Newspaper Page Text
VOL XXL
■
1 Vi'.-:'
M
-^‘IeDICINE
' AVER REGULATOR. Don’t
. I it. New is the time you
t •; ■\\ ake up your Liver. A
*•’ Liver brings on ‘Malaria, Fever
. .1 . : . Rheumatism, and many other
!•:• Mutter the constitution and
■ ;n. Don’t for et the word
v.r-v.f . !t u SiMAtoNS Liver
hr’!. .. .: ■iR -,-yj want. The word REG-
I '.ATO:< di ■ io 'iiishes it from all other
ji n. And, besides this, SIMMONS
: .I’. REGULATOR is a Regulator of the
i .e r.! ,n it pr<v-erly at w< rk, that your
systeei : iav 1 e kept in vooci condition. .
FOR TF!S BLOOD take SIMMONS
1 ;• it':' iIiLATOR. It is the best blood
purl: i-r ;u;i correct r. Try it and note
the (bitoicnce. Look for the RED Z
on evoy package. You wont find it on
a,iv c'icr medicine, and there,is no other
l.i'i ■••• tv like SIM.’IONS LIVER
Reg ; ;i-.e Kiagof Liver Remedies,
atv.vou grtit.
.?. ; <!«>., i'-hltn f.lpM.i, l’a.
\ Even a Child
cauTdi'-’y
It TAYLOR'S
AKTi-iltADi\{ '£
fCM'DISS,
L<TvV» whin, nro
\/J V!■ •!. ..I 1:. . ....
1 '• v ' roots an-:i
\ffif / forks. 'Hir-e
t \ *A‘ v..iers l . a
« \V K-.- nfnr iiei.-
: fimf a l aiint. I Inly
?i (l is| ij are made firm
t f. ‘ It! t! tL-t. iniutu « r
t /! I F f{ l|t i;.mifUvln
1 y h’ 1 tr: I forline y
| j I i 1»I sy US lie
♦ \ w■ f«rt.* exactly
♦ '• j ft ti lifcht i :i
--♦ \ \ . ft!. ii. Litß
i I f-iiti. They
♦ ,X'aW h arc the safest,
: \AV tfl • L—m ost, t lie
♦ A\ v \ |fa q w kest, the
t AvilwW P \ oc‘t cure for
* V vV\'Wf l \ Headache and
l 4 1 V ,* L) .N eura 1p i a
t M '-Jiff that human
jJf li nd 8 vv e r
♦ made. Don't
y .ludpe them by
t vihat some
: other headache medicine I .is done for
* y< u. Judge them by them'‘ ve.'. Why
♦ not try them this very day ?
t TAYLOR DRUG & CHEMICAL CO.,
♦ TRENTON, N. J.
FOR SALE 15Y 1). -T. SANDERS.
■ ..m.- - IW -"
—FOB Tilt 111-. ll »\<i OF TIIK NATIONS— *
fßotanic Blood Balm 1
I J iIM Tin: GREAT SOUTHERN REMEDY TOR J
V, All Skin and Blood Diseases %
the blood, and never fails’*
lot to cure the most inveterate S
fs I BLOOD AND SKIN DIS- *:
j EASES, if directions are foi- *■
2aM lowed. Thousands of grate- *
J ful people sound its praises p
j and attest its virtues.
j OFWRITE for Book of Won- J
| derful Cures, sent free on ap- Si
plication.
If not kept by your local druggist, &
send SI.OO for large bottle, or $5.00®
for six bottles, and medicine will
sent, freight paid, by
KM>OI> BAH,™ €«., Atlanta,6a. *
UtZf- e, -j, J. w At-'ii' 2
Scientific American
&, DESIGN patents,
COPYRIGHTS, etc.
For information nnd free Handbook write to
. MU AN & CO., SOI Bkoalwat, Mav York.
Oldest bureau for securing patents in America.
Kvery patent taken out by us is brought before
tbe public by a notice given free of charge in the
srtenfific Jktßcrinm
Largest circulation of any scientific paper in the
world. Splendidly illustrated. No intelligent
man should be without it. Week Iv, $3.00 a
year; sLsosix months. Address MUNN & CO.,
Fublishebs, 301 Broadway, New York City.
SIBOOOO
GIVEN AWAY TO INVENTORS.
$150.00 every month given away to any one who ap
plies through us for the most meritorious patent during
the month preceding.
We secure the best patents for our clients,
and the object of this offer is to encourage inventors to
keep track of their bright ideas. At the same time we
wish to impress upon the public the fact that
IT S THE SIMPLE,TRIVIAL INVENTION?
THAT YIELD FORTUNES,
such as the “car-window” which can be easily slid trtl
and down without breaking the passenger’s back,
“sauce-pan,** “collar-button/* *'r t-lock,** “bottle* .
stopper,” and a thousand other little tilings that mo. t
any one can find a way of improving; and these simple
inventions are the ones that bring largest returns to the
author. Try to think of something to invent.
IT IS NOT SO HARD AS IT SEEMS.
Patents taken out through us recei e special notice in
the** National Recorder,” published at Washington,
D. C., which is the Pest newspaper pc’ iished in America
«n the interests of inventors. We furnish a year's sub
scription to this journal, free of cost, to all our clients.
We also advertise, free of cost, the im ention each month
which wins our $l5O prize, and hundreds of thousands
of copes of the “National Recorder,” containing a
sketch of the winner, and a description of his invention,
will be scattered throughout the United States among
capitalists and manufacturers, thus bringing to then
attention the merits of the invention.
Ail communications regarded strictly confidential.
Address
JOHN WEDDERBURN & CO.,
Solicitors of American and Foreign Patents,
618 F Street, N. W.,
Box 385. Washington. D. C.
t Kcferenee —editor of this paper. IVnufor our
50-Page pa mthleU FREE.
ainMcv v
muni:!
We fur-.inh everyth We start ycu. No n*k. \ u ten :. vo»e
yo«r spare or all yot:r lititf to rbew..rk. ", Li- -an
cutitvijr m-wlead.tmd brinf* wor.Uerfot tu e«-t.evert k-r.
Beginner* *n* eamh.f fiva to fit’ per week and ur -ards,
and m-.ir after a litile eiperieuee. We me furnish von the nu
-1 ;■ m. nt and teack y-o t KICK. No n. •1. *plain her- Full
Lufonuatioa Mihfc. I fit £A(O, i.oDM, kai.Nt,
THE HENRY BOUNTY WEEKLY
WiilTß 110 l till.
’oiiliniud from last week's letler.
It has been quite a while since n,
wrote to Tiif. Weekly, but if we re
, member correctly Rural appealed t..
I the people to exbonorato him from the
j charge of denouncing them »g ‘•bomb
thiowi-rs. IR* will not deny savin- 1
iam ami ( levt landisiu and populistism
are uvin brothers, and that both are
the (II spring ol socialism. Now, all
yon who do not endorse Cleyelandism
are socialists. You belong to that
class who believe in the fore.hie divii
ion of all material wealth by law and
cot:rsinr; who hate the rich because
tney are rich, anil who are called
“bomb throwers” because they vent
their hatred by the use of explosives to
destroy life and property. We admit
, Hoit the word socialism is used with a
| great variety of meauiug, but the above
S is the common acceptation of the term.
We. hope however, that the people will
j extend charity toward this benighted
dreamer; he w*as perhaps just going
into his preseut stars of somniferous im
becility aud was not responsible foi
what he said.
Rural says that all parlies endorse
the speech of I lon. W. G. Turner de
livered in Congress Feb. Iftb. We
are not aware of anybody endorsing it
except gold standard advocates. It is
only a structure of plausible sophistries
built upon false premises.
In answer to our statement, that in
every couutry where silver has been
demonetized it was done at a time when
silver was at par with gold, Rural
brings out that oid worm eaten chesnut
about “using the ounce of prevention
to save the pound of cure.”
Now, if the people of the U. S. in
LSlfti, saw any great evil that would
result from the continued use of silver
not not a word was even said about;
we search the records m vain for any
thing against silver in any of the news
papers of the day, or in any resolution
or platform of any political party. No
oue one knew at the time what was
being done, except British emissaries,
and a few congressmen who helped to
perpetrate the crime.
Ivven Geu. Grant Pres, of the U.
S , said that he did not know that the
bid made any change in the monetary
standard.
Geu Robt. Toombi said that it was a
fraud put through by a venal congress,
aud the code was fixed up by a set of
thieves.
Instead of claiming the honor of
averting a great evil each of the old
parties have sought to shift the respon
sibility on the other. The democratic
official campaign book for 1890, asserts
that the demouitization of silver was
brought about by the use of British
gold.
Rural quotes from Mr. Crisp to sub
stantiate his assertion that the country
is more prosperous now than ever he
fore. In the first place we do not re
gard Mr. Crisp as a friend to silver.
His past record shows that he is an en
emy and his fight for silver is a sham
designed to injure the cause; but ac
cepting him as authority the quotation
jeroves nothing. Out great wealth and
vast undeveloped resources, our seven
ty millions of industrious people and
our immense productive power is no
evidence that the laboring classes are
prosperous. Mr. Crisp was only show
ing the grand po-sibilities of this nation,
if the legislation that has destroyed our
prosperity was repealed aud the law
re enacted under which we prospered
lor eighty years.
Dr. Talmage recently said that in a
country capabable of holding, feeding,
clothing, and sheltering 1200 million
people, aud wheie we have only seven
ty million, there ain two million men
who c-nnot gfet honest work, aud with
their families an aggregation of five
millions that are on the verge of star
vation. 1 lie men employed are esti
mated by others as high as four mil
lion.
Gold standard Englaud, according to
How to Treat a Wife.
(From Pacific Health Journal;.*
birst, get a wife; second, be patient.
You may have greal trials and per
plexities in your business, but do not
therefore, carry to your home a cloudy
or contracted brow. Your wife may
have trials, which, though of less mag
nitude, may be hard ior her to bear. A
kind word, a tender look, will do won
ders in chasing from her brow all
clouds of gloom.—To this we would
add always keep a bottle of Chamber
iaiu’B Cough Remedy in the bouse. It
is the best and is sure to be needed
sooner or later. Your wife will then
know that you really care for her and
wish to protect her health. For sale
by Medicine Dealers.
mcdonougii, ga„ Friday, may 22, LB<><>.
If iral’s argument, ought to be tin
most prosperous c iuutry in th l world
a paradise for Uio working man, yet
w« liutl va.-it areas of farniiug land lying
idle and abandoned in this densely pep
uhittd kingdom, became men cai.uot
make a living upou them.
The (> ii tni in her recent speech to
parliament said: “1 regret to say that
the cot.dition of agriculture is disas
irons beyond recent experience.
Measures will hj laid hi fore you with
the object of mittigating the distress of
the classes engaged in that iudust y.
Another evidence of our great pros
perky (!') is the fact that ibe govern
ment has fallen behind ISo million
dollars siuce July 18‘d3, and the public
debt during the last administration has
been increased over 500 million dollars.
We could give a whole column of evi
deuce but' the average farmer needs no
proof that he is not prospering; and as
for Rural it would all he wasted upon
him. J presume he will say that Dr.
Talmage and Queen Victoria are
calamity howlers and socialists.
Dennis.
Tribute of Respect to sister Adlade
Mills.
It is with sad hearts we note the
death of our helot el sister, Adlade
Mills, which occured last December at
her home in Newton county.
She leaves a husband aud one child,
with many friends, to mourn her de
parture.
She embraced Christianity at Sharon
church last Augu.it, and until death
claimed her she was striving to follow
her Savior who went about doiug
good.
She was of a gentle temperament,
and firm in the cause of Christ.
As a wife and mother she was ever
patient, tender and loving, always mitt
istering to those of her household as
only a good wife and m itber can.
Asa friend and neighbor she was
kind to all aud full of that love that
thinkest no evil, that suifere'h loug
and is kiud. She remembered a soft
answer “turueth away wrath.”
As a church member she was faith
iul aud true, ever ready to do what
she could in the Master’s cause, and to
make those happy around her. Now
that she has gone aud cannot return,
may God’s care be thrown around her
little ones, and guide their steps, sup
ply their wants and soothe their cares.
And may the husband be drawn
(nearer heaven untili at last father,
mother and children will be gathered
together iu that beautiful home pre
pared for the faithful
And may the father, brothers and
sisters lean on the Mighty Rock of
Ages thiough this life, and when they
have no place on earth may they too
be gathered together around the great
white throne.
Now let us all trust in Him who has
prom'sed to be with us always, even to
the end of the world. A Brother.
Adopted iu Sharon church confer
ence, Henry county, Ga, May 2nd)
189 G.
Obituary.
Fannie Lo u Fields was born Oct.
22, 1893, and died February 10, 189 C.
She was the youngest child of J. AV.
and Nannie Fields. The writer has
never known a child of a more affec
tionate disposition. She was intelli
gent beyond her age.
Oh, how well do I remember the
expression of that sweet little face aud
those bright eves, when she would visit
my home, which she often did. Pre
cious little Fannie Lou, though we will
see you no moie on earth, by the grace
of God we hope to meet you again
where sickness, sorrow aud b reave
merit never come.
May the Lord in his goodm ss and
mercy enable her parents and grand
parents to say, “though our little dar
ling is gone and can never return to
us, we will go to her.” God in his
wise providence has seen fit to clip the
tender bud in its purity-aud transplant
it in heaven.
Sleep on. Sleep on, little Fannie, sweetly
sleep,
This record shall thy memory keep.
The thought is deep upon my heart en
graven,
That I shall some day see you in
heaven, M. L. H.
Mr. D. P. Davis, a prominent livery
man and merchant of Goshen, Va., has
this to say on tbe subject of
rheumatism: "I take pleasure iu rec
ommending Chamberlain’s Pain Balm
for rheumatism, as I know from per
sonal experience that it will do all that
is claimed for it. A year ago this
spring my brother was laid up in bed
with inflammatory rheumatism and suf
fered intensely. The first application
of ( hamberlain’s Pain Balm eased the
pain aud the use of one botte complete
ly cured him. For sale by* Medicine
Dealers.
MR. T. I>. WKKMS.
An Old Citizen of Henry County lias
passed away.
|
After a long aud wasting uilliction,
Mr. T. D Weems, an aged and honor
ed citizen of our county, peact-fulU
passed away on the morning of the
13th of May, ISiIG. Mr. W. was
horn in South Coroliua, on the 23rd
of May, in the year 1,8 )8. We was
I the youngest sou of the late Samuel
Weems, who moved from South Caro
. lina to Georgia, first iuto Jasper, and
afterwards to Henry county, where he
resided up to the time of his death.
To those who knew Uncle Dickson,
there will be no necesity to enter upou
an extended detail of the traits of his
life and character, lie was a man of
untiring energy and perseverance; an
honest man, ever faithful to his word
aud promise; a true aud reliable friend;
a man whose heart was easily tonched
with a feeling of sympathy for those
who had fallen under the liam of ad
versity, and was calling for a brother’s
aid. His deeds of love and compassion
towan’s his fellow creatures were reu
detied in secret, without letting his
left hand know what was done by his
right. Passing on to a higher plane,
his children testify that he was a kind
and indulgent father, an ever loving
and affectionate parent. It was
always his highest pleasure to advance
aud promote the wellfare of Ids family.
During his long aflliction not a word
of complaint did he utter. lie recog
uized iu it all, the directing hand of
his Father. lie claimed that God was
his Father. In his religious faith he
stood out on the hroad platform of a
world wide, universal redemption of
all God’s erring children. He believed
in the unlimited sovereignty of the
God he adored. Whatever corruption
might befall us. he believed his Father’s
unmeasured love would shape and con
trol the ultimate destiny of all his be
lated, sin tossed children. Just on this
line, here we shall leave him.
To night, side by side, he is sleeping
iu his grave with his former companion.
His ear is now deaf
of the loudest th FhurJarm eu
logy can attract his alteution neither the
frowns of those why up braid him.
“Nothing you will reek, if you will let
him sleep on
111 the grave where his friends have
laid him.”
Let me say to you, children, keep
his memory fresh ou the tablet of your
hearts. When the summer is past,
and the cold cheerless wiuter has gone
by—when tbe budding springtime
shall have come again, go with your
loving hearts aud tender hands, aud
plant sweet flowers that shall bloom
over his grave. But let no tear ol
grief smitten sorrow fall on these fra
graut flowers.
We come uow to say to his bereft
companion. Minnie, the sacred vow
he made with you when you stood be
sidehim at the marriage alter, has now
been cancelled. It was only to last
as long as his life remained. But
the tingling of tbe bell that called him
away was heard and he gave up his
faded life, and answered to the call,
fie left you the assurance that he was
going home. 'That old wooden build
ing that had to be lit up night after
night was not his palatial home; no, no
that’s up yonder. No midnight lamp
burns there; no ear dull of hearing; no
tougue without power to speak plainly;
tie weak and trembling limbs; no palid,
humble glare of countenance; no death
bell heard there—but the trumptt
shout, “Home at last.”
An old friend, W. T. G.
A Chicago baker, said to be passion
ately fond of molasses, committed sui
cide the other day by lying on his back
on the floor aud suffocating himself by
allowing the molasses to flow from a
barrel into his mouth.
A good deal of sickness is reported
among the colonists at Fitzgerald.
Awarded
Highest Honors—World’s Fair.
DR
BAKING
POWDER
MOST PERFECT MADE.
A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Free
from Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant.
40 Years the Standard,
A WONDERFUL DREAM.
IN rKRWOVKX WITH I'llK STOIH
OF A V KST.
Vexatious Fxperleneu of a Populist.
<ll VPTKit 111,
No i.jiool avo exporieuco in mnUlu i'i
pbico
A rnn-oot solution gives,
til' I lie crowning mystery to lullf our raee
How Hie other lull lives.
Having received the light hand ot
populist fellowship of Mr. Western,
and being comfortably s.-ated and in
terestingly entertained in his otfloe my
uneasy feelings had disappeated and
given place to the more pleasant
thought that 1 was holding one ofDoe
aud another was holding me. Never be
fore bad 1 had any desire for an oliloe,
hut I was now a populist, aud populists,
as a rule have a eoit of mania for olli
ces, and iu my dream I was no excep
tion to the rule.
1 wrs now heartily ashamed of the
harsh thoughts I had previously had of
the merchant who. notv seemed so car
ried away with the certain knowledge
that he was entertaining a leading
populist of a distant slate that he had
almost forgotten that he was a business
man and I a customer, but I had not
forgotten it, aud I confess that I would
have enjoyed his political talk all the
better if the business that had brought
me to his place had been attended to;
for I could not understand what he
meant when he said 1 had been p king
fun at him and that ho know I would
make the matter all ri^>lit about the
money, for I had never been more sin
cere about anything in my life than
while I was trying to buy that suit, aud
I had tendered him more than enough
of each kind of money 1 had to pay
my bill, anil lie had refused it all. I
now called his attention to these facts
and ho said : “Are you a populist
and do not know that Grover Clove
land and his gang huve bankrupted the
United States government? and that its
money is dead so far as populists busi
ness chanuels is concerned.”
“Oh, I know we claim that the Gov
ernment is bankrupt aud entirely in
the hands of thieves and rohberb. Hut
itf BeSf-s ßella and throughout the land
of Henry, wo take all of its money we
can get I said.
“Well,” said he, “we cat,not do that
here, we are doing a populist business
on populist priuciples, and to be consis
tent we must practice what we pteach.
National banks are the creatures of that
defunct government, whose silver coin
is neither free nor unlimited and oven
iis gold com bears its imprint and cir
culates only by its authority. Wo can
n >t take any of them in otir business.”
Look here Mr. Western I said, are
you not running populism a little to
far; gold has a fixed bullion value vou
know, and besides that you are the only
man, except one, that I over heard try
to connect consistency with populism,
and that one exception was not a popu
list.
‘"Very true,” he said “gold lias a
fixed value when we kuow that it is
gold, but the only evidence we have
that these coins is gold, is that of a
parcel of traitors who sold thunselves
to England to n b and plunder their
own people, for a little English gold.
How does such evidence as this strike
you judge ? Would it not be the iiatur
al thing for such a character to pocket
all the gold and continue to grow rich
er, anil circulate something of no value
among the people and let them keep
growing poorer ?”
i was compelled to yield this point tc
my friend, hut 1 was now growing des
perate at the thought of failing to get
my clothes, and 1 told him to let con
sistency go to the devil, and sell me
that suit.
(CONTINI Kl) }
Are Vou One
Ot those unhappy people who aie suf
fering with weak u. rves, stariling at
every slight sound, unable to endure
any unusual digtuihmce, finding it im
possible to sleep? Avoid opiate and
nerve compounds. Feed tbo nerves
upon b'ood made pure and nourishing
by the great blond purifier and true
nerve tonic, Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Hood's l’ills are the best after-din
ner pills, a-sists digestion, prevent con
stapation. 25c.
Walter I. Woodall, of C'o'umbus, I as
lieen appointed assistant state school
commissioner. Mr. Woodall will hb
some (be duties of his office on .fuue
Ist.
The democrats of Crawford county
held a mass meeting at Knoxville and
eb cted a new executive committee for
a term of live years.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U S. Gov’t Report
Dwy&l Baking
Powder
absolutely pure
According to a newspaper of that
locality, this is how an Ohio girl pars
ed the sentence, “lie kissed me.”
‘•He,” site began, with a fouil lingering
over the word that brought the crimson
to her cheeks, “is a pronoun, third
person, singular number, masculiti gen
der, a gentleman, and pretty well Fixed
and universally considcied a good
catch! •Kissed’ is a verb, transitive,
too much so, regular evening, indicative
affection, first aud third persons, plural
number and govern by circumstances.
‘Me’ Oh! well, everybody knows me.”
And she sat down.
A Household Remedy.
And it never fails to cure Rheuma
tism, Catarrh, l’imples, lilothces, aud
all diseases arising from impure blood,
is Botanic Blood Halm, (11. B. I!.).
I’housands indorse it us the best rente
dy ever < ffered to mankind. The
thousands of cures performed by this
remedy are almost miraculous. Try
it. Only SI.OO per large bottle. For
sale by druggists. See advertisement
elsewhere.
Ihe Richland paper wants to know
what the fishermen are going to do for
bait, if Georgia goes for prohibition.
A Cure Tor Muscular Rheumatism
Mrs. R. L. Lumson, of Fairmouut,
B.inois, says: ‘‘My sister used Cham
berlain s Rain Halm for muaculur
rheumatism and it effected a completo
cure. I keep in the house at all times
and have always found it beuefieiul for
aches aud pain. It is the quickest
cure for rheumatism, muscular pains
and lameness I have ev< r soon ” For
sale hy r Medicine I) alers.
Children Cry for
Pitcher’s Castoria.
Sprir\g is Here
_ •
'1 lie time bus come when you must discard your winter robes nud clad vour
sclf with more comfortable garments
H o sombre colors of the whiter season must give place to the brighter hues
and lighter sbadig of spring You must keep in harmony with the seasons and
keep pace with the styles.
Every Monday until further notice will be our Bargain Day—when wo
will surprise everyone witn low prices. We don’t give a few prices on staple
goods that everybody knows the price of and charge high for other goods, hut
everything goes at sacrifice prices at the Globe Store.
Lookout For That Secret Bargain Day.
At the riqm-st of our numerous customers we will again begin our secret
bargains every Monday morning from 10 to 12 o’clock a. m. Don’t fail to be on
baud. The secret bargains are always cash. We quote you a few of our prices:
Domestics.
Arooskeag A. C. A. Ticking 11,4 c yd. 8 oz best Cottonades 12.$c. Yard
wide Sheeting 4 3-4 c yd. Best grade (’becked Homespun (same as Riverside)
5c yd. Good Checked ILimespun 1 I-4c, the kind that others sell at 51c. In
digo Blue Calicoes, best quality, 4 }c. Best Shirting Calicoes 3jc. Best heavy
hickory Shirting only Percales for shirt waist, lovely goods, 7c yd. Ba
tiste Persian Effect 4Jc yd. Hear this drop: One case Zepher Cbambray
Ginghams, worth Lie, lo go at, 7 lo; we are overstocked and they must go. Silks
for shirt waist from 19c to $1 25 yd. Brocade Luxor, all silk, 90c yard.
Dress Goods.
42 inch two toned Brocade Dress Goods 40c, lo go at 3.‘Jc. 40 inch silk
aud wool Dress Patterns at 49u yd. 40 inch black Nunsveiling for dresses, all
wool, just the thing for thi< hot weather, only 33c, other days 50c. All linen
Batiste, colored stripes, others ask COc, our price Monday 53c.
Millinery.
Wo do not like to blow so much about our Millinery Department, hut it
seems to be the order of the day. We were well pleased with our success ill
mill inery last seas in. hut this season our sales are nearly up with our entire
Hpring and summer season of last year. Why is this? Simply stylish goods,
popular prices aud a milliner who has no equal in Middle Geargia. A visit to
our miiliuerv department will convince you of the above facts.
Clothing.
1 nereis not a home in Middle Georgia who have a better selected stock
of Clothing than us. They were bought direct from the manufacturers. We have
them from the lowest in price to the highest in quality.
Shoes.
In this line the most of them were hought‘after the decline in leather. C"U
sequ ntly wo can give you closer prices than our competitors. Full line ladies
Slippers and misses Sandals.
Hats , —S raw, wool an i felt in all styles and prices.
Complete line men’s Underwear, collars, Cuffs, Neckwear, etc.
Our Grocery Department
Contains eve-ything a fanner needs at lowest prices. Call and sre u«.
THE GLOBE STORE.
C. G. Fennell & Co, Proprietors, .Jackson, Ga
5 CENTS A COPY
Just now everybody is beginning to
take a Spring Mediciue. And it is a
good thing to do provided you take
Simmons Liver Regulator—the best
Spring Medicine. It’s a sluggish liver
that clogs the system and makes had
blood. A duse a day of Simmons
Liver Regulator will make a new man
out of you, and a new womau too.
Look for the Red 7. on the package.
It is Simmons Liver Regulator you
want,
One talent well used gives its poses
sor greater satisfaction than five talents
buried beneath the rust of idleness and
sloth.
It is sad but true that we can silence
our consciences easier than our desires,
Prominent cotton men predict that
tho 1890 crop will reach the 9,000,000
bale limit.
17.1,000 cubic feet of Georgia mar
ble is to be used in the construction of
Rhode Island’s new Capitol,
For every quarter iu a man's pocke
Uniro are a dozen uses; and to use each
ouo iii such a way as to derive the
gieatest benefit is a question everyone
must solve for himself. We believe,
however, that no better use could bo
made of one of these quarters than to
exchange it for a bottle of Chamber
lain s Colic, ( liolcra and Itiarrhoe
Remedy, a medicine that every family
should be provided with. For sale by
Medicine Dualeis.
No better generui newspaper can be
bad than the Thrice a-Week World,
of New York. It gives all the impor
tant news, beside a largo and choice
lot of miscellaneous reading, aud comes
every other :iay for only ouo dollar a
year. In club with Tue Weekly for
only $1 7o ceuts.