griffin and North A labama Rail road Company. atees. Terms Bale sale for distribution cash. Aug. among fith, 1888. leg¬ of E. W. BECK. J. II. MITCHELL, 13.(0 Execntors \V. U. Alexander. GRIFFIN LIGHT AND WATER CO. Application For Charter. GEORGIA— Spalding County. To the Superior Coart of said County: The M. petition of W, J.Kincaid, 8. Grantland, Jas. Brawncr, A. Randall and others of said 8tate and County, their successors and as signs, shows that they have entered into of an association under the name and style “Griffin Light and Water Company”: that the object of said association is to erect Md operate Electric light and power works, Gas Works and Water works, all or any part Tieinity thereof, in the City of Griffin, Georgia, and and conduct other business thereto appertaining Power to as they may see proper, with real «Bd purchase and hold property, personal, all to sue and be sued, and to extr «se powers usually conferred on corpora¬ tions of similar character, as may be consis¬ tent with the laws of Georgia. Said company u to have its place of business In said coun¬ ty- be 125,000, The capital stock of said company shall wiih privilege of increasing to to *50,000, be in shares of one hundred dollars each, called in as may be determined on by toe directors, provided, that said company snail not commence business until at least ton per cent, of the capital stock is paid in. JWd «*» three. oompany nor shall have than a five board directors, of not who less ««1 more elect from their number a President ®J*». jtod such Said other board officers of directors as they shall may continue think n office until their successors are elected, lonr petitioners pray the passing of an or- ®*hy said Honorable Court granting this ®*Mor»be application and that they and their sne i"® no) incorporated for and during with the exceeding sal theexpirati twenty years, _ at ■ the purposes hei P»y, -— Ac. BECK yonr petitioners & CLEVELAND, • ictetify that the foregoing Petitioners Att’ys. true Xjjttn'om is a ex- °W*. the minutes of.Spalding Superior Ang. 21st, 1888. Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk. si CONSUMPTIVE a* wont i4flfriS8&tt and lathe beat remedy u 3 [toe flues blood throat and hum, and diseases I aad disease, eibaustfon. The feeble ^JEESSSSS I egaimd and eiowlv drifting • et ttomach aad bowel*. 60 s. at DniggMs. SOUTH BAY PUCK SHOOTING. A Day In a “Battflry,** with Qnn In Hand. Snapteloua Hlrtla. There La a fascination to many sports¬ men in shooting ducks from a South bay battery, comfortable though a more cramped and un¬ than that position cannot be found battery required by the gunner. The consists of a box about eighteen inches deep and long enough to admit the outstretched body of a man. A rub¬ ber coat is the substitute for a mattress and a sandbag serves for the pillow. From the box extends on each side a flat, ra/tlike screen composed of wood and and brown canvas, which serves to float the box and break the force of the waves as they dash up against it. By means of weights the lx>x is sunk in the water and iron decoy ducks hold it in place. A hundred decoys are scattered about the box in a natural manner. The gunner then lies down flat in tho box, with his sheila on one side and his gun on tho other With a parting iastriiciion to bo sure and keep the head well down the iiattery man sails away, leaving the gun¬ ner aJone on the sea. To the man first trying the sport tha situation is a peculiar one, and the sensa¬ tion the same. All alone, surrounded by tho little flock of decoys, and the waves pounding up with a swash against tha guards to the box, he.feels somewhat in¬ secure. As hs lies flat in the box hir body and head are below the level of the ing water. Sometimes, if the wind is blow¬ pretty strong, a wave will break over into the box, tickling his face with briny drops and sending cold streams of liquid down his back. If he is a sportsman he will only laugh at this and take a pull at his whisky flask to jfrevent catching cold. Sometimes the waves run so high that the gunner is compelled to bail out his box or it will became a fish pond in the sea. The sun beating down on hig face will redden it in about ten minutes. Meanwhile the sail boat is tacking across the bay to stir up the ducks. A bunch of them is aroused, and as the birds go gkimming along the water they spy i he decoys, and, tldnklsg they are a floe!, of brethren peacefully feeding, shape their course toward them. Am they still up to the decoys they soon perceive they are deceived and wheel away. Just ns they come about is a good time to fire, and if the gunner is expert while they are get¬ ting away he has time to slip in another shell and fill the back of tho rear duck with cold lead. If any of tho ducks fall the gunner stands up in the battery, which is a signal for the sailboat men to come up and gather in the fowls that have been khof Then the gunner stretches himself out again and waits for another flock. If the ducks are thick and not in a suspi¬ cious mood lie will not have to remain so long before another set will be along and more blazing away is in order. Some favorable morning there is a oonstant booming of guns on the bay, and big boatloads of ducks are brought in. It is not uncommon in the autumn for one man to shoot fifty to eighty ducks from a battery. The next day he may not get five. In tho season about five batteries a day start out from Patehogue. The skip¬ per always has a man to help him sail his catboat, and it is a race to secure the best ground. Often in making the best run across the bay the “cap’n” only gets in first to find the ground already seized by the ambitious huntsman who has gone out the night before, slept in the catboat and at sunrise is ready in his battery. 1 The early morning is the best time, as at dawn the ducks begin to feed and are out in great numbers. Every sailboat man is a “cap’u" and must His scrupulously be addressed as such. assistant is the mate. There is no crew. Thr South bay boatmen are honest, good hearted men, always ready to get as much as they can out of the sportsmen, but work¬ ing hard to drum up the game for him. He will charge $10 a day for the use of the battery, and will throw in the meals. In the cabin of the catboat the mate cooks ham and eggs, steak, potatoes and coffee, and serves it hot. Ir the sports¬ man likes oysters, he will throw over his rake and bring up half a bushel to open on the spot If one is not having much success with the ducks it is a good plan to allow the “cap’n” to lie in the bat¬ tery for a time, for he is invariably a crack shot and will fill up the quota needed in short order. Brant and broad bills are the most abundant of the family in the Great South bay in spring. The broadbiils are a plump duck, with short like bills. They are swift flyers, and it is shooting at a bumble bee to draw on one as he comes by. In the fall black ducks and red¬ heads come in the bay. Shell ducks are also plentiful. Shell ducks and coots are good broadbiils shooting, but not worth eating. The are great divers, and often, when wounded, will lead the skip¬ pers a long chase. On diving they are pretty sure to come up to the windward, and a good distance off. Often the ducks come in the bay in great quantities, and set up in the water like big rows of ten¬ pins. When started they rise with the noise of a whirlwind in the forest. The boobies are a small species of duck that sometimes come in the bay. They get their name from their aptness at losing their heads. A sliot into a flock of boo¬ bies will sometimes so disconcert them that they will fir around in a circle and allow the gunnzr to take his time in shooting them down. They are great chatterers, and ksep the bay noisy with their cries .—New York Tima* An Eastern Newspaper Custom. The New England papers have a rather amusing way of prefixing a man’s call¬ ing or family relationship before his name, as lor Instance: Chemist Smith went Into Druggist Brown’s store yester¬ day, and while there met Rector Rob¬ inson, who was talking with Genera! Notions Jones and his wife. Husband Jones told Rector Robinson that Daugh¬ ter Jones was much interested in religious matters, and had attended many of Re¬ vivalist Gush’s services. It is also ru mored that Son Jones has been recently converted. —New York Tribune . Strength of a "Wet Hope, Experiments have proved that the ten¬ sile strength of a wet rope is only one- third that of the same rope when dry; and a rope saturated with grease or soap is weaker still, as the lubricant pern: its the fleers to slip with greater facility. Hemp rope contracts strongly on being wet, and a dry rope twenty-five feet long will shorten to twenty-four on being wet —Frank Leslie’* People Susceptible to Hypnothm. Persons of a nervous constitution, and In particular those subject to hysteria, are most apt to fall into artificial sleep. There Is then produced in them a pecu liar neurosis, hypnotism, liaving psychi¬ cal and physical characters of its own—a genuine disease presenting a diversity of symptoms. Hence hypnotic phenomena ought not to be called forth rashly nor witiiout the precautions suggested by medical science. Women are specially susceptible to hypnotic manipulation, par¬ ticularly during tho period between the 18th and the 80tli year, when the ner¬ vous system is in full activity. Young men may be hypnotized, but it is very difficult to produce hypnotic sleep in old men or in children. Persons who in early life are subject to natural somnambulism or hypnotic sleep walking are later in life good likely subjects, just as they are also to be victims of hysteria and other nervous Many complaints. are the processes employed for producing hypnosis. One that is very frequently used consists in fixing the gaze upon some bright object placed a little above the eyes and in front of the median line of the forehead, so that visual fatigue directed may ensue upward quickly, the eyeballs being and inward. This pro¬ cess, or others of a like kind, may lie em¬ ployed in the case of persons who have never before been hypnotized. But after awhile, when the subject has, so to speak, been educated, various more expeditious methods may be employed. Thus a jet of electric light or a violent blow struck on a gong near the ear of the subject will quickly induce sleep. Again, in hypuo- tizable persons, the surface of the body often presents special points, “hypnogenio zones, ” as they are called, analagous to the “hysterogenic zones. ” Simple pres¬ sure upon these produces hypnosis. Even in the case of the most susceptible individuals rarely does sleep appear when they, for the first time, undergo the skilled hyp¬ notizing manipulations, however the operator may be. There is needed a complete surrender of one’s will and ab¬ sence of all mental preoccupation, and on the part of the company present abso¬ lute silence. In most cases exhibitions of hypnotization develop, at first, only vague phenomena not easily classified, foreshadowing, so to speak, what will follow later.—North American Review. A Plucky Frontier Woman. On the plains, in Assinlboin, I found a little lady in the larger of the only two stores in the place, who told me that tho Indians on a reservation close by had begun to grow restless, and were mani¬ festing the fact by unusual insolence. Only the day before a dozen of the braves had come into the store, when she was stark alone in it, and had demanded whisky, a commodity they were not al¬ lowed to touch and no one was permitted to Bell. She told them she bad none, and they sat, as Indians will, for a long time, as if to show her they would no* go away until they got it. Curiously enough, no one came to the store from the settlement. By and by the Ir Mans proposed to search for the whisky. She laughed at them and told them they could search. They did so, peeping and poking everywhere that they could think of. When they offered to go up stairs to her living apartments, she stood in the doorway there. and told She them flattened they must not venture her back against the door and defied them. She was less than the ordinary height, and did not weigh over 100 pounds, but she quailed them with the eye of a brave and determined woman, and when, pres¬ ently, some white men eame to make purchases the Indians took themselves off. Only a few nights before that this same woman had seen a wolf in her back yard, aad had gone out and “shooed” it away with her apron and scolding, just as one of our girls might do to a cat. I never saw a man that I thought more plucky than she. Per¬ haps, though, what no Indian or wolf could do might he done bya mouse. But it is beyond all reason to expect the bravest not to fear a mouse,—Albany Fair Journal. Swiss and French Soldier*. There is very little contrast between the Swiss and French soldier. Both are below the stature of the German, Eng¬ lish and American soldier; inferior intel¬ lectually and physically. The Swiss war* rior wears a cap helmet, which makes him look at once like a member of a rural band in America. It is of black cloth, with deep blue trimmings and with black silk braid about the edges. The front is cooked and the rear slopes and has the helmet brim. He wean a navy blue cutaway coat, dark gray pan¬ taloons, and each is decked with a very narrow red cord. At his side is a short, heavy sword always. His side arms are completed by a five-shot 42-calibre re¬ volver, heavy close enough to be used as a bludgeon in quarters. Also, like the French soldier, the Swiss is armed with a magazine needle gun, and is given so much active training that he is invariably « fair marksman. In this, as nearly all continental armies, there is by govern¬ ment authority an inducement for sol¬ diers to become fine marksmen. But the pay of the continental soldier is so low and generally his service so nearly menial that he takes little interest in what he does. The j>ay is about one-fourth that of the American soldier and less than half of that paid the English.—Cor. Phila- adelphia Times. Racial Element* of Rawin'* Army. Probably the Russian army is the most heterogeneous in the world so far as its ethnology is concerned. From the infor¬ mation on the point just issued by tha Russian statistical department we learn that of the 227,906 recruits levied in 1885, the racial composition was as fol¬ lows: Russians, 169,052; Poles, 17,212; Bulgarians, 406; Tcheks, 12; Lithua¬ nians, 5,800; Letts, 8,424; Greeks, 155; Moldavians, 2,850; French, 1; Germans, 3,572; Armenians, 142; Bohemians, 89; Georgians, 8; Jews, 10,011; Karehana, 809; Tchouds, 20; Esthoniana, 2,604; Laps, 1; Moravians, 1,707; Cheremissi- ans, 704; Votiaka, 841; Zyrians, 282; Permkms, 68; Voguls, 5; Chuvachas, 1,529; Tartars, 4,508; Bashkina 8,017; and about 100 belong to three other races or tribes. In all, then, the Russian army comprises 82 different races, or at least tribal elements, among which it is note¬ worthy neither Ossetians nor Circassuna are represented, so far at least as then recruits are concerned.—St Jamat* Ga¬ zette, A HINDU JEWELER. BUftoio* tbe Choicest Design Mamifoe* v need from English Florin*. Oho of my companions, having mads a bar.~ fin with the smith, handed him throe ,'*«h florins which lie desired to have .. jufuctured into one bangle of the i hefoest East Indian design and wo: aanship. The coolie man heated the coins, cut them into narrow:* pieces, of which he welded the rai • . igetlier, using hammer and anvil, il.os making a lor four or five inches long, and, as I remember, two or three lines in width and thickness. Covering one end of this strip of metal with damp clay, to protect his fingers from th neat, the bangle maker stuck the silvi r into the diminutive charcoal fire, which he set aglow by blowing through a tube similar in appearance to a glass blower’s pipe. When the metal was at a dull red heat he beat it soundly, forging it round and smooth to the diameter of telegraph wire; then, carefully bending it in a circle, joined the two ends, welding them to¬ gether done, and neatly the and with dispatch.. This joint having been covered with a rough mass of hot silver fashioned into a ball of the size of a small cherry, the Hindu held out the half finished trinket for our inspection and approval. He next smoothed and polished the sur¬ face of the bail by hammering; then ho graved and stamped it with various dies, cutting simple, conventional patterns of irregular design. Next, from having selected a small silver serpent devices an assortment of ready made and charms which ho kept in a cocoanut shell, he plunged it into the fire, and blew through his blowpipe until the cobra became blood red. Pinch¬ ing the reptile’s tail between two bits of moist clay, the Hindu drew it from tho fire, and, before it lost its angry hue, deftly corkscrewed tho emblem of im¬ mortality around the wire of the bangle in four complete coils, all the time tap¬ ping the snake here and there gently with his mallet, iu this way fastening it securely in its place. Plunging the orna¬ ment into a calabash of cocoanut oil, he waited till the serpent ceased hissing, and the Indian bracelet was then ready to be clasped cn tho wrist of whomso¬ ever gallant gentleman had in his mind when he found it in his heart to give ti*e order for it.—William Agnew I’aton, Peculiar In the eombinotion. proportion, and prepa¬ ration of its ingredients, Hood’s Sarsaparilla accomplishes cares where other preparations entirely which fail. Peculiar in its good name at home, is a “tower of strengh abroad,’ peculia tained, Hood’s in the phe Sarsaparilla nominal sales it has at¬ is the most suc¬ cessful meeicine for purifying tho bloed, giving strenghth, and creating an appetite. Dr, Moffett's TEETHWA (Teettihig Powders) .AlU'-i |»■-Itu'loT, A 1<!* Kpjnilat**the I><rthlng B *wSirettg*h**ns tli« Jiak***» In*'- ..-i J ' < * 1 ‘ mi; tv 25 On** i eotMiiR cure* »l;,H ; Ill 0 K 1AG<1 notii.XJ*' It for Hi a* ,'u;:»u*v < cf Chil<Ar* J ojf any age. It Try it and v *a will r.< v»*r bo yt i” VF :.*!••» US’ V Ion if m th*re ure child- rvn iu livui.v. Akk Your Jr From Birth to the Grave We carry certain with us oertaiu physical traits, a* we do mental characteristics. Inso¬ much that psychologists have striven to des¬ ignate ments— by gcoorio bilious, titles the certain tempera¬ phatic. at tho nervous, the lym¬ The individual with a sallow com¬ plexion is set down as bilious, often rightly so. If tbe saffron in the hue of his skin is traceable to bile in the blood, its presence in the wrong place instead of the Jiver, will also be neatb evinced by fur on the tongue, pain be -he right ribs and through the right shoulder-blade, flatulence and indigestion. sick headache, constipation, For the relief of this very common, but not essentially peril¬ ous thorough nomplaint, remedy there is no more genial and than Hostetter’s Stomach strength Bitters, which is also a beneficent tonic and yromotter. and a widely esteemed remedy for and preventive of fever and ague rheumatism, kidney and bladder troubles. New Advertisements. nilKJQ UUIVO REVOLVERS, tend stamp for price u 8 t to JOHNSTON & SON, Pittsburgh, Penn. PARKER’S Cleanses HAIR BALSAM and beautifies the hair. ■Promote* INflvtr a luxuriant growth. Fails to Restor* Gray Hair to it* Youthful Color. Tsrents Dandruff and hair falling *0c. and *1 .00 at lirumrUts. iSMAPST'^SSE Tolograpby, Coolt-keep- ynif, Banking, Penman¬ ship, 'Arltluiu-tlc, Correapoutlence, iSfc. Young roien ami women taught thorough to earn 'preparation a living for and honorable given a post* , tlrma. Torms reasonable. Time short. InstruotloB thorough. Business short men supplied No with competent assistant* furnWhed. on Address notice. for cata¬ eharsa Kalman for situations College, Poughkeepsie, S. Y, logue, - ■ U V? 2 «iur ff I D 3COVERY. •Asjr book leareed to e*» rending. ■Mod wfladerlag cored, Wholly dpoakloar srllhoo* artificial ootos. oollke eyetens*. piracy coodeoaoed by boprrwir Court Croat lodoceoeeote to correepondeuce Prospectus, with opinions of Dr. Wm. A. Hammond, the world-famed Specialist in Mind diseases, Daniel Greenleaf Thompson, the great Pyschologist, and others, sent post free by Prof. A. LOISETTE, 237 Fifth Ave., New York. EXHAUSTED VITALITY rpHB A SCIJUfC* OF LIFE, the great Medical Work of the age on Manhood, Karroo* andf physical Debility, Premature Decline, Errors of Youth, mad tho untold mtoerleacontoquent thereon, 900 page* 8 fa, 125 prescription* tor an dis eases . Cloth, full gilt, only $111), by* malt sealed. Ulnstratlre sample free to ali young and midd l e *ged men. Send now. The Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded to tha author by Ike Na- ttooal Medical Association. Address P. O. box MS. Boston, Maas., ov Dr. W. R PARKEB, grad¬ uate of Harvard Medical College, 25 years’ practice In Boston, who may ba ooosulted confldmtiaHy. Specialty.Disease* of Man. OfficeMo,4BuMncli*t. mi ■PC Lactated Food Endorsed by 10,000 Physicians A> • pmrtmat Aaod ter imiJdfi. h» Oiw pi t. ItoW ytkA h—d*e dlfiirtWe f Dfi bt fi d ig — ti o n , »wd O wwB n wwmw, find for Infants deprived of mother* mHlr. • The Favorite Food in Hospitals Hahnemann Hospital. Now York Intent Asylum. ** W* hew been aria* Lhoteted Hxw Fk Tea* 4 ft* Qmr. mrms “fs iw tong |ffii» T affia fc ^toaTta 5t Y ~ ai moothapaattnsaawof dj*iwi s rta ,» 0 a r e petn hat aertgm ;aBdtm w b nns rra* tt MndaribMO'Wi w* raqubaUs* M» ui Of tset¬ tiona, and with children, and In all amm » hae se wwwpred edralrahiy. We w oul d gtodly raooBt- 'and. BttacsiMfiffitlb um taste, tt We hare in oot disagreeable to the patient" 'SmtsWBM, F. CL PuuKMr, 1C. D„ Boon Rurguon. Tha Moat Palatable, Nutritious, and Digestible Pood Thi Rnt Ain mrr Boonomioju, Yoon. I I tri IWhtoaWlMto^flMafieniitoeiioB. wtottiMMitol ca “The KotrUicm of ISO Mfifiia tor fin Infant tor *t.OO. | Baetlj prepared. AtBniMto*-2S«*.,Mrte..SL WIUC,«1tlMtMM A ft*., SIBHMTOS.VT. WHIPS, WAGONS, BOfiCiES AND IIAPMESS’ -)«.(- - Studebaker Wagon i White Hickory Wagon! Jackson G. Smith Wagon! Jackson G. Smith Buggy I m And the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. Repairs on old Buggies a Specialty. w. H. SPENCE, angSJM&wSra O or. Hill A Taylor Street*, GRIFFIN, GA" Shipment Finest Teas, CRACKERS, ALL SORTS, 15c. lb. HAMS. BONELESS SHOULDERS. ETC. FINEST FLOUR ON THE MARKET. BIG MONEY! I TE *’‘ IL - CLEVELAND AND THURMAN Cartridge By Hon. W. Box, U. Hmklkl; also, Policy, Life of Mhs, Ci.xvxlakd; exquisite steel portraits. Voter Reform Truda tdOO Ac., complete. Aozhtk report Immense succeae. For best work^ apply quick and make to f500 a month. Outfit 35c. Hl BliARD BROE, NO MORE EYE-GLASSES Mo re MITCHELL’S EYE-SALVE A Certain, Safe and Effective Remedy for Sore, leak and Inflamed Eyes Producing Lsag-eifhlsdasRs. and Ilrilsrlsg ska Mrbl of u Ike Old. Cures ares Tear Tear rops, rops, Granulation,j^ilje, Tnmors, Red Eye es. Matted Eve Lash E8 ANDPRODU CTNG QUICK RE¬ LIEF AND PERMANENTCTRE Also, equally efficacious when used in oth er maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever Sores, Tu more. Salt Rheum, Burns, Piles, or wherever 8AI.VE inflammation exists, MITCHELL’S may be used to advantage, o Id bv all Druggists at 25ccnts. A GREAT YEAR fu the history of the United State* 1* now upon us. Every person of lntelllfenc* desires There to 1* keep p*ce with the course of it* event*. no better way to do »o than to *ub*cribe for The Macon Telegraph. IU new* facilities addition *Te nnsurp***ed the fullest by *ny Associ¬ paper in the South. In to ated Pres* dispatches. letter It ha* from special all correspond¬ Important ence by wire and State*. poinU in Georgia and Session the neighboring of Congress Wash¬ ington During will the be preaent the most important and most in¬ teresting new* centre In the country. The Washington Correspondence hod. of the Telegraph U the very best that con be Its regular correspondent farnfihe* ,, latent , , ttieclal news and gossip In full Hon. dispatches. Amo* J. Cummings, Frequent letter* of from New York, Frank G. member Congress trom of the Carpenter, and W. A. Croffut, three best known newspaper writer* at the capital, dis¬ cuss the livest and most important issue* of the day. Telegraph 1* Democratic Tariff Reform Tl e a the policy pap - It is thoroughly In line with of > ■ esldent Cl*reload and the Democratic pari In the coming only national all campaign the but the Telegraph will not public ls*ue* glye from the new*, stand¬ will discus* *11 Bahecrlbe point of genuine Democratic faith. a* orfcc. •oily, one year, • . . * - »7 OO Daily, six months, .... 4 OO Dolly, three months, • • ■ • * OO Dally, one month, .... .75 Weekly, one year, . . . • • 1 OO Term*; Cash In advance. Add re** TH* TELEGRAPH, Manx. Gtootai.*. ENGINES, Gins, Feeders s Condensers. ALL FIRST CLASS, AND A NO. t ! Price end Quality Guaranteed. Also, ”.c celebrated 1HOMAH HARROW, both in Wooj and Iron J2T A few Buggies on hand will be sold cheap. G. A. CUNNINGHAM. tsepl G. A. CUNNINGHAM, GRIFFIN,: :: GEORGIA, Has Been Appointed Land Agent lot Spalding County, by tbe Georgia Bureau of Immigration, and all parties having land for sale can expedite the sale by placing their property in bit hands. Full particulars in regard to the mos nable lands in this county can Ire obta by addressing him as aboTe. A full houses and lands and lots ef all desert p NAN WANTS BUT LITTLE Here below, but he Wants that little mighty quick. A or a big one is promptly filled by ad¬ vertising in the Daily or Weekly NEWS. ADVERTISERS :an learn the exact; a * of an> proposed Hne advertising in America . papers by addressir- ; Geo. P. Rowell & Co.. Newspaper A4v«rtiaing Bureau, to SprUOe St. New Yerk. tend l Oat a. tor lOO-Page Pavapbu- MERCER v 0 NI 7 ERSITY, MACON, GEORGIA. - tot -- Ju T7HFTY-FIFTH ANNUAL SESSION opens Elegantly September fnrnished afith and closes June 28th. close rooms and neat, new Centrally cottage#for located. students. Good board at reasona¬ ble rates. For catalogues and other information ap¬ ply july!2w4 to REV. J. A. BATTLB, President. SOAK'S COLLEGE EK1E, PA., for Circular*. ThibratwAoo, in America. ttsatiealktop? Ftii term begm* A*g.» •