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....NEW CROP TURNIP SEED-MI THE BEST VARIETIES.....
GUARANTEE IT
LAUNDRY SOAP I BARS FOR Be. WHITE BAR
SOAP WORTH 10c FOR Be A BAR
:-: ..SOME EXTRA FINE TEA..
■■■■ ~* x^3“r B MSZ 8or, •
ED FINE CIGARS AND TOBACCO. HYPODEHM-
Ifer
SAVE YOUR PICKLES. CALL AND BEE US
J. IST. HARRIS &
toid-ats?-
FRESH TROUT, FRESH BLACKFISH, FRESH SHEEPHEAD, FRESH
RED SNAPPER, FRESH OYSTERS, CELERY, CRANBERRIES, DRESSED
CHICKENS, NEW CROP GEORGIA CANE SYRUP, BUCKWHEAT AND
KAPfjB SYRUP, AND ANY OTHER ARTICLE YOU WANT IN THE
GROCERY STORE.
G. W CLARK & SON.
Cheapest Grocers in Town.
- ■
■ •■
MOCCA AND JAVA COFFEE 20c lb.
ROASTED COFFEE 10
GREEN COFFEE ’ 0 “
|L‘ BOBS CRACKERS | M> “
CANNED CORN «c CAN.
FINE CREAMERY BUTTER
DATES.
RUSINS.
raw NUTS.
BPpr:'-
APPLEB 20c PECK.
> “NEW MACKEREL,
p*
CO FRYING CHICKENS.
FRESH CELERY.
CRANBERRIES.
J. M. SEARS.
I
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" 11
Morning Call.
GRIFFIN, GA., OCT. 27,1898.
Office over Daris* Hardware Store
telephone NO. 22.
■
■ 1
DR. J. M. THOMAS,
PHYSICIAN AND SUBGEON
ft /». .- .
Office: No. 28J Hill street, stairway
next to R P. McWilliams & Son.
D. W. Perdue spent yesterday in At*
lauta.
Col. R. L. Berner went up to Atlanta
yesterday.
Rev. E. W. Hammond spent yester
day io Atlanta.
Mra.E. H. Hail, of Hampton, spent
yesterday in thio city.
Col. T. E. Patterson spent yesterday
in Atlanta on legal business.
# - John Bloodworth, pt Liberty Hill,
apent tho day here yesterday. *
Some men atop traveling afoot as
soon as they begin to get ahead.
8. Samuels camo down from Atlanta
nod spent,the day here yesterday.
H. W. Sparks, oF Barbeerille, jd
spending several days in this city.
Hon. R. T. Daniol spent yesterday
in Atlanta on professional business
C. H. Johnson, of Thomaston, a
former Gtfffinite, spent yesterday here.
Hudont’a perfumes and Lownoy'a
.candies at Anthony Drag Co.
■ i
. gha - —. MMrfarufMr
•r mtr* coato.
NOBBY TOP GOATS
In Covert Cloth and Kereeys rangtag In from s7.to 118.00.
lam elmwing a compleu stock of WINTER UNDERWEAR in all
Wool, part wool and heavy ribbed cotton. 1
Thos. J. White.
Mrs. E Gresham returned yesterday
from a pleasant visit to friend in AU
lanta.
Robert McDowell, of Barnesville,
was in this city for a short while yes*
terday morning.
Dr. J. F M. Barron, of Liberty Hill,
was iu the city yesterday on profes*
eional business.
Mills McNeel, of Marietta, was in
the city yesterday shaking hands with
bis many Jyyods.
Lieut. L. H. Kenan,<who has been
days in this city, left
yesterday for Atlanta.
Mra. A. W. Blake returned yesterday
from Macon, where she went to attend
the funeral of Miss Plant.
The council failed to get a quorum
last night, and adjourned to the regu
lar meeting in November.
Miss Katie Jones, of Hampton, re*
turned home yesterday after a pleasant
visit to friends it. this city.
J. W. Ward, who has been spending
some time in thia city, left last night
for his home in New Orleans.
Col. Byrd Garland, of The Rock,
spent yesterday in this city the guest
of bis brother, Dr. H. J. Garland.
Lowney’s fine chocolates and bon
bons—name on every piece—Anthony
Drug Co , Agls.
Any one having carpets' to fyut
down should secure the services of
Tom Phillips, who guarantees all woik.
Address him care Call office.
Mr. and Mrs W. H. Chambers, of
Barnesville, came up Tuesday night
to see Field’s minstrels at the Olympic
theater. They spent the day yesterday
with friends in this city and returned
home last night.
A negro applied to Chief Ison for
lodging last night, claiming he be
longed to the Tenth cavalry, and was
enroute to Savannah from Montauk
Point. He said he bad spent all the
money paid him by the government,
and was given a cot in the city prison.
Counterfeit Money-
Some one passed a counterfeit silver
dollar yesterday on Will Fambrough,
who runs a colored restaurant o.n
Broad street.
The counterfeit is very good, and
can be detected only by the ring when
it is dropped on a counter.
Fambrough turned the money over
to Chief leou, who is working on the
case.
Our merchants should examine all
silver money very carefully before ac
cepting it, m there is more of the
spurious coin in town, without a doubt
An Enterprising Druggist.
Thera •re few men more wide awake
and enterprising than J N. Harris &
S iu, or Carlisle A Ward, who spate no
pains to secure the best of everything
in their line for their many customers.
They now have the valuable agency
for Dr. King’s New Discovery for Con
sumption,-Coughs and Colds. This is
tohe wonderful remedy that is produc
ing such a furor all over the country
by its many selling cures It abso
lutory cures Asthma, Bronchitis,
Hoarseness and aHMtffeclioNß of Ibe
Throat, Chest and Call at the
above drug store «w 3 get a trial bottle
free or a for 60 cents and
SIOO. Guaripieea to cure or price
refunded-
IOC. KKBATE
The Only House that Pays a Rebate
in Griffin This Year.
We have gotten W. B. Griffin to run a warehouse had W *•» f l *)
cents rebate on each bale weighed at hia place. He will run the D. .
Patterson house and Mr. Olay Driver will do the weighing. We g«t Mr.
Griffin to weigh cotton three years ago and pay us ten (10c) cents rebate,
and now that we have to do it again we ask you by us.
Yours truly, MANY FARMERS.
J Saved My Baby's Ufa." 4
$ Johnson Station, Ga., September 16, 1898. A
2 LAMAR & RANKIN DRUG GO., Atlanta, G«u J
4 Gentlemen: I can not recommend your Pitts’Garminative too 4
A strongly, as 1 owe my baby's life to it. She had Cholera Infantum A-
I when tive months old, and 1 could get no relief until I began using Pitrs 1
v Carminative. The fever left her wnen 1 had given her but two bottles, r
y and she had fattened so she did not look like the same child. I advise all Y
3 mothers who have sickly or delicate children to give this remedy a trial. ,
v Respectfully, Mrs. LIZZIE MURRAY.
gm % ■ ®
? ft Saved Her Bahy Will Save Taura. 1
....TRY 1T.... T
Tribute to Winnie Davis-
The following is a part of a beautiful
tribute to Miss Winnie Davis, the
lamented Daughter of the Confederacy
by Miss Millar, in the Louisville Times:
“The legacies of some men are
riches, of some fame, of some patriot
ism ; Jefferson Davis legacy was bis
child and the south look her reverent
ly and tenderly to its heart, and when
a child the banner of that south cast
its saddened glory over her pillow
’ Some will refn ember her as a child
in the old days at Richmond, when
she moved laughing about, a rainbow
amid the storm. Some will tell of her
as they saw her at “Beauvoir,” dream
ing under the magnolias of Pass
Christian ever singing their magic
song close by. They will talk of her as
the light of her father’s eye, the gen
erous youug hostess to whom the
name of a southern soldier was a suffi
cient indorsal and passport to her
heart Every kindly word she uttered,
ever/ smile she gave, will be treasured
among “the days that are no more,”
and there is not one among them who
would not have made smooth the rug
ged pathway to the grave by flinging
down his heart and his old jacket of
Confederate gray before her.
“Three things are left the south she
so loved—to remember, to praise and
to mourn her. Tho winds will sing
her requium amorg the magnolias of
Mississippi and Louisiana and the sols
emn pines of Georgia ; the walers of
Virginia will murmur through her
dream, and the mountain of her na
tive stale loom above her as the walk
of Paradise. There will be sighing by
the seas that wash the shores cf Flori
da and the Carolinas, and the wide
plains of Texas echo back to the
sound. The voice of lamentation will
echo among the stormy heights of
Tennessee, and the gliding waves of
the Cumberland ; and our own Ken
tucky, with tears falling from her beau
tiful eyes, will weave an immortal
garland for the dead Daughter of the
Confederacy She has lived to see a
reunited people, and her father’s old
comrades honored and beloved. She
has gone forth to bear the red rose
company, while beside the bereaved
mother who weeps for her, stands the
south bowed under a sorrow too elo
quent for speech and too deep for
tears.” £4
-n
That Joyful Feeling
With the exilarating sense of renewed
health and strength and internal cleanli
ness, which follows Ua 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. _
C Jffi. fit T O TV X A .
th.- Kind Ym Have Always Bought
For Sale.
The Hughes place, 2 miles'north of Gris
fin; good 5-room house, big barn, bermuda
pasture, etc -2 acres of land. Easy
terms. A. S. Blake,
IT
Underwear
Weather.
Castilian Cuisine.
Oil and pepper are the two things
that especially characterise the Castilian
cuisine. One of the favorite dishes in
Cuba is "tasajo,” which is simply dried
meat, cooked with tomatoes, red pep
pers and onions. “Tripaa la. Andaluza”
is another preparation frequently seen.
As the name indicates, the basis is
boiled tripe, which is cooked with beans
and potatoes, and always served with
the small red Spanish sausage known
as “Butafarra Catalina.” A similar
sausage, only black, is known as “ Buta
farra Astoriana.”
' “Chile con carne,” which everybody
eats, is nothing more than a thick stew
of beef (carne) and beans seasoned with
chiles. Spanish “tortillas” are corn
cakes flavored with red peppers, and
differ from the Mexican tortilla in that
the latter, when properly made, are
rolled in chopped vegetables. A salad
a la Espanola is prepared of lettuce
and celery, with a few sliced tomatoes
and peppers. Served with French dress
ing it is very good.
The Spanish soups are as a rule a lit
tle too heavy for the American taste,
which runs more toward the consomme.
-They are thick decoctions, full of vege
tables, and look frightfully greasy.
Soup, however, does not have the im
portant role among the Spaniards that
it plays in French domestic economy,
and is an article of secondary impor
tance. The dishes named are pretty apt
to appear ere long on home menus, and
it is interesting to know in advance
what they are composed of.—New Or
leans Times-Democrat.
c ■-
Immense fortunes have been made
out of the banana business. Revenues
do not accrue alone from the sale of
the fruit, for the leaves are used for
packing; the juice being strong in
tanning, makes an indelible ink and
shoe blacking; the wax found on the
under side of the leaves is a valuable
article of commerce; manila hemp is
made from the stems, and of the hemp
are made mats, plaited work, and lace
flour. The fruit to be sold for dessert
is ripened by the dry warmth of flaring
gas jets in the storage places in which
it is kept, and immense care has to be
taken to prevent softening or overrip*
ening. The island of Jamaica yields
great crops of this useful and money
making fruit.
ACTIVE SOLICITORS WANTED EV
ERYWHERE for “The Story of the Phil
ippines,” Murat Halstead, commissioned
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., 856
Dearborn St., Chicago.
i 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 & Son. ’
WE CAM SUPPLY YOUR WANTS IM THE
• *
UNDERWEAR - LINE I
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. for mens heavy white and colored Shirts and
Drawers.
75c. for mens wool Shirts and Drawers.
Mens 1 and childrens cotton Underwear at popular prices.
Have center counter filled with lot of Underwear from
onr Fire Sale at 50c. on the dollar.
French Sacking Flannels 45c. ,
Eiderdowns 30c., 50c. and 75c.
Oassimers, 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.
FLEMISTtfI 8 BRIDGES.
BASS BROS.
DRESS GOODS
AND
CLOAK SALE
AT BASS BROS. THIS WEEK.
LET US HELP YOU SELECT THE NEW DRESS— CIIOOSJNQ 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 RECEIVER.
MILLINERY
DEPARTMENT.
THE STYLE. THE PRETTINESS OF DESIGN SHOW THE TOUCH
OF EXPERT MILLINERS THAT CREATED THEM-MISS MYNSON
AND MISS FAUOHE. THERE ARE BRIGHT GLOWS OF RED,
FOILED BY THE GREEN AND GRAYS. THERE ARE ALL THE
RICH TINTS THAT DYERS HAVE QAUGHT FROM THE AUTUMN
LEAVES. SO DELIGHTFULLY MINGLED AMONG THE SOFT
VELVETS, THE GLITTERING SILKS, 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 TRAJ YQU
WOULDN’T EVEN RECOGNIZE, BRING IT WITH YOU.
- SHOES. SHOES. -
X. -’• '■ ■' :
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 BTAP AWAY.
__
You are invited to call and see
our Bargams for this week.
I
.BASS BROS.’.