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DOUGLAS QLE8SIE1, Ed- ud Prop.
TER 1*3 OF
****W»fiH«' •,*••»**
'“ LT ',£a»*i* (in iwlvanoe)...
,
ontlnued strictly
asadvaoM, 1 vanes, and will be dlaoon
»«»aa»nbi i «* mibacrtpAloo expire*
Nnsutvasn
RAU& nf,
nor
lias* or >w »o
! nFotTcKB —10 cent* per
lee* than one dollar must be
|| [ rates will be made with
wHM« ^UtbiHluH j nr
rates aefor the
T“
1899 FEBRUARY.
Sr. Mm T*. Th. Fr. 8a.
1 2 3 4
smadbfc?
6 7 8 0 10 11
12 13 14 it "28 16 w_ 18
19 40 21 22 \2i
26 - 27|28 *
OfliSl r Pip«r ol Spalding W.
Thif weather ia what we get for
joining on to tropioa) poafieaaiona.
Instead of winter and summer, the
United State* may now be set down
a« th* poeeeggor of wet and dry sea-
g o n e mostly wet
Now they have shipped the rest of
that canned beef on the transport
“floteoe” and are going to send it to
Dew« v He will probably fire it
into wie Filippino^ should they get
too ► Ohstreperoos, and then they will
be sorry sorry they were not good.
The Army snd Navy Ordinance
adopt the
Kffft-Jqygpnson rifles for the navy
well as the army, andthe Lee-
Metford pieces will go oat of usb, the
object of the change being to have
tbs same ammunition fit the rifles
qw uolo djt wx6 ninoet ana oy
the land (prose. Moreover, dip
eartrldgee of the one-piece type need
so effectively in the Spanish Mauser
gnns are to be supplied on ail Krag-
Jorgenson r flee, which hereafter
will be the arm of both army and
navy. With these changes the
small arms of Federal troops on
land find sea will compare fairly
with the weapons of any other force
the world over.
THE MAI WHO ADVERTISES.
T4* man who advertones all the
ymx rou^osn getmw© business
with a three inch holiday ad then
th* oooM-yeir advertiser can get
with a full oolumn.
There is more money spent in De
oember than in any other month of
th* year, of oourse, but there is
some money spent every mouth,and
Is worth getting, riup-
Jt 2 per cent, of $5,000
in gutting s $5,000 holiday trade.
Ton oaU that good business, Hup.
pose there is procurable $1,000 worth
of basin*** ia February or August,'
isn’t it just as wise (6 spend 2 per
cant, of that! amount in order to get
that amount of business? Of courts
there is only one answer to this
question. * ' 11
It would bs foolish to assert that
jn«l as much money ought to bs
spent in February as in December,
with reference, of course, to lines of
business that ootne in for share of
the Christmas trade. But some
monsy should be spent in February
and in every other month of the
year. Every merchant who adver¬
tises at all ought to keep his name,
hie goods and the reasons why he
deserves to be in business, before
the public all the time. In this way
be can get a certain amount of di¬
rect business daring the months
when not so much business is done,
and he will not be obliged to labor
under the disadvantages of being to
all intents and purposes a new ad¬
vertiser when the busy season
ootnes. That is to say, his advertis¬
ing in any month of the year, if in-
teHigantly prepared and judiciously
pl a ned, will bring him enough im-
bq$iae$s to wore than pay
ipanditnr*, and when
arrive* tb«
bt D»*
WM. .nytbUig^hat Ih.l h 1» * coaid
)s
large* ciMe#. Suppose a jeweler,
for instance, who advertises to the
extent of a column or two during
the holiday season and never adver¬
tises at any other time, should use a
small space :e every every day, day, every every other
day, or evenoneea wet* all through
the year. Even if this apace were
only two or three incite*, It would
bring Wm business. * Even if it ap-
the public alive to the fact that he
wis on earth, that be wp conduct¬
ing a Jewelry boainess on such a
be 8 W alive # 1
to
no t <?o business mid to have a shard
of the peopled money,
Some merchant*haVean idea that
good advertising consists in using a
lot of apace, if they feel that they
otn’t afford to make a splurge, they
keep quiet altogether. This ia very
wrong and a very foolish idea. Of
course the more space you Can af¬
ford to uae, the more you can do
wi th it and the better off you are.
But if you feci that your business
doesn’t warrant more than two
inches, or two lines for that matter,
theee two makes
or two lines. Don’t disappear alto¬
gether. The man who advertises
even in a small way gains a certain
prestige by that advertising. The
man who fails to advertise at all
upon as being on the down bill
r* ad, which w a very had impres¬
sion to create.
New librarian of Congress.
Ooi.i mboh, O., Feb A—Dr. J. H. Osw
field, president of th**>hio State uai*
versify, was asked regarding the report
that his name had been presented to
President McKinley for He the position he of
librarian of congress stud had
received an intimation of tbs fact, bai
knew nothing of the infllneuos which
. caused the presentation. He said he
was not a candidate, but would not say
whether would accept or not.
Christian Selene*- TelHptes.
CftiCAOO, Feb. 8 —Chicago Cb tian
litist# have subscribed $ 20,000 wifhin
the last ten day* towards the *r»ction of
two costly -new temples, one for the
north side and the other for the weel
side cougragntfou*.__
Can Cubans Govern Themselves? «
One of the best known diplomatists re
o-mtly declared that the Cubans are iuen
pable of governing themselves, and that
the Unltog States most maintain Us pres¬
ent control Indefinitely, or else annex the
island. There will be those who will dis¬
The pute this, but there are none who dispute
well established fact that Hostetler’s
Ptotnach the Bitters is capable of of the ihs of stomach, stomach. ooutrolling It is
oon.mon disease bs s
m remedy It that Is ideal backed medicine by fifty years eonsti- of
si ce# t. Is an for
pation; predisposed a strength lung builder troubles, for those and who for
are to
nervoutnes* it is of wonderful benefit. Ac
an appetiser it Is incomparable Those
whose stomachs bottle. are out of order should
not fail to try a
8 <-v«*n Imiictvd For Murder.
Ooi.yt'iTT, Ga., Feb. &—After * sift¬
ing investigation, lasting on* day and
a half, the grand jury has indicted
George Phillips, Barnes Burrell Bailey, Phillips, Dew Bailey, Henry
Phillips, Gardner and 'hernia Cleveland <or
Ike
tue murder of old man J. Has tin aad
his ana, Virgil special Rustin, on of tke Miller night of
Juu. :l. A to m supe¬
rior court is heaiing the oases.
$HH> Reward $lOO, : >
* The readers of this paper will be pleased
to lenru that there ia at least one dreaded
disease that science has been able to cure
la all i its i logos, and that is caterrh.Hall s
Catarrh Cure is the only positive euro
knowo to the u.edioal frater—“y Catarrh
being lretag a a constitutional constitutional disei diet , requires a
constltnttonal treatment all's Catarrh
‘Cure is taken Internally, itlng directly
upon the blood and iuuoo< turfaces of the
system, therebv destroying he foundation
■■gRpsdlewwef, of strength tbe by building and kIvIi tha i t oonstltatloo the tba potl ilent
____. . „ . up „ a sew
and The assisting nature have in nm-h doing faith its work. in its
cumtiye proprietors that they so offer One Hun¬
dred Dollars powers for that it fails to
any case
cure. Send for list of testimonials.
Address F. J. CHENEY A CO..
Toledo, O.
Bold by V&mlfy Druggists, 75c.
Hall's PUls turn the beet.
. -• .
. — . y- -
Bearing-down sensations, internal
heat and female weaknesses are
cured by use of Simmons Squaw
Vine Wine or Tablets.
-swiso VOTiotr* a Quarrel,
Anniston, Ala., Feb. 3—Ernest Free¬
man, aged 90 years, committed suited*
here by shooting nimself with a pistol.
A quarrel with hie fiauoe was the cans*.
Root ot the Trouble.
“My health was vt-rjr poor, owing to the
Impure condition of my blood. A frk-n I
advised me to take Hood's Sarsaparilla
and I did so. In a short time 1 Ix-gan to
feel bettor After I taking three bottles 1
, was Sarsaparilla.” all right. gladly recoinmeml Hood’s
Chaklks W. jSavagk,
FVrnandlna, Florida.
Hood’s Pills cure all liver ills. Mailed
fur 86 c. by C. I. Hood A Co., Lowell Mass.
A sluggish li ver cause* drowsiness,
lethargy and a feeling of apathy.
Dr. M' A. Simmons liver Medicine
arouses the liver, and cheerful oner
gy succeeds sluggishness,
life \
The preserver which has car¬
ried many ladiee safely over tbe dan.
gerous sea “Change of Life” i« Sim-
noon* Bqpew Vine Wine or T ablet*.
’
\ i
8TEAMER t0
Thre* t.TinZZ.'Z Officer* mmd Two ChlMM flr»>
| ra-B Wtrc liruwned.
j g „ *"! „ °'
th# low of tbe-Britteh .< CUsna-
von. received here, elate that ah# ran on
a wreck about 90 or >0 miles from Hoog-
Kong on Dec. 20 and sank shortly after¬
ward Chief Officer Dixon, Quarter
ma*ier Smith, Obiuese Second Steward Wil*on
and two firemen perished
Captain Pithie wee on the bridge
when the ahis struck, and finding the
we* rapidly filling, turned toward land
with the object of beaching her, bat
this be we* prevented ffom doing by
the veaeel going down bend first about
half aa hour after ehe had at ruck. In
the meantime the boats had bees low¬
ered and filled until three only re¬
mained uu (be vessel.
Captain Pithie, Chief Officer Dixon,
Quartermaster Boyd add Second Smithy Steward Second Engineer Wilson,
when they saw the vessel was doomed,
jumped and overboard. Chief Second Steward Wil¬
son Officer Dixon swam to
the boats, but the others mads straight
for the land, which wae about 1 \i miles
away, succeeded aad after a terrible struggle tSky
in reaching it. Qoarteruias
ter Smith wee, however, so exhausted
that he died.
All the boats were picked up and the
passenger* and crew cared for. The
body of Chief Officer Dixon, who jumped
overboard aa the steamer sank, was
picked , island, I it up "B having two » days later on Linting
washed ashore. What
became of Steward. tewsrd. Wilson Wil and the Chi¬
nese is not kuown, but they ate believed
to be lost
CLAIMS
Sirs. Sherley or Kansas City Will Send
aa Attorney to Hoetoa.
Kansas City, Feb. 8 .—Mr*. Kathe-
xias Sherley of foie tiUf t who - he*fra- ■
quently made claim to the $ 2 , 000,000
estate of John 8 tet»ou in Boston, will
•coil send an attorney to that city to
fight for her alleged rights.
Mr*/Shier ley's claim to the estate is
that she is the daughter of Kate Stokes,
all his property at his death in 1896.
Mr Stetson wae one of the largest
property owner? in Boston He died
after a brief illness, hi* wife following
within tea days and leaving no will.
Stetson's father contested the will,
claiming nndne influence, bnt the court
upheld Ada Richmond, the will. \ then . sned
an actress,
for an interest, claiming she was Stet-
sou’s common law wife, but she also
was defeated. The contest now is be¬
tween the mother and daughter of Kate
Stokes >
Mrs. Stoke*, the mother of Kate, lives
ill Boston. Mrs. Sherley, the daughter,
lived City. in Chicago before coming to Kan¬
sas
ON THE COTTON MARKET.
Price* Down One to Three^Poiata at
the Opening In New York.
Nrw York, Feb. 3.—Etrly develop.
manta in the cotton market were not
calculated to stimulate the bull trade or
to invite new purchases. Uuder weak
Liverpool cables, foreign selling aud
hammering by some of the leading
bears, price* went off 1 to 8 points on
the opening. Stop-loss orders were result un¬
covered by this drop with the
that quite heavy liquidation market. soon set in
aud further broke the
Baoked up by scattered outside in¬
vestment orders the stronger bulls en¬
deavored for a time to stem the tide of
realising, but wdfe subsequently forced
to desist. May sold off deoliue to 6 00 and
August to 8 09 before the was
appreciably checked. On the dedUp#
southern freely. and Liverpool representatives
sold \
After the Sbarkry-Fltc Fight.
Omaha, Feb 8 .—J. H. Miles, presi¬
dent of the Fremont Hot Spring* com¬
pany of Wyoming, went east this morn¬
ing to press his offer of § 20,000 for the
Sharkey-Fitzsimmons folly fight. He says
he is able to demonstrate his abil*
tv to pull off the fight without interfer¬
ence at that point and also to give any
guarantee desired a* to the financial
end ----affair. of the at
Steamer Khyiflaad** Position.
Lx m wes, ■'* VI?.* Del., S Feb. 8 .—The s steamer
if —- ••• '
Rhyaland, . which* went ashore on Cot¬
ton Patch shoal on Tuesday night, was
pull«d 70 feet nearer deep water shortly
after midnight. Another attempt will
ire made vessel at high tide today to release
the big
Strike May B Aija-W.
Colon, Colombia, Feb. 8. -The sn-
uerintendent of the railroad went to
Panama on a special train yesteriisy and
it is understood that he made certain
conciliatory proposals to tbe strikers.
Bow t» Look Goo '.
Good lo tks are more than skin
deep, depending entirely on a healthy
condition of all the vital organa. If
tbe liver is inactive, you have a
bilious look ; it your kidneys are af¬
fected, you have a pinched look.
Secure good health, and you will
surely have good looks. “Electric
Bitters’’ ia a good alterative aad
tonic. Acts directly on the stomach,
liver and kidneys, purifies the
blood, cures pimples, blotches and
boila, and gives a good complexion.
Every battle guaranteed. Sold At
J. N. Harris & Son and Carlisle &
Ward’s drug stores. 50c. per bottle.
For Over Fifty Years.
AS Old and Well-Thied Remedy
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup by h»s been
used for over fifty years millions of
mothers for their children while teething,
with with perfect perfect success success It soothes the ehiM,
softens the gums, allays all beet pain, cures for
Wind colic, aud Is the the taste. remedy Sold
diarrhoea is pleasant to
by druggists in every part of the World.
Twenty-five cents a bottle Its value is
incalculable. Be sure and a«k for Mrs.
Winslow’s ng Syrup, and take no
other kind ~r.
A two or three weeks’ course of
Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine
will so regulate the excretory funo-
Mont that they will operate without
toy *14 whatever.
Woman’s Friend
The Great Medicine that Gives
Nerve Strength
Hood's Samapnrilln Makes
\ Blood Rich and Pure, Creatnn an
Appetite and Restore* Health,
Vigor and Vitality. ^
**I feel that I ought to write a few
word* in praise of Hood’. B.rs.p*nll«,
which has done great things for me. I
in a delicto condition snd wm sic*
was constipated. I tried
a rent'd t-my stomach aad
let highly recommended for lemSle
weaknesses, bat the medicine brought
other trouble. I wss *o we.k I
on household duties,
could not attend to my Sar¬
and I then determined to try Hood s
saparilla- After I bad taken thl* medicine
short time I began to gain strength. 1
a
Craw Strother Each Dey
until I was fcble to wot* all day without
any inconvenience. I have taken Hood’#
pills for constipation, and I am better to-
a.w than I’have been for five years.
Sloe UMng Hood'. Kwilli “<>
Hood’s Pills I feel rested in the morning.
am less nervous and am sure I have
richer ti-her and and purer ourer blood. I have always
been bothered with scrofula, but now I
am rid of it. fore my last child wa*
born I took cod’s Sarsaparilla, and
_ _____ while
loy girl baby was fat and strong,
my other child was not well snd lived
to be only two years old.” Mbs. E. F.
pwAT-, Bax 419, Missouri Valley, Iowa.
Hood’s Sarsa-
parilla
Bt the f act the Qhe Tgs b Vxri
Hood’s Pills fully piejored. a cent*.
Fever Sfoare «t Wesleynn.
Maoox, Feb. 3.—Three eases of scarle-
Female Female college college stadeut* an,0 “* at t^.^eaieyan this place
aud a< a result President Roberts say*
the iusytntion may close down Tdr a
mouth. Dariug the vacation the build¬
ing* will be thoroughly di*iufected by
formaldehyde gas to destroy all germ*,
if there be any, of scarlet fever.
Private Hraliis His tfomrade,
Albany, Ga , Feb. 3.—Corporal Her¬
bert C. Waite. Company F, Third Mis¬
sissippi regiment, was hit on the head
with au ax aud pftQhably fatally injured
by Private Howell Calhouu, of the same
compauv and regiment. Calhouu is be¬
lieved to be insane.
Clrvelnnd Building Gutted.
* Cleveland,
Feb. 3. — Fire which
broke ont on the top floor of the 4-story
Gaensslen block, at 80 Water street,
his gutted - hat structure and badly
damaged tbe Myer nud Btugb&m bulld-
jigs adjoining. The total loss is esti¬
mated at $ 7 o, 000 . A ’ k v
Parsnip Complexion.
It does not require an expert to
detect the sufferer . from kidney
trouble. The hollow cheeks, the
sunken eyes, the dark, puffy circles
under the eyes, the sallow parsnip-
colored complexion indicates it.
A physician would ask if you had
rheumatism, a dull pain dr ache in
the back or over tbe bipe, stomach
trouble, desire to urinate often, or a
burning or scalding there in passing unsatisfied it; if
after passing is an
feeling as if it must be at once re¬
peated, or if the urine has a brick
dust deposit or strong odor.
When these symptoms are present,
no time should be lost in removing
the cause.
Delay may lead to gravel, catarr’-
of the bladder, inflammation, caus¬
ing stoppage, and sometimes requir-
ing instruments, the drawing of the urine with into
o% may dangerous run
Bright’s Disease,the most
stag© of kidney trouble.
Dr' Kilmer’s s 8wamp-Root. Swamp-Root, tbe
great discovery of the eminent kid¬
ney and bladder specialist, is a posi¬
tive remedy for such diseases. Its
reputation is worldwide and it is so
easy to get at any drug store that no
one need suffer any length of time
for want of it. V" \
However, if you prefer to first test
its wontb rful merits, mention the
Griffin News and Sun and write to
Y., Dr. Kilmer & (Jo., bottle Bmghhmpton, N.
for a sample and hook-
telling all about it, both \ sent abso¬
lutely free by mail.
---*i_
To sweeten the breath, brighten
the eyo, clear the complexion and
insure the natural bloom of health,
ute Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medi¬
cine.
Boatitj- Is Olood Di«p.
Clean bleed tnaua* a elesn skin. No
beauty without it. Casearets, Candy Cathar¬
tic clean your blood and keen it clean, by
Stirring purities up the the lazy body. iiver and driving all im¬
from Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, bNckheads,
and Casearets,—beauty that sickly bilious for complexion by taking
satisfaction ten cents. All drug¬
gists, guaranteed, 10 c, 25c, 50c.
You missed something good If you
did not’get a sample of Dr. Tiche-
nor’s Antiseptic, it is the biggest
thing out for cuts, burns and other
Injuries. Write 16 Sherrouae Medi¬
cine Co., New Orleans, La., or Mem¬
phis, Term., for sample.
X
More than twenty million free sam¬
ples of D-Witt ’8 Witch Hazel Salve
have been distributed by the manufac¬
turers. What better proof of their con¬
fidence in its merits do yon want? It
cure* piles, bnrng, scalds, sores in the
shortest space of time. J. N. Harris &
Son.
One Minute Gougii Cure, cores
'A o tmjt imit
Bsassth*. rath. T(Z*
VICE CONSUL II "
DIES OF HYDRA
Fata m. st
Alabamian’t Horrible
Patras, GrfffiCfi*
jjE eefitsed treatment
Over Two Month. Ago, bnt Per
Bitten Kept th.
Son.. Unknown- Itcn.on
Mntter breed Until UeyondY*®-''
Assistance. ^
Naw "York. Feb. S.—A dispatch to
The Herald from Patras, Greece, s*y«
Colonel Viile y Ingkto, American rioe
consul there, has died of hydrophobia.
He bitten two mouths ago. bat the
was refused tt«*
matter kept secret. He .
ment He was much beloved ■■■■■■ and his
.
an srtfjrsjssasssl =•£
ment. _____ '
_ CHINA
FOREIGNER SLAIN IN
Evangelist and »»• Compantou Bru.
tally Killed atChoiigan.
8 an,Fkanci>co. Feb- 3.—In the sto¬
ries of murders of missionaries and for-
#iga.rs#idsHt#-re<?sutly: Chong Ching,
•f the barbarous affair at
involving the life of an Englishman
named Fleming and Evangelist Pan,
have been wanting. J. R. Adams, of
the Chinese inland mission, visited the
scene of,, the murders and tells of %
that the people of Chong&n had. dete:
mined to take the life of every foreigner
iii the place, and when Mr. Fleming set
foot in that town he was a doomed
At least 200 people witnessed the mur*
der from the opposite side of the river.
Evangelist Pan was suddenly and
quickly cut, down. Mr. Fleming dis¬
mounted from his mule to go to his as¬
sistance, but he, too, was attacked and
slain after a desperate conflict. He wa*
dreadfully wounded with a sword and
an iron spike. The two victims were
stripped of their clothing and their
bodies left for four days on the public
road.
BIO FIRE AT PHILADELPHIA.
Loss EsLIniatt-d at Over Five Hundred
Thousand Dollars.
Pkti.ADE LPHU. i'eb, JLaSA fire which
originated in the big cracker bakery of
the Stewart Cracker company, at Thir-
toenth and Hamiltou streets, early to-
day, completely gutted that -Structure
and thousands of dollars worth of ad¬
joining property, tbe total loss being
estimated at from $500,000 to $300,000.
The 6 storv build ug occupied by the B.
Hobley & Bon, silk manufacturers;
Philadelphia Novelty company of and agri¬ P.
P. Mast & Co., manufacturers
cultural implements; the big storehouse
of Hope & Townsend, Bolt and Nnl
Manufacturing ing occupied by company, J- J Hoover and the A build¬ Son,
lithographers aud blazing publishers, bakery aaughl
fire front tbe snd th*
flames soon leaped across Hamilton
street to the Cooper bras* work a and of
plnmbers’ supplies, aud tbe annex
the Hope & Townsend establishment, in
tbe rear of the Cooper brans work a
The block in which the fire occurred
is occupied entirely by mansfaotaring
estabitsumenta
Suicided lJefure a. Mirror.
Youngstown, O., Feb. 3.—Ex Sheriff
Charles Ctllabau shoe himself in the
head at t:40 this morning, dying in¬
stantly. He placed a mirror in front of
his face and seating himself fired delib¬
erately at his tempi*. He had just re¬
tired from sheriff office, 'of having- .filled two
terms as Mahoning oounty.
The cause or the rash act is not as yet
known. He was formerly commander
of Post No. 9, G. A. R., and was known
to all the politipian* in Ohia
No Further l)lt«rlin nation.
Washington, Feb 3. —Represeu tatiT*
Gaines of Teuuessee has introduced a
bill to repeal the law which prevents an
ex-confederate soldier from sitting on a
federal grand or petit jury. This is the
last relic of the laws disorimin;
against ex-celafederates. It sli
the revision of the law of 1862, ,lf. bo "ot
Hh-d-w „,d . 0
considerable hardship in the south.
Wants Xo Komi, , I Alliance.
London. Feb. 8 . —The famous Oxford
University Union Debating society,
which was so antagonistic to the north
daring the civil war in the Untted
States, last evening, by a vote of 46 to
80, passed tbe following resolution:
"That any formal alliance with Amer*
ica would be both injudicious aud irn-
practicable. ” *
t’liptubi )UIM(< Is Deart.
Atlanta, Feb. 3.—Captain John Mil-
ledge, former state librarian and a gal¬
lant confederate soldier, is dead at his
residence tu this city. He was 82 years
old and had been in bad health for
three moutha
TO CURE ■ A COLO ONE DAY
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.
All druggists refund the monev if it
fails to cure. 25c. The genuine has L.
B. Q. on eaoh tablet.
No use losing sleep and walking
the floor with Baby at night because
it has oolic. A dose of Dr. Tichenor’a
Antiseptic (diluted It and sweetened)
will relieve in a few minutes.
Very pleasant taste and odor, free
from opiates and perfectly harmless.
Ask druggists for it.
Kor-To-Hae for fifty Conte,
■ and the (
1 and W^SP theqi,e^i th 0n 1
Which wn»}»
an B!i
the st*,
and
health and, , him
When a, I happia
gy and phys-i | man’*
have gradual- jlyweak^ jcal f 0r J
arid wasted I down to i
lowest ebb, 'until
medicine have been tried in vain—now «
hapfi». “Dr. Pierce comes can some cure kind friend write who &
“Golden Medical you, to « a *
cued His thousands who Discovery » j, a _
you.” were further * on
than
is chief consultmg physician
“ f '“■S&S® _ ....... . ■VBM
whfch ^ - •
Now is the critical instant WiU
patient give up in despair and lerthe
of disease drag him away from wife bbk
family and children, or will he grasp
hand of the angel of life in one more *».
preiue effort for restoration ? Are n,
standing wins? between the cchv..:dir>r ?.neei s >
Which .
Mr*. Emily Howe, of 7 Park Avenue. Chicm*
Tils., writes: “ About two years ago
with whitt seemed niv son wa,
afflicted to be symptoms of
consumption. tiotden I Medical purchased Discovery three bottles of cm3 n,
Pierce's and it
him completely,”
The People's Common Sense Medical
Adviser, a 1000-page illustrated volume b,
R. V. Pierce, M D., will be sent free fot
_________ stamps for a Rha^mgsa heavier cloth-bound
31 copy.
ALL ABOUT GRIFFIN,
bf the World!
BIFFIN U fte
(Xuity Spalding seat of
Georgia, County, and li
situated in tha
cetre of the beat
portion of the
Great Em pita
State of tha
South, where All
its wonderful and
varied industrial
meet and are carried on with greate*
success, and is thus able to offer ~ induo*-, induo*-.
ments to all class seeking a home and
profitable career. Tnese are the reason
For a growth that is increasing it* pop¬
ulation almost dialy. sufficient railroad , • . hr .
It has ample and impert-‘“
eliities; the second potet^An the
on the Central railroad Itotween i
.
tal of the State, forty miles distant, and
independent!— of the — Savann ------ a h Griffin
West by 'Alabama way Railroad, the , principsl I
North Midland and Gulf
city on the Georgia hundred miles long built
Railroad, one enterprise ab4
largely through extended its own to-Atlanta and ttl
goon to be directooimeo-
systems of the Northeast; Vir¬
Son with the great East Tennesse
ginia and Georgia Railroad system; all
rtlnsmg in trade and carrying out goof
and manufactures. „ and flow#
That this Is the very horticultural cream
of the agricultural ana thejte per
lions of the Bute is evidenced and the by Unitod
that the unanimously State of Georgia ohoee it the rite f«
States aa
1 the Experiment Station, agaiMl tt*
strong efforts of every other section, a
has two crops that never fall, being cotton,
the most important crop in the South, sin
grapes, whh ich are are growin growing to surpass oot
too in tb? county the past decads
Griffin’s ho record during of the most progressn*
proves it be one
cities in the South. factorw,
It has built two large cotton good*
representing $400,000 and shipping
all oyer the world. and bra*.
It has put- U up Q ?ertiUze^factory two large iron
foundries, a I a oottot
seed oil mill, a sash and blind factory,!
plow factory, an ice factory, bottlin;
works, a broom factory, a mattress l aiM
ry, a wire fence factory, aQ d vtili»
smaller enterprises, electi^Ught „ plant by
It has put in M brilliantly lighted.
which the streets are system of
It has completed an extensive
a^inst waterworks, fire, and giving fdrnishlng complete water proDcutiJJ every
It has opened up one of the finest sod
arrest granite quarries in
building nq
purposes
SOlpU It has Ol established otu,u«u system of gradte
a currtoW
public schools, with a seven years’ erected
Ium second to none, and has
increasing hundreds of students eve rj
of naif a million dollars. oh arouse
It has built two handsome new
making a total of ten. businew
It has built several handsome residences^tM
blocks and many beautiful
bly $ 1 W*W 0 °° Two ofthese business Mocks Hotu*. i
the Odd Fellows Hall and Opera is*
and the Masonlo Temple, are among
handsomest structures in the whole
The city has parked and graded best sys¬ «*
streets, while the county has the
tem of roads throughout Its every part evidence tnsi
can be found anywhere—the first
of tho highest progress. borders frnn .
It has attracted around its
growers from nearly every State in *
Union and Canada, until it is surrouctiei
on every side by orchards and vine'rarfik
and has become one of tbe largest single^i a
beat fruit sections in the State, a 2*0 in*™
load of its peaches netting $ 1 ,
BUU CpiUClIUUB, U/ AWOV« V
sea level, Its healthfulness has aitrae**
general has attention. secured the permanent miuti .
It adding ®«-y
encampment of the State, revenge* *****
thousand dollars to its
f'with live and all growing these and town, otlwr'evidence*^ ‘With a heel™*®
and pleasant climate srinuner and winwr,
a hospitable and cultured people ana *
soil capable of producing any product Gnffin
the offers temperate*# induoeraey semi-tropio and eone. hearty *«
et ery a