Newspaper Page Text
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DAILY ENQUIRER • SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE 15,
ESTABLISHED IN 1828. 58 YEARS OLD.
Daily, Weekly and Sunday.
The EN'QUIRKR-Hl'N in lismal every iluy, px-
copl Monday. Tlio Weekly in iwiued on Monday.
The Dally lincluilinR Munilayi Is delivered liy
rarriers in the city or mailed, postage free, lo sah-
aeribers for 7Ae. per month, 8'J.OI) for lhrc
months, #1.00 for six months, to - #7.00 a year.
The Sunday is delivered by carrier boys in I he
city or mailed to subscribers, postage free, at
#1.00 a year.
The Weekly Is Issued on Monday, and is mailed
to subscribers, postage free, at #1.10 e year.
Transient advertisements will be taken for tin
Daily at #1 per square of 10 lines or less for the
first Insertion, and SO cents for each subsequent
insertion, and for the Weekly at ?1 for each in
sertion.
All communications intended to promote the
private ends or interests of corporations, societies
or Individuals will be charged as advertisements.
Hpecial contracts made for advertising by the
year. Obituaries will bechurgud for al customary j
rates.
None but solid metal cuts used
All communications should he addressed to the j
proprietor of tile Ivvqi :hk u-Srv.
M t mil Bakin tttul (ionenil Oorilnn tin
Iiotil to atliltVri? Dll' fK*r»]rl< 1 I>f Mllso'itri'C
this wot'k. Major liaom) will to
night .ihkI (icncrnl ilorilon next Frillin'
night. Tltis will give us an opportunity i
for mi unprejtulieeil vote in the nomina-
tion if the facts in the cane tire considered
in accordance with their merits.
Tim general trade situation, as, tele
graphed Bradstreet’s, litis been irregular,
with the tendency toward a continued
moderate movement. This is due in a
large part tb the spring trade being over,
to formers being busy in the fields, and
to tiie fact that tiie autumn trade lias not
begun yet.
Her Majesty having graciously con
sented to dissolve parliament, the United
Kingdom will he in an uproar for the
next few weeks, during the most exciting
and important election canvass of modern
times. The issue promises to lie squarely
drawn on the home rule question. What
ever the general result may he, there is
likely to be a considerable change in the
personnel of the house of commons.
There were l td failures in the I'nited
States reported to Bradstreel's this week,
against lob last week, IDT in the like
week in ISSd, IS-} in Isst, ltio in 1SS3,
and IliO in lss2. Canada had IT this
week against Iti last week, and IT last
year. The total of failures in the United
States front January 1 to date is -th.'IS,
against full in INKS, a decline of 773
failures in Kid days, or an average de
cline this year of about 1 4-5 failures.
The total in 23 weeks of 1S84 was 4ST1,
in 1K83 it wbjj 4T34, and in IHS2, 3255.
The New York Times has conic to the
conclusion that if Mr. Cleveland and his
followers were not blind as moles, they
would perceive that Mr. Manning’s idea
of iKilities and the reform is the sound
and safe and practical one, and that their
own is ruinous to their party and to
whoever may depend upon the party for
future advancement. Their conduct in
the matter is suicidal. They are working
with all their might to prove to the coun
try, so far as they can, that their party
cannot he trusted, that it regards pledges
ns only “'good enough till after election,"
that it has no conception of the work it
lias been called on to do, and that all
that its opponents have charged as to its
greed, its corruption, its folly, ignorance,
incapacity, and blindness kills far short
of the reality. Fortunately they cannot
prove that of the party.
The Nashville American make- the
statement that (he h’ev. Dr. Merrick
Johnson, who assumes to have been
culled to preach the gospel of peace, is
quite indignant because a few ex-Confed-
erntes of Chicago strewed Mowers on the
graves of their fellow soldiers who died
in northern prisons. The pious doctor
says that "the men who died tightingthe |
Hag should pass into oblivion," and in
the opinion of this professed follower of |
the long-sulfering and forgiving Saviour. I
the act of laying a Jlower on a dead com- j
rude's grave, is a crime which deserves all I
the pain- of purgatory. There area good |
many graceless hypocrites of the Herrick j
stripe scattered through the north, who I
find much more pleasure in preaching I
hatred to their fellow men than the doc
trine of "forgive your enemies.'’ It is a
matter of congratulation to the people of
this section, that the political pulpit deni- |
agogue is not a product of the south.
Itm TINt. Ills Sl.AMIKHS.
It utliirds us pleasure to direct atten
tion to an article which appears else
where in this paper, taken from the
Boston Journal of Commerce. It is an
extract from a very lengthy editorial and
we reproduce it as being of interest to our j
section in two respects—first as refuting
unjust slanders, and secondly, it demon
strates tic value attaching to a spirit of
truth and fair-mindedness.
Certain charges were made by a min
ister of the gospel rebooting seriously
upon the good name and character of the
mill owners and olUcors of Augusta.
These charges may have been accepted
as true by this Boston editor, and formed I
the basis of a moral essay in which the j
south would he held up aa its enemies
delight to describe it, and thank tiod
they arc not as we are.
But tiie editor of the Journal of Com
merce is a fair-minded man and had the
spirit of a Christian, and instead of taking
it for granted that the people of Augusta
were as had as .represented, and of course
| that Colutnhu* was just as hud, he de- '
! termined to investigate the matter. Ac
cordingly ho sent a copy of the charge
to each mill president and requested a
reply. Their replips lie published at
length and then adds the editorial
which we elsewhere produce.
Then again it is gratifying to know
1 thut after a thorough investigation this
impartial witness asserts in such plain
, mid emphatic language that these charges
are untrue. A- we entertain very kind
feelings toward the city of Boston out
, selves, we tuke pleasure in citing such an
instuni c as this in its favor.
I nil.t r ARK I’l.ATKOItMS WORTH t
Tie-leaders of the two great national
political parties seem determined to con
vince the country that the pledges and
promises of platforms are not worth the j
] at per upon which they are written. The
republican platform adopted at the last
( ('hicago convention, declares that—
“The republican party pledges itself to correct
the irregularities of the turiHV’
And the democratic platform adopted
a few weeks later, and upon which Presi
dent Cleveland was elected, declares |
that —
“Tiie democratic party is pledged to revise the I
taritfin a spirit of fairness to all interests.”
Yet there is hardly a man at Washing- |
ton city who does not fully understand I
that any hill looking to this end will he j
defeated in the present congress. Mr.
Morrison has. announced that on next
Thursday he will ask the house to re
deem this joint promise bypassing the
tariff hill, hut lie ban already been noti
fied by a republican member that objec
tion would he raised to any such proceed
ing. The gentleman who did this was
Congressman McKinley. The Herald
tells him that it seems a very barefaced
repudiation of the engagement which
Mr. McKinley and hist party are under
to the people. We do not like to believe
that McKinley, able man that he is, can
carry with him the whole or nearly the
whole of his party in the house in so
serious a step as this—nothing less titan
telling the republican voters that the re
publican platform promise? after election
are like the hills of a broken wildcat
hank—good for nothing hut waste paper,
and not very good for that.
But this opposition is not confined to
the republicans. There is a democratic
faction of which Mr. Kandall is leader,
who has on a former occasion given the
republicans sutlicient strength to prevent
such u measure by a democratic house.
All indications point to the fact that they
will do so again. But, as it lias already
been suggested, if they do not like Mr.
Morrison’s hill let them otter some other
plan. Mr. Morrison proposes to
make some raw materials of our promi
nent industries duty free. That would
certainly and very greatly benefit the
hundreds of thousands of workmen
and workwomen engaged in those in
dustries. It would secure them steady
employment and at better wages than
t hey can now get,because what was saved
in the cost of raw material would ena
ble the manufacturers to pay more to
(heir people. Mr. McKinley may say
that the Morrison hill makes too many
changes. Very well. Let him move to
strike off some of its provisions. To
refuse to consider the question at all is
to play false to the people in a matter in
which both parties voluntarily, explicitly j
and positively engaged themselves. It I
is to commit a deliberate and shameful I
fraud on the country. j
BAVARIA’S DEAD KIM,.
Our dispatches I his morning bring the j
intelligence that the mad king of Bava
ria is dead—dead and that hv his own
hand. Our di-patches Sunday morning
furnished the intei'crcsting spectacle of a
dethroned king besieged in one of his
own castles by the gendarmerie of his
ministry.
For some time King Louis lmd been
demented. The ancient expression "he
came by it honestly" can well he applied
in this ease ns both his father and one or
two of his brothers died in a demented
state of mind. I'ntil hi.- tragic death
yesterday the fancies of the insane king
have been of a harmless character ex- ]
eept to the public exchequer; he has
indulged in costly theatricals of which I
he was the sole spectator,
and has been building nu-
meron- very superior palaces in ro
mantic and almost inaccessible situations
among his Bhaetian or Yandelican Alps,
which separate his domain from the Aus
trian Tyrol, and rise in enormous ridges
to the height of nine or ten thousand
feet. As he was merely a constitutional
figurehead, his people, whose lower or
ders ad' (red him, would have tolerated his
fancies for an indefinite time, if it had l
been possible to restrain the cost of them !
within endurable hounds. The debts of
the tierman states, not counting the j
debt of the empire, aggregate about i
t? 1,500,000,000 for -15.000,000 people; that j
of Bavaria alone amounts to $335,000,000 I
for 5,000,000. That is, the state debts
average $33 a head, that of Bavaria j
alone being $ttT. It may well he j
imagined that feckless financiering dis
pleased the patient, loyal and honest Ba
varians. who have more freedom than
other states of the empire, retaining con
trol of their own postal and telegraph
systems, and having an army under the
command of their own king during peace,
and being free from the domiciliary sur
veillance of the empire. Moreover, the
personal rights of the royal family were
in a certain sense concerned ; they be
lieved that they had good reason to
move for the restraint of their royal kins
man. whose reeklessless was wasting the
^ patrimonial establishment, exhausting
the bounty of the subject realm, and
abusing the patience of loyal hearts.
It is sai'l of Louis that he has undoubt
edly been mad during many years; celi
bate habits and the possession of an in
violable personality, and wealth sold-
rient to gratify every reasonable whim,
have contributed to drive him over the
border into the land of the demented
The kingdom is, next to Prussia, the
most considerable element in the Her
man empire of to-day. Its area is 2H.-
2! 12 square miles, and it- population
2SH,7~R soul-. The king is sacred, hut he
has a responsible ministry. The lower
house is indirectly representative; th'-re
i- a deputy for every TOun families, clm-eii
by electors at the rate of one proxy for
every 500 men.
MAJOR RACO.A TO sl’KAK.
H"n. A. i >. Bacon. cnndiduU for tin
gubernatorial nomination by the st.de
convention, will address the eitir.i n- , ,
Mu-cogee t"-nighl. The position o. eii-
pied by .Major Bacon i- such that ail who
cun do-" should take ad\antage of the
occa-ion to hear his views upon tiie polit
ical question? of the day. lie is a dis
tinguished and able gentleman who will
entertain and instruct all w ho hear his
speech, and it is hoped that he will he
greeted by a full house. There is hardly
any man in Georgia better posted on
affairs pertaining to the state, and the
only way an intelligent vote can he cast
is to understand the views of the candi
dates and what effect his election would
have upon the issues at stake. This can
only be had by an attentive hearing, and
it should he accorded to Major Bacon to
night.
A professional beggar died recently in Rio
Janeiro and left a fortune of $200,000. A Rio
journal remarks that the discovery should occa
sion no surprise, as it is well known that many of
the beggars in that city are worth more than
those who bestow alms on them.
Mr. Blainb lias won the initial victory of his
presidential campaign. Bodwell, nominated for
governor of Maine by the republicans of that
state, was the plumed knight’s candidate. To
heighten the value of the victory it should be
mentioned that Bodwell has a barrel.
Forty-bkven thousand flats are said to be for
rent in Paris. They would accommodate 200,000
people.
It is conceded that the political revolution in
Oregon is clue to the fact that the republicans
have forfeited public confidence. The machine
lias been as overbearing and insolent in Oregon
as it is Maine, and has disgusted many honest
citizens who have heretofore acted with the re
publican party. Its action in forcing such a man
as John H. Mitchell into the United States Sen-
Hon. Morri* Ellinger, established the Jewish I
Times, and was its associate editor. The seeds of i
the reform movement which he had sown in
New Orleans fructified, and in 1871 he was in
vited to return to that city and take charge j
of the new reform congregation
known as the Temple Sinai, which !
■ all he accepted, and In November of that year he
laid the comer stone of the synagogue which
now ornaments Carondelet street, near Delord.
In 1872 he entered upon bis duties as rabbi
and pastor. From that year to the present he,
with unremitting devotion and attention, minis
tered to this large and influential congregation, >
constantly widening and enlarging its influence
until its membership are associated with! numer
ous charities in that city.
The Next Governor of Alabama,
Tin. readers of the Enquirer-Sun have already
been informed of the nomination of Hon. Thomas
Seay as the democratic candidate for governor, j
The selecUon of this distinguished gentleman j
has given very general satisfaction and our neigh
bors just across the river, in Browneville, on bat-
irday night, gave expression to their enthusiasm
with booming cannon. A short sketch of Mr. |
Sear will be interesting. He is a native Alabam
ian, ami was born in Green county in 1846, in |
that portion which was subsequently added to
the new county of Hale. His early education was t
obtained at a public school. Subsequently he !
was graduated from the Southern University at ,
Greensboro. During the late war he entered the
Confederate service as u private ut the early age 1
of seventeen, and fought in the ranks until its 1
close. He xvns twice captured, the
lust time while assisting in the
heroic defense made at Spanish Foil, opposite
Mobile. After the close of hostilities he began i
the practice of law. and attained high rank in his
profession. In 1870 he was elected to the state .
legislature from the thirty-second senatorial dis- j
trict, which had up to that time been overwhelm-
ingly republican. Since then he has continuous- ,
ly served the state as a senator without opposi- j
tion, and now concludes his long term often I
consecutive years as presiding officer of that
body. He was a member of the national demo
cratic convention at Cincinnati in 1880, which i
nominated Gen. Hancock. He presided overthe J
state democratic convention in 1884 with marked
ability. He has been eminently successful in the
management of his private aifairs, as well as his
public trusts.
FOB IRDELtSTT.
Possession liiveo When Completd, or Oct 1st.
r DHE new modern style two-story’ Dwelling on
I Twelfth street, between Col. George P. Swift
and Mr. H. IT. Epping Jr. Eight rooms, gas,
hot and cold water through house and in kitchen
and bath room, water closet and other drain
pipes connected with city sewer. Sliding doors
to parlor, “Hill inside sliding blinds” to all win
dows facing Twelfth street. Slate mantels in
every room. JOHN BLACK MAR,
se wed fri tf Real Estate Agent.
School I Boys
I WILL open a School for Boys in the city on |
the first Monday in September. The course
of study will be such as is used in all schools of
high grade. Young men desiring to enter col
lege can be prepared for any class. Patronage of
the citizens lespectfully solicited.
je!2 2w JOHN H. CROWELL.
CLEVELAND’S
SUPERIOR BAKING POWDER
DOES NOT CONTAIN
LIME,
AMMONIA,
OR ALUM.
Cleveland’s Superior Baking Powder, manufactured by Cleveland
Brothers, Albany, N. Y., is absolutely pure and wholesome. It ; s
made only of strictly pure Grape Cream of Tartar, Bicarbonate of
Soda, and a small portion of wheat flour, and does not contain
Ammonia, Alum, Lime, or any adulteration whatever.
The Cream of Tartar is refined by a new process which frees it
entirely from lime and every impurity, and is obtained in the pure
crystals and ground in their own factory ; the Bicarbonate of Soda is
prepared expressly for them ; and to ensure uniform and absolute
purity of their baking powder all the ingredients are subjected to
searching chemical analyses and none used unless proved to be
perfectly pure.
In confirmation of the above the able and reliable chemists of the
New York Produce Exchange report as follows:
“We are analyzing all the Cream of Tartar used in the manu
facture of Cleveland’s Superior Baking Powder, and we hereby
certify that it is practically chemically pure—testing as high as
99.95 per cent, and not less than 99.50 per cent.
“ From a hygienic point of view we regard Cleveland’s Superior
Baking Powder as the ideal baking powder, composed as it is of
pure Grape Cream of Tartar and pure Bicarbonate of Soda.
“ STILLWELL & GLADDING,
“Chemists to the N. Y. Produce Exchange.”
New York, Nov. 23, 1884.
Opposite Rankin House. Columbus, Ga.
ate was the feather that broke the camel’s back.
But the nomination of Thomas R. Cornelius for
governor was equally an outrage on those citizens
who condemn corrupt methods in politics.
Ice Cream Cake—the best Ice Cream made—is
made at 1243 Broad street.
With 90 cents you can have one gallon of the
best Ice Cream made from E. E. Cavaleri, 1243
Broad street. Order must be one day in ad
vance.
NOTICE!
WHEREAS, a petition has been filed in my
office, consisting of over fifty freeholders, peti
tioning the Ordinary of said county for t he bene
fit of the stock law under section 1455 of the Code,
and if no counter petition is filed I will, after the
expiration of twenty days from the publication
of this notice, order an election to be held in said
county for fence or no fence.
Given under my official signature this June
11th, 1888. - F. M. BROOKS,
jell td Ordinary.
The best Ice Cream made is made at 1213 Broad
street at Emilio E Cavaleri.
Ex-Prks/dk.vt Arthur was sent a piece of
wedding cake from the white house. This raises
a wail from the Galveston News. It asks, couldn’t
a good, hard work ing democrat be found in this
country to whom that spare piece of cake could
be sent? Why should Cleveland be distributing
wedding cake among republicans and mugwumps
while the country is crowded with hungry demo
crats ?
A short time ago the cold weather and worms, |
etc., were going to destroy the entire crop of 1
peaches in Delaware and Maryland. Now the cry !
has changed, aufi “the trees are so overloaded
with fruit as to endanger the branches being !
broken down and orchards ruined.” Half a ;
dozen live Columbus boys with good clubs would
save any orchard in Delaware from such a
calamity in less than one day and think it no
hardship.
A man named Yesterday would naturally be
behind time, and that is perhaps the reason why
a warrant in favor of John Yesterday, issued in
1783, is only in June, 1886. presented at the
United States treasury in Washington. The
simple interest on the warrant at 6 per cent,
amounts to more than six times the original
amount.
Death of Rev. Jamies K. Guthehu.
Our dispatches Sunday morning las* an
nounced the death of Rev. James K. Gutheim, j
of New Orleans. His body was embalmed and j
the funeral took place yesterday. Rev. I. L. j
Leucht, together with the Jewish rabbis from a ;
distance, assisted in the obsequies, together with
Rev. Dr. B. M . Kilmer, who was a warm personal ;
friend and other ministers. The remains were
interred in the lets in Metairie cemetery set |
a)>art for his family in the purchase of a burial j
place recently made by several wealthy Israel- |
ites.
His ni nth is very jri-nily lamented not only in j
New Orleans but various- purls of the country.
He was well-known in this city having atone
time lived here. He was burn in Menne, Dis
trict of Warburg, Westphalia. Nov. 15. ’817. and I
was therefore sixty-eight years six months ;
and twenty-live days old. His an- j
cestry were noted for their learn- j
ing, and he himself early evinced great i
thirst for knowledge and made rapid advances |
in his scholastic and collegiate progress. His J
first ministerial service was at Sendenlmrst ini
1838. In 1843 he removed to New York, from ;
whence he was invited i to Cincinnati in 1846. i
where he became pastor of the B'nai Yeshunen ,
congregation, and dedicated the first temple of i
that congregation, in compliance with the call of ,
the Shangari Clmssed congregation, then wor
shipping on Rampart street of this city, lie came 1
to this city in 1850. and dedicated its first edifice
in 1851. He performed the funeral rites of the
philanthropist JudahiTouro in 1854. In this your |
he became pastor of the synagogue known i
as the Dispersed of Judah, aud in 1*57 dedicated j
their synagogue—Nefutsah Jeliudah. From I
1863 to 1865 he served the Jewish congregations
of Montgomery. Ala., and Columbus, Ga., after
which he returned to New Orleans and resumed
charge of the synagogue on Rampart street, intro- |
ducing there the great reform movement, of which
he may justly be called one of the distinguished
American leaders. lie laid the corner stone of
the synagogue Tetniuii Peuch iu 1866. The Tern-
pie Emanuel, of New York, being aware of his
great learning, invited him to occupy the chair
of English lecturer, which he accepted in the fall
of 1868.
Dr. Gutheiiu remained in New York four years,
attending the rabbinical convention in Philadel
phia in 1869, of which he was the vice president.
During his northern residence he. together with
W. S. GREEN, Real Estate Agt.
roll SALK,.
$1050—Y* acre lot, with four new three room
houses, in Northern Liberties, all rented
and paying 18 percent., and clear of taxes
and insurance. Titles perfect. The cheap
est property on . the market—too cheap to
be there long. Call and see me at once if
you want to make a good investment.
$2250— 1 4 acre, corner lot. on lower Broad street,
with new five room residence, and servant
house.
$1200— acre lot, corner First avenue and Fifth
street.
$700— 1 4 Acre corner lot, with new 3 room House,
on lower Jackson street.
$325—For either of four new 2 room houses, on
lower McIntosh street. Will sell on install
ment plan or for cash.
$500— }\ acre vacant lot corner Troup street and
Fifth street.
$475—One four room house on Mercer street, on
block below street railroad. Terms easy.
Many other places for sale too numerous to ad
vertise, on anv terms wanted,
eodtf W. S. GREEN.
Application for Incorporation
—OF THE—
Rose Hill Improvement Com
pany.
STATE OF GEORGIA. MU8COGEE COUNTY
-To the Superior Court of said county: The pe
tition of G. Gunby Jordon, Clilf B. Grimes, B. T.
Hatcher, F. D. Peabody, Charles Phillips, H. R.
Goetchius, L. H. Chappell and Toombs Crawford
and such other persons as may be associated
with them, and their successors, respectfully
shows:
First That they desire to be incorporated and
created a body corporate and politic under the
laws of the state of Georgia, and that they and
their associates and successors mav have contin
uous existence as a corporation for the term of
twenty years, with the privilege of renewal at the
expiration ot said term as provided by law, under
and by the corporate name of
ROSE HILL IMPROVEMENT COMPANY.
Second The objects of said corporation are the
buying and improving real estate, to sell the same
lor cash or on installments to stockholders or
others, to aid purchasers in building houses and
improving property, to lease or rent real estate
for themselves or others, and to accumulate
profits for the stockholder therein.
Third Tin principal office of said corporation
and its place of doing business will be in said
county of Muscogee.
Fourth -The capital stock of said corporation
shall be ten thousand dollars, with the privilege
of increasing the same to five hundred thousand
dollars. Petitioners show that they will not com
mence to exercise the privileges conferred by this
charter until ten per cent, of the capital stock is
paid in.
l-.fth -Petitioners desire for said corporation
power and auihority to sue and be sued, to plead
and be impleaded, to have and use a common
seal and to alter the same at pleasure 4 to make all
contracts of every kind necessary or proper to .in
augurate and carry on its busuioes, including
power to execute promisory notes and bonds, and
to secure the same by mortgage or deed of trust
on any property of this corporation, to buy, own
and sell such pioperty, both real and personal, as
it may need or desire for its purposes, to adopt
such oy-la ws. rules and regulations as it may desire,
binding on its own numbers, and to provide iu
said by-laws for such officers of the corporation
as it iuu> need and fix tlitir term of office, duties
■ ■ ■ ''i-.iiii'ii. .i mi the man lit l and time of
their election, to receive Real Estate in payment
«>f stock subscriptions, and to do such other and
fhrtheracts as are uecessarj or proper to com
mence aud carry on the business named. Stock
holders who shall have paid their stock subscrip
tions in full to be in no way liable for the debts of
the corporation, or for wrongs committed by it.
Sixth Petitioners ask that this petition for a
charter lie filed in the office of the Clerk of the
Superior Court of Muscogee county, Georgia, and
there t.. be lecordcd us the statute provides, aud
publication be made as r< .pun d hy law, and that
upon compliance with the statute the Court will
pass an order declaring said application granted.
And petitioners ever pray.
Filed in the Clerk's Office of the Superior Court
of Muscogee county, Ga., and recorded in
book of writs 188i 5, folio 540. May li, 18%.
GEO. Y. POND,
my 15 oaw4w Clerk S. C. M. C.
■ RESTORED.RfiniMly
I Free.-A victim ot youth-
I tul imprudence causing
■ Premature Decay, Ner-
■ vous Debility, Lost Man
hood. &e.having tried in vain every known remedy
has discovered a simple eelf-cure, which he will
send FREE to his fellow-sufferers. Address
I, H. REEVES. 43Chatham atreeLXew Fork Citr
Manhood!
WILL OFFER TO-DAY,
A.HSTJD aOLTTLLTTTIE TJlSrTIL SOLD :
31 Cents.
2,000 Yards 27 inch White Striped
Muslins, tour styles.
Wurth
10 Cents.
At
3,000 Yards Satteens, Light and
Worth
5 Cents.
Dark Shades.
9 cents.
At
365 Dozen Fancy Dress Buttons.
Worth
5 cents.
20 cents.
At
5,000 Yards Eagle Weiss Suitings,
Worth
6 cents.
in all the pretty shades.
15 cents.
At
10,000 Yards 4-4 White Domestic,
Worth
64 cents.
equal to Masouville.
10 cents.
At
5< K) Yds Remnants Dress Ginghams
Worth
7i cents.
15 cents.
At
S(M) Yards Wool Algiers, Figured
Worth
10 cents.
Dress Goods.
25 rents.
At
1,000 Yards All Wool Nun's Veil-
Worth
1.2i cents.
ing, in all colors—acid test.
35 cents.
At
1.500 Yards Gottonades and Geor-
Worth
121 cents.
gia Plaids.
25 cents.
At
4.0(H) Yards 11 yards wide Colored
wort’>
25 cents.
Oil Cloth.
45 rn<ts.
At
300 Pairs Lisle Thread Gloves, in
worth
25 cents.
all colors.
75 cent--.
At
250 Pairs Misses Shoes, from 2 to 8.
Fully o'oi't 1
35 rents.
65 cents
At
900 Silk Embroidered Corsets.
wort
45 rents.
$1.0".
At
500 Bates' Spreads. Plain and
Fully u
75 cents.
Figured.
81.25
At
100 Plain and Lace Bound Para-
worth
81.51).
sols.
84. (111
'Above are a Few of the Immense Bargain:
OFFERED BIT THE
T rade Palace, C.P.Gray&Cc