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ol ipalding Co.
Mfr Ad vert Wb* Kata*.
7imk «to»qttent |
I counted M a
Hue lor
3SS&8&&SSS ,Srt“KS.tf££
le their advertUemcDts longer
• rate* a* for the Daily
Atlanta Journal not onif
tton wrapped in cotton bag-
t wonts it tiexi with cotton
Jrafipr , ' i '
--------
---THIS FARMERS.
i factor* and other mer-
boktep bashing in stock,
i tamers in their tight
igging combinations. |
_... J determined to defeat
tttion, and the only way
> ao to to use cotton bag-
1 of jute bagging.
ican aid them very
jon hand a stock
.............. „ merchants
an bagging. If the
oily do not do tnis they will
.jit difficult for the farmers to
cotton bagging at the lowest
ibto prices and In quantities suf-
ft to meet their wants.
gas .there to a demand for
agging, and the indications
" demand
... will bea large
this season, there to no legiti-
reason why the merchants
not carry a stock of it. They
can make just as great a profit on
OOWon bagging as on jute bagging,
and there to no danger that they will
be toft With a stock of itonlheir
hands.
The farmers quite generally in this
«*«»« have made up their
— to use cotton bagging
ihto season, even if they have to pay
- *e more for it than for jute bag-
At least that to the general
an. There is a probability
; the cotton exchanges in Europe
ww»ho adjust the rules regulating
tare that there will be no advantage
in that respect in using jute bagging.
The farmers and merchants should
act in harmony. It is to their inter-
p extent Is to do dependent so. They are to each a certain other,
upon
and they should give each other all
the help tbej can.
THE WRONG MAN.
An Atlanta policeman has come to
after will be In the capacity of a pri-
' vote citizen. There was an exceeding¬
ly popular showin Atlanta the other
^ night and it chanced that the chief of
the fire department sought relaxa¬
tion from his customary duties by at¬
tending. He also gallantly escorted
four ladies, one of them bis wife, and,
dressed in citizen's clothes, counted
u on a thoroughly enjoyable evening.
Hto enjoyment was marred soroe-"|
what, however, at the close, for in
|ps leaving he found the himself place of and entertainment, party borne
along by the crowd until confronted*
by a policeman who tapped his wife on
her shoulder with hto club. The chief
raised Ms hand to catch the blow,]
| felled when him the officer, not recogniiing Other him, |
at a single stroke.
officers rushed in to have a chanee at
p the man who had attempted to de¬
fend hto wife, and dragged him out
upon the street, when the scene
changed. They recognized their vic¬
tim and were quite willing to let the
matter dsop, bwt it did not. At a
subsequent hearing before the police
commissioners the vigilant knight of
the club was summarily dismissed
from the suggtifted force, An interesting ques-
tton by the outcome of
’ this little mistake what would
is,
have been the case if the wounded
instead of being an official,
been an ordinary citizen with no
amonntof influence in the com-
““"v 1 • I
W|> oOer One Hundred Dollar* reward tor I
* i, - the £• UHfchEY undersigned. A Co.. Iwtve Projw.. known Toledo, F. O. J.
r for the last 15 years, and believe hiiu
honorable in all business trausac- j
----- financially iff able to earry ont any ;
! Wholesale their firm.
Druggists, To-
SAN & Makvik, Wholesale
■^Oaahier. o,0. Toledo National
PtafiRSSS’tt
, nm. Testimonials sent free.
• bottle. Kohl by. nb Dreggitf*.
' Indian Corn Paint
‘ s and V\ arts
sate by
v* Hi_
_______a wonder-
tad still have
• leisure; others do little and
rly alwayH pressed
»for necessary work, fu some
measure the difference is owing to
natural aptitudes, one man being
quick to grasp a situation and
prompt to act upon it, while another
must turn it over and over in his
mind before he fully comprehends
it and frequently follows this hcsit%
tion by slowness of execution when
hto work to finally mapped out. It
makes no difference what this work
to, whether manual or mental, these
characteristics in men will appear.
Some are in such a hurry that they
make costly mistakes, but others,
without wasting time in ascertaining
the right thing to do, take care,
nevertheless, that It is the right
thing, and then do it without delay %
The latter accomplish a great deal.
There are many who, when they get
airly started, work like steam engines,
but they do not on the whole make
progress which to satisfactory to
themselves. This to often because
they work without method. They
are outstripped by men who seeming¬
ly take it easier and who have no
greater capacity than themselves.
Their weakness is that they do not do
things in order. It to too mnehr pitch
and toss with them. They do not keep
their work in such shape that they
can disputch it with regularity and
precision. The time consumed in
continually straightening up consti.
tutes a good share of the whole.
There some occupations which com¬
pel those who follow them to be or¬
derly and methodical. There to none
in which these qualities, where they
have been negtocted, cannot be culti¬
vated to good advantage. Deficien¬
cy in them is far from being a token
of genius. It signifies something of
indolence and much that to slip-shod.
Every man knowi whether or not he
to as orderly and methodical as he
should be. If he to not, unless he to
to* old to attempt the task, be should
endeavor to improve in these respects.
There to no danger of his carrying it
to that excess which marks persons
who have a passionate love of order,
but there is a likelihood that he will
materially lighten hto work or find
that without greater expenditure of
effort he can do much more than he
has been in the habit of doing.
DIVKRSKIELD FARMING.
The several expositions held in
Georgia within the past two years
have done much to increase diver¬
sification iu farming, by calling at¬
tention to our great variety of agri¬
cultural products. The offering of
large premiums for the best county
and individual collections .of agricul¬
tural products has done much to
stimulate diversification/’ We are
pleased to see that the Piedmont Ex¬
position has offered $1,200 to the
county making the largest and best
display of products grown or pro¬
duced by residents of the county
$700 for second best display, and
$300 for the third best. For the
best individual display $500 is offer¬
ed, $250 for second best, and $150
for the third best. ,For the best dis¬
play of hay $100 to offered, second
best $70, third best $50. For best
Georgia raised horse colt, foal Of
1888, $50 is offered; best mule colt,
$50; boat standard bred colt, $50;
cow making largest yield of butter
in one day, $15#, second best $100,
third best $50. Best diplay of do¬
mestic wine, $100.
We are pleased to see such prem¬
iums offered, as they will tend to in¬
crease the variety of our farm pro¬
ducts and thereby the prosperity of
farmers.
A peculiarity of Hood’s Sarsaparilla imparts Is that
While it purifies the blood, it new
vigor to every Junction of the body. (6)
Convlnelng Proof.
^lu many instances it has been proven that
B. B. B, (Botanic Blood Balm), made by
Blood Balm to. Atlanta, Ga„ will cure blood
poison in its worse 'phases, even when al
other treatment fails.
A. P. Brunson, Atlanta,(la.,writes: “Ihad
24 running ulcers on one leg and <1 op the
other, and felt greatly prostrated. I believe
I actually swallowed a bnrrol of medicine, in
vain oflorte to cure the disease. With little
hope l finally acted ou the urgent advice of a
friend, and got a bottle of B. IB. B. 1 experi¬
enced a change, and my despondency was
somewhat dispelled. I kept using it until 1
had taken sixteen bottles, and all the ulcers,
rheumatism and all other horrors of blood
poison have disappeared, and at last I am
sound and well again, alter an experience of
twenty years of torture.”
Bobt. Ward. Maxey, Ga., writes: ‘ M.v dis¬
ease was pronounced a tertiary form of blood
poison. My face, head and shoulders were a
mass of corruption, and finally the My disease
began eating my skull bones. bones
ached; my kidneys were deranged, I lost
flesh and strength, and life became a burden.
All said I must surely die, but nevertheless,
when 1 had used ten bottles of B. B. B. I was
pronounced well. Hundreds of scars can
now be seen on me, I have now been well
over twelve months.” •
A Woman’s Love.
Will undoubtedly morally; improve but when a man the
mentally fe and g?»od blood and
liver man medicine, needing nothing a wiJl take place
of Calisaya Tonic. It contains those
properties purification which serve blood fora ami thorough improve¬
of the
ment of ths working of theliveiS—that
most important of ajl systematic
functionaries, In malarial districts
it is a sineqnu non for ail disorders at¬
tendant on Jiving ifi sqch for
the calisaya. hark, the basis pf the
best known antiperiodia medicines,
which it contains, does a thorough
work and frees the blood from all ma¬
larial poison, ft is sold by ait dmg-
gista at fifty rents and a dollar a
For 'or sale t hv E. R. Anthoav.
iiosjps.
The Situation at Johnstown in a
Tory Unsettled State.
Quarrels and Conflicts of Fre¬
quent Occurrence.
Only a Mors Handful of Man Wow at
Work on til* Debris-One Gang Bofnoe*
to Work With a Strange Foreman In
Charge—Italians Take Their Places, fcofy
are Driven Away by the Strikers.
PrrrsBima, June 14.—The Leader’s
special fwrtn Johnstown Thursday said:
Chaos reigns supreme here. Every¬
body is excited and petty quarrels and
oontticte between the laboring men and
their bosses are of frequent oocuibmksh.
By 10 o’clock this morning the town
jwhs swarming with laboring men of all
types and natto n a l iU**. but the condi¬
asassafc-iiftRSt tions of “01.50 por day *nd pay your
be employed did not appear to be much
of an inducement, and as a result only
100 men ore now engaged in clearing
sway the debris.
Thisi gang is engaged in clearing away
and burning rubbish in Kerrsville. Not
a solitary man is at work on the mass of
and putrefying flesh above the
stone bridge, the stench from whieh is
fast becoming unbearable.
The First Conflict.
The first oonfliot among the workmen
occurred at 0 o’clock this morning,
when an attempt was made to dethrone
the foreman of tfie West Alexander
force. The contractors disorganized the
gang‘and put a strange foreman in
charge. The men refusid to continue
to work under any Other than their own
foreman. The contractor would not
concede a point, and the laborers re-
turned to their 1 t tents, where they are
still quartered, and say that they will
return homo before they will weak un¬
der a strange foreman.
Italians Take thalr Places.
A A gang gang of ol over 200 Italians won hired
to take the places ►laces of ol the tne strikers. strikers, The
la!>orerR did not. take kindly to the
Italians and intimidated them at every
opportunity. No open conflict occurred,
however, until the Italians were at
breakfast One of the American laborers
made an insulting remark to one of the
dagos, and the latter answered in the
same manner. Hot words followed, re¬
sulting in a raid on the Italians, who
were thrown bodily out of their tents.
Reported to General Hastings.
The Italians McKnight, reported Who the in matter torn to
Contractor re¬
ported to Gen. Hastings. The general
expressed such his determination to suppress
outbreaks at all hazards. The
assurance that all men would be
thoroughly protected from violence,
however, did not allay the fears of the
Italians, turned and their the tents. majority of them re¬
to
* Outrageous.
Bystanders say that the conduct of
the Americans to the Italian laborers
was outrageous. Contractor McKnight
told tile Italians to prepare to go to
.work to-morrow and he would guarantee
that they would not be molestm.
Strikers Kuu Out of the ramp.
This morning a large company of la¬
borers from Greeusbnrg refused to
to work for As 1.50 promised per day, fifty claiming tl
they had been cents per
day extra. On hearing this, Gen. militia Hast¬
ings ordered a company of to
the (Stamp of the strikers, work, whereupon who again the re¬
fused to go to
soldiers were ordered to charge upon
tlie fumes becoming and terrible. odors from decaying
flesh is
Two small stores have opened, and are
thronged At 10:50 with o'clock customers. of about 100
a gang
men were put to work ou the wreckage
near th * general office of the Cambria
Iron company.
GOOD NEWS IF TRUE.
Tlie Loss of Life at Johnstown Flaceed at
Not Over Throe Thousand.
Johnstown, June 14. —'The bureau of
registration has recorded 15,678 survi¬
vors. Of 1,193 bodies recovered 628
have been identified. Col. Rodgers says life
the highest estimate of the loss of
cannot place it at over is, 000 souls now.'
The Relief Commtwion.
Hakbisbubo, Pa., June la.—The fol¬
lowing commission has been appointed
by the governor to distribute the funds
contributed for tlie relief of the suffer¬
ers by the recent floods in the state:
Governor Governor Beaver, Beaver, Edwin Edwin H. H. Fitter, Fitler,
Dolan, John Y. Huber, Robert C. Og-
den, Francis B. Reeves, of Philadei-
pliia; James B. Seott, Reuben Miller,
S. S. Marvin, of Pittsburg; John Ful¬
ton, of Johnstown, and H. H. Ciunmin,
of Williamsport, will to Philadel¬
Governor Beaver go
phia to consult with financiers relative
to ________________ liis acceptance of _ _ a proposition ^ __________ from _______
private parties to loan him #1,000,000,
with which to repair the damage iu the
flooded districts, so that the state funds
nee.l not be touched. No interest is to
charged, and session the legislature make is appropria¬ expected
at its next to an
tion for its repayment.
Auxioi); to Go on Gov trnoi* Henver'i* Ho ml.
Philadelphia, received June 14.--Mayor the Fit¬ of
from ter Wednesday sixty-five to seventy Philadelphians names
who were anxious to‘ sign Governor
Reaver's to the $1,000,000. bond for the of indemnity- fund to be
state treasurer
used in clearing Cornell (Jonemaugh New valley. York,
Ex-Governor of
representing the relief committee of
,t citv, ftonq gfiked u.snjf. tne privilege and that of going
ou the 1 ...... hi space bo
left ■:fm. for ii.« tins name* iwtrn.uj of .,f itan tana, W. w T. T Slier- siLer-
other man, Mayor members Giant, of the «x-Mayor New York Gmce and
com¬
mittee. Mayor Fitte. said that ail the
names received required telegram would bo forthcoming. Governor
He a from
scheme is a grand success.
lit-lit* Trniti »Vr««k«>
Bautimohk. June 14. -A collimon be¬
tween two freight tiaiut. nesn Havre de
Grace, ot the l i •■••lphte Wixhieaiay division of
Ute JJaltiuiore - ; t v-.e■•. taiuiuz Joseini Mc¬ re¬
sulted in in.Vu.a,!.-
Kean, brakemaa, and VT with *ckfhg several
oars, two of them lowleil proyisuins
for Johnstown sufferers. It ft olauneq
*by train hands that the giving telegraph
p^ erato r was at fault at wrong
A Box of Ayer’s Pill* ha* saved many a fit
ol sickness. When a remedy doe* not. happen
to he within reach, people are liabie to neglect
f«**t .ufinenU ar^d, of coyree. to if serious flf
Hem follow* they have suffer the eonse
qnences. "A stitch in time»a*e« pine.”
•‘For Al»ng time I had no'appetite., was
re* Urns at night, and ref? much debilitated
After taking two bowIm of Ay«w'*Sar«apariJ.
la, tny strength and appetite iwtarnad, aad
my health Oswsgp.S.'i’.. was completely restored.”—D. M.
Fisher.
Won’* Give an Opinion.
9, Pa., JuneY4.-~Attorney will
- - not give an
. it would lx) con-
take money
the state »treasury for for the th flood sufferers
"before an » appropriation has been made,
as tlie matter has been be< amicably ar-
ranged between the state treasurer,
Hart, and Governor Beaver. obtained by the
The amount will be bonds¬
indemnity bond method, but the
men the must agree to bo the responsible for of
money in the event successor refuse to
Stats Treasurer Hart should
accept his settlement, and further, if
any of the bondsmen should die in the
intervening time, the remaining bonda-
mon must be responsible.
BLAI NE OBJ ECTS.
He Disagree* with Several Previsions of
ths Samoan Protoeol.
Bmklin, June 14 .— The. American
commissioners to the Samoan confer¬
ence have received instructions from
Mr. Blaine, the American secretary of
state, in relation to the protocol drawn
up by the conference
Mr. Blaine disagrees with several pro-
have not gone far enough in respect to
the rights conceded to the United States.
The conference had a sitting to reoeive
Mr. Blaine's reply.
The English and Gertaan commission¬
ers will afterwards consider Mr. Blaine’s
objections and deoide upon what attitude policy
they shall pursue, and upon the
which they- adopt depends the continu¬
ance of the conference.
PNEUMATI C^ dfUN CA RRIAGES.
Saw Ones Satisfactorily Tested at the An¬
napolis Testing Grounds.
Annapolis, Md., Juno 14 .—The pneu¬
matic gun carriage made by the Pneu¬
matic Carriage and Gan company, of
South Boston, Mass., was fully tested
mander M. R. 8. Mackenzie, Lieut SJ
Eaton Sclirooder und Lieut. Sidney A.
Staunton.
The tests began at 10:40 a. in. and
ended at 2 p. in, < Twenty rounds were
fired—ten slowly and ten fast. The gun
was furnished by the government, and
is an 8-inoh, carrying a 250-pound shell
with The a carriage charge of acted 1^6 pounds in satisfactory of powder.
a
manner. Tne recoil of the gun is re¬
ceived upon an aiq^cushion. A short
recoil is where a great desideratum is on ship¬ Tne
board, there little room.
recoil of a field piece of artillery will
be from six to eight feet
The pneumatic gun carriage tried
Wednesday reduced, the recoil to two
feet. No“aeeident of any kind happened
during the tests. The ten fast shots were
made with a minute and a half inter¬
val. matic Col. Gun Creasy, Carnage president and Powder of the Pneu¬
com¬
pany, and William Hunt, Jr., secretary,
were present during the trial.
„ A DELUGE FEARED ft
By the People of Shelburne FulU, Mass.
A bake Threatens Them.
SpbingfiAld, Mass., June 14.— There
is great excitement in Shelburne Falls,
one of the most thriving towns in the
Deerfield valley, over the possibility
that Vt, the Sadawga distance lake, above, in Whitington, give
and flood some the valley, resulting may in f way
a
ful destruction of life and property.
The lake covers 450 acres, and is said
of to contain The nearly dam tMJOo, is 060,000 gallons and
Water. f erv narrow,
about twenty-two feet high, <ilhe water
is nearly a square mil * in area aud forty
feet deep: it has within a week past
sprung a leak, but lias been temporarily
patched up.
Sadawga lake vs on the side of a
mountain, over 900 feet above Shelburne
Falls, sea level, and in the event of its
demolition that town would experience
a second Johnstow n horror., The Deer¬
field river on which Shelburne Falls is
located, is notorious for its turbulence
during citement high water. all So along great the lias river the that ex¬
become
a and thorough the dam investigation will either be will repaired be made,
or
demolished. -
BAYARD N T MARRIED.
Some Joker Fixed the Date for J|ine 12
When it Has Not Ueen Made Public.
Washington, June 14—Tfio wedding
of ex-Secretary Bayard and • Miss Cly-
mer did not take place Wednesday.
Some mischievous person had fixed it
for Wednesday at St. John’s church in
this city, and the newspapers generally
made the announcement, which was
wrong, and had never been authorized.
Many persons went to St. John 's and
were disappointed. No date hi
been fixed for the wedding, an
Leonard, the pastor of St. John’s, who
Ohio, has recently said that been the date elected for tho bishop wedding of
had had not not been been mode made known known to to him. him. Bay- Bay¬
ard is not in Washington,
Raw's New Lauar Organisation,
Chicago, last Tuesday June 14,-A evening meeting bring was the
held ay evening to
unorganized the Brotherhood working classes of sses United of of Chicago Labor, w
into
T. Labor. B. Barry’s Representatives substitute for of the the Knigh' folio
ing trades were present: Moulders,
foqndryjnen, butchers, coopers, waiters,
gas painters, and printers, coke-workers, telegraphists, and others,
carpenters iu all about
said to represent 10,000
wage-workers. Committees -were ap¬
pointed to prepare for organizing the
various sections of the city. Six
organize branches during were the reported week. as ready to
A New and handspirte line of Para¬
call and see them.
At New Yoke Stoke.
Marianna, Fla., Jan. 26,1889.
Messrs. Proprietors Lippman Bros., Savannah,
Ga., P. P. P.
For a long time I suffered with Ca¬
an picerated throat, J took S,
S., but derived wlio no benefit from it,
Dr. Owens, represented Lippman
Bros,, Savannah, Go., told me that
P. P. P. would cpre me, so I began
it. I have taken six bottles
(smaUAize) and I am entirely well. I
like a new man and consider P. P.
a wonderful medicine.
Pete Manning.
A MARSHAL SAVED LIFE AND HAIR.
Monticello, Fla., Jan. 24, ’89.
Proprietors Lippman Bros., P. P.: Savannah,
Ga., P.
For the past eight years I have
suffering dyspepsia, with dropsy; malaria, rheuma¬
bad and nair my all diges¬
was my come
out. In lactl was nearly a wreck. I-
taken kidney and blood medicines
did me no good. When I be¬
taking I P. V. P„ about child. 3 months I
was as weak as a have
taked four bottles (small size)
tod^y I $m a well man and mv
"has “come ngriiri.” I can no)
miner
Witness: W. O, Owens.
m ».V17 d A « 1 t
4 ^ *0 *323 $^ ’ * 1
Ill lli LINK
rV—*■—**■“
A Chain of Baimtglatf Evidence is
Being Furnished
% ...........
Which Bodes No Good for De¬
tective Coughlin.
Startling P-O.t.m.nt of a Ural bar of tli*
Chicago Sittvernre Department—Wood-
rulTs Story torrohora,. «d—.Tom Dm-
momt. the IHsh Watlonairaf, Wanted by
the Chloaifo I’olloe.
Chicago. June i4. One of tin* most
Important and startling statements in
connection with the Cretin, rnurd 1 r was
made Wednesday by Jack Stanley, of
the city sewerage \whneut, to tw >
friends—T. P. O Connor, and MnflioeL
Hart. Conversation opened by fellow asser¬
tion, of Stanley that be knew that
Woodruff. Hai t asked “whtVe did you
know him?”
‘•Why.’’ said Stanley, ‘dm worked at
Dean’s*' stable on Webster nvyuo. I
keep my stallion th .-iv, nnd became sus¬
picious of the fellow. I was naraid lie
wquM st eal j»y horse oS stake liter put
for sen tec. / made .ii';uiri.-*s about him
and found that he had worllfid three
weeks at the stables for nothing but his
board. That I regarded He - as freqm-nt- a sus-
circumstance. w is
-jree weeks in oousnltati m with
a" man, who appeared to be a detective
or confidence man, £ afterwards ascer¬
tained that this ’arrested man for was the Coughlin, murder the :.f
policeman Dr. Cronin.
“I saw him the htebt of the murder.
I was at Dean’s stable aliout 0 o'clock.
Woodruff began to set in a suspicious
manner. He slept in a loft Over the
stable. He took off his shoes on the
stable floor and climbed in his stocking
ire gone. -
The importance of this Statement lies
in the statement that it corroborates
Woodruffs story as related to Chief
Hubbard to a remarkable degree. It
connects Woodruff with Coughlin, the
dectective, also, and furnishes another
link in the chain of evidence which ; "
coiled around that person.
Tom Desmond Wanted*
The Herald says: “Tom Desmond,
an Irish Nationalist from the Pacific
coast, is wanted by the police for sup¬
posed complicity m the butchery of Dr.
Cronin. He eluded the vigilance of In¬
spector Bvmes’ detectives in New York
him Unit Monday has been afternoon, found. and Lnke no trace Dillon, of
who yet the first to direct suspicion
was
against Desmond as well as against John
J. Maroney and Charles McDonald, the
blacksmith, has sent the Pinkertons,
after tlie missing man, and there is
every reason to believe that he will be
rounded up in a day or two if he has not
left tlie country.
“The details with of the Desmond's crime supposed
connection great however, are as
yet very meager. It is known
that he engaged a room at McCoys hotel
April 16 last, the day before Maroney,
of New York, under the assumed name
W. G. Melville arrived, and that they
were frequently seen together, and that
they left the hotel April 21. ”
At*LeastJ» Dozen Hein* Watched.
“We have at least a dozeh men under
qlose surveillance iu various parts of the
country," said Luke Dillon. Mr. Dil¬
lon was busily engaged in wading
through a mass of correspondence. “I
think X understand I the motive of this -the
crime so well likely that be can engaged pick in out it I
men most to
am iu constant communication with men
earnest equally co-operation well posted, and have through their
to hope for success. If the every reason who
men
made the Clan-na-Gael—and that conspiracy were I believe members that , of
the most of them yere-thtey will be
discovered and convicted. *
Sullivan Seeltin; Relense, tfie
An attemnt to secure release ‘
or admission to bond, of Alex¬
ander Sullivan, on a writ of habeas cor¬
pus, Tulev's. was made * Wednesday Sullivan’s in lawyers Judge
court.
Tuley reserved his decision until Fri¬
day, Lawyer to allow A. S. time Trade, to readtlie Senator testimony. Duncan
and Hiram T. Gilbert represent Sulli¬
van, and while his* Spate’s assistant, Attorney Mr. Longeneck- Baker,
er
peared for the state.
Stanley Dentes the Story.
John Stanley denies making any such
statement as was credited to him in a
morning Conghlm, paper. The only He says thing he don’t he said kno
base the sensational story on, was that
when he saw the man Woodruff at
Dean’s barn, he remarked that he
thought that fellow would bear watch-
_____
Four Killed at a CroB-dng:.
Canton, O., June 14.—At noon
the Wednesday Pittsburg, the Fort west-bound Wayne express Chicago on
and
Lawrenee railroad struck and Peter K carriage Streb, containing brothers,
and two Frank orphan Sefert, boys Louisville, named Edward
and at near
here, killing the four occupants of the
thirty arriage minutes ami the late, horse. and The running train was
was at
the rate of about fifty miles an hour.
Tlie engine struck the horse and carriage
squarely, tossing both of these and the
occupants thirty feetP iu the air. Tlie
two Strelis aud one of the boys were in¬
stall tlv killed, while tlie other boy
lived half an hour. The liorso was also
iiustaati * v kilted and thrown 100 feet for-
WT.ul
__ _ _______
Vaar < a ;dictates for Governor.
Nuw One cans, Jane 14 -A speei
has from just Jackson, been received Miss.,_ of the says: withdrawal News
of the Hon. P. H. Taylor, of Panola, leaves as
a candidate tor governor. This
four ear;dilates field. for gubernatorial honors
still iu the
.Qu ! c : c Time tom Hour Kmiff.
New Yok'k, June 14 _The_ English
A captain voyage claims of ninety-two be the days, fast fastest time
to on
ifMionrl"
it's a Ctt-toi-Oil Tru-i.
St. -Lons, Jnuc 14. - A air tor oil treat
is sai 1 to te‘ foruijug i. ;sie .vest witii a
capital of * j*). n. Ml. Th-e arc but seven
regufa. qf wlxi.h lain* i. rit- <mn:ry. ail l>ut one
ate i:» .jo
Seemingly Kra(licate<^
With repeated and powerful dose* of it* of quinine, roriof—
and fever, in some one ms
from*, springs into active existence agai _ .in,
often without fl - slights ^----■* apparent “•— provo*
Toextinguish aish recondite thesmouldhringembers the
tl his obstinate and malady.no less
to subdue it when ii rages fiercely in the
rstem. it. Hostetler’s When every Stomach resource Bitten ol % is the all
hoi' y
i» a exhausted against it
of atmospheric poison that begets
alarial dlteeae, from It* attacks. Disorders
the stomach, liver and bowels, ate among
complaint* tp be apprel
\s&
*
Th* Chief Beams , _
cess of Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is found In tho
article Itself. It is merit that wins, and the
fact that, Hood’s Sarsaparilla actually ac¬
complishes what is claimed for it. Is what
has given to this medicine a popularity and
sale greater than that of any other sarsapa-
Merit Wins S\£JSW£
Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures Scrofula, Salt
Bheum and all Humors, Dyspepsia, Sick
Headache, Biliousness, overcomes That
Tired Feeling, creates an Appetite, strength¬
ens the Nerves, builds up the Whole System.
MteMPe Sarsaparilla Is sold by all drug¬
gists. | 1 ; six forgs. Prepared by 0.1- Hood
fe Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Masa.
BWI-ll! H-i
UPFMANS
iPYWiMj /\SUf\ECUnEron I
FOR SALK BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
fisssf.
Mm House!
-<o)-
OPENING OF SUMMER CLOTHING I
»-
I have searchedtheUnited
States for nice-fitting, dura¬
ble. pleasant
(§,’ SUMMER ★
★ CLOTHWG
I have found it in the Sum¬
mer Goods of Alfred Benja¬
min & Co., of New York. I
have the largest Stock,.and |
the best and most desirable
assortment I have ever car¬
ried?
(’oatVests -
From $1 to $10.
What comfort in nice, light
Coat, when the thermometer
is reaching upward these sul¬
try summer days. invited to
Everybody and examine. is
come
GEO. It. NILES,
36 HILL STREET, GRIFFIN.
d<fcw to jnly 1
1845, l ife Insurance. 1889.
--- )o(---
THE;
NEWARK, NEW JERSEY.
-)o.-
y- : ;
Purely Mutual. Msets over FORTY TWO MILLION DOLLARS. Annual'
Income over Seven Million Dollars. , y
La ge and An ual Dividends. No ’Tontine Estimates.”
The bast Life Contract on the market. We invite a comparison of our
Policies with those written by other Companies.
S. w. MANCHAM & SONS, Agent*,
GB1FFIA, GEORGIA. ^
CLARENCE V ANGIER, State Agent, Atlanta, Ga.
dAw to augl.
For X Cheat)X Goods
f . .......C .LL ON. . •' }
W.te. HOLMAN *CO.
We Standard A Sugar Ur making c ke Cifron, Currents, Prone* and a I
kinds of Extracts fr»r Flavoring. Tlie best Pat. Flour, Mince Meat, Jellie*
and in fact anything you want.
TURKEYS, FISIl AND OYSTERS.
Locve us your.yrrer and ii will be attended to.
BOOTS, SHOES AND LEATHER AT
' Home-mode HASSE'KtfS’ Shoes and SHOE Leather o STORE Specialty. -J,%
~
_ rCeeired
targe We warrant, all wprk and shall make H a point t® migrepresept nothin. Jnst
shipment of Gents' and tallies' and Mi»ees fine gnods. and school shoe* lor ChiMre*
ShTpsr cord.^dd^tor SOU cords ol Tan-bark. H. W. HABSELKU8,
Jan. lo V*J.
pjpag r te.«-> ttefijaWSS
tyj
Drawer 3, Atlanta Q»
,
FOR MEN ONLY!
A POSITIVE
tr asmikistcrinb m. i
n Ferlcvt tiraakfipper. War*']*
- - i .... .:t& ;
•5 »*<•' d - '-r ;
■ .«»4 -: V■ ** -r|
.**<•*««» ’■<* 4 > • I f