Newspaper Page Text
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Pills
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took three
J and was entirely
teese^UlB. time I am never
1 ’-Peter
Iyer’s Cathartic Pills,
Mr tt Co., Lowell, Mass.
1 Dealers in Medicine;
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aotsi^sedycation Zfiasfiibg;
frn - M- rrr-
SR ubookiprooOl
wmi
notes a lax-ox'
XH AUSTEDyiTALlTY
i,' : i i u l u MISERIES
HAY
peByIoyal — ZB> CUSS BUUOSD BBAOT. pills
" OfttaMft**, -* aiickJur *T*r C"**"*™ "»wlJh( 4
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HIRES
00 T BEER
EASILY MADE
MAKES fIVE CAUONS
MvantAnae gaucws
Jtoo-r BEER
Wbm most amnzMS aad wholesome
mrmuu MmaaL mum world. tstit,
* Ask Drug gist Qrossr ter It. *
year o r
C. e. HIRES, PHILADELPHIA.
LAS
rsorro. xsiifr*
____________ tool SHOES.
Examine W. L. Douglas $2.00 Shoes lor
entlemen s«d ladies. .'
, FOR SALE BY
& WHITE,
GRIFFIN.
&■**.. ' • •
New AdvttrtiMWents.
IS, MIRRORS
I «. EARLE * SONS,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
1 p five
V *1
wmm
Red Cloud Attaches His Sig¬
nature.
It i> Expected That the Enervation Will
Soon Be Thrown Upon to Settler.—Pros¬
pect. of an Kit™ Session of Congr***.
Other Washington Dispatches.
Washesgtox, June 22.—The reports
from the northwest are vory satisfactory
to those who favor the opening of the
Sioux reservation. It was expected that
the commission would encounter a great
deal of opposition, and no one cogni¬
zant of the facts, and the character of
the Indians thought that it would be
possible to induce any great number to
sign the treaty for some time to come.
The reports receive.! to-day,
nuance that Red Cloud has a
tached his signature, can. ’
prise, that he because would be it was gem
one of
hold oat to the last. The wisdom
president commission in assigning a pi
to Gen. Crook is
The long time connection of
with the rod men, and the
knowledge of their character __
possesses, makes him invaluable in a
matter of this kind.
asserting, Many of those few months who were loudedt that there in
a ago,
wan no possible chance of the ratifica¬
tion of the amended bill throwing the
reservation open to settlement, now ad¬
mit that the situation has entirely
changed, ^ that and within these same men" few are weeks pre-
~ a very
to signatures will insure bo officially the opening re-
congress to
of that vast expanse of land which is
now If practically this could have useless. been done this year
it would have made a material difference
in the population of South Dakota when
the census shall be taken next year. As
the matter now stands, it is not thought
that there will be enough immigration
into tile territory before the 1st of
June, lSUO. to insure any veiy great in¬
crease up to the time that the enumera¬
tion is made.
Appointment*.
Washington, June S3. —The president
has appointed the following collectors of
internal revenue:
William Cassius Goodloe for the
Seventh district of Kentucky; A. T.
Wimberly for the district of Louisiana
and Henry M. Cooper for the district of
Arkansas.
The president also appointed John H.
Simons, of Portsmouth, O., to be United
States marshal for the southern district
of Ohio; George I Cunningham, of
South Carolina, for the district of South Ore¬
Carolina, and Orville T. Porter, of
gon, for the district of Alaska
United States attorneys — Walter
Lyon, of Pennsylvania, for the western
district of Pennsylvania, and William
’** " ! for the western
Horace United Greeley States consul Knowles, at Bordeaux. of Dela¬
ware, Mason, Ohio, general
Frank of consul
at Frankfort.
Charles at B. Trail, of New Orleans,
consul Marseilles.
William H. Dimond, to be superin¬
tendent of the mint of the United States
at San Francisco, Cal.
PearisB. Ellis, to be assayer of the
mint of the United States at Carson,
Nevada.
_
Extra Session Anxiety.
Washington, June 22.--There is the
utmost of anxiety expressed of both among political mem¬
bers congress par¬
ties to ascertain whether or not it is the
intention of the president to call con¬
gress together No satisfactory in extra information session in Octo¬ has
ber. secured
thus far been from any reliable’
source on this point Congressman
Browne, of Indiana, is one of the
in natil
is possible. the president ‘Consequently the he subjoot will inter¬
view on os
soon as the latter returns from likely Capo
May, and at that time it is quite
given that some out general information will be
Newspaper Men Eu Route to Johustown.
Washington, June 23.—A party of
Washington correspondents and local
journalists left #ie Baltimore and Poto-
mpe depot at 8 o’clock for Cresson, Po.,
as the guests of the Pennsylvania rail¬
road at that noted mountain resort
They will visit Johnstown before they
return to Washington.
THE S TARVING M INERS.
Some Prospect of a Compromise Being
Effected in Indiana—In Illinois.
Indianapous, Ind., June 23.—Gov¬
ernor Hovey has received word from the
coal operators of Clay county that they
would meet the state board of charities
for the purpose and the of meeting discussing will the be strike held
situation, They that
in a few days. do not say
they will submit the difference between
them and the miners to the board as ar¬
bitrators, but the governor hopes that a
conference difficulties will result in an adjustment
of the
Illinois Miner. Starving.
Jomet, 111., June 22.—A committee
sent by the and citizens report of this the city condition to in¬
vestigate the locked-out miners upon of Braidwood
of mission. They
have fulfilled their re¬
port that they found many cases of want
and starvation in the households of the
miners, nearly all of whom have large
families of children. The committee
calls upon citizens to give what they can
for the relief of the suffering faniihes of
the miners.__ . „
•3,400,000 fluid for France.
New Yoke, June 22.—The heavy
engagements Europe of gold by yesterday for steamer ship¬
ment to to-morrow's
had the effect of the restricting from the deal¬
ings, and during hour 10 to II
the market was unusually quiet The
total amount of gold engaged is $5,400,-
000 and it all goes to France.
Shut in Seir-Defimne.
DtFBi.QtTB, Wednesday, Iowa, Jpne Barbara 22.—In Fayette Rosier
cotlnty, and killed her husband, Francis
shot third wife. He
Rosier. She was his
was of intemperate habits and She quarrels states
between them were her and frequent she shot him to
that he beat
save her own life.
_
Seemingly* Eradicated
With repeated and powerful doses of its of qginine, various
dulls and fever, in some one again
froms, springs into active existence ogam,
often without 1 provo-
cation. Toexti
obstinate .
of this
than to subdue it when ii rages an
system. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is
sufficient. When every resource of the
|*Srr‘i^S£?£Si* 2 »
Bitter* will protect
fe'.stHftiry* i^tam ffajrii ~ s
!
upon of
count
1 *’£*
zerlond and ths will w™, srt.
powers continue,
l&aarJWPn Germany.__
Hh***t- -*
Gemrny m aSi % 22. — Labor organiza-
workers in all the •industries i; employing
tSSB many men are M already K.
are ot daily occurrence,
c^es where strik^ areav^
Sry mason in Friday
work at a
pel shorter employers hours. 1
Not All Harmonious.
&»»£&&&£» and Russia
many that derives are strained, and says
it its information from
_ Berlin which absolutely
sources in are
Igfce circular recently issued from Bel-
is not credited any where.
A Mob of Striking Miners.
Vienna, June 32. A serious riot, the
outcome of tile strikes in that region,
has strikers occurred defied at Kladno, Bohemia. The
the gendarmes and the
latter were compelled to fire several vol¬
leys dispersed. into the Two mob of before the rebellious they coaid miners be
were killed and twelve were wounded-
Further trouble is feared and three bat¬
talions of infantry have been sent to the
scene. •
■
,
_
Lepers In Kantian.
London, leper unearthed June 23.- -It turns iSK o
the
Wales has a wife of six
grown up children. cl They They^aJl^ot all a
living similar by off-scounngs buying ox tails of the and Central
meat
market and hawking them about the
streets of London. The excitement
over these discoveries among all classes
of society is im mense.
Promoting.Socialism.
Berlin, June 22. —The North German
Gazette accuses Switzerland of promot¬
ing Socialism. It says: “Had a great
power other practiced such Switzerland abuses against has been an¬
lty power of, as would have resulted.
a War
Penloo Afraid of Asslnatlon.
London, June 22.—The Pall Mall
Gazette asserts that Mgr. Persico, who
made behalf an of investigation the inserted of Irish in affairs his in
port of the result pope, of his mission re¬
a state-
Ireland and declare that he held proofs
that that was t heir intenti on.
Deed of a German Stableman.
Berlin, June 22.—The buildings on
the Baronial estate of Henfstaadt in
Meiningen, the ground. Germany, They has been burned fire
to were set on by,
stableman on the estate, who, after
applying JE the torch, hanged himself in
one ie of of the burning buildings and per-
ished in the .......... flames.
Orten Ocean In Chin*.
Shanghai, June 23.—One-half of the
important of Szechuen, city of Lachan, in ” the prov¬ ’
ince was-----
by fire. The
days. It is
. W JBEB the ___ML.
in streets. trying to escape from narrow
_
An Overflown River.
Pams, June 22.— The town of Bar-
Le-Duc in the department of Mens is
flooded by an overflow of the rivers,
and the country in the vicinity devast¬
ated. Houses have been washed away
vine or destroyed yards rui ned. and crops and valuable
o The Boulanger Prosecution.
Pams, June 22.— The senate commit¬
tee, which has been inquiring into the
public prosecutor._
Servin'* Policy Unchanged.
Belgrade, June 22.—A circular is¬
sued by the Servian government denies
the truth of the recent alarmist rumors
concerning foreign this policy country, ol and Servia states that
the is un¬
changed. _
Eight People Drowned.
London, June 22. —Floods in the
Resenleaoh river at Stuttgart have sub¬
people merged portions reported of drowned. the city, and eight
are
Prominent People Nearly Drowned.
Chicago, June 22.—A Timm
gie from Harrison, Minneapolis of Chicago, says that niece Mb of
dent Harrison, narrowly MinetonkaL escaped drown¬
ing at Lake wednesday
afternoon, boat in gale. through The the
a S
composed euriSge, of of St Miss Louis: Harrison," Missf'Alice Nice,
of Ironton, O., and Miss Lillian Ward.
The of this gentlemen city; Charles were S. George Hord, M. of Chica¬ Want
go, and the owner oi the yacht Frank
Nickels The party were in the water
when an hour, rescued___ and were nearly exhausted
An Old Man’* Fatal Fall.
Boston, June 22.— Thursday Alexan¬
der M. Fryer, aged 08, and his son
Fred, were working on a house in Dor¬
chester, when the staging broke and
they fell twenty feet The elder man
received injuries of whtah he died
shortly afterward. The eon escaped
with a few slight injuries.
Health and Beauty.
She hi a form of life and light.
That, teen, S^Kgliher, becomes Icheek, a and part ofaigh, in her
Health on her beauty eye,
Her for aD grace i it*
The secret of
aad beauty ris is simply simply this: she averts
MMtt,
,
a
I ,000 that I
now
now i
increase
.00D or
drouth marshes, has and dried the ' the swamps fay Sl.'ss
so has not
mottling it was stated that two or three
looked for at present
Extraordinary Bone Scratching.
the house six weeks. Hesays: “When
I was aWetoget onmy legs, I had an
itching sensation that nearly rnn roe
i r»w to the
without re-
i this way for
two years I then found Clarke’s Ex-
the tract Drug of i „ h ix (Papillon) Skin Cure at
cured^ Store, used it, audit Clarke’s has
sound and well.”
Flax Soap has noequal for Bath and
Toilet. Far sale Skin Dr. Cure N. fl.OO. B. Drewry’s Soap |Drug 25c.
at
Store.
SWEP T IN THE RIVER
A Party of ExeuroloaUt* Moat With * S«f>
ion* Accident on Oneida Lake.
Sxraoosb, N. Y., June 22.—The Oath*
olio Benevolent legion of this city gave
a picnic at Frenchman's island in thf
Oneida lake Thursday. It was attended
by Everything about 500 went people Well until from the Syracuse. return
trip, the excursionists when the steamer board, Oneida, became having
its on utfe
manageable, comini? misDlaced. rudder breaking, or be* ^ '
.i
At the railroad bridge, near Brewer*
ton, the boat collided with the bridgiy
and a number of the pleasure seekers
there were swept into the river. Peter
Yaekel, the leader of the Central Oily
band, was drowned. He was a well
known musician of Syracuse. A num*
ber of those on board sustained injuries,
among them being Albert Engel, who
had a leg crushed; Mrs Charles
Webster, injuries about the head; John
Egan, bruises, and Charles Allen, who
was seriously hurt. It is said that a
little others girl was slightly also hurt. drowned. Several Several
were peo¬
ple who witnessed the accident from tire
share went into the water and rescued
many of the excursionists from drown*
ing. ' ___
The Quarrel Finally Ended.
Carbon, Ind., June 22.— Conrad!.
mann, wife and a tavern himself. keeper, Both aged 45, dead. Shot His hi*
are
wife was 28, and had been married to
him six weeks. The couple quarreled
incessantl y.
_
Cabinet Work* Burned.
cabinet Portsmouth, works ata" O.,
were burned to the ground Thursdey $8,0Q&
night Loss, $10,000; insurance
Abbott’B East Indian Cora Paint
remo speedily v es all Corns, Bunions and Warts
without pain. For sale by
all mayI7d«wXy. Druggists.
Advice to Mothers.
M i a Winslow's Soothing Sirup
for children teething, best female is the prescription and
of one of the nurses
physicians iu the United States, and
has been used for forty years with never
failing suooess by millions of mothers
for their children. During the process
of It teething its ohild value is incalculable
relieves the from pam, cures dys
entery bowels, and and diarrhma, wind griping By in the
colic. •* giving
health g" the child and rests the mother
Price 25 cents a bottle, augeod&wly.
DID YOU KNOW IT?
Did yoa know catarrh h a blood disease? WeUit
almost invariably Is, and frequently b a symptom
of inherited blood poison. The tendency to catarrh
may lay dormant in the system half a man’s lifetime
sad then suddenly become active end the disease
at once sever* sad troublesome.
N. C. Edwards, Lunpassas Springs, Texas
writes: “For over four years I have been a great
sufferer from a terrible form of Nasal Catarrh. I was
greatly annoyed with aconstant roaring in my toad
and my hearing became very much impaired.
The discharge from my Rose was profuse and
CATARRH very offensive, and my general health
i »P» lrei I tried most all prominent
physicians, but they did not cure me.
and I used various advertised preparations without
benefit
I then sent to the drug store of T. E. Smith &
Bra, and purchased B. B. B., and to my
astonishment and satisfaction, the use of ten bot¬
tles has restored my general health, stopped the
roaring sensation, entirely healed and cured the
nasal catarrh, and 1 am proud to recommend a blood
remedy with such powerful curative properties.
1 fie Business men of our town know of my case.’
W.A.PRma Fredonh, Ala., writes: ”1 am-
not refrain from telling you what a glo-
liATARRH *»<»“* medicine you have. For two
years my mother has suffered with a
severe Catarrh of the head and ulcerated
MrtUriWMMd R R^hS^I ** ee * i
hf aM q jljgfc#
H.C.KWNARB ftSo», ToweSga, Ga, writes
“0«ft of our neighbors has tan
Wo finally induced him totry ths
efficacy of B. B. B, and he was aoot delighted with
. He continued its use, and was
-—
MfiraniUw
lym yi
«EO. R,
d&w to July 1
1845 . Isife i— ri — n<T —•- iw is
*»♦ ^
- rt ’
THE-
NEWARK, NEW JERSEY.
Purely Mutual. Assets over FORTY TWO MILLION DOLLARS.
Income over Seven Million Dollars.
La ge and Annual Dividends, No “Tontine Estimates.’ 1
The best m Life Contract on the market. We invite a
Policies »lici< with those written by other Companies. , »ii
8 k W. MANCHAM & SONS, Agents,
GBIFFIN, GEORGIA. - >£ $|.
CLARENCE V. ANGIER, State Agent, Atlanta, 6a.
SPENCE A SMITH,
OPPOSITE BRICK WAREHOU8E,SOLOMOI
W"tes£ , I , r sir '■ * ,e “
H. Nothing Spence Vnt good the helm work Will cannot be done. V 111 not t#*e dealing. ft ri ot Call dj job cnwlefor. fo, ftps trice. h
ht you fell to getfeir j.t.
SPENCE & SMITH,
Solomon Street V kCriffin, Ga.
PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRIES.
, . , M ANUFAOTXJEEBS • •. * . »;*.
yi : 5
Sash, Doors, B]
Mantels, Mouldings, Musters, Newells, Etc., Etc.
Dressed and RoughiLumber, laths and
Paints, Oils, Window Glass and!
Gtiranw,' ■ t..........i*...... *....... v
quality. We nrannfaetnre We will give all yon our paid ( and paid: atr^as ixt
prices that you formerly price now
You plfd for 8x10x12 8x10x18 light Sash $1.10. 1.75. Our “ price «1 90 Afl c.
10x16x12 2 . 00 .
Door* $2 t i to $2 50.
Dressii
For Dressed and MatchwllSmSff^-lote V Prire^’S to 1 4ft
- - *
•
Try us and if you are not satisfied that our work It not equal, or better dou« than you
have had done by other*, we will make no charge. Wc thank the public for ttte Very
Gotten Mate.
nov2fri.Awly
Pljnfejp
m
ill
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