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• XJV. No. 21.
JD0US REDUCTION ON
*{G AND SUMMER
i GOODS.
F
I invited you to an opening of my
'hich Was successful, 1 now invite
'can and will make more interesting
■ want to leave for the East-
Pa large stock of fall and
I that time I must reduce my
|e |To inventory and have room
do so I have cut the prices
Inmer Fabrics I have.
Is department has been
lithe season, filled with
lisli assortment of dress
jings as ilie various inar-
d.
■r * * buying g * what m / m
I I ' pa/ns m J y
I Omars would l/kd and to
I \i!y # • lit had to buy . , onrti a Iu ,
*1UVtf necessarily yUI rtnl
r
jnHHHAgHnHHHHHHHiBHnHBHBnw; \ut '
s I am offering you
[1 stock, rumpled nor
is but are all sty lisli
ate goods. . l
l [eces of IdCO striped ' fawns
both
pat a
must at . /
go some price as
yeuch goods over. ' Now AS the
t yourselves * With # theses j
n t;
IW! V 1 lllC Ol ,.... (*<1111 hl 10
ainsook embroideries --. . _ r ~
ll'lQ ilicf ^ llPPH
I*! * 14 *
I I Slitter .... L,
cll’6 IliJJ ^ til
lilt of prices.
IpDrtment is loo full fortius
Iso got them to dispose of,
Iu to come and buy whether
In nov\ or not
Binder of my clothing will
price. If you need any or
d any it will be. to your
lie and take advantag -A
rr
prices,
qnen, Huberts ami Lit¬
re ever at your service.
!a. juhan , 4
W H
4»
Adel, Berrien County, Georgia, Friday, July. 18, 1902. 50 Cents
I LOCAL AND PERSONAL. H
Mr. W. T. Shy tie of Valdosta
spent Sunday in Adel. ,
Mayor C. E. Webb is visiting
friends and relatives in Dooly
county.
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Clements
visited relatives at Pinehursfc
Wednesday ,7
A(lel pic ced #t Bfech H .,™,
Wedne-day but the attendance
was rather small. •
Mrs. W. T. Shy tie of Valdosta
'
is spending this week with her
mother, Mrs. M. E. Wells.
CeWItVs Little Early Risers
▼he famous iittSa mills.
Mrs. ,T. T. Pope, and children
of Colquitt have been visiting rel¬
atives here for several days.
Mrs. Robt. Hewitt and dough-
ter, Jejtnie returned from Jessup
Monday where they have been
visiting relatives.
Stops the Cough and works the oft Cold
Laxative Bromo Quninine Tab¬
lets cure a cold in one day. NO
cure, no pay. Price 25cents.
Mr. and Mrs. J. II, Forehand
of Dooly county came down last
Saturday to spend a week with
relatives in ami around Adel
Cut this out aud take it to S. I*
Williams* drug store and get. a
a box of Chamberlains Stomach
w TaW ., 8 . Th0
S1C ‘ lie ' also correct disorders
of the st-onmeh. Price*2o cents.
Mii-s Ada Kirkpatrick had the
misfortune to lose a fine gold
Watch while attending preaching
at Sparks one night last week.
MONEY TO LOAN—On im¬
prove 1 farming lands in Berrien
County $100,000,00 at from six to
eight per cent. Call and see us.
Hendricks & Harrison,
Nashville, Ca.
Rev. J. F. Culpepper has been
assisting ill a series of meetings
over in Brooks county this week
but will return in time to till his
’ w * u, “ r !,ppoi ' u "" !llt ^ 8u,,d, W
“I am using a box of Chamber-
lfiu’s Stomapb Liver Tablets
and find them the best thing for
! | 1 snvwT.
mack ±jLtTeai£n*.te nfe^ive^md
DoWfels. Tfeyiie easy to take
effect ^
cents pet box. Fol sale by b. I ,
Williams.
Eev. J, T B. r. Cochran i -mi filled i Ills , •
regular appointment here burnlay
at the Presbyterian elm rcb: He
also preached to a good congvega-
tioil out at Massee Sunday after-
noon.
<s
This signature is on every box of the genuine
Laxative Bromo=Quinifle Tablets
the'remedy that cures a cold In one d«p
Mr. J. B. Hewitt and family
left Tuesday afternoon for White
Springs, Fla., where Mr. Hewitt
hopes to recuperate. They will
probably be gone a couple of
months.
The Same old Story.
J. A. Kelly relates an experi- j
fence similar to that which has
happened in almost every neigh-
borhood in the United States and
has been told and re-told by thou-
of others, He “Last I
hands says:
summer I had an attack of dys-
eatery and purchased a bottle of
Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy, which I used
according to directions and with
entirely satisfactory results. The
trouble was controlled much
quicker than former attacks when
I used other remedies?' Mr. KeL
ley is a well known citizen of
Henderson, N. C. For sale b,V
8. P. Williams.
TALLULAH FALLS.
A Glowing Description of This
Great Georgia Wonder.
!
We have to-day niiauy places of inter¬
est, Greece has bequeathed to usher leg:
acy of art and poetry, Rdtut' nan given
us her grand repress station if patriotism
and oratory, Egypt has fill- l our scnls
with awe and woiul -mien , The Holy
Laud lias inspired U3 with lofty seuti-
meiUs a: d rMigims fer >r. Ou the
historic Nile we find the mighty works
human race.
Yet, upon our own Sunn • South, th«
red lulls of Georgia, The empire State
of the South, the skies smi:j as sweetly
to-day as they did in the days of Homer
aud Virgil ,,011 the vjne-c'ad hills »ud
mountains of North-east Georgia, we
find some of the grande,t scenery in the
world, that inspires him to love his own
native land better than any other place
on earth,
The azure skies of Italy, the snow-cai>
ped alps, together with other scenes of
the Old World fail to charm and inspire
the tourist like hi* own Blue Ridge, its
s P urs > its poetic streams aud roaring cat-
(tracts which lie spread out like some
huge panorama.
Our party (Student body of Cornelia
College) after one hours pleasant ride
through deep culs and high trestles, ar¬
rived at Tallulah about ^o’clock. Then
procuring a guide am i f (king same cool
refreshing drinks at fine fountain, we
followed our guide nround to Indian
Rapids.
This place was so called by the Indians
from the narrow like swiftness that the
water makes in going over the rocks.
One will be charmed at the scenery and
will find here x fine g. .logical field to
engage his attention, vbout hrif way
frt * ra hoatl to thefc.r of the rapids
viewed, from a certain pafeut, presents
the perfect outlines of Ja head, the fore-
head, eyes, nose, mom,h, chin etc., all
show jverfeet. It is krx.wu a8Witches
Head.”
At this point happened a very sad ac¬
cident on the 27th of May 1897 a young
man from Atlanta by jhe mine of Mar¬
shall Clower overlooking was goin Jalouga very nar¬
row cliff the rapids, the
3 'ouug man’s hat was plowu off and in
c itching at it he lost hijs balance and fell
40 feet into tin 1 raging waters below, and
was carried into the whirlpool where the
water is over '.'.5 feet deep,aud so swift
aud angry nothing can withstand it.
HawthornPool.
Tliis pool has a very iu‘er< sting history
and is so named from th ? fact that iu
1837 a party who were traveling in North
Georgia for health visited the falls.
With the crowd was a Presbyterian
minister by the name of Hawthorne
Wiieu the crowd reached tliis place the
young minister not knowing the nature
of the water, proposed to go in bathiug,
his friends object proceed-
wlmd.? some rim •. %is frieuds went
back to hunt him. When they reached
KSXlll'S
his watch hanging on. a bush.' After
waiting and watching for several (lays his
body J came to the surifuce and floated in-
tot eDevi; it ^.reeorar-
This pool has been measured 200
feet and no bottom frirtud.
The next point of interest we came to
was Tempests Falls. This seems to he
the most majestic, sublime and attract¬
ive scene of all. The water tfk 's one
mad leap of 86 feet. To sit some even¬
ing when the sun is shining *va iu its bril¬
liancy upon the falleu ters of therc cky
stairway, and see the brilliant rainbow
iu all its beautiful hues, is a dieautiful
gight indeed.
Question Answered.
Yes August. Fhjwer still has the
largest, sale of ainv medicine in
the civilized world Your moth-
ers and grandmothers never
thought of using any thing else
for indigestion • or billionsness.
Doctors were scarce, they
seldom heard of Appendieitus,
Nervous Prostration or heart
ure< etc. They used August
Flower to clean out the system
find stop fermentation of uudi-
g es t e d food, vegulat^ stimuV the action
G f liver, te the her-
vous and organic n tion of the
S y S tem, and that is ajml (all they took
w ] ien feeling dull bad ,«rith
headaches and otheir atjhes. You
ou ]y uee d a few doT r
August Flower, In IP '■> , to
ma ke you satisfied | ^•e’fs'noth-
j U g serious the matt I witli yon.
You cau get this relj ble remedy
at. Clements’ & Har] til’s.
(jet Green’.4 speji! almanac,
Hurricane Falls.
This is the highest fall of all the series,
being 08 feet high. As yon gaze upon
this scene yon are filled with a sense of
solemnity and a feeling ol awe at the
contiunous roar of the wafers whose
muffled march beats up from out the
gorge below. Just above the falls where
the river makes a bend, yon see it as it
comes around some gigantic palisade,
which rises sheer and straight, like some
everlasting monument of nature. The
angry waters come dashing around the
projecting walls, seem to pause, as if lost
in confusion, and take one mad leap
down into the abyss below.
Lovers Retreat and Needle’s Eye.
This place is formed by a large over¬
hanging rock, where one is protected
from rain, storm or sunshine and free
from the eyes and ears of the outside
world. The exit is through the needle’s
eye, au opening so small that one has to
get down and almost crawl going
As we traveled on we saw many inter¬
esting things, but one of the most won¬
derful was Vulcan’s Forge. This is a
large and well formed room about 20 x
12 feet and 10 feet high. The walls nre
smooth and regular and of solid rock,
standing in one end you may look down
500 feet. Leaving this place with much
reluctance we arrived in, the of
Eden. In this lovely garden is a mineral
spring situated iu a beautiful glenn,
hence the name Glenn Ella. The water
gashes from au overhanging rock ami
falls obout ten feet. Here we bathed
our lips with the waters of Eden ex¬
changed smiles and with a wistful eye
at the waiving hair dangling jever the
shoulders of the pretty Blondes and Bra-
net tes we mended our pace and the next
point of interest was Lovers Leap. At
this point Prof. Leon performed one of
the most daring and thrilling feats ever
accomplished by man. Iu the year 1887
he walked arojea distance of a quarter
of a mile and over 500 feet from the bot¬
tom. On nearing the end it was discov¬
ered that he was walking with his r yes
shut, great drops of sweat roiling from
his face. He was taken from the rope,
but'was several minutes before he could
speak. This plaix.is so called from the
fact that the chief of the Indiaus hud
only one (laugh er that wrs the pride of
his life aud a great favorite with all the
trite. On one occasion this daughter
was strolling through the Garden of E-
den, when she found a white nmn. She
led him to her father. Gray Eagle call¬
ed his council together to determine
what must be done with this white man
whom they looked upon as an agent or
sign of coming scourge. This young In¬
dian maiden, like many others, plead
before her father for her captive, but
without avail. The decree of the chief
and his council was that this captive be
blind-folded and thrown from the rock
into the chasm beneath. This young
maiden sprang after him and when
found by the tribe were united iu death
at the foot of this place. Hence it has
since been known as Lovers Leap.
After eating our lunches and resting a
yrfc'Av underneath the beautiful trees, we
resumed our march totkoa Museum. Here
are hundreds of interesting things to bo
teen One of the most interest
musical instrument • made of
gourd with only two strings, The in-
ventor*was a Rabun comity boy, who it
is said could make Sucfe sweet music on
it that the birds would stop singing and
the squirrels would cease chatting. Oth¬
er things of interest w r ere: The oldest
bible in the world, one of the first pianos
choking machine etc.
The sun fast sinking behind the Blue
Ridge reminded us that our time was up
so marching to the train we were soon
on our way rejoicing. Arriving at Cor¬
nelia we said our good bye’s, each going
to their home to make their mark in life
probably never to see, each other again.
Thus ends the day and Spring term of
the Cornelia Institute.
J. T. PITTMAN
Mr. Thomas A. Kirtou is now
managing the popular Palace V-ar-
ber shop, during Mr. Hewitt’s ab-
sence where he is ever willing to
cater to the whims of the popu¬
lace.
> ’
hummer complaint is un nHy
prevalent among children this
season. A well developed case
\ n the writer’s family was cured
last week by the timely use of
Chamberlain's Colic Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy—one of the
best patent medicines manufac-
and which is always kept
on hand at the home of ye scribe.
This is not intended as a free
for the company, who do not ,ad-
vertise with us, but to benefit
tie sufferers who may net be
within easy access of a pbj'siciHn.
No family sliould bf"without, a
bottle of this medicine in the
house, especially in summer-time,
—Lansing Iowa Journal. For
c U } fe by S, P, Williams,
Saves A Woman's L^l
To have given up w<B
m.-ant death to Mr.-. Up'
■ •; 1 >• ovhester. Mass. |f I| ff|
she .til endured un
i'rnei a sever • him fl
matt! cotg!'. ‘iBB
writes, “I omd i ■ ’■
All . e \Jmm
loot -rs ;• ■:.i lyi ng
tdl 1 used Dr. King®
eovery he 1'. • -tenutiopB
eompiei 1 B
from coughs, told-!, tB
dim- troubles need tfl
Cure is guaranteed by ?. \\^8
lianas. Price 50c anti $iLo0. Trial
bottles free. *
FOR CASH
And for want of suitable place
to store we hare decided to floac
out about 30 buggies open and
top at tlie following prices:
Some little damage to some of the tops.
Open buggies, 35.00
Top 45.00
HARNESS CHEAP.
Buggies made by
Barbour Buggy Co.
Tliis is t lie 1 >es t ofiei* we
have ever* seen made in
tliis section.
J. T. WILKES & BRO.
STILL IN THE RING.
Almost my entire stock ol goods were destroy*
ed in the recent fire, but 1 take this method of
announcing opening to my customers and friends that I
am up a full and complete line of
GJMmEMEi
in the brick build
Valdosta Bargain!
FRESH GO
FREj
’PHONE45.
c V
%
The fmmmdL m
Takes this me
that they carry W
A CO
p a t en t and Proprietary
.. School Be
R Liiirdies, H 1
Plan
HOT
AND
!
In faci
T
Foley’s Ki
makes kidneys end