Newspaper Page Text
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t lest tbe
'have ffobblnd
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tM
r'th. mheriB bv
a a paper for
, L x £&* if,of
th. N...
I Connell trouble.
politician
to please,
iremov
f injurious to wiepuo-
* nnc individual In
i preeentndminiii-
t beheading Democr&t-
p rapidity.
»Sentinel Bays: Tbe
K) w hether
l for Pnaktont of
ig ^hfEt tariff mei
their word* will surely
i the working
i mighty short memorise.
ele to have both the arc
; electric lights to il-
and stores, and
m by eleettieity.
t Is what the the Record-
it may find out that
) batteries actually get into
has been Griffin’s
i and we expect to get elec-
i Ameriius.
’* * mwvement of the
to role the
of their party
«oaae of oor Northern
and brings toe colored man
a realisation of his
atns. Party-wise he
wanted tor hie vote. As a
“equal before the
not wanted by hie pre-
friends.
mP*' m the Southern States made
It '•vhi ) more tons of pig iron than
* 1887. The increase of
of the whole coun-
yiar was lass than one
thousand tons. The South
more pigiron than the
country did even as late as
facts are significant
of the strides Southern
* me - making. rt" ■
-----------------
man on being refused a
l restaurant in Cincinnati
t to compel service, but
irided that the state law
Lthe action was brought
He held that
I the right to refuse to
white man at bis restaurant,
eenld do toe same with a
The restaurant, the
^S'Was not a public inn or
L It was mote to the nature of
and the owner
i right to regulate it to suit
The decesion ta regarded as
i action of Ameri-
; the recent terrible
at Samoa the London
i says: “We do not know,
I records, any sound which
i finer mask upon the ear than
r of the Trenton’s men. It
manhood greeting
the doomed
j toe saved. It was pluckier
* human than any cry raised
»deck of a victorious Jine-of-
! ship. It never can be forgot-
mnst be forgotten, by
Agpeakhig people of Araeri-
«eer to tbe
e was the expression of an itn-
I courage. ” |
ste*. i is this section pot together, of the
fewyearn________ * ' to
sad by constantly
once
dual ca-
ono
“While "Well, be ho did," vice said president of
was
United States he served for a time as
a private in tbe volunteer army.
Queer idea, wasn’t itf Til tell you how
*
of ' ' Yoiu»e little ho was an honorary of militia member in Ban¬
a Mo., and company when Lincoln issued issued hta 1
gor, calf for troops promptly responded
and came to Washington. There it
was ordered to
guard dut'
intention to go with it- The officers
rather rebelled at the Idea of having
a vice president under them, but Mr.
Hamlin was determined.
‘Why notf’ he asked. If I’m a
good enough man to be an honorary
member of the company I guess I’m
good “And enough he shouldered to be a private/ and went
them. Well, at the a gun yard
with navy
there were, of course, more complica-
pretty 1*
“And
ular turn. Odd, wasn’t it? Imagine
the vice president of the United States
receiving orders from a sergeant of a
milita company.
‘Then when the company the was mus-
tered out he was offered regular
pay of a private for the time he was at
the navy yard, but he declined to ac¬
cept it
“ ‘Why?’ he was asked. ‘You served
with the test of us.’
•Well,’ he said, ‘I don’t think it’s
t lor
----1 the
rather "—Chicago draw the Tribune. vice president’s sal¬
ary.’
Toads and Snakes.
Toads in the presence of snakes usu¬
ally remain perfectly did still; they in this make is
their only safety, for
the least movement they would im¬
mediately be caught. I have known a
hour hungry snake frog lie in waiting and over an
for a to move, even
push with the nose to stir him up.
This has been called “snake ^harm¬
ing," and indeed it looks like it, but
the toad is the charmer, the snake the
charmee.
I remember one day I dropped a
toad in the midst of a pit of snakes I
had in perfectly mjTback still, yard. though He at surround¬ once be¬
came dozen
ed by more than a hungry
snakes. There was a circle of fierce
but heads ho and would glaring not eyes around The circle him,
move.
almost narrowed, touched until the him, protruding yet he tongues im¬
was
movable. Just then I was called away
for over half an hour, but on return¬
ing still found holding the the toad, fort in by grave most masterly dignity,
inactivity. The of seeing, hearing tmC
senses
smelling are very defective in garters
and they can see at short but a distances few yards of at but most,
even a
few inches they are often at *
A snake was yard. seen
a saw mill
open space were p ---„ ----
the snake made and long against jumps the and frog. the snake The
frog direct line to the spot where he
mane a
alighted, but before reaching it the
frog had again jumped in another di¬
rection, ana so the hunt went on for
about naif a minute; the snake quite
unable to trace the frog in his aerial
progress, was directed only by the dis¬
turbance At last made the frog, in alighting. hy < accident
more
face than of design, rough alighted board, on which the flat stood sur¬
a
leaning against a pile of lumber at an
angle fectly of still, about about 80 ten degs., inches and from sat per¬ the
ground. looked, The listened, snake was sniffed quite and puzzled; poked
he
aboutfor several board minutes, passingclose
to the end of the several times,hut
tiie hunt was an utter failure, brushwood, and he
slunk away toward the a
very Forest mad and and Stream. disgusted specimen.
tew Advertisements
Road Carts I oShSs 0
Ten per than cent, anybody cheaper Buggies!
JfJBth catalogues. Don’ toy’"before \ * getting our prices and
THE GEO. W. NASHVILLE STOCKELLCO., TENN
Name this paper.
sRsam machines! Ill ill
placing oor
1 person ia each locality,the wry
best sew mg*-machine made in
the We world, vhh all the HUchmeni*
wfll s&o rend free * con y tete
^line of our costly and vsimbt* art
■pic*. what In return send, ask that you
>w we to t*u*e who
if chit si your home,and after S
unttas nit efeall bwmnc y«mr owns
TM* *mnd mavhine is
e the ran Singer oat; before patent*, at*
tr raid for#D», j«t<
ont with th*
ll*iw<-hmenr*, and new sells for
ims&«
^75 preferred to who
can furnish a horse and give
their whole time to the business. Spare mo
ments may be profitably employed also. A
few vacancies in towns and cities. B. F
JOHNSON A CO., 1009 Main St., Richmond
N. B.—Ladies employed also. Never mind
about Tours sendingstamnlor for bti. B„ F .¥. A Co. reply. ap3wed6m Come quick.
South.
treats elaborately of
1 which the South ‘
_ natural
and of its great r«. .
and possibilities. We print below an
extract ‘ from the article in question:
“But the most startling condition
which confronts Chicago is the New
South, with ita vast deposits of nat.
oral wealth and its growing develop¬
ment, which must soon exceed the
wiidestdream ever indulged in by the
West, Tbe South will detract more
and more from the prestige of the
West, and ultimately establish great
trade and industrial centre* of its
own, with no eympatny whatever
with the West. It ta attracting the
great mass of capital, immigration
and brains which formerly turned to¬
ward the West. Its climate gives it
three crops to one of any other sec¬
tion of the continent . It offers more
inducements to the surplus popula¬
tion and the wealth of the world than
any other area on the globe. When
toe hum of its wheels, the roar of its
industries and; the maelstrom of its
full developing energies break forth,
the West and North and the East
wiH be drowned in the din.”
The writer of this article has evi¬
dently thoroughly informed himself
upon the subject of which he treats,
So far as this country is concerned,
the South ta certainly tbe land of
promise and the fulfillment as well.
A constant stream of people is stead¬
ily pouring into its borders and none
go away disappointed, Capitalists
and homeseekers alike are pleased
with the South. Mr. Ballou’s article
ta but an echo of what has already
been proclaimed throughout the
land. V"\
Western journals are found draw"
tog melancholy pictures of the fu¬
ture of the farmers, whom they al¬
lege me heavily mortgaged, robbed
by toe railroads and owning lands
decreasing to value to the rural dis¬
trict*. The great West ta, to other
words, struggling against the ten
dency of mankind Jo group together
and build up large towns and vil
toges, to tbe detriment of the farm'
tog districts. The fertile State of Illi¬
nois, regarded but a few years ago
as the garden of the West, has only
grown in the last 20 years in its
towns and cities, while in the coun¬
try the population has declined, and
less land is being cultivated than at
that earlier period. The same condi¬
tions are said to exist in Georgia.
The rights of the producers of agri¬
cultural products must be considered
by Congress, as well as the interests
of giant manufacturing corporations
and great aggregations of wealth.
Unfortunately the tendency has been
in theoppositedirection. Themanu-
facturer has been made the recipent
of tariff bounties, which the farmer
as a consumer has helped to pay.
Tbe great manufacturing interests
have by organisation secured their
demands, while the agriculturist has
struggled along with but little re¬
ward in the present and but little
hope to the future.
Thereto no particular reason why
the case of yellow fever that has oc¬
curred at Sanford should cause alarm
to Florida. The chances are that it
is only a sporadic case. If it proves
to be such, and its occurrence so ear¬
ly in the season seems to justify the
opinion that it ta, there will be no
danger of an epidemic. Cases have
been known to occur iu midwinter in
New Orleans, but physicians there at¬
tached no special importance to them.
The most of the Florida towns are
now in & goad sanitary condition,
and, as the state now has an able
and energetic board of health, the
probability ta that others will soon
be as clean as it is possible to make
them.
In its notes about the approaching
centennial, the New York Herald
says: The governors of North and
South Carolina will both stay at the
Metropolitan, so there ta not likely
to be any time lost between drinks.
---
The Invalids Hope.
Many seemingly incurable ease* of blood
poison, catarrh, scrofula mid rheumatism
have been cured by B. B. B. (Botanic Blood
Balm), made by the Blood Batin Co., Atlan¬
ta, Gn. Write to them for book filled with
convincing proof.
G W. B. Snider, living eevenmBes from A th¬
en*.,Ga., with writes: “For several years 1 suffered
and pronounced running ulcers, incurable. which doctors treated
A single bottle
ot B. B. B. did me more good than all the
act o rs. I kept on using it and every nicer
D. C. Kimtrd A Son, Towaiiga. Ga.. write:
We induced a neighbor to try B. B. B. for
catarrh, which he thought incurable, as it
had resisted all treatment. It delighted him,
and continuing its use ha was cored sound
and writ”
K. M. Lawson, East Point Ga., writes! “Mr
wife had scrofula 15 yean. She kept grow-
mg worse, kxrt her hair and her skin
and broke and ont appetite fearfully. followed. Debility, After •mneiatian physicians
no no ap|
and uumerou* advertised ....... medicines tailed, 1 ,
tried B. B. B., and her rerovery was rapid
•id complete." Accor.
'*• Baltimore, back ltd., writes: “I
____ran „.m weak and rheumatism. B
B. B. has proven to be the only medicine that
gave me relief."
A FlshgValued by aJLady.
What fish inmost valued by a lady?
^ “ta*
mm
2' l i
i knew what she wanted,
»is worthy Imitation, t*U*
Get
I went to buy Hoed**
tried to induce A* buy
thefr own instead*! Hood's; be told me their’*
flays' S.’SKST5RS trial; that If Z aiu not u*? » * !
Hood’* Sarsaparilla was- I had taken It, was
did not want *ny other.
loocPs
When
I was
“‘“—nr?isara-t d ion. for *obh> Hood** time, Sarsaj lik
jood that I wonder at
r Wend* frequently s Street, Boston.
Ella A. A. Goff, Goff, fil Cl Terraci Terrace
SarsapariHai
Bote by an druggist*. |lj stator*. Prepmsdeuly
by O.I.HOODSOO,, Apottecarbs, Lowell, Msss.
100 Poses One Dollar
Ms TORPID Pills LIVER.
FOR
Ator^d liver the who: y*.
Sick Headache, Costiveness, Rheu¬
Dyspepsia, Piles.
matism, Sallow Skin and
rule, as a trial win prove. Friee, *s«.
gold Everywhere.
THE. GRIFFIN OIL MILL
Application tor Charter.
&PALD1NG GEORGIA,
County
W. A. Bate*. T. P. Bell, B. Bf. Drake and J.
P. Nichols, lor themselves and such others as
may be associated with them, desire to be in¬
corporated and made a body corporate under
the name of >v,* v
“The Griffin 011 Mill.”
The principal office of said company will be
b Griffin, Ga., in the eounty of Spalding,
The he capital capital stock stock of of said said company company will will be be
(820,000) twenty thousand dollars with the
privilege of i nereamiig thousand the dollars, same to divided (8100,000) into
one * hundred tred tnousana collars, mvideo into
shares of f (|lt)0) (|100) one one hundred hundred dollars dollars each, each.
The business of said company - not to com¬
mence until 15 per cent, of the capital stock
has The been officers paid of in. said shall consist
company annually by the
of five directors to be chosen
stockholders : from said directors there shall
be elected a President, Vice President, Seere-
corporation b. to
“toAtoms'ftSSm ......____ . , cotton seed oil mill
mS8s^$5£ P “ dS
same and do eaeh
and every other act necessary to successfully
carry on and conduct a cotton oil mill.
To buy and hold such real estate and per¬
sonal property a* is necessary to the success¬
ful carrying on .said manufacturing deeds, enterpris¬ and
es. To take notes, mortgages
other securitieeforgoods and property sold a*
they To see proper. and besned, plead and be unpleaded
sue
and have a common seal.
Wherefore, petititioners pray that this pe¬
tition be filed in the Clerk’s office of the Supe¬
rior ed Court of Spalding law, county that and be the publish¬
as. required by and court
such righ business 1, afore- wi-
full power to cary on as
said and to exercise all wers necessary to
■ration. objects and ends
i corpo: And pe-
ill ev«* pray, etc.
M. L. BATES,
B. R. BLAKELY.
W. A. BATES.
T. H. P. BELL, DRAKE,
B.
J. P. NICHOLS.
GEORGIA— Spalding County.
I certify that the foregoing is a true and
complete copy of the application for charter
filed in Clerk’s offloeSuperior Court, April4tt
1889, and duly recorded on the minutes then
of. Witness my hand and seal of said Cour
date above written.
’ W. M. Thomas, Clerk.
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
V* /"VRDINABY’S OFFICE-Spaldino Cocn-
ty, Georgia, March 22nd, 1889.—John
B. Mills, a* administrator of Elizabeth G.
Mills, deceased, has applied to me for leave RB.
to self ten share* capital stock erf Central
office in linmn, on me nrst Monday in may,
1889, by ten o’clock a. m., why such leave
should not be granted.
88.00, E. W. HAMMOND. Ordinary.
as$s£&sarti J. Jordan u, executor of P. P. Smith, ssvm deceased;
irtBwVHi. > of deceased have .......■ applied befere tome to
cite you and and your your eoexeeutor eoexeeutor the court
of of Ordinary of this county, for a
your accounts as executors.
You are t herefore notified to appear
Court on the first Monday in May 1889, by
ten o’clock a. m. and submit to such settle¬
ment as in detault the Court will proceed in
yonr absence to make such settlement.
83.00. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
POSTPONED
Administrator’s Sale.
i the court of Or-
nary of Cobb county, Georgia, , wiil will be be sold sold on
first house Tuesday in May, 1889, County, before tire
door in Spalding Gcor.
between the legal f ale hours, a certain
lying in the city and of dtetinguishel Griffin »ud ' State to the of
k- own
, of raid city of Griffin a* lot numl iber four
_
in square number twenty-nine (29), i
one half acre more or lew. Stid
to be divided Into three loti of eqnal
Two lots running north and south
mbraci Obspel two-room street, the remaining house one-third
ng * On corner «rf
sod Riley. Ail known as the Betty Tay¬
lot- Sold m pa, t ef the estate of said Betty
of decanted, heir*. for payment one-half cash, of debts and
Terms balance
Administrator ANDREW of J. Betty ROGERS, Taylor,
■PP9" tow,
yeaT amMure* «*"
emy of Uuaic,
FAMtD FOR TWENTY YEARS,
For Integrity of it« Drawing* and
Prompt Paymr t of Prize*,
Attested as follow*:
toy control Company^ the Drawings and aafera in themselves, person rn«ilves. manage and that and
the same are conducted with with honesty, honest fairness
with fac-eimik** of our signatures attached in
it advertisements.” v - •
We the undersized Banks and Banker*
will pay all ---es Prizes drawn drawn in in The The Louisiana Louisiana
State Lotteries which w may be presented at
our counters :
ftgsz
Grand : Monthly : Drawing
At the Academy May of Mutic. 14, 188», New Orleans,
Tuesday
Capital Prime, #300.000
100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars Bach.
Halves #10; Quarters#5; Tenths f3; Twen-
tteths fil. _ t,
vF FIUz£S.
1 Paras of 1800,000 is.... 1800,000 100,000
1 Prize of 100,000 is.... 50.000
1 Prize of 60,000 is............ 25.000
1 Prize or 25,000 is............ 20.000
2 Prizes of 10,000 are.......... 25.000
5 Prizes of 5,900 are.......... 25.000
25 Prizes of 1,000 500 are......... 50.000
100 Prizes of are..........
200 Prizes or 800 are... t ...... 60.000
500 Prizes of 200 are.......... 100,000
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
100 Prizes Of 1500 are................ 50,000 80,000
100 do. 800 are..............
100 do. 200 are.................. 20,000
99 Prizes of 8100 are.... 199,900 99,900
999 do. 100 are....
8,184 *1,054,800
Note—T icket* drawing Capital Prizes are
not entitled to terminal Prizes.
For Club Bates, or any further information
desired, write legibly to the undersigned,
clearly stating Street and your Number. residence, More with rapid State,
County, mail delivery will be assured by enclosing re¬
turn
an Envelope bearing your full address.
IMPORTANT.
Address M. A. DADPHIN,
_____ New Orleans, La.
or M. A. DADPHIN, Washington, Money D. C. Order
By ordinary all Express letter, containing Companies. New Tbrk
issued Exchange, by Draft? Postal Note. We
or pay
charges *5 on Currency sent to ns by Express in
sums of or over.
A44 f«m Registered Letters Centain-
I inn ClilTBflCy tc
** w •■MteHfe »aw»*AA -A**
New Orleans, La.
REMEMBER, GUARANTEED that BY the FOUR payment NATIONAL of Prize*
is
BANKS of New Orleans, and the tickets are
signed by the President of an Institution
whose chartered rights are recognized in the
highest Court*; therefore beware of all imita¬
tions or anonymous schemes.
ONE DOLL Aar is the price of the smallest
part or fraction of a Ticket ISSUED BY US
ered in any Drawing. less than Anything Dollar in swindle. our name of-
for a is a
May Sheriff’s Sales.
fir TV ILL day BE in May SOLD next, ON THE before FIRST tbe door TUE
the Court Housa, in the city of Griffin, Spald¬
ing property, County, to-wit: Georgia, the following described
Lot of land No. 35, containing 20214
of land, also north half of lot No. 34, coi
ing one hundred acres.said land being in Spald
ing north County, by land Georgia, of C. S. Westmoreland, bounded as foOows
land of W. J. Ellis, sonth by the Savannah, east by
Griffin*North Alabama Railroad.went by
land of W. J. EUis. Levied on and sold to
Superior Mary
vs.
deceaa-
ed. Mary E. EUis, tenant in possession, legal-
ly notified. wi*
Also, half attbesametime lot No. 82, and (dace, place, be sold
west of abont two mile* went
ot Griffin, bounded 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 Mrs. L. C. Johnson, on the
road west by tbe a road running Thomas from the Mt. Zion
to Allen place, containing
one hundred acre*. Levied on and sold by a
Justice Court fl fa issued issued from from 1065th 1065th District Ibstriet
G. M. ot Spalding County County in in favor of Patrick
& _ Brooks .....____irt vs. Robert Skinner. Skinner. Levy made by
Geo. D. D. Johnson, John X. C., and turned over to
Robert Skinner, tenant ^n
legally notified. ' ‘ 88-00.
Also, at tbe same time and {dace, will be
sold, one undivided lot one-third the interest in one
house and known a* Wright Bowdoin
place fronting on Solomon street, bounded
Scandrett, west by William sontb Bishop place, alley east by Willis
Solomon street, in by East an Griffin, and containing north by
one-half acre more or lees; and one undivid¬
ed one-third interest in one tract of land in
bounded North Griffin, by containing wbat is three known or four Russell acres, P.
east as
Johnson alley and place, north by an alley, south by
an Sixth west by rtreetjand a new street, being, an
extension of the property of
White and J. D,
ine-third interest
tbe John Neal place in
Sonth Griffin containing one acre more or
Isaac teas, bounded Malone, west Henry by Prnden Handy Moore, Sam east Wa by
and
er and south by Strozier, Levied on by ?
tueof M. two JusticeCourtfi fas in favor of Frs
Potts vs. William E. George, from
Justice Court of the 1001st Dist.G. Little, M.. Spald¬
ing county. Levy made by J. C. L. C.
and turned over to me. Tenants m posses¬
sion Also, fegaRy at the notified. time and place, 89.00. will be
same
sold one undivided % interest in one house
and lot in the city <rf Griffin, known os tbe
B. W. Doe home place, fronting * *' on ~ Solomon *
street
the lands of of Mrs. Mre Mollie
by Solomon street and west w©§t by Thirteen tn
street, containing one and one-half acres
Levied on and sold as the Issued property of of Charles
R. Doe by virtue of a fi fa from Spald'
ing County Court in favor of L. Cohen*
Co. vs. Charles R. Doe and other fifes in my
hands. Tenant in p osse s si on, Mrs. Mollis H
---- 86.06.
time and place, will be
sold fifty acres ofiam Nt^iao ‘^‘adtenddfo.
east corner trf lot to
bounded by*;u.
by Kincaid "if- Manufacturing ~ ‘ Co. Levied MfinH
sued and .. sold from by . 1001st virtue _ Dis District of a tri MNR Justice 6. G. —Court Court fl fl ta fa is¬
c t If. of Spalding
N, B. Dre
Beeks, adn
la th. home ,f ,
■ m |%
m wm-'manat am mu h
3BOEOIA,
XTo-w toa. lt« S f, 03rt3T-wvo33.taa. TTmmr of 3E*ia.ToUcmtto
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A BRILLIANT CORPS OF WRITERS.
Agricultural Society, end a practical farmer ef the most thorough culture, and hb article
always instructive tofarmer*. DR. DANIBLLBR isnotoafy one ef the ahleetaad eiostt
ed agricultural leuraalbt In the^oountry. but hewas for four years virtuslly Coma
B.*J. BEDDING li the able and titoroughly experienced equipped writer. Asiistint Tsoy. J. S. Commissioner NEWMAN is ef in Agric charge i
th# State of Georgia, as well as an of
^ia.rn. state Experiment BUtion, and stands iu th* front rank ogrieultaral edacatei
writers In the South. With those eminent writer* are associated a score or more of male >
eontrlbutors—including not a fow professional agricultural writers-whose month*
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G*o.W. Harrison, ) Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga.
Manager. J Send for sample copy.
THE —
GRIFFIN NEWS
h
THE GREAT NEWSPAPER OF MIDI
GEORGIA
★ WILL CONTAIN DURING 1889 W
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