The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, February 08, 1888, Image 1

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rifpin Daily News. VOLUME 17 -4H£ca_ SIMMONS mm flnfailing Spec flc for Liter DISEASE. OVMPTHMQ oYml I UIVIO • Bitt - r or bad ttt8te "i • mouth; tongue coated white or covered with a brown mistaken far; pain for in the back, sides, 01 joints—often stomach; loss of Bneumatism; sour and appe¬ tite- soroetinK s nausea water-brash, or indigestion; flatulency and acid eructations; howeis alternately costive and las; headache; loss of memory, with do something a painful which sensation ought of having failed to low spirits; to have been done; debility; skin and a thick, yellow appearance of the syes - a dry cough; fever; restlessness; the grino is scanty and high colored, and, if al- owcd to stand, deposits a sediment. SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR (Pt/nEir VE«CI1B1E) Is generally u.-ed in the South to arouse the 1 *mid Mver to a healthy action It acts *;i:<ordinary efficacy on the Liver, Kitovs to Bowels. AS EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOR Maluria, Bowel Complain,* |)T,prp»la. (tick Hea ache, C'oa»(ipa«ion. Bllllousne**, Kidney Affection*, Jaundice. Mental Depretrion, Colic. Universally admitted to be THE BEST FAMILY MEDICINE or Childreh, for Adnits und for the Aged. u.m h #B onr Z Stamp in red on front of Wrapper. H. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia, Pa.. Sokfrofristors. Price $1.00 f ! OFESSIONAL DIRECTORY DR. JOHN L. STAPLETON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, GRIFFIN, : : : GEORGIA, Office— Fron*. Room, m> Stairs, News Build iug. Residence, at W. II. Baker place on Popiar street. Prompt attention given to calls, nay or -ight. jan21d<SwtSm HENRY C. PEEPL E*, attorney at law HAMPTON, GEORGIA, Fiaetices in all the Stn.e and Federal Courts. , «jei9d&wly JNO. J. HUNT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. White’s Office, 81 Hill Street, Up Stairs, fflar22d&wly over J. H. Clothing Store. D. DiSMUKE. N. hi. OOLDIN9 DISMUKE & COLLINS, LAWYERS, GRIFFIN, GA. Office,first room in Agricultural K:arl-d&wtf Building-, p-Stairs. THOS. R. MILLS, TTORNEY AT LAW, GRIFFIN, GA. A ill practice in the State and Fedeial Courts. Office, over George <fc Hartnett’s e >rner. nov2-tf, OS 3 Al'U.Tttr. BOBr. T. DAN1K I.' STEWART & DANIEL, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Will User George <& Hartnett’s, Griffin, Ga. practice in the State and Federal ytmrts. ianl. C. S. WRIGHT, watchmaker and jeweler GRIFFIN, GA. Hill Street, Up Stairs over J. H. White, Jr., A Co.’s. J. P. NICHOLS, AGENT TUB Northwestern Mutual Life In¬ surance Company, Of Milwaukee, Wis. The most reliable Ir. surance Company in America, angflbdly j. o. newtonT" .Mercantile Broker, GRIFFIN, : : GEORGIA. fun'Jd&wlm New Advertisements A A GENTS WANTED to canvass^for Advt-r- Using Pa'ronage. A small amount of Fork done with tact and intellifience may produce a considerable income. Age ts earn several hundred dollars in commissions in a single season and incur no personal responsi blity. Enquire at the nearest newspaper of¬ fice and learn that curs is the best known and best equipped establishment for placing advertisements in newspapers and conveying to advertisers the infoimation which they re %nire in order to make their investments wise and profitably. Men of good address or women, obtain if well informed and advertising practical, may authority to solicit patronage for ns. Apply by letter to Geo. P. Howeli. & Co., Newspaper Advertising Bu¬ ticulars reau, 10 will Spruce be sent St., by New return York, mail. and fall par¬ $100 to $3000 L“.°. N o™. s “»S Agents horses preferred who e au furnish their own and give their own horses and give their whole time to the business. Spare mo meats few may be profitably employed and cities. also. B. A F Jobs vacancies in towns son A Co., 1009 Main St.. Richmond.V GRIFFIN GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 8 1888 THE COMMON WEALTH. The Sews as Gathered Over At Swainsboro Manning uaan’x new hotel is fast completion Dirt is broken for the erection of the new commercial bank build ing for the Commercial Bank at Al bany. Forty one bales of cotton belong iug to Iuman & Co- were set on fire at Roylstoij on last Sunday by boys playing with matches. The cotton was not totally destroyed, but wag bsdly damaged, Chaney Parker, colored, who Jived on T. J. AI red‘s place, near Moxley, Jefferson county, and who is said to have been 107 years old, died last Sunday. She claimed to remember when the capital of Georgia was !o cated at Jefferson. At Miliedgcville on Thursday while Jack Stroberg, a young white, man !rom Mac on, was painting on a scaffold on the Georgia railroad bridge over the Oconee river, be lo3t his balance and fell about forty feet among the rocks, being killed in siantly On or about Feb. 25 u six column eight page paper, to be called the Georgia Farmer’s Alliance Advocate, will make its appearance. It is to be published monthly under the edi torial control of R. H. Jackson President of the Georgia State Alii ance, ussisted by the other State ofli cere, At Hawkinsvdlo a few days ago J W Conner bought out the interest of his partners, W. B. Fitzgerald & Co. essaying !o assume all liabilities, and \V. 13. Fitzgerald established business of his own, b&t Thursday was closed np by his former credi tors, who objected to his sale to Con cer, hence both firms are closed. Before his departure from Bruns wick ex Supi. Gaddis, of the Bruns wick and Western railroad, was pre sen ted with a watch, clock and band some silver service, the latter from employes of the road i.nd the former from citizens and friends. J, N. Brown, of the ^sarno road, was pre seated with a pair of sleeve but tone. We Must Not Plead the Baby Act, We are in the midst of centennial celebrations, and with becoming pride we rejoice in American skill and in genuity, iu American energy and en terprise and in the wonderful natur al advantages ami resources develop ed by a century’s national growth. Yet when an attempt is made to jus tify a scheme which permits a tax to belaid upon every consumer in the land for the benefit of our manufac¬ turers, quite beyond a reasonable de¬ mand for governmental regard, it suits the purpose of advocacy to call our manufactures infant industries, still needing the highest and greatest degree of tavoring and fostering care that can be wrung from federal legis lation.—[Grover Cleveland. SYRUP 1 _ ___ rl Cures Conghs, Colds, Hoarseness, Croup, Asthma.Broncliitis,Whoop¬ ing relieves Cough, Incipient Consumption in and consumptive disease. persons For advanced stages ot the sale by all Druggists. Price, 25 cts. — CArTION!— The penalise Ur. Bull's t'oajjlt N y»-op leeoldoalyin tchUetcrapittrt. and bears our registeredtitAPK Still'* Ifeaii masks. lo wit: A in a Circlt.o Rtd-*lrip Can- Han-Lab */, and the rac-slmilr *a®P^»el!rn«turesof "uScstf*- C. V* Joh» EYEKdCO., W. Ball »nd A. Balttroore-.Wd.f. 8. A..SoleProprietors. STOP CHEWISQ TOBACC O! THE LABOR PARTY. CLEVELAND'S POLICY WILL GAIN ITS ADHERENCE. What Henry George Tkiuks of the Coming Presidential Campaign. Washington, Feb. 7. — Henry George is here on a lecturing tour, and has given his views on the polit ical situation to a local reporter. Ho declares that President Cleveland’s message on the tariff has greatly strengthened him with the people and that upon it he can be re elec ted. Asked about the condition of bis own party Mr. George said : ‘’Well, just at preseut there is a little divis ion. The tariff question has come among us and there is eome differ enco of opinion as ^to policy. A de cided majority of oar folks believe in free trade—absolute free trade, but some think we ought to hold on to protection for a while yet. Will you put a presidential cand* date in the field ! No, I think not ; I do not think it advisable. I think a majority of our people are opposed to having a can dicUte. Your not having a candidate would be in the interest of the Democrats? Some think so and it probably would; Would that be a reason for your not entering tire field! If the Democrats fight f»r free trade—cail it what-they please, tariff reform or anything else, so it tended to free trade—we would do nothing that would antagonize them. They would gain many votes. You think Cleveland could carry New York ? I think he can and that he can be elected, was the emphatic reply. What is there in the opposition to him that is now talked about ? They say there is a combination to defeat his renomination. I do r ot know much about those matlors, but I thiDk it is probably so. I do not not think it is strong enough to beat him. I think be will be renominated and elected. Mr. Hill, I presnme, is a ‘practical’ politician, who doesn’t know much about the tariff or care much for it. Wbat is this difference between Dr. McGlyDn and yourself! queried the reporter. Merely a difference as to policy. Dr. McGlynn thinks we ought to put a ticket iu the field. You think this will not be done! Yes, I think it will not. Wheu all so called remedies fail, Dr. Sage's Ca'arrh Remedy cures. Commissioners Proceedings. At the meeting of the County Commissioners yesterday Messrs. T. R. Mills and M. Patrick were pres ent, Capt. Brooks’ commission not having arrived. The usual number of bills were aud ted. A new road was ordered opened, commencing at the Plank road at the Wolcott place, and running through the farms of C. S. Cjllins, Frank Ison, Z j!1 Ison, J. W. Travis, J. B. Mills, J. M. Mills and — Pitts, to the Zebulon road. The survey shows that this will shorten the distance from Griffin to Zebulon by a mile and will avoid tbe high hills. Two new applicants were examin ed and passed to the poor farm. The application for liquor license made by Strickland & Co., at Sunny Side, was read and action suspended for thirty days, a strong counter peti tion having been presented. ‘•Shall our girls whistle?” Of course if they strengtoen their lungs by taking Dr. Bull’s Cough 8yrup. Dr Bull’s Baby Syrup i* recommended by all druggists as being a purely vegetable, re. liable and safe preparation for babies. Price only 95 cents. BAB'S BABBLE. What Oue Woman Thinks About Kiss¬ ing. N Y. Star. I had been thinking how much stronger and healthier looking the women of today were than tbe tnen, bat I have had this idea all knocked out of me by rending about a wnnan in Onta rio. She sued a man for $2,000 be cause he kissed her on the cheek, claiming that the shock was so great that she could not perform her hotiBe bold duties for two weeks! I have done nothing but wonder e'er since —if she were a woman—what her ex pemnee in the kissing line bad been, and whether, if this brutal creature had kissed her plump and square in the month, she would have resented it so much. Women are sensitive creatures, and the poor deur may have thought to herself; Unless I were different from all other women, this man would have found my lips bo charming that he couldn’t resist them; but as I am not like the rest, be was forced to kiss me on the cheek. Such a thought would make any wornau sick. I would be willing to deelate before Assistant District Attorney Bedford that ninety nine out of every hundred women would be incapacitated for talking at least tor a month if such an insult wero offered them. I have never been an ardent advo cite of kissing, but I am sure the people who are must have reduced it to a fine art. Naturally the enjoy ment depends largely on the person who is kissed, and after all there are only two people worth kissing—that is, hiec people; one is a boy baby and tbe other is the man who is de voted to you. Kissiug a baby, a nice, sweet baby, must have been one of Eve’s consolations, while kiss ing a man who is fond of one, is de ligbtful because he always seems to like it so mnob. I think it ia wiser for a woman not to like it, beciuse then she doesn’t commit the crime in a spirit of wikWmpulsiveness, but goes at it with a perfect conscious ness that she knows how to do it and in the very best way. Little women, as a general thing, have the better of it as far as kissing a man is concern ed, because they have to reach np: that generally necessitates putting a hand on each shoulder, and the ba man representative of a Newfound land dog ia charmed to bis soul, be cause he thinks the little woman likes liim ‘o much. The woman who bas to reai i up to a man can always control him. Her siza acquits her of her folly aud be is certain to re gard her ai a dear little thing, and never see her Machiavellian schemes for ruling him. if I had daughters I should put heavy weights o-i their heads in early childhood to keep them from growiug very tall, because to the small comes the v ctcry. Look at Cleopatra she was little. Helen of Troy barely reached to the shoal ders of the man who lovod her, and in later days, Catherine of Russia and Marie Stewart were both slender and rather small. The small ho.uid is as certain lo wiv as is the Demo oratic tickht. “When be dache joins neurrlela, then comes the tu.' ot war.’’ A w ise general marshals his forces, charges with a bottle of Salvation Oil, and the dongliti ; • cringing In the dust; The young tnae who swallowed by mis¬ take the whole contents of a package of Laxador is ont again. He says h ft-cls “pa’.e” but otherwise is nil right. He will however follow tho directions nert time Advice to Mothers. Mbs. Winslow's Soothing Strip for children teething, iB the prescription of one of the best female nurses and physicians in the Umted States, aud has been used for forty years with never failing success by millions of mothers for their children. During the process of teething its value is incalculable. It relieves the child from pain, cures dys entery and diarrhoea, griping in tbe bowels, and wind colic. By giving health to tbe thild. Price 25 cents a bottle. augeod&wly AT COST! Crockery,Glassware, and enware We will are and going devote Fancy out our Goods, of Wood en- the tire attention to the Gro¬ cery Business! G. W. CLARK & SON. Mason & Hamlin ) Packard , ) Bay State , ) Chiekermy, Pianos. Mathushek , ; Anon, At LOWEST PRICES, for DASH or on TIME. JAS. M. BRAWN Eft. Orchard Hill Items. Orchard Hill, Jan. 8tb, 1888. After all tbe bard times and mur merings of the people of sorry crops and low prices of cotton amid ail tbe financial embamsmenU and fail nree, there seems to be a determina tion manifested to straggle through another year and put forth all the energy that they are master of— adopting the old rule, If you do not first succeed try, try again. We cannot tell what another year will bring forth and a push of energy and dose application to business: being blessed with health and suits ble seasons, making economy our watchword, wo may yet overcome all our embarrassments and become an independent people. Mr. IV. J. Dake has purchased one of the best saw mills in the land, and has located on the premises of Mr- J. A. Williams, wbere’he will be prepared to furnish all the lumber that will be needed for some time in this section. Jim is a good fellow and we certainly wish him success in his enterprise. Well, we have had bat little suita ble weather for farming as yet, and but little has been done, except such as could be done in tbe way of raia ing manure, cleaning up and prepar ing the ground for the plow when tbe weather will admit of having it done. All the preparations are be ing made that it possible and allow ing that one extreme follows another certainly it will not be long before wo will be permitted to do all tbe work that we are able. Mr. Tom Maddax has just finished gathering his corn. Rather late about it too, but I guess he did not need it much, though he said let it stay in the field until late so as to make it hold out. The black birds in the mean time held a consultation and decided that he did not need it and proceeded to gather it for him and they performed their mission in j a i. .a and business like manner, i cart. ng oft in adayortwo several ! bushels. Well, tbe birds must be ! fed „t._v how, aud it was really a char j itab e act in him to make them such ! a donation. After all he has plenty j to do him, besides a bale of cotton j to carry him through what will be a j hard struggle with a great many of us in making another crop. Air. M. F Sail', bas purchased! tbe stock oi good* belonging lo W - i A. Kiog & Co and is occupying the bouse fo; merly occupied by that firm. ! Millard is an enterprising young mat; and we predict for him a ■ cess. Tl Methodist pareonage is about completed and is occupied by Rfcv. Ellison Cook, the pastor of the Methodist church, a worthy man and we believe a zealous worker in pulling down the stronghold? of the wicked. Rev. C. W. Oliver baa been called NUMBER li to tbe pastoral charge of tl c Baptist church. A more devoted, zealous worker than UdcIo Wa»' moot be found, and we belie ill be in strnmental in the sr iuoent of much good. More anou. Uxo- Over-Worked Women. For “worn ont,” “run down,” debrli tatrd school teachers, milliners, seam 8'resfics, housekeepers, Dr. and over Favorite worked women generally, Pierce’* Prescription It is is the best “Cure of all reiterative ad tonics. Dot a i ’bnt mixably fulfills a siglinuis of purpose, being a most potent Specific for all those Chronic Weaknesses and Diseases pcca liar to women. It is a powerful, genet al as well ns uterine, tonic and norvine, and imparts vigor and strength to the whole system. It promptly cures weak ness of stomach, indigestion, bloating, weak back, nervous prostration, debility and sleeplessness, ju either sex. Fa vorite Prescription is sold by druggists under onr positive gaarantec. See wrapper around bottle. Prioe $1.00 a b)ttle, or six bottles for $5.00. .Sheriff Sales. The following sales wero made by Sheriff Connell yesterday: T. A. Warren house and lot on Sixth street; to B. P. Blanton for $75. House and lot of Warren Fuller, in Southwest Griffin; to Brooks and Kincaid for $100. Ten acres of land of T. W. Flynt, on tax fi fa, to Mrs. E. M. Drewry for $7. House and lot of Dick Thrasb, in East Griffin, for taxes, to Mrs, E. 91. Drewry for $15. House and lot of Dock Thrash, iu North Griffin, lor taxes, to J. A. Brooks for $15. One hundred acres, the property of Jos. Dorset, in Union District, to R. T, Daniel for $475, sold at admin istrator's sale. POWDER Absolutely Pure. Thu Powder never varies. A marvel u parity, strength and wholesomneae. More economical than the ordinary kinds, and c»B not be sold in ooinpetiton with tue maiUtnde of iow teat, short weight, slum or phosphate Bajuwo Powders. Sold only in tains. Rots Powd*r Co., 106 Walt Stmt, New York ooCJ-HAiwIv-*/»D crln-nti !•' or tit S»fr. OMNI