Newspaper Page Text
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w eCriFFin Daily News.
VOLUME 17
ScImimi & White
RECEIVED DURING THE WEEK
CHALLIES
fa In Lovely Patterns*
These Uhallies are in new designs, heautitul goods
and very cheap. The colors are also fast.
1
Li
JUST RECEIVED.
THE FIFTH INVOICE OF
Embroidered
Swiss Flouncmgs
Received during the week. We America,thereby buy these goods di¬
rect from !he largest importer in sav¬
ing the middle man’s profit. This is why our Embroi
deries and Laces are always cheaper than others shown
in this market.
Our Remnants
White Goods
Are well known to the ladies, and have made for them¬
selves a reputation. We thought there was enough to
turnish this whole country, but the first lot has been
sold and the second lot just received.
GREAT MANY SAY IT IS VERY DULL !
But our trade has been remarkably good for a dull
season. The reason for this is whin money is scarce,
we make prices to suit the times to attract the trade.
And We Get It, Too!
TOO SMI STRAW RATS
And in order to close them out we will sell men’s straw
hats regardless of price ; absolutely at your own price.
ADLER’S FINE SHOES FOR MEN !
We are agents for this well known make of Shoes, and
carry constantly a full assortment of styles. Shoes to
suit boys, young men and old men. Remember that
we give a guarantee on every pair of these Shoes, and
if not just as represented, another pair will be given
you and old ones returned.
MATTINGS ! MATTINGS ! ! MATTINGS ! ! !
The U.Q prettiest assortment u*tiVA»v of V*. patterns,^the J»-------------. best grade — «.
of f goods goods ever ever offered in this market. Prices to suit
everybody, at
Sherman & White’s
GRIFFIN GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE *( I88»
hmm
GRIFFIN,: : : GEORGIA,
Has Been Appointed Land Agent foi
Spalding Counly,
all by theGeorgia parties having Bureau of Immigration, and
land for sale can expedite
the sale by placing their property in bis
hands.
Full particulars in regard to the most val-
nable lands in this count; can be obtained
houses buttressing and lands mm as above. A full list o
and lots of all description
Tax Receiver’s Notice
FOR 1SS8.
I will he at the different precincts on the
dates mentioned for the purpose of receiving
State and County Tax for 1888 :
At Sunny Side, Tuesday, April Srd, May 1st
and June f>th
At Union, Wednesdday, April4tb, May 2nd
and June 6th.
At Mt. Zion, Thursday, April 5th, May 3rd
and June 7th.
At Line Creek, Friday, April 6tb, May 4th
and June 8th.
At Cabin, Tuesday, April 10th, May 8th
and June 12th.
At Akin, Wednesday, April 11th, May 9th
and June 13th.
At Griflin every Saturday until the hooks
are closed on July 1st. Offlc ice at Brick Ware
house. R. A. HARDEE, T. R., 8 C.
m ar25-3m
NOTICE
To Executors, Administrates, Guar¬
dians and Trustees.
Notice is hereby given to all executors, a
ministrators, make their guardians and trustees, to
annual returns between now and
the first Monday in July, 1888, at 10 o’clock
a. m., at my office in Griffin.
E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
May 31,1888.
State of Georgia”!onds~
FOUR AND ONE-HALF PER CENT.
Executive Office, Atlanta, Ua., June 1st,
1888.—Under the authority of an act approv
ed September 5th, 1887, authorizing the Gov
ernor and Treasurer to issue bonds of the
State to an amount, not to exceed nineteen
hundred thousand dollars, with which to pay
off that portion of the public debt maturing
January reeoeived 1st, 1889, sealed of proposals will be
at the office the Treasurer of
Georgia, for up to 12 o’clock in., on July 6th
next, one million nine hundred thons
and dollars of four and one-half per cent,
coupon bonds (maturing as herein set forth)
to be delivered October 1st, 1888.
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
January 1,1898.
One hundred Thousand dollars to n: atare
January 1, 1899,
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
JairuaTy 1, 1900.
One hundred thousand dollors to mature
January 1, 1901.
One huudred thousand dollars to mature
January 1,1902,
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
January 1, 1903.
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
January One hundred 1, 1904.
thousand dollars to mature
January One hundred 1,1905.
thousand dollars to mature
January 1, 1906.
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
January One 1,1907.
hundred thousand dollars to mature
January hundred 1,1908.
One thousand dollars to mature
January 1, 19Gt.
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
January hundred 1,1910. thousand
One dollars to mature
January 1,1911. thousand
One hundred dollars to mature
January hundred 1,1912.
One thousand dollars to mature
January 1 1913.
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
January 1, 1914.
One hundro 1 thousand dollars to mature
January hundred 1,1915. thousand
One dollars to mature
January The 1,1916, denomination
bonds to be in of one
thousand dollars, with semi-annual coupons
due on the 1st day of January and July of
ea«h year respectively.
The principal and interest payable in Gov- the
city of New York, at such place as the Treas
ernor may elect, and at the office of the
nrer of the State, in the city of Atlanta, Geor
gin. Bids must be accompanied by oertified
check or checks—certificate of deposits at
some solvent bank or bankers, or bonds of
the State of Georgia for five per cent, of the
amount of such bid, said checks or certificate
of deposit being made payable to the Treas
urer of Georgia.
Bids will be opened by tho Governor and
Treasurer and declared by the sixteenth of
Jnlynext, the State reserving the right to
reject any or all of said bids.
The State will isssue registered bonds in
lieu of any of the above named bonds, as
provided in said act, at any time on demand
of the owner thereof.
Copies of the act of the General Assembly
authorizing this issue of bonds will be fur
nished on applidation to the Treasurer.
JOHN B. GORDON, Governor.
R. U. HARDEMAN, Treasurer.
june&2aw-4w
MAN WANTS BUT LITTLE
Here below, but he Want* that little
mighty quick. A
I
•r a big one is promptly filled by ad¬
vertising in the Daily or
Weekly NEWS.
CRYING FOR PR0TEC fON !
THE GREAT NEED OF THE REPITB
LICAN PARTY.
Very Meagre Mews From the .Nations
Convention of Malcontents
at Chicago.
Special to the N Ews.
Chicago, June 21. —Tho platform
has been report from the committee
and adopted. It favors a total re
peAl of the internal revenue rather
than to interfere with the cherished
Republican doctrine of protection:
declares against the Mormons and
demands one cent letter postage.
The usual plank is in it, declaring
the nation‘8 eternal gratitude toward
the soldiers and Bailors and asking
for more pensions.
On the call of States for oounioa
tions for the presidency, God. Jos.
R. Hawley was put in nomination by
Connecticut as her favorite sou; Illi
nois nominated Gresham, the nomi
nation being seconded by Robert
Lincoln; Harrison was nominated by
Indiana. The convention then ad
journed until three o'clock in the af
ternoou.
We are indebted to the Constitu
tion for the above meagre news. Ar
rangementa bad been made for more,
but with the telegraph office here
closed at eight o'clock no more could
be received. The bulletins which
were so liberally advertised to be
giveu free by tho Western Union
company were not bandied at this
office.
The Adulteration of Kisses.
Considerable alarm is beiug ex
pressed jnst now by a good
of the northern editors over a lesson
they draw from the recent severe ill
ness of a yoang man in Pennsylvan
is.
It seens that this youth was attack
ed by a violent and mysterious dis
ease which came very near proving
fatal, and which for some time baf
fled all the efforts of the physicians to
diagnose its cause. When, however,
they finally sccceeded they did it in
this way:
The young man had a best girl, of
whom he was very fond. The girl
had very rosy cheeks, and the young
man, so the doctors found in the pro
secution of their professional inves
tigations, was in the habit of kissing
those cheeks where they were richest
and ripest. Furthermore, these
learned medicine men discovered
that the roses of the girl's cheeks
were not natural, but artificial, pro
dneed by the application of certain
cosmetics known to the female toilet
table, that those cosmetics werepois
onoue, and that their patient in kise
ing the girls bad pai taken ot so much
of her color that he was poisoned
and nearly lost his life thereby.
Granted that (his is all true we
confess our inability to understand
the consternation the case is creating
among tho yonuger of our masculine
contemporaries,of the north. To all
of us their talk about the danger of
kissing and the necessity of swearing
off is sheer nonsense. We cannot
see how tho case of this young man
has any gen ^ral application among
the people if taste. In the first
glace, a man who would kiss a j.i.1 on
the cheeks deserves no sympathy,
whatever may be the consequences.
In the next place a man who woold
kiss a girl who paints ought to be
poisoned, and if tbo act itself carries
with it its own proper penalty it aim
ply saves somebody the trouble of
throwing him dog-button
The outcry which our northern
contemporaries are making over
case is not in the least
to the girls of that section. Is it
sible that so many of them paint
this would indicate? We refuse
believe it. At the same time
invite such of our northern
poraries as are dissatisfied with
NICE 10 PIECE BANDED CHAMBER SET.
Only $ 2,001
Ami Everything in Crocker}'Line
COST!
G. W. CLARK & SOM a
complexions of their girts to cmne
out to Kentucky, where tbo roees
of our sweethearts’ are perennial
bloomers, always warranted to wash;
and paradoxical as it may so\)nd,
while their tints cannot be extracted,
albeit they somehow rush over him
whose lips come in contact with
them as though they were a whole
summer rainbow twining about him
and making a May pole of his spiual
column—a rainbow, in sooth, one
end of which rests in the gardens of
the Hesperides and the other in a jug
of sugar-house molasses.
Come sonth, young man, come
south.—[Courier Journal.
Grinding Him Down.
From thoArkansaw Traveler.
“I does think I got the trifenest
boy dat ebber libed in dish yare
country,” said an old negro who bad
met h white acquaintance.
“What is the matter with him?”.
“Oh, he ain’t no ’count, dat’s whut
de matter wid him. Come an’ stoled
my chickens, he did, and sold ’em,
an’ gin de money to my wife.”
“It was wrong to steal the chick¬
ens.”
“Yaz, It wuz, an’ he knowd dat.
Yas, he did; he knows bow I wuz
’rested on ercouot o’ dem chickens,
an’ tuck up ’fo’ de Cou’t. an’ how I
come mighty nigb go/n’ to de peai
tenchy. He knows dat I bad ter
keep dem chickens hid fur or munt’,
and den he come an’ steal ’em dat
way. It makes mad ter think dat er
boy will treat his daddo dat er way.
Chiliun deze days ain’t got no rev
unce nohow. Come er stealing my
chickens.”
“Where did you get the chick
ens?”
“Whar I get de chickens?’’
“Yes.”
“Whut you wanter come foolin’
wid me dat way for? Is I done you
any harm dat you wanter com ? er
slandrin’ me?”
“I merely asked you—”
“You merely wants ter slander me,
dat’s whut yer wants. Kan’t er man
hab chickens widout you come roun,
yare cusin’ him of stealing ’em?”
“I didn’t say that you stole them.”
“Mout ez well. Come axin’ me
wbar I git dem chickens. I’s had
enuff trouble ’bout ’em already wid¬
out you cornin’ roun’ tryin’ ter make
me feel bad. I ain’t no fool dat you
should come at me in sich er way ez
dat. l’se er bones’ man, an’ I gwine
hab you tuck up fur slander ef yer
doan watch out what yer doin’. No
wondrr dc cullud geuerman ain’t got
ho t-how in dis country when de
whi i; folks nil tryin’ ter griu’ him
don ii.”
Orchard liiil Items.
Orcharb Hill, Ga., June 21.—
We are having plenty of ram at the
present; too much for cotton. Fine
corn crops but poor cotton crops. I
beg the Judge’s pardon; I think be
is mistaken about fine cotton. 1
haven’t seen any yet.
There was a large crowd at the
Baptist church last Sunday; the re
port got abroad that there would be
an all day singing. As there was
no singing a good many were f job
Mrs. E. R. Cook is visiting l„»
moth, r at Zebulon.
I regret very much to stale that
Mrs. Martha Bond happened to a
very sad accident, scalding her foot.
Hope she will soon recover.
Chickens getting ripe; time for
(ranted meeting. Rat.
NUMBER 18*
A GREAT WONDER.
Mme. fttten. Who TeilrYwtsr Ttwaght*, •"*T
Reads Letters While fliied- fel d ed .
So absorbing is popular interest in
spiritualistic manifestations that bun
dreds of sleigh t«.oMiand performers
have taken to the road, of late years,
and continue to humbug the people
with their so called medianniatic so
tertoioments. Their deceptive math
ods disgust the thinking mmwee, also
retard genuine study and research
into the mysteries of reel spiritual
phenomena. We have carefully ex
amined the criticism* of the leading
papers in regard to Madame Stem
who is to appear at Patterson’s Hall
Friday, June 22nd, and we ere pro
pared to assert that it * - old be im
possible to secure r mmenta
from such sources •-> use of
fluence or of money, end we must
therefore conclude that what ia said
of Mme. Steen’s performance Is true.
To reprint all that has been arid
would fill every page of this journal
and we therefore give but a few brief
expressions of leading j xunala: ‘ "
St. Louis Globe Democrat—
Strange force of power.
San Fnucisco Chronicle— The beet
exhibition of oceolt foroe of power
we ever saw on any stage.
Detroit Free P re ss— Mme . Steen
is the only medium who ever visited
Detroit and gave perfect satisfaction.
New York Hetald— The moat mar
veloos, thrilling and exciting exhibi
tion ever introduced to the American
public.
Chicago Times— Mme* Steen’s *e
ance at Hooley’s last night was most
wonderful.
Seats are now on sale at Patter*
son's Btore. You can’t afford to
miss this wonderful performance.
" 111 ' B Sf lUU ' .iS S SSHBS 1 —l.,, 1 .....' l BBB*
*AKlH c
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This Powder never varies. A marvel a
parity, strength sad whotesomaem. More
economical than the ordinary with kinds, mniUtt and as
not be sold in oompotttoai Uton the
owdis ix)., no wau sum, lot 4th jw*
eta-d&wlvtoo column or ease.
JUST ARRIVED!
THE YERY LATEST STUBS
-OF-
NEW-:- AND BEAUTIFUL
rS-8UMMER HATS
Lowest Prices!
-Jot-
JjT Do not fail to eail and examine.
MRS. M. L. WHITE,
Cor. Hill and Broadway.
m3 PATER'
■. ** » *% -<*r Stone {*!