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NOW ORGANIZED
PUBLIC SALE
This is to Certify
THAT THIS OFFICIAL STATEMENT notifying you of this Public Sale is bonafide, and backed by the rep
utation of over 20 years in business in Eatonton, the signature below guarantees absolutely every statement.
We have resolved to place on the market our entire
Men's all wool Suits, made to Wiatch
latest spring styles, the kind you
would have to pay from $12 to $15 sold
regular for and positively worth $15,
sale price now, come make your own
selection ...
$4.98
Complete price circular mailed, and now
ready, quoting prices on this entire
stock. Send a postal to TURNER
& TURNER, Eatonton, Ga., giving
your name and address and you will be
mailed a large circular quoting prices
for this Public Sale on this mammoth
stock. You will be able to select goods
amounting to a purchase of from $25 to
$200—supply your family for the entire
season. If > ou make a trip of 150 miles,
coming to this Public Sale, you will
after you see this mammoth stock on
sale, realize the great savings of hun
dreds of dollars vou will be able to
save—buying your season's supply at
this Public Sale, and the two or three
days making this trip you will admit
will be more than well worth your
while.
stock of high grade clothing all of this season’
PjUUU styles and creations including spring goods com
ing in daily, just recently bought. A mammoth immense stock
.on the premises in our building to be placed on Public Sale and sold
for prices less than the cost of the manufacturer, beginning
wednesdau Marcli 3110 Saturday florii 17
Men’s, Boy’s ami ('hildren’s Clothing, Men’s, Ladies’, Boy’s and
Children's Shoes, White Goods, Mulin and Domestic, Knit and Mus
lin Underwear and every article or class of Clothing you need com
bine this ifiammoth stock to lie sold at Public Sale. Anything you
can think of in wearing apparel for men can he found on public
sale in this mammoth stock.
Turner & Turner
EATONTON, GEORGIA.
DOOMED!
$25,000 Mammoth Clothing stock of tho
firm of Turner & Turner, for the past
20 years established in business in Ea
tonton, Ga., to be sold on the premises
at Eatonton, at prices less than the
cost of tho raw material.
Official Statement
TO THE PUBLIC:—We, tho under
signed have resolved to dispose of our
entire Btock. This Official statement
has been patiently awaited by the pub
lic and therefore on account of small
space will not go into detail dwelling
up m tne history of the well established
reputation of Turner & Turner. To
those .lot knowing these facts we want
to state his signature below backs every
statement as represented and guarantee
any goods you buy or your money re
turned if in any way dissatisfied.
Turner k Turner
tiiitonton, (iunniia.
Railroad fare paid to all purchasers of $25.00 worth of merchandise and over. When
you come to Eatonton watch for the Big Red Canvas Front. TURNER & TURNER.
Men’s single Pants all wool made of
the best material finely Tailored worth
up to 3.50 you choice of about 150 pairs
98c.
75 doz. Boys Knee Pants all wool assort
ed patterns guaranteed not to rip worth
from 60 to 75c in this sale
29c.
10,000 yds of Standard AAA sheeting
no limit to a customer
4 3-4c.
Must be Sold
We will distribute into the homes of
the people our mammoth stock at
prices lower than the cost of manufac
ture, beginning
Wednesday, March
31 st to Saturday,
April 1 7th
Our stock must be sold. Come here
and you will see goods marked at low
prices you never heard of.
TURNER lN TURNER
Eatonton, (la.
Railroad fare paid all purchasing $25,00
or over. Look for the big red canvas
front.
Ladies’ fine nandkerchiefs, positively
sold fur 25c., retiring from business.
liquidation sale price now
3c.
Boy’s school shoes, strong, durable sold
regularly for $2.00. etiring from busi
ness liquidation sale price, now
67c.
A fine suit all to match homespun and
cheviots in plain and fancy mixed
effects, medium weight perfect fitting,
guaranteed to give the best of wear.
These suits arc positively worth $10.00
or your money refunded, at any time,
retiring from business sale price
$3.98.
Our all worsted Suits, latest fashions
of the season's weight, Suits guaran
teed and positively worth $15.00, retir
ing from business sale price
$6.95.
50 cent French Balbriggan Under
wear, an .extra heavy garment, shirt
and drawers to match, a standard 50c.
seller, all sizes, while they last, retiring
from business Bale
17c.
75 cent Balbiggan Underwear, a gar
ment good for spring wear, shirts and
drawers to match,all sizes, per garment
29c.
Men’s Guyto style suspenders in fancy
and plain designs regular 25c value
8c.
A lot of men’s fine Dress Hats selected
from lines where there were » few le ft
and making a total of about 8*0 guaran
teed and positively worth up|to $3.00 go
in this sale
98c.
Boys 2 piece suits, suits of dependab le
fabrics neatly finished. All styles
worth $3.00 go in this sale
$U9.
Our Guarantee
We guarantee each and every purchaKer absolute satisfaction. We
guarantee each and every statement here made. Every garment, every
article marked in plain figures, ONE PRICE TO ALL. Sale positive
ly begins Wednesday, March 31st, and contiues to April 17th.
TURNER A TURNER, Eatonton, Ga.
If you cannot come the first or second day arrange it so you can come
any of these other days. But hear in mind this stock must be sold,
and as a great many thousand people will come to buy this stock in
this Public Sale, we urge you to come early and be one of the early
buyers. Here are the sixteen days—beginning Wednesday, March
31st, and continuing Thursday, April 5th,Oth, 7th, 8th,9th, 10th, 12th,
13th, 14th, 15, 10th and 17th.
$11.9fi represents a lot of Suits that
are the products of the world skilled
tuilers. In novel and conservative pat
terns, single and double breasted, light
or heavp weight, perfect fitting, with
alt the newest ideas of fashion, actually
and positively worth up $25 during this
great retiring from business sale
$11.96.
Read This!
It’s an irregularity in need to refund
money on unsatisfactory purchases,
foreign an uncustomary at other sales.
This stock is being sold but our guaran
tee backs every statement and every
price here made and we have emphasizod
that no misrepresentation of the slight-
est aggregation has been tolerated in
this advertisement. In proof of our
good faith we cheerfully give this guar
antee: “Goods exchanged or money
refunded for the asking.”
TURNER & TURNER
Eatonton,- Ga.
Railroad fare paid all purchasing $25.00
and over. Look for the big red canvas
front.
Men’s suits, this season’s latest nobby
creations, all to match, positively worth
$10.00 or you money refunded now
$4.98.
Men’s firm fast black hose,
laily for 25c. now
old regu-
6c.
TAKING CARE OF THE
YOUNG CHICKENS
Some Points That Will Be
an Advantage With the
Spring Work.
Many young chicks are lost by be
ing taken from the nest too soon after
they are hatched. We are all over
anxious to take the brood from tho
nest, and In doing ao too early, often
allow the ch'cks to get chilled. We
first few days. Jf you have no drink
ing fountain, poul water into shallow
tin plafe or saucer, and fill with
<-maJl pebbles so that the chicks may
drink without getting wet. Sweet
milk is good for chicks, and if con
venient, should take the place of
water. Any kind of grass or vege
tables, and fine chick size grit should
be reiished, and fine chick size grit
should be spread over bottom of
coop. If early In the spring and
the ground is still cold, the brood
should be kept In a room for a few
days until the chicks get stronger;
they should then be taken to the col-
are afraid that the little fellow wl!!' ony coop described In last Issue of
get hungry, and we hustle them to a> h| n „ n( . r
Arwvn nft a n rm tho or\l A mvai n/i tt'hprf* * *
coop often on the cold ground, where
they must stay till the old hen heats
a place that will be comfortable for
them. Do not distnrb the chicks
except to reach under the hen and
remove the shells, until the chicks
are twenty-four hours old—longer will
Teach the chicks early to scratch
and hustle. "Those that work the
perlmental Instruction and is now
most are always those that grow the
fastest" is the way an old expert
sizes up the question of looking after
do no harm. Nature has supplied t * le chicks,
them with food, which they have ab«»' Watch for lice, and if anv should
sorbed from the egg. and that is suM-make their appearance, either dust
fleient for ft.! two days. , When they i the hen and chicks with Insect pow-
begin to get hungry do not give any der, or put a little grease on and
soft or sloppy food. Oatmeal, slight-! under the hen’s head, under wings
ly moistened, stale soda crackeys.ffand over and under tall. The chicki
baked cornbread, made of meal and | will g?t covered when they get under
water, all make good food for the her. and the lice will disappear. !f
and again a few days before the
chicks are natchod, there will be no
lice to contend with.
the h'*n has been dusted when set,<| This is such a natural, and suc.i I
an easy way to make money on the
farm, that we can not understand
why every one who possesses such a
lodhllty, does not take advantage
of It.
It Is certainly seasonable now, and
the Introduction of a flock of geese,
or ducks to the water doursea on the
place would mean a guarantee of a
harvest of either meat or feathers, or
both if desired, later on.
RAISING GEESE ON
THE AVERAGE FARM
"Down where the water lilies grow"
—yes, that’s the pi ice we have in
mind. Down there In the marshes
and the bogs. Down where ihe hogs
wallow, and further out where the
water is deeper, and the brush dis
appears in its .dark depths. That s
the place to grow meat and feathers.
It Is the place for ducks and geese,
and It may through them, be made
as profitable as any other part of the
hhine place. There are hundreds and
thousands of just such places scat
tered all over the south, that are now
practically worthless .but which are
capable of utility and proflt-yleidlng.
Ducks and geese are hardy and
easily raised. The young grow rap
idly and they may be marketed at a
very early age, or they may be grown
to maturity and kept at a trifling ex
pense in such a situation as we have
outlined, and their feathers picked
and marketed at a good profit.
j Mr. Grover Bloodworth has joined
j hands with Mr. J. O. Bloodworth here
in the real estate business and they wil
do business under the firm name of
j Blood worth and Bloodworth. Mr. J. O.
Bloodworth will have active charge at
present as Mr. Grover Bloodworth is
engaged in teaching school at Sharon,
Ga. just now.
Both are well known, enterprising
young men and will no doubt meet th®
full measure of success in their work-
One of the first sales to be pulled off by
them will be the sale of West End lots
at auction here May 5, next.
WHO WILL BE QUEEN
OF THE CARNIVAL?
Big Military Sprlog Carnival Will Give
Handsame diamond King
le Winner.
Safeguards fer Your Men-
Now, what are the safeguards of
young men. The first safeguard of
which we want to speak is a love of
home. There are those who have no
idea of tho pleasure that concentrate
around that word “home.” Perhaps
your early abode Was shadowed with
vice or poverty. Harsh word3 and
petulance and scowling may have de
stroyed all the sanctity of that spot.
Love, kinduess and self-sacrifice, which
have built their altars in so tnanv*
ubodtis, where strangers in your father’*
house. God pity you, young man. Yew
never had a home. But a multitude of
young men can look back to the spot
that they can never forget. It may
have been a lowly roof, but you cannot
think of it now without a dash of emo
tion. You have seen nothing on each
that has so stirred your soul. A strang
er passing along that place might see
nothing remarkable about it, but oh!
how much it moans to you. Fresco-
on palace wall does not mean so muah
to you as those rough hewn rafthos.
Parks and bowers and trees at fashion
able watering places or country seats do
not mean so much to you as that brook
that ran in front of the plain farm
house and singing under the weeping
willows. The barred gitewav swung*
open by porter,in full dreSs not mean so
much to you as that twlng gate, your
sister on one side of it and you on the
other. She, gone fifteen years ago into
glory! That scene coming back to you
today as you swept backward and for
ward on the gate, singing the songs of
your childhood. But there are those-
who have their second dwelling place.
It is your adopted home. That alsp ib«
sacred forever. There you establish*
the first family altar, There vourchild
ren were born. In that room flapped!
the wing of tho death angle. Under
that roof when your work is done, you
expect to lie down and die. There ia
only one word in all the laguago that
can convej your idea of that place, andi
that word is “home.” We never knew.’
a man who was faithful to his early
and adopted home who was given over
at the same time to any gross form of
wickedness. If you find more enjoy
ment in the clubroom, in the literary
society, in tho art saloon, than you do
in these unpretending home pleasures,
you are on the road to ruin. Though
yuj ma, u„ vu- ji'C no in you i uauv as
sociates, and though you may be separ
ated from all your kindred, young man,
is there not a room somewhere that you
can call your own? Though it be the
fourth story of a third class boarding
house, into that room gather books,
pictures and a harp. Hang your
mother’s portrait over the mantle. Bid
unholy mirth stand back from that
threshold. Consecrate some spot irx
that room with the knee of prayer. By
the memory of other days, a father's
counsel, a mother's love and a sister’s
confidence, call it home.
( HILDREBi’S CARNIVAL.
On Monday afternoon April 5th at 3
o’clock on the lawn at the home of Mrs.
E. R. Hines there will be a children’s
carnival. Field day sports will be the
amusement,and cream and candy will be
sold. There will also be a goose that
eata money and gives you something ,in
exchange. Feed the goose.
LADIES TAKE NOTICE.
I will sell this week 15 and 25c. piece*
of fancy china at 10c. Call and see the
10c table and be convinced of the bar-
gana I am offering. R. H. Wootter.
Contest opens Monday. April 5, beau
tiful $100 diamond ring will be present
ed to the most popular young lady in
the city. The diamond ring will be on
exhibition at one of the leading jewel
ry stores of the city. Voting stations
will be at the most popular places in
town such as soda founts, votes are
one cent each. Now Mr. Lady’s man
get busy.
Be careful about making any sud
den change* In little chick’s feed.
NOIICE if you have any eng
or repair work to be done get
Winslow to do It. He works che
will appreciate your patronage,
at »he Star Jewelry Co. and w
you anything in his line chday, i
less of cost.
Engines
AND BOILERS
l*w, 1*th and AtilairU Mill*, Ir\Inotary
Fuidm mil Filling*, Wood Maw*, BhUttora*
•haft*, Full*/*. lulling, <Ja*olla* luglaatv
““,1“ LOMBARD,
InaLj, MmMm mi Ms inti in! Stiffly list,
At! OUST A. OA*