Newspaper Page Text
| the Hair
press Vigor. Its clagnll.
Ayer’s Hair
beoeficlaJ effects on the scalp, and
f*2'- perfume commend It keeps the it for hair ,uni-
toilet nse. soft
"adlkrn, preserves its color, prevents it
<rom falling, and, if the hair lias become
or thin, promotes a new growth.
h Ta restore had the turned original color of my
. w hich Ayer’s Ha|r Vigor prematurely with
gfiucce**- I used I cheerfully testify to the en-
efficacy
,,’r _ w afflicted Mj some hair three falling years with
fad -,-lp disease. was out
what remained turned gray. I was
' mdnced S a “few to try Ayer's the disease Hair in Vigor, scalp and
weeks aumed my its
Ind. Sims,
u i few years ago I suffered the entire
tnu of my hair front the effects of tetter,
I i honed “ that loss, after but a time I waited nature in would vain.
fr remedies the were suggested,
- sueh proof of none,
mm gr. with and merit as
Hair Vigor, I began to to use use it. it.
could have desired,
out all over
IsLi*i£§p to he as soft and
A,Ba
Ayer’s Hair Vigor,
f,ff} fi nvtno Co., n Lowell, Mas*.
Or. J. C. Ayer *
SsM by DroWirt* and Perfumtrs.
inteUigen* aoader* will notice
Tin’s “*t>arranted Pills
•re >>•* Sf.;.V£,“ to evre” all classes
—■*
Vertigo, Headache, Costiveness, Dyspepsia,
“evers, Bilious
Flatulence, etc.
ejr are not warranted in-
nrwHERE.
4 —)o(—
C.H. JOHNSON, SR.
Stln represen’s t* e old
fouthern Mutual Insurance Co
-1,, Ga., the
of At ►■lit. cheapesi in Geor
gia and as good as ir. the world;
THE : GKORGIa : HOME
sir, i ( thers as good as can be found,
as he would nol represent othur than
gaoj ones, and earnestly solicits the
patronage of he community. He also
represents the o d
Washington Life Ins. Co.
id <ew Yoik, his choice of all the Life
( ompanies. because it embodies all
is promises in fhe policy. The Na-
ti nal Accident Society and the South¬
ern Mutual best Building and Loan Associ¬
ation, the Savings Bank for Small
investments extant. Call at Ins office
No IS Hill Street and investigate.
C« H. JOHNSON, SR.
oetl63<fcw4m.
Presto, Ctap.
FOR SALE.
th street. 4 half acre
Tacant lota on 18th street and Broadway.
Beautiful oak and hickory grove. Prettiest
building lots in the city.
For Sale or to Ren
Griffin FEMALE COLLEGE and lots, all
he apparatus, geological cabinets, school
benchg, 4c.
Stark house. H roomi ns, 1 acre land. Most
con invenient Charlton Cl boarding house, Hill ho use in the city, land,
treet. 4 acres
stables, fruits, 4c. A No. I place every
way. ; ,
Shelton lionsc and lot, acres.
One 5 room of house in desirable centre of I’dplar in the street. city.
Titles the most places particular.
perfect, ill right in every
Nall’s Jossey house and * lot, 7 rooms. VS> 1 acre.
house* “ 8 “
Adam Jones house and lot, 10 acres.
Blake houawntnd lot, 7 rooms, 65 acres.
Vuc&nblo%jroiu W~tO 50 acres in various
ffilote at. A net ion
iBiser.: ’^tir ' V "' *' f'‘ r kv * x -
'io% HOE.
SHOES,
aasswciaBtfi® we not stamneu
ockton. Mass
SmIh W. L. Dongts, .2.00 8Ws tar
entlemen and ladies.
FOB BALE B1
SCHEUERMAN & WHITE.
Jr GRIFFIN.
flMMftat |o«di w* will wadrui
teomt rtMO* ta hMaMp. writ*
acabowe. Only tb©#e W OO
[Slo «l>o” oor *W|S. ♦»
Lend of tJ>« tel*-
Uofit reduced to
•kmttafl
roi'M. AT FJYE POINTS.
u „ „
[Copyright, lm , by Amurtcan Prem .v.^ut^ ]
mm m i
O T HE younger gener¬
ation who know
York only as it has
been for twenty years
past, all growing" better
the time despite
sneers of pessimists, it
18 impossible , to realize
that only a few
years farther back there was such a
place in the center of the city as the
Points. Nowadays it does not take
usual courage for a moderately athletic
man to walk alone in broad
through any public street in the city.
Then it was not safe to do so, and
policemen rarely ventured alone
dark into the region known by the
name. Now the horse cars run
the center of it. Broad streets have
cut through, and old buildings
with new. Factories and stores
where were formerly tumble down
eries, that had stood since the last
tury, and that were swarming with
most degraded pour and the most
ate criminals. When the Rev. W. C.
Meter, with a few friends ns earnest
determined as himself, first started
mission school within the borders of
valley of the shadow of crime, lie
repeatedly warned by the police of
dangers ho incurred, and it was
time after the work was started
he dared to lake, even under escort,
the middle of the day, the ladies
werj> anxious to aid by teaching in
schi It seems now like a story of
foreign land and another age, but I
in 1854 or 1855 a party of a dozen
and gentlemen mobbed as they
homeward from the school one
noon, hustled into the street and
with volleys of obscene oaths and
vegetables, and so beset by a horde
half drunken men and women that
were glad to escape with whole
and ruined garments. And the
seemed powerless to prevent or
sucli outrages, for this was no unusual
occurrence.
The region about u hat is now
squaie, for the distance of a couple
blocks in every direction, was honey¬
combed with blind alleys and secret pas¬
sages, some of them running under¬
ground from one block to another. It
was a city ot rei uge ior criminals, and,
though they warred and preyed upon
one another w ith entire lawlessness, they
combined as a unit to protect any one
among them from the processes of the
law. Aside from the criminals the pop¬
ulation consisted almost entirely, if not
quite so, of the poverty stricken, for
dire poverty and desperate crime then,
as very often in history, went hand in
hand.
The children, w ho were coaxed one by
one into the mission schoolroom, were
a crowd of little savages. Their ignor¬
ance was something amazing It was
not very uncommon to find among them
boys an-.! girls of 6 or 7 years old who
did not know their full names, but who
Stoutly declared that “Sally” or “Bill”
was the oulv name they had, and once
or twice children were found who actu¬
ally did not know w het her they had ever
had fathers and mothers. Some had no
homes. God only knows how they kept
alive, for they slept in holes and corners,
and fed like vagrant cats and dogs on
whatever they could beg, find or steal.
Impossible? Certainly it is, but it is
true, nevertheless.
Among the wildest and shyest of all
who came in was a hoy who was the
originator of at least one famous joke,
though without intention. The teacher
asked him his name #ud ho said it was
George. Being asked what his last name
was he said that was his last name.
“But you must have auother name,”
urged the teacher. “Is it George Smith,
or George Johnson, or George What?’
“Nope,” he said, shortly. “’Taint
George What, nor George Nothin’, it’s
George. 1 liaiu't got no Oder name.”
But the joke came when the teacher,
wishing to know whether he had learned
anything at nil, asked him, “Do you
know who made you?”
At the same instant a boy behind
stuck a pin into George. Sucli
were very common among the little
ages, but it did not hurt any the less
cause it was not unusual. George
from his seat and shouted at the top
his voice “Goddemitey.
“Well, that's right." said the
who had not noticed the trick.
don’t shout so.” The story was
afterwards, with enlargements, until
became a “chestnut” many years ago.
It was a longtime—some
fore the teachers could learn much
the boy, for lie was distrustful to
last degree. He kicked the Rev.
Van Meter on the shins very
and twisted himself away like an
when that gentleman, according to
habit, laid lbs hand affectionately on
boy's shoulder. George thought he
going to lie beaten, and took his
precaution of eluding the
hold. He had,.it seemed, never
what it was to have anybody take
of' him in kindness, ami was no more
be handled than a young bird or a
rel. There was hardly anything, in
that he did know, as the good
people reckoned knowledge. He knew
how to swear fluently, as his
dentally correct ' answer as to
Maker indicated; but he did
know, and it was a long time
fore he could be made to
that swearing was wrong. In fact,
did not know what wrong was. So
as his experience of life went,
body did precisely what seemed at
moment desirable to do, unless
vented by superior physical force, him or
bodily fear. Stealing was to a
fectly legitimate mode of acquiring
thing that he might happen to
and the oniv reason why it should
done secretlv was that too much
tation about the act was apt to
interference on the part of the owner
who might anti probably would
the article himself. Lying was
the easiest way of concealing
that ho did not care to reveal, and
-mlv inkling he had of the
•baracter of the act w as that
to whom he mid a lie would beat
javagely if he did not he
enough to escape detection. As to
Sabbath the first knowledge he had
tne'di&*t«u..e v,.. .jay sud an¬
other came trots hi* noticing time ones
in a while these people who had whole
clothes on itnd who spoke gently came
into the neighborhood am) opened the
little mission room and tried-to get the
children to go into It.
George was among those who were
coaxed in with much difficulty, but after
going once lve went regularly. The room
was clean and pleasant, and as the au¬
tumn days came on there was a stove
put in and a (ire made it warm. That
was a novelty to iiitu—- wjjSm being allowed to
sit undisturbed in a room. The
story the good teacher obtained from
him after winning his confidence was
appalling by its very absence of detail;
but it was only one of many like stories,
and she could do very little to alleviate
the misery that was all around her.
George lived with a woman whom he
had been taught to call Aunt Sally.
Whether she was his aunt, who his
it
GEORGE JUMPED FROM HIS SEAT,
mother or father was, whether they
were alive, or whether, indeed, he had
ever had a mother or a father, were
matters knew nothing, concerning which he absolutely
even by hearsay. Aunt
Bally was negatively good to him, it ap-
’peered. She did not beat him, except¬
ing when she was drunk, which was,
however, much of the time. She let him
sleep in her room, and when she had
food she gave him some. When she was
drinking heavily she did not
about eating, and George had learned, as
young as he was, to keep away from her,
and get his food for himself. How or
when lie got it, only God’s ravens could
have told. Such cases are not as common
in New York as tliey were twenty-live or
thirty years ago, but they are found now
and again, even in these days. Who Aunt
Sally was, or why she took any interest
whatever in him, he knew nothing about.
She was a fact, and her interest, faint
though it was, was a fact, and he had
not come to the age of reasoning about
facts. He only recognized them.
One day—and it chanced to be Christ¬
mas eve—a lady and gentleman appeared
in the little room as visitors. They had
read of the mission work, the gentleman
explained, and had come from their
home in a nearby city to see it and to
give what little help was in their power.
There was a story back of it, but this
story was not told till afterward. Their
name was not Harrison, so I may call
them that.
\ 5 /?
GEORGE LIVED WITH AUNT SALLY.
“My wife,” said Mr. Harrison,
painfully, almost morbidly, anxious
do everything she can for poor children,
especially for orphans. And
Christmas time she seems
nervous about it. There is a story
it, of course, but it is too long and
painful to tell now." Tills to Mr.
Meter, whose earnestness in his
work made him rejoice in every
found friend, and whose enthusiasm
contagious.
Before long the story was
Mrs. Harrison’s father was a
manufacturer, whose two
were the children of different
and developed as they grew to
hood strikingly different
The elder one, Sarah, was the
of his first wife, who had deserted
and her infant child to run away
one of his clerks. He knew little of
story after hep flight, but in the
of a year and a half lie learned that
had been forsaken by her lover and
plunged into such a terrible course
dissipation that death had been
fully speedy in overtaking her. A
later he married the second time.
Again a daughter was bom to
and as the two children grew up
were treated, as nearly as possible,
actly alike. Everything that
could Duy, or arrecnon nictate, was
their command, and every influence
refinement and education was exerted
fit them for a high place in society,
whether it was some taint in the
or a morbid brooding over a
sin and shame, something led the
daughter to turn away from good
seek evil from her early youth.
father sought in every way possible
avert the misery which he foresaw
himself and for her, but it was of
avail. A wayward youth the was
by utter recklessness as
girl became a woman. She still
her father's house her home, and
spend a large portion of her time
but there were prolonged absences
the family strove in every way to
ceal, and into which they dared
inquire closely for fear of shameful
closures. The climax came in a
liarly painful wa . Among the
men who visited t the house was Mr,
-
Harrison, and it happened that, while
younger daughter was the one he
in marriage, both the gills fell in
with him." Sarah's passion was
the less violent becailt*«-tpf hopelessness, it*
character and its utter
when she learned that her sister was
marry the in&n she herself loved, she
home" finally, after a terrible defied scene
which she swore vengeance,
authority, tu>a spurnea the tore ol aer
father, mother and sifter.
For three year* nothing nt heard of
her. Her father, old before hi* time
with sorrow, mourned for her truly, and
would at any time hare received her
hack with open arm*, but no word came,
and he knew too Well the futility of
trying to track her or to lure her home
again. At lost one evening she presented
herself and, demanded an interview,
which was readily grunted.
It was behind clooed doors, and no one
but the father ever knew juet what
passed between them. He told his wife
and daughter, however, the substance of
it. Sarah bad demanded a portion of his
fortune, and hail offered for it to hide
herself from him forever, to take another
name and lead her own life in her own
way.
“I told her," said the sorrowing man,
“that she should always have a home
with me,no matter when she came to
claim it, and that I would never see her
want for anything if she would come
back to me, but that, jf she persisted in
the life she plainly said she proposed to
live, I would do nothing for her before
or after my death. And then she left
me, saying it was forever, and cursing
me—cursing me, her father, who even
now would die for her if need be."
For a time after this nothing was heard
of the prodigal. Then one Christmas
eve she wreaked her hate, or vengeance,
as she chose to call it, in an awful crime.
Mrs. Harrison’s only child, a boy not
quite three years old, was in one of the
public parks of the city, in charge of a
nurse, when Sarah Approached, and, by
pretending a violent fancy for the child,
threw the careless servant off her guard.
Whether she bribed tlie girl, or really
succeeded in tricking iier, was never
known, hut it was two hours later when
that frightened individual reported to
Mrs. Harrison that her boy had been
,
stolen.
It would be impossible to describe the
agony of the parents, and useless to de¬
tail all the circumstances of the search
that was made. The servant gave a suf¬
ficiently accurate description of the
strange woman, whom she had never
seen before, for the family to know who
J;
< 1 =^ v
SUCH A CHRISTMAS.
the kidnapper was, but Sarah had had
a sufficient start to get on a train for
New York, and all efforts to trace her
were ineffectual. Had the newspapers
even at that time learned the particulars
of the story it would have become as fa¬
mous as the Charlie Ross case, but the
family olnauk from feist? cApueuitj L?mt>
would have been inevitable, and though
all tho detective skill that could be pro-
:ured w as employed, no puolleatton wa*
made in the press.
Six years had passed fn m the day the
boy was stolen when Mr. and Mrs. Har¬
rison entered the little mission school in
the Five Points. It was her own loss
that had made her so peculiarly anxious
to benefit poor children; but, though she
was forever searching for her own little
one, both she and her husband had al¬
most given up the hope of ever finding
him. While Mr. Harrison was talking
with Mr. Van Meter, however, her eager
eyes were scanning the faces of all the
boys in the room.
Suddenly she turned pale. “Oh,
George!” she said, or gasped, rattier, and
without another word she flew rather
than ran to tile otlier end of the room.
Dropping on her knees in front of the
poor little waif who had drifted in so
strangely, she seized him with both hands
and looked eagerly, almost wildly, into
his eyes.
“\Vhat is your name?” she said to the
startled child.
“George,” he said.
"George what?”
“I dunno,” he answered, beginning to
cry, for he had developed a sensitiveness
about his lack of a proper compliment
of names, and, moreover, he was half
frightened by the now frantic woman’s
strange behavior
Suddenly she tore open his jq,‘t and
tne poor, ragged stun ne -mur on, and
looking on his breast found the birth¬
mark she sought Then, quick as a flash
—the whole tiling happened so quickly
that it was over beioro her husband
reached her side—she gathered him into
her arms, dirt, rags and all, and kissed
him until it seemed as if she were trying
to devour him.’ Then, of course, she
fainted.
It did not take long, though, for the
other ladies in the room to bring her
back to consciousness, and then such a
scene as is rarely witnessed in this world
put an end to anything like the usual
order of exercises. Mr. Harrison was
naturally a little slower than his wife to
recognized-lie child, but only a little, and
the bewildered boy was shortly em¬
braced and kissed as few children in this
world ever have been.
Such a prayer as Mr. Y”an Meter utter¬
ed, while the tears streamed down his
cheeks and every person in the room
dropped on his knees, has seldom been
heard even from his eloquent lips, and
in a few more minutes Mr. Harrison pro¬
posed to leave. It was obvious enough
to him that he, had to take his child
home, but the good missionary was
well acquainted with the neighborhood
to let him go unattended.
“You would be mobbed before you
gone a block, if the people saw you
rying away the child," he said, and
was presently arranged that a
should be summoned to escort the
up to Broadway, and a carriage
be taken there.
This was done as quickly as
for there was real danger of trouble
the news had been spread through
neighborhood before they got away.
it happened, however, ail passed
quietly, and little George had seen such
Christmas as be had never dreamed of.
“Aunt Sally" was found, and
effort was made to Induce her to
She consented to go home, but
she remained there or not I do
know.
StoMtionai as anything iq fiction, is it
not? Yet, excepting in *oo» few details,
it is a true story.
Their Bualaew Booming.
eenrral Probably revival no ot on* thing baa £. c B a nwd Anthony’* «nch a
trad* at
•rug Htor# a* their firing away to thrir ran
turners oner* ol ol so so many many five trial bottle* of Or.
Their King’s N«w Discovery ivvrr tor for Coummirtlon
trad* la (imply euamto tt* la thi* vary
valuable attic)* from th* fart that it alwa vs
run* and never disappoints. aiHlajT'throat Coi
and Asthma. Inn* Bronchitis,' mehitis. 'f’roop, Croup, m»t,
no* disease* disease# quickly qniekty coved caved, ton ran
teat it t before Indore ba; baying ' ‘ by getting a trial bottle
free Large site *1. Every bottle »• rranted
UNPRECEDENTED U Over Million AlTRACTi Ultt
ft
mm
Louisian* State lottery On wary
for Incorporated Educational by «»«• Legbdata.v is 1868
and! haritaldepurpowH,and
it* franchise ttutde a part of the present .State
Constitution, in 1879, by an overwhelming;
popular it* mammoth vote.
drawings take pim-
SemiAiiutdly. GRAND SINGLE (June NUMBER and .December), DRAWINGS #nd it*
Utk¬ ke pli ace on cacti of tin* other tcii month*
in the the year ,ud are nil drawn In public, tit
the Acad- umy of Munir, New Orleans, La
FAMtDFOR TWENT^ YEAH ,
lor Integrity of it* Ota wings and
Prompt Payme< t of Prim,
Attested a* follow*:
very control Company, the Drawings and in themselve*, penion manage and
and that
the same are conducted with honesty, fair new*
and in good laith toward all parties and we
authorize the Company to uee this certificate
with foe-similes of our signature* at toched.in
ifs advertisement*.
(’•■■IMntn.
e the undersigned Banks and Bankers
will pay all Prize* drawn in The Louisiana
State Lotteries which may be presented ot
our counters:
CABL Hsmsn&E: HSH1.Pm.
(Isles *1 Mask
Grand ; Monthlv s Drawing
At the. Academy of Mnsic, New Orleans,
Tuesday, January 14,1890,
Capital Prise, #300,000
100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars eoeif
Halves^* 10; Quarters f 5; Ten I Jim 2; Tnen
LIST OF PIUZ&H.
I Prize of gaoo.OOO is..... $800 006
1 Prize of 100,000 i»..... 100,000
I Pmz ZE OF 50.000 is. 50.000
1 Phiz PRIZE OF 25.000 i».......... 23.000
2 Prize of 10.000 is............ 20.000
5 Prize* of 5.000 are.......... 25.000
25 Prize* of 1.000 are......... 25.000
100 Prizes op 500 are......... 50.000
200 Prize* of 300 are......... 00,000
500 ]>», Prize* of 200 are......... 100,000
.
APPROXIMATION PRIZES,
100 Prizes of (500 are............... $50,000
100 do. 300 are.............. 30,900
100 do. 200 are............... 20,000
TERMINAL prizes.
999 999 do. do. 100 100 are............... 99,900 99,900
are.................
8,134 4 $1,054,800
No- TE—Tickets drawing Capita Prize* are
fji funmw*al
AGENTS VV1NTEH.
For Club Rates, or any further lntormatton
ired, writs legibly vonr" reside residence, to the the undersi; under
clearly stating Street ir More with
County, y, Street ufld nod Number. Number. More rapid ra. re’
■n mail nail delivery delivery will will be beaasured town red by by enclosing eticlot
Envelope hearing your lull address.
IMPORTANT.
Address M. A. DAUPHIN,
New Orleans, La.
orM. A, DAUPHIN, Washington, containing D. C.
By By ordinary ordinary Expi letter, Mou*y Order
issued by all Companies, Companies. New York
Exchange, Draft Port,at Nob
Address Registered Letters Contain¬
ing Currency te
SKW.ORLIAS* » , TIOSAI, RA1K
'w Orleans, L».
REMEMBER, GUARANTEED TEED that BY the FOUR payment of Prize*
NATIONAL
BANKS of New ew Orleans, and the ticket* i are e
signed by the he President President of of an Institution
whose whose chartered chartered rights rights are are recognized recognized In in the the
highest Courts; therefore beware of all imita¬
tions or anonymous scheme*.
ONE DOLLAar is th* price of the smallest
part or traction ol a Ticket ‘ ----------) ISSUED BY BY
in any Drawing, a ivthing in our nan me
> red or less than a Dollar Is a swindle.
L1PPMAN BROS.. Wholesale -ah- Agent*.
vannah Ga. jnen2fid*wt
HOTEL
3RIFFIN, GEORGIA.
Under New Management
4. G. DANIEL, Proper.
) -teie nit el all trains.
PROFESSIONAL DRECtf
HENRY C, PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
BAMPTOX, OEOftqlA.
Prod ties in all the State and
ourts. octbdftwly
JOHN J. HUNT,
A T T 0 K N E Y A T L A W
GRIFFIS, OKOHISU.
Office. 31 Hill Street, Opfltaire, over J H
White e Clothim- Store. mar22d4wly
THOS. R. MILLS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
and
Court*. Office over George 4 nov2tf
BX D ST EWAR ROST. T. Mill 1
STEWART & DANIEL.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Over George 4 Hart nett *, Griffin. Ga.
Will practice m the State and
rts . juIvlSdtf
CLEVELAND St GARLAND,
: DENTISTS,
GRIFFIN. • :- : OEORGIA
HENRY C. BURR ft BRO
'
srjiy ™**>**** 1
Hardware,
Stoves, Pistols,
Tinware, Sporting
Belting, :» '-.-"Mi
Farming
Implements $ x*
FOR THE SEASON OF 1889 AND 1890.
U'e btivif the hirgeat, best Holtwtttl and most completu ." stock in this •Re¬
turn. We nrc golwagpntft iijreDla for for the toe ceteforatMl fwenraiM
/- i-.itig, Farmer Girl and Champion Monitor
h-**« J ! - ois: Stoves r
Ami THIRTY YEARS EX PER! ho* shown uh that they are th® beat
ever xobl in this mnrketv
Bifi REDUCTION IN ALL LINES OF STOVES I
We are the recognised lender* for __
TINWARE, TIN WORK AND REPAIRING,
Of every deaeriptioft. To those In nead ‘of ' %*' v * *
LEATHER OR RUBBER BELTINC
We can offer superior 1011111-0100111®, We are ngvnte for
King Powder Co.’s Powder,
The BEST in the world, and can offer big inducement* to both the whole
sale and retail trade, 1
Henry C. Burr *z Bro.
Builders’ Hardware a Specialty.
REMEMBER, THE OLD AND RELIABLE FIRM.
W. M.Holmanjc
KEEP THE BEST OF ALL KIXDB OF #
STAPLE AND FANCY CROCERI
Our Sweet Water Pat, and TeHeo Hours cannot beat. Beat brands ot
Hams, Shoulders Fresh ond lot Brealtfact Mackerel and Baeon. White AH Fish. kinds The of Canned beat Cig»rs Good* and cheap al
as any one. Hpeciafty, Vcg»
imules Sullivan’s Tobacco. Water Ground Meal a
Fruits, Fancy and Stick Candy, * * * <«s
FRESII FISH EVERY SATURDAY.
gfff
PRICES DO
Mfa offer this rooming everything in ear store at
REDUCED PRICES!
■Ginghams at 7c. to 0c, per yard. Sattines at 10c par yard, worth 15c
Wehave {ust received another FINE LINE of
Drummer s Sample Shoes
AT at WHOLESALE wirm FttiT V FitttT COST. *11
We have fOO pairs of Ladies' Ktd Button Shoes which we propose to to soil
12.50 pair, worth rth . from $1
at less than cost- All styles at $1 00 to per jifX *
to $3.5b per patr. Give at a call and we f 3|J
WILL SAVE YOtJ MOtfEY.
R. F. STRICKLAND,
Griffin, Nov. 23 rd. *g , «.». M HILL
FARMERS’ CO-OPERATIV!
HAVING MADE MONEYED AN ihhp . .
We Want Cotton
AT HIGHESt MARKET PRICE
WE WANT EMPTY KER08E5E OIL
WIG WANT C’KOKKH ANDMBAL
We Want to Sell the Best Cow F«od orld
Wr Call at Oil, MILL.
W.E. H. 8KARCY,
BOOTS S^HOE^8 AND LEATHER AT
2 2 22
-HILL 8T.— -HILL ST —
Home-made Shoes and Leather a Specialty. "?
Wp warrant all work and^hall makr it u u^« ^retpreMM^^tWn^J mrt rereivrel
l large shipment of Gent* i for Children
md Wlopcr* of all kinds. H. W. HJ 3ELKUS
®lr per cord paid for 200 corda of Ta*t-b*rV.
TO THE FKOI ■
—.TH.fc-jW .1
mmj
HAVE MOVED THEIR STOCK OF •S»WI9i
SASH, DOORS Al
T® Ho. 16 Hill St. (C. H. H
Where All Sizes Sash. Doors, Blinds, Mantles, &c., p
1
> -
will bw on sale at lowtwt mntket |>ri<v* Wejviil aiao add t<i ont busines*
complete line of ...
Builder^
4
and will have {roods to unit all classes of buildings from tbef heages t't
finest at prices to suit the times. Call or write * for what jot want.
Respectfully,.
AYCOCK MANIIFACTtJBIlWf CO