The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, April 05, 1888, Image 1

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T^GrifFin Qaily ■ * News. OLUME 17 it WHAT MAY APPEAR TO BE ★ If ASH A SSFJl 7'TO NS ★ BACKED BY ★ SOLID PACTS! ★ i A thing o 1s a Joy Lorerer' k mt Pieman & White’s RENEWED FACILITIES FOR DISPLAYING THEIR BEAUTIFUL NEW SPRING STOCK, COUPLED WITH THE MOST TASTILY AR¬ RANGED, AND CAREFULLY BOUGHT STOCK FOR THIS SEASON, MAKES THEIR THEIR STORE MOST AT¬ TRACTIVE IN ★ MIDDLE - GEORGIA ! * fcarTHERE IS NO DENYING THAT ATTRACTIVE SURROUNDINGS ADD GREATLY TO THF BEAUTY OF ALL THINGS. WE HAVE SPARED NEITHER PAINS NOR MONEY To Please both the Fancy and Pockets of our Customers. From the moment you enter until you leave it, attractive displays greot you ON EVERY SIDE t But greater surprises still await you, as our polite and attentive salesmen give the prices on ah these novelties and staples. We are show¬ ing a beautiful line of HENRIETTA CLOTHS AT 25 CENTS With Moire Silk at 75 cents to match, that we consider Bargains, These ore goods that were bougot at a Bargain. SERG ES ! The Prettiest For 35 cents that are Assortment of SAT- worth anywhere 50 cts TEENS and GINGHAMS per yard. ever shown in Griffin, A FULL LINE OF ranging in price from’ GRAY WOOL SUITINGS ★ 10 c. to 25 c. at 25 cts. It will ab¬ Remnants ol French solutely do you good goods to Saheens for 10 worth look at these 20 c and 25 c. These attractions can’t Remnants of Zephyr last long,and when they Ginghams for 8 c. worth are gone we can get no 10 to 12 1-2 c. more ol them. I REMNANTS OF BLEACHING For 8 1 -2 c. worth 12 1 -2 c. remnants~of5vhite LAWN at half their Value. REMNANTS OF SCRIM. JUST THE THING FOR APRONS. Only ."» Cents. Fischues, Scarfs, and Light Weight Shawls a very popular Spring Wrap, our Prices never fail to sell. _l EMBROIDERED FL0UNCINGS from 25 c per yard to $2. ORIENTAL and EGYPTIAN LACE FL0UNCINGS from 50 c to $2 50 yard. Black Spanish Suimpure and Chantilly Flouncings. and Embroideries rum We ride rough shod over competition on prices in Laces PLAIN AND GILT BRAIDS, BRAIDED AND PASKEMENTERY SETS. r^-All Silk Moire Ribbons, in all shades. We have just added to our already full stock, Ladies Silk, Lisle and Gauze Underwear. Scheuerman & White. liR1FFIN GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING^ APRIL 5 1888 THE N liifeitatiiill 1 7 He pronounce our present Spring stock the luincsoniest ever shown in Gritlin. Mi: Ltos? says : “It’s all nonsense about people having no money to tray goods with. Advertise what we have and give the people Row Prices and they will settle the (juc-stioii iliorusclves as to the money.” Satins! Satins! Satins! I case of beautiful Satins, all colors, at 10 cents per yard. These goods Lyons in this ireek, so 1STe Depth of Wave Action. The depth to which wave action ex¬ tends has been differently estimated, hut it varies from seventy feet to 150 feet, a a shellfish which are known only to live at these dept Its are thrown upon the shore during heavy gales, ami it has been as¬ certained that shingle is moved in a depth of fifty feet. For all practical purposes, however, so far as harbor works are concerned, it is found that there is little movement of materials under eighteen to twenty feet below water, the foundations of breakwaters hitherto constructed not having been dis¬ turbed below these levels.—The Scots¬ man. Unfailing Spec fic for Liver DISEASE. ^YMPTOMQ > Bitter or bad taste in O IIYI1 I UIVIO i mouth; tongue coated white or covered with a brown fur; pain in the back, sides, ot joints—often mistaken for Rheumatism; sour stomach; !u.,s of appe¬ tite; sometimes nausea and w ater-brash, or indigestion; bowels flatulency and acideraotations; headache; alternately costive and lax; to have been done; debility; low spirits; a thick, yellow appearance of the skin and eyes; a dry cough; fever; restlessness: the sedlme'nt. :ii ‘ lowed to stand, deposits a SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR iriRELi YEGiTtBii) I- generally used in the South to aronx- tin Torpid Liver to a healthy action It act. with extra ordinary efficacy on the Liver, fflieys anil Bowels. AS EFFECT CAL SPECIFIC FOR Malaria. Bowrt Complaint* llTtpeprla. Mick MeatJacbe, (oniripation, Billion*n«***. Kidney Affection*, ianndlcc. Colic. Colic. Mental Dt-prenioa. Universally admitted to be THE BEST FAMILY MEDICINE r for Children, i, , for Adults, .. .. and , , fer the 4 , Aged . , ovLt t-Kvi ivr. has oar Z Stamp in red on front of Wrapper, H. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia, Pa., SOLKPKOPRIKTOKS. Price $1 oe THIS PAPER r> ~x Advertising Burras; s*ftWtor (10 Spruce St i>* .». wtv-r- NtW advert \ OK”* i - >qf po®;ravu ***# i > it EW Y ..... . Loaded : /> I H ere Marked 15 cents. >ijo Y aid ft Lovely Patterns almost its fine as tue French Satina, and bring: everywhere U) cents, now offered at 12W cents Yards French Satins elndcd, everywhere—Atlanta and Macon in- at 35cent*. We sell them at 'ft < Cashmere! Cashmere! t>-‘0 Yards very line twill Cashmere, a’i the Shade?, including the New Shades, Splendid Value, At IIrents. ?4h Y:uds 4o inch Cashmere in the very latest shades, at 4o*eents per yard. The Bargain of the Season tends to look out and In ntv” Yo DEEP FLOWING. Colonel (i. W. Foster Tells How he Gave a Farmer a Lesson In Stibsoiliug. Atlanta Cor Macon Telegraph. The office of Capt. Bob Mann, No. 4 K-'mbai! House, is the resort every evening ol a number of gentlemen who drop in to have a social chat while enjoying an after sapper segar. D :ring these meetings some of the members of the club usually tell an interesting anecdote or re lafe some instructive story. A few evi nings ago Col. Geo. W. Foster told a good one illustrative of the results of deep plowing. Said he: ‘’When the East Ten and Atlanta, } had a contract to du, some of the work When I reached Smith’s Mills 1 found an old farmer who owned a piece of bottom land over which I was compelled to hnnl t° make . a nil. ,,,. I asked the man M ««•» owr «. and be refit cd to do so. He told rue that the little of bottom laud, . . piece which was not more than three acrep, was all that he had upon which to raise corn, ud that if the wagons tan over it,.be land would b< it .' 80 hard he could never break it tip again . |j e > aa( ] about twelve bun dred acies, but he said that the three acre plot was all that he couid raise any com on. J offered to give him j §150 for his three acres, and told him when 1 got through making the * gJJ J would give B him LlS land back. To this proposition he demurred, aDd I did not know what to do with the fellow. I had to go over the ! . j rand some way and knowing this, I made another break at bim. In coming at bim I told bim that if he would allow me to use the land I would take my railroad plows and break np the land for him eighteen iW (/) own : With XJXj SERGES! ★ SERGES !★ SERGES! 15 pieces full double width Serge? in the new shades of Goblin Ocean depths,Separte, Inferno, Italian Bine nnd Hungarian Green Only 55 Cents per Yard ! HENRIETTAS! HENRIETTAS ! HENRIETTAS ! It is simplv out of the question to get n prettier fabric than the soft rich surface of . the Henrietta. Wo have them In the all wool in all shades and prices. the hmnmi you will sec Saturday , March Hist. --.(jot)*--- Five and a half pounds Good Rio toffee for $1. 42 lbs Pearl Grits for $1. Lemons 20c doz. Fancy Crackers 15 c lb. Fine Yellow Bananas. Oat Flakes in Bbls. Dove Brand Beef, Dove Brand Hams, Ice Cured Bellies. Pickle Pigsfeet, No. 1 Mackerel, Codfish and Irish Potatoes. Fish and Oysters. Fresh Bread and Rolls, and all Fresh Eatables of Season. Call to-day. c. w CLARK & SON. inches* deep. He considered my proposition for a moment or two and then told me to go ahead. After I hid made '.he till I took four plows, each palled by four mules and “busted'’ up his three acre patch in a hurry, and he and I sepa rated on the best of terms. The year following I met this old man here n Atlanta. He hunted me up and found me on the works. He to!me he had come to Atlanta to b y four plows like the ones that I ha used in breaking up bis land. Wh< u I asked htm what he wanted with tl eiu. ho told mo that his three acres which had been yielding bint about twenty five bushels of corn to the acre, was now producing fully s. verity five bushels to the acre, and that he had attributed the increase to ruy d ep plowing i went with Imn to a store and he purchased four four ho:?e p.o v < and shipped them to ni» U jine. 1 met him here ags.n a few days ago, and e told me that fie was ratsi' g more corn aid cotton than he knew what to do with. He 1 that be Uf.d 1 token up a large o . ^ tity c.' land with his four horse plows, a..d that he was dorng well. Several years before I waB at Smith’s Mills tbia man bad sold a farmer from Ohio a tract of about one hundred and twenty five rcrea of land. The Ohio man used two - NUMBER 62 TORE SILK TRIMMING ! SILK TRIMMING! In these g.,ods we stand far aheed of oth rr* in point The of cheapness and variety of pfain pat terns. stock embraces Moire’’In •triped and barred. SURRAHS In plain and Irredescenl. Solid hurrahs with changeable effect* in stripes and plaids. In this department w« also show • NOVELTIES in Silk and Gilt Braids, r- tdg line of Worsted Braid Bets, w! -cutty of design and LOYV PRICE will H lijtw anything in the State. u(j wheel i 11 ■ ill mules to tbe plow, and the Georgia man could not see how the Ohio man was outdoing bim in corn, when none of the tract was bottom land. My friend tells roe now (bat be is using two mules to tbe plow and that bis 1 and has never gotten bard since I broke it up for him ” ____ ................. POWDER Absolutely Pure. This Powder never vane*. A marvel o narity, itrength and eholesotnneae. More economical than tbe ordinary kinds, end cm not be sold in competitonvritb toe multitude of Powder*. low test, «hort weight, in alum Rora't.SaKHW or phosphate Hold only oan*. Powpkr Co., 106 Wall Street, New York