Newspaper Page Text
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The Georgia National.Bank
or Athens. Capital $100,000.
Roeeiveaili
firms and individuals,
tlon to all butm
tiaie
HP"
■i aaa
The Georgia -National iSauk
Of Athens. Capital $100,000.
Offers x> depositor- every faculty their I
balanced, business and. responsibility I
warrant.
ESTABLISHED 1832.
ATHENS, GA.;THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 19, 1903.
$5.0^A - YEAR.,
DR. JOHN GERDINE DEAD i
AFTER A BRIEF ILLNESS
The Entire Community Shocked by the Death of One of
Athens' Most Prominent and Beloved Citizens.
Went to See a Patient Monday Night and
Pneumonia Caused His Death. \ •
Them never followed In the wake of
death’s r.-leutleas abaft a deeper ar mors
universal sorrow than that occasioned
by the death of Dr John Gardtne, who
passed to hie reward yesterday afternoon
at fonr o’ol xsk.
Uit month ha had been ill with the
grip, hot he had recovered aoffloieotly
to be out again among hie patient* who
needed bis attention. Monday after
Boon be was called to the bedside of one
who was ill and who needed him. Be
did not feel wel\ hot in response to the
oall of duty he went.
That night he was taken ill and soon
knew that be bad before him a desperate
battle for life. Pneumonia rapidly fol
lowed and yesterday morning conges
tion of the long*. Svery possible effort
wa* node to btay.the fleeting breath, bnt
the last foe oocqnered over all the phy-
sloiane, and the gentle spirit went
home.
Io the death of Dr. Oerdlne the whole
oommnnity feels a personal loss. He
was a citizen without reproaoh, a friend
of Intense loyalty, a loving husband, a
kind father, a devoted follower of the
Prince of Peace.
A long time friend, in speaking of Dr.
Oerdine yesterday, said: “Who can
measure the sorrow of those to whom he
■bowed sympathy In trouble, whom suf
fering he relieved, whom anxious fears
he allayed? Who can toll how many
will recall with willing tears the hours
of patient watching he has spent with
then through nights of pain and weary
Ola, or how many have been oheered by
his quiet oomposore and aastSvWig voice
i* days when all seemed hopeless T”
A nobleman by nature, he ennobled
the great profession to which he devoted
his best efforts and upon whose altar he
at laat laid his iife a willing sacrifice.
Io the spirit of the lowly Nazarene he
went abont doing good, exemplifying in
large moaaure that love and tenderness
and human sympathy that bring to light
In man the image of his Maker.
If nch love he gave to those who yearn
ed for its tender graces; much oheer he
brought to thorn upon whom the shad
ows rested; muoh consolation he offered
to thorn who staggered beneath the
stroke of uflhotion. And today from
hundreds of hearts it all returns in over
flowing measure,as men and women and
children, who wear his image in their
hearts, drop upon his silent bier the un
bidden tears of grief.
A whole oity raoarns, but not ms those
without hope. For the God who re
wards the faithful aud the kind, who
delights in the loving and the true, has
opened wide the gates of pearl, and bade
him welcome to the glories of that oity
where oomea no night and where all
team are wiped away.
Dr. John Oerdine was born in Lexing
ton, Ga., and was sixty-three years of age
at the timeof his death. Hi* father was
Gen. William Oerdine, and hi* paternal
grandfather was Dr. Gerdine, a noted
phyiioian, who oame to Athens in 1806.
Hi* mother was Miss Luoy Lumpkin,
DEM8STHENIAN
Exercises Will te Held This
Morning at the Univer
sity Chapel.
6RE1TER GEORGIA
1 BREIT
Mayor Rhodes and Capt.
McMahan Have Re
turned Home.
THROUGH I I
A WINDOW
This morning at 11 o'clock at the Uni-
versity cbapdlthe De most hen ian Society
of the University of Georgia will cele
brate it* 103nd anniversary.
The exercise* win be full of interest
and the public la cordially invited to at-
Mr. Graham Perdue, of Greensboro,
will deliver the anniversary address.
He is a speaker of rare talent.
IDE DELEGATES TQ
Mill
Those who will Represent
Athens at Columbus
Meeting.
The Athens Young Men’s Christian
Association Will send a splendid delega
tion to the state oon rention whloh meets
in Oolnmbns, Ga., Saturday and remains
in session nntil-tbe following Tuesday.
Those who will repreeent the Athens
Association will be S oratory Walter T.
Forbes, Messrs. Thos. B.^odgson, Roy
Finch, Eugene Hoke and Milton
Thomas.'' ' ;•
They will carry with them to the
state otaVentioo a report of a year’s work
that will compare most favorably with
the report of any association in. the
state.
Mayor J. F. Rhodes and Oapt. J. J. O.
McMahan returned from Atlanta y ester
day. They say that the gathering of
delegates from different oittes and towns
in Georgia to organise the "Greater
Georgia” Association was foil of enthn
slassi. .g. "1
Mayor Rhodes was made vice presi
dent from the western circuit, eaoh ju
dicial circuit in the state being entitled
to one vice-president. ^
Oapt MoMaban will make his report
to £he Chamber of Oommeroeat the next,
meeting of that body. ' /
Mayor Rhodes snbsoribed for Athens
thssfcm of $100 toward*the fund that la
being raised for advertising paiposes.
Money Belonging to
Mr. F. iCBowp-
Was Taken*
Pogce. Amst Will Kemp, Colored. ■” *2.,■„
the Charge—One- JMf*'-’ • ' It was quite appropriate that the mar-
V WILL BE IE
ME OF P1PEIL
To be Issued from Tallulah
Falls at an Early Date
l by L. B. Magid.
"Silk” will be the name of a publica
tion whioh is being launched la Atlanta
by the Silk Oaltnre League, of which
Louis B. Magid, of Tallulah Falls, Chi.,
is at the head.
Mr. Magid, who has a wide experience
in the onlture of silk and who organized
the Silk Culture League, will be editor-
in-ohief of the magazine, whioh will ap
pear monthly. Secretary Ludwig of the
Silk Culture League will be assistant
editor.'
Plans for the publication of the maga
zine have been formulated, the first is
■ne to appear in two weeks henoe. The
headquarters will be at Mr. Magid’s
home at Tallulah Falls, the business of
fice to be in Atlsnta.
NO ApGUMENT flEEDEP,
■ ■f-
Bverjr Sufferer Proa catarrh Knoos That
Salrei.LoUoaa, Wuhet, Sprays
' ' S.
Will Kemp, a 'roung negro
the cslsboose on the charge of having
stolen $46 dollars from Mr. FrankH.
Bowden, the Broadstreet grower.
Mr. Bowden had made ap h£i deposits
and was ready to go to the bjak-with
them. He was calllkl aside to walt on a
customer and left the money lying on
the desk. • . .
The desk stood near the window and
pane of glass had been broken out.
Someone passing by reached his hand
through the glass, grahbed ae much iff
tbs money as he ooald and f made
with it.
When Jib* Bowden went tjb .get his.
money he found $46 mifsing^ The -po
lice were put on to the affair < ind Jit. a
few hoars tnooeeded -in huffing ' Will
Kemp on the charge. He had some
money in possession, amoDgjrUSS' was
blli that had befgMom hi *wo and
pasted together again, whict^ Mr. Bow-
den reoogalzad as one of hiai, bills;' that
had been stolen. j - ■
When Kemp was arreatedpe > Had in
his posseastap some new undprshiH* a»yl
quantity of tobnooo fafe v *Jfcj--*
bought. These goods weds taken in
hand by the polioe. Thus Mr theofficers
have been unabla to looatc mpr more of
’rhe money:
THE FUNERAL OF
MR. JOHN W. SATE
Held Tuesday Afternoon at
Bethaven Church near
Athens.
The funeral of Mr. John W. Saye wsa
held Tnesday afternoon at three o’clook
at Bethaven charoh' a few miles from
this oity, a church that the deceased had
helped to bnild over fifty years ago and
where he held his membership all the
while.
The iuneral services were conducted
by Dr. J. W. Walden, pastor of the
Athens Presbyterian church in the pres
ence of quite a large number of friends
who bad oome to pay their last tribute
to the memory of the dead.
The remains were interred in the
Bethaven burial ground.
daughter of Chief-Justice Joeeph Henry
Lumpkin, of the supreme court of Geor-
gtn.
He was n graduate of the University
of Georgia in the class of 1869 and then
want to Philadelphia to attend Jefferson
Medical College. Along with other
Southern boys he left that institution
prior to the breaking out of the war be-
tween the states, and later on graduated
at Nashville, Tenn.
- When the South called her sons to the
front be went as a private soldier and
then became assistant surgeon on the
staff of General N B. Forrest. No truer
Southerner ever wore the gray than Dr
John Gerdine and from hla couviotions,
maintained then with lofty Murage,
through toll and privatum, no lapee of
time nor ohange of circumstances haa
over swerved him.
Just ofter the war he was married to
Miss Susie Golding, who survives him
Ho leaves seven children, Thom is G.,
Johr, Susie, Mary, Sarah, Linton and
Marlon.
Dr. Gerdine oame to Athens in 1876
fromDoWMessunnlf^Miss., since which
time be had been one of the oity’s fore
most citizens. He had served as a oity
alderman, leaving n splendid record,
snd had been a useful member at the
city board of education since its organi
sation in 1886. He was an enthusiastic
member of Mt. Vernon Lodge, No. 29,
Free and Aooepted Masons.
In 1868, Dr. Gerdine connected him
self with the Presbyterian ohurch and
gave to bis Master devo ted, service for
almost half a century. For several years
put he bad been an elder in th it ohurch.
The. funeral of Dr. Gerdine will be
held Friday-morning, the details to be
arranged today. \
pooches do 'kot Core.
Powdors, lotions, salves, sprays and
inhalers cannot really cure Catarrh, be
cause!. this .disease t* a~ blood - disease
and local applications, if give transient
thfy accomplish any thing at all, simply
relief.
The catarrhal poison is in the blood
and the mucous membrane of the nose,
throat and trachea tries to relieve the
system by secreting large quantities of
mucu9, the discharge sometimes Closing
up the nostrils, dropping into the throat,
oausing deafness by dosing Eustachian
tubes, and after a time causing catarrh
of stomach or serious throat and lung
troubles.
A remedy to really cure catarrh must
be an internal remedy whioh will oleanse
the blood from catarrhal poison and re
move the fever and congestion from the
mnoous membrane.
The best and most modern remedies
for this purpose are antiseptics scientific
ally known as Red Gam, Blood Root and
Hydrastin, and while eaoh of these haye
been successfully used separately, yet it
has been difficult to get them all oembin
ed : in one palatable, oonrenient and
efficient form.
The manufacturers of the new catarrh
cure, Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets, have sao-
Deeded admirably in accomplishing tM«
result! They are large, pleasant tasting
lozenges, to be dissolved in the month,
thus reaohing every part of the. mnoona
-membrane of the throat and finally
the stomach.
Unlike many catarrh remedies, Stu
art’s Catarrh Tablets oontain no cocaine
opiate or any injurious drug whatever
and are equally beneficial for little child
ren and adults.
Mr.G. R R.-mbrandt, of Rochester,
N Y.. says: "I know of few people
Who have suffered as muoh from Catarrh
as I, of the head; throat and stomach
I used sprays, inhalers and powders for,
months at a time with only alight relief
and had no hope of onre. I had not She
( . S, Forfeits ItlsUfa.
A runaway almost ending' fafeUy?
started ajwrrible nicer on >he leg of J.
B. Omer, Franklin Grove, III. For;four
years it,defied all doctors and all reme
dies. But Bnoklen’s Arnica Salver had
no trouble to cure him. Equally good
for Burns, Bruises, Skin Eruptions and
Piles. '26o'at W. J. Smith & Bro., and
H. B. Palmer & Sons drag stores.
means to nuke $ ohange-of climate. New York Market-*
Spots
whioh seemed my only ohanoe of core.
Last spring Ireadanacoonnt o’som^
rafaarkable cures made by Stuart’s Oa- J
tarrh Tablets and promptly bought a 6tt
cent box from my druggist and obtained
each positive benefit from that one pack
age that I continued to use them dutlj
until I now consider myself entirely frth
from the disgusting annoyance of no
tarrh; my head is dear, my digestion
all I oould ask and my hearing which
had begun to fall ae n result of the ca
tarrh, has greatly Improved until I feel
I can hear as well as ever. They are
household necessity in my family."
Stoart’s Catarrh 'Tablets are sold try
druggists at 60 cents for complete
teent and for convenience, safety and
prompt results the an undoubtedly the
long looked for catarrh core.
IFOtMLLMte
WEDDING CEREMONY
y$
A
ROBBERY,
wMl
on
Found on Him Idea
by Mr. Bowden.
PeifQii!!£4 Last Evening at
S
Tresby terian Chufdy □ x
This
Gity.-
Yes^prdayevealngkt half past seven
b’olock at tlie PresbyBHttn^ohuroh in
this city, occurred the marriage fit Mr,
H -Oswald Garrison Vlllard, editor <£, the
j Now York Evening? Pc«S,'nnd Miss
1 ,t Jalia>Brackenridge Sanford, the beauti
ful and apcompUshed .young daughter
of Oqvlngton, Ky., Ba^, j; W, ^Mfien,
W
•i
TO DEATH
Jwo Year Old Babe, Left at Home by Its Mother, Went
Too'Clole Jo t^e Fire--Its Clothes Ignited and it
Was'LiteraHy fkirned to a Crisp Before
r Anyone Could Come to Its Rescue.
| riaga-ehooljh&ve occurred in Athens, I
> for It was here, while attending thff
ijharn Educational .Conference last
GufiTSr.' Villsid first met the
. '• y- ^attfiwtive young woman who tonight
18 in heojahehn,bride..,.
Marriage of Mr."6ep, Gunter
and Miss Maud Mas-" -.
^ sey Yesterday.- .,
Yesterday morning at ten o’clock, -at.
the First Methodist chorch parsonage,
occurred the lharriage ; of Mr. George
Gunter and Miss Hand Massey, Rev. I
S. Hopkins officiating;
The parents of the yonng lady did not
lobk with favor upon the marriage and
were surprised yesterday morning whin
* V ' '**/
it was again demonstrated that love
laughs at locksmith**
Mr. and Mrs. ghinter left yesterday
afternoon for OronerV.Ga-, where they
#fll visit relatives Cpra few 'days and
than return to AtheUa^where they will
in the futnre reside. 4 _ **
...
The ohmrch was beautifully decorated
with palms and smilax studded
with electric lights. Qoite a
number . of Invited' guests wit
nessed the wedding nnptlals. At
the appointed hour the wedding pasty
entered the ohuroh, first the ushers,
Messrs. W. L Garrison, of Boston; O.
D. Norton, of Ohioago; Hall Vlllard, of
New York; W. D Hoop-r, Ntd Hodg
son and Horry Hodgson, of Athens.
Then camo the bridesmaids, Misses May
Hodgson, and Amy Walden, of Athens,
daintily gowned in white organdy and
carrying pink carnations Miss Jane
Thompson, of Covington, Ky., maid of
honor, followed, a beautiful picture in
white organdy and carrying pink carna
tions. The bride gowned in white
panne crepe, carry ing lillies of the valley,
entered with the groom and at tile alter
were made man and wife in the most
impressive manner, by Dr, Walden.
Immediately after the wedding cere
monies a lovely informal reoeption was
tendered the bridal party at the elegant
home of Mr. trod Mrs. E. B. Hodgson, on
Prtnioe avenue. Tnesday-evening the
bridal party were charmingly enter
tained at the home of Captain and Mrs.
“W. VF; YhosB**, on~Hllleflgeeranne.
‘ hod on- Monday .evening were enter
tained by Dr. and Mrs J. W. Walden. ’'
Among ^he visitors from a distance
were: 'Mr*. < &eiSlty yillard, of .New
York, mother of the groom; Mr. and
Mrs C.. D. Norton,' of Ohioago; Mr
and Mrs. Philip Garrison, of- Orange,
N J.; Mrs. Lloyd Garrison and Mrs.
Frrrano, of New York; Mr. W. L. Gar
rison,of Boston; Mr. Hall Villard, of
NeV Yorkj Miss Jane Thompson and
Mrs. Lyle, of Kentucky.
Mr. and Mrs. Villard will spend sev
eral weeks in Florida before returning
to their hom& tn.New York.
Mira
SERIOUS IFtUIRY
TO MBS. HERRING.
Stumbled and Fell Break
ing: Her Right Leg
' Above Knee. 1
Yesterday at her home on Williams
street in this oity Mrs. Bfishit Herring,
aged 60 years, sustained serious injury
from a fall. ^ *
She was under the house ge tting some
ooal, when she stumbled and Ml heavily
to the ground. The bone In light thigh
was broken Entirely in' two jnst above
the knee. *
Dr. Qailliaii Was called in and rendered
the neoessary medical assiitanoe. On
Mosul of Mrs. Herring's ago the injury
is of a strips* nature.
Yesterday morning the two-ye«r old
ohild of John Hall. oolored, was burnad
to death at his home near the rook quarry
in this oity. ^
Oasoliue Hall, the littleohtld’e mother,
had gone off to her work and had shut
op her two ohlldren in the house. The
eldest child was only foory eve of age
The smaller child In some way gttttoo
oloee to the fire and its clothes ignited..
In a few moments it was a mass d r
flames and the other ohild scare sly knew
what to do under the olronmstanoes.
She gave the alarm as best she oould;
by screaming out and neighbors oame In
to see what was the matter.
When they arrived the ohild had been
literally burned to a crisp and was dead.
4
LI
TO DR. GERDINE.
By One Who Loved Him For
His Many Virtues.
They tell me that Dr. Gerilinels dead I
I can not believe it. There are many
sad hearts In Athens tonight and bnt
few dry eyes because a typical southern
gentleman has breathed his last; hut
such a man as our friend oan neyer die.
He will live in the love, the life and
merfioiy oturalL 1 As tender. a|td *ym*
pathetio as a woman, possessing more
Mrs. Yancey Harris and Mrs. Prioe
Hinton will entertain the Five O’olook
Tea Club, at the residence of Mrs. Prioe
Hinton, Saturday afternoon instead of
Thursday. The game to begin promptly
at fonr o’clock.
A CORKER
But Not rtach of a Pastor.
TT
The Market *Repqrt-.Tssued
Daily by Baxter & Co.
February'm 1908.'
liverpool Market-
Middling uplands 5.26
Sales 12,000 American — yt
Receipts, 21,000 America# 14.000
There was an old olergyman in Cen
tral New York State some years ago
who'waa a very powerful speaker bat
whose private life' was by ho means ex
emplary. Some of the more ont-spoken
of his parishioners were in the habit of
remonstrating with him regularly abont
this and Ms reply invariably was "Don’t
do as I do, doss I tell yon to do ”
It is so with a great many phystolons
There are hundreds of medical men who
folly understand the folly of drinking
ad, ws, who telL-their patients
not to drink either, yet who nse one or
the. other themselves. Bnt sometimes
it xnooks eyen the doctor oat and he has
to quit Old. King Coffee. A physiolan
of Wasioja. Minn., says; "I wa* a lib-
‘■Ai*,
Athens Market—. { '
Middling ®^o. ^
Port Receipts— ^
Today
Year Ago .. i
ny.terlou* circamrtance. _ > '-1
One was {rile and sallow and the
other fresh and rosy. Whence the dif
ference? She' who is blushing with
health uses Dr. King's New Life Pills to
maintain it. T&f gentl/ arousing the
lazy organs they compel good digestion
and head off opnatipatifflb .Try thegu
Only 25o, at W. J. Smith & Bro., andH.
B. Palmer Ah Sons, Druggists.
eral user of coffee from my youth and
my Ijeidth broke down while at college
in,1880, at 26 years of age, but I oontln-
tted to use ooffee until! 1898 although I
was nervous ana suffered constantly
from 'a condition known as diabetes ifff
sipldus, aoonditipn that is well-known
to tie due to nervousness.. My weight
frail below par and no diekor tonic med
Heines were sufficient to restore my vital
ity and strength,,
"In 18981 became suspicious of coffee
and I broke off the habit by taking np
Postum. Sinoe that time my nerves
have become strong and well and my
weight has increased about 30 pounds.
Well boiled ft is a delicious, healthful
drink, heavy with strength and mnsole
making qualities- ’* hTame furnished by
Postum 06.^Battle Creek, Mioh.
Even if your physician does drink oaf-
fee, you had better doaa he tells yon to
do. Give Postum «. trial. That’s the
easy way to shake off ooffee and get
well and keep well
THE LETTER LISTS
ARE MV AMUSING.
Some Queer Names Appear
oh List in The Banner .,
Ever}' Week.
religion than any minister"-TSever knew
as simple as a Child and yet proves every
inch a.man. He wsa a friend any man
might be proud to own. The flood The
haa done in this city will never be 'ail*
known till the final day. Everybody
loved him; If yon would know what he
really was—go and ask the poor, whom
he served without money and without
prioe; go and ask those who have passed
through deep waters- and have had his
tender sympathy. These oan tell yon,
have known him intimately for more
than a quarter of a century, and in all
these years I have never Imown any-
thing of him bnt what was good and
noble and true. How many a-sensitive
shrinking heart will miss the patient
kindness of the skilled pbysioian and
perfect gentleman. How many poor
uncared for sufferers will miss the secret
oharlty, the tender ministrations known
only to the Matter and recompensed on
ly by Him.
Dr. Gerdine’s, was' a rare nature, ex
qnlsitely refined, intensely sympathetic,
generous, bightoned, brave.* H» was in
troth, "a golden-hearted gentleman.
Men and women recognized and ap-
pteeiated the nobility of soul that mado
him a valued friend as well as well-be
loved pbysioian.
Little children loved Mm—a eulogy in
itself.. May the God of Meroy, the Great
Physician, reward him for the deed* of
meroy and charily with whioh his life
was filled, pnd may a blessed, blissful
eternity be Ms whose kind heart soothed
many * sorrow and poured itself out to
oomfort. others.
BOBT. TOOMBS DUBOSE.
* The list of letters remaining in the
Athena postoffioe every week, and regu
larly advertised in the columns of The
Banner, are Interesting and winning- ~
sometimes more so than others, bnt they
are always well worth reading.
The United States mail service) Is
one of the most marvelous pieces otf
machinery In the world, and ts thedef*
pair of foreign countries whioh trf
to imitate it. ' It’ is about as perfeot .as
anything under human direction oould
be, bnt a way has never yet been de-
vbeii for' diHrerfeg''*'Tellers
drenaes that oannot be found. It is
comparatively easy ;- to supply defi
ciencies In addresses and to send oat
traotors to locate missing parties, bnt
how to^get a letter tq a man when that
man oannot be found Ugh nor. low is -
something whioh even the United
States mail servios has never been able
to accomplish.
The advertised letter list is one of tht
means taken by the postoffioe depart-
‘ment to facilitate the delivery of letters
and parcels, and some of these lists are
genuine onrioaitles.
DAILY ARRIVALS AT : i
COMMERCIAL HOTEL
J. D. Rhodes, St. Lonis; J. Anerbock,
Philadelphia; 0. R. MoGohey, N. 0. ;
E. T. Smith, Naahvllle ; William Reeder,
N. Y.; O. L. Hubbard, Athens; J. R.
Thornton, Atlonta; F, B. O. Clements,
S. O.; O. Shewmake, Atlanta; J. F.
Manners, St Louis; E. V. Finlyson, N.
O. ; W. G. Smith, Atlanta; W. A.
Thompson, Atlanta; B. F. Wright, Va.;
M. W. Toetz, N. 0.; Iva E. DoPree,
Danielsnllle, Ga.; D. H. Dupree, City;
E. R. Barnett; Winston N. O.; W. T.
Goolsby, Atlanta; B. H. Maloons, Madi
son ;N. B. Maloons, Madison; George
Koontze, Atlanta; I. F, Vickery, Atlan
ta; J. J. Ragin, Augusta.
tarn
Lard Expensive andlnjurious.
Lard t* not only expensive but injuri
ous to the health when used In liberal
quantities. To make the ao-oalled oheap
patent flours white enough, the life : le
all ground oht of the flow; then it It
neoessary to load it np with lard in or
der to make it work. This acoonnts
largely far yow heavy hisenita- and rolls
and foot bod digestion. It takes leas
than one-half the lard to v, jrk "Clifton 1
that it does the oheap patents, so yod
not only aave mote than the difference
in prioe, bnt get •' more healthful and
nntrithiM food prodnot. . Health and
economy diotato tha nse of “Clifton.*’
Sold by WUigfirid Cash Grocery Storo
i« Athena
A
SALMAGUNDI.
i
The meeting of the Salmagundi, was
to have been held at the residence of
Prof. John Morris has been postponed.
Notion of meeting will be given.l»Mh "
85?LVANUS MORRIS, 8s6. 1
Meroury Takes a Tumble
Bnt ow prides are still the sams.
We have for prompt delivery
Oak and Pine Wood in
Chunks
Fire Place Lengths
Stote Lengths. .
, =^0OAL—
Give ns you orders early in the mottl
ing to secure a deliver^ the same <ay. “
The Athens Ioe and Ooal Oo> A.
Phono U»; " 4 ^ M
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