The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, April 18, 1888, Image 4

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PURE DRUGS! f 4N0Y TOILET A1ITICLEH, LEADING PATENT MEDICINES, PASTEUR REMEDIES, AND EVERYTHING KEIT IN A First-Class - Drug - store. At wholesale and Retail. *Sr 8yrup of Figs and Hasselkns’ Wine. Prcucrip- H B tta filled at alt hour# of Day or Night. Paiute, Oils, Etc., Etc. PR. E. R. ANTHONY’S DRUG STORE. R. J. DEANE, PHOTOGRAPHER. PICTURE FRAMES MADE TO ORDER. 0T Old Picture*, Copied and Enlarged. GrlBa, Ga., April IS. JACK H. POWELL, ■PROPRIETOR OF--- IMS’S FIRST-FUSS LIVERS ★ STABLES,★ IIroadway street. Finest Turnouts and Best Horses to be Had. fgg“ Tertua Most Reasonable and Strictly CASH to all! apr3 wed, fri.su Urn Tie Eire Stock of Goods ST1LWELL & KEITH, Art being sold at a GREA SAC- fHFICE. These goods MUST BE SOLD! lAgg.The Most of them are Fresh, First-class Goods. Oenuiue Bargains May be had. Come while you can find what you want. J. F. STILWELL, Receiver 23 Hill St., GRIFFIN. GA Jan. 3Ut, 1888,-d&w FUNERAL NOTICE. The friends and acquaintances of Mr. and Mrs, B. N. Burrow are inrit ed to attend the funeral of their little daughter Jannie,from thier residence at 2.-30 this evening. House ami Lot for Sale. The nine room house known as the Nall place, corner of Solomon and Sixth streets. One Bquare from business portion of city. Splendid Ad place for day boarding house. ply to C. P. or Tbo*. Nall. tf Situation Wanted. A lady desires a situation housework as nurse, and or can do general oooking, if required. Will be satis fied with low wages, and can give good references. Address •‘O/* care Nr.wa Office, Griffin, Ga. d&wtf. 400 Pairs of Shoes. I have just received 400 which pairs of Drummers* Sample Shoes, I will sell at less than New York cost. Call early Monday morciog before the assortment is broken. aprSJAwlw] It, F. Strickland r > NEW I.OT- Try our Imported Olive Oil! Russett — ★ Apples ! Durkee’s Salad Dressing Lemons Still 20c. per doz. f+CHEAPES f GRO » CER IN TOWN!+ J Jl'ST RECEIVED ★ BREADS★ — Another Firkin — - OUT AT 11 A M. -or 1HAT- EVERY DAY! FINF BUTTER f ’BOUND ABOUT. C*K«nla( P«opl« »»4 Goa • r»t I»«ri (iMtlp, E. V. Tinmmell, of Mrcob, is ia the city. O. W. Fulgham has moved his fami ly in tho city. Snpt. M. E. Gray, of the Georgia Midland, is in the city. Mias Hester Walker, of Cabins, is via iting friends in the city. Mrs. J. li. Frocman, of Sonoia, was in ho city yesterday shopiug. Mias Marie Hammond went up to At lanta yesterday on the 4:05 train. Mrs. J. T. Seats, of Concord, is visit mg relatives and friends in tbo city. Little Januie, infant daughter of Mr. ted Mrs. B. N. Barrew, died yesterday. Mr. Walter Malory, one of the clever est boys in Senoia, was in the city yes terdny, J. L, Patrick is building a hindsoms picket fence around his new home on Taylor Bt. Frank Woodruff, representing the Eagle and Phenix Mills, of Columbus, was here yesterday. Mrs. B. N. Miller, of Sunny Side, was in the city yesterday shoping and visiting friends. Walter Hill, of Hoilouville, was hero yesterday and reports everything in that aectioa right side np. Hon. ,T. D. Stewart is having his resi dence painted and when finished will be quito handsome. John McKinght, of iienoia, was in the city yesterday and left on the 4 p. m. train tor Monticcllo. Judge J. S. Popennd wif j of Zebulon, were iu the city yesterday. We are nl ways glad to sec the Judge. Mr. T. C. McLauriu is having his metalic roof painted which adds much to his already beautiful homo. Dr. J. M. Kelley will leave on the early train this morning for Borne, to attend the Georgia State Medical Associ ation. Everybody cordially invited to the prayer meeting at the Methodist church tonight. Services commence at 8 o’clock sharp. Clara Logan, Aurelia Tbrelkold and Sallie Williams got in a general tight on Slayton Avenue yesterday and was rnn in by the police, Henry Amos will leave this evening for Brunswick where he goes as one of the delegates from here to the State Baptist convention. J. J, Camp, of Orchard Hill, was iu the city yesterday and says he will soon go back on the Central as section boss. Mr. Camp is an old railroad man and knows just what to do to keep the road in first class order. Judge E. \V. Hammond returned yes torday from Flint river where he left a hungry and thirsty crowd from the quantity of provisions and—ho car tied back ou the Uo. Midland in the af ternoon. Success to yon fishermen. An Iiuportaut Arrest, The arrest of a suspicious character upon his general appearance, without move wait menta or companionship, traveler, fired ing until he has robbed a a bouse, or murdered a fellow-man, is an important function of a shrewd de tective. Even more impoitant is the ar rest of a disease which, if not checked, will blight and destroy a human life. Tae frequent cough, loss of appetite, general languor or debility, pallid skin, and bodily aches and pains, announce the approach which is of prunptly pulmonary arrested consump and tion, permanently cured by Dr. Pierce’s •‘Golden Medical Discovery." Sold by fi ruggists. “One fire burns out another s burning,'' ami most pain suffers mere to be cured, but Salvation Oil is painless and certain It costs only 25 cant#. LIFE IN WASHINGTON. THE MAtiXIFICEKT PUBLIC BUILD¬ INGS DESCRIBED. The White House, the UpitoJ, the Pen¬ sion Building, the Mnsenm, F,tr„ Etc., Etf. Special Correspondence Njcw*. Washington, April 14.—If I am to write the News anyways regularly, I think it may be proper for me to say something first o! this national capitol ao a city. Of coarse it is known that the early jealousy between the North Houth had to do with locating Was tgton on the muddy plain whi re it at da today. Across the Poto ..ac on the Virginia sboro the hills are beautiful and offered a charming site for tho location of a city. It has taken millions of dollars to lift Washington out of the inud, bat money will accomplish wonders and today it is tho most attractive town in America. Tbo most beautiful buildings in Washington U’ : o the govern menl of couisc, i ut of late years many magnificent bnildiugs have been raised by private means. There aro many private residences in this city which out strip in beauty and grandeur the President’s palace. In deed, the White House has little to commend it i l ie waj’ of arcbitectur al grace. Ii : mgs to a dead age, and was built, c judge, when our tal ent for designing houses was in its in fancy. It is very elegant inside, how over, has a great conservatory filled with choice plants and flowers and is surrounded by beautiful parking or namented with fountains. SpeakiDg of the White House re minds me, that very littlo of it is de voted to the private uses of the presi dentinl family. It is only two stories on a basement and is built of a spe cies of sandstone which is kept paint ed a brilliant white. I have been through most of tbo rooms, of the house and found to my surprise that only three or four chambers were re served. The basement bolds the kitchen, store rooms, etc., and the first or ground floor is made up of reception rooms, the red room, the green room, the great oast room, and the state dining room. Some of the rooms on tbo second floor are devot ed to office work. In a portion of the second story fronting north and west ate the chambers occupied by the President and Mrs. Cleveland, the samo rooms I may say, that have been occupied by all of our presi dents since the days of President Adams. The capitol Las been so often des cribed by newspaper writers that I will not mention it here. I think the new State Department building which cost £11.000,000 is next to capitol the most magnificent build iug. It has only lately been com pletcd and occupied. It required ten years to build it. The Treasury Department is perhaps the most in teresting of all to the visitor. Hun dreds of straDgers throng its long halls almost daily. The Department of the Interior is a building of grand proportions, and the Post Office De partment building is an exquisite structure just half a6 large and built of white marble. The new Museum and the new Pension Office are both notable landmarks. In the Pension Office a great hall, many thousands of square feet in area, has been con strticted. in which inauguration balls and other great State enteitaiuments are Leld. This immense room is at least three hundred feet long by one hundred wide and its lofty ceiling is a glass in colors. It is said that the person who bad the contract did not lei Congress know his plans until the building was almost completed, for fear the stingy members would vote to re fuse him means to finish it. 1 saw this vast hall decorated from floor j to roof last year when the doctors bad their convention here. Flags and flowers added to its wondrous beauty. Visitors will find plenty to interest them in these buildiugs for many dajs. It requires patience and repeated pilgrimages to see all. A porson might go to tho National Museum daiiy for weeks and yet see something new each day. Then there is the Medical Museum which is leldom visited by ladies, and Cor coransArt Gallery with its wealth of statuary, painting and art gems. This noble charity was n gift from tho late Mr. Corcoran to the people of Washington and up to the time of bis death he had spent abate j million dollars in works of arl to go in it. But I will not prolong this letter. It appears to mo now, that it is writ ten, that it will prove to be prosy for those of my friends who have summoned sufficient courage to read it through. Jkaho. HARALSON HAPPESSIGS. Items Gatherefl by One of Oar Ablest (’orrcF.pondenls. LIakalson, Ga., April 12. Farm ers, to you I will talk a bit to-night. What means the sugar trusts at tho North where from 1^ to 2^ per cent, ia off raw material and from 2 to 3 per cent, on the refined material? It means that the farmers produces the raw, and the trust produces the re fined. Here is a grand reason why farmers organizations should dot every hill top in the south, and espe cially the sugar growing districts. But again, what means tho ecent combination or guano trust, where 45,000,000 of dollars has been lump¬ ed together? It means tho raw material off, and refined on. Fay close attention right along here, it means a legion, first, to crush out Southern guano manufacturers, for the guano trust is a Northern con¬ cern. They can’t whip us politically they propose to starve us out, second ly, to buy our cotton seed at 20 cents per bushel “squash” out the very life of them and sell them back to us next spring, at 40 cents per bushel as a high standard guaao, “fiddle sticks” sell us the cotton seed oil as refined leaf lard. Buy our cot ton at 7 & 8 cents and sell 10 & 12 cents futures, and bold a congress at arms lenght. Demand laws of pro lection for their adulterous stuffs. Now farmers I know money is power, but what can money do without sub¬ jects? You already see yrur duty, why delay discharging said duty? This year, 1 told you some time ago, would be a year of elections, and its your privilege lo demand strenuous pledges from him who wishes so much to represent you in the halls of congress and state legis lafure. He that will not pledge leave at home, and if he pledges and fails to comply, impeach him! The southern manufacturers sees the slippery ground on which he stands now come out from among the evil doers and give the raw ma¬ terial maker an opportunity to make a little dividend while yon make a little and united we will beat back the opposing forces from the north, who come to subjugate you as well as we. I will here make an asser¬ tion, if every cotton raiser would curtail his crop to ten acres to the mule and plant the land in “hog end hominy,” next Christinas would bring forth the most glorious vic¬ tory in the south and west that was ever achieved. The farmer and laborer at the north as well as at the south are sufferers, when these trust companies combine their money, It • therefore, your bounded duty to come together, unite, organize and for¬ ever drive born office tho-e who will continue to assist monopolies to op¬ press the laboring classes, at the bal¬ lot box is i our place, there is your power, use it. I am not an an archists, but 1 am solid for low tariff and free luxuries too, twenty three years ago 1 laid down my musket not to take u up again unless to de¬ fend the star spangle banner. Every true southerners heart and hand is extended to immigrants lrom the cold bleak hills of the north, our latch strict/ hangs outside the doer. Come we welcome you to our hearths And homes, provided you come with honest purposes, come to live amorjg us, if so you are thrice welcome, if you have money come we will sel! you homes cheap, if yon are with out money come we will sell homes on time, come and bring a good citizenship with you. Ere long I will tell how kind 1 was treated by Ohio yankees ^God bless Sandusky City) soon after the sur¬ render. Let Ohio, IVnn. New Hampshire, especially come south. Some of us desire shariDg our south- eru hospitality with you. Miss Clara Williamsons has beeu quite sick is better at this writing. Miss Nannie Harrison, of Spalding is the guest of Miss Clara Wil¬ liams. Mr. J. VV. Brahfield paid a flyug, visit to Harris county last week. Miss Mollie Sibiey returned home last Wednesday. Prof. Willie Taylor and Mr- T. F, Hodnc-lt and Charlie Nixson spent Wednesday night on Line creek nnd cougbt a fine lot of fish. •Mr. Q. E. Smith and Lee Keenes took in Newnan last Monday. All the members of Haralson Ai- liauce No 129 are requested to meet at their hall Saturday before 5th Suu day 2 p. m. prompt, business of im¬ portance to attend to Editor Browne, of H. & A. of New nan, will deliver a S. S. address at our S. S. picnic. Cousin Dixie. “I Don’t Want Belief, But Cure,” is the exclamation of thousand- suf! ring from catarrh. To all such we say: Ua tarrh can be cured by Dr Sages’s Ca tarrh Remedy. It has been done in thousands of cases; why not in yours? Your danger is in delay. Enclose a stamp re World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y„ for pamphlet j on this disease. Central Builroad Tims Table. . NORTHWARD. Barnesville Special (Sunday only 7:45 a. m. Barnesville Aceommoda tion (daily except Sunday) 5:57 a. m. Passenger No. 3, 5:41 a. m. Passenger No, 11, 11:31 a. m. Passenger nnd Mail No. 1, 4:01 p. m. Passenger No. 13, 9:05 p. m. SOUTHWARD. Passenger and Mail No. 2, 8:20 a. m. Passenger No. 14, 11:20 p m. Passenger No. 12, 4:05 p. m. Barnesville Special (Sunday only) 4:58 p. m. Barnesville Aecommoda tion (daily except Sunday) 7:10 p m. Passenger No. 4, 8:43 p. m Two great enemies—Hood’s 6a rsaparilla de nd impure blood. The latter is utter ly eated by the peculiar medicine. ,"fuu. wci OTTF-N b. ■ nperior for excellence than proven in million* oi ' . .»e3 more a quarter of a cen turj. It isused by the United State* Gov eminent. Endorsed by the heads of the Great Universities as the Strongest, Purist and most Healthful. Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder does not contain Ammonia. I.ime, or Alum. Bold only in Cans. ^ PRICE BAKING POWDER CO. NEW YORK. CHICAGO. ST. LOUIS. d4thw8thp,top col.nrm notice to Debtors and Creditors. All persons indebted to the estate of 8. W Maugham, deceased, late hereby of SpaldingCouut notified to call ,Gearzia' are on the undersigned and make settlement of such in debteduess at once; and all persons having demands against said estate are notified to present their claims properly proven. apr4wG J. J. MANGHAM, Administrator. THE-;- VERY-:-LATEST STAPLES IN Hats, Bonnets, Ribbons, Feathers and all Othrr Trimmings have just been received at Mrs. M. L. WHITE’S, The Fashionable Milliner and Dressmaker, corner Hill and Broadway streets. Would examine be pleased to have everybody Prices call and my stock. JjjT the owest. A GOOD MULE! -bo:;---- Cheap for CASH or good NOTE! If you want a good load of wood send us one dollar and your or¬ der. J. H. KEITH & CO. E. J. FLEMISTER’S - SPECIAL BARGAINS ~ I OR THIS WEEK! t:o:;- All Wool Nun's Veilings, in desirable colors, 19c. well worth 30c. Wool Cashmer ' inches wide, in all new shades at 25c. Crepe Carreau i wool. 40 inches wide, at 50c.—value 80c. Grand reduc ...ins . i Silk Warp and Wool Henriettas. Blacks and Colors. Best quality St-rah Silks at 75c.. sold everywhere at $1 per yard. Great Cil in Prices 01 all Oiler Dress Goods ia Stock! Few Piec;„ Lack Silks at Your own Price! Late:i Trimmings to Match all Dress Goods! ‘Belford" 4 latte i Kids. Silk Embroidered, 65c. ‘‘Alexander ’d " ll “ $1.00 Splendid Black “ “ ” 1.00. ‘■Mather" Kids in Greys, Blacks and Tans, at $1.00 that retail the world over at $1.50. New Silk Gloves in Blacks and Colors. New Collars and Cuffs. One lot Ladies Hoes in Blacks and Assorted Colors, at 25c. on bargain counter, well worth from 40c. to 75c. Misses Silk Lisle Hose at 25c.—Grand Bargain. Colored Half Silk Dozens upon dozens Gents.’ Black amt Hose in Lisle, Clocked at 25c.. well worth double the money. -;:o: Hew Ginghams, Satteens, Prints, Lawns and Shite Goods - RECEIVED EVERY WEEK. •- Black Silk Spanish Lace Flouncing. Best value in city for money. Fine Line Torchon Laces Cheap. FASHION SHEETS for May, to Will have in a few days 500 BUTTERICK be GIVEN AWAY. Call and get one. -V.O-X- SHOE DEPARTMENT ! My Shoe Stock will be found the Largest and Most Gompleie in the city. New Slippers, for Ladies. Misses and Children. Special bargains in Men's Hand Sewed goods, in such celebrated Makes as Hanan’s, Emerson's and Sweet & Sherwood's. ----;:o:;---- sar Examine my CLOTHING SAMPLES from Jacob Reed's Sons. Will guarantee FIT and WORKMANSHIP, for less money than you pay for first- class ready-made work. W E HAVE OTHER BARGAINS AND SPECIALTIES that space forbids mentioning. All we ask is examination and comparison of prices of our goods with others. 63P Trade of all my former patrons solicited either for cash or on time. E. J. FLEMISTER. 51 and 53 Hill Si.