Newspaper Page Text
DOUGLAS 8LE88WER, Editor *
*AUT,(taUnM*)M knmtm.,...
WBIKLY.OatlMr..................
Griffis, Ge«rgU> Oet, 10,1088.
~
.
__
OOclal Paper of Spalding
Official Paper of the City of
AdTorttalag Batea.
Mqottt one. 'Tan Hum or Iom to b* ooont
l rsto* will b* made with
‘ oontinne their
LY—Seme rate*I* for the Pallr.
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
For President,
GROVER CLEVELAND,
of New York.
For Vioe President,
ALLEN G. THURMAN,
of Ohio.*
■
For Member of Congress, 5tb Diet.,
JOHN D. STEWART,
of Spalding,
Tbe Courier-Journsl’a most exper
tenoed correspondent, O. O. Stesley,
thinks that Tammany is tolerably cer
tala to eleot it# candidate for Mayor,
having most votes to start with.
General Marion Bsthune, of Tol-
botton, will run against Tom Grimes
io tbe Columbus distriot. Geseral
Bethune ia a Republican and repre¬
sented the distriot just after the
war.
_ _
GEORGIA OH WHEELS.
While tbe possiblo effects of the
admirable advertisement of tbe State
of Georgia, through Mr. W. L. Gloss
net’s Western tour in Georgia on
Wheels, haa been greatly discounted
by tbe foolishness of tbe South in
their wild panic over the Jackson
ville epidemic, yet much good can
be hoped for as the result. There
ooold hardly have been any scheme
devised that would have attracted so
mnoh attention, Everywhere tbe ole
want exhibition car went with its va
Rea ana complete list oi ueorgm
products, people have flocked to look
upon it, and invariably the universal
verdict haa been ‘‘the half has uover
been told*' of the great Empire State
of the South.
Georgia is no Utopia, but, as n
Macaulay said of England, one acre
of it is worth a thousand in Utopia,
and the conditions that here obtain
for health, happiness and prosperity
are snob as to impress any with the
desirability of residence in its limits.
The newspapers of the Northwest
have been pronounced in their pleas
ant suprises at the extent and varie
ty o! Georgia products, many of
which have been so novel to them ns
to reqniro columns in the minutest
description of them. Of course
this will turn tbo thoughts of i
grants from that section to the warm
Southland, where they are assured
by all that they will bo wirmly wol
corned.
The poor mao's lines never fell in
a pleasanter place than Georgia, nor
is there any land nnder the sun
where the labor of the husbandman
meets with raoro generous n ward.
All this has been impressed upon tie
Northern and Western mind by re
oent occurrences, and in the future
shifting of population, immigration
will snrely flow into out valleys
and people our fertile plans.
Georgia, though one of the origin
al thirteen States of the Union, is
not an old State. The development
of her agricultural districts was slow
from the existence of conditions that
all students of history will appreci
ate, but when the tide of immigration
did set io there has rarely been seen
a more rapid settlement. The rich
planters of older States poured their
■laves into the State in great uum
bars, attracted by the fertility of the
■oil. There are men still living who
remember when all this section was
•till a wilderness with its magnificent
virgin forest still unscarrod by the
woodman's ax.
The rapidly increasing population
of tbe United States both from nat
oral increase and foreign accessions,
makes it necessary for a field to be
open for emigrants. The lands of
the West are already too high, and
tbe cheap lands of the South are at
tracting favorable attention, and so
aa popular prejudice against our peo
pie is overcome at tbe North tbero
will then be a great influx of settlers,
" nothing ia calculated
more to
those people favorably than
__ an exhibit as “Georgia on
wheels.”
STEADILY m’REASIJftt FKOtt-
FERITY.
The dine months which have just
ended have marked a very important
period in the industrial history of the
South. Tbe great boom of 1887
brought into existent* many gigan¬
tic land companies and many iron,
coal and other companies, organized
for the development of the South.
The boom in real estate, and the
speculative fever which it engender¬
ed, was looked upon with fear by
many who anticipated financial
trouble when the reaction came. As
the calm inevitably follows the storm,
so tbo excitement in real estate and
in the organization of enterprises
partly based upon real estate, has
been succeeded by a period of depres
sion ir, land values, with compara¬
tively few sales. Instead of bring*
ing disaster, as many had feared, the
South has gone steadily forward, its
great enterprises pushed to comple¬
tion and new ones, large and small,
organized in great number. Here
and there the decline in real estate
has temporarily retarded the progress
of some new enterprise, but as the
dull reason is now dosing, to bo fol
lowed by a period of activity, duo in
part to the abundant crops and in
part to tho universal prosperity of
Southern manufactures, we may look
for a revival of many projects now
held in abeyance, and tbe projection
f hundreds of others. Nothing could
better have demonstrated the thor¬
ough soundness of the industrial
growth of the South, than tho way
in which all business interests have
stood the tight money market and
the real estate depression w hich fol¬
lowed the boom. Tho capitalists of
the North have closely studied these
matters, and we venture tho predic-
tion that their faith in the continued
progress and prosperity of the South
is greater to-day than ever before.
Never before in the history of tho
South was the outlook brighter than
it is now. The immense furnaces
and rolling mills, car works, cotton
mills and kindred enterprises, upon
which work was commenced from
twelve to eighteen months ago,
aud which during all that time have
been virtually locking up the capital
invested in their construction, are
now, one after another, rapidly going
into operation. Moreover, they are
beginning their careers as wealth pro
dueers at a most auspicious time,
when the demand for all their pro¬
ducts is active, with prices yielding
t liAJ*
wiit be taking the crude material and
turning out millions of dollars worth
of finished product to help enrich
the South. The corn crop, the sec¬
ond in importance in the South, has
made another advance, and the total
reaches538,000,000 bushels, tbe lar¬
gest amount ever produced by the
South, being 41,000,000 bushels
greater than in 1887, aud 100,000,000
bushels greater than m 1881, only
five years ago. The yield of cotton
is yet somewhat uncertain, but doubt
less that will be but little, if any,
less than tho splendid crop of I8ST
while prices will probably averago
higher, aw the world’s consumption
of this staple is now so enormous as
to cause a steady decline in tho
stock. Railroad construction is ac¬
tive, and the heavy investments of
foreign and Northern capital in the
improvements of old roads and the
building of new ones attest the faith
of the world at large in the South’s
great future.
The following headlines from the I
Courier-Journal’s Indianadispatcln a
show that the campaign is livening
up jn Hoosicrdom : “Gen. ilovey’s
Diamonds; How an Ex-Minister to
Peru Returned Home with Pockets
Bulging with Money ; the Scandal
That Attended the Republican Gub¬
ernatorial Candidate’s Return Home ;
Peruvian Papers Charge Him with
Defrauding the Government and His
Feilow Americans ; A Prince Among
Demagogues and a Campaign Liar
Without Reserve or Limitation.”
j
It is not at all astfioishin^ that
there should bo 240,000 colored
Democrats in the North. The high
tariff is especially oppressive to the
blacks.
A cabbage trust has been formed
iu Ohio. This looks like a base con
spiracy to put up the price of five
cent cigars.
How's This !
\Ve offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any case of Catarrh ttiat can not be cur
ed by taking Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
P. J. CHENEY A CO., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the nnderssigned. have known F. J .
Cheney for the last 15 years, n’.d believe him
perfectly tions, and hono-able finansi illy in able ail business transac¬
to carryout any
obligations made by their firm.
West A Truss, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo,
Ohio.
Waldlng, KinnanA Marvin, Wholesale Drug
gists, Toledo, Ohio.
E. H. Van Hoesen, Cashier, Toledo Nation¬
al Bank, Toledo, Ohio.
Hull** Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood and mucus
surfaoe* of the system. Price, 75c. per bot¬
tle. Rold by all Druggist* oiMAwlrn
Peculiar
Many fecniujr point! make Hood's medicine*. Par-
aaparitla superior to at! other
pi-.- .iW.r In rotnldnation, torr-.iiieids,^! proportion,
and preparation of
Hood'* s.impwr.u p«no<-. ' 1 ^
the fnftcurative value of th
best known remetlles^r * Jk-°*
the vegetable king X (l01 "-
Peculiar In Us strength
and economy — flood's H:ir-
aaparllla S Is which truly
elno of can
he.\id fa ^ollar." One Hundred Do«es
Q ba Jr Medicines In
*r larger and smaller bottles
»TVV3,/ri-ouirc vj *^^>roduce larger doses, and do not
ns good results as Hood's,
peculiar In it* medicinal merits,
flood's Sarsaparilla accomplishes cures hith¬
erto unknown, and has won for Itself
tho title of “Tho greatest blood S
purifier peeuliarinlts ever discovered " goodname S. qS\
home,” Hood’s —there Sarsaparilla Is now S ypSinora / sold in
of
Lowell, whero*»made,
than of all jt ^ ^FaVaet blood
phoneme- purifiers.<Jr/mu!iar ini record of in sales its
abroad, S' -v^wiio other preparation
has oV/ever -attained short such a popu¬ time,
larity in so popularity
. . _ and retained its
Vv ax\& confidence amors ad classes
people so steadfastly.
Do not be Induced to buy other preparations,
but bo sure to get tho Peculiar Medicine,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. Jl;«iifor$5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD * CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
iOO Doses One Dollar
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS.
To the Voters of Spalding County.
At the solicitation of friends I offer f«r
the position of Tax Collector ot Spalding
county, subject to a nomination ot the Dem¬
party if one is held.
B. D. BREWSTER.
-v——-- m —
s.s.s
An Important Announcement
About i
WHM
pain* lu my feet. Knees took ana bed nana* Immediately, w>severe
tho attack that I my joint*
and In two or thru© day® tnr were
swollen wollen to to almo«t alinoat double double their their natural natural «lz Eire,
nnd Bleep was driven from me. After *ufrer-
lng the most excruciating pain for a week,
lifting liniments who sympathlzefi and various with other tuy remedies, helpteawi
a frh ml
C< Why°don^'t It. I will guarantee you^get Swift’s cure, and Specific If It doea and
use a
not the medicine shall coat you nothing. after ’
1 at once secured the S. 8 . S., and
using It the first day, had a quiet night greatly and
refreshing refreshing sleep. sleep. Iu Iu a a week we<
lieneflttcd. jefltted. In in three three weeks weeks 1 I could sit up a
wa Ik alx.uit out tho room, nnd after using s
bottles lea I I was was w . out and able to go to buslnei
Sincet w then hen •n I l have stand been regularly feet from at my nine pi
of d hitv, and on am'entlrely my entirely free free from from
ten hours 1 * day. day, and nnd am facts
pain. In pain. These are I the will plain cheerfully cheerrully ami simple all
In mrctt.se. in roast', nnd nnd 1 will answer ai
inquiries by mall. relative thereto, Thomas either Markii.m*. In person OJ
11 W. l Q th street, New York City.
Nasuvillr, Tknv.-I ha warded off a so*
▼ero attack .ck of of rheumatiMn rhe by a timely where resoi tort
to ftwlfi a Sp«'o11lc. In nil cases ape;
tnanent relief is sought this medicine com-
mends Itself for a constitutional seeds treatment of
that thoroughly eradicates the dis-
ease from the system. lieV. Earrisos, D. D.
W. P.
New York, 51 7th Av*.—After spending
§300 to Ik» relieved of Mood Poison without
any benefit, a fevv bottles of Swift’s 8peciflo
worked a perfect euro. C. Porter.
ViexNi.Cli.-Mv littlo had Ctrl. scrofula Mx.ftm! In tho
x>y, aged aggravated four years, shape. They were puny
v-rst healthy and
tnd sickly. To day they are ro-
- ..... Joit.'fcoLUEK.
T.auy Lake, Sumter Co., Fla.-Y our 8 . «.
8 has proved a wonderful success In my
case. T.'to Tito cancer cancer on on my my face, no doubt. 1
would have soon hurried m :ne to my grave.
do think It U wonderful, li. Byrd, and nd lias ban no » equal,
B. Foi ‘ost master.
Waco, Tejlas, May 9, 1388.
fi. S. do., Atlanta. ,THR. Ga.:
Gentleman—Km nen—Knowing Knowing that that you you pleasure appreciate appr leasure
voluntary testimonials, time w e take customers li In
stating that one one health hea of our tin-use lady of four uners Tour large largt hoi has
regained her by
bottles of your your nir great great g remedy, remody, after after t havlm havlnjj having
been an Invalid valid id for f«*r f" several j*»*verAl years. years. Her Hortrou ertroubh trouble
v. m s extreme . xtrein debility, debt ransetl •ti by \>y adiaense *db»<- pc
collar to her her sex. s* §4 x~ %- Vi Wif.usat ir.i.is A Co., < nrugglsts.
Three fe*okS sell s mailed m 8 ttve on application.
AH druggists s. s, . Co.,
Th tc Swift Srremr
Drawer 3, Atlanta Ga.
h'cw York,'*5t> Broadway.
fh rn*m
THE VERNON,
Mrs. A. E. RIDDLE & SON. Prop’rs
Cor. First Avenue and Thirteenth 8t.,
COLUMBUS, : ; : GA.
You are most cordially invited to stop
with us wliilo in the city. septlSdlm
DR.JVIOFFETT’S
FEMALE MEDICINE
lue .>y System string »mi tone building to and sln.nethenlnjrthe.Uter-
up the genera! health,
INDIAN WCEJD
eorreets all lrreeolarltfes anil annoying troubles
from which so many is.iies suffer, it gives the
weak, debilitated wonntn tieslth »nd strength,and
mskes aheerful the desjmndent. depressed lu
out spirits. INDI In AN change wked. of life no lads should V.e with,
Aek your Druggist, ninSn/eanti Unfailing. _*
E. K. Anthony, Griffin and M. F, - win
Dili, Ga,
mm Ira rTirrcr
COLUMlrtXB, GEORGIA,
McGIIKE, Proji’i
The hc-t place in Columbus to get a bath
vie an 8! are. Give us avail when in th
JoE McOHEE
.V-Seat» iSCSI'JVtt
Now Advertisements
ADVERTISERS
A list of 1000 newspapers divided into
AND SECTIONS w ill be sent on
To those who want tlu'r advertising to pay
can offer no better medium for thorough
effeeti.se work than the various sections
our Select Local List.
GEO. P. ROWELL A CO.,
Newspaper Advertising Bureau,
10 Sprnce street. New York.
CNvjgli. br^icldtiw A-vhma, fniigvttien I Csa
cured msnyoi uic .enrtese. and isUie t,..: rvmfdy
aft sffectsorw >f Uie ll.mil as<f lungs, smi disca-^a
from impure blood and exhaustion. The fcvUlo
skit, stru*ur n S against disease, and slowly drifting
the grave, r i: 1'arfcer‘s in many eases reviver their health by
tiniuiy Take nv of id time. Ginger It InvaiuaMe Tonic, hut for delay :• dan-
it is ail jvuus
disorders of stomach and bowels. 60c. of Druggfst&
fTocunrsraise io
CiUK, PA.,
fur vJrcti?i;rSw
f/ fn Arjyrit u F , ' t<rz.i i> 4
f ' Aug. .Vf-pi.i-n thi-*
LTL iHi(Kr.
I The Georgia Midland R R.
and Best X-Ine
Willi Tlirouarli Coarli
e«* Between
C OUMBUS and ATLANTA.
ONLY ONE CHANGE TO
Washington, New York,
Nashville or Cincinnati.
Train leave* Columbus (Union Depot) 1:05
p. m, arrive at Griffin ’5:56 p. m„ Atlanta
5:40 p. m. Atlanta 3:40
South Bound train— Leaves
p. in Griffin 5:40 p. m., arrives in Colum
.,
bus 8:40 p. m.
Accommodation Train
NORTH BOUND—Daily except Sundays.
Leave Columbus, Midland Depot, ~ 00 a- m.
Arrives at McDonough...........3:30 Griffin,...............12:85 P- m. m.
Arrives at p.
SOUTH BOUND—(Daily except Sunday.)
Leave Griffin.....................8 McDonough................6:40 35 a. a, m.
Leave Columbus...............3:05 in
Arrive at p, m
SPECIAL TRAIN—(Sundaysonly.)
Leave Griffin.................... 8:25 a. m
Arrive at Co lumbua..............11:28 8:35 a. m
Leave Columbus................. a. in
Arrive at Griffin.,...............11:30 a. m
Arrive at McDonough............13:20 p. in
M. E. GRAY, Snpt.
C. W. OHEARS,
Gen’l Pass. Agt, Columbus, Ga.
New Advertisements.
PIIMQ REVOLVERS, tend stamp for
UUtSO price list to JOHNSTON S SON,
Pittsburgh, Penn.
, HAIR BALSAM
Cieansea and beautifies the hair.
Promotes a luxuriant growth. Grey
Never Fads to Restore
Hair to its Youthful Color.
I Prevents and Dandruff $1 .<<0 nt and Druggists. hair falling
60c.
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
r A rHE SC’IEXlo:’. OP LIKE, the
great Medical Work of the
age on Manhood, Mervotu a:u;(
Physical Debility, Premature'
Decline, Errors of Youth, and
tbe untold miseries consequent
thereon, SCO pages 8 vo, 125
prescriptions for all diseases.
Cloth, full gilt, only *1.00, by I _
mall, sealed. Illustrative sample free to all young
i/td middle aged meiu Send now. The Gold and
Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the .Va-
tt -i>a! Medical Association. Address P. O. box
Boston, Mass., or Dr. W. II. PARKER, grad-
uateof Harvard Medical College, 35 years' practice
In Boston, who may t« consulted confid<«it]al]y.
■Specialty. Diseases of Man. Office No. I Bulfluch st
HINDERCORNS.
PARKER S GINGER TONIC
i he best of all remedies for
Inward Pains, Colic, Indiges¬
tion. Exhaustion and all Stom¬
ach and Bowel troubles. Also
the most effective cure for
Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis and
affections of the breathing
organs. It promotes refreshing
sleep improves the prostration, appetite,
overcomes nervous
and gives new life and strength and $:.oo, - Drgguists.
to the weak and aged. 50 c. at
uraitjfui-tomTQriing,
EPPS’S COCOA
BREAKFAST.
“by a thorough knowledge of the natural
! laws and whuh govern the oparations of Uiges
1 tion nutrition, and by a careful applica-
iion of the fine properties of well selected
Coacoa. Mr. Epps lias provided rur delicately provid¬
ed our breakfast tables with n
flavoured beverage which may save ns many
heavy doctors’bills. It is by the judicious
use of such article of diet that a constitution
may be gradually built up until strong
enough to resist every tendency to disease.
Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating
around us ready to attack wherever there is a
weak point. Wc may escape many a fa*al
shaft by keepingourselvec well fortified with
pure blood and a properly nourished frame,”
—Civil Service Gazette, Made simply with
boiling water or milk. Sold only in half-
pound tins, Grocers, JAMES labelled EPP8 thus: A CO.,
Homoeopathic London, Chem ists,
England.
.i VfcLOUS
xMORY
DISCOVERY;
Any Book learned in one reading.
Wind —undering cured.
Speaking condemned ss if bout note.- Court
: krtut'lnducemenb I'iracs by Supreme
■ to forre.pondence
flns.es.
Prospectus, with opinions of Dr. Wm. A.
Hammond, the Daniel world-famed Specialist in
Mind diseases, Greenleaf Thompson,
the great Pysehologist, J M. Buckley, Richard D. D.,
Editor of the Christian Advocate, Judge Gibson,
Proctor, the Selctist, Hons.
Judan P . Benjamin, and others, -en!_ post
free by Prof, A. LOI8ETTE,
237 Fifth Ave., New York.
HOTEL CURTIS
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA,
Under New Management.
A. G. DANIEL, Prop'r.
1 01 tire meet all trains. feb 15dly
ADVERTISERS
:an learn the exact cos"
of an} proposed ] me
advertismQf in America!.
papers by addressing
r ieo, P. Rowell 8z Co.,
Newspaper AdrurtisinT Bureau,
IO Spn* A., New Ya’ipk.
lO lOO-Page Parjphle*
PARKER’S ■** Care for GINGER Weak TOKI 3
Inwanl rai-ix. Coughs, txliamaion. Lumrs, Asthma, ]n<U-
1 . t'ombim:tjrU»c n;%:
it exerts a crafh-
ibwreastQgilfso. are dreqnog thousands thaMomarh. th« l'-vr, tidueysand iti Bowels Bow.l.
their hvw to oTPisiga'a gra-e who would rwjrer
th by tho ttmtiy use Gisos: wosaXoxia
‘ at I»nar
u NPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION!
Over a Million Distriba?
• • ■■■•
State Lottery Compan
Incorporated by the Legislature in 1868 far
and Charitable purposes, the present
franchise made a part Of
Constitution, in 1819, by an over¬
pojffilar vote DRAW¬
It* GRAND EXTRAORDINARY sod
take place Semi-Annnally, (June NUM¬
and its GRAND SINGLE
DRAWINGS take place on each of the
other ten months in the year, aud are at
in public, at the Academy of Music
Orleans, La.
“We do hereby certify that we supervise th*
for all the monthly and tmar-
Drawiugs of The Louisiana State Lol
Company, and In person manage and cob
the Drawings themselves, ana that th*
ame are conducted with honesty, fairness
In good faith toward all parties, t *S w
the Company to nse this certifies.*
fac-similcsof oursignatmes attached in
advertisements.”
Cswwiulsssn.
We the undersigned Banks and Banken
pay all Prizes drawn in The Louisian*
Lotteries which may be presented at
oounters: *
M. WAOl8LBir.Pr«s. La.H*ri B*
la.KAIX, Pmfltat* K*» l *k.
s. BAltWWIY.Prei. M. O.KaH Bank
KOIIH, Pr«f. talon TIBaiii
: Monthly : Drawing
Ih the Academy of Mnsic, New Orleans,
TiR-sday, November 13, 1888,
CAPITAL PRIZE, $300,00,
100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars each
$10; Quarters $5; Tenths #3; Twen¬
$1.
LIST OF PHIZES..
1 Pbizkcf $300,000 is.......... $300,000 100,000
1 Prizk op 100,000 is..........
1 Pbize of 50,000 is.......... 50,000
1 Pbize op 25,000 is.......... 25,000 20,000
2 Phizes of 10.000 are.........
5 Pbizes of 5,000 are......... 25,000
25 Prizes of 1,000 are......... 25,000
TOO Prizes of 500 are......... 50,000
200 Prizes of 300 are......... 60,000
500 Prizes of 200 are......... 100,000
APPROXIMATION PBIZES.
100 Prizes of $500 are............... 50,000
100 300 are............... 30,000 20,00
100 i. 200 are...............
TERMINAL PBIZES.
999 100 are............... 99,909 99,900
999 I. 100 are..............
3,134 Prizes of amounting to......$l,054,80f Capital Prizes
Note.—T ickets drawing Prizes.
are not entitled to terminal
For Club Rrates, or any further informa
tion apply to the undersigned. Yonr hand¬
writing must be distinct and Signature plain
More rapid return mail delivery will bearing be as-
surred by address. enclosing and Envelope
your full
Send POSTAL NOTES, Exchange Express Ordinary Mosey
Orders, or New York in
letter. addressed Ciurencyby Express (at our expense
to
M. New A. DAUPHIN, La
Oneans
or M.JA. DAUPHIN, Washington, D. C.
Address Registered Letters tc
MEW ORLEANS MATOMAL BAIB
Mew Orleans, La.
REMEMBER sSlE
am! Early, who are in charge «f the
drawings, is a gnaantee of absolute fairness
and integrity, that the chances are all equal,
and that no one can nossiblv divine what
manners win draw 8 Prize.
REMEMBER that the payment of all
Prizes is GUARANTEED BY FOUR NATIO
NAL BANKS of New Orleans, and the
Tickets ire signed by the President of an In
stitution whose chartered Courts; rights are recog
nized in the highest therefore
beware oi any imitations or anonymou
schemes.
T\ M WIN m
Customers, Aught,
Boarders, To be Bought
Agents, Silver or Gold,
Orders, Merchandise Sold.
Servants or Place, G*ods to Appraise,
Lawyer or Case, Opening Days
Musical Popular Preachers, Tenders, Houses To Announce,
Cooks, or Acres,
Butchers or Bakers.
Books, Boats,
To Hire or Let, Votes,
Offices, Dress skirt or flounce
First Basement, A cure Handy for disease,
Floor, A MuslinChemlse, Valise,
Casement, A
To Purchase a Pet, Cheese,
Horse, Mare, Teas,
Monkey Bees,
Bloodhound or Bear, Peas, Prone
or Spitz Or Are
Free from Fitz, To Make Known,
To Hire a Hall, Your Store,
Driver or team, Hosiery,
An Elegant Carriage,Dry oods,
Play AnOpnlent Marriage,Upholstery,
.Concert or Ball, Picnics,
Skates, Plates, Excursions,'
To sell to creatur'sDivc’sions, Knick-Knacks,
Diamonds, gay
Clothes Ready; Made,
Pearls. Increase of Trade,
Curls, Rings, Coal, Coke and Wood
Wash for Features, Pictures,
Lectures,
To buy Odd Things, All Kindsof Food
Or sell Odd Things, Works on Theology,
Cats, Magic. Astrology,
Rats, Wealth and Felicity,
Mats, Flats World-wide Publicity
Bats. Flags,
Pantaloons, Rags,
Hats, Bags,
Respiender. Cravats,' Nags, shirts
t Dress or collars
Mutton or Beef, Almighty Dollars,
Financial Relief, House for Rent,
Stocks, Clocks, Store, Tenement,
Cash to be Lfnt,
■Locks, Socks, Cash to be Spent,
Portmonia Box, Scent,
Pig, or Tent,
Or Even Sheep or Ox, Roman Cement,
a Bean— Go-
Then in a Trice, Read the Advice,!
Take the Advice Far Beyond Price,
Written Below— Written Below—
ADVERTISE
-IN THE-
Daily News
To Business Men.
VO LABORED ARGUMENT IS NEEDED
-LX in these days to convince INTELL1
GENT men that it
Pays Well to Advertise
FILL - CAMPAIGN-
IN THE
Goods Trade
N
Jias opened up and it linds
J. FLEMISTER-
Equipped with.a large stock of new and desirable goods in every d«-
partment.*As the season advances, however, Manufacturers
anenebbers rush off the remainder of their stock
at reduced prices, and I now have or*
ders out for will these offer goods,
and
them at
Such prices that it will pay you to make fre¬
quent visits to my Place.'VI
offer Monday morning one case Standard Prints at 5 c., w nh
350 doz. Ladies Hose in Solid Black Seal Brown and Blue at 5 c
per pair, well worth 10 to 15 cents. Big Drive. 2 cases
Macon Knit Hose and half Hose, heavy and good,
at 10 c-, worth double the money.
Have the best half hose at 15 c
ever shown here. Sell
dozens of pairs
every day.
SPLENDID. VALUES IN FINERHHOSIERY. *
tfjrWill have displayed on our center counters on Monday morning a big
of Short lei gths and Drese Patterns of Fine all Wool Dress Goods at al¬
your own price. Come and see them ; they will not stay long at
named for them. They consist of desirable colors in Sebaster pools.
Cashmeres, &c- One case Cashmere, wool one way. 9 c, worth
1-2 c, *®“Double Width Cashmeres 12 1-2 c, worth 20 c.
36 inches wide, at 25 c. Henriettas 44 in wide at 50 c.
s®~Splendid assortment finer Dress Goods with Trimmings to match.
- Ski - M -and - ffli
Flannels,
and Striped Sacking Flannels, Blankets, &c., at living Prices.
SEE OUR TOWELS
damaged, 10,15. 20 at and half 25 price. c. They are eye openers. Lot of fine towels, slight¬
Checked Homespun at 6 c. Shirtings, Sheetings,
&e., at Factory Prices.
the largest stock of Jeans, Cassimeres and Waterproofs in the city.
Jeans 10 c. per yard. Jeans better and heavier than School-boy brand
25 c. All finer grades proportionately low.
Shoes, Shoes ?!
My Snoe deportment will be found to contain the best goods fromthemost
manufactories in the country New Shoes received every day.
on hand a let of broken sizes in Shoes that we sell for below value.
SHH0E CO’S WOMEN COARSE SHOES ARE THE BEST MADE-
Splendid line Jersey Jackets, Toboggan Caps Corsets, &c.
! HATS ! HATS.
stock will be found fully up to its usual standard. Good desirable
at Rock Bottom Prices.
and Satchels-
I buy goods in this line from the most reliable manufacturer in the
and will offer you better fiuished Trunks and Satchels for the same
that others ask for inferior made goods.
---JoJ-
Will say finally that it is my determina¬
to convert my large stock into money before
If good goods at less than their value
do it. So it will he to your interest to exam¬
my stock before making your purchases,
E. J. FEEIIISTER.