Newspaper Page Text
The Democrat.
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
BY CLEM. C. MOOPr.
CRA U rORDVILLE , GEORGIA
Bn'.ired at the postoffles at Crawford*.’>,
flemg a. a. afteon 1 -rlaaa mail rra*ter.
King I-* pohl of Belgium H<'crna to
feave wt hi- heart upon the construction
of a railroad in Congo, Africa
MexY - < njo/s the privilege of being
the first c.untry to have exclusive priv
lieges in Japan, from which hitherto all
foreigners ). ivc been debarre I.
Franc-, which a short time ago prid¬
ed itself < :i its efficient navy, now la
meats the fact that her naval armament
i* nntiq ifited and behind the times.
A c m ir.y in England insures against
burglar , . Over there in England there
are -aid I be no fewer than 28,723
known : over sixteen years of age.
la re' ’■ v ar-i it has been claime 1 by
ebemis’* that the changes attending the
ci i>1 * it m nf n.e'nl* in nods ate only
in ))tiil !* i ll and in part chemical.
A bill mj cn introduced into tho
Itrili.-:i Ibmof Commons restricting
the be,'.' it < London buildings to (JU
feet, or a- i melt more as the width of
the trr • <•■ ere 1 * lhit figure
The n udi-jiie of Pennsylvania,
with headquarters at New York city,
has informe 1 the j ublie that out of tho
atilhr.iei- • ..a) mined, no* more Ilian
forty per r. nt. is available for consump¬
tion.
The Turkish -..verniii'int, in order to
encouragi ... mufactun-m in that coun
try, has i- (I d a prrclainution, stating
that iiia. hi.-ry ami tools will be mi
milted fr. daring a period of fifteen
years.
Observe - ‘he Detroit Ere> /*.■•• «*: “The
Sepoys of India kicked up a groat re¬
hellion ubmt hog’s grease, but their
fnat-ex have * '.ranged in the lust five years
and they now eat American ham and
bacon with :u much gusto as on Euro
pean.”
Two su i,I,■ s Lave been recorded late
)y in Berlin "f promising young men,
Um* ««**.•. ,.t rtd. ........*<* *«i.o >• ••-«
•iuced to commit the fatal net from dea
pair at having failed to pass their ex.
ami nation, Tho mania for suicides
pervades fill c! ns es, both sexes and all
ages. Nlimiters of boys at school, ser
van t maids, man who liave been un
lucky in prof: s,ion,si life, the moment a
critical t line < nines succumb to a sense
of despair.
! ho t.r-t buv ever . I.actcd , to prevent
the niutili.'ion f herses by docking their
vtly pulsed the Massiu-liu
* P,,S : ”. A ' * ”‘ 1 ' 1 / 11 !ho
puui* imcnMor the oi cn ■. in ihc dn- i
' *' '
•
1,11 At AU \ 1 ‘ ’ a " ' *
penalty 1 >"» fin*-. Mi. (.corge I.
Aiig*‘!l, lh' lent of tn* Mi ..cha.. tis
'' A,Um . ", ’'. \F' | ,. n "Y"' '. .
',' 1 ' ' ' * ' : Y'
•' ■ ■ ■ * 11
©er*on, in I» ’’ 1 ‘ • p i.o:ui
ftiLr mu h Hint A\. " 11 ‘ IV 1 nr
fc.nvli.sli .... i •* h baud'' "•••’ ' c *
fondue s 1 . . t , , 1.11 i»i i <ju !| tht
In a iveen ttirc on unitary science
•• Ill > s;a!t!;; safuitea: ton was it in
regncl to the pul }iic health, , more
trull, di-< c, in Indio, where v? p’O
port tot >us tn '-i f.»r 'F <': i" i s
txj ml t lout of every million
•onutiUy, nil the tioath to reaches 10
pur eonu t the p 'pulation iu many
CMC A, 4 | cent l> lag the lowest. This
t'narnit'U* rate is duo wholly to
the in <! at mm able neglect of clean! i.
nos- and Shi* u e id wa:< ■ : nil 1 by the
w.-isliin ,s e: the polhiied soil and the
decay in ; < arekisses of thousands of ani
■ah, h.an.nn firings included, YVher*
ever ear :! preeautionarv measures have
been adopted the rate of mortality fell
at once fr m 7 jwr cent, tv' lj j*er eaut.
or less.
A curious iistration <>f tin* treasures
of the s i , overlooked for a 1 ng
time, is th( \X mt acral w x in
Utah. it was - rove tit l thri < us
ago on lie the T> ver and Hio
Grande 11 an area of
15<* ac:c‘. (*ver ! ons a year are
secured. It 1 K I s Ko the " \ tout is
made by Ives, aud can tn- u e t for the
same purr in x vi vv tu piraf
line in making candles, and is used in
the insu iti n of e ectrie wires. It
peed* n acfining for ordinary u*c*.
Tho a very is a hint to our land
owners mat their farms often eon torn
rieht*« that are overlooked. Th#
cytva iia fanners worked the oil fields
for getter-.:■ >v> without a dream of the
f s-aiUi u_ Ur fwk
THE DEMOCRAT AWJ-’OKD V II.LE. GEORGIA.
A Life’s Twilights.
When the lingering hours were laden
With the spoil* of a summer flay,
And a ivr»yk of light and beauty
On 1 lie far horizon lay ;
When the sky grew -oft with twilight,
Ere the -tor-, began to throng,
Bhe pas.-ssl me lightly humming
A snatch of a sehoo day song;
And the dream - till m we* my fancy
That 1 dreamed with a heart agio*
As she trinjied away to th ■ .sunset,
To the sunset long ago.
As lovers part we parted,
Win*re the winding paths divide,
tVhen the evening < -: oudh were golde*
And the day grew dreamy eyed.
IFr fatw was bright with blushes,
And her <*;. <■«*. v, i h smiles and tears,
! While the sunlight f» 11 around us
| Like a dream of coming years,
And the air seemed hushed with music
That whispered soft and low,
As she tripled away to the sunset,
To the sunset long ago.
There's a spot when- « lent shadows
j Whan the run is brightest, lie;
! There's a grave ben nth the maples,
Where the wii 1 winds sink and sigh.
Arid there I often wander,
With a saddened heart, alone,
When the dewy night-wind murmurs
Of the noisy day that's flown.
And recall the dr* am* I cherished
Era the world gr vv dark with woe,
When they bore her away to the simsof,
To the sunset long ago.
There are shadow* f illing round mo
An I t Jw* <Jurku<*' »on will close,
For my star is wif'Jy sinking
To the night from which it rose,
And I often hear fh • whispers
Of hovt ring spirit, bands
Ai d the \v ird and airy music
That floats from spirit lands.
Vet each dream in my fancy ling rs,
That I dromne 1 so long a. <»,
Ah I move away to th ur.s t,
To the sun f dying glow.
— V. McArthur m Jh truit Free Press.
100 MUCH ALIKE,
BY LIEUT. J. DAliK CHANDLER.
|
“Yes,” a- nted Mr. Bird, with evi 1
dent appr, through Gabon, as his he iron-gray ran his fingers hair; |
carelessly
1 j “yes, sir, girls, m you and observe, their li.ienesi they are to each very j
pretty ;
i other, in every way, U truly wonder- i
; fiii."
“The remark was made in answer to a
tribute of respect which the writer hud j
p)id to a pair of young Imliei—1 use the
word “pair” advisedly, because they
^ Vore twins -who had paused out of the
j 0l p u , 0 of y Ir ouc 0 f t ] u . oldest and
most rospecte 1 menibers of the Middle¬
sex bar.
hiicw the mother <>f thoss gills
" and-their >.sn>nt« more.
than tluriy yoais ago. 'Hie grand pgr
cuts of those cirls were clients of tho
*nan with whom I rend law, and aftcr
[ ward their children lie cam.! my clients,
and now 1 am the VM adviser of both
tho grandchildren. I don’t think, how¬
ever, that, those children are as much
alike as were their mother and her sis
ter. You could uot tell them apart at
all, unless you had them together.
At this point one of tin-young ladies
returned, with a little rush aid flurry,
j saying, ia tt very pretty tone.
J “! 1,c ’g your pardon, Mr. Bird, but 1
went off without my gloves. ”
' Don t apologize, don t apologize, 1
|‘ r ay, Miss— Mis,s -ah, Mi<s Annie. ]
am only too glad too *ec you in my
fico or my home, at any time.”
“Alice, you mean, Mr. Bird; but 1
thank you for the compliment all the
Mme,” an 1 away she fluttered.
“Confound is V growled the old gen- !
|j e „, a „ ( as lie resumed his seat, after i
closing the door upon tho fair visitor.
“1\1 have sworn that one was Annie.’’
Then ho looked up wiih a smile, after
thinking a few minutes, and resumed: j
“If you can spare five minutes and care
to hear it, l will tell you how 1 came
near going crazy getting acquainted
with the mother of these young ladies
and her sister.”
Of course, nothing would please me
better, and 1 said so at once. Mr. Bird
produ d an ancient and most respects
ble brand of cigars, and when we had
lighted up he proceeded:
‘■The maiden name of those young
Indies’ mother mid l er twin si-tcr was
Van Set Ivor, and their father, old ,lehn
Van St,\ i r. \\a> a large farmer and
miller, quite wealthy, residing near
Princeton. 1 had been admitted to the
bar only about a year when he died, and
my preceptor in whose office 1
still located, had the settlement of the
estate.
“On one occasion he wrote to the
girls, who were the only heir*, that he
needed certain mtnoranda from some
papers in the homestead, an.l th.at on a
day he lren.io toned he won d be there to
get them, asking the girls to look the
papers up in the meantime. When the
dav came the old man was particularly
and me to tak hn
horse- and do tin* cr: d; and I was
only too glad Aa-.aA toW 'lge kirn.
“In due r t. .it hod the home
stood, w receiv A a Hard, elderly
' v fiv»r ... ed into the par
LA, 4 i ■was t c i :ae
.
brightest #ad most ifu! ...... . g i„. .a
dies 1 had ever fflvt w I to: J her
( t
who I was and how I came L to be
there.
“‘That is all satisfactory, Mr. Bird.
We are glad to see any friend of Mr.
Adair’s. Be seated, and I will have
the papers for you in a few minutes.
Excu-e me, please,’ and she disap¬
peared. thisljgng
“I at pleasurably of the
young lady who had just left me, when
the housekeeper came in with refresh¬
ments, after the then good, old-fash¬
ioned custom, and soon left me to enjoy
them. I had been alone again but a
very short time, it appeared to me,
when the young la ly returned with pa¬
pers in her hand; but instead pf coming
forw.rd, she stopped and staj sd at me
in the most embarrassing way.
“ ‘Did you find he papers ! I asked,
in iny best society tones.
“ ‘Sir!’ she exclaimed, th Tack
Frost in her beautiful voice ‘Did I I
what?' |
“ ‘Find the went after. ,
papers you
1 1 t What arc you talking abput? Who
are you, sir, and pray what bye doing
here?’
“ ‘The only thing I’m doi£ »t pres¬
ent, madam,’ I responded, in tones
quite as glacial as her own, j is leaving |
here as soon as possible.’ resjlied, j
“ Oh, thank you,’ she with
lofty urbanity, as the maddest young
man in New Jersey slamme*^ the door
behind him.
•‘Long afterward I learned that I had
hardly driven away when the house
keep 1 r re-enter'd the room, and Miss
Laura Van Scriver, with her dignity still
at its full height, demanded:
“ ‘Who was that horrid, impudent
young man I found in the parlor just
now?" f
“ ‘Why, lie’s the young man Mr.
Adair sent down for some papers that
Miss Maggie has gone to get. Where
is be?’ ;
“Miss Laura remanded by dropping j j
into a-cream: a chair and exclaiming, with ' almost |
Mrs. “ *Oh, Elkins, my! I haven’t actually I drove done it? the Why, poor! |
fellow etc of the house. What in the
world will I do? Don’t, for gracious j
sake, tell Maggie. I’ll make it up with
\j r , Adair somehow, indeed I will.
“Tho result was that M:ss Maggie
Van Scriver never hoard of my cavalier
treatment, and was for a time filled with
wonder as to what manner of business |
muu I could possJ” Tying driven j
fifteen mile? to do an «s 1 and
tl.en 'vce ■ II without courte- or Jj>er
ttKC
■ nursed my wrath nut 1 kept’ u nice
and warm until I reached tome, and
then pome l it all out 16 .Mr. Adair,
whose laughter was so long and uproar
ii u- that i took on a fresh installment
nf virtu >ih In di :r nation - and teas about j
giving the old genthm m a piece of my
mind when he bade me shut up, while :
bo Wiped away the tears of hilarity and j i
comforted me by saying: 'Bfrd, t my |
dear fellow, it h all my fault, JirU utterly
f or g,.t to tell you that the flat me !
twins,and so terribly alike you
can’t tell one of them from
“Tho next day brought asking a wo^Iering what
letter from Miss Maggie,
hatl t aused my sutlden and meoinfort
aide departure, and would ?r. Adair
plca-rn tell her what it all meant anyhow,
“ ‘Now, here’s your C.iamd, Bird,
said the <11 man. handing ».? the let
ter. ‘Ju-t take my team and have
another drive down there. \hu can fix
up tho mistake, whatever i is, ia a
ji'Tv, and get what I want his time
sine.
‘A"ay I went, aud in due -imo "as
in the Van Scriver parlor. taok a
criiicul look at the young lad' ns she
came forward and offered me ler haul,
which I lost no time in taking I was
sure of Maggie Van Scriver new.
** ‘I’m v ry . 1 id to sea you,Mr. Bird,
Prav what made you leave so mceremo
niously on Monday?’
•* ‘Well, Miss Maggie, I thought it
was about the best thing I co-id do ua
der the cireum* ances. ’
* TV h.it? Just because I offered
yi ii a little refreshments?’
“ N >t at all. The re fre - hnmts were
as acceptable as they were gracefully
tendered.’
“ ‘Then why did you go a*ay before
\ I returned?’
“1 didn’t go before you returned. I
staid until you cam a back and practi
; eally turned of the house.’
me out
“ *1 turned you out cf t^e house!’
she exclaimed, in b auk-'astonishment,
Why, I never did any thing of the kind.’
“1 am sorry to contradict a lady; but
you certainly did.
“B this time I had forgotten all
about the twins in the case, aid Miss
Maggie's brow darken-d ominously as
>lie sa:d gravelv:
“ Mr. Bird, have you been drinking?
lam I wish not you to story distinctly teller; undarst^d nmfll say that
a
room never for sow the you paper*.’ after I went out t ^jf this
** >F ^ \ 4 a Suriver, I want ir equal-
1 ly, distinctly j-.,- ,i and - i emphatically . , borne . m
miad that I ant net a :ar, and df you
»
Lad mot in effect turned me out of tho
house, pretending to know nothing
about me, I should not have gono
away.’ flashed
‘‘Then Miss Maggie’s eyes as
she retorted:
“ ‘And you cannot oblige me more
than by going away again. ’
“I was half way across the yard to
my carriage when I heard a tearfully
penitent voice crying: ‘Oh, Maggie!
Cali him back Don’t let him go! It
was I that did it!'
<l I turned in considerable astonish¬
ment, and there stood both girls on the
porch, looking so terribly alike that,
staring at them in ssmi-idiotic wonder,
I could not for the life of me have told
which was the other.
“There is but little more of it. The
story of how Laura ‘tired me out’ and
concealed the fact from Maggie had to
betoVl numberless times, until the moon
shone brightly down upon my pleasant
reflections as I pursued homeward the
lonely real that was not lonely at all.”
“Weil,” asked the writer, “is that
all there is of it?”
“Yes,” said Mr. Bird, with a queer
smile, “except that I am the uncle of
those two girls that just left us and the
mischievous Laura is their aunt.”
Curious Mexican Beelles.
An industrious Mexican beetle in tho
window of a jewelrr on upper Broad¬
way furnishes amusement to large
crowds almost every hour of the day.
It is a curious looking insect, and even
persons well versed in natural history
are utiablc at first sight to tell exactly
to what variety it belongs, It looks
like a cross between a big black sjiider
and a tumble bug.
The beetle has a velvety blue back,
with the legs of a spider, Around the
neck is a gold band attached to a thread
that holds tlie insect to a miniature liu
man skeleton. Tho beetle crawls up
aad down tho skeletou with the regn
i ari ty of clock work. So precise are the
movements that nearly cverv one mis
'
fake8 u for toy
The other afternoon Walter B. Price
and Senator Stadler spent some time
pondering over tho beetle, “I don’t
believe a piece of mechanism could be
as perfect us that,” exclaimed tlie Sena¬
tor.
Mr. Price, who is a great student of
natural history, insisted that Nature had
never constructed such a looking in
sect, and as a result of the difference
of ojiinion a wager was male. I accom
panied the two gentleman iuto the
i 1.4 . w f ile j , V(‘ 1 ,*.
said that it was a live Mexican beetle.
“It is a most curious insect,” he
said, “and it is ai bu-y r a; a bee. Wo
have put on a false back of blue velvet
to give it a brilliant appearance. We
do quite a trade in them. Ladies wear
them a , charms to their chains. The
Baroness Blanc set the fashion of wear
ing them here in New York. I don’t
know j us t how long they will live, but
r know of , CV( t al that are ov. r live
years of a^e. lam at-a loss to under
st aud how they exist, for they never
eat or drink. We keep them in a show
cftS3 with our waiches. Some of them
j ! aro very intelligent, and one of the
c i er ks trains them to do a number of
cu ( e things. If he whistles they will
come and crawl up his arm. They are
as cunning as'possu ns. The: turn on
flicir Backs and pretend to be dead when
they scent danger. They -ell for five
dollars and upward, according to their
education.”
Five dollars sounds rather cheap for
a beetle trained like a circus animal and
dressed up like a Hayt -n tiolu marshal,
doesn’t ii?—AV ■ ■ Y H ■ '■'.
The Champion fc’lsh Yarn.
“Those were pretty go. d fish stories
published the other tl ty, ’ remarked a
N-ishiiila gentleman, 4 ‘but there is a
,u, d''ra ch .\<ning nvin in the real es,ate
in this rit v whcss experience
-
can di c u.it any I ever heard of. Hera
last wit . lie w. . * siting down iu the
’ Big llarpeth river, and had jus* settled
down to " when a flsh came
along and ran off with his hook and
line while he was killing it. He looked
into the water and a v his disappearing
tackle and -aw myriads of tine ti-b
porting amid the waters, Ha had ta
letura to Nashville at the close of t iat
day, and it wouldn’t do to come with
out something to show for his skill
Thon S h h " Hue was " one ‘ he bad
! ‘ “ I - t,! 1 ' ” ■* .-.u.i. .ing, , an ‘
3 yr.ito exjicdi.at flaih d tl.rougi
his mind. Div ting Limself of all hi:
wearing apparai, except the shirt, h*
careful y tore the rear of that useful
u«*m t i-.: an i upon each lit
placed a baited hook,
• Thus 1 quipped he plunged in th*
stream and boldly made for the opposite
shore. It seemed that he never had so
^ a swim in his life , but he finallr
the i alui ^ unh aded dozens
of the fiaest feh Jhat you ever saw.
W hea he swam back for his clothes ha
took ofl looks lest . g
_ wc.ght .» t of e fish s.v might n , u. drown ? r ._ V him. : m t, Those
w j, 0 are not in the secret regard his luck
os phenomenal.—*Y.ir : r, .s Amricam.
GEORGIA RAILROAD COMPANY
Stone Mountain Route.
Office General Ma>:ac f
Avgusta, Ga Mar: 2
/COMMENCING FT. 3rd inst.,
\_Jthe following ;> - edulcs will
be operated:
Trains run by 9C meridan time.
No. 1 —West—Dailt.
Leave Augusta..... 45 cJcSrfCfCTCc 233333
“ Macon...... ► ' n
> illedgeville .... Oi 10
Washington . ... 1 rS 20
Arrive Crawfordville .... rH 22
if Athens...... tO 15
r Gainesville.............. GO 25 ChO, E«
; Atlanta.................. 45
No. 2 —East—Daily.
Leave Atlanta ao 00 £OU> ir.
a Gainesville...... ci 55 ti
< < Athens, 8 50 m
*< Crawfordville. 12 it
Arrive Washington. .. 2 20 n
(4 Milledgcville. 4 49 ii
Macon ...... 6 00 m
Augusta..... 3 35 m
No. 3 —West—Daily.
Leave Augusta.......... :00 3
( l Crawfordville...... M :54 3
Arrive Atlanta......... Oi 5
No. 4— East Daily.
Leave Atlanta .... . . . . 11:15 p s
Arrive Crawfordville , . . . . 3:58 a H
I 4 Augusta . . . . .... 6:45 a n
FAST LINE.
No. 27 —West—Daily.
Leave Augusta.......... . 7 45 a m
Arrive Washington.... . 10 40 a m
Leave Crawfordville.. Washington . 7 zv » p*
Arrive . a 4t a :n
4 ( Athens. . . . . 11 40 a m
44 Gainesville 8 25 p in
44 Atlanta.............. 1 00 p ni
No. 28 —East—Daily.
Leave Atlanta. Cl 45 p m
u Gainesville........ o 55 a m
Arrive Athens t- 00 p m
( r Crawfordville..... 5 54 p m
( 4 Washington...... 7 20
p m
Leave Washington............. 4 20 p tn
Arrive Augusta 8 15 p in
SSrCUTEP.B IMPROVED Sleepers
Augusta, Atlanta and Charleston.
Parlor cars on 27 and 28 between Au¬
gusta and Atlanta.
Train No. 27 and 28 will stop and re¬
ceive passengers to and from tire folloxv
lag points only: Grovetown, Harlem,
Bearing, Thomson, Norwood, Barnett,
Crawfordville, Union Point, Greensboro,
Madison, Rutledge, Social Circle, Cov¬
ington, Conyers, Lithonia, Stone Moun¬
tain and Decatur.
E. R. DORSEY, I. W. GREENE,
Gen’l. Pass. Ag’t. Gen’l Manager.
Joe W. White,
General Traveling Passenger Agent.
■.niLSZsnycA
i.a i
■
■fs:’# ' r ' —-,4 k\ ■■ *
i
m i
~ - i
t
'THE l
TWmMm i
CUTTER, GRINDER AND \
SHELLER (
i
Combined in One Frame. The Cidy}
Combined Feed Mill Made. r
Warranted to Oive S^iisfaslioRj
Can us*? thro fiitTorcnt sisod Grinders v:p«>n ti. k
samo Mill n, any time. Really five ix:3.chl::e3 int
■
one.
L Send fur circAar to
FRAZER & MCY, ?
Willhm!>'bnrg, Ini.
. : ! T I
M p , '• ' ' ; • I
^-Jr ’^3^ u /n - : f’ •--■U:..’- F' i , V . M \ !
mULJ /•-/ '<e > ;
I IT ' -0“ I
mnfinn /t ; k> 'fijk M m/r&rj&ryp* iMAnfCl i
aJ iNfoi -V - i & !
mmmgk £
^ W-d y
* y ; &
2l)Cls'^* ^so 2
REPAIR SHOP.
GEO. K. GILMER, Machinist, |
Crawfordville, Ga.
Engines,Renaraters. and any kind of
^asonaldc."’Haring had much experienes to do best j
In this work 1 am now prepare*! ;
of work.
fi AXIS! ACTION GUARANTEED. j
Old Stows Made and New—I make it will good over-| 1
haul your . !d stove as
now t >r a verv small sum Parties dot ;
!■ g the nvinev. I will do their work;
and wait a for the ney.
_lU rae * ‘ r ‘‘ l Geo. it Gilmbu i
J ^
-LADIEs and GENTS'
L ICE CREAK
PARLOR.
Xo. 8 WT. Hunter bt.,
Atlanta. - - *q Fa
~
Meals at All Hours. Hepulars Diane
from 11:30 to 2 o e ock. ,sh | ;
Oysters in every sty 4 b. Game a..! .
.
In season.
PIANOS |
:•>
L & B. Sc 1. H*
FIFTH ANNUAL
CLEARANCE SALE
June I to Aug. I, 1883.
$257000
Worth of I’la nos and Organs
from best makers to be closed
out regardless of cost or value.
Stock, too large. Must convert
iuto cash or installment assets.
Some, entirelj NEW INSTRU¬
MENTS not used a day.
Some, Nearly New—used a few
months only.
Some, nsed a year or so.—Some,
used two to three years.
Some, fine Second Hands—taken
in exchange, and made new in
our -lte-strung. repair Factory. Kc.polished
Restored in Tone
anti Action , and made good for
years of service.
BARGAINS. EVERY ONE.
EASY TERMS,
Your OWN TEH.HN almost.
Very liaht Monthly Payments,
or .Small C ash Payment and bal¬
ance when yon gei ready.
GASH BUIS CHEAP.
Give yon all the time wanted
but SPOT CASH will save you
money. THY l'S ON. We wilt
meet you every time*
PIANOS
$ 50 , $ 75 , $ 100 , $ 150 .
ORGASMS
$ 24 , $ 35 , $ 50 , $ 75 .
WRITE FOR BARGAIN SHEET.
CLEARANCE SALE
SUITER 388S.
LUDDEN & BATES. S. IVI. H.
SAVANNAH, GA.
Dcbci ’ p lestr i c Sojf •
THE BEST l : mVf SOAP
-IN T v;
It is Stricil? Fr:. Mm in Quality, f
HE criginat formula for which wc paid <Sjo,ooo f
izL'cnty y.’nrs i\;j Ims never iicen inodilicd or
- cli ac-J iu ' ; •- 'I'lBi-* s*p;5j> is I
I isleiriit-KS in quality to-sLny xvi:!!
Unit mailt' twoaty years ago. iu
T i C.; nut blits that ea-i j
a jure tlse quest fabric. It bright- j
ens colors and bleaches whites.
T r wa * ■■■■pi
X in th ’’S
them soft unti v.'-'-i: - and like new.
READ THIS TWICE
■MMKAnraina.V : „ra'!K:v'<cu: t.. . .•* uwv"i^*'rc.- c')wa«
.xnce
WHERE ir, n. jsv-psit Having of time, of labor, I
bins’ J F.lecrric of soap, of fuel, usjiI and of the fabric, wher to <Sir<*C» b-
6o.«p is
tiotis. Its
/^XJE Ir; I l 1 1 nstrate great it
w will pay v t: t-> t — :.... 1. *
Y IKE 11 it€"+: things, it i.-i ext-.-ns'.vely imi
tated aud ccunterfeited.
Beware of Imitations.
VV‘Al"<V *V/A VS-V
i noon Bobbin k’ F.Iectrm. Don’t takej
•ic. Eiectro-Masic. Plii'-adeb »:sin Electric! 'Ihejj
or any other ir.u: 1 , Minpiy cve.-uv-* it ch ap.
will ruin cl .dhe-s and av. dear at ..ivy price. Ask for
jrr; T M
to Mexico keep- it in >«.;• y. h:t>:» 1
will ortler from h - • uc: rv-: wh'jic.-x.e p
TJF- jl ’ i cer.Ai foU-.w direction:!
bar, and -■ : Y-./.i vamiot sUibrd t|
oneaclwu.wle v.r;.:.- -. for your>eif this old, reliabli'.
wait longer i ef r- try.r.^
. :rf«i
Dobbins’-i Electric ^ Soap.
1$ l:KSp 1
|t »J while ti.e as buyer convenient
to as any
Art*? insudment ZL'kole^iF s .pot ystem, c^h is fi 1 £?Em \ % //S'
m a
l;d \ sys^rn to us. Tho /^5
6 *} co-operation cf the V^Vi ' /
tpu c'ub xnc;nbcr3 sells us ■— **
;3 wctches in each PHIU.
j •'“Jj S3F\v the Club T .:tch for Club, each and watch weget before cash it from j? Uy'A: v>*'
| member pays|«&f goes
out, tho h each only
> x a '•vck.® This is why we give you
'vfoM p ‘me re for: .-ur money than anyone larges: vis
! s«and why we are doing the
f i ^ wa:: Li b usincss in the world . ®i\Ve sc r re ’ 4 .
Jon!y first about quality what ethers gcoca, tut fer oui
T’ck: Tiriccs are get sec
is '‘nd substantial quality.OarSlOhiivei Silver [not imitation -'\i att-ii !?<■".$
a
any kind .« Stem-Wind American Lever
'.nd *•
m Oar 3 Watch is a Stem-*via*5, v: «
Open I- uce, first quality, rtiffened Gold
Aineri .^uLcvvr WauA ^guaranteedij
-vear 20 sold yozrs. It is by fully others. equal U to aud zzeyF
'i watch for e »~
J a first-class Stiffened Gold Case muck
more satisfactwy and serviceable thar. sr
M any Sc>ld Gold Cafe that can be sold at
• I ’ e ta
f pkS 5 ... .1 cases are i a variably tain, weak,
'VgK °* short aw qualit} Our $'ib • . A Watch vorthless ccr.tains after t -
use.
yqp cu:„-r:::s of ir.. vital importance d im¬
provements- to accur -1
Hind, c-'c., which we control exclusively. It
is fully ecu I ’* accuracy, appearance, dura
bility and w. to any ^5 Watch. ci:her f -,
Our-S iL.OG ii ail
road U a ch - j espcca-.y ccr.-vrcctec to
|road Watch reads, < hivn Face cr H :r.t t-.g. JV
; All these j. rices -a- c ei^i-r &H or ir clubs,
SI.OO a. Yverk.
TfeeKey-cfess ■altMeabCe'ifwaBaiWIsa Waicii C!sbGcF:-j- C .A c V 1
p _
004 WALS 3 T ST. FKlUfi. ri.
©Agents Wanted, < 3 *
iv Wstdi tfistfiatar, $ ? .00 s-Ls
. .. -... -G-uu r--^, Fi
- —---- 1 —*4