Newspaper Page Text
L Doesn’t Cost Much?
'< make a side-bar buggy as comfortable to ri<le in as*'
ij the easiest carriage ever built. A set of the Thomas jj?
jk Coil Springs is inexpensive and easily attached to either old or new buggies. The £
3 neatest, most durable, best-in-every-way side-bar spring is i | >
I The Thomas Coil Spring! P|
1 Used and furnished by leading carriage makers every- lit rJ 1 E
g where. If you can t get them in jour town, order direct ||*# s.
from US. Full in forum ton and prices mailed upon requ-st. / j \
I The Buffalo Spring 6s. (*r Cos., liufTalo. \. Y. S—*4—4—"“ > 1 b—— *|
VILLAINY UP TO DATE.
Bow Far the Camera Fad Will Sometime*
head a Man.
Rapidly closing and locking the
door, the villain turned to the fair
lady.
“At last 1” lie exclaimed.
She looked around in dismay. The
room was at the top of the house,
ami it was useless for her to scream
for assistance. No one would have
heard her.
“I have been long waiting for
this,” he said. He chuckled sar
donically. His hand grasped his
deadly weapon.
“This is cowardly. You have en
trapped me. You told me that from
this room was to be obtained the
finest view in all England.”
“The finest view in all England,”
he replied, with a profound bow, “is
actually in the room at this mo
ment.”
“If you think that I have beauty,”
she faltered, “why destroy that
boauty? lam too young to die.”
He laughed again, as though she
had spoken in jest. “I long,” ho
said, “to gloat over the inanimate
features that”—
“Coward! Coward 1” she cried, and
once more she looked for some
means of escape. Ah, there was an
other door immediately behind her!
She opened it and hesitated, for
within all was absolutely dark.
“Enter,” he said, “by all means.
It is but a small room, with no win
dow in it and no door but this. Y 7 ou
cannot escape. You are iu my pow
er. Enter if you will, but be care
ful lost iu the darkness you knock
against anything and hurt your
self.”
“Would you care?” 'she asked bit
terly.
“I could nev 'r forgive myself—
never 1”
“How dare you say it—you—you,
with your hand ali’eady on the trig
ger?”
“It is .stronger than I. I cannot
help myself. I must do it. Pre
pare!”
With a long sigh she sank on a
low couch and buried her face in her
hands.
“Do not do that,” said the villain,
almost tenderly. She made no reply.
There was silence in the room for a
moment, and then he spoke again:
“I cannot do it unless you take
your hands from your face.”
“Then I will keep thorn there for
ever.”
“In that case,” he replied coldly,
“I will wait.” He took a cigarette
from his case and prooeeded in a
leisurely way to light it.
To do so he had to put down his
■weapon. Watching him narrowly
between her fingers, she saw her
chance and made a sudden rush, but
it was of no avail. He bad snatched
up the weapon again before she
could secure it. Once more she flung
herself on the couch and covered her
faco.
“You know,” she said, “that I de
test the smell of tobacco.”
“A thousand pardons 1” he replied
as he flung the cigarette through the
open window. “I had been misin
formed, and certainly you carry a
silver matchbox.”
“That is only for ruy bicycle
lamj). ”
“They always say that,” he said
meditatively. “However, I can wait
just as patiently without smoking.
I am not a slave to the habit.”
There was once more a moment’s
silence. She changed her position
restlessly. Suddenly she sprang up
and stood erect, letting her hands
fall by her side.
“Go on,” she said. “If it must be
done, let it be done quickly. Get it
over. Do your worst. ”
She looked superb as she stood
there, a graceful figure in the sun
light. In her eyes there was an in
finite kindliness, as though she bore
no malice against her persecutor.
Now, just at the end, she smiled.
He saw it all, unmoved, without
wavering for one moment from his
fell purpose.
“That’s magnificent!” he cried as,
raising his camera, he pulled the
trigger and photographed her abom
inably.—Barry Pain in Black and
White.
iwiutnat nuiMii.
A company nas been formed In
Paris, it is stated, to make butter
out of coooanuts. It has a plant cal
culated to produce 4,000 pounds of
butter a day. Surely the most pro
lific plant on record! The bread fruit
tree is fairly productive, but this
butter “plant” entirely overshadows
it. Perhaps a oareful grafting might
produce a bread and butter tree,
whioh would olearly be a boon to
society. —Kxohaxur*
Distress After Eating
Pains in the Head and Constant
Aching of the Joints —AM Have
Been Completely Cured by Hood’s
Sarsaparilla.
“ I was troubled with a pain in my
stomach after meals and a constant ach
ing in my joints. I also had pains in my
head. I took medicines but without
benefit. Seeing so many testimonials in
regard to Hood’s Sarsaparilla I was in
duced to try it. I had taken it only a
short time when I felt a change. 1 can
now eat a hearty meal without suffering
distress, my joints are free from pain and
I weigh more than I have for eight years.”
E. G. Follexdore, care W. E. Jenkins,
Macon, Georgia.
“I had severe pains in my Btomacb
every morning. I took Hood’s Sarsapa
rilla and Hood’s Pills and the pain has
entirely left me.” Wm. E. Hodges,
68V 4 Randolph Street, Savannah, Georgia.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is the Best— in fact the One True Bloo<l Purifier.
Bold by all druggists. Price, Si; six for $5.
-. ->• * * are the only pills to take
lIOOU S Pills witliHood'iSaruptrilla.
BAZAINE’S MARRIAGES.
The Two Romantic Courtships of the Mar
shal of France.
In The Century there is an article
on “Maximilian’s Empire” by Mrs.
Bara Y. Stevenson, who wasin Mex
ico during the entire period of the
French intervention. Mrs. Steven
eon says of a vomantio character in
French history:
General Bazaine was at this time
the most popular man in the army.
Hitherto eminently successful in all
his military undertakings, lie had
risen from the ranks, having won
bis honors step by step upon the
battlefield, at first by his courage,
later by hia remarkable military
ability.
He was a plain looking man, short
and thickset, whose plebeian fea
tures one might search iu vain for a
spark of genius or a ray of imagina
tion, and yet under the common
place exterior dwelt a kindly spirit,
an intelligence of no mean order,
and, despite a certain coarseness of
thought and expression too com
mon among Frenchmen, afsoul upon
which the romance of life had im
pressed its mark in lines of fire.
The story went that, when a colo
nel, lie had in Spain come across a
little girl of great beauty and per
sonal attraction o who seemed to
him out of place uinid her surround
ings. He picked up the little wild
rose as it grew on the roadside and
oonceived the notion of transplant
ing it into good, rich soil, and of
giving it its share of sunshine. He
took the child to Paris, where he
left her in a convent to be educated.
The soldier continued bis brilliant
career in the Crimea, Italy, Syria
and Africa, and when, after some
years, he returned to Paris lie found
the little girl had grown into a
beautiful and attractive woman,
whoso heart was full of warm grat
itude for her benefactor. He fell in
love with her,and, breaking through
all rules of French matrimonial
usage, married her.
Her charm won for her many
friends in the circle which his posi
tion entitled her to enter, and her
death, which occurred ui :er pecul
iarly distressing circumstances,
soon after his promotion to the
command of the army in Mexico, was
a cruel blow.
The news of her death reached the
general while away from the capital
on the brilliant campaign which
added the greater part of the coun
try to the projected empire (Novem
ber, 1863). After a funeral mass,
which he hoard with his officers, he
retired to his tent, and, alone, fought
that hardest of all battles and con
quered his own heart. In a few
days he returned to his duty, and
no one ever knew what had passed
in his innermost soul.
Two years later a hall was given
at the quartier general. Bazaiue,
who had lately been promoted to
the rank of marshal (1864), had
stopped for a moment to say a few
words, when one of his guests, a
young Mexican girl who was waltz
ing by, suddenly stopped near us,
having torn her dress. . Pins were
produced, the damaged rufflo was
repaired, and the girl passed on.
“Who is it?” asked the marshal,
evidently much struck with her ap
pearance. “It is extraordinary,”
he muttered, “how much she re
minds me of my wife.” He looked
distrait, aud shortly after excused
himself and wandered off in the di
rection Mile, de la Pena had taken.
The courtship was a short one,
Maximilian, in order to facilitate a
union which he deemed to be in the
interest of his government, gave the
young girl as a dowry the palace of
Ban Cosme, valued at SIOO,OOO, and
thus was May united to December.
Two children were born to the mar
shal, one of them in Mexico, and
never was father prouder of his
young wife and of her offspring than
was the marshal.
In Deep Water.
Jones —Miss Verbose has just em
barked on one of her conversational voy
ages.
Smithers—Yes, and her escort is over
bored already.—Detroit Free Press.
Foul-Smelling
Catarrh.
Catarrh is one of the most obstinate
diseases, and hence the most difficult
to get rid of.
There is but one vray to cure it.
The disease is in the blood, and all the
sprays, washes and inhaling mixtures
in the world can have no permanent
effect whatever upon it. Swift’s Spe
cific cures Catarrh permanently, for it is
the only remedy which can reach the
disease and force it from the blood.
Mr. B. P. McAllister, of Harrodsburg,
Ky., had Catarrh for years. He writes:
‘‘l could see no improvement whatever,
though 1 was constantly treated with sprays
and washes, and differ
ent inhaling remedies—
[ in fact. 1 could feel that
/ each winter I was worse
I HHI than the year previous,
■Ma IHV "Finally it was
Wm brought to my notice
•A/ that Catarrh was a blood
mm disease, and after thlnk-
Jr ing over the matter. I
vjU. <; saw it was unreasonable
to expect to be cured by
/ mar remedies which only
BE* reached the surface. 1
IFSthen decided to try
8. S. 8., and after a few bottles were used. I no
ticed a perceptible improvement. Continuing
the femedy, the disease was forced out of my
system, and a complete cure was the result.
I advise all who have this dreadful disease to
abandon theirlocal treatment, which hasnever
done them any good, and take S. S. S., a rem
edy that oan reach the disease and cure it.”
To continue the wrong treatment for
Catarrh is to continue to suffer. Swift’s
Specific is a real blood remedy, and
oures obstinate, deep-seated diseases,
which other remedies have no effect
whatever upon. It promptly reaches
Catarrh, and never fails to cure even the
most aggravated cases.
S.S.S. r fi* Blood
is Purely Vegetable, and is the only
blood remedy guaranteed to contain no
dangerous minerals.
’ Books mailed free by Swift Spedfia
Company, Atlanta, Ooorgu.
AQUEEN ON THE SCAFFOLD.
Marie Antoinette’s Demeanor on the Way
to the Guillotine.
“The Last Days of Louis XVI and
Marie Antoinette” is the title of an
article by Anna L. Bicknoll in The Cen
tury. Miss Bickuell says:
The executioner then seized the beau
tiful, delicate hands and tied them with
rope behind her back. The queen
sighed deeply and looked up to heaven,
but although tears were ready to flow she
restrained them. When her hands were
thus firmly bound, the executioner took
off her cap and cut off her hair. As she
feJt the touch of the scissors on her neck
she started and turned hastily, evident
ly supposing that she was about to be
murdered in the cell. She then saw the
executioner folding up her hair, which
he put in his pocket. Before she left the
cell she said anxiously to the officer now
on guard, “Do you think they will let
me reach the place of execution without
tearing me to pieces?”
He assured her that she had nothing
to fear from the mob, but she seemed
anxious as she followed the officials
who led her to her doom, scarcely hop
ing even for the dreadful security of a
guarded scaffold. W r hen she saw the cart
awaiting her, she again started and
seemed to receive a fresh shock. She
bad supposed that, like the king, she
would have the protection of a closed
coach. The cart was of a kind seen only
in remote country parts at the present
day and made of four separate sides
rudely tied together, the back part be
ing let down for ingress, with a step
ladder attached. A plank put across the
cart served as a seat. The queen ascend
ed the steps firmly and prepared to sit
facing the horse, but she was immedi
ately told that she must sit backward,
looking toward the spectators. She
turned and took her seat with perfect
calmness and a grave, resolute look,
gazing straight before her, pale, with
red, even bloodshot, eyes, but carrying
her head high, as was her wont. The
executioner and his assistant stood be
hind her, leaning against the sides of
the cart. The priest took his place next
to her, but she turned away and seemed
determined not to speak to him, though
he held up a crucifix before her from
time to time.
She' seemed to suffer pain from the
ropes around her hands, on which he
pressed to relieve the tension. The ends
were held by the executioner, pulling
the arms backward. The cart -went on
slowly, while an immense crowd fol
lowed in dead silence till they reached
the Rue St. Honore. There they found
hostile elements, especially the aban
doned women who in Paris always play
such prominent part in popular disturb
ances. Here there was such a burst of
insult and execration that the unfortu
nate queen might well dread the possi
bility of falling into such hands.
But the cart turned into the Rue
Royale and reached the Place de la Re
volution, where the scaffold was erected.
As the queen passed before the Tuileries
she turned with an earnest, lingering
look.
The scaffold was erected facing the
garden of the Tuileries, before a statue
of Liberty, on the spot where the obe
lisk now stands, and not where the
king’s scaffold had stood, which was on
the opposite side, facing the Champs
Elysees. The priest attempted tb assist
her in alighting, but notwithstanding
the increased difficulty consequent on
her tied hands she turned from him
and stepped down firmly, with appar
ent ease, as quickly as she could, seem
ing desirous to hasten the end as far as
possible. The executioner offered to as
sist her in ascending the scaffold, but
6he went up alone and quickly, imme-.
diately going to the plank on which she
was to be bound. Iu doing so she trod
on the foot of the executioner, who
made a motion as of pain. With the
kind courtesy which characterized her
even iu this last hour, she quickly ex
claimed, “Pardon, monsieur!” in a tone
of regret and apology. The executioner
and his assistant then fastened her to
the plank, and tore off her muslin ker
chief, lest it should impede the action
of the knife. The last motion of Marie
Antoinette was an involuntary attempt
to bring forward her tied hands as a
ecreen for her uncovered shoulders!
* * * When the executioner held up
the head to the populace, to the deep
awe of the spectators, the face of Marie
Antoinette expressed perfect conscious
ness and the eyes looked on the crowd!
The expression was that of intense as
tonishment, as of some wonderful vision
revealed.
What It Lacked.
“There is something the matter with
my bicycle,” remarked the artist’s wife.
Her husband pinched the tires.
“It needs atmosphere,” he replied as
he got the pump ready for work.—Pitts
burg Chronicle-Telegraph.
p Slop
Coughing
Every cough makes
your throat more raw
and irritable. Every
cough congests the lining
membrane of your lungs.
Cease tearing your throat
and lungs in this way.
Put e parts at rest and
give diem a chance to
heal. You will need some
help to do this, and you
will find it in
Ayers
Cherry
Pectoral
From the first dose the
quiet and rest begin: the
tickling in the throat
ceases; the spasm weak
ens; the cough disap
pears. Do not wait for
pneumonia and con
sumption but cut short
your cold without delay.
Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pec
toral should he over the
lungs of every person trou
bled with a cough
Write to the Doctor.
Unusual opportunities and long ex
perience eminently qualify us for
giving you medical advice. Write
freely all the particulars in your case.
Tell us what vour experience has
been with our t’herry I‘ectornl. You
will receive a prompt reply, without
cost _
Address. DR. J. C. AYER, •
# Lowell, Mass.
#^LEAN
(IJ’EOPLE
5 with health. 1/ we
have catarrh any-
this disgusting
disease. Airs. L. A. Johnston, 103
Pilham and Ripley Sts., Montgomery,
Ala., tells her experience with catarrh
of the stomach and how she was
cured:
“ I will state to you that I have
taken eight bottles of your Pe-ru-na
and two of Man-a-lin and rejoice to say,
* God bless Dr. Hartman and Pe-ru-na.’
And I earnestly assure you that it
has done me more good than any medi
eine I have ever taken in my life. I
prescribe it to every one I meet who
is suffering, as the best medicine in
the world, and have made many con
verts who are now rejoicing in the
great good which they have derived
from the same. I can tell you that I
am almost entirely relieved of indiges
tion, that great foe which has tortured
me so many years, and can now eat
anything I desire without it is fruits or
something acid. ”
To understand the scientific action
of Pe-ru-na it is best to have Dr. Hart
man's special book for women or his
book on chronic catarrh. These books
are mailed free by the Pe-ru-na Medi
cine Company, Columbus, O. All
druggists sell Pe-ru-na.
Aalnoals and Water.
Tame rabbits are commonly kept
without water, bat they may be seen
licking the bars of their hutch after a
shower and drink eagerly when they
have the chauce. Most other rodents,
including rats, are thirsty creatures.
The only animals living in very dry
places which seem able to do entirely
without drink are snakes and reptiles.
In the cold desert of shifting sand in
Kashgar there were no reptiles, and not
even a fly. But the Afghan boundary
commission found swarms of lizards and
anew and venomous species of adder in
astonishing numbers in the awful des
ert of hot, shifting sand at the corner
where Persia, Baluchistan and Afghan
istan meet. We must note one excep
tion, the giraffe, which Mr. Bryden be
lieves exists for three-quarters of the
year in the north Kalahari without wa
ter. But this cannot be proved until the
desert has been explored and the total
absence of water confirmed. There is
known to be water beneath the surfaces
and if the gix-affe does live waterless he
must imbibe his liquid nutriment at
second hand in the juices of the leaves
of the trees which have their roots iu
the moisture.
Seals do not apparently drink; neither
do cormorants and penguins, but there
can be little more evaporation from
their bodies than from those of fish, and
their food is wet and moist. A more
difficult question is that of the water
supply of arctic animals iu* winter.
Possibly they eat snow. There is abun
dant evidence that, though many ani
mals can exist without water for long
periods, this abstinence is not voluntary
and when unduly protracted causes suf
fering and loss of health.—Philadelphia
Ledger.
Hawes Strouse & Bros
Hats. Clothing.
WATERMAN, BURNETT & CO.,
GAINESNILLE, GA.
.To the Citizens of Jackson and
Surrounding Counties:
o
WE HAVE OPENED FOR YOUR INSPECFION A COMPLETE
ClofMufi mud
©outs FnritlgMn|
Goods House,
INCLUDING
Men and. Boys Shoes.
We propose to make this one of the features of the growing city of
Gainesville.
We will keep first class goods, up with cito styles, but at less than
city prices.
It will be our aim to plea c e everybody. Will keep no stale out-of-date
so-called bargain goods, but everything will be freeb, new and clean.
There is nothing in our line that you can buy in Atlanta or other cities
that you will fail to find here.
If we haven’t what you want,
we will get it on short
notice. That is all
Atlanta Is doing;
for yon.
First-class suits for Men, Boys and Children.
First-class Underwear.
Manhattan Shirts.
Standard makes of Hats and Caps.
Earl & Wilson's Collars and Cuffs.
Sweet, Orr & Co’s. Overalls, Shirts and Working Pants.
A line of Men and Boys Shoes that we guarantee to wear.
WE ARE CONNECTED WITH A
Merchant Tailoring Department
In Baltimore, one of the best, and will do Tailoring work on order, and
. guarantee satisfaction.
In fact, anything that you can buy anywhere else, we can supply.
ALL WE ASK IS A CALL. Yours, anxious to please,
WATERMAN, BURNETT & CO.,
Hogue Building, Northeast Side Square, Gainesville, Gccrgia.
DAVISON & LOWE’S
-
DISPLAY OF
Fashionable Millinery, Dress Goods, Silks, Cloaks, Suit s
and Skirts — We will offer special values in every de
partment this week.
Special Silk. Sale.
350 yards fancy Silks 50c, former price 75c. 300 yards fancy Silks 65c, former price 85c. 250 yards fancy Silks 75c, former price sl.
29G yards fancy Silks 85c, former price $1.25. Suitable for lining Jackets, for Waist and Lress Trimmings. Best Siik bargains evtr offered.
Dress Goods.
We hate selected from this stock over
one hundred pieces of cheap and medium
Wool Dress Goods, suitable for chil
dren’s School Dresses, Ladies Wrappers
and Street Suits. They have been placed
on Bargain Counter, and will be sold at
one-third to one-half real value.
One lot yard-wide 15c, worth 26c.
One lot yard-wide 18c, worth 356.
One lot yard-wide 25e, worth 40c.
One lot yard-wide 35c, worth 50c.
One lot yard*wide 45c, worth 65c.
Showing new things in plain and fancy
Novelty Suitings.
White Goods.
We will offer good values this week in
White Lawns, Check Muslins, Piques and
Ducks.
Special Good Line
Table Linens, Fringed Table Cloths,
White Quilts, Ready-made Sheets, Pil
low Cases, Towels, Napkins and Crash
Toweling.
On Sale Monday.
10 pieces Scotch Hop Sackings, new
shades, sells eqerywhere at 75c. Our
price 50c.
10 pieces all wool Cheviots 1} yards
wide, 49c. actually worth 75c.
21 pieces Melton Cloths, in all the lat
est 2-tone effects for tailor suits, 1$ yds.
wide, satin finish. Our price $3. 75 for
suit; pattern would be cheap at 36.
35 pieces Ladies Cloths in all the new
shades, from 75c to 31.50 per yard.
25 pieces new style, lancy Dress Goods,
38 inch wide, 35c. These are special
good values,
Showing new things in silk and wool
Crapons and other new suitings
DAVISON LOWS, Athens, Ga.
Underwear.
This department is the largest in the
city.
Infants, Misses, Boys and Ladies Suits,
Shirts, from 15c to 31 50 each.
New Ribbons.
Plain and Fancy new Tafeta Silks in all
the latest shades.
New Bfack Silks and Satins.
Cotton Goods.
Best valnes ever offered in A thens.
lOOpieces dark Percales, very wide,
only 6 1 4c.
Remnants fine Percales, sc.
Apron Ginghams, 4Jc.
One lot Calicos, light and dark, 3Jc.
One lot dark Outings, 4 3-4 c.
2,000 ysrds Plaid Cheviots, yard wide,
only 7c, cheap at 10c.
5c for good Bleaching, yard wide.
2,500 yards Bleaching, better than
Fruit of Loom, in sto 10 yards pieces,
6 3 4c.
1,000 yards Remnants best yard wide
Sheeting, 4c.
One bale yard-wide Sea Island, 33-4 c.
Professional Cards.
B. C. ARMISTBAD,
Attornby at Law,
Jefferson, Ga.
Thomas J. Shackelford. | Frank C. Shackelford.
SHACKBLFOKD A SIIACKBLFOHD,
ATTORNBYS AT LAW,
Athens, Ga.
Office over J. 8. King & Cos.
W. I. Pike. | J. 8. Ayers.
PIKB & AYERS,
ATTORNBYS AT LAW,
Jefferson, Ga.
General practitioners. Collections given
special and prompt attention. Law office up
stairs in bank building.
CHAS. B. HBNRY,
ATTORNBY AT LAW,
Jefferson, Ga.
Prompt attention to collection of claims, and
ny other business entrusted to him.
G. W. BROWN,
Attornby at Law,
Jefferson, Ga.
Will do a general practice, collecting a spe
cialty. Office over Herald office.
JAMBS M. MBHRITT,
ATTORNBY AND COCNBBLOB AT LAW,
Jefferson, Ga.
Prompt attention given ito business.
W. W. STARK,
ATTORNBY AT LAW,
Harmony Grove, Ga.
DEERING IDEAL MOWER,
With Roller and. Rail Bearings.
DEERING ROLLER BEARING IDEAL MOTSEB, 4 1-2 and 5 feet cut. A round of startling victories
has maiked the path of tie Deerirp Ideal Mcwtr. No grass is too heavy or tco light, no laud is too rough and
no service is too severe hr the plicky little Idea) Bero. Instead cf flic tin* leatiig, it las rollers and balls. Tbe
crank shaft Is parallel •with the ground, so that tie celf edjustirg jitmtE moves st< cdily fcsck and fcrth in* work
man-like fashion. The Serrated Ledger Plates bold tie gram* like tie toller tf a feed cutter, and tot hire, can
escape or draw in under the sickle. Tbe adjustable drpg ter j:ajs tbe interret cn tie investment The driver of
the Ideal Mower can cut as slow as 1 e likes, ard it is never Dccessary to back when starting tbe machine. The
use of roller and ball bearings las eliirirated Iricticn, std irsteed (f grinding the bearirgp, 'all the power is ufed
in cutting grass. Don’t waste your tine and lay by csirg old, cntcf date nat bines, tut buy tie Deerirg Ideal
Mower. For sale by
Benton-Adair Hardware 00.
HARMONY GHOYE. _ _ _ GEORGIA.
Very Special.
550 yards Bleached Irish Table Linen
in short ends, 2 to 2 J yards, 39c, regular
65c quality.
50 dozen extra heavy Bleached Turk
ish Towels, 10c, good as 20c grade.
One lot extra fine satin finish Duck
and Damask Towels, regular price 75c
aud 85c; the lot to close out at 50c.
One lot extra large Buck and Damask
Towels, the 35c grade; to close out at 25c.
Cloaks and Suits.
This department is strictly up-to date.
We are showing new things in Ladies,
Childrin and Misses Jackets and Capes.
New things in Suits, Skirts and Capes
Will show large 'ine new style Jackets
this week in extra long and short cuts.
25 Bicycle Suits, worth 36 will give
choice of lot at 33 50: the cloth is worth
more than we ask for the suits.
House Furnishings.
New Mattings, Rugs, Lace Curtains,
Figured Swiss, Damask and other things
for beautifying and making your home
comfortable.
New Hall Screens and Screen Frames.
JUST RECEIVED 300 New Smyrna
Rugs, New Colorings.
TOWEL SALE. 250 dozen, frem 5c
to 50c each.
W. C. KENNEDY, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
Beilmcnt, Ga.
Will go anywhere on short notice, night.
Georgia Railroad
AND
CONNECTIONS.
For information as to Routes, Sched
ules and Rates, both
Passenger and Freight,
write to either cf the undersigned.
You will receive prompt reply and
reliable information
A. G. JACKSON, JOE W. WHITE,
Gen’l. Pass. Agent. Traveling Pa Ago.
AUGUSTA, GA.
S. W. Wilkes, C. F. &P. A, Atlanta.
H. K. NicholeoD, G. A, Athens.
W. W. Hardwick, S. A ., Macon.
S. E. Magill, C F. A., Maccn.
M. R. Hudson, S. F. A., Milledge
ville.
F. W. Coffin, S. F. & P. A., Au
gusta.
B PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleanse* and beautifie* the hair.
Promote* a luxuriant growth.
Never Fails to Restore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Cure*
One Minute Cough Cure, cures.
That is what it was made for.
DeWitt’s Little Early Risers,
The famous little pills.
Notion Department.
500 cakes pure Glycerine Soap, 35c
per dozen, sells everywhere at 63 c.
Helitrope and Witch-Hazel Toilet
Soaps, 10c per box of 2 cakes.
Memen's Talcum Powder, 19c.
Royal Talcum Powder, 15c.
Satin Bows and Ties, 10c, 15c and 25c.
Windsor Ties, silk, 15c, 25c and 35c.
Purses, 5c to 32.50 each.
Long Combs, 5c to 35c each.
Hair Pins, lc per paper, and up.
Ledies Hand kerchieft?; 3c to $1 25 each.
Ladies Hose, 5c to 31 a pair.
Gents Handkerchiefs, 5c to 50c each.
Gents Socks, 5c to 35c a pair.
School Hose, Sc, 10c, 12}c, 15c and 25c.
Ladies Belts, 15e to 31.50 each.
Umbrellas, 50c, 75c, 85c, 95c, $1.25
and up.
CAPS—New things for boys and
girls, 25c to 75c.
Shirt Waist Buttons, 10c perssf.e f .
NEW THINGS in Silks for Waists,
Dresses and Trimmings.
New Felvets in Plain and Poka Dot.
Shirt Waist Sale.
We will offer 100 Ladies Shirt Waists
this week, 3 for sl. Couldn’t haqe them
m ide for the price if you owned the
cloth.
SPECIAL GOOD VALUES
This week in Ladies Skirts and Chil
dren School Jackets.
Good values in Canton Flanneli and
Outings for Wrappers and Children
Night Robes.
R. W. HAU LB ROOK,
MAYSVILLE, GA.,
AGENT FOR THE CELEBRATED
SMITH GIN,
OF BIRMINGHAM, ALA.
No better gin is manufactured. The
impr ved and complete outfit can be
seen at Maysville, Ga., where it was
operated last season, and ginned
about 1,000 bales of cotten. Prices
as low, or lower, than any other first
class gin.
All kinds of repairing done on
g'PP-
SENT FREE
to housekeepers—
Liebig COMPANY'S
Extract of Beef
COOK BOOK.
telling how to prepare ma*y deli
cate and delicious dishes.
Address, Liebig Cos., P. o. Bo* 8718, New York.
qTEIDY INCOME kZZSiI
Eli her sex. I’ll start you In the mall order
KJ business dy or evening. No peddling.
M. Young, 303 Henry St, BrooklynTN. Y.