Funding for the digitization of this title was provided by the 2016 Spalding County SPLOST via the Flint River Regional Library System.
About The Griffin daily news and sun. (Griffin, Ga.) 1889-1924 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1889)
‘ ' f ; :3£ . 1 of whether J ’V' do not smoke hile those who ider it an inrnv it i. in « ll » ost <* aiI . v ;ue, pestilence, bah- imin Pasha escaped Is much better drinking, ^' than the muddy waters v -.‘ . rdling away the icssion. which lies one, toads to the on that the date for the open- of the A* Congressionnl - w ---1.—» n 1 session Id be ebauged. If Congress met mtb earlier or a month later the niLtees would he announce! in a week, and actbal work would begin. Among tlm many re¬ forms that Congress should adopt, that of a new date for the beginning of it* sessions should be the first. Yet it to more likely to be among the last. Congress has become too strong a reminder of a Georgia legis- . ' : L*. UOWU'VII, act. u. Office, 215 Summit. 8t. pve $ 1 1 d for any ease of Catarrh ot be eared with Hell’s Catarrh |Mve t enden edron. Bod dhI, and it told wile to , it they produced a •"» bought before. The, have rwififsaJS'sS: * Joontj *■*7 ,».v b,tt,r —— . ° <t - vf n fe« .Jj weefca »go. * 22JS. feton u ta f ££ hl°'hoSe i ITJL5S». »i"......... . . ascyrisss. s zrzxrzrzjsz: #100.000 #100.000 in in the the bank. bank. It It was was mon- mon- ,,«»*** I'rtSl^JAir'Not tod *„d up j.,t one of them supposed that so much iey was boarded by the farmers sssrwss a safer plaee for its deposit, tie farmers of Georgia have lifted decreased many a mortgage this have faced with such heroric courage for the past two decades. •< '-I.-- • —-----------,- THEY STILL LIVE. The Macon Evening News well says: “Jefferson Davis is dead; but the principles for which he struggled, devoted for the vindication of which he his life, and unto which he clung until a tavern bravl,” but the constitu¬ tional principles upon which the Con- still survive in all their living power; and when they shall have been, if eyer, reu’ly destroyed, thisBepublic will be transformed into one of the most op¬ pressive and offensive oligarchies the civ¬ that has ever arisen amongst ilized nations of the earth. It should he remembered that the principles for which Jefferson Davis straggled in theSonthhnd equally as zealous advocates in the North. They are the same whose bold advo- cseyjpnt eacyjpnt Clement Clement L. L. Vallandiglmm Vallandighani in peril of S t* his life til* and drove .j__.... him, 4l, the A Democratic candidate for governor of the State of Ohio, an exile into Canada. Both these men are dead* bat they lived long enough to see the principles for which they lived recog¬ nized. and these principles live after them. The sovereign right* of the States and the right of free speech are stronger today than in 1863. A Lady’s Chances of Marrying. Every woman hasachaceof “catch¬ ing a husband," but it is conceded that young ladies between twenty and twenty-five years of age are more likely to draw the matrimonial unusual prizes. thing However it is not an to hear of themarriage of alady who has passed the three quarter century marie. ¥et, how can a woman, weak A Valuable Remedy. A letter from S. P. Wardwell, Bos ton, says; “I used Clarke’* Extract June of Flax (Papillon) for Hay Fever Catarrh with Cure in last great satisfaction, and find it is the only tiling l have seen which would ailay, of without the nostrils irritating, and throat. the inflamatfon Its sooth¬ ing and healing immediate." properties Large were marked and bottle #1.00. Clarke’s Flax Soap is , the latest and best. Try it. 25ets. Ask for them at I>r. N. B. Drewry s i , had iKtni issued l»y tin- papal authorities free of eimrvro. tatt commanded tt eonsid enible price, so eager was the inquiry for tlwin Five were Umglit for our party. including Dr. Tnimagi ---- u ~ aide to attend after full »w»t in the morning of: 3LX5Z before the time ap|»»int.-.i 8t. JVUH-V IVutr'n, where where we we waited waited ir. in the the front front papal guard, ail -stalwart, line looking ars. vyp ft vigry uamerous mule choir and a small army of guards had passed into tin? cathedral and taken their posi¬ tions. The guards drew upon either t side of the main entrance along the entire length of the chapel, af¬ ter winch the jg crowd wm id m itted thin a few filled with wded each _____________itthat wedged c . In many and indi¬ viduals were fairly inch were in utterly incapable of moving ascertained an any that the direction would As we walk ? ,Jtad the middle pojw up of Swiss aisle between the two rows guards, we endeavoTMJ to get as close to the soldiers as possible, and by persistent effort we succeeded in getting into the front row of the crushing crowd. The chapel, it appeared to tue, was about three hundred feet long, and the people were divided by intervening soldiers into two huge throngs, facing each oilier the entire length of the interior, each crowd fringed off in front by the brilliant uniforms of the soldiers. At 8, chamberlains, arch¬ ( papal officers and bishops. bishops and foreign repre- seniativi-H at the Vatican catae strag¬ gling in By this time, as you must sap- rnst concourse was literally a mass or perspiring humanity- Inquiring of a bystander, the hour being now consider¬ ably past that announced, whether the pSpg wavrewrmriy- no* pan e ewA- *w i ftli ip n his engagements, I was told that in earlier years, when iiis physical health was good, ho was a model of punctuality, always promptly on time, but this had been less and less the case with increas¬ ing years and bodily infirmities. Of these tiie recollection was a painful one, that on the public occasion preceding this in which lie hail |>articipated, hi* weakness was so great that lie had to bo carried in to the services and fainted while assisting in them. There was no telling this time when he would ar¬ rive. but it would be probably not much be'ore 4 o’clock. At half-past 8, the per¬ spiration was streaming down Dr. Tal- mage’s face, in full view of a great many people, for he was one of the tallest per¬ sons in the crowd. The circumstances of delay became more and more distress¬ ing. ami every now and then the guards permitted people wlto could not bear the suffocating pressure to pass out between their majestle ranks. The sturdy Ameri¬ can preacher held iiw ground without flinching, and beguiled the time by get¬ ting up a conversation with an officer of the Swiss troop3, who could converse fluently in the English language Im¬ mediately liehind our party was a band of students preparing for the ministry. They recognized Dr. Tairuage aud were much pleased to see him. A movement throughout the chapel, which everylKxly who bn* stood on Broadway waiting for a procession to pass can realize, meant that the pope was coming About twenty-five cardi¬ nals preceded him in the procession, of which lie was the central figure, as many following him as he walked be¬ tween the ranks of the soldiery. Every head bared a3 the kindly, sweet-faced old man. smiling pleasantly all the way, passed along, pronouncing benedictions as be went, bestowed impartially on the multitudes standing in compact masses to hfs fight and left, and on the favored nuns and secular magnates—of whom I believe l have not spoken before—, who occupied seats in what a profane pen might call the boxes He raised his hands, wafting paternal blessings in every direction, excepting when one and another of the faithful, in an ec- itacy of devotion, fell kneeling before him and fervently (assetl his hands or the robe he wore. The pop® eeemed Doth pleased arid touched at these ex¬ pressions of devout veneration. His fuse beamed as with a heavenly smile, and he appeared in Ids .fragility as one only waiting for the summons from on high knett and Having readied the altar he offered an inaudible prayer, which sectned todast a very tong lime. Indeed. I noticed {hat one of the cartliesls. who tras evi¬ dently under the impression tht hi-; holi m-ss li*. utufliee .' to I L-.*l vq tione. went lun i ao.l A|;ispet? l to him. The |x>j«- then a rtm\ about fifteea ml«- utes after lie had readied the altar. ai*l retraced hi* steps by flat way that he. had gone His return was acconqianied with the same manifestation* of popular ret aeration as had appeared on hi* way to the altar. One of 1 1 tree waa so Ina- preuairtoy touching and heautiful that it u stamped on my memory, never to ba fo.gotten A little girl dressed in whit* advanced and kissed the Hand or the holy impressed you most, doctor?" asked a lady jzsnx&ssgzs from Brooklyn. oftheservices.kesaid: “I am not enough of the ecclesiastic to understand all this ceremony concerning the beatification of a martyr. If. however, half of what saint tong before this. He was, as J understand it. a missionary in China, giving his life to the poor and destitute until he was imprisoned- Then every day be was taken from prison and cruelly beaten until the time came for his mar¬ tyrdom.” Loins Klopsch. j SCROFULA It is that Impurity in the blood, which, ac¬ cumulating in the glands of the neck, pro¬ duces unsightly lump* or swellings; which causes painful running sores on the arms, legs, or feet; which developes ulcers in the eyes, ears, or nose, often causing blindness or deafness; which Is the origin of pimples, can¬ cerous growths, or the many other manifesta¬ tions usually ascribed to ‘•humors;'’ which, fastening upon the lungs, causes consumption and death. Being the most ancient, It is the most general of all diseases or affections, for very few persons are entirely free from It, Ter CURED By taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which, by the remarkable cures it has accomplished, often when other medicines have failed, has proven Itself to be a potent and peculiar medicine for this disease. Borne of these cures are really wonderful. If you suffer from scrofula, be sure to tty Hood's Sarsaparilla.’ « My daughter Mary was afflicted with scrof¬ ulous sore neck from the time die was22months old till she became six years of age. Lumps formed in her neck, and one of them after jrowmg to the size of a pigeon’s egg, became a running sore for over tbreeyears. We gave her Hood’s Sarsaparilla, when the lump and all Indications of scrofula entirely dis¬ appeared, and now the seems to be a healthy * 1 B^tSeto*gef^y” ri?,,t * *LB. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Soldby all druggists. gl;3ixforfJ. Prepared mil j by C. I. HOOP * CO., ApotLoeariea, LeweU, Slaw. loo Doses One Dollar Ordinary’* Advertisements 1 - TV, Osoksu, Nov. 27 EUis istratior has oh applied the estate to me of 1c . of said county, deceased, Let all persons concern* the Court of Ordinary, the at o’clock a, m„ tw first ry next, why such letters should 13.00. not be granted. E. W. HAM) * 1 vRDINABY’S OFFICE—Spawmso E—Spawmno Cons Coon r ty, Gborgu. Nov. 27th, ! 7th. 1889.—Robert 1889.—Robert H. Word has applied to ms me for for letters letters of of ad¬ ad- ministration on the deceased- estate ite of of John John Q. Q. Word, Word, late of said connty, Let all persons concerned show cause fore the Court of Ordinary, At my office in Griffin, on the flret Monday in January epplication next, by fen o'clock ft. why such should, ([$3X0. not be granted E.W HAMMOND. GrdU arr I I \ RDINABV’S OFFICE—8P/tLm.\'o Corx- / ty, Gzobou. November 8d, 1889.—H,C. Burr, executor of Rhoda H. Doe, represents to the Court in his petition, duly filed afid en¬ tered on record, that he has hilly administer¬ ed Rhoda H Doe’s estate. any they <*n, why said executor should not be discharged of from dismission his administration, the first and receive letters on Monday in February. 1890. $6.15 E. W. HAMMOND. Ordinary. This is therefore to cite all persons eoneen ed, kindred-and creditors, to show cause, any they can, why said administrator sboul “g 1 .? - ‘Tttmo™. mw. sSrssB said administrator oes should iwharged can. why from his administration, re letters of dismission on the flret «|§Bptoe where solid g is will pay you to pnct L CLOT l IS, - session legally notified. ffi.OO. sold Also, at house the same and lot time in the and city plaee, of winj* Griffin one containing one-fourth of an acreof land, with Hall, south by Solomon street, and on the west by H. T. Brawner. levied on and sold as the property Court of Esther Wood, the to satisfy Wrist a Justice fl fa issued from 1 District G. M. of Spalding ( omit., in favor of Robert. T. Daniel vs, Esther Wood. levy made by V. J. little, L. V., and legally turned over to me. Tenant in possession notified. ffi.tK). also, at the same -time and place, will be sold one heavy drop rump horse high. mule, Levied about six years old, 15% hands Shackel¬ on ard eold as the property of A. B. ford to satisfy one mortgaged fa issued from Spalding Superior Court in favor of B. 3. Powell, Administrator of H. R. Chambers, $3. dec’d, vs. K. B. Shackelford. Also,at the same time and place, will he sold. 45 4-100 acres of land situated and lying 8paid- in ing8d the County, district Georgia, of originally said lanus Henry being now part of lots lots .No. No. 124 124 and and &1 lul in in said said district district and and conn conn ty, bounded on the east by the right of way of the Central railroad, on the south by lands of Mrs. W. W. Woodruff, on the west by W. P. Manley, and on the north by land of W. T. Freeman, said land being a strip feet off wide of the south side of said Jot* and 622 and 2185 feet long, said lands bring set apart to F, J, Freeman as life Levied part of the es¬ tate of Jane A, Freeman. F, on and eold as the property of J. Freeman to sat¬ isfy one ft f» issued from the County Court of Spalding County in favor of the Pendleton Guano Company vs. F. J. Freeman, Tenant in possession legally notified. $<). Also, at the same time and place, will be sold the following No. property, to-wit: 101% the west half of lot 41, containing acres «f land more or Jess, also fifty acres of laud off of the north end of lot No. 9, running the whole length of said lot, also lot No. 24 containing 202% the acres of half land, of more lot or less, and east No. 23. containing 10i% acres of land 2d district of orlgimUly if county, Georgia. Levied property of Joseph i Pulteti Pullen by virtue of %\ fi fas issued Irdm S; 5palding J County Court favor of Pendleton linano Guano Co. i vs. Joseph Pt ««, and other fl fas i in in ------ ray my re.s... hands. Proper „ pointed out by plaintiff’s attorne . Joseph Pullen, tenant in possession, legally 16.00. no¬ tified. will Also, at the same time and (dace, the follow¬ be eold the oneundividedeixthlntereet in ing lands to-wit:202% acres of land more or lees, being 85 aeres bonwfld off lotNo. 112 and balance off of Colemanestatewld lot No. 113, D. north P Elder, by lands by ot John affiflands east lands of J J Elder of the estate of J B. Elder, south bj lands of.) M Coleman, and west by lands of DP Elder, in the 4th dis¬ trict Georgia. of originally Levied Fayette bow sold SpaldingConn- the ty, on and as prop¬ erty of J. H. Mala-.er to satisfy two fl fas is¬ sued from the Connty Court of Spalding County in favor of W. B, Griffin vs. J. H. Ma- laier, aud other fi fas ia my hands. Mrs. Mary Henderson, tenant in possession, $6.00. legal¬ ly notified. B. 8. CONNELL. Sheriff ft. C. umwN's pyp6f ASUfiECdffEroq CrilLLS^FEVfa DUMB fiBUC JVND FOH SAl ISCSi £fj£t» PILES, Ah SALT RHEUM, PAs tetter, burns calos, sores. H 'SB wounds, m- FACT’S SOSES m 2S^f For Sale by N. B, Drewry. •* • gPP^ .rfi?:’. ' NOBBY HATS! WOOIJ And lust the sweetest Li fi®- Call for Charlie Wolcott, or Lonis Niles, who i % octfOdJtw - » of energy sad sil d lsas w resulting iSSST'-*""' ...... F ’ ’ • ■ -: r , - RHEUMA lea Advertisement*. ---1—- EPPS’S COCOA BREAKFAST. “By a thorough knowledge of the natura the jmliciotis u*e of such articles of diet that constitution may lie resist gradually tendency built up strong enough to subtle every maladies disease. Hundreds of are around ns ready to attack wherever with boiling water or mdk. Sold only m NEW s | MODEL me case i Price $f '-s ORGAN, s: i..sj, « ] $12.87 n the Mm ' p STYLE gM I l «S qnartet properl 3244. . MASON ' 1 & . V A \ hamlin]; PIANOS. 1 "y; ■ sura U1IS R3!R >IH»* Hretertl" nvlr w B if H amt Jr 0Fi J fentUdlj, hr j