Newspaper Page Text
L
......».oo
.. t.».
r of Spalding Co.
. forth* first
to to counted as a
I tafifea insertion* for 1w»
kid for in advance.
longer
• .lor the *"* .B-TWlrv DJI*
.
newspapers are
1 Of trouble em in di-
I dinner.
who hadn’t
; fifty years, was
Ico man the other
could swindle
#
that pass be-
It used to be
f ounce; now it is
ffifei per ounce or fraction
__
r^wh.v.dvv.1- at. Washington
his Hoosier
,... inonetoogood
I he wears it daily
.^itheenseandequa-
l hand at the business.
ne company .has
, be reshipped to
f Undergoing inedi-
, old" European vin-
re sold here* at four
Mg^ rit8quali -
tr^ricr&Tia. urging tin 1
»• mms the
•moay
•held by nine-tenthi
There is butlittle divi-
Demoeratic pasJ^ ranks, and
‘ i ^^tnrb-
to" “ d H»n
th
After all the roTthe Republican pa-
.... *» the treaty just nego-
Hows the lines laid down by
i. AH the American demands have
----"fid.all the concewions have
f by Germany. It does i
j|7.> The Massachusetts - legislature
~ ',000 the flood suffei
to
t has already sent nearly
1,500. Knoxville the same amount.
Philadelphia had, up to last nisrht,
sent #300,000, the vbhfederate and New York $500,-
000; a#100, veterans
Savannah $l,i
City Council $200.
.
relief to stricken * Pennsylvanians
f rom every point of the compass
*---- *— foreign 4 — countries, com*
hundreds of telegrams telling of mon
ey, Clothing and food contributed
by sympathetic men and women.
i ss ***— 1 —■ 'j -■ ---- --- The I
Says the Macon Telegraph;
URtabrfa Iron Works, destroyed by
flood, are said to
bare been the most extensive in the
ttea, and amongthe largest
of Steel rails. It will be
pe of how closely interWov-
interests of the people of
whole country, if one result of the
Which has over-
t saved here
will eventual-
ly a™' b to a considerable sum,
PMPMKIByhdM to take cans of the
cant*, they have learned to take cate
of the dollars also. The copper cent
: is used in many of the large cities of
the South, but one is hardly ever
in the smaller cities and in the
towns and villages. The truth is
that the Southern people are inclined
to be extravagant. In the “good
old times,’’ about which we hear so
much, they did not find it necessary
to save the cents, and the lesson of
economy has been a hard one for
them to learn. It has been said, and
no doubt with some truth, that a
very good living could Ire gotten out
of what the Southern people throw
away.
The News and Sun believes the use
of coppers is becomming more gener
al in the South, however, and it is
significant that at toe same time the
Southern people unbecoming more
prosperous. The mere saving ofcop-
pers will not bring wealth, but the
economy in both small and large
matters that such a practice encour*
ages is very valuable.
In European countries coins of val¬
ue of half a cent are in common use,
and it is said that a petition will be
presented to Congress at |lje next o*
session to authorize the coinage
half cents in this country. There are
many people whose profits are made
up of small fractions, and it is chiefly
in their interest that the petition will
be presented. *
^
TfIKKE WAS NO SALE.
The Savannah, Dublin & Western
Short Line Railway was to hare
been sold Tuesday morning at pub¬
lic sale in Savannah. Fifty thous¬
and dollars, free from all claims, was
the “upset” or minimum price flxed
by the court at which the rood could
be sold. Not a single bid was
made.
Colonel It. J. Davant, receiver of
the Savannah, Dublin & Western
Short Line Railway Co., says that
the counties through which the road
is located are more heavily and beau¬
tifully timbered than any land he has
ever seen; the cleared lands are capa¬
ble of producing anything grown in
the temperate zone; the counties are
w ho
are thrifty and prosperous, are anx¬
ious to have the road built. The
line of road has been carefully survey¬
ed and staked, so that any one can
go over its entire length on foot
or horse bock. The charter, clean¬
ing of right of . way and grading of
road bed, grants of right of way and
surveys made and adopted, and line
staked off, are reported by Col. Da-
yant to be worth*, at the lowest fig-
tore, $109,898.
It is thought that the minimum
price will be reduced, and the road
advertised again for sale on July 2d.
This is the road which caused all of
Banker Branch’s trouble.
There is trouble ahead for the Ad-
mlnistration in more ways than one.
Not only has the struggle for spoils
caused a great deal of dissatisfaction
and bad blood in the party, but it is
by no means a unit on several public
questions. Among these is the Bilver
question. It is said that the silver
men a mong the Republicans mean to
take advantage of the narrow major¬
ity that their party will have in the
next Congress to extort legislation
In their interest. They intend to
make a determined effort to pass an
act requiring the Treasury to buy for,
coining purposes not less than four
millions of silver a month.
‘ Convincing Proof.
In many instances it has been proven that
B. B. B, (Botanic Blood Balm), made by
Blood Balm Co. Atlanta, Qa., will cure blood
-poison to its worse phases, even when al
other treatment fails.
A. P. Brunson, Atlanta,Ga..writes: “Ihad
24 running ulcers on one leg and 6 on tbe
Other, and felt greatly prostrated. I believe
I act ually swallowed a bn n o! of medicine, in
vain effort* to cure the disease. With little
friend, hope 1 finally and acted bottle on the of B.B. urgent B. advice I of a
enced change, got a and despondency experi¬
a my w»«
somewhat dispelled. I kept using it until 1
had taken sixteen bottles, and all the ulcers,
rheumatism and all other horrors of blood
sound poison and hare well disappeared, again, after and at last I am
twenty of torture,” an experience of
Robt years Ward, Maxey, Ga., writes: M,v
,- dis-
tse was protjonneed a tertiary form of blood
s« of his former trials and the
law and favorable
circumstances to which he owes his
long probation. How the trial will
result cannot be predicted; but the
chances are even that his sharp and
watchful counsel will succeed in get¬
ting another lease of life for him.|
Accused of nine of the most brutal
crimes on record, this man huaevad-
ed the law for over two years, and at
great expense to the state, his case
drags its slow length along and
seems no nearer an ending now than
when it was first registered on the
docket. It has lasted so long that
public interest in the proceedings has
visibly waned, and opinion, with
.those who trouble themselves to en¬
tertain one, iB fairly divided as to
Woolfolk’s guilt.
Be this as it may, it would bo well
for the State that there should be a
termination to this notorious trial
one way or the other, for men may
come and men may go, but it goes
on forever. It is hoped that an im¬
partial jury will be secured now, and
that Woolfolk and the state will
settle their differences satisfactorily.
afraid of the south.
An Englishman who has been in
Charleston for some time remarked
the other day that, before he came to
that city, he thought of providing
himself with a pistol and a bowie
knife against a time of need. He hhd
heard that the people of South Caro¬
lina were blood thirsty and danger¬
ous, and for awhile he would not ven¬
ture out on the streets at. night. He
did not care to be set upon by foot¬
pads and water the street with* his
gore.
His impressions were gained, says
.the World,from conversations he had
held with Northerners, whose opin¬
ions of the South, especially South
Carolina, were formed upon the sen¬
sational telegrams they read, sent by
correspondents, who, for the sake of
a few coppers, vilify their own people
by scandalous tales of “big sensa¬
tions.” This Englishman has been
in Charleston nearly six months, and
he only intended to stay a few weeks.
He said that he was never so agreea¬
bly surprised in his life ns he was
when he discovered the true inward¬
ness of the pedple of the South.
You May toe Too Modest,
But you certainly are not afraid to
torpid right liver—of bad blood,
it now, and Calisaya Tonic is
the article A leading physician
Writes: .
Ridgeville, S. C.
Dear Sir: Yon will please send me
two bottles of your Calisaya Tonic. given
The bottle you gave me has
satisfaction beyond my expectation.
* with * Hoping Tonic, you very great success
your I truly
am very W. B. yours, Way, M. D..
This standard preparation fifty is and sold
by all druggists bottle. at cents
dollar a
For sale by E. R. Anthony.
Unhappy Marriages.
riages Dnhappy of and too frequent unfortunate mar¬
are occurence
nowadays unpleasant and results the saddest arise, from or ftiost the
impaired health of either or both of
the contracting contemplating parties. matrimony Young meD
or women
should see to it that they enter on
this auspices important and conditions—health event 'under proper is the
mam point as everything See depends that the on
that alone almost;
blood is in good order—therein is the
foundation of happiness. Heroic and
spasmodictreatmentis not the desid¬
eratum. Mild and methodical means
■jr* i n
Id-
-ing. P. P. P. is tne great rene ,ver of
the blood (Prickly Ash, Boke Root
and Potassium). It does its work
quietly and thoroughly, and repairing eradicating
blood taints perma¬
nently the rrsping, Rheumatism, creaking bodily Mala
machinery. poisoning, For Syphilis, Scrofula,
rial
Ulcers of and Skin eruption, and it is
the ultima ration of medical achieve¬
ment, hence its reputation and high
rank as a blood medicine. Pure
blood is the essence of life. All drug¬
gists sell it.
mayl7dAwty.
Seemlnffiy Eradicated
fronts, springs into active existence again,
often without the slightest apparent provo¬
cation. Toextinguish thewnouliieringembers malady,no feu
of thisobstinate and recondite
than to subdue ft when ii rages Bitters fiercely in is the all
system. Hostetter’s i Stomach
sufficient. U1B When every resource of the
pharmacopoeia has been exhausted againstit
in vain, the Bitters conquer it—will remove
every Bitters lingering will protect vestige those; of it. brought Nay, within more, the the
influence of atmospheric poison that beget*
, from it* attacks. Disorders
r
tor the crest sue
•SM of Hood’s Sarsaparilla is found In the
article Itself. It Is merit that wins, and the
(set that Hood’s Sarsaparilla actually ac¬
complishes what la claimed for It. la what
baa given to'this medicine a popularity and
sale greater than that of any other sarsapa-
Merlt Wins B r %\ Wood the public. ^
Hood’s stun and Sarsaparilla all Hui Humor,, i
Biliousness,
Tired 1 i. creates an Appetite,
ens the Nei •" the Whole
WHIT.
The world ought to
done for me In the cure
which was so bad as to
ble by the physicians
went to be treated. Ode
me a copy of an silver-
Swift's specific, r.'. rt J
relief from the first -.t <J a*--; the poison <
gradually Men cared forced sound cut and t.i .well. my system, It is and I was tei
now
KSC ■ lag 8. S.'S, and I hnv
urn of the dreadful disease.
Dec. , Has. Ann Bornwnix.
An Sable, Mich* », vat
Scod for books on Blood Diseases and Cancer*.
malleffTree. Ths Swtrr Brscino Cow
Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga.
Ms Pills
stimulates the torpid liver, strength-
ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE.
reatodk MS
Sold Everywhere.
Office, 44 Murray St., New York.
Legal Notice of Proposed
Notice is hereby given that a bill will be to
troduced to the next General Assembly o
Georgia, to prevent the sale of Intoxicating Methodist
liquors within three mUes of the
church at Orchard Hill, Spalding county
Georgia. may9-5w
Notice of Proposed Legist
iation.
“ Notice is hereby given session that a bill the will Legisla¬ be to|
t .'oilneed at the summer of
ture to authoriie] the; county of Spalding
to issue sixteen thousand dollars (f16,000)
to bonds; or as much thereof as 1s necessary,
P. P
(Prickly Ash, Poke Boot, sad PtoMstoffiJ
CURES
SYPHILIS
8j SSSlsSS'SSSS rt pbUMo SpuS
wo^‘^^m p^.. mi
greet Blood Purifier.
SGROFULA
U *n impurity in the blood, producing Lumps
S^Tor Pt^te^^^Sfwhich'wP. 1 -™; iUP*
ssassse rajSMj
BLOOD
Cured to Its worse forms--_--,, ESsrsSS:
cues Scrofulous deers broke woLrKm out ttU a p*rt)r
mi s mss* of corruption;» bottle of P. P
procured, and the disease yielded quick!,.
|H|UH*TI.SM gjBMK
«ra* soma of tt* cures art
SSHfeiSgsgs^
EswSar**'—?* sasggigsg
LtrPMAJi Bbos., Wholesale Druggists,
$57to$250* urnisha 0 s's?r'iss; horse and glv
preferred their whole who time tlie business. Spare mo
ments may be pr tably employed and cities. aleo. B. F
few fan- rnontiaina vacancies tf in towns
JOHNSON A CO., 1009 Main 8t„ Richmond
Va. . ■
N B.—Pleaseatat* Nevermind about age sending oud^bustowwfafpen a fi^tjfo t
nee.
HR MM
^ V
l,Ci »
in”silk^and WoSens^ever trade the
Goods shown in the stySn South. ou^Dress'Goods Our object is to handle
to draw direct oa Parte and Millinery ,
----j same styles as canJbehad in any market on earth. White we ma lrea spccialtv elite We c
Domestic materials and ean suit the most conservative buyer as well as the have opened i
Si ks, Woolens, Trimmings, White Goods, Luces,
TAB4.E LINENS, HOSIERY, GLOVfiS? LADIES SEAOEO W- AP-S, ETC
From which can be selecte d styles new, unique are the acme of perfection in
and quality. In CARPETS we lead the van. Ill all there has never been op-ned i
Every pair mode to drd» and warranted to wear and to f
FORGET
That the pricewon our good, as well as the quality, are guaranteed. No trouble to show goods or to an
ters. in all parts Call if of you the can, south. if you See cannot, the stock write and to get us for information. prices before placing First class your'oders. upholsterers lay and drape oi
our
CHAMBERLIN, JOHNSON & CO.,
66 and 68 Whitehall and 1 , 3 , 5 7 9 , 11 f 13 arid 15 Hosier Sts., Al LAMA,
Agents Butteriek’a Patterns. dftwtojun
July Sheriffs Sales.
WILL BE SOLD ON THE FIRST TUE8
lug County, Georgia, the following described
white speckled ox about five yeajw old, one
yellow ox about five years old, and one white
spotted bull about eight years old, one bodies. log
eart, two two-horse wagons without
Wed on andwoki to satisfy one ft fa issued
Also, at the same time and place, will be
Spalding County, Georgia bounded north
and east by lands of the estate of Wm.
Boyd, souttoby plank read and weM by tond
of H. E. Williamson. Levied offand sold by
s?sa turned wTS; to Touto Tenant in «ra possession
over me.
legally notified. ffi.to
B. 8. CONNELL, SheriB.
Receiver's Sale.
the matter of McCone, in Wallace Spalding a Co. Superior vs. J.
L. Vaughn, BUI. Ac.,
Court, will to sold before the court housedoor
One undivided one-hall Intnreet In oneUv
(ttarl ground.
ly, on the south by Mt. Zion camp
Also, five the one st ory with residence lot of land frame containing building
with reoms, Spalding
twelve acres, to Crfewell, by «
Georgia, hounded on the north
‘SMV ^’o’llT-’s’cOllffiit.l,. r&£At*Vi. ■#:
noeiv.r. .
Orflinary’s Aovct-t.Mn>eiu*.
•.
county, deceased. •
Let all pereous sons concerned concerned showcause she before
the Court of Ordinary, Ordinary, at at my my office, by top
on the first Mond
------ vby such letters
^AklMOXD.Orfl.^.
rYBBlNABY’S OlFICE-Srehniso Couh-
theCourt of Ordinaty, at my Monday office, by Jufy ten
o’clock a. m., on the first to
next, why such fetters of Dismission should
not be granted. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
83.007 B. W.
itors and next-of kin of Nicholas Goodin, tote
w$mm said the County estate is
#3.00.
U /YRDINABY’S OFFICE-Sfalmso Uotrit-
tt, Georgia, June 3rd, 1880,—J. H.Ma-
next, why such letters, of -adt
should not be granted. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
*8.00. E. W.
Notice of Local Legislation.
be N6tic« made is to hereby the General given Assembly that application of the State will
of Geofgiafor the passage of a toll at the July
adjourned session to prohibit the sale of spirit-
nous and malt liquors within three miles of
'to Cabifis district in 1
Notice of Local Legislation
ttOtts and malt Honors within three
Teanren Baptist Church to Cabins-district to
Spalding County.
Notice of Loral Legislation
senrbly ot the the the state July Jt ‘
of Georgia for the passage (Of of atoll atoll at at
adjourned session toprohibittbesafeof bittbesaleof mile* miles spirit- spit of
nous and d matt matt fiqnora Honor* within within three three
Midway Methodist Church to Akin district in
^aiding County.
Notice of Local Legislation
of Georgia forthe passage of abfil at the July
Notice of Local Legislation
application toy of of the the Si Stats win
of a t tin ton at at the the) July
the sale of Farm
of Spalding between
Til K —
GRIFFIN NEWS
THE GREAT NEWSPAPER OP MIDI
• GEORGIA
* WILL CONTAIN DURING 1889 A
A ; ,T ■ T
■ tot
FULL LINE OF TELEGRAMS.
FULL LOCAL DEPARTMENT
FULL FARMERS UEMftTIHNT.
SOUND DEMOCRATIC EDITORIAL
INTERESTING MiSCELUNY.
MORE AND BETTES HATTER FOR LESS
THAN ANY OTHER PAPER PDPUSRKD.
TWENTY-EIGHT COLUMNS DAILY FOR ONLY
$Per Year .
aJ -
FORTY-EIGHT COLUMNS WEEKLY
Cents - KOOl
50 a Year. H
No one can afford to be without It.
Everybody afford to take tt.
Subscribe now arid get all tbe new* di
ing tbe year.
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