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THE OGLETHORPE ECHO.
Volume XX.==Number 9.
BEFORE STOCK TAKING!
Mid'Winter Clearance Sale
BEFOEE STOCZ: 'T-^EEUnTC^.
Oil 1 C DAYS BEFORE CHRISM; THEN ■ STOCK TAKING BEK
Less than Cost All Winter Goods
such as Blankets,
(Juilts, Woolen
Underwear, Flannels and Heavy Woolen
Dress Goods will be sold for less than man¬
ufacturer’s cost.
Fifty Pieces more of those Tricot and Flannel Dress Goods. I 2 Yards Wide, only 25 Cents a Yard.
^^^Tliink of a nice Wool Dicsh for'$2.25, actually worth twice the jiricc.-c^n
DAVISON & LOWE, 109 Clayton Street, ATHENS, GA.
The t Admiration t of * All!
Is a strong claim to make for my stock, but it is based upon
these facts: The unrivalled unerring superiority good taste of of our the styles,quality public. To
and prices, and the
command universal admiration requires no small degree of
merit, and the merit of our Fall and Winter Suits and Over¬
coats could not be greater than it is.
The * Season’s * Triumph i
With what ease the lead once gained is maintained! The
right of the line in the march of progress belongs to us by
the inalienable right of possession. Our leadership in Cloth¬ the
ing. Furnishings and Hats, from the honestly good to
topmost best, is unquestioned, all competitors have been
distanced in the race of enterprise. The agencies employed
have been legitimate business principles, pure and simple.
The Best of Everything at Lowest Prices
Were the goals of my ambition, and step by step I have been
ascending to the tip top of the hill of trade. I have reached
it, and show mv appreciation in the continued keeping of
.Seasonable amf Fashionable Outtittings at “Popular Prices."
My Ten Dollar Overcoats.
The arc at least *2.50 better value titan the average Clothing
House shows for the same money. They are made up from
t lie latest effects and come in’all weights. I have also as
great bargains in my 312.50, *15.00, *10.00, *18 00 and
*20.00 Overcoats, upon which I can save yon from *3-50 to
*5.00. The are the realization of the artistic tailor’s dream.
ILvUo-cIHin.'tosIfci.os
I nndoubtedlv show the largest and most handsome line ever
displuved in this city. Prices ranging *5.00 up to *22.00.
An elegant and most complete array of Furnishings and
Hats. Your iuspc 2 tiou solicited.
CHHS. MORRIS.
“Popular Price” Clothier, Hatter and Furnisher, Athens, Ga.
LEXINGTON, GA., FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 9, 1892.
Cloaks & Shawls Every Cloak
and Shawl in
our house will
be sold for less than first cost. These
goods are of newest designs and patterns
and are rare bargains at the prices.
FOR MISSIONS.
A Column or so Devoted to This
Laudable Work.
EDITED BY MRS. E. A. GRAY
In Which Will Appear From Time to
Time Local Items and Extracts
Relative to the Great Cause.
When our Master said, “It is more
blessed to give ” than to receive,” lie j
meantthathe . who , gives . . to Missions . j
receives greater benefits than those to
whom the gifts are sent; that the great
esl work of Foreign Missions is accom- j
plisbed at home and not abroad, in the
hearts of Christian men women who
gives their money and their lives more !
than in the hearts of the heathen to
whom the Gospel comes. Missions: |
Giving is the heart of
Missions is the heart of Christianity;
Christianity is the palm-tree—it . .. , has
as
hut one bud, and that is this Missonary
spirit. Destroys 1 hat hud and Chris
tianity withers and decays and he who
refuses to give to Missions is doing
much to destroy the power of that re
ligion which he professes.— Ex.
J)o not say we prefer to give to home
objects, for we cannot afford to send
men and money out of the countv.
I wonder if thst in wLicit the Angels
said when God spoke of giving up IIis
only Son to leave the home land and go
to a stray country? It is what we should
have said had we been there. Jsitnot?
For even in our charity we cannot af
ford not to be thinking of ourselves. :
i>,.« Cut i, is (hi, tins indeed indeed all an we we are are cnnahle capable of? ot .
Are we mver to give only to lend,
hoping for something again, and help call it
giving? Are we never to our i
fellowmen, however needy, till we are
quite sure we shall not ourselves be the
poorer? Ts this narrow selfishness the
breadth of our generosity? But what,
if by refusing to send the civilizing
enterprising Gospel to the Heathen we
are missing a great opportunity, de- i
_
c!inin» an investment which would
bring in libera! stores of wealth?
Be that as it may, no nation was ev
the poorer yet for obeying God’s com
j Cl, 'U‘S.
hold your money, withhold yonr rnis
siouarics, and this country will he the
poorer. Give out, your money, give
out your missionaries—the very best
and m vastly increased number—and
this nation will be a hundred fold
richer.
“There is that scallerelh and yet in
creaseth; there is that withholdeth
more than is meet and-it, tendeth to
poverty.—“/to not Say.”
“I don’t feel that I’m called to go.”
Ought you not to feel called? Think
of these words of the late lion. Keith
Falconer: “While vast continents are
shrouded in almost utter darkness, and
hundreds of millions suffer the horrors
pf heathenism, the burden of proof
lies upon L you to show that the cir
cumsl nces i n wh ich God has placed
you were meant by Him to keep you
out of the mission field.”
A Moravian 7Xth™ called upon
[ jy a Christian visitor with bad news,
“Your son,” said he to the mother,
“is gone.” “Is Thomas gone to
heaven through the mission life?
Would to God that he would call my
son Join?.”
Well, John did become a missionary
and fell. And this lime the commit
tee were V( , ry 8a ,p but before opening
t j u ,j r ihe old woman anticipated
(he story? am j exclaimed: “Thank
God! Would that he would call my
, a(jt William!”
William, too, went and fell, when
the noble woman exclaimed. “Would
that 1 had a thousand sons to give to
God!”
Oh! would that we had a thousand
such mothers! Then would our ranks
he full.
—_■». . —
i$ TATK OP Ohio, city ok Toledo. i **
j,r< as CJcnty j j
Fkask . I. ohkkry makes oath that he i*
the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Ciiknky
A L«., doing business in the C.ty of Toledo.
County and Male aforesaid, and that said
wj |j the ONE IIENDUED
pou.aks fo, each and every case of Catarrh
that cannot he cured by the ui>e of Hall’s
Catakrii cckk.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and sub-cribed in my
P^nce, this «th day of December, A. I).
f 1 A. W. GLEASON.
( Fh'.A \. NoUiry IMblic,
)
Hal IV Catarrn Cure is taken internally and
not* directly on the blood and niac'.U3_ surface
of the system. Send for testimoniale free.
F. J. CHENEY A Co., Toledo.O.
by Druggists, 7So.
________
Subscription $1.00 a Year.
DOLLS! DOLLS! DOLLS! 2,000
Dolls for tlio Holiday trade
now on display. Special
prices to Sunday-schbol classes and mer
chants. Nowhere else in the city can a
better assortment be found.
COHEN’S * PRICE * LIST
For Next Week.
40 inch all wool Black and Colored Henriettas at 50c., worth 75c.
54 inch all wool Flannel suitings at 50c., worth 75c.
54 inch all wool Storm Serges at 1.10, worth 1.25.,
42 inch all wool Storm Serges at 50c.,worth 75c.
54 inch all wool Ladies Cloths at 1.10, worth 1.50.,
40 inch all wool Irredesent Striped cloths at 50c.. worth 75c.
40 inch all wool Diagonal Serges at 50c., worth 75c.
40 inch all wool English serges at 50c., worth 75c.
40 inch all wool Fluid Henriettas at 50c., worth 75c.
40 inch all wool Bedford Cords at 85c., worth 1.25.,
NO pieces English Cashmeres, in all colors at 22|c., worth 30c.
25 all wool French and English Novelty Suits at 25 per cent, less than
value.
JO pieces Cream, Pink, Blue and Heliotrope York. Henriettas for evening
dresses at 25c., a yard, worth 30c., in New
English Box Cut Jackets, Blazersand Blazer Suits, in all grades at
prices below any home in the City.
In addition to the abivc we will ofTer special inducements in all grades
cheap Dress Goods. Calicoes, Percales, Cotton and wool Flannels, and
all grades of Domestics, in Bleached and Brown.
30 pieces all wool 9oz. Jeans at 30c..worth 40c.
50 doz. Heavy Black lxl Ribbed Hose for children in sizes from 7 to 8£
at lvc., worth Joe.
*10 doz. lieuvy i^lnck lxl Ribbed Itosc for diilclicn ut lo ruid 20c.y
worth 20 and 25c
30 doz. Ladies Heavy Grey and Black Hose at 12.|e., worth 20c.
25 doz. Ladies Undervests at 22 |c., worth 35c.
50 Smyrner Rugs in all sizes. See Prices.
“ and Garriairp Rohes See Prices
.
;>0 Gossimer ., Coats and S c Circulars. !|l_ a See o, p I rices. •'
r l’..K]e Damasks |,anla8KS > «apt Nankins IDS, Towel* l -WU-, Tranks l-u ....., Ya'Des -----““«* ------ J I, i; “ ncg v8 0 r
-Notions. -
Ladies’ and Cliildren’s Underwear in all grades cheajicr that any house
in the City. Come and see us and l*e convinced that we can save yon
rn '* m -.V
COHEN’S,
Talmadge New Building, College Avenue, ATHENS, OA^
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