Newspaper Page Text
ranee) Per Annum. ..15.00
&;»* »:4 ,. 1.00.
ii| Co.
™r square lor the first
i«* lor ouch counted BuWyucnt
I to be *«* «
cent* per Hoe lor
“t under this head
rtion* for less
advertisements RU&ffi longer
„„jlr
“ . ratM bm iur Oie ballr
y of negroes in
> thinking more about
« nn<l the watermelon
preferment juet
b been admitted
» which te a better state
i old Georgia.
i for the pro-
if ^_ and"those i point today
people who
Dfora window on Fifth
. j,ptto get their money’s
“=?S SII
*5,000. Now if it wi!)
» some solid, safe and re.
on how to get the *5,000
,_i will be happy
(southernpeople who
- York this week
a flgurein the cen-
and too doubt they
j bo ft considerable ex-
and abler men will not
un any other section.
Yashington was a southern
_______
A On ms Tnrlir*. Stern of
- for tbe
f decided ... to
, judge Adams has been
a tor sixty years, and is
-J being one of the most
r in the State. Judge Ad-
l solely with a view to en-
-a the practice o! law in
r
h. It is understood that
• bar is unanimously in
„ Robert FaHigant as
n’s successor.
I, of Augusta, has been
|Georgia, and in a letter
.
Constitution, among other
» gives the following: “Al-
“ttle town of not exceeding
rttants, there is more fruit
a Quitman thau any one
.mericft. Il is the watermel-
(of the entire world. Last
X) cars, or 1,000,000 water-
, were shloped from here, to-
crates of LeConte
My thousand crates o£
jeaches, and early veg-
___sof all kinds.”
'u se ■ ........
The Boston Herald thus explains
tbe collapse ofthe oatmeal trust:
“We find by reference to the tariff
at the tax on oatmeal is but
Jf a cent a pound. A great mistake
i obviously been made here. Ifin-
ad of, perhaps, 15 or 20 per cent.,
.
. _s this tax probably is, it had been
run up in the tariff to 50, 75 or 100
per cent,, as in the case of more
Javored articles, the trust would,
doubtless, have been secure. Per-
. haps the doty will t>e increased in the
next Congress. It has come to be
well understood no w that, in order
to make trusts upon which foreign
competition bears entirely successful,
they must have I thrift legislation in
The mmmmm high tariff is really
, „
trustsysUm.”
' 1 Mfe-----
WOlLf> CUT A SMALL FKiCRK.
The , Vicksburg Herald is of the
opinion that the increasing facility
tor borrowing money on real estate
will result in Yankeeizing the South
to a great extent, as land owners
who don’t settle up will be sold
out and their holdings will pass into
the bands of the only people who
Shave money to lend. “But so much
” says the Herald. “Your
A . Yankee amlerstands
_ .... r .
negro question better than any
i due on earth. If 4,000,000
..^dArittymen owned small land¬
ed estates in the Mouth, the negro
would cut a very small flgureindeed.’’
** to more Owtarrh Is thin section of the
■m* a w — -j^ Chtl*er lief"
KAtUtVO oppowrf Doe- to
•* . u great local many yea™
—~ a disease, and pre-
4 r w od w. and l*y constantly
*wit* local treatment. pronoune-
|J(OW8 catarrh
reflection §jf?|
..il
dmates now
iiitiamen >|hat j
he cen
ly 50,
lif e a very co
irised of go
military armed, Bervf#. <jpiipp|J SMrcely and drilled two day f
will elapse from the time the most
remote of the commands set out for
New York, before tbe entire force will
be massed in the heart of the metro¬
polis. The mobilization of a divis¬
ion of European troops attracts uni¬
versal attention, and is always ac¬
companied with apprehension the lest
the movement, if only for pur¬
pose of experiment, may preeipate
a war. Here we have p spectacle of
50,000 men leaving their homes,.mov¬
ing under orders, and yet voluntari¬
ly acting the part of soldiers for two
or three days, and then dropping
back into tbe every day walks of life
as naturally as if such a man¬
euver wus of common occurrence.
There is a good sized lesson for for¬
eign nations in this demonstration
of the ease with w hich a large body
of troops can be massed at a sea¬
board city on short notice. > a
matter of fact it would doubtless be
possible to concentrate twice as
many at any point on the Atlantic
coast in three days time, i£ftn em¬
ergency arose, and there are men
competent to handle them effectively
in the face of an enemy. The civil
war demonstrated what sort of
soldiers volunteers readily become,
and there is no question that the
sons of the veterans of ’61 and ’65
would bear themselves with equal
credit ==■= with their sires if occasion
Recent statistics show that Colum¬
bus. <3a., is one ofthe most progres-
sive manufacturing cities in the south.
While the population of Columbus in
1880 only numbered 10,123, today
the city and suburbs contain 30,863
souls. In 1880 the assessed value of
property was *2,850,000; now it is
*8,108,000. There are *5,804,000
invested in forty-eight manufactories,
and 5,857 hand employed, while the
value of her manufactured products
reached the enormous sum of *6,000,-
000. Columbus has seven banks,
with a combined capital and surlpu.
of over *3,000,000, non non and nml its its three Hm-e
saving banks have *1,300,000 On de¬
posit. At present more new build¬
ings are going up in .Colmnbus than
ever before in her history. Thereare
at least tour hundred dwellings
houses under construction, and con¬
tracts for many more have been given
out. «ti<
———., .. ........... ......... ,
The Vanderbilt Univomity of Ten-
-nesaec vannn ktva has started aFnwf Ail immi upon a a new now depar¬ ilnnuK
ture that it might be well for our
school of mechanic arts, or some
State institution to consider and
adopt. It PP^teWructobe tty
highway official fiom eaeh co
the the State,free State, free of of charge, charge, in in road road en-
gineering. According to the offer
the course of instruction is to con¬
sist of lectures and practical work on
the economical location of highways
to conform to conditions of typo¬
graphy and traffic; principles of con¬
struction of new and reconstruction
of old roads, and of maintenance and
repairs; methods of drainage, simple
highway structures, retaining walls,
drains, culverts, simple bridges; prac¬
tice in field sketching, simple platting
and draughting, instrumental loca¬
tion and computing estimates of
cost; study of systems of highway
administration.
The New York Sun printed a few
days ago interviews with a largenum-
•ber of prominent Englishmen rela-
lative to the possible annexation of
Canada to the United States. The
information sought to be obtained
was what position Great Britain
would take in favor of a decided
movement in favor of annexation.
The persons interviewed werepromi-
nent business men, mem¬
bers of Parliament and noblemen.
The substance of the interviews is
that if Canada really desired to se¬
cede from the British Empire, the
government would probably tet her
go, bat the desire would have to be
very deliberately formulated and
very strongly expressed. Most of
those interviewed did not seem to
think a pronounced annexation mov-
ment is likely to occur.
The Invalids Hope. ^
Many wemiusiv incurable eases ol blood
poison, catarrh, sprohila and rbmmuKem
have been cured by B. B. B. .(Botanic Blood
Balm), made by the Blood Balm Co., Atlan¬
ta, Un. Writ* to them lor book filled with
con?facing proof.
0 W. to- Snider, liWng: seveumlles from Ath-
ens.-Oa.. writes: “For several years 1 suffered
with rnmuntr ulcere, which doctors treated
and pronounced incurable. A stogie bottl*
of B. B. B. did me more good than ali the
doctors. I kept on using it and every ulcer
- D. C. Kinsrfi 4k Son, Towsligs. 6a., write:
We induced a neighbor it* try B. B. B. lor
catarrh, which he thought incurable, as it
had resisted an treatment. It delighted him,
and eoatimiinjr its use he was cured sound
-yF.'-- .
B. M. Lawson, East PointQs„ writes: “My
wife bm scrofula 15 years. She kept grow-
«mg worse. Bhe lost her hair a *
..
Tffort. Ol
the redis-
the late
rewived^|U|Mty .President
Cleveland of 7149
votes, members while the of Re}raf|pWh Congress and secured the
four
Democrats only three. In the pre¬
vious election the RopubHcans sectir-
Congressmen, and the Demo¬
crats two. New Jersey is aDemocrt-
ic state and,’with anything like Stair
division of the districts she would
certainly elect a majority of Demo¬
cratic! Congressmen. The Republi¬
cans know this, hence the howl which
they are now sending up.
. Wsm,
^
Thai
age fat
in
new ideals aud now
terns. Far more than lapse of
and wastes qf desolating ' “*
action Of quickening conceptions and
powerfully excited energies. And to
eagerly this change responsive, in the spirit in the certain race was
Bible-Greece. a way
air writers felt the all
Bome, Rome, Italy, Italy, in France, France, with Germany; Germany; the —
strove sto be tune new
learning. At the same time criticism
was hanlly in its cradle; you find a
trace of it in Jonson, Bacon, touch Selden, the
Camden; uamaen; but out it it does uoes not not iuucu mo
the very people s heart, as melody ly from from
lespom
as a mkin mark of the Elizabethan ut¬
terance led thus to unity of style. The
way
were
their entire-
i .U4i fct;«
The Dakota Parson.
“Just got back from a northwest
trip,” shic? a drummer to his friend in
nn/i Mflntsiis. SfoDDod i n BiszQAFck
theother day, UST^SS^S’S
I
alvUiiu lwVv Uj cuiu orejtjtvu iuvv hlfwl blood ***■
Sheridan GLa** 2^1n*v krvnca house knwpnnm barroom fn to frfti get o a
tingler. A moment later a man clad
in shiny black broadcloth strode into
the place. His feet were encased in a
pair of immense cowhide boots, from
the ^VbnteheV’s leg of one of which cfeavVand protruded aclubT a
anc j f rom theother club. club. the half of a scythe
blade blade and and another another
“Strapped to bis back was a Win¬
chester rifle; a belt contained a revol¬
ver and a ten inch bowie. On his left
hand was a pair of steel knuckles, his
MtO CaiJUGr iwwvw LLIO viviru.
“ ‘Bob Bloomer, you come hyer I’ he
ordered. of foot ,
bull “The shrinking advanced form from a the seven crowd,
whacker grasped him
and the walking arsenal
by tho neck and waltzed him out and
down tho street.
“‘Your sheriff goes loaded,’ 1 re¬
marked to my right mowed hand I’ neighbor. he replied.
“ ‘Sheriff be he’s
‘Thet yer is our new parson, an’ a
rustler. • ‘No backslider gets away from
him.’ ” —Chicago Mail,
Road Carts I EVERYTHING
ON WHEELS
Ten •i per th;’n sen! anybody cheapei Buggies!
C=fr Don' buy before getting our prices and
Nain^ this uawr. KASHVlLLfc TTjNN
ments may ii”profitably Wiployed P (Sso. _A
few vacancies in towns and eities. B. F
JOHNSON & 00., 1009 Main St., Richmond,
v„
ved also. Never mind
Come quick.
ap3wed8m
wm WM 3|Si
««.«* MtUH
r ilmr rHtsr© Celor. Gny
ttmr nir ifet yjarHUtm ’
C4Tn 5 Sk .t » -fvx i. i »*#3 .
HIWDSRC : T £?8.
B. A. f AHNESTOCKS jrtoi,
totkM
-mm. It I* now over tiafy peon Man M»
tin* *lK~tj *c# E£ai in a /W.»'0AJf
l at i
i*
18ftK.
i, and
b, ;.iT'
place on eaeh of 1 VattheAr!^
FAMED FOR TWENTY YEAR?,
For Iniegriiy of its Drawings, and
Prompt Payment of Prizes,
' ' follows:
Attestwl nn
Annual Drawings ol The i.mnsiana
tery Company, and in
control the Drawings
the same areeonduete
and in good laith tow
authorise the Company to use this rertitiente
with fae-similes ol oar signatures attached in
it advertisetneots.” ■ • ■' f .
iiSlai
Grand : Monthly : Drawinf
Capital Frtee, #300,000
tieths fl.; '
' ’ •YV- ■
LIST Ol? P&IZEB.
"'t .1 P--------- OF $800,000 is.. $300,000 100,000
1 Prize op 100,000 is.., 50.000
1 Prize or 50,000 is............ 25.000
1 Prize or 25,000 is............
2 Prizes of 10,000 are.. 28,f~ 20.000
5 Prizes or 5,900 are.......... 3
. 25 Prizes or 1,000 500 are.........
100 Prizes or are...;......
200 Prizes or 300 ore.......... 60,1
500 Prizes or 200 are.......... 100,000
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
100 Prizes of $500 are..........;....... 50.000 30.900
100 do. 800 are,......... ....... 20.000
100 do. 200 are..................
TPRMWAL prizes.
99 Prizes ol $100 are.................. ' 99.900
999 do. 100 are-------......... 99,900
3,134 $1,954(600
Note— Tickets drawing Capital Prizes are
not entitled to terminal Prises.
For Club Rates, or any further information
,3w Il'J. or Pti.lal Sow. Vo’p.J
“T
Address Registered Letters Coatair.-
ing Carrency tc
■nr UMKARS BsTUSAL BAlB
New Orleans, La.
BANKS oi New Orleans, and the tickets are
signed by the President of an Institution
whose chartered rights are recognised in the
highest Courts; therefore beware of ail imita¬
tions or anonymous schemes.
ONE DOLL Aar is the price ol the smallest
part, or fraction of a Ticket ISSUED BY US
fn any Drawing. Anything in our name of-
ered for less than a Dollar is a swindle.
Nay Sheriffs Sales.
0«u. Also, at the time and place, will behold
same
west half of lot No. 82, about two mile* west
of Griffin, bounded north by Mt. Zion road
id of Geo. C. Stewart, on the east
______ ., the ______ _ jttuiug irom bib mvor ffliwu
road to Allen Thomas place,
one hundred acres. Levied on and sold Distort by a
Justice Court fi la issued from 1065ti» Patrick
G. M. ol Spalding County to favor of
4c Brooks vs. Robert Skinner. Levy made by
Geo. D, Robert Johnson, Skinner, L. C., tenant'in and turned possession, over to
me.
legally notified. place, $6.00. will be
Also, at the same time and
sold, one undivided one-third interest in one
house and lot known as the Wright Bowdoin
place fronting on Solomon street, bounded
Semi <1 rett ,* sottth^byk to Ea*t an Griffin, anlf‘north 1 by
Solomon street,
one-half •half acre acre more more ot or lees; less; and and onenndivid- one undivid¬
ed one-thtod me-thtod interest interest in in one one tract tract of land in
North Griffin, containing three or four acres,
bounded east by wbat is known as Russell P.
Johnson alley place, north by an alley, south by
an and west by a new street, being an
extension of Sixth street,(and the property
T. W. Thurman, undivided McLeroy, one-third White and interest J. D.
to Boyd; what and is known one the John Neal place in
as
Sonth Griffin containing Handy one Moore, acre more or
less, bounded west by east by
Isaac Malone. Henry Prndea and Sam Warn¬
er and sonth by Strozier. Levied on by
tue of two JuSticeConrtfl fas in favor of Frank
M. Potts vs. William E. George, from the
Justice Court of the XOOlstDist. G. M., Spald¬
ing eounty. Levy made by J. C. Little, L, 0.
and turned over to - me. Tenants in posses¬
sion legally notified. $9.00.
Also, at the same time and place, will house
sold one undivided th interest in one
and lot to the city of Griffin, known as the
by Solomon street and west by Thirteenth
street, containing one and one-hall acre*
Levied on and sold
R. Doe by v
Co vs- Charles R. Doe and other fi testo my
Also, at the earn* trine and place, will be
north by balance allot No—
estate
and altef j Action. Distress
41 . tick Uosulache,
bvagbum, I , a f»lHt,"aUgone»
f b..d tongue, and trregn-
> cl the bowels, are
Ui« wore common
s. Dyspepsia does
Eating : ■t V. ii of Itself, It
condo!, persistent
S£“ , like Hood’a Sarsa-
CSS create, a
*«« Sick
m tl»o Headache
waw tenia» vemovea «- - banishes the
Untie effects of the dtecast*.
b<; (Ia< ii 0 sad refreshes U>» tirc<1 wln ' J ;
. dy»;)ep8la. , I
‘ t h.-.ve been troubled with
htyd Irat Uttlo aiipctlte, :uid what I did eat
distressed we, or did mo
jltUo In an hour
bum after earns I v -: ouW “po¬
ll re « fr'etijess, or tired, raytlilAg. :dl-8dne_tcatoff, My tr^*
4 Xh&4 liet csten wj business.
u. .. was ly being
v. lirU is mat r4 a jisunler, and from
; r.“
/ p i -'- 1 ar’lia
ML— — -W —-as-™-.- -35)
FOR TORJMO L1V
A torpid liver derange* the wh /*»
mi, and produce* A,
Sict Headache,
Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheu-
raafism, Sallow Skin and Piles.
nm mK'hV.WjtSsi.vftf-tsv H M ‘£ m
Sold Everywhere.
----—-------
THE GRIFFIN OIL MILL.
Application tor Charter.
GEORGIA, V
•Spalding County, f
To the Superior Court of said county:
The petition of M. L. Bates, B. B. Blakely,
W. A. Bates, T. P. Bell, B. H. Drake and J.
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 of
"The Griffin Oil Mill.”
The principal office of said company will be
at- Griffin, Ga., in the county of Spalding.
fffaO.WOjfwmUv tlLisunTdoiare vriththe
privilege of increasing thesameto divided ($100,000) into
one hundred thousand dollars,
shares ol ($100) one !
The business
tnence until 1 . k
has Tile been officers paid of in. said shall consist
directors be chosen company annually by the
of ftve to
stockholders: from said directors there shall
»*-*-“-* sec ^
The objects of said corporation seed oil shall mill be and to
erect and operate a cotton
an oil refinery ; the manufacturing of soaps
into such forms as said company may desire
and the selling of the same, and to do each
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 as 1 b necessary to the success¬
ful earrytogon said manufacturing enterpris¬ and
es. To take notes, deeds, and mortgages sold
other securities for goods property as
they To see proper. and sued, plead andbe unpleaded
sue be
and have a common seal.
full power to —-----MHMNL -.t™.—
said and to exercise all powers necessaiy to
RiKvessfnllv accomplish the objects and ends
contemplated by snch prs^, corporation. 'Ami
titioners will ever etc. BATES,'
M. L.
B. R. BLAKELY.
T. W. m V. A. '
a true and
charter
Ordinary’s Arvart sements.
18—,.. by ten o’riock a. m., why such leave
should not he Cw !
$3.00. HAMMOND. Ordinary.
f \RDINARY S OFFICE—Spaldixc iLDING Cons
V/ ty, Georgia, April 3rd, -To John
J. _________ Jordan, executor —omjen, ol P. P. applied Smith, deceased; deceased;
Ths heirs of deceased have to me to
cite yon and l your your coexecutor c,rt,,,......—... before the ..... court — — -
ofOrdiu Unary of this county, lor a settlement
of your accounts as s executors. executors.
Yon are therefore ■ notified notified to to appear appear at at said said
Coart irt on the first Monday in May 1889, settle- by
ten o’clock o’, a. m. and submit to such
meat lt as as in in default the Court will ..... proceed r .„ to
Tour alwence to make such settlement.
$3.00. E. W. HAMMGND, Ordinary. Ordii
POSTPONEQ
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA—Si alw.vo CovAtt.
By of of virtue Cobb Cobb of s.n order Georgia, Georgia, from the will will court be be sold sold of Or-
nary try Tuesday county, county, lo£9, on on
the first in May. before the
Court house door in Spalding Sours, County, certain Geor¬
gia, between the legal tale a
lot lying in the city of Griffin and Slat* of
irgia, k» own end dlatingnishei in the
a of said city cf Griffin as lot number four
acre to Two be divided into three north lots and of equal south
size. lots running
from embracing Chapel street, the remaining one-third of
a two-room boose on corner
Street and alley. All known as the Betty Tay¬
lor lot. Sold aspa,tof theestoteof saidBctty
Taylor, of deceased, for payment one-half cash, of debts and
benefit heirs. Terms balance
jay able Nov. 1st, l«9, with eight tpr eeot.
interest from dice of sale-
AND 4 DREW I J. ROGERS,
■tty Taylor.
Os » mt. T ■ ** l -4-
in 18891
™f .
* mil w
OEO^ca-i^,
35T0W ixx it* yoxty-sevaaa-tiJ. "!T«»r of S^tilbllcatloxx.
_____— ’jrrTTT
A BRILLIANT CORPS OF WRITERS. .
Agricultural Society, and * practical farmer of tho post thorough culture, And hi* articles are
vriUrs Sto£ in “Xtors-dneladin* ths South. With theso eminent writers are asioototed » seore ar mor, of msle and ft.
»ot a few prof.Mional a^tornl writer,-wh<*e month!, aril-
“a. oover every doimrtn.cmt of farm mannmment and ho«.had work. »akin f T B . Ccw.vi.
neotion with hi« work. ,, will be found fall to overflowing with m.t-
_-----departtnont the sain
. Each number It worth charred for th* year’,
iption.
nt .vtonsivo information useful to alt classes. Awtorwd 0 , rirw. oa« J'copl. u a journal
forth* farm, fireside and counting-room. EnbscripUon, It per year. Her advertising rate,
etc., addr M . PUBLISHING CO.,
the
Geo. W. Harrison, ) Drawer 8, Ati.anta, Ga.
% Managor. J A«<l for sample copy.
I T : l il i i iiW ......-...... i i!WL » MI!ga iS!
'THE ■toaitoto
GRIFFIN NEWS I .1
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GEORGIA
★ WILL CONTAIN. DURING 1889 ★
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