Newspaper Page Text
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of Spalding Co.
1886, Benjamin
Bit l freely h say :•/£ to my coHeagw that the
ItemrUtai party would be stronger
ia Indiana if you pat every Republi
can oat of offiw aod I think the
Democratic party would be weaker
> hi fmtasriy tibe «an»pro|K»tio n th at
municipal wade by the Democrats at the
cation in Indianapolis on
Tuesday hurt reetn* in a meaeore to
Hon assumed by Senator Harrison in
1886 , bat the falling off in the Re-
pnWfcau rote may also besotnetrhat
mrmmtm Sor by 'the .migration
mm that dty of a large nnmber of
H» dtfaens to fill federal position by
appointment ol President Harrison.
Repnb
la an organ# la directed to thefolloir-
ing special from Cad«, Ohio, to the
WiilnAdpMa Times: “Great extit*-
ment wa* occasioned here this morn¬
ing by the discovery that a moh had
made an attack upon the residenwr
of Jnitie# West, on the outskirts of
utterly demolished it. West, who i#
good citizen, was absent when the
TWtora made their appearance.
They forced open the door, compell¬
ed Mm. West and her children to va¬
cate the premisses, and then, after
.testroying the fnrnitnre. they pnlted
down the house The men liare not
been identified, and their motive is
unknown.*’ The Northern Republi¬
can organ# did not print this news.
The fact is that Cadi* is in Onio, and
not in the Sooth. Will Gov. Foraker
op«i h» capacious month on the
The New York World’s new build¬
ing, the corner stone of which was
laid Thursday afternoon, will tower
pre-eroi nent among the giuntjg of Park
Row, where the highest trade build¬
ings in the world are clustered so
conspicuously. At present the New
building, rising straight up
DO feefcabovethe sidewalk, isin
the lead, though overtopped by the
Tribune tower across the street.
And in this respect the Time# will
continue to wear the belt, since the
main wall of the World building will
Iw about 184 feet in bright. But
when it comes to the superstructure
the World will carry off the palm,
Starting from the roof of the super¬
structure there will be a dome 86feet
in height and 52 feet in diameter,
surmounted by a cupalo of 20 feet iu
bright making the total deration of
the structure from the sidewalk to the
summit of the cupalo, 800 feet. The
material of the base course win be
grgnite, above the granite op to the
fourth story cornice red sandstone,
and from there to to the roof buff
terra cotta and sandstone, with pol¬
ished granite columns and tablets.
There will be 18 stories In the main
building, and the editorial and re¬
port orial quarters will be loon ted in
k the surmou nting dom e.
drown# Iron Bitter* furnishes fffd
to the stomach to accomplish which lia# it#
work. Only a medicine a
specific action nponthe stomach will
do you any good, and Brown’s Iron
Bitters will art directly upon that
organ, toning it up and giving it
str mgth to do its work, relieving the
prawure upon the nervous system
gthening the the nerves, appetite, quickening
m pro vi ng remov-
» flatulency and dispelling the
spells which are so annoying,
nay prove very dangerous.
pst test of o msdk irw* is whnt
{lit Ash, of I’ofet it at Root home. and P. Potas- P, P.
t
i on sale at every drug store
Unah. all of whom would as
ink of doing without castor
rir stores ns without the P.
tepritceond For syphilttic king of all ptions. blood
es. era
y«ar» later, * third husband, Count Philippe
Periquet, afterward Priam de Chimay, and
lived with him on easy terms in Paris, not¬
withstanding the scandal, that had assailed
her. tt» continued few years to be a relgn-
iog beauty, but wa* ww admitted to the
court of the empire. Napoleon dWiksd her
exceedingly, thinking that toe bad a bad in-
floenoe oo Josephina. HI* treatment of her
might serve the torn of satirical raisoga-
mists, eioce toe indirectly saved Josephine’s
Ufa. Hwy might say that this wasan unpor-
dooable offense in bar husband’s eyes.
The part that the prince* had played in
the Revolution closed the doors of monarch!
cal society against her, although the prince
was welcome to almost every court of Eu¬
rope. She was noted for her kindness and
generosity, being ready to serve anybody,
whether friend or foe. She effected the re¬
learn from prison of any number of persons,
and snatched scores from the scaffold. She
hid Ch ildr en during each of her marriages,
four during the second, though Tallinn de¬
nied three of these. Shoseetns to have been
a woman, of whom there are anmberleas
counterparts, that possessed many of the
highest virtues, albeit toe may not have pee-
semed toe conventional one She died in
Belgium at «, having had a sufficiently ex¬
traordinary career to furnish ample material
for a dozen thrilling novels.
At the time of the adoption of the new con¬
stitution, the executive power was vested in
a directory of five members. An enactment
of toe national convention, however, pre¬
scribed that two-thirds of toe council of five
hundred must be selected from Its own mem
bera This was obviously designed to prevent
either royalists or ultnuto* from controlling
toe council, and caused a new and dangerous
tumult, in which parties were greatly divid¬
ed. The royalists, swing on opportunity to
retain power, and pave toe way for the re-
establisbment of the monarchy, organized a
formidable insurrection that menaced the
country with a renewal of the old strife The
middle class, however, were in such dread of
j the common hand, people, they and had of done their during regaining the Ter¬ the
upper as
ror, that they joined the royalists, who were
thus greatly strengthened, and vastly su¬
perior in numbers to the convention.
The entire prospect was of the overthrow
of the convention shd toe reinstatement of
the ancient order, which, more than six
years before, had been displaced with unex¬
ampled calamities tg France
ENTER NAPOLEON.
Such reinstatement wae only avoided by
toe accidental choice of a young soldier, who
had already woo renown, and was destined
to fill the world for ages with the magnifi¬
cence of his achievement*. That one man
carried the fate of nations in his twain. be
was toe shaper and controller of events, the
maker of epochs, toe creator of history, toe
foremost character of his century, iu truth,
of modern times.
Napoleon Bonaparte was then SO, recently
made a brigadier general of artillery, and
burning for military employer ent He had
been waiting for h» opportunity, and here it
was. Does it always open to men of tran¬
scendent power; or do such men turn the most
ordinary circumstance into opportunity,
whereupon the world says they were ringn
hurt J lucky to find itf Whatever the fact,
the great men and tbs great opportunity
ciproeally; they discover one another,
tor ior lack tat-s of of opportunity, opportunity, may may cot not the un gran
man paw unrecognized?
Kapctooc arm cot a Frenchman and would by to
most liberal cotanf aevar
have been acoeji-e.t r - . #< it by France tat
for hi* prodigtoa*. wi nr-ti nniversai genius.
IMwhad been killed
f ot fodi, and bis
L ^it I ‘ ..;^L army must defeated, bars been as
m-^v fiOOw without tars him, spoken ska
iw tar would
\s~ "Ms of him adventurer. as aUord-
can
JT JPr" w-bo showed prom-
ise that he had Dot
^^^oytasHr > %%g?redaren»d- How
ftaA-i he might
tave dipped oot of
above all others to deal with a mob.
Faolt, having gone to Barb, was enthusi¬
astically received—the constituent assembly
tad allowed the Corsican exflea to return
home—ami wae appoint*! lieutenant general
and governor of the island. The Bonaparta
bouse at Ajaccio was, for a while, the head¬
quarters of the patriot*, and Joseph and Na¬
poleon Bonaparte, who had gone hack tows,
were regarded as their leaders. They and
they Paoll differed personally widely as attached to polities, to him. though He
were
was soon opposed to the national convention,
in common with many of his fellow country¬
men, while Napoleon adhered to that body.
The result was civil war, and the latter, as
commander of a battalion of the national
guard, was obliged to attack the {dace of Ms
thi TtnueHixs.
At first successful, he was besieged in turn,
and his communication with a vessel which
had landed him three being cat off, he was
constrained to take refuge in the tower of
Capitello. He and his fifty follower* nearly
“Wiac, Women and Sot*,”
but the greatest ol theseis, “women.”
"‘ Wineis amocker,”and song is good
to “sooth the savage,” but women
StX STjg
in good health. But whoa afflicted
with disease yon will find them, tan¬
talising, coquettish, cross and hard
to please. For all “female com¬
plaint*,’’sick headache, irregularities, and other dis¬
nervousness, popularly prolapsus known “fe¬
placements male weakness” and other diseases, a*
peculiar peculiar to w .a* the sex, sea, Dr. xir. Fierce’s x icrrc sisc Fav-
orite ___? A. _ Prescription bW ■ ... A, f .. ■■ is At, the great -6- worid- ■ ■ ir r i mI i ^
fatned remedy.
Dyspepsia
and Indigestion in its worst form
are cured ny the use of P. P. P.
yon are debilitated and rtin down, or
if yon need atoaicto strength regain and flesh vigor, and
lost appetltite, P. P., and will be
take P. yon stoone
and healthy. For shattered consti¬
tutions and lost manhood P. P. P.
(Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Po¬
tassium) is the king of aH medicines.
P. P.-P. is the greatest Wood puri¬
fier in in the world. For sate by all
druggists.___
The Universal Verdict of the People.
Who ijave used Clarke’s Extract of
the Flax first (Papillon) and highest Skin place Cure award it
as a reme¬
dial agent in all cases of Skin Diseas¬
es, sightly Erysipelas, blotches, Eczema, humiliating Phnples, un¬
tions, BdRs, Tetter, erup¬
Carbuncles, etc.,
all yield to this wonderful prepara¬
tion at once. Price f 1.00 for a large
bottle at Dr. N. B. Drewry’s Drug¬
store. Clarke’s Flax Soap is good
for the Skin. Try it. Price 25c.
A Valuable Remedy.
A letter from S. P. Ward well, Bos¬
ton, says: “I used Clarke’s Extract
of Flax (Papillon) Catarrh Cure in
June satisfaction, lost for Hay find Fever is with the great only
and it
thing without I hake irritating, seen which the would inflamation allay,
of the nostrils ana throat. Its sooth¬
ing and and healing immediate.” properties Large wete
marked
bottle $1.00. Clarke’s Flax Soap is
the latest, and best. Try it. 25 ets.
Ask for them at Dr. N. B. Drewry’s
Drugstore.
THE HARVEST TIME
{-AT-)
MRS. L. L. BENSON S.
Coma see oar Ogvoias is Bargain here, Show.
Tb* Harvest Time
When all may reap at price* low,
And nothing win b* dear.
The cotton picked by honest hand*.
In every forst yea* are.
The graceful shapes with silken band*.
And dainty Filigree.
The Rainbow sheds its color* here
In every light and shade.
And la lenv* rips aa the fade. aotnnan sere. * *
tints toot never
Here ever bloom Fashion toe lovely flower*.
And all that plane.
And feather* from the Peacock bowers.
Turned into Juno fans.
Here Bonnets of Lace, Frit aad Straw,
And Hats mad Caps all new,
The pettiest yon ever saw,
Aad very cheapest too.
Titan coom nato onr harvest show.
The carnival of Art,
CARPETS, BUGS, OIL CLOTHS, DRAPERIES, ETC., ETC.
Department never so well stocked amd price* made to sdl.
SILKS, WOOLENS; TABLE LINENS, HOSIERY, ETC., ETC.
French Novelties in PRESS GOODS are marvelously beautiful and superbly grand in d««%n and coloring, j
VOW and CHILDREN'S SHOES.-Stock fill and complete.
CHAMBERLIN, JOHS
66 end 68 Whitehall and 1,3» 5, 7,9, 11 and 1
Farm for Sole.
One of the Attest farms In Middle
Georgia for sate. The proprietor’s
of Griffin, Ga.,
branch is a splendid place for a mill
est state of cultivation of may farm
Stockhotaer’s Meeting.
Or Vic* or Sivonra*. wJSST.’SlSgSb. Gmrn* awd North) I
The Annual Meeting of the Stoekhotoers
this Company be told attta Court H orn
asft.it teaswsm,^' aissfsiTftsrai
£& certificate*
presentation of their stock
of meeting. ED. WORKMAN,
dtd ...... Secretory.
Merchants and
Organized J nly 1. 1889.
SBfaKS Prompt attention to al
h.hT
fan Beepers ui Giis
Feeders aid Condensers.
Improved Milburn Sin-
Centennial Gin.
’* . Hall * Self Feeder Sir
agiei*wlm M Hill fit.. HBIFFIN, 0A
A ml
W. D. DAVIS,
ardware, fltov
.
PI8T0I&
Wfil Buy an Organ. $66 will Buy a
did mmWaiiti-T aad prescribe it with
great satWtetkm tor to* core, of sU
fwionsii —r **—•*—r
sad Tertiary Bjrpfcilia, Syphilitic Eben- xadtawtawNP
reaUsm. SerotolSas Oean and 'Sews.
Oiandaiar BwetonfS. RbenmatUu: Kii-
ney Complainta, old Chronic Dlceri that
SYPHILIS 9
harswtatad antrmtamt.Oahmfa. Hkin iiSEte'
r - -- - Vi Man, tatoaf* Female
jj—Mercurial Poiaon. Vetter,
gcaldhead. sto. etc.
r. r. r. a a immWimie aad an
erceOant apptttor. h—ag up toe
sysWmmjHdfir. Ky.pi are west aad
fssuaaad m todiy tty F. F. F. aad
A BUSINESS EDUCATION
, AT HOME. For Cirentare, ad-
MUS COLLEGE, Erie Fa.
WANTEH
AT 0MCI-1____ EVERYWHERE
4 ^Ttt.Profitable Business
GRATEFUL COMFORTING.
and nutrition, and by a t
of the fine properties of s
Mr. Epps hns provided on
with a delicately ‘Bar ord b
nave msstswc ns many heavy dost,
K2rs5».r:
floating tone is a round weak poiBt as ready 1
a . W<
•ts&fsar NEW YORK. CHICAGO j
BOSTON.
!,EW mob T assJdaXpZiii ,ST££*5K»R.
i
SSsS^iSZt: ty of person hiring.
The Mason A
PIANO®. (these 1 stand in tune ehartrtwta
instruments.
POPl*LAR|STYLES ORGANS at* 3 *
932.50,960, 978, #*» AND DP,
Organ and Pianos sold for Cash, Easy-PaJ
mente, and Rented. Catalogues tree.
THE" GLORY OF MAN
SThENSTK VITALITY!