Newspaper Page Text
VOL X.
WRIGHT BILL VETOED
Dispensary Measure Knocked Out
By Governor Candler.
“A DELUSION AND A SNARE”
Chief Executive of Georgia Differs
With Legislators and Gives
His Reasons In Char
acteristic Style.
Friday Governor Candler, of Georgia,
notified the house of representatives
that he had declined to approve the
Wright dispensary bill. He communi
cated his reasons to the house in a
message, and in that message he char
acterized the bill as a delusion and a
snare, which would not tend to prohib
it, but would increase the sale of whis
ky.
The following, in part, is what the
governor said:
While it purports to be in the inter
est of temperance and for the restric
tion of the sale and use of intoxicating
liquors, it will, in my opinion, however
good the intent, have precisely the op
posite effect. It will open the flood
gates in the dry counties and over
whelm them, and at the same time set
back the cause of temperance in the
state at least a generation.
If the construction put on it by some
able lawyers is the true construction,
It is a delusion and a snare, not only
damaging to the cause it purports to
foster, but misleading in its language
and its details. No matter how the
election goes, whether for or against
dispensary, the result is the same—
the sale of liquors in the county, if not
in dispensaries then in barrooms. Thts
is the construction put upon the bill by
some good lawyers. If it is the correct
interpretation, the bill is unwise and
unfair to the dry counties and ought
not to become a law. If not, then the
language is ambiguous, and it ought
not to go on the statute book, because
it would give rise to bickering and vex
atious and interminable litigation.
It is evident that it was drafted
wth special reference to the “wet”
counties in the state, and without re
gard to those, more than ninety per
cent of the whole, in which liquors can
not be lawfully sold at all. Its effect
would be to precipitate elections in all
of the counties which have, under the
local option law, prohibited the sale
of liquor v.'ithin their borders, in or
der to give the wet counties a chance
to establish dispensaries; to lose those
counties which have been saved in or
d<f to save those which have been
lost; to damn the redeemed by an
awkward device to redeem the damned.
Instead of putting a quietus on tne
agitation of the liquor traffic it will
Inaugurate In almost if not quite ev
ery county in the state flerce contests
over it."
I have heard only three arguments
In favor of the bill. One is that it will
stop the agitation of the liquor ques
tion. This is not true. On the con
trary, it will probably precipitate fierce
contests over it in every county in the
state within twelve months. Another
is that it will stop the illicit sale of liq
uor in the dry counties and provide for
its lawful sale by responsible bonded
officers who will not, as do the blind ♦'
gers, sell on the da ß*
law, nor to minors anTTTlrunken men.
There Is some force in this argument,
but not so much as those who advance
it think.
The other argument which has been
advanced and chiefly relied on, is that
it will be a great source of revenue to
the counties and towns in which the
dispensaries are located, and will in
this way greatly reduce the burden of
taxation. It is even claimed that al
ready there has been found a county
in which no taxes are imposed for
county purposes, because the profits of
its dispensary amply support the coun
ty government. Grant that this is true
and that the dispensary in every coun
ty will pay ail the expenses of tue
county and the people be wholly reliev
ed of local taxes, can Georgia, a glo
rious state, glorious in her history, her
traditions and the achievements of her
illustrious 6ons, and peopled by Chris
tian people, afford to sanction a law
making every county and town in the
state proprietor of a liquor shop to de
bauch the morals of the youth of the
country in order to escape the legiti
mate burden of local government? Can
she afford to put upon her statute book
a law to coin the tears and blood of the
wives and children of weak men into
dollars to fill the coffers of county and
town treasuries that their tax-payers
may be relieved from taxation?
1 do not think she can, and for these
reasons, and others not necessary to
mention, 1 am obliged in the conscien
ti°us discharge of official duty to with
hold my approval ofrom this bill.
Ca NAL COMMITTEE MEETS.
ore at Early Date.
e senate committee on Isthmian
ra ‘-u. was in session Thursday and
m'Kaged in a general discussion of the
- aragua canal bill, which was Intro
meed by Senator Morgan, but adjourn
a wlth °ut action, because of the ab
,,ence Senator Hanna. The disposi
ion of committee j g to re p or t the
pi*! st as early flats.
DADE COUNTY SENTINEL.
' EDirORS GIVEN THEIR LIBERTY.
Employes of Hearst’s Chicago Ameri
can Given Their Liberty Under
Habeas Corpus Proceedings,
At Chicago Saturday Andrew M.
n-awrence, managing editor of Hearst's
Chicago American, and H. S. Canfield,
a reporter, who were sentenced recent
ly by Judge Henecy to forty and thirty
days respectively in the county jail
for contempt of court, were discharged
from custody by Judge Dunne.
Judge Dunne admitted tlx* the arti
cles and cartoon which Judgft Hanecy
objected to were clearly calculated to
intimidate abd coerce the court, had
the court not already rendered its de
cision. Judge Dunne admitted that
the cartoon la evidence was probably
libelous and the articles probably so.
Harsh criticism, Judge Dunne re
marked, is one of the incidents and
burdens of public life.
"I see no reason,” he said, “why a
judge should be offered a different
remedy for attacks in the public print
than a president or a governor or a
congressman. Criticism of a public
official, if just, will do no good; if un
just, will do no harm.”
Following is Judge Hanecy’s com
ment on Judge Dunne’s decision:
“Judge Duune had the power so to
decide, but he did not have the right.
Any judge has the power to let every
prisoner out of the penitentiary, bat
they have not the right, nor does any
body expect that they will ”
The contempt case and the habeas
corpus hearing which followed grew
out of an effort made by The Chicago
American to secure an order for the
quo warranto proceedings to compel
the People’s Gas Light and Coke Com
pany to show by what right they oper
ated in Chicago. Judge Hanecy refus
ed to allow the quo warranto proceed
ings, and following this refusal The
American printed articles and a cor
toon strongly intimating that the judge
had been unduly influenced and that
when he again came up for election he
would discover that the people had no
confidence in him. Judge Hanecy
cited Lawrence and Canfield, with
others of the paper, for contempt and
found Lawrence and Canfield guilty.
W. R. Hearst, owner of the paper,
Clare Briggs and Homer Davenport,
cartoonists, have not been within the
jurisdiction of the court, and the con
tempt charge still pends against
them.
PECULIAR WRECK ON CENTRAL.
Cars Fall Through Culvert, Killing
Two and Injuring Forty-Eight.
Two dead, one fatally injured, seven
seriously injured, and about forty
painfully so, is the sum total of a
wreck on the Central of Georgia rail
way at the Southern railway culvert,
near Ocmulgee river bridge, in the
city limits of Macon at 3:30 Sunday
morning. The wreck was caused by a
defective switch, a portion oi the train
going on one track and another part
on a different track.
Two negro women whose names can
not be ledfcaed are the dead. One was
killed the other died short
ly negro woman
was fatally inju%L
About of the
Walter Main circ. badly bruis
ed and cut, but were taken
through on ~ —’ -nt out oy
the Centr ""u
--no""' north. The me 1U K>
.o Berger Carnival Company were
also slightly injured, but none of them
so seriously as to cause them to stop
here.
The place where the wreck occurred
is just on the Macon side of the Oc
mulgee river, where there is an em
bankment fully 25 feet high. Under
this run the tracks of the Southern
railway. The second-class coach, in
which were the negro women, fell j
through this culvert and onto the j
Southern tracks below. The front
trucks of the other coach remained on
the bank, but the other portion of the
car was crushed into kindling wood.
So small were the parts that the South
ern track was cleared by men carrying
away portions of the wreck in their
arms. No engine was necessary to
pull the wreck out of the way.
The train was the regular passenger
from Savannah and was due to arrive
in Macon at 3:45 o’clock.
YOUNG FOOTPADS SQUELC- 1
Three Boys Get Ter'- > ''T^ 10 ..
tiary JflF.iOUbing Old M
At Montgomery, Ala., Jjairday
Charlie Hartman, W. J. Bell rm l Frank
Smith, three white boys, Me oldest
scarcely 19 years of age, vMre convict
ed of highway robbery aM given ten
years each in the penit*tiary.
The trio caught a drunken country
man in an alley one night and relieved
him of about $6.
Bell is from Mobile, Hartman from
Georgia and Smith from Louisiana. All
were birds of passage in Montgomery
and happened to get together on a
lark.
SWITCHMEN LOSE FIGHT.
All Pittsburg Railroads Affected Are
Doing Usual Business.
All Pittsburg, Pa., railroads that
were affected by the strike of the
switchmen now have the full number
of crews at work and the officials say
that so far as they are concerned the
strike Is at an end and that whatever
trouble and Inconvenience there has
been is at an end.
TRENTON. GA. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 13.1901.
UNDER MARTIAL LAW
Race Trouble Brings on Crisis In
Two Alabama Towns.
STATE TROOPS ARE CALLED OUT
Twenty-Fiv* Negroes Incarcerated In
Jail at Andalusia, Under Charge
ef Murder, Object of
Mob’s Wrath.
A Montgomery, Ala., special says;
Sheriff Bradshaw, of Covington county,
Friday afternoon wired Governor Jelks
that he had positive information that
a mob from Opp would attack the jail
at Andalusia for the purpose of lynch
ing the twenty-five negroes implicated
in the killing of the town marshal and
ft merchant at Opp.
The sheriff asked that soldiers be
sent to Andalusia without delay. Im
mediately upon receipt of this telegram
the governor ordered the military com
pany at Greenville to proceed by train
to Andalusia, and arranged with the
railroad company for a special. Cap
tain Gamble, of the Greenville com
pany, replied in twenty minutes that
his company would leave for Andalu
sia at 5 o’clock Friday afternoon. The
distance from Greenville to Andalusia
is about sixty miles.
Military Were Sent.
About 3 o’clock Friday afternoon
Governor Jelks received a second mes
sage from Sheriff Bradshaw, stating
that he had the situation in hand, and
would not need the Greenville com
pany, which had been under arms.
Twenty minutes later he received an
other message from the sheriff that the
mob was already formed at or near
Opp, and would certainly attack the
jail. The military were at once order
ed to the scene.
Under Martial Law.
A special to The Montgomery Adver
tiser from Andalusia, Ala., says:
“The governor sent troops tonight to
aid Sheriff Bradshaw in protecting
the negro rioters in jail here, and the
town is now under martial law. .a
sheriff is fearing an attack at any mo
ment by a mob from Opp, and Is pre
pared to protect his prisoners at al!
hazards.
“Three negroes, names unknown,
were caught and killed by a posse of
citizens near Opp Friday for alleged
complication in the riot, and the whole
country is in arms against the ne
groes.”
BABY BREAKS A WILL.
Novel Suit Is Decided In Fulton Su
perior Court In Atlanta.
A dispatch from Atlanta, Ga., says:
The Alexander will contest came to
an end Friday morning in the superior
court with a victory for Mrs. Minnie B.
Alexander, widow of the late W. H. Al
exander, over which a legal fight has
been waged, is now revoked by the
verdict of the jury, and as a result
Mrs. Alexander comes Into possession
of an estate valued at $45,000. The
fact of the birth of a posthumous
child to Mrs. Alexander during the
present year broke the will, the law
providing that the birth of a child sub
sequent to the making of a will, in
-’’ich such an event is not contem
pt. ' - invocation cf the
will.
WILSON DIED HARD.
After Execution His Body Wriggled In
Coffin and Eyes Opened.
Bud Wilson, a convict wh
R. H. Naylor, a ena*-’ '* ...e xei jn
ty convict cauip, last Septemb' , was
hanged Friday at Danville, A k. The
trap was sprung at 9:45 r Jock and
at 10:05 the body was lo T into a
coffin.
Before the lid we r .aced upon the
coffin the body h n moving about.
Wilson opened 1 .-yes and his whole
frame shook v tremors. He was ta
ken from t’ coffin by deputies and
carried u’ Jie steps to the scaffold for
the pu r ,ose of hanging him again.
W' n the platform was reached the
be became rigid, remaining so for a
ment and then became limp.
SUICIDED IN TREE-TOP.
Self-Murderer Adopts Unique Plan tc
Outwit His Friends.
Nelson Culver, during a fit of de
spondency of temporary Insanity, ran
from his home at Hamilton, Mich.,
Thursday, climbed to the top of a
tall tree. When he saw his friends at
the foot of the tree trying to rescue
him, he pulled his gun and blew hie
brains out. His body dropped and
was caught on the lower limbs of the
tree, fifty feet from the ground, and
dangled there while his life blood
ebbed away.
TO STOP RATE CUTTERS
Was Object of Meeting of Wholesale
Druggists In Birmingham.
It developed in Birmingham, Ala.,
Saturday that the purpose of the con
venticn there of the wholesale drug
gists of the southern states is to de
vise some means to squelch the cut
rate druggists.
The cut raters, It Is alleged, are de
moralizing the business, as well as
monopolising it.
Official Organ of Dade County
■iUtlit PASSES DEPOT BILL.
QeorgU Representatives Dispoeft bf
Muchly Discussed Measure By
Favorable Vote of 107 to 55.
Bj a vote of 107 to 55 the muchly
discussed Atlanta depot bill passed the
house of representatives Thursday af
ternoon and is new up to the senate
for cotniderfttion.
I'.tvuraMe action was had oh the
measure after several hours of debate
and at the end of a session lasting
from 9:30 in the morning until shortly
after 4 o'cirnk in the afternoon. The
bill, as .'i• 1. oduced by Representative
Gress, of Wilcox, and providing that
the slate should appropriate $500,000
frem the yearly rental of the Western
and Atlantic railroad to erect a hand
some new passenger station on the
state's property in Atlanta, was passed
With six amendments.
These amendments in no wise de
tract from the strength of the meas
ure. The first amendment was by Mr.
Johnson, of Bartow, and provided that
the members of the committee to be
appointed to have charge of the mat
ter of building, shall be paid for their
services from the money appropriated
for the purpose of building the new
station. Another amendment by Mr.
Little, of Muscogee, provided that the
modification of the lease contract
should be assented to by the lessee of
the state road before any steps were
taken to build the new depot.
A proviso was added to this by Mr.
Johnson, of Bartow, to the effect
that the modification of the present
lease contract should not be construct
ed as giving the lessee any right or
claim to any betterments or claims.
An amendment by Mr. Lane, of Sum
ter, provided that the building com
mittee should keep its records open at
all times for public inspection. Sev
eral minor amendments were also
adopted.
The bill passed amid great enthusi
asm. The friends of the measure in
the house cheered and applauded for
several moments when it was announc
ed that 107 had voted for the bill, and
D\ audience in the gallery Joined in
the general demonstration.
Speaker Little and Mr. Morris, of
Cobb, who presided as chairman of the
committee of the vlhole while the de
bate on the bill ..In progress, both
acquitted themselves with distinction.
Their rulings were clear cut and decis
ive and were instrumental in eliminat
ing all superfluous discussion calculat
ed to delay matters.
The measure provides that a com
mittee of seven —four from the house
and two from the senate —of which
the governor shall be chairman, shall
be appointed to investigate the ques
tion of building anew depot, secure
plans and estimates and consider the
items of damage that may arise from
the erection of the passenger station.
According to the bill the new depot is
to be completed by July, 1905, and the
$500,000, which is to be appropriated,
will cover all costs and damages.
As soon as the bill was passed, Mr.
Slaton, of Fulton, moved that It be
transmitted immediately to the senate.
SEVEN AMENDMENTS PASS.
The Georgia Senate Acts on Proposed
Constitutional Chang.
The Georgia senate Thursr By passed
v ~ two-third majority
seve jf the proposed Jonal
ame aments as follows: *
Putting all pension. l jn an iftfii
,nt basis.
2. Extending the juris .ction of jus
tices of the peace to t' re r cases un
der SIOO.
3. Providing for a < nge of venue
where there '’"nger lynching.
4. iuakinr jr >f office
county o'” ,ir ' ,rs.
5. Requ. •* e general ar
priatlo" 1 i the govc
least ten ° final .n
--ment of .. as'semb’
6. Re ~:ng t i sectic which pro
hibits .anishme t and ipping a pun
ish ent for ex /ne
i. Providing t v .t two-thirds of the
voters shall c leide a local bond elec
tion instead c two-thirds of the voters
registered.
CARNEGIE JFFERS TEN MILLIONS
Will DonaJs That Sum to United
States Fjlr Educational Purposes.
President Roosevelt has received a
letter from Andrew Carnegie in which
the latter offers to make a donation of
$lO 000,000 to the United States. The
letter will be referred to congress.
Mr. Carnegies gift is for the pub
pose of establishing in Washington a
university for higher education. It if
somewhat on the line of the bequest
of James Smithson, the Englishman,
who gave $1,000,000 for the establish
ment and maintenance of what Is
known as the Smithsonian institution.
RECEIVER TAKES CHARGE.
Judge Speer Places Barnesvllle Con
cerns in Hands of Col. J. J. Rogers.
Colonel J. J. Rogers has been ap
pointed temporary receiver of the
Barnesvllle, Ga., Manufacturing Com :
pany by Judge Speer. Colonel Rogers
has taken full possession of the plant,
and also the Hanson-Crawley Corn
pan. It is believed he will put the
property on Its feet and running In a
short time,
JUDGE SLAYS PARSON
A Sensational Sunday Tragedy
In Brookside, Alabama.
REVENGE OF ANGERED JUSTICE
At His Church Preacher Referred to
man, Who Subsequently Slew
Him, as a Bearer of False
hoods and Slander.
A Birmingham, Ala., dispatch says:
Justice of the Peace R. D. Coffman, at
Brookside, in the western part of the
ccunty, shot and killed the Rev, J. W.
Bradford, pastor of the Methodist
church at that point Sunday afternoon.
The shooting took place in the pir
sonage after Rev. Bradford had or
dered Coffman to leave the piace.
Three shots were fired, one taking ef
fect, going into the minister’s right
temple and coming out on the opposite
side of the head.
Several months ago a feud broke
cut in the Brookside church, and Coff
man withdrew, being a leader of one of
the sides. It is stated he was expelled
from the church, a charge being made
that he struck his wife.
The North Alabama conference of
the Methodist Episcopal church, south,
met at Anniston last week and the
Rev. Mr. Bradford was sent back to
Brookwood. At Sunday school Pas
tor Bradford addressed his con
gregation, saying he was pleased to be
back. He said it was not his custom
to preach the first Sunday on his re
turn from conference, but .he desired
to take this opportunity of expressing
the hope that the coming year would
be a prosperous one.
He said it would be if such men as
Coffman were kept out and so prevent
ed from “lying on the church and the
pastor,” it being told that Coffman had
been indulging in much talk about the
church and the Rev. Mr. Bradford.
This address was communicated to
Coffman and late Sunday afternoon the
latter called at the parsonage to see
the minister.
The minister ordered Coffman to
leave the place, when Coffman fired
three times, as stated.
Coffman surrendered to Marshal Sor
rel, claiming tne minister attempted to
shoot him. Warrants had been
sworn out before Justice J. T. Sellers
charging Coffman with murder.
The Rev. Mr. Bradford died two
hours after the shooting. His family
is visiting in I-ouisiana at present.
MARSHAL JOHNSON RESIGNS.
Leader of Georgia Republicans Turns
Over Party Affairs to W. A. Pledger.
Walter H. Johnson, United States
marshal for Georgia, hd* resigned his
position as chairman of the republican
state central committee. This action
on the part of Mr. Johnson was
brought about by a circular sent out by
Attorney General Knox November 22,
in which he stated that it was contrary
to the spirit of the civil service lows
for any officer of the department of
justice to act as chairman of any po
litical organization.
The resignation of Chairman John
son leaves the state affairs of the par
ty in the hands of W. A. Pledger, of At
lanta, the well-known negro leader.
Pledger is vice chairman of the com
mittee, and as such will probably di
rect the affairs of the party in Geor
gia for a nun °r of months to come.
TEXAS PUI UING A TRUST.
Suit Is Brought Ag ’nst Alleged Com
bine With Thirty k 'lions Capital,
special from Aust Texas, says:
'amous Kirby Lr Company,
was recently for
♦ou,d()0,000 under uie i., Texas,
has been sued for damages on the
ground that it is operating in violation
of the anti-trust law.
The charges are that the said com
pany has violated the law in freezing
and buying out competitors. The pen
alties amounting to $770,000 are asked
for.
WITH TWENTY-FIVE PRISONERS.
Alabama Sheriff Makes Wholesale Ar
rest of Negroes at Opp.
Sheriff Bradshaw returned to Anda
lusia, Ala., Thursday with twenty-two
negroes who are accused of complicity
in the killing of J. W. Dorsey, a mer
chant, and Fale Atkinson, city mar
shal at Opp, Wednesday evening. The
negroes were chased with bloodhounds
and captured by the sheriff and his
posse.
There is great excitement at Anda
lusia and there are fears that the
friends of the dead white men will at
tempt a wholesale lynching.
DEWEY DENIES REPORT.
Published Statement that Schley Was
Found Guilty Is Untrue.
The New York World of Saturday
morning published a dispatch from
Washington saying that Admiral Dew
ey has denied the statements publish
ed in other papers that the Schley
court of inquiry had reached a decision
in the case and that Admiral Schley
had been found guilt)' pn five counts.
l i, mil i %
WHITE FRONT.
THE UNION STORE,
238 Montgomery Ayenne, CHATTANOOGA s HU.
if: fc.
We arc the cheapest store in the city fh Dry
Goods, Notions, Millinery, Ladies’ Ready-to-wear
Shirt Waists, Skirts, Jackets, Gapes, Wrappers,
Men’s and hoys’ Clothing, Boots and Shoes, Hats and
Caps.
■n-
Now is. the time to get fine Glassware FREE. Tickets with every 25
cent purchase. You get something i/ith every dollar’s worth of tickets.
Give us a trial; it will make you a permanent customer.
Every purchase must be satisfactory, or your money back. Read
prices below:
Nine bars Electric Soap, 25c.
One Good Broom, 10c.
One 5-cent Box Washing Fluid, 2c.
This is the place to buy your Christmas goods for the little ones. Dolls
from 5 cents up.
fNif'sirarsirsi rjrvirjrsuM tsfsirs>csicNmNjiNj
BARGAINS IN DRY GOODS.
All-Wool Red Flannel, per yard ..10c
23 yards Brown Domestic $1
Table Oil Cloth 10c
Standard Calico 4 to 5c
Canton Flannel 5 to 10c
Black Figured Brocade Sateen..
Outing Flannel 4 1-2 to 12 l-2c
Bleached Domestic 4c
BAKUAINB IN HATS.
We trim our Hats to suit you, and
save you 50c to $2 on a Hat.
Ladies’ Trimmed Hats 69c
Ladies’ and Misses’ Walking
a SI.OO Hat for 47c
Ladies $3 Trimmed Hat $1.98
Ladies $4 and $5 Trimmed Hat.. 52.98
BARGAINS IN SHOES.
Men’s Brogan Shoes, as they last, 79c
Ladies’ Dongola Shoes 98c
60 Pairs Ladies Sample Shoes,
sizes all 5, worth $1.50, at....98c
Men’s W. L. Douglass Shoes, $3
and $3.50.
This is the place to get Chil
dren’s School Shoes ..65c to $1.50
Rubbers of all kinds.
BARGAINS IN CLOTHING.
Men’s Jeans Pants, one pair to a
leslroyers of Hill Price and Oripafors of Half Price.
COME TO SEE US.
W. E. WALKER & CO.
EVERY MAN
HIS OWN DOCTOR.
x i. HAMILTON ITERS, B. B
i *lO page IlluairataA Book, osataiatag nlwbli information pottoia
to disaaaos of th human system, shoving how to (rut and onrs with
viasplest of ■•dioinoa. Tho hook oontalna analysis of oonriskip and
narriag.i rearing and rinuagemeat of ohildron, besides valuabla pr
toripfions, roaip.s, .to., with a full oompleaaant of foots (a materia nod.
Vs* that evaryoas should know.
This most iudtipsaaablo adjumoi to svsry woll-rognlated household wit'
*• mailed, postpaid, to any odiroas oa rsooipt of prioo, BIXTT OENTB
tddriO*
ATLANTA PUBLISHING HOUSE.
110 Loyd Street, ATLANTA, GA,
w iii IcT & .—.
Pi! ii Flail Jill Prill
NO. 30.
customer 25c
Men’s Black Cheviot Pants .75c
Men’s Black Beaver Overcoats,
with Velvet Collar, for $2.87
Men’s raw-edge Jdelton Suits in
brown and Oxford Greys ....$7.50
Men’s Suits, Grey Cheviots, fancy
lined, French faced, a $6
suit for $3.37
Men’s sl2 Suits ...SIO.OO
Boys’ Knee Pants suits, a $1.25
suit 89c
Boys’ vest suits., worth $1.25 at 88c
Boys’ Knee Pants 23c
Boys’ Corduroy Pants 49c
BARGAINS IN UNDERWEAR.
Children’s Fleece Union Suits....2sc
Ladies’ Union Suits 23c
Men's Knit Underwear, per suit, 50c
Men's Heavy Fleeced Underwear. .98c
A full line of Men's and Boys’
Shirts 23c to SI.OO
Ladies’ $3.00 rainy day Skirts ...$1.99
Ladies’ Flannel Waists 49c
Ladies’ Black Silk Waist $2.00
Window Shades 9c, 3 for 25c.
Misses’ Reefers, Fancy Trim
med, at $1.19
Ladies’ Jackets $2.47
Ladies’ Capes at 09c to $5.00