The Macon news. (Macon, Ga.) 189?-1930, March 25, 1898, Page 4, Image 4

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4 MALUft NtWb, ESTABLISHED ISSA NEWS PRINTING COMPANY, PUBLISHERS. R. u- -.Y, ButhricHS TOM W. LOYLESS. Editor. THE EVENING NEWS will be delivered by carrier or mail, per year, $5.00; per week, 10 cents. THE NEWS will be for sale on trains. Correspondence on live subjects solicited. Real name of writer should accompany same. Subscriptions payable in advance. Failure to receive paper should be reported to the business otfiee. Address all communications to THE NEWS. Offices: Corner Second and Cherry SstreetS. .... ■. l .. \IASLLX THE STATE TICKET. For Governor, ALLEN D.CANuLER, of Hall. For Secretary of State, MARK A. HARDEN, of Bartow. For Comptroller-General, W. A. WRIGHT, of Richmond. For Attorney-General, JOSEPH M. TERRELL, of Mer riwether. For Treasurer. W. M. SPEER, of jFulton. For Commisioner of Agriculture, O. B. STEVENS, of Terrell. For School Commissioner, G. R. GLENN, of Bibb. They do say Judge Atkinson’s Dooly county effort fell flat. South Georgia seems to be coming up right along—for Candler. The fact can't be disguised that Berner is stronger than Atkinson —'and that Cand ler is far stronger than both of them. The Macon Telegraph and Atlanta Jour nal stand almost alone in their opposition to early primaries. But as neither is en titled to a voice in those primaries, even they should become reconciled. The Monroe Advertiser has this to say of Congressman Bartlett: ‘‘The speech of Congressman C. L. Bartlett on the Hen derson bankruptcy, bill, was an able one and has been highly complimented. Mr. Bartlett is an able, conscientious and tire less worker, and has done much for the people of his district.” The Atlanta Commerieial, in endorsing a recent editorial in The News, says: “The Macon News, in reviewing the supreme court’s decision in the Flanagan case, very properly inquires why the same law should not apply to Mrs. Nobles. IWe have full confidence in the integrity and wisdom of the board, and that inclines us to believe it will commute the woman’s sentence, if not pardon her absolutely.” Fully ninety per cent, of the newspapers of the state have endorsed the early prim aries. Here is another endorsement from the Telfair Enterprise, an Atkinson sup porter: “We heartily commend the state Democratic committee’s action in calling primaries for the election of delegates to the state convention to nominate a gov ernor and state house officers. A long contest for party nominations is very un wise, we think; better get in trim to fight the party enemies, instead of an all sum mer’s fight inside of party ranks.” Says the Thomasville Times-Enterprise: “Candler scores a point, and a telling one, too, on Atkinson, in addressing him a let ter in reply to one from the judge, pro posing a joint debate. Colonel Candler addresses him as, “Honorable Spencer R. Atkinson, Railroad Commissioner, Atlan ta, Ga.’ The fact that Judge Atkinson is holding on to one fat office, while reach ing cut for another, will not be relished by the people of Georgia. It will be re membered that Colonel Candler promptly resigned as secretary of state, when he announced himself as a candidate for governor.” An agent of the Merrimac .Manufactur ing Company, of Massachusetts, is in Georgia “looking over the ground." It has not yet been determined that the mills shall be moved to the base of the cotton supply in the South, but it is significant that the company has an eye on this sec tion, notes the Birmingham News. It doubtless recognizes that the inevitable must come and that the South is soon to be the seat of the cotton manufacturing industry of the continent. Every Southern state is filled with favorable mill sites and the wise and progressive cotton manufac turers are availing themeslves of them. Says the Thomaston Times: “It now seems that the Hon. Charles L. Bartlett will have a clean sweep in the primary, and why should he not have? Bartlett is a man of brains and energy and is loyal to his party and to his constituents. He i is one of the hardest workers in the lower ! house of Congress, and, having been there j two terms, he is well acquainted with his ' fellow statesmen, with the plans of work ! pursued by the national law makers and is now in better position than ever before ■ to serve the people he represents. The i Sixth district could not do better than to ■ elect Mr. Bartlett for a third term, and ! lhe voters having realized this, will ‘put iim through.” The Washington Post throws this bou |uet to Congressman J. M. Griggs: “No j recent publication of a speech in the con- ' gressional Record has been so freely punc tuated with applause as that of Represen tative Griggs, of Georgia, and it is justly so, for Mr. Griggs did great credit to him self, and made a very favorable impression upon the House. There was sufficient politics in his argument to arouse the en thusiasm of the minority, and sufficient force and humor to command the atten tion of his political opponents. In con trasting the conditions between North and South Mr. Griggs paid his respects to New England, and declared that ‘the average Southerner would not feed his worst enemy on the stale bread and beans which are the staple food of New England working men.’” , Tne Coming Crisis. i Events which forebode a conflict be \ tween this country and Spain continue to multiply until now no man, however ; conservative, can really doubt that a crl i sis is almost at hand. There is now hardly any doubt of the i fact that the president will act immediate i ly in the Cuban matter, and it is not to be ; believed that he will content himself with ' recognition o’ the Cuban government. On the contrary, public sentiment has forced nim to yield, and nothing short of active j interference will satisfy the popular de mand. For once the Republican party has been compelled to ignore Wall Street and McKinley has been compelled to ignore H a v 3. d a. *■ to much positive evidence of the inhu man outrages practiced by the Spanish in Cuba has been offered by statesmen whose j testimony is worthy of belief, that even : the‘most conservative of our people now . demand that an end be put to the Cuban I srtuggle. It is another Armenia, and that, too, right at our doors. The president evidently realizes that : there is no way out of it, and for several : weeks past he has been making active l prepatations to meet the issue. The crisis I cannot be long delayed. It may may come i today, tomorrow’; it cannot be later than : next week. Whether or not the president's action will mean war will depend entirely upon Spain, as will also the character of the struggle. But war, at 'last, seems inevita ble. And, regardless of the Maine disas ter, the attitude of this government is founded on right, justice and humanity. Senator Thurston's Speech, Senator Thurston’s speech in the United States Senate yesterday was one of the most dramatic efforts ever delivered in that body. Aside from its tragic features, however, it was in every way an eloquent and masterful effort, and bids fair to go down to history as one of the most mem orable speeches of these troublous times. There is no estimating the effect of such a speech just at this time. Coming as it does from the chairman of the convention which nominated President McKinley as well as from a strong supporter of the ad ministration, it is significant to a degree and indicates the strong pressure that is being brought to bear on the President in official circles. Moreover, the speech was so genuinely sincere and so evidently truthful that it is simply unanswerable, and, will, therefore, be accepted by ths American people as conclusive proof of the horrors that exist in Cuba, for which we, as near neighbors, are, to a certain extent, morally responsible. It will also be ac cepted as a conservative yet positive esti mate of our duty in the premises, and as such will convince the majority of Amer ican people that to delay longer would be criminal. Mr. Stevens’ Campaign. Hon. O. B. Stevens, South Georgia’s candidate for commissioner of agriculture, was in iMacon a few hours yesterday. Since announcing his candidacy Mr. Stevens has visited fully half of the counties of the state, and he is meeting with splendid success everywhere. He is making the most vigorous campaign of any of the can didates for state house offices, and he is rightly meeting with proportionate suc cess. Everything indicates that Mr. Ste vens will get Bibb's six votes, and his nomination is looked upon by his friends as a certainty. As The News has repeat edly stated, the people of Georgia could select no better man for the place. He is not only a man of splendid business abil ity and long experience in state affairs, but he is a. practical farmer and one of the most successful in Georgia. A dispatch from Versailles, Ind., the town where five men were lynched some time ago because they were suspected of burglary, says there is a movement in Ripley county looking to the nomination of Hezekiah Hughes as sheriff as a rebuke to Governor Mount. Hezekiah Hughes is supposed to have been one of the leaders of the lynching bee. He was a few weeks ago brought to trial for the crime as a result of the energetic action of Governor Mount and the district attorney. It ap pears that there was very srong circum stantial evidence against Hughes, but it was impossible to get direct testimony against him, and upon trial he was ac quitted in short order. The trial was so farcical that the prosecuting attorney said, when the verdict was rendered, that it really seemed from the testimony that the five men bad broken jail and gone out and hanged themselves. “The proposition to elect Hughes to a high office,” correct- I ly concludes the Savannah News, “marks the difference in the manner in which lynching is regarded in Indiana and the South. In this section of the country such deeds may be condoned under certain cir- j cumstances, but they are never glorified.” I Two Noble Triumphs. Mr. Editor: Seldom have the telegrams ■of a single day combined two more sig.ni ficen t events than those of today which report (1) the abandonment of the long established custom of christening vessels with wine, and (2) the decision of the su preme court of Georgia uphold the consti tutionality of the dispensary laws and de claring that no individual has “a property right to have issued to him a license to sell intoxicating liquors.” The first event indicates the subtle power of growing public opinion. It is no longer decorous to parade intoxicating liquors on social occasions. And it was, to the liquor traffic, “the unkindest cut of all,” that the vessel whose launching signalized this fact was “The Kentucky.” This was al most as striking a when “old Bourbon” ; county went dry in a local option election. ■ The other event indicates the broadening ■ scope of legal methods or restricting and i prohibiting the traffic. Where now are the ■ jurists who declared the anti-barroom bill • would not stand the test of the courts? i Walter B. Hill. An 11l Timed Test. A young woman who lives on Capitol bill and has a name which exactly ex- ! presses her nature spent a part of last ' summer in Atlantic City. There is in j Atlantic City an Episcopal church whose i doors are never closed. The paster is ex ceedingly devout and ultra high church, i and he rebels prayers every day. The Washington young woman went into the church one morning. The rector bad just begun to read the service, and she was the only listener. The rector finished the prayers, and it than became evident that be meant to do bis full duty by his con gregation. He was going to preach a ser mon to the Washington young woman. “Dearly beloved,” he began,gazing ear nestly into space, “I purpose speaking to you this morning from the text”— and to the dismay of his solitary listener he con- , tinned, “from the text, ‘Depart from me, ?or I am a sinful man.’ Chicago Inter 3cean. MACON NEWS FRIDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 25 1898. THE OLD CIRCUS MAN. HIS TALK ABOUT THE FIRST SOUVE- NIRS GIVEN BY SHOW PEOPLE. They Were Distributed by the Great Gi raffe A Thrilling Incident Which At tended One Performance—How the Peo ple Stood on the Giraffe's Shadow. "The first souvenirs I ever knew of i being given out in the show business,” said the old circus man, "we gave away in our shew at the time we had the big 18 foot giraffe. Wo never had au at traction that beat the tig giraffe. The people were just carried away with him. There wasn’t anything about him but what interested them, even the slightest little things. On clear days, when we were where we could do it and the sun was right for us, we used to get the giraffe out in front of the entrance of the main tent and have him stand i there like a great sentry. People used to step and look up at him, and then the first thing you know somebody’d dis cover his shadder. Anybody’d cast a long shadder at that hour of the day, of course, but the giraffe's shadder reached as far as you could see. And as soon as one man begun to look at it 40 others : did, and then you’d see ’em. I’ve seen 1,000 people at a timeline up long that shadder and just stand along the edge of it down past the main tent and the sideshow tents, just standing there lookin at it. The giraffe was great, but his shadder fairly staggered ’em. And there they’d stand till the sun dropped down under the edge of the earth, and the first thing they knew there wasn’t any shadder. Then they’d stare at each other for a minute, and then all bunch up together again and look at the giraffe till we took him in. "We used to have a line on the pro gramme saying that at 3 o’clock and at 9 o’clock the great giraffe would hand around ice water. That’s where the sou venirs come in. We used to give away the glasses the water was in. The glasses were marked, ‘Souvenir of the Great Giraffe,’ and whoever got ’em could keep ’em. The seats in our circus were divided into four sections. We used to give away four dozen tumblers at every performance, one in each section When the time come, we’d march the giraffe around the edge of the ring, and in front of each section his keeper would baud him a wire holder holding a dozen glasses, which he would take by the handle in his mouth. Tall as he was, he could reach easy to the highest back seats. It’s astonishing how people used to grab for those glasses. It seems as though the whole section would stand up on the seats and all grab for the holder when it come near ’em. They’d spill the water and get wet and have the greatest time you ever heard of, but nobody got hurt, and so we just let her buzz along. But finally something did happen. : “At one evening entertainment when he was serving out the souvenirs, when we come to one of the sections, there was a man sitting on the fourth tier from the top who picked up his boy, a bright looking youngster about 10 years old, who was sitting alongside of him, and sat him up on his shoulder. The giraffe lifted the holder up and swept it along the seats with the people grabbing, and when it come near this man with the boy on his shoulder the man just lifted him up so that the boy could stand on his shoulders. He was going to get one anyway, and when the holder came along the boy made a grab for it. There was only one glass left in it then, but the boy got it. He upset it lifting it out of the holder and scattered the water all over everybody, but that didn’t count. He got the glass and was com ing down with it when his father, in stead of feeling him jounce down on his shoulder, felt his weight growing light er, and the next minute he and every body else saw the boy suspended in the air. When the giraffe saw the last glass go, he lifted the bolder, the way he al ways did, to clear the people before swinging it around and down to the keeper. This time when he lifted it the buttons on the outside of the cuff of the boy’s jacket got caught la the wires. They were sewed cm the way mothers sew on buttons, and they held the youngster’s weight easily, and when the giraffe lifted the holder up he lifted the bey with it "Then there was a scene. We knew the giraffe wouldn’t hurt a fly, but it looked to the people as though he had the boy in his teeth and -was going to sling him through the other end of no where. The whole audience rose up and stood leaning forrard, watchin and never say in boo, but the giraffe swung his neck around as gentle and easy as the arm of a crane and lowered the holder and the boy hanging to it safe into the arms of the keeper in the ring. The boy hadn’t even dropped the tum bler. "Then the people did holler, and the giraffe walked off as stately as you please, the boy climbed back up to his pop, and the show went on. Nobody hurt, but when we run out of the tum blers we had on hand we adopted an other style of souvenir.”—New York Sun. Unappreciative. "Palette felt disappointed because you didn’t attend his exhibition of paintings.” "I was detained.” "But he kept the gallery open very late. ’’ "Yes, that’s what detained me until a little later. ” —Cleveland Plain Dealer. Tetricus, the barbarian, was the first man to wear trousers, the two part gar ment having been forced upon him by his captor, Aurelian, with the intention of making Tetricus appear ridiculous. The costume, however, seems, after sev eral centuries of usage, to have made a hit. A state lunch in China contains 146 dishes. The best time to advertise Is all the Lima. CLAY, CALHOUN, WEBSTER. Recollections cf a Woman Still Living Who Met the Famous Trio In Washington. Mrs. William Armstrong Davison, now in her eighty-fifth ycar, lives in Jefferson City. She was a conspicuous woman in the society of Washington in the times of Clay, Webster and others who made his tory. Os Webster she says: "He was the most unusual looking man I ever saw, his dark skin and beetling brows having earned lor him the cognomen of ‘Black Dan.’ In manner and dress be was most scrupulous. His coat, modeled on the Byronio lines of the times, was blue in color, ornamented with brass-buttons. He was a noticeable figure anywhere. I was not surprised when afterward I beard his speeches in the senate chamber, where six years before he had made himself famous in his cele brated reply to Eayne of South Carolina, with his wonderful gift of oratory and a voice ponderous in volume. I became per sonally conscious of that -feeling of awe which caused his opponents to consider him in oratorical combat one of the most formidable of adversaries. “During one of my visits to the senate Mrs. Linn and I were being ushered to the Whig side of the house when we saw approaching us Dr. Linn and a tall and exceedingly handsome man. “ ’I want to present to you a friend of your father,’ Dr. Lian said, turning to me and introducing Henry Clay. Making a most elaborate bow, Mr. Clay spoke of my home in his flowery way. ‘Oh, that little Whig city, Wheeling, the very Eden of my heart!’ “We next spoke to John C. Calhoun, and I wondered why Vice President Van Buren chose to emphasize his insignificant appearance by calling Senator Calhoun, who was dignified and the typical states man, to occupy the chair in his absence. The vice president’s figure was small and weazened. His whole appearance as well as his character justified bis sobriquet ‘Fox.’ He was a widower and much given to ladies’ society.” Asked about tbo dress of that time, Mrs. Davison replied: “Our dresses were nearly all made alike —that was one satisfaction. For evening wear light colored silks, cut short waisted, with sleeves of large puffs, in which we frequently wore pillows, to give them the requisite size. Our skirts cleared the floor about six inches, and we wore white silk stockings and satin slippers. For day wear our gowns were of dark silks, decol lete, with detachable long sleeves to slip under the puffs. Over the shoulders we wore a cape of the silk, and we substituted black stockings and slippers for the white ones. One of my bonnets was a coal scut tle shape of cream velvet, surmounted by high standing white plumes. The men wore colored coats with brass buttons, fanciful waistcoats and soft white Byron collars, with black silk stocks.” Every eno Os Mrs. Davison’s children, of whom she has eight living (her home is with the eldest, Dr. A. C. Davison), and nearly every one among her grandchil dren, has some trophy of those bygone days. Brocades, laces, berthas, old fans, a cable chain of gold with monocle attach ed, her wedding gown waist, in which her granddaughter and namesake has been photographed, a garnet and turquoise bead reticule, which she bestowed upon me—all are preserved with great pride and care.— Kansas City Star. Mme. JBonaparte’s Huge Gong. Mme. Caroline J. Bonaparte, widow of Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte, lives in a house on K street immediately adjoining the residence of John Addison Porter, sec retary to the president. Among the other domestic paraphernalia of Mme. Bonaparte is a certain huge gong located in the sta ble at the rear of her house, by means of which she summons the coachman and other servants when she desires their as sistance. Mr. Porter’s wife has been seri ously ill for some time, but Mme. Bona parte’s desire for the comfort and company of her servants has been by no means less ened on that account. On the contrary, the btg bell has boomed out time and again, day and night, until Mr. Porter had forgotten the Cuban situation, the an noyance of office seekers and everything else. He accordingly filed a complaint w ith the District commissioners, alleging that the ringing of the big gong was a public nuisance and should be suppressed by the police. That department accord ingly sent out Lieutenant Boyle, who had an interview with the relict of the distin guished scion cf the French imperial fam ily, and as a result presented an official report in which be said that “Mme. Bona parte says she will continue to use the gong just as she has done for the last 13 years.” Further investigation showed that the police regulations could suppress bells and similar nuisances only when they were rung in public streets and alleys. Secre tary Porter thereupon took an appeal to Commissioner Wight, who has charge cf the police bureau, but thus far no means have been suggested to relieve Mr. Porter of the nuisance except by moans of a form al suit in court. The controversy is a fun ny one, but up to date Mme. Bonaparte, who has something of a reputation for firmness, is decidedly triumphant and cor respondingly exultant. With all the power of the administration behind him, Mr. Porter has been unable to suppress the Lig gong in the stable, and his sick wife is correspondingly the sufferer.—Washing ton Latter in Chicago Tribune. Mme. de Louie. Although Dupuy de Lome’s troubles do not seem to weigh heavily on him, Mme. de Lome prostrated by the blow. She is the only child of a merchant prince of Cadiz and brought to her poor but noble husband a dower of more than $3,00u,000. She is an unusually ambitious woman and has spent her money liberally to further her busband’s political fortunes. During the evil days when Madrid was skirmish ing for finances with which to keep up the $200,000 per annum which Spain boasted was the salary of her minister, Mme. de Lome’s private purse was at her husband’s disposal, and It is stated that she has spent $200,000 since they came to Washington. —San Francisco Argonaut. A Feathered Surgeon. A story is told which would indicate that swallows have considerable surgical skill as well as intelligence. A certain physician found in a nest a young swallow much weaker than its mate, which had one of its legs bandaged with horsehairs. Taking the hairs away, he found that the bird’s leg was broken. The next time he visited the nest he found the leg again bandaged. He con tinued to observe “the case,” and in two weeks found that the bird was cautiously removing the hairs, a few each day. The cure was entirely successful.—Pear eon’s Weekly. You can talk to 10,000 every day through the colunuu of The News. flow POWDER Absolutely Pure Japan au Object Lesson. Japan’s present experience is affording the world some exceedingly valuable testi mony on a variety of important economic problems. She furnishes a panoramic ob ject lesson in industrial evolution so rapid that we may perhaps see the whole process of transformation from barbarism to com paratively advanced civilization in the course of one generation The very rapid ity of movement increases the friction and hardship, but it will bring Japan out of the slough all the sooner. Capital is in troducing the instruments of civilization; upon labor rests the responsibility of dis tributing the benefits of that civilization throughout the naticn. The method by which they will have to do this is the same that has of necessity been resorted to wherever the factory system has appeared and developed—namely, organization. They must organize to demand better wages, organize to secure shorter hours, organize to bring pressure upon the legis lative authorities for the enactment of hu mane factory labor regulations, without which the conditions of toil are even more degrading and stultifying than under the ancient systems cf industry.—Gunton’s Magazine. A New Use For the Telephone. When tbo enterprising burglar’s not a-burgling, he is using his thinking facul ties to the disadvantage of others. A firm of booksellers was called up late one even ing by telephone, and in respouse to the inquiry it was stated that the firm had in stock a number of very valuable books. The caller thanked the firm and remark ed that he would be in in the morning to purchase some. When morning came, the shop was found to have been broken open, and the very books about which inquiry over the telephone had been made were stolon. This shows the enterprise of the modern burglar. He was ready to rob the place, but ho took she precaution of finding out whether the job would be worth while. By using the telephone k .e saved himself ail the annoyances of identification which a personal cull would ba to entailed.— Pearson’s Weekly. We fire Book-Sellers Up to date and a trifle beyond. Always were— always will be. When you wish the latest call on yours truly. If we haven’t it you need look no fur ther. We make a specialty of “having it.” BURR BROWN, The Book-Seller. APPLICATION FOR CHARTER. GEORGIA, Bibb County.—To the supe rior court of said county: The petition of H. B. 'Erminger, W. J. Massee, W. H. Woodson, of Bibb County, Ga., shows: First. That they desire for themselves, their associates and successors, to be in corporated under the name of “Massee Lumber 'Company.” Second. That the object of this associa tion is pecuniary gain to its stockholders. Third. That the general nature of the business of said association shail be to deal in land and lumber, to buy and sell the same, to lease land for the timber of its products, to erect saw mills and operate or use the same in any way, to prepare lumber in any form for the imarket and to 'have the necessary machinery and appli ances for putting lumber in such form, to do a general mercantile business, also to locate lumber yards wherever they se fit, to build houses for sale or rent, to buy and sell real estate, to make contracts per taining to the operation of these several businesses and to borow money and secure payment for same in any way. Fourth. That .the principal office of said association shail be in the city of Macon, Bibb county, Ga., where its main business wil Ibe ransacted for he present, and they desire the privilege to transact business anywhere in and throughout, said state and elsewhere. Fifth. The amount of capital stock of said corporation, at he commencement, shall be ten thousand dolars, divided into shares of one hundred dollars each, ten per cent of which, and more, has been ac tualyl paid in in money or its equivalent and petitioners ask the privilege of in creasing said capital stock to fifty thou sand dollars to be paid in as former, in money or its equivalent. Sixth. That each shareholder of the cor poration shal Ibe liable for he amount of stock subscribed or held by him and no further. That they have complied with the statute in maters of this nature. This petition seeks all the powers inci dent to corporation of like character and the right o do al such acts as are neces sary for the legitimate execution of the purposes in the business and businesses stated. To maks by-laws for the govern ment and management of Ithes corporation and in same showing the relative value of each stockholder’s vote said constitu tion binding on its members, and according to it the corporate body shal elect its directors or afficers, and the business be managed, and with the right to make a by-law giving privilege to the mebers of the corporation to change the principal office to such part of Georgia as they see fit, and where their main business may be transacted, and notice in the Evening News be published for one month of such change. To have the right to sue and be sued, to make contracts, to sell or mort gage the property, to receive donations by gift or will, to buy and hold property, real or personal, necessary to the or ganization, and have the other common powers. Wherefore the petitioners pray the court for a charter incoporating them for twenty years, with the right of renewal and in any way sought and not inconsistent with law after legal advertisement. This March 18, 1898. BAXTER & REID, Petitioners Attorneys. I, Robert A. Nisbet, clerk of the superior court, do certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the original now on file in this office. This March 18, 1898. ROBERT A. NISBET, Clerk. THE jniHinem Companu THE test Sum OUR SPRING OPENING Has been the greatest success, and many were the kind praises we received from the ladies for our efforts to place be= fore them such an ( exquisite stock at 1 such reasonable J prices. Our sales 1 were the largest of I any previous sea= I son, which was a gratifying tribute to our labors. This is but the forerunner of what we intend to do this season. Our stock will be con stantly replenished with all the Novelties as soon as they appear in the metropolis. Our stock of Childrens School Bats and caps Is immense in variety and style and prices from 2-5 c up ward. Ask to see our Roses at 15c a bunch. We have, them in twelve different colors and would be considered cheap at 25c. Our stock of Flowers and Ribbons cannot be equaled ia this city. Our stock of Infants’ Caps must be seen to be appreciat ed for variety and lowness of price. Please ask for anything you may not see, as we can not display everything. NEWMAN MILLINERY COMPANY , Out of town Millinery sup- gj plied at wholesale prices. 1