The morning call. (Griffin, Ga.) 18??-1899, October 25, 1898, Image 4

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E < Over COAT ...JEW CROP TURiIP SEED-ALL THE BEST VARIETIES..... BEST MIXED PAINT ON THE MARKET; WE GUARANTEE IT TO GIVE SATISFACTION. GOOD LAUNDRY SOAP 9 BARS FOR Be. WHITE BAR SOAP WORTH 10c FOR Be A BAR ..SOME EXTRA. FINE TEA.. ALL KINDS BPICEB FOR PIOKLEING. FLAV ORING EXTRACTS FOR CAKE AND ICE CREAM. PENS. INK, PAPER. ENVELOPES. COMBS, BRUSHES, COLOGNE A&D FINE EXTRACTS •> .....All the Popular Patent Medicines and Drugs of All Sorts PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUND ED. FINE CIGARS AND TOBACCO. HYPODEBM ICBYRINGES/REEDLES. ETC- FOUR YEAR OLD APPLE VINING AR—SOMETHING THAT WILL HAVE YOUR PICKLES. CALL AND SEE US J. JST- HARRIS & BOISE- WAR IS OVER! But Wu On Out Price* is juat commenced. Parched and ground Coffee 10c. Beat Green Coffee 8c lb. Briba Grita |LOO. Soda cracker* Bc. Cabbage Sc. 81b Can Tomatoes 81-70 case. Beat Cream Cheese 12jc. Wwbing Powden 8c package. Ann and Hammer Soda 64c. Keg Foda 81ba for 25c. Royal Powders 48c. Oolong Tea 11c package. Swift Hama 10c lb. Octagon Soap 4c bar. Irlah Potatoes 96c pk; 900 matches 10c doz boxed. Salmon 10c can. Black Pep- Dec 16c lb. 110-Fine Table Salt 663 Mason’s 10c blacking Sc box. Bib Bucket Jelly 86c. A Fine Fancy Candy fur 10c lb. Apple Vinegar 80c gallon. Sweet Po tato* 86c bu. Large, Fino, Yellow Banana* 10c doz today. We want your trade and will do everything in our power to please you. Give us a call today. We are giving the LO WEBTPRIOEB of any house in the city. 1 hree express wagons will get your gooda out promptly. G. W CLARK & SON. * * Wholesale and Retail Grocers. - ■ MOOCA AND JAVA COFFEE 20c lb. - • ••• ■ ROASTED COFFEE 10 " GREIN COFFEE 0 “ BOSS CRACKERS 10 “ CANNED CORN 6c CAN. FINE CREAMERY BUTTER. , DATES. RAISINS. NEW NUTS. APPLES 20c PECK. * NEW MACKEREL. 50 FRYING CHICKENS. FRESH CELERY. CRANBERRIES. Eg•" '' J. M. SEARS. Morning Call. SBimN, GA., OCT. as, 189 S. Office over Davis’ Hardware Store TELEPHONE NO. 22. PERSONAL AND LOCAL DOTS- DR. J. M. THOMAS, PHYSICIAN AND BVBGEON Office: No. 23| HUI street, stairway next to R. P. McWilliams & Son. • • ■ P. T. Archer spent yesterday in At* testa. e R. D. Ison spent the day in Atlanta yesterday. 0.0. Bradbery is spending a few days in Macon. Col. Geo. I. Jones spent yesterday at Warm Springs. Mrs. E. Gresham spent the day yesterday with Atlanta friends. Col. W. E. H. Searcy, Sr., made a basinees trip to Atlanta yesterday. Rev. E. W. Hammond returned yes* terday from a short visit to Molena. * '—Hudnul’a perfumes and Lowney’s oandiee at Anthony Drug Co. Remember the parade today at 12:30 o'clock, beaded by Al. G. Field’s fine fe; ' band. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Burr left yester day for Macon to be gone for some fc * <kV ‘- Joshua Hammond went down to maw—was—— z'-J z■ ■ ■■■■- . ■ i w—., .• ■ . These Cold Daye call for something heavier than summer underwear, or eerge coate. NOBBY TOP COATS In Covert Cloth and Kerseys ranging in prices from $7.50 to SIB.OO. lam shewing a complete stock of WINTER UNDERWEAR In all Wool, part wool and heavy ribbed cotton. Thos. J. White. Macon yesterday to attend the meet ing of Masons. Mrs. T. L. Jennings, of Bolingbroke, spent yesterday in this city with her uncle, Dr. N. B. Drewry. Miss Eunice Edwards left yesterday for Hampton, where she will spend several days with relatives. Col. 8. W. Murray, of Newnan, was in Ibis city for a short time yesterday with bis brother, A. 8. Murray. Mrs. Will Freeman returned to her home in Macon yesterday after a pleasant visit with friends here. W. T. Murphy, representing the Anvil Soda Company, of New York City, spent last night in this city. Lowney’s fine chocolates and bon bons—name on every piece—Anthony Drug Co., Agts. The Relief Association will meet in Y. M. C. A., parlor this morning at 10 o’clock. All members are urged to be present. Mr. and Mrs. John Brooks, of Dub lin, returned home yesterday after spending several days with relatives in this city. Mrs. Julia Pritchard and daughter, little Miss Genie Pritchard, are spend ing several days in Atlanta with their many friends. Rev. W. G Woodbridge went up to Atlanta yesterday where he will spend a week or ten days assisting in a revi val tn that city. Mr* A. W. Blake went down to Ma con Sunday to attend the funeral of Miss Plant, whose death occurred in that city Saturday night John S Patterson, formerly of this city, but now of Augusta, returned home yesterday after a short visit to his parents, Mr. and Mrs D. W. Pat terson, in this city. Mr. and Mrs P L Brown, of Jones bqro, arrived in the city yesterday and will remain here duiing the fall sea son. Mr. Brown is buying cotton seed for the Georgia Cotton Oil Company, of Atlanta. Snpt. A . G. Martin, Dr. R H. Tay lor and O. N. Rauschenberg went down to Macon last night to attend the an nual communication of the Grind Lodge of the Stale of Georgia of the Free and Accepted Masons. Al G. Field’s minstrels, which will appear al the Olympic tonight, have the largest advance sale of seats ever given an attraction in this city. Standing room will be at a premium before the curtain rises. All who cannot secure seats can at least see the parade today at 12 :30. Hanes—Adams- Mr. A. O. Hanes left yesterday for Jonesboro, where he will be married tomorrow afternoon to Miss Mattie Adams. Mr. Hanes has been connected with the Call for several months past, and has made many friends in this city who will extend their warmest cons gratulations upon his winning the hand of one of Jonesboro’s fairest daughters. O AffiT ORXA. B«anth* KM Ym Hw Always Bought ttgwta* 7*2* „y/ / X * Saved My Baby's Ufa." V Johnson Station, Ga., September 16, 1898. 2 LAMAR & RANKIN DRUG CO., Atlanta, Ga. A Gentlemen: 1 can not recommend your Pitts’Carminative too A strongly, as I owe my baby’s life to it. She had Cholera Infantum I when five months old, and 1 could get no relief until 1 began A usin |L J Carminative. The fever left her when I had nven her but two bottles, y and she had fattened so she did not look like the same child. l a vise a □ mothers who have sickly or delicate children to give this remedy a trial, y Respectfully, MRS. LIZZIE MURRAY. ? It Saved Her Beby WH Save Yeura. ....TRY 1T.... Meade Left the Jug Outside. An old soldier relates to the Syra cuse Standard, this incident of hie experience with Geo. Meade ih the late war. It was a raw night in October, the wind was rather strong, and Gen. Meade btd fixed a stove in hie tent. The soldier was the sentry for the general. A puff of wind knocked down the improvised stove pipe and soon the tent filled with smoke. The general came out and asked the sentry to help him rearrange it. The soldier replied that he was under orders, and could not leave his post of duty. “Yes, yes,” said Meade, “that is true, but I would like to have that stovepipe fixed. You are right,” and the gener al went at the job himself. “I kept pacing my beat,” eaid the soldier, “and enjoyed Meade’s efforts to get the pipe back in its place. He made a sorry mesa of it. Finally he turned to me and said : ‘Sentry, you will have to help me. I will be res sponsible for you, and if there is any trouble about your leaving the beat I will explain to the commanding officer.” “In a few minutes we had the pipe in position. Meade disappeared into the tent without a word of thanks, but he soon came out with a jug of appletack and asked me to take a drink. Once morel reminded him I was on duty. ‘Yes, yes,’he answered ; ‘I know, but you helped me to fix the stovepipe.’ “He turned on bis heel and re ens tered the tent, leaving the jug outside. After a time he came out. “Did you drink?” He enquired. I nodded. “ ’I knew you would ; but I did not see it.’ ” That Joyful Feeling With the exilarating sense of renewed health and strength and internal cleanli ness, which follows the use of Syrup of Figs is unknown to the few who have not progressed beyond the old time medicines and the cheap substitutes sometimes offer ed but never accepted by the well-inform ed. CASTORIA. Bean the lhe Kind You Have Always Bought “‘T‘ New York’s Faihionable Bank- Some very fashionable and rich dis rectors have been added to the man agement of the Piazza bank, among them Col. John Jacob Astor, Herman and Victor Oelrichs, Stuyvesant Fish, August Belmont and others. The wives and daughters and sisters of very rich men and women, rich in their own right, are depositors in the Plaza, which is across Fifth avenue from Cor nelius Vanderbilt’s mansion. The ins slitution has been nicknamed “The Pink Tea Bank,” for there is a hand some reception room where the fash ionable depositors gather to draw their checks and talk polite nothings. A maid is always in attendance, a sepa rate corps of clerks keep the women’s accounts, and in the season a line of carriages surround the building. It ia here that the young daughters of the millionaires are taught how to keep a check book. Such patronage evident ly pays, and the Plaza, by adding new directors, ia reaching out lor more of it.—N. Y. Dispatch. T caotoria. Bwi * in( * Yon Have Always Bought ——■—l'l' » X* I'o (.‘uro Constipation Forever. Take Cnacare t* Cundv Cuthart io. 10c or Sa u a C. C. fall to cure. drvxKists refund moue*. Heavy , Underw3ar Weather. Elephant Great in Crime- Few more impressive confidences can be imparted than one in which a Hindoo describes how he knows hia elephant intends to destroy him. It is all so seemingly trivial, and yet in reality of such deadly significance. Hie story is so full of details that prove the man’s profound understanding of what he is talking about that one re mains equally amazed at the brute’s power to dissemble, and intended vic tim’s insight into the would be mur* derer’s character. And yet, from the psychological standpoint, an elephant never gives any other such indication of mental power as is exhibited in its revenge. That patient, watchful, im« placable, hatred, often provoked situ» ply because a man is in attendance upon another animal (for it is the rule with tuskers to detest their next neighbors), speaks more conclusively of a high intellectual guide than al stories, true or false,’concentration am fixedness of purpose, such careful, un<» relaxed, vigilance, such perfect am consistent pretense, and when the time comes, such desperate, unhesitat ing energy as homicidal animals ex hibit, are impossible without a very considerable, although in this instance very irregular development. No one can deny that if this creat ure is great at all its greatness shows itself in its crimes. These have caused it to be worshipped in the east, where men venerate nothing but merciless, irresponsible force, and where an exhi bition of those qualities and traits de scribed fully account for the formula, “My lord, the elephant!”—Outing. ACTIVE SOLICITORS WANTED EV- ERYWHERE for “The Story of the Phil ’ ippines,” Murat Halstead, coiffmissioned ' by the Government as Official Historian to the War Department. The book was . written in army camps at San Francisco, ■ on the Pacific with General Merritt, in the , hospitals at Honolulu, in Hong Kong, in the American trenches at Manilla, in the Insurgent camps with Aguinaldo, on the deck of the Olympia with Dewey, and in the roar of battle at the fall of Manilla. Bo nanza for agents. Brimful of original pic tures taken by government photographers on the spot. Large book. Low prices. Big profits. Freight paid. Credit given. Drop all trashy unofficial war books. Outfit free. Address, F. T. Barber, Sec’y., 356 Dearborn St., Chicago. For first class fruit and ornamental trees and vines write to or call on Smith Bros., Concord, Ga. Big stock. Low prices. Agents wanted. DR. E. L. HANES, DENTIST. Office upstairs in building adjoining, on the north, M Williams & Bon. TUESDAY, OCT. 25th. AL. G. FIELD and His Greater Minstrels With 50 people and Special Palace car. Don’t Miss the Parade Tuesday at Noon. Prices SI.OO, 75 and 50 cents. Reeves’ Drug Store. WE CAN SUPPLY YOUR WANTS IN THE * ■ I UNDERWEAR - LINE! 11 15c. for ladies heavy ribbed cotton Vests. 25c. for ladies heavy bleached cotton Vests worth 40c. 25c. for ladies heavy bleached cotton Pants. $1 suit, or 50c. garment, for ladies heavy knit Underwear. 75c. and $1 for ladies wool Vests and Pants. 25c. and 50c. lor mens heavy white and colored Shirts and - Drawers. ‘ 75c. for mens wool Shirts and Drawers, Mens and childrens cotton Underwear at popular prices. Have center counter filled with lot of Underwear from our Fire Sale at 50c. on the dollar. French Sacking Flannels 45c. Eiderdowns 30c., 50c. and 75c. Cassimers, red and white Flannels, Waterproofs, Table Linens and Napkins at lowest prices. You can’t afford to pass us by on Wool Dress Goods, Silks and Trimmings. We have the largest stock and most desirable styles in Griffin. FLENIISTEH I BRIDGES. BASS BROS. DRESS GOODS I AND CLOAK SALE! AT BASS BROS. THIS WBEK. LET US HELP YOU SELECT THE NEW DRESS-CHOOSING A FALL DRESS IS EASY HERE. IT’S MORE, IT’S A PLEASURE. OUR AUTUMN PATTERNS ARE THE HANDSOMEST EVER SHOWN ON THIS MARKET. NO EXCUSE FOR LEAVING HOME TO BUY THAT BEAUTIFUL DRESS, AS WE HAVE IT HERE AND GUARANTEE YOU A SAVING OF 25 PER CENT. ON YOUR PUR CHASE. LININGS, TRIMMINGS, GLOVES AND HATS TO MATCH EACH DRESS. ALL NEW STYLE CLOAKS JUST RECEIVED. I MILLINERY DEPARTMENT. THE STYLE, THE PRETTINESS OF DESIGN SHOW THE TOUCH OF EXPERT MILLINERS THAT CREATED THEM—MISS MYNSON ' AND MISS FAUCHE, THERE ARE BRIGHT GLOWS OF RED, FOILED BY THE GREEN AND GRAYS. THERE ARE ALL THE RICH TINTS THAT DYERS HAVE CAUGHT FROM THE AUTUMN LEAVES. SO DELIGHTFULLY MINGLED AMONG THE SOFT VELVETS, THE GLITTERING BILKS, THE FLOWERS AND BIRD PLUMMAGE THAT ONE CAN ONLY DRINK INTO THE SPELL-BOUND EYES THE BEAUTY, AND WONDER AT THE ART THAT CONJECTURED IT. IF YOU HAVE AN OLD HAT THAT YOU WISH CHANGED INTO A NEW ONE THAT YOU WGTLPN’T EVEN RECOGNIZE, BRING IT WITH YOU. - SHOES. SHOES. - . . • - '■« ' - ft YOUR FEET ARE YOUR FRIENDS. HOW ARE THEY GETTING ALONG THIS COLD DAMP WEATHER? THE ONLY CHANCE FOR YOU TO MISS A SHOE BARGAIN IS TO STAP AWAY. You are invited to call and see our Bargains for this week. (6) .BASS BROS.’.