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Vol IX. No. 119.
SOCIAL SALAD
PLEASANTLY REPORTED FOR
’ SUNDAY’S CALL.
Some day,
When others braid your thick, brown
. hair,
And drape your form in silk and lace,
When others call you “dear” and “fair,”
And hold your hands and kiss your face,
You must not forget that far above
All others’ is a mother’s love.
Some day,
’Mongst strangers in far distent lands,
In your new home beyond the sea,
When at your lips are baby hands,
And children playing at your knee -
O then, as at your side they grow,
How I have loved yon, you will know!
Some day,
When you must feel love’s heaVy loss,
You will remember other years
When I, too, bent beneath the cross,
And mix my memory with thy tears;
In such dark hours be not afraid;
Within their shadow I have prayed.
Some day,
Yohr daughter’s voice, or smiles, or eyes,
My face will suddenly recall;
Then you will smile in sweet surprise,
And your soul unto mine will call
In that dear unforgotten prayer,
Which we at evening used to share,
Some day,
A flower, a song, a word may be
A link between us strong and sweet;
Ah; then, dear child, remember me !
And let your heart to “mother” beat,
My love is with you everywhere—
You cannot get beyond my prayer. •
Some day,
At longest it can not be long,
1 shall with glad impatience wait
Amid the glory and the song,
For you before the Golden Gate,
After earth’s parting and earth’s pain,
Never to part I Never again!
* * *
On Tuesday afternoon Mrs. Joseph
H. Drewry entertained the Young
Matron’s Cooking Club in her usual
bright and charming way from three
to five. The hours were spent in vari
ous delightful ways and this proved a
very enjoyable meeting of the club.
At 4 o’clock the guests were invited to
the dining room where the dainty re»>
fresbments of salad, wafers, and tea
were served The table was indeed a
lovely picture, the only flowers used
for decoration being violets and maid*
en-hair fern. Those present were
Miss Neely of Buffalo, Miss Alford of Ala
bama, Miss Smith, Miss Mattie Smith, Mrs.
T. E. Patterson, Mrs. H. C. Burr, Jr., Mrs.
J. H. Clark, Mrs. B. B. Davis, Mrs. Wilson
B. Mathews, Mrs. M. J. Daniel, Mrs. Chas.
F. Wolcott, Mrs. J. H. Drewry.
■* * *
One of the most pleasant entertain
ments of the week was given on Wed
nesday afternoon by Mrs E. R Anth
ony at her pretty Taylor street home.
The occasion was a meeting of the
Social Circle and was thoroughly
enjoyable in every particular. An
interesting program had been arranged
by Mrs. Anthony for the entertainment
of her guests. Mrs. Latta and Miss
Blanche Latta charmed their hearers
with brilliant selections on the piano
and the recitations of Mias Sara Ma
lone were received with delight as they
always are. Another attractive feature
of the afternoon was a beautiful vocal
solo by Miss Leela Redding, whose
lovely contralto voice it is ever a pleas
ure to hear. During the afternoon, an
elegant salad course and chocolate
were served.
» * *
The euchre party given on Thursday
afternoon by Mrs. Lloyd Cleveland,
when she entertained the Card Club,
is numbered among the most delight
ful of the past week’s pleasures. There
were six tables of cards and the game
was unusually spirited and interesting.
Dainty bonbons, olives and salted
almonds were enjoyed during the game.
The pretty score-cards were very effec
tively tied with bunches of violets. At
the close of the game a delicious salad
course wis served. Besides the mem
bers of the club those who enjoyed
this charming affair on Thursday were
Mrs. Thus. R. Mills, Mrs. Thos. Nall, Mrs.
A. B. Cleveland, Mrs E. B. Boyd; Mrs. E.
R. Anthony, Miss Neely, Miss Smith, Miss j
Brawner, Miss Florrie Jean Richards, Miss
Mattie Smith, Miss Bessie Clark Brawner.
w* • *
A brilliant affair of the coming week
will be the reception of Mrs. Wilson
B. Mathews on Tuesday afternoon.
Mrs Mathews will be assisted in re*
eeiving by the members of the Young
Matron’s Cooking Club, to the meet
ings of which she has, by her lovely
disposition and charming manner,
added greatly to the pleasures. The
affair will be a decided social success.
• ♦ ♦
Mr. George A Niles left Thursday
for Atlanta, where be has accepted a
position with D. Waxelbaum A Co.
Mr. Niles is one of Griffin’s brightest
and most capable young men and in
every undertaking achieves success.
He will be greatly missed by a large
circle of friends.
• * *
Friday evening Misses Brawner gave
a very delightful entertainment in
honor of Miss Pearl Neely, who is a
charming guest in the city now. The
beautiful home was adorned with rare
cut flowers and smilax arranged grace
fully and artistically in ball and parlor.
The Misses Brawner as hostesses are
ever charming and attractive, and this
evening spent*with them was, asusuab
thoroughly enjoyed by the guests.
Those present were Miss Neely, Miss
Smith, Miss Mollie White, Miss Lora
Smith, Miss Mamie Mills, Miss Evie Kell,
Miss Mattie Smith, Miss Jackie Mills, Miss
Mary Mell Neel,' Miss Brawner, Miss
Bessie Clark Brawner, Mr. B. R. Flemis
ter, Mr. W. D. Davis, Mr. H. W. Barnes,
Mr. James Anderson Redding, Mr. Rag
land, Mr. Lang, of Columbus, Mr. Henry
Smith, Mr. Douglas Glessner, Mr. W. H.
Newton, Mr. Otis Crouch, Mr. and Mrs.
Aaron Jason Burr.
On Friday evening Mrs. Smith com
plimented her two bright sons, Masters
Fielding and Francis, with a very
pleasant affair at the home of Prof.
Chas. M. Neel. The evening was
spent in playing games and in enjoy
ing an attractive program which had
been arranged for the occasion. Among
the particularly enjoyable features of
this program was the piano playing of
Miss Evelyn Reid and Miss Alice Has*
selkus, and the graceful recitation of
Miss Florence Doe. At half past ten
delicious refreshments of frozen cream
and cake were served.
NO IMPROVEMENT.
Col. Boyd’s Condition Remains Un
changed-
Col. Boyd’s condition was unchanged
from his first attack of Friday after
noon, at the hour of going to press last
night.
His attending physician had a faint
hope that a reaction would set in yes
terday afternoon, and that his con
sciousness would be partially restored,
at least, but in this he was disappoints
ed. No signs of restoration of any of
his impaired faculties have shown
themselves, and the opinion is express
ed, by'those in position to best judge,
that the stroke will prove fatal unless
relief is secured within a few hours
more.
The entire left side is completely
paralyzed, and bis entire body seri
ously affected. His mind and power
of speech it is feared are permanently
injured. He lies upon his bed with
closed eyes, noticing nothing that
transpires within his room. All that
medical skill and loving friendscan do
has no effect.
All Griffin is in sorrow over this
sudden and sad affliction and all hearts
go out in true and deep sympathy for
the family that has thus suddenly
been plunged into so deep sorrow.
All that can be done for him is to
watch and pray that his life may be
spared.
Fire Sale!
Monday morning at 8:30 o’clock
we will commence our grand fire
sale of our entire stock Dry Goods,
Notions, Shoes, etc. Every article
marked in plain figures. Be on
hand, as we will save you money.
Will close the stock out in next 60
days. No goods charged at this
sale.
FLEMISTER & BRIDGES.
Piano Tuning.
Charles H. Smith, of Atlanta, will
be in Griffin the latter part of this
month to lune pianos, organs and mu
sical instruments generally. He wil
come fully endorsed by teachers and
persons of note.
Any one wishing him to do any
work for them will receive prompt ate
tention upon hie arrival, if their re
quest is left at the Call office.
CA.STOBXA.
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CA.S 1 :
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY 23, 1828.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE.
BY W. E. H. SEARCY.
Christian science is confounded by
many with what is called faith cure or
Christian healing. But there is no
connection whatever between the two.
Faith cure or Christian healing is
taught in the Bible, and la an .actual
healing of a disease by divine interpo
sition.
Christian science was discovered by
a Mrs. Eddy iu 1866, and is not the
healing of disease at all. It is a system
wherein disease is taught to be the
“false testimony of a false material
sense.” In plain English, Christian
science teaches us that there is no
sickness in reality, at all. There is
nothing to cure. The relief that it af
fords is in convincing the mind that
there is nothing the matter. Indeed,
according to this latter day discoverer,
there is nothing real but mind. , Mat*,
ter is nothing. The body is matter. It
is nothing; it cannot suffer; only the
mind suffers; yet there is nothing the
matter in reality with the mind.
They remind us of a story we heard
once of a conversation between a Uni
versalist and a Methodist preacher.
They were going the same way, and
got into a conversation about their re
spective creeds. The Methodist finally
said, “If all the people are saved any
how, and there is no such place as
hell, why is it you are taking the trou
ble to travel around and preach?”
“Well,” said the Universalist, “you
Methodists are going around preach
ing everybody into hell, and I feel it
my duty to go around and preach
them out by showing there is no such
place as hell.”.
Our doctors are busy as bees every
day going from house to bouse telling
people they are sick, and having them
to take physic—often of the most
nauseous kind. But Mrs. Eddy’s dis
covery just puts an end to the business
by showing that it is all a mistake—
that we are in reality well. t
There is another thing about Mrs.
Eddy. She frames her sentences about
her science in away that is rather
mystifying, so that her deciples can
always be trying to find out something
they don’t understand.
Now, let’s hear her own discription
of her discovery. She says;
“In the year 1866 I discovered the
science of metaphysical healing, and
named it Christian Science. Chris
tian Science unfolds the demonstrable
fact that matter possesses neither sen
sation or life, and that human expert
ence shows the falsity of all material
things. The only sufferer is the mor
tai mind, since being in God cannot
suffer. All real being is the divine
mind and idea. Life, truth and love
are all powerful and ever present. Sin,
sickness, disease and death is the false
testimony of false material sense. That
this false sense evolves in belief a sub
jective state of mortal mind which
this same mind calls matter, thereby
shutting out the true sense of the
spirit. My discovery that erring mor
tal, misnamed mind produces all the
organism and action of the mortal
body set my thoughts to work in new
channels, and led up to my demon
stration of the proposition that mind
is all, and matter is naught, as the
leading factor in mind science.”
Now, while we are free to admit that
some diseases are purely imaginative,
and exist nowhere but in the mind,
the highest and best science as well as
common sense teaches us that there
are diseases cf the body and plenty of
them. Os course, for a purely imagi
native disease—one where there is
nothing the matter but in the mind—
treatment of these new scientists will
have a very happy effect. But if one
has an enlarged liver we would atill
advise that the common kind of doc
tors be called in, with the nauseous
physic.
Heroditus, the historian, tells us
that the ancient Egyptians divided its
medical practice as follows: “Each
physician is for one kind of sickness
and no more, and all places are crowd
ed with physicians; for there are phy
sicians for the eyes, physicians for the
head, physicians for the teeth, physi
cians for the stomach and physicians
for internal diseases.”
Genesis tells us that Joseph had an
array of physicians himself.
If we are to get back to this system
of specialties, and Mrs. Eddy would
confine her work to the diseases of the
imagination, there might Jbs a very
Important place for Christian science
Royal make* the fond pare.
whol*MHii6 ttnd dtolidov**
■MI
POWDER
Absolutely Pure
A
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK.
in our medical system ; but when she
attempts to carry forward the discov
ery and apply it to sure enough bodi
ly disease, we may expect to hear, as
we often do, of sad cases that have re
sulted from the delusion she teaches.
- Christian science deals with sin in
the same way it does with disease, and
is salty like theosophy in its concep
tion of God. Christian heeling is en
tirely different; it is of Christ. “She
who by faith touched the hem of the
Master’s garment, end was healed of
the issue of blood,” like thousands of
others who have had faith in Him,and
been healed, establish the efficacy of
faith and prayer, and place Christian
healing far above the descriptive for
mula of the metaphysical cure of Mrs.
Eddy.
To follow Mrs. Eddy means to repu
diate the scientific research of all the
centuries touching matter which we
know to be real and to be existing
about us and possessing qualities
which we can discern. It is to repu
diate the medical science of this en
lightened age. It is to repudiate the
Bible doctrine cf sin and destroy in
our own minds the belief in a personal
God.
Our advice then is to let Christian
science (so called by Mrs. Eddy) alone.
It is not science; it is not Christian;
in her own words it is “metaphysical.”
Christians should ally themselves with
that branch or denomination of the
church universal with which they can
most congenially labor for their own
spiritual advancement, and the
triumph of religion generally, and not
waste their powers and influence in
the propogation of systems, however
high sounding, which are not founded
in reason or revelation.
Deafness Cannot be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach
the diseased portion of the ear. There is
only one way to cure deafness, and that is
by constitutional remedies. Deafness is
caused by an inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube.
When this tube gets inflamed you have a
rumbling sound cnmmperfect hearing, and
when it is deafness is the
result, and unless the inflammation can be
taken out and this tube restored so its
normal condition, hearing will be destroy
ed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused
by catarrh, nothing but an in
flamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh)
that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the beat.
FOR SALE.
One SSOO first mortgage 7 per cent
Odd Fellows bond for sale. Apply to
Call office.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c.
It C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money.
DISSOLUTION NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that the partner
ship heretofore existing under the firm
name of WHITE & WOLCOTT has been
dissolved. The businets will be continued
by Thos. J. White, to whom all indebted
ness must be paid. Thos. J. White hereby
assumes all liabilities of said firm of
White & Wolcott.
THOS. J. WHITE.
CHAS. F. WOLCOTT.
A CARD.
To My Friends and Customers:
As you will see the firm of Scott &
Horne has been dissolved, and I have
bought out the stock of goods of Robt. L
Williams, and will henceforth be found at
the Scheurman Store, where I will be
pleased to serve my friends, I trust, as
well in the future as in the past.
Thanking you for past tavors, I am, <
Respwtfufly, -
Jan. 1,1898. W. P. HORNE.
<<
No-To-Bac for Fifty Cent*.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, make* weak
men strong, blood pure. 50c, SI. AU druggist*.
FOR RENT.
A5-room residence on Poplar street.
The house contains rooms, a cook room
and servants’ room. A good well of water
and garden. Adjoins Dr. McDonald’s
home. Apply to J. D. BOYD, j
Dissolution Sale. 1
’ _____
THOS. J. WHITE HAVING BOUGHT MR. C. F. WOLCOTTS INTEREST
IN THE BUSINESS OF WHITE A WOLCOTT,' .
Offers at Absolute Cost!
All Winter Suits for Men or Boys,
All Overcoats for Men and Boys,
All Winter Underwear.
THESE GOODS MUST BE CONVERTED INTO CASH AT ONCE. NONE
OF ABOVE ARTICLES WILL BE CHARGED TO ANY ONE AT THESE
PRICES. ANY ONE HAVING ACCOUNT ON MY BOOKS CAN HAVE
THESE ARTICLES CHARGED, BUT AT REGULAR MARKED PRTCIM
THOS. J. WHITE,
SUCCESSOR TO
Al' V- 17
r j /AJ
■ ■
luDu ul uOi
—(o)
Your Attention for a Minute.
New Embroideries, I
New White Goods,
New Lawns and Laces.
OUR IMPORT ORDER OF THREE HUNDRED AND FIFTY PIECES OF
EMBROIDERIES RECEIVED SATURDAY. THIS IS THE HANDSOMEST
LOT EVER SHOWN IN GRIFFIN—EMBROIDERIES JN MATCH SETS,
WHITE EMBROIDERIES, NARROW EMBROIDERIES, COLORED EMBROID
ERIES, ENSERTIONB TO MATCH.
DOMESTICS. - -
75 PIECES OF BLEACHED DOMESTICS AND CAMBRICS RECEIVED
YESTERDAY. BE SURE TO GET OUR PRICES ON THESE-
THIS WILL BE A WEEK OF EMBROIDERIES AND WHITE GOODS
AND WE WANT YOU TO SEE THE BARGAINS WE ARE OFFERING IN
ENTIRELY NEW GOODS.
B. F. STRICKLAND & CO.
J. H. HOFF'S BOOK AND MDSIC STORE
HAS OPENED UP A BEAUTIFUL LINE OF
LACE VALENTINES.
Fault Finders and Hlt-’Em-Hard Conics.
O’ TAT TTTTP'h 1
•• oafcaaafca ■■ M*eea*a OK
— ■ -■ ——T?
SELLING OUT
Olit I
A VISIT TO MY STORE WILL CONVINCE YOU THAT HAVING
JUST BOUGHT OUT THE STOCK OF R. L. WILLIAMS, I AM PREPARED
TO GIVE YOU BARGAINS. EVERYTHING AT COST. A SAVING OF «
PER CENT. ON EACH PURCHASE.
• WE CAN SHOW YOU A NICE LOT OF CROCKERY, GLASSWARE,
WOODENWARE, NOTIONS OF ALL KINDS, UMBRELLAS, .TRUNKS,
VALISES, RIBBONS, SHIRTS, COLLARS, CLOTHING, JEANS, FLANNELS
AND WOOLEN DRESS GOODS AND MENS HATS. ALL INCLUDED IN
THIS SACRIFICE SALE.
• , :
TXT. 13.I 3 . HOBITE,
21 Hill Street—at Sdienenmui Stere.
Ten Cents per Week