Newspaper Page Text
THEASHBURNADVANCt
Entered at tho Ashburu hostoffiec
as second-class mail matter.
Official Organ of Worth County’/
Ashbum, Ga., Aug. 2 (),
Subscription $1 a year in advance
GEORGE BlITLEIt, LOCAL EDITOR
Ice at Walker's.
List of jurors next week.
1'or keg pickles, go to Walker’s.
Beet steak and roast at Luke’s.
Col. Powell’s little boy j s qu it e
sick.
Beef 5 to 8 cents a pound at Walk-
er’s.
For additional local news see second
page.
Ice! Ice!! Ice!!! cheap at Walk¬
er’s.
Rev. J. C. Flanders returned last
Friday.
Get your ice cold drinks at JVal
ker’s.
Durham & Co.’s new gin started up
Tuesday.
Plenty of lemons to squeeze at
walker’s.
ITof. Grubbs, of Sycamore, was in
town Tuesday.
For all kinds of smoking tobacco
go to Walkers.’
R. P, Fain is attending the Indian
Springs meeting.
White Wine Vinegar, 30 cents per
gallon, at Walker’s.
IV. A. Murray went to Macon on
business Monday.
Col Powell went to Dakota yester¬
day on legal business-
C. Dasher of Sycamore was in Aih-
buru trading Tuesday.
Several ladies from Daxotawere in
town shopping Tuesday.
I sell the very best steak at eight
cents a pound.—Walker.
Johnny Rogers, son ofG.K. Rogers,
is quite ill with apeiidieitis,
W. M. Biuce. formerly of Pelham,
is clerking lor G. B. Gorday.
Subscribe with us for the Southern
Immigrant. Fifty cents a year.
James Tifton of teyluester Was retr
istered at the Clyde Monday.
Walker gives a glass of soda water
with ever collars worth of goods.
Telephone subscribers will please
add to their list J. IV. Walker, No. 33.
J. E. Edmondson went south Sat¬
urday' with a drove of horses for sale.
All the telephone subscribers say
ihey ring off. The central kuows bet¬
ter.
Rev. J. C, Flanders reports a good
meeting from Johnson county last
week.
John Fountain of Sycamore is the
proud father of a line boy born yester¬
day •
Lester Stuart returned from Ella-
villo Monday, accompanied by his
mother.
Cotton baskets are on the market
now. W. A. Murray received 100
Monday.
Sheriff Story was in Asliburn Mon¬
day crossing palms With his many
warm friend-.
A subscription paper is iu circula¬
tion for money to complote Liberty
church house.
The dove shooting season opened
up Monday, and local sportemen are
in their glory.
J. S. Butts and wife, and J. IV. Ev¬
ans attended the Indian Springs meet¬
ing this week.
Major VI liitc has returned from
Americus, and reports haying had a
royal good time.
lie . Mr. Burgei is now holding a
protracted meeting at tiie Bap'ist
church in Dakota.
Cotton is beginning to come in
pretty lively. It is bringing 6 7-8 in
the Ashburu market.
Walter Whidby is assisting Mr.
Daniels in Jeffrey & Roobin’s store, in
the absentee of Mr. Jeffrey.
J. W. Chapman was taken quite ill
this week, and is confined to his bed
at the Dew Drop Inn.
Mrs. G. H. Snow left for Hard Fine
R Sunday , to . ...... her husband, who has
join
secured a position iu the mill there-
Rev. J. Lawrence went to Indian
Springs this week to attend the Holi¬
ness meeting now in progress there.
Go.s. I n we! , and Davis and Marshal
Hall attended comity court Wcdues-
day. 'They rep, rt a large crowd there
Mr. and Mrs. Piyer and children
went to A-jjerU-u- Saturday on a two
weeks’ visit i" relat ves and fi ior.d .
Did you ever bear ol tlio Ashworth
buggy, luanufuelured in Macon, Ga.,
ami sold by Hie Ashbum Buggy Co.?
W. H. Mash burn, formerly ol this
place, but now- of Valdosta, was in
town this week .ml rogi-tored at the
Clyde.
Mrs. A, D. Betls left last Saturday
for Jonesboro. Ga., where she will vis¬
it relatives ami friends for a couple of
weeks.
J. S. Betts & Co. wero engaged in
taking an inventory of s'.ock Monday,
and as consequence their store was
closed.
Tax Collector Hall was m town
Monday. Ho has not received Ins
hooks yet, but thinks he will got them
next week,
The Journal says that smokehouse
thieves aro getting iu their work at
Arabi. llie shot-gun brigauc should
go into training.
Charley Green, aged about 18, who
lived near Sibley, was found dead in
bed ono morning last week. Ho had
been ill for some time.
Henry Rhodes, col, the wife beater
and pistol thief, pleaded guilty before
the county court, and was given two
years on tho chain gang.
One dollar now invested in In¬
ternational Stock Food mav save
you forty dollars next spring. Eor
sale by W. A. Murray.
R. J. Mahoney put up agm ami
boiler last week for Bowman & Wright
in tho Dan Davis neighborhood. The
gm is now ready for business.
Tax Collector Hall has started up
his new gin at Oakfield. lie makes
discouraging reports of the condition
of the crop m that neighborhood.
Mrs. J IV Powe!', who has been
very low for the past two mon lis.
is, we are glad to note convalescing,
and is able io sit up some each day.
There is talk of a new railroad from
Asliburn to Sylvester or Poulan.
Also one from Sycamore (o Fitzger¬
ald.—Cut abort Liberal-Enterprise.
J, J. Lee & Co., merchants of Ir-
ivinSville, have dissolved partner¬
ship, Mr. Lee retiring. W. R. John¬
son will conduct the business here¬
after.
It you want to see 'what Chat¬
tanooga plows aud Monarch guano
can do, go out and see the corn on
J. Lawrence’s place two miles from
Ashburu.
Mi-s Flora Monk, a charming > ourg
lady from Abbeville, was the guest of
Miss Willie McLendon several days
the past week, and returned homo
Wednesday.
A little International Poultry
Food for your chickens will keep
off cholera, and make your hens
lay. For sale by W. A. Murray,
Ashburu, Ga.
On account of Neal’s report of tho
cotton crop, in which he estimates that
9,750,100 bales will be raised this year
the staple fell off forty points in two
days this week.
Pv. Gardner, wife and baby, loft for
Macon county Tuesday, where they
will sojourn for a time. It is hoped
the temporary change will prove Oen-
efieial to their health.
On Monday IV. A. Munay received
from the TEtna Insurance Co. $7.)0,
being payment in lull of his policy in
that company, for loss on his store
burned May lGtli.
Miss Mattie Clark arrived here
from Millcdgevillo Tuesday. She will
spend a few days with her sistor, Mrs.
J. P. Belyin and take a position with
,
Mrs. T. J. Slangier,
Burning itching skin diseases in¬
stantly relieved by DeWiti s witch
Hazel Salve, unequalled heals for without cuts,
bruises, burns It
leaving a scar—-I S Betts & co
Some of the machinery m McLen-
don’s gm broke down one day las'
■week, and as a re ult tho gin was idle
several day*. The break has been re-
panel., • red and a ginning ° re- timed.
For low rates wos’, Texaq .. exmo.
California, Alaska,or any other l"" llL "
witn free maps. write to Fred D Bush,
Dis’rict Fussenger Agmt Louisville «
Nashville HR, Atlanta, Ga. ly
B. h -1 to l ake Gity
.
Monday wneio Ue \\>-i 1 11144
some time, having secured .!■ posit' >i,
saw ft er for the E ist Coast I jUm
as remain here.
V, e r Co. His family will
Vim vm'or and victory: these ate
he characteristics «>f He Wilt’s Ltttk
i little p"
... , the famous •>
io « nC ^ a i.j. g.
Iviffco s
J. G. Padrick and Miss Willie Lee
■ Fit’iwood were married at 1 ifto' 1
dnos!gv Mr. J’adrick is we I and
w . A>bbur-i, and his
^ . ^ , u ^ noW n in
,n\ incaas bere uti WlUl , h e Adv'nc ■
in , , ,
.
sle-wer hosts of c ongratuiau-i - -•• •
b M wishes upon tk" ' ">■
b iniiic bride.
A negro l*ov named George Wash¬
ington fell from a pile of sliiugloi at
the mill Saturday, and received seri¬
ous brui«os. Dr. Turner was sum¬
moned, but found uo bonesor shingles
broken.
Don’t nauseate your stomach with
leas and bitter herbs, but regulate
your Uvt r and sick headache by using
thoso famous little pills known as De-
Witt's Little Earlv Kisers. J. S.
Belts & Co.
E. K. Hobbs and wife of Valdosta
artived iu the city yesterday, and are
registered at the Dow Drop Inn. Mr.
Hobbs has secured a position at the
still as woodsman, and will re¬
main in Ashburu.
“They don’t make much fuss about
it.” We are speaking of DoWitt’s
Little Early Kisers, the famous littlo
pills and for constipaation, billiousncss.
all stomached liver troubles.
They never gripe.—J. S. Betts & eo.
J. S. Botts, J. W. Evans and J. L*.
Belvin each tost a line calf this week,
and it was thought for a time that a
contagious disease had broken out
amonst the young stock, but no more
fatalities have been reported.
The beautifully' engraved di¬
plomas issued by the American
Business College, Omaha, Neb.,
are the finest ever seen. They
are steel engravings 22x28 inches
in size.
The authorities of the town of Ash-
burn, Worth county, have made a
mid into the camps of the gamers and
brought them before tho county
court. — Cnthbort Liberal-Enterprise.
The next issue of The College
News, published by the American
Business College, Omaha, Neb.,
will contain a large number of
testimonials from students and
graduates of the A. B. C.‘
Mr. and Mrs. Hargroves and two
children, of Leesburg, arrived here
Saturday on a visit to his son
Will- They returned home Monday
night, in order (o enjoy a moonlight
drive.
A lady’s cream silk handkeichief
with needlework was iost near the
Methodist church Sunday night- The
person who found it will ph ase deliv¬
er it at this office and receive thanks,
a bouquet and other compliments.
Our method of instruction by
mail is highly recommended by
our patrons. Send for testimoni¬
als and list of names and address¬
es of students. It is free. The
American Business College, Oma¬
ha., Neb.
L. D. Simmons lias sold his half in¬
terest in tho Bedgood & Sitninoiis saw¬
mill at, Arab! to Greer Bros, of Dako¬
ta. The mill, which has been shut
down for some weeks, will now mako
full time, lo tlie joy of many idle la¬
borer-;.
Work on Jeffrey & Roobin’s new
storehouse had to bo temporarily sus¬
pended Monday, owing to inability to
procure lumber. The frame work is
up, and tho building will !>o pushed to
completion as soon as the material can
be oblaincb.
Now is llie lime to decide what
brands of guano io u-e next year, Ask
your neighbors who u-ed Southern
Phosphate Woras’ goods this year
how they line the following brands:
Monarch, Ocmulgee, Tip 'Top, etc.
Sold by J. Lawrence. Asliburn. Ga.
If you wish to he enrolled as a
free student in the mail depart¬
ment of the American Business
College, Omaha, Neb., send m
your application at once. Their
offer of a free course by mail will
be open for a limited time only.
*
Jack Sumner gave Dr. Thrasher a
watermelon tarly in the season, and
the doctor traded it off for a log-.
Sunnier has been missing melonsever
since, and suspic en points to the
aforesaid M. D. Now is tho time to
subscribe.
We dip the following from the High
Springs (Fla.) Sentinel: Maj- Geo.
Butler, late of tho High Springs Sen-
tineJ staff, is now holding a position
w j t j, t j le Ashbum (Ga.) Advance,
3 j.,j J or WI p ma ke a valuable co-
srljutor to the editor of the Advance,
Is your horse in poor condition?
^ as ^ ie a P 00 i’ a PpeDte? Then
his system needs toning up Yon
will never find anything to beat
Internationol Stock Food. Get a
package to-day. It will make
, vou moue y. For sale l>y IV. A.
| Murray, Asliburn, Ga.
| <. Buttcr J 0 }jn” is a nickname given
.
^ ^ reu^ °
- 0 kick bout butter at is
! hoarding house, z: nd he now
ter to b .rn, furn.shen hy the
es, who even cam'it in their pock-
• t- to have i: i handy for him at the la-
hi" or on the streets. Now if be
would more ;* kick on egg-, with voI-
,iu ; ary contribution- alone lie could
tor'-, an
1 o n ba y '.‘i- " ’■ Achbui
Col Park, the lawyer who recently
located in Poulan, was appointed by
tho conuly eourt. lo defend Graham,
one of the Aslibtun gamblers,IY« dues-
day. He lost his case, but neverthe¬
less proved himself to be an able at¬
torney.
The weeds on the street between
the residences of Messrs. Fulth, Law
and Rogers arc an abominable nui¬
sance, aud the couneil should have
them removed. Ladies cannot walk
on that street after a rain without
gotting their skirts wringing wet.
A Fouian special of tho 13th says:
The first bale of cotton was put ou
the cars at this point this morning.
The crop will bo a fair average
through this county. Robert Gannon,
five miles South of Poulan, lias twen¬
ty-three acres in short cotton which
will av rt rago over a bale to the aero,
t orn is suffering, and will b" short.
Some peddlers lost one of the
horses Monday, and they are now
camped on the street uo.ir the Baptist
church. Lateu. —The peddlers will
probably move now, for J. P. Newton
has triuPd them his lino mare with
dilapidated eyesight for forty chick¬
ens with good eyes
'I'he annual district convention of
the Epwortli League will moot m
Cordele on llie 10th and 17di of Sep¬
tember. An interesting program has
been arranged for the occasion, and
the city will be filed with visitors.
No doubt. Asliburn will he well repre¬
sented.
Look out. for hog cholera, You
may have to buy meat next year.
A stitch in time saves nine. A
little International Stock Food
given your hogs twice a week
will keep the cholera off, and put
your hogs in good healthy condi¬
tion for fattening. Try it. For
sale by W. A. Murray, Asliburn,
Georgia,
People having farm lauds for sale
would not do a bad tiling to leave de¬
scription and prices at this ofiico. We
are receiving letters of inquiry aud
calls from all over the Union- Farms
left at this office for sale will bo de¬
scribed to inquirers. We now have a
cal! for aone-faorso faun on 100 acres
that can bo bought for $000.
Did yon ever hear of the Ashworth
buggy, manufactured at Macon. Ga.?
Gall aud examine them, They are
sold by the Asliburn Buggy Co.
Strict!}' first class, high grade work,
and the manufacturer places the
strongest, guarantee on them t..at is
placed on any buggy put up iu
Georgia.
The American Business College,
Omaha, Nebraska, lias a notice in
the local columns of this paper
offering a thorough course of in¬
struction in bookkeeping and
business methods by mail tree of
tuition. Did you read it? To
avail yourself of this liberal offer
is the same as accepting a present
of $50.
Fall term Asliburn high school be¬
gins September 0, 1807. First grade,
$125 per mouth; second grade, $1.50;
third grade, $1-75. Those prices aro
exclusive of any public funds. Inci-
den als. 5 cents per mouth. Tuition
payable monthly. Music department,
Mias Ella Bacon; Primary department,
Mrs. L. D. Passmore; Principal,L. D.
Passmore.
A fierce wind struck tins section
Sunday, and for a time it looked as if
a cyclone would como, but tho clouds
proved to be too high. Many pears
were blown from trees in this neigh¬
borhood. and a portion of the brick
wall surrounding the slab pit at die
mill was blown down. iVo have no
information as to tho effects of the
blow in other portions of the county.
J. VV. Walker has put in a telephone
at his place ol bu-iness. and his nurii
her is 33, 'Tuesday a customer called
him up and ordered a quart ol ice¬
cream. Mr. Walker then called een-
tral and got connections, ami with the
aid of a funnel scraped tho cream
into the transmitter, expecting it to
slide over on the u ire to bis customer,
but it didn’t slide worth a cent. Ho
is thinking of attaching pneumatic
tubes tobis ’phone.
Last week a coup e of boys got into .
a scrap, and ihe 'legal fraternity
cided to have some tun, so they ar-
rested the aggressor, charging him
with assault ami battery. A mock
trial was held and the defendant was
hou "' J °'’ or to k<Jep ll,,; P (, «,'o<
look it ail in earnest, and, like
patriarch of olde, he “Jilted up his
*'*d wept.”-Poutau ilergld-
Mo lo weep is quite an ac¬
compistuncnt, and a willingness to
pop Ins'humbs in his ey. s and bawl
to ihe moods 'ill the Water traces rail-
r n,ds io In- thin i- sufficient proof i f
j D In r-grot. After Lo gets through
P»J "g off ; be mw;rere he might go on
i i a ving.
W. A. Mutiny is selling 1)) lbs.
of good coffee for $1; 24 plugs of
good tobacco for $1; package soda
5c per pound; fresh canned salmon
10c per can; Yard wide sheeting
5c per yard. New goods arriving
every day. No shoddy stuff, hut.
good goods, and him. no man Everything can or
will undersell
that people need, from the cradle
for the l>aby in “swaddling
clothes” to tho last thing you
natd. Coffins and caskets cheaper
tl nu i yon can find them*anywhere.
Ho is brushing up for fall busines,
and prices are being cut to the
core. Try him, and you will bo
pleased.
Two star mail routes will probably
be established from Ashbum during
tho next few months. The new poat-
offleo near Live Oak, over in Irwin,
will be known as Exchange, and a
route will be established from Ash-
burn to Luke via Exchange, a dis¬
tance of 12 miles. That settlement is
much in need of a postoffice, and we
will bo glad when they get it. Ou the
road from Ashburu to Warwick, a
distance oI 2t) miles, two offices have
been established, ouo at Ad Real’s
named Marsh, aud one at Fate Qrtf-
(lu’s on the Jake Young place namod
Griggs. Then it will he in order to
establish a mail route from Ashburu
to Warwick to supply these two of¬
fices.
The Georgia Southern and the B. &
\V. (Plant System) aro at outs, and
no lumber or naval stores along the
line of the former road destined for
Brunswick or Savannah aro being
transferred to llie B & W at Tifton,
but go via Macon. What caused the
rupture we do not know, but one
tiling is certain : While tho Plant Sys-
leni controls to a great extent trans¬
portation in Florida, it does not in
Georgia, nor never will. It cannot
dictate terms to (ho Georgia Southern
road, for that road is an independent
and liberal ono, and tho only one en¬
tering that Stale charging but three
cents a mile passenger rates along tho
entire lino. As between the Georgia
Southern and tho Plant System, in
any kind of a wrangle, the people are
with tho former.
On last Sunday a daughter of Dock
Simmons, col., ran away from home,
and coming to town with Leonard
Troulinan, got married at Daniels’
restaurant, A wedding dinner was
ordered, and while tho dusky bride
was (riumpha .tly ensconced ou tho
hurricauo dock of an empty cracker
box enjoying a luscious wateriuillion
her parents put iu appearance with
blood in their eyes, aud it is said that
the old woman was armed witn a shot¬
gun aud tho old man with au axe.
The wedding dinner was broken up,
and the bride broke aud ran. Up to
9 o’clock that night the bride had not
been found. The old uim declared
that he “wasn’nt gwine toi feed no
gal all summer ou pot linker and
greens au’ den ruu off and git inar-
married to a uiggali at cotton pickin’
time.” The old m in’s wrath was ap¬
peased, however, by the aforesaid
“uiggali' 1 agreeing to help him pick
cotton, and Leonard is enjoying his
honeymoon under the parental roof.
The parents of little Nina Mahoney
sent to this office for publication this
week a nice tribute to the death of
their dear little one who died two
week; ago, but we cannot publish the
tribute because it is compiled of ex¬
tracts from poems of different iythni,
thereby losing tho intended effect ol
the effort. Poetry is nice in an obitu¬
ary, hut it should he original and lo
the point, composed for the special
purpose, and dedicated to tho person
named- However, we have the deep¬
est sympathy for the bereaved parents
m tho sad loss of their dear JitiJo
who so shortly shone its little light in
their home and faded so early in
dewy morning of life. The little car¬
riage has been rolled aside, the -mall
slippers stored away, and tho tiny feet
gone lo snot her shore to pace in gold-
on slipp-rs and rule in a carriage more
elegant than the ono left behind. Let
the parents be prepared to meet
God and their ehi!d-
Editor./. Lawrence of the Holiness
Advocate giyos notice that he will
change his chinch relationship and
has called a meeting of the stockhold-
era to decide whether lie or someone
(; , He s|iftll b<J , }j(; editor of Ul0 Adrn .
ca'e. It has been known “in the fam¬
ily” ff.r some time lhat Bro. Law-
po(M . | . wys i|ltf l0 (ll0 Weslovan
f -i, MrfJ h Tim We-Fysii church is
claiming our extremists, he being the
fourth wh<> ha- gone from the Metlio-
church iu Ashbum. The Wesley-
, ml-m^r-hij . . ,
of 20.000 To-day
slit: 1ms 10.0 10 i !i-h* of only 4,COO in
half a century, lire. Lawrence has
been a pillar i.i the Mc'li Sis' church,
but since he lias gone off in the Wes
leyan faith it is heller for him to join
the Wesleyan church. Harmony ha¬
unt prevailed i" the Methadist church
of Ashbum 'hi- year, but when the
chi dr it of Brael art properly divided
the g pel ship inay be expect' '/ to
I Itnoie - we I . ly.
Blaokcappcrs iu Asliburn.
Hiere never was a time when
man could not. bo deceived, and
lie is so much an animal that lie
will run if you get him badly
scared. Two young men from
the country who recently spout a
night in the suburbs with rela¬
tives can testify to the fact that,
even a trained mind will succumb
to deception, wits will depart, ac¬
tivity of limbs will appear, and
tbe one thought of saving the
body will wrap the mind and ex¬
clude facts and common sense.
It happened that during tho
time a negro woman was kopt in
the lock-up here a day and two
nights, that the two young men
in question came to j>ay a visit to
their uncles, Col. Z. aud W. T.
Bass. It is customary at tho
country home of the Bass family
and their neighbors to play
pranks on each other and “get a
move on them” if they could.
Logan Horne and Thomas Royal
are bright young men, but. the
first law of nature—the preserva¬
tion of self—is an instinct with
them, and water would as much
run up hill as they would delib¬
erately go into danger.
Col. Z., lid and Wesley Bass
conspired to frighten the young
men with a practical war story,
and talked low to each other in
their hearing of the negroes being
so mad about the woman being in
jail, and how the colored race
would rise up with guns that night
and slay white folks fill none of
us woro leTt, and the woman out
of jail. Tho boys pictured in
their minds a battlefield with
Asliburn strewn with dead and
wounded, with not enough loft to
keep their graves clean.
After the boys had retired, Kd.
Bass appeared at. the window
with blackened face, wearing a
uniform plug hat with tassel, and
carrying a stick in his hand fora
gun. lie addressed himself to
the boys and demanded their sur¬
render as ho pressed the stick to
his shoulder and pointed it at
them. Calling on a higher powor
for mercy they tumbled over each
other to the floor and went out
in the hall to inform Uncle Wes
that an army of negroes had
come to kill them, and that one
nine feet high stood at tho win¬
dow with a big gun reudy to
shoot them as fast as thoy poked
their heads out, Mr. Bass under¬
stood tho joko and told the boys
to dross and go to Zack’s for his
gutt and he would kill the last
mother’s sou of them. Their ob¬
ject. waH to get the boys strung out
down the Sycamore road and close
in behind them, but, like the
boy on the burning deck, they
refused to go. Mr. Bass told
them to go with him and he
would get tho axe and slay the
one that tried to come in. They
went far enough to peep under
the house and see the blocks of
wood that lay scattered around.
A fearful groan was heard from
one of tho boys, and thoy went
back into the bouse like rats to
their holes. Again inside they
whispered with deep breath that
they saw nine great big strapping
black negro men on all fours,
with go us ready to shoot. Ed
Bass, still at, the window, de¬
manded the persons of Ed Bass
and the two boys. Wesley in¬
formed him that Ed had left
there at throe o’clock that even¬
ing. Tho bovs spoke up and said
the boys had gone, too. Kd then
rapped at the door and demand¬
ed admission. The boys stuck
spurs in the floor and plantod
their backs against the door and
commenced pleading for mercy.
One of them informed the “gen¬
tlemen” outside that none of
them had anything to do with
putting the woman in jail, and
ho thought thoy ought to go
away and let innocent people
alone. Then the rap would come
from the other door and there
was a rush pell mell inside to
keep the door from being broken
down and to save their own lives.
They too, as the| Poulan Herald
would say, lifted up their voices
and wept.
It i. as au awful hour; yea an
awful age to the boys, and when
the denouement came they me¬
andered off with the solemnity of
a blind black mule returning
from the funeral of a Porto Itico
nigger, and ’rieath tbe branches
of a swaying pine took an oath
that the Bass home should never
again be invaded by them—after
dark.
Davis A barbie Deliver Goo'ls Free.
Lee $ I’, ri iu’- sauce is for meat-,
[t nive- tie m i (a-firr si flivor, aiet is
Used liy nii o people wlm .Sardines love ko and mo¬
th ini' good. Imported
Prepar'd Fiencli Mustard. Fresli
Dried apphs Fine Gandies and
( radii rs Fresh Mackoiel 111 k"f(s.
Bent Tea. Rice and Coffee. ‘King of
Patents” Flour is the bes 1 . Cabbage,
Onions Potatoes. I)e-t Hams 12o.
tVes orn and Country B-ef alwa; son
hand. Oavis& Barbee, “Up >o Date
*' 1 oetrs.” I*L‘ ue ly.