Newspaper Page Text
m
OrMa, Georgia, July IT, 1C
DOVabAS GLRSSNKR, Kd. *
DAILY, (In Advance) Per Annum.... .15.00
IfBSKLTtO m . 1 . 00 .
M ' ss a m
ADVERTISING RATES:
MO. Tniltne* nr Uwa to be couutoi m s
SPECIAL N0TICK8-10 mat. par Hn. tor
»i° t :^ i r„r r ro ,, i u o^
thaa oas dollar mast be paid for in advance.
UberaJ rate. wtttbe mad* with parte* wt»h
their lidrortinement. longer
e rato* a. tor tbe Dallv.
OFFICIAL PAPER OP SPALDING CO
THE
D. J. Balky, #p k , would make a
bustler if turned loose in tbe Geor¬
gia legislature.
" <i*
■ ■ - " 1
_______________
rainetb __ it
The rain, it always—till
takes a notion to stop, and then
there is a drouth.
It is probable that the November
election* may give the Senate of tbe
United States to the Democracy. A
gain will certainly be made in New
Michigan, Montana and Wisconsin.
'-•'Si.i-fc * 4 .. ........v ' * * ..... ... ’ • j
■
The affair at Homestead has had
the effect of causing tbe Kentucky
legislature to pass a law forever
shutting out Pinkerton hirelings
Iron that State. Georgia passed
each a law in the last legislature,
and It is om of the best statutes in
book. '■ *............. '
Everybody who wants any notire
in a newspaper always says, “Put it
In a conspicuous place, please.”
When a notice or advertisement is
sto the New* and Sun office
this request is always cheerfully com¬
plied with. Any place in tbo News
and Bum Is a conspicuous place,
reads it all
Tbe Daily New* and Sun certain-
Jy has aa appreciative subscriber in
the person of Crarimer S. Shattuc,
of this place, who dropped in the
other day and paid np hie subecrip-
Mon ,to January 1st, 189ft, In the
language of the good old gospel
hymn, “Get on board, little children
there’s room for many a more I"
.... ----
M Griffin is a great town I ” is the
admiring exclamation of M. T. Ber
gaa every time he comre up from Ids
Columbus ire works to his Grifiiu ire
wotks. And the tone in which he
says it shows that he fully appre¬
ciates the audacity, enterprise and
soaetaat growth of the greatest
place of its site in the South. Grif¬
fin is a great town I and M. T. Ber-
gan is one of Us prophet*.
Especial attention in called to Spe¬
cial Bulletin No. 1T& which isintend-
ed to he the beginning of a series of
manuals for tbe instruction of farm
erein tbe first principles of their call¬
ing. This pamphlet is on the “Air
and the Boil, in Their Relations to
Agriculture,” by H. C. White, ,B. S.
"Ph. D., Vice-Director. Again we cnil
attention to the fact that bulletins
of the Kxperimeut Station will be
seut free to any farmer who requests
It, by addressing R. J. Redding, Di¬
rector, Experiment, Ga. A great
deal of nonsense is talked about the
uselessness of the Experiment Farm
by those who pay no attention to
its workings. The most valuable
tool on tbe farm is useless if not
V*
It is probable there will be a lively
contest for the position of secretary
of the Georgia State Agricultural
Society. Several names are men¬
tioned as possible candidates. This
wilt not be the only office in the so-
for which there will be a contest.
The position of president will be
contested for by the present 'ineum-
bent, Col. J. 0. Waddell, and Mr. 0.
A. Barry of Cntbbert. W. A.
Broughton, of Madison, will possibly
be a candidate for tbe position of
treasurer, made vacant by the
death of Hon. R. J. Powell, of
Barnesvtlle. Mr. Hape is the secre¬
tary now. The Telegraph says that
there is a strong desire among the
members to elect Mr. B. W. Jemison,
of Macon, secretary. He fora
Jm&eI thto with tfliciftni'y &im 3 fnitti
fulness. Tne next election of officers
be attended with
l thin section of Ute
1 tea years was supposed in-
ffistsaiss :£2SU"
I proven catarrh to be a
, Catarrh
* Co.,
! eure
WAKEMAN’S WANDERINGS
0L0 TOWN&HII.
Practical Plea tor ReU.v7m.r-
Jtoart.The Ancient City of Kx.ter,
It. Alrnlon Kovlronm.nt, Sunny A«-
p.et Mil N«t>te CdMnt
(Copyright, IKS. br Edgar L. Wakeman.)
Kxktrk, England, July 2.—Nature wear*
other aspect* than those of sunshine ami
gladnea* in these "tight little” British 1st
ends.
But you find a sovereignty of elation
ami exaltation In wandering alone among
the historic and scenic glories of any land.
A good staff or stick, a stout pair of legs, s
receptive tnind and shove all a cheery and
sympathetic heart, whatever your lack,
•re the regal companions for each loiter-
Ami nature never fails to appear to sin¬
gle devotees at her myriad doors and win¬
dows with radiant welcoming*. How
witching is even this foggy morning, half
disclosing the wondrous charms of valley,
mead and stream f At times scarcely can
your hand be seen before you for the
strange eddies, curlings and fantastic con¬
volutions of the fog. Th*rc Is your road,
hard a* "British conservatism," beneath
your feet—one of the best and surest and
most beautiful whyg in all the world
bringing to the heart of the American
wanderer upon It the keen and patriotic
pang that those of his grander land are so
shamed by honest comparison.
— Drip, drip, d r ip from the leaves of the
hedges Into water basins of rock, the great
drops striking like silver pellets chimes upon of
swinging glass; until tbe very
the fairies are rung in your ears beside the
road. Not a rod away, but invisible, riv¬
ulets of the night’s making wimple from
rooks to pools, in all manner of melodic
runs, from the staccato of tenor trills to
tbe baritone minors of stately psalms.
Here and there, as the heavy br«
move a trifle, come the hesitant wild hares’ pipe feet of
stirring bird, slippery the patter leaves, of the shuffling
upon the
scamper of some skulking pheasant, the
complaining chatter of rooks and daws,
the half caught, hoarse resonance of hid¬
den waterfall, while faint and for
strangely muffled, from little hamlets in
the distance, the notes of school bells steal
faintly along the folds of the clinging mist.
But In the cheery old English inn, in the
presenoe of muffins white as snow, bacon
crisp and brown, an omelet as yellow as «
frost painted beech leaf, a Jug of clotted
cream as sweet os a nut kernel and a fra
grant brewing of tea la the delft pot nnder
tbe “coaey,” you have reason to rejoice in
the blood tingle that comes from doing
half doaeu miles before breakfast over a
perfect road, through a genuine British
It was on such a morning that I came
over the east Devonshire hills and halted
at a wayside inn, still high up among their
wooded heights, os I neared the oW cathe
dral town of Exeter. As the fog lifted I
could see from my inn window cart after
cart jogging comfortably on to tbe Satur¬
day market day sales in Exeter. From the
bustling good wife of the Inn I inquired
the distance they had come.
"From ’round about Bow, Coppleetone
and North Tawton," she answered.
"And how far Is the farthest of those
places I’’ 1 asked.
“North Tawton may be likes ten
twelve mile, str, at least from Exeter.”
I told her 1 thought that u good distance
for a heavily laden east drawn by only one
"Ccmtrarywise,” she retorted cheerily
"many comes from far beyond Kggesford
and Ofaulmleigh, twenty-five mile, sir, by
hill and dip; and many carts, sir, do be
loaded m heavy M a ton and a half and
two tons, sir. American beastlee ’aven’t
the might of Devon cattle, I’m told, sir,’
■he concluded half qutssically.
Quite right she was, 1 told her. But 1
clipped the wings relating, of her honest Devonshire
pride by also may the sainte for
give met bow we did not require that sort
of cattle in America; os we had railways
between all villages, all over our farms (I
oould have truthfully said, railway mort
gages), did chores on roller skates, and
went to the milking and visited neighbors
in tram cars propelled by electricity; for
all of which she made me pay handsomely
at tbe reckoning.
That morning, all tbe way to Exeter,
alongside those huge carts which bowled
along under their great loads as easily as
over a cathedral floor, and in a thousand
other places on the highways of England,
Ireland and Scotland, I have inexpressibly
longed for the power to bodily transfer
some of these grand old roods to our eoun
try; to make American millionaires, who
may still have American pride left in
them, see their beauty, magnificence and
utility beyond those of all things money
and patriotism can give to communities;
and to Compel American farmers Independence to know
what might be the matchless
of their fives and living with these perfect
defenses tor their toil and homes and
granaries against most of the monopo¬
listic and “corner" abominations of our 1
In five years’ time 1 have tramped along
8,000 miles of British roads. Each time
I step my feet upon their broad, firm !
even surface every drop of American
blood in me tingles with shame at the
thought of the mud pikes and bottom¬
less road sloughs of our own splendid
country—rich, great and strong enough
to match the roads of Europe without
a week’s delay. And yet for five months
of every year, and in a lesser degree
for the other sven, half the people of
our farming communities are iai^rtsoned
and impoverished helplessly at home. As
one result the people of the whole country
pay, In an indirect road tax, through
annual sharp advances on all food necessi¬
ties of life, all of which the farmers lose, a
sum each year enormous enough to main¬
tain as superb roads as England anywhere
possesses, around every section of culti
vable land in the entire United States.
But our wise American economists, and
our unwise and often suspicious and shift¬
less farmer* who, in tbe fall, winter and
early spring months, filled prefer to resentfully
brood over their and rotting gran
mries and build new political parties rath
er than build good roads, both retort:
“Ah, but tbe grand English roads you
so glibly write How about have accomplish, been centuries
in building. can we In
a year or a generation, what ha* required
*,000 years’ labor for perfection there!”
This would be good argument were it
true. But it is not. There Is not a Brit¬
ish, or for that matter a European, stone
road in existence that was^net originally
tire, whenever begun and however long
it may have been maintained. And, with
European governmental feurd and social oondi-
lions i dc o niciTably uptm jMMM&t
the*condition of the people is incompara¬
bly more happy and prosperous than
where they do not; while land values have
Invariably been increased from 100 to 1,000
percent. built
Not so many years ago Austria
nearly 2,000 miles of store highway up aud
down and from end to end of Galicia, or
Austrian Poland. Previous to that time,
materially, a no more wretched, God for¬
saken land existed on the faced the earth.
What was the result! In less than ton
years’ time these roads did more lot the
*,000,000 people of advancement Austrian Poland in ms the
teriai and social than ail
churches, aU the books, all the newspa¬
pers, all the battles, all the railways and
ail the governments had ever accomplished
for them from the days of MieosysUw and
|-«- art frtila of that j
ua ewtko room for n i
nec«*dhle dabs ttiwl !
and
on good roads, •»
armors whom- betterment and com¬
fort would lie incalculably augmented by
per rfect roads, would carry away with them
a knowledge ga and and purpons purpose which would not
only add add billions billion* to to our our national Wealth,
but make, in good time, our brood land
bloom and blossom fairer than the sweet¬
est garden spots lu all this old and Worn
on* Europe! I
With such thoughts as these came,
with the carts and cortmen, along the brow
of the hills skirting the noble valley of tin »
Exe, to ancient Exeter, which looks far fa
away to tbo warm green sea that best a
upon the rod cliffs of Devo
It was in ancient days an old British
town, built long before Cawar, and called
Veer Isc, or the city on the river. Antiqua¬
rians observe that, like moot Celtic trad¬
ing towns, it was built for safety sonic
little distanoo from tbe sec, and just lor
rood where the river Exe ceases to be navi
gable. Discovered coins of the Greek
dynasty in Syria and Egypt prove that
Phoenician merchants must have coma
here many years before Christ to trade for
Cornish and Dartmoor tin. Then the Ho¬
mans marched In and mads it a great sta¬
tion. Lastly the Saxons here fortified tbe town
on the Exe, and traded with the Cor¬
nish Britons across the Tamar,
The Exe was the frontier f then for tbe
Damnonians, but Ath Atlielstan came and
drove them pellmell Into Cornwall —.
rebuilt tho walls of Exeter. The Cornish
Britons, cooped up among the rocks of
Cornwall, soon had their avengers. Tlx
Danes came crowding up the Exe with
their black sails und black banners and
wintered in Exeter in The W8. rejoicing red In Sax¬ l
on beeves and ale. old tower, stil
seen In the Rougemout ruins of today, was
always getting beaten about by stones
military engines and shipped by
crossbow bolts. William the Conqueror
besieged it, wishing to siege Githa, they mother
of Harold, and bar daughter, but am-
caped safely to Bruges, While Perkin IffirtMr: '
beck, as "Richard IV;” when joined by the
Cornishmen of Bodmin, besieged the place,
but unsuccessfully, and was finally banged
at Tyburn.
And sore and on runs tho grim story
that bos left just enough scar and hardi¬
ness on the lovely, leafy old city to add
a mellow charm to all you may see and
know. Fifty thousand folk do not 11 ve to
gather in a more winsome spot In England.
The embowered Devon hills which sur
round it, the glorious valleys which reach
their greens and blooms to its very doors,
tbs grand sweep of tbe Exe vale to the
the city’s noble old antiques, its beau
tiful streets, half in the shadows of are
mots architectural past and half In the
sunshine of modern elegance and adorn
ment, give everything upon which you
Irek a sweet and winsome face.
It all blends in that fine sunset glow
which some of these old cathedral towns
take on so fittingly. The pleasant teeming
smiles back to you from polished pones,
from mow whits old arches, from bright
rod roofs and brighter red banks of
a from a wsas marvelously assess — uiwwu* v clean wswioss evwosu stone steps w**m and
area ways, from bits of ancient tiling, from
doorknobs and brasses glittering like bur¬
nished gold, from the snuggest and trim¬
mest of shop windows; indeed, from alt
things that can tell of substantial, well
kept age without the semblance of a wrin¬
kle or a frown upon it.
You feel this sense of radiating heartl¬
ess and amplitude again In Exeter around
tbe market places re these pleasant mar
ket days All the country folk* gathered
here are well garmented, comfortable and
cheery. They of all the look “merrle as though old England’ they had
stepped out hard find outside
of the books, now so to
of tbe covers of those books. Pride glows
In their faces for old Devon and Exeter
Its capital, and in themselves. They do
say Dickens found his “Fat Boy,” of Ding-
ley Dell, among them. And well he might,
for they are fat and fine and stanch,
and all. Rosy, overlapping Jowls and big
paunefaes, suggestive of plum puddings
and the famous “clotted cream” of Devon,
are everywhere among them.
You arc thus In love with Exeter long
before you have many times wandered up
aad down Queen and High streets, saun¬
tered through the arcade of Chapel street,
peering into the old half timbered struc¬
tures that cluster in stately fashim around
tbe wide cathedral close, and have at last
come among the silences within the great
cathedral walla A pedant can alone tell
another tbe exactitudes and measure¬
ments of such a mossy, massive, marvel¬
ous land’s edifice. splendid Coming cathedrals, one by one to will Eng¬
you at
least surely remember of them all those
Impressions upon your tnind and heart
which seemed most powerfully character
Istic of each.
In the sense of architectural distinctive¬
ness Exeter cathedral will remain In your
memory remarkably distinguished from
all other English cathedrals. Their plans
tpvariably comprise a huge central tower
and smaller towers at the west end. Here
are towers crowning the transepts. This
does away with the usual four cumber
some arches archi tecturally separating
nave and choir,.and permits the grandest
uninterrupted view of vault and vista of
entire nave and choir to be found in
England.
Two other structural peculiarities are
seen in this cathedral. The choir and the
nave are of equal length, and throughout
whole edifice the openings are wide
low, rather than narrow and lofty. Tho
feature contribute* greatly, along
the emphatic feeling that tbe struc¬
is not a hodgepodge of “restorations,”
but one great design, to a sense In the be¬
of indescribable breadth and spa¬
Whatever else you may feel with¬
Exeter cathedral, which has stood hero
as you now see it for certainly
than 600 and perhaps more than 800
It will remain iu your memory as
one cathedral of England which must
as the tbe highest expression in con¬
store of perfect dignity and re¬
Edgar L. Wakkmax.
Guaranteed Cure.
We authorize our advertised dr up-
to sell Dr, King’s New Discov¬
for Consumption, Coughs If and
upon this condition. you
afflicted with a Cough, Gold or
Lung, will Throat this or Chest trouble,
use fair trial, remedy and as directed,
it a experience
benefit, you may return tbe bot¬
and have your Money refunded!
couM not make this offer did we
know eoukl that Dr. relied King’s New Dis¬
be on. It never
Trial bottles free at J.
Harris & Son’s Drugstore. Large
50c, and «1.
,’5*ri252ffiS»2?2
Thomas Hedlan was appointed to the
__
Buckteu’s Arnica Salve.
The Best Salve fa the world for
Bruises, Bores, Ulcers, Baft
Fever Sores, Tetter, Chap¬
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and
Skin Eruptions, and positively
Riles, or no pay required. It
guaranteed to give refunded. perfect satis¬ Price
or box. money For saleby J.N. Hor-
per A
Hie also desires that tbe
nomioating convention of tbe Sixth
coiiKressionql district be held there,
iturnesviilu will Im a aoutestaat with
Gridin for the convention. Neither
Spalding nor Dike counties have a
candidate iu the race. Tbe only
counties in the district that have
candidate* are Bibb, Monroe and
and Baldwin,—[Macon Telegraph.
The convention should coroe to
Griffin by all means. Barneaville is
a nice little place, hut mtt not pre¬
tend to Offer the attractions that
Griffin does. A congressional con¬
vention ini he former [Hare might
burst the town tank.
Cbaunref M. Depew in a public
gpereh In 1890 said of Grover Cleve¬
land:
“If I am to imme the topical and believes Amer¬
ican, the roan who loves
In his country Jwiio, beyond determined everything
else, the man once
in what direction his duty leads, can
not b® swerved from the path—the in
roan who is doggedly be persistent right—the
whnt he believes to
roan who thinks not of self, bat of
his country and it* needs, I would
name Grover Gleyelnnd.”
This is the man whom tbe Demo¬
crats mean to elect President and
from tbe testimony of l)epew he is
tbe right mnn for the place. Let us
all support him without regard to
party. What do you say?
t . \ 5- mi '/'T 1 ^' 1 «! •••'.. ' '
A Leader.
Since its first introduction, Electric
Bitters has until gained rapidly is clearly .in popu¬ in
lar favor, now it
the lead among pure medical tonics
and alteratives—containing nothing
which permits its use as a beverage
or intoxicant, it is recognized as tbe
best and purest medicine for all'* ali¬
ments of stomach liver or Kidney*.—
It will cure Sick Headache, Indiges¬
tion, Constipation, and drive Mala¬
ria from the system. Satisfaction
guaranteed with each bottle or mon¬
ey will be refunded. Price only 50c.
per bottle. Sold by 3. N, Harris &
» on * i-
Near Jackson,O., John Reed, an old and
Infirm man, was almost beaten to death
by his two refusal daughters. of the old The quarrel divide came his
from a man to
property be tween th e m.
For Over Kitty Years.
An old as» Well-Timed Remedy
—Mm. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup by
has been used for over fifty years children
millions of mothers with for perfect Jheir
while teething, child, softens softens success* the
It soothes the
allays all n, cures wind
colic, and is the remedy
Sold by A. Druggists - te pleasant in to the part taste. of
every hot
the world. Twenty-five is incalculable. rente a Be
tie. It* value
sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow's
Soothing Syrup .__
At Cairo, Ills., Jo HaUrich, In attempt¬
ing to jump off a moving train, was
killed. He was a newsboy re the road,
lived at New Orleans aad was XI years of
Many letters are received daily by the T
P, P. Do. from awfsueh patient*, saying that they
had used sueb « blood purifier aud
mentioning their numes and stating that
they dhkBO good, and that they did not get
wriluntn P. P. P. (Prickly red Poke Root
and potassium was tried. These letters we
started to publish when the variona marni-
factorerrawrote us fearful letters aud we dis¬
continued the same, but P. P. P. (Prickly
Ash, Poke Root and Potassium) is triuuih
ant on every occasion, aud has made a host
ol friends in cores of dyphilis, Rheumatism,
Blood Com Poison, pl aints. Dyspepsia, malaria and Fe¬
male
__
The Frenoh chamber of deputies h
asked granted by the extra credit of 8UU.UUD frsucs
the government for agents’ ex
peases at the Chicago fair.
Swamps
Are not. the only abode of malaria. Yon find
it everywhere, even in localities where atmos¬
pheric and sanitary conditions would seem
to be unfavorable to its devcioperncnt. The
universal remedy for and preventive ol the
dire complaint is Hoateter’s Stomach Bit¬
ters. Wherever the malady assumes its
most virulent form, and whether it be chills
and fever, bilious remittent, dumb ague or
ogue cake, the Bitters is mom popular and
constitutes the best means of protection and
From Maine to the Isthmus of Pana¬
ma, in Guatemala, this Mexico, South Amende
and the tropics truly famous medicine
won “golden opinions’’ from nil condi¬
and dosses in more than a metaphori¬
sense. rheumatism, For debility, indigestion, consti¬
and kidnev tremble insomnia, ft is hi highly neuralgia,
effica-
Use it with persistence.
People wonder when taking they find how rapidly
health is restored by P. P, P JI’nekly
Poke Boot and Potassium). The teas
..... U simple,as * it is apowerfu! of ftSiatow combination cr — ’ ’—“ —
roots and herbs ■ ■ one woods.
A fact worth knowing is that blood dit¬
which other medicine* ines fail to cure will
slowly but surely to the blood cleansing
of P. P. P. (Prickly Ash, Poke
and Potassium.
A Tramp’s Crime la Indian*.
PERU, July 15.—At Waverly, a small
town just west of here, occurred
outrage of Miss Maud Fox.:
estimable young lady, lady by a supposed knocked
The young was
but her cries frightened the brute
talked o' bat Cade was safely lodged
jail aud may escape the rope.
" BBS
MW Tremont st. Boston, was In very poof
from bad circulation of the blood,
almost bursting aH over her body, A cob
jsays I
* all day i
Hooo** Pill* •
MUM
A Polut Fur You.
la rlsg of what Hood’s Borsaparitla ha*
done tor others. Is not rerooniHde toeuppom MferofP-
that it will lx- of benefit to yon? For
sssm llvincdy;,
flood** Pill* cure Sick HoadaekJ
~ “ -"*►-* ' • e
Preafflent Carnot, of France, the has Legiou con¬
ferred the elwvaliers’ ribbon of presi¬
of Honor upon Heury Haydm, vice
dent of tho Foreign Frees club, and Henry
Mosiur, the artist Both gentlemen ore
Americans._
,, |\ 0. llofliu an, editor Times, ltocky Mount
Ya.: writes*: “I am pleased to snj that Bo
tonic Blood Balm is the best eppeUrer and
tonic for delicate people 1 ever saw. It act¬
ed like a charm in my case.”
--
Make no Mistake.
When one wants to eradicate every indica¬
tion of nnUaris from their system, they are
truly wire and make no mistake if they w ill
try Dr. John Bull’s
Smith’s Tonic Syrup.
For many years it has deservedly main¬
tained its reputation re being tbe -5; most re¬
liable of the many , 'V
one sees advertised and sold for the. most
annoying and enervating of all malarial dis¬
eased, known as
Chills und Fever.
it has a,good and lasting effect and ho
other remedy has ever given such satisfac¬
tion. Demand it of your druggist. Take
no substitutes on which a larger good profit than is
made. One bottle wil* do mftro
six bottles of any. other remedy, and the re¬
lief is alwnts permanent. A word to the
wise is sufficient. It cures malarui.
Take Bull’s Sarsaparilla.
Is your blood in bad condition? Do yon feel
wrnk? Do yon haye pain? Do son* t+trob-
delav. Give it a trial. Get it from your
druggist. Large bottle (1»J tod-spoanlnls)
fl.oo. ..
l>r. Jolm Bull’s Worm Destroyers
taste good aad quickly remove worms Irom
children or ’grown people, restoring the
Weak and puny to-robust health. Try them
No other worm medicine is so sale and sure.
Price 25 cents at drugstores, or sent by mail
• y John D, Park A Sons Co., 175 and 17 1
Sycamore St., Cincinnati, O.
-------
The Substitution Question,
When you see anything ad
yertised in the News and Sun
you may be sure tbe proprie¬ he
tor hris a good thing, If or make
would not advertise it. you
op j our mind td. buy what you see
advertised in the news and Sun, be
sure you get it, and don’t take any*
thing else that is recommended “just
iF you see a thing in the News and
Bun it’a so.
Female Weakness Positive Cure.
To The Editor :-Ploase inform your read¬
ers that 1 have a remedy for the thousand
and one ills which arise from' deranged fe¬
male organs. I shall be glad to send two
bottles id my remedy free to any lady if
they will send their Express and I’. O. ad¬
dress. Yours respectfully, Dtt. A. C.-Mxfc-
cmsi, Utica, N. Y.
_
xw roxrn back acbkj. for noth-
Or you are are all worn general out, debility. really good Tre
tag, It k
BHOWX’S IKON B1TTMB8.
It will curs you, deanae your liver, and glva
a good appetite.
Cheap Medicine—Save Money.
AU buy retail medicine*, wholesale ami you rates. want,them Jacobs’
cheap—at Pharmacy, the largest at southern “cutters” <>f
prices, has an advertisement h* to-day's pa
per containing a few prices. Ali other ar¬
ticles are sold at similar low rates. No mat¬
ter what you want that is usually kept willsell in a
large drug store semi to them. They
it at astonishing low rates. Express twenty-five charges
far packages under five pounds, and
cent*. Watch these advertisements
prices. Send for a numiier of tilings at once)
Is a word to the wise sufficient?
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
PRESERVATIVE
Milkmon, Crenmeryman and
Dairy men can keep Milk and
l fusing Cream fresh a week without
ice. Healthful, tastelesH.
odorlee* and inexpensive. Sample, enough
to make test, mailed for ten cents.
The I’reservaliao MTg Co., 10 Cedar St.,
New York. *
IB iiaamian FI HI 1\STITI Virginia. T£
g^AUNTON, the
Opens Sept. 22. 18t>2. One of most
thorough Schools lor Young Ladies officer*. in the
South. Twenty-five teachers and
Conservatory Conroe in Music. One hundred
and iffty4wo boarding unexcelled. pupils Special from twenty induce
States. Climate
tnents to persons at a distance. Thoseseck-
ing the best school for the lowest terms,
write for Catalogue of -this tiine-lionored
School, to the President,
WM. A. HARRIS, D. D., Staunton, Virginia.
gfnia Advantages Schools- of first BS order. CblfegThte Con-
qeryatory frjT'ferras advantages in MUS1£. liegkis
low. Session
Thutidzy before first Monday in
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Clcanwfl snd beautifief the b*Lr.
Promote* * luxuriant growth. Gray
Never Tail* to Restore
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Cure* walp dif*p*»efl & hair taHmg.
3l)c, aud 11 <X> at Druggist*
>A ?Su CONSUMPTIVE rmstrTKxrrarfmwtizmt
w£ R S?J?u N 4vr , 0 e ri?te c rcS! §°r
4 HH 2 BE
Name Paper.
EfTTBAUSHKD 1850.
Nature’s Summer Itemedies
“TheLord created medH'.ines'out of Iheeaith
And he that is wise will r ot abhor them.”
l>r. O. P. Brown’s Restora¬
iVIGORATOR. tive AssimUant, LIVER 1N-
Old Reliable
Remedies. 1 Great tonic, stom-
hitters, cures Epilepsy, Dys¬
pepsia, Dysentery and and all
diseases of tbe stomach and bow-
2 Cures Billtousness, Liver
Complaint, Grand »t., JerwyCitj, Druggists N. or J. Dr. Browu, 47
Electro Nervine
Cure* Peraanently all Diseases of the Nerv
ou* 8ex. System, It Restores either Impaired Acute or Chronic Lost in Power either
or
Checks aU forms ol Waste or Drain; Makes
Stroug $5, Trial the pcVge Weak, 13o, i uli (with package, fil; Six for
curely sealed receipt, of price. book), Address sent DR. se
on
O F. ADDAK, No. 671 Wabsnh Are.
Chicago, ill. JaulSdAwIy
------ ■
. Habits
at boms tetk-
Bookof ■
A'
NA. MjAI m: Si •••
■ i City
in .
The New ml a
fei
NANTAHALA,
Marble City!
NANTAHALA,
X
Swain County, North Carolina, Three Thouasand
Feet Altitude, High up in the Mountains, oh the Nanta-
hala River and Western North Carolina Railroad. A
Health Resort that will outrival either Asheville or Denver
wm 1-1
Nantcihala’s mi
JLI5. tl.J. All f *' ® -11 ■ ^ r
*f j *
Mountains of Marble,
Millions of tons of Talc,
Forests of Harwood Timber
and Immense Water power
THE NANTAHALA MARBLE AND TALC CO.
The finest dividend paying property in America.
The engineers and experts estimate that stock in this
company will pay 4
A dividend of from 20 t0 60 P er cent
The Nantahala Marble and Talc Company aie now
selling stock for the purpose of developing their property
and building a city at Nantahala.
Price of stock is $100 per Share. Subscriptions
payable $10 per Month- each share— or Cash.
To interest all in the growth tf the new eity, the
company sells with each two shaies of stock a lot in Nan¬
tahala. a f '?*■ i l.fi . ’>x
The stock will pay big dividends, the lot rray make
you rich. i
riman You saw Birmingham,Bridgeport,Middlesboro, of South * Har- "
and other new towns the grow m
and make thousands of dollars for those that inv
fact we can all look back and sec where we Rtisse<
not investing m the right time and at the right pi
NOW IS THE RIGHT TIME.
NANTAHALA IS THE PLACE- ”<• h««
No Savings Bank or Loan Association is Safer or
More Sure to Pay Dividends! None of them are under
Better Management than Nantahala!
The President of the Nantahala Company, L. B.
Nelson, a native of New Yoik, lately of Iowa, has invest¬
ed millions of dollars for Nofthcn capitalists without the
loss of a dollar. 1 4 # .*#1 /■'*!*• '
The Directors of the Nantahala Company are all
men of the highest character, being success! ul bankers,
merchants and manufacturers.
Send in your subscriptions to J .A
a. j. McBride,
THE COLUMBUS SANITARIUM.
THIS INSTITUTION FOR THE TREATMENT OF THE
JAINB - AND - WM - HABITS
Is undertlie profefwioaat supervision of Drs. Wniker, Blanchard, Mason end Barnes.
Tiic projectors of this institution claim to cure patients with less suffering Rnd am in a
shorter time, than is accomplished by auy other mown treatment. For or terms ol treat
ment and other information, address
DR. J. C. BARNES, Secretary,
21(iam, Columbus, Ga
jnuy
BEST ORGANS AND MS
FOR EASIEST PAYMENTS
The MASON & HAMLI N CO., now offer to rent any oae ot their fam¬
ous Organs or Pianos for three months, giving tbe patron hiring full op¬
portunity to test it thoroughly in his own home, and return if he does not
longer want it. If he eontinues to hire it until the aggregate of rent pai
amounts to the price of the instrument, it becomes bis property with
out further payment. Illustrated catalogue, with net prices, free.
MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN AND PIANO COMPANY.
BOSTON. NEW YORK. CHICAGO.
1 111
An Ordinance.
■
From and after the passage of this ordi-
nonce it shall be the duty of I any person or
■ who mny run or keep a hack lor
hire, jii the City of Griffin, to regimer the
same in the clerk’* office of said city, who
shall give eaid hack a number and it shall
be the duty ol saio person or pereons to
have thennmber of said buck printed in a
conspicuous It place on mud back.
shall also be the duty of person -or per¬
sons running a hack in the City of Griffin,
tokeep the ahght in the hack after dark and
ligh‘ ---- hack! ‘ ** - “ to ** th «
number of the
B® it further ordained, that no person or
persons hack shall engaged charge m running or driving a
««•** more than twentv-five
city jiuiits, apossenger nod for anywhere inside the
seated the use or hire for a foiw
carriage shall not not charge charge more more Gian
one dollar an hour, and other vehicles in
same shall have proportion, and that said
his charges printed on a
shack;
CetrCe^r refuse to taken
11 " 9OT ' i «*’ the «-«- fees
Be it further ordained, that anv oerson
or skulk persons violating the above oidmance
upon affidavit and warrant being
ssued, as ia all violations of city
ordinances, be carried before the shafl; citv '
court and tried.and upon conviction it 1
MnvLfaSi 1 rity t dg * to cauee said’
the X eity cham-gasg t0 W ,° for rk a on time <*• not atreots longer in
h fr’daysorto p a $- a Sue not to exceed
uehundred dollars, either or both,or In the
1 i l l' ll m i mu —■
ENCAMPMENT
Is here and so am I
m BmiTiTms
To wit: Bouses and Jot*, vacant
in centre of the city und suburbs.
city. and MWff large forms -f 1 in and near
' -----
-
If you wii WM iK
al; my off
I, will be be pleased to sho W YOU
tbe city.
Now is tbe time to bo? as Griffin
is advancing every da
I have sbme
wishing t
e G. A. . A.„. CUNNINGHAM,
Real Estate Agent
Liver Hita, wtmt tba tUrertto*. toss Mwrtrletlf
“ “ ‘ * " “*