Newspaper Page Text
wM
i wBr
Drug : Store
*f Landrtdtih Cleveland ud Mmn A R*-
• *•«••*-•«!*•* Guaranteed
. _
RN SEED POTATOES.
OWOCROM NERVE AN! BONE LINIMENT II
NB.DREWRY
FINEST
IN THE MARKET.
ir cabbage:
-
IEL FRESH DOVE BRAND HUMS
-RESH CHESSE J BUTTER ON ICE
• l<#*i f.»r »*«.,«' » , .
TF. Clark & Son.
HEADQUARTERS
fiw Class tm m,
limit-j-in*
Ksbp always on a**»
How, Haw.
GraniUsted Sugar,
S. a Syrup,
Coffee, Parched and Green,
vtU UIM or-
Fresh Canned Goodn,
■*;
Fine Cigars and Tobacco.
N ....... '■ -■
saaO'-Ma
■waww ,'f i ua ' i
; '*tm .....nRg,«m
known
^tuHOTlRENT! ils College,
■
for the Maugham place on South
88 acres Farm in
ms and fruits,
_____i ____Vo South payment*. Hill
on st.
one-third acre, corner lot, on
___t to purchase lots without de-
" hT DRAJESS
Jr Fwr Bent
SftVi. HowreNcf 2ft 8 JB£8 Hilfstrwt ^now
Mang. stand In we Call - **
jr»
fof. ChiBs and River take
Ti m » m a * »s Pyretagc.
mm GEORGIA RAISED
Rve - and - Barley I
NOW 18 is THE the tUfa time TO to PLANE. plane.
gmmsmm: BLAKELY.
•BOUND ABOUT.
City Note*, aad Hewn From This and
S‘fe 3 ~ den
What has hagvwwd wood aad
ear (he haa brought wrought;
i has
the verdure red;
like a •Aver boot among
Shoals i of stars bright jewe
In ___. the earth's earth’s eerowst;
She has brought the orchard’s trait
To repay the robin’* tuts
Which has gladdened half the year
Withal
And i
Catch 1
TUI the 1
Withal
S. H. Daane will sell the J. F. L. A.
cigar. ' ■ ■ ■
Farmers were busy picking cotton
yesterday.
R. F. Strickland will sell the J. F.
Ellison Speer, of Locust Grove,
wds in t^s city yesterday,
Charie*, Lower and Hi
went to Macon yesterday.
C. 8. Shattuc arrived home yester
day from a southern trip.
Emmett Brown commences to
clerk ter-W. B. Hudson today.
lira. John Swift, of Atlanta, Is vis-
iting Mrs. Nunnally at CresmU.
W. W. White’ a solid farmer of
Miss Helen Rogers, of BarnesviUe,
known here, has gone to Tea-
J. H, Merritt, of the Atlanta Con¬
stitution, was one of the reporters at
i r exchange meeting yesterday,
is good weather for cotton to
mature, and if it knows what it is
about it will take full advantage of
it..
Edward White, Jr., of the Atlanta
Constitution, came dawn to report
the Alliance Exchange meeting yes-
lay.
BarnesviUe Gazette: “Mr. Bryant
of Griffin, has been spending
the week in town the guest of Dr. H.
Hdue.”
The News and Son had the pleas¬
ure of a brief call from Col. J. W.
Beck, lecturer of the State Alliance,
on yesterday.
Tom Marshall Trice, of Concord,
was here for a short time yesterday.
He is said to be the largest man in
that thriving town.
jMre. J.D. Rivers, and two children,
left yesterday for Anniston, Ala., to
make a visit of two weeks to her
brother, H. B. Rudieiil.
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. H. Searcy
returned home yesterday from an
extended stay at Buffalo Lithia and
other springs in Virginia.
’Mrs. Jack Nolan and little son, of
McDonough, passed through this
cit Jyesterday morning on her way
to visit relatives at BarnesviUe.
Buckles'* Antes Salve.
The Best Salve in the worid for Cute-
i ~ Salt Bbewa, Freer
Corns, and all 8 ktn Eniptiona, Required. mad Itisguar- positive,
ly cures Pile*, or no pay
teed to give Price perfect 85 sntisaction, box. or For money ml* re by
funded. canto pee
B. B. Anthony.
is
his mb
ajtd Son yes-
terday t be had to take
ss&t
Mrs. C. P. Beeks and little son
Wallace, of Atlanta, who have been
spending some time in tide city with
her father Col. W£T. TramtheM and
family aad other relatives, took their
departure for home yesterday. They
were accompanied by Matter ffefope
Johnson who will visit them.
The meeting* which Are being held
nightly at the Christian church are
largely at ten ded and are productive
of much good. Rev. J. A. Perdue,
who ie aaateting Rev. F. L. Adams
during the meetings is an earnest
and very interesting preacher. The
will probably continue
throughout next week.
There will in a lew days be a change
made at the passenger depot In this
city. The ticket jJSce is tpj» en¬
larged and the railroad telegraph
office will be moved up from the
freight depot. There will also be a
change made in the bagage room, bat
r^ new depot gg-ti yet, and where i~nr.r ie there z a
it worse than here?
"Five yew* ago I had
night sweats, was greatly reduced
ad had been given up by a»y physicians,
began to take Ayer’s Pectoral, sad after
«Wngt«o botMwoMI
p lately cured.”—AngaA. Lewie, Ricard. N. Y
Reported ftrt t w l os ef the Midland.
Colombo* Enquirer Sun.
A report comes from Athens that
the Georgia Midland railroad will
soonbeextendad from McDonough
to that place. As Mr. Gunby Jordan,
SSlT&szr
in regard to the extension, we
sume it wffi not be ireide
|y. We have always believed, how¬
ever, that the Midland toad would
push cm further northward from its
present terminus at McDonough.
We believe that it will go to Athens,
and, if satisfactory connections ean-
not be made there, it will putoon
still farther.
^ the Mid-
It fa more/thafl likely that
land road i
of the largest and most useful syp-
terns of railroads fa toe country, aad
that Columbus will be the important
centre of this great syrrteteC Mr.
toward the
system. OneoUtelfa
has already been hoilt fr y
another, the Southern,
*mt&y extension from
ed. Work on the
Carrollton to some point on the Mid¬
land will soon be under headway,
aad survey* have been mad* for to*
Georgia, Alabama and Florida road
under Mr. Jordan’s directions.
The development of the new system
of roads, of which those lines named
will probably be apart,*
Is Cownusiwtoa Incurable,
Reod the following; Mr. 6. M. Morrison
Newark, =±» -rk., says: “Was down with Ab-
s?.KS«. p «sSsr
Began taking fa. King’s New Discovery third bottle, Jor
Consumption, Consumption, able am am now now the on work my form
and to oversee on my
It is the finest medicine medicine ever i
Jesse Middle wart, Deeator, Fhio, Discov- says:
“Had it not been for Dr. King’s New
ery for Consumption I would woold have have died died of of
Lung Trouble*. Was given np by doctor*.
Am now in best of health.,” Try it, Sample
bottle free at E. B. Anthony Drugstore.
Superior Court.
Spalding County is having lots of
Superior Court these days. There
will be another sitting, for motions
only, tomorrow, when motions will
be made for new trials in the Thomas
murder case, the Plummer arson
case, and the Georgia Midland will
try to get a new hearing in th<: dam¬
age case won by Mi*. Martha Bray.
There will also be an injunction case
argued, in which Ella E. Arp will try
to keep B. P. Blanton and John
Avery from cutting down timber on
some disputed land in UpsonCounty,
near the Georgia Midland road.
Since the last term there has been
only one new case placed on the dock¬
et, being the application for a di¬
vorce by W. A. Ellis.
Electric Bitters.
This remedy is becoming so well known
and so popular as to need no special mention.
All who have used Electric Bitters sing the
same eong ol praise,—A purer medicine does
not churned.- exist fad Electric it is guaranteed Bitters will to do all all tha dis¬
is cure
eases of the Liver and Kidneys, wifi remmove
Pimples, Boil*, Salt Rheum and other affec¬
tion caused by impure blood.—WiB drive
Malaria from the system and prevent as well
as cue all Marial fevers.—For cure of Head
ache, Constipation and Indigestion try Elec¬
tric Bitter#—Entire satisfaction guaranteed,
or moon tefanded.— Price SO eta. and f 1.00
psr bottlt at E. R. Anthony Drugstore.
ADVICE TO MO-istEBS.
Mbs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrttp,
or c hildren teething, is the prescrip¬
tion of <me of the best female nurses
and physicians in the United States,
and nas been used for forty years
with mothers never-failing for their success children. by millions Dur¬
of
ing tbe process of teething its value
^incalculable. It reHevesthe child
child it i
a bottle.
TO
»ii'.
f Meeting That
-- In Captariug the
'in / *
| i»* • Mnehauge. ' ^
1 "Wwelfr* pEgg
Owing to two different hours hav-
Wg been appointed for the eitisens
meeting in regard to t he Alliance Ex
change ywrterday, there ww only a
«l»all attendance, though composed
4 representative buginess men and
farmers.
B. N. Barrow was made chairman
Of the meeting and Douglas Gleseoer
Secretary. Mr. Barrow introduced
Col. J. W. Beck, of Milner, the State
Lecturer oftheAlliance, who portray¬
ed in glowing terms the benefit that
the exchange would be to the farmer
and how it would build up the town
In which it wae located,. Manufacto¬
ries for the different articles handled
by the exchange would spring up in
a short time, and the fortunate town
Would be not only the Mecca but the
Medina of the 120,000 members of
the alliance i» Georgia
M»Tbe point having been raised that
"* *« bia
Atlanta and Macon with
their largely greater resources, Mr.
stated that he had reason
tobebeve that thefdirectors looked
favorably upon Griffin, not only-as
a Central point and the location of
s experlmentjstation, bt»t
the as one
s of the coming large cities of Georgia,
and tl»t they could by no means be
controlled entirely by the amount of
monetary inducement. It was an
institution that would be a perma¬
nent feature wherever located, and
they proposed to locate in the best
place if they received the proper
encouragement to do so.
After some farther discussion of the
different points in the affair, partici¬
pated in by Messrs. Boyd, Strickland,
Hunt, Barrow and others, it was
mbvsd by Col. Hunt that the chair
"leisure, be authorised to appoint, at it*
a committee with full plenary
powers to act in toe best way to pro-
;npte the securing Of’the exchange,
,to invite the committee from the di-
rectors here etc. This was seconded
by Mr. Strickland, and the meeting
adjourned, lubject to the caH of the
committee. , , *
“It goes right to the spot,” said an old
gentleman, who found great benefit in Ayer’s
'Sarsaparilla. He was right. Derangement*
of the stomach, liver, and kidneys are more
ipeedily renudied by this medicine than by
any other. It reaches the trouble directly.
WASHINGTON NOW ALIVE.
aad Ordinary People Re¬
turning to the City.
Washington, Sept. 5.—The tide of
fashion which ebbed away from
Washington at the beginning of sum-
jner has flowed bark, with the oyster
andthe months with the “R” on
hem . Houses are being opened for
he season and preparations are be¬
ing made for th« winter campaign.
Waanington fashionables have not
learned-to stay in the mountains dur¬
ing late -September and October to
feel the sensitive dying of the summer
•Qd hear theftreeracklingin the back
log .vhen nights grow cool. That is
a fad they have yet to acquire.
The Chinese Minister will return
with his suite next week, and imme¬
diately thereafter will start for the
Orient. The successor to the present
minister has been named, but the
date of his departure for America is
not stated. The new minister will be
accompanied here by his wife, the
first instance on record where a Chi¬
nese woman of high caste has been
permitted to leave the Celestial king¬
dom. Prior to this time such permis¬
sion has never been granted and even
this permission is a very great sur¬
prise to all persons acquainted with
Chinese customs and government.
The strict snrvei lance which is ex¬
ercised over wives in the Celestial
Kingdom will be carefully preserved
here. The new Envoy will be driven
In a closed carriage, with his wife, to
the legation boose, where the Mad
ame will at once be installed in her
apartments. She will not re¬
ceive visitors nor go into society.
Occasionally the Minister, when Mad-
ame's health absolutely demands it,
will take his wife driving, bat these
drives will be be few and far between,
as long indoor life has accnstomed
these women to go without exercise
or outdoor airing.
The oyster season is always inau¬
gurated in Washington with tremend¬
ous eating of .fried, Thi»hel&t»d stewed, steamed
and raw oystere hus¬
band on his way home on the night
of Aug. 81, cunningly carries a box
of fried oysters and fears not the
wife’s wrath. He even wakes her, if
she is asleep, to explain to her that
he has not been to the dub this even¬
ing, but has merely been inaugurat¬
ing the oyster season.
What tons of ojptsre are eaten in
Washington in a year! Everybody
eats them from the dusty street Arab
S 5
to bring
would
te a fair aired navy. The average
relish every day as long as the sea¬
son last#. Heaven be merciful to tb
man who don’t like oysters and is
out late at night and hungry. In
nine-tenths of the restaurants he will
be told that they are “just out” of
this and that and the other, but
they have “oysters, sah.” And he
must eat oysters or starve.
So many years have passed since
brave, dashing Fernando Wood went
home to the still country that it is
almost necessary to tell anyone
except a New Yorker what the great
Mayor waa. No man, had a better
control of New York politics. He
#as almost without academic educa¬
tion, but he was one of the finest nat¬
ural orators that ever charmed an
audience. When he first came to Con¬
gress his tall, handsome figure, his
dash aad impetuous eloquence at¬
tracted the attention of both Houses.
In resource he was faexhaustable.
One day he stepped into a cigar
store on Pennsylvania avenue with
Henry Clay, who prided himself on
his knowledge of tofraoco. Clay was
watching the deft workmen making
cigars.
Those men are very skilful at that
work,” remarked Clay. “Yes, very,”
replied Wood, “bntit doesn’t look
very defficult to do.” ,
Sir, I think that to be one of the
most cunning of trades,” retorted
the Senator in his positive manner.
“Oh, no” responded W ood, “I be¬
lieve I could make a cigar equally
well.”
“I doubt it, sir,” said Clay.
“I’ll bet you a box of cigars I
can,” replied Wood, clay accepted
the wager and in a minute Wood had
a cigar wrapped and finished and
held up before the great Kentucki¬
an’s eyes.
Henry Clay’s wonderment at the
ease with which a natural expert man
had learned a skilled trade in a mo¬
ment never ceased to be expressed
and to his philosophic mind it seem¬
ed like the discovery of a new princi¬
ple.
And Henry Clay died without ever
knowing that Fernando Wood had
learned the cigar maker’s trade and
spent several years at the bench,
where, as everywhere else, he had ex
eelled.
The men who lived such lives as
Clay and Wood, and nearly all the
public men of that day, are gone as
a class. It appears to me that I do
not hear “the future of the republic”
talked of so much of old. There is
more talk now of “what my State
wants in the department” and of
“the administration.” Great men
have learned to live more in their
own class and to hold themselves if
not more honest at least more hon¬
ored.
The many remarkable cure* Hood’s Sar¬
saparilla accomplishes are sufficient proof
that it does possess peculiar curative powers.
’ HU Opinion Infallible.
Chicago Tribune.
Dr. Bolus (ataconsulation)—Well,
gentlemen, my opinion is that the
patient cannot live a week.
[Dr. Sawbones, Dr. Squills, Dr. Oe
ciput. and Dr. Pancreas concide.]
Dr. Shingle (a recent accession to
the local medical talent)—Gentlemen,
I beg leave to differ. The patient
will recover. His ailment is im¬
aginary. There is nothing really the
matter with him.
Dr. Bolus (arrogantly)—You cer¬
tainly do not expect to convince us
of the correctness of your opinion,
sir!
Dr. Shingle—No, sir, probably not.
You will pardon me for saying that
I was a pension agent for twenty
years before I became a doctor,
and-
Dr. Bolus (with deep conviction)—
Gentlemen, if he can't see any disease
in the patient it isn’t there!
[Dr. Sawbones, Dr. Squills, Dr. Oc¬
ciput, and Dr. Pancreas again coin¬
cide.]
‘Ou Way of Trad*.
People who are deeply interested fa
“business” are sometimes accused of
talking tions of trade “shop ; ” and the bringing parlor. A ques¬
into cer¬
tain author has a son, Rob, who is
greatly when be interested is “swapping” in traffic, and article, who,
not an
is coniuriug up some other possibility
of trade.
One day Rob was walking with his
them, father, when asked, an “H-, acquaintance where met
and can
I get “At the last book book store,’’ you published!”’ the
any “Buy it, do, and was an¬
swer.
8alel”
“Can’t afford that!” was the jocose
^‘^h yes, you can. They’ve put it
into paper, and you can get it for fifty
cents."
And bow much of that fifty do
you get—ten! No, I can’t think of
contributing ting i to your support to that
extent”
fathers "Pa," elbow, whispered “ask Rob, him if nudging he wouldn’t his
rather five split sod toe not difference—give read the book von at
*111”—Youth’s cents, Companion.
A Fisk Vetoed by a.Lady.
'What fish is moat valued by a lady ?
Her-ring. Let her ringthe glad news
of SGSMKSKSj-f Dr. Kggere’ HnckhWy Cordial,
,shw< v - a
v. •'A--.-- •
CHA RTK Sob-
DO YOU WANT TO SAVE MONEY?
Get puces on Silverwsie, China, Crocker), Ue.pi, efa, before |
mot All style* new good* arriving oonttanily.
nap ■Vi Fit £,”iT;
W. D. DAVIS, Stov< 4 $31
Hardware, j
And F arming Impl ement*.
|Q| t !>»* ' - ’ . r; j
Have just received a nice line of CEDAR fS’-SS&'fe BUCHJffB, ptyr.iraiBB,.
PISTOLS.
★ * * PISTOLS! PISTOLS!! * *
r Come and see me. *«l .3111° B
mts
A. LOW
U Jeweler and Dealert in _JfiL
u Ja W JMjdMkJC»
Special attention given te Repairing.
-
’ M :
500 Pieces Sheet ___
ONLY tO DENTS EACH WM
To Close Out TRe Lot!
Regular Price 35c., 40c., 60c. and 75c.R tfL^, |Pj
*®“ Two second hand Pianos, one at- fljr> and©oetrt
DELNE « HOFIp
For )-( Cheat) )-(
....CALL ON........ &
W. M.HOLMAN .
kinds We of Standard Extracts A for Sugar Flavoring. for making The cake. test Ci»ren
Pat. F
ami in fact anything you want. k |
★. TURKEYS, FISH ANDO ■bdhbI .j
for Leave us your order and ft will he'iUIMMH t «o\ BtyK* «c.
th> Color fnataiih
Color for treatment various forms has lately of mental been sug¬ de¬
gested rangement-bright crimson surround¬
ings for melancholia, excitement, and soft blue The for
maniac Lai so on.
report which has reached us leaves
milch to be desired from a scientific
standpoint, says The little Lancet; mean¬
doubt while, that there prolonged is very r
a
titude, ness largely and, by influences hope d
ana winter seasons, optimism m
spring statistics and of summer, death even suicide though show the
from
an increase fa bright the remedial weather. vafoe To re¬ of
state a belief fa
color is merely to insist upon the
sought No-one are would always recommend the object*
a
course of fogs as an alternative for
sunshine. It other words, valuable stimulauts.
as a rule, are more than de
pressants.— Boston Herald.
. fwtMti*i Thanalr»«.
The hotel men of this state formed
their protect association themselves fa from 1887, sneak largely thieves to
and “dead beat guests.” President
W. D. Garrison, of the association,
says that fa one year before It was
formed the proprietors of the Astor
house had stolen to pay for fourteen and gold he
watches from guests,
himself at the Grand Union had to pay
organization for seven gold of watches. the hotel But since they the
men
have not suffered any raids from sneak
thieves, and Mr. Garrison did not
since have to pay for a single gold
watch.—New w York Tribuna
A boat Bhokaapara.
“Hare ‘Hamlet’ you seen, is Ben, that have Shake¬
speare’s ’s said to hews
writ by Bacon!” asked Raleigh.
Will “Hal erf Stratford* ha I” laughed shrewd Jonson. ”
“Shrewd!”
“Ay, shrewd, hSp Han started a this him-
self, Magazine. to advertise play.” - Harper’s
For Nervousness and Dyspepsia, use
Perry’s Liver Pills.*
THE
miti'ai life mum id,
OF NEW YORK.
000, Organised in 1843. Aswte*v#r <136,000
vrw, rwu Paid memllare uimiiWB wuw since QiYBiuMiviDtt organisation vvgr over
*272,000,000. Pain member* in 1888, *15,-
the 727,550. Thi* company advantages advantages is the the largest in
world, EEJu. and ™ the kur it it often ofiera to to in- is-
surer* make it the safest, cheapest and best; 1
8. W MANGHAM’S SONS. Asts.
jnlv7dftw6m4p.
HUGHES & TAGGART’S LABD.
BBL. EXTRA FINE MAGTERKL
HOLMAN t STEWAKT.
i
B IDS BiBEWiBi
To All
—fo©A8a -!**• ..V‘i rnmm xi -1
te
Bids will be reeaived ontU 1
1889, for one hundred (100) (
M>e« ' ---- -----------
hew m mi
ill the be*t varieties, ussms bought direct froa
the grower*.
lot P VINTH mUMMS *t the k>*r-
TH^Hr -
Osborn’* I* Fir* « SSI
___ iiBL.iSe;®*!' .......—
. .. ,;ift 'H'j
Improved ffiiteni Bfa.
Mmrm Cu frwi h H ttft.
e 9
immM Prices os low >w a* as some sass* gr*d* * asysfiff*-
anglfidftwlm Ml
r- Tftr x' ir * **