Newspaper Page Text
fat RsprMmtatits, Oessty,
F. D. DISMTJKE.
, Gorman, of Talbot, is spoken
candidate against Gordon,
t he is a connection of Fixer
of the proceedings of
i Executive Committee
i wsek was innaccuratein
; tbe resolution offered by
providing for n second
■ where no candidate had a
(r, was adopted. It was de-
B a dose vote, and the cnn-
avlng the highest number of
i will be declared the nominee.
It has been a long time since we
»heard much about the Panama
The new* that the plant of one
dredging companies who are
engaged upon tbe work has been sold
emphasises the decad-
of that enterprise. Interested
financiers may be able to keep
or less of an agitation over
of being able to resume
i, but it does not appear
low that the scheme will ever
bom the disaster that has
it.
With both houses of Congress lle-
pubBcan by an ample margin, the
country was told last winter that a
n « «*■> new „.,i„ rule, heading i.nS off “dilatory*
motions and "minority obstruction,”
would insure the prompt dispatch of
legislature business and send the bills
of each House sailing through tbe
other to receive the approving signa¬
ture of a President in hanpony with
both branches of Congress. That
was the "iridescent dream.” The
gloomy reality in the ninth month
of a protracted eeeaion is an unpre¬
cedented record of delays and antag¬
onisms between a Republican House
and a Republican Congress. House
bills have been butchered in the
and Senate bills in the
The experiment in capital sharing
with employee that the Illinois Cen¬
tral Railroad is inaugurating will
be Watched with a great deni of in¬
terest. Tbe corporation invites its
employes tolflveet their savings in
the stock of the (Company, one share
or more at a time, according to their
means, at tbs market price. Shares
can be purchased on installments,
istsrest being allowed on nil money
paid in, and the purchaser may with-
and have his in¬
vestments paid back to him. It is
believed by tbe officers of the Com¬
pany that this plan, if generally ac¬
cepted by the men employed on the
road, will result in establishing a
community of intereets that will be
beneficial to all concerned. Theoret¬
ically the scheme is admirable and
well worthy of serious attention.
How It will work in practice rem&ivr
to be seen. Ifit should acoinplmli
even part of wbat ip hoped for, it
might offer a possible solution of
some of the troublea'that now exist
in tbe relations of railway employes
to tbe corporations for which tliey
toil.. T v-
OmImm Can't b* Cured . |
the by local diecaesd appRcatione, portion of a* the tliey ran There not is teaeh only
ear.
> cur* Dhafnea*. and that is by con-
I remedies. Deaftwwe ie caused h.v
A condition of the raucous lining
tachina Tube. When this tube gets
aiding sound or im-
i it ie en tirely closed
t unless the ittflam-
i aadthietnbe rector
bearing will Is-
onto! ten are
but an
is his fir
its blemishes, or if
hednre,think* thorn excritatKw. Ware
he not (shoe blinded by peternal feel*
ing he would never talk of the Repub¬
lican party being “benefited" by a
which will make it harder
for everybody to feed, houee and
doth* himaeif. That political or*
ganintkra which i* foolish enough
to ask for popular support on the
ground that it baa made people
poorer and life harder to Hve de-
eerveea thrashing. If the Republican
party were *o unwise as to do what
McKinley wishes and begin “pointing
with pride” to the fact that it has
harmed all but a selected few, the
sooner the pallbearersshould be pick¬
ed out the better.
"Tboii Sn*lt Mot Steal."
Naehrille American.
The New York Tribune says “the
Lodge bill is a Force bill jast as the
ten commandments are force hills.”
An amendment to the decalogue, as
it were, How long before the Repub¬
lican party will tear up thedecalegue
and write a new one, Just as it has
torn up tbe Constitution and written
a new one whenever it bns suited its
purpose to do so? Whenever it does
«od undertakes to substitute a
new decalogue for the old one, we
venture to prophrsy that the eighth
commandment will not be in it.
The National Deficit.
If aeon Telegraph.
The Republicans have a great deal
of aadacity, but they will,not wil¬
lingly go to the country on such a
record. Tbe party found the Treas¬
ury overflowing with money and the
revenue largely in excess of the needs
Of the Government. It cannot hope
for popular approval of a policy
which empties the Treasury, renders
the revenue inadequate and increases
taxation. Thar* must be at least a
show of reducing the taxes orincreas-
will ing trade, and the reciprocity dodge
probably be resorted to.
A Sorry Spectacle ft»r Freemen,
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The Ch 1 i for n la Democratic pin tfortn
calls it by its right name when it
epeakeof tbe “ahatnelees servility”
displayed by tbe^Republican majority
la yielding a ready obedience to
Reed's tyranical mandates. There
never before was so humiliating an
exhibition of the sacrifice of American
independence of thought and notion
as presented at this session of Con¬
gress by tbe abject Republicans of
the House.
Mts Reward May Come Later.
Louisville Times.
Even Reed and bis associates re¬
fused to Genera] Chalmers a seat in
Congress, though Chalmers had a
better case than some of the contes¬
tants who were seated to? make a
bigger Republican majority, andyet,
if tbe Force bill should pass, nodoubt
Chalmers would be made the Chief
Supervisor of Mississippi, and with
soldiers to sustain him he would be
dictator of that State.
The Public Will be Plucked Again.
St. Paul Glolie
Eastern importers have anticipat¬
ed the McKinley tariff by bringing
over unusual stocks of goods. When
the bill is through, all the advance
called for in its provisions will be
added, and tbe consumers will have
to pay. The competing home manu¬
facturers will go up also, and the
general goose be plucked ns usual.
Disgusted st the National Scandal.
Buffalo Courier.
__
By nature and habit Mr. Reed is
arbitrary and dictatorial. He has
been made drunk by power. For a
time tbe people were more or less
entertained by bis antics, but they
are fast becoming disgusted at tlie
spectacle.
Can't Choose Your Descendants.
Louisville Courier-Journal.
What would the first President
Harrison have thougbtof the narrow
little man in the White House who is
eupportiug the Force bill? Nogrand¬
pa can know what kind of a grand¬
child be is going to have.
A Word to the Wise. )
Buffalo Thnee. /
.Motto b>r the next Congress: “Drop
a nickel in the *l.»t and draw out a
pension.”
Tbe exhibition of the Warren Coun¬
ty Fair Association is nearly com¬
pleted.
De Witt's Little Enrl.v Riser*. Beet little
Ml mil lor l)yef»e|Miin. X. B. Drewry. SourStumm-h. Bad llreath.
()J
A movement is on foot to |»l«ce
marble heiidatonen, engraved with
the soldiers' names, on the graves at
Jonesboro national cemetery.
i»
this
month if i ng it bos
Jiad for many months. It is willed
"Inscription for a Memorial Bust of
Fielding,” and Mr. Lowell evidently
had in his mind when he wrote it the
claims which Mr. Howells, speaking
for himself and others, has set up
that by gradual evolution the mod¬
ern novel (for example, the works of
bimeelf and Mr. James) has become
far superior, a* a production of liter¬
ary art, to tbe novels of Fielding,
Smollett, Scott and Thackeray, or
even of George Eliot. Mr. Lowett
draws Fielding as the master of all
Fnglish novelists, which he was, und
he means that there shall be no mis¬
take about bis language. Here is
the epitaph:
H* looked on naked Nat ant unashamed,
And raw the Sphinx, now bestial, now di¬
vine,
In change and rechange: he nor prnlead nor
blamed,
But drew her a* he raw, with learlee* lit e.
Did he good service? God mnet Judge, not we;
Manly he waa, and generous and elneere;
English In all, o'l genius blithely free:
Who loves a Man may see hie image here.
Fielding was the inventor of the
modern novel. All the novelists since
then have imitated him, consciously
or unconsciously. The unconscious
ones have been those who never bad
read him, and therefore were imita¬
tors once or twice removed—that is,
they imitated those who imitated
Fielding consciously, having read*
marked, learned and inwurdly diges¬
ted him. Thackeray said that since
Fielding no novelist has dared to de¬
pict a man, meaning that modern
squeamishness had prevented other
novelists from speaking their minds—
himself, as he confesses, amoDg the
rest. Hince Thackeray’s timeGeorge
Eliot has dared to depict a woman;
but who has depicted a man ? Mr.
Lowell recognizes Fielding’suRequal-
ed genius as a painter of human na¬
ture, which is what ought to be, if
thero is any excuse for his existence.
Fielding’s mind was high and noble.
He had the coarseness ol his age, ns
Shakespeare had. But the person
who can read Fielding merely for the
coarseness, and not for the genius, is
to be pitied. Most men will rise from
the perusal of his writings lienefitted
and improved.
Tdebe in *ne medicine that will cure I ram*
ciiatfly. We rater to De Witt's Colic and
Cholera Core for nil Summer complaints. No
delay, no disappointment, no failure. We
•ell ft. N. B. Drewry.
The Finest on Earth.
The Cincinnati, Hamilton A Dayton ItR. 1*
the only line running Trafne, Pullman's Perfected
Safety Vestibule with Chair, Purlor,
Bleeping ami Dinning Col service between Cln-
nati, Indanapotts and Through Chicago, and ie the
Ol ly Line running Cincinnati, Keokuk Reclining and Spring- Chair
Cars between
fled, 111., and Bleeping Cat Cincinnati to
Mackinaw. 5a—— - -
And the Only DlRtCT LINE
between Cincinnati, Dayton, Lima, Toledo,
Detroit, the Lake Regions and Canada.
The road is one ol the oldest, in the State
ol Ohio and the only line entering Cincinnati
over twenty-five miles of double double track, tra and
from Its post record ran more than assure its
patrons speed, comfort and safety.
Tickets on rale everywhere, und sec that
they read C. H. A D., either in or out of Cin¬
cinnati, Jndhinpolis, or Toledo.
General E. O. MoCORMICK,
Passenger and Ticket Agent.
julylBdAwly.
Roy’s
Blood Purifier
Curts Bolls, Old Sores, Scrofulous Ulcers. Scrof¬
ulous Sores, Scrofulous Humor and all scrofulous
diseases. Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Cou-
tageous Blood Poison, Ulcerous Sores, diseases of
the Scalp. Salt Kheum, Blotches Pustules, Pimp¬
les Itch,TeUer.Rlnf-worauhScaUl Head Merec:a,
Rheum 'tisutj Constitutional Blood r. lsm. Jier-
curie: ■ . imatism, andalldlseaielkflliiiifff.u. Diseases,of the Bones Gen¬
eral 1, -v!itary Taint. Sold by rib i‘ In.pun
Blood - ; !, r ■, !,py
gists i 'a-.ala. Roy Remedy Co , V.S-.r..- “t.
iuig2tl-d*wty-urui.
X T THE BEST KHOWK REMED Y
JLJk «H,OrC. M Cnroa Gonorhart an.
G meet In ltatllsya, without 1‘ulu.
Prevent* Stricture. Contains ito
Sold ____________ by druggists, if druggists, lieware mce of Sub¬ »i.
stitutes. Anne Chem.Co.T,td..N.O. I*
For sole by E. R. Anthony, Griffin, Oa.
to
steep well, fail* In
it rettleoa, unnatural in its appetite ann
grinds inda its Its the th* testh, testh, positive ] you have strong for this Indicstions is ot
Worms; ormt; poet. cure _____ ___ B. A,
Fahnestock's Venalfkge. Ask you
h25*V** *° r *** I u HS8BT »«« may save roui
i itagrr.ej
BANK ^
OT F ICE 1 S desks
V-ND STORE FIXTURES
'theTERRY M F'G. CO.
NASHVILLE.
"JJ jy/whvi Iv.^ y,—i jw' -
■ Jl n
* suvnoo"** 50NVSOOHJ.
fwr'-ur j hTbr-' . ”^-7
S 03XNVM S±N3DV
ijcwg >y J s u - wp
dyspepsia
Makes the Hve* of many people miserable,
and often leads to self-destruction. Distress
after eating, sour stomach, alch headache,
heartburn, loss of appetite, a faint, “ all gone'
feeling, had taste, coated tongue, and irregu-
... larlty of tbe bowels, are
UI8tre«S name „f the more common
After symptoms. Dyspepsia does
not get well of Itself, It
bfflfng requires careful, persistent
attention, and a remedy like Hood’* Sarsa¬
parilla, which act* gently, yet surely and
efficiently. It tones the stomach and other
organs, iVguhttcs the digestion, creates a
good appetite, and by thus 8fck
overcoming tbe local syrnp- Headache
tom* removes the sympa¬
thetic effects of the disease, banishes the
headache, and refreshes the tired mind.
• I have been troubled with dyspepsia. I
bad but little appetite, and what I did eat
u __. * Mtreascd ir.e, or did mo
near* llttle good- j a an hour
burn after eating I would expe¬
rience a faintness, or tired, all-gone fccUus.
as though 1 had noteal«ia»y"- Il, I5» My tron "
b!e, I thl.sk, was aggravated by icy business,
which Is that of a painter, and from being
more or less shut up In a SOUf
room with fresh prdjit. laid oTOI'lu""
spring I fool; Hood's flarsa-
rUla—took three bottles. It did me an
Immense amount of good. It gave me an
appetite, and my food relished and salisfled
tho craving I bad previously experienced.’’
Ukohgb A. PAor,, \Vatcrtovrn, Mass.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Prepared
Sold toy all drttggLt*. gl; she for fi. only
toy C. L HOOD ds CO. Apothecaries, lowell, Masa
JOO D6&e« N On® Dollar
TO MACKINAC
Summer Tours.
Cslack SrrAutst. Low Rsves.
Pour Trips per Wests Between
DETROIT, MACKINAC ISLAND
Pstotkey, The Boo, Marquette, sad
lake Huron Peru.
Every Evening Between
DETROIT AND CLEVELAND
%ui*j Tripe durifle Jane, July, A«ga*t and
Svpteintwr Only.
Oun illustrated Pamphlets,
1 ... 1 U and Exourslon Tiokets will be furnished
by your Ticket Agent. or address
E. 0 WHITCOMB, a P. A., Orreorr, Mich.,
THE DETROIT t CLEVELAND STEAM NAV. CO
ft DESKS—200 New Styles.
180 sad Special Illustrate). Discounts, Book Oataloges free; for Poatage 1S80 bow 10c. ready
pages, COUNTERS.
TYLER BANK
A Fseqaellvd porfoet work for of Stylo, Art* ISO OoftlKy ksd Book Prleo. Frooi Illostrstrd In Colors
posoo. ions, Pootofe 15 els.
TYLER DESK 00„ ST. HO., 0.8 A.
Georgia Midland & Gulf RR
Turns Table, ft*. 32, Taking Effeet
June, 22, 1890.
NORTH BOUND—Daily.
Leave Columbus....f........................1:00 p. m
Arrive Griffin..................................8:50 «•
Leave Columbus...................... 5:10 “
Arrive Griffin.................................8:17 •
Leave Griffin..................................8.35
Arrive McDonough................... 9:15 “
SOUTH BOUND—Daily.
Leu vo McDonngli.........................7.40 a. m
ArriveGriffln...........................8:20 “
Lavee Griffin..................................8:85o.m.
Arrive Columhus.................... 11:80 •*
Lrave Griffin............................. 4:15 “
Arrive Columbas.............. 7:08 “
,N0RTH BOUND-Freiuht.
I^uve Columbus.........................7:50 a, m
Arrive Griffin............................2:05 p. m
Leave Griffin.........................2:80 “
Arrive McDonough................8:80 “
SOUTH BOUND—Freight.
Leave McDonough..................8-00 ;(5 a. m
ArriveGriffln.................... “
Ismve Griffin.....................10:80 “
Arrive Columhus...........................4:25 p. m
Q UR as - PILES,
SALT RHEUM,
TETTCR. BURNS
^SCALDS, SORER,
WOUNDS. IN¬
FANT'S SORES
Anb OHAFINQ,
SORE NIPPLES
AN INVALU-
FOR CATARRH
* •
m m m m
25® T *
IN DARKEST AFRICA
The complete st, >ry of Stanley's recent th rtlltng
adventures ami the disclosure of his itn]xirtunt
iiseeveries win ap|x-ar for the first time In the
work written by tilmself, entitled “/a
Darkest Africa." In two volumes, profusely
deceived Illustrated: price $3.75 per volume. Do not be
by any of the so-called "Stanley
books” now being offered as “genuine” and
“tUtbflUilO." To To nn no ono one n* of these has Stanley
contributed a line.
to AGENTS ■ seriptklu only. Applicants .'will_be We are sold now by ready sub-
experience. appoint canvassers. that should state
book, the ____________,____ Remember Stanley’* own
only one in which he has a personal
interest, will bear on tbe title page the imprrat of
Charles Scribner’s Sons
Apply t* JOHN R. NRLSON,
Chattanooga, Ten-
Sole Arc at for Tenneraee,
Alabama and Gear:
ji» o
* P- 8 __
- *’ «wtf ««t • Una
-
wM, *ertl, Ml imm V
Latent de la
-
Of THIS
STATE OF ZACATECAS, MEXICO.
A syndicate of capitalist* have secured th*
concession tor operating this
LOTTERY,
nml ho* extended Its business throughout the
United States and British America.
Below will be found a list of the prise* which
will be drawn on
Sept, 27th, 1890i
AT ZACATECAS, MEXICO
and continued monthly thereafter.
Q ATMFfr *- - #150,000.00.
100,000 Ticket* *1.00: at American *10.OOJHnlvra.alS.OO, Currency.
Tenths,
LIST OF PBIZE8:
lPmzi r.......SI 50,000 fs.........|150.000 50.000
1 Piuzs or........ 50,000 25,0001*.......... is.......... -J5.000
1 Prize or........ 80,000
8 Prizes or...... 10,000 are....... 10,000
2 Prizes or..... 5,000 2,000 are....... 10,000
6 Prizes or...... are....... 10,000
10 Prizes of ...... 1,000 500 are....... 10,000
20 Prizes or...... are....... 40,000
200 Prizes or...... 200 are-------
800 Prizes or...... 150 an....... 45.000
500 Prizes or...... 100 are....... 50,000
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
150 Prizes or......*150 100 are...,.........15,000 are..............
150 Prizes or...... 7,500
150 Prizes or...... 50 are..'............
999 Terminal Prises of *50 49,950
1*92 *524,950
Club nstesi « Tiokets for *50
«#■ Special Rate* arranged with Agent*.
AGENTS WANTED
In every town and city in the United States
and British America, bv
The payment of five Prises hundred is guaranteed thousand del¬ a
gpecii >ecial deposit of
lore 's (*500,000), ' with the State Government,
ani d approved by Jesus Arechiga, Governor.
Drawings Drawings under under the the personal personal supervision supervision of of
Lie. Herminio Arteaga, who is appointed by
the Government as Interventor
“I Certify that with the State Treasurer
all necessary guarantees are deposited, of this draw as¬
suring full payment of oil priies
ing. Herminio Arteaga, Interventor.
IM POBTANT.
Remittances must be either by New York
Draft, Express or Registered Letter, Ameri¬
can money. Collections can be made by Ex¬
press Companies or Banks. Ticket sent di¬
rect to management will be paid by drafts on
New York, Montreal, St. Paul, Chicago, San
Francisco or City of Mexico. For further in¬
formation address Manager,
JUAN PIED AD,
iZacatecas, Mexico.
Apartado 48. opr2fldAwtf
C, U. 8, TIE TABLE SO, 11
In effect June 1st, 1890.
No. 15 —Daily
LeaveUriffin.... ,...5:40 a. m.
ArriveAtlanta. ....7:45 *
No. 16 —Daily,
Leave Atlafita ....................... ..0:00 p.m.
Arrive Griffin....................... ... 8:00 •
No. 8 —Dail/.
Leave Macon..................................H:80 n. m
Arrive Griffin...................................5:28 Atlanta................................7:00
"
No. 11 —Daily.
Leave Macon............................... 7:90 a.m.
ArriveGriffln............................ 9:20
“ Atlanta...........................11:00
No. 1 —Daily.
Leave Macon.............. 1:40 p. m.
ArriveGriffln............................... 4:00
“ Atlanta.............................. 5:40
No. 13 —Daily.
Leave Macon ... ..5:55 p. ra.
Arrive Griffin- ... 8:12 “
Leave “ ................................. 10:10
Arrive Atlanta.....................
No. 2 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta 7:00 a. ra
Arrive Griffin... 8:82 "
" Macon................. 10:85
No. 14 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta..............................11:80 1:00 a. m
ArriveGriffln.............................. 1:25 p.m. ”
Leave '• ................................ 3-40
Arrive Mucon.....-..................
No. 12 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta.. ,..2:15 p. m.
Arrive Griffin.... ...4:00, “
Leave “ ..........................:........4:05
Arrive Macon........................... 0:15
!No. 4 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta.............................. 7 20 p.m.
ArriveGriffln.........................7...... 9:08
'• Macon..............................1120
No. 33 —Dah.y.
Leave Griffin............................... 9:25 a. m
Arrive Newnan.............................11:05 “
gall, Carrollton.........................12:20 p. m
No. 84 —Daily.
Leave Carrollton...........................4:20 p. m.
Arrive Newnan................................5:25
ArriveGriffln ...................................7:20 “
No. 81— Daily, except Swibay.
Leave Griffin................;................ 4:00 p. m.
Arrive Newnan............................. 6:25 •*
Arrive Carrollton...........................8:15 “
No. 82— Daily, Except Sunday.
Leave Carrollton.............................6:50 a.m.
Arrive Newnan................................ 8:45 “
ArriveGriffln................................11:00
For further information relative to tick
et rates;~ begt r o utes, schedule, REID, Ac., write to
or call on JN0. L. Griffin Agt., Ga.
E. T. CHARLTON, G. P. A..
Savannah, Ga.
vmi na aud ewtpvt wlUi omloferooid»
•mUwof opbolst«ria( jAmakm, **nd At* le. tUn.pt. Seadth*
^S^SS^US. Big O Is acknowledgoc*
The rally sate remedy for
XitowmrrlMeaorWMMa
I preserfbe it sod feel
safe In recommending it
to all sufferers.
A. J. 8TONKR, M. D,
TO WEAK MEN
Snaring sen,/a from the effects of ^ onthftUer rm-a ser^f
rolMble treatise (ssslsd) ra ran
____ FREE ot charge. A
particulars for bom* cure, aUqta Ttoe <
splendid medi cal wo rk; debilitated.^ raa dtoy every
man who la nerreoa and
Frof. F.C.FOWUB, Moodus, Conk
r zxm/SRmmi
SSSwSSSsl
IWMK,
mm* VERiVIIFUGE.
THE NEWS, ^■E SUN,
ESTABLISHED 1871. established W77
?
T HI B
Griffin News and San,
DAILY AND WEEKLY,
(CONSOLIDATED MAY 26, I860,)
m
OFFERS J--
More Value ★
^ To Ad
In . ......... ............. __ _ _____________._ x__\. __
piopoiDon to prices charged, thnn stny
other medium in tbe South.
■With the combined circulation of two old
and well established papers, it charges the
prices of only one.
It is published in one of the agricultural,
commercial, manufacturing and railroad
centers of the most progressive State in the
South, with a lasge and intelligent snr
rounding population and extra facilities
for distribution.
Being a first-class newspaper, fully up to
all demands of the times and the require,
menta of its constituency, it is read not only
by nearly every family in Spalding Count*
but In the eight surrounding counties, wW
a good general circulation in the State and
other States.
IT COVERS ITS WHOLE FffiU
and covers it completely.
Of the 257 newspapers and periodica'
published in the State <*f Georgift, the
NEWS AND SUN
ranks eminent among the two dozen that
stand at the head of the list. Its greatest
foreign patronage comes from the largest
and most experienced advertlfcrrs wnd the
shrewdest and best advertising agencies*
Prices low. Write for rates and
copies of Daily and Weekly to ‘
DOUGLAS GI
li