Newspaper Page Text
'•t-r.rii? ..la'.'.—Atet. .'.’ _,i. . :. s&ki :'
contains only
remedial
a'Is prepared with
" cleanliness*.
is prescribed by
gf? *»
is lor sale
nded by all
first-class druggists.
—Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is a medicine,
tS£Z ££SZ ™ .
hen persistently used,
, is therefore a highly eon.
4 the
Medicine in the
has had a suc-
hall a century,
as at present.
-aw
Ilia.
Dr. 4. C. Ayer 4 Co., Lowell, Mats.
Frits |1; six Bottles, gS. Worth «5 a bottle.
If You Have
Ms Pills
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
. V .. ;.Vw • . •
'
—-
lew Adven'tene'ils.
PARKER’S
3 AIRBALSAM
----and beautifies the hair.
W. L. DOUGLAS
83 SHOE GENTLEMEN.
93 SHOE FOR LADIES.
SHOKSs
sss? fKflffl'm: not stanmed 1
Examine W. L. Douglas 22.60 Shoes tor
eutlemen and ladies.
FOR S ALE BT
SOHEUERllAN & WHITE,
CR?FF|~.
' I.IPPMAN BROS., Wholesale Agents, Sa
rnnnah Ga. lune2iidAwly
Sure
^ olcoSee ^ ________imcme. tea, In
i or or tr¬
ie knowledge ol and the per- will
i
LOTMAN'3
PYPJGEI usunEcuecros I
CHILLS tm/feR
DUMB f\OOC ^ND
(LARI/
6S&b£
*.i :M S<m
TO ADVERTISERS
Kpation—FBI ■■■■■« assvz
To those whe
^can otter no
GEO. P. ROWELL A CO.,
“^wjssaf ifiTort
if
dat ML
-sssrr: . , _ ‘ IMxltengmi «*»«*wna. hi&mUta C., a killed bad.
po«t, In Cincinnati Sunday.
A dozen persons were injured in New York
by an explosiou ot sewer ga*.
Floyd Reynolds was killed by a runaway
horse near Newcomerstowa, O.
Norse Donelly, stabbed by Mr*. Robert
Ray Hamilton, is able to walk about.
John BL Day, 99, Warren county, Ohio's
obtest citisen, passed to the beyoud.
Treasurer of Sherman towhsblp, Huron
county, O., is 91,tS09 short in his account*.
Augustin Albright, of Piper City,' Hi,
£*Bhw*ithat he can walk on air, and proposes
Several thousand persons got a docking
Sunday from a sudden tidal wave at Rock-
away beach.
William Horn’* sweetheart, near Locust
Groye, killed O., refused to marry him and he
himself. .
Anthony Braun, a demented butcher, of
Cincinnati, committed suicide Sunday, by
cutting bis throat.
Henry Wainesthorpe was found dead near
Millhausen, Ind., with a bullet in his head.
Believed accidental
Dr. H. H. Tucker, Baptist minister, fell
from a second story window at Atlanta and
was fatally injured. b * 7*
In a collision near Salamanca, N. Y., En¬
gineer Johnson and Baggageman Cleveland
were fatally injured.
Otto Kriechbaum had both feet run over
by a Bee Line freight train at Crestline, O.
Amputation necessary.
Upper Sandusky’s new gas well is going at
tho rate of 60,000,000 cubic feet per day. It
has not yet been controlled.
Floyd Reynolds, while riding a spirited
horse near Newcomerstown, O., was thrown
from the animal and killadr
, Dan. Haley, the Paulding county, O., dee-
perado, was shot and killed by a little man
: whom fie was trying to choke to death.
Henry Waivesthorpe was found dead
with bullet holaiu his head, near Milthousen,
Ind. It is thought he shot himslf acci¬
dentally.
Mrs. John A, Logan, in an interview in¬
dorses her son’s action in refusing to for¬
ward bis father’s picture to the Murat Hal¬
stead dub of Cincinnati.
At Mount Sterling, Ky., Saturday, there
was a terrific row between whites and blacks
over an attempt of the latter to rescue a col¬
ored prisoner from jail
While coupling cars in the Baltimore and
Ohio yards at Newark, O., Brakemen James
Rider was caught and severely pinched-be¬
tween the bumpers. His injuries are liable
to prove fatal.
Miss Viola Adams, daughter of a wealthy
resident of Chicago, who was disowned by
her father twenty years ago for eloping with
a man named Andrews, is now the heiress of
$40,000, left by her grandfather.
Ci 8. Walters, who kept a grocery at Sew¬
ell’s Point, Va., was found murdered in his
bedroom. The broken skull and mangled
face plainly showed the manner of death.
Two colored men, who acted suspicuously,
were arrested for the crime.
Foreign Notes.
Count William Pourtales is dead.
Learie defeated O’Connor in the boat race.
The Germans have blockaded Saadani,
Zanzibar, and fighting is expected.
A boat containing a Irdfand, christening party was
capsized, at Killarney, Sunday even¬
ing and five of the party were drowned.
Emperor William was serenaded at Dree-
dau Sunday by 12,003 citizens. The en¬
thusiasm manifested by the people was re¬
markable.
Editors Kubne and Benecke, of The Nord-
hause Gazette, accused of lese majeste in
connection with the Geffcken affair, have
been acquitted.
It is reported that there is a hitch in the
negotiations for the proposed loan to the
Bulgarian government by an American syn¬
dicate, and that the government is receiv¬
ing offers from German and Austrian finan¬
ciers.
The bishop of Marseilles has issued a formal
protest against the circular recently issued
by the French minister of justice, in which
the minister reminded the clergy that they
are prohibited by law from taking part in
elections. The bishop affirms the rights of
priests to intervene in elections and other
political affairs.
“He most lives who thinks the most.
Acts the noblest, feels the best,
And he whose heart beats quickest
Lives t he longest, lives in one hour
More than in years do some whose
Fat blood sleeps as it slips alonglheir veins,”
These lines describe that condition
of perfect health which all men and
women wish to enjoy. To be able to
think clearly, to incline to do noble
acts, must to be live free from long the and domination joyously, we of
disease. By taking Dr. Pierce’s Gold¬
en Medical Discovery we may, by pu¬
rifying tion, general the-blood. debility, escape and consump¬ weakness,
and all blood and skin diseases, and
.ver fy the truth of poetry as well as
fact. It is guaranteed to cure in all
eases of diseases for which it is recom¬
mended, or money paid for it will be
refunded.
The Deadly Toothpick.
Boston Herald.
“Do you know,” said a physician
to a Herald man yesterday, “that
the great American habit to tooth¬
pick chewing is responsible for a
very large number of humAn ills? If
you have ever noticed these things
ranch you have observed that a good
many people who take their meals at
restaurants or hotels cafes, and rush
out immediately afterward to busi¬
ness, snatch on the way a toothpick,
sometimes several of them, and
thrust the little wooden speers in
the mouth. In nine eases out of ten
they don’t use the toothpick quickly
and as a matter of business, but they
retain it in the mouth after all neces¬
sity for its functions has ceased.
They chew on it and wobble it about
under the ja ws, and finally the piece
of wood is reduced to a raged palp,
and then it is usually cost away.
Very frequently small particles of the
wood are swallowod, and Iknow one
man who was in the habit of eating
his toothpick. I became acquainted
with him because he wanted me to
give him something to heal his stom¬
ach, which was really in a lacerated
condition. The small particles of
wood that are swallowed frequently
lodge in the walls of the stomach
somewhere and induce several gastric dis¬
turbance. I know cases
which proved fatal.”
f Tho Worst Nasal Catarrh,
no matter of bow long standing, Sage Cr- Is
absolutely cured by Dr. *
drnggistP.
asked one of the marketmen.
“In the first place,” the Jerseyman
replied, “just try the skin of any ol
your fruit. You will Hud your ap¬
ples and peaches and grapes, and all
your fruit, for that matter, which is
home-grown, with » thicker and
tougher skin than you have seen for
years. This is one of the indications.
That is the way Nature takes care of
her products. Last winter apples
and other fruits were so thin-skinned
and tender that It was hard to
gather them without bruising them,
if you will remember, and we had an
extraordinarily mild- winter. Corn
is another of Nature’s signboards
The ears this year are protected by
thicker and stronger husks than I
have seen before for years, and talk¬
ing with farmers up in Pennsylvania
I find it is the same way. Wheat and
rye straw are tougher, hay is wirier
and the seed pods are better protect¬
ed than usual. These are old farm¬
er’s signs, and they are good ones,
because they don’t come from any
moon-planting actuaf superstition, but
from observation year after
year by a class of men whose inter¬
ests lie in keeping a close wa tch of na¬
ture’s moods.”
My love was like a lily lair,
Low My heart drooping in the with sultry grief air. and
was rent care.
I loved her well.
But Io! The wonder grows and grows;
My love’s now lig» a blooming rose.
How bright her face with beauty glows,
The wanderering bee would stop to sip,
The nectar of her perfect lip.
’Twas Dr. Pieroe’s Favorite Prescrip¬
tion wrought the spell.
Weaker than Water.
A man is never in a more debilitat
ed condition than when he has weath¬
ered finds a it case hard of measles. bear The under system the
to up
weight of the disease and almost re¬
bels against the strain upon it. And
yet there is a remedy which answers
prominent the requirements druggist of such and a physician case. A
writes:
Gentlemen—Your Darlington, 8- C.
tonic has been
going very well this spring. There
Has been a good deal of measles, es¬
pecially which left amon them the in factoy debilitated operatives,
a con¬
dition, be the Jor which thing, your and tonic has seems sold to
very it
well. ' Yore truly,
John A. Boyd, M. D.
For sale by E. R. Anthony.
For Chills and Fever take
Uppuuta’i Pyrafuge.
Very Kisaky Indeed.
To tamper with symptoms indicative of
growing brief time kidney needful disorder; stimulation to neglect for a
of the renal
organs when'their inactivity points, as it al¬
ways and unmistakably does, to their event¬
ual permanent disease, is certainly very
risky indeed. This ■ m is, m jjaiws; however, diiHIi risk that
many Bright’s persons disease perceptibly diabetes, oatarrh drifting of into
the
bladder, who read 4c., constantly, heed near. So those
reflect and the lessons of re¬
corded experience, the advisability of using
Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters as a diuretic,
need scarcely ~ more than a suggestion. No
' " “ ~ ittsdby tto: '
for rhe preaention of serious renal disease.
The unmedicated excitants of commence, no
matter how pure, bear in mind, react pre-
judioialiy The Bitters upon subdues the kidneys malaria, when constipation inactive,
and rheumatism,
For Nervousness and Dyspepsia, use
Perry’s Liver Pills.
ODD r. PRICKLY ASH, POKE
«. r. BOOT and POTASSIUM,
is also the best possible tonic. It
never fails to bring your system back
to by a sickness healthy condition when run down the
springit should or overwork. be everybody. During
used by
It will build you up, give you an ap¬
petite and digestion, and enable your
system to stand our long and ener¬
aid vating digestion—neverfailing summers. Nothing like it to
to cure
the worse cases of Dyspepsia. Annual
Skin Eruptions, peculiar to the South¬
ern climate, immediately dried up by
its use.
JE*Y FAH
. -WTO——
NEW YORK OR BOSTON
-IS VIA-
SAVANNAH
-AND TUB—f* »
OCEAN : STEAMSHIP: LINE
—or THE—
Central Railroad of Georgia.
SUMMER EXCURSION TICKETS
Now on vole ot reduced rate*. Good to* re¬
turn until Ootoberaist, 1880.
|'ree Magnificent, from the heat Steamer and duet, and elegant, Incident service to AU-
Rail Routes. If yon are eiek the trip will in¬
vigorate and band you up.
6o East by Sea and You'll not Regret It
the JnssN merit* of tim ti would before Route do purchasing wen via Savannah. to inquire tickets first Fur¬ via iff
ther information may be had by applying t~
the Agent at your station or to.
H. 8. o. BELKNAP, oriiyanar, W. F. 8HELLMAN,
T.CHABDTON, General Manager. CLYDE Traffic BOSTICK, Manager.
Genl Pees. ______ Agent. Truv. Pnns.Agwt
Savannah Ga
mmqwm ■ jS*is£MEa:.
SRINO.
^
and A by the
suffering of i ; the family,
How keenly I sympathizes
with her invalid how greatly the
kind husband fa r his sick wife’*
recovery. Bleased be the men that fur¬
nish sick and aching humanity with a
remedy that bring* aure relief.
Isaac ll.Otfew, ML Olive, N. C. writes: “ 1 was
trouble,I with skin disease and was broken out la
running acres. 1 had been afllicted for ten years
skin diseases- aKrrs;
months ago 1 got a bottle DU- B. at John R.i
Smith’* drug store at Mt. Olive, and it has entirely
cured me, and I hare had no aymptoms of tire di»
ease since,”
Kenpesaw.Lia., Sept. U, JSS7.
Blood Balm Company. My DearSliu: I Urc
great pleasure in acknowledging the great Uuafit
my wife ha* derived from your great and nUdgr
ful medicine, U. B. B. For two year, ,u*a
great suffer from Scrofula or some blood lipase
which lad lain dormant all her We; we had aftik¬
on unuiit a * lonfWm * omeollhe ‘ ,|0st!,kiU '
pblLUr U LA f u i physician* In tire country tot
all to no efiect nntil we lad all despaired of tel
recovering Her mouth was a solid ulcer and for
two months or more her body was broken
out with (ores until she lost a beautiful head of hair,
also hereye-lashes and eye-brow*. In fact she seem
ed to he a complete wreck. Now comes the great
secret which 1 want all the worhMa know, and that
is that three bottles of Blood Balm medicine has
done the work,which would sound Incredible to any
one who did not know it to be so. Todayroywife
Is perfectly healthy and dear from any scrofulous
taint, and she now has a three months old bate also
perfectly healtMy. Very Respectfully,
ItTL-Cr . L. Cassidy.
tar'll the reader will 1 send s to the Bipod Balm Cor
Atlanta, Ga, for their illustrated illustrated “Book * of Won-
den,’’ R will prore of further interest 01
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
* .• : ■ ■ ■ • uf . ■ ■ -r ^ ....
HENRY C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
BUfPTON, OEOBOlA.
Practices in all the State and Federal
ourte. octOd&wly
JOHN J. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
GJUFF1N, OEOBOlA.
Office. 31 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over.,1. H.
White’s Clothimr Store. mar22d&wly
TH0S. R. MILLS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Will practice in the State and Federal
Courts. Office over George 4 Hartnett’s
corner. nov2tf
OHS » STEWAKT, BOBT.T. DANIEL.
STEWART & DANIEL,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Over George 4 Hartnett’S, Griffin, Ga.
Will practice in the State and Federal
rts. iulylOdtf
CLEVELAND & GARLAND,
DENTISTS,
GRIFFIN, - : ; - : ^GEORGIA.
HOTEL CURTIS
3RIFFIN, GEORGIA.
Under New Management.
A. G. DANIEL, Prop'r.
. I -ters meet all trains.
D. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
WOODBI'BY, GEORGIA.
to all business
rts, and where
Collection* a specialty,
U IyhThu 1 4,
In effect September 8th, 1889.
No. 15 —Daily.
LeaveGriffin...................................5:45 a.m.
ArriveAtlanta.................................8;00 “
No. lft—D aily,
Leave Atlanta................................6:05 p.m.
Arrive Griffill...............................8:05 ‘ .
No. 8 —Daily.
Leave Macon................. 3:30a.m.
Arrive Griffin................................5:25 “
“ Atlanta................................7:00 «
Eo. U—Daily.
fesa .....................sa*-*
“ Atlanta..............................12:30 p. m.
No. 1 —Daily.
Leave Macon.........................1:40 p. m.
Arrive Griffin.......................... 3 53 “
Leave “ .... ...........................4:00 “
ArriveAtlanta................... 5:45 “
No. 18 —Daily.
........ 9:00 6:40p.m. “
........
........10:40 “
No. 2 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta................. 6:50 a. m.
Arrive Griffin............ 8:17 “
“ Macon.................. 10:30 “
No. 12 —Daily.
teave Atlanta................................2:15 p. m.
Arrive Griffin................................«..4;00 “
“ Macon..................... .....0:15 “
No. 4 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta.....................—.... 7:05 p. m.
Arrive Griffin................................ 8:35 “
“ Macon..............................11;00 “
* Jfo. 14 -Daily.
Leave Atlanta........................ 9:05 a. m
Arrive “ Macon.............. Griffin........................•■,,.*.10:43 1:00p.m. “
No. 27 —Daily.
Leave Griffin............................ 8:30 a. m.
“ Newnan.............................10:20 “
Arrive Carrollton.........................11:35 “
No. 28 —Daily.
Leave Carrollton........ ,4:20 p. m
“ Newnan................................5:25
Arrive Griffin............................. 7.-20 «
No. 20 —Daily, except Sunday.
Leave Griffin................................-.1:30 p. m.
Leave Arrive Newnan...............................,4:15 .....J»:25 “ “
“
Arrive Carrollton .........................-.7:00 “
No. 80 —Daily. Except Sunday.
Leave Carrollton....................—......5:45 a m
Arrive Newnmi..................•—.........7:85 “
Leave Newnan..,....—......................8:05 “
Arrive Griffin................................10:35 “
••■For farther information relative to tick¬
et rates, beet routes schedule, 4*„ write to
K ^CHARLTON, Savannah. G. P°A^ Ga. GrtB^Ga.
.-tag --- --—---ita
★ THE A——
Ajcocfc Maiicliii Com
HAVE MOVED TJJKJJ] .STOCK OF
MR V A ffi fill V U DOORS AND BLINI
****■■, w 3
■'
.. - .
No. , 16 H!)l (€. H,
To St. Johnson’s old Stand)
.
Where All Sizes Sash, Uscjs. h>inds. Mantles. Sc.,
will be on sale at lowest mmkei priiHvi. Wo .wiitri!*i> fnhl to oily Inimness a
complete line of
Builders' Hardware ,
and will at have prices goods suit to suit all classes Call of buifilinpcH for from the cheapiest want. to the
flncBt to the times. all or or write write I what yon
Respectfully,
AY00CK MANUFACTURING CO.
For )-( Cheat) )-( Goods
. ......GALL ON........
W. M. HOLM AN -CO.
We Slandard A Sugar lor malting cake. Citron, Currents, Prunes and ai
kinds of Extracts for Flavoring. The Best Pat. Flour, Mince Moat, Jellies
and in fact anything you want.
★ TURKEYS, FISH AND OYSTERS,
Leave us your order and it will bo attended te.
THE FARMERS’ CO-OPERATIVE GINNERY
Owned and Run by More Than 500 Farmers! Plenty of Cotton Bagging and
Ties Always an Hand and FURNISHED AT COST!
house Capacity in the of Ginnery 70 bates per day. Cotton delivered free to any ware¬
should drive.immediately city. Farmers who the Ginnery, pick as much as a bale of cotton per day
to and save time and labor. Mr, Lu¬
cius Johnson, Superintendent of the Ginnery, waa elected by the farmers
themselves, and will see that every man gets full satisfaction.
All Cotton Seed can be Disposed of, if Desired,
town without farmers moving them. well farmery Wagons from unloaded by elevators. We appeal to our
as as the country, both white and colored,
to bring their cotton to the Farmers’ Ginnery.
W. E. H. SEAliCY, President.
B. N. BARROW, General Manager.
N. B.—Stock in the Ginnery ana Oil Mill is ready for delivery. Notes duo
should be met by Oct. 1st, as promised. Stock can still be bought; but will
soon be worth a premium. Be wise and act quickly.
• i;.-’
(Prickly Ash, Poke Hoot and Potanlnm.)
-MARES POSITIVE CUBES OF ALL FORMS AND STAGES OF-
Phjaloian* endorse V. P. P. a* a aj,lgn- yon vrtH regain flreh And itrengtfa.
dld combination, and preresribe it with s Waste of energy and *11 dhWMW malting
groat (atelaotion for the core* ol all! from overtaxing tbeeyitem on oared by
form* sad Tertiary and stages Syphfll., of Primary. Secondary j theneeotP.P.P.
SypWbttc Steu- & Ladteewbom eyitetnaarepoteoBedand
taatein, Scrofolous EBoer* and Sores, w hoM blmxH* In an impure comUMomhie
filandnlar Swellings, ftheamahare, KW- to menstrual irregnUritie. arc goouUarly
ney Complaints, old Cbronlo Cleon that banefitofi by the wonderfttl tonio mb)
GS 'll ‘ ■ ■■ ' UK -''J
SYPHILIS
mmmmmammmmmmmmammrnmmm
have resisted *H treatment. Catarrh, Skin blood oleanalng proparflet ot P. P. P,
Diseases, Eosema, Chronic Pemalo Pritidy Ash, Poke Boot udFotMtim.
Complaints, Mercurial Poison, Tettm, Soto by all Bruggtat*.
Soaldbead, etc., etc,
P. P. P. is a powerful tonic and an lippman MMh, Progrtsten,
excellent appltizer, building up toe Whole aa lx Muanism,
system rapidly. B yon we weak and Block, SAVANNAH, GA
f Stole, and feel badly try P. p. P„ and in
'
...... II ■ I ..................
RHEUMATISM
NOW©*
ft Joy p JcaLJwJCM TTTftiWn Jn reep JT JLHJ 1 ' % l g , , T JKLwJM HfTr^WTi J.%
i
THE ERRORS3fY0UTH<indMANHOOD
Bound in leather, foil i
EX ° ERT , hqme t reatment , ■ POSITIVE
M«UeoInflrmary,l-------------------- i CURE.
“I HRARO A VOfCIl IT ftAIH, **OOMH , ]T AND > w SKI.'” -«»> I
WHEl.ES* stamp
-PRESS Cft-
748 REYNOLD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA
Agents WantedlCatalogiie FREE!
RUBBER STAMPS, SEALS,
BADGES, CHECKS,STENCILS
STEEL ST A WPS, &c.
Sole Monnfirotaren ot
Tho Wheless Self-lnklng Rubb«w
Stamo Printing Press
--■■■■ ^ .■ -“:v
D9g|
■■— J-jJ --
MEReER U*IV R$in.
MACON, GA.
FULL FA ULTJE^. FIVE SCHOOLS
1. 3. The The College Preparatory of liberal Departmeot. Arte.
3. The Scietific Department.
4. The Department of Theology.
5. The Lnw School. „
”' 1 - w - , -~
.^®w»SES
"
i I
m
We tte.
Grand !
Halve* ft 10; * <
ttotbn #1.
a ruu or
jffSs 200 Psizmof
500 Pwm or
loS Pl d? °’
» Aft
TEEMIXAL 1
’Nor*—TIckMe i
For Club Bit - *
desired, write
County, clearly stating Street
m
turn mail deli
an Envelope I
* IMP I
.
'
si : 1
C C
'JSwSISMs
was so had i
•oon cored l , i|
AnSoMa.Midi., Dec. 4S, 'J&*
Scud for hoof'8 ‘***~-'- j * ___
si
fj