The Griffin daily news and sun. (Griffin, Ga.) 1889-1924, June 14, 1889, Image 3

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. P. H. David- ,thre 7 ^KS waSdftS Vigorf and wr¬ ithe entire ™«5S l in vain, id, none, merit as K^Xd! soon came out all over to be as soft and a natural H. Pratt, v. ’s Hair Vigor, r . J. c. Man. Bold by Druggist* and Perfumer*. TORPID LIV£R. liver deranges the tv Is /a* sk ia, Headache, Costiveness, Rheu- Saiicw Skin and Piles. i ^SSSTiSST *Stft'iS£r > a trial will prove. Price, »5e. Sold Everywhere. •few Advertisements. A BUSINESS EDUCATION . AT HOME. For circulat e, ad- dr^ C'UAKK’S COLLKGK, W- CURED NMAIH ■NESS pinMbaTBBStMtM I CBSHIOH Wklipcr. h«.rd dt.tt.eUj. Comfort. _ ... ..nitUi r-, :? CAV6A-M U : k .. j : 4 >. \ bn.;.ies the hair. i r..iK»i >• -v iuxarLuvt ftrowdi. I SfflSS '■ »*\ and ----- m.<*4 tTVnggtat JSMSK,li".I^^SsSK ttSESSHsS _?tiSs3;S or Dr. W.H.Parker, No.4 Bulfinch St.,Bo#ton,Ma*a —DERICK’S HAY Pf yF asa ^•°^0«if t ePth0;S »fw figgA NtSI^D&effik'sWorks. « of< - zabast. w. v, bo. CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS ESS CSOSS CIAMOSa BEASTS. fSSSSSSS, SnsiMtKSS IAPKS WzBmm *boh*rt »wd them. Name Paper. it Chemical Co„Madisoii Stt*FMIa*P* HIRES «* HIRJBSMMPIiOVED Mr ROOT BEER! IN LIQUID NOffOiUNC EASILY MADE THBMCKACE MAKES FIVE CAUONS /ivtz&Anoe ateZovr ■ a©oT BEER n» moat APPETIZING and WHOLESOME rEMPKKANCn DRINK in the world. TRTJT. f Aik Druggist Grocer for It. * your or | C. E. HIRES, PHILADELPHIA. '.,•5 AS oehtlemen. OR LADIES. H - SCHOOL SHOES. vnoUtoropi* i $2.00 Shoes r ^r^rt * | FOB Bits 4r :& aE^ssrtsrjsrvt ........ » it was Chancery lane limbed chancery. law Law shop winch, i* lull of books. Law signs evei*v wh f Ur everywhere. Groat dingy oi' lions,* lull of law. Law oozing out every civvioe. More windqjvs full of lawyers wigs Saw at last real lawyer on shiewaik un¬ der full sail in wig and gown eiu ryfng satchel. Followed him until uis;i|>|><'aj*- ance in dingy doorway. Could hardly believe my eyes. Real British lawyer. Santo Its on American stage Wandered from Chancery into the Strand. Thence, somehow oro.Vr. into Fleet street. Next Parlia.ne.it street. Saw very long building b.Uiiug with turrets. Big church Par!iuinor>l*i:i<T close bv Asked names. Houses of tVest- winftter Abbey! Kept going Gn-. in a park. Found ugly bp. house x.i it No end of carriages rolling up to it - Red coats, cltajceaus and feathers insult* of curriages, oirmon Sill; stockings, plush coats on more men outside of carriages; on more men clinging out iiehiud. Two, sometimes three, holding on to each Other. Footmen. Fo^iul myself Uwtking at outside of a queen’s drawing room. Queen, Victoria; palace. Buckingham; park, St. James. Good as a circus Bet¬ ter. Starod. at ai istocmcy's show bal¬ ance of afteftiooti. Never dreamt such things could be outside of an ' English novel.' - Saw all this inside of seven hours. Found all at once my legs very tired. Stomach very hungry. Had forgottett all" about these useful accessories, which had done a long day’s work for ma Tqok them to cheap tavern. Filled stom¬ ach- for one shilling Tea, toast, eggs and ham. Rested legs. Bed one shil¬ ling. Ditto for breakfast. Started out next morning on same mission. Wan¬ dered. Saw. Wondered. Came on place3 without warning had heard of all my life. No guide. No guide book. Sudden and seif discovery adds to inter¬ est. Temple Bar. St. Martin’s Lane. Seven Dials. The Monument. The Tower. The Tunnel. Hyde Park. Re¬ gent’s ditto. Kept going in this way for three days. Slept in tavern where night overtook . me. Came out at last where started from. Euston Square station. Month May. Be§t time for sight seeing on this plan. ■ Sixteen hours of daylight. No dark¬ ness till 0 in the evening. And even 0:80. Queer to see people going to theatre at 1 p. m. Two hours beforecandlo light. Re¬ verse in November. Sixteen hours of darkness then. The rest fog and rain Sky about one hundred feet overhead. Color lead. Monuments and steeples lost in fog. Rain perpetually intermittent Any sort of day called “fine” if no rain. Rains easy; without warning. Rains without notice or provocation, dears up only to. rain as hard as ever ten min utes afterward. Rains one minute in mist Then in fine drops. Then in driz¬ zle. Then in great coarse drops. Then in mist again, and programme as before. Rain or sTiine, no one goes out without an umbrella. As soon go out without hat Rains so much that Londoner forgets all «*t iU I’eopla tUraw<to«’V*«B*wfc “ts rains’’ as we do. Expect it will rain anyway. As breathe soon think of saying “There’s air to this morning.” High class young lady rides horseback in Rotten Row. Shower comes on. Doesn’t mind it Rides un¬ der tree. Rain pours tlirough. Gets drenched. Doesn’t mind it Matter of course. Weather clears. Rides on, even if wet to skin. No waterproof. No um¬ brella. London in November all rain, smoke, fog and umbrellas. Universal color lead. No red brick. Houses two- thirds mud color. One-sixth charcoal color. Smoke of centuries. Dome of St Paul’s black as your hat. Traces of smoke everywhere. On outer walla Inner walls dingy cream color. Bed sheets and pillow cases smoky yellow. Smoko gets in suds. Collars and cuffs same color. American whiteness of same wonder to London laundry woman. Never resume American whiteness after first washing. N. B.—Reader will excuse this style. Not elegant. But does away with words that tell nothing. Desire to tell as much as possible without waste of words, time, ink, paper and space. Too many useless words in our language. Make a show but do nothing. Verbal tramps. Lim gual loafers. Language needs weeding. * Prentice Mulfokd. Nothing Is Lost. “Twill print it for you, if you‘wish," said the editor, kindly, as he Humorist glanced from the joke to .the Youthful standing timidly and wisely close to the door, “but we can’t pay you very much for it, because we have printed it once or twice ourselves, and the man who owned’ the paper before the present company bought it ran it a couple of years in a tooth wash advertisement, But I’ll tell you what you might do with it,” he added, as he noticed the falling countenance of the Youthful Humorist “you might take it to The Educator and Palladium; they are running a prize joke department in their Sunday edi¬ tion.” Tlie Y. II. entered it ih competi¬ tion and took the So 00 prize. —Bob Bur¬ dette. _ Smoking by Proxy. Ira Tripp, a millionaire coal operator of Scranton; Pa., was told a few years ago by his physician that he must either quit smoking or die. As lie didn’t. Want to die lie quit smoking. He loved the odor of tobacco. however, and still en¬ joyed it by frequenting the-company of smokers.. But gs they did hot always smoke good tobacco, he finally adopted the plan of hiring a man to smoke con¬ stantly in his presence, Mr. Tripp fur¬ nishing the cigars, which of course are of .the finest quality. Thus far the man enjoys it, although he sometimes feels that lie is a little crowded, —Now York Tribune. . . Seemingly Eradicated With repeated and powerful doses of quinine, chills and fever, rer, in i’ some one of its various V int ito active existence again, evervliWrerimr vestige ofU Nay, more, 1 , i H_ This t . without reference . to _ was his painted student like days others when from he the drew model; and recognized not pose.” the Always fact that looking “nature does her animate—-moving and living—he upon as recorded by the most simple means the stable facts observed during na¬ ture’s transitions. With the excep¬ tion of several painted studies of his parental home, and of other places dear to his childhood memories, which were in fact pictures in every sense, and well composed shade, and probably effective from m light drawn na¬ ture, but. painted taore from •memory, I have never seen any work from na¬ ture of Millet’s that was not memo¬ randum like in character, indicating principal by outline and shadow the contour; accenting here ana there a prominent or important which muscle, he would or some particular form find to be the key td the expression sought of the form or action which he Almost all other painters have left us studies elaborately wrought out either detail in color and or ip research chalk, surpassing the parts even in the in picture for which these studies were used. Upon my first visit to Millet he took from his pocket a sketch book about two and a half by three and a half inches in size, anef showed me upon one of these little pages his studies for the wheat ricks; which were the called principal “Winter.* obj« hire ----- like many others of the same charac¬ ter, was a masterpiece; every line was in light and shade, the attempted. texture of This the straw, the artist etc., supplied was not in his painting— studies not by in more color, elaborate but by his drawings knowledge or and memory, and by the observation of other wheat ricks under similar ef¬ fects as those presented in his picture. Some of his landscape studies in outline with pen and ink were the ex¬ act record of proportion and construc¬ tion, resembling rather the work of a topographical engineer. The other qualities of the landscape were too fleeting. He had copied all that would pose for him, as with the ricks; his memory and knowledge The supplied Century. the rest—Wvatt Eaton in Took Him Down a Peg. One of the oldest inhabitants in Bootbby, was met by a scribe some ing days tale since, of and how regaled ho and by his the better follow¬ half had prided outwitted Triaasolf a smart his ’ knowledge nephew who of I on tilling the soil. “You see," , MWWwWM ri Hhni - uwrrtto man, “this smart nephew of mine came down from Bristol to make me and the old lady a visit, so, of course, I had to show him my bit of a farm, which, considerin’ ef I do say the it, rocks is a putty a-growin’ good one upon it” “Nephew’s name is Joshua, and 1 fust took him along to ther hog pen. They’re likely creeters, and Josh' turned up his nose at ’em and said: “ ‘Huh! them’s nothin’ but shotes. Yer orterseo mine up to Bristol.' My, but they’re big fellers.' “I said nothin’, but look him along to see my cows, as handsome animiles as can do found' hereabouts. Josh sniffed, and said; “ ‘Huh, them’s Bristol—your’s nothin'; yer orter is see mine up to • mere calves to ’em f quiet “I was Next gettin’ I showed, a bit riled, him but hen¬ kept filled with fine birds, but my nery as soon as Josh laid eyes on ’em he laughed right n ‘ ‘Ha, out liai” snickered he; ‘what u miserable lot of feathered bipeds—yer orter see mine u; *‘I was a-bile ffi cool outwards. That evening I ________________ _ and she my said wife how Jerusha all about able it, fix him as she was to and lake the conceit out of him. Je¬ rusha is mighty pert on taktu* folks down. Watt, Josh went to his virtu¬ ous couch, as the poets say, but it want long afore he was up again, and he didn’t stop to dress hisselr, nuther. He came prancin’ out of his room like all possessed. ‘Jake ’em off! take ’em off 1’ “ “I thought as how he had the hor¬ rors from drinkin’ too much apple jack, but I see clingin’ to his legs an’ shirt, an* nippin’ liim, several live lobsters. Then I had to laff. Jerusha snickered too, but said calm-like; “ ‘Huh I tbem’s nothin’ but bed bugs; ’sjiose you have ’em bigger up to Bns- “We picked the green critters off poor Josh and put ’em back in the box where Jerusha had ’em previous ip puttin’ ’em in has bed. It took Josh down more.'”-Boothby a peg, and he’s now on earth once (Me.) Register. I» S #nlous Phonography, Among of g the the many phonograph, Ingenious appli- a means [idflmr HK;. WK will be valuable occurs. This device to ing the them railroad from companies the exaggerated in protect¬ who injured pre¬ tensions ef persons Are on the trac the fact 1851, foretold In a has said, brought “presently to pasa “The dudl sun organize pains,” he we the shadow*. the echo, as we now do -New Yo rk Telegram. ' Saved from Consumption. Several Rowley, physicians Druggist, predicted of Chicago Mr. Asa B. would soon have consumption caused by an aggravated case of Catarrh. Customers finally induced him to try Clarke’s Cartarrh Extract Cure.' He of Flax (Papiilon) says I( suit was unprecedented. application to get well after the first and am now, after a few weeks, en¬ tirely cured.” skill of paid -ensic wares to be That such er- are not :ly successful can be! Sometimes are slgr.„ resaw no dou tiee is d< suspicious. Pat Proctor Knott wrote the celebrate , Dulutb speeches is even yet hardly determined question. Certain it is neither has made so decided a Bimce that time, and there is some¬ about its breezy similes which like the gonial kniglit-errunt of the when at his best, despite the fierce of the statesman’s adherents- is a question of “one says and denies; which do you believe, The riddle will probably unsolved as long as “the city of the unwilled sens” Is to fame. M no remedy Sarsaparilla. fo. dyspepsia more successful Hood’s It acts gently, yet and efficiently, tones the stomach and «r*- and _. !« «r, re- the (burdened i Hood’s Sar- afairtrial. (d> commons, going to speak later on in the and he had a large roll of which he was looking through. “I never learned a speech but once,” said, “and then I cud Hot remember But 1« consider that no one ought address the house on an important issue without thoroughly getting the into his head, ana knowing how he intends to treat it” “You pointing write down the some ‘notes. passages,” “Yes,” 1 be said, to re¬ plied, than “I do, I intended.” otherwise And I might then say he more went on to difficult; lie bad to acquire the habit of speaking slow¬ ly. “You should sentences,’’ not make pauses be¬ tween words and ho went to sav, “hut pronounce distinctly every syllable.”—London Truth. Ruby’s Letter. A letter from Mr. J. W. Ruby, Un¬ ion City, Clarke’s Ind., says: “I Flax have (Papil- used your Extract of lon) Cough Cure and find it a com- dete cure for deep seated cold. It las done more than two of our most [ful physicians. My childre Whooping Cough and- wit aid of light your compared Cough Cure, with they neighbors’ 1 very children who did not take it. I be¬ lieve it to be the best cough cure in the market.” So it is. A large bot¬ tle only fl.00. Clarke’s tihrYn Flax -gbftv Prtoy Soap lw « 25 cents. Cough Cure Cure 6n4 and Sc Soap for sale by Dr, N. B. Drewry’sDrugstore. Abbott’s East Indian Corn Paint removes allCorns, without Bunions For and Warts speedily pain. sale by all Druggists. mayXTd&wly. DID YOU KNOW IT? Did you know catarrh Is a blood disease? Wall It almost invariably is, and frequently Is a symptom of Inherited blood poison. The tendency to catarrh may lay dormant in the system half a mpi’s lifetime and then suddenly become active and the disease at once severe and troublesome. N. C. Edwards, Lampassas Springs, Texas rites: “For over four years I have been a great sufferer from a terrible form of Nasal Catarrh. I was greatly annoyed with aconstant roaring in my bead and my hearing became very much impaired. The discharge from my nos* was profuse and CATARRH very offensive, and my general health Impaired. I tried most all prominent physicians, but they did not cure roe, and I-used various advertised preparations without benefit I then sent to the drug store of T. E. Smith & Bro, and purchased B. B. B M and to my utter astonishment and satisfaction, the use of ten bot¬ tles has restored my general health, stopped the roaring sensation, entirely healed and cured the nasal catarrh, and I am proud to recommend a Hood remedy with such powerful curative properties. 1 fie ousiness men of our town know of my case. 1 W. A. Prfrer Fredonia, Ala., writes: “I can¬ not refrain fromtelllag you whataglo- CATARRH tiotta medicine you have. suffered For two years my mother has with a severe Catarrh of the head and ulcerated sore throat. •She resorted to various remediM without effect, until she used B. B. B„ which cured her catarrh. ;■ healed her sore throat.” R. C. Kimnaxd A Son, Towaliga, Ga, write, “One of oar neighbors has been suffering from catarrh for several years,which resisted CATARRH ah treatment induced and raedirine resorted to. We finally him to try the efficacy of B. B. B„ and he was soog delighted with an improvement He continued id use, and was ■3T Write to Blood Balm Co, Atlanta, Ga, for Book of Wooden” sent free. (]<ft WASTED Agents i i every Town and Couoty to eeil oar Goods. Send ns one doldub, and we pie that sells for three dot lin a business that wilt pay you the^riuhMond from (109 to (SCO per tpontli publishing CO.. KICHMOV >, VA, $57 to$250 their preferred whole who time can furnish buskteee. a hone Spare and giv to the mo men to may be profitably employed and also t.. few vacancies in town* citie*. JOHNSON A CO., 1009 Mate Va. N. B.— Please state age and business ex nee. Never mind about sending stamp fo> m:- %j ja imv.the Fcom II l« JIO. . . ... 1 GEO. ft, <J£w to jnly l 1845, X*tfe Insurance. -T H E ---OF--7.' NEWABK, NEW JERSEY 4 - j Purely Mutual. Assets over FORTY TWO MILLION DOLLARS. Income over Seven Million Dollars. La go and Annual Dividends. No ‘Tontine Estimates.” The best Life Contraot on the market. We invite a comparison of our Policies with those written by other Companies. MANCHAM & SONS, 6BIFFI1V, GEORGIA. •CLARENCE ANGIER, State Agent, 6a. _______________________________ V Atlanta, d£w tosuftl. sapps ........GAEL ON........ . . . W. M. HOLMAN We Standard A Sugar for making cake P«!° kinds of Extracts for Flavor! ng. The krai be; Flour and in fact anything you want. ★ *’ URKEY8, FISH AND OYSTERS. Leave us your order and it will be attended to. SOOTS. SHOES AND LEA- 22 HASSE1.KUS’ SI -HILL ST. Home-made Shoes and Leaf •WStSSJSJt.■*. *. m, •ass A NEW BROOM SWEEPS * . SPENCE & SMITH, OPPOSITE BRICK W A KEIIOVOKeoLOUON rWewiil build m.jil .’i,-, 1 stnapseaK* ’*• 1 11 ” * and Delivcij j» u :i g«n v 1 . 1 py». 1 n« i >. Inn o V ppo W . ►. fcij-r ji h i j g v ill 1 1 i Jut, i. q u iuth in- ig but tooti vcik wili 1 <• i i ) . \ 111 -i) i ii^”f.ih r «j ji H, gpeiiff. at the t-.etm jon esntu i li t; i< , < i fnit i ■ i < SPENCE & Solomon Street,! Griffin, Ca. PATRONIZE HOME INDUS! Apt llflttril c ... MANUFACTURERS. Sash, Doors, tfIfATiIHlifwffl Mantels, Mouldings, DfiflnofAiM Ballnsters, Neveils, UawaIIa Etc., 17#a Etc. Dresseo and Rough Lumber. Laths and Paints, Oils, Window Glass and GRIFFIN, s t t t t We manufacture all our good* and shall endeavor to | qua lily. We wiU give yon «fcw reasons why you sT ** ' ■MMifil . "% j $ 7. ' ' ■ i-i V MRHp in * f i fiSiSliwciiiyii? | 4 Jj * WBwamJ i miti i teGW