Newspaper Page Text
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Foil i ‘itK l 10.>'T,
WINF1KLH SCOTT HANCOCK,
Of Pennsylvania.
Fob Vicz-I’rbwmst,
WII.UAM If. ENGLISH,
of Ltdinna
I’KtSIIIIATUl. I.l l.v Toils.
stair at l.lirgc.
Hon. J • ( RLM id P.ichmoiid,
lion. Ii. E KEN Vtiyj, ol Jpiiojolpb.
At.TWKK.VrV
lion. L J,< FAS. *1
lion. A. I’ll ADAMS, of 1 hath
V ViluWi WulnioN’I'tt
Er- - fMif'i’uUcl'd^hhigr 1 H» [s f 01*1 i!.!« LkiAH'l 11, «»f iHfair.
1 1 *'
r,
r. UK.UBKN n. NIMii.T, »r Putnam
‘ ve'xei vi'V'Vi V't MGNhf 1 , N ('u" 1 1 , 1 L"e" w
■■ \V 11,Id am E M M Of g« in,,- ((
A I.TEI
•JOSKl’llRS <’ \ Ml’, of Emanuel.
w ■WILLIAM iiai;i:j>
n JAMES lii-dinr
v III SI!) r < of Harris.
c kckmjvg'g 'll, i';i< osm'iwt.iwin
I’F.TKIt W All.N \ HER, or < .,i,i,
acji MMJON g"!; oVI•' !ii' S \''ui!' L!,< "
Foil .i.f HKTuav or .state,
V. V. BA BN K I T, of Fulton,
Fob EiiMI’TIIOM.kM iUNK.IlAI.,
WILLIAM A. WKIGIIT, of Kiehmcmd,
X. Foil TmtAMUlKB,
D. Sl’KER, of Troup.
Fon AtTojim v Geneiiai.,
CLIFFORD A NDF.liSON, of Bibb.
I III) l*i:Opl<l’N ( Tmicc.
Fou Cknuhi VIIll'll Djnthut.
ALENA SDF.lt If. STEPHENS,
iiE.xiKMi»KK that Saturday, SepUmilH'i
I ltli, in tlie liny uiqmintfv.l for hotting
the primary election m the several isfll
lnp districts.
Attention is(cnl!ed to the announce¬
ments of candidate* under their proper
heading. The people must decide on
their reqpeeUve merits for the otlices
asked for.
“Tiik Heatiieucotbs,” is ths title
of n new wrial story, by Miss Mat Orlm,
of Atlanta, tlui (list chapters of which
will appear in tlm Savannah ItVr Uy
A'ois of Satin day, August tlHtli. With¬
out anticipating, wu may assure the lov¬
ers of pleksant fiction that a rich treat
awails'thfim in pet ft sal of this charming
alovy ot honte life. KuTmcrfbeiw, to have
it on tiro, slioulij send In thoir names at
oihis to J, Jl. EhUU, Savannah, Ga.
Subscription, si* Inontlis, igl ; oqo year,
ao Twt
Onn readers will bo pained to learn of
the death of the Hoft. Miles W. I .awls,
of Uroenesboro, which occurred sudden¬
ly yesterday morning. Colonel Lewis
wax ’ nil able lawyer and a prominent
politician, nml his demise will be regret¬
ted throughout this section of thv state,
where he was widely known and univer¬
sally esteemed. His death was an¬
nounced in Court yesterday evening, and
on motion of Olonel John V. Reid, His
Honor Judge Pottle ordered an adjourn¬
ment till this morning.
Wr have received eo.ee u imw
v iv 'fur f n Z
puper gazetteer P 1 ’ “ of '
io most . emi , fn..> , uipileil, , , il .. . ns cel
tainiy Hie himdao.nesi, me, issued
, ; " ."’"A'.' V '■..... T' T"i u
, a ;;v " '
V "! Z h TZ
hs n .oml..,tmp . * i xt< nsm advertis
nm bun au and wo 1, Hove them to be
:' )Kr a! ' ,!
;;.....I'' . - 'orefoie, iu
commend.ng , ilu^. ■*>'-To the pnMic.
Ti press »0W admits that
tlie stone.' in circulation to the effect
.......... "»v, i.r,
coumnfid i the compilation of the
Southern . ecu-us returns , may safely , , bo .
set down as falsehoods. Under General
" a-.-.: ................
on’, tic count! v las been conducted on
purely bits ne • principW. Honest and
iNiiii|n ot i::. • have 1 ecu imploved, and
the results tin > announce an untUiv of
HDi'lit ! * o! : g t . m.i> rxiKK't the
cry of fraud t. -• louder as tho pollti
e.d camiKtijn < 1 ids, but it does not
dt soive ;u iiKeinion. la this counec
non the i pb a .V.-i-fA .L i.i .cm
savs of'the »TI:* ae in the population
- ,1 • suu s is certainly sulli
Cient!> as.. ; to excuse the ,1 sus-
1 h-i; that : s i irnmlmd bv tlieenu
inci.uois ,i.v ‘‘'"ac. Two tin 1* -.s
xi i< !i s<. x ( ,0 ti.'.ov - - cb i:t iqv'ii me
, ' •• w u ...... , ,mlicd “ l
U : - : I ..’I s .. - tl it til. .
'
statistics obi., 1 flat U cci ,,, of IsTo
do not dese tv. .piimt cnlid, ucv. The
r,.;int was!. 1 . .s'U.x i: !> Kiintuer
alors wen* m i- i'll!: 1 U-canse iticv
v' u ’air i c'iir-i'vU'iU, l 'it m or
del' to reward re• 11.- > seiviecs or In
lompass jv l.i.E iitiig-ns. 1 .IB tune
the census has everywhere Is'eu taken
upon business principto, which may in j
part account lor the change of figures.
Another iistlui MV Las 1* u at work to
produce Uie ,r i.; i, miL.
t »v
-s given some
than t! inert f.vrt that the iutrt is
r than was antieinated, the state
uients of the emu aators mu -,t i«; re
accurate
' *
A STKOM. (.Ill KIISMIAf.
Some fault has been found, and we
eiieve justly, with General Garfield on
■uni of a s,s-ech made on the floor of
1 House a few years ago, wherein he
i: “ I believe that tlie fame of Jeffer
ii is waning and the fame of liamiiloii ,
waxing in the estimation of the Ameri
ran (xoplc, and that we are gravitating
toward a stronger government.” If he
had substituted the term “Republican
patty ” for ‘‘American people” Ins
would iiavo hit tl.« mark m the center, j
And eve,, this projection may l«: mml
ifiud, for had tin? Hf.'puldicmi party iii its
entirety ilemanded a "stiong govern
liient ” General Grant would haye re
eei,ed the nomination '
at Chicago. We
may he “ gravitating tow aril a stronger
ill,, laughter evoked
by tli© witty brwlinrz on Uie coming
n, ‘‘ ir " ****** *>«* *«'»*«•* linec
shows that the Am«iican people are not
prepared for Irn|ieiiali»ra, or a limit
! «1 mo.ia, ehy, or even a partisan life lease
the flepublic.
The Philadelphia Nwlh Amtrimn i H
Hi" oldest daily pajier in the United !
States. Republican in polities, it has
always l.el.1 itself strictly conservative,
and consequently linen looked np to in
t-elli the .Vortl. and thoSouth as a me
dialer between the extremists of both
parties, and an able and judicious advi
ser of those afRIiating tvitli the party
whose principles It advocates. It is no
Hap I rap j.....mil. It lias never indulged
in mud dinging. The editor cannot con
sciMitiousIy advocate the cv.ndidacy pf
Genera! Hancock a Pennsylvanian by
birth but at Uie same time advises the
rancorous Republican press to cease
Its attacks upon him, “as Ins cliarac
lm is unassailable.”
It,it in commenting on (ho before
mentioned utterance of General Gar
field, Colonel Me Michael says : “If Gen
end Gaiiield said this, lie uttered a great
truth, w it hout doubt. Whatever we
may accord to Thomas Jefferson as a
patriot and a .statesman, lie will stand
in history as tlie representative of disin
tegration in government. Jefferson was
an idealist, and therefore a theorist He
was the author of the Virginia resolu
tious of ««, than wjiich nothing that
liilppcned suliseijiiently Jiad a more direct
ami a slrongur impulse toward the con
vulsiougl who lKdl. It wan Thomas Jeffer
son made secession pt^sibW.’’
This may all be so ; but why exalt 1
H|p>Uto*> Burely Hamilton »»»d disparage, Jefferson
was as much an idealist
«s Jefferson—Ills.was Ihenby for a “ strong gov
moment,” and arrayed himself
against Washington and' every othei
statesman of that day. Ham
I a born artstocmt, his and this id plainly
in all writings after the
close of the war. Ilad ho lived longer
he would have openly advocated the
cause of a rich and Wooded aristocracy
to tlie exclusion of genuine democratic
principles. Washington announced tlie
-er of electing a mao to the Presi
in! chair more than twice. Ilanu
il wrote an able and specious argu
u, at in favor of a third term, or, in
tact, any number of terms, but it met
with no favor except with the Fedoralistic
cliipie the ofllce-holding-in-perpetuity
coterie. We therefore fail to see any
great difference in the idealistic tendon
of u,c Uvo b'™- One was a 4 aria
tocrai, tho other a democrat; either by
''imsolt would have wrecked tho Hupuh
lie. The strong ideas of both, combined
d ^ managemont of mat ^ who,
witljout tbeli .
lectual ijualities possessfil thf necessary
adjiuKtof plain,praotiealcommon-sense,
made the BapubUc. If Jefferson was
an secessionist, so was Hamilton
^ monarchist And. And this WHs stands stands
hiatorv
The X«rth essay on the
Wca uttered bv General Garfield is a
p ioco 0 f sophistry ; and to have been
consistent C olonel McMicbnel should
have supported General Grant iu his
'«».
--—- • -
A A Trio xnp«Ortn. North
CilAUTAryiA, N. \August, lSSik
in the “School of Languages” aud
“Teacher's Rut rent” -at this place, 1
leave to-duy for Canada; but before leav
ing will give your ramie is some idea of
t hantauqUR and the hike. Many will
inquire, where is Chautauqua f Rub
your eye on the map of the great State
®f New \ 01k, in the western extremity,
and you will tlnd Chautauqua county,
This county is uotrilatbomeand abroad ,
for her fruito. bur butter, her cheese,
Iwr her min pram tUHlner l»r enssi>< grasses, and amt well well war- w ,r
rants the apiwllation, “A laud flowing
with "itn nni„ milt and and hoiua nomj. “ Snrines -prings. mul. nml
titudiiiou- III numlkT and superabun
limit in ev« 1 flowing, ' pure, sparkling
water, irrigate the held and carry health
io tin- very .loore other inhabitants.
Kid,... the bosom of this highly
elevated land of almost mountain height
is tlie beautiful IxhI.v of writer known as
...... unko C hatituqua, *-. *»u foot above , iUe , lov-
11 of Lake IT w. or 1- •' fiet above the
level , , of . the m a, nml ...... is the highest uav -
igatxxl water on the iviiiituut. It is
twenty-four miles miles ii; in breadth, Icnsth, and hem j
1* to three aud the
greatest depth s eighty ftvl. At the
southern extremity of this lake three
iIW r>Ui let
tin: great mn nitfactiirini I James
Until. The outlet of ttfl >rms the
Con new an go river nJH aifl into the
Ohio. The lake is a dozen
beautifully modeled steam lorn two
to four decks, and are a! pt busy,
About four miles from tl !i end of
this lake, on the right Jj is this
mueh-talked-of-place, <j{||[Wiuqua. —
This is no town as many till suppose,
but a plot of land two mils in length
: *" tl one m width laid off u o avenues.
Along these avenues are located the
magnificent Chautauqua < ttages and
t( T ,t8 of every imaginable sMpe. Besides
these dwelling places there are public
buildings: the Amphitlieate* if with its
orchestra for seating 600 sjIVers, and a
seating in semi-circular tieirpf seats for
an audience of five thousan people m
«*»*»“* *"<' * covering firtwo thou
^>‘<1 more who may stand 4 easy hoar
l| iR distance of the Sjak^ tlio old
Auditorium, with its cxcell thouSfW; sjfcro strum
and a seating for five
Uie Children’s Temple, a Wilding of
Urge eajiacity, capable of
two thousand jicrsons pind wills
cUna.roou.efor separate
model arrangement after tfiMfcfui.el
ern style of l*hiloeopb*H#*JW Sunday school
Ilall of of
tlie »'icient Parthenon, one
thousand jicrsons-, the neat fhspel for
“*« tl,e J*™ round by tn, dw ellers who
w i oura thus in these graven 1’ark^n jU»e grand
I’^ee Hotel, Palestine imita
ot the Holy Land, stowing its
mountains and valleys, its river* and
lakes, ita oitlea and hamlets, and all ol
special interest to the Bible nader and
the searcher of sacred history |« model
ot Jerusalem, and innumerable models
of “atnre and art, desirable for illustra
tions in the manifold varieties of iu
steuetjon peculiar to the Assembly.
The grounds and public bilTldjngs are
brilliantly illuminated at night with
« lec tric lights, and the colored light
thrown on the fountain is beautiful he¬
yond description. .Improyemqftaen the
grounds increase yearly; this is the fifth
Ka* ot the assembly and there is now
aappoasd to be twanty thousand hT people
on the ground, \yell what all this
for * you may ask. I will give you some
idea of it. Here we have a ‘School of
Language#” for the benefit of teachers,
Principally, lasting six weeks, bsginning
on The first of July, taught b# teachers
of 8C i e " Re ' of language, of arUrand his
At the head of seveiO depart
“»W* this school are men |Vlio are
distinguished the country overjfor their
attainments and work, They ■ are not
lad by one man of dLstiuetloii, l)ut are
lne l' **- *i linked A pnpil together take for a conn one ju \ all pur- the
0 may
languages just as they like ■ |t the
bead of the Latin department i Bro
fessor R. 8. Holmes, who ofyg Jrs to
the dm m jjBMT i ffoff
the okl
or tlm uouna antt l%ws. Prom;* i Tim .
aj’ e( )>s, a native Greek, has charge of
the dei«rtment of Greek, and viws his
a better knowledge of mat lan
* ua 8 6 duric 8 this short term, than most
P u P Us « el in ordinary colleges in a whole
°° llu 8 u co«rs«- Tlie class in German is
fo charge of Professor Woman, a native
^ Germany. Professor i-alaude teaches
the French class. Professor Cook has
c ' sar k e °f the class in Anglo-Saxon,
Th « wb «fo school is under charge of Dr.
Vincent.
The “Teachers’ Retreat,” a school for
the training of teachers in the various
branches, with daily lectures on Kinder-
8» rtlen ‘ Olay Modeling, English Litfra
Sci©*Uiflc Botany, Objective Les
*>ns, Chaucor to Shakespeare, Geology,
etc.; ako dasses in Elocution, Tonic
wl-fa-System. This school opens July
20th and continues to August 3d.
Tho Sunday School Assembly begins
August 3d, lasting three weeks. These
meetiugs are intsrmingied with lectures
from the most able divine of every do
nomination, Terence, microscope seances, Mis
sionary ketures to the ohtt
dreu (Illustrated), “ChautauquaSongs”
hy the orchestra of six hundred of the
H»est singers, lectures on Alaska ami
**J5* Ghautauqua C0 ! is a great . pace, . v
!*■■ »■?? ” h “'
tenaenta, HiOlc leauers, u> it one sum
mer, and you will never regret it.
Obssrvkr *
•
m - — ------
W^t-rUerehon.
The indoreeroont of the action of our
late delegate, A. W. Mershon, Esq., by
the voters of this couuty, is no doubt
gratifving to him and his many friends.
While some of the friends of Governor
Uolquitt admit that lie may have been
too credulous aud that he may have
made some mistakes, all pgree in giving
him credit for his high character as an
honest man am) a Christian gentleman.
A Urge lnajont} ' of the people of this
county , , believe , if ,, he (Governor ., Colquitt) , , ....
should be elected his own successor lie
would .11 give ■ general 1 satisfaction; »■ con.w- . __
quciitlv they will vote for him. *
'
Vnv \ ox Torvu. IMmtti
-— • —
Hon. Frank Holden.
The old-time friends of the Hon. W.
F. Holden would be glad to honor him
with a seiit in the Senate. Siuee the pas
Sion of . the ., hour , has , subsiaeu . •, , m;\uy of .
his old friends are demanding his recog- .*
mtion , of , the . best , members . the
as one
Georgia legislature Inks had since the
days of ret -unst 1 uction. He is recognized
not only by the people of Taliaferro
county but by the people of the whole
state as having been, conspicuously instra
ment i! in the passage of the t>est laws
for Georgia. The I ite allowing crimi
nala to make their statements before
the courts of this State is said by the
late Chief-Justice Warner to he the
wised, and most humane law that was
ever enacted by a law-making power—
one that will never be repealed. lie is
the acknowledged author of the only
proposition that ever succeeded in such
a disjioaition of the State Road as to
take it out ot politics, so that it now pays
825,000 monthly into the State treasury.
Many creditable things might bd said
of Itim and what he has done. His
entire eonrse has Gen conservative, and
such as to rne<-t the wants of the people.
He would no doubt serve the people, if
called upon, to the satisfaction of both
political parties
Olu-Times Kiiik.nus.
.. A „ r „ htrw , (
uromdVia^nJuastlunatic'at^ck.^we^en^
and debilitated state of tlie system, all these
r y. ” Tin; first dose gives relief, and the
^;^a^s.ro«^mitsheai- *• keep
Dwayne’s l^illsslioulft be taken to
j the Weis ^^y^rcei^ fol
f tvf Many are ready to certify that King
j tUemS Z't'atl*T d£u*
! Son's, Greenesboro, (in.
I ITT The best chewing tobacco, •• Matta
po.ii;’’ Bird ;” the C. A. best Davis smoking A Son have tobacco, the exclu¬ “The
sive sale of them for Greene county.
Parents, yourself—it give S. S. 8. to your children—
take it eradicatet every taint.
The Iowa Meteor Purchased.
In May, 1879, the largest meteoric
stone ever beheld in America fell on a
farm in Emmet county. The farm ue
longing to Mrs. Col. C. H. Perry, of
Keokuk. The stone lay imbedded 15 feet
deep in the ground for 10 or 12 days, vis¬
ited by hundreds of people each olc
carrying off a piece of it. A friend of
Mrs. Perry, residing in this city, wrote
her asking her if she would like to have
the meteorite stored in the Davenport
Academy of Sciences. She replied that
it would cost if 150 to 8100 to get it out
and place it upon the railroad train—for
something would have to be paid the
tenant of the farm, who claimed a sort
of partnership in the ownership—and if
the academy would raise the amount it
might have the stone and welcome.
Alas ! there wasn’t a dollar in the acad¬
emy treasury, and the effort to raise
amount failed.
Then a Mr. Berge gave Mrs. Perry
8100 for the stone, she supposing he in¬
tended it for an institution in his State
—afid Mr. Beige gave the farm tenant
850 or 800 for the right of way across
his fields. And so Mr. Berge got pos¬
session of that stone, and not long since
he sold it to tlie British Museum for
and th * re ,l ..... 18 to - diiy ' , ..
weight, when wh *1 shipped °* ^i T to
London, was 431 pounds. When Mr.
Berge was exhibiting tho stone at Keo¬
kuk, Mrs. Perry secured a couple of
pieces, and one of them she has sent to
the academy Accompanying Mrs. Per¬
ry’s gift are two photographs of the orig¬
inal stone.
Do you know what made the Emmet
county aerolite so valuable ? It was un¬
like any other well authenticated rock
from heaven that eyer fell upon earth,
triolite, iron, nickel, cobalt, phospho¬
rus, copper, sulphur, lead, silver, gold,
silicia, magnesia, alumina, soda, lithia,
and potassium, all distinct, yet all to¬
gether like the particles of a granite
block. The piece in the academy lies at
the side of a sample of an reroute which
fell iu Johnson county in 1875—but the
latter is nothing but stone glazed black
with fire; and still another piece of rero¬
ute, from California, is in the ease—aud
it is composed of splints of iron.
4t Save Your Hair” Keep It Beautiful.
The “London Hair Color Restor¬
er,” the most delightful article ever
indroduced to the American people
and is totally different from all oth¬
er Hair Restorers, being entirely
free from all impure ingredients
that render many other articles for
the hair obnoxious. Where baldness
or falling of the hair exists, or per
maturely ersyness, from sickness or
natural youthful color, and cause a
healthy ill growth, cleasing the scalp
from impurities *„ ’ dandruff &c
. „ t SSt
ly perfumed, rendering the hair soft
and pliable marking it an indispen
sable article in every toilet.
Ask your druggists for London Hair
. . ‘ XorihSixtlfst ’ \\ . ,
’ Philada
• a gtfiyi
■*~ * •_
Another Otter.
The publisher is determined to place
lhe Savannah WtAl * Nt%rs in th « hands
of evervbody 3 3 in Georgia * and Florida
i , . .
; wh0 want a nrst ‘ cliiS3 neWS antl tamUy
journal, J ' and to that end we offer to send
, me jxaper irom inisaaie (August i«n;
' to March 14th, 1881, for one dollar.
1 election and *-----
1 this will cover the election ana inaug
j j uration dnyour^dollar^and of the Democratic •#y*? candidates. t ***
ana oesi nvwspaper id me muid. aq
dress J. H. Estill, Savannah, Ga.
--—♦- • -
$3jp Paulin© Lucca, the world-renowne»l
prims donna : “1 have heard the beautiful
Onrans n^’ilheit of Messrs J EsteyACo. and was
instrument’s, at the full, noble and sweet tones
of these which resemble so
^T Pi :^ .^^Tner Anmriro^Orean
f nd
Harmonium. ’ Pailixs Lucca.”
or
------
t*?* New Harness. Xexv Saddles, Xew
Halters amt Xew Bridles to arrive. C. A.
DavG A Son, Greenesboro, Ga.
MYERS & MARCUS,
JOBBERS IX
DRY GOODS,
Notions and Hosiery 9
BOOTS, SHOES, HATS AND CLOTIILVG.
rplIK JL UNDERSIGNED would respectfully inform the merchants of Taliaferro and
and adjoining counties, that their Fall Stock is now being received, and in price amt
assortment is uncqnaled business by any establishment that lias ever of been brought to this market. X special
feature ot our is the a
BOOT, SHOE AND HAT HOUSE
Entirely distinct from our Dry Goods, Xotions and other Departments In our new
store wfll bv found the largest and best selected stock of SHOES and HATS we have
ever had, and we fee! satisfied that it will be to the interest of purchasers to inspect our
stock before purchasing elsewhere.
August IH, 1HH0.-—33yl. MYERS gst> & and 2S3 MARCUS, Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
DAWV (1 MILLS & GRIST MILLS,
bane ‘ Mllls, . Gm . Engmes, ‘. botton ‘ Smews, ‘ .
I Shamng Pulleys, Ilanger's Journal Boxes. Mill Gearing, Gudgmns. Turbine Water
“'11m:ls,(_‘rin Gearing, CHEAP! JUDSON'S GOVERNORS, DISTON'S CIRCULAR
SAW, uml Hummers and Files, Benin]: and Babbit Metal and Brass Fitting, Globe and
WW): Ynlvn-s nml Whistles, Gauges. etc., Iron and Brass Castings, Gin Ribs, and Gold
! Mime Machinery, from
GEO R. LOMBARD a .. 00.,
I FOREST CITY FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKS.
5 Near 34%;!" the lh-miring Water Tower. Promptly 110 Fenwlrk done at Low street. Prices. jlllwfiCW-j-Y AUGUSTA. GA.
I --.A._._..._. ._._.. _ WW
I .n..
! W. N. MERCIER,
! (SUCCESSOR T0 BENSON & MEBCIER,)
! Cotton No. Factor 1 3, Warren and General Block, Oommlssmn Augusta, . . Ga.., Merchant,
5
2 Will make Liberal Cash Advances on Consignments.
‘ Business Oomspondonoo Respectfully Sohciud» 18m6
GREENESBORO!
The Great Excitement!
GOODS MARKED DOWN!
5 Cent Counter. 10 Cent Counter. Bargain Tables.
The People Coming in Crowds!
MANY NEW GOODS PUT ON THESE TABLES! MANY OLD GOODS
Marked Down to almost nothing placed there also ! The People Excited ! Well they
may be. Tho following is a partial list of THE FIVE CENTS COUNTER. Every
Item on this counter only 5 cents :
Dress Goods, Vegetable Trowels, Hand
kerchiefs. Extracts, Spring Whistles, Tape Measures, Hand
Dolls, Baby Battles and
Scoots, Pickle Forks, Pencil and Protector,
Essence Jamaica Ginger, Tea Bells, Child’s
Watches, Pie Plates, Zinc Mirrors, Funnels,
Graters, Good Wash Pans, Two Boxes of
French Blacking (good, for 5 cents), Good
Note Paper, Box Paper, Combination Hatch
et, Hammer and Nail-Pull, Music Books
with choice Music, Package Illuminated
Scriptural Texts, Scholar’s Companion, slate-pencil, con
sisting of pencil, rule, pen, &c.
Good Ink (2 for 5 cents), Metal Coffee-Pot
Stand, Metal Sadiron Stands, good Mouse
Traps, Towels, Handkerchiefs (5 cents each
and 2 for 5 cents), Socks, Bleached Hose,
Pocket-Books, Children’s Hose, white and
All the above only Excited. a partial Every list. This Counter is being con
imiallv filled up. No Wonder the People are Store of Reader of The Democbat
should see THE FIVE CENT COUNTER at the
C. A. DAVIS & SOX, Greenesboro, Ga.
- o
]®* Every Housekeeper who buys a Bill off our Five Cents and Ten Cents Counters or
Bargain Tables is entitled to one of our Patent Stove Lifters, free of charge.
C. A. DAVIS <t SOX, Greenesboro, Ga.
-o
Ten Cents Counter.
Thirty-six inch Whalebone. Scholar’s Com-
8S?.iS5ftJES , hSr-&i2a t ?»:
Ma({ic Photos, Long Clothes Lines, Mer
chant’s Pocket Scissors, Toy Tea Tubs, Large
Tin Pans, Coffee canisters, canisters,
nice Leather Belts, Autograph Albums.
ty, White Stockings good quality, Colored
#
Every one of the abovs is only 10 cents—some of the goods worth from 25 to so cents,
Every day finds new items added to this list Goods have dwlined Davis protects your
them. Rcmembt'r that everv housekeeper who patronizes our 5 cent, 10 cent and Bargain
Counters is eiditled to one of cur Patent Stove Lifters, free of charge. FIRST COMB
FIRST SE . DAVIS & SOX. Greenesboro,
^ ^ Ga.
-0--
UiU Rnwiyaln 4 * 1 " Tnlklna
RTMOICE! ft THE DAY OF HIGH PRICES
LET THE PEOPLE IS OVER
for this season. Prints Marked Down. Domestics Marked Down. Almost everything
at Low Prices. A Line of Good Dress Prints at 5 cents. Good Colored London Cord at
cents. On the Bargain Table* we shall make a did Specialty the FIVE of Extra Dow Prices—Priee*
that will make you wonder more, if possible, than and TEX Cents Cooo
Wrs The catalogues In the of meantime these Tables busy are hands not yet complete. putting the They Goods will appear the Tables in thera for
C0 { UTnns s^on. are on
Your Inspection at prices which will almost amaze you for cheapness. We give every
Housekeeper J who bnvs a Bill off the Bargain Tables one of our Patent Stove amd Kettle
fn o{ charf , e ; M we should forget to put it in, please ask for it.
We append only a very few items in the catalogue of Bargain Tables r
Ladies' Summer Gloves, good ones, 15 cts;
Summer Gloves, 15 cents ; Gent’s
50 Dress cents; Shirts, Towels, Uundned, 10c, loo, 75 cents iwc, ^Neglige, «.5C, wortn
much more ; Fiee Dress Goods, 10 cents ;
Handkerchiefs, 30c, 40e, 50c, 75c. per doz.;
Shirt Fronts, 5 cents eaeh ; Dress Prints. 5
cents a yard ; Printed Lawns. 714 cents per
yard; Ladies' Shade Hats, 10 to 25 cents:
C. A. Davis & Son 5
Greenesboro’, Ga.
AprillLimt-o-o.
colored, Children’s Bibs, Marking Brushes,
Mucilage Books, with bottle and brush, Mwmoran
ilum 2 for 5 cents, Envelopes, 2 for
5 cents, Note Paper, 2 for 5 cents, Boys’
Knives, Nickel-back Tuck Combs, Round
Combs, Coarse Comhs, Fine Combs, Whisk
Brooms, Toy Brooms, % doz. cakes Toilet
Soap Tablet (only 5 cents), Paper Lamp Shades,
Fine of Court Plaster, Wicker Rat
ties, nice Dress Buttons. 1 dozen Spools of
Thread, Ladies.’Nice Collars, 1 yd. White
Rntf, Transparent Soap, Shaving Soap, 1 pr.
Scissors, Pencils, 5 for 5 cents, Bead Neck
laces, Imitation Coral Necklaces, Ladies’
Bows, Laee Tidies, Napkins, Shirt Bosoms,
Silk Fringe Fans, 5 cents a yard, Linen open and
shut largo Palm Leaf Fans, 2 for S
cents.
Good Colosne, Coin-HoPters rocket Knives,
Combs, quire of good Letter Paper and a
package good Envelopes (both for to cts.),
Shoe l.rusher, Nice Ties for Ladies, Silk
Handkerchiefs, Silk-finish Bandanna Hand
Shut Fans, Sets of Jewelry, nice Dolls, nic*
*’ ^ as 1 R,bbons ’ flne Fo ^‘ Wk »L
Tt
Suspenders 10 cents; very nice suspenders
25 cents ; Toilet Soap at nominal figures ;
nice Tabte Ctetors, $1^5; Gent s an 'J
..
rur, »f»oi anu oiruw nais, _ <ui inarKM i
down; offered Many these Lines Tables of Shoes prices and Slippers
on at which will
make them move. Look for Extended Cat
alogoe. Coim'to see the exceedingly Chea*
Stock offered by