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THE NEWS, Establhho" 1871.
'f »tLcv-«* 4W-fMR"*Mmn««A ,«^as>iB§-*rt 14# *Uirf tfVrMnv-r:
n,a ;•?•-• *. ,i ■ ■ -c ■ ■ ,.»-*»
8 V’,1,1, Be ll ,'. l,i m LOTS STILL TO BE HAD!
p*\ i
gs. &
m wm
are Gofa^
FAST I
i&ad
<;■ • • #.'•; •?; -: ■:■'& ‘ ; •" *- ’ t '• 1 •'•.*• «*a
; . THE . , . . .
opportunity to purchase a lot on the hithe rto
unheard of the Griffin - • . -i’Q «li’’ • . *■ ; t
of terras Real Estate and Invest¬
ment company has been embraced by many during the
past week, when they were first put on sale.
They will Build.
A large majority of the lots now sold have been pur
C-rased by those who announce their intentior of building
upon them. This will at once increase the value of their
pioperty, as well as that of lois in the Park.
A Great Demand.
THERE is now, and has been fof several years
past, a great demand for building lots i j Griffin. These are
the only desirable lots on the market, and it shoul4 be re-
mcmbered that their number is not unlimited.
BIG DR 1 Y®
IK LADIES’ ADD CHILDREN’S OXFORDS
Poi the next few days. Having bought a line of the above gobds at about
half price, Wilf offer them in the same way for a short time. Oar stock o
SHOES of every kind is complete. e. "We Jjfe suit you both in style and price
• :j. «T 1A Milii*' '
B0WD0IN & LITTLE,
5i Hill Street, - Sign of the Big Boot.
■. . . .............
WL
(Successor to B. P. Blanton.)
Merchant Miners, 14KJ
-Dealers in- b'-sa
iwit'i untir
LUMBER, SASH AND BLINDS.
doulding, Brackets A Ballister Work alwaya in stock
GRIFFIN - - - - - GEORGIA.
jj REMEMBER Plctur We can make you anything in the shape
Portraits « from the smallest Loetost PMoto up to
in Crayon, Oil or Water Colors. All work auar-
*nteed to please.
^ m. d mitchellaco, gm mm wm
k§? ricture frames made ^o |Order.
8:»J, U-au and get atW oui W prices, °'- kS in and wc will do your b.not, w
8-y keeping the price down we hold our trade, it is
U-seless to say that the prices are too high, for »*
K-emember that this is the place to have it dohe r Tor #e
tf-Rn the plumbing business.
dL' 1:.. . !
B-y being It in time you. avoid tl|e
H~ush. -ush. it has hag already already commenced. commend Again remember
U- nly pl ac e to have your
^
HENRY C. BFRR & BRO’B
,. > *.
IT <1A 1 * « " »A? M0RN11 JUNE 0. 1891.
t to Home mm
0 Beeh& |Investors !
0
1,1
h
rpTr ■ *'
tiukt» tmfafo
-5 oSUTSSi;- .
m : .n .•< 6 .» grn .• ^ i. f tte,.
This ■ g House for $200
* 1
' ’ 1 ' 1
_ ,
■ laOOK AT THESE TERMS.
tot goes for *200, Including the largalot on which Is the *16,000
8*00. fateaton improvements onfthem worth from $5o to $500. The
[made, 19 ________
>r consecntive
sold, ai
nten, tam.areMto._ J*S.» «.« S& SM ad-
.
Infor.
Of the General Assembly of the
Presbyterian Chureh
Does Not Extend to the Case
of Dr. Briggs.
The Position Bald fcj the Directors ol
the Union Theolugicol Seminary—Res¬
olutions Passed at the Last Meeting.
Dr. Briggs to Hold Hfs Chair by a
Large Majority. - ,
New Yorx, June 6 .—The directors of
a. tr™, huMUe
met and have declared their position on
tile question of the right of the general
•WAhWy'of -the Presbyterian church to
veto .... the transfer - of - — Professor - Charles — .
A. Briggs from the chair of Hebrew to
the chair «f Biblical B; theology, x>logy. Then#*
ter at tjijtft.....
____Resolved, aft*r Resolved, having That Th____ the board of directors, and after
taken legal advice change
their she no reason to
Views on the 1 tubject^of^t so ranter o f
m
it was that Dr. Briggs shi______
cease to be professor in the Union sem¬
inary. The effect that of j* the resolution
given above is it the judgment of
the directors that the veto was a usurpa¬
tion of powers never given, or intended
th pan, to the general aswa*My,
an it Since the vote was illegal, the
—Jftfent stands, and Dr." Briggs
wUl continue as professor during the
coming ymnT’ year, as ~ during the patt seven¬
tem
----------full hoard of twenty-
w—w The vote by which the resolution
was adopted was practically unanimous,
—•- ■ —1--— — 4 ---—~ition.
Ibly pounds, ema-
nea 115
•nd-ai the . time of hi* da death weighed
only thirty-eight
*______ asixwerini’wtvike, 460 miner*
Cable Coal company, at Washing, difficrS-
ume work, the
the returfi to work which
shsfl nun he is no miner
^gdh^to&vesUg.^ shaR be, discharged except for 1 *
FORTUNE KILLED
An Angry Ainu Follows Uj> Another to
Meet Hit Own Death.
Gicekksbusg, Ind., June 6.—On the
fsrtn of Orange Logan, six miles west
of town, Ills brother, George Logan,
killed William Fortune. Fortune had
been employed as a farm hand by Logan
for two years, but was recently dis¬
charged tor drunkenness. This greatly
angered him, and he has repeatedly
threatened to kill both Logan and the
man employed in his place. Before the
Log*?n their f&i^hce family were arid no. <temaruleiT»n Fortune came to
iater-
view.’ Ho'said that the affair must be
ended, and oife of the t wo would die be¬
fore night. After suggested be left, Mrs. Logan,
fearing band trouble, their to her'hus¬
™“" that —•» feAJ they «*aw go ***** over to brother s.
Orange Logan, to spend the day, and
Acting upon this advice, they drove
to hia brother**, a mile distant. Hia
^ drove entered to the barn the to residence, put up his while horse. he
Just as he was preparing to leave the
buggy "Now, Fortune will appeared, this. saying: *
we end
Fortune pulled a dirk and drew back
his hand to plunge it into his enemy.
Logan, in an instant, pulled his pistol
and fired four shots in rapid succession.
The second shot entered Fortune’s ab¬
domen, the third and shot passed through
the left tom through the heart,
lodging tgeast bone. just under The the shot skin on the
last entered his
back and penetrated the right lug.
Fortune ran a distance of eighteen
feet into the barn and fell lifelesa just at
him and fracturing his skull.
Fortune was a man of bad repute,
having tiary. served He a term in the ^wniten-
came here two yearn ago to
implicated escape the clutches of the law, being
county,, in a cutting affray in Boone
Loiran is a nmminent SrSLiS farmer son of
------married * and about 33
years of age. His family is one of the
wealthiest and most most aristocratic in the
■ ■ w -fiij
Loam was arrested and placed under
hearing. a $10,000 bond to await a preliminary
- ' * a*i mm ~ - ] «s ’ %
CoujEJusrGa., June 8.—mooni uusx,
the northern portion of the city was
swept by a cyclone, which proved quite
destructive. Several chimneys were
blown down, fences laid low and a large
number of trees uprooted and shorn of
their limbs. It did not last over 5 min-
utes.aad was confined entirely to a few
blocks. ooompanled A heavy rain, with hail, fol-
W ed.^a by thunder and
TRm First (toorfls Melons Shipped.
Thomas viLLE, Ga., June 6.—The first
car of Georgia melons was shipped from
Md»l, this county. They were shipped
by J. H. Sapp and J. M. Pelcher, and
..... Itup
soA
and > Kansas
City,
V?
fot '
m mm
A "Kpw York I4ab.v Without,-Jiyes
f« tin- Buckets.
A Case Almost Unique In Med¬
ical Annals.
.
Only Tw o .Snwkru Mellow. M lu-rw Mw>
Ky«w Klmnw lie-Tl.e Pamily rhy-
.Icliui Prooimm'c* tu« l’»«e «, Mo*t
Ueuiiuluiblo ()«,—Mill Never See the
Lti lit. T
New York, June 7.—A remarkable
case almost unique in imdical annals
will be brought before the Society of
the Eye and Eeiu Infirmary. t i
It is that of a child born without eyes.
The CBSH. is exciting great interest
amopg physicians and scientists,
In many thousands of diseases of the
eye treated in this city, no surgeon re-
m CTnbera meefang wi th such a case.
Even hooka record hut few instances
where eyes ure absent nt birth.
The'child Is the sun k 31r. arid Mrs.
Adolph Z«ok«r, Wl.ni b oiit. tivo weeks
ago, the nurse and father were aston¬
ished at the discovery that the infant
was sightless.
Where the eyes should be there were
only two sunken hollows. Hia eyelids
were closed as tightly as hoards glued
together. In all other respects the
child was perfectly developed.
In a few days a line began to appear
across the hollows as if the lids were
beginning ue8 7rr 1D ® to vo part. This this line une ex expanded pan de d
”* ““ *•
with the fingers.
Bttt when they were parted only sight¬
, less sockets were disclosed, in the
of which appeared tiny center
parently a bine spot, ap¬
pupil a substitute of nature for a
The or ordinary size.
parents of the child are physical-
**- - »isaEsas 5
an
Ear gen
E '
eyeand ear f
thoowidWonld 1
l* tka toj^R Baby. 1
^ I
i
THE SUH,
I jm;
(«fj S^iL
'■'M
Most DeslraL
life,
WHEN the improvements iiow comm
jPARK contemplated by thecbmpany are completed , EYpfSoN „
will be by far the most attractive part of Qriffin.
tThesp improvements are guaranteed, and will be made be¬
fore the lots are paid for. 1 ' - - £ f>
it-,-.. Worth the Money,
_J.*■» i i >“ - 4 * * * • *** -*f l
,/ ‘ BEAR in’ tliat
j that is worth mind 1 fullf there is not a lot in the Park
not the ; price asked for it, while
y " eWOrtk sever *^ t * mes price. .-Thi, is outside
the oppoitumty to get the munificent mansion iere
pictured. ' V T IHwigtvtrt.j!
■ h
In dU f &**/*$ ^
Your Own Han
THE disposition and distrribution of
___
will be absolutely .in the hands of tlie purchasers,
the company will have nothing to do with it.
arrangement could be made, suggest it a
done., .. H ' ■ t>f
. ...... ,
By"BUY a lot while you have the chancie! *
eJS&hfe
' '' ^si
Higher of an in Leavening Power.~U. S. fle/t Report, Aug. i 7 ,1889.
l i
..
—- —-
AB 50 UTTELY PURE 1
^ - for Gate In Crtffin By ». M. aiakglv.
which were probably the smallest
‘ESS* biih °o£T&
ih. *1, uk
at birth waa easily placed in a quart
slj itjyjaa
ten and one half inches in circumference
DROWNED IN THE SURF.
CUrk Was the of •
Ufs Savins to nttsn. ,
Emk, Pa., June 5.-Cap*. William
cyu-k, superintendent of the life-saving
statiod of this port, was drowned ip ths
surf the other morning. The propeller
Badger baaA,«d State had been driven crewWLt on the
Capt. *y Clark’s to
hfl * «^e»T<wing to
crew wave clambered and failed onto to right Its its& Tka
another wave struck the bottom, but
tarled Um about thirty feet*feua captain
th*
him any assistance. The unturned
was washed ashore with «w» ran
clinging to her._
S gt-Si TheswrtiiatiSl^S gffia
road committee.
venttoo will be held at Coaay i«i-»d
Mias Birdie Lamnore was tendered!
diploma, eept tto on second acwmnt hotmr of her ribbon, refuLS’to^
but her
the ment. Her-,:,___________ house,
«m of applause. was the signal
DEFUNCT B
That Wa» Inaugurated With a
Yiew to Failing,
r • ' ' ./Y’‘
And Commenced Business
Without a Dollar.
The Slick Record of the Commercial
Itonk of Outhrle, OkUhoma TN. R
"
' * ' " ■ ‘ ‘
om XlepMlW Cm
Guthrik, a T., June fl.-Reaeiyer K,
D. Mix, ai the Commercial hank, which
failed some months ago, has handed in
hia report to the court.
It shows that the bank, from its in¬
ception, was run with a view to take in
»U it could in deport** and then fail.
The defunct tank started without a
dollar. It opened on the Sid of April,
1889. On the S8d $10,000 in silver was
received from the Newton National, of
Newton, Kan., by express, and tbosame
day $12,000 was sent beck to to the
Newton National. The deposits for the
first three months averaged $18,000 a
day.
There is no record that . y of the or-
ganizers of the in titn .. or anybody
else aver put in 1 ; * ’lai. . «pt the de¬
positors. The he >»*,:.( urn 1 .(building
was built on dejs .it-or^* m Presi¬
dent J. M. Rogiiiile credJei himself
wittrhaTing another ae^^ad $3 ...... >,000, while *~
had credit party, of named- $48,000. T.
a
in a bad condition.
Pbobia, Ills., June 6.—The
electrical -ilux ins during the
fsSSS™-® days have done much damage. The
A. ^ from lft«
say opto
Wul ‘ 50a