Newspaper Page Text
fHE NEWS, Established ltfl
BASS BROS.
We bought the S H. Deane Stock of M*rchan-
chandise, which we are going to close
out at Wholesale Cost.
Besides tl^e Deane Purchase we have bought
largely of Summer Goods in Baltimore recently, and
our Mr. J. L. Bass, of Rome, Ga., who knew nothing
of these purchases, visited New Yark City and bought
enough summer goods to supply the wants of a city
of 25,000 people. Well, we only have a population
of 12,000, more or less, and a little over two months
in which to sell this magnificent collection of summer
goods.
Miss Harris and Mrs. Thaxton would like to have
another Spring Millinery Opening, as their stock is
perfectly beautiful. Misses Camp and Smith would
also like to have another Dry Goods Opening, to show
the pretty All-Over Laces and Embroideries, the new
Lawns, Dimities, Organdies, Silks, etc. Yes, we would
all doubtless enjoy seeing the lovely goods which we
have on display, but the time is too short. We are
overstocked on many t hings and our time must be
given to selling.
We have bought material to trim 600 ladies hats.
It was bought at half price on account of the lateness
of the season, and will be sold for less than half price.
NJf your old ha^ needs new material, bring it up at
once and get it made over. This millinery stock must
go, ties, if at give-away Organdies prices. New Lawns', new Dimi¬
new by the case. A $1,000 worth of
Laces, Embroiderioc, All-Overs must be disposed of.
Linen-finished Crash, worth 10c. yard to go at Calico
prices.
100 Suits of Clothes., worth $6.00, bought so that
we can sell them at $2.50 Suit; sizes. 34 tb42. Our
Clothing Bargains are'great. Our stock is large.
Childrens’ Shoes Bdlow Cost—15c., 25c* and 75c.
pair. Cost three times more than we ask. Five Show
Cases and three Pair Scales we would like to sell.
BASS BROTHERS.
Y'&OL-
YITFfYTF Than we like to have at
W Tf L h V 1 L* r > we this m,ust time reduce of the our year stock. and
We begin taking stock in
More Ti ir SHOEStt TT Arr , about ten days and these
more.
Do you want a $3.50
Shoe for $2.50?
If so, come to see us
for we are going to sell
a $3.50 Tan Willow
and Russian Calf Lace
Shoes for men for
TWO DOLLARS
AND
LILLY,BRACKETT CO. Fifty Cents.
R. F. STRICKLAND & CO.
SPECIAL SHOE SALE 1
For the next 60 days we will positively sell any
Shoes in either of our stores at N. Y. cost. We have
bought largely of Shoes recently and will positively
sell them in the next 6o'days regardless of cost. Come
and examine our stock; all new and stylish. No old
goods. Mens Fine Shoes. Ladies Fine Shoes. Chil¬
drens Fine Shoes ail to go at wholesale cost. Our
Clothing department wa$ never more complete. We
carry the largest and most complete stock of Mens
Youths and Boys Clothing in the City, all new and
stylish. 75 per cent, off <Tn all summer clothing.
Come at once and be surprised. An Ingersoll Watch
with every $5.00 Suit.
M. FRIEDMAN,
45-53 HILL STREET, QR1 FFiy,
Positions Secured !
Government examinations, boes cash-or timeonly“salarie?iX? Installments. A thorough and scientific
ovm» In all departments Requires spare Sf laWamUortdutTw as muoh ai Jh^ nri
Mud of work, "Tho bows pass*th« U
gxft m,n °°vE2* oC ? tu ! 3y actl Wd guarantee that you will
V ° >tloa * Write, Inclosing 1 stamp lor our catalogue describing
Urte if m* tQ a • ■.
BUBEAU QP OIYIL SERVICE H8TBUGTI0I WASHINGTON) D. Q.
(IRMWIlt, GEORGIA. SATURDAY MOUNINGMULY 14 . 1900 .
Acts gently on the
Kidneys, Liver
and Bowels
CieA nses the System
OVERCOMES f •*-^ r i :
hAB.TUAL** ST,, * T,0 N i
UAt ;
PERMANENTLY i !
j |
1
ovy ths genuine - muhtd &y I
(SUIvRNIA Rg TRARe.V \YRVP(§.
^ -k l» VAa.
*u m Au mmm* MKt i# mmu.
Insurance!
FIRE
AND
LIFE
a
Our rates are reasona¬
ble.
Our adjustments equit¬
able.
Our settlements prompt.
We solicit your patron¬
age.
Roswell H. Drake
& CO.
Office:
- City National Bank.
’Phone52.
Estimates
. Furnished
—FOR—
Plumbing and Pipe (Fitting, Tin
and Iron Roofing, Steel Ceiling?,
Cluttering, Old Roofs Pumps, Windmills, &c.
Prompt repaired and painted.
attention*to inquiries from
other towns. Your patronage solic¬
ited.
A S. CAMPBELL,
Laundry Building, Broad Street
GRIFFIN. GA.
DO YOU WANT A HOME ?
I have them for Sale, either
cash or fiasy monthly pay¬
ments. If you want an
investment, I have some
Real Bargains in the way
of “force sale" property
to offer You.....
A. B. CLEVELAND,
REAL ESTATE.
We Have Today
Fish Roe 15c. per lb.
White Cod Fish I2j^c lb.
Fresh Asparagus
every day, per bunch 10c.
Lechrfer Grocery
COMPANY.
PHONISO, »l.
$25,000,000
IN NEW COTTON MILLS
Spindles Added In
Six Months.
DEVELOPMENT
of Sew Kaltroud Given
Mississippi a Deep Water Harbor.
Carnegie Buys Iron Ore Lauds In
Texas—Birmingham Shipments.
Baltimore, July 13.—The organiza¬
of new cotton mills iu the south
the last three mouths, says The
Record* while not as ac¬
as during the preceding three
has beta pushed with much
As in the first three mouths of
year, the last quarter shows a steady
toward the diversification of
manufacturing and the building
mills equipped for finer goods. Es
mills that have been notably
continue the enlargement
operation* by building new mills
r extending their present plants. Tak-
ig the mills definitely organized, and
mittjng all that simply have been pro-
>cted, and including the spindles to be
dded to mills already established, the
rtal for the first six months of the year
I as follows: Alabama, 76,640 spindles;
Georgia, 192,428 spindles; Mississippi,
1,240 spindles; North Carolina, 152,951
piudles; South Carolina, 3$9,262 spin-
Tennessee, 28,500 spindles; Texas,
spindles; total, 876,368.
Southern Mill Takings.
Eighty-nine nejj companies have been
irmed, representing an investment of
stween In the $20,000,0DQ|pd ten montbe ending $25,000,000. June 80
them ootton mills took 1,863,144 bales
cotton, or 135,689 more, bales than teat
These takings reptawnt more
38 per cent of the total number of
by American cotton mills.
fact is but one of the indicatieas of
steady textile progress made by the jou
the week industry, evidenced also *
by the awarding of a__
for a $75,000 cotton lmitt at Fay¬
Tenn., the addition of 6,000
representing the investment of
$100,000, to the plant of the KeaCtr
C..'WsdMSmTOYfftontion company of d? Salisbury, phots
for
$100,000 cotton mill at Hillsboro, Tex.
Mineral Wealth of Texas.
Baltimor*, July 18.—The report that
Carnegie interests have purchased
Bessemer ore preperttaa at
Tex., again calls attention to toe
that the extensive mineral wealth
that district mast play an important
in the _________________development future in the * of
industry. If the purchase of
great ore field has been made, it
represent an in vestment looking to
future,-or else an indication that
and steel works are to be con¬
there, as the distanoe is too
to justify the shipment of ore to
east under present conditions of
It Saved His Leg.
P. A. Danforth, of LaGrange, Ga.,
intensely for six month?
a frightful running sore on his
but writes that Buoklen’s Ar-
Salve wholly cured it in ten
For ulcers, wounds, hum*,
paid or piles it’s the best salve
the world. Cure gvaranteed. Only
Sold by Carlisle & Ward and
>ks Dm { Store.
Educate Tour Bowel* With C*.caret*.
Candy Me. UC.O.O, Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
fail, druggists refund money.
Rheum atic
^Sciatic or
Neuralgic &
H you suffer with pain—any kind of pain—keep fat
mind that pain is hut a symp to m, not a disease; that
what you must fight is not the pain but its cause; that
liniments and oils for external application are almost
worse than useless. To overcome the cause of pain,
internal treatment is necessary.
Pains, whether fn muscles, joints, head or elsewhere
will disappear when you purify and enrich the blood
and strengthen the nerves. \
There is one remedy that has been successfully em¬
ployed in thousands of
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
for Pah People
Rheumatism is a disease of the Mood; Neuralgia
is the prayer of a nerve for food; Sciatica is but rheu¬
matism under another name. Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills for Pale People can be used with the greatest
success in any of-these troubles b eca us e they attack
the disease in the blood and drive it out. Proofs as to
the efficacy of, these pills arc found in thousands of
tfstimonials from grateful people who have been cured.
At dracgtoiu or SliMt from Dv. WUISuas Madtata* Q*.,
B. Y., postpaid saiesuptst pries M osets per box I • Seats, |Lta
Most everybody knows
something about
Old Virginia Cheroots
as smoked 300,000,000 this of Ask them anybody arc being about
them, if year. have smoked
you never them
yourself. They have made their
own the reputation cigar and their own place their
: cigar Three trade, trade, good wholly wholly on on for their five
merits. smokes
cents, and no waste 1
Three hundred million Old Virginia Cheroots smoked this
year. Ask your own dealer. Price, 3 for 5 cents. 1
■
PEACH AND HONEY
Georgia Will Soon Overflow With Ilia
Beloved Be Tere«e of Oar Dadd lea.
Deputy Collector E J. Hinton was
in the city yesterday He says that
Georgia will be almost overflowing
with peach and honey thin year, and
while the proverbial milk Mid honey
will oontinue to flow with its noted
freedom it will only be a side issue
compared to (he peaeh and honey
that has sinoe time immemorial
been so popular with the daddies of
the present generation and also with
not a few of the preemit generation.
For the past few weeks the liquor
dealers of Macon, Macon, and and it it is is presum presumed
those of other cities, u have —to been uemi be- ue-
sfeged by people who wanted to bay
whiskey barrels. At first the unusual
demand was not understood bat the
demand has grown so great that the
dealeara have made inquiry and have
learned that the barrels are wan-
ted for brandy, Million* of boahelg
of peaches arr wasted in Georgia
each time there is a good fruit crop,
there being no way to dispose of
them aH and while there wtll be the
same condition of affairs this season
many will make a large portion of
their crop into brandy. Tke gov-
erment issues a special lioenee for
a fruit still and it looks tike there
will be many ot them. Of ooarae
there will beamy of them moon¬
shiner stills also, but the licensed
stills will he more numerous than
ever before and they will do a land
office business.
It is estimated that fully 600
Macon whisky barrels have been sold by
dealers within the past few
weeks and the demand is still on.
Many of these barrels will be need
as mash tabs, hat they wilt event-
nally be filled with brandy.
8bake Into /our Skoes
Allen's Foot-Ease, * powd !er. It cures
painful, ------------- smarting, swollen -------- feet 1 and In¬
growing sting nails. of and instantly takes the
out corns and bunions. It’s the
greatest comfort discovery of the age. Al¬
len's Foot-Ease makes tight or new shoes
feel easy. It is a certain atolng’feetT oure for sweating,
callous fiull/tiia and^ot, end Vwv 4 a. toed, 1---1 . A t,| Mn £ __.1 m.____ Try
it to day. Sold by all druggists and shoe
stores- By mail for Stein stamps. Trial
package Free Address, Allen 8. Olmsted,
■a-
THE SUN. Established 1877
CLUB ORGANIZES
AND WILL PROCEED TO FUR¬
NISH ROOMS AT ONCE.
Itesalatlon Passed Unanimously la Buy
All Vanishing* Through OrlSIn
Merchants-
The members of the Griffin Com¬
mercial Club met at the city hall
yesterday afternoon and effected an
organization, and the officers will
proceed to get a home for the dab
at once.
The report, of Treasurer W. H.
Newton showed a list of seventy-
one paid members, and a subscrip¬
tion list of $125 extra, showing cash
on hand $077. It was also stated
that quite a number <st other mem¬
berships are assured.
R. H. Drake, of the committee on
five a rr ang e m ents, reported a pries on a
or ten years lease of the upper
floor of the Merchants and Planters
Bank building, the owners to take
oat all present partitions, put in »
new floor, new windows, paper or
tint the walls, pat in four cross par¬
titions and a frontdoor leading upon
the balcony. It was resolved to ao-
cept this, subject to such modifica¬
tions as might be made by the gov¬
erning The board.
reports of the committees on
constitution and charter were de- *
Carted.
It was reeolved to proceed to the
election of permanent officers, to be
formally ratified after the adoption
ot a charter. The following gentle¬
men were named and elected with¬
out opposition:
President—W. J. Kincaid.
Vice President—Douglas Gleesner.
Secretary and Treasurer—W. H.
Newton.
Governing Board—W. J. Kincaid,
Douglas Glessner, W. H. Newton, 5.
J. W. Mangham, T. J. Brook*, D.
Bailey and R. H. Drake.
The governing board was in¬
structed to make a trade with the
bank, furnish ths rooms and do such
other business as may be necessary
toward the installment of the club.
The board was instructed to limit
the list of oharter members to one
hundred, or to close the list with
less if they deem advisable.
. It was unanimously resolved that
as the club is a thoroughly represen¬
tative Griffin institution all articles,
books try to its famishing, except
billiard tables and the like, shall be
p irebased from or through Griffin
merchants.
The governing board will meet at
the president's office at half past
three this afternoon.
Bismarck’s Iron Nerve
Was the reentt of his splendid
health. Indomitable will and tre¬
mendous energy are not found
where stomach, liver, kidneys and
bowels are out of order. If yon want-
these qualities and the success they
bring, use Dr. King’s New life
Pills. They develop every power
of brain and body, only 25 cents at
Carlisle & Ward and Brooks Drug
Store.
Three ewarters issued.
Ralbioh, July 18. — The state has
chartered the Collins Gin company of
Mayeaville; the LaGrange Manufactur¬
ing company, The and the OHff Investment
company. has blanket LaGrange investment
company make a charter, and can
cotton goods, etc,, and its author¬
ised capital is $60,000.
A Child Rgjoys
The pleegant flavor, gentle action,
and soothing effect of Syrup of Figs,
when in need of a laxative, and if
'he father or mother be costive or
bilions , the most graifying results
follow its use; so that it is the best
family remedy known and every
family should have a bottle. Mann-
factored by the California Fig
Co.