Newspaper Page Text
THE NEWS. Establishen 1871
S BROTHERS THE
TO BUY YOUR
Winter
i - FOR YOURSELF AND YOUR FAMILY.
Why ? '
Because
They sell only the best Shoes made, and one pair
wear longer than two pairs bought from other houses
keep cheap stuff. Did you buy Shoes from us [ast
If so, we are not talking to you, as no one could
you to buy from any one else; but this is to tho$ewho
been buying shoddy Shoes from merchants who do not
for any thing but 1 the profits, and regardless of wear.
Just ask your neighbor about our Winter Shoes and
they will teH you about them better than we can. write. It
is poor economy to buy Shoes for winter that I will not
serve you ten months or one year, even if you can get
them for 15 cents a pair less. We are going to keep and
sell Shoes that wi’.l give satisfaction to every one who buys
of us. We want to sell you and your family your winter
goods and will save you money sure. Youis,
BASS BROS.
KEEP YOUR MONEY AT HOME
—AND-
. . PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRIES,
la the ad we Riven by every leading newspaper, every leading city and citieen, and by com
mon sense, and new come*
J. T. MANLEY & SON
-WHO OFFER THEIR-
Home-made Shoes,
LEATHER and HARNESS,
For less money than any ea tern geods in the market. We will also hare and keep in
stock the most elegan' and comulere line of ladies aod gentlemens Boots and Shoes from
the beet factories in the land and will compel* in prices with any bones in the State.
J. T. MANLEY & SON, 22 Hill Street.
* COAL COAL. COAL COAL. COAL *
★ LUMBER. LUMBER. LUMBER. *
SLAUGHTER
IUNT PRICES.
Change In Business
I have purchased the entire stock of goods, accounts,
notes, etc., of J. ASHER. Entire stock of goods must
be closed out by January ist, 1894.
Genuine Bargains for Everybody.
Actual New York Cost is all we ask You.
Those indebted to the old firm will call and settle at
once or accounts will be placed for collection.
Respectfully.
P. HARR ;
£1311
| LARGEST Daily ANO BEST
* in the World
PUBLISHED IN
ANY CITY
OF EQUAL SIZE.
Lime, Doois, Fire Clay,
Brick, Windows, Fire Clay Brick,
Laths, Flooring, Fire Clay Piping,
Blinds, Ceiling, Plasterer’s Hair,
Terra Cotta Piping, Fire Clay Hoods,
Shingles, Moulding, Coke,
Portland and Itosendale’s Cement, Weatberboarding.
Three Best Grades of Coal.
Our prices suit the times. Orders correelly and promptly filled.
Polite attention awaits yon.
NEWTON COAL & LUMBER CO,
W. H. NEWTON, (Manager.
ill
GlUFFIN, GEORGIA THURSDAY M<MINING. DECEMBER 7 . 1893 .
Turkeys,
Cranberries,
Celery,
Mince Meat,
Goshen Butter,
New Currants,
Citron and Raisins,
New Nuts,
Cocoanuts,
Red Snapper.
Trout,
Norfolk Oysters,
Fresh Bread and Cakes
New lot all kinds
Flavoring
Extracts,
and Spices
THE CITY BANK
GIllFFIN, GS EORGIA.
f- * ■ T~ .
The Place to Deposit Yonr
Money
If you want to be sure of getting full value
iu Bank return. building, Having leaned the City National
we are ready to accept
Gold, Silver, Greenbacks.
Griffin Certificates *
and Columbus Scrip—
anything that anybody elee will take—at
PAR IN EXCHANGE
-FOR —
7 lat Shoals Corn Whiskey,
I. W. Harper’s Favorite
and other Rye Whiskies
Brandy, Wine, Beer,
Cigars, &c.
Bank open from 6 a. m to 12 m.
W. H. HARTNETT, Pree’t.
NED KAVANAUGH. Caehier.
CHILDS & GODDARD.
LEADING UNDERTAKERS
A tall line of Burial Caeca, Casket* and
Robes kept in Mock, from the cheapest to the
Embalming a specialty and free tocnetom
Call* anewered prompt! vjd.y or night.
Hearse free.
For Over Fifty years
An old and well-tried remedy.—Mrs
Winslow’s S x.thmg Syrup Dae been need for
over fifty years by millions of mothers for
heir children vbile the teething, child, with perfect the
suc-cees It soothe* eofteus
gome, allays all pain, cares wind colic, end
is the best remedy Cor Disnhoea. Is pleas
ant to I he taste. Sold by druggists in every
part of Its the world. is Twenty-live ncnlcaTable. Be cents a
bottle value sure
and ask lor Mrs Winslow's Soothing Syrup,
and take no other kind,
inoel.tuee.thnrasatwl r.
Additional local and latest
rams on inside pages.
For Sale
One acre land on corner of Thirteenth
Broadway on atreel car line.
Thia is the moat desirable U t fer sale
that street and it not cold »* a whole will
divided up and sold in small lots. There
a bargain in thi. property to any one
has a litt'e money to inve*r, as it can
bonpbt NO V. So there will be a big
in it. Choice of two houses and lots
Thirteenth street, opposite W. B
for sale or rent’cheap Houses, lots
lands of all kinos for sale or rent chop
in and near city. Call round to my office
lock over my lists and I will show yon all
any place yon wish to see without anv
pense to yon.
P.S—Lands from $10 to *100 per
NO . W is the time to invest.
One house mid lot, one acre land,
barn and ont houses; all new, on West
lor street.
G. A. CUNNINGHAM,
Real Estate
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
rmmm jasasssa*®
TfS
Farker-S
„ Cleanse* HAIR BALSAM
Promote* and bvsutific* the hair.
^ at > luxuriant * ' •retfL..
VWT iver Falla to Before Graj
Ha _alr to ita Youthful Color.
Core* *calp diseawa it k air tailiBf.
ffx-.and tl-OCat fh-uggiste
I &U CONSUMPTIVE
A Cup of|| PB,at *bl«. Pure, Refresh
DOUHlOn Rmillmn II (I mg and st mnlaUug.
.
can be made in three min¬
utes, thus: take a cup of boil¬
ing hot water, stir in a $
teaspoon (not more) of
Liebig Company’s of
Extract Beef,
* Then add an egg
and some sherry,
if liked—season
carefully. . .
Steward
WEffirtfl yoy Um a!Nr* reward 'or any ews of ?>*▼«*
wnnialnt, Dyapepokk, Sick Hoadache, Jbdicefttoa. to*
4in 'am or CoMrmmm **m o( mro wife WemVt
Veaetablo Ltror Pills, when the direction* are *trk*h
ompliod rrtta. They mropureW Vegetable, anon .rtn
jOI to giro a ttofectkn. fcwOtMd Urgo box*.
onu nlng ISPiUa, * «**.
and olUttoa*. Th* vmi
kUA ioaf xwmn<mr*
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly ter than used. others The and enjoy many, life who live with bet¬
expenditure, by more,
less more promptly
adapting the world’s best products to
the the needs value of to physical health of being, the will liquid attest
laxative principles embraced pure in the
remedy, Its excellence Syrup of is Figs. due
to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax¬
ative dispelling ; effectually colds, headaches cleansing the and system,
fevers
and permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because h acts on the Kid¬
neys, Liver and Bowels without weal
e iiing them and it is perfectly free from
every Syrup objectionable of Figs is ' substance. sale by all drug¬
r
gists in 50c and $1 bottles, bn t it is man¬
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose nami >s printed on every
package, also the nr-ue, Syrup of Figs,
and being welt substitute informed, if offered. you will not
accept any
MANCHAM
DRUG-
CO.,—
Reliable Goods,
—Fair Dealing,
Lowest Prices.
.............. — 1 -
Starvation lirota Them.
Cheyenne, Wyo., Dec. 5.—On Tues¬
day Foreman Hudson, of the Pratt &
Ferris Cattle company, apprehended six
men killing cattle on the range. They
have been sentenced to a year’s impris¬
onment. speaking In pleading guilty the one of said the
number, tor party,
they had stolen cattle to keep their fam¬
ilies from starving. All were fanners,
living in Nebraska. Their crops had
failed, families their farms were starving. mortgaged and
their were
Savanaab Goes It Alona.
Savannah, Dec. 5.— The December
tern of the superior court began Mon¬
day, and the matter of the necessity for
• new judicial circuit the grand was brought The
grand prominently jury brought before in recommenda¬ jury.
a
tion at once to the effect that a new cir¬
cuit was necessary and that Chatham
should be left in a circuit by itself.
They urged that the bill now before the
general assembly for that purpose be
passed by that body.
After Actor Curtis Again.
San Feancisoo, Dec. 5.— The grand
jury has summoned Frank McManus
and ex-Senator Dunn to testify in rela¬
tion to the recent trial of M. B. Curtis,
the actor, who was acquitted It of the
murder of Policeman Grant. is re¬
ported that McManus and Dunn will
give the grand jury information that
will warrant the indictment of Curtis
for jury bribing.
The. AbUene Country.
The garden spot of the great
Southwest, cheap lands, good socie¬
ty, good schools, nmueious churches
and the mout healthful and delight¬
ful climate. The Abilene Reporter
is the leading weekly newspaper of
this most favored and rapidly devel¬
oping country. If you are seeking
information send 25 cents for three
months subscription and receive, in
addition to the three months sub¬
scription to the Reporter, a splendid
railroad map of the btate ami de¬
scriptive printed matter handsomely
illustrated. Address.
The Abilene Reporter,
dswtf. Abilene, Texas.
Coal! Coal!
I am selling the Glen Mary Coal,
the finest red ash coal in the world;
delivered anywiere in the city at
|o 25 per ton. Will hare the first
shipment Satordu.v. Also wood de¬
livered in any quantity. Yard at
junctkrnof Central and 3eorgia Mid¬
land .railroads. Send me your or
dera. (tl) C. Lowanthal.
A Choice Suburban Home
For sale; well stocked with fruit of
all kinds, including about 4 acres of
fine grapes; good bouse, good water,
High ground. For particulars in¬
quire of the Editor of the Newh and
8cn.
Cake and Candy.
Mis. Ida Judkios, at her residence
on South Sixth street, is prepared to
make all kinds of cakes and candies
to order. All orders will receive
prompt attention. The patronage
of the public solicited. (t<.)
“Orange Blossom,’’ the common-
sense female remedy draws out pain
and soreness. 8old by E. R. Anthony.
AND SUCH WAS FAME.
JOHN L. SULLIVAN OVERSHADOWED
AMBITIOUS STATESMEN.
A CmfMsnw W1 m I. Wear, ef Work ee
the Way. sad Mean. Commute*— Van-
grmmmmn Mryan-. Lemoa la the Art at
Waking Hand way. '
Washington, Dee. A - fSpedal.]-
It was a Democratic member of the ways
and means committee who said to youreor-
rempondent today; “This is the last time I
shall ever serve on thi. committee when s
naw tariff bill te to be prepared. When I
came to oooffrass, I waa very ambitious. A
seaton the great ways and moans commit-
tea was the apple of my eye. If I could
compass that, I thought, my cup of happi¬
ness would be full. How I intrigued and
schemed to accomplish my desires I shall
not stop to tell you, but I finally succeeded,
eud that was the beginning of my troubles.
As a rule, I do not shirk hard work, but
when it oomes to toiling night and day and
getting nothing but cursee for It, there Is
where I draw the Una For more than two
months I have worked harler on the new
tariff bill than I ever worked before to ail
my life. After a day of hearings, or of con¬
sultation in the oonmlttee room, I have
gone home to dinner completely worn out,
but with the absolute necessity of going at
it again after dinner and sticking to it till
midnight or after stared me in the face.
Teo Meek Week.
"I have put iu work enough in three
months to have won a halt dosen lawsuits,
with fees in each case equal to half my
year'* salary as a congressman. I have had
to master the details of a toon of separata
manufacturing Industries, their materials,
method., wages, prices—everything. I have
pored over long columns of figures till my
brain was golug rotilid and round ilka »
ballet dancer’s skirts. At night after re¬
tiring my gray matter has danced the
“Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-ay"tfll daylight peeped
through my chamber windows. That I
have escaped Insanity, or at least a mental
oollapse, 1 attribute as much to good luck
as auythlng else.
“And what do I get for all this?” contin¬
ued the congressman, somewhat bitterly.
“My salary? Ysa; and the consciousness of
having striven with might aod main to do
toy duty. But I doubt if these are sufficient
compensation for the labor, for the anxiety,
for the risks, for the loss of friendships,
which I bave had to suffer. To frame a
new tariff bill on a principle Is to quarrel
with one’s best friends; Is to be a tyrant,
hard hearted and unyielding; is todeny the
prayers of men who declare they are to be
ruined; is to Inflict hardships upon one’s
own section of the country; to visit loss
upon one’s own people. It is to have a lot
of one’s fellow members of the honse de¬
clare their re-election is to be made impos¬
sible, and to be compelled to turn a deaf
ear to their entreaties for aebanoe to remain
in public life.
"Nor is this all. One Is required to take
a fearful responatoility, to pursue a policy
which one’s nearest friends say will result
In party defeat, and if that defeat oomes, ae
it may In the mutations of polities, a lot of
fellows will rise up and curse us and say
they told ns so, and that It we had been
po sse s sed of as much sew as a schoolboy
we should have known better. This is what
it is to be a member of the weye and means
committee when a new tariff bill Is In the
proces* of construction. I want no more of
It in mine.”
Advlo* To a Mew Member.
Mr. Bryan of Nebraska is not the mem¬
ber of the ways and means commtttee who
talked la thia way. Mr. Bryan la perfectly
Infatuated with hard work, and besides
be glories in the opportunity which he has
had to put his antiprotection convictions
into pract ice. Mr. Bryan tells a funny story
of the manner In which he first mads his
appearance In congress. That was only two
years ago. He was not only s new member,
but a very young and green one. One of
the'oTfif membent from a western state took
pity on the youngster and called him
aside and gave him a lot of good advice.
“Now, I’ll tell yob how to work It,” said
the old member. “I’ve been through the
mill. I bave had my eyeteeth cut. Unless
you know the tricks of the trade down here
you are not In It. In the first place, you’ve
got to have a place on a good committee.
Without a big committee place you are no-
Body, and as a nobody you stand a mighty
poor show of re-election.”
And then the old member sat down and
gave the young Mr. Bryan an hour’s lesson
in the art of making headway as a con-
gr^mmun.
“All of which did me a heap of good,”
says Mr. Bryan. “I Immediately proceed¬
ed to do the very things which the old
member bad said I must never do, and to
leave undone the very things whose pen
formance be had urged upon me ss of prime
importance. The result is that I am b
member of tbe ways and means committee
and am perfectly satisfied with my position
in the house and in my district .”
“And bow has your friend, the old mem
ber, fared?”
“He? Ob, he failed of re-election and la
now occupying some sort of a clerical posi¬
tion In one of the government depart¬
ments.”
Fame Is a Vapor.
Mr. Bryan is one of the meet noted young
men of tbe day, and betides bis reputation
faasan exceedingly striking face. He tells*
story on himself illustrative of tbe expres¬
sion, “And such is fame!" Last winter John
U Sullivan appeared in mplayina Washing¬
ton theater. Accompanied by one of the
most famous senators, a man whose name is
a household word throughout the country,
Mr. Bryan went to see Mr. Sullivan. He
and the senator were shown to front seats
just before tbe cariaiu raised, but not j»
head was turned in their direction. Per¬
haps not a dozen persons iu the’ audience
knew the senator’s face, and no one knew
Mr. Bryan. But the moment John L. Sul¬
livan’s mug was seen a shout went up that
left no doubt as to the audience’s familiar¬
ity with his physiognomy. “When tbe
play was over,” says Mr. Jryan, “tbe sena¬
tor and I left tbe hall, satisfied that if fame
was our ambition we bad missed our call¬
ing, and instead of Statesmen should bave
been prizefighters.”
Navel Work For Women.
Several ladies at Rockland, Me., who are
engaged in the time worn scheme of “earn¬
ing a dollar” for church work, seem really
to bave bit on something new. Oneof them
is earning her dollar by digging worms for
a neighbor’s bens, while another baa con¬
tracted at so much a week to spank a
friend’s children when they need it.
Converted kjr u Oak.
_
When Winifred of Devonshire (880-75*
A. D.) went to Germany to convert the
heathen, his first act waa to fell asacred oak
whick had been dedicated to Thor. A great
storm assisted him la laying the giant
prone upon tbe earth, and the heathen, re-
Advertising
GR 'IN i
Highest of all in Leavening Power.*
i
: 1 i
i I ’j
ABSOLUTELY t-,
DANGER WMERTED
London’s Police H*d an Exciting
Time with Anarchists.
CROWDED TRAFALGAR SQUARE.
AnVy'navsral Ilnur, of Fighting the Ms-
-•'ttirber* Were Ui.eersed and the
Square Wes y«|et Again.
Other Bad Characters
London, Deo, 5.—Tbe people of Lon¬
don were treated Sunday afternoon to a
spectacle of anarchy defying the
and a display of police oaleulat
■trike terror Into the hearts of the evil
minded. And while this was
thousands of law-abiding
looked on.
% Suae about through titt
announcement that they meant to maet
in Trafalgar sqnare. Home Secretary
Asquith promptly ordered the chief
commissioner of police, Sir Edward
Bradford, to prevent the meeting. Tin
anarchists thereupon declared their
tention of meeting in spite of “ ”
itiea.
The anarchists had
square on several
They had been tolerated on the
that they were not dangerous, and that
suppressing them would call undue at¬
tention to theta. But newspapers called
the attention of the honse of commons to
the fact that at their ’last meeting the
anarchists openly advocated a policy of
blood and dynamite, gloried in the out¬
rages at Barcelona, Marseilles and else¬
where, and practically urged En
anarchist# to follow the example of
brethren in Spain and in France. 1
the home secretary did not dare allow
the reds of London any more rope.
In the afternoon the police mu
In strong force about Trafalgar
ed »R 1
Charing the
avenue and on l^^to°coUect
The anarchists a
o’clock, though toe four Xt/Ui AafAv-K via I
square were ere black with polk
aud on foot. This
thousands of
borbood of fliliilS
front of the .
for packed with people it was :
a vehicle to pass unless
ja.eru.xag’fi mounted police.
to do more towards spreading their fiery
literature than anv meeting could. Man
and women anarchists mixed among tbs
and
labor,.
ars of<
article 1
Barcelona bomb waa (
and good act.”
anarchists Gradually increased the number until of ■ they
courage to posh towards the
collected, among them many
wearing slouch fiats
Nicol, the anarchist!
nent figure. polios, by threes, kept
The twos and
moving about the square, compelling the
anarchists to “move on.” Thi* caused
the anarchists to wave their hats , ami
hoot at the police. Some spectators
cheered, others hissed.
At exactly 3:10, as if by prearranged
signal, some anarchists made a rush lor
the steps at the foot of toe Gordon statue,
and one immediately began on address.
He bad hardly uttered his first sentence
before the police charged the spot, dis¬
lodged tbe reds and scattered them in
the liveliest manner.
Other attempts to bold a meeting re¬
sulted in a senes of brisk brush** with
toe hustling police, the who anarchists were from kept very busy
one point to
another. A number of the reus were
roughly handled by toe police, throwing
them neck and crop from the steps, and,
in many cases giving than a bad shak¬
ing up. Eventually the anarchists be¬
came so demonstrative that 50 more po¬
licemen were sent to the square, where¬
upon a double cordon was formed around
the Nelson monument.
Suddenly an anarchist rushed through
tbe police lines, climbed a monument
and began to speak. A stalwart police¬
man bodily quickly the seized crowd. him and the threw anarchist him
into As
still tried to tpesk, police he was hustled followed off to
to the nearest station,
by Shortly a shouting before crowd. 8:80 another detach¬
ment of mounted police was summoned
to the square, and a charge waa made
upon the anarchist mob, which was
broken and finally dispersed, being over¬
awed.
At 4 o’clock the sqnare was practically
cleared, but toe anarchists had collected
street, intending to reach Scotland Yard
led a strong force of
Kt police to the yard.
The horsemen reached that point before
the anarchists, and, with the assistance
of the police £,*‘£l on foot, the dangerous f!!S£; mob
’T.? 33 2 ?a 5 w
moving, and
toria hotel and toe
p»T\i£i, poli0 '’ **” '
Finally, at about 5 o*«,_
oui part of toe mob 1
numerous smsats hav’
One or two persons wen
the hoofs of the home of toe
police, but no serious injuries have lilF* been
reported. ’ anarchist leader '
Every who
5SSSSfl£“ to
«!*»
BOtepletodi .
Ufa______
' V ' ■
London, Dec. i
Tyndall died -
AFTER
»“*“ 1
,
„ „ _
m
r and town, 1
a license, t
WSL-i be
must expi
ori
ent.______
altles are I
imprisonment of from l. „
dispose of the dispensary i ’
hand.
Birmingham, z
Drew, who c
Indian and chief t
the Indian :
week ago. He f
him to invite i
MTS 1
ae a land flowing i
where gold ‘
<
A Female We* 1
Henderson, Ky.,
past two weeks a f
hade
pistol-
after nightfall.
go on her t
be insane,'
of her amt
belief that ti
in disguise.
N.i
.'08 1
nWaiw