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TH2 BANNER.-WATCHMAN,: ATHENS] ,GA. MAY,
IWEOUt, NOTICES*
fUNKBiX SOT1CK.
The friends and acquaintances of Mr
and Mrs. John R. Moor »nd Mrs. J. 0,
Edwards and family, aro respectfully
requested to attend the funeral services
of Thomas Edward*, tho infant son o f
the former, from their residence on Jack,
son street this (Wednesday) morning at
10 o’clock.
Examination* (or Teacher* (or City
School*.
The annual examination for teachers
in the city schools will be held for white
teachors at Academy on Saturday, May
14th; for colored teachers at Baiter
street school on Saturday, May 21st
0. D. PiAHiostr,
. Secretary Board of Education.
Athens, Ga, April 27th, 1887
Annual Msstlnf.
The Annual Convention of the Geor
gia State Division, Traveler’s Protective
Association, will be beld In the city of
Maoon on May 23d and 24th next
T. P. A’s and other travelling men not
members, are cordially Invited to attend.
Reduced rates will be given from this
city. ,
Prayer Sleeting Dally
At 12 o’clock m„at rooms of the Young
Mens’ Christian Association. Alt are
cordially invited.
MOORE & ELDER.
at
Florida Cabbage
Moore & Elder. "
Choice if am Potatoes at
Moore & Elder.
Eating Irish Potatoes at
Moore & Elders,
Peach Preserve at Moore
& Elders.
Quinco preserves at
Moore & Elders.
OUR NEIGHBORS.
YESTERDAY’S NEWS FROM THE TOWNS
AROUND US.
WINTEBT1I.I.E NOTES.
Fruit and Watermelons; A Modal Farm;
Prosperous Lotting (Slab.
Wirranviu.*, May 17,—[Speoial.]—
tTlHTERVlLltb) flit/
Mrs Wm England, an aged lady of our
town, who has been quite siek recently,
A Successful High school—Personal and
Other News.
Gasxtsmu; May 17.—[Special.)—
Our sheriff. J C McConnell, is confined
to bis bod sick. . .
Mias Bills Wolmot, of Gainesville, is
visiting relatives in town.
The Elberton district high school at
Allen’s camp ground, is on a boom. The
Mornul methods of - teaching are very
person* have been to Cramp’s
mill Ashing in the last fortnight. The
Teccoa News editor was present at one
time when they took out 160 or 160
pounds, and he says it was a not a fish
story, either.
All
Farmers report their lands too wet to
work, and considerable damage done from
the overflow of the streams.
Tbs grandest picnic of the season will
be at Franklin Springs Saturday next.
The Methodist Sabbath school at Elber
ton will run an excursion to Royston, and
a good time is anticipated. Several will
go down from this place amt enjoy it
fitb. them.
Crops are very much improved from
the late fine showers.
DRUNK, BUT NOT STAGGERING.
it -
Lli the eastern portion of this county
i visited by aieries of rains last week.
■ to* 1 ‘ * *-
•■No Physio, Sir. in Kind"
A good story comes from a boys’
oarding-scbool in “Jersey.” The diet
boardl . .
was monotonous and constipating, and
tbe learned Principal, decided to intro
duce '
sauce,
bright — - .
covered the secret mine in his sauce, and
pushing back his plate, shouted to the
tedsgogue, “No physic, sir, in mine,
dy dad told me to use nuthin’ but Dr.
Pierce’s ‘Pleasant Purgative Pellets,’ and
they are a doing theirduty like a charm!”
They are anti-bilious, and purely vege-
JEFFERSON.
Farmers Blue; An APIs Minister; Tbs B. B
Qames; Personal.
JxrFsasoN, May 17.—[Special.]—Por
tions of our county have is yet received
no rain, snd tbe formers are blue. Some
of them have no cotton up and oats are
■uttering.
The Rev. Mr. Ivy had a large congre
gation both morning and night, and our
people were delighted with the sermons
of this able divine. Some of our citi
zens said it wss ss good as Talmage
could do.
J. M. Orr, of your city, a Jefferson boy,
wss with us to-dsy, visiting his uncle,
Mr. Ju. G. McLoster, who has been siek
■this mills near here.
Our boys are glad that the University
base bail club downed the Augusta club,
but they think of reorganizing their club
and giving the Athens boys a chance to
transfer tbe championship for Northeast
Georgia -to Jefferson. Our club has
never suffered defeat.
A No lessen Man on • Spree In New
Fork City—Bard to Randle.
-A quaeriragmentof a mam the ‘
GENERAL NEWS NOTES.
three pieces raked qnt of the wreck of
freight train on a Jersey railroad, is
Betimes seen making slow progress
is convalasing.
The fruit in this section is about all
killed, but judging from the many spaci
ous watermelon patebes along the road
wc will juat have melons this year.
Hr Wm Eberhsrt baa some of the
bestootton and some of the finest wheat
in this section. Mr E. is a model farm-
■ or, and no community can boast of a
more quiet, if retable and worthy citi
zen then he.
Mr MeNorton has been employed to
redo some of the work on the new Meth
odist church. He is now putting on the
finiihing touches in a very taaty and
handsome manner.
A certain young man os Railroad atrett
is inclined to believe its better to be too
soon thin too late, aa he usoallr meets
his engagements one hoar aheap of time.
Hr George Hodgson, of your eity, was
in our town yesterday. Mr H. seems to
be quite a favorite, as he keeps tha bovs
lively while hen; and has a non mot for
everyone.
We hare a loafing elnb in full
ration here now, with WI Tack c!
pun. It meets promptly at9 a. am, ad
journs at 12, resumes duties at 2:30, ad
journs at 6. Your correspondent has
been tendered a lucrative position to Join
but has thux far declined. 0 W Lowe
is acting aa secretary at present, bat for
failing to attend regularly it is rumored
that he will bt reduced to ranks. I
should slate as further inducements to
those who desire to join tbe elub that tbe
chairman has a mule and buggy be pro
poses to loan gratuitously to any member
of good atandingfor takingerenlng rides.
HOSIER HAFFENINa*.
Death ofa OMM-AOeod Wheat Crop-
otbtr Viws.
House, May 17.—[Special.]—Mrs.
A C Mas* baa returned homo bom Port
Madison S. C., where she has been (pend
ing several days with her daughter,
Mrs. Sailie Jones.
Little Maud, daughter of Mr and Hn
L N Turk, diod last Saturday, and wst
buried at the Presbyterian cemetery to-
and always knew her lessons. Thebe-
reared parents have the sympathy ofa
host of friends. *
Miss Yittie Hill is the gneit of Miss
Finnic Sumpter.
The many friends of Miss Ada Forbes
will regret to learn of her sickness.
Miss Birtie Forbes is visiting her bro
ther, Mr. G 0 Forbes, of thiB city.
The prospect fora good wheat and
oat crop is flattering in this county.
A B Wofford, our home senator, is in
our town.
CRAWFORD NOTES.
Baltic atlas In the Reumtalu—BlcycUag
at Orawford-The Last Hast.
Csawroao, May 17.—[Special.]—
Marion Hubbard and wife are in charge
of the hotel while Charlie Hnbbard and
family are rusticating in the mountains.
g0" l ‘ Hello!” we heard' one man tay
to another, the other day. “I didn’t
know you at first, why! you look ten
years younger than you did when I saw
you last” “I feel ten years younger,"
was the reply. “Yon know I used to be
under the westher all the time and gave
up expecting to be any better. The
doctor said I had consumption. I was
terribly weak, had night sweats, cough,
no appetite, and lost flesh. I saw Dr.
Pierce’s ‘Golden Medical Discovery
advertised, and thought it would do no
harm if it did no good. It has cured me.
I am a new man beeause I am a well
one.”
SUOKLXX'1 ARNICA IALVS.
The Beat Salve in the World for Cats
Bruises, Sores, Ulcere, Belt Rheum
Ferer Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eiupe
tlons, and positively cures Piles, or n
pay required. It is guaranteed toglv
perfect satisfaction, or money refunddy
Price 26 cents per box For sale b
Lone A On —tf
BANIEUVH.1.E DOINGS.
Personals—a Pleats—The Hall (torm and
a saw Mill.
Dahixlsvillx, May 17.—[Special.]—
MisaBesaie Johnson has returned home
after an extended vixit to Genera, and her
sistar, Mrs. Branch, comes with her for a
visit to her parebte here.
Mrs. E. K. W. Meadow has returned
from a visit to her daughter Mrs. N. E.
Oglesby, in Alabama.
Mist Nellie Mostly, of Nicholson, is
visiting relatives here.
The picnic at J. D. Powers’s mill on
8atarday was the gayest of the season.
I did but little di
damage so fares
Hail did but
beird from.
Mr. Will Bowes uv mil) is at work
near town, and some building is going on
in our village.
along one of the east side avenues. The
legs of him are buried athpewbere in
Jersey, having been cut off above tbe
knees, and he usee hj, hands for feet and
his arms for leg*, raising himself; from
tbe ground on both bands and swinging
upon his stumps. He says be wes hi the
army, and that his legs were shot away
by a rebel cannon hall at Gettysburg.
One of these days he expects to get a
pension. The saloon keepers in his
neighborhood all know him, and they
would rather give him a drink than hear
him describe the bottle of Gettysburg,
with his own heroism in keeping up fire
with his musket after he lost his legs.
There being so little of him to absorb tbe
alcohol, he sometimes goto pretty drank
on a few drinks. But he can't stagger,
and he has no use for lamp posts. There
is no “reeling, rolling home, boys,” in
his. When he feels so good that he must
whoop 'er up he just yells.
The last time he got on a spree he
planted himself an a comer and bowled
until he woke up all the policemen in
the precinct. They thought Buffalo
Bill's Indians had dug up Steele Mack-
aye’s property hatchet that was solemnly
buried in the middle of a circus sing and
started a war dance When three police
men reached the scene of revelry the
man without any legs was waving his
arms wildly and daring the whole world
to coine on. About twenty people were
grouped around him, and, as there were
no loose bricks or other missiles within
reach, nobody was afraid. He shouted,
sang, defied the universe and when he
was not waving his fists above his head
he pat his hands upon the ground and
bumped himself up and down energet
ically. He called that dancing. Once
in a wliilo he would charge on the crowd
with a whoop, swinging himself along
rapidly, and heap insults and sarcasm
upon the people who dodged out of his
way. Although he was only about two-
thirds of a man, he made more noise
jthan three whole men.
Two of tho officers tried to persuade
him to go home, but he stood upon Iris
rights os a citizen, and his stumps as
fragments of humanity, and refused to
budge. Then they took him by the col
lar, and lie wound his arms about their
knees and laid them sprawling upon the
sidewalk. With a hand upon the ground
on each side of one of the prostrate police
men the legless roisterer hoisted himself
as high as ho could and let himself drop
on the policeman’s hack like a pile driver,
expelling a roar from him and amusing
the crowd. The three policemen tried
several ways of lugging the abbreviated
inebriate, and finally adopted a wheelbar
row. He stood in the vehicle and bel
lowed all the way to the station, and in
tbe morning he explained that be acted
that way because lie couldn’t get any sat
isfaction out of a spree otherwise. It ho
only had some legs to stagger with, he
would be as quiet and peaceable as a
drunken dude, but if a man couldn't
stagger and go Bee sawing all over a tide-
walk ho must work off the liqaor some
other way.—New York Cor. Chicago Her-
Cotton has been plowed up arid re
planted in Arkansas.
The Virginia debt conference ended
without a settlement.
The negroes are dying up around Mad*
progress ison, Ga., with the dysentery.
Jake Sharp, who bought up the New
York aldermen, Is being tried.
About fifteen negro recruits have been
enlisted for the U. S. army in Atlanta.
Smoke from the Michigan forest Jlres
makes navigation of the lakes dangerous.
The Chicago strike is still unsettled.
All the carpenters have now been locked
out.
Powderly says he has no fear of the
war made on him by the Chicago anar
chists.
The incomes of the royal families of
Europe amount to close upon $G5,000,000
a year.
Mr. Barclay, of London, has refused
Mr. Wright’s offer of £20,000 for the
race horse Bendigs.
It is said that eighty four million dol-
lars have been invested in tho South
since the beginning of the now year.
At Plaeuemine parish, La., a lunatic
named Ed Williams killed a sheriff and
badly wounded two men who tried to
arreat him.
There is a scandal in the New' York
public schools, occasioned by toe young
[while
Another “Combine" (trike for $18,000.
The Quaker City has several times
shown the falsity that “llghtninv
never strikes twice in the same place.”
Not long ago a combination of Lombard
and boutli Sts., Railroad conductors
drew $15,000 in Tbe Louisiana State
Lottery, but the drawing on Tuesday,
April 12th, has proven a still greater
windfall in one-tenth of the $160,000
capital prise, to a combination of thirteen
U. *L. Am** A# /Linsfnll
of the members oi the club, although
not in want, are men of very moderate
means, and the $1,163 which each will
soon receive, will, no donbt, be put to
good use.—Philadelphia (Pa.) Inquirer,
April IS. 1
Wonderful Ourei.
W. D. Hoyt A Co- Who’esale and
Retail Druggists oi Rome, Ga., say:
We have been •*lllng Dr. King’s New
Discovery, Electric Bitters and Buck-
lea’s Arnica Salve for two years. Have
never ban died remedies that sell as well,
or give such universal satisfaction.
There have been soma wonderful cores
effected by these medicines in this city.
Several cates of pronounced Consump
tion have been entirely cored by useof
a few bottles of Dr. King’s New Dis
covery, taken in connection with Elec
tric Bitters. We guarantee thorn at
ways Sold by A. B. Long A Co,
girls having pictures takenjwhfl
in Indecent attitudes.
posing
Fears were entertained yesterday of a
toe visit of Editor
riot in Toronto over
O’Brien to that city. O’Brien has been
elected to parliament from Ireland.
Atlanta, May 16.—Tho oxsentivo de
partment has had no application yet fora
requisition for Blackwood, who, ft is re
ported, is held in custody in South Caro
lina.
At Millington, Tenn., Mr. George S.
Millington shot and killed Mr. T. 0. Ken
nedy. Millington had Kennedy arrested
for selling liquor, and out of this grew
the trouble.
SCHOOL BOOKS.
An Enermens Expense le Parents
We hear (great deal of complaint late
ly from our citizens over the expense to
which they are put buying new books
for ihelr children that attend the city
schools. With some families this out
lay amounts to about as much as tuition,
were it charged. It seems to them, too,
that they are required to buy an un
necessary number o) books and stationery
and very costly ones, at that The question
of copy books is no small item, and they
cost, too, several times as much as the
white paper. Before a pupil is through
with a book he is often required to invest
in another. Wo hare been frequently
requested of late to call the attention of
our Board of Education to this matter,
and ask if the board could make arrange]
ments to protect the people from this
expense, or at least greatly lessen it. In
fact, free education is no great relief if
the money saved from tuition must be
expended on books. While the children
must of course have suitable bonks, it.
really seems that more changes are made
than are absolutely necessary. Thesame
complaint applies to other than the city
schooisbnt not to as great an extent, we be
lieve. It has been suggested thattue city
matter will be looked into.
Advice to Mothers.
Mbs. Winslow’s Soothinq Stbup
should always bo used for children teeth
ing. It soothes'the child, softens the
gums, allays ail pain, cares wind colic
and is the best remedy for diarrhoea.
Twenty five cents a bottle.
FEEING FIVE.
Alexander Bloomfield, a discharged
employee at Waterbary, Conn, shot snd ‘
painfully wounded W. 8. Frost. Before
ling arrested Bloomfield then blew his
cK
own brains out
Tom McNair, a prominent farmer cf
Butts county, living about ten miles
from Jackson, was called to his door
Friday night and shot to death by un
known parties.
The bodies of 85 miners have been re
covered from tbe colliery disaster at Syd
ney, New South Wales. Seventeen vic
tims have been brought up from the
Monatimo, B. C,, mines.
Savannah, May 16.—King Solomon
Thomas, one of too most noted colored
men in this part of the State, and (leader
of the blacks during reconstruction davs,
was buried to-dsy by the Grand Lodge
of Colored Free Masons of Georgia.
Ont of fifteen hundred convicts, white
and black, in the Georgia penitentiary,
there is only one white woman, Isabella
Roonev, sent up for life from City coun
ty. She is a yonng woman about 22
rears old, snd is confined at the Cha tu
rn
II toe Sufferers Cram Consumption.
Scrofula, and General Debility, will
trjr Scott’s Emulsion of Pore Cod Liver
OH with Hypophosptiitee, they will find
Immediate relief end a permanent bene
fit. Dr. B. H. Brodnax, Brodnax. La,
saya; "I gave Scott’s Emulsion to Mrs.
p,, troubled with a very severe Bron
chial affection. Added to this toe birth
pounds)
taking toe Emnlsion, cough is gone,
looks fNab, full in toe (ace, flesh firm,
good color | baby same, (stand in fine
condition.
Greatly Excited.
Rot a few of tbe citizens of Athens
have recently become greatly excited
over the astounding (acts, that several
of their friends who had been pro
nounced by their physicians as incur
able and beyond all hope—suffering
with that dreaded monster Consumpt
ion—have been completely cured by Dr.
King’s New Discovery for Consumption,
the only remedy that does positively
cure all throat snd lung diseases,
mghs, Colds, Asthma and Bronchitis.
Trial bottle free at A. B. Long A Co’s.
Drag Store, large bottles $1*
Typhoid, Searlst sad Tallow rows, Moao-
looehee camps.
Mr. Daniel Hand, of Guilford, Conn,,
to whom Mr. George W. Williams, of
Charleston, recently motored $700,000,
has made a will providing a fond of
$100,000, the interest of which is to be
used for educating the negro children of
the South.
Over ten thousand striking miners are
idle in Belgium. The Boston brewers
are on a strike. The. store factories
throughout the country are ready to
startup. The strikers have been defeat
ed. The Nova Scotia coal miners have
succumbed. There was a compromise of
toe various strikes at Fall River, Mass.
CovnroTox, May 16.—Mr. A. M. R.
Reynolds and wife were coming into
town Friday morning. When near toe
city limits toe horse* became frightened
by a mule, ran away and tore up the
baggy, dashed ont both Mr. and Mrs.
Reynolds, which seriously injured him
mid fatally injured hi* wife. She djqd
her* yesteyfisy from injuries raepiyet).
The financial secretary of Iqffisbsfi *4-
viaed the government of the discovery
of an immense amount of treasure, esti
mated at $25,000,000, which had been
accreted in toe palace of Gwalfe by tha
late Maharajah. The treasure has been
sank in pits under vaults beneath Ze-
nsra. The secretary was present when
the treasure was unearthed. After re
moving toe earth to tha depth of six feet,
the workmen uncovered great flagstones.
Beneath theso stones were several pits
filled to the brim with silver, chiefly
freshly coined roupees.
The Beys Going to Charlotte to
Touch np the Carolinian*. *
The Captain of Reel Co. No. 6 received
a dispatch Yesterday from toe. chief of
the fire department of Charlotte, for them
to be on band Friday and contest with
the two Carolinas. The members were
at once notified and a meeting was called
to deoide. If they can get good rates on
the railroads they are certain to go, and
will lesvo here Thursday evening and
reach Charlotte early Friday morning.
The boys are ail in good trim for the
race, and if the tar heels can beat Geor
gia she will have to travel in very quick
time.
ANOTHER STRIKE!
Low Prices Must Deign!
The
Before My Departure For Europe 1
NotAloneatCost
Bat Begardless of Cost!
MATBESS MAKING.
T HORS who wwt food M*tre*«» will rand the
m itorlel end have them me de to order. Hare
been in tbe bu«lne»s for a r.ng Uue ami can give
' rta*ea. ~ —
.jpl
prompt attention. Wiu aUo repair Haraeaa in
good style,
mayiedf
J. D. MITCHELL*
W OAPPS, M. O.
Surgeon and Homeopathic Physician.
TTAViKG pernaneatlj loonUd in Athene* wi 2
XX respond prrmpUy to all cal a day or night.
Can be found of nights in ray office, over'1*1 in-dfe
FOR SALE I
A N F.leg<nt Cottage Residence On
Strong Street, between College Ave.
and Lumpklri t Streeto. The bouse haa4
rooms 16x16, with large cook room at
tached, good servants lionse, well with
in 6 feet of home, good garden, etc
Everything in thorough repair, the
rooms hare recently been Kalsomined,
Will -sell at a reasonable price and give
esiv terms. Uouse now occupied by
Cobb Lampkin.
A Convenient 7 room house or Pulaski
Street, large lot, (good bam and stable,
convenient to business and street car
line. Will toll for oost of improvements,
8}i Acre* on Rook Spring Street, good
3 room house. Price $460,00.
36 Beautiful building lots, situated on
College Avenue, Ware Street, Eilsabethi
Bacon and Barrett Streets, at- prims
from $504)0 to $36p,00 each. Call and
mo plat at my office.
W. D. GR.IFFETH.
Rea) Estate Agent.
S .
FDR CLEANING
GOLD, SILVER AND OTHER METALS!
Entry/ bottle warranted to do all claimed for it ,
or money/ refunded.
J, N, Smyth,
MANUFACTURER,
ATLANTA, GA.
Ail my Spring and Summer goods
must leave the store. May they
bring what they will. Sell I-will
and must. Tbe foillowing will give
you an idea of what you can buy
for the cash.
FIRST DEPARTMENT.
5,000 yards Prints at 3 1-2 cents.
4,000 yards best Satteeii Prints at
4 1-3 cents, worth-7c. 3,000 yards
Ginghams slaughtered at 7 cents;
worth to cents. 1,200 yards French
Satteen, regular 15 cents goods, at
o cents. 63 Crepeoline, Dresses at
ft,00, worth $3,50—13 yards to
match.
SECOND DEPARTMENT.
White Goods. 1,500 yards White
Lawn at 4 1-3 cents. 1,600 yards
White Lawn at 7 cents; worth 13
cents. 1,300 yards White Lawn at
to cents; worth 15 cents. 1,100
yards White Lawn at 13 1-2 cents;
worth 32 cents. 600 yards Check
Nainsook at 6 cents; worth 10 cents.
400 yards Check Nainsook at 8
cents; worth 15 cents. .A.large
of Lace Curtains at 40 cents on the
dollar, ho such chance again;
therefore, don’t miss it.
THIRD DEPARTMENT. .
One thousand dollar*’ worth of 1
Laces at 1-3 it* former prices, and
this is no enaggerution. 5,000 yards
at 1 cent ptt yard, worth 5 cent*.
1,000 yards at 25 cent per dozen
yards, worth to cents per yard.
2,006 yards Egyptian and Oriental
Laces at 5 cents—one and half inch
wide at 5 cents. 1,800 yards ditto
at 10 cents, 2 1-2 inches wide, worth
aocents. 1,400 yards ditto at 15
cents, worth 30 to 40 cents.
FOURTH DEPARTMENT.
Millinery. May styles received.
They are just pretty' enough; and
can’t be beat; but now the price*;
A $5 00 (rimmed hat for *3. A $3
trimmed hat for $1.75. A $3. trim
med hat for $1 00. Will be trim
med to order, or Irem stock to se
lect. Parties buying hats and trim
ming at my store, can have their
hats trimmed free of cbaige.
FIFTH DEPARTMENT.
Gloves and Mitts.—1,000 pair
of choice Silk G oves or Mitts given
away for a mere trifle. 300 SUk
Parcsola at $1 75, former $3,00.
SIXTH DEPARTMENT.
Inventory taken and exact amount
given. Men’* Hats! 190 Straw
Hats at 10 cents, worth 25 cents.
318 Straws Hats at 15 cent-, worth
35 cents. 214 Straw Hats at 35
cents, worth io cents. 317 Straw
1, broad brim, 50 cents; worfh
41; Straw broqd brini, -
low crown, regular $1.56 Jigt foyl*
65 cents. ||I Fejt Opera Hafs qt
75 cents now. 100 Felt Stiff Hat* ‘
at $t, regular $3 hat.
SEVENTH DEPARTMENT.
|AKlN|
SPECIAL
N
MOST PERFECT MADE
Prepared with strict regard to Parity* Strength, tad
Heeifbfnla*—. Dr. Prfert Baking Powder contain*
DIPLOMA AT GEORGIA STATE FAIR, ISM*
Having used your r. P. K. for cleaning gold,
lifter; putted ware*ete*.T find that it excel*
anything I ever used, doing all that is dlataod
Atlanta,
I Hare nflad your P. P. K. for cleaning gold,
•liver and other metala. It fvpelt any prep?
oration I have
tad with very
ter metals, it yxpalc any prep-
.ration I «l»r,
t», a*
AH*n
Igeib W11M it (very ftufy id SUk
•e-sofa .air i,r moohk a bldsb.-**
aprl-taAstl.
n EOBQIA, BANKS COUNTT.-Wk*W*. B. C,
*T Holing, Executor of the will of Wllloby
Bolinc. repreeonta to tho Court In hie pod 1 1 .
duly tied end entered ou reeovi, that ho hae
fuhv adraluietcred Wllloby Belief* wtate; thil
ia therefore to cite all peraone eoneerrod, belie
ea4 creditor* to ahow c»a*e If any they can, wh£
Clothing. Here t will nfako special
mentions. This department has a neavy
investments ,|aml to mak (money oome m
balks, 1 will cut prices down right and
left. They consist mostly of tine goods.
For instance An $18 dollar suit mark
ed down to $12.60. ,1 $15 lenit marked
down to $10, 86 Linen Yeats at 60
cents, worth $1.60. 03 white Duok Pants
at 60c. A $15 suit down to $7.60. I ex
pect to (ell toe last s’ich of them before
my departure; therefore the eooner you
come the better suited you’ll be. 1 shirt
1 pair suspenders, collar snd neck-tie
given to each ymt free of charge. A
large lot of Men’s flocks at 5 cents •pslr
regular 15 cents hose.
EIGHTH DEPARTMENT.
Ladies snd Men’s Shoes and fllippors,
What say ye when 1 sell yqu s $J tmt,
ton shoe for $97—either kid or pehh’.o—
a $2.60 shoe rdf $17 a 2.50 shoe for 1.607
a 2.00 kid button shue’for 1,007. T mse
are limited in quantities, then either
send or come at once, A 2.60 slipper
for.1 00. A 1.30 slipper 751. Men’s
Congress or low quarters-^* limited
quanityll you find youf number—at
1.36, regular 2-60 sheas. 36 pair AUl-
K tor. Slippers it 126 that cannot be
nglit for le-s then 3.00
My competitors kick st me to make
such ruinous prices, but f maka my
promise (o them that after dune 1st I
■hall quit it and go on smoothly with
their high prices £ualesa my sti ck will
b i too large. But notii then 1 raise the
flag and cry out; “Come ye who wort*
hard for the dollars, and take from my
store 2.60 worth of goods tor It.”
A visit 10 the Gilt JRJge Palace Store
ill readily convince you that even the
buyer will lay in a large (apply
d# dellvemijto any pan of tot
:j free of e" ~