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II #4
HiLmanKR,m.APr 09 *r
*) pier Auuum., ♦5.00
. 1.00
8 *Pt. W, It
i of Spalding
Advertising Rate*.
ollnr far sqaare Inr the tret
r «nt« for retch subsequent
r Im to b. counted *, *
SSgjgsgaaa —10 Pent# per line lor
t tie ppM tor in advance.
• • * (
c. fe-
.gotten all
" ...OriSta* North
widow of 48 who
t&zxvz
j when he get* old enough
matt.# 1
*are being made at the
farm in the manufuc-
4 of there*. We see no reason
-,.y thin could not be made a profit¬
able industry in Geotfcte, and we be¬
lieve it wii« he,
_
iL. Sullivan my* that letter
»was announced u» a can-
„ngrras war a put up job of
.
w York Sun, and when he goes
"ark he’ll have a retraction
6 Sun in eclipse.
wrerreef Nta ■-—.....
State Fair will no
,_it one. Ttie men who
; the details of St, gen-
, understand the bus-
are attending to it
r and earnestness.
etary Bayard has refused
, under any circumstances,
Stic candidate for Gov*
___aware; but he has done
other citiara of the Diamond
» conld have done. Ho has
__________J the BanlSbory and Wol-
cott factions of the Delaware Demo¬
cracy, and thereby saved the State
to the party. Mr. Bayard’B sell re¬
nunciation is deserving of special
honor.
..........
* 4 Let ns havefewercoBVentionftand
: £5E
t&XXZZZ'ZS'S
the blacks, that man has
head on him. He has solved the
race problem, so far os he is concern¬
ed. In a few years he will probably
have made money enough to go and
live in some other part of the coun¬
try if the South becomes distasteful
^ *BM». «•* £<*
BANK 8 KNBATIONAW 8 M.
For the past twenty-five yeans the
two races hove worked tn harmony
with rare exceptions throughout.the
whole South, says the Brunswick
times. Today the negroes are in
the main peaceable, contented and
prosperous; ore fitting themselves in
a position of satisfied subordination
to the white* and rapidly losing in¬
terest in politics and faith in the Re¬
publican party's power or inclination
to change their social status. And
yet certain Southern journals persist
in the idea that the situation of af¬
fairs is such that the race problem
presents only three solutions-auial-
ga motion, colonisation or exter¬
mination. The first is further awoy
than in the days of slavery; the
practicability of the second is out of
the question and the necessity for
the lust is not apparent, fhith the
very scanty material of three” local
fights between the blacks and whites
which have recently occarred and
which have had their paraded before,
nothing but the rankest sensational¬
ism could manufacture a race issue
such as jeopardizes the supremacy of
the whites or the peace and prosperi¬
ty of the Sooth. No! The negroes
will remain, the whites will continue
to rale them; and fewer disturbances
wDl occur between the whites and
blacks than between the employers
and employes of any other section of
the country-
remarkable cure* Hood’s Bar
~dtre are sufficient proof
ocuttar curative power*#
(*
OtaTX or O*io,rrrr Vrrr or - ffiapayi i crt.*no, ■
JTSsr. y realm flrm’of oath F.4. that he is
ttasenior pamicrof the the firm of F.J.Chkrsv r
ISffZZr'S
k 1 /fj 11 ,
Char
HIM TAKI.M Iwau in i:
fa# Me«r«t of the i’owsr of Utwi|tiffrm
The Knwltjr Hetween aim «„<| | tal>u><l
.
How 01,1 HoUej«ptorro Oelo III. r.«.rt
By JmriD B HFH 1 T BBOWHE
(Oaprrtfht, mk tv Amen** pnm a*k»im
ferwjt from the atw ojf-
tor orflloiSi, Corea, ,.uo’ won
Vt passion Mid
-■art w«eti*to W#liw»*
OU, <* the furious rerw-
ua Deemooltae—any tbsir fatal
.atlonteta who rushed headlong on
ROBESPIERRE’S HOLD ON THE PEO-
RobesptcTe seems toJiere l 7 ha d rery tt t^e
"* “
oak ami i RH
eioquent^he oonfidetw* ' Although not
Igwuniiv, »w was ” — "O’ logical — and plausible, and
■:<% WM eagerly JiAs-'iaA,ta, listened ll t . l , Jl «.# to !_ in the 0 OJJiJ^utl 6 JJjg
~---------- —
contention and the Jacobin dab, and nude a
he was » m respects money, which bad tto
temptation temptation for for him. him. This This trait, tr*n, however, nowevor,
wm shared by nearly all the chiefs of toe
period sod i* an argument In favor of tfcrir
Sincerity But beyond this, he had none of
0 , personal or mental, that oom
belong to leader*. He was small in
ally’ pole, his manner uervous—his eyes continu¬
Mfakod—rwervod even to shynessaad
suggestive of suspicion.
Always extremely extromely poor, poc.-----— bis drew wm scru-
pulously neat, ioat, and and bis bis bearing bearing academic. notoemta The
oemaguguv demagogue wm never w™ denoted by his »» — be-
havior, and he is said to have boon a mao to
excite belief In his absolute honesty In any
---------- •— '— —They ;riot—and who
there
are ruck- malt,i*iu that be wm a constitu¬
tions! Inver of peace and lnw; but that per
Driving tho Revolution must bo purified by
too sacrifice of many lives and extreme meas¬
ure, be did not hasltuto to demand toe seed-
floe for the ultimate good it would produce. tho*
He wa* ouuvinoed that he knew bettor
ZiZS.-SSSEZ&E&SS: suits of tho uationol Insurrection, and render
tl»tin twrmonoutly remunerative He sent
men t« the scaffold wholly for what he
thought t.* be the public good. he considered Af a man.rh* their
pitta! than, duty;and, as a patriot therefore, shrank
execution a not
from it. however his feelings might and recoil.
Tint no was very astute, compre¬
hend U nature of his own countrymen,
to, . niy any doubt It is marvelous the!
I.,. . . ,co controlled toe revolutionary
p... f>»- live of the meet turbulent and
t. r » ■. 15 /.v known to history without bring
;n ftii’ .t,. ,, true sense, a man of action.
in. ., 1 'ist Iwvo been extraordinary,
IUj-t . . s *• .. far tal as direction of the masse.
,y■..! Ida TOutomporarles, ntemporaries, i MIrabeau
. . ■■ . •cptnd .,—. 'lids , 1 ^* view, view, difficult diffl_______ as it
<>• u, Mitiugulshes the long prevalent
op*;*, •:* ,>: ............ Hie bloodthirstiness, . ...... the charged pitiless ,
deni * > :r:w of him who has been
with Ii« at and substantially reaching
the dictatorship of France.
HU opjssdtinn to Dantou, wim shored his
power, and to Dan-
Urn’s adherents, in¬
cluding Camilla
Deemoullns, all rep¬
resenting modera¬
tion and advocat¬
ing clemency, is
generally attribut¬
ed to fear of them
rea*on of bis disap¬
proval and distrust
of Dantou is that
Danton was what Is
barton. termed an atheist,
MWWetoe bulk of toe iBtertote. already for
executed. Thalr substitution ot reason
toe tbeologte drily bad offended Robe*
piarre, not probably because he bad any re¬
ligious scruples, but because be thought the
common people, whom he was always court¬
ing. would be alienated by any system of
ratiuimlixm. S“but Ho may havo boon a kind of
wbetbeMweh or not, ho evidently
esteemed it politic to assume to be. There¬
fore bo used his secret influence, nearly con
trolling the committee of public safety
against Danton and bis confederates, and his
influence wm fatal He to said afterwards to
have opposed their arrest. This inconsis
tenoy, his hesitation to take a decided course,
5b*sa?^svB2r-S, was characteristic of him, but Os he supported
. < i* ______Al._ ofi ,x Mn
CAREER OF DANTON.
Danton was perhaps the foremost flgure of
the Revolution proper, the legitimate suc¬
cessor of illrabeoU, whom In many respects
he refolded. He has been greatly traduced,
portrayed as an arrant demagogue, a social very
monster Ev«ry loader during that
and • political convulsion must, as has been
Mid, have had his share of deinogogism
Calm statesmanship was impassible ascendant, at such a
vhou the people were in the
wiki with ith fury, fury, averse avers* to, ----------— if not incapable of. .
reflection The leaders dealt with the ma
terial they had, and in a way to render It
servi.-eubte in establishing tho republic. Dan
ton ha* „f late year* been treated from much
of to.* odium rest upon him. A man of vio
tout p*u»*iou*. of extreme audacity, of remark
aide tv-** >uires, of exceptional self confidence,
be eras sure to go to great lengths for what
ever k.*<l mastered hto Imagination and con
vietion*
From his early yean ho wm an enthusiast
In Ifcctaif of freedom, detreting the very name
of prim v «r king in every sense be was an
•ggrwaivn. uncompromising democrat, eager
to .1 ;r* anything for the oauw he had been
bom to repuMB. No ” man ~ of hto age was bet
ter ter im-p titled .1 by nature and temperament ■ "**" ’r ------ for a
revotiiUounry rereer, and cironinstancw eo
inrMctl with and furthered hia destiny A
mrire of an-Wents to boyhood marred hto per
renal appearance, and' smallpox Ita completed
bb ittoflitureiuant “Nature,* “Nature,” he Mid, arid, and “ha* the
bestowed on me the maaive figure
harsh owpratdoo ot liberty.'' natron
tike atactoe of Ms illiteracy are
Ue ha*) a fair classic education. WM a dili¬
gent reader, wpecjally of pure literatim,
know many language#—very unusual for a
IhiK’iuHUi —and wrote
the eummemvment <*f the Rerulntioa he jyas
a towv«r ip Iterto, tiring then but 9# Mira-
bewii ami he tiseame acquainted, and the
former at once discovered hto extraordinary
tatouts and Immense fore*. So far from be¬
ing a savage, as be tuts been called, ha bad a
genius for friendship, a warm heart
2 4«w
gg
tho largest
¥ ■w »«d vantage
BS
Aiirron on trial.
After t' M flight of to* king, t Dan ton be¬
.win* # greet political power. He "• ras largo
If tpr.truinen tol In inducing the coot iTocetloa
« [vjy rdy IT, 17,1TV1) 1791) In In the the Champ Champ of de de Louis. Mmb Mm* to Unlike sign
a petition for the depoeal
mad of hi. associates, he accomplished hie
reunite by speech, not by writing, end „PP the
tradition ......... U that be oould mold the
----., „
he chose. Hence he 1* charged with crime*
of which be wm not guilty. The Sep
tom her massacres Me examples His bi¬
ographers deny his , asserting
ng in their
France, and taken
Verdun, Danton mounted the tribune and
delivered to toe legislative assembly notably
toe most effective speech of tho Revolution,
rioting with the famous words, “To ovo-
oome t bo enemy, to destroy blm, what do we
need! Audacity, still audacity, audnrity
always." execution of toe king,
He woe bent on the
considering ft essential as a revolutionary
measure One of hto friends having entered
into an argument to show that the conven¬ i*
tion could not legally try Louis, he respond
ed: “You may be right; but we can kill him,
and we will"—mi illustration of his deeper
ate deetpfan. He instituted, March 10,1788,
toe extraordinary criminal tribunal, privi¬
leged to make whatever arrests It pleased,
and from whose decisions there wm bo ap¬
peal. This was done in excess of patriotism,
under conviction that toe success of the Rav-
oluUoi* demanded it Most of the proceed¬
ings he urged so zealously were to this mid,
for which he was violent, thereby gaining a
reputation for cruelty he did wot merit Marat,
hto colleague, constitutionally suspicious, of¬
ten suspected him, and drove him to lengths
be would not otherwise have gone. He con¬
tributed to toe overthrow of the Girondists,
but would gladly have saved them, bad it
been In his power. Afterward be believed
in moderation (the guillotine was repugnant
to him), whloh deprived him of the support
of toe Mountain, toe ultra party Robespierre. of the
Jacobins, who concentrated on
Instance* of a policy more and more humane
lessened his influence among the radicals and
raised Robespierre to supremacy. conscious of
In January, 1796, he was an
approaching crisis, and that hto enemies were
trying to destroy him. It was evident that
the dictator, as h* was styled, had become
inimical, and was conspiring against him.
No two men could have been more different;
Robespierre, cold, crafty, furtive, resolute,
vigilant, deadly; Danton, hot, open, An iropetu-
ona, confident, daring, defiant * attempt
wm made to reconcile the two; but they were
irreconcilable. Robespierre fears Danton,
__him. To the giant the Revolu¬
tion has grown an Imposture, a most tragic
unquestion
butchery fiery lover well hater.
Dantou was a as Charpentier, as
He lid had marnea, married, at at 27, ura Gabrielle urwuv vuurpcuwei,
daughter of a prosperous superintendent of
farms. They loved one another devotedly,
not at all as toe French, when wedded, are
commonly supposed to feel toward one an¬
other. She was, In contrast to him, a sound
Catholic—their attraction may have lain tn
opposites; but be was a hero to her before he
had won recognition. He often said that she
was Uto discoverer. While ho was on a into-
riou to Belgium she died, leaving two chil¬
dren. It was a crushing blow to bjiii; and to
returning to Pains, be ordered her gra ve
be opened that he might see end embrace
«g*In the woman ho had adored. Gabrielle
had selected for him Louise Geiy, a fair girl, in
hope of weaning him from the Revolution,
to „ be ^ a „ mother mother to tc her children, pious like her-
telf, and of a royalist family. Some months
later ho wedded her, still mourning his great
toss, and went through, for her sake, with the
religious ceremony which he regarded as ab¬
surd.
Dan ton’s friends were greatly alarmed tow wife
ard the last They urged him to By, his
joining thorn in entreaty. “Where shall I
go r he said. “If free France expel me, other
tends will have only dungeons for me. And
one docs not carry hto country on the soles
of bis shoes.’’ Even the arrest of hto inti¬
mate, Herault d’Eschelles, also on the com¬
mittee of public safety, moved him not Thh
buoy ax distressed him; beseemed to be in
an apathy of horror, “I would rather be
guillotined than guillotine But they dare
not touch me I am the arch that sustains
tho entire structure They know that Us fall
will crash them.’’ He was over confident;
hto was the courage of rashness The night
of March 80, 17»4, he was arrested, with Ca¬
mille Desmoulins and others; arrest, of
v~— meaning death. No one knew this
better than Danton; no one could look more
calmly at the end, though be had much to
live for He was young—but 34—gifted, a
husband and a father, with a host of friends,
the assurance of fame and a beloved repute
lie which be more than any other man had
created
HIS LAST HOURS.
At tiic spurloa* trial he bear* himself
grandly before the very tribunal he had es¬
tablished twelve months before. For hto act be
publicly begs pardon of God and man, hto ote
ject having been, as he said, to prevent another
Septa* iber massacre and the unloosing of a
scourge upon mankind. “These Cains know
abeolutely nothing about government or gov* dis¬
erning l leave everything In frightful
order. "
Fonquier-TiuvIUe asks, according to form,
bis name and place of abode. The response
is, “My name to Danton, tolerably well known
in the Revolution. Mr abode will soon be in
Annihilation; but my name will live in the
Fantbeon of history.” He shows Ukeanangry
He demands ....—.. . ^ ... —.—- be
mitteeappea* as wiUiesaos, if they dare;
will cover tl.cm with shame. “1 will expose
the three shallow scoundrels, lobes, Corn
St, dost, who fawn on Robespierre and
him to his down. 1 will plunge them into
the empty abyre out of which they should
never have arisen." , K
The president it--■
ami insists on
exclaims tho giant, “how I defend myself)
The right of sentence is yours; I do not inter¬
fere with it The voice of a man speaking
for hto honor and hto l)fe may weB drown the
jingling Of your bell.’ He cannot be sup
at length ll« common* might have insisted
on bis retaMB, might have overthrown the
triumvirate thro, m they did, through their
representatives, a few months iater .
Dan ten fas the foremost okutor tsb®**
Tltnn of the Revohitton. Hto arrist creates
it Dan ton, Uw
9 days. K flfariii
Wflterif --h* wotdd have deprived
of It bv hto aggrsativ*, dtodain-
i
to They assume to learn of a plot
“ - prtamer. «dth*
m over-
‘1' filial nm “.^Ttati vongeanco I il * III to ewtetoh qJ ot, jxxq 'HtSfi: *•***•“—• vntmwo. -
Strong as they are, Danton Bring is an in
otetomt MMm and they hunger tor hto
Wood. When he hear* tire sentence, he ex-
tooons; —w— - — — — -- ■** —c-j —m ..
w ma I
drag Urn
On the Way from the--- 5 Luxembourg prison
ontAprfl 5 17W), ta
has the air of a conqueror. isror. To To the tl» fickle,
treacherous, savage mob >b which which surges surge* aboM
At thought of hto young vilttokw shedding aH
possession “No fw a moment, a few
tears. weakness, Danton,” ha solilo¬
quizes, “bo yourself.” and recovers his rtoio-
At the foot .
friend, HdrauJt
embrace him,’
X RBrtJSMCAW BAPTISM.
•What stupidity I" exclaim* Danton. “You
cannot prevent our heads from kissing in the
basket." A* he place* himself under the ax
he my* to the executioner: “Show my head
to the people; it will be worth their seeing!”
And then the magio voice which for three
year* had guided the destinies of distracted
France was forever hushed.
you sufic-rfrom Jaundice? Has your
liver does not furnish the healthy ac¬
tion which shouldresnlt from it. The
impurities the duct, are stopped disordered and dogging
up cause a con¬
dition, which wfU produce serious re¬
sults to your health, unless you take
Brown’s Iron Bitters at once It wil
cure your biliousness and jaundice,
and inceite to healty action the slug¬
gish liver.
Cubbed Ollti
A iittiv girt fhyear-okt Was sitting down be*
side her mother on u stool outside on a porch,
iego, Cal, tho other day—and
most beautiful ftiful dav day it it was, was, too—with too—with slat slate
and jienrii in hand She was trying to draw
hottte. t*ut gave it up after a good deal of
rui.I*;!;,; and cleaning the slate Finally,
after « N’-.ort pause, the little girl concluded
to draw me San Miguel mountains, whose
majot I-----!**“ ti.- f ieiik rises - - east of tho - T city. . She had T .
outlines .
just coinpleWtl part of the of the
uiteias, ami as she glanced up for another
look, raw a high fog passing over the peak,
When Klip exclaimed mamma* mamma,
just ’ Rwtk * ' Dbi! has rubbed out San Migel
toounf'u ' Icwistou Journal
..- -:«r
SnaspSita
m
The Chief Reman for the great sue
cess of Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is found to the
article Itself. It to merit that wins, and the
tact that Howl’s Sarsaparilla actually ac¬
complishes what is claimed tor it. Is what
has given to fids medicine a popularity and
tale greater than that of any other sarsapa-
Merit Wins
Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures Scrofula, Salt
Khetun and *11 Humors, Dyspepsia, Sick
Headache, Biliousness, overcome* That
Tired Feeling, creates an Appetite, strength
Ml the Nerves, builds up the 'Whole System.
Head’. Sana partite Is Sold by aR drug¬
gists. Ilitix for»5. Prepared by a L Hood
kOo., ApottMMtas, Low*H, Mast.
2^7gai sod «r8i earmpeiill*
mercury. K&rtsm patAh ssgsette
c^> itoetosadfei eared Jan me io T9 ei
(/) Kfssyssisf "YBfVifftafe sli litua an extent ivieco had that acA()etor*'«SS white she
■c
pmi Idntcf BSBftfV 1 -S xVrt’-criflyrt 1 iMfitta
* isavol: . I r b.-sad Aaadl jlw operatiw
yy fmz* ood Diseases AriBOlWM. Colombo*. amt free. Ga*
Ssnrr Srxcmo Co.
Drawer A Atlanta. G
Tutfs Pills
...... re., i..»ijii.m. «te«i
ANTI-BfLIOUS ren* MEDICINE, aarere.re.. MEDICINE,
wetng szxsxtfz ttie yekoM
• o
in all tills
Iy Mbs, BARfeTS, Fl AND Mil
A LONG FELT WANT
Jn the South tiHi* been it Hretelum FondHte h.,n«. nhere eolirt to!S*lw »rtoa1 Kol F
TURJE. TUBE. All All this this has lias been been done don* during during _______a the the summer summer auromer salt, with and and and ft Hi now now we wt. are «re «■ - ^j 1 t parlor°DininK'liocmi S ]y . atid^
itritt price . wltn ns ».-.«.«-*• y uu ,-**** •—
firstedass goods it will pay you to
CARPETS, RUGS, OIL CLOTHS, DRAPERIES* ETC., ETC.
Department never so well stocked amd prices made to sell.
^
SILKS, WOOLENS; TABUS LINENS, HOSIERY, ETC., ETC.
French Novelties in DRESS GOODg ftre marvelously beautiful and superbly grand m design &M ootonag.
L^f^rUENT8\ 1 SHOES.-Stock full and complete. | '
Ra8SES’, BOYS’ and CHILDREN’S
MILLINERY and DRESS MAKING-A11 work done to order. call write.
Mr. J. T. Stephenson is with us and would be glad to have his friends or
CHAMBEJO^N, JOHNSON .& C J..
66 and 68 Whitehall and 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 and 13 Hunter S#., AltWifa, GA.
.Jew Adver ifsementS.
"’F#.
A BUSINESS EDUCATION
THOME. For Circular*, ad-
CLARK’S COLLEGE, Erie, Pa.
HtN&£»tCORfeS*
WANTED
AT ONCE—EVERYWHERE
Profitable Business
LIBERAL PAY. ^SS'XSSSS
ered until December 25th. Give references
R. H. WOODWARD & CO.,
Baltimore, Md.
■teHes haihValsamI and beautifies the hair,
es a luxuriant Rattors growth. Brsy
.Fails to
and fil .00 at Drngfrist®.
GHATEFUL -COMFOBTING.
EPPS’S COCOA
BREAKFAST.
‘By a thorough knowledge o! the natural
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id nutrition, and by a careful applicuti
of the fine properties ot ot well-selected well-selected Cocc Cocoa,
Mr. Epps has provided onr breakfast tables
with a delicately flavor*! beverage which may
gave us many heavy doctor’s buis. Mis by
the judieiout_______________ is use of such articles of „ diet that
a constitution may be resist gradually tendency built . cadency up ....
until strong enough to every
to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are
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there re is is a a weak weak point. point, We lay escape many
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ed frai
ply with boding water or milk. Bold only i
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Homceopathic JAMES Chemist#, London, EPPS & England. CO.,
MASON & HAMLIN
Organ and Plane Co.
BOSTON. ------- NEW YORK. CHICAGO.
NEW Contain s afive octave, Nine
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MODEL large and hanusoinc tdsome case «***«* u* of
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ORGAN, *h; also sold on the Easy
S System at fit.37 per
STYLE quarter, ;r. for for ten ten quarters, quarters,
when organ becomes proper¬
2244. ty of person hiring.
The Mason & Hamlin
MASON “Stringer,” invented and pat¬
ented by Mason * Hamlin in
& 1882, is used in the Mason &
Hamlin pianos exclusively. Be;
HAMLIN mavfcable refinement of tone
and phenomenal capacity to
PIANOS stand in tune characterise
these instruments.
POPULAR|STYLKS ORGANS at $22
$32.50, $G0, $78, $96 AND UP,
Organ and Pianos sold for Cash, Easy-Pay*
meats, and Rented. Catalogues free.
THE GLORY OF MAN
“STRENGTH lost VITALITY!
How I How Regained,
Exhaustedyitality
^UNTOLD MISERIES
____pretenders. fco Possess this great
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mall, fiadtoft ptetpaid, embossed, coocealed full to Price only $ 1.00 bj
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W. M. Holman & Co.
KEEP THE BEST OF ALL KINDS OF
STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES.
hSS.^^ Onr Swept houlde^ond^BraakfactBacon. Water Pat and Telico Flours cannot be beat. Best brands
All kindsrfCanned Goods fito
grades Fruits, SulUvan’^Tobacco; Fancy and Stick Candy. Water Ground Meal a Specialty. VegetabJes, ,
i®» FRESH FISH EVERY SATURDAY.
(Prickly Ash, Poke Boot and 1
-MAKES POSITIVE CUKES OT ALL FOEMS 02 -
did HtrficUna endOMB end P. prescribe P. P. a* » it spies- with j l will regtin flesh and strength.
combination, sll|
greet satisfaction for the cares of
i sj tho uss of P. P. P.
Ladies whoea systemsarepatoonedand
Ft i naaomooa isman uur »i* **w* .*,uw uB
Glandular Bwelllngs. Kheumatlem, Kid to menstraai irregularities are peculiarly
*■ t a tad by (he wondartUl tonic and
aey Complaints, old Chronic ulcers that or e
SYPHILIS S3S! ^(SCROFULA |gaogt^ s aa m p « i
have restated idltieatmont.Catan h. Skin blood cleansing properties of P. P.P,
Diseases, Eczema. Chronic Female Prickly Ash. Poke Boot and Potassium,
Complaints. Mercurial Poison, Tetter, flold by all Druggists.
Scaldhead, etc., etc. UPPIAN aMti) ffiropttators,
P. P. P. U a powerful tonic and rat
excellent appltlzer, building np the WHOLESALE DMWBWTSt
system rapidly. U yon are weak and uman Block, BATANMM, «L
ftebtaend feel badly try P. P. P. and
RHEUMATISM
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY.
HENHY C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY- AT LAW
saumflt, geoboU.
Practices iti all the State and Federal
ourts. oct9d&wly
JOHN J. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
GRIFFIN, GEORGU.
31 Hill Street, Up Stairs, aver J. H.
White** Clothing Store. niar22d&wiy
THOS. n. MILLS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Will practice in the e State and Federal
Courts. Office George & Hartnett’s
novilti
OHN D STEWART. ROD T. T. I) A MU-
STEWART & DANIEL
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Over George & Hartnett’s, Griffin, Ga.
Will practice in the State and Federal
rts . inlvl9dtf
CLEVELAND & GARLAND,
DENTISTS,
GEORGIA.
PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
WOODBURY, GEORGIA.
Pprompt attention given to all business
_ r .
Will 11 praeti--- •aetieein all . the Courts, and where
ver business ..iiness calls. colls
CoHections aspecialtv
HOTEL CURTIS
’ GKIFKIN. GEORGIA,
Under New Manasrement.
4. G. DANIEL, Prop'r.
* I rots meet all trains
$75 to $250 a .SR‘“. ad
Agents
prrferml who can furnish a horse and fpv
their whole . time to ____ the business. _____iun». Spate mo
merits may be profitably employed also,
few vacancies in towns and cities. c-itiet. B. ------ F
JOHNSON A CO., 1909 Main St., Richmond
N B.—Please state age and buKtorescxperi fo*
nee. Xnver mind about soLilinp ap3wed6s stamp
eply.
TO ADVERTISERS
A fist of 1006 newspapers divided into
STATES AND SECTIONS will be sent on ap-
pCcation —FREE,
xiaStnjses&iZ To those who want their advertising ^sssa to pay
•“iflftsiate Advertising Bureau,
Newspaper 10 Spnieestreet. New York,
PiltM
£V AOKlHISTERim M. NAffitt’ HUU meint
u can be given In acre of coflee or tea, or inv-
effect a ^
me pat’
wreck,
com] si^ECfftc
?, O n tacs’st.
C 0 » » Cincinnati, S
FOR MEN ONLY!
&s mmm
SslMl Srac.
For Sale or leal 1
«fif PpitY
THE CHARLTON
and beautiful view of snrronnding country
A No. 1 water and frnite at different vanet
on place.
Ihe nrunw PLACE,
on 14th street, 4 acl4 land, 5 room house.
Branch running through the lot.
THE OLD NALL HOUSE,
rooms, double kitchen, I acre land. 1
dock from centre Hill street.
JOSSEY HOUSE AND LOT.
ami 'Ifroo’mhonse oh Shelton lot all w «
Poplar street. A bargain given to
alM»ve property. for so*
Other houses and lots and lands
and to rent.
A. CUNNINGHAM,
Real Estate Agent.
IT
DAYS
Inne25
ill I ’ %
terlythatt