The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, April 21, 1889, Image 2

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•v* s ^ he ty i* it ly •r * L y r a , “* ton Central Labor Union totationa the other day g the appointment q* Mr. Reid oe minister to France uding that a different ap- for the place be made. It ed that President Harri- he Republican party did the interest of the Ameri- ig people when “the great- of organized labor in this was appointed to office. , little strange that the Sty is cutting down her elephone and electric «t as Griffin is common¬ ers up. The trouble in that the wires are so •iffia has the ad- rk. It must b$ rever, that the eat has a slight tion and wealth, dallying about “to a new (rail- be o millionaire in a year or two. The chance he has for making a big fortune come* to him through hi. ° Hto name la Dennis T. Flynn. He is a young Irishman of Buffalo, N. Y. A few weeks ago Congressman SS£SKSJ 2 £ 5 S£r He is the first settler in the new teri- tcry, no one else being permitted to enter it until April 22. As yet Guth¬ rie exists only in name, but there are several thousands of people on the borders of Kansas, Missouri and Ar¬ kansas waiting for a chance to get there and build a town. Mr. Flynn con enter a quarter sec¬ tion of land and locatethepost office i there is is no doubt a built around the post trouble to sell them. Guthrie will have a boomfrom theetart, and lots within its limits will bring fabulous prices. Mr. Flynn will be ready to resign bte office in all probability within a year, and retire from business with man more than ° nce in The present apportionment under it is suggested that the ratio under the census of 1889 be 200,000 of population, which would give the membership of the House 835, « now. Mr, Springer, of Illinois, excel- lent authority upon such matters, thinks that each of the New England States, e*»pt Massachusetts, will lose one or more Congressmen, and that the Western States and Texas round dozen Congressmen under its next appointment. CURRENT COMMENT, Painter on a Boom. Chicago Inter-Ocean (Bep.) Grover Cleveland and Gov. Hill will do well to keep an eye on our Gen. Palmer. Of Course They Will. Boston Globe (D«m.) The southern anything colored republicans of this ad¬ haven’t got out ministration thus far, not even aay had when more Cleveland “protection" President. than they Some was day wake the southern ask colored themselves republicans why will up and they rote the republican ticket . 1 An Interesting Fact. Louisville Courier-Journal (Dem.) At last a White Cap the has only been con¬ victed. In Arkansas mem¬ ber of a band that could be captured in has been given twenty-one years the p«aitentiary. Is it not some¬ what noteworthy that the only of known instance of the punishment a White Cap should be, not in the north, where White Cops most abound, but in the so-called lawless south? Deadheadism Encouraged. New York World (Dem.) Mr. Harrison and Mr. Blaine took a excursion lighthouse yesterday on a Movem¬ had ent tender. We aped that Mr. Harrison would re¬ nte deadheadism by paying for his own junkets. He receives asalary of rent nearly for f1.000 attending per week to and government his house business. He has no more right pleasure to use a naval vessel for a yacht than the humblest clerk in the New York postofflee. There is one thing to be said in Mr. Cleveland’s favor. He was not much of a dead¬ head. The Invalids Hope. Many seeming!/ incurable eases of blood poison, catarrh, scrofula and rheumatism bare been cored by B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm), mads by the Blood Balm Co., Atlan¬ ta, Ga. Write to them for book filled with 3 pith running S^K ulcere, 5 which S 3 doctors J£i»S!l treated and prononneed incurable. A single bottle of B B. B. did me more good than all the doctors. I kept on offing it and every ulcer out 1 )▼ Debility g§ retteS* mtok 1 her recover , K. - -— IT DID dance to¬ tes bof of on Baeter iT Oh I ohl what a shame it Is, It tot Might be she never heard of it. for them be a heap of innocint ignorance in America waitm the most beautiful Pings to Irish, so an’ ^Bnt really, Maggie," and blue eyes were wide with wonderment* “really and truly, does the sun dance with the moon on Easter morning? “What would I be tailin’ ye for if it wasn’t so at ail? The? do in Ireland; just os sure as the blissid sun comes up drlppin' out av the say, lavin’ ould Eng¬ land in the dark, bad luck to her! The moon runs hoppity skip across the they sky an’ joins hand with the sun, an’ dance a rale Irish dreadfully jig together." funny," skid “That must be Elsie gravely; then, a last doubt linger¬ ing in her puzzled thoughts. “Did you ever see them. toil Ma-KKie?” “See thim, Oh, ohl run away, now, to yer mamma an’ shtop axing me bothersome questions. Don’t I tell ye it’s sot What more do ye want, I dunno?’ Elsie put her little finger in her mouth and walked slowly and with abstracted gaze into the sitting room where her mother sat sewing and her fattier was reading the evening paper. She sat down upon a low stool under the mantel and studied the brown In the and soft yellow light fig¬ *>f ures of the carpet. the big lamp on the center table the brown seemed darker than it did by day- light, and the yellow was almost white. Elsie wondered vaguely whether the yel- lew moon would be white during the dame with the sun, for she remembered that whenever it appeared would by the day It was wofuliy pale; and just son min* turn his dazzling face aside for one would the sun’s legs go right downfrom thenTbe'a body like papWor would would both, and this seemed more litfely, both just tilt from side to side and laugh in each other’s face before they resumed thrir regular duties? It was strangely interesting to the eight-years-old, and In happy reflection tee forgot all about the odd figures in tbo new carpet Tho bronze clock above her head began to buzz with Immense importance and then uttered a single tiny ring and went on ticking hurriedly, as if in haste to reach the next hour mark, when its buzzing should prelude All a name significant announcement. subject this well regulated clocks are to vanity; they puff out the cheeks of their faces, rattle away as if all their precious Insides were falling to pieces; the pendu¬ lum is silent, and then the commotion ends with a few silvery strokes, more or less, after which the timepiece and re¬ covers its modest self possession goes on About its useful busin'esa “Half past 8,” said Mrs. Durant, glan¬ cing up at tbo clock. “Time little girls were in bed.” “Mamma,” exclaimed Elsie, taking a tuck in her dress with her fingers and looking hard at her feet, “mayn’t I sit up nil night, just this once?” “Mercy on us!” cried Mrs. Durant, lay¬ ing her sewing down in her lap; “what does the child mean?" Papa Durant looked inquiringly over the top of his paper. “I want to see the sun and the moon dance together,” replied Elsie, “and I can’t wake up early enough if I go to bed.” Danes.” | speak, Mzuuu hot Durant with was too amused astonished smile to papa on said: t “You would have your trouble for don’t nothing, indulge Elsie; hi such tbo sun antics.” and the moon ’ Elsie did not uhderatanU her father’s words exactly, but eho felt the denial and tee responded: "Maggie says they do every Easter morning, when the mm conies out of the sea, and the moon hop, skips and jumps, and they take hands and dance in fee sky. at least In Ireland, the both of them, and perhaps, if I just sat up all night, they'd doit for me. Please, papa.* “If*you sat up, little one," ho said, "you would not be awake in the after¬ noon to sing with the other children in o’clock. At last it grew chilly, and she climbed into bed again, just for one minute, to get warm. The evening had grown old for won- i -i there was the moon. many minutes, and followed her . band to their chamber. Her had j gone back to a happier her. time Only , her son Willie was with five years . ago, and how long it seemed! bad j yielded to a restless disposition and wandered away, where she knew not except that it was credibly reported If he were alive he wouid be nearly now. bat no word from or about had ever been received. He had absent a year when his parents to overcome the depression that upon them by leaving their former and establishing themselves in a country village where this story them. W Mrs. Durant said nothing to her band of their common grief, and she slept she had relieved her heart by thoughts of Elsie, upon she poured forth all of a mother’s ing affection. »*. Elsie started. There was a flood soft light iriVher room, and the stars had shone so clearly into her were almost invisible. She sprang her bed with a great fear at her Was it day? No, there was tee smiling at her and making tee night glorious. How had the moon around the house corner so quickly? shebeen asleep? The street been put out tt could not be more a minute since tee snuggled her font htin^ry ry Easter mo -fay that againl Whan did job waed to liver he exclaimed. “Way off somewhere. I live here now." he orchard. ; up here wasn’t you tiP* was he going asked, to and see once, rise when Mrs, Durant was startled her sleep by a violent knocking at chamber door. “Mis' Durantt Mis’ Durant! Haste upt Elsie’s gone!’’ Maggie on the way to the earliest early masses had glanced into room. - During the few minutes that lowed, confusion and anxiety for possession of the household. Mr. Durant irii out to warn the stable, and Mrs. Durant, painfully She went by the road that wound the MU to the churoh. As tee the building tee saw tee « man crouching the portico; and determined to him if he had seen Elsie. He did not or hear her. She had come quite when the sound id hie voice made stop stock still with a fearsome about her heart. miA lli jKji mi v Am Mi & “MV OHttDBKKl” “Wake up, Elsie,” he said; “the sun just getting he dancing?” up.” inquired “Is a sleepy voice fi?m a bundle in bis “Where is the moon?” “Elsie! Willie! My children!” Mrs. Durant, running forward. Hie man, a young and not bad fellow, albeit haggard and roughened exposure, rose quickly and said: “We’re here, mother.” And did the sun and the moon dance that morning? deeply The happy first rays tee sun fell on a group front of the church, and the paling looked on from the other side of the If they did not dance then it is if they ever have done so since the Easter. PiUs and Poetry. There men who make a living writing rhymes in which they the virtues of somebody’s or Pellets. consumption It rather cure, grates or upon feeling to read finish a pathetic by learning stanzr poetry and Road Carts! ON j : Us mcdielual Lowell, where Jw ItO/it jTo&n 1 -. bloud than of all/T / <^fe§ Induced boy other preparations, Do not be to Peculiar fiedMw. hat be sure to get the Hood’s Sarsaparilla IOO Doses One Dollar FOR TORPID LIVER. A tot»M tow/snwsw «»• »**<• tens, and produces Headache, Sick Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheu¬ matism, Sallow Skin and Piles. ) ! Sold Everywhere. THE GRIFFIN OIL MILL. Application tor Charter. Georgia, 1 Spalihro County. J To the Superior Court of Mid connty: The petition of M. L. Bates, B. R Blakely, 5. W. A. Bates, T. P. Bell, B. H. Drake and P. Nichols, for themselves and such others as may be associated with them, desire to be in¬ corporated and made a body corporate under the name o! “The Griffin Oil Mill.” The principal office of said company will be at Griffin, Ga.. in the county of Spalding. wffl The capital Btock of said company be ($ 20 , 000 ) twenty thousand dollars with the privilege of inereneingtbesameto ($ 100 , 000 ) one hundred thousand doBars, divided into shares oi ($ 100 ) one hundred dollars each. - -v ■ -- wt com-' meneeuntil 15 percent, capital stock has,been The paid of in. said shall consist officers 1 _ company of five directors to„,---------■ to fee chosen annually bythe 7 , shall _. stockholders: from said directors there The objects of said corporation shall be to erect and operate *Jr cotton ““---* seed oil *” mi! “—* an oil refinery; tjie manufacturing 1 -- of into such forms as said aid company 1 may desire _______ and the selling of the sa same, and to do each and every other act necessary to successfully carry carry onand on and conduct conduct a a cotton oil mill. [■,'jCo.boy sonal To buy property and and holdsnch------|-------- holdsnch is necessary real estate to the and snceess- per- r „ as fnl carrying on'said manufacturing deeds, enterpris¬ and es. To take notes, mortgages other securitieeforgoods and property sold as they To see proper. be sued, plead and be unpleaded sue and and hava a common seal Wherefore, petitioners pray that this pe¬ tition be filed in the Clerk’s office of the Supe¬ rior Court of Spalding county that and be the publish¬ ed as; required order incorporating by law, and them under court the paw an corporate name aforesaid for the full term of twenty years with the right of renewal, with full power to eary on such business as afore- successfully accomplish the objects and ends contemplated will by such corporation. etc. And pe¬ titioners ever pray, M. II. BATES, BLAKELY. B. R. W. A. BATES, T. P. BELL, DRAKE, R. H. J. P. NICHOLS. GEORGIA— Spalding County. I certify that the foregoing is a true and complete copy of the application for charter Ordinary’s Advertisements. i \RDINABY’S OFFICE—SFAt-mxo Coc ty, Georgia, April 3rd, 1889.—To Jol J. Jordan, exepntor of P. P. Smith, decease The heirs of deceased have applied the to me cite yon and yonr coexecutor before con of Ordinary of this county, for a settles!* of yonr accounts as executors. ~ Yon are therefore notified to appear at mi Court on the first Monday in May 1889,1 ten o’clock a. m. and submit to such sett! ment as in default the Court will proceed yonr absence to make each settlement. $3.00. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. FAMtD FOR TWENTY For Integrity of its Drawn, Prompt Payment of Pri Attested as follow*: wUl pay aU Prires Arawn in lV U State Lotteries which maywepresei our counters: Grand ; Monthly : Dra At the Academ/of Music, New Oth Tuesday May H, 1889, Capital Priae, gsoo,, ■gsiams&sr&JSs- tieths # 1 . list or riuzss. 4 1 Prize of 8800,000 is............yj 1 Prise or 100,000 is........... \ ' 1 Pan® or 50,000 is............ l Pam or as,ooo is............ * 1 riuzsoe so,ow Q 2 Doiet'o Prizes no of 1A 10,000 ADO are......... 5 Phizes or 6,900 are.......... 25 Prizes or 1,000 are......... 100 Prizes or 500 are.......... 200 Prizes or 300 are.......... I 500 Prizes or 200 are.......... 5 APPROXIMATION FUZES. »8 100 Prizes of $500 are................. 100 do. 800 are............... 100 do. 200 are................. v is 99 ,< Prizes , , - of TFRMJNAL #100 PRIZES. 'J ore............... 999 do. 100 are................. 3,184 nj Note— Tickets terminal drawing Capital *! not entitled to Prizes, a For Club Bates, or any further info, desired, write legibly to the unde clearly stating and yonr Number. residence, ivitl County, Street More* turn mail delivery will be assured hj « an Envelope bearing yonr fall addiw IMPORTANT. Address M.A.DAUM Washington,», New Orfrit or M. A. DAUPHIN, r By ordinar- ----*~‘~ —•*— atl charges _______ Currency ....___or sent Postal to Note. by E: on us sums of $5 or over. Registered s ,1,^ 0 ADorts* utters ing Currency tc V*W ORUUZS ZitOSAL BEMEMBEK, that the foUK payment « is GUARANTEED BV NA! BANKS of New Orleans, and the tic signed whose chartered by the President rights of recognf* an Im are highest tione Courts; therefore schemes. beware of i ONE or DOLLAar anonymous is the the price of part or fraction of a Ticket ISSUEI yyr ILL BE SOLD ON THE FIRST the Cot! ri Houee/in the city of Griffin, ; mg County, Georgia, the following <i« property, to-wit: 202! Lot of land No. 35, containing No. 84,« of land, also north half of lot being ing one hundred acres.said land w trig County, Georgia, Westmoreland,! hounded as * north by land of C. 8 . I land of W. J. Ellis, » 6 uth by the 8 av I Griffin & North Alabama Railroad,! land of W. J. Ellis. Levied on anal satisfy one fi fa issued from Spaldings Stanley Court in favor of Frank W. w E. Ellis, administratrix of W. ,T. Kite, ed. Mary E. EUis t tenant in possessioi j lynotifted. Also, the time and place, wi at same mi west half of lot No. 82, about two of Griffin, bounded north by Mt. Aid and land of Geo. C. Stewarts on the! Mrs. McDowell and D. H. Johnson, ^tension of Sixth streetjand the pro T. Boyd; W. Thurman, undivided McLeroy, one-third White ai and one Neal fii what is known ns the John tueof two Justice Court fl fas in favor* M. Potts vs. William E. George, fi Also. at*he Same time and eltof in <* Bold one fifidivided % interest and lot in the city of Griffin. kBoe street, B. W. Doe bounded home north place, fronting ire an alley, on ; the lands of Mrs. Mollie H. Thompao bv Solomon street and west by li street, containing andsold one and oww> a Levied on as the property tewed ho* o B. Doe by virtue of a A fa of L. ing Connty Court in favor other* i Co. vs. Charles R. Doe and bands. Tenant in possession, U™- set conier of lot No. 130 in the 3d