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A CLEVELAN D
TTOBNEYS AT U% 1 -
Griffin. Ga
—
Do Yon Want to
SELL YOUR LAND ?
It so we will advertise it free of charge >■
lb* lending paper*
North, East and West
BUCK * STKWART,
Agents for Georgia Immigration tt
In vest meat Bureau.
W. J. Nobthkn. Manager.
H. J U4RLAN0.
0ENTIS1.
0®ce Over Griffin Banking Company,
drilln. Qa.
M. O. BOWOOIN.
—DEALER IN—
Real Kstate,
24 Hill Street.
GB1KFIN : t (IICOROIA
BLAKELY A ELLIS
FUNERAL /. DIRECTORS
A- a U. GRADES CLOTH-COVER BD, Me.
talic and Wood Coffin* and Caskete-
prompt and caretnlattention Frw- ..... M«i«ee
Carriage* and all det ails attended »A
da'ming on reasonable terms. r ali« «■>
Notice to Debtors and < refill r .
All persons indebted to ?he state o' E L
Hammett, hereby late notified of Spa d.igCounty,<]. <■ „Ked
are to call and net'L the
game; and all pertiee havirtg cl mu .igainai
said estate will present tne «a;> e piopetlt
proven. * K. T DAM BG,
„ novlSwd AdminUtr.it.or.
ARE T "to
ICYttE&S I I
its : *1
High Ciate
Warranto 1 superior to any rflcycle built in the world, regardless if price Do not <
ndac»d to p iv m ire monev for an imertor wheel. Insist on having the Waverly. Built
and guaranteed by the Itniiina Btovofoi'o, $85. a million dollar concern. whose bond is a*
good Catalogue as gold. 21 lb. SCORCHER, 221b LAD1KS*, * $75.
fi^M. Good agents wanted in every town. '
INDIANA BICYCLF CO.. Indianapolis
r DQNT
BE
WOOZY.
THE lull
THATS
BOUND.
P0SIN O/ipS
efs
SEND / ^ Jt. CENT8
; jt\ i Tor S AMPLE m. PACKAGE i .-A
Faultless Chemical Co
BALTIMORE, MD.
'
PURGATORY AND PARADISE COM*
PARED BY A MAN WHO
$ HAS SEENjBOTH*
4 Miracle Worked f - ~ " “
Albert Applebee r.i
Jkad ailing was •a a a very very sick i man. He
•. been, ..-.w for -- months months aad i had been
compelled . ... to remain home, unable to
to his basinets. HU attend
about the friends stood or sat
few small stores in the village of
Borodino and diseaeeed his sad condition.
Applebee Was hie a carpenter and a good one
too, hut since strange malady overtook
him he had not shown any disposition to do
sny work. Life had lost its charms for
him, he became a misanthrope and lost in
everything. local doctors tried HU friends their advised skill him hi{s and but the it
on
was of no avail. Although they no doubt
lut he recovered and it hat made soch a
stir in the small town that a JVVaw reporter
drove was sent • ut to Borodino to investigate. He
over and found Mr. Applebee hard at
work on the roof of a house he was buiid-
“ Well, It was josl this war. began the
carpenter, who is a good-looking man of
shout fifty summers. r ‘ In the fall of 1800 I
had a siege of grip. It was a pretty rough
time for me as 1 was very sick and J never
ei P e «ted fo go oat again except feet first in a
coffin. But f recovered after a long sickness
but was loft with an ailment which was quite
as hRd dangerous and' Infinitely more painful. I
serofula in my head for two years and a
half or over and there was a sickening dis¬
charge from my right ear. I took about
every medicine known to the medical fra.
lirmty hut could get no benefit.
“ I was also troubled with a severe pain in
the stomach and indigestion which made
me feel that life was not jworth living, last
■“ :ine known Dr.
as
ale People which
had read of them in by a friend of the whose wife
some countrv
papers. But I gave it a trial and was sur¬
prised to find that it benefited me. 1 tried
more and persevered and at last thank God,
1 was cured. My ear has discontinued dis¬
have charging and for the past three months I
lieen perfectly-Well. I make these
■itatenfents merely becanse I think'the world
ihould be acquainted with this remarkable
remedy.” Several
of Mr. Applebee’s neighbors were
nreased ‘eeo by the their reporter confidence 1 in the? Dr. in Williams' turn ex-
Pin!< l’iils after seeing the wonderful change
they simply had wrought on tiitn. Onesaid the cure
was wonderful as the man was a total
Dr. Williams’ Pink PHls contain all the
dements necessary to give new life and rich¬
ness to the blood and. restore shattered nerves.
had They are for salary all druggists, Williams’ or mav be
Company, by mail Schenectady, from Dr. Medicine
company, sotienectady, J? N. Y., for 60c. per
box, or six boxes for $2.50.
aw..-lilt), i
WE HAVE LEFT JNI •*»*** WE
OUGHT TO Kg
"
ThU Is „ th# View of . Ooagroesaeaa . 6.
O.
i -The Necewdty of Libers! AnWo-
•I a VMtf MsM.
Men. Money Par Capita.
[Special Correspondence.}
Washington, Jan. 2&—Horn Joseph
<3, Csuuqu was in a delightfully social
and reminiscent mood when I milled cm
him the other evening at the Norman¬
die, and having just come in from hi*
regular late afternoon spin on the bi¬
cycle he was aglow with vivacity and
good humor. “I confess to being an old
man at last,” he mid, "ami, like other
old men, my thought* turn ofteuer to
the scenes of my youth, and I lovu to
meet some one from the old neigh Ikw-
hood and hear how the boys and ph Is of
1850-60 have turned out." I may be
permitted to add that in the days be re
ferred to bis father was known to onr
folks, borrowing a term from Scripture,
as tbe beloved physician. He wan
drowned while returning late at night
from a professional call, so in the local
memory his position was something like
that of a martyr, and team sometime?
shone in the eyee at those who told of
his good qualities and sad fate. Ur.
Gannon talked at great length of hi?
classmates In the Bloomingdale Quukei
HON. JOSEPH o. CANNON.
school; of early days on the Wabash,
"when around Annapolis a man wasn’t
in style unless he hud an agne cake;" of
the great antislavery fight made by his
Quaker friends and relatives, and of the
developments of bis own political side
since the memorable day when he sat
under the stand at Rockville and hard
the first great speech of O. P. Morton,
then candidate for governor, opening
the hot campaign of 1856. Finally,
however, he got on to What he calls the
philosophy of budgets and gavo hit
views as* to tbe principles which should
govern tbe committee on appropriations.
With much else he said:
"The true question for the people It
ask is not, ‘Do we pay more taxes than
we did?’ but, ‘Is what we pay houestly
and economically expended!’ If yes,
then they should be willing to pay more,
for jnst now this nation can earn and
Bave very many dolfhrs by tbe propei
expenditure of one. To state it bluntly,
the United States has reached that point
where it must assume a new and fai
higher and more commanding place
among the nation* Providence has im¬
posed on us the suzerainty of this west¬
ern continent, and we cannot abdicate
onr function. If we try to do so, it will
be much the worse for ns. All history
shows that a nation, in order to live,
must go on developing, and any nation
that withdraws its energies and oon
tracts them witfein Its own bouudariee
is certain to become like China or worse.
A nation like this is not at liberty to sit
back at selfish ease and disregard the
claims of the weak. We have a duty toe
plain to be mistaken. And here comes
in the great question of an efficient navy
and coast defenses, and herein is made
evident the truth that parsimony ia not
eoonomy. ’ ’
Need cf a Navy.
“What is your idea as to immediate
action ?”
"1 would have them all, both navy
and deftimfes, brought to a very high
state of efficiency—not for war, but to
prevent war. Under Arthur we began tc
build a navy, and though we have been
ridiculously slow we have made a very
handsome start. We have navy enough
to give us some standing, but, what is
of far more importance, we have learned
how to build a navy and have got the
plant to do it and tbe men who under¬
stand the business, and if we don’t go
ahead now it will be nothing less than
criminal negligence. It is to gtrengthfn
tbe diplomatic arm that we want these
things. One dollar in preparatibn wiir
save very many which would otherwise
be. expended in war. The embassador
who speaks with a good navy behind
him is listened to. I want to say, how
ever, that while I am not criticising
any others our man at Constantinople
ia in a condition of unusual embarrass
meut, and so far be appears to have
done his duty well
"Embassadors, how war, am not tbs
most important In fact, .1 sometimes
think that in these days of iuterconti-’
nental telegraphs and rapid transports
tion we might do better with special
envoys than resident embassadors. It is
the consular service that we need to de¬
velop. ram almost afraid to say how
far I would go iu that liue if I could
have my way and bow much money I
would spend in establishing a world¬
wide consular service on a new car at
any rate a far more thorough and com¬
prehensive system. We should—indeed
we must—have it renovated from top to
Bottom. Not that it isn’t pretty good
now, but we want a system far better
and more comprehensive than that of
any of the older nations, and we want
it put under a far more rigid system of
civil service. There should be a drat
class man cf business in every great
seaport and foreign city, and that man
w sogEjugi
- v „„rM*
pmeci 0 M>'
i
howabfe ea&atif
want, and are they bay to to boy buy tt!
Ha shoo id be able to answer these ques¬
tions at a miuute’s notice.
MmA at Harm Foreign Trade.
"Did you ever figure out how little
haa really been dona by tbe great na¬
tions in foreign trade Why, compared wUh
what might be done? Mae world
contains 1,500,060,000 people and only
about 400,000,000 of them can really
manufacture for themselves. Hew, all
them uncivilised or not entirely civilis¬
ed people who are using only $3 or $8
worth each yearly of manufactures ought
to use SO times as much. To civilise
them is merely to stimulate their de¬
sires and develop their capacity to pay.
Look at the vast tropical regions of
Spanish America, where they produce
almost nothing to compete with us and
need almost everything that w? can
manufacture cheaply. Why, we ought
to sell those people $3,000,000 or $4,-
000,000 worth of stuff in a little while,
even if we supplied them with nothing
hot household conveniences and farm,
implements—in which we beat the
world, and do it easily. Now what has
all this, you will say, got to do with tny
committee? Why, I would select tlw very
best men who could be got for the
places, put them iu all important cen¬
ters there and have them make it their
life business to serve this country in
commercial lines, and to get tbe right
kind of men we must pay them. This
country doesn't want cheap men to do its
work. We want tbe best, and, by the
blessing of God, we can afford to pay
for them.
“I sometimes smile when I think of
tbe protests against increased cost and
the pledges of retrenchment and then of
tbe way circumstance* have forced ns
into a wider field. Take the history of
my committee, and it illustrates it beau¬
tifully. Tbe constitution, yon know, re¬
quires that ail lulls for raising money
must originate in tbe bouse, and, while
it does not say that bi 11a for spendiug
money must, yet the reason of the thing
carried it, and so far the first 76 years
the ways and means committee made the
appropriation bills. Early in 1865, how¬
ever, Tbad Stevens carried a measure for
a separate committee on appropriations,
and as he had been chairman of the ways
and means he elected to follow the ap¬
propriations and was tbe first chairman
in the Thirty-ninth congress. Tbe oom-
mittee had all the 18 bills till Randall
had his great fight with Speaker Carlisle
and our Bill Morrison, then chairman
of the ways and means. Of course it
was taken for granted they wanted to
protectionist. cprtail Randall’s At power, aa he was a
. any rate, they took
from the committee seven bills and gave
control of them to the special commit¬
tees having the special subjects in
charge, and now we have exclusive oon
trol of but six bills.
Faring '
aad Getting.
"A great reform, was it? Well, we
have more work to do than the commit¬
tee once had with all the bills, and as
we necessarily have a sort of supervision
over tbe seven bills brought iu by the
other committees, on account of defi¬
ciencies coming in, we can measure the
advance with precision from year to
year. It ia destiny that is forcing ns
along the path toward higher functions
and greatly enlarged national activities.
And why not, if the mouey ia properly
expended? Contrast our old neighbor¬
hood in 1860 and now. Taxes then were
perl rhaps 50 cants on Courts $100, bat what
did we get for itT and jails I
. ... , ,
Now the taxes are three times as high
and on five or ten times as much prop¬
erty, but look what the citizen gets for
bis mouey—-the finest syatetn of grave]
roads in the world, with splendid
bridges over the river and all the creeks
at every important place; the finest;
school system ia the country, a system
that has been taken aa a model by many
new states and even by the District of
Columbia, qnd a hundred other things. ”
(Here Mr. Cannon told several am
about tbe mud roads of his early
and laughed most heartily at the recol¬
lection. ] "Why, the citizen gets twice or
three times as much for each dollar paid
in taxes aa ia i860. Now it ia perfectly
practicable that the United Btotes should
do the same, for, though it is a govern¬
ment of limited powers, withiu its
sphere it is supreme. That gives ns all
the power we want as to navy and coast
defense^—Sooth Africa and the islands
near to us. the Nicaragua canal and all
tbe rest—and I am very decidedly for a
bold and vigorous policy, believing that
to be far more economical in tbe end. ”
Mr. Cannon directed tue to many cu¬
rious and interesting points in tlie rec¬
ords of the committee on appropriations,
and by the courtesy of the chief Merk,
Mr. James C. Courts, 1 was enabled to
pass a very pleasant afternoon in the
survey. It is ao odd fact, by the way,
that this committee has had but two
/chief clerks in the 31 years of its exist¬
ence. The first was Robert J. Stevens
of California, who beid continuously for
18 years, and was succeeded by Mr.
Courts of Tennessee, who has bsld for
12 yeast' as chief and bad previously
been Mr. Stevens’ assistant for 6 years.
Tbe latter was a Republican, and Mr.
Courts is a Democrat, civil service rules
having held from the start in this com¬
mittee. Thad Stevens, aa aforesaid, was
the first chairman, and was followed iu
turn by’Washburn of Illinois. Dawes of
Massachusetts and Garfield «f .Ohio.
Then oame the political revolution of
1874, and the Democratic chairmen
were Randall,- Holman and J. D C.
Atkins of Tennessee. Frank Hiseock,
Republican, followed, then Randall
again, then Gannon in the Fifty-first,
Holman in tbe Fifty-second. Bayer* of
Texas in the Fifty-third and Cannotf
again in the present house. Hehas been
an the committee for 14 years, having
started with toe Forty-Sixth congress,
but lost his sent in the Fifty-second.
J. H. Beadle.
f "I - " ■ | it i i n . 1 . - |
Weighty Responsibilities Endanger.
It's curious* that the floating debt of
corporation often sinks it—Philadel¬
North American.
_
When toe was a Child, she cried for Caatoria.
Whaa toe beams Was, aoe cfcntg to CaatoriSt
haeah. had Children,ah.!
Tbs dumb or FssUm
Best Lsdies’ Fashion Journal .wbKshed
or tbs mousy. Non# better at any price.
Only 50 ccs, a year, post-paid. Send time
w!v %
Emulsion
MS
m v
Cod-liver
Oil without
the fish-fat taste*
You get all the virtue
of the oil. You
skip nothing
but the
taste.
iw. and $taM at aU druggfsta.
Acts like a poultice, drawing
out fever and pain, and reinvig¬
orating the entire Female Sys¬
tem. It removes all 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
and permanent cure.
"Orange Blossom” 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.
"Orange Blossom” is apastile
easily used at any herself time. with Every it.
lady can treat
Mailed to any address on re¬
ceipt of $ 1 . Dr. J. A. McGill & Co.
4 Panorama Place, Chicago, 111.
S old by Carlisle & Ward
immmTlra
Kot tientt o- V rlnary Troubles and
Nervous Affections.
These tablet» bave epeciflj action on the
senital and urinary organs, and speedily
correct any abnormal condition, it mat! era
not what it n ay be.
Cure all kidney and bladder troubled, ol
every description; improve th« appetite; aid
digestion; core constipation; bnild up the
system and give tone and vital force to all
pi thy organs of the body.
Ovsrrwnrked Men, that suffer find from Tosom-
trow nia and tbeir Nervous Debility, prompt relief
nee
Delicate Women, that sufier from Neural¬
gia. Will Hysteria immediate and other Nerverous and affection*,
hy find relic! a permanent
cure tbefr use.
from They cure all Female troubles, resulting Monthly
Period* deranged conditions 01 the them will
Every woman that trie*
thank us to? th*information. Price $1,00
per Sold package; 3 package* for Haggard $2 50
0o., 7VI by !*• druggists $road 81., and Ga. Specific Sent
Atlanta,
by mail on receipt of price.
g - jfe ........
AHouseheMRsmil} Care* •£!?[,T-
w 5*45 Sift-TO •ALT RMEUM RMEU form 1C of
mStlssarf » »**Of •kIN
BLOOD toning dRUPTIO* being #SI*sm**s for betide, ia
sad restoring up foo eyetam
oon-
Stitution. whon imnoirod
from any ce»ne. No.
, aad Rsnhnont oupornotural keeling of
| ell propertlee bleed Jeetify no la guaroo teeing e oee*
dieeeeee, If dtrecOene are folleeeed.
Frtee, |1 per Bottle, or * Bottle* for frt
roa eats nr siooonta
I 1 SENT BLOOD FREE BALM
CO-, ATLANTA, Q<
February Sheriff’s Sales.
Win be sold on the flrstTuesday In Februa¬
ry next, between the legal hours ol sale, to •
erty, to wit:
One quarter pf an acre of land in the city
of Griffin, 9a., bounded north by Velestine
Dickenson, east by 8. H. Deane, and went by
State encampment ground*, eouth by
Valentine Dickenson Levied on and sola
a* the property of London Green to aatiefy
a lie tamed from the Justice Court of tbe
1001st. District G. II., in favor ol Milton
Cnapatn vs. London Green. Tenant in pop
session legally notified.
M. F. MORRIS. Sheriff 8,0.
I bave purchased three botUe* of Df, Drake’*
I Remedy. I firmlv Mieve it tp be tbe best remedy fta OO tbe
ojfzl have saved tbe lives to taro of my children by ms.
best medicine that ever went info a bottle, f saved
of my cbiidreo when it was black in tbs tote* aad tba
Df] CP 11 lieved, ,WTea - and a0,5 in to five nve minutes minutes it tt wsa waa sleeping' sieeptng; eoaodly. eoandt '
U do without it eveo if it eoat ten dollars a bottle. _
CURES; John A. Gdbbman, Carey, Oblo,
OUR GUARANTEE
We go it ran tec ever? bottle to cure^Croupany^ol its forme, aadl^autborixe every d
Colds, Hoaraeoess, Whooping Cough aad of tbe Throat and Longs.
)$he My case, tbri ISit u» TiZSSXZSl'm t?,rr ¥ *
hen in with sample bottle of Da. Drake ’•
w a gent came a Tbe
iof tas> s, be gave ooe doss of the medicine. trt
of thirty minutes her breathing became natural. A second dots
bad died from membraneou# croup in our little town within tbe i
■»r. Drake’s German Croup Remedy became tbe talk of tbs town.
vr-' |
Tod ou ^ rQ,?1J ‘ -t do< * nofc Vsep it, send 10 cent* tor a s umpM
CO by, Ohio.
Foreole in Gfdffia by?H. fit j i. Ni l ;
y • - •# .V
__5i_:-1 f'? f J'
ny
•AU.1
HYevie
put* t* AUMUT a HU*.
or
as its
fame implies, rives hi
readable form the best
World, **££ £ -
generally on the ;
trt published. With the recent extraordinary ]
increase of worthy pertofficah, tone these careful 1 [•
reviews, summaries, and r
quotations, giving the
*isl of pertodlcaffeera.
* ____ aTO ___ * aji4sas tore, are alone worth
the sufeecrtfffipn Aside from these Jartct. dejMrtmenti, the editorial $ 3 . 50 .
aad contributed features of the Review fir Reviews art
equal in extent to l magxrine. The Editor’s
an invaluable chronicle Of the happenings of the
with pictures on every page of tit* men and t MR
women who have made the history of the month.
■'X IN Literary WmU stytt “ W* are deej% b
impressed from month to mouth with toe value
of the ‘ Review or Reviews,’ which is a sort
led Eiffel Tower for the survey of the whole
field Of periodical literature. And yet it has a mind and rok» %t
own, and speaks out wUh decision and sense «, Mi
’ s-i hour. It l
daily newspaper. « is daily in V
it is monthly in its method. It is the world
unde/ a field- glas*,’’ th*nm\
Ml mall II New* N.w» Steads. Stand., Slogt. Single Caw, Copy, jj
£? view ri *®s. (kJN) iNltfll wilf ■
m Xmmtmmm «**» *
OF RAILWAY COUP)
Schedule to Effect January &th, 1896.
No. ill fcW. ltoirVI IT 2 ft T*
Daily. Dally. •Fatness. • v ,
7 50 pm 4 OOpm 7 SOjh . Atlanta, ■■%
5 41 pm 4 4 3 pm 8 16am ...Jonesb'ra..... ...
8 25 pm OSMfW 8 58am
8 57 pm 6 OOpm » 80am
7 55 pm 10 00am
26 pm 6 20pm 10 10am
11 18 pm 715am * 11 * 00
am
52 am 8 25pm 1152pm
1 00 y oopi )pui II 52pm ...........Uitl’d«*rtD .........Teaatfts
am a ....a........ «
2 66 am 8 31pm • •»**?•* •*»••*< a.:r.T:.::r:^
8 00 am t7 45pm •••»• a * a a « .as«M
6 80 am 5 40pm BstsSfak.,... ..,....( S s gs»
Between Macon .id Soattuert Oeergl a Pototo.
« o.7 ■Daily-1 No. 6 ■
lTlfitn'£7 arartows.
8 7 60 60 11 pm pm 12 1 52 21 pm A Ar............., r.. •••**• *•,, * 4 «••<...... 0*m» «*•« a .Fort • a a llttCOB . . . , . ....... •tuatMiMM), . * . •»«,«««. u T 3
pm pm
15 pm 8 25 pm Ar• Aa i
8 05 pm it. >awaon.............. .
8 47 pm Ar.....,,,.....
4 40 pm • wt .xv.otM.n « • f j j i t » inim
7 85 pm Af* • • a .La* .* • »•**•* *'A * f eeae.ees*
Trains marked run daily except duaday
Train tor News an, Cat rolltoa aad
20 a. daily m. daily except except Sunday. Sunday. ( RvtaraU
m. For For
TBE GEORGIA MIDLAND & GULF R. R.
Jno. F. Flournky, Receiver. t > - J
line lunning Double Dailjr Trains,
Coaches between Cotumbus and Atlanta.
>;■. wmimmMtiwBk
NORTH BOUND. ME* 1 BSaR
.............. .....•XoIdidImii,.,,,
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Trains 50 and 51 carry through
Ask lor ticksts nod aoe that they rand via Tbe
O. W. OHKARB, Gust. Mgr.