The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, March 04, 1888, Image 1

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'l Daily Hews. VOLUME 17 __ 71 REGULATOR Unfailing Spec flc for Liner DISEASE. eviUlPTflMQ* oYml I UIVlO Bitt - r or bad taste i mouth; tongue coated white <~r covered with a brown fur; pain for in the back, sides, 01 joints—often stomach; loss mistaken of Bneumatiana; sometimes sour and water-brash, appe¬ tite; nausea or indigestion; flatulency and acid eructations; bowels alternately costive and lax; headache; loss of memory, with a painful which sensation having failed to do something spirits; to have been done; debility; low a thick, yellow appearance of the skin and eyes; a dry cough; fever; restlessness: urine is scanty and high colored, and, if nl- owed to stand, deposits a sediment. SIMMONS LIVER ( PURELY VEGETABLE) I» generally used in the South to arouse Torpid Liver to a healthy action. It y, inordinary efficacy on the Lifer, Kidneys and is EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOK Malaria, Bowel Sick Complain,* ache, n.v*p<*p*ia< Hsu Con*ripalion. BUIlousne**. Hiilssy Affection*, Jan art ileulal Depreuiun, Colic. Universally admitted to be THE BEST FAMILY MEDICINE i t hil dreh, for Adults v,nd for the Age OH !.¥ G EH III HE has our Stamp in red on frontof H. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia, Pa.. SlUFt'KOFUIKTOKS. I’tice 11.00 PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY DR. JOHN L. STAPLETON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, GRIFFIN, : : : GEORGIA, Office—Fron) Room, up Shuts, Nf,ws ing. Residence, at VV. H. Baker place on Poplar street. Pron pt attention given calls, cay or .light. jauSld&wOm HENRY C. PEEPLES, attorney at l HAMPTON, GEOBOIA, Practices in all the State and Conns. ___oct‘.Kl&wly_ JNO. J. HUM, A TT 0 R N E Y AT GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. UlHce, 31 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J. White’s Clothing Store. mar22d&wly 1) DlSMl'KE. X. M. DISMUKE it COLLINS, LAWYERS, GRIFFIN, GA. Uiiice,first room In Agricultural marl-d&wtf ; p-Stairs. THOS. R. MILLS, TTORNEY AT LAW, GRIFFIN, GA. Will practice in the State and Cr.'rU- Office, over George & c truer, nov2-tf. o X 1) HTS.VAHT. BOBT. T. DAN I E STEWART 3t DANIEL, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Over George & Hartnett’s, Griffin, Ga. Will practice in the State and ourts. ianl. C. S. WRIGHT, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER GRIFFIN, GA. Hill Street, Up Stairs over J. H. Jr.. A Co.’s. ,J. r\ NICHOLS. agent the Northwestern Mutual Life surance Company, Of Mllwaakce, Wis. The most reliable uraace Company in America, angSHdly HOTEL 3BIFFIN', GEORGIA. Under New A. G. DANIEL, Prop’r. LiF" I’o ters meet all traius. feblhdly New Advertisements The Art of Advertising Pot fcio we will inshrt 4lines (32 words) One Million copies of Daily, Sunday weekly Newspapers. The work will all none in to days. Send order and check to CEO. P. ROWELL <k 10 SPRUCE ST., N.Y. ®»B *.*,* for l ;a 30cts. ge Newspaper Catalogue sent idi- d ItiCnrwlAi nr-' ; homo Jl*j- with j j ort rain. Bockol par- titulars sent FREE. _j B. M.WOOLLEY. M.D. *a. ctico VM Whitetill to GRIFFIN GEORGIA, SUNDAY MORNING, MARUH 4 1888 SOME 1ACTS ABOUT ADVERTISING There Is Great Art In Knowing How to Advertise Judiciously, We are gratified to observe that the Secretary of the Navy applies just business principles to the deal ings of bis department with the nows papers in the matter of advertise meats. The issue involved was a very simple one, bnt i! actually called a ruling by the Hecrelaiy himself, and as it is an issue which not infequeut ly arises between newspapers and their patrons, it is worthy of notice Mr. Whitney has decided that where official advertisements aro published exactly io accotdaaance with the copy that is furnished by the depart rnent, the nowep ipers shall be enti tied to pay for all space and liues used at their sworn rates. The decis ion arose from a controversy with the Second Comptroller, who lias heretofore held that pay should not be allowed for lines and spacing which ho held to be unneccessary There is great art in advertising, and he will be most successful in the use of the newspaper who applies the best rules to the ait. Of course the man who use) the spaca gensr ously will reap his reward in greater measure than he who confines him self to a line or two poorly expressed and hid away in the many columns of the average daily. But even a small advertisement can be made very attractive if the advertiser will take the lime aud pains to make it so- And it not seldom occurs that an advertisement which brings no re suits would have been very satisfacto ry had it been attractively written and properly displayed. Bnt all advertisers shonlu remeber that space costs, because it is the news prper's capital, just as tbe individ ual who enters a store must bear in mind that the cost of three yards of silk is exactly three times as much as the cost of one yard. The ap plication is easy. Mhoroands of people are leading tin satisfactory lives, because of the dispirit ing effects of indigestion. Let such try Laxador and be happy. Cures Coughs, Colds. Hoarseness, Croup, Asthma, Bronchitis,Whoop¬ ing Cough, Incipient Consumption and relieves consumptive persons in advanced stages of the disease. For sale by.all Druggists. Price, 25 cts. t'ATTlOV!—Tlie genuine Dr. Bull** Cough Syrup IjSSoM onl ;r in urhltevrapperi. j, and bear# our registered trade J marks, to wit: A Rnll't Head 5, .tion-Lal/d, in a Circle, and a lied-HIrip the fac-simile Cut- "AOr NtfP- -‘''sisrnnturesof John EVER W. «S Hull CO., F I and A.l. M Ba ltimore, A..Solerroprletora. | STO^CHEUjH^TCmACrO! Lange’s Chow TOBACCO ANTIDOTE! F^teVIL'rii'x. THE GREAT »oi«l '.vail llrasinU- . Ordinary’s Advertisements. /ORDINARY’S OFFICE. Spalding Coun- Y ) tv. Georgia, March 2d, 1888.—M. 0. Bowdoin, administrator of R. K. Foster, has applied to me for letters of Dismission on the estate of R. K. Foster, late of said county, deceased. concerned show be¬ Let all persons cause fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at my office in Griffin, on tbe first Monday in June, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why such lette s should not be granted. |6.15. E. W. HAMM ONND, Ordinary. RDINARY’S OFFICE, SraDDiNJ COUN- Y7 tt, Georgia. March 2d, 1888.—Willie Hill has applUed to me for letters Administration on the estate of William llill, late of said county, deceased. Let ail persons concerned snow cause be¬ fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at my office m Griffin, on the first Monday m April, ’888, by ten o’clock a m., why such letters should not be HAMMOND, granted. Ordinary. $3.00. E. W A NEW BOOK Full of new ideas ON and valuable in¬ CABBAGE format ion. Although actual¬ AND ly worth many dol- CELERY. iars to growers, a I . mai cd copy will be | free to anj person w ________ add who will send two stamps and thv ese of three or more extensive Cabbage, Cauli flower or < > le v growers. m.LIX6HIS7 ISAACI. Co,, I*a Le Fmmr, lack'* febtcUbwlm. prepare for WAR ! Some Timely Advice to Sonlhern Farm¬ ers and Others. 'I he following from the Baltimore Manufacturers Record should be read, pondered and acted upon: prepare for war! Do not be startled, friends! The Manufacturer’s Record has no reason to suppose that this country is in any immediate danger of engaging in war with another nation. Our caption is not a warning, hut a suggestion has ed on the condition of affairs in Eu¬ rope The Continent is a vast camp. Troops are massing on the Russian frontier. Arsenals and navy.yards are alive with artisans. New forts have been built and old ones repair ed and strengthened. Vast turns ot money have been voted at.d en ormous loans negotiated. All Eu¬ rope is “waiting with bated breath” for the signal that shall “let loose the dogs of war.” The pretext for this emergency is of no account. It is the fact that concerns us. If the signal is given, and it now seem s un avoidable, there will be a Titanic struggle of long duration, the end of which no mortal can lore-know. This impending conflict has an im¬ portance to the people of the United States they will be wise to consider. A general European war draws from the producing classes a vast body of men who become consumers. Th » country knows by sad experience the cost and the waste of a protracted conflict, but we cannot realize how very different will be the state of things in Europe from what it was with us when our civil war existed. South and North drew their food supplies from their own psople. It is not so abroad. Europe, Russia ex cepted, obtains much of its food in time of peace from other countries. Let war begin, and a groat fleet of grain carriers will be shut up at Odes sa, and American farmers will lie called upon to supply the shortage. Our annual shipments of meats of ail kinds are enormous, but the tbe de> marid will be double, perhaps treble, in case of a general European war. Armies roust be fed and clothed. The waste of war material must be made good, hence arms and ammu¬ nition will be called for as they have been in the past. The taking oft - a million men from industrial labor will decrease the producing capacity of European manufacturers. The nations that look Yo Germany aid France for goods will uatuially turn to America, and should Great Britan be drawn into the conflict, the mar kets of the world will be open to American enterprise as they have not been for a generation, Should the war that eseins irnini ueut begin it will affect this country in many ways. The demand for breadstuff's and meat will increase the cost of food at home, for specu laiors will certainly avail themselves of the foreign demand to force high er prices. It will be w.ee, therefore, for Southern farmers and planters to devote a much greater area to breadstuff's and other food crops thau they have dona of late years, and, as far as possible, to raise all the meat that will be needed for their own consumption and for the domestic market. They cannot have too big a surplus. Eveytbing will be wanted. In those districts where canneries can bo supplied with sufficient stock to make tbe work profitable, er where there is plenty of fiuit for drying, these in dustiies should be pushed to tie ut most the coming season. \Ve will need all these things to prevent spec u’ation nd to furnish a enrpins for foreign markets. Tbe tendency of a genera] foreign war, when once under full headway, is to induce timid capitalists abroad to trariefer as much of their means as possible to this country. Tbe magnificent development of the tbe Son'll dnr ing the present decade has inspired a confidence in its destiny that will draw millions of roony to it for in vestment if proper effort are made to call attention to all localities where capital can be profitably employed. It would be well if an influential or ganization could bo formed, repra seutiug every Southern Slato, and supplied with abundant funds, fbat should establish offices in London, Liverpool and Manchester, in Berlin andjother money centers of Garmany, in Holland and elsewhere, all of which would be agencies for furnish ing such information ue foreigu cr.pi talists would require, The men at the head of an organization of this character should have a national rep utation fer sagacity, business ability aid probity. Such men as John H. Inman, and fifty more that might be named, could if they would, form n syndicate for this purpose, whose influence would ba felt in every financial city of Great Britain and the Continent, and divert to the South streams of sapital that would make the present developments seem small compared to that which would then he inaugurated. Again we urge, prepare for war! ROVER RUSTLINGS. Dovru en the Dogs nil Bachelor*.-Bari ness and Mumps. Special Correspondence News. Rover, Ga., Mar. 3.— We in this part of the moral vineyard have just past through a weak of rain and hava all got so lazy we can hardly got about now it has stopped. We are all getting very badly be hind with our tanning on account of so much rain,but expect to do justice, if nat a little more, when we do get •tirted. Our crops last year fell far abort of cur expectations, so in order to make up we expect to plant right smart both of cotton and cor», and trust that Divine Providence will bless us. Mr. Ayccck last week lost a splen did hog which was bitten about a month ago by a mad dog and last Fri day the eflects of it was th* hog went raving mad and died, which was a great loss to him, being a Jersey. My opinion is that about two-thirds of the dog population ought to be de stroyed, because they are mostly own ed by the negroes and they can’t feed themselves, let alone a poor, no ac count, suck egg dog. Thieves aro playing havoc with some of us. What with meat, chick ens, potatoes and greens they hope to live well until their labor is need ed, But as Bill Arp says, its born in them and they can’t h*!p it. Rover has livens fine bachelors as the State can ; ff ird, and it would he wel! if the law would enforce and make them take advantage of leap year or doom them out of sight of our young ladies. They arc all capable of taking care of a wife, and if they won’t then I say get them out of tbe way What say you? They are a pest as they are; but at the same time clever men in their way but no other. Tbe firm of Williamson ds Weath- avby are for tbe time of year doing a very good business, owing generally to the clever business like of the firm and we predict for them much s’icct *s. The mnrops are in around us, and are making some of our young toiks look a little fat and sick, hut hope they will be up and a boat again in » few days. Thanking you kindly for your Dailt News to this place, we hope to do the best we can for you in ting subscriptions to so cheap and lively a paper which wc consider is doing a great deal for the advance rnent of our cause. * * * Delicate diseases of eiterb sex radically enred. Send 10 cents stamps for book. Address, World’s ^ensary Medical Association, Lemons ! Lemons ! Lemons 25 cents per dozen. | ★ i We have to-day 55 J> PLAIN PICKLES, * j - String Fish, ‘.S' 3 ! u Mango Pickles, 11 Shad. ’ ^ 5= 1 ce H rd Head Cabbage n CO ~Z Fresh Oysttra. is 7 Turnips, IU O MIXED - PICKLES. » 5 | I’riTTTOES.; ^ J : 200 Lbs Fancv Candv. ★ :d C.W. CLARK & SON. THE GEORGIA MIDLAND. What It is Doing for the People along Ms Line. People aro too apt to underrate the blessings they hive, or to be dirap pointed if they do not at once come up to the full measure of their ex pectations. It is not, then, perhaps eo very strange that the citizens of thia section ,Jo not seem to nppreci ate fully as much as they should tbe advantages which tho Georgia Mid land and Gulf railroad has given. Nevertheless, these advantages are very great aud should not be over looked or forg t er. The development that has been caused ..long the line of the road baa been rapid and wonderful. Concord, Rover, Williamsons, Molena, Neal and Woodbury, all bavo developed rapidly and are destined to become important feeders to Griffin. People aro able to come to Gr.fliu easier and they come more frequently. While this is the newest complet ed rood in the State it oitily distan ces its rivals in its spirit of enter prise, accommodation and liberality. Fust its hue shortened thegJistance from Griffin to Columbus by just one half, reducing tho fare in propor tior; but not satisfied with this it has of its own accord again reduced the fare to $1,00, instead of the #4, 80 it formerly cost by way of Ma con—being in nil a reducrion of two* thirds- Tbe freights, too, bavo been made very low, so that in Columbus, the home of cotton manufacturing in tho South, scarcely any plain cotten goods are noi l except those of tbe Griffin Mills. It has recently put r.p a side track at tho Griffin Fertilizer Company's work*, on which stand four loaded cars ready for shipment as we write. Col. G. G. Jordan was in tswu on Friday, on bis way over the line the road tofind oat tho wants of the people and where tbore was auy prospect for new business. A side track will be put in for the new cot ton factory and the machinery will probably be brought over ibe Geor gia Midland and itf) connections. Ample fiicilitifB will also ho given to the granite quarries soon to opened, whibli are likewise on the line of this road. Between here and McDonough evc-ty Ling is being dono to euable farr ora to receive their gnano sup plie easily, and platforms will be pa; up wherever necessary for the shipment of cotton this fall. In as Cob Jordan says, the road fully completed the management time to attend to the many matters which could not before i arranged, and they propose to doit, Co! Jordan thinks Griffin is * pering and improving nicely, ! the Georgia MidhruJ is certainly ing its film; _ in the good work. __ Advice to Mothers. Mas. Winslow’s Sot,thing Sv***-* for children teething, is the pro c < of one r f !he best female nu•..*<?• physicians m the United States, has be > u-cd for forty years with failing suecss by millions of mot for their children. Daring tbe of teething ite value is entery'^nd^dierr^Ja^gri^in^i^ and colic. bowels, wmd By health to the child. Price 25 cents bottle. angeodFwly NUMBER 8a Religious Notice. Beginning with Ash Wednesday, the lfnh inst., there will be Evening Prayer in St. George's church at 4:30 p. m., every day in Lent. Bid me discourse, and 1 will enchant tnine ear with tales astounding cares of nil sorts of suffering by Salvation Oil. Price only 25 cents. • An Indian boy wanted to hang himself sfter seven school girls had kissed him. He didn't for ho fonud they had given him nothing more serious than a cold which he speedily cured with l »r. Ball's Congh Syrnp, and married the prettiest oue. Wonld yon care to hsv tore ot ad vice worth a great de; r tamper with yonr baby's heal* ig opiates bat to qmet its stomach i. . s, etc., use Dr, Bull’s Baby Svrup instead. Christian Chnrch. Services at 11 n. m. aod 7:15 p, m. Morning subject, “What made Eng land—the Gospel or the sword!" Evening subject, “Tbe Christian's Marching Orders.’’ Sunday school at 10 a. in. Tbe public cordially in vited to attend. *akih c POWDER Absolutely Pure. Tim Powder never varies. A marvsl u parity, Mrength and wholesomnsss. More economical than the ordinary kinds, snd ub not be sold in oompetitonwith the multitude of tow test., »iiort weight, alum RovavBiuiw or phosphate Powders. Hold only in cans. Powder Co., 10b Wall Street, New York oeti-<l<V,wlV-top crlnmn 1*' or Sti. pare. f | , I ; roil HKXEF1T or- TV A PHTI ST* A CIITIXtCH • ° : ‘ —WILL BE GIVEN AT— j Female College Chapel, Tuesday tve., Mar. 3L . 8 c- block, P. M. By the Celebrated Pianist and Composer. CONSTANTIN - STERNBERG, -ASSISTED BY- Mrs. Sumner Salter, Prima Donna Soprano. 4 Mrs. Constantin Sternberg. Prima Donna Contralto. Mr. Sumner Salter, Baritone. MAKING .. A QUARTETTE RARELY j EQUALLED IN THIS COUNTRY, -tot- TICKETS OF ADMISSION, - $100 mm*F or Sale at Brawnor'* Book