The weekly banner. (Athens, Ga.) 1891-1921, October 20, 1891, Image 1

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Will THE BANNER Leads. All tha locil Ail the All tho BwnHMnBBnni *il . . .i**rS» i. ; .i. IW34 I OwMlMal- 4 wttk the Bat* 1877. I Athena Bai aer, Bat* II .1833. ATHENS, GA„ TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 1891. 8 PAGES IMPORT&HT to ADVERTISERS. THE DAILY ANO WEEKLY S 3ST 3XT 3S3 3=L H»t ha largest circulations of any rt Published In Northeast and Eastern Georgia VOL. 60 NO. 43 Meaning Augusta’s Great Exposition. Augusta has seven direct railroads The finest nine branch roads. Augusta is tbe largest cotton manu facturing centre in the South. Augusta lias steamboat navigation to the sea, which secures for her cheap freights. Scheduled Savannah thirty hours Augusta is the best cottr n market in the 8outh, and also the largest inland market except Memphis. Augusta’s annual income from tbe , <»nal and water works is $80,000. The 4 DAZZLING PANORAMA. w ** er «* pp 1y ia unsurpassed. Augusta has nine miles of canal, fur nishing power for manufacturing at $5 50 per horse power per annum. A ugusta’s average annual tempera ture for the last twenty years is 64 de grees; average rainfall, 50 inches. HER GREAT EXPOSITION ! And it is such a city as this that now h s in hand the preparation for the ton was °V ° f VisitUrS tbHt WU1 thr ° n * the The Milledgeville cadets have sent no ton was mapped off and packed to a grounds., on the grpat opening dry, tics to manager Henry that they will November the.22nd. j be there> aud the Min^geyiHe boyS hanageruknbv talks. I are experts in the Military arts, too, so Manager Thomas P. Henry, who has j tho pe0 p le 8ay . in hand the general management of the . Tbe charlston cadets have signified Augusta Exposiucnwas^fonnd^ in the | |heir determination * ^ on haad and substantial state of Rolidity. A grand stand capable of holding thousands of people was built in fair view of the race track and the entire grounds. THE HEN WHO HOLD THE REINS. Everybody who joined the great throng of visitors who saw the sights of the last National Exposition can tes- Cotton picking will he done by ma- ROASTED ALIVE, chinery in a field of late cotton during Un „ lw . the Exposition. Horrible Fire In SOME SPLENDID EXHIBITS Among the great numbers of exhib- cffioe of the comnany the other day I iiih „ L.ir . .1! lt “ymg that this compa- with his coat off, a half smoked cigar in ny will make a beautiful appearances on The Busy Hum of Industry Will Soon be Heard, And the Electric City Will j Crown Herself Queen one corner of bis mouth, bis sleeves the field W * th a , d T“ ° r “° reas : ! The cadets at the University of Geor- sistants bending busily at work around London, Oct. 16.—A tenement house lfcors already enrolled upon the books caught fire in the morning in the dock of the Manager the following have been I district of Iamdon known as the mill announced: wulL The fire originated in the lower Enco Bros., of New York, well known 1 part of the house with the result that OF THE SAVANNAH VALLEY. The Greatest Exposition South Ever Knew the Will Open Nov. 2nd and Close | Nov. 28th This Year. THE BANNER ON THE GROUNDS, A Fu!: Description of What tbe Great | Fair Will Be. PROF. MCDONALD. Manager of Kirmess. An Instructive and Entertaining Ex hibit of Georgia Products—A World of Amazements Each Day for the Millions-Racing, Music, Speaking, Merriment and Fun. Patrick Walsh, Z. W.Carwile, Athens Will Go Down by the Hundreds. ONE CENT A MILE! great Augusta National Exposition of 1891. Augusta can safely promise one of the finest if not the finest Expositions in America this year. It certainly will I not be surpassed, and it is doubtful if it | J**- E. Gow, will be equalled. The thous&uds wh.il W. N. Mercier, will attend daily during November will. Jules Rival, so adjudge. Augusta has long been the largest i Cotton Manufacturing City in the S mth, having gained for herself the -ohriquet of the “Lowell of the South,” and she will lead in other manufac- 'urts. THOMPSON A HOUSTON’S CORNER. tify to the grandeur of every feature of tbe great show. But they cannot even then conceive of the vastness of the Exposition that the Electric City is now p’anuing to throw open to an admiring public No vember 2nd 1891. The last one while it was at the time conceived to be tbe most dazzlingarray of art, of science and of general amusement cannot be compared to the one that will soon be in progress in Augusta. The Exposition Company was organ ized last summer with such men at the head of it whose very names carry with them the perfect guaranty that tbe c lining fair will eclipse anything of its kind ever seen in the Southern States. Here are the men who have the reins of the Exposition in hand: officers: Thos. P. Henry, J. B. Platt, President 1st Vice-Pres’t 2d Vice-Pres’t 3d Vice-Prea’t Sec’y and Treas’r Manager Gen’l Manager directors: R. H. May, Mayor, ex-officio. Win. Mulberin T. P. Branch D. Sancken P Thompson , him, answering inquiring letters from j exhibitors, and patrons of the Great Exposition that came not only from every section of tbe South, but from ev ery quarter of the Globe as well. One would have thought tbe clever Manager had the responsibility of tbe Great Chicago World’s E&ir resting upon his shoulders, so great was the rush of work befoie him. "I haven’t hardly time to talk to even a newspaper man,” said Manager Hen ry and that meant a very great deal coming from an old newspaper man himself, such as Manager Henry is. “But I am anxiouB to have you say through the Banner to the vast multi tudes of people in North Georgia,” be went on to say; working with corres pondence all the while, “that Augusta wants them all to come down in No vember and join her in proclaiming to the world at large that Georgia can beat the whole civilized united kingdom when it comes to holding an Exposi tion.” “We will have an Exposition that will be as instructive as it will be en tertaining. It is the very kind of Ex position that the people of classic old Athens will enjoy. The schools and colleges of your city will fiud more at tractive features to the Augusta Expo sition than have ever yet been seen at a show of this kind. The Arts and aci euces, Electrical appliances, and gen eral displays will be such as to please, profit,and instruct every college stu dent, every pupil of the Lucy Cobb and the Home School. “The Exposition will be run day and night. At night the Social World of Augusta will join in the Kirmess which will be one of the chief amusements of the entire Exposition. Many of Augus ta’s fairest young ladies will don the fancy coctumes.of the K’rmess in th e music' hall each night, and th e gia are expected to be on the fieid, too, and everybody in Augusta is already betting their money on them. THE GREAT ALLIANCE DAT. Alliance Day, November 18 will be a conspicuous day. Hon. L. F. Livingston of the Georgia State Alliance, and Hon. J. William StokeR, of South Carolina Alliance, will deliver addresses to large numbers of Alli&ncemen invited to meet them. Col. Livingston writes tbe management. “You can have my co-operation to advance your laudable undertaking at the time you suggest, (November 18) to my utmost capacity. Xu tbe meantime if 1 can assist you in any way command me. Yours, respectfully, L. F. Livingston in Dr. Stokes writes; “I render hearty assent to such a movement, and will as heartily help. Every AUianceman in Georgia onght to go to the Augusta Exposition on Al liance day. There will be instruction for him, for bis wife and for his children. Each leader of the Alliance in Georgia will be on hand, to make tbe day profitable by discussing tbe methods, the past and the future of their cherished order. Some eloquent speeches will be by prominent Alliancemen from all parts of the South on tbe live and important questions of the day. This will afford the farmers of the finest section of the South to get to gether and have a good lime, studying ail the propositions that confront them to-day, and seeing the wonderful sight* of the great Exposition besides- A SUNDAY SCHOOL CONVENTION. Ther- will be a chance for every Sun day School scholar in Georgia and Sont. Carolina'to get together at the Augusts Exposition. The Inter-State Sunday-School Cor- dealers in Italian arc -.oods, have secur- space in the main isle, and will have a handsome exhibit. Thompson & Robinson, dealers in electric appliances are to make an ex hibit. The Dnoker Portable House Compa ny will have a flue exhibit of & six- room house. They oou em plate loca ting a Southern branch of tbeir bouse Augusta. Thi* Johns Asbestos Company, of New York, dtaicr» in the finest roofing aud paint-, will have a display near the Alexander Drug and Seed Compa ny exhibit. Pictet Ice Machine C mpany, of New York, will have a novel display of ice machines for tbe making of ice in pri vale bouses. The exhibit of the Goodyear Shoe Company is now on its way here. Mr Williams, the manager, will arrive in Auegu9ta tomorrow aud will commence Monday getting his good** in {.ositlou To » reporter of the Augusta Chron icle recently chairman Hull, of tbe >a eing committee, said that the mil s of (tableswou’d be taxed to their fullest capacity daring the racing. He says the evices from ail sections if the country ate that the East, the West, and the South as far as Texas, will send strings ol runners to Augusta Many of these will winter in Augusta, and this means thousands of dollars to the produce and commission men of Augusta. Chairman Hull suggests that it would be the neat thing for these business to get together and make up a purse for -ome one day. They will get tbeir uocey back within a week from sales of applies alone, bayond the fact of help ing to make a public enterprise a grand iuccess THE ELECTRIC DISPLAY. One of tbe mo-i dazzling of all tbe brilliant displ .y9 to be seen at the Aii gusta Exposition will be the electric aiii city that decks the smil- • v of the beautiful Sivannah! v> here throbs tlu* 'Teat heart •jin’* iml«i>irial and commercial here pi ace and plenty reign - a was once called the “Foun- v " Then it was characteriz' d de; walks, beautiful lawns and •I - I., miles around, all bear- uleiices of a Southern a*is:oc cniiar to tbe population of that 1-- e ! 'l 8 i.ithern city. « i • her many splendid achieve el more recent.years, with her i stitfcl 4 , her extensive manu lu r thousands of spindles, nrical street railways, and her mu of industry on every side, a has been crowned deservedly 1 metric City” of Georgia. Au;ua«a is today unquestionably the | m -t striking illustration of the typical city of tlm New South to be found in the Sou.ii Atlantic States. Blessed rri; i ;ii it, elegance and ease which pro V'ils among all her people, having h'* n liamlej down by the blue blood of wcU time aristocracy; and yet in- fu*'"! with a newness of life aod indus try, -Ik- stands out touiy in bold relief among her sister cities, and proudly holds out her history of unbounded ■aarfsiss tv** hn-> Au siu the" FRONT VIEW OF MAIN BUILDING Shehastwel e large cotton factories, which, alone, are mire than any of the entire States «f Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana or Missouri, .and the same number as the State of Mississippi E. J. O’Connor W. C. Jones A. F. Austin F. M. Mulberin Lesser W. Ed. Platt W. Schweigert lv*#Z5£ 7** hon. Patrick walsh. Prosperity and abundant h st, ry to which every Southern city AN ELECTRIC DISPAY She has tbe best map position in the Southern territory, standing between tbe North and tbe extreme South, in access to the Atlantic Ocean, and in tbe midst of the most vital and far- reaching systetas of railroads in the South. She is at the Head of Steam Navigation of tbe Savannah River, opening to tbe sea, aud is the best point relative to Northern, Western, and Southern home, and Southwestern for eign markets, in a Southern direction. Augusta is the center of the richest and most populous agricultural region of tbe Southeast, making her the Sec ond Largest Inland Cotton Market in tbe United States, Memphis being the fiist, and guaranteeing support by b >me consumption alone to many man ufactories. AN BAST TASK Wbat an easy task it will be in tbe light of all this enterprise, all this . wealth, all this pluck and courage, and h*; fo iowing pointers are a sufficient ] all this pride and determination for pology i or the tbe boast that Augusta I Augusta to have the grandest Exposi a cs with pardonable pride. Read tlou ever knownio tbe South Atlantic j/ m through to the end and think. J states, a child^oth >h -• at a g'anoe. 1 ru 1 “cy are: 1 Augusts does nothing by halves. Au KU8ta’s population 45,000 I In 1888 she held within her confines Aukusu’* total debt ia $1,744,800 11**'* greatest exhibition of Agricultural Augusts has $6,000,000 invested in I »“d Mechanical arts apd.different pnr- °° tl °n factories suits.ever before collected for display , A”gu»ta’b assessed value of oronertv I beneath Southern skies Her patriotic k *-1,3000 ooo ** 1 and plucky cltissns pooled tbeir energies ■fugusta Lae twenty-sixlmilesof elec- “ d ********* • rdaoos ** ***& btc street railroad * I op * or permanent use tbe grandest Augueta.has the" bast public school bom8 ,or an ex P 08iti °® t0 r ° n ° d . * a in th* Ann.k * . I the Southern States. Handsomi build- Tbomas Murray. HON PAT WALSH. Eevi.rybody in the South knows Hon. Patrick Walsh, President of the Au gusta Exposition. Genial and jolly always, and spur red on each day of bis life by indomi table pluck and energy he is the only man to be put in tbe lead of a great en terprise, like this. Mr. Walsh says there is nothing go- tt& y well aspire. Ad.) the electric city has reason to k°int to her record with pride Hei ^uvautantages cannot be told in words. hrr-.’s her apology. Ashbury Hull J. U. Jackson A. J. Schweers A. A. Thomas G. J Howard Jno. B Tisohei G. H. Howard Exposition chorus con3<stiug of two he udred voices will make tbe welkin ring sure enough with the harmonizing thiiuder of their combined voices. Ibis will give tbe Exposition a social feature that many Expositions do not have. Athens and Augusta are so closely united socially that they will find mutual pleasure in tbe Kirmess.” THE LADIES AT WORK. m the South. the Southern - . - IT?. 1 " ^ <>lnaed and Eroded ^Qllare $9,ftfPjpop‘** ” nw:f ““ dosed and graded off most beautifully. BP E WORSHIPPER in Kirmess. iug to he left undon - that can be done to make every visitoi to tbe Exposition have an enjoyable v’slt when he goes to Augusta. “The men of Augusta,” raid he “have gone to work in behalf of this great undertaking as they have never gone to work before. Our proudest capitalist and our humblest laborer has taken ofi bis coat, so to speak, and is bending every energy to working out tbe success of the Exposition. “Such a unanimity of interest pre vails,” be continued that there is not a man in the city of Augusta and in this whole section of Georgia but will when tbe time comes be on hand aud ready to The following ladies of Augusta have charge of the Kirmess: Mrs. M. A. Stovall, Mrs. Virginia Allen, Mrs. John Butt, Mrs. C. A. Withers for the Egyptain dances. For the Spanish dances. Miss Georgia McDonald. Mrs. Wm. A. Garrett, Miss Belle Smith. For the Tambourine dance, Mrs. Wm. Mtxlhenn, Mrs. B. S. Pelot, Mrs. Joe Myers, For the Swedish dance, Mrs. James Daly and Miss Georgia McDonald. For the Greek dance, Mrs. Ed. Platt, -Mrs. James U. Jockson. For the Moon dance, Mrs. A. F. Aus tin, Mrs. E. W. Deveney, Mrs. Gbas.E. Coffin. For the Japanese dance, Mrs. Patrick, Walsh, Miss McDonald, Mrs. Frank Smytbe, Mrs. Sam Meyers For rhe German dance, Mrs. Pleasant A. Stovall and Mrs. Wm. H.Crane. a great military display. Great will be the Military display. Two Military brass bands will furn ish ronsio daily daring tbe Exposition, one of these being composed of young ladies—a unique musical organization The Military features Novembers, 6 ami 7 will be the military event of th* year. lt embraces a sham battle—a re alistic depiction of warfare, participat ed in by the three arms of the service. M.i itia from all parts of the country will meet, affiliate and compete for honors. The prizes aggregate $2,875, i Infantry drill, first, $1,000; second, $500;.third, $250. Cavalry, first, $500; second, $250. Numerous medals aud other prices are also offered. Tbe grand military ball comes off Friday evening. THE UNIVERSITY SHOULD GO. There will be a cadet drill. All the military colleges of the South Atlantic states are arranging to send to Augusta crack companies to com- vention will be an auspicious event. No vember 13th and 14tb, renowned Sun day School workers will deliver addres ses and lead exercises. Addresses will he delivered by some ot the most eminent divines in the Southern States to the children and teachers and there is sure to be enough amusement on these days for the boy; and girls who go there. Beautiful sacred music will be heard on that occasion by the finest bands in the country. THE DRUMMER’S DAY. Of course there will be a drummer’ (lay. All drummers are invited to a grand rally at the Exposition November 17, when President Carey Townsend of the S.T. A. will pieside and hear discussions of important topics. The Inter-State Chrysanthemum Show will be held November 16,17 and 18. Liberal prizes offered and will te the most extravagant display of floral beauty ever before seen in the state cf Georgia. The Cattle show begins Monday, No vember 23, and continues a week. Cat tle men will be here from the North and West. GOVERNOR NORTH EN TO SPEAK. The openiug day of the Augusta Ex position will hie oue of the most nota- be days in the history of Georgia. It will bring together thousands of Georgians and Carolintans, who will come together for mutual enjoyment and instruction. Governor Northen will be thereto turn the button And start the great wheels on November 2d. He will make make a most powerful address to the people o' Georgia oil that day. Every man for miles around ought to be there on the opening day. Governor B. R. Tillman and the South Carolina Legislature will visit tho Exposition Thanksgiving Day and celebrate “Carolina Day.” The Grand Veterans Rallv, Tuesday, November 17, will attract tbe followers of Gordon, Hampton, Beauregard, Bnt. ler, Early, Young, Wheeler, Fitzhugh Lee and other leaders. The Savannah River Convention November 19 and 20, will bring togeth plete for the championship and for the extend a cordial greeting to the thoua« priz s. a London Tenement House. the rickety wooden stairs leading to the upper floors were almost immediately burned away, thos cutting off escape by that means of a number of inmates of the house. When the firemen reached the spot they found the building in a mass of flames, and learned that there were still several people on the upper floors. With commendable promptness the fire men made several gallant efforts to reach the endangered people, bat all such attempts were repelled by the vol ume of flames which poured ont of the lower windows and which were fast eating their way upward. At last , when tire was finally sub dued sufficiently to enable the firemen to mount to the top of the charred ten ement, they found the bodies of an old woman of 70, a yonng woman and three ohildren, all huddled together as they tried to escape from the smoke which had suffocated them. To Got Evan with RowctIL Chicago, Oct 16.—A $5,060 damage suit for libel was began in the circuit coart here by William D. Boyce, against George P. Rowell & Co. of New York. Plaintiff ia the publisher of The Satur day Blade, while defendants issued the American Newspaper Directory, which purports to give the circulation of news- >apors throughout the county. Mr. 3oyce alWes that he went personally to New-York and gave proof to Mr. Rowell that his paper had a circulation of between 150,000 and 200,000 a week. Notwithstanding his evidence the de fendants rated his paper below 159,000, and then added that information re- rardiag the circulation of The Saturday Blade was not satisfactory. Plaintiff says the defendants have acted mali ciously, and have injured The Blade as an advertising medium. display, his i In this department the man;igemrnt has taken especial interest, and theex- ibits that will be there to keep alive he machinery nail will make the dis olay by far the finest electrical show hat, has ever been seen south of Balti- oore and Cincinnati. This, too, is one ftbe must interesting displays that an be secured. Electricity is fast king sway in this day and lime as the most desirable motor f-<r machinery mil vehicle 4 Tho Thumpson A Hous- >n Company will by itself have an ex tibit an the Augusta Exposition that vill be worth for more than the ad- uission price to see. The very 1 u.-stappliahccs of electrici y will be displayed in a most wonder ful style. ONK CENT A MILE The rcliroad- have reduced tho- rati? of travel to-the E (position to one cent i mile, anil with this splendid opnortu nitv thus afforded.them all the people ii Northeast Georgia can fake a trip to he Fountain City and see the eights of the gr<-»t Exposition It will be well worth the money expended, and the benefits resulting from a visit to Au gusta at this time will more than repay the loss of time and money. LET ATHENIANS ATTEND. If there are any people in Athens who would ei.joy a day or two off, a digbt rest from the cares of business ife now is the time to take it. - The merchant who has been kept at his business all the ong summer; the mechanic who has known no release from the constant aber at his lathe or over the anvil, he farmer who has toiled through the fields to savs his corn and cotton crops; ill now have an opportunity to have a <ood time for a very small amount of money, and to see an exposition that will not only please bat highly instruct Every citizen of Athens and North east Georgia who can do so should go Iowa to the Augusta Exposition. SHE DESERVES IT ALL. Augusta deserves the highest meed of praise for her enterprise and hard work in getting up this Exposition. She has secured reduced rates n tbe railroads; has gathered together exhibits from every -eotion of the continent, has arranged with the most artistic taste and the ut most care; has perfected all her plans to give to tbe public such an Exhibi tion of products and inventions as has never been seen in G< orgi&; and has now ready for the - opening, an Expo sition of which the Empire State is prond. Let South Carolina and Georgia meet on the banks of the S.ivannah, and hand in band take in the glories nd the sights of the Augusta Exposi tion. ... Remsen Crawford. A London dispatch says: Arthur E. Smithers, managing director of the English bank of the River Platte, was arrested, charged with stealing £7,000. The prisoner for years has been in the habit of taking money from the fnnds of the hank, but until recently he had been able to replace the sums abstracted before the auditing of the accounts took place. At Roanoke, Va., the planing mills of Bnsh & Carvers, and fonr small resi dences adjoining, were btmiod in the morning, and Thomas Deareh, an em ploye of the firm, lost his life. He left the building when the fire broke out, but returned to get some clothiug and money he had in his room, and was caught by the falling roof. Loss, $80,- UOO; insurance, $3,000. SPECIAL OFFER IN CARRIAGES AND BUGGIES. We have on band a large lot of Car riages and Buggies which we are very anxious to sell between this and Christ inas. And on account of the tightness of the money market, we will offer them for the next 60 days at the same old price we. have been selling t iem at for the past six y»ars. The reason we make this offer is because we are satisfied at -bis price they are tbe cheapest buggy you can buy. Our guarantee on them is strong enough to back us up in what we say. Be 6uro to call and see ns before buying as we have a nice i.s8ortm»nt. Respectfully, * Klein & Martin. “ALLIANCE LECTURE ” Bro J R. Robins, Alliance lecturer for 8th Congressional District will de liver a public lecture on Alliance prin ciples at the G«urt House in Athens, on Saturday, Oct. 24th , 11 o’clock a m * Everybody invited to attend. There ... .l ., . . ,, ,, '! will also be a secret meeting of the Al- er tbe thoughtful citizens of the Valley fiance on the same day, at the same to discuss and urge River improve- place. All members of the order are provements. urgently requested to be present, All the latest improvements in agri- J^^tendllfe^e^wiataia^ioin- cultoral machinery will be shown at ity will pleasec'Dy. work during the Exposition. | Geo. T. Murrell, C. Jj. C. C. HARNESS HARNESS HARNESS. If ronr Harness needs repairing car ry th»-m to Klein & Martin and get it a ell done at a reasonable price. . Carry your horses to Kleiu & Mar tin and get them shod first class. A Denver special says: Jim Conners and iiike Ryan, welt known in this city, went to the house of Mrs. Dalcoff, a former mistress of Conners’, aud, af ter binding ana gagging C. J. Finni- enm, whom they found in bed with tho woman, threw h m from a third-story window. His jaw was crushed, his eyes knocked ont and his skaU cleft so ‘hat the brain protruded; bat lived until the afternoon. He leaves a family at Can ter Oak, Pa. The murderers were ar rested. Particular* of the Killing of llultoeh. Mobile. Oct. 17. —The particulars of the killing of Dr. Seymonr Bollock, a prominent ex*Federal soldier at Navy :ove, by T. P. Brewer, are as follows: For some time bad blood has existed be tween the two men. This originated from a petty qnarreL Brewer tells the' story of the fatal affray. He learned* that Bollock had threatened to kill him on sight, and accordingly kept ont of -, the doctor’s sight. Thursday he went! fishing and took his gun with him. 1 Bullock was reported to have left Navy; cove and gone some miles np the bay. Brewer was fishing,' when suddenly there was a flash of a gun and bullets whistled around his head. He looked up and saw Bollock some distance off about to fire again, and then Brewer discharged his weapon, a double-barrel’ shotgun, with fatal effect. Four back- shot struck Bullock and he died in- >tantly. There were no witnesses to the affray.. Bullock’s body was brought here and will be interred with military honors. Sbot HI* Wife by Negligence. Zebulon, Gil, Oct. 17.—The jury in the case of the state against Oscar Harden, who was charged in Pike supe rior court with the murder of his wife at Liberty Hill, Ga., on October HL 1889, returned the following verdiot: We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of involuntary manslaughter in the commission of a lawful act through culpable negligence. HARNESS. HARNESS ^HARNESS If yon want to buy any harness be sore and call on Klein is Martin as they have afnli. line of them at prices lower than any once else. If you need any kind of repair work done carry it to Klein & Martin the” Carriage makers,they will do it as cheap: if not cheaper aod a great deal better and quicker than you can get it done any u here else. “Doss yonr mother know yon’reeut,” said a boy to his little brother. “Ye 1 she does," was the answer, “for one bottle of Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup has knocked my cold into a cocked bat, you be*.’’ A few applications of Salvation Oil will instantly -relieve stillness in the l ek or joints. If jou want your horse shod carefully and vieht send him to Klein & Martin the hor6e shoers.