Newspaper Page Text
—
(The §rm
SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST.
....;• -.HO, QA.. FEBRUARY 15, 1902.
IX A WEAK SPOT.
THE
, r0 RY OF AN ATTACK AND ITS
REPULSE.
TJjr : : j I)C Account as Told by a Veteran of
1 on Hundred and Fifty-fourth In
diana Volunteers.
jr. Keller, of Girard, Kans.
j. a veteran who saw long ana hard
At vice in the civil war with the
One Hundred and Fifty-fourth Ja-
_ v > oiunteera and he tells many
„ stur y of bivouac and battle. He
uti- recounting some of his adven-
[lirfc ,, to a repoiter the other day.
ail my experiences in the war
uid out of it,” he said, “one is most
uppermost in my thoughts, I had
L;rained my hip in some manner
put : thought i had got over it all
About two years after that,
however, when I was plowing for
wheat 1 gave out again in that spot,
Rheumatism sot in and I had to
quit work- 1 tried one thing after
toe other to get some relief from the
puiu but nothing that 1 took helped
me at all and I became discouraged.
“The cords of my left ieg were
drawn so badly that I could not
.straighten it out at all, nor could 1
sit down. My hip and Knee pained
me and I suffered norribiy. At times
aiso I had nervous headache. After
trying a number of things, my
daugnter, Mrs. Fry, who had been
cured oi rheumatism by Dr. Wil-
hauiT Ihuk Fids for Pale People,
induced me to try that remedy. My
case was a very stubborn one and I
took live boxes ol ihe pills before 1
could see much change but I kept
on and they certainly did wonders
for me. Tne cords in my ieg began
to slacken and before long it limber
ed so that 1 could use it again and
be able to sit down. My kidneys
had been bad and the pills soon
mane them better, loo. Dr. Wil
liams’ Pink Pill lor Pale People are
a grand, good medicine and 1 re
commend them to all who suffer as
I did.”
1 ne real cause of rheumatism is
the presence of acid in the blood,
which irritates the sensitive tissues
that unite tne joints and coyer the
muscles, thus causing, those inde
scribable tortures which rheumatic
sufferers endure. Years ago tnose
afflicted were bled; as it taking
away some of the impure blood
could remedy the balance. This
lolly has been abandoned and to
day physicians prescribe and drug-
ists recommend the use of Dr. Wil
liams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, as
these marvelous vegetable pills go
uireeily to the seat of the trouble,
exerting a powerful influence in pu-
riiying and enriching the blood by
eliminating poisonous elements ana
renewing health-giving force, thus
making a potent remedy for curing
Hits disease,
Hr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale
People are au untailing specific for
ah diseases arising from impover
ished Dlood or shattered nerves.
They cure not only rheumatism but
locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis,
St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia,
nervous headache, after-effects of
grin, of fevers and of other acute
diseases, palpitation of the heart,
auicinia, pale and sallow complex
ions, and all forms of weakness. At
nil druggists, or direct from Dr. Wil-
iiarns Medicine Co.. Schenectady,
M V., liny cents per box; six boxes
for two dollars and a half.
Cliknneys That Lean.
“IF • tills.” said the man with
I ; . mU'-i eye. who war, gazing sky-
Wiirii tap ton years ago some man
who had a grudge against me. I guess,
y attention to the fact, if fact
11'. that if a chimney leans at till it
ill",ays leans to the east.
"I didn't believe it. and I can hardly
■ ir yet. but I've spent hours and
’:d w. eks and months squinting
: >ys from car windows and
I walks, but I’ll be darned if 1
' Lave been able to discover a
g chimney that didn’t slant, to
. I’ve looked at factory chim-
yv hotel chimneys, farmhouse chirn-
' and city house chimneys, and
a!!, like" the adobe gods on the
i -of Yucatan, bend their heads
’ the rising sun.”
man with the restless eye
(lav
ever
lean
the i
And
i .o began an inspection of the
Pk .v Hue.—New York Telegram.
tailor Cover of Darkness.
iff minister of a Scotch parish was
5°fftg from home and procured the
■ff'i’uymai) of a neighboring parish to
■'’ffnah' on Sunday. His servant, who
"bo the beadle, was sent over to
; v ion to drive the reverend geu-
ff'iorm to the manse.
" a die train arrived, the beadle
isloii him to wait awhile, as he bad
’OU'e messages to do before lie went.
P '"as two hours before he returned.
f' 11 rood man was furious and tbreat-
report him to-his master.
. ''"el. sir. ye can dae that if ye
ilk< -" said the beadle, ‘‘but he tell’t
tlK ' ffiuisel’ to wait till itjwas dark
; 1 drove ye ower, for if the lolk
’ fffe village saw wha was to preach
11 morn nobody wad turn cot ava.”
MAN IS NOT MONARCH.
Hla Senses Are Less Acute Thun Are
Those of Animals.
: Man’s vaunted faculties are far less
acute than some of the lesser crea
tures.
! The human eye is a wonderful piece
I of mechanism, with its little bundle of
I nerves that iu some mysterious way
: make visualization possible. Yet this
eye, with all its delicacy of discern
ment, is but a circumscribed organ as
compared with the eye of the eagle,
which sees infinitely farther than can
any human eye. The same is true of
tlie human ear. The rats and the mice
that haunt our houses, .the squirrels
that caper about the woods and the
numberless other little animals all
hear better than we do. They may not.
trace refinement in sound as accurate
ly as can man, but for catching sound
at long range theirs are the ears most
perfectly constructed.
The sense of touch is more accurate
ly developed elsewhere in the animai
kingdom than in man. No man made
device for measuring water pressure
equals that of the fish, whose sides ali
strung with nerves register the water
pressure correctly every time and in
form his fishship just how much he
can stand and when to move up or
down.
A dog’s sense of smell is always re
spected by man, who frequently, as in
the case of a hunter, relies on it to sup
plement the findings of his own less
active olfactory nerve.
When it comes to the human voice,
there are birds with whose music
man’s music cannot bo compared. Not
Patti herself ever sang more sweetly
than the meadow lark at break of day.
*(00-Ur E. IX-tchnon'R AnH-»luretla
1 ay be worth to you more than $100 if you
'■' hiid who soils bertdinc from inconte-
11 water durina sleep. T lures old and
- (dike it arrests the trouble at once
' by H b McMaster. Druggist.
u* tb« new* of your MCttoa.
Coil Liver Oil From Bcnns.
During the wait between acts a med
ical student and a young woman who
sat together became slightly embar
rassed for topics of conversation. Fi
nally ai.d not unnaturally in view of
the nature of the young man’s studies
their talk drifted to the subject of dis
agreeable tasting medicines. Among
the horribles they mentioned were cod
liver oil and castor oil.
“I don’t see,” mused the young wom
an, “how any one can bear to eat the
beans that stuff is made of.”
“What kind of beans do you mean?”
inquired the young man.
“Why, cod liver oil beans, to he
sure.”
“Aren’t you thinking of castor
beans?” ventured her companion.
“Why, I always thought cod liver
oil was made from beans,” she said,
and the good breeding of the young-
man was shown by the fact that he
didn’t even smile, but several of those
who sat near by hadn’t equal control
over their features. — Philadelphia
Ledger.
Baby Priscilla’s Sermon,
Little Priscilla is the daughter of a
Congregational clergyman in the north
ern part of New York. She is only
four and a half years old; but, like the
children iu all families of Puritan ex
traction, she has been taken to church
since she was old enough to walk and
has learned to sit Sweetly through her
father’s longest sermon.
Yet little Priscilla, like other chil
dren, has her weaknesses, and the
greatest of these is bananas. One clay
she asked her father to get her some,
but he was busy and put her off. So
the little one started out toward the
village, where two summer hotels, like
Scylla and Charybdis. stand on oppo
site sides of the road to catch travelers
from the railroad station between May
and November. It was late in the aft
ernoon, and she found crowds on the
verandas. She did not hesitate a mo
ment, but turned fearlessly on Scylla.
She mounted the horse block and cried
out in a clear, high voice, “My people,
you must be good if you wants to go to
the good place; if you bad, you go to
the bad place.” Calvin himself could
have said no more. She paused for a
minute and then pronounced her bene
diction. But Priscilla was years ahead
of Calvin this time. “Now I’ve pweach-
ed to you,” she said, “I must take a
collection.”
Priscilla gave the same sermon under
an apple tree at Charybdis, and after
her itinerant preaching was finished it
took two of the young men and maid
ens from Scylla to carry her bananas
home for her.—Boston Transciipt.
Sweiiriiigr I® the Last Centura .
The early part of the nineteenth
century was the age of heavy drink
ing and bad language. Gentlemen
swore at each other because au oath
added emphasis to their assertions.
They swore at inferiors because their
commands would not otherwise receive
prompt obedience. The chaplain cuised
the sailors because it made them listen
more attentively to his admonitions.
Ladies swore orally and in their let
ters. Lord Braxfield, a famous Scotch
judge, offered to a lady at whom he
swore because she played badly at
whist the sufficient apology that he had
mistaken her for his wife.
Erskine swore at the bar, and Lord
Thurlow swore on the bench. George
IV. was always swearing. A profane
oath always accompanied this defend
er of the faith's expression of approval
of the weather, a horse, a dinner or
a drinking bout. Ilis accomplished
brothers envied his powers in this field
of endeavor and copied his example.
“Society clothed itself with cursing as
with a garment.” Vauxhall, then Dili
a fashionable resort, must have been
a delectable place, with its feast of
curse words and flow of oaths. Other
amusements were bull baiting, cock-
fighting and prizefighting. Wilberforte
and Sheridan supported a bill in 1S02
to abolish bull baiting, which was op
posed by Mr. Windham on the ground
that it was “the first result of a con
spiracy of the Jacobins and Methodists
to render the people grave and serious.”
—London News.
Worshiping: Fishes.
The mummified fishes of Egypt have
recently engaged the attention of
French archaeologists. They are now
known to belong to the giant perches,
one of which, Lates niloticus, was wor
shiped, in many cities, notably at Es-
ner. which took from the cult its alter
native name of Latopolis. Further re
search has established the fact that
these embalmed fishes, whether inter
red alone or in some human necropolis,
must have been imbedded in a shell of
dav incorporated with alkaline salts,
particularly common sodium chloride.
—London Post.
Try one of on r dobbin# ota*
■losiaJj WctJr\vToocl’ts Work.
Josiab Wedgwood's work deserves
collecting for ;; re!;:: reasons. It i- an
English art. invented a:;-.] ;v rfe.; ■! hy
a native of England. TI • designs used
for its decoration were made by the
best native artists of Lis time, it was
made of English clay, by native crafts
men. without slate aid or subsidy,
without foreign inspiration. All na
tions acknowledge his lifelong services
to the world’s ceramic industry. As
his epitaph truly records. “He convert
ed a rude and inconsiderable manufac
ture into an elegant art and au impor-
tant part of national commerce.”
His countrymen are advised to collect
; good specimens of his work while it is
j possible to do so. A time may come
j when they may find it difficult to pur-
chase at any moderate price. Greater
. Britain and English speaking America
are already competing. Wedgwood
I ware has grace of form and charming
; color, and it daily grows in the estima-
| tion of its possessor.
The bine examples have been called
j “cold,” but the same objection might be
j applied to the Venus of Milo. The
j Chinese—no mean authorities upon
j ceramics—poetically call one tint of
j blue on their porcelain “blue after j
rain.” Wedgwood blue is a pure color, <
but never tires and reminds one of the
celestial blue where the skylark soars.—
Connoisseur.
*rt
Napoleon as a Scientist.
The seat in the class of mechanics of j
the institute made vacant by the flight
of Carnot was filled in 1707 by the
election of a young artillery officer.
Napoleon Bonaparte, just returned
from his Italian campaign covered
with glory. The first consul paid much
favorable attention to the institute, ;
l and it continues to this day very much
i as it left his hands in the new eon-
> stitution which lie gave it iu 1S0G.
He exhibited Ids admiration for the
I pure sciences and his dislike to the
speculative sciences, philosophy and
| ethics by the expansion of the eonven-
| tion's first class and the entire suppres
sion of the Second class, thus creating
j four classes—sciences physiques ct
| mathematiques. la iangue et la littera-
j ture franchises, histoire et Iittoxature
j anciennes and beaux arts. It was Louis
| XVIII. who. in 183(5. restored the old
| names ol’ the academies to the four
I classes of Napoleon.
Some Bible Pads
Here are same Tic
Testament that it*to.
years’ time to figure i
There are Cl) boo;
fill 214 verst s. 7: \ ITU
1 Oil letters.
The middle bach is
The middle chapter
The middle v: rse v>
Icles xx. IS. if the
and verse 17 if th
about tlie Old
one man three
t)2D <•!::
irds and
iters.
: i *rovt-ros.
;• is Job xxix.
would be II Chron-
were a verse more.
> were a verso less.
Distillers of RUBE CO PM
The word
The word
times.
The shortest verse is I Chronicles i.
tnd" occurs 35,543 times.
“Jehovah” occurs (5.S55
-teg#*
; JjVIl’:
The twenty-first verse of Ezra vii
contains ail tlie letters of the alphabet.
The nineteenth chapter of the Second
Bo lt of Kings and the thirty-seventh
chapter of Isaiah are practically the Dr'-if’ !
same.
In the Now Testament there are 27
books. 2G0 chapters. 7.059 verses, 181.-
258 words and S3S.3S0 letters.
The middle book is II Thessalonians.
The middle chapter would be Ro
mans xiii if there were a chapter more,
and Romans xiv if a chapter less.
The middle verse is Acts xvii, 17.
Tlie shortest verse is John xi. 35.
’i’lie middle chapter of the entire Bi
ble is also the shortest—the One Hun
dred anil Seventeenth Psalm.
The middle verse is the eighth of the
One Hundred arul-Eighteenth Psalm.
Don’t tis the top of your
Jelly nr.d preserve jars in
the old fashioned way. Seat
them by the new, quick,
absolutely sure way—ba
ft thin coating of Pure
Rciiocd Paralline. lias
no taste or odor. Is
air tight and acid
proof. Easily applied.
Useful in adozen other
ways alxjut tho house.
Full directions with
each cake.
Sold everywhere. Made by
STANDARD OIL CO.
m
m
*3
33
Guaranteed quality and proof, penJal. si 50.
-r.d Beer. Hgy** .TUG TRADE OF BURKE Solicited.
KEARSEY & PLUMB,
1269 Broad Street, AUGUSTA. Ga.
BE
M
KV -
<2>;
w
rk
P. Shewmakf., President.
A. M. Boatwright, Secretary
/
IK
/•» -
J
mc£
iS
I o
i o
i O
I CS
•;>
I
-Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
Q
—■" Gather Sunshine.
Some persons are like the human
heart.'inasmuch as they sprinkle rest
and kindness and heart’s ease all
through their daily tasks. They weave
a bright thread of thankful happiness
through tiie web and woof of life’s
pattern; they are never too busy to say
a kind word or to do a gentle deed;
they may be compelled to sigh be
times. but amid their sighs are smiles
that drive away the cares; they find
sunbeams scattered in the trail of ev
ery cloud; they gather flowers where
others see nothing but weeds; they
pluck little sprigs of rest where others
find only thorns of distress.
Like the human heart, they make
much of the little opportunities, pre
sented to them: they rest that they
may have strength for others; they
gather sunshine with which to dissi
pate the shadows about them.
The grandest conception of life is to
esteem it as an opportunity for mak
ing others happy. He who is most true
to his higher self is truest to the race.
The lamp that shines brightest gives
the most light to all about it.—Good
Cheer.
Catching Tunnies.
The industry of catching tunnies is a
very ancient as well as lucrative one.
Allusions to it run through fe. classics.
Two hundred and twonl;, hi years
before the Christian era Athenseus
took the trouble to prove that a brother
scribe had made a mistake in attribut
ing a panegyric of the tunny to Hesiod,
and modern scholars have agreed that i
the first authentic classic reference to
the tunny is by Herodotus.
That the capture of the tunny was a
familiar feature in the daily life of
these times is proved by the story re
lated by Herodotus, who tells us how
Pisistracus, returning to Greece afteT
his second expulsion, pitched his camp
opposite to that of his adversaries near
tho temple of Palias at Paliene. Here
a soothsayer, Amphilytus by name,
moved by a divine impulse, approach
ed him and uttered this prophecy:
Now the cast lias been made, the net is outspread
in the water.
Through the moonshiny night the tunnies will en
ter the meshes.
—Herodotus i, G2. (Rawlinson’s Translation.)
Tisisti’atus grasped the meaning at
once, accepted the oracle, fell upon the"
Athenians, defeated them and return
ed to power.—Nineteenth Century.
For a Free Acci
dent Insurance
Policy good for
one year, write to
e Dim
0 iAiJL
Tho Popular
Liquor Dealer
ooc
A ugusta,
Georgia.
Ail it costs is 2 cents
r 1Hi< r.
Tlie Floating- Gardens of Cashmere.
The thousands of floating gardens on
the rivers of Cashmere are formed by
long sedges which are woven together
in the form of a gigantic mat. These
sedge grasses, flags, stalks, lilies, etc.,
are woven on the river or lake banks
awhile their roots are still growing in
the slime underneath. The required
amount of earth is then superimposed
upon the mat, the stalks are then cut,
and the mat and its load are a full
fledged “floating garden.” They are
usually about 20 by 50 yards in extent,
seldom larger, the full depth of the
mat and its earthly covering being
about three feet.
A dishonest Cashmiri will sometimes
tow his neighbor’s garden away from
its moorings and sell the produce of
tlie other’s toil. The writer lias fre
quently seen one of the largest of these
miniature gardens being towed by two
men in a rowboat which hardly look
ed larger than one of the luscious mel
ons serenely reposing on the floating
truck farm.—Exchange.
Repartee of George III.
George III. once gave a hard hit at
Lord Kenyon, one of the most uncom
fortable noblemen in the English court.
He came into the royal presence one
day in great excitement and, seeing the
surprise depicted pn the face of the
monarch, said in seif defense:
“I have lost my temper.”
The king was quick at repartee and
without waiting for the explanation
which was to follow said;
“I congratulate you. I hope you will
find a better one, for your old one was
the worst I ever knew.”
The courtiers laughed, and even Lord
Kenyon could not hold out against the
general merriment.
H0i EYfMf's
COMPOUND
ELIXIR
FOB
HORSE
Colic.
The 2 biggest farmers in Georgia and South
Carolina—Capi. Jas. M. Smith says of it:
“Have tried them. Holle man’s is the best
ol all Keep it all the time,”
Cap!. K H. Walker says: “Holleyman’s
is worth its weight in gold. I have saved as
mar,\ as three horses lives per month with
It.”
Ho!!eyman’s Compound Elixir
50 GENTS.
Will cure any case of Horse Colic under
the sup
Sold by all the merchants of this county.
D” not take any substitute said ro be the
inlarne thing or as good.
N. L WILLETT DRUG CO,
AUGUST A. n\
ake it.
Waiting For the Horae to Yawn.
A New York young man who had
been on a trip in Canada was telling
his friends of the times he had had.
“We took a horse and a buekboard,”
said he, “from Xavier Station out into
tho woods for a day’s shooting. When
we got there, of course we unhitched
the horse and took off the harness.
Then we went hunting.
“At night, -when we came to hitch
up, hanged if we knew how to do it.
j In about an hour we got nearly all tlie
j harness on. but the old horse wouldn’t
let us put the bit in his mouth. We
couldn’t drive him without that!
“Charlie said, ‘Say, have you lots of
cigars?’
“ ‘Yes,’ said I, ‘but what has that to
do with it?’
“ ‘Well,’ said he, ‘we shall just sit
down and smoke till that brute yawns!’
And we did it.”—New York Times.
Mantels, Tile, Grates, Hardware, : :
: : : Doors, Sash and Blinds.
ROUGH and DRESSED
LATHS, BRICK, Etc.
837 BROAD STREET, : : AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
Corner Myrick and
Barron Streets,
WAYNESBORO, GEORGIA J>
F I have opened ? Livery, Sale and Feed Stables, corner %
f Myrick and Barron streets, and solicit the patronage of %
% the public. Well equipped turnouts, and good, stylish %
% horses for hire at reasonable rates. Shall keep first-fHss ^
% stock for sale. Those in need of Horses and Mules should #
% see me before buying. t
3?. 3L. E23HSTS02ST,
<♦>
Corner Myrick and Barron Sts., Waynesboro. Georgia.
*^5= XT * > As it is too late in life for me to learn to keep books no’ . noth
^ .yerS D 1 • I'. ing charged nor tickets made. All is cash Don’t ask credit.
v.. P. M, WHITMAN,
2Q9 7th St., Augusta. Ga.
GIVES FREE EYE TESTS for ’efects o :
S! ght, grinds the proper glasses ar<! WAR
RANTS them.
Lenses cut into your frame wl.u© - au wait.
FREE OF CHARGE,
Henry Clay's Crack Shot.
A story old, but good, is told of Hen
ry Clay’s lucky crack shot. Clay was
visiting a backwoods county in Ken
tucky where the man who could tiro
the best shot stood highest in esteem
and the man who couldn’t fire at ^11
was looked upon with contempt. He
was canvassing for votes when he was
approached l?y some old hunters, one of
whom told him that he would be elect
ed to congress, but that he must first
show how good a shot he was.
Clay declared that he never shot
with any rifle except his own, which
was at home. A target was set up,
however, and Mr. Clay aimed at it. He
fired faint beartedly, but the shot
struck tlie bullsoye in the center.
“A chance shot, a chance shot!” cried
his opponents.
“Never mind,” he answered. “Ton
beat it. and then I will.”
No one could beat it, and Mr. Clay
had too much sense to try again.
Killed In Sawmill.
Crestview, Fla., Jan. 28.—William
Rye was killed in Cowan's sawmill
here Saturday afternoon. He became
entangled in the machinery and before
help could reach him he was so badly
bruised that death came to his relief.
New Florida Postmaster.
Washington. Jan. 28.—Arthur J. Mil
let has been commissioned postmaster
at West Bay, Fla.
i U LW D. PEf
* DENTIST %
m rdq Broadway, : AUGUSTA, G&
Bell Phone 1675 Strower Phone274
«*b IP T P7
W. D. BECKWITH,
RESIDENT DENTIST,
WAYNESBORO, ; : GEORGIA,
(Office-Over Citizens Bank.;
Office houis: 8 to I a. m , and from 2 to4
p m. Specsal attention to crown and bridge
work. Satisfaction guaranteed. Charges
expense of a trip to
reasonable. The
arge eitv saved patrons
sep3,’9S—by
mmssmmmm
ssss
gg Augusta’s Popular ::
ip Clothing House :: ::
fill Makes Big Reduction I
Ten cent. Cotton is nothing in comparison
to the money you can save by purchasing your
IvtUI Clothing, Underwear and other wearing appa-
r el from us.
We have made enormous reductions on all
44^ Winter goods.
[jfi-'gr Special Reduction on Overcoats ; all
sizes and styles.
!. CTEVrS 30N»&>C0HP«NY^
Y—T
838 Broad Street,
AUGUSTA, GA.
TELEPHONES:
Bell, 282; Stroger, 802.
OFFICE and WORKS
North Augusta.
s *
By Arthur Colton
This is the title of one of the
short stories we will give oui
readers in an early issue.
Hopeful.
Visiting Clergyman—Do you ever look
forward with fear to the awful tor
ments that await you in the future?
Prisoner—Well, 1 don t know, sir.
When I get out, my wife may not be
alive.—Life.
Inconsiderate Words.
It is very evident that many are not
aware of the painful wounds they are
constantly inflicting upon others by
inconsiderate words. This is manifest
by the censures which they pass upon
others for that of which they them
selves are guilty. It is difficult to listen
with an impartial ear to one’s own
speeches. They do not impress them
selves as they do others. They are not
able to place themselves in the exact
position of others. Hence, though they
do not mean to violate the Golden Rule,
they are yet continually doing it
through a waut of consideration.—
Christian Instructor.
I can make
a coat that don’t
bunch up and
hang like a rag
in front; a coat
that fits to the
back ofthe neck;
a coat that fits
under the shoul
ders ; the sleeve
seams are direct
ly under t h e-
arm—not twist
ed half to the
front.
Apd as to the
pants—cut s o
they don’t sag;
fit under the
hips; don’t draw
bacK 01 the kuee,
and fit smooth
over the instep.
Manufacturers fHigh Grade,)
Doors, Blinds, Glazed Sash
JYUaritels, Etc.
_£kTTGKCTST-£u, ' GHEOISGKr-A.
Mill WorK of all Kinds in Georgia Yellow Pine.
Flooring, Ceiling. SidiDg, Finishing, Moulding, Ere
Sills, Bridge, Railr ad and Special Bills to order.
Car
feb 24.’1900—b v
est Time
Jf yon care to lonlf
To select fall clothing is right now.
This best of ail stocks is at the top-notch
of fullness with us—just opened up, and are
handsome, exclusive styles that have been
made up especially for the particular buyer.
Full line Ladies’ Tailor-Made uits and
Skirts, odd and walking skirts, Henrietta and
Silk waists, and ready-to-wear hats. Ladies
are invited to visit our Ladies’ department.
Complete line of well-made children^ clothing.
J WILLIE LEVY,