Newspaper Page Text
....... 1 . 00 .
Spalding Co.
Adverttalu*
-Da* dollar pW #qn*re for the- flntt
, and fifty rente for blunted rerii snbrequrot
- .or tare to a. a
f> «mtt p«r Wnefor
toaandrrt.htob.ad
t Insertion* for Ire*
.forth. Daily
tKOAOS.
nted by the
amendments t6 t
pea Yeryimportant work
t' i.-it^hobM /It wIOttla taSTwitfaout It MBOUt
“ the legis-
' delay, because
l beta seemon to a few tfteke,
»eUF early in the session as
“ >
.
it toad congress ww the result
conviction of thepeo-
* county of the state that
‘ ilawsare radically de-
s| he long as they -re* W"
M there is very Httle
the toads will be ta¬
il work done on the roads
nidney without mak-
lany better. The reason is
. i JGSSS^. %S
'
> simply comply
; lotto makegood and
rideaof the road congress
f Ipsa to© convict in making
good one, and
m approved by the Morning
fe wer? many articles. The
be slightly increased, of
e convicts were put to
the roads instead of be¬
ta contractors, but the ben-
>ple would get from good
IhiiT n(u>e>ll» t~-* -awn -f- <->
_j the amount of additional
ey would have to pay.
» roads were once improved as
aid be the cost of keeping
epair would not be very
^indeed, the cost of putting
a to first-class condition would
l jgraht as some of the farm-
to think. If the farmers
■nftrai an estimate of losses
inually suffer through bad
( would be surprised at the
of them. The wear upon
j and harness thftt
f roads is much greater
i they have any ideaol. It they
contribute what bad roads
tern, together with what they
| bn the roads under the present
lam they would have to a few
ts a fund that would be sufficient
i tyake first-class roads to every
i, ......
people take hold of this
! question to earnest. Let them
. .. snow th* legislature that they
only want good roads, but are ready
to pay for them. Let them move en-
wgetically and harmoniously in the
V and the legislature will do
k to necessary to be done. When
It accomplished Georgia will
„ave token a step she will never re-
—* to time she will be able to
_ Jas good roads as there are
>i any state to the onion.
Road Congress made a pretty
Start toward inaugurating a
p system of road working in
_.gta, hot the people should not;
; this subject drop here. It ought
i be constantly agitated until actual
have been reached. Georgia
•public highways.
Convincing Proof.
tMtonre* It ha* been proven that
L B, (BotoDM Wood Balm), made by
1 Balm Co. Atlanta, (la., will mre blood
taits wbree pbaare, even when al
rentment fails.
A. P. Brnaaon, Atlanta,Ga„write.: “Jhad
cnkwsoh one leg and 6 oti the
“ *- a ,nwf.witod 1 kallatra
_____ w
riwwj JITvB«iWW*» barroJ of medicine, A oPflr t in r
owed a
I to cure the dtoeaee. With Mttto
l finally acted oa the argent advice of a
i and got a bottle ot B. B. B. 1 expert-
disappeared, and at last I am
“ again.'after an experience of
, Ga., write*:
Tiff'S? tertiary form of blood
I font
a harden.
jrertbeiem. .122
army
will be
under a
than they would
ha^e to bear If this country had the
greatest standing army in the world
The last annual appropriation for
pensions was #88,400,000, and it is
believed that at the end of the next
fiscal year there will be a deficiency.
Since the close of the civil war more
than #1,000,000,000 has been paid
in pensions, and the pension burden
is steadily increasing. It would nat¬
urally be supposed that after a quar¬
ter of a century all entitled to pen¬
sions would be on the pension rolls.
Such is not the ease. New names are
being added to the rolls by the thous¬
ands, and the prospeet now is that
before the end of the present admin¬
istration millions there of will dollars be an increase in the-an¬ of
many
nual pension appropriation,
f Thecommissionerof pensions has al¬
ready placed constructions upon ex¬
isting laws that will add many thous¬
ands of names to the pension rolls.
The Assistant Secetary of the ■feer-
ior is reversing pension decisions of
his Republican predecessors, and in
that opening wide the door to fraud.
Only a day or two ago he decided
it a man who hod been bit to the
ek with a whisky jug by the corpo-
ofhia company, two weeks after he
d received his discharge from the
army, was entitled to a pension. The
claim of this man and many others
like it had been rejected by previous
administrations, both Republican
and Democratic. The fact that they
are granted by this administration
justifies the codusion that the pen¬
sion sharks are now afforded every op¬
portunity bfrS to make successful raids on
ta ei try .
Thinking men all over the country,
says the Savannah News, are begin¬
ning to view with alarm the rapid in¬
crease of the pension charge. With a
pension commissioner who seems to
think that he has been chosen to dis¬
tribute the treasury surplus among
the ex-union soldiers and sailors, an
Assistant Secretary of the Interior
who is a good deal of a demagogue
and who has no knowledge of law and
no resjfect for precedents, and a con*
jrras that believes in winning tbesdl-
lier vote at any cost, there is a prob¬
ability that the treasury will l>e bank¬
rupted, notwithstanding the reve¬
nues are now so much in excess of the
needs of the government.
The pension sharks are now send-
-. ■. . „ . ... 1 if..!. II ■■ ■■■ ■ > , ^ , .1 * M — . — -.X
sailors in every part of the country,
asking them to file applications for
pensions if they have not already
done so, In the circular there are
Statements calculated to excite their
cupidity and induce them to make
statements which are wide of the
truth. They are told that the new
commissioner of pensions and the
hew Assistant Secretary of the Inte¬
rior are the friends of the ex-soldiers
and sailors, and that their policy is
lar more liberal than any that has
ever before prevailed in the pensipn
bureau. They are also informed that
the present congress will enact pen ¬
sion laws that will authorise the
granting of pensions to thousands
who have heretofore been barred out,
and that the' sooner they file tlieir
applications the better it will be for
them
The south has thus far offered no
opposition to pension legislation.
She has taken the position that those
entitled to pensions should have
them, but she has known all along
that the money of the people was be.
jug distributed largely among those
who have no rightful claim to assist¬
ance from the government. She has>
however, said nothing because her
position is a delicate one. The time
has come, however,*when she must
protest against a further increase of
the pension burden. She bears a part
of this burden, and is theretofore en¬
titles to speak with regard to it.
She has her own veterans to care for,
and she cannot afford to contribute
to the support of thousands and
tens of thousands of able-bodied men,
whose claims for pensions is based
upon neither justice, common
nor benevolence.
r- —j — '**. 1 —-——-
Bioo REWARD. 9100 .
,Md that ta Catarrh. atarrh
stitutional dfaeaae, require*
treatment. Hall’* Catarrh Cure in taken in¬
ternally, acting directly upon the Mood and
miKUK surface* of the of Bystem, thereby destroy
ing the foundation the disease, and giving
the patient gtrengih, building up the consti¬
tution and ,a*MBting nature in doing ite wdrk.
The proprietor* have so much faith in ite cur¬
ative powers, that they offer One Hun;
died Dollars for any cam that it fails to cure.
Bend for list of tesjimonials. Address.
F. J. CHENEY ft CO , Toledo. 0.
Sold by Druggist*. 7oc
Advice to Mothers.
Al * v\ iRsnow* ri mth.no mnir
fjr obit livn teeth me, if M.<‘ ptw^ytpUi.a
of ocm «»t the hc*t uar-c* iud
pu **!<»«!>* to the ■ United .state*, hi,cT
| iHS for forty test* with never
>T1 oo«s« by toll boo* of uiot bare
fi.i •Imirebildreu. During the pru»«a
t .iliHig its rditf ie inealcuUtrie
irtM the club* (toot P« 1 S. 'Xirce lijs
-» * ,, d tlierrhoT. .grijitwt to Mre
■mmn
■
,
r .
«r (Dsm.)
r Tanner in-
The Mat Net Kxbatisfed.
Boston (llohe (Dew.)
It is now several days Harrison since any has
one by tlie name of
been appointed to a federal office.
But be patient 1 The President is
doubtless holding a conference with
his numerous family. * rA
The Same Nearly Everywhere Else.
Nashville American (Dem.)
There are about Nashville a flock
of republicans against who the are administration. beginning to
ihutter
They don't see what good exactly has
the election of Mr. Harrison
done They either don’t exactly themselves understand or thrirparty. why
it is they haven’t begun to get hold
of some bf the nice offices lying
around.
Our Big Barometer.
NewYorkTribnue (Rep.)
Tile Georgia School of Technology
is going to nave the biggest barome¬
ter on the continent. The tube is to
be twenty feet high and broad to pro¬
portion. It will be too bad if, after
getting this mammoth instrument
mto position, Georgia varied is not favored
with a large end assortment
of weather. It would be indeed mor-
tifying little place if during to Montana the summer Dakota, some
or
which harbors only a small, unos¬
tentatious barometer, should be vis¬
ited by a shower robust of cyclone frogs accompan¬ and aerol¬
ied by a
ites. while the Georgia School of
Technology should be compelled to
train ite champion tube upon noth¬
ing more, important than the sweet
zephyr and the mild regulation thun¬
der storm.
Lobt.—I don’t know know where, i can’t tell
when, I don’t see how— how—Bomething of great
vatae to me, and t for for the the return return of of winch which I I
shall betruly thankful, vix.: a good appetite.”
Found.—‘ Health and strength, pure blood,
and appetite like that of a wolf, regular diges¬
medicine, tion, all by Hood’s taking Sarsaparilla. that popular I and peculiar
want every
body to try it this season.” It is sold by all
drnggists. One hundn J doses one dollar.
A IHrhux* of i* eltaire.
The French . ambassador at Rome
has had the good fortune of a singular
“find.” A famous portrait of Voltaire
has been missing fur more than half
a century. The most celebrated of his
statues, and nearly all liis likenesses,
represent the philosopher in his old
age, but there was a portrait known to
have been painted by Largilicre in
1718, when Voltaire was only *24—
“the brightest young fellow m th®
world,” as Carlyle describes him.
This is the portrait that M. Mariani
discover 3d and exhibited 1 at his first
reception in the Fames© palace a few
nights ago. Its value is even en¬
hanced; fora characteristic anecdote
explains how it came into the posses¬
sion of its late owner. Voltaire in his
flames of his youth. The lady had
survived her beauty and did not care
for the interview. Voltaire was
piqued, and wrote first a rather insult¬
ing quatrain on the refusal; which he
followed up by sending a portrait of
himself as the court beauty may have
remembered him when they were
both young. Indeed, for the purpose, adopted
he took it away from his
daughter, fifty to whom be The had lady presented retain¬
it years before.
ed the picture and bequeathed it to
her nephew, ambassador Baron Yarieourt, .acquired from it.
whom the
The pedigree, therefore, is without a
flaw. A medallion head in Beauhar-
nais’ edition of Voltaire’s works has
evidently portrait.—Pall been Mall inspired Gazette. by Largiliere’s
The Paris Girl.
There is one peculiarity about the
Paris girl, which, while subject it provides remark a
gomevraat delioate to
upon, so extraordinary that we
must et our blushes and contem-
plate it refer to the excessive de¬
all velopment Frenchwomen, of the bust According among to nearly our
ideas' about the formation of true
beauty, this amounts to almost a de¬
formity, spindle It is a most legged surprising girl tripping thing
to see a with
along the avenue a torsol protu¬
berance for all the world like.a pouter
pigeon: the thought And what that, is more rule, surprising this
is as a is
entirely au naturel. I scarcely know
how to account for this phenomenal
growth that of the Parisienne, unless to is
so many of these girls that we see
on the streets and at the theatres are
the daughters of countrywomen, who
were accustomed to working in the
fields and bearing loads on the head.
Their children have inherited the fine
development of the neck and shoulders
induced JEIawever by this much muscular of truth employ¬ there
ment.
may be in a surmise of this sort, the
fact remains that the girls hero are ex¬
traordinary iu the matter of busts. I
have often marveled at the shapes of
EVench women as we get them in the
comic papers. I now see the basis of
the caricature. I am very often com¬
pelled to smile at the along sight the presented boule¬
by a girl as she bobs
vard like a bird, with the chest of a
hussar and the limbs of a sandpiper.—
Clare Belles Letter.
Rooney Xow*Hae*9to,000 fi HI* Pock¬
et.
It is
Pjovidence ... —, ------- j --
were a week ago. The ticket 2,887, wl
drew the flret capital pnxe of $300,000 in the
drawing of March 18, brought one-twentieth
part of the prixe to Mr. John Rooney, he
haring pa id #1 for tb*t»b«re in it chance*.
—[Providence (B. I.) Telegram, March 80.
Seemingly Eradicated '
With repeated and powerful doeee ot ite of quinine, various
chills and lever, in some one
from*, springs into active existence again,
often without the slightest smouldering apparent embers provo¬
cation. To extinguish the less
of thisobetinate mbdue towhen and reconditemalady.no ii fiercely to the
Stomach rages Bitters ie all
sufficient. Hostetyd When * of the
every resource agfliasfcit
phiurmaropceK has been exhausted
in vain, the Bittern wiwnpr it—will remove
ms. £
influence of atmospheric ite attack*. poison that Dfcbrders beget*
malarial disease, liver from
of the stomach, and . ! are among
the complaint* to be ** “ the
The Chief Renans tor the great suc¬
cess of Hood’s Sarsaparilla is found In ths
article Itself. It is merit that wins, and the
tact that Rood’s Sarsaparilla actually ac¬
complishes what la claimed for it, Is what
has given to tots medicine a popularity and
sale greater than that of any other aarsapa-
Merit Wins 2 ?*&. , £U£
Hood’s Sarsaparilla cores Scrofula, Bair
Bheum and all Humors, Dyspepsia, Sick
Headache, Biliousness, overcomes That
Sired Feeling, creates an Appetite, strength
sns the Nerve*, bnUds up the Whole System.
Bood’s aarsnimrillnls sold by all drug¬
gists. •i;atxf<*«h Prepared by C. J, Hood
ft Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
■
M’s Pills
ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE.
f virtue s are
Sold Everywhere,
Office, 44 Murray St, New York.
UPPMAN'S
jPYRMEi | eswcuvroe I
CHILLS ftftVfcR
DUMB f\6UE i
r„:t sale by all bbtcgjsts.
SElS&f.&WM
Tlic Georgia Midland RR
•liortcnt -and Best Line
With Through Coach
ess Between
UULUB 8 US iflfmsmr
f *NLY ONE CHANOETO
Washington, New York,
Nashville or Cincinnati.
Schedule in Effect Sunday, dan. 6,1889,
TRAIN NORTH
Leave Union Depot, Columbus..,.IK® p. m.
Arrive Griffin........ 3:56 “
Arrive Atlanta..................,.5:40 “
SOUTH BOUND TRAIN
Leaves Atlanta....................2:15p. in
Leaves Griffin....................4:05 Columbus...........7:05 “
Arrives in “
ACCOMMODATION TRAIN
KORTH BOUttD -(DAILY EXCEPT 8CNDAV).
olu tcbus—Midknd depot,
at Griffiu................
rtMeDonongh........... •
80TJTn BOl-S.D - (DAILY EXCEPT 8USDAT).
Leave AUauia ....... ....6:50 a 41
Leave.McDoaongh................8:50 30 “ **
l eave Griffin ....................8
Arrive Columbus. Midland depot, .2:05 p. in
SPECIAL. TR AIN Sunday Only .
Leave Columbus - Union Depot, 8 ,25 a.
Arrive Griffin.................,11:40
Arrive MeDonough........... .12:20 p.
Arrive at Atfanta............... 1:10 “
RETURNING- South Bound.
Leave Atianta.............. .... . .6:50 a. m.
Leave Me Donough...............7:35 ‘‘
Leave Griffin......... ........ 8:25 K
Arrive Columbus—Union Depot, 11:25 “
Ask for tickets to Atlanta and points be¬
yond over the Union Georgia Depot, Midland and RR. Ti<-k- office
elsoc sale at at the
in Georgia Home building.
M. E.GRAV, Supt
C. W. Gen’l C HEARS, Pass. <X>luint>us, Ga
. Aid.
New AOvertisefiicr.t%.
Road Cans
Ten per then cent, anybody eheapet Buggies!
Don’ buy before getting our prices and
catalogues. .
THE GEO. W. STOCKELL CO.,
Name this paper. NASHVILLE TENN
14MX SAL8AM
m hair.
t-.t jawilh G«my
^/cr F.i' v
:^rb^ ' J Vitrialilngi Color.
-.1
v,,.—, V l mm#
I*- l
■
Administrator’s Sale.
By virtue of an order granted by the court
of Ordinary of will Spalding County, before at the the Court May
Term, 1889. be sold
house door in the city of Griffin, during the
legal hours of sale, on the Bret Tuesday in
June. 1889, ten shares capital stock of Cen¬
tral RR. and Banking Company amounting of Georgia,
and one interest certificate to
|400.00, dne by said company. «. Mills, lereosed, Sold Sold ae ae tor tor foe
property of Elisabeth JN0.
distribution.. B. MIMAL
Administrator lisabeth 0. Mills.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
Nottoc is h reby given to all who are ia-
,he si d^tetlL at once.
bol.Hftg claim- sgnUrt the
'
Disfributed.
•jtsianii fry -tofi*' 1
lucoi porated liy tore in 18t»8.
for Edncationul anift liarii . _ .
its franchise made a part ef the present State
Constitution, in 1879, by an overwhelming
'’X^GRAND EXTRAORDINARY DRAW
BEU DRAWINGS take place on each of the
other ten months in the. year and are all
drawn in public, fit tile Academy of Music, New
Orleans; La. ,
‘We do hereby certify that Monthly we supervise and Semi- the
rangements for all the
Annual muiil Drawings Drawings of of The The Louisiana Louisiana State State Lot- Lot¬
tery Company, and in person manage and
control the Drawings themselves, and tha at
the J same are conducted \ RHRPIIi with honesty, lonesty, p&tiee, fairness fairnes
and tn i goo<] faith toward all and we
- oriieth ____ certificate
authorise the Company to nee this
with fac-simfles of our signatures attached m
It advertisements.” - - " .
CMlulnm,.
We the undersigned Banks and Bankers
will pay all Prims drawn in The Louisiana
State Lotteries which mny be presented at
our counters r
Mammoth Drawing
At the Academy of Music, New Orleans,
Tuesday June 18, 1889, .
Capital #000,000
100,000 Tickets flirt #4<R Halves *20;
Quarter* *10; Eighth* *5; Twentieths *2;
Fortieths *1.
list ©v PRIZES.
1 Prize op *600,000 is............*600,000
1 Prise op 200,000 is............ 200,000 100,000
1 Prize op 100,000 is............
I Prize op 50,000 is............ 50,000
.2 Prizes op 20,000 are .......... 40,000
5 Prizes op 10,000 are.......... 50,000
10 Prizes op 5,000 are......... s 50,000 50,000
25 Prizes op 2,000 are.........
100 Prize* of 800 are.------- _ 120,000 80,000
200 Prize* qp 600 are...... —
500 Prizes of 400 are.,.....,,. 200,000
approximation prizes
100 Prizes) of *1,000 are............ *100,000 80,000
100 do. 800 are...............
100 do. 500 are............... 50,000
TWO NUMBER TFRMINALB. ■
1,998 Prises at *200 aw.'^T™..... *399,600
-m—
'3,134 *3,159,600
AG ENTS V\ ANT ED.
For Club Rates, or any farther information
desired, clearly write legibly residence, to the u with mlersigngd, State,
County, stating and your Number. More rapid
Street re¬
turn mail delivery will be assured by enclosing
an Envelope bearing your full address.
IMPORTANT.
Address M. A, DAUPHIN,
New Orleans, La.
or M. A. DAUPHIN, Washington,! Mi Order
By ordinary letter, containing Companies. oney New York
issued by all Express impa New
Exchange, " ' ?, Draft Draft or or Postal r>«»+oi *
Address Registered Letters Contain¬
ing Currency tc
1ICW ORI1AIS BeTWNAX. SANK
New Orleans, La.
—min—i ■-—— —fa— .» *-« , .■
is GUARANTEED BY FOUR
id the tickets
if an
rights are recognized all in
highest Courts; therefore bewarq of
tions or anonymous schemes.
ONE DGLLAar is the price of the
part or fraction of a Ticket ISSUED BY
in any Drawing. Anything in onr name
ered for lees than a Dollar is a swindle.
June Sheriffs Sale.
yy ILL BE SOLD ON THE FIRST
property, to-wit:
15 acres of land in Spalding County, district
gia, originally being ofl of lot No. 149 Spalding in 3d
bounded Henry Jas. now S. Boynton, south
Hercules east by by lands of B. R.
Bedier, west
ly and north by balance of of Justice said lot. Court fi
on and sold by virtue a
issued from the 1001st District G. M.,
>r of Fanny nny H. Wood-
. nd other o____ fl fi
possesion legal!
* 6 . 00 .
R. S. CONNELL, Sheriff
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
/ORDINARY’S OFFICE— Spaldi.no W.
V/ ty, Georgia, May 3rd, 1889. — James
Willis, Guardian of the minor children
Mary makes J. Willis, late of said county, sell the
application - forleavfe - to
■ ■
mg m the northwest corn
and a piece of woods lying in the west of
lot adjoining E. C. Akin on the north
Thos. Baird on the south.
let a® persons concerned show cause
fore the Court of Ordinary, at my office
Griffin, on the first Monday in June next,
such permission should not be granted.
*6.00, E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
Let all persons concerened show cause
fore the Court of Ordinary, Monday at Jane my office
Griffin, on the first granted. in next,
such leave should not be
*6.00. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordfnary.
said county, deceased
Let all person*concerned show cause before
the Court of Ordinary, nary, at at my my office, office, by o ten
o’clock * a. m., on the Aral ; Monday in
next, why why such sn letters of adminieti istration
should not be granted.
*3.00. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary
Executors’ Sale.
By virtne of an order from the Coart of
dinary. will be sold befor thee Court
doer of Spalding county, in the city of Grif¬
fin, on the latTueeday in one-half Jane next, bet of ween land
the legal dionrs of sale, acre
more or less, with improvements thereon
and known a* the Georgia Hotel lot, bound¬
ed as follows: On the north by alley, east by
property of Mr*. Conch, south Sold by Broadway toe
street, went by Hill street. as prop¬
erty of the estate heirs of Thos, P. creditors. Smith, dece’d, Titles
for the benefit of and
perfect and term* of safe cask
W;.\
'
*• ^ m,
- -
<., li.tan .......
k. I. a. W.^J,
. rAfy-N-0Li«>»<
g; e»*i *® ugricttltu
200,000 Readers 1 Leading iu
n SODTHERN CULTIVATOR D DIXIE FJ
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send in your aubscriptions. Only One per annum, ®
eto.,a4drew THE CULTIVATOR PUBLISHING CO.,
GiO. W. Harrison, ) Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga.
# Manager, j :;*</ for sample copy.
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