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THB ALBANY DAILY HBRALDI THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1906.
with friends and attending to busi
ness affairs.
Hunter accompanied her home,
will visit in Athens a few weeks.
L. Hall, of Newton,
Mr. R.
among the well-known visitors in Al
bany yesterday.
Mr. R. A. Scrandrett, of Macon, was
looking after business affairs in the
city yeBterday.
EVERYBODY IQDES IN IT AND THERE’S
ALWAYS ROOM POR ONE MORE.
Dr. P. L. Hilsman spent yesterday
afternoon in Arlington on professional
business.
Mr. Hal F. Brlmberry has returned
from Hampton Springs, Fla., where he
spent several days for his health.
Thosi Who Come and 0o—Short and
Snappy Paragraphs that Everybody
Will Read With Interest—What Is
doing on in Society, With Now and
Then a.Little Qosslp.
Mr. John Storey,-of'Columbus, was
looking after business Interests in the
city yesterday.
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Houston, of Syl
vester, were among .'the well-known
visitors in Albany 'yesterday.
Correct
Clothes for
Springs
Summer
Are Here.
Mrs. Clarence C. Thornton leaves
the city in a day or two for Dawson,
to visit relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Henderson an
nounce the arrival of a baby boy at
their home in Arcadia.
"Beauty unadorned” doesn’t appeal
to the dressmakers and milliners.
Mr. Charles Sale was attending to
business affairs in the city yesterday.
Col. I. P. Cocke, of Armen^, is ming
ling with friends in Albany today.
The friends of Mrs. C. I. Hutchason
will learn with regret that she is ill.
Mr. John W. Shiver, of Americus,
was among the visitors in the city
yesterday afternoon.
Major William Wilder is spending
the day in Thomasville, attending a
big military affair there.
Mrs. Charles Lonsberg will enter
tain the Wednesday Afternoon Card
Club next week.
Mr. J. D. Hope, of Oakfield, was
among the well-known visitors in Al
bany yoBterday.
Mrs. ,T. H. Harris, of Warwick, was
among the shoppers in Albany yester
day afternoon.
Copyright 1906 by
Hart SchatFner U Marx
Jo Men’s Clothes Wearers
/ You are offered, daily, all kinds of clothes to wear—some good, some bad, some
dishonest. The dishpnest clothes are those made of fabrics adulterated with “raer-
Rosenberg Brothers
. Mr,'Buford Jones, a traveling man
welt known in Albany, Js spending a
few days in the oity, looking after
business matters and shaking hands
with his friends.
Mr; Charles Mell, of Athens, and
Mr. iHawkes, of Atlanta, two well-
knowil insurance adjusters, are spend
ing the day in Albany, appraising the
damage done N. L. Ragan’s home by
fire. .
Mr! Charles Hall, of Newton, is
spending the day in the city on busi
ness.
Miss Helen Davis is expected home
in a day'or two from Atlanta, where
she has been visiting the last two
Mr. Buford Wood, of Kentucky, a
well-known traveling man, is spending
the day in the city.
Mr. L. H. Webb, of Moultrie, is
among the visitors in the city today.
Mrs. C. Wilcox’s little daughter, is
ill today as the result of painful
burns sustained yesterday.
. <1
Mr. Harry Malone left the city to
day for Talbotton, to be at the bed-
side.of his uncle, Mr. H. Malone,.who
is seriously ill.
Mr. Sid Fried, of Macon, a traveling
man, was mingling with friends here
this morning.
Mr. W. E. Barnes, a popular travel
ing man and erstwhile Albanian, is
spending the day in the city,, mingling
The friends of Mr. Tuck Callaway
will regret to learn that he is ill.
Mrs. Cv G. Stovall and little son, of
Monroe, N. C., are in the city, the
guests of Mrs. M. R. McLarty.
Mr. J. S. Miller, of Baconton, was
among the visitors in the city yester
day afternoon.
MIbb Hetta Casper entertained the
Wednesday Afternoon Card Club very
delightfully yesterday at her home on
Commerce street The first prize,
very pretty fan, was won by Mrs. A. C.
Plonsky. The consolation prize,
handbag, was awarded to Mrs.-Louis
Zucker.
The friends of Miss Luclle Patter
son will learn with regret that she is
ill at her home on Residence street
Miss Vic Collier is expected home
tomorrow from Thomasville, where he
visited friends the past week.
Miss India Barnett returned to her
home in AthenB yesterday mornlng :
after a stay of several months at the
home of Mrs. William Lockett. Prof
A Good Garden
Is not only a luxury, but an. econ
omy. It cuts the grocery bills in half.
The Albany Drug, Co.’s seeds are
absolutely fresh and of the best qual
ity—they/grow.
Albany Drug Co.
REfilSTtRID TRAM HARK
WEARS LIKE IRON
Stains and varnishes in one operation. Easily applied.
Quickly dries. ^Vears like iron.
Oak Japalac will make that old furniture look like new.
Dead Black Japalac on your grates aud iron work will
give the popular black wrought finish.
Ox Blood and Malicite Green is the very thing for your
veranda chairs and settees.
Japalac is made in thirteen colors. See us—tell us what
you wish to do, and we will tell you how to do it.
with
Mrs. M. D. Gortatowsky is expected
home tomorrow night from New York,
where she has been visiting relatives
the past ten weeks.
Time robs us of lots of ^things we
would do if we only had time.
Capt. P. E. Boyd, of Leary, is at
tending to business affairs in the city
this afternoon.
Judge and Mrs. F. F. Putney left the
city at noon today for New York city,
to attend the funeral of the former’s
sister, Mrs. James Wetherbee, who
died yesterday. Messrs. E. E. and J.
R. Wetherbee, of Putney, sons of the
deceased, have already gone to New
York. Mr. James Wetherbee, it will
be remembered, was killed in n rail
road accident not very many weeks
ago.
Mr. W. H. Gilbert spent yesterday
In Doerun, looking after business af
fairs.
Success 1b often merely a matter of
being In the light place at the right
time.
Mr. J. W. Aultman, of Worth coun
ty, is spending the day In Albany on
business.
Miss Bessie Purseley, of Pretoria,
Is among the shoppers In the city tills
afternoon.
Mr. P. M Ware, of Louisville, a w.ell
known traveling man, Is spending the
day In the city. 1
Mr. M. G. Houston, of Worth county,
Is attending to business interests In
the city today.
Mr. Ernest Holland, of Louisville, a
popular traveling man, was a visitor
in Albany yesterday.
Mr. G. W. Jackson, of Baconton, Is
spending a few days in Albany, the
guest of Mr. Walter Morrow.
Mr. I. V. Ballard, of Harlem, and
Dr. J. B. Robbins, of Augusta, are ex
pected in the city In a day or two.
They will be guests at the home of
Mr. J. B. Gilbert, on Broad street.
Mr. J. J. Hall, of Syjvester, wub
mingling with his Albany friends yes
terday afternoon.
It’s about all the modern peacemak
er can do to Insist upon fair play.
Spring
Suit
Now.
cerized cotton”—made to look like all wool, and sure to wear like part cotton. The
town is full of this stuff—clothes that cheat. They look honest and they cost honest,
but they’re a fraud. And you’ll find it out when you wear them. We stanch for all
wool and no “mercerized cotton.” If you find Hart, Schaffer & Marx’s label that’s
what you get. ‘ .
m
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as
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&
MASTERS HAT
iSSfeu**" 1 *
' W '4SA _
SOLE AGENTS
I
The Particular Man There’s Quite a Change
With an inclination to wear fine shoes
is the man we want for a customer.
Nothing 'desirable that any gentleman
will want in fine footwear is absent
froiii our spring and summer lines.
In hat styles this season. The old hat
won’t do. Come and see our new line
of Hawes’ celebrated $3.00' hats. We
have all tliat’s new for spring and sum
mer in fine headwear.
Hanan Shoes and Oxfords . . $5.00 and $6.00.
King Quality Shoes and Oxfords 3.50 and 4.00
Hawes Hals
Stetson Hats
1.00 and $5.00
A COLOSSAL QORGE.
Mr. F. B. Leonard Is nursing a se
verely Inflamed eye, the result of a
painful experience with a cinder. Mr.
Leonard is being kept indoors for a
few days.
Mr. L. L. McCleskey, of Atlanta, a
well-known official of the Southern
railway, has been in the city todny
on business.
Mr. John D. Twiggs narrowly es
caped serious Injury yesterday while
on a buggy trip such as he frequently
makes In connection .with his busi
ness. The horses behind which he
was riding became frightened at a
pair of oxen, the negro driver jumped
out, and the buggy was overturned be
fore Mr: Twiggs could secure the
lines. He was painfully bruised, and
for a time was unconscious. An ex
amination by a physician showed that
no bones had been broken, however,
and Mr. Twiggs is being congratulated
accordingly.
At a sale in New York the other
day of autograph hooks, colored sport-
_ prints, pastels and engravings col
lected by Frederick Gebbard, Long
fellow's poems, with autograph and
photograph, brought )120.50, the high-
price of the sale.
est
The Sublime Ilranllen of the Grand
Canyon of Arizona.
Tills terrific gash is more than 200
miles long aud more than a mile deep,
and its area exceeds 2,000 square miles.
From the 101 Tovar rim. on which 1
stand, to the gleaming, snuw veined
crags on the opposite side of tills stu
pendous cleft the dlsOince Is thirteen
miles. Human vision cannot take In
the full extent of this wide pageant of
terror mid glory nor Is It within the ca
pacity of words to set forth Its over
whelming splendor. The plain on which
I stand is nearly 8,000 feet above sea
level, and here, 111 a prodigious Assure
—gaunt, abrupt, frightful and wonder
ful—are assembled mountains, valleys,
enormous rocks, precipitous crags, ra
vines of mystery mid forests of gloom,
through which the black waters of the
Colorado rush onward In tliolr* resist
less flow and over which the dauntless
eagle wings Its upward flight to meet
the sun. All the forms arc here that
Imagination could construct, and all the
colors are hero that glow in sunset
skies. Far down In the subterranean
vista the forests show like green lawns.
Not less than seven geologic periods In
the physical hlBtory of the. planet are
displayed in the Inyers of tinted rock—
black, green, gray, rod, brown, blue,
pink, orange and alabaster, with ninny
other mingled hues—tliut constitute the
walls of this colossal gorge: walls that
seem continuous and uuhrokcD, yet
everywhere mF rifted with lateral As
sures, the beds of mountain streams
that swell the flood of the great Colo
rado river.. The American continent
has nowhere else a spectacle to show
commensurate with this in beauty,
gruudeur and awe.—William Winter in
Pacific Monthly.
Max Cassel aud Sister.
We will sell Ladies’"and Misses’ Suits 40 par oent. less than
they are marked. You are sure to get a bargain. Also
Misses’ and Children’s Kid Gloves worth $1 for 50c. Al'
Millinery reduced 60 per cent. Corsets with supporters, for
mer price 50c and 75c, will sell now for 35c.
Max Cassel and
80-Broad Street.
THE BALTIC window *’ D °°n, annd*.
JJ.rxj~tJ.ivj Umti Cement pjjp- HaIri ete
See our Mantels for tenement and
cottage houses.
Columns and Balusters turned to
order.
Flooring, Ceiling, Riding and Fram-
Ing jLumber.
Telephone No. 44.
I
J. D. WESTON!
• 19
A Swell Dress Slioe
Lace and Button
JOS. L. RAREY,
THE OLD RELIABtF. TAILOH.
IN NCWANK*
THE
s c 3
Is stilLlEoing business at his old
- Natit '
place over the First National Bank,
samples of .all tbe new colorings in
all Rod winter fabrics are ready for
nspection. Our styles appeal forci
bly to well dressed gentlemen, and
our prices are as low as Is consistent
with good workmanship.
&
No Wood famine in Albany now.
Barron gets It by trainloads.
at Ekrlrch’s.
JOS. L. RAREY,