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v ed ino from om^aft^SS that trotf
. ©out. I* every victim of this dls-
o,I W ou!4W could h ^^oi ^r ‘ three ‘ 'lH words ' "'H iff
se word*
».»”
# AfW^i ?ti)i alone, X
whloh ®y»elf had permanently iss troubled o£ rheuma- several
me
Rheumatism.
Braa^esTfieiiKS Avoyellea Parish, I*.
world^ejtwp be
£S» »b^?them
^omnlSits." Ve
great benefit from
:u». **»v years ago I was
taken i ill with rheumatism that I was
to do any work. I took three
Ayer’s Pills and was entirely
Ayer’s Cathartic Pills,
fbkmsRd it
1
.
.tew Advertisements.
letiRKBtrMnm
n
HAIR W BALSAM
■ and ■ beautifies the hair.
A a luxuriant growth.
>11*
K»
__________aadfcair falling
SSSiSSmSsSSlmmS^^
HINDERCOftfiS.
K smarm wzmmwmsm
ExhaustedVitality
Untold miseries
.y m ■
ftmiltrs asd lotion . Waetern and Southern >**
Worfifc^ ilSSSy, 1 jftSr*
P«oWllLLS ■...... ■' US -------------I CB0S8
rUllOSB p BBAHB, Jffl, $- A
^KK^a^SrVSf. ‘ ' «W OjicAMJfr'. injlu*(
sgp&Ss' !«v|f|5uitap«2£
=*!• Ftatvmwue*.
SiuPhUs^Pa.
HIRES
HUUIS’ IMPROVED Ut
TMSMCKACE MAKES FIVE GALLONS
Awees-srue GMZcws
WW3m»*°yMWMy —r*-'
-
*ooT
• Oak your Drug gist o r Grocer tor It. *
C. E HIRES, PH ILADELPHI A.
GLAS
_______. osrtlemen,
•3 SHOE FOR LADIES.
OK.
OK. „ :w
'OOt SHOES.
css? arc
Examine W. L. Dei |3.00 Shoe* lor
entlemen and ladies.
POft HALE BY
SCHETJERMAN & ifRITE,
CRIFFIN.
g AH
. -- frn u H Adut MittURi B fn ^
■ m PKTJffiRES, THE BEST'Pietnre MIRRORS
Frames oi eJ
kind*. All the “Rogers’ Group*
In choice Etchings and
_________ CARLE ft SONS,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
CONSUMPTIVE -
$
ferttk^SutJof
and such ding, . which which thought trfi
dtarn---- arts, arts, they they — ^ exercised exercised
’OOtonfltl S them n i ifTvo of 4 I
ersto do outright violence, tile
king this end resolved put them, to banish with their them, and to
to ships and sent them to families, Ceylon.
neighborhood When, however. the fleet was in (lie
of that island, a great
storm scattered it and one of the snips,
after fore the being driven for many days be¬
of tempest, archipelago was wrecked upon
one an of u abate ted
islands far to the south, wwptthe
survivors settled. Naturally !
culiar toa-ity oP gifts parents possessed of (
had developed^......, '’jJwroH
dinary Having psychical set before powers, their J
evolving a uet^tud adva
humanity, of they had aide<
opment these pov..
result rigid system of that stirpiculi
was • after a few
centuries mind reading became so 7
general that language fell inr**™**®
as a means of communicatii
For many generations the
speech still remained volnn
gi-adually the vocal organs sjljBlI ho
’ "
few months wholly birth —■— „
after did, iMeM,
still emit inarticulate cries, but at an
age when in less advanced races these
dren cries of, began the to mind be articulate, the chil¬
readera developed
the power of direct mental vision and
ceased to attempt to use the voice.
"The fact that the existence of the
mind readers had never been found
out plained by the by rest two of considerations. the world was ex¬
In
the first place the prtup of islands
was small and occupied a corner of
the Indian ocean quito out of the or¬
place dinary the track approach of ships. the In islands the second
to was
rendered so desperately perilous by
terrible currents and the-maze of out¬
lying to Kxfs impossible toll shoals for that ship it was to
next any
touch their shores save as a wreck.
No ship at least had ever done so in
the 2,000 years since the mind readers’
own arrival.—Harper’s Magazine.
"That III Matched Pair."
be There daily is_a certain the down pathetic town figure streets to
seen qn
that has often struck the Man About
Town as peculiarly fitted for an artist’s!
pencil, it’is that of a very old man
breast, With a long ’ white beard falling on his
W \
with
fashioned cloak, ancient and frayed:
trousers and unmatched shoes. Ha
carries several boxes of cigars under;
his arm and visits the various offices
offering look that them would for touch sale heart with a of wistful
a stone.
He beyond never begs, soliciting and has but little to
say his Sometimes purchasers ho for
wares. is chaffed a
but little the by old thoughtless peddler silent! young clerks,
his boxes and -woes quj
weary round. knows Every him, one but none'
ond street
his name or place of abode. He is a
queer contrast to the general life ancf
prosperity, “age a touching that ill matched illustration pair,” of
and of ana how want, poverty and wealth brush
against each other in a great city.—-
Bt Tonis Bepublic.
Blair Says It’s All Rigid. *
Mr. S. 0. Blair,Chicago,says: “We
eouldnoi keep house without your
Clarke’s Extract of Flax Skin Cure
and Cough Cure. We have used both
for numerous ”d. We troubles* especially the Cough for
our cb recommend
Cure to every family having <diildren.
remarkably We used it for quick Whooping and .satisfactory Cough with
If yon want the best toilet soap get
Clarke’s Flax Soap, 25 cents. Ask
Dr. N. B. Drewry, Druggist, for these
preparations.
Morphy Beat Satan.
In the autumn of 1861, Confederate Morphy,
on his way to the
Manassas, was invited by
Rev. R. R. Harrison, of Richmond,
spend the evening with a number of
other distinguished guests at his resi-
to a colored eni
“Jen d’Echecs,” It whicl ■B-an,
room. and dress after reprcSeU the German idea
mephistopfi chess with eles, engaged in a game The
board lay tomb, a young the man. guardian
on a ana
angel of the youth looked down with
sadness and interest upon the po¬
of the piece* on the board. The
yyung man’s pieces represented the
manly virtues, and many of them had
already represented been the captured. tempting Satan’s vices. pieces The
positioruof the pieces as shown in the
engraving was one that had often been
studied with care by the Richmond
players, and the young man’s g^me
tion was regarded Bet as in hopeless. Morphy’s The posi¬
he was asked up if the position presence,
and was cor¬
rect position After careful the board comparision and in the of
the on
engraving, ho was answered in the
in affirmative. Morphy always then dignified remarked,
hi* quiet bat man-' 1
ner, that he believed he could take
of chess expressed surprise, but Mor-
jhy vindicated his belief in a short
iiime. He took the young man’s game
and played against each gentleman in
Succession and won. The devil had no
Chance against the genius of Paallibr-
phy.-Ne w Orleans Picay une.
..j Lw so nuiny doors to let out
’ r " e ’” U k
on old not time die peeftt|bse
da ys they had discovered rem¬
edies that shut these doors. How
different is Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medi-
calDisco very, from the old time doses.
Coiraumption that or it lung-scrofula, shut*, if taken is one in
wide door
Don’t waste a moment then
lest life slip through that open door,
rr T.
.
pSHSSfiS £* her SSCSfirnffiri? suggestion &«<** w» they unbearable moved uearer and at to
the door. A ,
and this conductor passenger coming soon'got in collect on
his fans she to
asked him to open a venti-
Utor. He did so, politely. Scon the-
taay rapped on the door with ner um-
“Please turn the damper in the
stove 1” said she.
In a few minutes the lady began
fanning hyinn book, herself vigorously with a
and remarked that “Oon-
ductors didn t seem to have any judg¬
ment ahbut heating cars.” 7
At this juncture the conductor re-
,w ’ -
that “Conductor, door f wish you would leave
open* The heat from that
Btovo is positively depressing.”
“I am sorry to say, madam, but
there has been no fire in that stove
thermometer today,” said tba conductor, and the
degrees.—Brooklyn instantly Eagle. fell twenty
Sending a Shock.
Englishman Among certain is eastern nations the
sa^vi th which supposed, he from the suc-
ce uses certain simple
I A woman ree HpHPPHRRRpi
of a physician who has become eel*
brated tor htesuocesaful use of eleoi
trieity quired: in various diseases and* in*
quireu: “H anybody ®».
back - had headaches in the
of their neck, and was so nervous
about doctor; “but I must
more “Bless you, your they symptoms.” aittift
myaymp-
patSt ” come ^ ottier ^7 a*
“But I can’t bring her.”
“Why “Because notj’.’ she
teriea to work oh her.”—Youth’s Com-
p ^ ni01 h - - #
:
The Great Dismal Swamp,
mire of Virginia, decayed is one enormous i
of vegetation, a reffton
of gloom and desolation; but not
more so than the human system
when blocked up- by decayed animal
motter, which poisons the blood and
brings household. gloom to an otherwise nappy
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasat Pur¬
gative Pellets remove 411 waste mat¬
ter, and give Nature a chance to
buildup.
matter In little Things.
“One of the best opportunities for a
ionairo of this city recently, “is to
rack his brains until he has invented
something useful or that the
-Wanta."& roM*al immownon m
that it takesaskilled engineer (Hainan
- v nomenal inventive ability to dq-
anything in this useful to of manufac- machin¬
But there age is wide ‘field
ery. to shrewd amateur*, a
open so to
speak, venience to supply housekeepers, little articles shopkeepers, of con¬
to designers bwhad
eta, and can at rea¬
sonable ratesto execute the idea onceif
is conceived. American women are bo
accustomed to getting what they want
timt anything which lightens their
labors in thehouseholdh sure to ‘go.*
Whan I was a boy cm tae farm a
home my inottMr used to make ttu
clean all the cHEer knives on 8un
day with beta brick. Now, scraoinf witawii
thm brick into a fine belhe powder mo*MaSoti
lumps part of in the it, used whole to work, the
othe;
day I heard of a **aa ^ who has made i
“w teadowttH
ou know how difficult it w to
up small coins from a wooden coun
.....
and counters made, un-
ties of rubber standing up thickly alj
over ii Coins thrown on the mat are
as easilvptelted up as if thergstood on
drinker, the general n
Mr. Lincoln
gastronomic most folks w! led
on i
the officer, veiy
general.
'No, young man,' ^
have seen from (09 many veryarii-
>», -
Seemlnglys Eradicated
With repeated and powerful doses of quinine,
chills and fever, in some one of its various
ms, spring# the into slightest active existence again,
m without apparent provo- '
cation. TO extinguish the smouldering cm here
of tfrisobsttnate ahd recorniite malady.no less
than to subdue it when ii rages fiercely in the
system. Bostetterfs Stomach Bitter* is all
snffleient. When every resource of the
pharmacopeia has been exhausted against it
invaiii, the Bitters conquer remove
every lingering vestige of it. Nay, ?8^ sritto more, tos the
influence Bitters will of atmospheric poison ^y that begets
malarial disease, from its attacks. Disorders
of the stomach, liver and bowels, are among
t he complaints to be- apprehended These from both the
use oi miasma-tainted water. art
cured and prevented by the Bitter** Rheu¬
matism, constipation and renal complaints,
yield to its action.
Advice to Mothers.
M a, WlSHtow'B
for children teething, is the 3
of one of toe best feoude S to
physician* in the United fit
has been need for forty years with
«tY
t&mm SuUn from all
fin. 7 #•
' r:
”
In Why happy shouldn’t ckcer I) [ 0$i
■
FVom heavy heart uml weary brnto
Efassrss&M feKawes
To them, shall 1 repine!
fir %EK FinWTrt’ 3 S
—Helen It Wtoriow
J Afflicted Saves,—A w}thscrofula. fine family Two oi children died were the a
test wouliffsoon followed, early;
have but, for the
timely and pemveringnee of Ayer’s Sarsapa¬
rilla, which built them Cp into a healthy and
vigorous manhood.
rr» -”M—('».’/■ .
A Fl?h Valued by’a Lady.
.What fish is most valued by a lady f
Her-rmg. Dr. Birgers’ Let her Huckleberry ring the glad news
of Cordial,
Boying' colie, and her relieving child trom a case of cramp
it teething.
r
A RUINED HOME. mC
(tottery Ottr house is on fire 1 Our home is buinlng a p II
so Werriag to the soul I M#e,«8eed, Is
teDi^when^itdsstrojq. but how much terrible Inanimate when things it destroys ga loye, the
more
; tiring tissues of the fltsh 1 Fire in the blood, how
Cruel fa it« effaotl Otrierfag the fair skin with spots
sstssssss
Singeing thaw^f roots hf the hslraud Causing *
te fall dead away. Cramping the fuactions of the
Quick cureS •ZSST.
Q#ick in «s effect, comes to mind, ft Uhbfcmft
Blood Balm,.made in the beautiful City «f Attest*
most convincing pms! of its remarkable merit.
BTRobert Ward, Maxey, Ga., writes: “For
twelve or fourteen years I have been a great suffer-
tu from afterribl* fonxi of blood poison. My hMd|
my skull bones. I became sohorriblyrepuisive that
for three years I absolutely ref used t. let people see
ais&'sas^'jxat.t; but condition
c •> me, my coh~
-
BAD BLOOD tfauedto grow worse, |Wl
aches and pains; my nights were passed in misery I
wwreduced in fksh mrisUength; my Iddneys ware
terribly deranged, and we became a burden tome.
f chanced to see an advertisement of Botanic Blood
Balm, (B. B. B.) and when right or ten bottlea had
been used I was pronounced sound and well Hito
(beds of scars can now he seen on me, looking Bit
a man who had been burned and then restored. If
cun was w*B known in the county,”; ;M> , , ijt
Lew JohnsoUj Belmont Station, Mlis., writes
“My ears and scalp were covered with sores and all.
my hair came out. I lost my appetite and became 1
a mere skeleton, f am now taking B. B. B., and the
sores are going away and my strength Is oaring
Jteto?........... . oa
s>f:t
BY FAB
WdQ^tFngerkte
—xo-
SEW YORK OR BOSTON
- IS VIA -
SAVANNAH
<! ' ' —:ilthTHE '
OCEAN : STEAMSHIP: LINE
-v«kI ——ox rm — *fl4c >* ; .
Central Railroad of Ceorgiai
SUMMER EXCURSION TICKETS
Now on sale at reduced rate*. Good to re¬
turn until October 81st, 1889.
Rail iwfe»&wjaiteSiri» Routes. If
you are dick the trip will in-
vigorafp and build you up. . f ,,
Go East by Sea and You’tinot Regret it
Bahsengars, before purchasing tickets via
ther information may be had by applying to
the Agent at your, station or to
ii.’k b.mZSto sWsKtfEjf " taeMli '
GonT Pass. Agent. Trav. Paso. Agent,
Savant .vaimah, Ga.
^tss mast asui a
«.i* taSM-
w asiSHSaffi
in yo«T horn* t>r & toonthfi sss *od ehqtr* them to tko*«
Ji*ni
who ro»jr tera called. Urey itt h- eosme your wptnr. There
Who -write ftl oaco «u> mm »( waivffifi tte-watcll
lore, wm wr.l send and you art sample-that^ells Agents Send County in us husincB* in on to every sell hollas, for that our Town three wBl and Goods, and dol wa
s: you a pay
you from $190 to $300 per month.
THE usnp nngmuro oo.^.
$ 75 to$ 25 o tJOTrisa:
preferred who can fnrniah a horse and giv
tbrir’wWolotttoe to the LmrinoK. Spore mo
au*t. r
JOHNSON A CO., 1009 Mato St, Bicfunond
Vh.
N. B.—Please state age andbnrine**expert
new Never mind about sending SgSOy stamp foi
•re-
Special Sanitary Notice.
Jfetta is hereby gfren to »!! wham it may
concern: That erery owner or occupant of
era, occupant* or agents, within therity f
to ctom»*ameaher theexpiratkm----- cative
notice, the nmn’aal aha« tt to tedeme
RWteHNpbWPpSw 1
\ *
1 IPENING OF
—t v -t IS
in*.
«K».
dAw to jnly 1 ,£>, ^
1845, X»lfe
Mutual Beaeit
¥FWAD¥ JERSEY.
.'•c A ~ as ;, v:
-^ -
t25ar F s° RTY TW ° M,LL,0N D0LLARS - Annual
Millten
La f e and Annual tkvidands. No ‘ Eitlmatec."
The best Life Contract on theTnai We invite a comparison of our
Policies with those written by other fiatJ ~ 'T'f ~\f-
;
W.SMANCHAM * SONS. Agent.,
“' GRIFFIN, GEORGIA,
.
CLARENCE V. ANGIER, State Agent. Atlanta, Ga.
fiftvto*a*L
meusmsmem
SPENCE ft SMITH.
OPPOSITE BBICK WABEHOUSB,80LOMON St
Nothing lot rood work Will fce done \M1J i-1 teg* a ,1 e, dj lob to. *n> j if<*.
H. Spence at the brim jon cannot fail loyet teir dullny. ( *)J cn ns lefor i j»u b
SPENC E & SMITH,
Solomon Street* Griffin, Ca.
mm
PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRIES
Apt MiiMirii Coi
........MANDFACTDRERS.......
Sash, Doors, Blinds,
: Baatels, Moulding, Ballnsters, Newells, Etc., Etc.
.
Dressec and RoughiLumber, Laths and Shingles
Oils, Window Glass I
Paints, and Putty.
MUFFIN, € ft i * r GEORGIA.
ice* that you formerly paid and price wow toad: - - r
You paid for 8x10x12 light Sash $L1G Our prieo r 90 c.
- 8x10x18 “ nl.75. $1.4 C
“ 10x16x12 “ * 2.00. 1.60.
* ;t»*
\ . “ ■ 1.28 ts -
35c. to 40c. Our Price 25 e *‘t* t
28c. to 30c. Our Price 20c
*• ” Plank one side20c. to 25c. Our Price 15a
For Dressed and Matched Lnmber $1.50 to $1.60. Our Price $1 2d to 1 4
Wsreho^e 1 '°'F^tory,
13th St. near Griffin Uotton HL0*.
. i » ■ ..
“—
wi
*
Ms *
22^255
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