Newspaper Page Text
:
eCrifFin Daily News
VOLUME 17
wrrTT'.,—
_ _Lm
^^-Zjvjs* " 'JEg
Unfailiog Spec flc for Liver
DISEASE.
nwilDTfiWC SYiVIrlUIVlO. i Bitt-r or bad taste in
mouth; tongue coated
white < r covered with a brown fur; pain id
the back, sides, 01 joints—often mistaken for
Rneumatism; soar stomach; loss of appe-
~r,. hut neiim»s nausea and water-brash, or
iiulriestion; flatulency and acid eructations;
bowels alternately costive and lax; headache;
toss of memory, with a painful sensation of
having failed to do something which ought
to have been done; debility; low spirits; skin a
thick yellow appearance of the and
eves-’a scanty dry cough; and high fever; colored, restlessness; and, if the al¬
urine is sediment.
lowed to stand, deposits a
SIMONS LIVER REGULATOR
iPl ltELl' TEfiETABI,*)
j« generally used in the South to arouse the
T. rnid Liver to a healthy action It acts
Vi ■ ..ordinary efficacy on the
. .
Liver, joiners anfl Bowels.
AS EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOB
Malaria, Bowel Complalm* ache,
lIrturpKta. Sick lie a
................ BilliousnesH.
Kidney Affections, Jaundice,
■nei.ial Oeprriwiiin, C’ol c.
Universally admitted to be
the best family medicine
O.VLl' OEStltlK
h;is oar Z Stamp in red on front of Wrapper.
H. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia, Pa-
Solepboprietous. Price 11.00
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
DR. JOHN L. STAPLETON,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
GRIFFIN, : : : GEORGIA.
• Offict—Front Room, up Slims, News Build
ing. Residence, at W. H. Baker place on
Poplar street. Tran pt attention given to
calls, i'ay or ..igld. jan'dldcSwOm
HENRY C. PEEPL Efc,
aitorney at law
0
1IAMPT0S, GEOr.OI
Practices in all the £ta‘e ai d Federal
Courts. cUOl&wly
JNO. jT HUNT,
A T T 0 11 N E Y A T LAW,
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
iifliee, til Hill Street, Up Stairs, mar22<t&wly over J. H.
WI ile’s Clothing Store.
11 DIS.YIl'KK. N. M. COLLINS
DfSMUKE & COLLINS,
LAWYERS,
GRIFFIN, CJ A.
iMKct,first room in Agricultural Building.
P-Mairs. uiarl-ditwtf
THOS. R. MILLS,
TTORNEY AT LAW,
GRIFFIN, OA.
Will practice in the State and Federal
C mris. Office, over George & Hartnett’s
c -rner. nov2-tf.
on o. oM-v i ir. no nr. i. danib l
STEWART & DANIEL,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Will (her George & Hartnett’s, Griffin, Ga.
practice in the State and Federal
amrts. ianl.
C. S. WRIGHT,
WATCHMAKER AND Jf. .V EL Eli
f
Hill GRIFFIN, GA.
Jr., A Co.’s. Street, Up Stairs over J. li. White,
•J. P. NICHOLS.
AGENT THE
Northwestern Mutual Life In¬
surance Company,
Of Milwaukee, Wis. The most reliable In
surance Company in America, ang2Sdly
J- G- NEWTON.
Mercantile Broker,
GRIFFIN, : : GEORGIA.
I'anSdAwlm
New Advertisements
A GENTS WANTED to canvass'.for Adver-
ab. "°rk rising done Pa’ronage. A small amount of
with tact and intellificnee may
produce a considcr»ble income. Age ts earn
several hundred dollars in commissions in a
sitiglg season ard incur no personal responsl
mdy. Enquire at the nearest newspaper of¬
fice and learn that curs is the best known
ami best equipped establishment for placing
advertisements in newspapers and conveying
to adve-itisers the information which they re
•fibre m order to make their investment*
w ise and profitably. Men of good address
or women, if well informed and practical,
®&y obtain authority to solicit advertising
Rowell patronage for ns. Apply by letter to Geo. P.
A Co., Newspaper Advertising Bu-
resu, 10 Spruce 8t., New York, and full par¬
ticulars will be sent by return mail.
End "WlilsSey Halv
Ite cured at homo with
out pain. Book of par-
Oculars sent FREE.
B. M.WOOLLEY, M.D.
“ 6y* Whitehall bt.
GRIFFIN GEORGIA, =F
FRIDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 3 1888
HOW PIES ARE MADE.
The Amount Devoured by Pa»t:y Loving
New Yorkers—Some Startling Figure*.
A great revolution lias gone on in the
manufacture and compounding of pie.
No more the housewife carefully meas¬
ures out “a cup of mi'-Y, a spoonful of
saleratus, a lump of butter, pinch of salt,
three tablespoonfuls of sugar, four sliced
apples and a little pure lard.” Today
the dough is kneaded by steam and the
ovens are vast and hot breathed caverns.
In the great kitchen of the modern pie
factory are numbers of immense copper
kettles surmounting brick ovens, and fat
male cooks stir the savory 7 masses within.
On little tables around Hie room aro
dozens of wooden tubs holding the linings
for thousands of pies. Then the busy
bakers take the dough, and before the
oven door with deft and rapid touches
press it into the shape of the embryo pie,
into a pan and a line of pies is soon pass¬
ing into the oven’s mouth with wonder¬
ful celerity. The ordinary ovens used
will hold about GOO small pies and the
temperature required is graduated with
remarkable skill.
New York, of course, produces and eats
more pies than any city in the world,
although its per capita consumption is
eclipsed by Chicago, Boston and Philadel¬
phia. There are eight or ten large fac¬
tories dealing exclusively in pies, and be¬
tween 500 and 000 bakers also make
them. The largest factory is on Sullivan
street, and its output of pie is something
awful to contemplate, and when one
thinks of the number of churches and
schools the money spent for pie would
build, it is a question if the people should
not stop and ask, “Whither is this awful
habit carrying us?” In a year or two tlio
pie habit may rank with the curse of
drink and evils of tobacco as a never
failing fountain from which debating so¬
cieties and Jyceums can draw topics to
argue on.
One of the foremen in the factory on
Sullivan street said:
“In our establishment we turn out
every kind of pie so far discovered, but
there aro certain kinds that are staple.
These are apple, minoe, lemon, grape,
raisin, plum, gooseberry, whortleberry,
strawberry, peach, raspberry, pineapple,
pumpkin and custard. Apple, mince,
lemon, pumpkin and custard aro the fa¬
vorites. All our material is the finest in
the market, and we buy it in large quan¬
tities, always keeping our orders ahead.”
“How much material do ou uso
daily?” asked the reporter.
“In a single day we use about 100
dozen eggs, 850 pounds of lard, 12 bar¬
rels of flour, 000 quarts of milk, 2,500
quarts of fruit, and turn out about 7,000
pies, or about 50,000 a week and 2,600,-
000 nr year. The output from the large
concerns in the city will amount to 35,-
000 pies daily, and the bakers will turn
out about 40,000 more, or 75,000 a day,
525.000 a week and 27,300,000 per
year, an average of about sixteen pies per
capita. These pies cut into quarters the
usual sizes outside of boarding houses
wouhkmake 109,200,000 pieces. At an
average of five cents—as some of the
cheap restaurants charge only three
cents, arid tonier ones ten cents—this
would make New York's annual pie bill
$5,460,000, or more than we pay for
public schools, or the fire and police de¬
partments, or send to the heathen. New
York produces about one-thirtieth of the
pie crop of the United States.”
This last remark aroused a statistical
vein in I lie reporter, and he figured until
his brain was dizzy, and these are some
of the results: In the United States there
are eaten every day 2,250,000 pies; each
week, 10,750,000; each year, 819,000,-
000, at a cost of $163,800,000, an amount
greater than the internal revenue, and
more than enough to pay the interest on
the national debt and pensions. If the
pies eaten daily were heaped one on top
of another they would form a pie tower
193.000 feet, or nearly thirty-seven miles
high; if laid out in line the} 7 would reach
from New York to Boston. With the
pie products of a year a tower 13,468
miles high could be erected, and stretched
out they would cover a lino 89,ISO miles
long, or sufficient to girdle the earth
three times and let a Chinaman in Pekin
chew at the last pie. These pies before
eaten would weigh in a year 803,000
tons. Pie is a great institution, as these
figures show.—New York Journal.
SYRUP
Cures Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness,
Croup, Asthma,Bronchitis, Whoop¬
ing Cough, Incipient Consumption in
ami relieves consumptive disease. persons For
advanced stages of the
sale by all Druggists. Price, 25 cts.
- CAtTION!—Tlie genuine
I»r. Bull'* Coo jjli >* yro p
is sold only in white srrappere.
andboarsour registerWTBADE Bead
vaeks. towit: A Bull’s
in a Circle, a Red-Strip Cau-
.Host-Label, and the fac-stmlle
MPi ........I ill i nnf Joh « W. B«11
and A. C. MEYER A CO.,
BUtlmor*.«d.,C.».A.,SoleProprletors 1
»TOf CHIWI1W TOBACCO!
^^orusoBEAr F*toe *o Ctao. tobac«> hr antidote •** Dr*t|ta*-
INJUNCTION GRANTED.
CENTRAL WILL NOT CLOSE OUT
THE .8. G. & N. A. R. R.
Ike Stockholders Object, and
Propose to Have a Receiver
and a Set dement.
The Central Railroad ami Binking
of Georgia have openly
that it intended to fore
its mortgage on the Savannah,
and North Alabama Railroad
time this month, having takeD
preliminary legal steps to 6ccure
judgment at the cocaine* term of
But it seems that it is too
a piece of property to be
to go thus by default, and
have an eye upon it for their
purposes. A party represented
VV. E. H Searcy, of this place.
been purchasing stock at the
price that the Central Las of
(87.50 per share) and offered
Central tbe’same price for what
neld- This the managers of the
refused to accept, although
the last meeting of the stockhold
of the S. G. & N. A road they
expressed a willingness lo sell.
Searcy’s party, together with
smaller holders, among them
Dr. N B Drewry, Ben Milner,
M Holman, O H Ison and W H
all of Griffin, then determin
to fight the sale under the fore
and on Wednesday they
in securing an injunction
Judge Clarke, of Atlanta, Judge
being absent in Florida-
counsel through whom this was
are Col E W Hammond, of
Judge AM Speer, of Madi
and Hon Clifford Anderson, of
Their idea is to force the
[into the hands of a receiver
secure a settlement from the
which has been running the
for so many years.
——-
“The moon of Mahomet arose, and it
set,” says Shelley; but if you will
a bottle of Dr. Bull’s Cough Tyrup
some handy place you will have a
cure for croup, coughs and colds.
The eighth wouder of the world,—A
had man limping with rheuma
wbo n*-ver heard of Salvation
Price 25 cents a bottle.
-*--
THE AUGUSTA GAZETTE DEAD.
Unprofitable Business of Running
a Rival Sheet.
Augusta, Ga., Feb. 1-—[Special. J
Augusta Daily Gazette will
come out tomorrow. When the
came lo work tonight, they
the doors closed and were in
that their services would be
no longer. The first issue
the Gazette came out June 19th
and it has lost money from the
While the figures are not au
it is said the publishers
sunk about six thousand dol
in the enterprise. Mr. Miller j
tonight, when questioned, that
had examined too locks, and
the paper was losing $100 a
week, and so ordered to close np bus
iness. He says it does not owe a
dollar, has met all its obligations
and owns its plant, bnt that its ex
penses were steadily exceeding its
receipts, and they decided to lose
money no longer. He said the paper
paid expenses in December, which
was the ODly month it did since it
was started. It is rumored that Mr.
John M. Weigle, lately of the Even
ing News, will purchase the outfit,
and run a weekly paper.
“That Miss Jones is a nice-looking
gill, isn’t she?” belle of the
“Yes, and she’d be the
town if it wasn’t for one tbiDg.”
•‘What’s that ?”
"She has catarrh so bad it is unpleas¬
ant to be near her. She has tried a
dozen things and nothing helps her. I
am sorry, jor I like her, but that doesn't
make it any less disagreeable for one
to bo around her.”
Now if she had used Dr. Sage’s Cat¬
arrh Remedy, there would brve been
uotlung of the kind said, for it will cure
catarrh every time.
The Tapestry Weavers.
Let ws learn a New Year lemon, no braver
lesson can be,
Frort the ways of the ta pen try weaver, on the
cfllier side of the aca
Above liU head the pattern hangs, lie studies
ft with care,
And as to and fro the shuttle leaps, hi* eyes
fastened there
He works on the wrong side evermore, I nt
works for the right side ever,
It i*«nly when the weaving stops, and the
trch is loosed and turned
That ha sees his real handiwork, that hi*
marvelous skill is learned,
Ah! ths sight of its delicate beauty ! It pays
Win for all his cost.
No rarer, daintier work than hi*, was ever
done by the frost !
Then the master brinarelh him golden hire,
and giveth him praise as well,
And how happy the heart of the weaver is,
nq tongue but his own can tell.
T1 e years of man a e the looms of God, let
down from the place of the suu,
Wherein we all arc weaving, till the mystic
web is done.
Weaving blindly, but weaving surely each
lor himself his fate,
We may not sec how the right side looks, we
ean only weave and wait,
Bat looking above for the pattern, no wear¬
er hath need to fear,
Only let him look clear into Heavei.— the
Perfect Pattern is there,
If hA keeps the face of the Savior forever nnd
(jiways in sight,
HiaAoil shall be sweeter than honey, and his
weaving is su- e to be right,
And when his task is ended, and the web is
turned and shown,
He shall hear the voice of the Master; it shall
~ say to him: “well done;”
And the white-winged angels of heaven, to
bear him thence shall come,
And God shall give him gold for his hire—
not coin but a crown.
INGALL’S IDEAS.
The Kaunas Senator’s Opinion of the
President Two Years Ago.
Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 2. —The
followiug letter written by Senator
Ingalls of Kansas t > a friend in this
city has been made public by the
Times for the first time:
Washington, March 25, 1885.
Dear Mr.—I was glad to receive
yours of the 19th. We are still wait
ing for the President who moves with
great deliberation, listens to every
body and does as he pleases. Hit
principal nominations so far have sur
prised Demoeracts as much as they
haye Republicans but they are gen
erally strong men, whose selection
will be appreciated by the conserva
tive forces oflhe country. He has
no imagination of sentiment and his
policy will not be sensational or start
ling, but if he keeps on as he has be
gun his administration will grow in
popular favor. He is self-possessed
and confident, and exhibits no pertur
batiou or timidity. Good humor pre
vails though there is nmchjinaudible
grumbling among Democrats at the
delay an “turning the rascals out.”
But if Cleveland car, stand the racket
for the in \t twelve months, he will
bring his par'v to the hnees sind be
come a strong leader. He has a
great opportunity and evidently in
ends to improve it.
Yours (Signed) J. J. Ingalls.
Bartholdi’s Statue of “Liberty Enlight¬
ening Hie World”
will be a reminder of personal just liberty
for ages to come. On as sure a
foundation lias Dr. Pierce's “Golden
Medical Discovery” been placed, and it
will stand through the cycles of time as
a monument to the physical emancipa¬
tion of thousands, who by its use have
been relieved from consumption, con
sumptive night sweats! bronchitis,
coughs, spitting of blood, weak lungs
ane other throat and lung affections.
An l xcelleut Medicine.
‘My wife and myself were in hail health
for some fifteen years. I ehaDced to he look-
ins over one of Simmons Liver Regulator
Almanacs and saw A. H. Stevens’ and Bish¬
op Pierce’s names to testimonials. I then
c*)ta’ned some of 'he Regulator, and can
heartily friend* recommend the Liver medicine.” Regulator to
ray as an excellent
7. E. TIabrison.M D , Gordoneville, Va.
Advice to Mothers.
Mbs. Winslow’s Soothing Sikh*,
for children teetbiDg, is the prescription
of one of the best female nurses and
physicians in the United States, and
has been nsed for forty years with never
failing success children*. by millions of mothers
for their Daring the process
of teething its value is incalculable.
It relieves the child from pam. cures dys
entery and diarrhoea, griping in the
bowels, and wind colic. By giving
health to the child. Price 25 cents',*
bottle. aogeod&wly
AT COST! W e are going out of Wood the
(’rockery,Glassware, Fancy Goods,
enwareand
anti will devote our en-
tire attention to the Gro¬
cery Business!
G. W. CLARK SOW
Mason & Hamlin) OllllS.
Packard, \
Bay State, J
Chickeriny, ) Pianos.
Mathusliek, \
Anon, ;
At LOWEST PRICES, for HASH or on TIME, .1 AS. M. BRAWNKIfclr
(tiwtl-'Jm
II1E COMMON WE ALII.
The News as Gathered Over Georgia.
Rye in Worth county is beading
nicely.
Aiub.icaa Las received over 37,
000 bales of cotton this season.
Conductor Newberry is pushing
to completion the work on the arle
sian well aQLeeeburg.
The motion for a new trial for
Wooifolk, the murderer of nine peo
pie, is to be heard in Macon the lat
ter part of this week.
Quite a number of citizens at San
dttsville met at the City Hall on Fri
day last lo form a company in the
interest of a cottoD seed oil mill.
The Augusta exposition directors
feel so confident of a big euftcess
that a committee of the board Las
keen appointed to raise the capital
stock to 8100,000.
A peddler w ho insulted ladies at
Brunswick, was taken to the edge of
town Monday by a baud of young
men, flogged and told to go and sin
no more.
Saturday the colored sawyer at
Cook's mill at Brunswick, caught
the thumb of his left hand between
the cogs, and the member was crush
ed entirely off
The two oldest physicians in New
nan are Drs. Lotig und C. D. Smith,
both of these gentlemen having prac
ticed medicine in Newnan for nearly
forty years.
Thoinasvillo is more than holding
her own as a winter resort. The
present season promises to be the
most brilliant and suc-e ssful the
place has ever known.
Willis Pain, the car breaker, who
way caught at Brum-wick last week
breaking open u car, and escaped
from the gaurd house, was r. captur
ed Sunday in the conn.-y. and is
now ii j id
A' the public sc’oo) ixiiuin tiou,
at S tadersville. on Thursday, out of
eig .ty six applicants for teacher
sbq ?, eighteen whites and fifteen
colored passed the bo.rd. None
passed the first grade.
The residents of Ben Hill, a small
settlement some eight miles from At
lanta, arc rxc ted over the death of
Bowen, a negro man, who died in
greit agony a few- days ago. The
c iv-c of in* lemh *>as hydiophobia.
Uucle Lrtkin Brown, keeper of
the toll bridge at Roswell, is very
sick and not likely to etirv'v !(»
is 83 years of age. and this is hi*
firs: eonfireineot of illrr‘ c . i
never t, Le :i lose of t.-l *J« I* lie
Still i* 'u*t s lo do so
Rev.J. P. Cliryry, of Hamilton,
has in his possession a wooden dipper
that the Indians made over a hundred
years ago. It has been handed down
from one generttion to another. It
NUMBER U
is made of black cedar, aud -a a fine
piece of work.
Mrs Minnie Frankie i.* under ar¬
rest in Atlanta. S - *• anted at
\Talhulla, S. C., on a < h . ge furnish
ing her husband with tools to aid him
in escaping from jail, where he is con
fined on a charge ot selling patent
medicines without a license.
* * f * Nervous dobillr, prema
ture decline of power ; - ithor twx,
speedily and permanent! cured. Large
book, 10 cents in stumps. World’s Dis
yensary Medical Association, 663 Main
Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
Central Railroad Time Table.
NoaruwAKD.
B irnesvillo Special (Sunday only
7:45 a. m. Barnesville Accommoda
tion (daily except Sunday) 5:57 a, rn.
Passenger No. 3, 5:41 a. m.
PasseDger No, 11. 11:31 a. m.
Passenger and Mail No. 1, 4:01
j p. m.
Passenger No. 13, 9:05 p. m.
SOUTHWARD.
Passenger and Mail No. 2, 8:20
a. ra.
Passenger No. 14, 11:20 p. in.
Passenger No. 12, 4:0 » p. m.
Bartlesville Special (Sunday only)
4:58 p. in. Bartlesville Accommoda
tion (daily except Sunday) 7:10 p m.
Passenger No. 4, 8:43 p. m.
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
Tine I’uWii never varie*. A marvel o
rarity, *tren i and wholceomness. More
economical t. i the ordinary kind*, and can
not be sold ii ooipetiton with the inaltitude
of low test, >: urt w eight, alum or phosphate Bakjmi
Powders. Boid only in cans. Rota.
Powdek Co., 1C6 Wall Street, New York
f*f*ionr»n 1 nr 4t>. .
A PERFECTFOUNTAIN PEN
1 hat i* within the means of all.
nulin's New Amsterdam Fountain Pen
(Fine, Medium and Coaree.) Always ready,
writes freely, and never get* ont of order
Warranted 14-karat G. id and to give entire
at isfucth n.
; Pric-eSll/Zo l>> mall, prepaid
Liberal discount to agents. Send for Cir
i cuiar of our Bpecialtie*
JOHN S. HOLIN',
No 11 U:>'U »»t.N Y.
Manufacturing Stationer. j-Jod&wlni
/HIS T ATiJTt r