The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, May 16, 1889, Image 2

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* * it . l | - ■ m . B ,TO t | ■ ‘ , great section of a tearean- which IS *t nothing - ' when we dost no crop has sire until from / raised it with the M t last sea- y is less than it , showing that the k er na naop m our own prodne- the mtry in the .o has steadily in- e fact is that the m white- Whits ' ? way of down it One ofthese f the nation, named Abraham r ,p^toUfctte taU farm in Abe has been spring, and the tindaatrious habits was mon ths coming crop, nfigfro had a reputation, l him in his hour > white neighbors seeing $ was about to lose his crop [$, went to his rescue, and t out his crop. That is a rway of treating the in Wack, and Abe i it more than he sal stream of syco- ( tears and philosophic 1 hab ...... TURN AND NOW, The Wilmington Every Evening jrs it has not been many years since > It <^y% was (mnsidered quick time trans-Atlantic voyage. There living who can remem- B, in the old days of sailing took a month or more to „ , >ocean Turning at random i old file of the Delaware Garette s issue of Tuesday, August 6th, , we read: “By the arrival of »ship Corterin 89daysfrom Liver- oi we have received London and ool papers of the 25th of June.” w very far back this seems when m from England nearly six weeks L was - the freshest obtainable, t a seore of years nearer i time we read in the Garette 1844: “The steamship Ryrie, (from Liver- lit her wharf in East sdnesday morning, a few i before 6, making the short of 12* days.” Today we > the phenomenal time just the new City of Paris—5 I hours and 7 minutes. It ► J f* ft Kkr ooKinvamonf. m nicicmruv tt’Kan n Hvil record was broken. ?greyhounds of tlie At-, s bseatryiag to lower the : days. Thff Etruria near- I in doing this last June, jests E 611 - dies, being i statute d *r>« *» “a ‘Ti - «» o! with Mu was not a barvaeu waste, so to one morning and a city the next, but H haa grown quit* rapidly, £ the Covington and Macon railroad 4 ent farmer* what is ran only a rural iwtthfment of a half dozen families. .Railroads are developers, however, and there is no telling what point along, theta- routes thriving towns will be built. When the Cov* was a* es- _______ied thing, one of the stations was named for the man who, probiv bly, more than any other, was ta- strumental in bnilding the road- This man was Col. E. C. Machen. Last fall the desirability of the little station as a place of residence began to be appreciated, and today Machen has stores, churches,-» school house, a warehouse and some handsome an oil mill apd guano There is one respect in which Ma- ingto some account* Outline may ImveaprettyWggra^^inafew years. The Georgia Guthne, on th„ contrary, Is one of the healthiest sec, tions of the country. Other towns in Georgia, while they are not going forward with therapid Strides of a Guthrie, are, making quite satisfactory progress. They areiawensingin peculation, and they l new enterprises as rapidly as purses will allow. They may not be on a boom, but they are by no means at a standstill. It is very certain that their progress is not all on paper. It is steady and solid, 'ThW is certainly the beet kind of a boom. *tOO KKWARI). $100; / V • sa'tfjK’a&rjMaLS been able in all its that science has Catarrh. to care stages, and that is Hail’s Catarrh Curs is the only positive cure now known to saB s®BEs ' * the consti- vork. ME ^ "?i’sste?Sco ,t, If, fails to cure. to Aa ao.o. jfciirila UrogSWtU. Tfic : , .., PRESS_0PIN10N. 7 Why the Buys Don’t Get There. Williamsport Sun and Banner. crawl Verily* through it is easier the for a of camel needle to than who eye a eol- for a man was not a lege ofite chum of Russell Harrison to get under this administration. And Then They Don’t Get It. Norristown Daily Herald. Mrs. Shaw is said to have made ♦16,000 by her whistling the past season. Thousands have of women who ] want |15,000 then to “whistle for ft”—and 'mm j thqy don’t get it. I Time Between i Drinks Long Enough. Chester Times. Neither the Governor of North Carolina nor the Governor of South Carolina they would citizens vote of for Pennsylvania prohibition were on the 18th of June. The Bulls In Oklahoma Scooped. Oil City Derrick. - The sage people who sold the Okla¬ homa boom short are the winners. It the is beautiful always a plumage good idea of to bird discount that a star away. 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, Go. Write to them lor book filled with convincing proof. isjSSTndtee: G W. B. Snider, “For living several sr.vemniles irom I suffered Ath- runniiiif) ulcere, which doctors years i*h wfesuris: treated ire. I kept on using it and every nicer ■a*Si It ™ delighted'him, jfl continuing its use he was enrol sound ny» Mt*u scroipH id ycnni, one afpi grew- i nuHiiciiKw ianea. i tried B. B. B.,^and her recovery was rev id C! ! '-e Secor, Baltimore, Md., writes: reHef.” 5 sasr» are me Themis m ore Catarrh i n this section of th ountry than all o ther diseases put together snd until the last few yean was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years Doe- tom pronounced local it a local disease, and pre¬ scribed remedies, and by constantly failing itTncu to cure with local treatment, pronounc¬ ed raid* Science has proven catarrh al cum on tbs market. It is taken intern ally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonhil. It ......upon..Iks ‘ ” SSrJ . Address, r A nab Valued by a Lady. rnlnAyi rebelling Or present Senator Brown, of Georgia, who baa been lying at the point of death, is now oousid- Wiiliam Dart'and William Patty were ar- retted at Urban* O., *w alleged complicity *aeggae&,.rw- A proposition to iseue boadt at lit Ver¬ non, 0„ in Pie sum of *10,000, for natural ga» propotat, oarried by a decisive major- Case to Company’s machine works at Columbus, O., f urnithed the regular nightly bonfire last night, at a cost of #80,- At Buffslo the jury In the Kemraler mur¬ der trial returned a verdict of murder ia the first degree, and sentence was deferred until Tuesday. Adas a, A Bridgman, aged 81, of Hanover, a. accidentally shot himself hunting, through and the head while preparing to go lived but a few hours. Special meeting of the board of pardons, May SB, will consider whether to commute the sentence of Frank Morris, of Cleveland, or let him bang July 10. Mrs. J. Warren Piett, of Akron, O., seek* to know why her bridegroom tarries. He went *&&VtSZ to Columbus last Saturday with ptemy - WWW Enander has defined the Danish mission be¬ cause his appointment would not be aeoeptar ble to the Danish govorWm% | Tobacco growers of Caldwell and Lyon* oountles. Ky„ are greatly excited beds over the wanton destruction of eutire of plants by some unknown miscreant*. KoUsrr, sou of LewU Hawks, of the Chi¬ cago and Alton railway, was shot and killed at Temple, Tex. He was oity marshal and deputy United States marshal In a freight collision on the Erie railway Conductor Thorn had oneof hls legatofcU out of the socket oud Engineer Cowan wa* frightfully bruised. Twenty-seven ; can were ground into splinters. The Connecticut senaite passed a toll pro¬ hibiting the manufacture or sale of oleomar¬ garine, colored to imitation of butter, and prohibiting the s&l© of imlt&tion fihfinuri It now goes to the governor. Charles Email and Alonso Barrett an ais rested at Sheibyviile, lad., for robbing Mias Young, by toe authorities, who assure them ttodatealtog fr<mi a Young girl ttatoadl business oud they won’t Barrett. The remains of Eb. Cheney, toe missing traveling salesman, were O., found floating Dap, in toerivernear accidentally Ripley, Friday. pears that be fell into toe Ohio and was drowned while attempting to moil letters by 4 b © steamer Bonanza. Baza Baix--C incinnati 10, Athletic 0) Brooklyn 10, Louisville ft; Baltimore i, Hanaas City 8; Bt. Lotos 16, Cotambua 5; Indianapolis 5, Cleveland 4; Washington 8, Philadelphia 0 (six innings); Chicago 10, Pittoburg 3 (five innings); Hew York 7, Bos¬ ton 5. Louisville warehousemen resolved thuslyj Resolved, That no further negotiations look¬ ing-to the settlement of the differences be¬ tween the Manufacturers and Buyers’ asso¬ ciation and the Leaf Tobacco Exchange be recognized, except such negotiations as are; conducted through the president of the ex- chage. Henry Weluhoimer was arrested at Peoria, telegram from Syracuse, N. Y., wanted for HFr, forgeries forgeries committed 0 over , a a ye year ago. Weiuheimer has been working at Peoria for F. B. Bradley, merchant tailor, went uuder toe name of towr wwO- bore an un«*-“** fc ,eJ reputation. Troops B, E and G, First United States cavalry, and a detachment of Crow scouts under command of Maj. Carroll, have Fort Custer for Tongue River agency, Mon¬ tana, to assist Agent Upshaw in preventing toe Sioux and Choymines from holding a sun dance, and to turn the Sioux buck to the Fine Ridge agency. Surveyor General Taylor says that Fort Staeton, formerly Fort Wadsworth, has been transferred to toe interior department and will be disposed of under the of the act of 18 Si The tract comprises four townships, adjoining the Siseeton Indian reservation. It will not be offered for sale until surveyed and appraised by the com¬ mission. The miners at Mulheim and Duisberg, Germany, have joined in the strike. There was an encounter near Brackel, Westphalia, yesterday, between troops and strikers. Three miners and one, woman were killed and several wounded. More troops are be¬ ing sent into Westphalia: by direction of Gen Albodyel, and their presence every¬ where embitters the strikers. A Double T rugeUy. CHICAOO, May 13. Patrick yeors of,age, employed in one of Armour’s packing wife, bouses, shot and killed his young 28 years of age, Saturday morning, and then put a bullet into his own breast, Just above the heart. He cannot recover. The tragedy took place at the home of Mrs. Ford’s sister-in-law, No. Ill Brown street, where the unfortunate woman has been stop¬ ping for some weeks. Ford had been mar¬ ried but three mouths, but he an 1 bis wife quarreled and they have not been living to¬ gether for some time. Saturday morning Ford called on his wife, had a dispute with her and shot her dead. Injured by a Falling Kievalor. Cincinnati, May 13.—Joseph Elbow Kearns, an employe of the Corrugated company, at St Clair and Gano streets, was taking a load of material from the groun 1 fi->r to the sixth floor ou ths elevator a • >o i i):30 a. m., when the jerk-rope suddenly snapped in twain, and the elevator fell five >‘;OHes. Kearns was badly injured, one eye being crushed out and his head he*v,g frightfully bruised. He was also iuternatfy injured, and when patrol No. 2 arrive,!, was uncon¬ scious, He was removed to the city hospi¬ tal, where, it is thought, that ha will ilia Kearns is 31 and single, and lives with his parents iu Fairmouut A -Man Killed and Bobbed. Tucson, Arte, May 13.—It has been defi¬ nitely ascertained that Cady, who was killed and roasted on a stove several days ago, the murder being charged to Apache Indians, was killed by the Mexicans, who had quar- ■oled with him during toe day. He was tilied, roasted and mutilate], and not a Mngle Indian has left the reservation or was •van in toe neighborhood. Ukely ^O., to be Lynchcl. Jackson, May 13.-Lynehiag is threatened William Althouse, mw-i -c i of an outrageous assatfit upon the two little Mc¬ Clelland gtrb. The jail is strongly -urn-dad. Agony i* Courted By rheumatism, persons who, attacked seek by a mild form of Subeeqnent neglect to prompt reHef- torture is prevented by an im¬ mediate resort to Hoetetter’s Stomach Bft- " ore a rio w sl dranaht * ‘ thweia „ . A is not _______ iron ble at the outset, but^wri^nigh impossible to erau.cate it Irhett No evidence in relation to t h uperb blood depurent is more positive “M than that i»itiis.rtT which - jrr "* J1 Si ' „ ■ r In the blood, which, ao tl» of too neck, pro¬ of swellings; which r-'EceS pahfful running sores on the arms, legs', or feet; which dcvclopes ulcers In the ry*, ears, or note, often causing blindness or dis.iness; which Is the origin of pimples, c;m- ™ the raw rnammm> : ms E!.-ua)ly usqribcd to “ Umuors: ” which, f. icumg upon the lungs, causes emisumptioa ti;d.da 1-iOSt £• very H ”"^ n CURED ' By taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which, by rsaassss proven Itsclf to be ft potent and peculiar medicine for this disease. Some of these cores are rt-.lly wonderful It you suffer from scrofula, be sure to try Hood's SarsaimrUla. “ My danghkorMary was afflietedtrith scrof¬ ulous sore net:: from the time she was22 months old till aha 1 ecarno six years of age. tumps formed fit he*: neck, snd oneivf toetn after jrowrag to the size of a plgeon’.a egg, became a running sore for over throeyrars. Wo gave rsaasrrsjsrtars; healthy appeared, and now she seems to bo a child.” J.S. Cabwlk, Nauright, N. J. N. B, Bo sure to get only JSg&tSSfS!& cl i-wou, x™ to noon a CO., too Pooe 3 One Dollar If You Have mm*®®? 5J££j?*SS: SOU) EYBBYWHEBE, Nolice to Debtors and Creditors. Hotice ia hereby given to all who are 1 debted to the estate eall of Mrs. ard Josephine settle at Pi jjett, deceased, to out®. ............. Wirre lire yeto* -t* •«* nit fit II ar»G ****** t Ci*e a noi pli f’. jrastmaari. ilgter; ' at^s «-E r 5 The Georgia Midland RE j dhurteirt Tltrou^h ««<1 Best Y ’oorah Wltl* «s Betweira COLDMBUS and ATLANTA. ON LX ONE CUANtlKTO Washington, New York, Nashville or Cincinnaii. Sehedulc in Effect Sunday, Jen. 6, 1889, TRAIN NORTH Arrive Leave Union Griffin Depot, ................s...3:56 Cclnmbns.... Id® p 1 m- Arrive Atlanta....................5:40 ** SOUTH BOUND TR.tIN Leaves Atlanta....................Sslfip. in. Leaves Griffin.....................4:05 “ Arrives in C©1 ambus....... .. 7 d-. r > •* ACCOMMODATION TRAIN. north bound -(dailt except eundav). ave Colu m bus—Midland del ot, c ei, rrivesut Griffin............ rrime© McDonongli.... *.* SOUTH BOUND - (DAII.V EXCEPT SP-NBAlj. Leave Griffin.....................8 30 “ Arrive GolnmbKit, Midland depot, .2:05 p. u> SPECIAL TRAIN Sunday Oni.y. Leave Columbus—Union Depot, 8 25 Arrive Griffin................... Arrive McDonough.............12:20 OUg. P- Arrive at Atlanta............... 1:10 n RE i DRNINO - South Bound. Leave Atlanta..... ,6:50 a. n Leave McDonough 7:35 ‘ Leave Grillin........ .....—8:25 Arrive Columbus—Union Dtpul, 11:25 etc Georgia on sale at Home Union building. Depot, In M. E. UBA'\ rinpt. C. W. CnEARS, Pare, Geu’l Agt. Columbus, G;i ama-ambr-i. asssaaiffi&ss i SL. Ckickiuall.P Administrator’s Sale. )or in the ■H city of of Griffin, t first Tnesdgy during the June, legal hours 1889, 89, of sale, on Hi the capital stock of Cen- in k^lKWitiw ten ten shares share* eg and and interest Banking Company amounting of Georgia, one certificate ^to $400.00, due by said fee A WIPI^R S-: i- • . LobisiafW- >lale -Spiorj .eon**-) 11 j anTail drawn op in pnbllc, at the Acad- FAMtDFORiWINT' YEAR', For Integrity of H$ Drawings, amt* frompt Payrae't of Prizes, Atlested a* hdloif*: same areeonductod with honesty, fairness in good faith toward all parties, and we the Company to use this certificate fae-similes oi oar signatures attached m _________ advertisements J««*taamkental >•* CsnuolHissen.. We the undersigned Banks and Louisiana Bankers pay all Prises drawn in The Lotteries whieh may be presented at counters : Grand : Monthly : Drawing At the Aeademy May ol Musie, New Orleans, Tuesday H, IB80, tal Prise, 0000,000 ££ LIST or PB1ZBS. * 1 Prize, or $300,000 is. ...........*300,000 100,000 1 Prize 1 or 100,0001s............ 100,000 is... soifbo 1 ~ Prize of 50.000 23.000 is........... 25.000 1 Prize of is........... 2 Prizes of 10.000 are......... 20.000 25.000 5 Prizes I op OF 5,900 1,000 are......... 25.000 25 Prizes of are........ 100 Prizes of » 500 are........ 50.000 200 Prizes of 300 are........ 00,000 500 Prizes of 200 are........ 100,000 APPROXIMATION prizes 50.000 30.000 10O do. 200 200 are.. are 20.000 TFBMI TERMINAL PRIZES. 99 Prizes of *100 are............... ,99.900 999 do. 100 are.:.......... „ 99,900 8,134 *1,054,800 Note—T icket* drawing Capital Prizes not entitled to terminal Prizes. For Club Bates, or any further information desired, write legibly to the undersigned, with State, clearly stating your residence, County, Street and Number. More rapid re¬ turn mail delivery will be assured address. by enclosing an Envelope bearing your tall IMPORTANT. Address M. A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans, Li charges on Currency sent to ns by Express in sums of *5 or over. Address Registered Letters Contain¬ ing Currency tc XKW lUtlFA** 1 -TOiUI BA1K New Orleans, La. u’ BAJiKS , ffi5ra^‘>tf5Brs*TroaE of New Orlea: Orleans, and * the ” tickets, are ■ signed by the President of an Institution whose chartered rights are recognized of allimlta- in the highest Courts; therefore beware, Hohs OHE or anonymous DOLLAar is ■ June Sheriff's Sale. property, 15 to-wit: of tend in Spalding County, Geor¬ acres gia, being off of lot No. 149 in 3d district of iriginally Henr. on and sold by virtue of a Jnstiee Court issued from the 1001st District G. M H. , Spalding county in favor of Fanny Wood¬ ruff vs. Willie B. Pritchard, and other fi fas in my hands. Tenant in possesion *6.00. legall,- notified. '■-■■■> B.S. CONNELL, Sheriff. Ordinary’s Advertisements. . .BDINART’S * OFFICE-Spaldiso Coun- ' ty, Georoia, May 3rd, 1889.—Jamee W. Willis, Guardian oi the minor children of Mary J. Willis, late of said county, deceased, makes application forleave to sell the lands belonging to his wards, to-wit: Fifty acres of land in the third district of Pike county it being in the northwest corner of and a piece of woods lying in th# lot adjoining E. C. Akin on the north and Thos. Baird on thesonth. Let all persons concerned show cause be¬ fore the Court of Ordinary, aijny office in Griffin, permission on the first should Monday in June next, wny such not be granted. $6.00, E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. g V ARMNARY’S OFFICE—SPAi.niNo Consr- I TY, admistrator Georgia, May 3rd. 1889.—J. W. S. Brown, H. Keith, oneetateof forleave deceased, has made application to sell the undivided half, interest in on acre of in lotNo.—square- as follows; on the north by Broadway street, on the east by 2nd street, on the south by Flemister ana Arnold and on the west by the other property belonging for the to Mrs. benefit Elizabeth heirs Brown and said estate, of and creditors. Let all persons coucerened show cause be¬ fore Griffin, the Court the first- of Ordinary, Monday at June my office why in U1UUU, Viu on Wic ill Dt iuuuuaj in iu a tiucnoAt next, , nir such leave should not be granted. *6.00, E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. / ORDINARY’S * OFFICE-Spaldiso Couk 1 tv, Georoia, May 3rd. 1889—A. M. El ledge applies to me for letters of Administra tkm on the estate of John D. George, late o said county, deceased: Let all personsconcerncd show cause before t of Ordinary, at my office, by ten should not be granted. W. *8.60. E. HI AMMOND, Ordinary. t Executors’ Sales By virtue of an order from the Court of Or¬ dinary. wfll be sold befor tbse Court Bouse door of toe Spalding 1st Tuesday county, ip June In the city of Grif¬ fin, on legal hours of sale, one-half next, between the acre of land more or less, with Improvements thereon, and known as the GeorgiaJlotel lot, bound¬ ed as follows: On the north by alley, east by SSES''; ,7 m ' d }bi /< ,-i l.vteUmxi eeadiugln M AND DIHE FJ ^TXu^IsrT^., GEOIIQ-IA, 3jT©w lKv-Atoa3P«Mrty-®<tor«xa>tii. TTswax zssetssg&vsas i 7Z and tho Industrial proxreee of the f •nd Western State. - A BRILLIANT CORPS OF WRITERS. The editorial ( iler pubiioation..... ... cal farmer of ... the the most most ... thoroufh thorough ... - ..... sultan, culture, and and hie hi* s i__ LEJBle not only one of the ablest and mo, „ ... j>. ....... ol A gricultiuoiat the Georgia State University. Wuhinctm, C„ andlateft Professor R. J. BEDDING is the able and thoroughly equipped Ahtmt Commissioner of A«i the State of Georgia, as well as an oxporieneed writer, P;:o*. J. 8. NEWMAN ia in cha.... Alabama State Experiment Station, and standr in the Iron trank of agricultural eduoalon writers in ths South, With these eminent writer# are associated a seen or more of mile u. nude contributors—including not a few professional agricultural writers - whoso monthly L e)e« ©over ©very department of farm manafiroment and household work* making The 0©tf| tor the most oomptoto, attractive and valuable agricultural journal in the South, eaeht bring worth more than a whole year’s subseripUon to any farmer who reads and thinks 1 muitift© with his wprk« department will be-firand toll Its illustrations are snpeih, and every to overflowing ; ter to instruct, enlighten and entertain. Each number is worth the sum charged tor I subscription. - SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR. Now ^^22#.... No family can afford to be without THE is the . send in your subscriptions. Only One Dollar per annum* the twelve numbers eonstiti volume et extensive information rueful to all classes. Endorsed by Pm. rad P«*i* as a J for the farm, flresido and counting-room. Subscription, H per year. For advertieiag I ate. a address CULTIVATOR PUBLISHING THE CO* Geo. W. Haurison, ) Drawer 8, Atlanta, < T ' ; Manager. J Lead for sample copy. 558BS5SHSKHH! t h i: GRIFFIN NEWS. I ^ THE GREAT NEWSPAPER OF MtWftK GEORGIA if, WILL CONTftlN DURING 1889 ' 1 1 AjljL THE NEWS. FULL LINE OF TELEGRAMS. FULL LOCAL DEPARTMENT, FULL FARMERS DEPARTMENT, SOUND DEMOCRATIC EDITORIV. INTERESTING ifSCCUAM. MORE AND BETTER MATTER FOR LESS COSl THAN ANY OTHER PAPER PL PUSHED- i TWENTY-EIGHT COLUMNS DAILY' FBfer 0NB $ 5.00Per Year. FORTY-EIGHT GOLUMN&WEQILY FIR 50 Cents a Year. No one can afford to be without it. Everybody can afford to take it. Subscribe now and get all the new© Ing mWMffl .