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■'HE WORLD WILL WAG
■ And Our Descendants Will Enjoy
| Great Advantages in 1993.
I Mrs. Lease Sees aßosy Future for
America.
The Conquest of the Elements Will Be
Cantinued.
_ ’T\ Horn]
'Rioter Hugo, whose birthday France has
made a national holiday, prophesying of
the fut A-e, said: "In the Twentieth ccn
tiirv, be dwull Ro-)ty will be
Famine will be dead, bat the people !
Fill livel For all humanity there will be |
put one country, that country the whole i
earth; few all the people one hope, that hope
ail heaven!” When we contemplate the J
Wonderful advances made by the world in
the past fifty years, the triumphs of skill,
the Inventions of genius perfected anti
brought about through the forces of steam
and electricity, imagination runs riot and
the brain grows dizzy at the possibilities of
the next century. When we remember, too,
that humanity, like blind Orion struggling
beneath his load to meet’ the God of day,
has turned ite face toward the light strug- j
gling toward the realms of thought, de-1
veloping a higher intellectuality progress- ,
mg in an age of ideas, we may well ex- |
claim, "Ear hath not heard, eye hath not '
seen, nor hath it entered into the heart of '
man,” the wonders, changes and gigantic i
progression t hat science, now in its infancy,
hath in store for the children of men.
In 100 years the political and social im
provements of the United States and of the
whole world will be so marked in contrast
with the social cannibalism and pitiful
wage slavery of today that the world will
shudder as it reviews our time. The dec
laration of American independence will be
the only political platform, its inspiration
the golden rule; the map of Europe will be
changed, crowns will lull and thrones
crumble; the divine right of kings and the
diyine right of capital will be recognized as
subterfuges whereby the vicious and idle
livjjd upon the toil of others. The reign of
juMce will be inaugurated!
■e complexity of government will dis
awear, for the intricate and burdensome j
1 Bathat now obstruct justice and bewilder :
the s shall beobMter
jUK Th® ro l® individual action will be
"*the fullest lib"rty and hi.aeat good of each 1
rompatible with the fullest liberty and high i
est good of all. The railroads and channels I
of communication, light, water and all i
public improvements will be managed by ;
4the state in the inn r< st of the people and |
owned by the general government. That i
superstition of a' darker past, a fetich !
taught by selfish partisans and college bred
idiots, that gold should be tlio basis of
money, will disappear before the full knowl
edge of tho fact that a gold basis for a
monetary syst cm was a trick of the money
breeders to make money scarce and dear
and flesh and blood cheap.
Temperance legislation will consist in
every man being a prohibitory law unto him
self,'and in this way only can that evil that
is sb deeply rooted in the human heart that
legislation cannot reach it be controlled
led subdued. With the amelioration of
□overly through the just distributions of
profits of labor and the boun
■wous gifts df God the percent. of criminals
Ktvill be reduced to the minimum, and for
few who fail into evil doing because of
brute in the family blood that should
P have been subdued in their grandfathers
th‘e state will bring all the machinery of
humane power to defend and improve just
tts it now brings its power of law to prose
cute and brutalize. With individual free I
dom and the absolute right of the whole !
people to the free use of the earth and its i
resources, slavery and inequality will disap
pear, one sex will have equal opportunities
with the other, and woman’s dependence,
the primal cause of man's brutality and
sex slavery, will have become a thing of the
past.
■ Marriage will be not so much a contract
of flesh legalized for a fee as a union of
soul sanctified by an approving conscience.
The tendency toward the accumulation of
great wealth in the hands of a few w ill d J
crease in the next century, for the quick- I
ened conscience and aroused conceptions of
justice of an intelligent people will chess
tuat man with criminals who holds mote
of the world’s gifts than he can possibly
use while his fellow beings want. The
bounties of God shall not be fettered by the
dead, but the earth and the fullness thereof
shall belong in usufruct to tho living
Great corporations and business combines,
which constitute the power of plutocracy,
shall be controlled and dominated by na
tionalism —the creatui ■ shall not be greater
than its creator. With a government "of, ,
for and by the people,” in fact as well as I
tradition, the condition of the laboring
classes will be one of comfort and independ I
ence. Three hours will constitute a long ;
day’s work and liberally furnish infinitely
more of the benefits of civilization and the
comforts of life than sixteen hours' slavish :
toil will provide today. Opportunity will ■
thus be given to improve and develop those j
God given faculties and aspirations that lie
dormant in every human soul. Books and
music, athletic game- and mental and phys- ;
leal culture will occupy the time and
thoughts qf a healthy, happy, godlike peo
ple who/trill send out thought message- ;
froitA-'A to soul, from place to place, as an |
m arrow flies from the bow of the archer.
■ Agriculture will be developed by elec
tricity, the motive power of the future. ;
Science will take in condensed form from ;
the rich loam of earth the life force or
germs now found in the heart of the corn,
the kernel of the wheat, the luscious juice
of the fruits. A small phial of this life from
the fertile bosom- of mother earth will fur
nish man with subsistence for days, and
thus the problems of coiks r.;;d cooking !
will be solved. The slaughter of animals, .
the appetite for flesh meat that has left the
world reeking with blood and bestialized
humanity, will be one of the shuddering
horrors of the past. Slaughter houses, |
butcher shops and cattle pens will be con
verted into conservatories and beds ■of
bloom. Man and beast will hold life sa
cred, and the vegetarians of the next ceu
tury will exclaim with Goldsmith:
No flocks that range the valleys free.
To slaughter I condemn;
Taught by that i - .ver that pities me,
I learn to pity them.
i The dress of the future will offer no re
\ aistance to or compression of action. Be. th
l ffig ever in the infinite ocean of good the
' "house beautiful” will not be prematurely
decayed by sickness, distorted by pain or
racked by fashion’s tortures. Vulgarity
will not conceal or exp - -. "To the pure
all things will be pure.” The practice of
the maxim "Know thy.---li ’ will make the
body honored and rcsy:.-.-.dent "the tem
ple of the Holy Th:- race will be
mentally ami physically L< ilt.uer. m.ppie.
and handsomer bew .t □ us ..-ssci tne
race, no longer de; u. i wdi
be freed from 1.- ■ rt.iity. wmk- mans
animality will decn '--e ! port ion to the
iaprease of mentality. .. on u.saall Have
the sole right to say vri; a she s: .mli wear
the crown of m< ! rho ,! ata ourtg-ffsand
kJwahAuuM ht> ■ and alleys shall jjg
longer swarm wnu uw opaVKi e.; SKsnxst
men.
Improvements, inventions and startling
discoveries will so crowd and supersede one
another that our limited human ken can
not today grasp them all. We will bear
Awn the barriers between the seen and the
unseen and hold converse with the disem
bodied. We will travel over land and water
and through the air by means of electricity,
and hold communication with the in
habitants of other planets, and Sunday ex
cursions to the mountains of the moon will
not excite comment. The center of popu
lation has moved westward 500 miles in the
past century, and, judging the future by
the past, the greatest city will bo located
on our boundless western prairies, where
the almond eyed Mongolian from the orient
will meet in the tide of humauitj’ pouring
westward the Aryan brother from whom
he separated on the plains of Asia 6,000
years ago.
Where Chicago now lifts her proud spires
and many storied buildings a great lake or
I inland sea will surge its restless waters,
j and the dwellers on its bunks will tell with
; bated breath of the cataclysm that en
-1 gulfed the doomed city and rolled the
I waters upon its sin and pride.
Tho American now living who will be
the mast honored in 1993 will be that man
■ who is today endeavoring to exemplify in
I his life and teachings tho spirit and doc
j trine of Jesus Christ, who is lifting from
i the rubbish of the temple the book of
I books, and leaving nothing undone to bring
■ about that time of which Isaiah sung and
j the prophets have so long foretold. Un
honored by wealtp or station, though not
j unknown, he lives today for his fellow men,
■ beloved by all who meet him. Tho ripest
I years of his white manhood he has been
: writing justice on the nation’s page, and
l this shall bo his sure reward, for “With
what measure you mete unto others, it
shall be meted unto you.”
For ever the truth comes uppermost.
As round and round wo run;
And ever the right shall triumph,
And over shall justice be done.
Yours tor the kingdom coming,
MARY E. EEASE.
—, «.
Cities of the Next Century.
[From Our New York Correspondent.]
Colonel Albert D. Shaw, who, when
United States consul to Manchester, gained
a wide repute, speaking of the development
of cities in tho next century, said:
One of the greatest cities in the United
States will bo found to occupy the area be
tween Buffalo and Niagara falls. I think
that early in the cent ury there will be a
j eityof 1,000,000 inhabitants there. It will
j be one of the greatest manufacturing cities
in the world. It will include practically the
| eityof Buffalo its well as the towns upon
i the borders of the Niagara river.
This great city is to be developed through
the capt uriugof the power of Niagara falls,
which even today is practically consum
i mated, and which from the time of the dis-
I covery of this country has gone to waste.
■ This water power is to be mainly utilized
i in the development of electricity, and both
the Canadian and the American falls are
to bo made to serve this purpose.
A power will be developed there suffi
cient not only to run all the engines neces
sary to turn the wheels in as many factories
as can be located in this urea, but also suf
ficient to furnish the city of Buffalo with
light and with electricity for domestic uses,
and, I am inclined to think, may even pro
vide power and light for cities as far away
I as New York and Philadelphia on the east
and Cleveland and Cincinnati and Toledo
on the west. The capacity is practically
limitless.
Even with the great plants now estab
lished on the American side and with those
contemplated on the Canadian side only a
comparatively small portion of this enor
mous power is utilized. It has the advan
tage of being not only cheap,but permanent.
No drought will ever affect the Niagara
falls, and the cost of furnishing power will
not be d pendent upon the operations of
1 capitali-ts who control the co-gi fields.
I Already there are indications of the
i growth of this city. Manufacturers from
all parts of the United-States are securing
rights there, and even before the close of
this century ve shall see a considerable
city established there. Early in tho next
century 1 look to see a continuous manu
facturing city extending from the Niagara
river to what arc now the outskirts of the
city of Buffalo.
Nature has done everything to favor this
locality, and at last science and capital are
i taking ad vai ■ age of these natural tempta
; tions. My own opinion is that during the
; next century this will become the greatest
manufacturing center in the world, and
men now in the prime of life will see
enough, I think, to justify me in this pre
diction and before many years have passed.
Junius Henri Browne’s Prediction.
I am and have always been a great be
liever In America and everything American.
The form of government is ideal, and will
: no doubt meet the requirements of its citi
: zensfor generations if not for ages to come.
The social and pblitical condition of the
country in 1993 will be, in myopinion,;
marked improvement on what it is now.
j It wHI tend more and more to humanity,
i reason, freedom and independence of the
individual. Sociali -ni, which is in the air,
will steadily grow - here in a modified and
! rationalized form. There will be more
; equality in education, position and fortune.
The republic will be more than ever
’ democratized. The government will be
i simpler. The railroads and telegraphs
i will in nil probability be owned by the
■ state and managed excellently—better than
{ they have been at any previous time.
Legislation on the subject of temperance
j will be more enlightened. There will lie no
I attempt to enforce total abstinence, but
! there will be less drinking and far fewer
i rumshops. Those that are permitted will
! be obliged to pay very' high licence and will
I be thoroughly regulated by law.
Criminals will be less severely punished
! and their number will have materially
! diminished. General education will have
i greatly lessened crime.
■ The divorce laws will be the same in nil
! the states. Divorce will be freer generally
i than at present, but allowed for only a few
I moral causes—among them nonsupport,
disloyalty, crime, intemperance and tern
i peramental incompatibility.
Wealth will be more widely and equally
1 distributed, and great corporations and busi-
■ ness interests will be conducted harmoni
ously—on the principle of the employees
! and workers sharing in the profits. The
! conflict between labor and capital will be
, largely settled in this way, aided by co
i operation. As a necessary result the la-
I boring classes will be much less dependent.
I Food will be provided in the next cen
! tury at a low cost and without difficulty
for our entire population. Schemes to ad
vance the prices of tho necessities of life
will have become so discouraged by public
i opinion as to be no longer practicable.
Law will be simplified. Lawyers will
. have diminished, and their feeswill have
i been vastly curtailed. The principles of
i medicine will be more generally and intel
; ligently understood. There will-be much
j more dependence on nature than on drugs
or physicians, who will have decreased.
Theology, as such, woi be little taught
and will have almost no influence. Author
i ity will have no weight, and faith, as re
spects dogma, will be without esteem. The
; doctrine, then, will be deed, not creed.
The churches, outside of the Roman Catho
lic, will coalesce—will be as one. They will
nreach morality only and inculcate charity
THE AUGUSTA Cl IRONIC! E, APRIL 26, 1893.
American literature win snuiu sc tift
head of English literature. The drama will
be its best and most accepted form.
The social and political status of women
will be on a par with thnt of men. They
will enjoy the elective franchise.
The servant problem will have adjusted
itself to the needs of the community, and
will have ceased to be an injustice and a tor
ment to householders.
The race will be handsomer, healthier
and more contented—through increased ed
ucation, knowleilge of science and human
sympathy.
JUNIUS HENRI BROWNE.
The Developmeut of the South,
[From Our New York Correspondent?]
Mr. Samuel Barton, who is a nephew of
Commodore Vanderbilt and the broker
who executed many of his orders when Jay
Gould and the creator of the Vanderbilt
fortunes were engaged in a contest for the
possession of the Erie railroad, in speaking
of the development of tho United States in
the next century, said:
It is my opinion that there is to be a won
derful development of the resources of the
state of Florida in the next century. Our
people do not understand what a magnifi
cent territory that is. It will become not
only the groat sanitarium for the invalids
of the east, but my impression is will be a
rival with Nice and other Mediterranean
districts for those who seek pleasure and
comfort in winter travel. Already some of
the capitalists who have been attracted to
that country are developing it by means of
railways.
Before tho beginning of the next century
a railroad will skirt the Atlantic shore al
most as far down as the Florida keys.
This great subtropical territory will be as
thoroughly crisscrossed by railways as are
some of the states of the north. 1 thiuk
our pleasure seekers will discover that the
lower part of Florida has as many tempta
tions in the winter season as have any of
the winter resorts of Europe, and I look to
see the islands in the Caribbean sea the re
sort of those who seek fashionable pleas
ures, for there they will find much greater
natural beauties than are to be enjoyed 01
the shores of the Mediterranean, and then
is none of those distressing mistrals which
sometimes make life miserable ut these
Mediterranean resorts.
I doubt whether the lower part of Flor
ida will ever be drained so ns to make tha*
section available for agriculture, although
almost anything is going to be possible in
the next century. Completely to drain
that would require the building of a ditch
as deep and broad as the Mississippi river.
Farther north, however, I think wo shall
find early in the next century the great
sugar belt there completely under cultiva
tion, and it is capable of producing millions
of pounds of sugar.
Transportation facilities will l>o so in
creased that the orange district, especially
upon tho east coast, will practically furnish
the United States all the oranges tho mar
ket requires. Pines and cocoanuts will be
grown In southern Florida to such an ex
tent as to command the markets of this
country, and I think I am not making a
wild prediction when I say that in the next
century the value of Florida to the United
States will be of more commercial impor
tance than arc some of the states in which
even bonanza mines have been discovered.
Professor David Swing’s Guess.
It is almost certain that tho United States
will continue to advance in all the next
hundred years. The sunshine, rain and
soil are constant quantities in the sense
that they seem quite secure for one more
century. Coal oil and natural gas will no
longer exist, but there will be plenty of
wood and coal. There will be food for all,
but all the great west and southwest will
be settled as densely as Germany, but Mex
ico and Canada will then be in tho North
American republic and will furnish homes
for many nuw millions.
The American president will bC clecrtsl
for six or eight years and will not be eligi
ble for a second term. Near the close of the
next century some rare, noble woman will
be elected president of the United States.
Railways will be so leveled and straight
ened that slow freight trains will make 190
miles an hour, but the best of passenger
trains will ruu 130 miles an hour. It is not
certain that steam will be the, form of power.
New powers are liable to be discovered.
One cent a mile will be full fare.
Considerable traveling will be done by
the air route. The fact that air is an ocean
which will float a man settles the ques
tion of aerial navigation. Mau is sim
ply to invent the kind of boat. It must be
very large and strong. It must come. This
boat may be guided from city to city by a
wire strung about 100 feet above ground,
so as to let the balloon pass over trees and
houses. Thus a wire one-quarter of an inch
in diameter will hold and guide many bal
loons full of people.
On account of fast and cheap travel cities
will become groups of suburbs, and all the
poor will have air, sunshine and light.
Suburban fare, twenty miles, will bo two
cents, on what are called zone tickets*.
The working people will all be share
holders in the farm or factory where they
work. They will simply draw dividends
and will lose by all strikes, because they
will strike against their own interest.
Literature, the drama and all life will be
higher and purer, because the increase of
common sense implies an increase of all
that is good. Dress of woman will be sim
pler-and the conduct of men more honor
able, for each hundred years make man and
woman less of a fool.
The Christian -church will rest wholly
upon the words and life of Christ. The
writers of the Bible will stand related to
Christ only as valuable forerunners and
missionaries of the one great Chief. The
church will be a vast impulse and guide in
art, ethics, benevolence and worship.
Great calamities will come la the form of
pestilence, earthquakes and civil strife, but
they will not much impede the progress of
the nation. .Washington and Lincoln will
still be most honored names because n<
other two minds can ever again find two
such tasks to be performed.
DAVID SWING
Bearded women have existed at all peri
ods of the world’s history. Even llerodo
tus, the "Father of History,” gives us an
account of one Pedasnes, "who lived above
Halicarnassus, a priestess of Minerva,whose
chin regularly budded with a large beard
whenever any public calamity Impended.”
An Easy Settlement.
“The last time I saw Trotter he was
deeply in love with two girls. How did
ho settle the matter?”
“Oh, easily enough—only one would
have him.’’—Vogue.
/ Two of a Kind.
Training will do many things, but it
has seldom brought together two such
incongruous mates as in this story.
Little Barbara had been sick, but was
convalescent.
“Are you my doctor?" she said, wak
ing up suddenly and finding a strange
lady at her bedside.
“No, dear,” said the strange lady, “I
am your trained nurse.”
“Ah, that’s better,” exclaimed the lit
tle girl. “I shall-like you very. much.
nurse,” she continued, pointing
to a cage hanging near the window, "let
me introduce you to my trained canary.’'
—St. Paul Globe.
' KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement mu’
tends td personal enjoyment when
rightly The many, who live bet
ter than others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptlj
adapting the world’s best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the pure liquic
laxative principles embraced in tin
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the forth most acceptable and plea
ant to the t aste, the refn shing and truh
beneficial properties of a perfect lax
ative; effectually cleansing the system
dispelling colds, headaches and fever.-
and permanently curing constipation
It has given satisfaction to millions un
met with the approval of the mediea
profession, Jkcause it acts on the Kid
neys, Liven and Bowels without weak
ening them ami it is perfectly free from
every objei tionable substance.
Syrup ol Figs is for sale by all drug
gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man
ufactured >y the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, wnose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will not
accept any substitute if offered.
Hat Horn
Water.
Fresh supply just in. Low price
by tlic ease.
Buffalo Lithia
Water,
Direct from spring. Case, $5.50
—l2 half gallon bottles.
Bed Bug
Poison.
Best and suresl. s<»bl. Easy to
use—2s and 50c. bottles.
Insect
Powder.
Onr old Dalmatian Brand. By
far the strongest- and guaranteed.
Special 5 and 10 lb. price.
Camphor
for Moths.
We sell also the Coal Tar Cam
.plior. Large arrivals of both.
|_ ,See us before putting away your
"Wankel'S and winter Aothing,
Are You
Going to Paint?
J list, a word—Wo want you to call
and see us before doing so. We
offer the purest, and best Lead and
Oil, gi AUANTKico. There is no
bettermixed paint than “Masury’s
Liquid Colors.” See color card
and get prices.
Alexander Dint aafl Seed Co.,
OPPOSITE EXPRESS OFFICE.
Paint at
Wholesale!
From our new paint ware house just
rented by us.
White Lead.
We are sole Augusta agents for Buck
Lead. Been selling it for 30 years.
Highest grade.
Linseed Oil.
Agents for the largest crushing mill in
tin- West. Brought out only in '-ai'
load lots. We sell only pure mixed oil.
Varnishes and Dryers.
You may rely on these being oil and
not turpentine goods.
Dry Ochres, Floor Faints,
Stains, Colors in Oil,
In any quantity.
Reacy=Mixed Paints,
Pure straight goods. Don't sell the fish
oil and whiting kind. Ours don’t peel
and crack.
Plastico,
The Only Cold-Water Process
For Interior house walls. Murii superior
to hot water process which scalds the
life out of colors. 2,010 tons used re
cently on World s Fair buildings. Get
color curd. slbs 50c. Sole Augusta
agents.
® IM B ■ M to.
WHOLESALE.
ChfofcCrterV English Diamond RrnnJ.
PILLS
Oric. .rtn.elOciyCecuino. , a
X .'“SL'"\ safe, nltvat r liable, ladies, ati Z'XX
X1 D.-i ;-’t B-r Ti. ■< r J A'ziGhsft Dia \
.D-’D' f •- Kc-'i Tt-.i <;■/■< n.rtn:!iayv?y
-rx —. L s al ; 1 v"-li bid • ribbon. 3 «!.e VjXT
Uikßrto ot!<r r. />/ f « avhsbtu- V
1 / ~ OT f ‘ on n't • At DrugKinu.ori«<’nd4ft.
I Jr * 1 I'flni.’' l pcMicuiars. t r utlmoniaia and
\ “ RoIL ’■ fr.r Itier..” in letter, bv return
// Mail. 1 Fntonialn. Pap-yr,
X /Chic < henJcol €o.,M»i<lUon Square
Bold by all Local Dr. -s -
Advertise in The Chronicle.
5 Z\ ?
?/ \ |
0 Take our advice, «
m Use this device, a
a And try
Before you buy. p
i ?
Wc guarantee everything, and
S give ample opportunity to
J examine and test Instruments J
and Machines, a
| AND REMEMBER, j
Wc pay freight S
to any point within
| ”273 Miles.E |
X “ There’s no place like home,”
a if you’ve got a KN ABE
O Piano in it. 0
t over 50 Years |
m before the public. Its popu-
0 larity is so fixed that blow V
and bluster cannot move it.
| THOMAS & BARTOiM |
$ SOUTHERN AGENTS,
| Awla ... - Oeorgia. J
[boilers, |
E n g i nes,
SAWMILLS,J
LANDRAM & BUTLER.
This Week We call attention to a few leading
items of importance.
HOSIERY!
We carry only the
best makes. Colors
guaranteed.
OUR LEADER
Lord & Taylor’s Clebrated
I Onyx Black at 25c., 35c. and i
sc. per pair. Children’s, !
L idies’ and (lent-V sizes. x
'
rind Gloves 1
iln Silk and Lisle, Black and Colors, 25c., 35c., 50c. to Sf.GO.
| Evlnen I kindkerchiels !
Ladies’, Children’s and Gents’ plain white hemstitched at 5c.,
ioc. 15c., 20c. and 25c. Colored border hemstitched at 5c., ioc., 15c.,
20c/and 25c. Mourning hemstitched from sc. to 50c. each.
r -. «/ in black and all colors, from 25c. to $1 per yard,
New race Veiling, plain and figured meshes.
weather—new style fancy Japanese Fans, 5, 10,
Get Ready &■. t. o _
a. r Silk Elastic at 25c. txt varil; Cotton
We sell the best American 1 ins at j< . Elastic at p( . r black, yellow, red.
i,a-paper; English Pins, 10c. per paper or g reen> Jjlac, pink, white and blue. Pels
„„,k. Darning Cotton, all colors, sc. ball | >es t toilet soap, 5c., 10c-and 20c. a eako.
i ~r sc. for two curds; guaranteed fasl. The best three cakes for 25c. sold.
AskTTße*Showii the Bargains in Linen Towels
and Damasks.
r''*J'T*G! We have some great bargains for you in Negligee Shirts at 50c. and
(lEIN S k 5» 75c. Ties al 25c. and 50c. Half Hose in fast blacks at 15c. ami 2:>e.
I ring Cassimcreß for pants or suits at 50c., 75c. and SI.OO per yard. Summer under
wear, vests and drawers.
'T? . with Our Silk Sale. Wo are giving onr customers
Vv e Are tile best silks ever shown at 25c, ,85e.,150e., me. and
■il.oo per yard; black, solid colors of every shade and fancy changeable effects.
We Have Just Received Lace, so much used now as dress trim
mings, 15c., 25c., 50<-.., 75cf, to $2.00 per yard.
Prices on all-wool Dress Goods cut as follows: Sl.oO now 85c.. 81.-5
rKlVlud BOW 75c., 81.00 now 65c., 85c. now 50c., 75c. now «5c., 50<.
We Have Many Choice Bar
gains for the Week.
LANDRAM & BUTLER,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DRY GOODS,
S2S and 830 Broad ,
Children Cry for etcher's Castoria.
Smoke Stack, Stand Pipe, Sheet Iron
and Tank Work, Cotton Presses. Cotton
Gins, Cane Mills, Shafting, Pulleys,
Gearing, Boxes and Hangers, Mill,
Machinists’ and Engineers’ Supplies.
Schofield’s Ironworks
MACON, GI'.OHGIA.
FAIWY HOSIERY,
I Color warranted last,, Silk ;
j and i.islo Richelieu stripe, I
' solid black b et, with boot I
tops in pink, red, yellow, j
lilac, Nile green, light blue |
and greys, 50c. and 75c. per
'all-silk rose,
Solid colors, white, black,
■ pink, blue, greys and tans,
| SI.OO and $1.50.
11
HOSIERY
To match youi summer
'shoes and slippers, Tans,
, Modes and Leather, all
ilizes, 35c. to 75c.
OOH CHILDREN'S
Past Black How-. all sizes,
25c.: plain or ribb d, don Me
knees, heel and toes. You
will use no other.