Newspaper Page Text
TRADE ISSUE DAILY AJND WEEKLY EAMJNEUl DEUW'MEEK 6, 1892.
Our Stock of Furniture is beyond doubt the most complete that has been shown in the city nf
Athens. Fine Furniture, Medium Furniture, Cheap Furniture, at J 01
Bedsteads for $1.50 and up, Bureaus for $5.00 and up, Rockers from 50 cents up. Chamber Suits from $12.50 to $250.00. t
fact we have everything to be found in a Strictly First-Class Furniture House at Rock Bottom Prices. We would be pleased to ha **
you call and examine our stock. It is a pleasure for us to show this Immense Line of all kinds of Furniture. Ve
DOESETY’ <Sc
MAX JOSEPH.
A MAN WHO I» A LAVA VS AT THE
FRONT
BATTLING FOR ATHENS.
Tho IT nprrrrdrntrd Huccean of o Mer
chant Wlio Keep* the Best Roods,
The GrrnUat Varieties, and Sells
At Low Prices.
Everyone who comes to Athens in
quires for the store of M x Joseph. They
have heard far and wide of his mammoth
store, and are always anxious to see t£e
magnificent stock he carries.
And when they enter his btore they are
•at once corv inced that everything that has
teen said of it is true, and they purchase
largely of the splendid bargains he offor..
And they come again, too, and con
sequently there is always a crowd of
bargain seekers at his establishment.
These large crowds of customers do
not go there for nothing. There must be
something there to attract them, and the
secret of the whole thing i3 that there are
to be found bargains at this establish
ment which are not to be found any
where else.
FIVE MAMMOTH STORES.
Max Joseph is the propiietor of five
mammoth stores^findiug it necessary to
1 ave a great deal of space in which to
store bis immense stock. This stock is oi
a varied description, and contains bar
gains all the way lrom a cake of soap to
the finest articles of clothing.
DRY GOODS BARGAINS.
In this department, Max Joseph chal
lenges comparison of stock with any firm
in Athens. His stock of white goods, tlm-
nels, sheetings, jeans, bleachings, blan
kets, cloaks, wraps, silks etc., deserves
the inspection of all who wish to buy
n ce goods at low prices. If you are going
to make puichases in tbis line, look at
Max Joseph’s stock, aud so thoroughly
convinced will you be that you will. not
leave bis store until you make your pur
chases.
men’s furnishings.
Max Joseph carries a full line of Gents’
famishing good-, and those who trade
with him in this department all say that
these goods give eminent satisfaction.
Gent’s underwear is a special diive at
Max Joseph’s, and in the way of men’s
heavy uoderaLirts, wool undershirts and
the like, ibis stock haB no equal.
He niso makes a specially of Worsted,
Cassiinere and Cheviot suits at low prices
RADIES GOODS.
The ladies of Athens always seek bar
gains here. The largest and best assorted
stock of ladies' shawls, wraps, underwetr
and dress goods to be found on the market.
Cashmeres, bedford cords, satteens, silks
giughame, calicoes, all going at the cheap
est of prices.
SHOE DEPARTMENT.
Max Joseph’s is also the headquarters
for bargains in shoes. Ladies can find
everything in the way of shoes they may
want at Max Joseph’s, children’s shoes a t
made a 'specialty, while the men always Wtt8 hart,
flock there to get bargains in shoes from
brogans up to the very finest.
GROCERIES
Max Joseph also offers the greatest bar-
gains in groceries. His‘grocery depart-
m ntis well stocked, and is cons* a itlj
replenished with the best goods in order to
supply the ever increts ng demand made
op it.
For particulars as to prices at tbis mam
moth estab i<hment the j eiders of the
Banner are referred to the disj 1 ay ad
vertisement of Max Joseph to be fonnd
on another page of this issue.
WHAT HASCAU ED THIS?
The history of Max Joseph’s great sur.
cess ts a merchant is one that Drompis
the question as to wbat caused it. Where
here is evident so many marks of success
mu9t be a corresponding cause.
It is simply this. Mr. Jost-ph paysfn-
qnent visits to New York and while there
is especially careful to lay in the very best
aud most attractive line of goods
to be found for sale
in the great metropolis,. He is a man of
shrewdness "and possesses splendid busi
ngs judgment which serves him well in
making up his putchases.
Mr. J isepb has a splendid conception of
what kind of goods it takes to please the
various tastes of different customers, and
when he lays in bis stock, you may rest
> s ured that he bus articles to suit every
taste imaginable.
Tut large patronage he receives every
day of the week at bis five mammoth
stores on Broad street iully vindicates hi
judgement and taste as a buyer of gcois.
He is constantly receiving from the Eas
tern markets consignments of goods of all
descriptions, which go to make his already
attractive establishment s'lil more attrac
tive.
Whenever you wish great bargains in
dry goods, shoes, cloth ins, dress goods,
me i’s furnishings, groceries, and the 1 k",
call on Max Joseph.
Headache
Indigestion, Hilliousnesa,
Dyspepsia
And all Stomach Troubles are cored by ■>
P. P. P.
[Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Potassium.]}■
Rheumatism is cured by P. P P. Pains and
achea in the back, shoulders, knees, and ankles
and wrist- are al> attacked and conquered by
P. f. P. This great medicine, by its blood
cleansing properties, builds up and strength,
ensthe whole body.
N' thing is so efficacious as P. P p., at this
sea-on. and for toning up, invigorating, and as
a strengthener and nppitizer take P. P. P. Jt
throws off the malaria and puts you in good
condition.
Abbotts East Indian Corn Paint cures
a’l Corns, Warts and Bunions.
CAREFULLY CALCULATED.
Note* Gathered from Reliable Sources anil
Condensed for Hurried Readers.
President Diaz declined to accept the
resignation of the Mexican cabinet and
requested them to remain. They con
sented. .
There is every indication of a speedy
ending of the Lawrenceville, Pa., strike.
A large portion of the men have applied
for positions, including many of the for
mer employes.
Prominent husiness men of Charleston
are agitating the question of building a
grain elevator. Efforts heretofore made
to bring western grain to that port for
foreign shipment will be resumed
The United States senate committe on
bank failures! of which Senator Chandler
is chairman, Will meet in Washington
next week to prepare a report on the cause
of bank failures, and recommend changes
in the national banking laws.
In Vienna, in a calamitous fire, the
church of St. Michael, one of the finest in
the city, was destroyed. The church con
tained many tombstones from the six
teenth to the eighteenth centuries, which
are badly damaged. The loss to the city
1s irreparable.
BILtS FOR BOWSER.
A FEW
INCIDENTAL^ THAT
HIM UP.
STIR
A Case of Blackmail Clearly Established
in the Gas Bill, and the Water Office
Stigmatized—-^Jowser Gives Up in De
spair.
[Copyright, 1892, by Charles B. Lewis.]
“What’s this?” asked Mr. Bowser as he
entered the family sitting room after the
evening meal and picked up a piece of
paper lying on a stand.
“That?” queried Mrs. Bowser as she
glanced in hLs his direction. “Oh, that’s the
gas bill. It just came in this afternoon,
and I left it where you would be sure”
“What! What!” interrupted Mr. Bow
ser as he hurriedly got out his glasses to
read the figures. “Four dollars and a
halfl Mrs. Bowser, what on earth is the
meaning of this?” ,
“It means, I suppose, that we have
burned that much gas and are expected to
pay for it,” she quietly replied.
“WIIY, MRS. BOWSER, WHY?”
“Never! Never! I’ll see that gas cant
pany buried a thousand feet deep under
the burning sands of Sahara before I’ll
pay any such bill! It’s nothing less than
highway robbery — blackmail —extortion!
What did you say to the man who left it?”
“Nothing.”
“Nothing! Didn’t you even protest
against such bold faced robbery in broad
daylightl”
“Certainly not. The bill is only fifty
cents higher than last month, and I’m sure
we have burned much more gas. I con
sider it very reasonable indeed.”
“Reasonable! Reasonable! It’s rank
robbery, and I’ll never pay it—never! This
is another specimen of the way you prac
tice domestic economy!”
Mrs. Bowser made no reply, but Mr.
Bowser walked around the room with his
hands crossed under his coat tails and his
neck growing cherry red with emotion.
Having got Btarted he was bound to follow
out that line, and after a minute he broke
out with:
“When I think of the awful extrava
gance and reckless waste going on in this
house it makes rne fairly shiver! It’s no
wonder I can’t got a dollar ahead to save
my hide!”
“The bill from the water office for the
present quarter is also there,” observed
Mrs. Bowser as she carelessly glanced over
the evening paper.
“It is, eh? Yes, here it is.. Great Scott
and seven graveyards, but here’s more
highway robbery! Three dollars for water
during tlie last quarter—three dollars!”
‘Yes, that’s the regular amount. Our
water tax has been three dollars per quar
ter for the last four years.”
“Never! Never! It’s never been over
The funeral services of Dr. Scott took ,. «everi it s never been over
place at the White House Thursday after- two dollars at the outside! They’ve tacked
noon. Among those nresant. were on a dollar, thinking you paid the bills and
wouldn’t question it.”
She entered the library and returned
r a . n ?, innte with six or seven water
bills. All were made out for the same
amount—three dollars. Mr. Bowserglanced
at them and saw he was floored, but it
would not do to admit it.
“And why is our water tax twelve dol-
larS a „f! ar ’, Mrs - Bow ser—twelve dollars
a year? he hoarsely demanded as he stood
before her and waved the gas bill in one
hand and the water bill in the other. “Be-
n- -r— - v»r*T Cause °* your reckless waste and extrava-
J 0<w *? d gan . ce ’ madaml That’s what they based
figures on-a wastage of mQ
“Another evidence that this house is ran
on the Hottentot system! Clothespins cost
money! Why aren’t they taken care of?”
“They cost a cent a dozen, Mr. Bowser.’
“No matter if yon could get a thousand
for a' cent! It iBu’t the cent we look at,
but what might .happen for the want of
one single clothespin. For the want of
this very pin you might lose one of my two
dollar shirts. And now what on earth is
the matter with that clock?”
It had stopped. He put in the key and
fonnd that it had not run down. He gave
the pendulum a push, but after a few un
certain motions it stopped agaiD.
“I presume the clock wants cleaning,”
explained Mrs. Bowser. “It has stopped
several times lately, and I was going to ask
you to have a jeweler send up for it.”
“Wants cleaning! That clock out of
order again! I’ve paid out over $10,000
within a year for repairs to that
clock, and here it has’stopped dead still
again! Did you haul off and bit it with a
sledge hammer, or did you tarn it upside
down and pour sand into it?”
“We’ve bad that clock seven yeajp, Mr.
Bowser, and this is the first time it has
ever had to”
“It’s no use, no use!” be exclaimed as he
fell upon the lounge with a great crash.
“It may be that 1 can keep from commit
ting suicide, but should I go crazy and
wipe out this family and burn the house
to the ground and kill about forty'firemen
and police and pass.the rest of my days as
A raving maniac the world will under
stand all about it—all about it, Mrs. Bow
ser.”
And after a dozen long drawn sighs and
a great dqpl of kicking around, with an oc
casional “humph!” to let her know that he
was still thinking the matter over, he fell
asleep, and Mrs. Bowser carefully tucked
him up with a baby blanket.
NEW STOCK FOOD.
k Georgia PRODUCT and No EXPERIMENT,
I beg to call the attention of the people of Athens to the value of th
New Stock Fi-od; for 'eeding horsep, mules, oxeD, cows, hogs. <fc c vain,
based on analysis of Prof. H. B Pro< t >r, oi London, and Kiliott W s,!
wart, Professor of the Principles of Agriculture, Cornell University :*
New Stock Wheat and Corn Con a id Oats
Food. Btan. Mixed. *
Flesh Formers 9.10 8 27 (One hail Kich.)
Oil and Fatly Alatrer B.aO 6 50 a 'f
Siaich, Sugar, &e 48.40 49 98
Wood Fibre If.70 16.02 } £
11 **0 C.27 J2l57
Tolal F ' ! °d 63 80 “63575
Showing tbe New St^ck Food to be more valuable a9 a food than .->uhei
Bran, Corn or Oats, although the cost of Bran is one-third more per ton
and Coro and Oats m xed cost nearly twice as much per ton. ’
This Food is no experiment, but has been used for forty years in tho
eation of Georgia where it is raised and manufactured
I pr pose to sell this product to the merchants of Athens, and will
guarantee that it will always b» krp*. bv them from this time on.
Now you have an opportunity to buy a home product for lees money
than you are paying for an inferior Western stock food. 1
b. t.rroAs
LATIMER & JOHNSON,
fancy and family Groceries,
How Disease is Caused.
The absorption into the system of
hydrogen and other positive gases con
tained in the atmosphere cause the
physical disturbances known as disease.
To cure, the electric poise of the system
must be restored by the absorption of
the negative gases. With the Electro-
poise?, the electrical condition of the
Biga grade Canned Goods, Pure Confectionery
the best brands of tobacco and cigars.
FANCY GROCERIES A SPECIAL , Y.
noon. Among those present were mem
bers of the cabinet, who ware not pall
bearers, Vice President and Mrs. Morton
Sir Julian Paunceforte and others promi
nent in official circles.
In London, Chief Justice Coleridge re
fused a habeas corpus in the case of the
Frenchman, Francois, recently ordered
surrendered' to the French officials by Sir
John Bradge, to answer the charge of
blowing up the Cafe Very in April last
i rancois will now be extradited.
At Johnson City, Tenn., a freight was
wrecked on the East Tennessee railroad
through d isobedience of orders. Freights
21 and 22 collided. Twent r * "
with cattle were demolished. ...» , uuu
several tramps in the cars were killed: T A
great number of cattle were killed.
Great excitement has prevailed at Talo-
ville, N. Y., since Sunduy, caused by au
Italian flag being torn down and burned
u ~
gallons of water every quarter I”’
She made no reply, and he sat down to
get his breath. He got it in a couple of
minutes and jumped up with-
by ft number of American miners. 1’heL.v -? fc yo ^ 887 something to me the
iptlians opened fire on thefoiinere at the I ? ■ f,, ay about> having a plumber an
time, and the latter responded, but no one “ere?” "
- The Italians threaten to raise
““other flag, and if they do another row
will be inaugurated by the Americana.
NOTHING MORE DANGEROUS
“Than a neglected cough,” is wbat D-.
J. F. Hammond, professor in tbe Ec
lectic Medical College, says, “and as: a
preventative remedy and a curative
*gent. I cheerfully recommend Tav-
P r’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum
and Mullein.”
State and County Taxes
For 1892 are now due and tbe books will
remain open only until December 20,
oext, after which date execution will
issue against each delinquent as requir
ed by law.
The registry lists for the election for
county officers will close on December
24th. Voters wiU please take due no-
ice thereof and govern themselves ao-
i coidingly. HJH. Linton, TV C.
thehShtS.’ rc ’ S “ Somewh ' re «*«
bathtub leaking again!
. pa [ d °“t for repairs on ‘
that bathtnb within the last year, and now
it’s out of kelter again! How on 7arth1
ever managed to get fifty-eight dollars in
the bank to pay for a plain, cheap coffin In
case of my death passes my understand-'
“We have lived here fop six years, Mr.
Bowser, and there has never been anything 1
wrong with the bathtub before.”
“But why does it leak now?” he de-
“ Did y°“ ““oily and deliberate.
ly stand there with a crowbar and punch
?£? 1 r h , r ° Ugh it? It>a wonder to me
that business failures are increasing and
husbands committing suicide on fvery
■hand. What’s this?” 7
and P icked “P some-
^h! £,7 h h h i*2 ^ en P“ rtl y bidden under*
ant way 86 a “ d held aloft in a riiamph-
cl . ofch “Pi“” replied Mrs. Bow-
ser M1 she looked up. “I presume baby
JlWfefeifcig-lEgB the backyard” ' 7
world, is absorbed. Tbe a cumulation
of tbe positive gases causing tbe disease,
is c unoustible, and when brought ir.to
contact with the negative gas—Oxygen
—combustion follows in the tissue of the
bndy, so generating vital force and en
abling every organ to j roperly perform
us normal futetions. The blood passe-
through thr lurgs to have tbe impuri
ties which it has gathered up in tfo
course of its circulation through th
tody burn d out by tbe Oxygen which
we inhale with every breath; thus put
ting the entire task cf cleansing th
blood upon the lung->, and they are of
ten not able to perform their duty
nroperlv, and disease ensues. The
E'ectrop ise causes tbe combustion tef
tNke r ace in tbe capillaries, by the
Oxtgeu which is absorbed at ev»ry
pore, so that tbe blood returns to the
lungs with tbis woik more than ban
done. Our book of fifty pages which
we send to any address free, fully ex
plains the theory of the Electropoise and
its cures, besides giving numerous testi
monials trom those who have been cured
by the treatment. We take pleasure i»
pointingtnthe numerous letters tha
we haye from p omineut and reliahi
people in Georgia ai d adjoining Statt-<
who endorse|tbe Electropoise. Tbe at
tention of all impartial investigator
especially the me deal profession is In
vitel to the "treatment. Atlantic
Elkctbop jisb Co , Washington, D. C
Overworked Women.
In journeying through districts, farm
mg and manufacturing, it is pathetic to
observe that scarcely a woman who en
ters the tram has not some physical de
tect. Her back is bowed, one shoulder
or one hip is higher than the other. She
limps a little, or the joints of her fingers
are crooked. Her gait is uncertain; she
baa nothing that maybe called carriage.
When she sits down she slumps. Her
muscles, except those that have been
trained to their daily tasks, have neither
force nor directness. To the eye she has
lost the gracious presence that is a worn
aDd h^ 01110 a machine
adapted to the performance of certain
sortsofwork. She may have within tlfo
meekness of Griselda, the virtue of
Caesars wife, the, proud maternity ol
Coraeha, the lofty piety of St. Theresa,
an the same she has been deprived bi-
S rC ^ 8 -« nCe ’ s ^ T0Qndi “g8. the tyranny
u and , custom of that which
should have been hers, and it is sad to
see.—New York Evening Sun.
No-hing but Pure Fresh Stock. Prompt and careful attention given t<
all orders.
No. 11 Broad Street, Long’s Old Drug Store,
NEXT DOOR TO C. A. SCUDDER.
NO PISTOLS AND COFFEE IN
OURS.
We are now prepared to deliver good
in any portion of the city. We have lot
of good sfor housekeepers at the lowec
cash prices—and don’t vou know i»
best to pay cash and haye no wrangli-
or hard feelings at the end r f the monr b 5
Come.to Wilson’s Cash Store aud but
and wb'n tbe winter is all over, nefcc
and P’ent will surely follow. P
J. P. Wziaojr, Agent.
Suits to Order!
FINE GOODS $25
Put up in First Class Style
OVER COATS $25.
PANTS PROM $6 UP.
JOS. MINDER.
THE T a 11.014,
No 9, College Avenue,
i
Still they go. No end to the sal»
of the
“Only” Pencil Sharpener.
The best thing of the kind on th
market.
JACKSON A BUr KR CO
NEW GOODS!
Has received her new MI1.LINJSH
GOODS. The ladies aiej nvited to «
<ind examine ump.
TIME TO.GO WEST.
Now is the;time*to take advantage 01
he low rates and quick schedules offer-
id by the Richmond & Danville rail
road to the “Great West.” The through
0 %r route via Atlanta and Birmingham
is the short line to Arkansas, Texas,
Missouri, Indian Territory, and the oth-
ir states of that wonderful seotion
Double daily schedules reaching all
Western points mo3t comfortably apd
quickly this way. Baggage checked
through to destination.
For maps, time-tables, and other in
formation call on any agent of thv-
great system, or address
W. H. TAYLOE, A, A. VERNO
Dist. Pass. Agt, Pass. Agt.
10 Kimball House, 10 Kimball Houa.
Atlanta. Ga. Atlanta. Ga.
How About Blank BojKS
If you are going to open up a n<
e?-, r>r want, a Ledger, Journal
Cash Book, don’t forget t i call si
s-v us We ba^ h- largest lii
ever before in A hevo,
JACKSON & BURKE <’0
JOSEPH Cl LLOTTi
STEEL PENS
NOS. 303— 404—i 70—£04,
And other styles to suit all hands. f
THE HOST PEEPECT OP P2®
S O APS
—AND—
PERFUMERY
IN GREAT VARIETY.
We keep always on hand the best
makes of
STATION ERY.
F.vervboly koows what ‘ Blair.’
And “H ke’a” g'ods are We are
selling lots of them.
JACKSON A BURKE COMPANY.
Our Stock J of Standard
13 R IT & s
IS COMPLETE.
PRESCRIPTION
Accurately Prepared.
Jno. Uri l S
ColIegelAvenne.
Nov 10. Mario-* 1 *
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