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Volumd XI
SPECIAL!
Mote Goods for Same Money!
Same Goods for Less Money!
® M“Il‘l“
Dry Goods and Notipns
A Trial will Convince You that
what You Save Helps Pay the Bill, by
Baying your Dry Goods and Notions
from | | :
L. S KIYARDS NTIO STAAD,
Pine Street, 20d- Door East of Grant.
Also Next Door to Graves, the
Pop-Corn Man.
WE ARE NOW READY
TO QUOTE PRICES AND SUBMIT SAMPLES OF
FALL GOODS
FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CRILDREN.
- \
WE CAWRY EVERYTHING IN RE4DY-TO
WEAR, AND ALL ORDERS WiLL RECEIVE
PROMPT,AND CAREFUL ATTENTION.
Always Remember
. We send goods by express C. O. D. subject to
examination before acceuting.
2. We send two or three styles of garments for
selection.
3. We allow 10 per cent discount for cash, ex
cept on contract goods. o
B. H. Levy, Bro. & C
» . gvyg ‘fi flny
THE BIG STORE SAVANNAH, GECRGIA.
\z . . P g = N HIPHEE PR RRE
ATLANTIC & CIRGAINEHAL RAILWAY
TIME TAELE EFFECTIVE FEB'Y. 1, 1805, :
AL, TRAINGS DAILY.
TRAINS DEPART FROM FITZGERALD.
For Douglas, Waycross, Jacksonville, Savannah and all AM. P.M,
: points Fast and Boathi -+ oo a saice a 8 3D 400
FOr BrufSWICE ... coirerann oo assesmmiasiimminssnrerss 838
For Tifton, Moultrie, Thomasvilie and a!l points Southwest 840 405
For Cordele, Vienna, Montezuma, Macon, Atlanta and all
pointe” West and Noeth:- .o oo ammaenen o 1195 755
For *Ocllla at Mlewinville &.. 0o i i 840 405
*Daily except Sunday.
EXCELLENT TRROUGH BCHEDULE and LOVY RATES.
GiLORGE DOLE W ADLEY, ALEX. BONNYMAN, H. C. MCPADDEN,
Vice-Pres. and Gen. Mpgr. Superintendent, Gen. ¥t. & Pass. Agp
Waycross, Ga. ' ‘Brunswick, Ga. Waycross, Ga.
J. G. KNAPP, Comriercial Agent, G. A. JOLLEY, Agent,
: FITZGERALD, GEORGIA.,
¥ H‘(ifi.‘.’.-.‘efl.fi.w ~ e T e e e "‘"':—""-""-“"‘——'—""'—""—""—'—_—'——'_‘—"—_;_“——'*fff STy 4 B
White Goods, Dress Goods and Embroidery Sale
\
—eeeee NOW GOING ON AT BROWN BROS —————eeemmmmecoe
Come before the best selections are all picked over. Having bought heavier than ever before, and having the cash to pay down
enables us te give you all some of the Best Values ever seen in Fitzgerald. © We treat one and all alike, and give everyone the ad
vantage of our close Cash Buying. Ribbons! We have them for everyone. Thanking you all for past patronage and, solieiting
a continuance of the same, we are your friends, ' = - | L
’ T 2 OWN BIRRO=S. .
TTEIRICE--A -W E E o
FITZGERALD, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 30. 1906,
!
An Incident of the & A. R,
}
Encampmant at Denver, Colo,
Tunneling out of Libby prison
—then meeting together in Den
ver forty-two years afterward.
This was the story of two
prominent veterans who faced
each other at the Brown Palace
hotel ome afternoon—stood in
deep and thoughtful silence,
then rushed almost to an em
brace as they gripped hands and
re-alled the past.
It was a very unusual reunion,
this in Denver, for two old com
rades who had not seen each
other since the dark days of the
war,
General W. C. McKelvy of
Creek and Captain M. S. Kirby
of South Amboy, N.J. were two
men who had this experience.
General McKelvy is adjutant
general of the National Associa
ion of Union ex-Prisoners cf
War, and opened headquartersin
the Brown hotel. He
was standing at the door of
room 237, when a medium sized,
ruddy-faced man, with gray mus
tache and military beariog, came
to the door. 'The two men fac
ed ecach other for a moment,
when a smile of recogunition flash
ed over Kirby's face. He grasp
ed McKelvy’s hand, but the lat
ter for the moment failed to re
cognize bis old comrade.
Don't you knoow me-—Kirby of
Libby prisor 7"’
‘Then there was anexclamation
of surprise and, the two men
clasped hands and examided
each other with friendly glaunces
of recognition. :
Forty-two years ago they were
made prisoners and taken to
gether to Libby prisoa. There
they became frieads and bed
mates and between them plann
ed to tunnel out to liberty.
““We begun that tunnel in the
night,” said Captain Kirby, “‘and
we kept it mighty secret, you
mgy know.”’
%hey dug a straight shaft into
the earth some twenty feet and
then started horizontally to dig
outside the prison walls. It was
desperate work, dangerous in
the extreme and could be done
only at night. But the men per
sisted and dug away at their
deep tunnel in the silence and
darkness and szemed on the way
to sure freedom. ‘For a month
these two men toiled together
and then an unexpected ex
change of prisoners freed them
both and sent them to the North
and the tuninel was abaudoned.
' Some years ago they were ata
reunion at Andersonviile, but
their meeting together did not
occur until they met in the
‘Brown hotel.
~ Captain Kirby is president of
the New Jersey Association of
Union ex-Prisoners of War and
was a member of battery C. of
the Fourth United States artil
lery. 1
Greene and Gaynor Gase-
Wil Enter Ifs Fourth Week.
Savannah, Ga., Jan 28—T he trial
of Greene and Gaynor, will to
morrow enter upon its fourth
week, with the prosecution hav
ing made but slight progress in
the introduction of its evidence,
A stage has been reached, how
ever, whege a more rapid presen
tation of evidence may be expect
ed. .
Considrabie anxiety bhas been
manifested by those connected
with the case relative to the con
dition of the juror who has been
ill for to or three days.
Much relief was experienced to
day upon information being
secured that the juror is better.
It is thought he will he able to
goon with the case tomorrow
and that, therc will no interrup
tion on his acchbunt. }
Shakespeare Club.
Shakespeare Club met at the
home of Mrs. G. P. Mingledorf,
Friday night lasf,with the follow
ing members present: Messers
Klepper, Tavlor, Teal, Mingle
dorf, Denmark and James; Mes
dsmes Klepper, Hoover, Mingle
dorf, Raber, Jones and Yancy.
Subject for the evening was
“Julius Caesar.” You will re
member that it was in a scene
in this play in the street mid
4hunder and lightning that
Caesar exclaimed:
“0 Cicero. I have seen tempest, when the
scolding winds
Have rived tho knotty oaks; and I have
Tnesif::lbitlous ocean swell and rage and
To tfg’g}rl. Ited with the threatninz c'ouds:
JSut never till to night. never till now,
vid Igo throu«h a tempest dropping fire.”’
It was during this awful night,
during Calpurnia’s slumbers
that she cried out: “They
murder Caesar!”
‘lt was in this same play that
Calpurnia cried:
““A lioness hath whelped in the streets;
And wraves have yawned and yield d_up
Fix’gget‘igg;:gxirriora fought upon the clo.uds
The noise of battle hurtled in the air.
Horses did neigh, and dying men*did groan,
An({}fi?hgtslfgetg%d shriek and squeal about
Itis written in this play the
last oration that Brutus made
and how he used the same dag
zer on himself that he had used
m Caesar. It was on this same
occasion that Antony, by dead
Caesar’s body, made the great
est oration that ever fell from
the human*lips.
This play will be finishecd at
the ncxt meeting.
; Chas. B. Teal,
Club Reporter.,
“If you slip and fall, pick your
self up, brush off the dirt, sup
press the cry, and smile. The
cry of discouragement will put
you in the lower strata of the
mental atmosphere which en
velops us, The'smile of courage
will.lift you to the higher strata
of thought curreats, which, in
turn, will attract towards your
happiness and prosperity.”’—
Stella Stuart. :
Souvenir postal cards at the
Enterprise office. i
———Manufaetured By——— : 1
FOR COTTON AND CORN.
3
"~ The unusually satisfactory results from the use ot
VICTORiA MEAL M XTURES bave encouraged us to
increase the manufactue of this fertilizer, and we promise
that we will continte to offer to the farmers the Best Goods
at the Lowest Prices.
Special Mixtures will be made for customers desiring
them.
Blood Goods Do Not Help the Price of Cotton
__________ Seed, the Product of your farm. e
Cotton Seed Meal Mixtures Do. =~ &
| WHICH WILL YOU HAVE? ; 4
i,
Fitzgerald Cotton Oil Co.
The Enterprise offers its subscribers the follow-;
ing Low £lubbing Rates for 1906. o
'NAME OF PERIODICAL |RegularPrice] CLUBBING PRIE
Tue ENTErPRISE and $1 00 Yo f;
Womag'’s Home Companion LOlOO
McCall’s Maga%ine : 50 s2'7 \
The Modern Priscilla _ 50 ]
il L A
Tue ENTERPRISE and $1 00 : 3
Woman’s Home Companicn 1 00 —%
American Illustrated Magazine 100 s4'3 /
Lippincott’s Magazine .« 280
Tue ENTERPRISE and . $1 00
Woman’s Home Companion 100 $4 0 ‘
American Illustrated Magazine 1 00 UV
Success Magazine 148 3
The House Beautiful 2 00
Tae ENTERPRISE and * $1 00
Woman’s Home Companion 100 $3 5 N
Review of Reviews 300 . 1
Cosmopolitan 1 00 4
TuEe ENTERPRISE and ! $1 00
Woman's Home Companion 100 $4 0 s::"
Review of Reviews 3 00 U
Cosmopolitan 100
Success Magazine i 100 o
Tue ENTERPRISE and ’sl 00 '
Weman’s Home Companion 1 00
The Smart Set or Outing / 300 $5-1 '
Appleton’s Booklover’s Magazine [ 300 :
-
THE ENTERHRISE and’ ‘sl 00 ! "
Woman’s Home Companion in LOO ~
Review of Reviews i fiOO $5.0 ‘
Lippincott’s Magazine 2 50 t
Cosmopolitan 120 &
TAE ENTERPRISE and l $1 00 '
Woman's Home Companion | .- 160 K
The World's Work 3 00 s4=B
Review of Reviews 300 b
THE ENTERPRISE and ‘ $1 00 l
Woman's Home Companion 100 $8 1
Century Magazine 4 00 .
St. Nicholas 3 00