Newspaper Page Text
Cloaks, Carpets,
Matting, &c.,
At and BELOW COST
FOR CASH »
The entire stock must be sold out in a short time,
therefore ccme early and secure bargains.
£IF"Country Merchants will find it to their interest to
call and see me. Sale to commence Monday and continue
until the stock is sold out.
A. SCHEUERMAN.
“S
WALKING MATCH!
OUR COMPETITORS ARE TRYING TO
KEEP IN LINE BUT OUR PRICES'
ARE SO LOW THEY
Never Touch ’Em.
ALL WE ASK YOU TO DO, IS TO
Call, Examine and Price!
We will do the rest, by selling you Better Goods tor Less
Money than any other house in the World.
Ladies Cloaks!
Regular Prices $5 00, $10.00, $15 00, $20.00.
Our Prices 2.65, 5 25, 7.00, * 9.50.
LADIES’, MISSES’ AND CHILDRENS’ SHOES
ALMOST GIVEN AWAY.
M-ms’ Brogan Shoes...............$ 75
Calf “ ............... 1 00
“ Calf machinesewed shoes 1 30 1
Calf Goodyear welt shoes 1 45
“ Calf hand-sewed shoes... 1 98
All shapes and sizes, laceorcong
Boys Calf bale or coDg shoes. ..$ 80
“ Satin calf or Cordova bal
Shoes...............................$1 25
“ Large but. or lace Shoes.. 140
Ladies button or lace shoes,75c.
......................... fland$l 50
worth f3 00 aod $3 50.
f- THE UNION -»
CLOTHING 1 SHOE amitnuujc, HOUSE,
Next to Book Store ire, GR1UFIN, Gl.
H. D. ROWBOTHAM,
Contractor and
Plans and Specifications Furnished :
: On Reasonable
Address N. J. BELDINC.
Special Suit Sale.
Mens’ Block CheviotSuifp........$4 48
Mens’ Brown Cheviot Suits...... 4 48
Mens’ Clay Worsted Suios........ 7 73
Youths’ Suit (all sizes)............ 2 75
Boys’ Suits...............................98
Boys’ $5 Suits......................... 2 25
Our regular $1 50, $2. $2 25 and
$2 50 Hats at $1 for choice. Meb
and boys crush hats..............44 cts.
Brings comfort and improvement and
lends to personal enjoyment when
rightly used. The many, life who live bet¬
ter than expenditure, others and enjoy by more, promptly with
less more
adapting the world’s best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
value principles to health of embraced the pare in liquid the
laxative
remedy, Syrup of Figs. its presetting
Its excellence is due to
in the form most acceptable and and pleas¬
ant to the tasts, properties the refreshing of perfect truly lax¬
beneficial a
ative ; effectually headaches cleansing the and system, fevers
dispelling colds,
ana It has permanently given satisfaction curing to constipation. millions and
met with the because approval it of the the medical Kid¬
profession, Liver and Bowels acts without on weal
neys, them and it is perfectly free from
ening objectionable substance.
every Syrup of Fip is 't sale by all drug¬
gists in 60 c and $1 bottles, but it is man¬
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose nan* <s printed Syrup on every Figs,
package, also the nf.me, of
and being well substitute informed,'you if offered. will not
accept any
f
GBORGIA
RAISED -|
SEED—®
RYE-■
Saturday Morning,
October 6th.
NT* All kinds Fish received
this morning
Rice Birds. ■»
Oysters,
Crabs,
I’oeanvassed Pig Hams.
New Mince Meat.
One Barrel Pig Feet.
Edam Cheese.
New York Apples.
Ferris’ Celebrated Mpats.
Evaporated Apricots.
Holland Herring.
New York Cabbage.
Finest Jersey Butter.
Yankee Beans.
*riF“Our Breads baked
I®" Fresh Hailv
CHINA'S THREATENED DOWNFALL.
All Enrol*., nnS PoMlkly the United State*.
Ma* W* l)t»»* !»*• an Embrogllo—The
ltuaalan Hoar H»» Given a Sullen Growl
or Dhsatlsfaetlon—Scare f Up in tlie Mon¬
golian Province.
London, Oot. o.-f-As the Duke and
Duchess of York w«b proceeding iu a
carriage at Leeds to Yorkshire college,
at the opening oefiemouies of which
they were to be present, a man rushed
from the crowd which lined the route
to the college buildipg and attempted
to force his way to the side of the car¬
riage. One of the detachment lancers,
acting as escort, strtjck the man repeat¬
edly with his sword hud drove him batik
to the crowd, whefie he was taken iu
charge by the polic proyld imbecile,
The prisoner believed, his to action be an rushing
and, it is iu
toward the carriage pas prompted sole¬
ly duke by and a desire duchess. to sli^ke hands with the
Hebei 1 loa In Mongolia.
Tirn Thin, Obt. i 5.—Reports have
reached here that a rebellion has broken
out in the province $f Mongolia. Troops
from Ptjrin were sent to quell the up¬
rising. Serious troubles are said to have
arisen within reached the pMaiv at Pekin. No- A
details have here as yet.
number of European** from outlying dis¬
tricts are arriving here. Residents of
Tien possible Tsiu against are taking the anticipated every precaution attack
on the part of the natives.
->4--
In an Un»Wl«l State.
London, Oct. 5.—-The Shanghai cor¬
respondent of the Central Nows says,
a report is in circulation there that the
Japanese intend to establish a blockade
of the treaty ports of C'hee Foo and Tien
Tsin. The Chinese merchants at Shang¬
hai are cancelling their freight con¬
tracts. All the missionaries at Liao
Yank have fled to Few Cliwang. The
country is in a very unsettled state, and
the soldiers are inucji feared.
Kuglnnd Will Have Trouble.
Paius, Oct. 5.—Figaro, iu an article
on affairs in the east, says if the British
interfere China will not lie able to re¬
sist the desire to prevent Japanese from
profiting by victory-over her, and that
the peace of Europe may be threatened,
for France, Russia and the United
States would in such case certainly in¬
tervene.
Against tli. Consecration.
Madrid, Oct. 5.—The La Correspon-
dencia de Espana nays that Premier
Bagasta has privately declared the con¬
secration of Rev. Senor Caherera as
first protestant bishop of Madrid further illegal.
The government, the paper says,
' *■&($ '5$
The Official Records, Kill
Showing the
Best it
Baking Powder. 1
The United States Government, after elaborate tests, reports ™
the Royal Baking Powder a pure cream of tartar powder of « *
greater leavening strength than any other.
-Bulletin fj, U. S. Ag. Dep., p. 599.
Baking The Canadian Powder highest Official of Tests, all in recently leavening made, strength. show the Royal if
—Bulletin 10 , p. 16, Inland Rev. Dtp. 1 i
The Royal was found to be a perfectly pure cream of tartar I 7
: 1
powder, containing neither alum nor phosphoric acid. It was also 5
the highest in leavening strength. It was in fact the best powder i \
analyzed.— George F. Payne, State Chemist , Georgia.
j • c- &e$l
: Hence, in practical use,
The Royal Baking Powder goes further, makes
purer and more perfect food than any other.
■te
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 10« WALL BT., NEW-YORK.
approves Kev. ot rhe protest entered again**
Honor's consecration by i>upal
uuiipio.
Alt Europe Interested.
London, Oct. 5. —The St., James Ga-
*ctt<? declares that- the interests of Eng¬
land, France and Russia are closely in¬
volved Chinese in the possible breaking it up of
the empire, and is l»lieved
Russia has signified that she cau no
longer regard the progress of events iu
the east with indifference.
Allowed Their Religions I,lb«rty.
Paris, Oct. 5.—Referring to affairs
lu Madagascar, Matin says France will
allow the people of Madagascar com¬
plete religious British lilierty, but will not per¬
mit the missionaries under cov¬
er of religion to practically influence
ministers of the queen.
Thar* W era (I lanta In Those Carta.
Bingham, Mass., Oct 5.—-Workmen
eugaged iu excavating for a railroad
track unearthed five skeletons over six
feet in length, with jawbones of mmsu-
al size. Tuo skeletons had been incased
iu coffins fastened together with hand
forged nails. The oldest- inhabitant is
puzzled. that the place The simplest used explanation burial is
was as a
ground by some date. family which settled
here at an early Experts say the
skeletons are those of white men.
A Macro Murder la Alabama.
Selma, Oct. 5.—Frank Smith a negro
man, was murdered at Lake Lanier by
a strange negro. About 12 o’clock the
negro went to Reuben Goldsby’s house
anil told him that somebody liad kill¬
ed Frank Smith, and said for Goldsby
to take care of his body, that he would
be paid for doing so. The negro had $6
he said he had taken from Frank's pock¬
ets to defray burial expenses. It is sup¬
posed he murdered Frank for the little
money that he had.
Craaed Under the Weight of Wealth.
Davenport, Oct. 5.—Joe R. Lane has
been appointed guardian of Jas Thomp¬
son, one of the city’s oldest residents,
s, and for years regarded as the richest
man iu Iowa. Mr. Thompson last year
resigned as president of the First Na¬
tional bank, to devote his entire atten¬
tion to his largely private estate of $1,200,000,
consisting of western mortgages.
He ^became heavily involved, and his
mind has given way under the strain.
Mr, Harrl-on’a Tour Arranged.
Indianapolis, Oot. 5.— Final arrange¬
ments for the triumphal tour of Benja¬
min Harrison through Indiana have
been made. After an interview with
Ciief Adviser Dan Ransdeli and Chair¬
man John K. Gowdy, the ex-president
agreed to their program, which means
no less than -i0 short speeches in the
state.
A Noted Profewor Dead.
New York, Oct. 6.—Professor Vin¬
cenzo Botta died at 2:30 a. m., from the
effects of a fall from a window Tuesday
morning.
BRIEFS OVER THE WIRE.
The establishment of a freight bureau
is discussed in railroad circles at Sa¬
vannah.-
Harry F. Hall, of Montgomery, Ala.,
has been commissioned, by Secretary
Herbert, chief engineer of the warship
Detroit.
White Caps are posting notices to
ginners around Huntsville, Ala., not tc
gin any cotton “until the legislature Oates
meets and decides between Bill
and Captaiu Kolb. If you do we will
burn, gin, residence and barn. ’
your S C., station the
At Gaston, a on
Florida Central and Peninsular railroad,
a lad named Samuel Wilkius, of Phila¬
delphia, was run over and killed while
trying to hoard a passing train.
Andrew Jackson Cal., last Laird, captured charged in
Los Angeles, week,
with a number of crimes against the
government during his connection with
the LaGrange (Ga) postoffloe, is in jail
at Atlanta.
THE SUN, Established 1877
FATAL Flllli TO FIVE.
Firemen Met a Dreadful Death
In a Detroit Building.
AN IMMENSE BUILDING BUBNED.
Th« Walla Collapsed and Carried the Vic¬
tim* Down ta Dntk la tbo IKIirb-i
Number of Othtr hniM Injarod, Bam#
Seriously—Bad Bias* I# Detroit and a
Fir# at Nashville.
Detroit, Oet. 5.—Fire at 7:45 a. m.
somptetely gutted Keenan & Johns’
furniture store, entailing a loss irf $80,-
000 on the sleek and $25,000 on the
building.
The fire started {a the boiler room and
shot up the freight elevator shaft, gain¬
ing such headway that the firemen were
unable to save any portion of the build¬
ing or oontents. At 9:15 the front wall
fell out. Five men were killed and
four or five seriously injured.
The dead are:
Lieutenant Michael Donaghne, chem¬
ical engine, 1.
Pipeman Pipeman Richard D. Ely, engine 9.
John Pagei, engine 9.
Frederich Bussey, a clerk.
Martin Ball, engine 8.
The injured are: Lieutenant OTtonrke
of engine 8.
Pipeman F. Cronin, Stock, engine 8.
Pipeman C. engine 8.
Two or three others were injnred.
Another Dmtroelf*# Ware.
Buchannon, W. Va., Oct, 0.~Just
after midnight fire broke out in the
Kiddy furniture building on Main street.
The fire spread rapidly and raged fierce¬
ly and by 2 o’clock the Kiddy furniture
building, Btockert’s feed stable, White,
Carver & Brothers' hardware store and
building and a half dozen frame dwel¬
lings along Main street were in rains.
In half an hour more. Piter's drug¬
store and two large 3-stisry block* op¬
posite, were in flames.
Help from Weston was called for and
arrived at 2:80, and by 8 o’clock the fire
was under control. Twenty houses, in¬
cluding all of both sides of Main street,
from E. C. Farnsworth’s building to Dr.
J. W. Brown's block, were burned out.
The origin of the tire is thought to have
been incendiary. Loss. $*O,UU0; insured
for less than half.
Heavy Low In Nashville.
Nashville, Oct. 6.—Fire early in the
morning destroyed the Y. M. C. A
building. The Banner editorial rooms,
temporarily located iu the fourth storv
of the building burned together with
the files and library of the. paper. The
loss is $100,000, partially insured.
The Biggest «*e Well.
W ilk will*, W. Va., Oct. C.—The
big gas well on Indiana creek has bro¬
ken loose again and the roar of the es¬
caping gas can be heard a dozen miles.
The well belongs to the Victor Oil com¬
pany and was drilled into the sand Sept.
6. The gas pressure threw the tools,
weighing 4,000 pounds, out of the der¬
rick, wrecking that structure. In about
a week it subsided, but now experts
pronounce it the biggest gas well ever
i struck. Enough gas is being wasted
! daily to light and heat a city of 100,000
population.
May Break Up the Team.
Baltimore, Oct. 5.—The fight for the
Temple cup between the Baltimore and
New York baseball club* may have end¬
ed with Thursday's game. McGraw
Oriole, third baseman, declares he will
not play in another game, and it is not
certain that the other players will go
on the field again. McGraw says the
team is not in a fit condition to play
winning ball, and he would rather for¬
feit the cup and monies at stake than
be defeated by the New York club.
The fine Jersey cattle on tbe tana ot
C. H. Phinixy near Augusta, Ga, are
dying of anthrax, a disease which is
contagious wtych cattle and one subject, of the most fatal to
«•
A FINANCIAL SHOWING.
Secretary Carlisle Helps Out HI#
with Owd Campaign Thunder.
Wasainoton, Oct. 5.—-The campaign
in the west and south is being made
largely on financial issues, and the
treasury department is being drawn
upou daily for material, Secretory Car¬
lisle lias just emit a letter to Senator
Harris of Tennessee, in which a t
pari»<>n of the decrease in the
debt during the first Cleveland a
tration and the Harrison i
is furnished. From all accour
Republicans in Tennessee have 1
that the Democrats have
showing in this particular. Seer*
Carlisle states that the decrease in
during the first Cleveland adntini____
tion - from March 1, 1885, to March 1,
1889—was $341,448,449, and that the de¬
crease during four years of Harrison’s
administration was only $238,627,668.
In Illinois declared and Indiana from the the Republi¬
cans have s'
during the operation of the
law the receipts iu excess of the *
ment’s expenditures before.---—, were
tively larger than ever been prepared at
on this p lint have
Hecretary Carlisle’* suggestion for the
use in those two states. The records of
the ........ department show that * «tt*|iil^ during the
■ ‘
wHf'riWf ill IOWd,
Iu the year 181.M, during the whole erf
which time the McKinley MU was in
full force, the expenditures exceeded
the receipts to the amount of $69,808,-
260; nor withstanding the expenditures
were $16,752,676 less than the preceding
year. This show* that the receipts to
excess of expenditures diminished an-
anally nnder the operation of the Mc¬
Kinley act, until finally a large deficit
was the result.
Rum I* a Robber* ‘ Murdwr Mia# hnou, jm
Berlin, Oct. 5.— A dispatch from Wil-
na, Russia, reports that robbers mur¬
dered a rich farmer of Gibanisaki. hia
wife, three children and four servants,
looted the house and escaped.
=
ITCHING HUMORS
Torturing, and disfiguring of eczemas,
every specie* itching.
r "
— pimply dry, skin and ta
with relieved by thin, and
speedily a single and
and e
cured by the Ctmecas Reme¬
dies, when the feast physicians
and remedies ML
Itching Skin for Years
menced My disease bead. (psoriasis: spread com¬
idly all on my body, under rap¬
over Scales-would my got
my nails. drop all
without the time, relief. suffering 1 endless, and
the Ctmawa* Remedies cannot praise
too
much. Have made my skin as clear from
scale* a* a baby's. All I used was *6 worth.
DENNIS DOWNING, Waterbury, Vb
Skin Disease 9 Years
Red over nine yean a dreadful
nT L. | skin disease. First appeared a
wk f y few small red spot* on my breast
LA which kept spreading slowly to
*4# my buck. The spot* tamed gray,
and began fall off, itching. and It Small scales
would continued
all over my body. 1 tried all medicines, con-
sulted doctors, no use. Then I gsve it ail op.
Tried the Cenex ka Remedies, and they whites* cared
me that entirely. of child. My skin now pore
a &
JOHN E- FEABSON, Whatcom, Wash.
Itched Scratched Bled
Pi Duucreu vi years with pimples
which I had to scratch match until untu I 1 would would
After doctoring Remedies. three years,
tried Ci TiciRA After
SSSw
Large Sores on
Was greatte ^ ibl ^w U hM ood
O srr&JsislIl ob my face. Itaads were In such
and remedies, i ----- 1 “
■"* * CfTM r*A Kem*
free from all skin 8AMT5L * ^uide. J.l
2SS Falrtno not Ave.,