Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
THURSDAY* MARCn 3. 1 DOT.
Last Two Days for Easter Clothes-Buying
Save time and trouble by coming straight to this store for your Easter
Clothes. Greatest stocks to choose from; best styles; best values—and the
finest clothing show room in town to see them in. Plenty of careful and
competent men to serve you.
$15
Hart, Schaffner & Marx'
and Rogers, Peet & Co.
$40
Could we offer stronger evidence' of the high quality of these clothes than the names of
America’s best makers? And these two concerns have even surpassed all their previous efforts
in the production of this season’s styles.
Our small profit policy is still in force and we’ll save you $5 or more on any suityou buy;
besides giving fabrics and styles not to be had in other clothing at any price.
We want you to come and see these clothes; want to show you why we are so enthusiastic
about them; want you to realize that you’ll make a big mistake if you don’t buy your Easter outfit here.
Copyright 1907 by
Hart Schaffner (S’ Marx
45-47-49
Peachtree
Daniel Brothers Co.
Copyright 1907 by
Hart Schaffner & Marx
EX-GOV. W. J. NORTHEN OUTLINES
THE PURPOSES AXD PLANS OF THE
CIVIC LEAGUE OVER GEORGIA
To the Editor of Tlio Georgian:
In r»'f>|Mjii80 to your request, I give you,
herewith, somewhat of uu outline of the
imrpoMo uud the plan of the* organization
of civic longues throughout the state for
cognize that, under present strained
s between the races, such scenes
epeatod In almost any section of
ptirjMMo, hut very much more difficult to
I am confining roysell
mainly to the direct question addressed to
the people to whom I speak, asking how
we can prevent criminal assaults upon
women and how we can prevent murderous
mol.s that lynch and burn negroes. These
two conditions I always say are the daugei*
cuts iu our decaying civilization.
of muuicrous mobs, as they occur at the
Ixed. It would" really seem that civilized
people could introduce some remedy to pre
vent and moke entirely Impossible these
barbarous practices. Ilnvo we not gone
Just as far, with both these horrible cou-
•lltlous, as we can afford to go, If we ex-
l»*« t to hold prominent place among the
civilized nations of the world? I nm fully
conscious that so great n problem as con*
fronts us In the presence of two mwj,
absolutely distinct lu every element of their
nature, lias never confronted any nation
upon ojirth before It came to us. Khali
wo solve It or shall we leave It aioue to
bring us to savagery, nuarchy and govern*
mental hell?
A Young Woman’s Story.
In lSss u Iwautiful, sweet young woman
told me a most harrowing story that at
put me to constant tbluklng.
__ Since
then I have been asking mysolr, almost
• very day, "What can we do to prevent
nu ll conditions as come so dangerously iieur
leaving her n life of stmino that could never
be wli«d nwayr* I say "almost every day*
Ut.iiih,.. our papers report these horrible
outrages "almost every day.”
Having now exhausted nil the resources
r.t my command to answer this great and
grave question, I Mtn asking the people all
over the state, "What can we do to save
the fair women of Georgia from outrage
shame brought upon them by fictids
from hell?" Who eon dare say me nay?
"Itli the |M»ople whom I address I lenv
n printed elrciihir from which I uow quote
'Vfii SE our boiue
"'■‘•'tre against criminal assaults and snv
• i;r i-lvtllzntlon from murderous mobs and
l.iwjess lynching*'." , ,
' N<» good citizen can decline to help
riLsuer this grave and momentous question,
i.t'iy good, law-abiding uinu will cheer-
[''by consent to give his time, his strength,
hi* thought, his prayers nnd his conseern-
to service nnd sacrifice, if we are to
protected against crime and violence
***** [he lawless spilling of human blood."
this same question came to me with
redoubled force when one of the most dis
tinguished lawyers In this city, and eer-
tmnly. one of the most prominent men in
tie state. In my presence and in the pres-
J‘ m ‘ n of one of the most splendid women
m Georgia niul in the presence of three
tlUuug the most prominent and publle-spir-
jtnd 1111*11 of tin* state, made a most alarm-
tog revelation. He said:
An Alluring Statoment.
.‘'Twenty of the most respectable tueu of
Ttl " laltorlng classes of this city came Into
mr ofric,. „oon after the Atlanta riot and
f n,, l t<* me that they came to tell me they
h"d nothing to do with the riot that had
occurred; tlwv said they kuew noth*
‘"g of It until they saw Ho* report In the
'""rtiliig (tapers. They then said they had
’'■m* . further, to tell me If this thing eon-.
Utu.-d ami they were to be forced to ueg-
i*' 1 , ,h '* ,r business niul sit «t their homes
Mtli guns In hand to guard their wives
”t“* daughters from brutul assaults, they
Effted me to understand that the riot that
V 1 J'tst passed was only the sputtorlng
'5 grains of pow.b r dropped around the
t'figazlne in comparison with the slangh-
<JT they would make when they touched
l’ fT tin* magazine that would make blood
>'i the streets like water."
1 am sure all the parties present mill
{*"11 this alarming statement and the
ered° r *bat nppalled us when it was deiiv-
* thon nnd there determine*! to take the
Mnt*r , IU4 j u || ||u« tH'opic, "What can
^•* do to save our .ivlllzatlon from such
• nfui crime and such fearful spilling of
Iwlled to know that 1 " —
human blood." This Is tho foundation of
my mission over the state, nnd I am no-
I have now spoken in nearly ninety
counties In the state, to conservative, Inw-
ahlditig citizens, and I always suggest some
few things wo can do and then ask the
people to toll me such others as they be
lieve will help the ends I nm seeklug. In
this way, l nm seeking to bring pence
11 ml security to the people. Just this and
nothing more.
Iu every community that I have thus
far visited I find a very large uumber of
strictly law-abiding white men and a very
large body of strictly law-abiding negroes.
All the people must to know that there are
a great many good negroes In Georgia, who
deplore as much ns tho whito people, the
outrages committed by members of their
race. This statement I will never ho able
to make some white people believe.
Hit Plan of Campaign.
1. I am asking the law-abiding white poo*
E le to appoint a committee from their num*
er, sufficiently large-to know and classi
fy every white man la the county. It hai
now- liecome necessary to know, definitely
nnd fully, the character of all tho people
among whom we live. Tho plan requires
n good, large committee In the county
town and smaller committees at the other
towns In the county, and at least two
good men lu every militia district iu the
county.
2. This committee, I repeat. Is expected
to bo large euough to learn the chnrnctor
of every white man In the county and
classify them as follows:
in) All the white men who are positively
law-abiding nnd calm and conservative un
der great excitement. This will Include
nearly all of the ministers of the county,
tuauy, very ninny, good Christian laymen
nnd many other most excellent citizens
who are not identified with any religions
denomination. This class will Include also
or we will never settle the problem of the
races whatever else we may do.
(b) Tho second class of negroes will bs
found to l»e quite slmllur to the second
class of whito uieu. They do not commit
outrages, but they are lu full sympathy
with all the devilment the vicious negroes
do. These are they who hold secret meet
ings nnd plot (,aucf niuu. These are they
that swear they will not work for white
people, except upon very Limited condi
tions. This class will bo found, as among
the white people, to contain some preach
ers and « good lot of so-called Chrlstlnu
laymen and quite a number of newspaper
editors. This class, together with the third
class stir up hot hate between the races
as does the corresponding class among the
white folks.
Idle and Vicious in This Class.
(e) Tho third cluss will Include all the
Idle, vicious nnd villainous tiegroes, who
commit all kinds of lawlessness and crimes
nnd especially the class that make crimi
nal assaults. These are the negroea that
lounge around dives and dens and clubs
durlug the day nnd commit burglaries and
assaults at night. To be concise nnd com
prehensive, - this class Includes all the
tiegroes that are heavily loaded with In
famous villainy. It might be well to com-
pnro tho corresponding classes of both
races.
4. When n civic league Is formed hetweeu
the first class of white men and the first
class of negroes the white people will bo
amazed to know how the first class of ne
groes will give Information and help to find
a large body of low down, filthy, morally
corrupt ntid physically rotten white nieu,
who nave negro concubines and these Inw-
egroes will enable us to punish,
severity of a new law to be en
acted, that will enable us to send the Inst
one of such white men to the penitentiary
for twenty-fire years under the sole (lairge
of filth and moral corruption, as the result
of the problem of. the races.
After these classifications have been
lade. It is always suggested that these
several committees Ik* asked to recover, as
all the editors of the county papers, Judg- far as uiwy Ik* possible, tho lost character
‘ ‘ * * - “ some of the of ' - *-•* - * “ **"
__ul some few
of the prominent politicians.
(b) Tho second class of white peoplo will
he rouud to have some few ministers, quite
n good niiny so-called Christian laymen,
some of the editors of the dally press and
a very large uumber of politicians. None
of these men ever Join mobs themselves
but they will support others who do and
TfiMSJft BVUS!
r, of very unpleasant things as I nave
traveled over the state for nearly four
mouths. It seems to me that a minister
or n church man who favors tho burning of
a human belug takes close bold on to the
folks that live lu the pit.
<c) The Inst class the committee will
form from the white people lire those who
•astly snvnge enough to lynch and
burn human lieings. Href, lM*c«use of their
own murderous inclination, ana, second, be
cause of the suggestion mode to them by
the class Just referred to above.
Aid of Negroes Sought.
3. After this classification of the white
people, the committee will s*k the aid and
the co-operation of the law-abiding negroes
ns to the classification of the uegroes lu
the county. I.et me repeat, If we nro to,
be a civilized peoplo, the time has come
when we must know the character of ev
ery man. white nnd black, who Is a mem
her of the community In which we live.
<s> The first class among the negroes wll
Include many hiw-nblding uegro ministers
nnd negro laymen. These are fully am
heartily ready and anxious to help solv<
tin* awful conditions which confront us.
as has been already, proven by the nld
they have given to the law-abiding white
people In suppressing crime, since the--*
civic leagues began organization.
May I be permitted to sny when I meet
a good negro I do not hesitate to salute
him as such and tell him I nm his friend
nnd will be hlh stanch friend as long in
he behaves himself ns a member of tin
community? This does not hurt me a part!
ole, but It greatly helps the uegro to make
h, {n“order“toVlIeve the aupersensltive It
may be well to say that I leave with all the
committees a printed circular carrying the
following statement: "Let It be under
stood nil the way through that, in the
Mouth, there mn never be fttiy social In
termingling of the rneps nnd that the politi
cal power of this section, will remain In
present hands, but that the negro will be
gunrnnteed equal protection of the low and
that all the resources of the law will lie
exhausted In protecting the Innocent nm!
punishing the guilty. There should Ik* no
aristocracy of crime. A white fiend I
end—
For the Restoration of Charaoter.
1. All ministers, white and colored, ex
cept those of the second classes of both
races, will bo asked to preach to their
several congregations, on s fixed day, on
law and order.
2. Every three or four weeks thereafter
all the white people of all classes and all
the negroes or all classes will he usked
to conn* together at some convenient poli
ty of Colquitt will have such h meeting
for the first time on April 4, nnd these peo
ple will be spoken to ujr Judge Covington,
who, as everybody knowa, will say some-
— 1 * The f
thing worthy of being delivered,
address of this kind to lie dehverou i
Taliaferro county will lie mude-, by Jink
Holden, the presiding Judge of the iiortl
vrn circuit, who Is thoroughly In sympathy
with the movement we have tmdcrtnkeu.
sun* he will make a speech worthy
... n Murk brute.
I nlwiiyn tell tlio prople. tlmt for I hr
same crime. Justice demands that wo shall
renrrui snunuK u* always strike the white man Just ns beov*
many so-called good | llv nnd Just us often ns we strike tb* mgro
4%
Interest Compounded, Allowed In Our
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT
On and After January 1,1907
TH E NEAL BANK
E. H. THORNTON, President.
W. F. MANRY, H. C. CALDWELL,
Vice President.
Oarhier.
F. M. BERRY,
Asi’t Cashier.
the attention and the reading of nil the
[lie In the state. The committee for
county has already held such a
* ware delivered by
KSES. _
meeting, ami nddres
whole
The morning of the day I spoke at Wad
ley. Mayor Cockrlll himself Imprisoned n
negro mid snld to thos* who threatened to
nnd*: "1 will stand here at the jail my
self nnd kill the last man of you who
dares to couie this wuy to defy the law
of the state that bus imprisoned this crim
inal. This Incident occurred iu the enrly
morning. I arrived In the towu nt noon
and spoke to the people In the afternoon.
When I called for a chairman of the com
mittee to Ik* named for the county, one hun
dred and fifty to two hundred men prompt
ly nominated Mayor l*i»ckr1tl to lend them.
This Is the spirit and the action I mn ask-
Ing for all over Georgia to suppress mur
derous mobs.
3. These speeches to white men nnd no-
groes are to Ik* kept up once a month nt
least until Meptcmber 22. This day has been
selected been tine Inst year September 22 was
the day of the Atlanta riot, mid It was
made the Devil's day for Atl.-infn, for the
Mouth and for the nation ns well.
To Observe Anniversary of Riot.
September 22 this year will full on Sun
day, mid we hope to niHko It GihI'n day
for tin* state and for the nation. On that
day. all the minister* In all the pulpits
of the two races, will
l*e asked to pleach Iu the foretimiii on
"Law ami Order." lu the nfternoon of
that day nil the committees over the state
will arrange a mass meeting to Im* held
at MHite public place to Ik* addressed by
some prominent, law abiding business man
In the t-omuninity on "l.nw nnd Order." All
this effort will Im* made to prevent lawless
ness, outrages mid mobs by converting the
{cited and savage |*eop|e of l*oth races
nay Is* brought to Ik* clothed and
their right mind.
To some very sensitive people this.may
sound Ilk** agitation, but the devil has
been giving its n lot of agitation for tile
last forty year* In almost dally doses, as
brought to ns in nssnnlts and savage mobs.
Why not give the devil some agitation
been use of tin* prevention or crime* over
which he has gloated nil these years lu
loud buzxaH in hell?
After this tnneb has been said. I felt
the people we must make fnditldunl selee-
I tioiis from the worst classes of white
{ people ami negroes and handle them dts-
I erectly and yet completely In such way as
I t some newly enacted statute will authorize.
I. Of these, I select flm the tramp or
s*range negro nnd the tramp or strung**
white mui. Tin* white man or negro whom
nobody In tb'* community knows. I t#*ll the
stwtsb-fu. Gtai vsr crime comes from Idle,
loafing nnd indolent people who will not
work— 1 white mon and negroes. I give them
n thrilling atory from real life about c
strange or tramp negro who came dan
gcrously nigh waklug an assault, sll of
which might have been prevented If there
had been a committee In the community to
look out for nnd hnudle strange or tramp
negroes nnd strange or traiuji white men.
After hearing me apeak on tula subject ut
Hnwklnsvllle, Pope Drown, who is the
chairman of our committee for that county,
said to me tho next morning: "Every
where you go, preas the danger to come
from the struugo or trump negro. I never
allow one to stop on my place."
Will Be Grateful for Small Fruits.
If the committee will now handle prop*
erly one trump uegro or trump w-blte muu,
uud save from assault oue pure, sweet
country girl, I ahull never regret the ef-
fort I have made to bring to pass such
security.
2. I tell the committee to keep their eyes
on the Individual vlllulnous uegro that lives
In the community on some man’s farm, and
who, everybody knows. Is a fiend Incarnate.
He needs to Ik* shipped to sorno other
section. If he I* lifted nud put In motion,
he will then become a strange negro, ana
there will be a committee of conservative
people lu every community In which he
may appear to handle and deal with, him ns
a tramp or a strange uegro. The commit tee
will quite well understand how to free
themselves from him by keeping him going
until he reaches, some one of our sister
states to be tamed by the governors who
ive no race problem.
The committees are urged to look out
for the uegro nud the white man wjio do
not work, aud either put them to work Slid
keep them at It or declare them vagrants,
and send them to the work bouse for fif
teen years, or as long as may Ik* necessary
to get them in the habit of perspiring a
little antler moderate exercise. I^»t me
sny again, these are the people that glva
us trouble.
4. The Individual uegro, that tho commit
tee la especially urged to watch nnd care
for. Is the returned convict If this Indi
vidual negro 1s properly looked after a large
uumlH*r of ■ assaults and consequent mobs
will he prevented In our state.
I aui sure Judge Allen Fort wll! pardon
me for telling a story he told tue durlug
my administration, lie sentenced a young
boy to the cbaingnng for twelve months,
during which time he became u well trained
villain aud u graduate in crime. After the
boy's term expired and ho returned to hi*
home, there was one burglary after an
other In the town from which he had beau
sentenced. It seemed Impossible to catch
up with the supposed burglars, os their
F inns were so systematically and success-
ully arranged and executed. It was sup
posed that these burglaries were worked by
u gang of thieves who understood and co
operated with each other. It was finally
discovered that nil these troubles were
given by the returned convict boy, who,
uow ns a graduated criminal, Just turned
out from our colleges of crime, was
now equal to si! the possibilities of ini
quity. The state made this lw»y a criminal
by oue year's service In the chslngnng. For
his later lawlessness he was sentenced to
the (ftftltentlary for twenty years.
What of the Released Convict?
What of the criminal who Is sent to the
penltoutlnry for five years nnd ut the ex
piration of his term Is returned to Id*
home nud turned loose upon any commu
nity In Heorgln, u demon packed with vil
lainy nud crime ami fully ready, under the
most approved methods, for hurglnry and
murder nnd assaults, with the dsrlug of
Jho devil to perpetrate nil his Iniquities?
In the midst of all this terror nnd nlnrm,
.•restive
llk'n the
u not ngir
r .. —.. villains su« . ....
lets, and do nothing to save the purity
1 our state from their outrages nud our
civilisation from the bloody scenes which
follow.
Whilst the committee*
their power to prevent a
do fully a* much t<.
criminal, breaking bis neck by law and not
by murderous mobs. I have already glv
ans I suggest In t
-- jd only the first clr
of white |K*ople to pursue nnd capture n
bring to trial nnd courlctlou the alleged
crliiiit’iil.
rge the committee to restore, as far
as possible, the relations, broken forty
years ago between the race*, nnd bring
about ns near ns iHuodhh* the friendly con
turb nud trouble
light of the day.
tell them, forcefully.
all through the suu-
• iru lucui, iwrfnuu/, that we
r settle the problem of the rseei
long ns we allow corrupt white men to
rulu the homes of negroes and ninke for
them n lot of strunqiets and wetu-he* In
stead of pure, denii women In their
homes. I tell them this gross aud cruel
Injustice to the negro cries aloud to God
and His vengeance is upon us for our
shame. At this point I always say quite
a lot of things not clean enough for the
public ear. I speak only to men.
Indifferent to Northen Opinion.
May I be allowed to sav that I cnre very
little for the ojdnlou of our friends, the
enemy, at the North, but lest they chuckle
over this concession. I desire to say of the
whole African population In the North At
lantic states, ns reported In the renege for
1890. 2J per cent were muhittoen. In the
western division 62 |K*r cent were uiulat-
toes. In the north central states 31 per
cent were niul*tt<jc*. Iu tin* Mouth Atlan
tic states 10 |M*r cent were inulattoes and
lu tin* south central 13 per cent were mu-
hit toe*.
May I he allowed to say. In a general
ay. and nt tin* same time most affection
tely, that our friends at the North will
ive quite as lunch to do. If they attend to
their »»\vn business nnd let ours alone.
To meet ull these conditions, sonic at
tended with alarm and others attended with
dlNgiist, we will have a law committee com-
tmsed of eighteen or twenty of the ls*st
lawyer* In «i«*orgfa to suggest to Ho* legis
lature suitable untcitdineiiTN to the law* we
already hare and the ••unctuo-nt of new
laws necessary to boodle properly and as
they deserve, the vicious element* of our
coiiiiituidfie* Isiib white nud black.
This Is only a part of what I have to
say to tic* committees. You cannot allow
space for more. The pnr|s*ae of my can-,
v*** will remnlii fixed mid unalterable. The
plan for preventing assn nits a ml the sav-
ui.ciy of mob* 1* folly open to atucudiucui
will, help to inskt* It better, for — .....
poses for which I shall continue to address
the people of the state.
If I am not to be allowed to help settle
these grave questions, what are our Immi
gration friends going to do with the Ger
man girls and the Swedish wonieti that
they are going to tiring nmong us to chop
cnee for thirteen yeurs, but I would be
glad to know what Is to bo done with the
German girls and the Sw(*dlsli women. If
somcliody doesn’t agitate the question that
will greatly concern them when they learn
their environments on our farms.
neotlou.
As soon as the nnmes of the committees
are reported to me from the several coun
ties visited ou tny recent trip, they will be
given to the public through the ^ress.
Mrs. O. 8. Price.
The funeral services of Mrs. O. S.
Price, who died at a private sanitarium
Tuesday morning, were conducted
Thursday morning at 10 o'clock in the
chapel of H. M. Patterson & Son. Tho
Interment was In Westvlew cemetery.
Mrs. Price was the wife of O. 8. Price,
of the firm of Price & Thomas.
00i>i>00(><k><i00<h> 0000<KH50<J<100
O 0
0 ROME HEARS ALFONSO O
0 HAS TUBERCULOSIS. O
0 O
0 Paris, March 28.—-A dispatch 0
0 from Rome to The Journal says It 0
0 Is stated that news has arrived at 0
0 the qulrlnal to the effect that O
0 King Alfonso of Spain Is suffer- 0
0 Ing from tuberculosis and that 0
0 the Spanish court Is extremely un- 0
0 easy regarding his condition. 0
00000000000000000000000000
Evelyn Lovinia Camp.
Evelyn Lovinia, the young daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Camp, died at the
fumlly residence,* 106 Windsor street,
Thursday morning. She was the grand
daughter of Patrolman Camp of the
Atlanta police force. The funeral serv
ices will be conducted Thursday after
noon at 3:30 o'clock. The Interment
will bo in Westvlew cemetery.
L0UISIANAN INDICTED
ON CHARGE OF PEONAGE.
Special to The Georgian.
New Orleans, La., March 28.—The
Federal grand Jury today Indicted Rob
ert Hlenvenue, a prominent planter of
Point Coupee parish, on a charge of
violating tho peonage laws. Three
counts were brought against Hlenvenue,
who Is Accused of making Aaron Ba
ker work out an indebtedness of $100
after causing his arrest.
LIEUTENANT WINSHIP 4 **
WILL RESIDE IN MACON.
__ -Lieutenant?
Emory Wlnshlp, who recently 'retired
from the United 8taies army, where he
has made a brilliant record, has return
ed to Macon, hie old home, with hla
wife and child, and will remain her**
resting and visiting his old friends for
two months. The appreciation that the
city of Macon felt for his gallant con
duct during the war with Spain was
evinced about eight years ago by tho
presentation of a beautiful sword to
Lieutenant Wlnshlp.
McClure’s Store News
Special Week-End Sale at Both Stores
Japanese Salted
Peanuts for
Friday and Satur
day, 5c Pound.
All Sizes of
Flower Pots
Now
In Stock.
Delicious Fig Bar
on Sale at Both
Stores Saturday,
5c Pound.
Velvet Ribbon—best quality
and all stylish shapes; N'o. 12;
per yard 40c
Ladies' Collars in dozens of
new nnd pretty styles at,
choice 10c
Water Pitchers —half-gallon
size; regular 50-ccnt values;-in
this sale 25c
Chambers of best quality plain
white stoneware; Friduy anci
Saturday 25c
Meat Platters of plain whito
ware; small sizes; 10-cent val
ues 5c
Table Tumblers of plain clear'
glass; good quality; 2 for.,5c
All
Easter
Postcards
to
Close
at,
Choice,
lc
_ v* ——-
Easter Gifts and Novelties
Tomorrow and Satur n/ we will close out all Easter Gifts
•.nd Novelties at 'reduced, prices, including Eggs, Rabbits. Chicks,
Ducklings, Baskets, Hells, etc., etc. Immense lines at both stores
to choose from.
Atlanta
Souvenir
Postcards*
Big
Line
to Pick
From,
lc
Berlin Kettles oi near gray en
ameled ware; 6-qunrt size; on
ly 33c
Pie Plates of best tin; 8-inch
size; very special at 2 for. .5c
Windaw Shades of good opaque
on best spring rollers... .25c
Household Paints and Enamels;
ready for use; all colors; per
can 10c
Rubber Heels for Men's and
Women’s Shoes; new stock;
pair 8c
Moulding Hooks for hanging
pictures, etc.; special, per
5c
Specials in Easter Millinery
(Whitehall Street Store Only)
New Shapes for Ladies' Hats, made of best
wrapped wire; special values at 75c and $1.00
Children’s Bailors of .Milan and rough straws;
50c, ?5c aud $1.00
Girls’ Hats of laee and embroidery; new and
pretty styles; special at 75e and $.1.03
Infants’ Caps of white lawn and silk; laee
trimmed; 25c to $1.00
McClure Ten-Cent Co.
63 Whitehall St. 3840 W. Mitchell St.
Corner Forsyth.
Corner Hunter.