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~M- . iTlJ a OOTS I- RS WEEKLY . m&sfrissim't 9
m. xix.
1 Y f* I n il I in K J rs’i 1ST 0. t j? f <t!i 1 V. y. f?
sszan&suaE saa.gg Mb
Al’IiH' Q<>. lOOl. ONLY FOR THE NEXT 10 DAYS. II j 20 , l?)()l.
After being asked by quite a lot of our customers to advertise prices we have deoided to do so fora while, showing to everyone
doing—that is, showing better quality, lower prices, newest goods, (no old stock as our goods do not stay with us
W hat we are follows that cash for customers:
long) selling only for cash and buying for cash, proves as we save our
SHOES- CALICOS- SPECIAL NOTICE i COLLARS.
4-pl\, any sup, only
.44 •Ill .00 Wool lulls * .78 4-plv, bidii-s collars, only
i.uu Siioes only . .$ .79 Simpson's host Calico only 1.22 i .98 4-ply, nil styles cuffs, oi ly L w»
. Calico only -4£
1,25 Indies shoo only .98 Glouchestor’s best only .44 Galley's trading stamps will be 1 50 4 4 119
1.50 * ‘ 1.29 Blnei’s best Cnlieo 4 4 1.48 BELTS.
1.75 1.48 Turkey Rod Calico only . 4-4 Worth money to those who have them, 4 4 1 98
1.08 Navv Ide Calico only' .44 we have almost 80,000 out that we Straw hats only .09 Ladies, latost. style, only .20
1 98 Solid colors of best Calico 44 as .15 . i til
InL offer cash for as follows: .25 4 4 12 * ,b
Zp 2.18 .85 4 4 4 .29 B00 afempLs, onlv .12
I 2.48 worth 25e, 50c
SHIlKTI^i < * .50 4 4 4 .82 and 75c,
1,00 Mens.ahoe onlv ,79 .05 » 4 4 .48
1 25 .98 AAA Best sheeting, ynd vide .5 .75 4 4 4 .52
k »— 1 B8 A A Heavy sheeting, yard wide .5 10 Galley’s trading stamps in cash $ . 0.8 1,00 4 * 4 .78 PAATS.
11 — 1 48 A sheeting, yard wide 4-1 20 07 4 9 Jenns only
. $ .72
i 1.08 AAA Sea Island, varJ wide .5 35 .15 oz pants •
1.98 AA Sea Island, yard wide 4 50 .25 CL< >TH1XT 8 ez .leans punts -only .59
2 18 7 oz .Runs pants only ,48
2.48 75 .37 $8 50 suits only $2.18 $1 20 pants only .118
2.98 pins only —* 1()0 50 4 50 suits only 2.98 2 50 4 1.08
Good paper 1000 5.00 0.00 suits only 8.98 R 00 4 1.08
Each pair of shoes are fully Best pins, pel* paper only +- 7 50 suits only 5.98 4.00 ‘
guaranteed not to rip and to be Hair pins . 1 10 00 suits only 0 98
represented -or money re- Goat’s best thread, 12 spools .48 12.50 suits only 7.98 7
as i .4 4-4 Fruit nf the Loom only,.
funded. ball good thr- ad only .13 IT 18 ECONOMY, TO TRADE AT GAM’S. i-H 'h '4
BO .5 4-4 Lonsdale Cambric only...............SG 4*4 Ited Star Blenching only........ s
7 1 i 4
4 4 Cnbat Blenching only %
k tzJ a
We will pay ^1,S5 per Cord for
good split pine wood delivered and
corded on our premises, Contracts
for which must be made by June 1st,
snd wood delivered not later than
August 15, 1801.
For further particulars apply at
office of.
( ON YE Us Olf, Ml LI J •
Caight a Dreadful Cold#
Marion Kooke. manager for
9 Thompson, a largo inipor
f,, t < f fine milliuery at 1058 Vi 1 1 -
........ At8 "” e ' m ' s
“i'll ing the late severe
•t I ca'lght a dreadful cold which
k
,,l; 'de me Unfit to attend my j
" ot'k during the day • One of j
hi' milliners was taking Chain
herhpn’s Cough Remedy for u
s VtM H cold at, that time, whicn
M-- | , |f ; il to relieve her so quickly
1 t bought some for myself -
MOW entirely well and feed ]
v pleaded to acknowledge its
,, #
ill- : || '• for sale by Galley
I ) l|!f (
A CHINESE CLASSiO.
How COMRADES IN* WARTIME.
?a . v 'vc have no clothes?
1> aLI for Loth will do. i
L i but ;he hint?, in raising men.
\ T ' b ? P fight ear s and pikes renew; i
‘ r as one, we two!
tbs •tty we have no clothe*?
8kirt our limbs shall hide.
i i i:i (t'e kini, in raising men,
i: s !>vfd and iance provide;
I ''"' ll do it, sid c b,- 6 jde.
lk " ' a -'' vc have no clothosf
\\ I irtle thou shall wear.
Lrt t. 1 il>c king, in raising men,
! A i, - and arms prepare;
Uj '-» ot war we'il sliare.
-Book World.
CONYERS, 1 i\ \ . SATURDAY, APR. 2/, 1901.
-
RIVER BOATS IN RUSSIA.
Nearly Every Known Means of Loco
motion As la Cite.
Everywhere up the Volga and its
it t:;:
while t i irol igh the canals to St, I’eters
burg alone pass annually during the.
lions of tons of freight. Every known
means of locomotion ts used, from
men who, like oxen, tramp the tox>
paths. hauling the smaller barges, to
powerful tugs that creep along by
means of an endless chain laid (n tin
bed of the canals and minor rivers,
dragging after them at snail pace great
caravans of heavy barges.
From the greater streams immense
craft nearly 400 feet long. IS feet in
‘b-pth. carrying d.coo tons of
drift down 10 the t nspinn. wher» tluj
n , x , broken to pieces to be used as lire
wood oil t4ie steamers going up stream.
In all there are miles of mivsga
ble waterways io_tlie valley of the Vol
ga. or If the streams which float the
giant rnfts tlsnt form so large n part ot
the rrattie of the rivers are included
the mileage is increased to nearly l.*>.
OOO. or as much as that of the valley of
the Mississippi- floated
Fifty thousand rafts are
down the Volga annually, many of
them ICO feet long by 7 thick, and this
gives but a faint idea of tlie real tratfic
of tlie river, for itt addition there art
10.b00.000 tons of produce passing w
and down the river during tlie open
season. Much of this centers at Xijn
Novgorod. To this famous markei
Bteauiers and barges cquiv fi'ObJ ail
parts of itnssin. bringing goods to be
sold nt the great annual fair, over
S200.000.000 worth of merchandise
ty' t i'ani sa mi' era ft I inch'd ing roVt*! are
required for this traffic. They come
I from as far north as Archangel, as far
cast as the Frals, from Astrakhan in
the south. St. Petersburg and Moscow
to the west, while great .caravans of
rhips of the desert arrive daily from
nil parts of Asia.—Engineering Muga
fciim.
Didn't < ot tils comerr.
A writer in the Boston Transcript
gives this reminiscence of the Rev. 1 >!*■
Elijah Kellogg of Harps Well. Me..*
"One Sunday before ills sermon the
doctor announced from his pulpit: 'The
widow Junes' grass is getting pretty
long. I shall lie there with my scythe,
rake and pitchfork at 4 o’clock tomor¬
row morning, and I hope every male
member of the congregation will be
there too.’
"The next morning lliey were all
there and among them Captain Griggs,
six feet two in his stockings, with a
weight of nearly 250 pounds, ’Pnr
sou.’ said be as they were working up
the field near each other, ‘I'm goin to
cut -your corners tiiis mornin.’
"Now. I>i*. Kellogg was a little man.
weighing scarcely more than ICO
pounds, hut lie knew how to handle
a scythe, and. as he told me. with a-lit
tle shrug of tiis shoulders, 'he didn't
cut my corners that morning.’ M ore
than 'that, the man who had thought
he could beat the parson at mowing
dropped under a tree exhausted from
working with such a pacemaker.”
The Worst Paved City.
Moscow is-probably the worst pav¬
ed city in the world, Great cobble
stoues driven by hand into a loose bed
of sand form a roadway which is al¬
ways dusty in summer and muddy in
autumn, and in many of the roads
there is no attempt at a roadway of
any kind. The streets are badly wa
tered and cleaned.
The city is regarded by the Russians
ns "the holy city.” probably because of
the large number of monasteries it con¬
tains. it was once the capital of the
empire and still enjoys the distinction
of being considered the capital of the
interior, but there does uot seem to be
any particular desire on the part of
the authorities to make it more worthy
of its title.
Dry Itot In the Pulpit.
The "unkindest cut of all” umotig un¬
intentional sayings capable of a satir¬
ical application was that.of au old pew
opener in n southern county, She was
tn at tendance on the rector, the church
wardens and a city architect down
with a view to church restoration.
Said the architect, poking the wood
work Witb his 1 hero S a great
** 11 of v drr rot It) these pews, Mr. Hoc
*
tor.” Before the . , latter could , , reply tilt .i .
oid woman cut III with. "But. law. sir.
it ain't nothink to what there is in the
pulpit.”—Chandlers' Journal.
A Dig Oae.
Au octopus which had been in a Egbt
with some other monster once drifted
ashore on the Malay peuiumiln. He laid
feelers, or arms, which were from Vi
S''''founds, "it was cah-ulated that
lie was big enough and st.r.ng enough
to drag a two ton fishing boat under
the surface by main strength.
The inhabitants of Palmyra get all
their salt by dipping buckets Into the
neighboring salt lake and allowing the
Water to evaporate.
Fme ciothes do not make Ilia
man hut they count#foi‘ a lot
when ?i man wants to run a
boat'd bill.
Whether or n<>t a fed >w is
crusty depends largely on how
he has been bred.
«. onliln't I nine lire
Unde Si. from Eprreek. had just left
an aching molar at the dentist .« and
stopped at a lunch counter for a sooth
ing beverage.
"liinmir a cup of caw fee." he said,
sitting down on the first vacant stool.
‘Tlrsuv one!” called out the girl he
hind the counter.
••That's what lie did!” responded Eli¬
de Si. with a delightful grin "Ilow’d
you know itV”-Cliicago Tribune.
Literary \ote.
Slip was n hriglit girl at Mount Mol
yoke college, it happened Hint dnv
thm they had hash for supper and
meat ha ’is the next morning for break¬
fast. “Ves.” siie said ns site glanced n(
the table: •‘lteview of Reviews this
morning ’’-Boston Journal.
/
ACOVE 2240fT M A^eoR0.a
5EA. fl.i7 ill Agricultural College
Il M»®« Buttons.
lit
|i* m gL Hi L
t
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r AJSh.'f
A ail. a.b,
Normal ; nd Ilusiuess Mnti’s courses.
laboratories healthful, InTlgoratin^cn.
m to: militarr di^ctpunc! {rood bnard moral in anti Ov¬
relltriov-s influences. Civ a pest
L’,’"if-ues^fncJn^cou^fo? State; abend n cc of counlry produce ;e*pen MS
“Lf-ui uTvYsUy. of TWiiaSw TjieinMi
itorv c!as<. (lo-educattoil amdenuof l»mit«d
tali on founded sfiecially for
ucaus. tswd Mr ^
Egotism is an alphabet of on
ly ono le ter.
f-pji An is optimist he faith savs cowards * hat p*s«i-|
551 >> t of i
The world is like a piece of j
music - full of sharps and flats,
The most sadsfvintr thing in
life is lovp an 1 sympathy; hut
these, like fame, must, e< me
Spontaneously and directly, if
come a t all. and not to lie sought
as a sp c fie ond or direct aim
in themselves.
4 FR1CANA will cure cyphili* anil O’*
Sores to Stay Cured.
'rT57,e.i ! i>,ii]i;!iiri:ru',:-ri;iii];.iii!::!n:ii.:: ......................
9 oo Drops
.(.•i.dvl.hiiffl.iji iium iE
'iTmnFtr
AV^gefable IheFoodandBegula- Preparationfor As¬
similating Stomachs ami Bowels of
ling the
Infants r*°( hildkfn
Promotes Rest.Conlains Digestion.CheerfuI- neither
ness and
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral.
FotNahcotic.
jkc^e ofouto-SMUUPiraaR
Pumpkin M'x. Senna Semi'
•
RaeKiU, SJU -
Arise Seed *
Him. Seed
Ctmified WnrityrerJi Sugar
FUrm :
A perfect Remedy Stomach,Diarrhoea for Constipa¬
tion . Sour
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish¬
ness ond Loss of Sleep.
FacSimile Signature of
NEW YORK.
C* z « *—- W'/ mo a
w U-- C / rf / b /
EXACT COPY 0- r WRAPPER.
’
,
NO, 18 .
The Best Blood Purifier*
The blood is COtisUnllv beiQ2
purified by t he lungs, liter and
(uinev s. Keep these organs in
. . ... , ,
a healthy condition and t h©
bowels regular vml von will
have tin need of a blood puiiliar,
For this purpose therein noth¬
ing Mpial to Olmnibeiijun’s
Stomach ami Liver Table!*, on*
dose of them will do jou mol'd
good than it dollar of (lie* best
blood purifier. Price, 2o cent*.
Samples lire at Uailey’s (Dug
store.
For Infants and Children.
Ths Kind Yon Have
Always Bought
Bears the h
Signature
of
-
I in
I
“ for Over
Thirty Years
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