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PBOFSSEIONAL CAROS.
Lu>t» €ucvk(* »,
iAMMONO * C LEVELANU.
IAtAmws RNEYS AT Uijiti
Griffin. Ga.
Do You Want to
SELUWRIR LAND?
U to we will adycrtin# it tree ul charge io
the lwuHnjl paper*
North, East and West.
BKCK & STKWABf,
Agents for Georgia Immigration &
Investment Bureau.
W. i. (ioBTHW. Manager.
H. i G4RLAN0,
1 % # :oen t, si.
Office Over Griffin Booking Company.
Urflln. Ga.
NL O. BOWDOIN.
—Mil,!!* IK—
Real Kstate,
%W | 24 Hill Street.
GRIFFIN : : GEORGIA
BLAKELY & ELLIS
FUNERAL .'.DlflEttORS
f\ A LL GRADES OLOTH-COVEKED, Me.
tallc and Wood Coffins and Caskets-
prompt and caretul attention. Free Hearse
Carriages and all details attended to. Em
balming on reasonable terras. P»lt« sm*»r
ed d lv °r wtoS*.
Notice to Debtor* and Creditors.
All perepus indebted to the < state of E. L
Hammett, la$e of Spading County, deceased
are hereby notified to call and settle tbe
same; and all parties having chums again*’
said estate will present the same pioperlj
proven. K. T- DANIEL,
novl2w6 Adroinistratnr.
ARE THE
PBK High 5 Grate
Warranted superior to any Bicycle built in the world, regardless of price. Do not i
ndneed to pay more monor for an inferior whael. Insist on having the Wnverly. Buill
and guaranteed by the Indiana Bicycle Co., a million dollar concern, whose bond is as
good as gold. 21 lb. SCORCHER, $85. 221b. LADIES', $75.
Catalogue free. Good agents wanted in every town.
INDIANA BICYCLE CO., Indianapolis Ind. U* S A.
r DONT
np
woozy.
CHEW
THE GUM
.ROUND thats
»■>Tjwbtia
*•* ® WRT S '»
SEND 1 ( CENTS
’For.SAMPLE PACKAGE 1
v ultless Chemical
BALTIMORE. MD.
A Miracle in Texas.
investigated BY THE TFy ai S
CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE oTby AND D
vouched f m. a
fjvo«v^; (wrofnihc Texas STANSBURY c*- • -
t o o us whi rh«S?mV^”left r .e Spauidio * I rz
sciatic 9 *° ^ ted
h*P down. It on“ow ,i de snr^. f ,l“ y
came bnt
XbeTit thi: ioHt
member, it was just the same as if it
of paralyzed, I was totally unable to more^ ^°ie ...
month, my room for tim/l a year and i^d »
of which was ridden l
came eonditwn back than from when the springs 8 ^ if a to™
and laid I went. I came Rome
^in^vervU flat on my back and suffered
CrUCiatin g »*° nie *> screaming in
u
the constant use of opiates. After three th
months of this kind of ree
which to the very time bone, my entire mv attention left leg ^i&^away .
PIU®? r n d *? f Dp was called to
Pills for p Pale f ?> People, c e by fir. Williams' Allison who Pink is
now train dispatcher at Texarkana, and
who was relieved of locomotor ataxia of
twenty repeated years duration. At his Urgent and
them solicitation I consented to give
began a trial, after taking a few doses I
to improve. I continued taking the
wiiVn was finally kef>t cured. I igh L My on leg , im u p ro just ving the until I
he th >*na same
thotPtot that Pmk Pills p*n not ° only * r cured oue me I but am saved sure
my life.
The reporter next visited Dr. C. H. Stans-
bn 7>. a graduate of one of the medical
school, l of Kentucky, and who
a man enjoys
the confidence of everybody Spaulding in Longview
He said: “ I know that Mr. had
a terribly severe attack of sciatic rheumatism
of which I tried to cure him; used every-
,n ,5 known to my profession in vain, arid
hita to go to Hot
the
nucu ims wens ana 1 in<
was would only affected a matterlof time until hi__
be and he would die. I also
know that his cure is thre direct result of the
use of Dr. Wiliams’ Pink Pills.”
“ That is rather an unusual statement for
regular physician to make, doctor.” a
‘ I know it is, hut a fact is fact, and
there hundreds a
are of people right here in
Longview who know what I say is the
truth. I also know Mr. Allison and know
that he was relieved of a genuine and
ease of locomotor ataxia of twenty years
standing.” J
C0L1) storai
A MAMMOTH INDUSTRY CONCERNING
WHICH LITTLE IS KNOWN.
More Than a Score of (treat Warehouses
la Mew York Fo r I'reMrriag Meats and
Frnfto-Stered In Vrtgerlfle Atmosphere
For More Than a Year.
[Special Correspondence. ]
New Yore, Jan. *8.—When yon or¬
der roast ehieken or turkey or delicious
sucking pig in hotels or restaurants,
you doubtless mnack your lips with an¬
ticipation of the feast and consider your¬
self a very great connoisseur of good liv¬
ing. I wonder would you enjoy your
banquet quite so much and would you
reckon yourself so much of a bon vlvant
if you should examine the subject of
cold storage thoroughly.
If, as von put that dainty, crisp mor¬
sel of golden browned young pig in your
mouth, some one were to tell you that
fpyipf
COLD STORAGE MACHINE.
it hud be&i hanging for over a year ia
a cold storage warehouse, do you think
you could swallow it, or if the tender
breast of that spring chicken should
prove to be from a fowl killed in the
spring of 1895 do you imagine it would
seem quite so much of a delicacy? You
cannot tell these days what you are eat¬
ing unless yon belong to that fortunate
class of beings who can run out in their
back yards, kill and dress their own
swine, beef or fowls and cook them ia
their own kitchens.
The business of cold storage is a vast
and important feature of metropolitan
commercial life. New York boasts two
dozen great cold storage warehouses,
wherein shippers and dealers, wholesale
and retail, store the quantities of beef,
game, poultry, eggs, vegetables and
fruits which regale, solace and sustain
tbe metropolitan stomach. There is, by
the way, nothing too good for that same
stomach. Tbe markets of the west and
south send their choicest products to
New York, the city of well fed men and
women.
Many of the cold storage warehouses
still cling to the nse of ice, natural or
artificial, as tbe case may be, and of salt
for freezing * Others have
purposes.
adopted the newer method of using salt
brine and ammonia. The ammonia cools
the brine, and tbe cold air is pumped by
an engine into tbe various rooms of the
big warehouses. In one large warehouse,
down near the ferries and quays, there
are 25 miles of pipe running from the
pump into all quarters of the great
building. This warehouse, which is
typical, is five stories in height and has
a capacity of 75 carloads Of freight
On one of the coldest days of the re¬
cent cold snap, when the thermometer
registered only 8 degrees above zero,
the writer, believing in the eternal fit¬
ness of things, visited a oold storage
warehouse. While at first glanoe this
might appear foolhardy, let me say that
it is much more prudent to visit such a
place on a bitterly oold day than to go
in the heat of summer, when the sudden
change of temperature might produce
fatal results. As a matter of foot, it was
actually warmer in many of the ware¬
house chambers than outside. The aver¬
age temperature of the rooms devoted to
the storage of meats, game and poultry
is from 12 to 18 degrees above zero,
while that in the rooms set apart for
fruits and vegetables ranges from 82 to
84 degrees above.
Some idea of the immense stores de¬
posited in these warehouses may be
gained from the statement that in one
room the writer saw 1,000 barrels of ap¬
ples and was told that there were alto¬
gether in the warehouse 10.00Q barrels
of Bartlett pears. One room was piled
to the ton with saddles of venison, there
being 1,500 in the collection. In another
room were 2,000 chiokenB waiting the
resurrection dak. But the most fascinat¬
ing and appalling of all the sights
shown thewriter wm a row of beauti¬
fully dressed baby pigs, stored before
the holidays of 1896 and to be kept un¬
til the holidays of 1896. There is one
humble individual in New York who
won’t eat sucking pig next December,
The rates far cold storage are one-
third cent per pound per month. Cheap
enough it sounds, but when a dealer
consigns thousands at pounds of staff to
the care of the warehouse it may read¬
ily be seen what a bill he will have in a
few months. Gold storage is only for six
days on oysters and vegetables. The cold
storage companies do not examine goods
on receipt, so that, npt being able to
oertify to their condition, they are not
responsible for any damage to perishable
goods. Condition and quality being thus
unknown, all goods are stored at the
risk of owners. Tim dealer, on consign¬
ing his stuff to the warehouse, receive*
a receipt for so many barrels, boxes,
kegs, crates, bags, baskets, tubs or other
reoeptactee, qr for so many fish, ribs,
lambs, saddles, calves, loins or sheep, as
the case may be. He is of course privi¬
leged to draw out any amount of this
stuff at any time he may wish on the
payment of its board bill.
Many cold storage warehouses do a
regular banking business. For illustra¬
I •0jgf?AS * e!ax - V gu*T
i inao
tion, suppose a poultry dealer wishes to
buy 10,000 fowls and has not the money
wherewith torocure them. He borrows
that money at 6 per dent interest from a
cold storage warehouse, or rather the
storage firm buy the poultry for him end
store it in their warehouse, giving him
the privilege of taking out as many as
be likes from tithe to time on the pay¬
ment of cash at the -ate of one-third
cent per pound arwith plus the in¬
terest on the asonry advanced for the
original purchase. Thus the cold storage
people become, as it were, brokers of
food stuffs and make a handsome profit
in this way.
lices and steam front the im-
meats in a bold storage ware-
form a frost on the pipes used to
convey the cold air to the refrigerators.
This frost takes oa ati sorts of fantastic
and pretty effects, so that the pipes are
really quite attractive at times. Barrels
of this frosty substance are daily re¬
moved. It looks exaotly like ioe, but
when you lift pieces of it you find them
as light as thistle down.
The consignors of stuff to the cold
storage warehouses are, as a rule, the
market dealers, who in' old days lust
thousands of dollars on unsalable goods.
Now all they have to do is to pop left
over stuff into cold storage and try it
again. Meanwhile the gormand mbs
his hands over his delicacies, not know¬
ing he is eating meats possibly a year
old. “What of that?’’ asked one to
Whom the writer Was expressing her dis¬
gust “Think of the mastodon* frozen
in Siberia which the dags unearthed and
ate! It doesn’t hurt them a little bit.”
Yet to some it may not be an agreea¬
ble thing to fancy you may be eating
stuff which has been in oold storage over
a year. Edith Sessions Tipper.
* JAMAICA.
Charaetertotiw 9t tbe P«opl«— It* Export*
and Import*.
[Special Correspondence. ]
Kingston, Jamaica, Jan. 80. —The
tourist upon arriving at Kingston does
not form a very favorable impression of
Jamaica. There it no disputing the fact
that the city has been in a very poor
condition for years. The sewers are
above ground and in the center or at the
side of the streets. Tbe sidewalks are
miserable, to say the least, and it ia far
preferable to walk in the middle of the
streets, jump the sewers and dodge the
efibmen, who have no regard for pedes¬
trians, than to keep on tbe uneven side¬
walks. This, however, will be remedied
to a certain extent, as tbe city fathers
have had the fact pounded into them
that the city is in a most wretched con¬
dition, a disgrace to the island. An un¬
derground sewerage system is now being
put in. They have an excellent water
system, and every house owner is com¬
pelled to place the water in each house
for the tenants, and no restrictions are
placed upon the amount of water to be
used. This has greatly added to the
healthfulness of the city. Gas and elec¬
tric lights are also in use.
The longer one remains in Kingston
the less favorable impression be has of
the island. The city is overcrowded
with a poor, ignorant class, and it is a
wonder how they manage to exist. Upon
the arrival of a steamer the wharfs are
(crowded with the natives, poorly clad,
and ope is besieged on every side, and
all he can hear is “guv me a thxupence,
A NEGRO HUT.
■ah,” or you are asked to buy fruit
cigars. To oae who has visited the
ics for the first time it is an
sight. More women than men are
ployed in coaling steamers,
large baskets of coal on their beads
easier than we could carry it with
hands. Their habits and mode of
are somewhat similar to tbe negroes’
onr southern states. The merest
of a hut is sufficient for them to live in,
and their daily food consists of
meat, corn bread, green bananas
yams. It is next to impossible to
them to move quickly unless there is
rewafd in sight. In many respects
are like children. They mnst first
taught and are willing to please so
as you do not try to force them.
majority will not work on Saturday
Sunday, and no matter how
the work may be they prefer toioee
day’s wages in order to be ont on
street and go to the market. They
happy and contented if they have
one meal a day, and don’t seem to
it very much if they miss that, and
bother themselves about the morrow.
they were au industrious class, it
not be necessary to import from
United States about $200,000 worth
can annually, $158,000 worth of
and beef, $156,000 worth of butter
$740,000 worth of flour. The total
ports for the fiscal year ending
1894, were $1,852,645, more than
half the total imports from all
countries combined. The principal
ports from the island are fruit and
wood, and the United States gets
.the whole of them. A large amount
coffee’ and sugar is also exported,
most of it going to the United Hates.
W.aAOM.
Baron Alderson,onoe released from
duties a juror who stated that be
deaf with one ear. “You may leave
box,” said &ould his lordship, “since it is
essary you bear both sides. ”
When B*by wju rick, we -ave h*rCfc*orto.
When toe <u * Quid, she cried for Castori*.
When she b*c*me Ilia*, rite clung to Qutoria.
,W hW *h» h s a Cha.trwlt«Ux*T« t h* m Ototoeto
The Hue
Thmness h often $ sign of poo t
ncAlth. Los* of weight generally
show* something kethmf wrong# wrong
If due to a a cough, i cold,
any there king trouble, or if
is an inherited ten¬
take dency to weak SCOTT’S lung*,
carel
EMULSION of Cod-
iiverOiLwith Hypophos-
phites, is It a fat-food such and
more. causes
changes that the in the system
gain is perman¬
ent and improvement continue*
even after you cease its use.
(DC. sad. fi-aoat *U druggist*.
ti;{ InBi
o lifts ___
B
Act* like a poultice, drawing
out fever and pain', and reinvig-
orating the entire Female Sys¬
tem. It removes ail obstructions
and creates a healthy, natural
flow of all secretions.
It is the one natural cure for
female troubles, because it is
applied right to the diseased
parts. Don't take internal rem¬
edies for Female weakness,com¬
mon sense requires a direct ap¬
plication for immediate relief
andjjcrmanent “Orange Blossom” cure. ,is a sure,
painless cure for falling and
dropsy of the womb, profuse,
difficult, irregular menses, leu-
corrhoea, ulceration, tumors,
sick headache, constipation, sal¬
low complexion. pastile
“Orange Blossom” is a
easily used at any time. Every
lady can treat herself with it.
Mailed to any address on re¬
ceipt of $x. Dr. J» A, McGill & Co.
4 Panorama Place, Chicago, III.
Sold by Carlisle & Ward
Koi Genlto-Vrinary Troubles am
Nervous Affections.’
These tablets Dave specific acti-A on the
genital and urinary organs, adfl speedily
correct any abnormal condition, it matters
not what it may be.
Gore aH kidney and Madder troubles, oi
every description; constipation; improve the build appetite; eld the
digestion; core end vital up
system and give tone body. force to all
of tbe organs ot the
Oven-worked Men, that suffer iron Insom¬
nia aid Nervous Debility, find prompt relief
from t
<ria?H cate Women, that suffer from Neural¬
gia,Hysteria end other Nerveroue affections,
Will find immediate relief end a permanent
core tiy their use. Female troubles, resulting
from They deranged cure all conditions oi the Monthly
Periods Every woman that tries them will
%SWSSrSFK- thank ns for the information. Price $1,00
»,«•».
Co , IVt N. Broad 81. Atlanta, Ua. Sent
l»y mail on receipt of price.
fens of
mtligntef SKIN
LOOD BRUPTION being
Al toning «{■ the nyntom
end raftering •* *m-
•Mution, when imsn l raS
from tny eoeno. P in a
fine Teste, end ft* almost *upornoturnl banting
properties justify us in guinntsoing n cur* of
1 * bleed d i s ea se s. If directions era followed.
Price, gi per Bottle, or • Bottle* for gu
VOX SALK XT DKOQOMTS.
otll ervr I rorr rittt BOOK Warner or wit!, -wowDttrm cmr
BLOOD BALM CO^ ATLANTA, GA
February Sheriff’s Sales,
Will be sold an the first Tuesday in Februa¬
fore ry next, the door between the the legal house, hour* of in *ata, the city be¬
ot court
of Griffin, Spalding County, Georgia, t* tb*
highest bidder, the followingdeMjribed prop¬
erty, to wit:
One quarter of an acre of lend in t.be city
of Griffin, Gu^bounded north by Valentine,
Dickenson, east by 8. H. Deeae, west by
State Valentine encampment Dickenson grounds, Levied and sooth and sold by
on
as the property of London Green to satisfy
a fl fa issued from the Justice Coart of tbe
1001st District 0.- M., in favor ot Milton
Cbspmsn ▼*. London Green. Tenant in pos¬
session legally notified.
M. F. MOEEIS. Sheriff 8.0.
I have purchased three bottles of Dr.
Remedy. I firmly believe it to be the best f
I hare saved the livee to two of n»y children Iren bj by 1 its use. it is the
OIsfe best medicine that ever west into a bottle. I saved the Ills of one
of my children when it was blank io the tees and tbs firat doM re¬
DOSU lieved, and io five minutes it was sleeping: eouodly. I would Dot
do without it even if it cost ten dollars a bottle.
CURBS
OUR GUARANTEE <fo 4fi
We guarantee every bottle to cure Groop to any of its forms, sod a
fopd the mooev should it fail, Ws also guarantee it to be tbs
Colds, Hoftrieoeus, Whooping Cough and aH diseases of tbe Tt
r|crtjfikafirhter DRAKE ^proprietors Findlay
bad membraoeous croup io its wor*t form. Our beetjfphyricto
up tbe c$Mr,gayiog sbe could not live. I was mounting my
when a gentleman came io with a sample bottle of Db, Drake's j
sent of toe doctors, b« gave one dose of tbe medicine. Tbe chi \ .to
of thirty infantes lier breathing became natural. A second c
had died frorh mem bra neons croop in our little town witbto i
fa **r. Drake’s ap Remedy became the talk of tbe I
i l®“II - Findlay, sale your i l d* by U. i B. not Drewry keep it, k send Son. J. 10 N. rente Han (or a i HUMi
- js f "nr 'ir
i™REVIE
| appears hi the oUwr
are published. With the recent exhaonHaary
Bis A increase of worthy periodicals, these careful
reviews, summaries,
quotations, giving the : ..annum,
, gist of periodical Mas.
ture, are alone
subscription price.
Aside from these
. and contributed f
equal in extent to
an tnvaiu
with pictures on every page of tb*L
women who have made the history qf the month.
I from i
bf the 1 Review
of Eiffel Tower for the survey of the
field of periodical literature. And yet 4t has “■•■wiu a mM and volcri -Mom
own, and speaks out with decision and
teVL the hour. It is a singular combination of
5$; the daily newspaper. It jg dally in Its freshness;
It is monthly in Its method. It is the world
££ under a field glass. “ rfftT
3-7* 80,4 on *U New* Stand*. Sin*l. C*py, _ ,| rantt.'*
§§.... 1 3 Aster Place, “Review-Reviews
mmmmwummmt
- pwP mm
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA * RAILWAY COMPANY,
Schedule in Meet January £th,
No. 4 No. 12 mn- : - JhSF
Daily. Dally. •tati on*.
— ...... ..
7 50 pm 7 30jdi .Atlanta............. jjftft
8 41 pi 4 43pm 8 16am ..Jonrab ro............. 718.
9 9 57 25 pm 6 5 00pm 24pm 8 9 58am 80am »2 ...Griffin. D**TlU* V 82 pa>|
I 7 10 00am • «. *. .,.
85 pm
10 11 26 18 p 6 26pm 11 10 10am 00am ....Forgvth..
pm 7 15 am • * » ».»»*._ _ _
. . . .
11 52 urn 8 25pm 1152pm • s. .....Gordon.....
9-OOpm ■ * *. 4* l*. Mm *•« • * * •*«[**y»«»-
1 00 am II 52pm
2 56 am *«*e*«4 «.. . Mlllw . .*****.« atlXiLII
H 00 am t7 45 pm . >•»*• •*••«. » AQ^Ufltfl. ft. — . « - »WM« • -M?
6 30 am 540p . .........Havaiinah. ah............I 9
Between Macon and Southwest Georgia Pointa.
No. 7 I No. 6
*7~50 p! It 15 am Lv..............
8 50 pm 12 21 pm hit .. ....Fort Yslb^. ■0 440,*»„.,94 4 ,
10 11 pm 1 62 -11111' Dm
-*1*093905 SSSSS ^ At9 At****,**,*,,,9044094041 •••« • 4 • • 9* . 9 0 44 9*9499 .... . 09 4 . 4**9 . 0 » 0 404 ...... 00* ••Cuthbort..»Lv ..DftWftOtt A • , lbftAJT Eo^flolliox" 49 9 4 4* 900944*9 9999, 4 4 • 44 9 4 4 S 4* 44*40044 * to*#/* 4 4 4 * •# 9 »*.LV ..Lv * DVl
_
j :
Train lor Nawnaa, Cat roll ton and teavas Griffin at 8 86
8 20 a. m. daily except - Sunday. - - Beturning arrivaa Griffin Griffin at at 8 8 4b
a. m. < a. a.
p. m dally except Sunday. For timber
dlTBIH {
O.
7 s *
THE GEORGIA MIDLAND & G R.
• X*’ 1 '' ''• >4 '' - *' '■ ! ' ‘1,51* * 4- 1 i fcwrti'd 7*1^1
Jno. F. Flourney, Receiver.
Shortest anfl QaicKsst Boato fiotvesn GolmOii id
- $1 *
Only line lunning Double Daily Train* and Through
♦ Coaches between Columbus and Atlanta.
NORTH BOUND.
...........................Columbus..... •...»ffswrlj HrIIi * IttlMMSI •• ••»
Leave............. Mountain .«••••••• *•«•*..* * a • • ...... * • » .
I Leave................Warm ................Oak Springe 4 e • • • • «» •« • * • e tee *
...... •••*»• a • *-•
Leave.. W ■HIM • • » • ...... * * • • • • ••* • • * • * ** •*
......... .. .»••#•«••** ..UOIW’Ord* 44 t 44 44 •• 49444 V •»*•**# W4i 4* •«•*•*«.
lllHITf. ii mi----—— .a.WilliaiI»iO* ssnwists ssMi....« HM t s «s>. ■»*
Dffyg,, 944444444 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 .... . .9 - ... « 44499 4 4 4 9 999*94 4 4 9 4 499 4 4 4 4 * 44
Arrive............ Arrive., AiriYM Leave. . • . • • • • «•*••• ............... • • • •»•».». .-..MAeonC. AtlflOtfl) SOUTH •. • Mellon • 0 C. one BQCTR ft. ft, h R.s***ee**»flMsnis« • 9 aa 4 09 a a 9 • It * 4 44-0 #••••««• • a*'.* ,9 s*sM«**«i*«**s 4,,9*99 •• • * 4 * , *••* 0 9 4_* # -.JlgSfc—
JESaras#*•«»«••••*.* »*y-. . licljoBdugh. T
^ ...GrtfBn ,
Arrive...........
Leave...................Atlanta, C. ft. ft......... 999490999499 0 9 4* 7 80 am 4 00 pm
Leave*....*..... .*.•••Mawtarv. ft* ft.. III
Leave....................drifts •*•* 4444 4444 II
Wav (tel'tfrtfl # . *,«■ • “l«tl • • 044 4 4 440 444 9 »•—» • • • • t*ra- ?•»•••
Leave................... (eMOfu**.*»•*« •...•*>.
I4&VA„M..1M....N . •#••**•*Warafc S • t S • S S M»* Woodbttfy S|wriagpn..»*M•... .****, ,44999400 0 0,094 4444 *44499 9999,
ue we. 4 9 4 99* 9 9 4 4 •**!'•«• • **»^w-...sa.« Isa
Leave.................... Oak Honntain•«»• ststteH«<Hw» - JM£
Leave....................Waverly •»..•....CohirotMw.... Rail..... ,M**
Arrive......*..•• ■ • *•»«»«**#•
Train. 50 and 51 carry through coaches between Columbus a
Ask for ticket, and see that they i Mad via Tbe Georgia I
O. W. 0HKAB8, Gen. Mgr. CLIFTOB JON m>,Gea. Fans. Ag*