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Clothing and Gents’ Furnishings.
Our stock is in tune with the demand. Just what is sought after
the most can he found at our place.
What the season, style and trade wants we have. We respectfully
ask yon to give us a call.
WILEY L. SMITH,
23 HILL STREET, GRIFFIN, GA
Tangle Foot Fly Paper 25 dou-
ble sheets for 35c.
With every 10c. worth Insect
Powder we will give a sprinkler
to apply it with.
CARLISLE & WARD'
New Lot Beans Just Received.
Now ih the time to plant your second crop.
Also Watermelon and Cantaloupe Seed lor late planting.
M edicincs of all Kinds.
Everything kept in a First Class Drug Store.
Prescriptions a Specialty.
J N, HARRIS & SON.
LOOK WHAT SPOT CASH WILL DO !
1 doz. 3-Ib cans Tomatoes for sl. 60 lbs Pearl Grits for sl. 52 bars
Soap for sl. 100 lbs C. S, Meal for sl. Granulated Sugar 5 7-So lb. Meal
55c bushel. Ice Cured Meat sic. King of Patent $1.40 barrel. C. S. Hulls
33c. Hay 05c. 200 box Matches 'LI dozen.
G. W CLARK & SON.
CHEAPEST GROCERS IN TOWN.
fcMIS lIA'oAW a
Y ■ -A v f AnS XvAcww&n
ISR
WB
J. M. SEARS.
The Grocer.
The Evening Call.
GRIFFIN, GA., JUNE (i. 1599.
GtTiceovcr !)nvis' Hard ware Store
TELEPHONE NO. 32.
PERSONAL AND LOCAL DOTS
DR. J. M. THOMAS,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office: No. 23i Hill street, stairway
next to R. P. McWilliams & Son. Tele
phone 27, 2 rings.
J \V. Reid, of Jolly, was here today.
S. Samuels, of Atlanta, was here to
day.
Another hot nod dusty day this has
been.
T. P. J..nea made a bnsiuesi trip to
Atlanta today.
J. W. Dunbar, ol Hollonville, spent
today in thia city.
(' i!. J a ir.ee Hall, of Uincii na' i, w- s
i i 110 ci' y sh i • no ruing
A 1' Pat It r-i.n. id A i lian.s .n,
madei iir ci'y a visit t >day.
z\ Picnic Ham will tie nice for your
Picnic Dinner The I'ty Mi.-it Mark
et. 20 Bill S' n et
Bratttly Solder, oi Jone-bor , -pent
today >n this city with home io ks
Mayor John II \\ i sot>, of Milner
waa the guest of Griffin friends today.
J A J. i'.d.ve., I Line Ch. k, wag
circtllatifiy among hi- Griffin friends
today
Henry S rub n, of Macon, ha. re
turned home after spending u few
days in t! isci I v
Mt- E Gre-iiam lei; this morning
to Bpeud'some time with rrluiivis m.d
friends in Forsyth
\\ ha will b any nicer than Break
'.is! B icon , r Drit d 1> es 'or your
break' ut? I’he City Mt at Market, 20
Hlll Street.
V. B It -..<■nt d.W I; I I'liutll '
a- <■: tp.is n ruing, where he spent
the day nti businese
W a ker Artio d, of Mai u, is spend*
i it a a few dais wit • his frond, Ed
Rauda P.i, ar street.
Gorge Mui.all, o' Atlanta, who
bus b«en vomit g hi.< friend, Haymond
I> e, tn this ci y, teturued Ii mi this
morning
W. I' Pitker, t.f B hpage, Tenn.,
who :s spending - mic time in this
cii y, went down to Barnesville this
morning on a bu-inera trip.
I' rt>b Breik'a-t Bactu, Dried Beef,
I chic ILinn. Dresaed Chicken, Pork
and Beef. T.n> City Meat Market, 20
Hill Street.
Col. J J Flynt, who haj been spend
tug a few Jays with the Griffin pic
nickers at F at Shoals, returned home
thia morning and reports all well and
having a m .st erjov able time
If our meudiHms would join the
Call in its petition i' c>' cii.
our streets would be ay rtnkled during
these hot dry days. J,t is to your in
terest, brother, and we will aid you.
Wednesday
(
WE WILL HAVE: ’
Fine Pine Apples, 15c.
Cantelonpe.% 5c ami 10c.
Beans, best in town, 7}c quart.
Crate fine Cabbage, 5c lb.
Large fine Mackeral 10c lb.
’Fresh Lemons 20c dozen.
Breakfast Syrup, orange, lemon,
honey and sugar flavors.
New lot Hams, 11c lb.
All kinds Crackers fresh. <
Laurel wreath Salmon, 17ic can.
Florida honey peaches, get a basket ]
Standard Blend Tea, 5c package.
Best black and green Tea, 50c lb
jM'COWELL & EDWARDS. ;
I
Ordinary’s court was adjourned
from yesterday unlit today, when A.
J. Clark made application lor dismiss
sion upon the estate of Mrs Margaret
Tarvers, lie having jellied up the af
fairs of same.
Remarkable Rescue-
Mrs. Michael Curtain, Plainfield, 111,
makes the statement, that she caught
cold, which settled on her lungs; she
was treated for a month by her family
physician, but grew worse. He told
her she was a hopeless victim of con
sumption and that no medicine could
cure her. Her druggist suggested Dr.
King’s New Discovery for Consump
tion ; she bought a bottle and to her
delight found herself benefited from
first dose. She continued its use and
after taking six bottles, found herself
sound and well; now does her own
housework, and is as well as she ever
was. Free trial bottles of this Great
Discovery at Harris A Son's ami Car
lisle & Ward’s drug store Only 50
cents and $1 00 ; every bottle guaran
teed.
c a. s t o rt x a .
Bears the De Kind You Ha/a Always Bought
The South’s Timber Supply
It seems wasteful to see < ur fine for
j esls, hickory, oak and poplar, year by
■ year growing smaller, when we know
s that the major portion <>l the timber I
I | has been destroyed in land clearing,
J There in a fortune waiting for some
I capitalist who will come here and fut
■ up a factory to utilize these fine wood«< ■
lots of wooder.-ware, handles and
1 spokes are shipped here, white the raw j
; material at our own doors is going to
■ waste —Greenville Ala Living 1 ruth.
The same thing is true of many sec
tions of both Georgia and Alabama,
i Some of the finest and most valuable
j timber in the world grows in these
.-tales, und sooner or later, there will
come a demand for it Today, limber
,■ cut from ibe L'clite within a
• few miles of Columbus, is I ting ship-
I ped to Inctorh-s in far off Spain. It
' requirts no argument to cot vines any
■ one that more money could Le gotten
• j out of the timii'-r if it were uttiiz td by
I mills at home. The mills will come,
■ in time, as the limber supp y i* being
, | exhausted in many n-ction-
An important feiture in con
nection is the utter ignorance of our
people on the laws of L-reslry and
methods for the preserve : n ot our
forests. Timber has always been so
plentiful in the past that they have
never found it necessary to study
means to prev nt the needT.s sacrifice
of our forests The rapidly diminish
ing supply of the w orld's timber should
serve to give them new ideas on the
subject, draw their attention to the
study of forestry, and how b-at to pre
serve our !• ■rests, and at the same
time reap a profit therefrom —Colum
bus Enquirei-Sun
• i ♦
For Diabetes use Stu
art’s Gin and Buclin.
Depends.
“Thomas, how would you correct the
sentence, ‘He laid down on the
lounge?’ ”
“I wouldn't correct it at all. ma'am.
It's all right. ”
“How do you make that out, Thom
as?”
“He was carry in an armful of down,
ma'am, and lie laid it on the lounge.”
•—Chicago Tribune.
Too Clever to Keep.
First Shipping Clerk—Have you heard
that Robson has got sacked ?
Second Shipping Clerk —No. Is that
a fact ? I thought he was such a clever
sort of chap.
Firsts. C. —Too clever by. half. He
invoiced a consignment of cradles as
matrimonial fruit baskets I—Vanityl—Vanity
Fair
’ 1 ' - r i.,. . jt fi t ’scaref-
• const t p;r pm rore-cr
' - ■ » » r < cists i • fund njonv*?
T<’ < urv < efiviipHiiuu k-oreiet.
Take ('ascarets Candy Cathartic. 13c or 25c.
v C c C fad to •'ure. refund money
SUNRISE DOTS ]
SiNitisK.-June C.—Mrs. Liuuie Wiles is i
visiting her daughter here, who has been ,
quite ill, but we arc glad to note, is some I
filter at this time
J. W. II d ■ f Gr.ffin, wa - here last 1
Sunday. J
Mr. and Mi J. P. McGee and Mr. An-p
derson vi'.ited ri uivi s hen-Sunday. j
Wade Sander. d Rufus Camp, of Or- ‘
chard HiP, were I Sunday.
Frank Oliver i-die lat Cross Road- la't (
Sunday. (
Our dairyman, Mr. Robertson, has a fine i1
lot oi cows,and is doing a fine business. I (
Miss Jessie Thrower, who has been vis- 1
iting Miss Alice Dingier, has returned to I
her home in Barnesville.
Watermelon patches are looking fine. I
Come down, Mr. Ed., about July 4tb. I|’
think we will have, plenty by then.
Tom Hutson says the bugs arc about to
kill his Irish potatoes.
m wwTyToc a is. I
Midway, June 6.—The farmers are busy
chopping 2-cent cotton, to pay lor 8-cent
bacon, a barrel flour, and so on to the j
end of the chapter.
Howell Welden filled bis regular ap
pointment Sunday.
Prof. Morris, of Owl II >11"W, passed I
here Saturday.
Robt. Bailey and 0.-car Bel), of Patrick,
visited here Sunday.
Lon Beckham and Leonard Futral call
ed on Miss Leila Futral Sunday.
Douglas Chapman called on Miss Annie !
Biles Sunday.
We hope Whit Oxford has heard from
his girl before now, for if not, I’m afraid
Milledgeville will have another inhabitant
soon.
Wonder why J. O. Grubbs didn't fill bis
regular appointment Sunday? He has
been so faithful heretofore.
Marvin King called on Miss Leila Fu
tral Sunday. W’here was Mr. B?
Mr. 11. A. Pass, Bowman, Ga., writes:
“One of my children was fbry delicate
and we despaired ol raising it. For
months my wife and I could hardly get
a night's rest until we began the use of
Pitts’ Carminative. We found great re
lief from the first bottle," Pitts’ Carmina
tive acts promptly and cures permanent
ly. It is pleasant to the taste, and children
take it without coaxing. It is free from
injurious drugs and chemicals.
LETTER LIST.
List of letters remaining in the Griffin, j
Ga., postoffice, week ending, June ('>, 1899.
Persons calling will please say ‘advertised
and give date. One cent must be paid on
each advertised letter.
MALE LIST.
Ben Breed, II D Cross well, Will Hag-'
aril, Charlie Morse, T W Johnson.
FEMALE LIST.
Miss Jessie Swisher.
11. L. Williams, P. M.
Relief in Six Hours.
Distressing Kidney and Bladder Dis
ease relieved in six hours by “New Great'
South American Kidney Cure." It is a |
great surprise on account of its exceeding I
promptness in relieving pain in bladder, I
kidneys and back, in male or female. Re- j
lieves retention oi water almost immedi-j
ately. If you want quick relief and cure
this is the remedy.. Sold by J. N. Ilitrris \
& Son, Druggists, Griffin, Ga.
MOZLETS LEMON ELIXIR.
Regulates the Liver, Stomach, Bowels
and. Kidneys-
For biliousness, constipation and ma
laria.
For indigestion, sick and nervous head
ache.
For sleeplessness, nervousness heart fail- i
ure, and nervous prostration.
For fever, chills, debility anti kidney I
diseases, take Lemon Elixir.
Ladies,for natural and thorough organ
ic regulation, take Lemon Elixir.
50c. and sl.oO bottles at all drugcists.
Prepared only by Dr. 11. Mozley, At-!
lanta, Ga.
Gratitude-
Dr. 11. M' izley—Dear Sir • Since using
your Lemi>n Elixir I have never hid an
other attack of those fearful sick head
aches, and thank God that I have at last
found a medicine that will cure those aw
ful spells. Mrs. Etta W. Jones,
Parkersburg, West Virginia.
Mozley's Lemon Elixir-
I suffered with indigestion and dy.-en- i
tery for two long years. I heard of Lemon }
Elixir; got it; taken seven bottles and am ■
now a well man. Harry Adams,
No. 1734 First Ave., Birmingham, Ala.
Mozley’s Lemon Elixir
Cured mV husband, who was afflicted for
years with large ulcers on his leg, and was
cured after using two bottles; and cured a
friend whom the doctors had given up to
die, who had suffered for years with indi
gestion and nervous prostration.
Mrs. E. A. Beville,
Woodstock, Ala.
MOZLETS LEMON HOT EBOPS.
Cures all Coughs, Colds, Horseness,
Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Hemorrhage, aud
all throat and lung diseases. Elegant, re
liable.
25c. at druggist. Prepared only by Dr.
H. Mozley, Atlanta, Ga.
Q I’ATE OF GEORGIA,
O Spalding County.
Whereas, Andrew J. Clark, administra
tor of Miss Margrett A. Tarver, represents
to the court in his petition, duly filed and '
entered on record, that he lias tuli admin
istered Miss Margrett A. Tarver’s estate, i
This is therefore to cite all persons concern- i
ed, kindred and creditors, to show cause, ]
if any they can, why said administrator !
should not be discharged from his admin- i
istration, and receive letters of dismission ‘
on the first Monday in September, 18vS. 1
This June 5, 1899, t
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary. 1
? “P/fte’ Carminativo |
j Saved My Baby's Ufe>" v
I Johnson Station, Ga., September 16, 1898,
1 LAMAR & RANKIN DRUG CO., Atlanta, Ga. 2
<5 Gentlemen: I can not recommend your Pitts' Garminitivi too *
I strongly, as I owe my baby’s life to it. She had Cholera Infantum 1
I when five months old, and I could get no relief until 1 began using Pitt*s j
J Carminative. The fever left her when 1 had given her but two bottles, y
v and she had fattened so she did not look like the same child. I advise ill ?
3 mothers who have sickly or delicate children to give this remedy atrial.
f Respectfully, Mrs. LIIZIH MURRAY. t
z ——
J If Saved Her Baby -Will Save Yeura. i
? ... .TRY 1T....
< Eaglebrand <
& Condensed Milk C
> Has No Equal as an Infant Food €
C “INFANT HEALTH’sent FREE. J
REMNANT SALE
.zYT-
BASS BROTHERS.
•
ALL THE SHORT LENGTHS IN WASH GOODS TO GO ON MIDDLE
COUNTER AND PRICES PLACED ON SAME THAT WILL MOVE THEM
OUT AT ONCE. WE HAVE A GREAT ACCUMULATION OF THE MOST
DESIRABLE
Spring Goods in Remnants,
RANGING FROM 8 YAHDS I P To 13 YARDS EACH. AN OPPoRILNITY
TO BUY CHILDREN S DRESSES, SKIRTS AND SIIIRT WAISTS FOR LESS
■ THAN WIIOLESAT.E COST. I f WILL TAKE ABOUT TEN DAYS TO CLOSE
| OUT THESE REMNANTS--FIRST COME WILL OF COURSE GET PRICES.
About 525 yards plain and striped Lawns at Sic, worth 6c.
About 110 yards white and checked Lawn worth Sc, to close at 5c y<l.
About 265 yards white Lawn in sto 15yaid lengths, to go at 6L This
! lot is well worth 10c.
The 20c white Lawn we will close out at 10c.
White Organdie in 5 to 12 yards lengtiis, at 10c.
GREAT BARGAINS.
Fink, blue, red, cream and green Organdy at 10 ■.
Irish Lawn at 7jc,
White and colored Biipies in skirt lengt: , very hea; c out
remnants.
Linen Crash for skirts at Bc, worth 15c.
ilemnants in Perea'., , Cai; ■■-\ B'ea< Cotton a des C.i.--iir.-:.
Dotted Swiss at Sjc yard.
A beautiful line of ladies Silk Th's bought cheap, will sell cheap.
Don’t miss this sale of Remnants, Come as soon is yon can.
Sample Slippers to lit every one at about
half price.
BASS BROS.
REGARDLESS OF AGE
The kiduevs are responsible for more
sickness, suffering, and deaths than any
oth r organs of the body.
A majority of the ills sfl'icting people
today is traceable to kidney trouble. It
pervades all classes of society, in all cli
mkt< regardless of age, sex or condition.
The s-. mptoms of kidney trouble are un
mistak..' .•, ■ :ch as rheumatism,neuralgia
sleeplessness, pain or dull ache in the back
a desire to urinate often day or n.ght, pro
fuse or scanty supply.
Uric acid, or brick-dust deposit in urine
are signs of clogged kidneys, causing pois
oned and germ-tilled blood. Sometimes
the heart acts badly, and tube casts (wast
ing of the kidneys) are found in the urine,
which if neglected will result in Bright’s
Disease. the most dangerous form of "kid
ney trouble.
All these symptoms and conditions are
promptly removed under the influence of
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root. It has a world
wide reputation for its wonderful cures of
the most distressing cases.
N<> one need be long without it as it is
so easy to get at any drug store at fifty
cents or one dollar. You can have a sam
ple bottle of this wonderful discovery,
Swamp-Root, and a book telling all about
it, both sent to you absolutely free by mail
Send your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
Binghamton, N. Y.,and kindly mention
that you read inis liberal offer in the Mid
dle Georgia Farmer. 6
Tax Receiver's Notice,
> i 1 will be at the different places on th
• i days mentioned below, for the purpos-e o
I receiving state and county Taxes for tin
> I year 1899:
• Districts. April. May.
■ Africa
Union -1 2
Mt. Zion 5 3
■ Line Creek f> 4
Orrs 7 5
Akins 10
Cabin 11 9
On Orr’s days will be at my office.
cept the days named above 1 will 1 y at
office in L. C. Manley’s store until tb<- n< fl
of July, when my books will be ; 1 ' •
11. T. JOHNSON,
Tax Receiver Spalding County,
J. CHESTNEY SMITH.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
(MEce over Grlthn Ranking Co. - *'
Represents the best and "'’fniur‘ne*
Fire. Accident and Sick lienetlt "
Companies in the country. ■
’l ■ C 1 <’5.T !
.■. <: and . , ; s
■ her. ’ ' ’... .»
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