Newspaper Page Text
|Tertl«in«r
• Mlw pM Kjuara t*r lb*
aad fiftp oanta for «aoh sub-
. be ooont-
i lines or lea* to
__10 No Ineertion oenl* a*der par Map this
, t0 canto. All insertion*
tfthato **a dollar moat ba paid (or i ft
j fat*s will be mads with parties
la oanttnus th*ir advertisement*
Sets* raise** ter the Ihstlv.
Tht Democratt of Tennewwe in
muj (hair former majority for
governor find their msjorily in the
v
findUv (0.) Courier: ‘ The Repub
I will now hate to redeem their
and give the farmers a dol
pound for their woo! next
spring/'
The Democrats, though losing the
in the presidential contest, se
l s majority in both branches of
the legislature of Indtenn-.-lO in the
senate end 18 In the house.
lUoon News: "A Miss Harrison, s
oiaoe of the president elect, has been
a charming feature of our fair, and
•he ia bright and fair. If her unde
is tike her, the Booth has nothing to
„ r a
'
> , fe. Hampshire with
In New a man
whbfcsre on bis chin only has receiv-
ad tbs largest vote for Governor.
Hew Hampshire can triumph over
every prejudice except that which
the kssps for the South.
•AS» fib
The Democrats of tbs city of Phi
adaipbie have no reason to be asbam
ed of the record they made on Tuea
day. They gave Grover Cleveland
21,866 more votes this year than in
IMA, end reduced the Republican
plnratity in that city 12,049 votes.
William Walter Phelps says that
failure to revise the tariff would mean
Republican defeat in 1892. The
Republican defeat ia New Jersey in
1888 makes this fact quite clear te
him, and be knows thst time to dia
pel misrepresentations is all that ia
needed to bring the oountry into ac
cord with New Jersey and Connect!
out.
Mrt. Harris ia th« name of a will
o* io Topeka, Kansas, who has done
an original thing. She' has put over
her husband's grave a lasting mentor
te! of the illness whioh ceased his
death—manu-S'petu. At the base
of a simple granite shaft ia carved a
mail of ooiling and writhing snakes.
Above ia cut bis name and age and
the simple sentence: “Died of Dalir
iura Tremens.”
The National Democratice Com
mittee distributed documents that
coat over $100,000 for printers’ bills
•lone. The Milla bill and "What
the Milla Bill Means” were the pam
pbiets for whiclFthe heaviest orders
were received and filled. The tariff
defiued by the St. Louie
platform was fought straight out
with the utmost energy from oae end
of tbs campaign to the other.
From 1886 to 1892 the Democracy
will be a force of observation, having
tho great advantage of the very high
standard of Cleveland’s Administra
lion for oompariaon with the doings
of their opponents. It will be im
possible for the Republicans to again
shift the issue unfairly. It will bo
their performaocea and their promis
as that tbs people will have to invest
igste, and with unity and wisdom on
the part of the Democrats in Con
grass the result of the criticism wilt
be sooh as to surely lead the domi
aafit conservative element of the
MOStiy to approbation of Democrat
ic aaassures.
A wan who ha* pr£c etlsed medicine for 40
years, ought to kn ow salt from sugar;
reed what he says.
To Joebdo. O , Jan. 10, 1887.
Messrs. K. J. Cheney A Co.—Gentlemen:
have been in the general practice of ined-
for most 40 years, and would say that in
mf practice and experience, have never
sees* preparation that I could prescribe
much confidence of success as I can
_ manufactured by
'sCatarrh Cure, times you. and
ribed it a great and would many in
ia wonderful, find My ron-
.bet I have yet to a csm of Ca-
_ would
that it would not cure, if they
~ ~ “ tg to directions.
M. D.
j. Ofifoe, 215 Summit fit.
tlWfor any case of Catarrh
Kail's Catarrh
, Props,. ToUjta, O.
, «pc. fWlw* t ©
t>r "busted” a in»
In hi* „ _ a 0 *rber corporation'* monopoly
_iOna Whon U ho a bl$f railroad In the senate Oglesby
, «u
was one of the beat story tellers there,
and tho story of hi* experience won’t lose
anything though at If second given In band. hi* own It was language, In tho
bonanxa days of Lendvillo when tho
stranger within Its gates paid for what
ho got. *'I had a little hole in the tells ground his
out there,” Governor Oglesby when I
friends, "and went to soo was
going to got dividends. I wanted a slmvo
and they sent mo to tho only barber
in tho place. It was tho toughest slmvo
I over got, snd I'm blessed If the robber
didn't ask for four bits when I offered
him a quarter. Now, when you're on the
borders of civilization jnebbe two bits
Isn't too much for a shave, but half a
dollar when you’ve Just stood another as¬
sessment oil your mining stork is too
much, t swore and said tho next time I'd
go somewhere else. But tho robber only
laughed snd told mo to try It on.
"Sure enough there wasn't another
barber In the town. There bail been one,
but ho had struck a lead and was able to
buy all the tonsortal establishments in
the country. However, pretty soon ono
cams along. Ho didn’t havo much to
begin with, but I told him to start up anil
I'd get some .customers.
ont In front of tho other fellow’s
shop and told evory man who came along
what a robber’s don it was. Some of
them only laughed, but others bits. The went to
my man ami saveil two mo¬
nopolist tried to raise a row, I wouldn't
be bluffed, and In less than a week he'd
cone down to twenty-five cents. Then
my man put the prieo at fifteen cents,
and before I left that was the regular
charge In Leadvllle, and you pould got a
shave for leas than it cost to tako n
drink.”—Waahlngton Cor. New York
Tribune.
Tbo Diamond Dealer’s Methods.
Jacob Drelcer, the diamond dealer who
made the sensational sale of jewelry to
George Law's friends, the sloggers, Is a
Saratoga character. Ho seems as soft
and amiable and flexible as a maiden, but
hi* that Is merely ‘There his way is of accomplishing looking at
business. more
diamonds than buying them,” ho says.
"That is true of every place In the world.
If I could charge 5 cents a look' from all
•who come hero I would Boon be rich with¬
out selling a atone.” As it is, the shrewd
fellow gays he Is merely paying his rent
and his fare back to New York. York. "It is a
queer business,” buys diamonds ho gays. when "People he nos think made
a man
a little extra money. It takes moro than
that, I tell you. lie buys diamonds only
when he feels good. If a man feels just
right, diamonds Beem just tho thing to
invest in for himself and his wife, ir ho
didn't feel good they might as well bo bo
many of bricks. and Suppose with u man headache, made a pot
money, got up a or
bis wife made him cross by refusing him
something—ho has no use for diamonds
then. The littlest thing that crosses a
man who has diamonds in his mind will
drive them out."
JJe knows another thing, does this
shrewd doalor In luxury.
He knows enough to sell Ills goods In
the store, and nowhero elso. "Tho store
Is my stage," ho says. “There Is where I
jday and diamonds understand my his part. hotel If a show man
takes away to to
to hU wife I might as well givo him up
as a customer. Blie ghows them to ono
lady. flaw Tho that lady Is envious. 'Isn’t that shows a
In one?’ she nam She
them to another. 'Beautiful,' gayg that
lady, wliatovcr ‘but I like ’em clear white,’ or rosy She
or color theso don’t havo.
shows them to a third lady, and that ono
Bays, ‘They’ro splendid, but particularly Mrs. Jones'
are tho bigger.’ unnYuuid That settles btwm ioitl it, by
aa lias ono man
that he saw a fluer pair sold for less
money once.’’—Saratoga Cor. New York
Ban.
J* Death Preventable?
dio Why of dlsoaso should at men. all? women There and is children,
no pro¬
vision for doath In early Hfo except by
accident, ignorance of the laws of health
aud neglect of duty somebody. toward our neigh¬
bor on the part of . . .
Why Why do some die, and fatal some recover? Fa¬
should dlseaso bo at nil?
tality Is connected to somo extent with
the surroundings in which tho patient
baa lived before |ho became affected, and
Is living at tho timo at which tDo ills
ease commences In a given district. If
there has lieen a largo number of fatal
cases of inflammation of tho lungs, you
may ba oortain that tho air of that dis¬
trict habits Is not so pure the as it ought to ho, ami
the of Inhabitants are not so
prudent as they might lie. No man dies
of inflammation of tho lungs in middle
life, or Indeed of any acute disease, bo it
what it mav, if he has lived healthily
both as to habits and character of sur¬
roundings.
If a district has a death rate of twenty-
four in tho 1,000, It is double what it
ought which to be. Tho half of tho deaths
take placo might havo been pre¬
vented if tho people would obey the laws
of health, keep their houses and their
persons clean, dispose of their excreta in
a proper way, and be temperate in their
habits of living, and at tho sarao time do
tho their sophistication duty to their of neighbor articles by of avoiding diet,
or
the mischief of adulteration.—Dr. Alfred
Carpenter.
Couldn't Get Away with Much.
"United States Sub-treasurer Sutton,
supposo a thief should get into your big
vault somo » night?” In there ”
“No thief can get
"But suppose ho could?”
"Vi is Impossible.”
"But say that somo clover fellow did
get in, how much could ho carry away in
gold?" “Not than $25,000. Wo
moro single put
that much in double eagles in a
That bag, tho weight deal of of which weight is 100 in pounds. mighty
is a good Hard a
small bundle, making it to carry. A
thief would have hard work to run with
ono of those bags, and he couldn’t nmnago
to lug two to savo bis life You have no
idea liow hard it is to carry a 100 pound
bag of gold Tho weight is so concen¬
trated. But, after all. no thief can get in
there. burglars. Tho safes are Paul absolutely Globe. proof
against ”—St.
A Fondoffo* for Vowels
Tho Scotchman has long been noted for
his fondness for vowels, a peculi&rity in
language illustrated by tlie following
story: Going by a draper's shop 'oof' a man
noticed a coat aud asked. "Aw "Aye,
aw’ ’oo," replied tho shopkeeper question. "Ave. “Aw'
a’ ’oo?" was tho next
aw’ a’ ’oo,” was tho reply. In English simply tlie
dialogue would linvo referred to
the fact whether the coat was aii wool
and ail one wool, tho answer lading yes to
both questions.—Chicago Herald.
Advice to Mothers.
M s. Winslow's Soothing Stiu p
for children teething, is the prescription and
of one of the best female nurses
physicians in the United States, and
has been used for forty years with never
failing sneoess children. by millions During of the mothers
for their process
of teething its value is incalculable
It relieves the child from pain, cures dys
entcry and dierrhoB*, griping in the
bowels, and wind oolic. the By mother, giving
health £• the child and rests
Prior 25 cents a bottle. angeodAwIy
Catarrh
fs a constitutional disease, caused by sernfo-
lous taint In the blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla,
being a constitutional remedy, purities the
blood, builds up lh« whole system, ami i«r-
manently cures catarrh. Thousands of i<oplo
who suffered severely with thl* disagreeable
disease, testify with pleasure that catarrh
Can be
cured by taking flood's Sarsaparilla. Mrs.
Alfred Cunningham, Fallon Avenue, Provi¬
dence, B. I., says: “ I have suffered with
catarrh In my head for years, and paid out
hundreds of dollars for medicines, but havo
heretofore received only temporary relief. 1
began to tako Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and now
my catarrh Is nearly cured, the weakness of
my body is all gone, my appetite Is good *- In
(act, 1 feel like another person. Hood's Sar¬
saparilla Is tho best medicine ! have eve*
taken, and the only one which did mo perma¬
nent good. I cordially recommend it.” A
gentleman in Worcester, Mass., who waur
Cured
Of catarrh by Hood's Sarsaparilla, .ays: “I
would not take any moneyed consideration
for the good one bottle did me.” If you are
a sufferer, do not put off taking a simple
remedy till your bronchial tubes or lungs are
affected, and consumption has gained a bold
upon you. He wise In time! That flow from
the nose, ringing noise tn the ears, pain in the
head, inflammation of tho throat, cough, and
nervous prostration will be cured if you take
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Bold t >7 *11 druggist*, Jl; six for f.V Prepare*
kr c. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass,
IOO Doses Ono Dollar
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS.
For Representative.
At the solicitation of many friends I an-
myself a candidate for Representa¬
of Spalding county, to fill ilie vacancy
by the death of Hon. N. M. Colletts,
to the Democratic nomination. If
elected 1 pledge myself to represent the citi
of Spalding county without regard to
calling or occupation.
JOHN II. MITOIKLL.
For Ordinary.
To tub People—I announce myself as a
candidate for Ordinary, subject to nomina¬
tion of the Democratic party. I trust that
my past administration of the office lias been
satisfactory to the people and that they w ill
continue to give me their confidence and
support, E. W. HAMMOND.
For Sheriff.
Editor News 1 'lease announce my uaiuc
ns a candidate for Sheriff, subject to the
decision of the Democratic nomination. If
elected, J. 11. Nutt win be my deputy.
11. P. OGI.ETKI.E.
For Sheriff.
Editor News—IM easc announce fifty name
as a candidate for Sheriff of Spaldimr Coun¬
ty, Huhjc' t to a Democratic nomination, if
one is held. It. 8. CONNELL.
R. H. Johnston For Ireasurer.
I am a candidate for Treasurer or Spalding
County, subject to nomination by the Demo¬
cratic party. R. H. JOHNSTON-
For County ireasurer
To the Wrens or Siwllino < < i sty—I
Hereby ttnn'mncc reysrir n* a cnndiflatc n»r
ro-eleolion an County Treo^urt i■, Mihject t<#
the Dcniormtic nomination, I respectfully
solicit youv votes. J.C. lillooKS.
For County CLrk.
Editor N i:\v- -I’leasc announce my imim,*
a* a candidate for v-election to the olhof *>f
County Clerk, subject to a IVmoci atn j-ri
Diary, it ouo is hold. W M THOMAS.
For Tax Collector.
Editoh News—P lease announce my name
a* a candidate for Tax Collector, siihject to
a Democratic nomination if one is held.
W. 11.1IOHNK.
For Tax Collector.
i am a candidate for Tax Collector cf
Spalding C« unt y. Subject to the Democrat-
nomination, ii one I- held.
W. U. tiiU Bi* '.
Tax Collector.
Editor N'lws—A t the mpi t of fih'nd.s t
nm.uneo myself a candulate for l ax CcdU’e-
tor of Hpalding C'ouuty "Uhject *o Democrat
id nomination. My only reason for so doing
t lost my right arm in serving my country
and ean't plough-* J. Y. I’A 11 EltSON.
Sunny 8ide, Oct. 24, IW
For Tax Collector.
Editor News:—TT ca-e auimunc< mj name
aft a Candida to for tlie office oil ax Collector
of Spalding Comity, Biihjoct to tho Demo¬
cratic nomination if one is held.
U. H. YAHRKunai.
For Tax Collector,
Editor Nenvs:— 1 'kase aunounco my name
uh a candidate for n- election to tli ‘dticc cl
Tax Collector of Spalding county, ut> > ct
to the 1 democratic nomination, if one is held.
J. W. TUAVLS.
To the Voters cf Spalding County.
At Uw »<.>!.cltatton of friends 1 cflVr far
the position <>f Tux 4'ollector of Spahling
comity, subjcid to a noniiiiation of the Dem¬
ocrat party if ono is held.
B. |). BRFWSTER.
For Tax Receiver.
Kiiitok Nkivs- Pli use anr.ouncc my inline
a* a candidate for Tax Henivorof Spalduig
County, atit'jvot tojlie Demovvutic lL'inina-
ioti, if ono is held.
M. T. FI LLK.it.
For Tax Receiver.
Editor News: — Please annomic- my niunc
ns n candidate for re-eleciiuu U< the offico of
Tax Receiver tspn din j. county, subject to
tw tt. IVuiOct at ic i.ominatmn, if one i*> licit!.
K \. H.VKDKE*
*
ine By Riving and tone building to a«d strengthening the the.l’ter- j
Svstem lxdiajv up wked general health, '
eocrrctB all lrregularltlft* and annoying tronMus
from which ao many y ladles iaaies naffer. saner. It It give* gives the the .
oman health iltbi and strength,ami i
makes abeerfttl the of life despondent, lady should depressed In
aplrlt*. In chaitvre no be v*lth-
Mt INDIAN WEED. It u Second L nfaUing*
▲a* jour Druggist.
E. R. Anthony, Griffin and XI. F, n
Ocbard Hill, Ua.
ISP A . S Y t-' k LL SI
«siJiU5^?SC452L’3SBE MNi . Jleyee mil w
f&fr---; m f«
The Georgia Midland R It
•ihortvst iiimI Be»t Line
With Tlii-outrli Ooitr-h
cn lictween
COLUMBUS and ATLANTA.
( SLY ONE CHANtiK I t)
New York,
Nashville or Cincinnati.
-VO. 50, I'asszmcieb, south,
Leave McDonough.. ........... 7:30a. in.
(iritBn . .. 8:15 "
•' .. 825 “
Columbus..............11.-5 “
Vo. 51, PASgENOBB ANI* MAH., SOUTH.
ave Columbus..................1:05 p. n».
Griffin.................3:58 “
VO ’ 1-VSSENOKH ANtl mail, SOl'TII,
Griffin ....... 4:05 p.m.
Columbus.................7:05 "
NO. 53, i'AHSKVliEB. SOUTH,
- Columbus..................4:10 p. in.
Griffin..................7:14 "
" ...................,7:20 *'
McDonough.............. 8:0” “
NO. t, raEIOHT, NOBTH.
Columbus..................7:00 a. m
Grillin.....................1:25 p. ,in
" 2;30 '
McDonough............. .3:35 “
no. 2, FRiHIHT, SOUTH.
McDonough..... ..........7:45 a. ra
GriIBn ....................8:50 *'
" 9:85 “
Columbus .............3:30 p. in
M . E. GRAY, Supt.
C. W. CIIEARfi.
Gcn’l Pass. Agt, Columbus, Ga.
New Advertisements.
W: HAIR
*V.. '7 . . .....II., :.. rat r Lite hair.
Promotes a luxuri.nv "ro'.vlh.
gll -■ "Prevefitft Never Hair to Fa.l* dandruff its Youthful lo Restore and hair Color. failing Gray
fl'ic. and $1 I>rqgtri8
Crateful--Comforting.
PPS’S COCOA
BREAKFAST.
“hy thorough knowledge of the natural
ich govern the oparations of diges
ami nutrition, and hy a careful applica-
of the. fine properties provided of well selected provid¬
breakfast Mr. Epps tallies has with cur delicately
onr ft
beverage which may save ns many
doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious
of such article of dietlhata constitution
be gradually built up until strong
to resist eve ry tendency to disease.
Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating.
us ready to attack wherever there is a
point Wc may escape many a fatal
by keepingonvselvec well lortiticdwith
pure blood and a properly nourished simply frame.” with
—Civil Service Gazette, Made
water or milk. Sold only in half-
pound tins. Grocers, labelled thus:
JAMES EBl'S A CO.,
Ilomceopathio Chemists, England.
London,
-THE [mm SPIES. VOPUFK.tl,. VITALITY
Ki't al JledXcat Weak of the
. .. Mn.ihood. Nervous and i
) :O'-'.'al D. hllltv. Preniature '
1>" H' Errors of Vouth, and
■ 1111 :o!-! Miseries Cottsequent
’ " "■ I -.e'I's 8 Vo, 125
1 .. ,lions for uH diseases.
Of.Ml. full Blit. . ..iy * 1 . 00 , lot __
sealed. Illustrative sample free to«|,,
'*V y ; Ue ,>KV 1 meo Send fl„id „„„«
' - noiv. The
veiled Medal awarded to the author v
i Medical Association. ,
..v. Address p.
■ ■"■ton. Mass., or Dr. W. H P.iii-rn
! ‘ Diseases who may of consulted confl.|.«,tlal|y
. Man. Office N„. . I UuL'.'i, h«t
V
1 he . • nt
V>rm by • r3
folios «•*
jiit the
Uiincd I’.-*
Mjc mi : the
3 3ne>r:;. net j it
it -ill of r
Paris. 1)0:- I
With . 1-
trier*,?!I- v 1 _> ■ .k-
?n the !: lo-a-
JUted <
Mu- <’T-
iraor- 1 ’ HIO
riiperitri
?Xi ■
in nf i
I his r.,
prove,
iwl 1 NO
3thi.v h
H He
liblCj e. of
:onr, ■ • ■ it.lv in-
;rc!t- ’ ^au'Uug
ii tui.e
A c O rn threo
aun«f 1 I - ? sent,
toceth* r . ’ >«cij .ipplicanL
riatv s i w easy
nonts:
MASOfi i tn PIANO CO.
no . . (. Ui AliO.
Tho Tov Jho Child lakes Rest
-13 THE—
ANCHOR”
Stone Mding Blocks.
Heal Stone. Threo Colors.
A CI.F.V F.R pRKSEKT for fthikl-
ron of f ail all aces. aue*. For For $1.75, or
ef $2.U) at'eod average box.
Pt’scriptlve free application Catalogue ggot
post on to
F.,Ad. Richter & Co.,
3IO BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
octkkVw 2m
ew Felts
Jl ST KKCElVKDD AT
MRS. M. L. WHITE’S
Millinery Store.
Clark Building. Corner offHill and
Broadway.
Wno ivrt* Weak, Norv
ous and DcUilitatrd
ami sutTon; g from
Debility, Seminal
\Veakiu*>s. Nightly
Lmissio: 7 , aud all the
effects of early Evil
Habits, which lead to
Premature Decay, Ooneumption or Insanity, of Mari,
sen*! for i'ears* Treatise on Discuses
with particulars for Horn** Cure.
( un» guaranteed No core ro pay, J. S.
Pfaus, t)I*3 and bit Chorcli St.. Nashville
Trim. novMdttwIy.
YOU mn SUMPTIVE
A rth m*. \ n ,i igest s on f l so
TONIC hU luma deUy. It
U&» -cu.ea cure** manv manv .-t uje me worms w .»i >i son—su»d 1st bo beet remedy
fur ail aiTtK iumis »f the Uinxit aj»<! lung*, and discafs-s
arlsiitir fnmn impure iteood and UflMinttifm. The feoiWo
aud sfc-k. struggling agamat d m o a—, ami drifting
ffiWB. Take tt in si
«d disorder* of stom*
L uislana
Incorporated by the Legislature in 1808 -r
Educational and Charitable purposes, ; i
its franchise made a part of the preat ;t
Slate Constitution, in 1879, by au over¬
whelming popular vote
Its GUAM) l‘.X 1RAORDJNARY DRAW¬
INGS take place Senii-Annaally, (June and
December), and it* GRAND SINGLE NUM-
H KK DRA WINGS take place on each of the
the other ten months in the year, and arc all
drawn in public, at the Academy ol MtR>ie,
New Orleans, La.
‘•Wedo hereby certify that we supervise Semi¬ the
arrangements for ail the monthly and
annual Drawiugsof The Louisiana State ho:
tery Company, and In person manage and con
troi the Drawings themselves, and that the
same are conducted with honesty, fairness
and in good faith toward all parties,att<l this we
authorize the Company to use certificate
with fac-ei miles of oursignatmes attached D
its advertisements.”
rom mixNluucr*.
We tlie undersigned Banks and Bankert
will pay all Prizes drawn in The Louisians
Stale Lotteries which may be presented at
our counters:
«. IW. WAlHSXKl’.Pre*. La-Tm'l B.
I». 1,44414. Hre.Ktat.- SaM »k.
A. BA4,»Wlil,Prnt X. O.Xafl Uant
( Alii, H01I4, Prr«. I »!sa VI Bant
Mammoth Drawing
At the Academy of Music, New Orleans,
Tuesday, December 18, 1888,
CAPITAL PRIZE, $600,000.
100,000 Tickets at $40; Halves $30; Quar¬
ters £!0; Eighths 55; Twentieths $2; For¬
tieth? SI.
LIST OF PHIZES..
1 Pbize OF *600,000 ig.......... §000,000
t Prize of 200,000 ia.......... 300.000
1 Fbize of 100,000 is.......... 100.000
1 I’kizk of 50,000 is.......... 50,000
3 Prizes of 25.000 are......... 50,000
5 Prizes of 10,000 are........ 50,000
13 Prizes of 5,000 are......... 60 000
35 Prizes of 2,000 are......... 50,000
100 Frizes of 800 are......... 80,000
300 Prizes of 400 arc_________ 80,000
500 Frizes of 200 are......... 100,000
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
100 Frizes of $l,000are............ . 100,000
100 ilo. 800 are............. .. 80,000
100 do. 400 are............. .. 40,000
Tubes Numiieh TekmINALS.
fill Prizes of $800 are ...............$79,300
<»9 do 400 are................. 39,0C0
Two Ni mbek Tekm inals.
900 Prizes of $300 are...............$180,000 180,000
900 do. 300 are..............
3,140 Prizes Brates, of amounting to......$3,118,80(
Eor Club or any further informa¬
tion desired, write legibly to the undersign¬
ed, clearly stating your residence, with
State, County, Street and Number.
More rapid return mail delivery will be as-
surred by enclosing an Envelope bearing
your full address.
Send POSTAL NOTES, Express Money
Orders, or New York Exchange in Ordinary
letter. Currency by Express (at our expen sc)
addressed to
M. A. DAEPHIN,
New Oneans La
or M. A. DAUPHIN, Washington, D.C.
Address Registered Letters tc
NEW OIUE4X* 1 * TOU A,. MAXI.
new Orleans, ba.23
REMEMBER
and Early, alio arc in rliarxo el rht*
drawings,is a guarantee of absolute fairness
and integrity, that the chances are all erjua!,
and that no one can possibly divine what
numbers will draw a Prize.
REMEMBER, also, that the payment of
Prizes is GUARANTEED BY FOUR NA¬
TIONAL BANKS of New Orleans, and tlie
Tickets ore signed bj the I’residentof an In
stitution whose chartered rights are recog
nized in the highest Courts; therefore
beware of ail imitations or anonymous
schemes.
S I. UHII * SIS
!sn Agency
CRIFFIN, CEORCIA
►Strongest Companies,
Lowest Rates,
’’I'omjit Settlements
HOTEL CURT IS
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA,
Under New Management.
A. G. DANIEL. Prop'r.
’•&" 1 ot t* if i: id nil trains. fcb 15dJy
ADVERTISERS
n learn the exact cos*
•\ proposed line
rtismgin America:
;s by addressing
P. Rowell cz Co..
tisin Surcfiu
.« , New Y«»rk.
loO-.'jge r’i*‘ ph
to. WITTIEST,PRETTIEST JUVENILES
QUEER PEOPLEp.i.Vrc«x
Ulnprmmt uf the Frog and the Mouse.)
nil of the oddr.I itkiXp, clinrmlna niorirs an
IsiBah-itTovoLinB iU«Kr*tV.in« bv uc I’tocih'
Juvenile artists. Mpllln* Imuensrly. t riiio
„f i | . "It nit ,01 Util* fells i ciUl orth drltoht !emf -
Hon. Clinton*. Eton. '•Dus’lsntd me another for
art thf children to !wl."- R. H. Conwell, I) D, Inermi.
oarahlv ijop neat and elegant Hon. B. S. Oox. faerinaO
a, and Uncle Htmne. Hon.Howard Croaby.
4I.ENTM WANTED. HI Hr BBARD BROS,
7*8 (Ibealnnl Street, et, Phltadelphla, INt.
?T0 CLARI S BUSINESS COLLEGE
ERIE, PA.
for clrc*l*nri^*b«Bt seboo.
. _A Itototagtos
Aag-SO. ICaatm this paper.
While we ciosd out many of the
offered, we have added
I
it will be to your interest to visit my
CROWDED STORE ROOMS if
you wish to
Bargains.
Department.
inis department of my business does
occupy as much space as some of my com¬
it nevertheless contains
ome m m ich : Drives !
Will offer this week 75 Men’s Cassimei e Suits
$10,00; worth from $12,50 to $15,00. These
were purchased in the last ten days, late
the season and the party that I bought from
anxious to sell. Leave your orders for Suits,
or Overcoats and I will have them made
JACOB .
by the best house in the country,
SONS, of Philadelphia. No fit, no pay.
Department.
Have added largely to this
in the past few weeks.
TREMENDOUS BARGAINS
nil and Giflree’s Wrens,
LADIES’ JACKETS,
N V W M A R K E R S,
Mojcskas, Jerseys, &e.
Shoe Department!
Find that I am over¬
stocked in Childrens
Boys' and Misses’
AfAlfl/tG Custom#^ per Will on save this line you Shoks. 40 to 50
r •co ft Just received big stock. Cel¬
1 J; FLEMISTTE. Sw eet & Sherwood’s
ebrated Hand Sewed
. Shoes at $4.00. As
good as any $7 goods.
Buy my Eagle Shoe Company’s Penitentiary Ma de
for (lies’ and blisses’ and yon will have no
All at the lowest prices, at
Flemister’s.