Newspaper Page Text
CITYIN BRIEF '
Hbossip of the City Told in Brief
Paragraphs.
LOTS FROM THE NOTEBOOKS
■r ‘
■ OF THE NEW SOUTH’S REPORTERS
M f HURRIEDLY BUNCHED.
BHh of Nowh Gathered nt
'•Random and Pul Into One
Column—Some of the Hap
peninga of the Week.
Dry and dusty.
Rain needed badly.
||» Send in your job wofk.
Hng. Farmers are needing rain.
Picnics are now all the go.
Garden truck is burning up.
<AII flavor of soda water at Condors.
The buncoed man dreads the stranger.
The early bird is now apt to catch a
• Best and purest kHL water at Con
dors.
H. P. Crawford went to Atlanta last
■ Friday.
watches stop, but all are not stop
1X watches.
■> Spare the advertisements and spoil the
I . business.
Mr. J. C. Billinghurst, spent Friday in
■ | Atlanta.
| # A small advertisement is better than a
b bad traveler.
People above suspicion must,of cours»>,
1 40 stand very high.
The confidence of the political leaders
I f equals their gall
When bank stock is watered there’-
bound to be a run on it.
The tax receiver was in town last
p*' Monday and Tuesday.
The wages of sin are regulated by a
back-sliding scale.
There is a great deal of sickness
throughout the county.
E. F. Wright and B. G. Griggs visited
Atlanta last Thursday.
The church is all right, but some con
gregations are all wrong
The merchants are now closlpg up at
*-•: A 7 o’clock in the evening.
/ £ Mis? Annie Smith, a daughter of Mr.
nJ Dave Smith, is quite sick.
Hf . is to be envied. Me doesn’t
Hg have to stretch bis pants.
f rs: Itdosen’t spo l the barrel organ to
f f>‘‘ knock a few staves out of it.
'' Mrs. Lillis Waltom and Miss Effie Winn
a>« spent last Friday In Atlanta.
People who* have cast in their eye
I must have Iron inlhdi/bloqd. ,
V7 Roseola has about spent its force. A
few scattering cases yet in town,
i♦| • „ .
L '• a wise man who takes a large
I " «pec* and puts little matter in it
1 i 1 very wise man advertiseth, but a fool
speculareth od the Stock Exchange.
< 3 A bi 8 advertiser leavath an inheritance
I b ‘“ obll ‘ ,r « n ’ B children’s children.
I V 1 Misses Jennie Stokley and Nannis
•J Turner visited Atlanta last Friday.
Vulgarity in long clothes '» more shok
ing than Immodesty In short shirks.
Stationary in all shapes, styles and
gill quality at Selman, Mallory 4 Co. 5-3-tjl
g||g| A good advertisement is like the mer-
iStaSfe- chant’s ships; It bringeth abundance from
B?Br -
W ben you are roasting sotnobodv
that somebody is roaming
1
I t Whoso lovoth a good business lovetb
WW adv ‘’ rtlß ' u k; but he that despiv,>th f»me
■ is not wise.
Wh®n people loose their tempers what
* blessing It would be if they could
never And them again.
He that trusteth in a large circulation
shall be wealthy, but he that belleveth in
H|K\ cheap rates shall be busted.
■VI n B PP« arB to » hard matter to get
anyone to preach the commencement
B sermon at the college this year.
* Look up and see if your stationary is
getting low. If so come to The Nkw
■ I South office and have It replenished.
SSaa- the biHMt grad., of
Hhr ''
A A 1 a A ' - /"•
.. ■’ - WjOA
. >A * A.- ’ ■'
’U -.e: j T-.ents ~t
♦- l ,lac « to school
children innol l-.ud a better
ter place anywhere than Douglasville
Tultioh free.
\ Profeasor J. G. ('amp sits ho belongs
V) tbe >’' r ty where it only takes two to
B1Bk ” * majority, and the m.v.>rin is In
tyWitwtt county.
spring is now upon us in ail its bloom
s ‘ h*d beauty. Lebus show our apprvcla-
Uo ° of >t by being mo.e cheerful, buoy
0. *“*• Bmißbl ’' !Ul ' i kind to those around
"In A <*>®|»’cte line of patent me ii<ine*.xt
Selman Mallory A Co. s<Mjl
TO THE_FARMERS!
I am prepared to negotiate prompt
ly 8%
Five Year Loans On Farms.
I charge for my services a cash com
mission of 5%, which will cover all
expense except $lO of sls for Abstract
of Title.
Please call on, or write to,
C. P. N. BARKER,
Room 32, Gould Building, Atlanta, Ga.
Miss Clouts, a charming young lady,
is now visiting at Jeff’s. She arrived
Tuesday night. Mother and child are
doing well. Grandpa Furr is also rest
ing easy.
Mr. Cass Harding, of this place, who
recently visited his farm in Paulding
county and was taken dangerously ill,
we are glad to state, is on the road to
rapid recovery.
The successful young men in this world
do not stand around waiting for some
thing to turn up. They go to work and
turn something up. Everything depends
on one’s own effort.
There is a conscience of the head as
well as of the heart; and in old age we
feel as much remorse if we have wasted
our natural .talents as if we had per
verted our natural virtues.
The colo n ed people have done a very
commendable act towards their dead.
They met last week and cleaned off and
otherwise fixed up the graves, greatly
improving their grave yard.
Rev. J. J. Haines, Mr. Thomas Haines
and daughter, wife of Dr. T. J. Garner,
of Hope, Ark., who have been in attend
ence on the Baptist convention in At
lanta, are now the guests of Mr. A. G.
Weddington, of this place. They are
sons and grand daughter of Rev. Henry
Haines, a neted Baptist divine who left
this section for the west several years
ago. They will be royally entertained
while the guests of “Sandy” Wedding
ton.
DEnk coca-cola at Selman, Mallory &
Co. 5-3-tjl
WORK OF THE REAPER.
Mr. Seaborn Abercrombie’s Sudden
Death.—Other Deaths.
Mrs. Peavy, mother of Mr. C. O.
Peavy, of this place, died in Atlanta last
Tuesday. Her remains were brought to
Douglasville for interment last Thurs
day.
Mr. J. S. Smith, after lingering several
months with consumption, died last
Wednesday evening. His wife died only
a few weeks ago. He was buried by<
the Masonic fraternity, of which he was
a member at Holly Springs burying.
Mr. Seaborn Abercrombis, of Aber
crombie’s district’ died last Thursday.
He had been ailing only a few days.
He was a leading man in his district.
In politics he was in favor of the Thhd
party and was rather severe in his de
nunciations of opponents. He was burled
by the Masonic fraternity of this place,
being a member ,of the Douglarville
Lodge. There vL*a a large crowd at, his
funeral.
McElrss’t WINE OF CARDUI for femaledlseswe.
Mumps.
There are several cases of mumps in
town, and it seems to be the desire of
those who have them to strow them all
over town. The writer wishes no one
harm, but I f those that have them were
carried in a few Inches of the grave they
would be mere careful the next time
they that is not desirable.
T|p Tax “Equalization Board.
The Tax Equalization Board* met on
last Monday. The board is composed of
the following well known citizens. The
board will meet again on the 12th,
Tuesday: C. P. Bowen, of 730th dis
trict, W. A. Sayer, 1259th district,
Jacob Stovall, 12?lst district, T. H.
Selman, 780th district, Columbus Blair,
1273 d district.
Let every enfeeble woman know it!
There’s medicine that’ll cure her, and
the proofs positive!
Here’s the proof—if it dosen’t do you
S;ood within resonable time, report the
act to its makers and get your money
back without a word—but you won’t
do It!
The remedy is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription—and it has proved itself
the right remedy in nearly every case
of femal weakness. It is not a mlricale.
It won’t cure eyerything—but it has
done more to build-up tired, enfeeble
and broken-down women than any
other medicine known.
Where's the woman who’s not readv
for it? All that we’ve to do is to get
the news from her. The medicine will
do the rest.
Wanted—Women. First to know it.
Second to use it. Third to be cured by
it. The one comes of the other.
Douglasvillb, Ga. May 1, 1892.
The following letters remain un
claimed in the Pest Office at Douglas
vill Ga. and will be sent to the Dead
Letter Office If not called for by the
first day of June.
Joh n A. Wilson, P. M.
John Williams, Warner West,
Mrs. Tommie Sanders. A. W. North,
Miss A. L. Laster, F. M. Lindley,
Ladle Mack, W. M. James, Bid Hedy,
W. L. Taylor, B. P. Townsend, Obe
Fowler, J. E. Burton, J.H.
Phllfr* Au(ler9on > Mrs - R. A.
GOOD LOOKS.
Good looks are more that skin deep,
depending upon a healthy condition of
all the vitkl organs. If the Liver be in
active, you\have a Billions I«ook, if
your stomaChe be disordered you have
a Dyspeptic Look and If your Kidneys
be affected you have Pinched Look.
Secure good health and you will have
good looks. Elecric Ritters is the great
alterative and Tonic acts directly on
these vital organs. Cure Pimples,
Blotches, Bolls and gives a good 00m-
Slexion, Sold at Condors Drugstore,
Do, per bottle.
~*~Base~BaiL
The Douglasville and Villa Rica base
ball clubs will play a game of ball on
next Saturday afternoon, on the
Douglasville grounds. Come out and see
he game.
Mc£LAU »W!NEQFCA*PUI for Weak Nerrt*
AT RIYERMI
The Third Party Held Forth Last
Saturday.
C. C. POST AND WIFE.
Exhort to a Small Handfull of
People.
Mrs. Post Says the Negroes
Are as Good as the Dem
ocrats. Converts for
Democracy.
B. A. Camp, one of the most promi
nent and substantial citizens of
Campbell countv, was in Douglasville
yesterday, and in a conversation with
a New South reporter, he was asked
if he heard Post at Rivertown. He
said he was not there, but had au
thentic reports from the speaking.
“What kind of a crowd did he
have?”
“Very small. Most of them were
from Douglas county, and after the
people found out that Joe James
would not be there, many of the
already small crowd left. To Rive
you an idea of the crowd, Post said he
did not want them to iAvite him to
speak to so small a crowd again—it
was too expensive, and he didn’t have
time?”
“What did he say about Joe James
net going?”
“He said he knew James would not
be there —that James if as afraid to
meet him?”
“He didn’t tell that for the truth,
did he?”
“Yes, or at least he wanted them to
believe it, but they know Joe James
too well for that.”
“Were there any other speakers?”
“Mrs. Post spoke a few minutes,
during which time she took occasion
to say that the Democrats need not
howl so much about negro supremacy
in the south—that the negroes were as
good as the Democrats.”
“How did the crowd take that?”
“They took it so well that they told
Post that if it had been him instead of
a woman who said it, they would have
put him in the river.”
“Did Post and his wife make any
converts by their speeches?”
“Yes. I saw yesterday five or six,
and have heard of several more. Those
I saw said that Saturday morning
they were in favor of the Third party
—now, they are. with the Democrats.
Those I heard of expressing themselves
were on the same line. That’s the
kind of converts they made.”
“How about the Third party in
Campbell?”
“They are dropping off like sheep
with the rot. By the time the elec
tions come on I don’t thinkwny think
ing man in the county will vote the
ticket. Y’ou may put old Campbell
down where she has always been—
squaredn the Democraticcolumn.’'*|-
Mr black-draught tea f a«a Conattpatfeu.
Guaranteed Cure for La Grippe.
We authorize our advertised druggist
to sell you Dr. King’s New Discovery
for Consumption, Coughs and Colds,
upon this condition. Ifyou are afflict* d
with La, Grippe and will use this
remedy according to directions, giving
it a fair trial, and experience no bene
fit, you may return the bottle and have
your money refunded. We make this
offer, because of the wonderful success
of Dr. King’s New Discovery during
last season's epidemic. Have heard of
no case in which it failed. Try it.
Trial bottles free at W. H. Condor’s
Drug Store. Large size 50c. and SI,OO.
Chirdren’s Service. .
The following programme has been
improvised for the children’s service
on next Sunday a. m:
1. Opening Hymn.
2. Prayer by Superintendent Calla
way.
8. Responsive reading, by Superin
tendent and children.
4. Music.
5. Speech, Emory Weddington.
6. Recitation, Ruby James.
7. Music.
8. Speech, Lawton Moon.
9. Recitation, Mamie L. Strickland.
10. Music.
11. Talks by Professors Easley,Flem
ing, Callaway and Rev. J. L. Moon.
12. Missionary collection.
18. Music.
14. Benediction.
The people are invited to come to
the services. A special invitation is
extended to the young folks.
■C. A. Thompson,Seymour, Ind.,writes;
“My sister Jennie, when she wm a, young
girl, suffered from white swelling,
which greatly impaired her' general
health and made her blood very impure.
In the spring she was not able to do any
thing and could scarcely get about. More
than a year ago she took three bottles of
Botanic Blood Balm, and now she is
perfectly cured.
Lectnre at College Hall.
Professor J. G. Camp will deliver his
magnificent lecture on “Woman and
Her Influence,” at the College Hall on
next Friday night, 13th inst., for the
benefit of the Methodist porsonage.
Professor Camp has several times de
livered this lecture to crowded bouses,
and has never failed to elicit the high
est compliments on his masterly treat
ment of the subject His brilliance
and eloquence as a speaker are well
known, and we bespeak fqr him a
large and appreciative audience on
Friday night, Admission 24 cents.
THE ONLY ONE EVER PRINTED.
Can You Find the Word.
There is a 3-inch display advertisemen
in this paper, this week, which has no
two words alike exoept one word. The
same is true of each new one appearing
each week, from the Dr. Harter Medi
cine Co. This house places a “Crescent”
on everything they make and publish.
Look for it, send them the name ofthe
word, and ih»y will return you Book
Beautiful Lithographs or Samples Free.
George N. Lister.
Editor New South. \
George N. Lester died a few weeks
ago, his family is in need, a card has
been issued earnestly calling for aid to
these helpless ones by Messrs. Clay,
Trammell and Thompson, who have
consented to act as trustees, and to
safely invest any and all sums that may
be contributed for the benefit of George
Lester’s wife and his little orphan grand
children. The appeal is to the bar, the
Confederate veterans of Georgia and to
the personal friends of Colonel Lester,
and it is to be sincerely hoped that every
lawyer, every old veteran and every
friend will respond promptly, cheerfully
to this call, for no nobler, truer man
ever lived or died in Georgia; no nobler
or truer woman ever needed aid than
does his excellent wife now in her old
age and helpfulness.
The people of Douglas county knew
him and to them he needs no eulogy,
though a brief outline of his life may
not be uninteresting, especially to the
young men of the county who should
strive to emulate the example of this
illustrious man. He held positions of
honor and trust. No man was more
loved, trusted and respected by his peo
ple than George Lester, yet fortune was
charry of her gifts. His life was one
long struggle with advenity, borned,
poor, lived poor and died > poor man,
hopeful, cheerful, with au abounding
confidence in the goodness &nd mercy of
God, that all would be righxTnto him to
the end. His father died while he was
young, leaving his mother poor, with
several children to raise. (They lived at
Cumming, Ga ) She was aneble woman
of the true southern type—made a living
by her needle, and while she busily
sewed George, the oldest,.vent to school
and did in the house work.
When in the prime of manhood he
was asked where he was educated; he
replied, “in the chinquapin thickets
around Cumming, in the school house of
adversity.” But while he worked and
studied, his mother instilled into his
mind the truths of Christianity, laying
the ground work of a aobie character—
truthß<that he lived np te and exempli
fied in his upright walk all his life. He
could say what few other men could,
that in all his life he never used whisky,
never swore a prefane oath. Is it a
wonder that such a manjgained distinc
tion? So true, so loyal to his God and
his country. He was admitted to the
bar and married the daughter of Judge
Irvin, of Marietta, servedius a colonel of
a Georgia regiment during the war, lost
an arm at Pennville, Ky., and carried an
empty sleeve to his grave. His home
was desolated—his all swept away by
Sherman’s army.
He came out of the army homeless,
with one arm shot off, the other broken,
a wife and children to maintain. Did he
falter? Not he! With a supreme trust
iu his God he went to work, got a hull
of a house, dragged rails to make a
fence around a patch, made corn to
bread his wife and children, and said
that was ene of the happiest years of
his Forjk.jjme bfl did a lucrative
practice in Campbell and Douglas coun
ties, was at one time jnTue of the Blue
a«'i
at ihe time of hie' He was
stricken w ith parah sis eighteen months
before lie died, was a Sawyer of great
ability, was a just judga, a statesman, a
Christian, true to his <od, trit's to his
country, Democratic to the>sore.
Will the bar of Georgia, will the Con
federate veterans of Georgia (many of
whom fought by his the family
of thia‘truly good and great man suffer
for lack of aid? I earnestly appeal to
every member of the bar. to every sol
dier, to every friend of the good man in
Douglas county for help. * Let the
amounts, be much or little,it will help to
keep the wolf from the door of this good
woman and her orphan grand children.
Hand in all amounts to Colonel J. S.
James, who will promptly remit to the
trustees, and they will acknowledge re
ceipt Thb N«w South will publish a
list of all contributors. Respectfully,
Lizzie Glovxb.
Ab Afflicted Family.
Miss Lola Smith, the daughter of the
late J. S. Smith, who was taxied last
Thursday, was taken sick st the grave,
and is now quite sick at the residence of
Mr. A. R. Bomar, at Chapel Hill. Mr.
Bomar, who wps in town yesterday, re
ports that she is improving slowly.
tar WINE OF CARDUI, a Tonic for Wom«u.
Spring suite $lO to $25 atA. Rosenfeld
A Son, 24 Whitehall corner Alabama
streets, Atlanta, Ga.
GR A XT) SALE!
We place n Sale this a. m. the following
bargains: .
1,000 yards Debige-Atgets, worth 7.
1,000 yards Ghallies 5 cts worth 7.
1,000 yards fine Challies Sets worth 12.
850 yards Sateens 10 cts worth 15.
300 yards Fine Linen Chamburg 12 worth 15.
250 yards Brillianteen 20 cts worth 15.
750 S rds Fine W ! lite Uwns at cost -
75 odds and ends in coats and vest at and below cost.
bee our bargan coimter of Ladies and
Gents’ fine Summer Shoes sold regardless
of cost. AV e offer the above reduced prices
in order to close out a certain lines of our
stock.
Our New Stock of Ladies Dress Goods is
the prettiest in town. Our Gent’s furnish
furnishing goods are the latest in style aud
thff best in quality. Groceries, Hardware,
etc., as cheap as can be sold. Don’t forget
bargains. There ismoney in them for you
UPSHAW BROS & CO.
A MINISTERS’ FOND.
That is What is Wanted at the
College
FOR "YOUNG PREACHERS
Who Are Unable to Defray Their
Expenses-
A. Scheme That is Put Forth
to Bring in. the Money
for a Noble Pur
pose, Etc.
Editor The New South.
I beg space in your columns to call
the attention of our citizens to a scheme
that lam confident will meet the ap
proval of our entire people, who are so
widely and favorably known for their
exceeding liberality to all charitable or
benevolent purposes.
It is well known, there are several
most excellent young men attending our
college who are preparing themselves
for the ministry, and some of them are
not able, financially, to complete their
education. There are many others who,
for lack of means, are debarred from
getting an education which would fit
them for the ministry, and who, with
a Ljttle assistance, would enter our col
lege and soon prepare themselves. The
idea I wish to advance is to get up a
ministers’ fund for this purpose, to be
applied by the faculty, or trustees, to
the most deserving applicants. By this
means one or more young ministers
could be kept in the college all the time.
To start the fund, there are no doubt
many of our people who will readily
give five or ten, or even fifty or a hun
dred dollars. There are many wealthy
people throughout the country who
could easily be induced to give much
larger sums—even thousands of dollars
for so worthy a cause when once it is
started at home. Get the fund started,
and I suggest as a means of continual,
small contributions to it, the establish
ment in both of our churches birthday
contribution boxes. Put a box in each
church, and every Sunday let all whose
birthdays come on that day, or may
have come during the past week, put a
card in the box with name and age, and
a copper for each year of the giver’s life.
Os course this could not be made com
pulsory on any one, but when the idea
becomes understood, every Sunday
school scholar, old and young, teacher
and superintendent would contribute as
their birthdays arrive.
What do you think of it? Agitate the
subject and we will soon have free tui
tion absolute for a number of worthy
young men. p. McD. C.
Try BLACIGDRAUGHT tea for Dyspepsia.
Bubkiiigham’s Dye for the Whiskers
does its work thoroughly, coloring a
uniform brown or black, which, when
dry, will neither rub, wash off, nor soil
linen.
The seat of sick headache is Lot du
tbc brain. tiie stomach and
you cure it. Dr. Pierce’s Pellefts are
the Little Regulators. Only 25 cents
a vial;
GEOKGI A, Douglas County. To all whom
it may concern: Notice is herebv given that
Martha M. Huey, widow of John M. Huey,
deceaxed, has applied for the settlng apart of
a year’s support out of the estate of the said
deceased, appraisers having been appointed
for that purpose, and having made their re
turn as required by law. This is to cite all
parties interested to show cause, if any they
can, why said application should not be
I May^th, h i e ß/ rßtMOnday June ncxt -
H. T. Cooper, Ordinary.
Sheriff’s Sales for August, 1892
Will be sold before the court house door in
the town of Douglasville, Georgia, within the
lawful hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in
August, 1892, the following lands, to-wit:
Lots number nine hundred and twenty
seven (927), nine hundred and twenty-five
(925), four hundred and twenty-three (428),
one thousand and twenty (1020) nine hundred
and forty-six (946), nine hundred and forty
five (940), seven hundred and eight (706) nine
hundred and ninety-one (991), eight hundred
and fifty three (853), five hundred and forty,
two (542), seven hundred and twenty-five (725)
and five hundred and eighty-three (588). all
in the 18th district and2na section of origin
ally Cherokee, now Douglas county, Georgia,
and containing forty (40) acies, more or less
each. Also, lots number nine (9), forty-eight
(48) and ninety-seven (97),confaining two hun
dred,two and one-half (202%) acres each,more
or less, and one hundred (100) acres off of lot
number ninety-eight (98), in the first (Ist)
district and fifth (sth) section of originally
Carroll, now Douglas county, Georgia. Also
lot number seventv (70), in the third (3d) dis
trict and fifth (sth) section of originally Car
roll, now Douglas county, Georgia, containing
two hundred, two and one-half (202t,i acres
more or less. All levied on and to be sold as
wild lands, as the property of J. W Brown
and T.R. Whitley administrator on the
est»teof E.R. Whitley,deceased, under and by
virtue of six tax fl. fas. Issued by W. A. Bavei*
former tax collector of Douglas county, for
their State and county taxes forthevehrs
1885,1886, 1887, 1888, 1889 and 1880 Property
pointed out by W. A. Sayer, former taxcol-
I lector. This May 2nd, 1892.
1 F- Adebhold, Sheriff
1866 CHAMBEMIN, JOHNSON & CO-> 1892
Dry Goods, Carpets, Furniture and Shoes.
We think the Cheapest Store in the United States. Give us a chance to prove it.
n ru Pnnrlc.! Full stock Staple and Fancy, Domestic and Foreign. Dress Goods, Silks,
L»l y UUUUoi Linens, Ginghams, Gloves, Hosiery, White Goods, Laces,Em broideries, etc
Pamalcl Stock complete in every detail. Our large trade proves that our prices are
veil [JU to I lowest. Largest and best stock Draperies in the South.
Fl 1 unit urn S Largest stock to select from. Cheapest goods as well as the best. Wo
I LI I 111 Lu IU I can save you money on Furniture.
Qhnno j Made to order to fit and to wear. All in best and latest styles. Give us a trial
QllUuo I order, or write for Information.
CHAMBERLIN, JOHNSON & CO.,
66 & 68 Whitehall, and 1,3,5,7,9.11,13 & 15 Hunter Sts.,
Agents Butterlck*. Pattern,. ATLANTA, GA.
lEW GOODpEW GOODS?;
CHEAP, CHEAPER, CHEAPEST.
We keep in stock everything a person
may want, from a pair of needles down to
a four horse wagons.
Our stock of dress goods is wonderful and
complete; consisting of over three hundred
new styles and colors, such as Fancy Do
mestics, Silks, Linens, Ginghams, White '
Goods, Laces, etc.
Our stock of Clothing is enormous—over
one hundred and fifty New Styles an Col- "
ors to select from. Men’s suits, all wool,
$4.50 to $25 per suit.
Our Stock of Ladies, Misses, Children, Men's and Loys Shoes carfl
be beat for Q UALITY, STYLE and CHEAPNESS. All in the very
latest style. .
Furniture of all kinds and Wonderfully cheap. Oak Suits from
S2O to $45, Led Steads from $2 to $lO a piece.
Don't fail to see our enormous stock before you buy for we keep every
thing and ice will give you the highest price for anything you bring to
town to sell.
Le sure and see us before you bus t Thahks for past favors.
ROBERTS & PHILLIPS,
THE ONLY HARDWARE STORE IN DOUGLASVILLE,
KEEPS A FUL L LINEAND BEST QUALIFY OF
Buggy and wagon material, double and single plow stocks,
planters and all kinds of plow points and plow goods, stoves,
barb wire, nails, valley tin, grindstones, Rims’ knobs, and pad
locks, cutelry, blacksmith tools, patent stove backs, fft any
make of stove; water sets, cedar tubbs, fibre buckets.
HOLLOW AND TINWARE A SPECIALTY.
Speed indicators, saw lets, saws, files, carpenters tools of best
make; round and square iron, drill steel, steel bits, bolts of
every description. Infact everything kept in a first-class hard
ware Store
FIRE!
IS YOUR PROPERTY
INSURED
-A- o. i n s-s L o t> y ire?
Crawford & Wright
WILL WRITE YOU A POLICY.
They represent the best Companies in the Country.
'The United Underwriters, of Atlanta,
The Greenwich, of New York.
The Phenix, of Brooklyn,'
GET THEIR RATES ON THREE AND FIVE YEAR POLICIES.
Office in The Bank Building.
THIS SPACE BELONGS TO
H. P. SIBLEY & CO.,
Who Are Opening Up a Nice Stock
OE*
Furniture Family Grocreies,
ETC.,
IN THE JAMES BLOCK,
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.» For Sale by Selman, Mallory &
3