Griffin semi-weekly star. (Griffin, Ga.) 1868-187?, June 25, 1869, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

miffin Jjemi-llße,elclii> JJtar. VOL, IV. Jitar. BY SPEIGHTS & FITCH. PUBLICATION DAYS-TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS. Office—ln Jllmah Hall. Terms of Subscription : One Year-Payable in Advance *4 on Six Months— “ “ ............‘..V/.? 50 Terms of Advertising: Transiknt Advertisements—*l 00 per square (10 lines) for each insertion—always payable in advance. Makriaue AND Obituary Notices— Five lines or less, 50 cents. When over that number of Hues, the regu lar rates will be charged. T ".r 3 Advkrtistno Business Caeds-1 square 8 inonths*lo 00—G months *ls 00—1 year*2s; 2 square 5 months sls 00—6 months $25 00—1 year S4O • quar -2n < 2l u, 5 n .l mo i lth 12 00 “ 3 months $25 00-6 months rroM l n°ontL 1 *m ma 1 Ulonth 935 00 8 muuth3 PROFESSIONAL CARDS. Drt. -■ >J. Griffin, Georgia. Of hco at resiuencemppoait®Cojirt-llouse. juno 1, 1569- W f r P W. THURMAN, Attorney at Law L . .and Notary Public. \MUI pra*hee Law ia the Count.es composing the Flint CTfcult. Prompt atten tion given to all business eimrusteS to his care. Ofhce Last Side of Hill Street, upTtalrs. in tile Moor Build- Gridin, <fa,, 24, 1868-8 m j M. CAMPBELL, Attorney at Law, *1 - Griffin, Georgia. Will attend promptly to all bus iness entrusted to his care. Strict attention will be given to. Collections and cases in Bankruptcy. Office in Aimi.li 1 fail, April 11,1287-1 y T4OYAL & NUNNALLJf, Attorneys at Griffin, Georgia. Ofllce in Cunningham’s Building, Hill St. Practice in th« Flint Circuit, and elsewhere by special contract; and also in the United states District Court. Special attention to Bankrupt-- i cy Cases. Nov«ytf)or 27,1565-I^H DR. M. J. DANIEL— at llarri^( Drug Store, Hill Street, Griffin, Qa. Nov.2My DR. L. G. BRANTLEY, formerly of Henry County, tenders his professional services to the citizens of Griffin and the surrounding country. Consultations and Advice strictly confidential. Office next door to the Neims House, where ho will bo found when not professionally engaged. Deo. 6, 1867-ly A CLEVELAND & SON, Resident Den . tists Office adjoining CHARLIE WRIGHT’S, sign of Si, the MOLAttTOOTH, . , pleased t o recelvo <fF- ■ , ; iiiAAAA:^V ilVlhg worlc done in 1 our lino. We feel f A/s,- cSoO certain that we can £ give satisfaction, and jP llu teforo warrant all * v%ir \pi Terms Cash. ~ T\ RS. DREWRY and MOORE—Office at 1 J Dr N. Die wry's Drug Store, where they may be found during the day. At Night— CalL for Dr 2Drew ry will be left at his residence; for Dr. Moore, at the residence of Mr. Prothro. Jan'v 19-ts A M. BPKER. K. W. BECK. QJPEER & BEOK, Attorneys at Law, Grlftiu,Oa. Will practice in the State Courts, and in the United States District Courts, at Ailar.ia. Office in Merritt’s Bai k Building. Dec 1, ISCS-l y J}OYNTON & DtSMUKE, Attorneys at ».» the Stab Offic. ’ Paste, i t the Counties own;- »'ng th« Flint Circuit, and in the C. S. District Court. At tention given tocasislu Bankruptcy. N0v.27-i v. PEEPLES & STEWART, Attorneys at Law, Griffin, Georgia. Office nfi the cornor 01 Hill Street and Broadway—Up Stairs—in the Moor Building. Prompt attention given to business placed In or Imnds. Novcmber27-ly William M. Cline, Motary PulTdllc, (EX-OFFICIO JUSTICE OF THE PEACE,) %*Oftice corner Hill and Solomon Streets, over G. B. BEECHER & CO.’S Store, Gritfin, Ga. *** I WILL HOLD a regular Monthly Court for the trial of Civil Cases, at ray Office, on the SECOND MONDAY in each month, and will try crim inal eases at any time necessary. [april 16, H6lMm Stone Yard in Griffin. S'i B. ROOKS, Contractor for Brick vJT • and Stone Work ; Plastering of all classes In addition to the above, any kind oi STONE CUT TING wilt he faithfully executed at short notice, may 14, ISG9-w!y FURNITURE MANUFACTURERS AND WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN FURNITURE of every Desciipioo. Our Manufactory has been overhauled, and Improved w\th new machinery, engine, &c., and we are now prepared to far niah the public with Furniture of all kiuda at very low prices. <© <D® if a $7 So Wo keep constantly on hand a LARGE ASSORT MENT of COFFINS, from the finest Burial Coses to the cheapest Coffins. for Coffins should be made through Captain DOE, City Sexton. We are greatfu for the large patronage extended to us hereiofore,and will endeavor to deserve an increase thereof. Call at our extensive Warorooms on SOLOMON ST. March 23dy MOONEY, BOYD & CO Dissolution. npHE firm of Head & Speer has boon this I nay dissolved by mutual consent. All parties in debted to the firm, will please make payment to Mr. G W HEAD, and those having claims against tho firm *'ill present litem to him for payment, will make all aottlemerts. l ’; J Griffin, dune 4, 1869-wlra E. 1- 81EEK, Having bought the Intoroat of K. P. SPEER, I will continue the linslnwu at our old .land, where I will bo ready to nerve the public with anything in invliM^ Hiifflu. Georgia, .tnn« !*•*-« GRIFFIN CARDS. WHOLESALEAND RETAIL LIQUOR STORE J! John D. George, HAVING PURCHASED THE ENTIRE STOCK OF Mia iquors I OF THE LATE FIRM OF REID, GEORGE & PATTERSON, will continue the BITSIFKSS in the CELLAR of the same buildifg ; and will keeD a FULL STOCK of the bos Fo if¥* ;W ft " d DOMESTIC LIQUORS, of all kinds, and sell at WIfOLSALE and RETAIL low for CASH. b t Griffin, Ga., November 21, 1868. ‘‘THE DRUG STORE!* N. B. DREWRY, DRUGGIST & APOTHECARY, REMOVED TANARUS) RICHARDSON & MANN'S OLD STAND, UNDER THE ODD FELLOWS HALL, East Side Hill st., Griffin, Ga, DEALER IN Drugs, Chemicals, Paints, Oils, Window GLAS3, LAMPS,.CIGARS, SNUFFS, PURE WINES AND LIQUORS FOR MEDICAL PURPOSES. MSS' ALL GIODS WARRANTED AS REPRESENTED. Dec. 13, 1868-3ra PRESCRIPTIONS put up under tic immediate supervision of Drs. I'r 'wry and Moore, day or night. “®a Speetyi to Planters! T HKRFvy \ T FORM THE PUBLIC that .L lam Sr'. f y tt for SK ASSET’S CELEBRIS,iI COTTON GIN. I will furnish this PRICES, either with c. . —. Porter's Improvement, 2s p’:r. 1 * ay prefer. M v .\SLY'S G.’N has been extensively u.-cd in Georgia, a:.d ha:. Never been Sra^r&sii t>v any GIN in use Partiesintendi. : to .-va N) W GIN this Fail, should consult me at on-. .>•■* •tI mt do able to supply the demand, WHICH 1 ' y, ’> RE A'l\ that the manufacturers sometimes find \it to up with their orders. A Specimen Gin < can be seen at the Store of DAVE PATTKRSO. ' . ner Hill and Solomon Street, who will take great \ sure in exhibiting the camo. \ John H. Jo.'.sey. moy 14, 1869-3 m GUANO!__ GUANO! Charles A. Sindall & Cos., —AT THE— OM State Bank Building, Griffin, OFFER FOR SALE THE RELIABLE Chesapeake Guano, AN AMMONIATED Soluble Phosphate, PREPARED at “ Chesepeako Guana Work.,’’ Baltimore -regarding which tho follow, log certificate of I>r. Loro,- lloit, of Monroo county, Georgia, is given : MONROE COUNTY, BA., Dee. 25. IS6B. Oknti.kmvn :—ln reply to your Inquiry, I take jilcm ure in saying iny experience with tho CHESAPEAKE PHOSPHATE, I bought of you last spring, has h?on very favorulile. 1 used (2m) two hundred pounds up on ) three fourths of an acre, third year's new ground,applying it in the drill, rows three feet apart, sixteen Indies in the drill, on which I had flvo thous and seven hundred stalks of cotton. From t Ills 1 gnth ored (l-‘24) eighteen hundred and twenty-four pounds of cotton. T!:e last of August, the worm committed great ravages in it. destroying ail of iholatocrop. Had It not been for tho worm, I should have made at least one-third more on tho land. I can cheerfully recom mend it to planters as a sertiliaee for cotton. Respectfully, I*. HOLT. i iaa BARRELS on hand and to arrive. <S I/ f f Also on 'land, Peruvian Guano, Bone Dust, Lund Plaster, Lime, Fait, dte gap—Planters are Invited to call at the PLANTERS WARE HOUSE, on Broadway Street, an I cxamlno artinies for Uicinscivca. may as, ls«Mf Wall Paper ! AiriNDOW SHADES and FIXTURES, \ » for sale t-y H. T. BKAWNI.K A BON. GRIFFIN, GtA.., JUSTE 25, 1869. MISCELLANEOUS. Periodical Agency, SAVE TIME. TROUBLE AND RISK I . will receive subscriptions to any pe„ riodical—monthly, weekly or daily—pubs lished in the United States, at publishers’ prices. We give below a partial list, with prices, of leading publications : Scott’s Monthly Magazine, $4 00 Hill’s Monthly Magazine... 3 00 The New Eclectic 4 00 The Galaxy ’ 4 00 Peterson’s Ladies’Magazine ” 2 00 Godey’s Lady’s Book 3 00 Frank Leslie's Lady’s Magazine 3 50 Demorest’s Lady’s Magazine 3 00 The Southern Home Journal (weekly) 3 00 Riverside Magazine 2 50 Burke’s Weekly 2 00 Now is the time to subscribe. Feb 2»tf H. T. BRAWNER & SON. FOR THE MILLION! WORKS OF CHARLES DICKENS ! Oliver Twist 172 pages... .25c. American Notes 104 pages... .15 Dombey & Son 356 pages.. .35 Martin Chuzzlewit 342 pages 35 Our Mutual Friend....33o pages 35 Christmas Stories 102 pages 25 Tale of Two Cities 144 pages 20 Hard Times 200 pagts... .<# Nicholas Nickleby 340 pages..! !c5 Bleak House 340 pages 35 Little Dorritt 330 pages 35 Fickwick Papers 326 pages... .35 David Coppeifield 330 pages 35 Barnaby Rudge 257 pages ...30 Old Curiosity Shop 221 pages. . .30 Great Expectations 184 pages... .25 Sketches 196 pages ...25 ISyClear type and handsomely printed for sale by H. T. BRAWNER & SON. february 19, 1869. The Great Union Piano. WE have fast received direct from the FACTOHY, one of these FINK PIANOS They a re warranted to boa much better Instrument than has ever been introduced in this market The prices range from $450 to SOOO. Mr. O. B. BICE, General Agent, has sold 14 in differ ent parts of the state—the largest number in Macon. The Wesleyan Female College have one ; the Acade my for the Blind have one ; also, Mr. S. B. Burr, of Griffin,has owned ono more than a year; also, O. W Thomas, of Atlanta Some of these PI ANOS have been in use over two years, and all are delighted with them. They are recommended by Teachers here and else where. Call and see for yourself. H. T. BRAWNS R & SON. may 4, 1669. New Books! \| OIIUN ; Or, The Last Days of Lee 4* 1 unJbia Paladins—by John Eaten Cooke. 12mo. Cloth. Price (2 25. W imD-TlPOtkvvr. * -gw-r n „ f Life. By the author of * The Schouberg-Cotta Family 12nio. Cloth. Price fl 75. TRICOTRIN". The Story of a Waif and aStray. ByOuida. 12mo. Clotli. Price $2 00. I>RIN'CE EUGENE and U\s Times.— By Louisa Muhlbach. Svo. Clotli. Price $2. THE CHILD WIFE. By Capt. Maync Reid. I2mo. Cloth. Price 81 75. CAST UP BY THE SEA. By Sir Samuel Baker. 12mo. Cloth* Price $1 25. L. W. Gunther, O O T T O IST —AND GENERAL — Commission Merchant, 90 IF*. Lombard, St *, BALTIMORE MARYLAND. ITBERAL advances will bo made on J consignments to the above House, by CHAS. A. SIND ALT. A CO., Griffin, Ga. ***OtUce OLD STATE BANK BUILDING, Broad way, Griffin,Ua. may 21, 1569-ts aagiai'SiaKis®® PATENT GIN IMPROVEMENT I DESIRE TO ANNOUNCE to the pub lie that I am now prepared to soil COUNTY and STATE RIGHTS, of my “Patent Gin Improvement/’ l am also prepared to put my improvement in Gins, when desired This improvement, which keeps the Cotton in a to and fro motion in a lateral direction, has been THOROUGHLY TESTED, Mul pronounced by the most intelligent Fanners and Cotton Buyers, a GREAT IMPROVEMENT on any other mode of gin ning Cotton, ar it produces LONGER STAPLE, lighter -'■draught, and makes more lint, in a'given time, than any Gin run without ray improvement. 4T7*A good, reiia b ' agent wanted. A. A. PORTER, Griffin, Go. april 16, 1809-3ra THE ‘PET’IROCERY! TAYLOR STREET-©* W. B. Cunningham & Cos., CONTINUE to offer superior induce meats in tho Grocery Trade l end nay particular attention to tho purchase ans! sale of Country Produce We have also fitted up a neat cool SALOON, in roar of our Store House, wher^w^ MR. ELY SHERRILL, the Philosopher will dispense refreshment* in the most genteel manner. , . THE PUBLIC may rest assured wo wul always give them a cordial old faahloued welcome . and see us.^^t W. B. CUNNINGHAM A CO. may 14, 1569-*Btn Rooms to Rent! VFEW DESIRABLE ROOMS over my Store. PKIOEB REASONABLE. G. A. CUNNINGHAM, may 14,1 *oo—tt WENDELLPHILLIPS ON THE PACIF IC RAILROAD. All bail afed farewell to the Pacific Rail*, road. The telegraph tells us that the Ini dians have begun to tear up the rails, to shoot passengers and conductors on this road. We £3. great good in this. At last the poor victim has found the vulnerable spot in his tyrant. “Thank God America has resisted," cried Lord Chatham. Our feeling is the same. For several years and «4orS the Indian has begged this great na. tion to attend to his wrongs. His cries have been unheard. Ruthless and unheed, ing we have trampled him down. Toaday the worm tarns and stings us. Last year Indians destroyed locomotives and shot conductors. Timid Durant for bade the telegraph wires to report the fact. He trembled Tor his read. To-day 15,639 warriors ua the war path—a thousand miles of exposed road—this railway the P®l Faying of the American. Triple ! Would our Vords could reach cFiy Indian chief. We would tell him, lay down you? gun, but allow no rail to lie between Oma> ha and the mountains. The accursed cod j’' is O Connell's best weapon and shell. The Pacific I'y.lway ia the Indians Alabama. — Every ’V.trw Struck oil the rails is heard round thv Ilaun? that road with such dangers that none will dare use it. Some men may think us needlessly ag gressive. No citizenship, they may say would be a better remedy. Yes, by-and’ by. At present citizenship means little. Heaven forbid that we should betray the Indian to such protection as ‘citizenship’ gives to the Georgia negro and loyalist.— No, we arc thankful the Indian has one de. fence that the negzo never had. He is no citizen and has the right to make war. Well may he use that last right, and never yield till “citizenship” means more than it does now. An abclitionist may well glory in these red men. When, in 1C65 General Sanborn earned to these Seminolea the nows of emancipation, they instantly set their slave tree. But, more just than we, ttiey ceedec ot once to divide their possessions with them fairly—shared with them their pension money, and last wiuter, in Wash ingtoii, were spesially earnest to secure such a teacher as these emancipated men would prefer. When two or three years ago Sherman’s Commission met the Indi ans, the Navajoes refused to come into con. ference unless their women could be ad. mitted on equal terms with themselves to share the debate. Could these men be per suaded to undertake, for - jvr.rs to come, the task of reconstruction 1 What a saving of time ! What a saving of honor ’. Earnestly do we wish that this nation could rise to the level of once doing an act of justice from pure and simple motives of honesty and duty. But it does not seem as if this level would ever be reached in our uay. in default of that we rejoice to see tie nation scourged to its duty. Long and reary were the years of blood and an yrtune that finally broke us into wil. our stubbornness yield sooner and easier in this matter of the Indians. It seems probable. By the time Congress assem. bles again, we think its members will be ready—as they never havo been—to listen on this topic. The sad and ponderous dec.. uments stored on the Capitol will, at last, be real, and we shall learn that a nation by it confession always is the wrong, .must seek some other path out of its troubles than 1 y sending butchor3 to waste treas ure and blood in the vain effort to “exterms inate” abraver race than ours. We spent a hundred millions really—fifty oesfessseds ly—to “exterminate and remove” the Sem inoles from Florida. But there aro ever, glades in Florida to-day where no white man enters, and which the JSeminolo still holds. If this be the caso in Florida with a thousand Senunoles, how likely are we to “esterminate” twenty thousand such, spread over the boundless West? i?her« man is bartering thejglcries of Atlanta for defeat, utter and shameful and well de served, on th 9 prairiio. WXNDELL PHILLirS. [Anti- Slavery Standand.j A W ife’s Love.— Woman’s love, like the rose blossoming in the arid desert, spreads its rays over the barren blain of the human heart, and while all round it is black and desolate, it rises strengthened from the ab sence o. every other charm. Tu no situa tion does the love of a woman appear moro beaf-Yi;.:! than that of a wife. Parents, brethren aid friends have claims upon the affections—but the love of a wife is of a distinct and different nature. A daughter may yield her life to the preservation of a parent-a sister may devote herself to a suffering brother ; but the feelings which induce it are not those which lead ? wife to follow the husband of h6r choice through every pain and peril that can befall him to watch him in danger, to chesr him in adversity, and ever remain unalterable at his side in the depths of ignomiuy and shame. It is heroic devotion which a wo. roan displays in adherence to the fortunes of a hapless husband. When we behold her in domestic scenes a mere passing crea ture of SDjoyment, an intellectual toy, brightening the family with her endear, incuts and lovo for extremo joy which that presen:e and those endoarments are oalcns lated to impart, we can scarcely credit that tho fragile being who seems to hold her existence by a thread is caapble of supporting the extremo of human suffering —nay, when the heart of man sinks be neath the weight of agony, that she would maintain pristiue powers ot delight, and by her words of comfort and patience, lead the inurmurer to peace and resignation. A Dutchman Offtof..— “I vantsch to schipp in do I ucilla,” said a Dutchman to a clerk of a shipping office. “Well,” said the clerk with pen in hand, “what is your name ?” lish Hars bagas l manderliauusovanonßnoymendevrensehsen. ronchutJeotmrtdeseeudhupyoneromp, said Dutchy, gravely, spitting out his old quid, and taking a fresh one. “Mercy on me,” said the clerk, “do you know what it is in English ?_” “Yaw, Ish does— Y'on Sinidt.” The Leoisi.atpke. —Gov. Bullock will, we learn, oall the Legislusure together on the 7th of July. By that time the im. poachers will he ready to prefer ohsrg.s against him NEW YORK JOURNALISM-YOUTH AHEAD—OLD MEN SHOVED BACK —THE PHILOSOPHY OF PROGRESS AND SUCCESS—JOUXALISTIC CE LEBRITIES. The young, vigorous blood which flows with healthy energy through the veins of the rising newspaper men of the present day in this city is telling with admirable offset in the colame of our city journals. Spirit and force is given to the productions which emanate from them, and a wide par. allel ia dra-.n between them and the fogy editor* of the past generation. Enterprise, industry and careful observation supplant the teachings of experience, and to.day we have on the New York press a class of woungmen, bold and dashing in their style, sound and firm in their argument, and sparking and witty in their hnmor, who are too oAsn traduced and disgraced by the hummers and literary kangaroos who jump from one situation to another, and who are taken ?.s representative men. >V hisky and turky suppers are not the minent likings of new.paper men, ex. cept those besotted “beats” who only make a business of itemizing for the purpose of gormandizing and satiating an appetite which honest labor and gentlemanly res pectability would never satisfy. Tse responsible men on the press toedav are in the main gentleman whom it is a pleasure to know—a gentleman of talent, of integ ity, and high-toned respectability, and it ts those we accept as the representas tives of the rising generation of newspaper people in New York, rather than the nig gardly few whose debauches bring igno. minv upon the whole fraternity. Glancing uver the field of labor, we ob serve.seor., of fine fellows working with in defatigability—gradually cutting their way through t’ r diversified events of newspaper life to positions of emolument and fame. They are youn Mnen, too—some beardless, but showing a i wer ot the pen well up to older heads ; other- more advanced, yet youthful and full ol energy. Busy a3 an in 9. 'trious little hatter, works Iw R. Shi .to i: a man of perhaps twenty-seven years . age, whose finished style of writing o the warmest ap probation from his cc/;7 of the Times, :n particular, and his hos r * intimate per* sonal friends in goner and. 1 George F. Williams -a r V'abie, hard working “local.” of thirty -live »—u. vers replete to the crown of Li- fit ’etty head with energy and sniriy,-—>» Htavr au e.l BUove the time.. As military editor of the Times he has v. <n a deasant celebrity, and his chronicle? fY: r war form some of the most pleasan'^D?ji.es of stories “from the front.” Mix—the genial James, a vetW Dt.ndrea. ry in manner—is a bright and go d-lo v. ing fellow, over whose head the sunsh,. tnirty springs cast its glow ot glory, af is a suarp and piquant writer, a go— anX industrious man, but really so • dema’d> fond of myself, you know.” " Withal, he is TntfeS e l±? e Jt lleMfeWfe) he now exercises his Ulent. George Pierce—rosy.cheeked, smiling George, brimful of o -era bauffe, and look ing as fresh and as blooming as a bunch of dewy roses—is Mix’s special confrere in business. Thirty cold winters have not frozen the energies of Pierce, and night af» ter night he plods to his little home, after doing up a hatch of locals for the Tribune. St. Clair McElway, the twenty-eights year old boy baby of the W T orld, holds a pen of exceeding great ponderosity, has but a few friends iu the profession, albeit he is a dashing sort of a fallow, who has com manded much attention for his bold style of writing and inaccuracy of “facts and fig. gors.” W. M. Rosenblat, a promising young journalist, not yet attained his majority.— The lack of experience which sometimes shows itself is more than balanced by in dustry and go aheidativeness. A good lin guist, a vigorous and comprehensive wri- 1 ter, and a firstcclass condenser, make Ro=- enblat, who is one of the Sun’s bright beams, destined to a high position in the journalistic world. Wm, J. C. Meagham, a dapper little fel low, fully seven aud twenty, brimful of wit and genial good humor. Asa special of the Herald, Meagham has traveled this wide world well over, and sported liberally in the bright mazes of sea-shore life. Asa correspondent, he is sharp aud chatty, en. tertaioing and pleasant, with notes of expe rience from the rusticity of the Green Mountains to plain, unvarnished matter of stern fact, “Ku»Klux courtesies,” Ronald Macdonald—a "uiet steady work er, a young editor ot supeti r tact, great experience, and more than average caution A man of rather per sonnel, with a nerve for the perpetration of cutting jokes, and withal a compiler of news of a pre°pronsiß9Ht highness.—N. \. Democrat. Chicago Post thus does up in Thyme the Craig-Sprague breach of prom, ise case. The verdict was in favor of the chrinoline for tho full SIOO,OOO claimed as the curative salve for her heart sores : A STREAM 0V LOVE WIUCH DIDN’T R’’X SMOOTH. Aaisnit* Craig Amt T.iaha S|>r»su«. Ttu’V fvU in love at eight ; Ho hked her 6tyte, She Kited hie pile. And everything went right; T«» MU and coo. And “I tore yon ‘ My duck' - ‘ iuy door delight!” Aias ! alee I It oatne to pflM That hope ehou and suffer blight, And love, which trusted Too muoh, he busted In a breach of prvtutse fight! E®, A bright-faced little boy in West i Liberty, Ohio, was askod at Sunday School the other day, who wrote the New Testa ment. lie promptly responded in a clear voice as one who knew whereof the affirmed. “Don Piatt.” . *»- Mr. Glnnun ooutesses to have get stuck for once in his life. The other n«nt iu the dark, he mistook his mucilage Dottle for the hair oil. His hair has unoe preseut ed the appearance of whole- -11 'I'* 1 '* > v ery like hie wife’s eorsets. 2STO. 67. MISCELLANEOUS. CQMPLIMENTS nf the SEASON WH AT SHALL WE say to our nu merous friends, to whom we feel so grateful ? We are at a loss to know. Twelve months since, we launched our little boat U I)REWRY? CV.," on Kill Street, with bills-F ling all oigned, for the <- Haroor of Success,” commanded by CHAS. F. NEW TON, Captain ; JOHN O. STEW ART, Ist Mate, and CHARLES P NEW TON, Engineer. Our voyage thus far has been pleasant and satis factory, adding to our cargo at every port; and to-day we have the pleas ure of announcing that we have on board and are dailj discharging one. of the beet and most thoroughly selec ted stocks of SPRING and SUMMER DRY GOODS ever brought to this market. Nearly every citizen of this com munity, and surrounding country, we hope, have something in this valua tle cargo, and we respectfully invite them to call and see what it is. DREWRY it CO. March 30, lS69.tf CLOTHING —FOR— SPRING & SUMMER 1809. JOHN H. WHITE A to his friends and tha -f gvtwrs.iy, ti\t k« his retaro-d to Qriic wiOi s large aseoruee;,: cf FINE and Medium Clothing, MJOMaover FLEMLSTER* BROOKS. Ever/gir 'C“ b eea mattfactare-i to order, and U warranted \'l i TXpartnient k.vs hv! hu SPECIAL AFT EX AL*- ana U utiaaually tall with everythin,? r-ertainir.* ' ENTLSad AS« OCTFTT, acci as sSrts, Unde?- .. Drawers. Half Kos-:, Ccllats, Gloves. Neckties S, . m well as the L tTEST NOVELTIES in the Also, a very choice selection, of ROTS’ and k■ ■ ■> US’ CLOTHING. Tailoring Department A full stock of PIECE GOODS, such as Cloths, Cm sintera and '» eatings, Lin*n:% A-c. which will he cut by hisaself, and ruadt up in the best and latest style. I desire to call p--rticcla- attention to this Department, 35 l hkV£ bee:, coi ne.Uu with th* TAILOEING BUS INESS in Grit? a:, nv Tears, and act consent tha: f ran give satisfaction. Call to see me, over FLEMIS TKK «ac BROOK.>, where roa can procure anything ic the CLjTUING LINE, a* very sca’l profits •joh:: u. white i co. GriSa, Ga., epril C, New Picture Gallery r rilE undersigned hens leave to inform I the cit—eci c: Criffin. and ti:e .rounding coun try, that he has PERMANENTLY c.*ied in thi? Ci r. and that he has fitted up one of the BEST anu NEATEST Picture Galleries m the State, near the Railroad Depot 'n the “Moot Bu.<ding,” m MILL STREET. an Übs• ‘ now -re - pared to eze-utc any kind of a PICTI -..-I p*x*;>»* mav desire, and farters bims-tf that wit : ges'be has. THAT OF LONG LT'PT' AND MATURE JUDGMENT, h: can make a* good £ a* can be had in the St ite of Georgia, or la the United States Remember, ntv PICTURE GAL LEE V a in the MOCK BUILDING,” HU Street H:i* tg that I xrsy receive year libera! patronage, I arr, very respectfully* L jGL Green. Griffin. Ga.. apr;’. «S 1862- 3c E. L. MURRAY, Architect & Master Carpenter, OFFERS his services to the Citizens of GriJfcn and th* turrouudinc; country, solicits a share of thoir patronage. DESIGNS of the latent and most fashionable style drafted upon SHORT Xu- TICE. Contracts made. Cabinet Wark done anc! repaired. All work ectrusted u-> me, wIU b* executed with neatness and diapateh. ***Shop oppo site the market, at the old Dugan aland, march 9, i>6k*-tf Russell P. Johnson^ Git IFF IN GEORGIA, COMMISSION MERCHANT, at tho Griffin Ware Hoase"%iK I7OR the sale of GTJAjTO, I^bo^pbates, Ac ALSO—Agricultural Implements, Maciugie ry. etc. respectfully solicited, and prompt return* made. *«*Agency for the .'elebrated Dow Law’s Cotton Flanterand Guacc Iwtributor. feb. 2o» 1569-ly "a»©wrw »o'»aaT PE pot. macox, oeosoia jco E, E. Brown & Son, Proprietors. HPHIS well knewn House has been refit ted and impaired, and ia cjv ooe of the NEAT EST HOTELB ia the State, and the eonvenleatta thecltv. The Hotel applied with the markets adord. }au15~1869-ly