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THE DAILY TIMES-ENTERPRISE.
JOHN TRIPLETT, - - - E itor.
S. B. BURR, - Business Manager.
file Daily Times-Estebprisi; ii published
ererj morning (Monday csc’ptcd.)
The Weekly Enterprise is published every
Thursday morning.
The WeRKLt Times is published every Knt-
nrday.
M ! 5
Subscription Kate?.
Daily Timks-Bntkrprise, . . . . $5 oo
W {ekly Enterprise, 1 00
Weekly Times, 1 00
Daily Advertis no Rates.
Transient Rates.—50cti. per squa
first insertion, and 40
quent insertion.
One Square, one month, - - - • $ 5 00
One Square, two months - - - - 8 00
One Square, three month- - - 12 00
Or»o Square, six months, - - - - 20 00
One Square, twelve moul is, - - - 35 00
Subject to change by special arrangement.
H. B. Bl'KR, BtiKfncsn Manager,
SPECIAL NOTICE.
In order to insure pn nipt inserti* n, all
advertisements, changes, locals, etc., should
oe handed in by noon be ore the day if pub
lication'
. r m or the
ts for ea h subse-
Bl'NINESS NOTICE.
Parties leaving Tbomasville for the sum
mer can have the Times-Enterprise sent to
.any address for 50 cents per month. Ad
dresses can be changed ns often as is desired.
SUNDAY. JUNE 1), 1880
Tom Woolfolk is undergoing his
fifth trial at Perry.
There is a growing sentiment in
favor of preventing the sale of the
deadly cigarette to minors.
Georgia is paying pensions to thir
teen hundred disabled ex-Confcdcrato
soldiers. Generous Georgia.
Extensive preparations are being
made for the celebration of the coming
4th of July in Georgia. It is our day,
too.
If a woman would believe less of
what a man tells her before marriage,
and more of what he tells her after
ward, the wedde 1 state would be a
much more harmonious affair.
A North Georgia man is suing for
a divorce because his wife beat him
over the head with a Iramed “God
Bless Our Home” chromo.
Verdict for the complainant.
The Tallapoosa New Era thus sum
marizes the situation in Georgia:*
“Guano*at the bottom, free negro
in the middle, and a mortgage on
top.”
Speak gently. A kind word is
more soothing than all the opiates,
and one may help to make life bright
to one whose future is clouded over
with misfortune, of which the world
knows nothing.
A ladies society for the cultivation
of the art of conversation has been
organized, so says a contemporary, out
West. Time thrown away. That is
an art they take to as naturally as a
duck does to water.
Ex-Minister McLane, who arrived
lome the other day, alter having cred
itably represented this country as min-
sterito France, expresses some inter-
:siing views concerning political mat
;ers in that country. He says that
he purity of the ballot and the inde
pendence of electors are more highly
isteemed and more jealously guarded
;han in the United States, and that,
lowever impressionable the French
roter may be, he is independent and
incorruptible, and nobody would dare
lo attempt to bribe him. He says
ilso that most ot the French people
ue devoted to republican institutions.
—News.
Cordele as a Railroad Center.
A correspondent jof the Atlanta
Constitution, writing from Cordele,
Cordele now has the Savannah,
unericus aud Montgomery in opera-
ion from Louvale, within eight miles
f the Chattahoochee, to Abbeville,
n the Ocmulgee, a distance of 115
ailes. .The Georgia Southern and
Florida or the Suwance River route,
9 now in operation from Macon to
/nldasta, through Cordele, with the
-railing nearly ^completed to Lake
iity, Florida.
Then the surveying corps is uow at
vork on the line of the Atlanta aud
Florida from Fort Valley to Cordele,
ind this road will be completed by
.he first of November, giving Cordele
k direct and independent line to Atr
anta and the west, aud Atlanta an
ndependent line to Savannah thirteen
niles shorter than the Central.
But this is not all, for the presi
dent and directors of the South
Brunswick and Cordele railroad com
pany have stated positively that their
road, now under construction to
VVaynesville, will be in operation to
Cordele within twelve mouths, giving
Cordele a direct line to Brunswick,
ind Atlanta another direct line to
the beautiful Brunswick-by-the-sea.
Great Floods.
Speaking of great floods the Savan
nah News says :
“ There has been greater disasters
from broken dikes than that of Cone*
maugh, but is doubtful if modern his
tory furnishes aA instance of so great
a loss of life in so short a lime from a
broken dam. When the dikes at
Dort, in Holland, broke in 1446, as
many as 100,000 lives were lost and
seventy-two villages were destroyed,
but the work of destruction was not so
quickly accomplished as at Cone-
maugh. In China, last year, when the
Yellow river left its banks, a great re
gion of country was inundated, and
nearly 20.000 lives were lost. AD
were not lost in an hour or two, how
ever, nor in a week or two. The
deaths were distributed throughout the
entire summer. A little more than a
century ago floods in .Spain caused the
death of over 2 000 persons, and in
1S13 a rise in the Danube drowned
2.000 Turkish soldiers. There were
memorable floods in France in 1840
and 1846, by which nearly 1,000 peo
ple lost their lives, and when the Vis
tula broke its banks in 1829, more
than 1,000 human lives were dts
troyed.
In Europe and this country dams of
reservoirs have broken and destroyed
many lives and immense amounts of
property, the most notable of which
are the following: The bank of the
reservoir at Lorca, Spain, broke in
1829 and 1.000 persons were drowned;
a break in the embankment of the
Bradfieid reservoir at Sheffield, En
gland, in 1864, caused the death of
250persons; the tlaydenville, Mass.,
reservoir burst in 1874 and destroyed
that village and 140 persons; the
Lynch Brook reservoir, near Wor
cester, Mass., broke through its banks
in 1876 and one life was lost; the
breaking of the Huron mill dam at
Houghton, Mich., in 1884, cost 6 lives,
and the breaking of the East Lee dam
in Massachusetts, in 1886, cost 9 lives.
Calling for Letters.
The average darkey has a weakness
for inquiring for letters. The follow
ing from the Times-Union, JacksonJ
ville, will apply to many other places:
“Let us stand at the postoffice a few
minutes and see the picture that life
presents in its ceaseless ebb and flow
about this official pier of strange,
wierd fascination. There are twelve
persons standing iu line at the gener
al delivery window, eleven of whom
are black, male and female. The sol
itary white man looks like a star on
the sombre brow of night, or words to
that effect. He gets a letter, but
none of the negroes do. It does not
matter a particle, however, for they
expected nothing. It is probable
that not one ot them has had a letter
in a year and will not get one in an-
other".year, and another year after
that, but they will be in line every
day just the same.
That crowd of negroes you see just
entering the office arc part and parcel
of an excursion irom Middle 1* lorida.
They have just reached the city and
will leave again at (i p. ni., but they
will be at the postoflice three or four
times during the interval.
The clerk at the window has a face
sickbed over with the pale cast of ex
treme weariness. Ho has become
cynical regarding the presence of
common sense in the gourd like -head
of the average African, and mechani
cally looks in the “O” box as every
fresh arrival delivers the sterotyped
inquiry.”
A Loss of $20,000,000.
Tacoma, W. T., June 7.—The
business portion of Seattle, the larg
est city in this Territory, is in ashes.
Every hank, hotel, place of amuse
ment, all leading business houses, all
newspaper offices, railroad depots,
mills, steamboat wharves, cool bunk
ers, freight warehouses and telegraph
offices, are burned down. The fire
began near the corner of Pearl and
front streets, in a candy factory
building, at 2:30 p. m. yesterday and
before midnight had consumed the
whole business section of the city
northward to Stetson & Posts mill,
along, Front and Second streets to the
water front, involving a loss of over
820,000,000. The city is literally
wiped out, except the residence por
tion on high ground.
Seattle, W. T., June 7.—It is
now etimated that the loss by fire in
this city in buildings alone is$10,000,-
000, and the the personal losses will
probably swell it to S20,000,000. It
is thought that many persons must
have perished in the flames. Giant
powder was used to blow up buildings
in the hopes of staying the progress
of the flames but without success. It
is reported that two men have been
lynched for stealing-
Sticks to It.
Gen. .lulial Early delivered an ad
dress at Winchester, Ya., on the (itb.
We take the following extracts from
the press report of the occasion:
The graves of 3,800 veterans in
Stonewall cemetery were decorated
this afternoon in the presence of 10,-
000 people. Gen. Jubal Early, the
orator of the day, was introduced by
ex-Gov. Holliday in an eloquent
ipeech. Gen. Early in opening his
address said : “When I last saw Win
chester, which was the theater of so
many stirring events, it Was amid the
din of battle, accompanied with the
roar of artillery and the flash of mus
ketry. After a desperate and most
unequal struggle, which lasted from
day break until dusk of evening, my
command was compelled to retire on
that occasion before the overwhelming
force of the enemy, which numbered
nearly, if not qqite, 50,000 men, of
whom more than 10,000 were cavalry,
superbly armed and equipped, while
my entire force of all arms did not ex
ceed 12,000, .or 13,000 at farthest.
“That cause was lost, but that did
not prove' that it was wrong, for the
history of the world abounds with
instances in which might has proved
more powerful than right. The fact,
therefore, that the cause for which
these brave soldiers gave their lives
failed of success, and that we have
accepted the result with a determina
tion to abide the issue as a final set
tlement of the questions which led to
the conflict, does not justify those
time-servers who pretend to have dis
covered that they were on the wrong
side iu the contest either from want
of manly courage or from some sin
ister motive of self-interest. As I
have said on former occasions, ‘If I
ever repudiate, disown or apologize
for the cause for which Lee fought
and Jackson died, may the lightning
of heaven blast me and the scorn of
all good women and true men he ray
portion,' and again I say that the con
federate who has deserted since the
war is infinitely worse than the one
who deserted during the war, for the
former has gone over to the enemy
at no personal risk to himself and
Dr. Benj. Dillard, druggist, at Auro
ra, Mo., says: I sell a great quantity
of.S. S. S. for scrofula, eczema, rheu
matism, and other blood diseases, have
never heard of a case ol failure to cure.
Pimples, blotches and eruptions on
the skin evidence the fact that the
blood is in bad shape,and these symp
toms show that nature is trying to
throw off these impurities, in whiclr
effert it should be assisted by a reliable
vegetable blood remedy, as is Swift’s
Specific.
Fresh peaches every morning at
Sampson's Jackson st. Fruit Store.
. ew York iloilies, Times, World. Tribune
and Herald, Macon Telegraph aud Atlanta
and Savannah dailies, every day.
Miss a dime McClelland,
Jackson Street.
Tin
, No. I, Hood Horses for sale by
B. A. HASS.
Mill
nlia Hums
1’lCKKTI
12c at
's Cash Grocery.
Itcid k Culpepper are keeping up with the
procession, they have secured the agency of
the famous Star Mineral Water, the finest
preparation known lor dyspepsia. It is
guaranteed to cure. 4 C tf
MtisQurro DAKS.
Of all kinds. A good bar complete for
SI.75. Patent beuiistead attachments.
Agent for Armstrong's patent canopies,
made in walnut, cherry and antique oak.
■ Geo. W.Fobbes,
May 17 tf. Masury Building.
Elegant fresh Magnolia hams at 12
cents at Pickett's.
simply from motives of gain, while
the latter took his life in his hands,
knowing that lie would be shot if
captured, and in a number of cases
he was tempted to leave the service to
go to the assistance of his family,
which he was induced to believe was
Btarviug at home.”
The Seventh of June.
To-day is the anniversary of a
group of notable disasters.
On the 7th of June, 1692, the
flourishing city of Port Royal, Jamai
ca, was shattered by an earthquake,
aud the place, with 3,000 of its peo
ple, went down forty fathoms under
the sea.
The earthquake of June 7th, 1733,
reached (Santiago, in Guatemala, and
swallowed it up with its inhabitants.
On the same day in 1755 an earth
quake destroyed the city of Kaschan,
in Persia, killing 40,000 human bc-
iugs.
On this clay also, in 1 Slis, an ex
plosion in the Haydock coal mine, in
England, killed 189 miners.
The same fateful day in 1885
brought a water-spout to Jalisco,
Mexico. Nearly 200 persons lost
their lives, and the destruction of
property was immense.
Such an anniversary docs not need
to be painted red. Its horrible sug
gestions are enough without any
touch of fanev.—Constitution.
Picket sells the most clegant_ flour
manufactured in America for 85.75.
Elegant cott'ec at Pickett's 5c per
pound under the market.
JERSEY' MILK.
Parties desiring fresh, pure Jersey milk,
from Jersey Farm, will bo supplied, in any
quantity, delivered, on application tn, or by
addressing
JOHN CHASTAIN.
April 10, 1889.
AN ADMISSION OF ITS GOOD
QUALITIES.
An old line physician never recom
mends a proprietory medicine till he
knows of its good qualities and has
proved them. A well known conser
vator of the health writes:
“Allow me to offer you my experi
ence with Calisaya Tonic. I have
prescribed it in many cases of general
debility with marked success. In
fact, I treated a case of typhoid mala
rial lever with no other anti-periodic
tonic or stimulant. It has proved all
you claim for it in my hands, aud has
been perfectly satisfactory.
Calisaya Tonic is sold by all drug
gists at fifty cents and a dollar a bot
tle.
TAKE A REST.
Kxc.iu.iiou tickets ut ion rates will be sold
to all summer resorts throughout the coun
try by tiie East Tennessee, Virginia and
Georgia Railway, commencing June 1st;
good to return on or before October Jlst.'
East train service with Pullman cars.
IJ.W. WltK.NN,
Gen. Pass, and Ticket Agt.
Few more pairs Old Ladies Bus
kins and shoes to be sacrificed at
Pickett’s.
PIANOS AND ORGANS.
YV. S. Brown, tlio Jeweler, lias se
cured the agency for all Hie first-class
Pianos and Organs, which ho is selling
at tlio lowest prices for cash or on long
time. Those iicslring lo purchase will
do well to learn his prices and terms.
Florida Central
—AND-
Peniusula Railroad.
Formerly Ihc F. It. A' IV. <’o.
Standard Time Used—June 2,1889.
3 | 7 | SOUTHERN DIVISION I 8 |4
6 30 p; 11 27 a Ly Callahan
8 30 pl2 42 p Lv .Baldwin
9 25 p 1 27 p Ar Lawtoy
9 55 p 142 ]> Ar Starko
10 30 p 2 27 p Ar Waldo
1120 a! 3 02 p Ar Hawthorne Ar
1 10 n 4 29 p Ar Ocala
3 05 p
150p
1 53p
1242 p
8 30ft
610a
6 40a
6 00a
3 55 a
3 30a
10 62a 2 60a
10 23 a' 2 00 a
9 07 p:12 01 p
8 UOa! 9 20 p
7 3-5oi 7 55p
7 10 ft' 7 OOp
545 ft! 4 OOp
31 |
7 00a
6 00 a
6 40 a
7 20 a,
8 25 a
9 30 a
10 25 n|
12 05 p
| TAMPA DIVISION. |
Lv Jacksonville Ar
Lv Wildwood Ar
Ar Pauasoffkeo Ar
Ar Sumtervlllo Ar
' Ar St. Cathorine Ar,
Ar Lacoochee Ar
>r Dade City Ar!
Ar Plant City Lv
| 30
550 p
5 10 p
43°p
3oop
; 2i5p
' nop
ill 45 p
4 00 p
~23 | 15" CEDAR KEYDIV^ | 14j J24 “
7 00 p 1145 a Lv Jacksonville Ar 150p 610ft
— 4 10 p Lv Waldo Ar I A ** *•’ * * n "
4 53 p Ar Gainesville Ar
5 42 p!Ar Archer • Lv
6 12 p Ar Bronson Ar
1035 pj 3 40p
0 40 a 230p
8 25 a 1215 p
7 48 a
6 30 a|
8 id p |Ar Cedar Key Lv
0 \ 1 rWFiTEB N DIVISION | 2 | 10
7 OOP
8 05 p
10 40 P
1158 p
104
4 10
6 10
8 GO a
920
7 15
800
9 30 a
10 27 a
11 28
12 52 p
2 02 p
3 03 p
4 00 p
Lv Jacksonville Ar
Ar Baldwin Ar
Ar Lake City Ar
A r Livo Oak Ar
A r Madison Ar
Ar Moutlcollo Lv
Ar Tallahassee Lv
Ar Quincy Lv
Ar Rivor June. Lv
3 20 p
2 35 p
1 08 p
12 23 p
1115 a
lo30 a
9 60a
857 a
800a
705a
2 45p
1 4Gp
1122 a
9 55a
815 a
5 25 a
320a
1 50a
12 05 a
J, 2, 7, 6, 9,10,13,14 Dally.
62, and 63 Daily.
3,4, 23, 24, Dally, except Sunday.
30 Dally except Sunday. 31 Dally except
Monday,
60
FERNANDINA AND
(.JACKSONVILLE BRANCH | 5 | 61
* The law prohibiting the sale of spir-
ituous liquors find of cigars, cigarettes,
or tobacco in any other form, to minors
under 16 years of age, and prohibiting
the gilt of these things to them, has
gone into effect in New York. It ii
thought there is no way to evade it,
The law was intended chiefly as a
check upon the cigarette evil, and its
results will be awaited with a good
deal ot interest. II it checks that evil
in New Vork, other places will follow
New York’s examplt.—Ex
Longstreet’s Gold Mine.
Washington, June G.—Col. “Jack”
Brown called on the President to-day
at the request of Gen. Longstreet, who
is still sick in Gainesville, in the inter
est of Freeman Longstreet’s candidacy
for collector ot internal revenue for
Georgia. In speaking of the burning
of Gen. Longstreet’s house, Col.
Brown said: “After the fire workmen
were engaged in clearing away, the
ruins, and in a hopeless sort of way
looking around to see if anything could
be saved. While at work with pick
and shovels, they struck a gold mine
on the site of the destroyed home
stead. Further investigation, assays,
etc., have disclosed that it is a gold
mine of great richness. Gen. Long
street and family are raised from a de
presston of a loss they could ill afford
to the prospect of the actual posses
sion of wealth. There is gold all
through that section of Georgia.
A Good World.
Philadelphia Prcsg.
Better than all else, perhaps, that
the Johnstown horror has developed
is the universal sympathy which has
been expressed for the survivors of the
flood Nothing can be done, for the
dead, but the haste to supply the
needs of the living is as widespread as
it is spontaneous. Al' races and con
ditions are engaged in the work. Even
the alien Chinaman, who knows from
bitter experience what pestilence and
flood are, contibutes his mite lor the
benefit of persons he has never seen.
YVc always undersell any body cjse
at Pickett’s Cash Store.
Lot of tabic 11 ncu at Pickett's and
it will be sold at from 15c to 50<: per
vard, about half what it cosl hi New
Vork.
TAILORING.
There is an end to nil things, so the
people say, but thoro is no end to tho
splendid fitting clothing made at 81
Broad street. Cleaning aud repairing
dono in the ncutest manner. Givo tno
a, call. . John Kenny.
KILL FLIES.
Insert Powder Fly Paper.
Casskls’ Pharmacy,
118 Broad street.
More mattings received tills weok.
New patterns in seamless—fancy.
Geo. NY. Fobbes
845p-4 SO n Lv Jacksonville) Ar80Oa-G 00 p
1005 p-600 a Ar Fernandina Lv 715 a-4 *0 p
6 and 6 dully, oxcept^UDday. 60 and 61
Sundays only. _ __ .
7 -.15 a. m., Now Orloans Express. Shortest
and qulckost lino to all Middle pnO. West
Florida points, FonBacola, Mobile and New
Orloans. 7:15 a. in. and 7:30 p. in. trains con
nect through to Thomasvlllo, Montgomery,
Nashville, St. Louie. Cincinnati, Chicago, and
all points North and West. Arrive at 2 ;45 p.
in.and3.15p.ro.
11:45 p. m. Mail and Express for all points
South, Gainesville, Ocala, Loesburg, Taveres,
Apopka, Orlando, Panasoffkoe (St. Catharine)
Dado City, 1‘lant City. Arrives at 1:50 p. m,
7 -00 p. m. Local, connects through for all
joints South, Ocala, Oaluosvlllo, Leesburg,
Tavares, Orlando, Tarp *n Springs. Souther
land, St. Petersburg, and Tampa. Arrives at
C:10a.m,
11:45 a. m. Cumberland Route Exprose, con
nects at Fornandtna with steamer City of
Brunswick, dally, for Brunswick, Macon, At
lanta, Chattanooga, Louisville, Cincinnati
St. Louie and Chicago. Arrives 1:50 p. m.
4:13 p. m. Fernandina Mall and Express,
dollv, connecting Tuesday and Friday with
Str. St. Nlchola. tor Savannah and way-land
ings. Thursday with Mallory Steamers for
Now York. Arrlvos 8:50 a. m. Bunday train
loaves Jacksonville 8:45 a. m.
Thla new sorvlco gives perfect connections
at Baldwin for nil points North and Wost, Via
Callahan to all points North, East and West.
Via Fernandina, connecting with Str. City of
Brunswick, for Brunswick, Macon, Atlanta,
and all polntB North and Wost.
D. E. MAXWELL, A. O MACDONELL,
• oon. Manager. O. P. & T. A
J. W BE1D. Agent nt Thomasvlllo. Oa.
Fresh Magnolia hams at 12Q cents
per pound, lor sale by
(i 7 lit. T. J. B.u.i. & Bito.
Grocers.
— —
More of those shoes still left at
Pickett's and we need the money and
will knock the bottom out of prices.
A great many pooplo feel themselves
gradually falling. Theyodon't know just
what is tlio matter, but they suffer from
a combination of Indescribable actios and
pains, which each month scent to grow
worse. The only sure remedy known
that will counteract this feeling and re
store perfect health Is Brown’s Iron Bit
ters. By rapid assimilation It purifies tho
blood, drives out disease, gives health
and strength to every portion reached by
circulatory system,renews wasted tissues
and restores robust honlth and strength.
l’rickly beat and chaffing are cured by free
ly using Bopaclne Toilet Nursery Powder.
Try it; you will be delighted,
McRae & Mardre, Tb'imasville; A: Bradiord,
Columbus: Alexander Drug and Seed Co., An
us,a; F. von Oven, Charleston, Agents.
WALL FAPEB.
Have just recioved a large lot of wall
papor, all grades. Celling decorations
etc. Geo. W. Forbes,
Masury Building.
"TIIE INVALID’S IIOrE.
Many seemingly incurable cases of blood
poison', catarrh, scrofula and rbcunia
tism have been cured by B. B. B. (Botanic
jjlood Balm ), made by tlio Blood Balm Co.,
Atlanta, (fa, Writo to them for book tilled
with convincing proof.
G. W. B. Raider, living scrcn miles from
Athens, Ga., writes: “For several years I
suffered with runu" ^culccrs, which doctors
treated and pronounced incurable. A single
bottle of 1). B. B. did me more good than all
the docturs- I kept on using it aud ercry
ulcer heated."
1). C. Kinard A Son, Towaliga, Ga.. writes:
“We induced a neighbor to try B. B. B. for
catarrh, which ho thought incurable, aa it
bad resisted all treatment. It delighted him,
and continuing its use, ho was cured sound
and well. ’
It. M. Lawson, East Point, Ga., writes:
“My wife had scrofola (5 years. Mho kept
growing worse. She Inst her hair and her
akin broke out fearfully. Debility, emacia
tion and no appetite followed. After physi-
plans and numerous advertised medicines
failed, (tried ii- B. II , and her recovery was
rapid and complete,”
Oliver Secor, Baltimore, Ud., writes! -i
suffered from weak back and rheumatism.
B. B. B. bag proven to be the only medicine
that gave me relief.”
MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY,
The "Colorado Short Line," runs solid
through trains, equipped with Pullman Buf
fet .Sleeping Cars from St. Louis and Kan
sas City without' change, to Pueblo, Colo
rado Springs and Denver, where direct con
nection is mudo for all Rocky Mountain Re
sorts. Solid trains from Memphis to St.
Louis, via the Iron Mountain Route. Round
trip tickets via this line arc on sale at all
coupon ticket offices in the United States.
For further information, illustrated resort
book ot 140 pages, tree, time tables, etc., call
on or address
II. £. Townsend,
Gen. P. k T. Agt., St. Louis, Mo.
GEORGE FEARN,
REAL ESTATE ASIVT.
OFFICE IN MITCHELL HOUSE BLOCK.
City and Coaitry Property for Sale.
HOUSES RENTED
And Taxes Ft Id.
LOANS
NEGOTIATED.
Brins me a description oi your properly
D 1 COYLE'’
AV\X"’ i !1
Local Legislation.
Notice is hereby given that at the af)
proaching session of the legislature I will in
troduce a bill “To incorporate the town of
Metcalfe, in Thomas county, define its limits
and provide a government for the same.”
A. T» MacINTYBE, Jr.
Administrators' Notice.
GEORGIA—THOMAS COUNTY:
aB persons bavins claim* against the estate
ot ebeldon Swift will present them to the un-
deragned within the next thirty day*.
May 33,1W3. R. B, MARDRE, i
i, AOm'r.
When you are con
templating a pur
chase of anything in
our line, no matter
how small may be
the amount involved
By coming to look
over our large and
well selected stock of
Clothing, Gents’ Fur-
nishing Goods, Hats,
etc., that is new and
seasonable.
Decide Quietly
To buy of us. After
seeing’ the prices and
examining the qual
ity of our goods you
can’t resist them. It
is impossible to do as
well elsewhere.
NO
Better fate
a be found. We
get the choice of the
best goods on the
market, andbuy and
sell them at
ms mmiT
JLiOW.
You can Depend Upon It
That our prices are
the lowest, our as
sortment the most
complete, and our
quality the highest.
Dont fail to call on
us.
G. H. YOUNG & GO
Clothiers end Furnishers.
106 Brotd St.