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PARKER’8
Untold Miseries
100,000 Agents Wantedto T
ONLY AUTHENTIC, Complete and
History of Julislewi
Profusely Illustrated with views of all
ctnneeted with the terrible scenes of the
ty inunation. 1 i mo. 400 pages. Price
50. Liberal terms. Thousands want it.
523 Uhestnut St,, Phiia., Pa.
IN UQWO NO BOILING EASILY MADE
TriSPAtKACE MAXES FIVE GAU0NS
C. -irHt fits, PHI LADELPHIA.
(xioo and mi.IS BOYS’ SCHOOL SHOES.
Examine W. L. Douglas f2.00 Shoes
entlemen and ladies. -
V FOB SALB BT
NCIIEUERMAN &
CRIFFIH.
HOTEL CURTIS
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA
Under Now Management.
'• 8- f'Vr.
pHILDI ui eatisjr
venoiiffihr, again ref ra-
ttMumgand'grim
BndAmdlydeaS^ iping at
•are. Try uiuri *•. *?
O Yin/ hJEUEI.
mm ___
wPsSESS
congratulations to the
that authorised it; to the
who designed it; to the
who built it; to the
who supervised it, and to the
ple who own it. But V
you also, senators and
tives, of the present general
because it is your high privilege
celebrate its opening and dedicate
to wise and patriotic legislation*
congratulate the state because
these her assembled sons she
representatives worthy of this
guished honor and capable of
ing from these auspicious
ings renewed inspiration for the
momentous duties before them.
congratulate the commissioners, be¬
cause through patient investigation,
untiring energy, wise provision and
conservative expenditure, they
achieved the almost unprecedented
success of completing^ great
work within the orginal appropria¬
tion. [Tremendous applause.]
Above all, I congratulate this people
that this whole enterprise, from be¬
ginning to end, is clean, creditable and
above suspicion. [Great applause ]
From the first bill introduced in the
legislature to the expenditure of the
last dollar by the commissioners
there has been neither jobbery nor
tbonght of corruption. From gran¬
ite base to iron dome, every chisel¬
ed block and moulded brick, every
metallic plate and marble slab is as
free from official corruption as when
they lay untouched by mortal hand
in orginal purity in the bosom
mother earth. [Great applause.]
Every stroke of hammer, of trowel
or brush is a record of labor honest¬
ly rewarded. Built upon the crown,
ing hill of her capital city, whose
transformation from desolation and
ashes to life, thrift and beauty so
aptly symbolizes the states resurrec¬
tion, this proud structure will stand
through the coming centuries a fit
memorial of the indomitable will and
recuperative energies of this great
people and of the unswerving fidelity
and incorruptible integrity of their
chosen representatives. [Applause.]
“And while we dedicate to the
state’s service this new political
temple, we erect within it no new al¬
tars to strange political gods; we
preach from its pulpits no strange
political gospel; we prescribe for its
service no new liturgy or strange
political faith. We consecrate it to
the old-time doctrines promulgated
by the fathers and early prophets of
the republic, recorded in the written
word of the declaration and the con¬
stitution; and sanctioned by the
political experience of a century. We
engrave upon this temple’s corner
■tone our ancestral canons—a perpet¬
ual union of coequal states; the
federal constitution, the supreme
law of the land; “the preservation of
the general government in its whole
constitutional vigor;” the support
of the state governments in their
rights as * * * the chief
bulwarks against anti-republican
tendenciesthe equality of all men
before the law; burdens and benefits
impartially imposed and fairly distri¬
buted; equal encouragement and ex¬
act justice under the laws, state and
federal, for every class of citizens and
every branch of industry. [Ap¬
plause]
“We hang upon the outer walls of
this new fortress.the old banners in¬
scribed with the ever-living tenets of
a political faith, which, tried with ex¬
perience, has ripened into assurance
—viz: hostility to all sectional and
class legislation; hostilityto all laws
and systems of laws which impose un¬
necessary burdens upon the whole
people in order to bring to the few
nndue advantages and unjust enrich¬
ment-opposition not only to trust®
and monopolies and their kindred
and concomitant evils, but undying
hostility to the discriminating, un¬
just and unnecessary taxation, which
encourages, increases and perpetu¬
ate) these evils. We are not only
against the evils themselves, but
against the governmental partiality
which makes these evils no less
hatful andpUlicg fa tti « ^ g»r-
.
And may
#d he was greeted by enthusiastic ap
plaU8e -
_
Her Face wa* Her Fortune.
She was as pretty as a picture and
so animated and lively that it did
£E=£S^jittS£ She is a woebegone looking piece-b!
needs Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip-
right, restores the roses and the lus¬
ter and makes the woman what she
a '5£SJ1fc£Uf | to p &
only druggists, medicine for women, guaran¬ sold by
under a positive
tee, from the manufacturers, that it
«£SfStTtrAS has been printed 3 ! 3B
guarantee xss sstsgr* on the
***
The Brutal Prize Fight, —
Philadelphia Ledger (Bep.) S, ?
Take it at its best, the prize fight is
an bad indefensibly that brutal should affair. It is
two men stand up
with the premeditated purpose of
physical beating one disability; another into a state of
to pound each
other’s faces to a jelly; to maim and
bruise each other to the point of non-
resistance.
The liver and kidneys must be kept in good
condition. Hood’s Sarsaparila is a great
remedy for regelating these organs.
How to Lick Sullivan. ,
Philadelphia rimes (Ind,)
Now the fight is oveT and settled,
why not put Sullivan’s portrait on
t
and a would physician have at this place amputated!. said ms
arm to be
The corruption that came from va¬
rious sores was so offensive thatl dis¬
liked to come in contact with my
friends and neighbors. Itook thirty-
two bottles of an Atlanta Blood Pu¬
rifier, also a lot made in Baltimore,
and in feet everything that I could
hear of, butreceivodno benefit. I had
entirely Mr. despaired Clarkson, when gotir General
Agent, P. P. came here ad¬
vertising P. (Prickly Ash, Poke
Boot and Potasium) , and induced
me nottle, to give took it a trial. I got one large half
aKS&EttKK it, and one and a
S'
skin gcaeral has a clear, health healthy is better color, and
my than it
has been before in ten years. 1 con¬
sider it the grandest blood medicine
of the age, as such a smaU amount
shows its wonderful effects. I am
agent of the F. R. A N. RR., at this
place, Greenville, Fla., and take great
BtATfUopd-
« 'V' l
and joint* were
Money Wanted for the
Stark Plantation.
• i*<~ *\t ,r l >1
Good neighborhood.
kind. Large, beautiful dwelling and ontr
X&SflB'f* Parties having “* p ”" 1
tolet property to sell will do well
me know it, as I have applications ev¬
ery day. Will take it on option If deeired.
Boat Estate Agent.
111 Til mu, It. 29
lu effect June 28rd, 1889.
No. 15 —Daily, Eichpt Sunday.
Leave Griffin ,.............................5:4!
Arrive Arrive auuuu*. Atlanta ........................8:0< ..................
No. 18 —Daily, Excurt Sun
Leave Atlanta,
Arrive Griffin................................
No. IT— Sunday Only.
Leave Griffin................................
Arrive Atlanta...............................
No. 18 —Sunday Only.
Leave Atlanta ,..........................
Arrive Griffin.
No. S—Daily.
Leave Macon,.. ....SffiOi
Arrive “ Griffin.... ....5:25
Atlanta. ....7:00
N
ISSSffi:: .. 8:25 ». ».
“ Atlanta.. ,12:30 -pim.
, * 1
Leave Moron....
Arrive Griffin.,.
Leave “ .... .........4:00
...••*•..5:45
No. 13— Daily.
Macon. 6:40 p.m.
No. 12— Daily.
Leave Atlanta. .,2:15 p. m.
7 S*d P ^
Arrive Griffin.,:.......................
*’ Macon.................... 11:00
.
No. 14— Daily.
Leave Atlanta,,,.................... ,, 9:05 a. m.
Arrive Griffin................... ,,10:43 “
.... 1:00 p. m.
No. 2T— Daily.
Leave Griffin,..,..................... „, 8:80 a. m.
“ Newnon..................... 10:20 “
,.
Arrive Carrollton.................... ..,11:85 «
No. 28— Daily.
Uave Carrollton Newfian ----------------------4:20 p. m.
“ ............. ...5:26 -
Arrive Griffin..............,„,T:20 M “
Ji' •teSS: ■ ■
............................1:30 p. m.
......a.„,..........,4:80 “
Leave f" ......*■»»■.....,.&85 “
»,,, ,f....... 7:10
IAILV, Excwt Sukdat.
Leave Carrollton—------5s45 a. m
Arrive Newnon.,..................,..7:85 “
For lurtherynlonnatioii ^^. relative to
et i^e, best routes. sche^M . write to
1
"we’henrtn^hnni
sotieit a continancu
DONT Fl
'
T* H E —
at 1 r t n
—-OF--n, tV** *
NEWARK, NEW JERSEY.
------do<-—- . ... , /, • . •;:«!* iiiiis*-: ; ;**
1 <»• - -' >' ■■■
tal. Assets over FORTY TWO Mil I ION nm I arc
Income over Seven Million Dollars.
La ge and Annual Dividends. No
The best Life Contract on the ma
Policies with those written by other nies.
s. W. MANCHA*
GRIFFIN,
CLARENCE V. ANGIER, State Agent, Atlanta, Ga.
B~;t3 WHAT COMMISSIONER KOLB SA"!
bfncn Cojuhssiosbb or Aori«blti
G;». • . Habuson, Skcbbtaby Cultivator Plbushixu Co. :
Ihur Sic.—I can and do most heartily rsoommond Tub Southebx Cblth
of Alabama as a farm Journal of very superior merits. It should be In the
siessivo agriculturist. Vary truly jours,
ArTrr A -a~A GKEKXRGKEA, U. T A
abortjrHWsrwasktaa. -JTwar pf lE^tello&tlaa., :
laa it*
Hi* recognized oikan of Southern agriculture----- and the -------------- Industrial progress of the South, with
a guaranteed circulation in every Bouthern and Western State.
• A. BRILLIANT CORPS OF WRITERS.
The editorial corps of writers and contributors Is unsurpassed, IfcKtualled, by that of any sim-
always instructive to farmers. DR. DANIEL LBBls not only one of the ablest and most learn¬
ed gffiteidfural Journalist in the oonntty, buth* weeforfour year* virtually Coinmistlonhr at
Washington, D. C.. *nd later, Professor ol Agriculture at the Georgia State University. COL.
B. J. REDDING is the able and thoroughly equipped Assistant Commissioner of Agr!orlUre of
the State of Georgia, as wsli as an oxporteneed writer. Peov.J.S. NEWMAN is In charge of the ,
Alabama State Experiment Station, add stands in the frontrank of agricultural educators end j
writers In the South. With those eminent writers are associated a sooroor more of main and fe¬
male contributors—including not a few professional agricultural writers -whose making monthly Tub Cultiva- tgi.j
elos cover every departmentof farm management and household work, j
Ten the most complete, attractive and valuable agriooltural journal in the South, each issue f
being worth more than a whole year’s subscription to .any farmer who reads and thinks in *»■-
neetion with his work. overflowing ^ with
Iti illustrations are superb, and every department will bb found full to mat.
leg to Instruct, eaUghten and entertain. Each number is worth the sum charged for the yeas s
No family can afiord to be without THE SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR. Now Is the time t*
send in your subscriptions. Only One Dollar per annum, the twelve anmbers constituting *
volume ot extensive Information useful to all classes. Kodortcd by Prtm mnd PmUju* Journal
for the farm, flresldo and ooanting-room. Subscription, |1 per year. For advertising sates
etc. t address PUBLISHING CO,
THE CULTIVATOR
Geo. W. Harrison, \ Drawer 8. Atlanta, Ga.
Manager. \ bead for sample copy.
Application for Amend-
merit ofCharter.
State op Geoboia, Spauhnx*, Coi ity:
TO the Honorable, the Snperio Court.
eaid county: The petition ol the
Farmers Co-operative Man¬
ufacturing Company.
of der ssdd the county, laws of Georgia a corporation and incorporated organised un¬ by
this Honorable Court on adjourned the 30th oi April,
1880, at the February term oi
amended ae to allow them to engage in the
al property «e may be mem
pose of transacting thi* bri
ness, or seen ring the paym
»d real and advances; personal to sell, sent,
received when tothe prop* Interes rty
to do so and to do so and,
other acts which are propel
ryingon a warehouse and
: ■
j—to— u-**m
mw YORK OR BOSTON
■ ' f ■ _a_ib via : : |
SAVANNAH
K.vi AND THE—;
OCEAN ■ STEAMSHIP '* : jtS-ll' LINE
• V - y
or -THE—
Central Railroad of Georgia.
- w. • U AH V i m i . t'-bi ,*V v ;■
SUMMER EXCURSION TICKETS
Now on sale at reduced rates. Good to Tf
tum until October81M, IttriO.
Go East by Sea *M Will
i
'j
.
.
*1
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