The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, March 06, 1888, Image 1

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tieHriFFin 1 Daily News. VOLUME 17 1 REGULATOR Unfailing Spec flc for Liver DISEASE. CVyPTHMQ* Bitt-r or bad taste ill OTIVir I UlflO * mouth; tongue pain coated white er covered with a brown fur; in the back, sides, 01 Joints—often mistaken for Raeumatisin; sour stomach; loss of appe¬ tite; sometimes nausea and water-brash, or indigestion; flatulency and acid eractatious; bowels alternately costive and lax; headache; toss of memory, with do something a painful which sensation ought of having failed to to have been done; debility; low spirits; a thick, yellow appearance of <he skin and eyes; a dry cough; fever; restlessness; the urine is scanty and high colored, and, if al- owed to stand, deposits a sediment. SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR (Pl'BKIil* VEtJETABlI!) f» generally used in the South to arouse the Tcrpid Liver to a healthy action. It acts >.'n,ordinary efficacy on the Liver, Kidneys and Bowels. AN EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC Foil Halaiia, Bowel Complaint* B,*li«|Mla, Bleb H«a> acli««, (oaitipation. Billlonmnia. Kidney ASectioun, Jaundice, Tleutal llepreMion, Colic. Universally admitted to be THE BEST FAMILY MEDICINE i Cliil dreh, for ^dnlis rmd for the Age OXLT CEXl'IAE has our Z Stamp in red on front of Wrapper. H. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia, Pa.. Soi.Fi'KOPniEToiiH. Price 41 00 PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY DR. JOHN L. STAPLETON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, ORIFFIN, : : : : GEORGIA, Office—FronARoom, up Stairs,'N ewsB uild ing. Residence, at W\ H. Baker place on Poplar street. Fi-mpt attention given to calls, bay or night. janllld&wOm HENRY C. PEEPLES, attorney at law HAMPTON, GEORGIA, Practices in all the State and Federal Courts.______octUd& wiy JNO. J. HUNT, A TTORNEY AT L A W, GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. Office, 81 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J. II. White’s Clothing Store. mar22d&wly D MSMUXE. N. M. COLLINS DISMUKE & COLLINS, LAWYERS, GRIFFIN, GA. Office,first room in Agricultural marl-d&wtf Building. I’p-Stairs. THOS. R. MILLS, TTORNEY AT LAW, GRIFFIN, GA. Will practice in the State and Fedeial Courts. Office, over George & Hartnett’s corner. nov2-tf. ON n STEWART. ROBT. T. DAS 1 Kfc STEWART «c DANIEL, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Over George & Hartnett’s, State Griffin, Ga. Will practice in the and Federal hurts. iaul. C. S, WRIGHT, >■ VTCIIUAKER AND JEWELK11 GRIFFIN, GA. Hill Street, Up Stairs over J. II. White, •!r., <fc Co.’s. or. I>. NICHOLS, AGENT TDK Northwestern Mutual Life In¬ surance Company, Of Milwaukee, Wig. The mostreliable Ir. nrance Company in America, ang28dly HOTEL CURTIS, GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, Under New Management. A. G. DANIEL. PropY. 1<*T Po ters meet all traius. feblodly New Advertisements. The Art of Advertising ! For sio we will inshrt 4lines (82 words) in One Million copies of Daily, Sunday or Weekly in Newspapers. The work wiil all be •one 10 days. Send order and check to CEO. P. ROWELL <k CO,, 10 SPRUCE ST., N. Y ^pajp: ^ Nevrspapei Catalogue sent by i fetd Wli.ihcy Iia'o- j its sored pain. at Book homo cf with par¬ out ticulars sent iREE. • B. M.WOOLLEY, M.D. “"“I 6EM WhttebaU Bt, GRIFFIN GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH l> 1888 A Broker’* First Fright. “I have frequently l>een caught short on the market and seen myself within an ace of being ruined," said a New street broker to a reporter; “but I was really scared only once in my life, and that was during my first day in the street. My father got me a place in the office of an old friend of his, where I enjoyed the full confidence of my employer. I had been working only a few hours when he handed me ten crisp $100 bills and told me to deposit them in an uptown bank. I put the bills in my coat pocket until 1 had finished writing up my books and then took a car going up town. When I entered the hank and put my hand in my pocket the bills were gone. I can’t describe my feelings, for the simple reason that 1 hadn’t any. I felt myself turned to stone. Both in mind and body I was stuiiefied. W lien I had collected myself a little I went out of the bank with the expressed intention of throwing myself into the river. I knew not w here I went or what I was doing, but I found that I had re¬ turned to tho office. The broker was out when I got back. I was too numb to bo agitated, and no one noticed there was anything the mat¬ ter with mo as I put on my office coat and began poring over the set of books. It was not until I saw the broker coming in the door that I began te full}’ realize mv position. I ran my hand wildly through my hair in a vain attempt to calm myself, and then absent mindedly put it in my pocket. The first thing 1 felt was the roll of bills. I iiad changed my coat-and forgotten all about it. The broker chided me for not going to tire bank, but he never knew why the money wasn’t deposited until the next day.”— New York Evening Son, In Central California. Heretofore the eastern tourist has been accustomed to hear only of southern Cali¬ fornia and its so-called semi-tropical cli¬ mate, while scarcely anything lias been said of the merits of the climato in cen¬ tral California. To such an extent has this puffing of one portion of tho state to the detriment of another section been carried that many of the eastern tourists now visiting the counties adjacent to the bay seem to be surprised that fruits of many kinds are grown outdoors until Christmas. Particularly is this so in re¬ gard to grapes. Some surprise has been expressed that the fine grapes on exhi¬ bition at the rooms of the state board of trade should be found outside of Ixis Angeles and San Diego counties, whereas the fact is that the best grapes grown anywhere in California are produced out¬ side. of southern California, and those grown in Sonoma, Napa, Santa Clara and along the eastern foothills of the Sacra¬ mento valley have never been surpassed anywhere. Another fact worthy of becoming known is that there ripen in Butte county, 600 miles north cf Los Angeles, and at Los Gatos, in the Santa Clara valley, some fifty miles south of San Francisco, the first orange crops of this season. They are of fine quality and nearly two months earlier than the Riverside crops. In Santa Clara county some of the finest white Verdel, Tokay and black Ferrara grapes get ripe and ready for the table at Christ¬ mas. In this same county strawberries and raspberries can also bo had up to tlx? holidays.—San Francisco Alta. TIio German Soldier. The German soldier, as 6een at Stras burg and in other parts of the empire, is rhe result of a most careful and thor¬ ough military organization for a long series of years and of a military system that has reached perfection. He is an educated man, physically and mentally, and a part of his education is acquired under military discipline. He is not so dashing in his appearance as the English soldier, but he shows in his figure the re¬ sult of thorough training in athletic and gymnastic exercises, and there is an air and expression of intelligence and mental culture about the German soldier not seen in the army of any other nation. His uniform is scrupulously neat and clean; he is sober, quiet, respectful and obedient; he is faithful, loyal and patri¬ otic. My observation of the German soldier leads me to think that in physical development, in military education in every detail, and in general education, which includes the knowledge of several languages, the German soldier has no superior or equal.—Col. Clark in New York Herald. DR. BULL’S COUGH SYRUP Coughs, Colds, Hoarse¬ : For the cure of Bronchitis, j ness, Croup, Asthma, Con¬ Whooping Cough, the Incipient relief of sumption, and for con¬ sumptive persons in advanced stages of the Disease. For Sale by all Drug' gists' Price, 85 cent*. HOW A DIME IS COINED. An Interesting ProoMi That tlie 1’nblle Know* Little About. There are many things to lie seen at the United States mint on Fifth street. It is not generally known that this is tho largest institution of the kind in the world; yet it is a fact, and in its facilities for the rapid and perfect coinage of money tho San Francisco mint is con¬ ceded to Ixj much superior to the Royal mint of London, which is generally sup¬ posed to be tho largest and most com¬ plete mint on earth. A reporter called the other day, and through the-courtesy of Coiner James M. Gorham was permitted to witness the manner in which dollars and dimes are turned out by the bushel. Just at present there is a lively demand all over the country for silver dimes, and hundreds of thousands of dollars of them are being shipped to New York, Chicago, Cincinnati, St. Louis and other eastern cities. Two of the money presses are, and have been for some time, running exclusively on this coin. The demand is so great that these machines are not even stopped on Sundays, and will be run on that day. t The process of dime making is an in¬ teresting one. The silver bullion is first hielted and run into two-pound bars. These in turn are run through immense rollers and flattened out to (he thickness of the coin. These silver strips are then passed through a machine which cuts them into the proper size for the presses, the etrips first having been treated with a kind of tallow to prevent their being scratched in their passage through the cutters. The silver pieces are then put into the feeders of the printing presses, and are fed to the die by automatic ma¬ chinery at the rate of 100 per minute, 48,000 dimes being turned out in a reg¬ ular working day of eight hours. As the smooth pieces are passed between the ponderous printing dies they receive the lettered and figured impression in a man¬ ner similar to that of a paper pressed upon a form of type; at tho same time the piece is expanded in a slight degree, and the small corrugations aro put into its rim. Tho machine drops the cotr pletecl coin into a receiver, and it is ready for the counter’s hands. The instrument used by the counter is not a complicated machine by any means, as one might suppose. It is a simple copper covered tray, having raised ridges running across its surface at a distance apart tho exact width of a dime. From the receiver the money is dumped on to this board or tray, and as it is shaken rapidly by the counter the pieces settle down into the spaces between the ridges. All these spaces being filled, tho surplus coin is brushed back into tho receiver, and the counter has exactly 1,250 silver dimes, or $125, on this trav, which num¬ ber is required to fill the spaces. Tho tray is then emptied into boxes, and the money is ready for shipment. The dime does not pass through tho weigher's hands, as does the coin of a larger denomination. One and one-half grains is allowed for variation or “toler¬ ance” in all silver coins from $1 down, and the deviation from tho standard in the case of the ten cent pieces is so tri¬ fling that the trouble and expense of weighing coins of this denomination is dispensed with.—San Francisco Chron¬ icle. Beverages of Venezuela. The beverages mostly in use in the cities are French wine or imported Ger¬ man and American bottle beer. Owing to tho heavy import duties imposed upon every article, beer is very expensive. I paid sometimes for a small bottle of Mil¬ waukee lager, Vienna Droller or “Cum- batsheer” (Kulmbacher) six to eight reals, equal to as many dimes. The lower class are very fond of aguardiente, manufactured from sugar cane; carrato, or hervido, a sort of fire water, manufac¬ tured from Indian corn or guarapo; but these strong drinks are usually taken in small quantities, and intoxicated Venezuela. persons Fruit are rarely seen in drunk waters and Naranjada are also drink a good deal, but the most popular with many is “aqua de papelon,” which was first introduced to my knowledge on the coffee hacienda of the Austrian con¬ sul. He might tell a curious tale of its aftereffects, hut I trust in his discretion. “Aqua do papelon” is simply water, sweetened with na ive . . In order to promote the making of pure white sugar the importation of this article into Venezuela is entirely forbidden, and the sugar in general use is called papelon, being the product of cane, containing all the svrup or molasses.—E. De Hesse Wartegg in New York Sun. Silk i reduction is being encouraged in Kansas The state ha.r. by act of legisla¬ ture, established a station from which eggs will be distributed and reeler-i edu¬ cated. The peach growers of Maryland and Delaware have decided to ask the legisla- tures of those states to enact laws com¬ pelling i-rowers to destroy all trees affected by the'yellows on the first ap¬ pearance of that dreaded disease. My (laughtereufferred greatly with ntura gia in the face ind forehead and was un able to secure any relief. I saw Salvation Oil advertised, sent for a bottle, and one ap plication gaveentire relief. .1 S. M Caolley, (policeman Residence 2(4 X. Bond St., Balto., Md. Laxador is the result of years of observa tioti and experience It is now racommend ed by leading physicians for costiventss and indigestion. An eminent Presbyterian divine announ ced to his cocgrega’i jn that he mu it take a vacation on account of bronchitis, the elders raised h s salary and gave him Dr. Bu i’s Cough Byrup. He waa cared. HARALSON HAPPENINGS. A Sad Dcntli* -The Rabbit flub— Some Personal Mention. Haralson, Ga., March 5tb, 1888. -—In last week’s issue I reported Mrs. Mary A. Callahan had so far recover ed as to return home. I was inisin formed, sad to say. She last Wed uesday, 22nd, relapsed, (yet at her lather’s, Mr. J.J. Herndon’s) and con tinued to grow wotse till Sunday last at 7 p. m. sho breathed her last. Funeral services were held at 2 p. in. Monday at the Baptist church by her pastor, Dr. Cousins, in the presence of a large audience of sorrowing rela lives and friends, from text, Rev. 14 chap. 13 verse. Mrs. C. leaves a do voted husband, two little children, an aged father and mother and sisters and one brother, and hosts ®f sorrow ing friends. The entire family has my condolence, stay the spirit of our Savior comfort the bereaved ones, may hi* everlasting arm ever bo un derneath them, Mrs. Mary Callahan, of Campbell county, mother ol Mr. Tommie Cal la han, is visiting her son. Miss Mattie Fannie Jones, of E! berton, niece of Mr. Jesse Forester, is visiting Mr. P.’s family. Sho is a lovely young lady. Tho Haralson rabbit club during the rainy days of last wc*ek,took in 75 of old Molly hares. Messrs. Henry Taylor and John Hodnett were slight ly shot by some of the excited boys. Mrs. Carrie and Miss Sallic Belle Reeves, wife and daughter of Mr. Fred Reeves, of Eureka Mills, are quite sick at this writing. The Secretary of the Lime Kiln Qlub can’t decide which he loves best, Miss S. or Miss P. Road working was the order of the day last week. Last Monday a light snow fell in the afternoon. Something like a blizzard accompanied the snow from N. W. What young man vvasit tLat went to see his best girl not long since and after tea, while he was drinking in the sweet words that fell from her ruby lips the doleful sound of the alarm clock informed him that it was eight and therefore time for Lira to Lull out? Miss Julia Hodnett, a lovely young ladv of Senoia, is the guest of Miss Carrie Taylor this week. Prof. W. II. and Miss Mamie Tay lor visiti i their uncle Dr. J. W. Tay lor, Lutli iville, last Sunday. Cousin Dixie, * * ' Delicate diseases tl eiterh sex radically cured. Send 10 cents in stamps for bock. Address, World’s Dis pensarv Medical Association, Buffalo N. Y.____ Central Railroad Time Table NORTHWARD. Bartlesville Special (Sunday only 7:45 a. m. Barnesville Accommoda Lon (daily except Sunday) 5:57 a. m. Passenger No. 3, 5:41 a. m. Passenger No, 11. 11:31 a. in Passenger and Mai! No. 1, 4:01 p. m. Passenger No. 13, 9:05 p. in SOUTHWARD. Passenger and Mail No. 2, 8:20 a. m. Passenger No. 14, 11:20 ; a. Passenger No. 12, 4:0> p m Barnesv le Special (Sunday only) 4:58 p m. Barnesville Acc; n.in' la tion (daily except Sunday) 7:10 p ru. Passenger Na 4, 8:43 p tn Hiex and bilious headache, and all de rangements of stomach and bowels, cur ed by Dr. Pierce's “Pellets ’—or anti bilious grannies. 25 cents a vial, No cheap boxes to allow waste of virtues, i Bv drnvtria’s ____ Religious .Notice. Beginning „ . ith Ash Wednesday, . w the 15th inst., there wilt be Evening j Prayer in St. George’s church at 4:30 p. in., every day in Lent. Lemons ! Lemons ! Lemons 25 cents per dozen, i 2 ★ 1 We have to-day j go J> PLAIN • PICKLES, n String Fish. 1 0 0 Mango Pickles, ^ Shad, 1 ^ H»rd Head Cabbago f QC cc , cl. Fresh Oysters. ! = 25 f Turnips, 0 f MIXED - PICKLES. 0 > 3: * POTATOES. ; Lbs Fancv Candv. J ★ r 200 CD C. W. CLARK & SON. CONCORD CULLIN'OH. Personal and Other Item* From Pike’s Popular Little City. Concord. Ga., March 5.—Dr. Pope Speer will soon have drugs for sale in Concord. Robert McLendon will take his place us clerk, and Dr. Wil linmB is prescriptiouist. Ten or fifteen tons of guano are sold daily in this place. Bates Sc Co. are doing n large bnsiness. Gardening Las commenced aud coin planting is in ordor. There is a largo Sabbath school here and Ihreo churches in process of erection. Mrs. Ward Moreland and Mrs. W. W. M Ireland are ike guests of Dr, J. A Williams and family. Z. T, McGebay, of Erin, is in the city. J. F. Harrison, Rev. A. G. Peden a id T. J. SullivuD, of Hollonville, are visiting Pike county’s westerri metro polia. ‘Bab's is king” all the world over. As it* rule should be quite as possible, fail not to provide it with Dr. Bull’s Baby Syrup for all the ailmeats incident to its condition, If ie u safe remedy. Why They Leave Farm*. Burlington Hawkeys. “Why do tho boys leave the fium? ’ wails u writer in an agricultural journal. Well, dear brother, there are several reasons. One is because the boys not 05 years old at his birth- Then, if there ts a hoe on the farm weighing 14 ounces, bright as uicklc plate, sharp ns arasor, an J an other has weight somewhat less than a breaking plow, with an edge on it like a hammer, and a sapling with the bark on it for a handle, the hired man takes one and the boy getk the other, aud evtry man in America knows which is the othei Did you ever stand with such a hoe in your hands away down in a corn row on some airless, still, hot summer day, twenty acres of corn blades and tas sels wilting about you, standing fourteen inches higher than your head, shutting out every last trace of , breathable , ., , , . and , then .. hear , air, a locust down in the edge of tbe tim ber strike up bis long, strident, monotonous call to make it ten times hotter? And ail this time a cool creek not a mile a way, loitering in deep, silent pools in shady places in the woods, or breaking into merry dancing ripples over the pebbleid Ad 1 iu the deep holes, the fish just lay g around waiting for a boy? Wi , then, you know why some boys leave (lie farm. Still, boys can be kept on the farm and made to stay there all their lives- Yon drtve a long spike through a boy’s body and through a live oak tree, and el„, l or loll it oo lb. otb.r .id., and then saw off the boy’s lags and break o,s back, and he will stay on the firm Yes. there i.re some other ways .vc k r . ", bn: tins is the only in ! fallible method. Advice to Mothers. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Srvr for children teething, is the pre c -- 0110 best female uu.s* - ... U j physicians in the United States, »d«1 , hast* ; n-cd for forty years with never failing succ *9 by millions of mothars for their children. Daring the process of teething its value i* incalculable. It relieves the child from pam. cures dys entcry and diarrhoea, griping in the bowels, and wind colic. By giving health to the child, Puce 25 centa a bottle. aogeod&wly Ordlnarj’s Court. The folbwiag business was traits acted by His Honor,Ordinary E. W. Hammond, at the monthly session yesterday: The will of J. VV. Boyd probated in common form. Mrs. Eliza Boyd* appointed executor, W. B. Hudson, administrator of . Thos. Lyon, made a settlement with J. E. Lyan, sole heir. E. II. Blood worth, gnareian of Minnie Bloodworth, discharged. J. R. Ellis was appointed adminis trator of Wm, Ellis, J. J. Maugham ap; ed adminis trator of S. W. Mai J. J. Maugham ;, d adminis trator ol J. C. Manghaui. Henry R. Bishop appointed admin istrator of Giles Bishop, vice John M. Bishop resigned. Harriet S. Crowder, administratrix of R. P. Crowder, was granted leave to sell land. John H. Mitchell, exeoutor of S. C. Mitchell. Settlement continued until Monday, March 13ih. *akiH c POWDER Absolutely Pure. Tina Powder never vane*. A marvat o Ciarity, itrengtk and whoIe*omoea». More economical than oompetiton the ordinary with kinda, malUtuda and eaa not be sold in tue of Powder*. low Uwt, Bold short weight, in »Ium Bor* or p boepk ‘.‘ILxnr' a t * only Wall cans, Tor p 0 wd«k Co., 106 8tr«t, New nnt2-dAwIv-ton or 1 umn 1*’ or ill ttafw. FOR BEXim OV- BAPTIST ★ CHURCH -f : 0: f- WILL BE GIVEN Al¬ Fenuile C^ollejs-e Chapel, Tuesday tvening, Mar. 13. . „ y Cclebraled p ijn ,„' and - _*__**’ CONSTANTIN - STERNBERG, -ASSISTED BY— Mrs. Sumner Salter, Prima Donna Soprano. Mrs. Constantin Sternberg, Prima Donna Contralto. Mr. Su inner Salter, Baritone. MAKING A QUARTETTE RARELY EQUALLED IN THIS COUNTRY. -tot- TICKETS OF ADMISSION, • $1 00 aerFor Sale at Brawner’s Book Store. NUMBER 36