Newspaper Page Text
i GLKtiSNKR, Kd. A Prop’r.
vein Advance) Per Annum.. . .$5.00
LY, On* Year,,,..,..... „ 1 . 00 .
I 24, lHHO.
of Spldfog Co.
RMH.
»<)liar* for the first
aia-seism
. NOTICES—1
• MpfifiHi rate* a* forth* Daily
»vi think after a conildera-
•“ «-•—> that are to l*
r various privileges in
it week that George
1 was first in the pocket.
■Nmi is$
days o/tL
g contain-
..ml •*<*•***» papenUnfer.
#t%Ts»firp ostmasters were re-
of the first asstot-
Thto num-
letters received by
erf the postoffice de-
400 applica-
. (ieuurtnient for
F>
i on file tor lib ;a
‘ i at the civil service commfa-
but 117 postofflee
r in service.
8H* IS A DAISY
woman, Nanitta
„ Oklahoma. „ Her
i at home
i, Ky., where she was
upon a daily paper as
ondent. She was an
tat* librarian in Ken-
was beaten by only
Chagrined at this defeat,
Washington and became
there for her wit and
Securing the reeom-
,
i of the Kentucky delega-
i several Senators, she was
) of a government school
Or. There she became
I in Oklahoma and wrote
i of the country fur
press. On one of “the
North Canadian
_,> bearing the fo\-
_to Nanitta Daisy’s
I you risk living there by your-
” was asked her.
and she laid
> table before her a brace of
ivory handled revolvers
medals received at
tournaments. "Will I?
" ‘ 1 so.”
say
_ YORK IS WANTED.
nA.Koys, editor ot the
T.) Times, was a Stalwart of the
fit the time Boscoe Conk-
with imperial sway,
i ordinary, everyday Ke-
content to follow the
[ his party, and does »ot
l the contentions of
which he bore a distinguished
of the past are buried,”
other day, "and I trust
■one will occur again in the next de¬
ad* to disturb Republican success. I
President Harrison is feeling
way carefully in order to avoid
very danger. With patronage
distributed, a party is great-
gthened. On the other hand,
iums are given out to the
■tan, patronage, instead of
a benefit, to a corse. Harrison
a politician too long not to
this, and no mistake will occur
can avoid it. Of that you may
sure. With the Republicans of
R united, I am sure we ei
) «iUan we will
y if a strong
man to placed in nomina-
by the Democrats. The battle
will be in New York, aa be-
The admission of four new
not aid us if we lose New
again, there is a possi-
Inthe solid North-
m, column on the tariff
York must be kept in
column.”
tail more Catarrh tn this section of the
than 1*8 other disease* pot together,
1 lew year* was supposed to
Far itt smt many years Doc-
a
and by constantly
treatment, %•* prqnoune-
proven catarrh
Ussa s r , oul therefore
itutioim! ITj.fW
«r<- constitution-
■ 10 i dross drop*ton to • toaepoonfnl.
''' the Mood and mucus
oiler one hmv-
»to cure. Send
F.
alady? • w A
m. *
»arii
we bare
and West Point Terminal mondpoi
with lew fear and alarm than *
of our contemporaries, because
lieve itwa. but the beginning of a
system which would rival It.
For some months, there hove
rumors of a consolidation of the va¬
rious smaller roads of Georgia into
one great whole, and we note from
the Atlanta Constitution of yester¬
day that the subject is being revived
in a very tangible form. There to
much to hope for. Fruition may not
be the work of the next few weeks, but
ttiat St will ultimately come we have
not the slightest doubt. And when
it does, Columbus will be the gainer
more largely than any other city .in
^heChattanooga, Rome and Co.
fumbus, which now reaches Carroll¬
ton, if they act from self interest
along, will soon begin work to this
great manufacturing and distribut¬
ing center. So much work has been
done, and so much expenditure on
the Columbus Southern, that it re¬
quires no great prophet to see that it
will be built and be a link in the great
system, and that It will ultimately
reach a connection with the Florida
roads. It to an open secret that the
Covington and Macon will soon build
a line to Griffin, where it will come
into dose connection with tb# Geor¬
gia Midland road. The parties in-
terested in the Covington and Macon
are also in earnest about extending
to an eastern connection of that road
towards Augusta. Our Macon ex¬
changes seem satisfied that either
the Birmingham, Macon and Atlan¬
tic; or the Macon and Birmingham,
(both of which have made surveys),
will soon commence to build from
Macon towards Birmingham. If
either to built It will give the Georgia
Midland road a Connection with Birm-
Ingham and Macon, while the ex-
tension of the Covington and Macon
we have already spoken of will give
it a connection to Athens, Macon and
Augusta. |'f*> ■ |
There are now in the State of Geor¬
gia the following roads, allot which
are independent and belong to no
sy|tem, vto:
Savnn vannah, Amerieus and Montgom¬
ery, Georgia Southern and Florida,
Atlanta and Florida, Columbus
Southern, Augusta, Gibson and
Sandersville, Covington and Macon,
SSS3S
nail, Bahtin and miles Westtfig of graded wtohfhne road,
fifty or sixty
but as yet with no rails on it. It to a
manifest fact that with the present
cheap money market, and the rapid
improvement going on in Georgia and
the thecousequeni consequent attraction that these
give to capital, besides the indisputa¬
ble interest that each of these
pendent roads must have, makes it a
matter of the very near future
all these roads will be a part of
common line. It needs but some
ter band, and a syndicate with
oliable amount of credit to join these
now disjointed pieces into a splendid
piece of paying property.
When this is accomplished, there will
be a direct line from Chattanooga to
Florida, and Columbus will be imme¬
diately upon it. There will be a
rect line front Columbus to Savannah,
much shorter than the existing one.
There will be another direct line from
Macon to Birmingham with which
the Georgia Midland road will con¬
nect, making a line competitive, and
almost as short as the one now exist¬
ing. • low debt that this
The bonded sys¬
tem will start out with, the fact that
it will have new steel rails and would
enter every important town and city
in the State, would, we think, make
it from the start a serious competi¬
tor of the old system. We hail with
delight the prospect that this system
may soon become a certain fact,
and the conclusion that Columbus
would be more benefitted thereby
than any other city in the State.
Losr^—I don’t know where. 1 oau’t tell
hen, t don’t see how—eomethlng of which great
value to me, and for the return igood of I
shall be trnlj thankful, and viz.: etrelith.pnre appetite." blood,
FouNn.— ‘ Health
write like that of a wolf, lar . regular regular and peculiar diges- diges-
arifla. I want every
body to try it tide seaeou . It ____ is sold by all
druggists. One hundred doaes one dollar.
The Invalids Hope.
Many seemingly incurable cases of blood
poison, catarrh, scrofula and rheumatism
have been cured by B. B. B. (Botanic Blood
Balm), made by the Blood Balm Co., Atlan¬
ta, Ga. Write to tbem for book filled with
convincing proof.
G W. B. Snider, living sevenmlles from Ath¬
ena.,Ga., writes: “For several year* I suffered
with running nicer*, which doctor* treated
and pronounced incurable. A single bottle
ot B. B. B. did me more it good than all the
doctor*. 1 kept on using and every nicer
We D. C. Klnard neighbor A Son, Towaltga. B. Go., 8. B. write: tor
induced a to try
catarrh, which he thought ItdeKgbted incurable, ae it
bad rerteted ail treatment. him,
and continuing ita see be wa* cored sound
and well.''
wife R. had M. Lawson, Eaet 15 Point Ga., She writes: kept kept “My
scrofula yearn. g grow-
f*uvrrMiw« Hinuvvirw i«ku, j.
tried.B. B. B . and few recovery wa* rapid
I complete.' “I
live Secor.
to >w 'be oel.va
, bar.
Such a
makes our
, small to the high
we levy on articles our pea-
„ abroad. The way to male
trade with us to to
:th them ou equal terms.
All the war ships we can build
will not compel merchants to buy of
us when the tariff virtually forbids
us to buy of them. France has a
navy little inferior to that of Great
Britain, butthebigger sbe makes her
navy the smaller grows her foreign
commerce. Norway and Holland,
without navies, send their ships to all
ports and are constantly increasing
thdr foreigh trade. Better for us to
have no navy If, we are to make a
‘jingo’ use of it*’
THE COMMONWEALTH.
The M«ws as Gathered Over Georgia.
Quitman’s new hotel will be built
on what to known as the Purcell lot.
The question of a county court has
been talked of generally by the peo¬
ple of Bulloch, and a large majority
favor its establishment.
Kinchen Melton, of Macoa county,
was robbed of #885 one day last
week. A negro woman was arrested
and part of the money recovered.
R. J. Jordan, of Buena Vista, says
a fox came to his home the other
night and killed one of his hound pup¬
pies. which was sleeping under his
residence.
It to reported that Martin Arm¬
strong, while plowing on the Green
R. Duke place near Jefferson a few
days since, turned np $1,878 in gold
coins of the stamp of 1852.
While Mrs. J. M. Lacy, of Taliaier-
ro county, was engaged in making
soup a few days ago a spark fell on
her clothing, and before it could tee
extinguished she was badly burned.
The Marietta Journal thinks that
the old Georgia Military Institute
with its two-story building and six¬
ty-five acres of land at the place,
would be a good place to locate the
Georgia Confederate Home.
A natural curiosity to to be” seen
opposite the residence No. 1,013 Sec¬
ond avenue, Columbus. A small oak
tree to growing from the limb of a
by.
The citizens of Lutherville have
organized an association and opened
public library. Several hundred
volumes have been purceased, a hall
secured, and the library will be formal,
ly opened to the public next week.
Rev. T. S. L. Hartwell, minister of
Greene circuit, suffered a painful acci-
dent the other day. While getting
feed from the loft for his horse he fell
heavily to the ground, fracturing his
collar bone and otherwise injuring
himself.
T. F. Brannen, of Nellwood, Bulloch
county, bad a very narrow escape a
few days ago from a falling tree. He
saw the tree falling only a short dis¬
tance ahead of him and reined his
horse in, when the tree fell only a few
feet ahead of him.
Tim Alderman, of Quitman, had the
misfortune to lose a horse and mule
which were struck by lightning.
Quite a storm prevailed in tha t neigh¬
borhood on Sunday morning, and
considerable damage was done in the
way of blowing down trees and fenc¬
ing.
At «ne of its early meetings the
city council of Tallapoosa passed an
order that the clerk should procure
an office centrally located. He has
done so, and pays $60 per year for it
Later on the council voted a salary
of $25 par year to the clerk, he to
pay his owm office rent.
John Tillman has purchased be¬
tween forty and fifty acres of the
Wade place lying north of Quitman.
The most of it to in the corporate
limits and a little northeast of Capt.
S, G. McCall’s residence. Mr, Till¬
man's intention is to put out a large
pear grove and fruit tree* of various
kinds.
a - ’ Jvdfttoe.ncn!*
Road Carts ISS G
Ten per than cent, anybody cheaper Buggies!
JINF- ‘“t^^HEGEO. Don’ bny before getting our prices and
W. STOCKELLCO.,
Name this paper. NASHVILLE, TENN
K.:r ■
rr ■-
,
i*.
Si.'.; ‘Np
«-'t
'
to say other arttcia.
, knew whst ; sbe she wanted,
( to worthy Imitation, tella
m -4^
I wont to boy Hood’*
clerk tried to induce me bur
of Hood 1 *; be told me their’*
would last longer; that I might take K on ten
dag*’ trial; that U I ild not like it I need not
pay anything, etc. But he could not prevail
on me to change. 1 told him 1 knew what
Hood'* Sarsaparilla wo*. I bad taken tt, wu
•atOHed with it, and did not want any othe*.
Hood’s
When I began taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla
I wa* feeling real miserable, watering
a great deal with dyspepsia, and so weak
that at times I eould hardly stand. Hooked,
and bad ter some time, like a person In con¬
sumption. Hood’s Sarsaparilla did me so
much good that I wonder at myself sometimes,
Sarsaparilla
Soldtqrattdnigifet*. ft; staforfl. Prepared only
by C. t HOOD A CO., Apotaeearies, Lowell, Hem.
Doses One Dollar
Ms Pills
FOR TORRID LIVER.
A tarpta l iver d er anges Use who yw
Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Costiveness, Rheu¬
matism, Sallow Skin and Piles.
2SE.S rill*, mm a trial wlU prove. Price, fggs; 85c.
Sold. Everywhere.
THE GRIFFIN OIL MILL.
Application tor Charter.
GEORGIA, i
SpaLmno Countv.
To the Superior Court of said county
The petition tition of of M. M. L. L. Bates, Bates, B. B. B.i B. Blakely,
W. A. Bates, T. P. BeB, R. H. Drake and J.
P. Nichols, for themselves and such others as
may be UV associated tuwuuateu with itiou them, cuciu, desire uonuo to w be uv in- iu-
corporated and made a body corporate under
tbsna name o! ‘
“The Griffin Oil Mil].”
capital stock of said company
($20,000) twenty thousand dollars with
privilege of increa«u»gthesameto thousand dollars, divided
one hundred
shares business ol ($108) one hundred dollars
The of said company not to
mence until 15 per cent, of the capital
has been paid in.
The officers of said company shall
of five directors to be chosen annnaliy by
stockholders: from
« a cotton
a» an on oil refine refinery; the manufacturing of
into ich forms as said company may
of the same, and to do
ittieract necessary to
carry on and condn mduct a cotton oil mill.
To buy and hold such real estate and
sona! property a* is necessary to the
ful carrying on'said manufacturing
es. To take notes, deeds, mortgages
other securities for goods and property sold
they To see sue’and proper. bee be sued, plead and be
sue and
and have a common seal.
Wherefore, petititioners pray that this
tition tion be be filed filed in iu the the Clerk’s Clerk’s office office of of the the Sc
rior ed Court required of Spalding by law, county and that and be the
as; order incorporating them under
pass an aforesaid for the full
corporate name term
twenty years with the such right of renewal,
full power to carv on business as
said and to exercise all powers necessary
successfully accomplish corporation. the objects and And
contemplated will by such
titionere ever pray, etc.
^
B. R. BLAKELY,
T. W. P. A. BELL, BATES,
R. H, DRAKE,
J. P. NICHOLS.
GEORGIA—Spalmng County.
I certify that the foi regoing is a true
complete ite copy copy of the application ilicw for '
filed in Clerk’s
Inly
srnyh
date above wrlttei
W, M. Thomas, (Berk.
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
/ORDINARY’S Geoboia, OFFICE—Spapdino March 22nd,
B. Mills, Tt, administrator Elisabeth
a* of
Mills, deceased, has applied to me for
to sell ten shares capital stock of Central
and Banking Company ting of Georgia„one hundred hundred
est certificate amounting to to four four
lars Let Let due all all by same concerned concerned Company, apany, show show ton for
the persons persons Ordinary cause
Court of of said county, at
office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
1889, by ten o’clock a. m., why such
should not be granted.
$3.00. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/ V/ VRDINARY’S OFFICE—Spagimno
ty, Geoboia, April 8rd, 1889.—To
J. Jordan, executor of P. P. Smith,
The heirs of deceased have applied Ertere to me
cite yon and your coexecutor the
of Ordinary of this county, for a
of your accounts as executors.
Yon are therefore notified to appear at
Court on the first Monday in May 1889,
ten o’clock ». m. and submit to etaoh
ment as in default the Court will proceed
your >nr abfteilCft absence to to m«to make emoh such settlement, “— 4
$8.00. E, W, HAMMOND, Ordln inary,
POSTPONED
Administrator’s
G EO RG T A—8 ialdino County.
By virtue of bu order from the court of
gif, £ggj£t between, the legal sale hours, a
lot tying m the city of Griffin *nd State
Georgia, plan of ki own aud diatineuisbel in
raid city ofGriflln ns lot number
(4) in rqnsr* number twenty-nine (29).
taining be one half tore more or less. Said
acre to divided Into three lota of
size. Two lots running north and
from Chapel street, the remaining
embracing a twivroom bouse on corner
Taylor, benefit ylor, of deceased, deceaied, heirs. for for pay* payment pf debts
lit, Terms one-half ooe-l cash,
interest rgyable Nov. 1S8B, with wit eight ter
from data of sate,
ANDREW J. ROGERS, Taylor.
Administrator of Betty
■Cre*. V*. :**«>«>*
m
Louisiana Slate
Incorporated by , in 1868,
emy ol Music, New Orleans, La.
FAMED FOR TWENTY YEARS,
For Integrity of its Drawings and
Prompt Payn aymentof Prizes,
Attested &a follow*:
the same are conducted with honesty, f
and in good faith toward all parties, and we
_________I the Company to nee this certificate
with facsimile* of our signature* attached in
it advertisements.”
'
We tb* undersigned Banks and Bankers
will pay all Prize* drawn in The Louisiana
State Lotteries which may be presented at
onr counters:
Grand : Monthly : Drawing
At the Academy of Mnric, New Orieans,
Tuesday May 14, 1889,
Capital Prtoe, # 300,000
100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollar* Each.
Halves $10; Quarters $5; Tenth* $2; Twen¬
tieth* #1.
list OF PRIZES.
1 Priz e op $500,000 1800.000 100.000 is............$300,000 is— 100,000
is............
1 Prize of 50.000 is............ 50,000 .....
1 Prize of 10.000 25.000 is..... 25.000 20.000
2 Prizes of are...
5 Prizes of 5,900 are... 25.000
25 Prizes of 1,000 are- 25.000 50.000
100 Prizes • 0*> 500 are-
200 Prizes of 800 are- 60.000
500 Prizes of 200 are.. 100,000
approximation
100 Prizes of $500 are............. 50.000 80,800
100 do. 300 are..............
100 do. 200 are—.......... 20.000
TERMIN’AI. PRIZES.
99 Prizes of $100 are.................. *99,900 99,900
999 do. 100 are..,..............
8,134 $1,054,800
Note—T ickets drawing Capital Prizes are
ititled to terminal Prizes.
For Club Rates, or any further information
desired, write legibly to the undersigned, with
clearly County, stating and your Number. residence, More rapid State,
Street re¬
turn mail delivery willbcassured by enclosing
an Envelope hearing your full address.
IMPORTANT.
Address M. A. DAUPHIN, La.
Near Orleans,
or M. A. DAUPHIN, Washington, Mo D. C. Order
Express Companies. ring on*y New York
issued by all Draft Postal Note. We
Exchange, charges Currency or to by Express pay in
on sent us
sums of $5 or over.
cmu,n -
ing Currency tc
nw OHUAXS 1STOXAX UXK
New Orleans, La.
REMEMBER, GUARANTEED that BY the payment of Frizes
is FOUR NATIONAL
BANKS of New Orleans, and the rickets are
signed signed by by the the President President of of an an Institntio Institution
whose chartered rights are recognized in the
tions highest Courts; therefore schemes. beware of all imita-
or am ions
ONE do: the smallest
part in or fraction fa Ticket ISSUED BY US
ered any for Drawing, less than Anj nything Dollar in swindle. onr nam
a is a a
May Sheriff’s Sales.
f^yiLLBE 3 SOLD SOLD ON THE FIRST TUES
the Court _ House, May in next, the city before of Griffin, the door Spald¬ of
ing County, Georgia, the following described
property, to-wit:
Lot of land No. 35, containing 202% i
of land, also north half of lot No. 34, contsun-
ingpne hundred acres,said land being in Spald¬
ing north County, by land Georgia, of C. 8. Westmoreland, bounded as follows: by
north by land ol C. o. Westmoreland, east east bj
land of W. J. Ellis, south by the Savannah,
Griffin A North Alabama Railroad, west by
land of W. 3. Ellis, Levied on and sold to
satisfy one 0 fa Owned itrom from Spalding Spalding f Superior
Court in favor of Frank ink W. W. Stanley Stanley vs. v Mary
E. Ellis, administratrix rix of of W. W. J. J. Euis. Ellis, deceas¬
ed. Mary E. Ellis, tenant in possession, $6.00. legal¬
ly ' notified. time
Also, at the same No. and place, will mileB be sold
west " half alf of lot 82, about two west
o,... v.«,
of Griffin, bonnded north by Mt. Zion road
and land of Geo. C. Stewart, on the east by
Mrs. McDowell and D. H, Johnson, on the
south by lands of Mra. L, C. Johnson, on the
west rogd by the a road running Thomas from the Mt. Zioi
to Alien place, containing
one hundred acres. Levied on and sold by a
* Broo er. Levy made by
Geo. D. Johnson, L. C., md turned t ----- over to
me. Robert Skinner, tenant 3 b
legally notified. $8.00.
Also, at the same time and place, will be
sold, one le undivided i one-third interest in one
house and id lot known as the Wright Bowdoin
place wefit’ from street, by bounded Willis
lace, east north by
street, In East ._ alley Gnffln, and containing
one-half acre more HH or less; and one ne undivid- u
ed ed one-third one-third interest interest in in one OBe one tract tract of of li land in
North Worth Griffin, uriffin, containingthn containing three or tonr acres, P,
bounded east by what is known a* Russell
Johnson place, north by an alley, sputh by
T. W. Thurmop, McLeroy, White and J, D.
Boya; ana one undivided one-third interest
in what is known as the John Neal place in
South Griffin containing one acre more or
less, bounded west by Handy Moore, east by
IsaacMalone, aitd Henry Strozier, Pruden Levied and Sam Warn¬
er south by on by vir¬
tue of two JusticeCourtfi fasinfavorof Frank
M. Potto vs. William E. George, from the
sion legally notified, $ImK)™
Alsg, ftt unmvfSd the samp time a»d place, will be
.old one % interest in ope house
and lot In the city of Griflln, known ae the
B. W, Doe home place, fronting on Solomon
street, bonnded north Moffie by H. Thompson, an alley, east by
the lands of Mrs. eonth
by Solomon street and west by Thirteenth
street, containing one and one-half acre*
Levied on and sold as then • of Chark*
ter fi fas in my
" 1, being ont of thesonth-
130 in the ltd land dis-
Georgia, bonnded
L <*
'
Mb
& hi Leading
200,000 in*
Ti . |i LWATOR FJ
ATLA1TTA, QEORO-IA,
JfcTcrw iaa. it» yortsr-esrvwgatli. TTetef of:
mereeecslsedemsa guaranteed circulation efBeadMrn in Southern sgrieultore and and Western the ij*2wtri*I State. presres. of the I
a every
A BRILLIANT CORPS OF WRITERS.
Tbs editorial eorw of writer* and eontributor* 1* unzurpaseed, if sgnaUed, by that o
Il*z publication In all the Union. HON. W. 3. NORTUEN i* the President ef the 0*
ed agricultural Journalist in the country, but he w*« for four year* virtually Commit,,.
Washington, D. C., and later, Professor of Agriculture at the Georgia State University,
B. 3. BEDDING i* the able and thoroughly equipped Assistant Commissioner of Ai
the State of Georgia, a* well a* an experienced writer. Prof. J; S. NEWMAN is tn i
ti.h.m. gtate Experiment Station, and itond* fa the front rank of agrieultaral ed
writers In the South. With theso eminent writers are associated* score or more of m»l««_
male contributors—including not a few professional agricultural writers—whose monthly ,
els* cover every department of farm management and household work, making Tun Ccu
tob the most complete, attractive and valuable agricultural journal in the South, eaek l,
being worth more than a whole year’s subscription to any farmer who reads and thinks ft |
Election with hU work#
IU illustrations are superb, aud every department will be found fall to overflowing with i
tar to instruct, enlighte n and entertain. Each number is worth the sum oh urged for f
!U No°f* P mUy'can aflord to be without THE Dollar SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR. the twelve numbers Now is the
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Manager. i Send for sample copy. 1 I
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