Newspaper Page Text
PENNSYLVANIA IN DOUBT.
The Philadelphia Times, on iude
pendent Republican paper, writes
very significantly ee follows about
the moet roc 1 - ibbed Republican
stronghold:’
“There is not an intelligent Re
publican or Democrat iu this oity
who doea not now know that Harri
eon will lose not less than 10,000 of
Blame's majority in this city, and
moi e likely 15,000 of it, with a poaai
bility of falling even Lelow that. It
is a now assured fact that President
Cb veland will receive much the larg
est vote in this city that has ever
been cast for ft « national Democrat
ic candidate, and that increased vote
will come alike from considerate and
conservative business men and from
intelligent working men. While
Pennsylvania is a decided Republican
State, it is so only because it has had
a very liberal support from the large
industrial establishmentsof the State,
dffoday there is hesitation, doubt or
change in every mill, shop, forest,
fiield or mine in Pennsylvania, and
it is largely undemonstrative in poli
tics. There are large factories in
this city where the number of Repub
lican votes could heretofore be safe
lay estimated by the number of vot
ers employed, in which employers
can give no assurance as to the votes
of their employes. They are reading
the President's message; they are
studying tho facts of somUbarbamn
QunB and Poles taking the pin .a of
A lerican workingmen in highly pro
tected industries; they are counting
tho excessive texee they mast pay for
the necesariesof life, and as they pay
these taxes out of their steadily re
duced wages, they are studying why
th<se taxes are impoacd upoD them
and bow they can be repealed. Nodo
understand the situation bettor than
Chairman Cooper and Chairman Kis
nei; and before the frosts of October
shall come, Senator Quay will be
summoned by his f' ends in his own
State to save it from revolution. In
stead of sending speakers, managers
and money, from Pennsylvania to
New York, New Jersey. Connecticut
and Indians, speakers, managers and
money will be needed in Pennsylva
nia to save high war tax Congress
men nnd hold the State in the Re
publican column by a respectable ma
jority. These are tho sober truths
as to tho present situation in Penn
sylvanin, nnd those who swagger
around boasting of eighty to one
hundred thousand majority for Har
rison will be glad to carry the State
by any majority on election day.
From Itirfft to t"e Grave
We carry with us certain physical traits, as
we do certain mental characteristics. Inso¬
much that psychologists have striven to des¬
ignate by generic titles certain tempera¬
ments—as the billons, the nervous, the lym¬
phatic. The individual with a sallow com¬
plexion is set down as bilious, often rightly
so. It the saffron in the hue of hi/skin is
traeeatde to bile in the blood, its presence in
the wrong place fur instead of tongue, the liver, will also be
be evinced by on the pain
neath -he right ribs mid through the right
shoulder-blade, sick headache,constipation,
tlatulence this and indigestion. not For the relief peril¬ of
very common, but essentially
ous aomplaint, there is no more genial and
thorough remedy than Hogtetter’s Stomach
Bitters, which is also a beneficent tonic and
strength remedy yromotter. and a widely esteemed
for and preventive of fever and ague
rheumatism, kidney and bladder troubles.
Dr. Moffett's TEETHJNA (Teething Powders)
Bowels, AlUfN IvritAtlon Aid* Direction, Kpgrnlat^s the
StrvnKihens tb« Child juakes Teething
and Cost* onlv i5 Cents Teethtna cure*
the.*nirmncr Eruptions and Sores, of and Chlldrte nothin* of equal* It for It
trouble* any ape.
ittnfdand sure. Try It and will never be
wltho.it TKETH1N A as long m there are child*
rea iu tile House. Ask luttr t-
j* .*; r .v- •. <1 bat
ADVERTISERS
:an learn the exact cost
)f an} nroposed line oi
advertising in American
papers by addressing
Geo. P. Rowell & Co.,
Newspaper Advertising Bureau,
lO Spra'-e 3t., New Yerk.
tana lOcta »o* lOO-Pege Pamphlet
J»j'.■ ® '■
•■■■ " ■•-'-- — 1 """ 1 i’** "<r~..... —
DOUGLAS G* ESSSER, ' dtUr A Prefer
•.II X,X' .(In Adrane*)p*i Anon®......»».»•
vffKKii I.XT, One Year.................. !.«•
Urlffta, Georgia, Sept, 8,1888.
Official Paper o! Spalding Co.
Official Paper of the City of Griffin
A«t v/*rtl«ing Rate*.
DAILY- <)m dollar par square tor the
first insertion, and fifty cent* for eaeh sub¬
sequent one. Ten linos or leea to be count¬
ed a« a square. NOTICES 10 cent* line
SPECIAL insertion under per »b«t
1 or each insertion. No
bead for less than BO cento. All insertion a
lor less than one dollar must be paid for in
advance. will be made with parties
Liberal rate* their adver.iscmento
wishing to continne
longer than one week. Daily.
WEEKLY—Same rates as for the
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
For President,
r.ROVER CLEVELAND,
of New York.
For Vice President,
ALLEN G. THURMAN.
y ■ of Ohio.*
For Governor.
JOHN B. GORDON.
For Secretary of State,
N C. BARNETT.
For State Treasarer,
R. U. HARDEMAN.
For Comptroller General,
W. A. WRIGHT.
For Attorney General,
CLIFFORD ANDERSON.
For Member of CoDfjresB, 6th Disf.,
JOHN IX STEWART,
of Spalding,
Far Senator—2Gth District.
JOHN I. HALL,
of Spalding.
For Itepicsentative,
N. M. COLLENS,
of Spalding.
Judge Thurman had an immense
i ,i\ i lit 7 Y. on Thursday
night, but was unab’e to speak long
on account of a f light • tack of
cholera morbus. This was sufficient
to give tho A ’ inla Constitution cor
respondent a pro ext for te’egraphing
a lot of rigma o’e about tho feeble
ness and old ago of the lusty old
Roman.
true northern sentiment-
The following words from Major
Glosstier, tho Georgia Immigration
CoinmiB'oncr,\vritton from Mansfield,
Ohio, "show the true sentiments of
the North as it is seldom found in
newspapers or political utterances:
“Whatever may have been the pie
judices engendered by tho war—and
wo know that they were naturally
many rud g oat—they have been
worn out by a quarter of a century
of time, and today tho n asses of the
people in tho North do not look
nptStt their ^brethren of the South as
ti-ulors and rebels, nor is there any
longer the fear that for so many
years elated, that the Northern peo
pie are unwelcome and their lives in
danger at tho South; Not only
has tho Georgia exhibit received a
warm welcome, but many men have
come to me and thanked mo for
bringing it beie, as an evidence of
the restoration of harmony between
the sections and as the opening to
to them a refuge from the increasing
winter rigors of this climate. Not a
a single word tf disagreement in re
gard to the South b ve I heard, ex
cept it may be in the surprise exprps
eeil that we were so much farther ad
v meed in manufacturing than was ex
pected. I have t ked with many
old soldiers who accompanied Sher
man in his march to the sea, and all
have a good word for Georgi . wh ; ch
they look upon hb the bcs.-, State
in the South, and many have ■■xpress
id regret that they did not settle
there after the war closed. I have a
few canes with me. made from the
timber of tbc old s ockade at Auder
sonv lie.and have given a fewtotbose
who were prisoners the o. These
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM ,
C!t&n*e« and he anti flee the hair.
PromoUt a luxuriant frrowtiL
Never FeiIt to Reetore urey
Heir to its Youthful Color.
Cur«ascalp diMiucsand hair falling
HINDERCORN3.
The aafeftt, surest and best omt*f«*rCV'mn, Bunion*, Aa,
Stop* all peniv. Ennuiv* I'mnfui t wu t Ip* f* vt. Never fails %
fO cure. ctuilM at i*. ts iiijsooj * Oo* 1L
CENTRAL RAILROAD OF GEORGIA.
Notice to the Traveling Public.
The best and cheapest passenger
route to New York and Boston ift
via Savannah and elegant Steamers
thence. tickets Passengers other rontee before would pnrebas do
via
well to inquire first of tho merits of
the route via Savannah, by which
they will avoid dust and a tedious
ride. Rates include meals
stateroom on Steamer.
Round trip tickets will be placed
on sale June 1st, good to return un
til Oct. 31st, New York Steamer
sails tri-weekly. Boston Steamer
weekly from Savannah- information apply
For farther to
any agent of f 1 is Company, or to
E, T. Cn - TILTON, G. P, A.
Savannah, Ga:
C. G. Andel L.v,Ag-t Steamer,
Savannah, Ga.
rn
Customers, Aught, Bought
Boarders, To be
Agents, Sib rr or Gold,
Orders, 1 hand iso Sold.
Servants or Place, Opening >., .Js to Days Appraise,
Lawyer or Case, To Announce,
Musical Teac iers,
Popular Preachers, Houses or Acres,
Cooks, Butchers or Bakers.
Books, Boat3,
To H ! re or Let, Dress Votes, flounce
Offices, skirt or
Basement, A cure for disease,
First Floor, A Handy Valise,
Casement, AMuslinChemUe,
To Purchase a Pet, Cheese,
Horse, Teas,
Mare, Bees,
Monkey or Bear, Peas,
Bloodhound or c j . 1 >r Arc Prone
Free from FUz, To Make Known,
To Hire a Hall, Your Store,
Driver or team, Hosiery,
An Elegant Carriage.Dry oods,
Play,Concert A.nOpulent M&rriftg6j Ball, Upholstery PicnleSj *
or
Skates, Excursions,
Plates, Knick-Knacks,
To sell to gay creatur'sDiveisions, Ready! Made,
Diamonds,- Clothes
Pearls, Increase of Trade,
Rings, Coal, Coke and Woo d
Carls, Pictures,
Wash for Features, Lectures,
To buy Odd Things, All Kindsof Food
Or Bell Odd Things, Works on Theology,
Cals, Magic, Wealth Astrology, and Felicity,
R .ts,
Mats, World-Wide Publicity
Flats. Flags,
Bats. Rags,
Pantaloons, Bags, Nags,
Hats, Resplendet tCravats, Dress shirts collars
or
Mutton or Beef, Almighty .....~ Dollars, Rent,
Financial Relief, House for
Stocks, Store, Tenement,
Clocks, Cash to be L^nt,
Locks, Cash to be Spent,
Socks, Scent,
Portmonia or Box, Tent,
Fig, Sheep or Ox, Roman Cement,
Or Even a Beau— Go-
Then In a Trice, Read the Advice/
Take the Advice Far Beyond Price,
Written Below— Written Below—
ADVERTISE
-IN THE-
Daily News
To Business Men.
xro LA BORED ARGUMENT IS NEEDED
_13l in these days to convince INTKLL1
GENT men that it
Pays Well to Advertise
MAH WANTS BUT LITTLE
Mere below, but he Wants tha‘ little
mighty quick. A
or a big one is promptly filled by ad¬
vertising in the Daily or
Weekly NEWS,
mm hoke mm shop
COLUMBUS, - GEORGIA,
.TOE MeGHEE, Prop’i
-)o(--
The best place in Columbus to get a bath
or clean Shave. Give ns a call when in th
city JOE MeGHEE
Regular & Perfect
DIGESTION
PROMOTED BY USE OF
* Tarrant’*
Seltxer , Aperient.
Sold by Tarrant ft Co., N.Y.,
and Druggist* ever; where.
UNPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION!
Over a Million Distribu' *»
L.S.L.
State Lottery Company
Incorporated by the Legislature in 1808, and for
and Charitable purposes, present
franchise made a part of the
Constitution, in 1879, by an over¬
popular vole
Its GRAND EXTRAORDINARY DRAW¬
take place Semi-Annually, (Jnue and
and its GRAND SINGLE NUM¬
DRAWINGS take place on each of the
other ten months in the year, and are al
in public, at the Acacemy of Music
Orleans, La.
“Wedo here by certify thai we supervise the
Drawings for of All The the Louisiana monthly and State Quar¬ Lot
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, i *8 W8
the Company to use this certificate
fac-similesof oursignatmes attached m
advertisements.”
Commissioners.
We the undersigned Banks and Bankers
pay all Prizes drawn in The Louisiana
Lotteries which may he presented at
». IK. WAUHSX.BV.Pres. La.Ssl'l «•
X/ANAPA;. PresState NTa* I IJk.
BAi.DWIX,Pm. X. O.XsI’l IBank
KOMIS, X»res. X nlou VI Bank
; Monthly : Drawing
lb the Academy of Music, New Orleans,
Tuesday, September 11, 1888,
PRIZE, $300, CO.
100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars each
$10: Quarters $5; Tenths td; Twen¬
$1.
list op FHIZF.3.
1 Phizecf $300,000 is.......... $:?0.),0u0
l PaizB of 100,0001s.......... 100,000
1 Peize of 50,000 is.......... 50,000
1 Pbize op 25,000 is.......... 25,000
2 Phizes of 10,000 are......... 29.000
5 Phizes of 5,000 are........ 25,000
25 Prizes of 1,000 arc......... 25,000
100 Phizes of 500 are......... 50,00o
200 Phizes of 300 are......... GO,COO
500 Phizes of 200 are......... 100,000
APPROXIMATION PBI/.E3.
Prizes of $500 are............... 50,000
do. 300 arc............... 30,000
do. 200 are............... 20,00
TERMINAL, PBIZES.
100 are..... ., 99,909 99,900
100 are..... ......
Prizes of amounting to......$1,054,800 Capital Frizes
Note.— Tickets terminal drawing
not entitled to Prizes.
For Club Rrates, or any further informa
apply to the undersigned. Yonr hand-
w-riting must be distinct and Signature plain
More rapid return mail delivery will be as-
surred by cuclosing and Envelope bearing
your full address.
Send POSTAL NOTES, Express Money
Orders, or New York Exchange in Ordinary
letter. Currency by Express (at our expense)
addressed to DAUPHIN,
M. A. La
New Orleans
or M..A. DAL'PHIN,Washington,D.C.
Address Registered Letters tc
HEW ©XIX.EAft* IXATONAX, BAXX
New Orleans, La.
REMEMBER ZKkSKKSKS;:! •! the
and Early, wboar« In charge
drawings, is a guaantee of absolute fairness
and integrity, that tee chances are divine all equal, what
and that no one can possibly Prize.
numbers will draw a
REMEMBER that the payment of all
Prizes is GUARANTEED BY FOUR NATIO
NAL BANKS of New Orleans, and the
Tickets are signed by the President of an In
stitution whose chartered rights therefore are recog
nixed in the highest Courts;
beware of any imitations or anonymou
schemes.
The Georgia Midland 1IR.
^liopjpst and Best Line
"Witlx Through Coneli
os Between
COLUMBUS and ATLANTA.
ONLY ONE CHANGE TO
Washington, New York,
Nashville or Cincinnati.
Train leaves Columbus (Union Depot) 1:05
p.m, arrive at Griffin 3:50 p. m„ Atlanta
5:40 p. m.
South Bound train—Loaves Atlanta 3:40
p. m., Griffin 5:40 p. m., arrives in Colum¬
bus 8:40 p. m.
A<»f*oiiiino«lation Train
NORTH BOUND-Daily except Sundays.
Leave Columbus, Midland Depot, ~:00 a. m.
Arrives Arrives at McDonough...........2:20 Griffin,................12::i5p. m.
at p. m.
SOUTH BOUND—(Daily except Sunday.)
Leave McDonough................0:40 a, m.
l^ave Griffin......... 8:25 a. m.
Arrive at Columbus...............2:05 p, in,
SPECIAL TRAIN—(Sundaysonly.)
Leave Griffin.................... 8:25 a. m.
Arrive at Columbus..............11:28 a. m.
Leave Coinmbus................. 8:25 a. ru.
Arrive at Griffin.................11:30 a. m.
Arrive at McDonough ..........12:20 p. m.
C. W. CHEAR8, M. E. GRAY, Supt.
Gen’l Pass. Agt, Columbus, Ga.
MACON, GEORGIA.
T7MFTY-FIFTH ANNUAL SESSION opens
.A; Elegantly 8eptemtier 20th and closes June 2*th.
fornished class rooms and neat,
new cottages for students.
ble Centrally located. Good board at reasona¬
rates.
For catalogues and other iDformatK'n ap¬
ply to REV. J. A. BATTLE,
julyl2w4 President.
$100 to $200 made A MONTH working can for us be
horses Agents and preferred give theif whoern furnish their own
whole time to the busi¬
ness. Spare moments may be profitably em¬
ployed also. A few vocaneies in towns and
cities. B. F. Johnson & Co., 1099 Main St/
Richmond, Vb.
children pick their nose, grind their teeth,
restless, unnatural in their appetite, they aw
should likely be troubled taken and with B. Worms, A.Fahnestock* prompt me a*
be given them according- to diito
it has saved many a child from death ani
m CURTS BUSINESS COLLEGE
ERIE, PA.,
for circulars. The best schoo.
, in America. Fall term begins
Ang.sa ilemiou tlds J.a[« r.
‘ANNOUNCEMENT”
THE CAMPAIGN
IS NOW OPEN!
THE GRIFFIN NEWS
Ir in the fight, and should be read by every
TRUE DEMOCRAT!
who desires to keep posted on the'paints of the greatest political struggle ever known ta
his republic, in which not alone p irty supremacy is involved, but in the langnags of the
President “We struggle to secu-e and sive cherished institutions, the welfare and happi¬
ness of a nation of free men.
The main battle grounds of thU conflict will he New York and Indiana; and IheNxwi
has made special arrangements to present from ‘me to, time the progress of the campaign
n the Empire State of the North, a- viewed from the most absolutely trustworthy I>emo-
ratio standpoint, and will a! o have special sc; \ ice from Indiana, Appropriate and point-
d political cartoons will appear from time to time.
In Sta'e affair- a’ politics of Spalding an 1 arrounding counties, the people will be
kept fully posted f i litorial utterances and by special correspondents, being better
prepared to do tl. ■ 1! m ay other paper in this saetion. The News is the offl rial organo
the State in this county, of the county itself and of the city of Griffin, and enjoys the fulles
confidence of the p rty end its leaders
With all this, ' - recognizes that there is something besides politics even in apo
litical year, and v. bright and newsy as ever. Renewed attention will be paid to
attracting irami i .■, ; co-op < ration with the great Democratic newspaper of the Me¬
.
tropolis, the New . ' -I..-. The most eminent of Southern statesmen will l>e invited to
discuss the poll*ice. epect- of the South; iis most successful business men to portray 1
industrial conditions and demands. In this, the News should receive the substantial a
and eccouragomer;‘ ' very citizen of this section.
The farming dt, ai!n ent will appear regularly as at present acd illustrated each week,
Illustrated novelette wi ! also continue to be an interesting feature.
The price of the News i es it within the reach of the humblest voter, while its charac¬
.
ter is equal to that of papers three times the price. The Daily News will he sent fr»w
now until January 1st next for $2. 50, from August 1st to January 1st for $2.10, from Septcm
ber 1st to January 1st for $1 TO, and from October 1st to January 1st for $1.25.
The Weekly News will be sent one year for 50 cents, six months for 25 cenls. Call
the office, or subscribe through your postmaster or any of our many correspondent*
through Judge R. H. Alien, onr Pike County Editor, or through
DOUGLAS OLES8NER, Publisher,
Griffin, Ga.
GET YOUR NEIGHBOR TO SUBSCRIBE.
New Advertisements
rpiIE X located UNiVE' at 81 -TTY ANEE, OF TENN., THE SOUTH is
.V upon the
Cumberland Platan, 2,00.) feet above the sea
level. 7 hi* srh-rf-!, pnd„r the special patron
age of the bi*>bt>;iH of the Protestsnt Episco¬
pal Chinch, in the South nnd Southwest, of¬
fers the healthiest re.risenee and bestadvunt-
«ges, both moral and edu-ationalpn its Gram
mar School and in its CoPegiate and Theo¬
logical University Departments For tuc special claims
of this for patronage, apply for
documents to the Rev.TELFAIR HOD3SON,
Vice-Chsnc»l)or, Sewancc. Tenn.
TTtC JL1J f r ft -i'T? mnj oeronno cm
Oerero: t . iLjw. il«CX>'» K.rwbpau.-;
iRwri <10 grn-noo St.), whore naivortisM
... ur ■ » It t:, kfcW VilKS
DR. MOFFETT’S
_ FEMALE MEDICINE
IneSystem , By JTlTlag toBeto and strenirthenlngr ral nf* 1111
and balldinir ap tn$* g^na *
ixdian weed
corrects from which all Irregularities ladles and suffer. annorlng It g 1 trovor^ ’.*’
weak, so many health aud strength.*^ a
debilitated woman depress*.*
makes cheerful the despondent, should. be »■*
spirits. In change ofllfe no lads and V*f«***-
out INDIAN wEKD. It it Safe
Ask yonr Druggist.
E. R. Anthony, Griffin and M. F, 8«t»
Ochard Hill, Ga,