Newspaper Page Text
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Griffin. Georgia done 4. I8»l.
OOl’dLAS
DAILY, (la Advance) 1**r Annan..
WEEKLY, On* Year,..............
Advertising Matos
iSSStiSS&ZIXS Ten b. counted aa
•ne. Unas or law to
VtiBClAL NOTICES—10 cents under par this line
*jeh iewtiou. No insertion
forient than 00 cent*. AH insertion* for
ban one dollar most be made paid with for parties in wish
liberal rots* will be
»ff*o continue their advertisements
t r ates os (or tb s PaHtr.
81 ‘aper of Spalding Co.
ME NEWS AND SUN
Off&rs to its weekly subsuib-
ersfor 1891 ,
$4 for $1;
Offers to its daily subscribers
for 1891 ,
90 for S
■ring away every month anew and po|ta.
lar novel with each edition.)
Offers to its advertisers for
1801 ,
2 for 1
circulation, combining the circulation oi
Nswh (dully and weekly established estab- n
71) with that of the 188«), Suit (weekly the two hav
sbmt in consolidated 1877, daily in In 1889, and the rotes
g been those
advertising remaining the same as
Um Njtffi alone sample copies snd other in*
Send (or free
The broker ia noT always a reading
nan, but be is given to making mar¬
ginal notes.
The really good man who goes a
Ashing on Sunday will at least tell
the troth about bis catch as bis
tribute to tbs day. ^ —
Bathing will not be the fashion
among the 400 this year. This
to sea bathing. Tbs tub is still
rigueur, except when the water is cold
% and then It is de rigor.
Myra Clarke Gaines’ money, which
•hrfonght all ber long life to obtain,
and oter which her children bare
fought ever since her death, goes to
her grandchildren. 80 the courts
have just decided. Her estate
up $ 0 , 000 , 000 . -f jw,
cge TBBiwim wn mu umummr s a rr
at San Salvador, October 14,
It will head the great naval review in
New York barber and then come
the Great Lakes to Chicago,
Detroit in the spring of 1893.
ahoy there 1” “The Santa Marla-
Bound from Palos to
Bey. Marion Murdock, of Kalatna
mo, says this of Shakespeare:
path was made for him by his
decessors. No one man
equable the creation of his
tere/YfWch were as varied as life. All
poetry eesmed to be centred in
drama,'and surely the man Shakes¬
peare was revealed In his works.
can readily believe with all his
gists in the vast variety of his vir¬
tues. Through this poet we can truly
leant'the diviae mysteries of living
and can hear nature’s voice as
speaks to us.”
$100 Reward. $100.
The readers of the News and Sun will be
dreaded pleated to learn that there Is at least
disease that science has been able
able to cure in all itsstages, and that is Ca¬
tarrh. Hail’s Catarrh Cure is the only p osi-
tlve cure now known to the medical profes¬
sion. Catarrh bring a constitutional disease
Catarrh requires a constitutional internally, treatment. Hall’s
Cure is take acting di¬
rectly of the udou the Mood and mucous surlacee
system, thereby destroying the fouir
prietors sting hare nature In much doing its work. Thepro-
so faith in its curative
powers that they alter One Hundred Hollors
lor any cose that it (ails to cure. Send for
list of testimonials Address,
F. J.CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c. -----
"Blittnrs began life as a school
teacher.” “Reallvf What a pre¬
cocious been.” little baby he must have
I Use It myself.
Jno. E. Jones, Fort Valley, Ga.,
one of the leading druggists - there,
states that be commends Dr. Rig¬
gers’ Huckelberry Cordial bemuse he
uses it himself, and knows of what
value it ia for bowel troubles.
A good many eo-called “swells”
have nothing about them to merit
that title but their heads.
Kor.Ovcr Kilty Years.
Ail old and Well-Tried Remedy
—Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup
has been used for over fifty years by
millions of mothers for their children
while teething, with perfect success.
It soothes the child, softens the
colic, gurus, jtiiays all pain, cures wind
mid is the beet remedy for
Diarrhoea. Is pleasant to the taste.
Sold by Druggists in every part of
(lie world. Twenty five cents a bot¬
tle. Its value is incalculable. Be
sure mid ask for Mrs. Winslow’s
kind Soothing Syrup and teire no other
“le there anything brilliant about
Proear’s writings?” “Yes-Tie
store between the paragraphs.”
■ .......— • *
Bkehem's Pells act like rong c on
a weak stomach.
LAND.
Ow« Langdoo. i, in one ofhiafsyndi-
cat# letters, i that it will not
>ple can go to
Hr way of
rldch interests
who are
leda, yet who feel
to join in the summer rush.
Langdon, after several times
ing the unutterable tedium of
ocean voyage, is interested in
time before he con railroad it
Alaska, cross th j Behring strait on
bridge, and continue through Hltm
ria to St. Petersburg ond Berlin.
Kal!rpad rnen soy that it will
be long. American capitalists
already fully made up their
to connect Alaska with our
railroad systems by a trans
dian Hoe—a precedent
by the American connections of
Grand Trunk line. The
strait is easily bridged, oris narrow
enough to be a slight matter in
case. On the other side the Russian
Government is pushing ;its trans-Si¬
berian line with Considerable energy,
mainly, of course, for military pur¬
poses. So it should not be very
long iiefore traveled Yankees are
enabled to get into Europe by the
back door. The old way will always
be the cheapest ond quickest, how*
ever.
Even now there are considerable
advantages in taking the western
route. In the first place one sees a
little of America, in the second the
Pacific is always calm in summer,
and besides, Japan, China and
British India are very interesting
pditions of the earth to visit.
WANTS BUT LITTLE
HEBE BELOW.
| Bob Burdette is put down as a
morist, but in reality he is one
the greatest of the immortal
ophers, Here is a little
.to which most men,who are men,
fully argue:
A little while, my son,and the Sum¬
mer flitting will begin. I don’t
pose people leave the city in tne sum
mer because it is so much
healthful in the mountains, on
farms and down b;y the sea. Not
bit of it. If there is one thing
{don’t think about it is their
Any people who go from town to
country never take the slightest
of their health when they get
But tain they restraints. go to get The away love of from
our own liberty, we don’t care a
for human other breast. people’s—is We do rampant love in do
to
we please. Alas! that we should
also desire to have everybody else
as we please. I have suffered
many things from doing as
flgmrfl&lAnFvSf That *g8S5
wrong. is one reason why
have never joined any secret
ties; there is always some
laid upon the candidate; rules for
conduct and actions laid down
men whom he never knew,and
he would have
ho known them. I do like to do ns
please. I I like a whole seat in a
way car; never want two but I
want one. I like to sleop in a
eight feet long and six feet wide in
clear. It is four sizes too large
me, but then you see I can lie
wise, cat-e-cornered, strait,or
ed, as I prefer. I have some
tances—nay, seize they are
heads frequent opportunities to
them, over tell my plans,
and me-not what I
do; glad would I be indeed to
any one who could tell me what
do—but what not to do. And
body can tell any fellow what
to do. I love these friends
dearly. OTttimes do I wish
were in heaven, where the
cease from troubling, and then
would be at rest down here.
seemB to me, that when I go
heaven, if some saint <)f this sort
whom I have known
come to me and say, by virtue
“I prior residence and longer
wouldn’t hold my harp that way
if I were you, and I wouldn’t sing so
loud, and wouldn’t sing that
and I wouldn’t keep time with my
foot while I sang T ” it seems to
now, that I would get right up, walk
straight out, and come back to this
earth of ours. I can stand being
“bossed” down here—a life time
for very long, anyhow—but to start in
advice eternity and under somebody’s else
little direction, that would
a too much.
Woe t wOe I Unutterable Woe.
Why endure It daily, nightly, we bad well
by nigh chronic said, hourly. They do who are tortured
rheumatism. The remedy, bo
tanic, pure, sale and prompt is at hand.
Were the evidence In liehalf of Hostetter’t
Stomach Bitters collated, it would be found
to teem with well authenticated proofs that
the medicine is both a preventive and a rem¬
edy in this malady ol varying agonies and
ever present danger. To forestall it* chronic
stage is the dictate of prudence. Renounce
dangerous medication Far more effective,
more certain, more permanent in the benefl-
eient eoonscquences is the use ol the Bitters.
physicians Experience indorses, the recommendation of
sanction its use. Begin early,use
with persistence, and expect relief. Hostet
ter’s Stomach Bitt th relieves constipation,
billieusness, kidney ailments, dyspepsia and
malarial trouble.
You should never judge how well a
keep* man can keep a secret by the way he
one tbut is unfavorable to him
Mother.
If the little darling is
such sleepless nights slowly and
arainRge painfully wasting away , l>y
upon its system from
Huckelberry ^fleets of teething, give Dr.
Cordial and a cure
result.
He—Well, it is growing late, I iear
I must go. She—Oh, stay n
longer and see tbe sun rise
For Malaria, Liver Trou¬
ble* or Indigestion* use
BROWN’S IRON BITTERS
The action of the postmaster of El
Paso in refusing to allow thrift Paso
Time* to be transmitted through the
mail simply beeauwr it contained ne
news an associated pres* dispatch
giv ing a synopsis-ol tJie opinion of
the Supreme Court of Loofeionncom¬
pelling the Secretary of State to snb-
mit at the next election a constitu¬
tional amendment passed by tbe last
general at-sembly extending the
the Charter of the Louisiana State
Lottery tw< nty-five years, is deserv¬
ing of the severestcondemnation and
censure, not only because of the in¬
justice of 1 such an arbitrary pro
ceeding, but upon grounds of public
policy. The business manager of tbe
Times very properly had this post¬
master, who bears the name of Smith,
arrested for unlawfully detaining
mail matter, and he was boond over
to appear bfeore a commissioner for
trial, but tbe punishment whatever
it will bp, even if ever meted out af¬
ter many months of delay will never
fit the crime. Nothing short of ab¬
solute and immediate official decapi¬
tation, with whatever other punish¬
ment the law provides, would be
proper for such officious intermed¬
dling with the mails. Tf tbe United
States mail is to be subjected to such
scrutiny and exclusion by the post¬
master at El Paso, the postmasters
at the various cities, towns, villages,
hamlets and crossroads in theStat e
and through the United States, have
the same right, power and authority
and are of course at liberty to do
just as the postmaster at El Paso
hns done. If the postmaster can stop
the transmission of a newspaper be¬
cause it has in it the decision of a
court in regard to the Louisiana
lottery, he can also stop it because
it mentions tbe name oi the lottery
in it, and if he can do this he can
stop the Post, because it incidentally
mentions the Louisiana State Lot-
teryCompany in criticising its official
conduct. If he can do this, howevey
he can override the strongest bul¬
wark of the liberties of tbe people and
violate one of tbe plainist provisions
fn the constitution of the United
States, thereby completely throt¬
tling the press.
Upon grounds of public policy the
United States government should
not tolerate such tampering with the
mail. It throws open the doors to
fraud and, if permitted, will tend to
make the service inefficient and un¬
reliable. Why not detain a letter
suspected of containing a lottery
advertisement, and why not open it
to ascertain if the detention is legal ?
If its contents are legal why then of
course it might be permitted to con-
tinue on jieiaqwtev^^
publishers, however, is to allow a
postmaster to authorativelv detain
mail matter which in his opinion is
illegal. He ought not to be permit
ted to do this. If the publisher has
committed any wrong he can be held
responsible and be made to suffer the
penalty; but a postmaster may de¬
tain an entire edition of a newspaper,
entailing a heavy loss upon tbe pub¬
lisher, and yet when the matter
comes to a final trial the court may
decide that the papers are mailable.
The damage has thjn been done tbe
publisher, and there seems to be do
adequate remedy for him. Suppose
the politics of a newspaper are ob-
jectionable to the postmasters gen¬
erally, and throughout the State
they choose to hold a paper because
in their opinion it is not mailable, it
would thus put it within the power
the postal department to stop the
circulation of a newspaper and
bankrupt it, leaving the publisher
with a lot of suits against postmas¬
ters as assets. Such a state of
affairs leaves newspaper publishers
without adequate remedy, and to
allow such arbitrary conduct on the
part of officious postmasters is con
trary to the institutions of this gov¬
ernment, and a violation of the
legal maxim that each wrong lias its
adequate remedy.—Houston (Tex.)
Post, May 16.-----
"How delicious in Ihe winning
Of kiss al love’s beginning”—
pings potwible the poet ar.d his sentiment is true with
one exception. If either party
the catarrh, even love’s kits loses its sweet¬
ness. Dr. Sage’* Catarrh Ib-medy is a sure
cure for this repulsive and distressing af¬
fliction. By its mild, soothing, antiseptic,
and healing properties ft cures the worst
cases. JiSt'O reward offerred for an incura-
Mrs. Laura Hart, Beaufort, 8. C.. writes:
‘‘A loathsome form of blood poison was
killig me. My appetite was lost, my bones
ached, and parts of my flesh seemed as if it
would come off my bones. A friend brought
me a bottleof B. B. B. The sores bega*
bottles healing at once, and when I had taken tw*.
I surprised my friends at ray rapid
,ecevery.”
~TS?- -
ULCRRSf
CANCERS,
SCROFULA,
8ALT RHEUM,
RHEUMATISM,
BLOOD POISON.
these and every kindred disease arising
from Impure blood successfully treated by
that never-failing end beet of all tonics and
medicines,
SamSmSSS
Books on Blood and Skin
Disease* free.
Printed testimonial* sent on
application. Address
^ Swift Specific Co.,
ATLANTA, «A.
New
Stray ridicut (
The
I rub**,
Sores. Tete
Cttres, and f
v core* Pile* i
tedt< give* l 1 SSW*'W 3 KJ
m->. ; Prices
1 N. Harris A sm
The Ifcata fe a chased specimen of
naval architecture.
.A I
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.
When Baby was sick, we gave her Csstoria.
When she w*a a Child, she cried for Castor!*,
When the beoameHts* the clnng to Oastorfa,
9 bm Ashed Children, shegsve then Oastoria
Gov. Russell has made nn innou
vation in Massachusetts by appoint*
Ing two women to be factory in¬
spectors.
La Grippe Again.
During King’* the epidemic of La Grippe for Consump¬ last sea¬
son Dr. New Discovery
tion, coughs and Colds, proved to be who the wed beet
remedy. Reports from the many They not
it confirm this statement. were
only quickly relieved, but the disease left no
bad after results. We ask yon to give this
remedy a trial and ve guarantee that you
will be satisfied withthe results, or the pur¬
chase price will be rounded. It has no equal
m La Grippe, or an r Throat, Chest or Lung A
trouble. Trial bottles free at 3. N. Harris
Sons’ Drug Store. Large bottles, 50c. and
♦1.00 .
_
T. P. O’Connor is proud because
his new London weekly started in
with over $1,090 worth of adver*
tiring.
He Has a Popular Knack.
“ I write from tie heart to the heart,’
says JamesTV’hitcumb Riley. So do all hon
cst, earnest si makers. For instance, when
the attention of the public is called to a
subject, said—commendsequnlly the ring—the way in with which the a thing
is asser¬
tion When Dr. Westmoreland's Oalisaya
Toiflc is discussed, the messages sent out to
a dyspeptic, debilitated world are marked
by all tbe scincerity that acanowledged furnish.
value and appreciative and liver worth medicine can does A
better blood not
exist. It contains properties which thor¬
oughly purify the blood and imvigorate tfte
liver. It affords immunity against chills
and fevers in malarial districts, und is the
peer the of anti-periodki o! tionhle—nalaria! medicines. poisoning It goes at of
seat
J. the N. blood. Harris For A Son. sale by E. R. Anthony and
_
Duckets—I wonder Lambkin—It why it is gold
goes abroad? can
ford to.
A Sea Sick Passenger,
On the ocean,"cares very little about a
He is positively indifferent whether he
washed overboard cr not. But. set
by a wineglassful or two of
stomach Bitters, he feels renewed interest
his personal safety. This fine
neutralizes in brnekiih water—often compul¬
sorily detriment drank of health,—the on shipboard, pernicious to the impuri¬
ties of which give rise to disorders of
stomoch. liver and towels. To the mariner,
the tourist, the Western pioneer and miner,
the Bittras is invaluable as a means of
latent tection against mabria, when To its seeds
in air and rater. the effects
overwork, menial or manual, it is a
. reliable IieT antidote, and to the debilitated and
1 anil VtgoF.-’-' 1 * — 1 ---j;, - '- Ji - -
Whenever tw* people find it neces¬
sary to agrle or. their rights, there’s
going to be trqnble.
BEECUAMS PILLS
, I ONE ME1T EMLIM REMEDY.)
Cure BILIOUS and
25ctS. Vervotu Box. ZLLS.I
a
OF AIL PRXJGfQXBTa.
The flying-machine people have a
big advantage over the rest of us.
With them it ii never fly-time.
In the head
Is a eonstutionil
Disease, A and reqniteq
const xtional remedy
Like Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
Which purifies tile blood.
Makes the weakstrong,
Restores health.
Try it now.
It is always the jaded and
sinner who declares: “Now I’m go¬
ing to swear off/’
An Awful Sore Limb.
Flesh a Mass ot Disease.
Hopeless. Cured by the
Cuticura Remedies,
For three years I was almost crippled wit
an awful sore leg from my knee down to m
ankle: the skin waa entirely gone, and th
flesh was one mass of disease. Some physi
cians pronounced it incurable It had di
minished about one third the size of the oth
er, and 1 was in a hopeless condition.
trying all kinds of remedies, and spending
hundreds of dollars, from which I got no re¬
lief whatever, I was persuaded to try your
Cuticura Remedies with the following result:
After three oays I noticed a decided change
for the better, and at the end of two months
1 was completely cured. My flesh was puri¬
fied, tradthe bone (which had been exposed
for over a year) got sound. The flesh
gan to grow, and to-day and for nearly two
years, sound my leg in is as well as ever r it
was, every respect and not a sign
of disease to be seen. —
Rxv. 8. G. AHERN, Dubois, DodgeCo. Ga,
8ad Eczema Cured
The Cuticura Remedies wrought a wonder¬
ful cure on me. I was troubled greatly with
a severe case of Ecsema, and after receiving
little or no benefit from the treatment of
some of the leading specialists here, I pro¬
cured a set of them and before they were all
used the disease had left me. I recommend
the Cuticura Remedies as the best and surest
cure for all disease of the skin.
W. NELON CHAMBERLAYNE,
Concord, Vo.
Cuticura Resolvent
The new Blood and Skin Purifier, and Pur¬
est and best of Humor Remedies, cleanses
the blood of all impurities and poisonous
elements, and tljpg removes the cause,
Cctjccba, the great skin cure, and Cuticura
Soap, an exquisite Skin Purifier and Beauti-
Her, e'ear t he skin ol every trace of disease.
Hence the Cuticura Remedies cure every
disease and humor of the skin, scalp and
blood, with loss of hair, from pimples to
scrofula.
Bold everywhere Price Cuticura, 5f)v.
Soapt Potter i*5e , Resolvent, Chemical fl. Prepared by lh<
Boston. Drug and Corporation,
‘Send for “How to Cure Skin Diseaser,’
ials dft pages, 50 illustration, and 100 testimon¬
PI lllflskin M p LES, black heads, chapped and oily
,aired byCntieura Medicated Soap.
HOW MY BACK ACHES.
Back Ache, Kidney Pains and
weakness, soreness, lameness strains
and Pain relieved ia one minute by
the Cuticura Anti Pain Plaster. The
a ad rs tonly I ns t a n tv n cOas pti ttkiller plaster
. hi>* thus afflicted, will send
you a Holt and appliances (fo oa n trial.
Voltaic Belt . Marshall. Mich
An Attractive
_ ALMANAC ___
Combined POCKET
amt JKHMORAHDCM BOOK
advertising , “«raisrT bhowtsirox sffSsa“'‘ bitters
,
Now
Is the Time
lo purify your blood and fortify your system
against the debilitating effects of spring
weather. At no other season U the bitter
taste In the mouth more prominent, the breath
Sick so offensive, the drowsy dizziness
so frequent, or that extreme tired
feeling so prevalent Hood’s Sar¬
saparilla is just tiie medicine to
purify the blood, cure sick headache, bilious¬
ness and overcome that tired feeling.
”1 have been troubled a great deal with
headache, had no appetite, no strength, and
felt a3 mean as any, Headache
one could, and be
about my work.
Since taking Hood’s
Sarsaparilla I hare not had the headache, my
food has relished, and seemed to do me good,
and I have found myself growing stronger
every day.” M. A. Stein-man, 18. Grand
Avenue, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Dyspepsia
Few people have suffered more severely
from dyspepsia than Mr. E. A. McMahon, a
well known grocer of Staunton, Va. He says:
“ Before 18781 was In excellent health, weigh¬
ing over 200 pounds. In that year an ailment
developed into acute dyspepsia, and soon I
was reduced to 162 pounds, suffering burning
Intense sensations in the stomach,
palpitation of the heart,
nausea, and indigestion.
I could not sleep, lost all
heart in my work, had fits of melancholia, and
for days at a time I would have welcomed
death. I became morose, sullen and Irritable,
and for eight years life was a burden. 1 tried
many physicians and many remedies. One day
a workman employed by me suggested that
I take Suffenng a mm a Hood’s
£= »=
sla. I did so, and before taking the whole of
a bottle I began to feel like a new man. The
terrible pains to which I had been subjected,
ceased, tbe palpitation of the heart subsided,
my stomach became easier, nausea disap¬
peared, and my entire system began to
tone up. With returning 8 Years
strength came activity of
mind and body. Before
the fifth bottle was taken |
I had regained my former weight and natural
condition, l am today well and I ascribe It
to taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla.” •
N. B. H you decide to take Hood's Sarsa¬
parilla do not be induced to buy any other.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. ?1; six for g5. Prepared only
by 0.1. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Hass.
100 Doses One Dollar
It RIMlffS GOLDEN SPECIFIC
can be given in coffee, tea, or In articles of to
without the knowledge of patient if luecessai
it 1$ absolutely harmless and will effect a perr
nent and speedy cure, whether the oatlent I
moderate dri nker or an alcoholic Wrec*:. IT NI
ER FAILH. It operates so quietly and with si
certainty Venience, that the patient hia undergoes no In©
and soon complete reformation, ^
effected. 48 page book free. To be had of
HANGHAM A SONS, Druggis
Iri fl 1
R. F. STRICKUbS;
Loan Ears _ For _ Minute ** T ail
us your Return a we
Them with Interest!
On our bargain counter this week you will find
Blouse Waists, Ladies’ Swiss Balbringham vests,
Fashion Versts, Ladies black and colored Hose.
Collars, all shapes and styles at cc. each, Cuffs ioc. .
Children’s Percal Waists.
Men’s Gauze Shirts, Men’s Balbriggan Shirts,
Bleached and Uunbleached drawers, Men’s Half Hose,
kinds, Men’s, Boys’ and Children’s Windsor Ties.
The best-aH Linen bosom shirt in the world at 50 cents.
Men’s Collars and Cuffs, Ladies!, Gents’ and
Handerchiefs. Laces and Edgings.
R F, STRICKLAND, No 55 Hitt St
Hoes, Hoes, Hoes!
Wholesale and Retail.
COLLINS’ IMPROVED GUANO DISTRIBUTOR.
At Factory Prices.
Cotton Planters of all kinds. Rhodes a Specialty
I have the best line of Garden Tool bn the market. My
stock of Hardware is complete. Come to see me before
bvyinganJ I will save you money.
-W- 3 D. Davis
• i
What- is
GAS
ST
Gives healthy t
’.Vlthout narcotic i
Otmrigf!
iraOBB ° 5BOS
' rv.fc >& a tf-
. yi‘“
rad its fail
1 iesoc t«H he variou'
body. It isremxrkab!
eepfible th. j system is to the help to
be I'erired from at this season. R,*-
overcodlee that tired feeline, imparts
viprortrtiiA beaHh. It* thousands ol
friends as with one voice declare “It
Makes the Weak Strong.”
Lord Salisbury's ideas are always
captivates unpopular, but his style oi speaking
the crowd.
*
Ordinary’s Advertisements
/ \RD1NART’S OFFICE,BrALwnoCouiWY,
Manley, Georgia, administrator May 38, .1891. —T. G,
on estate of W. E.
George,deceased, make* application for leave
to eeu an undivided halt interest in a house
and lot in Griffin, bounded oh the north by
Slaton’s alley, east by an alley, south by
Solomon street and west by the John O.
George Let place, to pay debts of show the deoeased
all I persons P« concerned cause be-
fore the Court of Ordinary at my office on
the first nrst Monday Monday in in July, July, 1891, 1091, bv by ten ten
o'clock a. m., why such application should
not be ranted.
E. W- HAMMOND, Ordinary, B. C. Ga,
Notice to Debtors and Creditors
dersigned debtedness and make and settlement of such in¬
at once; all persons having
demands against said estate are notified to
present, their claims properly proven.
JOSEPH A. AYCOCK, Executor.
May 6w6. |8.70,
An Ordinance.
Be it ordained by the Mayor and Council
of the city of Griffin, That any person or
persons who shall place npon the track of the
Griffin street railroad any lock, stick,
boulder, or any other obstruction, said orshall in
any way interfere with track so to -im¬
pede cars; or shall while on the cars endeav¬
or to throw the same off the track in any
manner of by any device, shall I t found guilty
viction disorderly in conduct, city mid of the shall city upon con¬
the court of Griffin,
be fined not exceeding one hundred dollars,
or sentenced to work on the streets Dot ex¬
ceeding sixty days.
Ail Ordinance.
Be it ordninpd by the Mayor and Council
of ».----. by the authority city 1 of Grills, and it is hereby enacted
—-* of the - v - same, same, that from and
after the passage oi this this ord ordinance that it
shall be unlawful ffjfrany for any person p< to curse,
swear, use obscene or vulgar language, or
otherwise act in a disorderly manner, npon
any streetcar in the city. It shall afau be
deemed disorderly conduct for any person to
ride upon any such street, cars in the city
and refuse, upon demand, to pay the regular
and usual fare for his or her passage; a d
any person violating this ordinance shall,
upon conviction before the police or city
conrt, pay a fine of not more than one hun¬
dred dollars or be confined in the guard
house, or jail not more than thirty days, Or
work on the strets of said city not more
than thirty days. Any one or more of these
penalties may be etnposed by the court.
Be it further enacted thatthedrirer or con¬
ductor of such street ear is policeman, hereby declared
to be and created an extra with
out extra compensation from the city,
Ordinances.
* Mr r.
4. Taking
**Y10,189!
i-eave Columbus. -■■•....9:^2
Arrive ... Griffin... V
-
'Airiw&eDonOTgh' . r .„---
ArriveGrifflnU^'...... ............—7:20* „
boSth BOUND.'” S:4 °
LavcGri*. 5 ’
*Arri .........-® :ao »
,No.52,
Lea McDonough di* Svkbjt.
ve .......7-bOo.w
"* RF**........
* *’• S-# «L>*-s ’ • • • • •«. 8:15 “ i
dnmbus...... 9:50 “ j
............*:30n.||
’
% e. k lARiimm
Time Table No, 32, Taking r*^
Sunday, May 10, 1891.
WESTBOUND,
No. 83. PASstKOEB—D aily.
ArriveCareollton'.'.'.'.‘.'.'.'.'.'.V.''.'.'7.;.\;j2;^n No. 81. Mixed— J
Daily Ex. 8p»
Leave Griffin........................ ,. 1K
Arrive Carrollton..................... ' „
o
EAST BOUND......
No, 82. Mixtu—D aily Ex, So*.
No. 84. Passcxgicb— Daily ■'
aB &BBfr".’.......
MNIa 8.1 OF
ATLANTA DIVISION.
Time Table No. 32. Taking Effect
Sunday, May 10, 1891.
NORTH BOUND.
No. 8. Passkncbb—Daily.
Leave Maeon... .............. 2 . ... 8:15 ». a
(i roffin...................5:2fi 11
Arrive Atlanta.............................. 7;oo .<
No. 15. Accommodation—Dxii.i.
.......................5:20 a. w.
4rrive Atlanta .....(J:00 ■*
...............................8:00 “
No. 11. Parsbng eb—Dail ,.
U *7* ..................................6:50 h. b
No. 1. Passkngeb—Daily.
Gnffln................................3:55 .............................. L* 5 P*
..
Arrive Atlanta.......................... 5 ; J 5 »;
No. 18. PAsaxNOKB—D aily.
................................6:20 p.»
arrive
SOUTHBOUND.
-* No. 2. Pamekgrb— Daili
Arrive ig Macon......................... ft— 10*5 •'
....
No. 14. Passenger— Daily.
Ijiave Atlanta............ 11:30 a. ■
Arrive Macon......... .......................3:55 P
"
No. 12. Passenger—Daily.
Gnffln. ......................-......3:45 p.n
|Arrive Msoo...........................•.■...6.40 .„ ...................... 4-25 ••
-
No. 16. Accommodation—Daily
Le “ ve Atlanta.............'...............5:45 p. a
Arrive ‘ gnffln.................................. BarnesviUe...........................8:40 7:53 “
“
4. Passenger—Daily. >
ta.................... .........7*10 hrSt «] 2
—.8:47
,.11-05
i THE BEAUTIFUL
v
Jp
2 ;
|
CINCINNATI^—
rssfc*- Through Lomt fine* fc
Car
CH JF£ G P " 4 ^
,„,OETROI'
FFALO
^Ki^TNEW t£m ORLE
Y ^^0si\ ■
Ecellent Passengers via this line are afforded and M
view of Imokpat Mountal*
surrounding Iltetoriir ..scenery.
■wriadWhrfr
Tli 1 CinringgiL JUmDtpabfc Dayton BB, h
’ illy line ranmug Pullman’s Perfertsd
vis, with Chair, Pariorj
g Cbi Tagls service betwen Cir
— and i« «
'hrough Reclining Sprie* Chi.
iftti, Keokuk and
Bed, lit.,' an^ Bleeping Car Cincinnati
Mackinaw.
And tb# Outv DaytW^Ll^^Toledoffl OlBhCT LINE
troit, ClnehHiBttjJDwytw the OM^^e^oFdest
Th* ___j road is in the StsU
of Ohio and the onlv line mitering Cincisnai.
over twenty-five mites of double track, asf
from its post record can more than assure lti
erql Passenger and Ticket Agent.
g GendJtwl
J K. BTKWABT, ------------------- U. P. 1
Office over Drewry’s Drn* Ston I