The weekly Augusta chronicle. (Augusta, Ga.) 1892-19??, August 16, 1893, Page 10, Image 10

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10 .[HE GOSSIP OF GOTHAM. >\IIAT TAMMtXY JWI.IV WILL A'l- Tirill’T IV CO3GUENN. KOI’VG M’< LEI.LAVS DECISION— 'rm: smu'Aito Hunt. Ml” l.uln Morris Ila* Iler Suitors— To 'l’rn 11*11 In ill n Mciinitei’le. [CorTIIK.nT, 1893.1 Then 1 is us yet no evidence of the “in.subordinatioa” toTammany so viru- /**» A I w. HOCHKE CO! KUAN, from the admin- j iteration in return for anfi-silver sup port. It. is difficult to believe that Mr. : Coekran ever tried .anything so silly, not to mention the fact that anything like intrigue is quite beyraid Lockrun. He is an orator, a gentleman and a democrat. Au y body who ex peels, t herc foro, a lively time in the house through obstructive tactics inaugurated by Mr. Cockrun, of New York, will be disap pointed. Never, perhaps, did a con- ( gr< ssional delegation go to Mashing- • ton from this city more thoroughly j determined to help the administration. ; Tammany’s policy, it can be stated on ’ the authority of Mayor Gilroy, is to 1 repeal the silver law, to fight for tariff for revenue only, and to secure the oilices for good democrats. New York’s Mayoralty. Nover, perhaps, were the fatalities incident to New York city’s mayoralty ( : ■ ' 7 \ v / I ’ ' / / I z- more sharply Vro ii g li t out than in young George 11. Me li linn’s asser tion that he does not want to be in ayo r. 'l' h e young man is re tiring into the ; pmenities of the pres id e n c y of ■the board of al dermen, after having litxuri* GEORGE B. St CI.ur.l.AN. ated in the municipal chief magis trate's chair owing to the absence of Mayor Gilroy. Young McClellan has just shattered the dreams of his parti sans bj'saying that ho docs not like the jnayorality, its duties arc too arduous and thankless, and so forth. He ’vol! knows that nearly every man elected to the office has found in it a political grave. Only the other day there was reported the death of a man who, not so many years ago, had been New York’s mayor. Yet everybody forgot his name so completely that’ when the obituary appeared it seemed ' that of a nobody. Gilroy's predecessor, Grant, seems already buried in oh-1 llvion, while Hewitt and others an-I pear to possess scant, political influ- I vine. The. only exception that would I appear to prove the rule is ox-Mayor Grace, who to-day bolds many of the threads of Gotham’s destiny in his hands. Therefore all the talk and plans si plentiful of lute upon the part of the friendsand Hdhercntsof McClellan are rendered nugatory by his own action Ji’.st taken. A Youthful Millionaire. If young Elliot t F. Shepard is really to he put into I iiclo Sam’s navy, as re ported the. other day, many friends of the Shepard family will be intensely astonished. Certainly there is nothing in Iho life and surroundings of this millionaire in his teens to warrant any such statement, and a near friend of the family says Elliott will not be made a sailor, and no one ever thought of doing so. The young man pursues his studies in a disjointed way now, owing to the holidays, but this autumn there will be work cut out for him. His education is planned on an elabor ate scale. Languages, music, mathe matics and art are all to be mastered, or rather . studied, by this heir to a great name. His pleasures arc horseback rides, boating and sports. His health is a trifle delicate and his personal appearance would not com mand much attention were it not for a quiet, gentlemanly manner beyond his years ami a pleasant, deft, way of say ing clever things. The boy promises to grow into u clever man, with all his father's good, generous qualities, but without his headstrong will and rugged obstinacy. Young Shepard is surpris ingly well educated, for very few of New York’s upper ten are educated in the sense that poorer people under stand the term. The wealthy and socially prominent New Yorkers spend too much money in educating their children to achieve satisfactory results, but fortunately for young Elliott he lias the benefit of George W. Wmder- Lilt's counsel and supervision. Mr. Vanderbilt has nothing' of the peda gogue or pedant about him and his easy way of swinging a heavy dumb bell and handling an intricate aorist as if both were mere feathers, would lire the emulation of youth. Altogether no one has reason to think that Elliott Shepard will become a United States naval officer. A Society Swell. Frederick Gebhard is just now the abject of a peculiar conspiracy to an,- Miss i.ui.U Mobius, ing candidate, finds the field against him. Whenever his suit is more than usually favored, \ some paragraph raking up the past ap< r pears and is sent, marked, to friends o. Gebhard. The dirty trick is more >nnoj'iug because the perpetrator of.it is can fol to preserve anonymity. AR a matter of fact there exists n great misapprehension in the public mind regarding Mr. Gebhard. A man of great physical strength, he is very gen tle. Well educated and aristocratic, he never puts on airs and is affable with everybody. Ho is a temperate, quiet, good-humored fellow now, whatever he may have been, and pos sessed of great shrewdness. When ever he invests his own money the re sult is highly advantageous to him self pecuniarily, and, considering his means, he is not an extravagant liver. l’erh:n\i time alone cun tell how true is the rep<\t that Gebhard will adopt a public en’cer - that is, not necessarily seek public office, but help along such political reforms as are needed. As an orator Gebhard, with his strong, agree able voice and splendid addre..:., would be a success. lent!}’ charged on t'oigfrcssinan j AV. BourkeCock-I ran, of New York city. Ithasi been stated that he formed al compact w ithl his fellow mein-1 bers of the New York ilcli g.f ion toextort “place” To Transplant a Menagerie. The board of aldermen of New York cannot seriously mean to buy out the Zoological gar dens of Phila delphia. Some city fathers think it cun bo done, and argue that, it would be a splendid thing, since the city of ,I'hi 1 ndelph i a owns one of the finest menager ies in existence. One New York alderman makes the surprising assertion that Philadcl p hi a’s ‘“Zoo” does not pay, and that it is pro posed to introduce, beer and music into it. But as Philadelphia, he adds, is too moral a place to permit that, New York should buy out the garden’s in males and take them to Central park. Tliiy unique project, he says, is quite feasible. A special train would cost very little, and New York could send over its experienced keepersand trans fer the animals in no time. It would certainly bo one of the oddest train loadsof pm engers that ever journeyed between tho two cities, it is highly unlikely, however, that the scheme will be curried out. From a purely su perficial acquaintance, with Philadel phia, I should judge that that historic city would never consent to the bar gain. I’hlladriphiu on Snnday. Speaking of Philadelphia reminds me that yon could no more buy a drink ■'' s * irn.vr rnir.r.TA’ lacks ox SUNDAY. transpired that there was no liquor in the house. He and a New Yorker went out with a va lise and for two hours it is the solemn truth that they vainly endeavored to purchase something drinkable other than Schuylkill water. There are places it seems in Philadelphia where liquor is surreptitiously vended, but there is a system of free masonry con nected with them, not knowing which you are not sold to. ,“Sp.>nk erstcsi” id the. highly captivating Philadelphia name for these establishments. Well, after a vain hunt the Philadelphian and the New Yorker returned to the thirsty guests. The only thing to do was for all hands to take a train for New York, which they did, Philadel phian and all, and everybody could then get drink and to spare. lIAVtD WECHSLER. This Frujf Weighed a Ton, The labyt inthodon, a huge creature resembling a toad or frog, and which lived in the earlier periods of our planet’s history, has recently been found in a surprising state of preser vation in the marl beds of Hnezel weitz, Hungary. All species of this gigantic frog are now* extinct and are known to the naturalists only through the investigations of the geologists, who have often found parts or entire fossils of the monster in strata of the triassic portion of the mesozoie period. Southwick mentions in a. three-line entl'y in his “Quizzism and Key,” un der the head “A Prog us Large as an Ox,” and in Barnett’s ‘'Geological Epochs” it is considered in a chapter on‘‘Huge Frog-Like Creatures of the Mesozotic Age.” The specimen un earthed in the Hungarian marl bed is entire, with the exception of the left fore-arm and the lower jaw. The skull measures eighteen inches be tween flic eye sockets and weighs ex clusive of the missing under jaw, three hundred and twelve pounds. The bones which ha ve been discovered up to date (and there is still hopes of finding the missing parts), with the adhering matrix, weig'h eighteen hun dred and sixty* pounds, almost a ton.— St. Louis Republic. A Turk's Narrow Escape. Sehampeddin, the moliah, observed a dark figure prowling in his garden by moonlight. Thinking it was a robber he took his bow and arrow, shot at the object, and quickly retired to bed. On the morrow great was his aston ishment. at finding that he had trans fixed his own eraftan, which his wife had hung out in the garden to dry. He knelt down to pray, stood up again, put his hands to his head, and then, folding them devoutly over his breast, he once more prostratedhimself, kissed the. ground, and cried out: “Praised be Allah and his prophet! How fortunate that I was not wearing the eraftan at the time the deed was perpetrated, else the arrow would have pierced me through and I should now be a dead man!” —Phare du Bosphorc; Appropriate. She—-I wonder why they call these angel sleeves? He—What else could they be called when you wear them. lndianapolis Journal. Hard to Believe. Maud—Yes, I am obliged to have my shoes made to order. My left foot is larger than my right. Ethel—ls it noy him. It has been stated on the highest au thority that he is to be married to Miss Lulu Morris. But there are other suitors for the young lady’s hand, and Mr. Gebhard, as lead- THE AUGUSTA CHRONICLE, AUGUST 1 1893. 1 AND MY COMRADE. (Written for The Chronicle). If you will cross the city bridge— the wagon bridge—lnto Carolina, and follow straight on, two hundred yards, till you come to the first turn to the right, you will be In tin- straight road to Freetown. Not so straight, either, for when you get across Horse creek, and up amongst the hills, you will find sandy roads leading hither and yon, and unless you know the way you will go somewhere else besides Freetown. Having turned to the right, as I told you, you will presently make a sweeping turn to the left. Do not go through Rutherford's gate into his brick yard, unless you want to spend an hour, or two oi them, watching Ashantee and Cooru assic cyelops tending the roaring fires of the kiln, the sweat pouring from their blax.-k hides in cataracts, —uh, bah, I am borrowing all this hifalulin from my comrade,—let us get back to tho road. The road now runs par allel with the Carolina railroad, an 1 you come to a little bridge without a. railing, and if it Is blackberry time you pick all the berries you want t orn the bridge. I was picking b tries there one Sunday with my <•< nn.i lv when I put to him the question, "Is it not. strange that red blackberries are green.’” "To children, 1 suppoiw it is,” replied. "Now wont you say something original, jurt for va llty?” I let him do all the talking for the next half hour. Then you come to a larger 1 ••Idg? with railing on the sides, that teat a bit of standing water, the lit -'"I of a little lagoon. Tho water is full "f all kinds of marsh weeds ami v« t ■ m 1 1 jL /I SB -'ijKrrx? A QUESTION. tion, and there you will see th- tall hibiscus, nkln to cotton and okra, with Its flaring white flowers as largo as the open hand. Leaning over th • stilling you watch tho little minnows, and if you look close you will see a pike, not much bigger than they, hall hid by the water weeds, lying in wait to undertake the Capture and the swallowing of a fish bigger that' h-'. Ho is like folks, isn’t he? A little house back turtle swims by, paddling industriously outward wlht his w-b --bed feet, intent upon getting to some place where he will turn square about and swim back. He reminds mo <q tho bicycle rider oh the asphalt, with h-ad bent down, elbows out. and legs sti . awing, turning back wlr-n he h? got to nowhere. But ah, the dragon-flies! They ar.- the poetry of the place. My < m rade and f counted from that railing one Sunday’ ten different kinds, dis porting themselves about the water below. Sane would be so neatly alike that I would take them to be th<i samp; Ibut my comrade would iy perhaps, "No, that one has black tip.-; to his wings: the other has not.” Th tl is Just like him, and it Is very’ pro voking. There was one fellow, sturdy a n blacksmith, brown about bls wings and shoulders, with a body which, in lack of si wing; he had powtl -red white There was another, riwi,- greener than the leaf lie sat so d 'tr uly on; his wings were black ji id I- li ed like finely’ woven lace. Then th re was :i blue fellow, with a slender blue body, and steel bine wings ero: ed with black liars, and he was so t im and clean; he was an out anti out dandy in his get-up. I asked my’ comrade what he reckoned his clothes L-ost.. "A. hundred million yea| s of (God’s thinking,” he replied, w'tfiout (lifting his eyr-s from the • I ' • tg. ■ lie's a bit queer. Between Mobile anil Now Orleans 1 hate seen r d dragon-flies,- as mur derous in tijir looks as doublets they are in their deeds. But pci haps dragon-flies arc not always to be judged by their looks, as people are. o£ beer there o n Buit da y t han you could fly. Not long ago a Ph iladel phian invited so me Ncw Yorkers over to the Quaker < 'lty for Sun day. AV hen tho guests had ns r> ein bled it] Now you turn to the right agiin. leaving the railroad at your bm and wh.cn you have crossed on a rude bridge a bold- little stream. yo« i out" into the open li dds of the civ r bottom, its rich brown soil bringing the best of cotton and corn. The riv.-A is on your right hand, some distuned a wily; the swamp is on your left. At; first you will note that the trees tu'l the swamp are mostly gum; but half! a mile on that they are mostly ey-| press. Looking into their dark and I sharietU depths, it semis as though amongst their limbs and in their re cesses which the eye follows back in to darkness, strange things might I>e seen in the mud and water below, and in their leafy coverts. My com rade must once have been thinking I that way, for. reaching out his hand, j lie said: ‘'lt’s name is seclusion. I ’ wish I could fly.” The first time we went down that way together it was bite fall, and tlie cypress had turned color, their compact foliage standing now against the sky in huge rounded masses of ruddy brown. My comrade. gazing at it a while in silence, turned to me I and said; “It is fur, isn’t it?”* “It i isn’t so very fur;” I answered, "it I might be a good deal further.'' Ho ‘ turned upon me a. contemptuous look and said: “You are so darned smart.” But we have known it as th- fur : country from that time. Now the road strikes close to th" river, and for a long distance down there is quite a bluff; opposite the bluff is Kirk’s bar and’ th *•■ barber shop. Just here there is a wash by the side of the road, and out of it we have picked many an Indian ar rowhead, and flint chip and bit of rude pottery. Beverly Walker knows the place. He knows every Indian find in a radius of thirty miles. Once Beverly was an Indian Chief, and he loved a maiden—but that is another story, as Rudyard Kipling says. For a good part of a mill the road sticks to the edge of the woods along the river, then it bears off through the fields, towards Horse creek. If it is a very hot day, amt if you don’t feel very well yourself, you will dread the tramp through title shadeless -fields, and perhaps you will lie down On the cool grass and decline to go further. But I and my comrade and the Sun are old friends, and we love the wide fields, and. the waving corn—ah, I knew you would come. Half way to the creek we pass a pump in the fields; the water is clear and cool, but it tastes of iron. The creek is better. And now we come to the long bridge. As we approach the creek we do not see the bridge, for there is a sharp turn in the road just there, and the bridge is hidden by canes and bushes. Even then, when you come upon th« bridge, you see but a little part of it, for the bridge itself has a turn in it. ipo us both this gives the bridge and the place a peculiar charm;—my’ com rade says it is the charm of variety, hut 1 think it Iles deeper than that. It is ft long bridge, stretching clear across ths creek bottom, for the wa ter, dammed at the pulp mill below, 1h above its natural level, arid tills tho narrow valley (tom bluff to bluff. We always stop here to lean upon the railing to look at the still water and at th- reflections of the trees in the water. If the water and the sky are right for it, you may lixrk down, away down, and sec down there, ever so deep down, another sky, and other drifting clouds. If you wait long enough you may see a wild duck fly over, or. if It is the light season, a woodcock. Having crossed tho bridge and rest ed in the shade of the svyeetgum trees, ami having drunk of th.’ creek, we follow tho road again through the Helds. Wo pass plums and blackber ries, and dewberries, a wild locust, and grapes. As we near the foot of the hills you will see, off .to the left, a clump of trees in the field. These are sweetgums. Winter before last they were barked, to kill them, but they survived the treatment, and were in full foliage through the summer. In the fall and winter the gum was to be got from them at any time In quantity’ to please the greediest boy. I and my comrade ar? still boys. There are seven of the trees, and my comrade named them the Seven Sb- I -rs, and when we found that a little tree n< ar by had too its store of gum, he named that the Baby. In the spring and summer this clump of trees was a graceful mass if green foliage- -:' worthy subject for an artist's brush; but in tile fall and early winter It glowed in flame of red and yellow, so bright, that if trans ferred in pure truth to canvas, it would have been said to be overdone in color, and called a chromo. Now the road climbs a hill; on th? right is a deep ravine down which you hear the fall of water; its sides are lined in spring with ferns, and violets and trllliads, and the pale ghost flow •?t ;; in the bushes above are sweet- Irubs, nnd l.tlmfa-, honeysuckles, ari'h woodbines, and yellow jessa mines. On the left of the road Is a bank of red and white clay—kaolin—and there, hard by the road, a gush of pure cold wat-r from the bank, is Indian Spring. It is so cold and sweet aft'" i lie hot tramp across the fields. Th • water comes from a little nook or cavern, back in the bank, and there, half hidden in the semi-darkness that lay hick, 1 .‘:iw bunches of ferns growing. I called my’ comrade to see tho charm they gave to the spring. "Yes,” he said, “t have seen them; I knew they would look beautiful, and I put tlr tn there." And 1 know he did, for he said so. , Now here we are, at the Indian Spring, and nt the end of our column in The Chronicle, and we are a long way yet from Freetown. But wood and water are plenty; lit us go Into camp. BEItHY BENSON. SEW GAS APPLIANCES. The Gas Light Company of AugusL Desires to call attention to New Gas Lamps and Gas Stoves Now on exhibition and for’ sale at the Gas Office. , The Simns-Luagr&n Lamp, Now in use in St. James' Church, at Mr. Schneider's and at Dr. Perrin’s drug store. The WclsM Incandescent Gas Lamp. Now in use at the Georgia Railroad Bank. THE RADIATOR LAMP, Now In use at Phinizy & ch's counting room and at the Gas Office. Wlmve also a great variety of NEW STOVES. both for heating and cooking purposes. Our heating stoves are suitable for offices. bed rooms and hath rooms. Our <las radiators will warm any moder ately sized hull. Some of these stoves lire quite ornamental. Our COOKING STOVES ARE UNSURPASSED for clean lluess mid economy. Call and see them. 11. B. ADAM. Secretary. SOUTHERN Express Company's MONEY ORDERS ywmwr ««li W—W M«tTT. I3SMI For Sale at all Important Agencies of the Company. CHEAP, o EASY TO OBTAIN. PREFERRED EY MERCHANTS. MUMMMWa.MW GOOD AT ABOUT 15,000 PLACES IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA. THE SOUTHERN EXPRESS COMPANY | Will Issue Money Orders at all important Agencies pay able at all other of its impor tant Agencies and at about 13,000 places reached by the other prominent Express Companies in the country. Ho Written Application Required RATES ARE AS FOLLOWS. Not over $5.00 5 certs. Over $5.00, not over SIO.OO 8 “ “ 10.00, “ “ 20.00..10 “ “ 20.00, “ “ 30.00...12 “ “ 30.00, “ “ 40.00...15 “ « 40.00, “ “ 50.00..20 “ The attention of the public is called to this important feature of this Com pany’s business. Apply to Agents of Southern Express Co. for Money Or ders or information as to same. CHAS. L. LOOP, General Auditor Southern Fxcress C’ntdhcctor’fl Ens’J.ih Dlnraond Rnuid. FENN'fROWL PILLS mw Oily (tamlne. /SL X SAFE, alwar* v'.l.’. . lad-ls, ask «X\ / I’rir.u: . r I KnclisK d &■' ,c ' sll «».ox ■= > . Cel " i. ribl-oii. TuL 3 ■jSa other. KcAwe V I'/ ~ /yr tU’i.d I.' iruf I.':. At Druggists. < r send 4c. I U jt. .{;.•»;< :. r particulars. and \ 'e* li for Ladies.” i« by return —X 7/ Mull. I <».’!'<*3 T. -•.imoblaii. Name Paper. X 1 Cbkbc*i-'rChcalGfe? 801 l by all Ucal D.'ur r ?u. rldla«Uu. i'fc. f !■ — —1 ICASTORIAj for Infants and Children. "Cm tori a la ho well adapted to children that I recommend it ug superior to any prescription known to me." H. A. Ancnitn. M. D., 11l So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T. "The use of ‘Pastoria ’ la so universal and it* merits so well known that it seems a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the intelligent families who do not keep Castoria within easy reach.” Carlos Martvx, D. D . New York City, latte Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church. Tnu Ccstacr Cowfant, 77 Murray Strikt, Nrw York. pn t T PD 0 moke Stack > Stand Pi E e ’ Sheet Iron IL El\O. and Tank Work, Cotton Presses. Cotton " Gins, Cane Mills, Shafting, Pulleys, ■ Gearing, Boxes and Hangers, Mill, engines, Machinists’ and Engineers’ Supplies. QAVUMIIIQ Schofield’s Ironworks | AtACON. CrEOROIA. GREATEST BARGAIN SALE EVER OFFERED IN AUGUSTA AT Baltimore Clothing House. We have concluded that the balance of our Spring and Summer Clothing nuu. be sold, and to accomplish this we have made the greatest reduction ever offered. Yon will find the bargains divided la different lota and all goods marked in plain figureo. LOT FHtST. 75. consists of Men’s Spring and Summer Suita that we •old for 812.80. HH.SO. »15. flfi.so and Baltimore Clothing House, BROAD AND WASHINGTON STREETS. TO Till*; Oi ’ t Pine and Timber Lands, Mineral Lands and Agricultural Landsl Your attention is specially called to the forthcoming edition ol ths AVGUSTA. CHRONICLE. 80,000 copies to ba published on Aug'.nt 1. so be dtstrfbTited nt the Chicago World’s Eair, and to be des-riptive of the country one hundred and, fifty miles around Augusta, as an ex ceptional place to advertise your pyjperty. These papers will fall into the bunds of investors and home-seekers of the West, and your advertisements placed in this edition will probably lie productive of good results. Fur advertising rates, address at once, The Augusta Chronicle. AUGUSTA, GA. CHOICE MEATS! 13, fala.ee ATarlcet, , HAS THE FINEST Beef, Lamb, Veal, Mutton, Pork, Sugar Cured Corned eeft an<J P° uitr y- I In fact everything to ba had that is kep | in a first class market. »t~ij rWT: -* —’ ur tra, ' e ' 3 t ' ,u cl 'eam of the city. I'. S—We defy competiti m. B. LAWRENCE, Palace Market Proprietor. Cotton Gin Sale. We have 50 which we will sell cheap—New Pratt and Improved Augusta Gins, Feeders and Condensers ; also a fe-K second-hand ones, in good order, 30 Presses, etc. Lombard Iron Works and Supply Co., Augusta, Ca. Large stock of Engines, Boilers, Shafting and all kinds of Machinery Supplies an<? Repairs, Belting, Piping, Injectors, etc. TURPIN HILL DAIRY. Pure JMZillc iviicl Cream DEI IVERED DAILY IN ANY PART OF THE CITY. I l * l ALSO CURD, BUTTERAND BITTERMILK. W. R. WALTON, Manager, P. O. Box 626. — —— C. A. ROBBE’S HEATING, LIGHTING AND PLUMBING WORKS n? steam in Hot Air Engines, Steam Pumps, Lead Fijies Sheet Lead an! Zinc Force and Suction Pumps. Hydraulic Rams, Steel Wind Mills, steamOa.. . Injectors Inspirators. Hot Water Boilers, .ron Copper Zme, aud Wood Pulp B—t Tuba, Mill and Kubber and Hose Pipe? -id a sud hue ot PLUMBING, GAS LIGHTING, WATER AHI DRAINAGE SUPPLIED 755 and 737 EL.LSS STFIE.&I. Children ©ryfor Pitcher’s Castoria. Cm tor I a cures Colic, Con’tf.xitlon, Sour btouuu h, I'uirrtv’-a. kiuetation, Kills Wg>-ius, gives sleep, and promote* dk rest ion, Wltbu'W injurious ineuiueUou. “ For several years I have recommended your “ Csst'ii ia.' and shall always coutiuue to do so as ic lias; invariably produced beueheiai results.” Er win F. Panora. M. D., “The Winthroji, T'lSth Street and 7th Are., New York City I LOT SECOND. $1.1)9. consisting of Chil dren's Spring and Summer Suita that I we sold for 12.50. $3.00 and $3.50. LOT THIRD. 12.09. consists of Child , yen’* Spring and Summer Suits that we sold for $3.25, $4.00 and $4.50. LOT FOURTH. $3.99. consists of Chil dren's Spring and Summer Suits that we sold for $5.00. $5.50 and SO.OO. ( The balance cf our Pantaloons. Hats, | Shirts, etc., will be sold at the same rw I ductions.