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tliS EFFECTUAL?
WT A WOjNDERKQl. MEDICINE. *9m
For BILIOUS & NERVOUS DISORDERS S A U £ H
Sick Headache, Weak Stomach, Impaired
ACflM Digestion, ItKe HMICDn Ohnetipatkm^ the Disordered • Liver, etc.,
vital* organs, strengthening the
musouUr system, and arousing with the rosebud of health
The Whole Physical Energy of the Homan Frame, s (
Taken us dfrecipd tbtse famous pit/a wiH prove marvellous, V
Htsrvtirerithuli h enfstble4 br-vny ^of -ihe.above, or kindred (
diseases. SOLD BY ALL -DRUGGISTS,
JPrto©, M cent* per Bos
SOW; bight” now.
I« the time to boy Real Estate in and near
Griffin—the garden spot of the world—before
it gets any higher, _ whic aich it is certain to do.
1 hare some of the most -deeireoWe subur¬
ban residences and farms In and around
riffl*. toil They can NOW. be bought low and on
The MaJuryhOtase term*—right
and lofi and 2? acres of
,and. Sixth street runs right through it. 20
Albedta fine lpfcs peaches, can be cut oB.it, with tins vineyard, plums
pears and wud goose
on em:h lot already bearing,
Tbs Mills property. 130 acres land. Fine
7-rosin bouse, barn, stable.and natural
grove. Thd
Roberts place. 86 acres land, 6-room
house, kinds large fruit barn the and ptmto. packing 'Will house divided. and oil
ot on be
THe Lyons place. 100 acres. 7-room
house, barns, etc. A convenient place, in
five minutes’ walk of Hill St. \
The Hill plnce and 4 acres. Beautiful
grove. works also. Large home water works and gas
The Lockhart plans—260 acres—cun be
•jugit at half its raise. *
The Woodruff place—267 acres—on the C
1. R Will be divided np in tract* it desired
Various other lands and houses. .Vow (
Jie time to strike. while the iron is hot.
G. A. CUNNINGHAM-
If If Ash my agent* t*r W.I,. Douglas Sb.e.
not n- for snlo In roar plane n«k your
Idftl •inter 1 to and send far catalogue, youT secure the
TUeu eucy, get them for
LTTAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.
FOR
m
WHY 13 THE
W. L. DOUGLAS
c - hurtt* --------«aif, mad' or thread
tad easy, ana because tee make more shoes
Vade .
man any other manufacturer, It equals
Mm /.red shoes costing from $4.00 mm' to $5.00.
(4t^t/bih!^omf<!rtVw'anaf)^h^'. The bait
M ou ‘-
LOj5w^°lice FOi rnmX «ad I&«re*rrfew»ftH tetwremriiorsAll Shoo; Farmers, them; * Railr< fine calf,
1 M wear
learn <*m, smooth^InHide. heavy three soiet, exten-
pair Will ve»r a year.
■ fln% ««♦ ha better ihoa*arer offered at
vr&nR Him pMcej for one trial will convince those
yho a shoe comfort and service.
W*00 Workingman's shoes
atroag and durable. Those who
p other make,
cliool shoes are
t-rywher©; theysell
Tffi _ shoe for
and durable.
Price Mstarai ,ped __ the bottom -----.—i* of each shoe. namersmd
on
W. I*. DOUGLAS. Brockton. Mass.
SCHEUERMAN & WHITE.
Griffin, Georgia.
dew Advertisements.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
mm aud beftattfiw the hair.
I oSea a luxuriant growth.
W Falls to Bettor© Gray
scalp to lt« Toothful Color.
I diseases Sc hair failing.
SOc, and $ LOU st Druggists
_
0 v o U C O M 3 U M F=T i V E
The only mra cure for Coma
" tWKHX : ft ------ CO.. N. Y.
G R ATEFU L-CO MTORTING.
EPPS’S GOG Oft,
BREAKFAST.
law. “By a thorough knowledge ol the natural
which govern the O]
a(lelieatdyflavored Bppe hn* preyftied our breakfast tables with
beverage whist t may nave
Us many any doctor's doctor', bill*. bills. It It is is by by the the judicious iudicidu
use of such articles ol diet thttt a constitu¬
tion may be gradually built np nnlfl strong
enough to resist every tenden cy to disease.
Hundreds of subtile maladies, nr j fids ting,
around us ready to attack wherever there
Isa weak point. point. We We may mav escape escape many many a a
fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified
with pure blood and a properly nourished
frame,’’- '—Civil Service Reform. Made Made simply f
with boiling-water or milk. Sold only in half-
pound EPPS 4 ties. VO., byGrocers, Homeopathic labeled thus: JAMES
Chemists,
London, England._
Mention the .Yaws aod Hus wn«h you write.
THE NEW WEBSTER
nntprauama-Eimmmv.
WEBSTEffS
LVTERNAriCNAL
DICTIONARY,
Critical examination invited. Get the Bad
Bold by ft all Bookseller*. Ulustr.tsd pamphlet fn
O. c. MERRTAM A CO., Publishers,
Caution!—'There Springfield, Mao., If. 8. A,
lovaral v»uww>— PhAtn a ut-io have oav© recently recwH? been wen issued lssuea
r«r\rlnta 4ha 10 At edUlAn of
tlnee superannuated. These books are given
Webeter's Unabridged,” *The
n^etH^, ” WabeteFi ES?yolopedlo DioUonw
isaHM S8RSMHP. aa
5SSS& i
MdNGHA Mft BONg, DrngjrkrtWj
Griffln, Ga
TWELVE REASONS WHY
Dr. King’s Royal tJcrmetuer Hus Be¬
come the Most*P6pular and Reliable
Household Remedy.
1. It is the best Blood Purifier.
2 It is the best Nerve Tonic and General
lnvigorator. 8. It
is a positive cure for Stomach Trou¬
bles, such as Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sick-
Headache, .4-, It etc.,
cures Bowel Diseases in old oryoung
whether of long or short dnration..
5. For Catarrh and Rheumatism it is
more dy nearly the a Specific than any other reme¬
on market.
6. For Female Diseases it is all that can
be desired—pleasant ,safe and unfailing.
7. For Children it is the great King of
all remedies. They all like it and it builds
them up faster than anything known.
8. It cannot 'be surpassed as a cure for
Diseases of the kidneys and Bladder.
9. It is the great conqueror of Maluria.
Cufcs promptly Swamp Fever, Chagres Fev¬
er, Jaundice and ull malarial troubles.
10. For Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Sores,
Sprains, Bites of insects, etc., it is a quick
and unfailing remedy, nsed externally.
There is nothing better.
It. It will break fever in less time than
Quinine and Ahtipyrine, and leave none of
thair unpleasant aad hurtful effects, such as
nausea, uervousuess and prostration.
12. It is as pleant to take as Lemonade,
Hermless always, and CURES WHEN ALL
ELSE FAILS.
These statements by the unanswerable
argument of FACTS. Germetuer presents
an array of; testimonials absolutely with¬
out a parallel in the history of medicine,
either in character or number.
Price ft.00 p"r bottle; Six Bottles f 5.00.
Sold by all reliable druggists.
Kino's Rovm.Gebmetuer Co, 14 N.ISroud
Street, Atlanta, Ga., Manufacturers.
Health is Wealth!
Dr. E. C. West’s Nerve and Brain Trea.
ment, Dizziness, a guaranteed Convulsions, specific for Hysteria,
Neuralgia, Headache Nervous Fits, Nervous
tration, caused by the ot pros¬
cohol use al¬
tal or tobacco, Wakefullness, Men¬
Depression, Softening of -the Brain,
resulting decay in insanity and tending to misery,
and death, Prematura Old Age, Bar¬
renness, Loss of Power in either sex. Invol¬
untary Losssb and Spermatorhma, canned by
overexertion ot the Drain,self-abnse or over-
indulgence. Each box contains one month's
treatment, f 1.00 a box, or six boxes for
$•>.00, price. sent by mail prepaid on receipt of
WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES
to cure any case. With each order received
by us for six boxes, accompanied with $5,00
we will sed the purchaser our written guar¬
antee to refund the money if the treatment
does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued
only by Or. E. R. Anthony, Druggist, Sole
Agent, 2-2Hd& 41 Hill strict, Griffln, Ga.
‘
vnrm.
$500 Reward !
WE will pay the above reward for any case of L’ret
Complaint, Dyspepsia, 8ick Headache, Indigestion, Con*
stlp&tion or Costiveness we cannot euro with West’s
Vegetable Liver Pills, wben the directions are strictly
complied with. They are purely Vegetable, and never
tail to give satisfaction. Surar Coated. Large boxes,
containing 80 Pills, 28 cents. Beware of counterfeits
and imitations. The genuine manufactured only by
THE JOHH C. WEST COMPLY, CHICAGO, ILL.
Sold by Dr. E. R. Anthony, Durggist, Grif
fin. Ga. 2nrmly.
aSuRe(ure Fever
c ?(hills s-
1)UMR AGUE AND
'MALARIA
LIPPMNOTtt., Proprietor*,
i DrujsUtl, Uppswtn’i Bl*ck, SAVANNAH, GA.
IUV_N©
SPECIAL
SUMMER SALE
IFINK 500
I Down ORGANS at Way
|iK».V Prices—to close.
Termi-43 to *5 nuiDtiUy
—or glO Cosh, balance in
Fait. No Interest
IGREat bargains
■Must IWrltefor be sold. Can't hold.
Itaranin Sheet.
1 LOUDEN « BATES,
SAVANNAH, GA,
BE A MAN
AFOUO WA$A PERFECT MAN.
8ft 2S2LMS" ftuziou w«ro the »Mi«nu for euiwan i» men wmh that
pony boy* »t birth were put to de*th.
YOUNG MEN OR OLD,
frost JtXXVOM 0X-
sas ssss
r /r- —s', lug *11 DIscsmi, Vitkiom *nd
- .. -T—---- 1 —v ’ AfflleUOB.ofKen. from SO State* and Testimonials Territories
—
gML assmaseBRs T « eneutviir assTOBko
«
BPlUM Land rl ----1 Whimsy *in. at Book hum*with- Bibik of Mr
* ’ Atlanta.tia. *- Office my - WVUeball at
x
HO Ylf W&NT to reach steady |I " v v
^ -
" and liberal purchasers in
this part of the Country?
UUE HAVE advertising space for
oolo sale at r»t reasonable, rooonnohlo not nn* "cheap.” “r rates.
EXTRAORDINARILY GRATEFUL
A Dads Offers • Bravo -Bswwr a Ciga¬
rette (or Baviag HU Life.
Siam! Baagl
These were the ooisee I heard the
other day as I stood alone on the plat¬
form of the Union depot, •watching one
of the Central Hudson flyers come in.
The sounds attracted my attention
the more because a dude with his col¬
lar half tom oft and a big grip in his
hand landed almost beside me, and
then went whirling along the platform,
while his ease went rolling in the op¬
posite direction.
At first I thought the poor chappie
had been struck by the train, but the
attitude of a stalwart yardmaster just
this side of the thundering locomotive
explained the situation. 'The dude bad
been thrown bodily off, the track.
For a moment the human missile
seemed bewildered. Then he hmto ly
exclaimed- “Awl” and gathered himself
up and sought his grip and stick
He approached the railroad employe
with a countenance filled with mingled
wonder and gratitude.
“you “Aw, wailwoad man,” he drawled,
ah a wondah. ”
“Yep,” replied his rescuer.
“Aw, ef it hawdrdt been foh yaw I’d
been a mangled corpse."
“Yep."
“Yaw, aw, pweeipitated me from the
pawth of a wushing locomotive, and
I’m, aw, gweatiy obliged to yaw.”
“Yep”
“Yaw handled me wathfer wufl, but
then the impulse of the mawment, I
sdppows, made you do it*
“Yep."
“Have a cigawette?”
“Nope."
The dude rearranged his apparel and
disappeared in the parlor car.
Had it not been for the courage and
coolness of the yardmaster the dude
would have been a subject for a coro¬
ner’s inquest.
He was standing directly between the
rails looking at the locomotive, as if he
were trying to make out what it really
was.
The yardmaster had thrown him
completely from the track just in time,
for the locomotive almost grazed them
both as it whizzed by.
Such an occurrence happens every
day in the week. People will persist in
staying about the yard and getting
mixed up just at the wrong time.
Sometimes it is an innocent looking
countryman, sometimes a woman who
is bound to do just as she wishes in
spite of all the railroads on earth, and
sometimes it is the very clever man who
thinks he knows it all,—Albany Argus.
A Boy Almost Swallowed by a Python,
At Judan, a village six miles from
Muka, a man and his son, aged from
ten to twBlva yfiars, were sleeping in
their house inside a mosquito curtain.
They were on the floor near the walk
In the middle of the night the father
was awakened by his son calling out.
The lamp was out, and the father
passed his hand over his son, but found
nothing amiss, so he turned over and
went to sleep again, thinking the boy
was dreaming.
Shortly afterward the boy again
called out, saying that a crocodile was
taking him. This time the father,
thoroughly aroused, felt again, and
found that a snake had closed his jaws
on the boy’s head. He then pried open
the reptile’s mouth and released the
head of his son, bat the beast drew the
whole of his body into the bouse and
encircled the body of the father.
He was rescued by the neighbors,
who were attracted by the cries for
help of the terrified couple. The snake,
when killed, was found to be about fif¬
teen feet long. The head and forehead
of thrboyisre encircled with punctured
wounds produced by. the python’s teeth.
—Sarawak (Borneo) News.
After Hundreds of Tears.
In the year 1400, or thereabouts,
workmen were employed to put choir
stalls in Lincoln cathedral, and were
told in the early English vernacular of
the day to hurry the job up, as several
big functions were soon to come off.
But lots of things happened; mdney
got to be exceedingly scarce, and the
men weren’t paid very promptly. Al-
though there were no Knights of Labor
then, human nature was pretty much
same as it is now, and the men
knocked off, remarking, “No pay, no
work.”
The clergy were so busy running the
county political machine that they
didn’t have time to arrange the mat¬
ter, and the finishing of the stalls was
postponed from time to time until the
present day. At last, however, dean
chapter think they see their way to
this Fifteenth century job,
are calling for estimates from wood
England is a little slow, but
does get there after a few centuries.
—St. Louis Globe-Demoerat.
The Wicked Bosom Pin.
As every one knows, in the early days
Methodism a considerable degree of
was maintained in regard to
wearing of jewelry or costly attire.
eminent divine of that church gives
amusing incident. A preacher had
gone to his new charge and was in
midst of his sermon when a woman
and went oat, slamming the door
unnecessary violence. Of coarse
supposed he had said something
gave offense, bat on making in¬
be learned that the woman left
“the minister wore a bosom
The fun of it waa that he had
to the service over bad roads
one drop of mod had settled on his
shirt bosom, deceiving the
conscience of the good sister.—
Awake.
-a.
Kerosene tor the lluus*.
Dtt 0. B. Bird, of New Jersey, says;
“Kerosene that Is at- all safe will not
burn when odd, but will buna when
heated. Here, \hen, ia adeflnite point—
the degree of heat at which It will bum.
Evidently this should be higher than
the highest temperature ever reached in
lamps Kitchens sometimes reach 115
and engine rooms 138. Thus the burn¬
ing point (fire tret) of oil should be over
125. But that does not cover the dan¬
ger. At 10 to 20 below the burning
point there is a gas which takes fire and
fires the olL This, thon, is the true
danger point—the flash test. Thus we
have the rule that kerosene must be
heavy enough so as not to give off an
inflammable vapor at the highest lamp
temperature, and light enough to climb
a wick and not freeze solid.
“The latter ts shown by the oil re¬
maining clear and fluid tor ten minutes
at 20 deg. or 12 below freezing. Fig¬
ures within extreme limits are 120 flash
test, which would give 130 to 140 fire
test This oil would be safe in any
place, and Is the lowest that should be
used in lamps. But some lawmakers
do not know the significance of those
figures and some do know the signifl
cance of the thousands which a little
variation of the fire test and the aboli¬
tion of the flash test put into the pock-
ets of the producers. More than one
legislator has thus sold to a fiery death
some innocent woman or child. ”
A Curious PftKsover Custom.
The painting of a hand on the houses
in Tunis, Algiers and other oriental
countries is not wholly a Jewish cus¬
tom, but is common to tha natives of
all. It is always an emblem of good
luck, and in Syria, also In Naples, is a
charm against the evil eya Hands ar¬
ranged in the form of & branch are
merely an aesthetic form of the charm.
The reason the Jews paint hands on
their walls at the time of the passover
Is because at that season of the year
their houses are renovated inside and
out
Captain Candar remarks that the
hand charm was used by the Phoe¬
nicians, and that it occurs on votine
steles at Carthage, whence it is sup¬
posed to have spread to neighboring
cities and countries. Hands are found
painted on the wails of St Sophia at
Constantinople; are common all over
India (the hand in that country being
supposed to be that of Swa). The
same curious charm is found in various
parts of Ireland and in the Moorish
temples in southern Spain.—St. Louis
Republic.
Sh« Hade Her Point.
“Wlial is the gender of sausage?”
asked the lady teacher of a class in the
Jefferson schooL
“Feminine," responded a bright eyed
girl near the front, with a saucy little
shake of the head.
There was a chorus of objections,
called forth by the teacher’s look of
pain at such ignorance, but the girl
never flinched.
“I say it is feminine,” she insisted,
with the same saucy smile, “and I can
prove it,” she added as a clincher.
“Pray, how?" inquired the teacher,
sarcastically.
“It’s feminine,” she explained, “be¬
cause it never tells its sage I"
The teacher is young and pretty her¬
self, or there’s no telling what might
have happened to the girl with the pun.
—Detroit Free Press.
Th« t’«! of Water In London.
One does not find any period in the
history of London when the citizens de
sired plain cold water as a Leverage
Beer was always the national drink-
they drank small ale for breakfast,
dinner and supper; when they could
get it they drank strong ale Of water
for washing there was not at this
period so great a demand as at present
At the same time it was not true to say,
as we said a few years ago in the house
of commons, that for 80.) years our
people did not wash theTiiATvesi
through the Middle Ages the use of the
hot bath was not only common but
frequent, and in the ca.-* of (lie better
classes was almost a necessity of life. -
Walter Besant in Harper’s.
A Hnrryup Barber's Shop.
“This is what we call a hnrryup
shop,” said the bos* barber. It was on
a down town comer, opposite one of
the busiest ferries. °U a customer
says, ‘I’ve got four minutes and a half
to catch that boat,’ we shave him in
that time and give him a good shave
too; if we have front six and a half to
eight minutes we can fix him up. VVe
get accustomed to working rapidly.
Sometimes a man says, ‘Is your clock
right?’ and when we tell him it is he
says; 'Well, we’ve got eleven minutes.
Don’t hurry. We’ve got ages of time.”’
—New York Sun.
The True Way
TO KID TEE HtJMAI BOOT OP **
The Poison of Diseaftio^’
M TO FOBCX |* OUT THBOtJOM^^HKMQK.
swirrsljpeciric
always does this effectually. It treat* the
disease instead of the symptom*, and re¬
the cause, thereby nuking a cure.
Kre. B. j, Itowxu, No. 11 Qutaey 4St, Medford,
Mas*., uji that bar mother ha* been eared of
ScrefuM, by the u» of four bottle* of SL EL EL,
after having had much other treatment, tad being
to quit* alow condition of health, aa it waa
atm could not Ur*.
Treaties on Blood and Bkta DM aa * n maltod trea.
swirrsTMcmoca.
a. Atlanta, 0*.
YK
against disease. ■i Danger Shut the door
comes oft-
cncst blood through l in in impure blood. _1 Keep
in your health. 1 '* For orae~ order, t! and “ ~ yon ~ ’ keep ‘
Dr. Pierce's this, nothing eqi___ quaU
Golden Medical Discov¬
ery. It invigorates the liver, puri¬
fies and enriches the blood, and
rouses everv organ into healthy ac¬
tion. By.tnis of the means it cures. Ev¬
ery part system feels its
saving gestion, influence. Biliousness, Dyspepsia, Scrofulous, Indi¬
Skin and Scalp Diseases — even
Consumption in its earlier (or Lung-scrofaia) vield it.
stages, all to
It’s Remedy the only Liver, Blood and Lung
that’s guaranteed to bene¬
fit or cure, or tho money is re¬
funded. Trying terms to sell on
—but it’s a medicine that can carry
them out
“ Golden Medical Discovery ”
contains no alcohol to inebriate,
and no syrup or sugar to derange
digostkm. It’s concentrated i vegetable
a ex¬
tract; put up in large bottles;
pleasant to the taste, and equally
good for a dults or children.
Some
Children
Crowinff
Too Fast
become listless, fretful, without eneto
gy, thin and week. But you o«n for*
tify thetrv and build them up, by the
use of
■SCOTT’S
EMULSION
OF PURE COD LIVER OIL AND
HYPOPHOSPMITES
Of Idmc *1*4 Soda,________
They will palatable take It readily, milk. for it ft al¬
most as as And ft
should be remembered that AS A pKK.
kb «rar« c f,' j s
UHEQ8AIUD. AvoUtatutUuOoncogonS.
<>f ft Household Remedy 11
( [ BLOOD -> > row row ALL ALL SKIN * 1 ! r
<| DISEASES
B.B.B.
» Botanic Blood Bobu !>
( f n D cures r,,rtnc SCROFULA, ULCERS, SALT ( > f
sheum. eczema, ev*n <
(1 form of malignant SKIN ERUPTION, bo- < 1
■Idas l>eln| tffloaclout in toning up tho , >
system and restoring tho rnnstHatlon, 1
when impaired from Its < ‘
any cause.
Justify almost tjpwiwitorel In guarant*elm| heellnypropertlee | 1
us a cure. If , 1 \
fractions are followed. flfle
8 ENT FREE
DLOOr tLM CO., Atlinta, Ga.
For Blood and Skin Dis¬
eases; Kidney ft Bladder
Troubles; Indigestion*
For two year* I suffered great) y with Blood Pot¬
ion and a general breaking could down of health. I tried
•very remedy that l hear of without any
benefit, then until restored I began to to take uaualgood your remedy. health,and I waa
soon my
am derf under lasting It obligai the .Lions to Wooldridge**Wo
ul Cure. wm only
good a tail.
>’• Won-
dertul ommend Cure It to s all thorough auffertu* trial, with I can Liver phcrfuHy troubles rec¬ It
ha* done me more good than a barrel of sosslled
remedies it and I feelltZa a new man. I prooouooe
the true and only elixir of life. frRNTLV.
^ . MW.
Manufactured by Wreldrl4*e W.sdertol Core Oa,
COLCMBCH, OA.
ftoR 8ALE BY ALL DBA’UUISTg.
ABB0TTS
Ru|V, COP^j-S 0V-. ftSJc-r, ■ ^ Jp -
^UNIONS i’gE^ p f E ru l MOUt vA'
AND //arts J P^ j^
t
UPPMAN BRO h GKUbGiblbrdUi'i.iAVANNAH GA.
Bladder, cures Inflammation of Kidney*. Li Liver v ami
diseases Brick-dust deposit*, and ltiabei
fantile of the Urinary nary Organs; Organs
Stomach, Torpid Liver, Indigestion, Boor
D>' . ------, pcp»la,8tck Dropsical —. m —_. Headache. ___Sections, Affectloi
8
72 PUI», tl.00,
by mall. % CUBES
^ mat ism Gout, of 1 th the Rhe Joins * !
Ot the Vomitings. Urethra, Inflammation X^eurorrhcea,
Diseases of tbe Prostate Gland.
LITHOSINH.
Disease Specific of the for Stone Kidneys in the Bladder, Bright’s
In its Incipient stages.
OO Doses, *2,00.
Or. i J. T. LEE, 91 Woodburn Av., Cincinnati.
to U atknowledgor
the leading remedy toi
Wb»i Cra et r k iM to Uleet.
Leocorrhrea only — sate reme.l/ for
or Whites
t prescribe it ana teel
safe in reccimmenolnxl
to ait suffcrm.
A. J. BTONKK. M. 0,
Bzcatub, Iu
BLRUMD VIDOR;., Osaeral asd KKBV0TJ8 rABJMUAMBOOD, DEBU.ITT,
STRENGTH Wszksass of Kiren or of Excuse* Body sad in OldorToasr, Kind, Eff«U
stmsta>wua.Ma»tJupku> BMMet, >.blt axsamiD tally antareS. oaetsrarsaiworVusT H.< ta bin., nk
d-.or.ir Bre mUfj nfditac tO SUM aoaa TabtassT-aensa a • s.j,
ly U,. tat, nstaaottasos*preWk US VarSfa CMUta. fHuikM.
B.i- —Mil(-M)lm,
ddd wm ERIfl MKDIOAL OO.. EUPRALO.I*. V.
Ordinary'. M«rtl,em' to.
lo> lMm’tdMli' T«oH
tiii um ol l*iu| more or few in A ikin’,
Let all and lor______
person* [persons concerned concerned show show canoe canon on on the
Monday Monday in In Heptrreber, Heptratbor, 18*U 18*1. before Itefore the
Ordinary,
Let alineraons show canwi or the flrst
Monday iu September,18*I,before tbeCourt
*1 Urdioory at my Griffln. why end)
application ♦ Ib, should not be gTant.ii.
3 E. A. HAMMOND,
8. C. 0*.
o
Lei all persons ronorrtied show cause, l<e-
Oiy the Court of Ordinary, at my office iu
ilntnu by 10 oYltx'k a. m. on f hr first Moil-
lay m 8v.pt.mter, why such .letters should
«<>* U- Rt.lined.
S3,on. e. w. hammond.
OrdiMMT. B-V-Oa
S / YRDINARY’S OFFICE, 8nz,.mNQLou»TT
H. A, Pritchard, tlsouau, July 2, 1801-Whereas, W
executor of W. H. erert'in Pritchard Id*
Nr^^^rreenu jw to duOetTfor tlw
bua fully discharged the which
he was appointed.
This is therefoi
v V ---, ’• — mrrm ■ . * gwv u * VSSIA/ Ulil
the qot t* Amt discharged Monday from hin executorship on
to October, 1891 .
K W, HAMMOND,
( W YRKINARY’8 G ,4nly OFFICE, 2,1891-Whereaa, 8pzt.mnoConj»TT, MaH>
K o B0U
L. Ellto, adminintratrix of W. J, Kilim, de-
«lu* . pLW.Ut
This %as appoints)
to thereofore to otto all person* inter-
oete.1, kimlfo.1 and creditor*,-to show caums
il any they can, why said administratrix
tfhould not be (Uncharged from her adminifl-
tration on the flret Monday ia OetoUr,
Kh. E - WH, ' , SX D ;,
i 1 (, |V F IK K i V"_y ■
I VilUaw *, administrator of J. E, Williatmt
was This appointed. therefore to cite all
u persons con¬
cerned, kindred an (^creditor* to show cause,
if any they can, why said administrator
should not lie discharged from hi* adminis¬
tration on the flrat Monday in October,
mK ww K. W. HAMMOND,
Ordinary.
A COMMON DISEASE.
Dyspepsia has become the most common
disease of th* country, all classes are not ex¬
old, empt, attacking tbe yonngaa well as the
ing causea no rfbubt fronuour mod* of liv¬
and the too free us* of tobacco, etc., and
yet it, is one of the most difficult diseases se
have to encounter. In the laet five years
Dr. Holt discovered a remedy, (Dr. Holt’s
laded Dyspeptic Elixer), up to this time has not
to cure in a single instance. We can
frier you to W. A. Wright, Cornu. Gen. of
th,- Stats, Judge B. F. Lyon, Mr. George
aslier, ier, Macon, Macon, Q- Ga., Dr. " L. - — V. - Dozier, •
Geor •getown.Gia, Ga., and Mr. Joe. Harrison, L'olmn-
Manufactured DUS ... hundreds of others if desired.
«r Co., Montezuma, by Dr. Holt’s Dyspeptic Elix-
GA. Bottles double
tormerBite. Price fl.00. For sale by all
druggists. Dr. Holt's '
vents and Croup and Cough Syrup pre¬
Manufactured curse croup. No cure no pay.
•rCo., Montezuma, by Dr. Holfe Dyspeptk E)ii-
Ga.
HARPERS'BAZAR
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a
Giving the the latest information with regard to
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short stork*, parlor |.iays, and
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which is of interest to everything to
1861 Agues B. Ormsbce wilt women. Dur
write a so
articles on “The HoQreCstofortabfa,”
i.-t Corson sill treat oi “Haaitary Liv-
aud an mterestlngsucoeesion of papers
in Art and History,” superbly
will i>e furnished by Theodore
The serial stories will lie by Walter
Uesmitaud Thonins Hardy.
HARPER’S PERIODICAL.
l’EH YRUL
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HARPER* BROTHER# New York.
Counter*, Tyler ftyetem. Port-
it* hp tS**H to OwM, Oh*s SMI, MMMsdto
Stab, tore F ees, 1» Cw*.
Aire TYteafa Bant
toltai Bsss an* cheap¬
est redaction on Mith, in with great
pu a.
f»l Ctata, «Sl TStn, tat
MW, U dnahSMt, ,. b*W titan
to ‘ “
‘ Is wSr,
PEEft CO l.s »
4
Griffin in the county neat ............ , „
Ooorgto. and to nitnated in the cent re «
a profitable career. Three are the reaa
railroad between the capital ol tha
forty BliMdteteBt, a»d ita prinmpa
to Chatfanooga and the -° Meat n by
On On and North way o
the Alatmin
and principal Gull city on tbe Georgia
rnSvelenpr. Itoilt largely railroad, ion* hnadro
t«n>rtoc ond to be extended throw** it* own en
nsd tbe noon to A then
ryn ryatffna of Ui# - Nartoeeat - direct
with the great Eaat Temaanee,
—~ railroad ayatem; an.
I and noon to le built all
bringing in trad* and carding»oot good*
manufacture*.
, J hat thw to tbe Very cream And flower of
the ngrtcnltnral nnd horitcnftoral portion*
othetfirtfem. It ha* two cmp» t hit
never fail, in tietofl the South, cotton, the nost impor¬
crop and grapes, wnic'.
eonnty. growing to sorpnaa cotton in tbip
Griffln 'a recordMnring tho pant half derad*
prove* it to be one of the non progremiea
rittca In tbe Booth.
It ha* boilt two large cotton foctorie* rep
reeenttog 1260,000 and ebipping goods a
It haa put op a large iron and brass foot
dry a icrtltizer hwtory. a cotton Seed o
mill, a each and blind factory, a plow factory
an ire factory, bottling works, a broom
iwtory, a mattress factory nml various
emuller enterprise*.
H Baijto# te a* •‘nftrii- i ^ | j, j light plant by
which tk* Street* are britliantly lighted.
it is jnst completing an extensive StwTl system
cd waterworks, givimr complete protection
against (ire, and funiisliing water every¬
where.
It i* laying several miles of street railroa
or convenient trennjHirtation over it* iarg i
area.
It has opened up the floret and lar
(fraud* quarry ia the Btats, lor build!
ballast ing and macadamizing purpose*.
It ha* »ecnred a rot-tdo compress with a
It ha* established a system of p-aded pub¬
lic schools, with a sewn year* curriculum,
second to nofie.
It has organise! two new banks, making*
total ot four, with combined nMoureM o
bail a million dollar*.
It has built two handsome new churches,
making It, naa.bnilt a total often.
■p several handsome tnudees*
blocks and many beautiful residence*, th«
f160,600. imiiding rectrd of 1889 alone luring over
«»
It has attracted around it* bordsts fruit
growers from nearly every State in the Union
and Canada; until it, is surrounded oa,every
side bv orchards and vineyards, and has lw-
com* the largest and best fruit section in th*
State, asiBgte car load of it* peaches netting
>1,280 in ths height ol the season.
It has doubled its wine making capacity
making by been bothFrench and German methods.
It n has exempt from cyclones, flood* flood*
■■ and epidemics, epidemics, . and by by of ot ,
and reuson reuson it* it* topo- topo¬
graphy With will altitude never be subject to them.
nealevel, an bealtbfuineas of 1,160 feet abor* th*
it* has attractedgen-
oral attention and is about to recur* th*
Htate, permanent military encampment of th*
With all these and Other evidences ot a
live and growing town, with a heal Grin 1 and
pleasant hospitable climate and cultured summer people, and and winter, soil a
a
capablo of producing any product-of th*
temperate or semi-tropic ami zone, Griffin offers
•very inducement a hearty welcome to
new eitnen*.
18U1.
HARPER’S MAGAZINE
ILLHSTIUTKO.
Th» import ant eerie* of <pnper* on South
port ol the yfcar 180L The article, on
-iouthern California,by Charles Dudley War¬
ner, will also be con tinned. 4aoag other
noteworthy 'Ibaries Egttort attractions Craddock; will be a novel by
a collection of
published original drawing* for' the first by W, M. Thackeray, now
and illustrat'd by time; a novel written
novelette Ji»y William George Dean Howells, du Maarier; m
and a
tetie* ol paper* on London by Walter B*-
taut.
In i be number sBd variety of iiiustiated
papers and other articles on subjects of
timely interest, as well as in the unrivalled
haracter of its short stories, poems, etc.,
Harper’s that standard Magazine will continue to main*
lam of excellence for which It
has linen so long distinguished.
HARPER’S PEItIDICALS.
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BUS MAGAZINE. ..94 00
ABDEH’H WEEKLY...... 4 00
AtU’EK’H AIU’ERT4 YOUNG BAZAR.,.................... 4 0
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wm
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* E. D. MANN, Proprivtor.
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