Newspaper Page Text
PART TWO.
HATS.
Prices in Hats CRUSHED!
One lot of fine Fur Crush Hats In Black, Blue,
Brown go In at this sale at 49 cents. They
have never been sold at less thau 75 cents.
One lot of fine Fur Brown Derbys at *1 24,
worth 82 50.
One lot of Children’s Oxford Caps, Black
Blue and Bed, with Silk Tassel and silk
Lining, go In this sale at 39c.
Positively worth 75c.
One lot of Boys’ Jockey Caps at 89c.
One lot of Boys’ Jockey Caps at 19c.
Red and Blue Fez Caps at 87c.
BoysMllackand Brown Alpines at 60c., worth
Boys' Black and Brown Alpines at 80c.
Boys’ Black and Browu Alpines at $1 24.
GENTS’ FURNISHINGS.
Heavy Bleached CHALLENGE Canton Flan
nel Drawers at 62c., worth SIOO.
White and Natural All Wool Shirt or Draw
ers at 99c., worth $1 50.
White Merino Double Breasted, Fleece Lined
Shirt at 89c., worth 75c.
One lot of White Unlaundried Top Shirts at
33c., good value lor 50c.
One lot of White Unlaundried Shirts, patent
inserted Sleeves, continuous facings, ut
49c., worth 75c.
Collars and Cuffs.
Collars, four-ply Linen, latest stvles, worth
20c., go at 7iso.
Cults, four-ply Linen, round and square cor
ners, worth 25c., go at 12J4c.
One lot of White Laundried Shirts at 89c.,
worth 50c.
One lot of White Laundried Shirts, rein forced,
pateut inserted Sleeves, continuous facing,
open back and front, at 59c., worth 75c.
One lot of fine White Laundried Shirts, in
corded and plain Opera Bosoms, worth
81 00 and $1 50, go in this sale at 79*:.
SEE PRICES IN
WINDOWS.
W A K KM ANWAN DERINGS
CABLYLVS OHiLSSA HOME AND
BOUND ABOUT.
An Ancient London Suburb Replete
With Memories of Kings, Courtiers,
Statesmen, Novelists, Poets and
Painters—A Pleasant Region Where
Worthies' Wraiths Unbidden Rise.
Charming Memories Recalled.
iCovvrioM.)
London, Nov. 14. —A good sweat book
could be written about the lolk who have
loved and known old Chelsea whom we have
known and loved for what they did for the
world.
Many years ago I saw one of these folk
on a London ’bus and had a good hour’s
study of him as a ourious character without
kuowiug who he was. He first attracted
m_v attention by his generally disheveled
mid thrown-together appearance. When
tie entered tho ’bus he held a copy
of the London Times in one baud
and dragged a very old bit of a traveling
rug in the other. He slapped the latter over
his knee as he sat down, glanced at the pas
sengers sava.eiy, and immediately closed
his eves and b gan a peculiar motion of his
m >uth that seemed like a nervous chewing
of bis nether lip.
He was a scraggy and it then seemed to
me an 111.kempt man, out of sorts with all
tha world. 1 mentally endeavored to place
him. Perhaps ho is someone of those seedy
old clerks so wondruusly picturod
by Dickens, thought I. He may
be a miserly old batchelor who
daily tumbles out of his lodgings and
into his work and then back again, never
knowing change, sleeping In his clothing,
mummified to everything on earth but his
ledgers ami his desk. If he have a wife and
family, be cull's the children, warus the
cook, abuses the housemaid and “blows up”
his wife before leaving his habitation, and
tills particular morning he has made them
understand who is master with greater ven
geance than usual.
Pretty soon be seemed to awake with a
start, glared aguin ut his fellow passengers,
utul, giving bis bony knees a vicious twist
away from proximity to aii elderly fat
woman who sat reside him, plunged into
his paper as though so far he had overlooked
his duty of discovering, capturing and pun
ishing some sort of sedition within. Sure
enough it was there. He scanned the
editorial page for a moment, smashed
the pnper togethor with his kuuokly
hands, dropped it upon the
’bus floor, and, pawing it back beneath his
feet, for some time gave it a nervous kind
of pounding which plainly told his senti
ments for the balderdash he had discovered.
be fell to chewing again with bis eyes
quite closed, and shortly awoke with a start,
to lounge toward the door and soundly be
rate the conductor for carrying him
past bis destination. I could not
hear all of his scolding; but it
brought traffic on the Strand to a stand
still; and then the scraggy, hairy, tum
bled-up, loose-join ted oid man disappeared
among toe cabs and busses, a tangible,
Irascible altercation with a Scotch dialect,
prompting from drivers as he pass and the
choicest blackguard quips and quirpsthat
roll from London drivers’ ready longues.
V..-
Sunday Chats on Interesting Topics. ★
The Value of a Promissory Note depends upon the Signature thereto and the Indorsers thereof.
The Value of an Advertisement depends upon the Name attached to it. Its Indorsement is the Reli
ability of the Articles advertised. On this basis we stand, and the first case of disappointment has yet
to be recorded. The People are with us because we are with the People. You know this is SO.
YOU \ In Children’s and Boys’ Clothing
u | we don’t think it would b. possible
KnOW/ to gather a finer assortment than
Thje \we show—so many pretty Novelties
/ exclusive with us; everything ster-
IS \ ling in quality; good, honest values
Oj. I that give back in wear every cent
/ they cost.
OUR BARGAINS
In Boys’ SUITS and OVERCOATS.
600 Boys’ Strong Suits and Overcoats, 85c.,
worth double.
400 Boys' Suits and Overcoats go at 81 15.
1,000 Boys’ Suits and Overcoats reduced to
$2 20.
2,000 Boys’ Suits and Overcoats, S t 59,
worth $4 00.
1,600 Boys’ Fine Suits and Overcoats, 83 90,
offered elsewhere at 86 and 87.
900 Boys’ Fine Suits and Overcoats, 84 50,
worth $7 00 and 88 00.
Children’s Jersey Suits.
One lot of Blue Jersey Suits, sizes Bto 8,
83 40, worth $8 50.
One lot of Blue Jersey Suits, Sailor Color,
trimmed in Gilt Tinsel, sizes 3 to 8,83 90,
worth B*> 00.
One lotof Blue Jersey Suits, double-breasted,
sizes 3 to 8, 82 90, worth 84 00'
Single Jersey Pants.
One lot at 81 14, worth $1 50.
Boys’ Overcoats.
At 85c., 81 15, 81 69, $2 60, $3 35, 82 00, 88 90,
$4 50.
They are World Beaters.
COLLATS’.
Tbe incident left a smile on nearly every
face in the omnibus. A pleasant-faced man
sitting beside me, noticing tuy look of In
quiry and rightly judging my nationality,
kindly solved the mystery. * ‘ily dear sir,”
ho said with almost an air of pride, "he’s a
brave literary man that. He wasn’t born
in England, but he’s the biggest man in it.
When you get baok to America you can
tell tbe yankeea you’ve seen old Thomas
Carlyle I”
I never saw him again. But the London
incident of long ago made me a studeut of
Carlyle one of the most diflioult tasks of
tuy life; and, from much reading after the
sturdy old barrator In philosophy and reli
gion, many pilgrimages to his birth place,
up there in dreary Ecclefeohan, and to other
British localities which his strange person
ality and genius made something like
shrines, I have come to love his memory,
and especially to have au affection for the
place where for half a life time be strug
gled. contended, railed, assaulted, defended,
suffered and repented in 1119 humble and
imperial, niggardly and noble career.
That place is Chelsea. It Is London now.
You cannot find a break in all the great
musses of solid structures from the densest
part of the borough out to old Chelsea and
for many miles beyond. Yet the Chelsea
region is still ini st charming.y distinct.
You know insensibly when you orune to it.
You feel, without being told, that you
have crossed its boundaries on
leaving it. Without participating
in its memories, knowing none of its
history, if you were set down with
in it, its lovely, leafy, somnolent air has the
very spirit and hush of lingering noble
presenoes. You dally nni idle upon its
streets as if wo ed by the unconscious spell
of memory, ns if laggard from pleasant
companionship, as if held by the gentle
hand of reminiscence.
In the very heart of this pleasantest of all
London outer districts Thomas and Jane
Welsh Carlyle literally battled along to
gether, from Oct, 10, 1834, until Mrs. Car
lyle’s sad and strange death in
her brougham in Hyde park,
in April, 1566. The lonely
old soul tuat was left remained, rather than
lived, in the same house to tbe end, in 1881.
Aud I somehow believe that the forty-seven
years’ staying of the sage of Ecclefeohan in
No. 5 (i; eat CUeyne row has thrown more
of a poetic glamor over old Chelsea than all
the other fumous and great who have coins
and tarried and gone.
Materially, Sir Thomas More origiually
made Chelsea. Carlyle rounds out its fame.
Vast fields of history and romance lie be
tween. This “pore house in Chelchith,” as
the ancieut records speak of the home of
Sir Thomas More, was not so bumble an
habitation after all. It bad agi ut porch,
many flue windows, dozens of gables, a
pretty tower, splendid gardens tor
tbe time, and besides housing lbs
happiest family living in England
ill tbe sixteenth century, wa9 so
attractive a place, though then far away
from London, that Queen Mary was
"moved to purchase it;” the gurrulous
Erasmus found it a hospitable retreat, and
King Henry VIII often came up the Thames
m nis royal barge to debar* and stroll to
this first old Chelsea ma sion with bis arm
lovingly ar >und tho neck of More, which
his headman’s ax severed one July morn
ing a little later on.
Lying along the northern bank of the
Thames, to the west of the city, Chelsea
proper may be said to begin on the east at
SAVANNAH, GA.. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1892.
IMlexi.’s S3WXVS st,3n.3L
Ovez*<?oa,ts.
You ) In Men’s Clothing we have drawn thousands of gentlemen to a knowl-
KnoW 'edge of the foot that they can befitted as truly by us as any Custom
j s 1 Tailor, yet at ball'the price. They profit bv the knowledge, so
So. / may you.
Fearless of any competition goes up the curtain Monday morning, revealing
the most startling and tempting prices. No matter what Bargains we and others
may have given you in the past, in this Sale they are all eclipsed beyond compari
son by the splendid values here presented.
jf* mm 9 will purchase a Suit of Imported Clay Worsted, Un
dressed Worsted Cheviots, Silk and Fancy Worsted,
Homespun, Niggerheads, Scotch Cheviots, or Overcoats of Melton, Kersey,
Cheviot, Clay Worsted, and so forth.
Without exception the finest Suits or Overcoats in the world for the price.
Worth S2O and $22. i
*1 if— Will purchase a Suit of Silk Mixed Worsted, Plain and
I £mm m Fancy Cheviot, Twills, Diagonals, Cassimeres, and so
forth, or an Overcoat of Melton, Kersey, Chinchilla, Cheviot, and so forth.
Our competitors’ prices, sl7 and $lB.
I™ Will purchase a Suit of Plain or Fancy Cheviot, Worsted,
Cassimere, Homespun in light or dark colors, or an
B ■■■ of Melton, Kersey, Cheviot, Beaver, Chin
chilla, Serges, and so forth, all well made and trimmed in latest styles, worth sl4
and sls.
SUITS: Single and double-breasted Sacks; some with double-breasted Vests,
Cutaways, &c.
STYLES OVERCOATS: English Top Coats, single and double-breasted Box
Coats, &c., <fec.
COLLATS*. I COLLATS*. I COLLATS*.
tbe famous Chelsea hospital for British
pensioners. The magnificent Thames em
bankment forms tbe shore edge here, and
near the Botanic gardens Leoomes Cheyne
walk, which continues a mile or so to Bat
tersea bridge. In this two or three miles
distance, about the center of which is the
Carlyle neighborhood, and extending baok
from the river to the depth of a mile or
more, there are wondrously quaint
old structures, clumps of auoient
cottages covered with viues and embedded
lu greenery, Elizabethan mansions by the
score with monstrous chimneys and gray
old gables, winding lanes leading from the
Thames, where once were fine water-stairs
and picturesque (Is er huts, bits of vener
able park ana moldy gardens overshado wed
by prime modern rows, where the aristo
cracy have crowded in upon the older
haunts of literature aud art, and cobwebbed
tuns innumerable.
Chelsea hospital itself is a world of mem
ories not only of British history afield, but
of the time of Charles 11., of old King
James' College, of Sir Stephen Fox, aud of
wayward though kind-hearted Nell
Gwynne. And as to the pensioners them
selves, Chelsea would hardly be Chelsea
without them. Straggling along its shady
thoroughfares, sitting bent and silent on
suuny benches, leaning against wiinpling
fountains or vaßos and statues, resting as
composedly as house owners on steps and in
vestibules, or stumping gravely along with
orders to this or that servant, as
if long habit had them
supervisory rights over ihe daily affairs of
residents, they irresistibly suggest bevies of
croaking cockatoos turned loose in park and
gardens each one querously harping upon
some fancied grievance or delight.
At the western side of the hospital still
stands Sir Robert Walpole’s house, almost
precisely as it stood when he all but ruled
K gland through the two Georges, first
and second. It is now a portion of the
hospital infirmary. It was to tins old red
brick mansion that Walpole’s ri
val Boltngbroke came to dine and half
choked for his cholor; where Swift and
Gay ca tie to get material for satire; and
where Po; e came with scandal of his past
amours and, probably, to beg for assistance
in others.
Not far from the boipltal, over in the
northeast corner of Chelsea, Is a little green
oval like a pretty e.nerald lozenge.faround
which orowd some very aucient 2-story
brick houses. Tne windows are little, the
steps, scrapers an 1 knockers are little, but
always bright and clean, and it seems that
every face you boo at the tiny panes Is
little and snappy and old, like all else in
this venerable Hans place. At one of these
bits of habitations, precisely liko all the
rest, was born the poetess, L. E. L. But
two doo, s away, in another box of a house,
•he went to seiiool. Her school fellows were
the East Indian writer, Miss Roberts, and
Laly Caroline Lamb. Years after here
were also educated other famous women:
Lady Bulwer, Miss Mitford, and that best
and ter,derest of all Irish writers upon Ire
land, Mi s. 8. C. Hall.
Tbe one time fatuous Cremorue gardens at
tbe western edge of Chelsea, has special
interest to Americans. A granddaughter of
Y\ illiain Penn, named Philadelphia from
the city of her birth, became the second
wife of Viscount Cremorne. Outliving her
husband she inherited the I ea itiful grounds
once known as “Chelsea Farm.” Graunville
Penn, once lord of tho Stoke Poges manor.
where Gay lived and wrote tEe “Elegy,”
fell heir to the propeityaud sold it to the
Cremorue Garden corporation. Wicked
enough it grew in time. Decorous associa
tions retrieved it and an innocent nursery
garden now veils its unhallowed site anil
memories.
At least three anotent taverns in the
neighborhood have peculiar old-time in
terest. Two, one at tbe western and the
other at the ea.tern edge of the parish, are
directly associated with Neil Gwynne.
That to the west, in which I found a noble
sort of publican, and, oddly enough, a
oousiu of that rampant little pugilist w hose
skill of tongue has never been defeated,
Charley Mitcnell, was built by Charles 11.
as a home for bis favorite. It was from
the windows of this house, now a resort
of Chelsea pensioners, that Nell’s eyes
looked In upon the then fine meadows
of King James’ College, in her dream, when
she saw the beautiful palace rise with its
thousand chambers out of whioh “divers
many old and w rn out soldier mn" came
and cried, "God bless King Charlesl” which
led to tne merciful fouudiug of the splendid
hospital.
The other associated with the fame of the
pretty orange-girl is a sedate old rookery at
me western side if Chelsea. It is called
the “Nell Gwynne tavern,” and
many a rare tradition of Charles,
companion lingers about tbe mellow old
place. Another curious inn still in exist
ence is tbe “Prince of Wales,” at the corner
of Lawrence street and Justice walk, but a
square’s distance from tho old Carlyle home
in Great Cheyne row. Chelsea was once
made known through the artlstio world for
its famous china. For the forty years
after 1745 its china works, which stood >n
the site of the "Prince of Wales,”
turned out a produot equal to that
of Sevres. In the cellars of the inn
you can see the remains of the oveus and
baking rooms, just as they were aban
doned. Dr. Samuel Johnson was suddenly
possessed of the idea that he could as easily
make china as a dictionary; aud the
doughty old sobolar, but nn killed native
workman, fora long time came here daily
to spoil good material, his faithful house
keeper trudging after him with a huge
basket coutaiiiiug his dally food.
In Great Cheyne row Smollett lived,
lorg before Carlyle came, and here he wrote
"Ferdinand Count Fathom” and finished
Hume’s "History of England;" while
George Eliot died in a house near Car
lyle’s In the same modest little thorough
fare. Chelsea old ohurch, one of tbe
sweetest old places iii Loudon, overlooks the
Thames but a few rods distance.
Here you will find the black memorla’
slab of Sir Thomas Moore. Lady Lucre,
Lady Jane Cheyne and the Duohess of
Northumberland, three of Chelsea's former
grand ladies, lie i eneath monuments within
the church, while Charles, George and
Henry Kingsley, onco lived in La rectory
with their father, who had received the
* ‘living" from Lord Cadogan.
In Cheyne walk aloug the riverside lived
Turner, the painter. Rossetti lived and
sang here among bis birds and flowers,
Leigh Hunt’s gypsy-like boms, of wbioh
Carlyle has left inimitable descrip
tion, was justaround the corner from G eat
Cheyne row. Queen Elizabeth used to visit
tbe Earl of Shrewsbury at Shrewsbury
house just, baok of Cheyne walk. The poet
George Herbert dwelt in the same neighbor
hood; and at a little barber shop, coffee
bouse and quaiut museum, called "Don
BalteroV’ by the wits of the time in honor
of its grave nobody proprietor, one Bait,
who • ‘brewed divine coffee and ehaved with
equal terror,” Kichard Cromwell, Steele and
Addison and Benjamin Franklin, who
worked in a printing shop in Bartholomew
close near by, came to get shaved and to
loiter over their coffee, “where the literati
then sat in council.”
Long and pleasant is one’s loitering here.
If you oome many days or but one, an eud
less host of wraiths of worthies start
up unbiddeu iu your wanderings.
If once or many times you depart, you
will ever insensibly be drawn, at parting,
to tbo gray old habitations of Great
Cheynerow. The wind .ws of all overlook
the turbulent river, darkening Battersea at
its farther shore, and the pleasant villages
upon the hills of .Surrey beyond. At a
windowofone.it matters not who lives
there now, your fancy cannot but see a
shaggy, sturdy, haggard face. Its gray,
defiant but sorrowful eyes are lifted aoross
tbe turbulent river, and rest beyond the
hills upon that material and spiritual
light that somewhere ever brings tbe
blessed morning time.
Edgar L. Wiusak,
LEMON ELIXIR.
A Pleasant Lmon Tonlo.
For Biliousness, Constipation, Malaria,
Colds and the Grip.
For Indigestion, Sick and Nervous Head
ache.
For Sleeplessness, Nervousness and Heart
Disease.
For Fever, Chills, Debility and Kidney
Disease, take Lemon Elixir.
Lailr-s, for natural and thorough orgauio
regulation, take Lemon Elixir.
Dr. M >zley’s Letnon Elixir is prepared
from the fresh juice of Lemons, combined
with otnsr vegetable liver tonios, and will
not fail you in any of the above n- mol dis
eases. 50" cent aud $1 bottles at druggists.
Prepared only by Dr. H. .Uozlay, Atlanta,
Ga.
At the npttal.
I have just taken the lust of two bottles
of Dr. H. Motley’s Lemon E.ixir for nerv
ous headache, indigestion, with diseased
liver and kidneys. The Elixir cured me. I
found it the greate>it]medioiue I ever used.
J. H. Mknnich, Attorney,
11425 F street, Washington, D. C.
From a Prominent Lady.
I have not been able In two years to walk
or stand without suffering great pain.
Since taking Dr. Motley’s Lemon Elixir I
can walk half a mile without suffering the
least inconvenience.
Mkh. B. H. Bloodworth,
— a< *‘ Oriifiu, Ga.
.(ben Baby waa ciolr, mi gave her Cestoria
When hc was a Child, she cried (or Castoria.
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria,
When she had Children, she gave them Cantortf
Big bargains in fine clothing at Kohler’s,
158 Broughton street. Overcoats and un
derwear sacrificed . —aiL ,
You \ In Stylish I'an Us wo loud tkepro-
KnOW) <,eSßlon ' Everything that is sold i*
This of this Full's production, and no
|g thing antiquated. OUR PRICES ARE
§q J LOWER THAN THE LOWEST.
86 50 Punts go at ?6 50.
88 00 and 87 60 Pants go at 86 00.
87 00 and Jit 50 Pants go at 85 80.
86 00 Pants go at 84 75.
85 00 Pants go at 83 90.
84 00 Pants go at 8* 35.
83 50 and $3 00 Pants go at 82 65.
ALL these goods are Custom-made and in
all the latest patterns.
Men's Overcoats.
83 99, 84 90, #6 25, $8 50, 88 25, 89 60, 811 00,81175,
812 50, 814 76 ami 816 00-Kersey, Melton,
Chinchilla, Cheviot, Merges, Clay Worsted,
Beavers, and so forth.
Our Famous Clay Worsteds.
sl6 00 Clay Worsted Knits go at 813 00.
818 00 Clay Worsted Muits go at 814 75.
SJO 00 City Worsted Knits go at 816 00,
821 00 Clay Worsted Knits go at 821 00.
$25 00 Clay Worsted Muits go at 822 00,
Special.
A Prince Albert Clay Worsted Knit—we have
placed them in this Kale at #ls 00, worth
$22 00.
A Brown Prince Albert Whale Cord Coat
and Vest worth 820 00 go In this Kale at
•** 50. .
Young Men,
We have a full line of Huits for you at 83 25,
84 00, 86 00, 80 25, 87 50, 89 25, 810 50, 812 25,
814 75, 816 00, and so forth. They come In
single and double-breasted Sacks, Round
and .Square Cut, and of all the latest mate
rial. You can save from $2 00 to 88 00.
COLLATS’.
<.l N 18 I PUNISHING GOODS.
Q~ |fp7
Hold oi to a Good Hat
And remember that LaFer has more of the
same kind when you need a new one.
La Far’s Hats last well, maintain their
shape and satisfy the wearer.
Cover your head and shade your eyes.
Buy Hati from 1 *Kar and you’ll bo wise.
Gentlemen’s Underwear, Hosiery and
Gloves, all of tbe best makes and latest
styles,
LaPAR'S NEW STORE,
132 BROUGHTON STREET.
FEE 11.
TRY Steam Cooked
and OUR Prepared.
The best HORSE
on tbe and COW
market, FEE Du
W. D. SIMKINS.
HEED.
BESIDEsfsEED, OATS AND RYE,
I keep the fullest and best Has la the city of
GRAIN, HAY AND FEED.
My formula for the production of
OUR OWN COW FEED
“Is out of sig it," "no other imitation Is in it,”
ami for bracing up stock "Obsoks" Max
hattan Food Is incomparable.
T. J. DAVIS,
GRAIN DEALER and SEEDSMAN.
15C BAY STREET, - SAVANNAH, GA.
Sixd ron l’Kicc Ccsrimt.
Telephone 223.
PAGES 9 TO 12.
SHOES.
One Lot of Fine Dongola Infants' Shoes.
Sizes oto 6, worth 50c., go at this sale fof
89c.
One Lot of Children's Spring Heel Shoes.
Sizes stoß, Dongola, plain toe and patent
leather lips. Grain with solo leathertlps, go
In at this sale jor 67c.
SCHOOL SHOES
For BOYS’ and GIRLS'.
Theexcellent wearing quality of our School
Shoes is known by thousands and re
quire no comment.
67c., 87c., 81.07, 81.83, sizes 8 to 11; 67c., 87c„
81.07, 81.33, ;81.69, sizes 11 to 2. They come
in Grain, Veal Calf and Hnfffc.
Boys’ Buir Lace and Button, sizes Ito 5,87 c.,
$1.07, $1.33.
Ladies' Dongola Button Shoes, opera and
common sense toe. All sizes for 87c.,
worth $1.25.
Ladles’ Fine Dongola Button Shoes, opera
and common sense toe, all sizes fot 81.33,
worth f1.75.
Ladies’ Fine Dongola Button Khoes, Exten
sion Sole, equal to hand sewed, opera and
common sense toe, for 82.49, worth $3.60.
Mens' Buff Lace, Congress or Button Shoes,
solid, for 81.07, 81.33 and 81.69, worth $1.50
81.76 and 82.00.
Mens'Calf Laoe, Congress or Button Khoes,
all styles and sizos for 82.13, 82.59, 83.13 and
84.13, worth 82.50, 53.60, 84.00 and 85.00,
86.00 Patent Leather Congress and Lace Shoes,
go In at this sale for 84.89.
One Lotof Itondon CutSHppers, In Black and
Wine Color, genuine hand sewed at 81.89,
worth 82.50.
SEE PRICES IN
WINDOWS.
saoßs.
THERE ARE '
FIFTY WAYS
OF PUTTING OUT A FIRE, BUT
SHUTTING MR EYES
IS NOT ONE OF THEM.
IX ’T
SHUT YOUR EYES TO THE FOLLOWING
FACTS:
We have the largest stock,
to select from.
We keep the best goods
the market affords.
We always lead; never
follow.
BUMM MORRIS®,
THE LEADING DEALERS IN
FINE FOOTWEAR
fLOUK.
"Best men oft are
molded out of faults.
But the best cakes
are molded out of
SELF-RAISINQ
Buckwheat,
W e tidings.
Wedding invitations and cards printed or
engraved at the shorten notice and in the
ateet styles. VT e carry an extensive and
well selected stock of fine papers, envelope*
and cards aepectally (or sucn orders, batn
pies sent on application. Momrnta JNxwt
Printing douse, .Savannah, Ua.