Newspaper Page Text
VOL. X.
IN RAGING FLOODS
Cities of Georgia and Alabama
Are Closely Grasped.
LIVES AND PROPERTY LOST
Greatest Damage Done at West Point,
Ga. —Trains Plunge Into Wash
outs —Many Deaths Prom
Drowning.
i u£ nie ana terrime destruction
to property has occurred as a result of
the heavy rains in Georgia and Ala
bama between Atlanta and Montgom
ery.
Four deaths are known to have re
sulted from the flood near West Point,
Ga., while the destruction of property
was extensive there and all along the
lines of the Atlanta and West Point
and the Western Railway of Alabama.
A telephone message to The Atlanta
Constitution from West Point stated
that the river had risen twenty-five
feet above normal height, and three or
four bridges and culverts had been
washed away. The streets of West
Point were flooded and many people
had to move into second stories for
comfort and safety.
At 2 o’clock Sunday morning freight
train No. 21, with fifteen cars, on the
Western Railway of Alabama, went
into a. washed out culvert at Notasulga,
30 miles from West Point. The engine
turned completely over and Engineer
Thomas Russell was killed, while Cy
Lee, the negro fireman, was fatally in
jured, and two trainmen were badly
hurt.
Train No. 209 started to the scene
of the wreck, but went through an
open culvert 5 miles out of West Point.
No one was injured in this accident,
however.
Four men attempted to cross the
Chattahoochee river near West Point
shortly after noon, with the result that
three of the party, two white men and
one negro, were drowned. The dead
are George W. Callaway, H. 13. Jones
and one negro, name unknown. The
fourth member of the party, a negro,
escaped unhurt.
On the Louisville and Nashville rail
road, southerp system, the train due at
Montogmery was derailed and is under
water at Dyas. On the Geneva branch
of the Louisville and Nashville 300 feet
of track have been swept away near
Rocky Creek . Numerous washouts are
reported along the line between West
Point and Montgomery.
Only one train attempted to go from
Atlanta Sunday over the Atlanta and
West Point —the LaGrange special,
leaving the city at 8:10 in the morning.
It was stopped at. Hogansville on ac
count of a severe washout and had to
turn back.
All of the through trains to New Or
leans, via the Atlanta and West Point,
had to be annulled Sunday, arid pas
sengers going in that direction had to
go around by the Southern.
In West Point the water was up in
the streets and the situation, it is said,
was desperate. People can get about
with difficulty, and as the river was
still rising, fears are expressed as to
the results.
BIG BATTLESHIP LAUNCHED.
With Appropriate Ceremonies the Mis
souri Glides Into the Water.
The battleship Missouri was launch
ed at the ship yard fit Newport News
Saturday at 11:12 o’clock. Fully 15,000
people, it is estimated, saw the big de
fender go overboard. The launching
passed off without a hitch and none
prettier or more successful was ever
accomplished. Miss Marion Cockrell,
daughter of Senator F. M. Cockrell,
of Miisouri, was sponsor for the ship
and she performed the duty assigned
her with the traditional bottle of cham
pagne, using a bottle of Missouri pro
duct for the purpose. The number of
distinguished guests gathered around
fhe sponsor on the christening plat
form was larger than ever seen at the
yards.
MILITIA GOES FOR OUTLAW.
Alabama Governor Asked to Assist In
Capturing Uriah Porter.
The reign of terror which has exist
ed ;n the Crawford community in Ala
bama since the killing of Joseph Fin
(her by Uriah Porter came to a climax
Saturday afternoon when the situation
became so acute that the governor of
Alabama was appealed to for aid. Gov
ernor Jelks ordered the Twin City
(,l| ard to proceed to the scene and cap
ture Porter, who has been at large in
ihe community heavily armed and
threatening death to any who dared to
try to arrest him.
POWDER MILL WRECKED.
Concussion Was Felt Fourteen Miles
Away—Four Men Injured.
A dispatch from Scranton, Pa„ says:
w D ex Pl°sion of the barrel mill of the
oosic Powder Company, at the Jer
ru> n works Friday blew the mill and
fc °nie adjoining buildings to pieces.
H he shock wsb plainly felt in Scran
ton a distance of 14 miles. Four work
m,a Injured by flying debris*
DADE COUNTY SENTINEL.
SOUTHERN PROGRESS.
The New Industries Reported In the
South During the Past Week.
Among the more important of the
new industries reported for the past
week are agricultural implement works
at Harrison, Ark.; bottling works at
Chattanooga, Tenn.; a box factory at
Tuscaloosa, Ala.; a $30,000 building
and manufacturing company at Vicks
burg, Miss.; a company at Frog Level,
N. C., to manufacture builders’ sup
plies, coffins, furniture, etc.; a $150,000
canning factory at Pascagoula, Miss.,
a $25,000 coal company at Madison
ville, Ky.; a $25,000 coal company at
HunUusion, vv. Va.; a $300,000 coal
company at Wheeling, W. Va.; a $60,-
000 coal and coke company at Charles
ton, W. Va.; coal mines at Fairmont,
W. Va.; a cold storage plant at New
Orleans, La.; a $50,000 cotton bagging
and tie factory at Norfolk, a.; a cot
ton gin at Boyce, La.; an excelsior fac
tory at Vigor, Va.; a $200,000 fertilizer
factory at Atlanta, Ga.; a $40,000 fer
tilizer factory at Nashviile, Tenn.; $lO,-
000 fence works at Knoxville, Tenn.;
flouring mills at High Point and Lytch,
N. C., Pomaria, S. C., and Bentonville,
Va.; a $35,000 flouring mill at Blue
field, W. Va.; a foundry at Henderson,
Ky.; a gas plant at Raleigh, N. C.; a
grist, mill at Danville, Va.; a slo,uoo
hardware company at Columbus,
Miss.; a hardware company at Weston,
W. Va.; a $25,000 ice factory at Jack
sonville, Fla.; a knitting mill at Gads
den, Ala.; a $50,000 land company at
Appalachia, N. C.; a lumber company
at Cordele, Ga.; a $30,000 lumber 'com
pany at Columbia, Miss.; a $20,000
lumber company at Dallas, Texas; i
SIOO,OOO lumber company at Houston,
Texas; a $25,000 lumber company at
Richmond, Va.; a $25,000 mining com
pany at Princeton, Ky.; a $150,000
oil company at Beaumont, Texas; an
oil mill at Cleveland, Tenn.; a $50,000
planing mill and lumber company at
Charleston, W. Va.; a $3,000,000 rail
way and electric company at Atlanta,
Ga.; a $25,000 roofing and supply com
pany at Wheeling, W. Va.; a sash and
blind factory at Bagdad, Fla.; a saw
mill at Jimps, Ga.; a shoe ans harness
factory at Birmingham, Ala.; a $24,-
000 tar and turpentine company at
Pensacola, Fla.; a tobacco factory at
Bedford City, Va., and a zinc mining
company at Chattanooga to develop
zinc mines in Tennessee.—Tradesman
(Chattanooga, Tenn.)
ARMY JOURNALS PROTEST.
Roosevelt and Root Are Scored For
Brutal Treatment of Miles.
The service papers, the Army and
Navy Journal and the Army and Navy
Register, are strongly of the opinion
that the president and the secretary
of war went too far in rebuking Gen
eral Miles for his Cincinnati interview
The Journal says In part:
“We greatly regret to learn that
there is a substance of truth in the
statement appearing in the dispatches
from Washington to the effect that
the president openly rebuked the lieu
tenant general commander in the pres
ence of others during the visit of Gen
eral Miles to the white house. The
army regulations forbid such a show
ing of disrespect toward even a non
commissioned officer by his superior
in rank.”
The Army and Navy Register says:
“The impression prevails that the toife
of the Root letter is unnecessarily se
vere —out of all proportion to the of
fense. There are even those who think
the language employed is brutal and
that the publicity given the corre
spondence was a cruel advertisement
of the president's displeasure. The at
tempt has been made to publicly dis
grace Miles, an effect which may not
have been fully realized in view of the
opinion on the matter entertained by
the majority of the people. However
much people may differ in opinion on
the justice or necessity of a fierce re
buke of Miles and its publication in
semi-official form, there can be no
doubt on that other incident, said to
have occurred at the white house,
where General Miles was personally
cilticised by the president in the pres
ence of other visitors. If this Is so,
General Miles’ friends may very well
find their patience exhausted.”
FUNERAL OF NELLIE CROPSEY.
Great Throng Attend Services In
Church at Elizabeth City.
Funeral services over the body of
Miss Nellie Cropsey, whose remains
were discovered in the Pasquotank riv
er after a search lasting several weeks,
was held in the Methodist church at
Elizabeth City, N. C., Sunday, of which
the girl became a member only a
month before her disappearance. The
church was crowded to suffocation and
the street leading to it was lined with
people who uncovered as the hearse
drove past.
MINE CAGE DROPS.
Six Out of its Eight Occupants Meet
Instant Death.
At shaft No. 1 of the McAlester Coal
Company, at Hartshorn, I. TANARUS., Satur
day, while the cage was ascending with
eight men It jumped its guidings about
100 feet fro mthe bottom of the shaft.
Six of the eight men were killed. They
were caught between the cage and the
bunting* and their bodl dropped to
the bettom ef the shaft
TItENTON. GA. FRIDAY. JANUARY 3.1903,
CAPTURED A TRAIN
Four Men Play the Hold-Up Act
Without the Trimmings.
BRUTALLY SLAY A PASSENGER
Engineer Is Covered With Guns and
Forced to Do Bidding of Would-
Be Bandits —All Are
Arrested.
Four white men killed J. M. Rhea,
an inoffensive passenger on train No. 6
of the Yazoo and Mississippi Valley
branch of the Iliinois Central railroad,
at an early hour Monday morning, near
Leland, Miss., cut the locomotive from
the train and forced the engineer to
run to Cleveland. All four men were
arrested, one beir. in jail at Leland
and three are locked up at Shelby. The
four men are:
Ashley Cocke, a prominent business
man of Cleveland; A. M. Phipps, post
master at Shelby; Thomas Lauderdale,
said to be a relative of Phipps, and a
man named Blackman, residence un
known.
The men went from Shelby to Le
land early Sunday night. At Leland
it is said they spent several hours
drinking and carousing. At 3 a. m.
the men boarded the northbound train
to return to Shelby. J. M. Rhea, an
engineer, was on his way to Tutwiler,
under orders to take out a locomotive
near there. He was sleeping on a
seat in the sleeper when the passen
ger train pulled out from Leland. At
that point Cocke and his friends board
ed the car. Cocke had a revolver and
Lauderdale and Blackman had win
chester rifles. Phipps was not armed.
Walking up the aisle Phipps was in
advance of the party, when he came
in contact with Rhea’s legs, which
ivere extended out into the aisle as he
slept. Rhea was awakened and in
quired what was the matter. The
members of the party stood there and
discussed the situation angrily for
awhile and then the quartet
the end of the car and out
platform. Very soon they returned
~.nd going up to Rhea told him that
r they could not all stay in the same
car, and that he would have to get
out.
Rhea remarked that in order to pre
vent trouble he would have to do as
they told him. Thereupon he started
out of the car. He had just reached
the door when it is claimed the men
opened fire upon him. He fell where
he stood.
Conductor George McLaughlin order
ed the train back to Leland, there to
leave the corpse. As soon as Leland
was reached the conductor went in
search of the sheriff and peace offi
cers.
In the meantime the quartet had not
been idle. They had driven everybody
out of the smoker and the adjacent
car during the run back to Leland.
and when they arrived at that place
they went to the engine, aboard of
which was Engineer Delaney. They
covered him with guns and told him
if he did not obey their commands
they wuld kill him.
He was compelled to uncouple his
engine and when the men mounted
into the cab he was ordered to open
the throttle a^ J :j-*vAMg,.£ngine down
the track toward "TTnlpfr
citement of the moment Phipps be
came separated from his companions
and did not get away from Leland,
When the sheriff arrived at the rgjffi
road he arrested Phipps.
were carried on to Shelhj^. j .-vT
there, they to ijfijfreal
themselves, "But, still their
weapons,they waited for jwe next
train, on which they yjpveled to
■Cleveland, where they vjtfe arrested
without trouble. Thewjpere taken to
Shelby and placed iu'^ail.
Cocke, the man \<mo seemed to be
the leader of the quartet, has, it is
said, killed a number of men. He is
charged with the killing of a negro
last Friday night In Shelby. There is
jnuch excitement and indignation
among the people of the Leland and
Shelby neighborhoods over Monday’s
tragedy, but no violence Is anticipated.
WILCOX IS RETICENT.
Excitement Over Nellie Cropsey Trag
edy ts Gradually Subsiding.
The excitement over the Cropsey
case it Elisabeth City, N. C., is dying
put, and business is being resumed.
The talk of lynching James Wilcox
is heard no longer, the people having
decided to permit the law to take its
course. The citizens’ committee are
collecting evidence against Wilcox to
present to the grand jury when It
meets in March next.
Wikox is still in jail and refuses ab
solutely to make any statement re
garding his conduct on the night of
Miss Cropsey’s disappearance.
“PEG LEG” PAYS FINE.
Negro Exodus Promoter Arrested By
Tarheel Authorities.
“Peg Leg” Williams, so well known
as the promoter of the great negro ex
odus here in 1890 and 1891, was ar
rested at Maxton, N. C„ Monday for
having no license. He paid the SSO for
license and was discharged. Ha Is not
this time having much success la la
(Using negroes to luvo tht UM|
Official Organ of DadLo County-
WAS DISASTROUS TO BRITONS.
London War Office Issues List of Cas
ualties at Zeefontein Battle
on Christmas Eve.
The London Avar office Saturday af
ternoon Issued a list of the British cas
ualties at Zeefontein December 24,
when Colonel Firman’s camp, consist
ing of three companies of yeomanry
and two guns was successfully rushed
by a Boer force under the command of
General DeWet. The length of the list
demonstrates the entire success of De-
Wet’s attack. Six officers and fifty
men were killed, fjlght officers were
wounded and four are missing. It is
presumed that the missing officer*
were taken along with the captured
guns.
The Boers, who apparently number
ed about 1,200, under General DeWet,
behaved well, leaving men to look af
ter the younded.
The Imperial light horse were 14
miles away. They heard of the fight
at 4:30 and arrived on the scene at
6:30. After breathing thefr horses,
they galloped after the Boers, who,
however, succeeded in reaching the
broken country, where the light horse
was useless against superior numbers.
Simultaneously with the above the
war office gave out a dispatch from
Lord Kitchener chronicling a minor
success of the South African constabu
lary, who raided Bothaville and cap
tured thirty-six Boers.
OVER TWELVE THOUSAND WORDS
Written on Ordinary Postal Card—All
Records Smashed.
T. F. Glenn, credit man for the At
lanta, Ga., branch S. S. White Dental
Manufacturing Company, has just bro
ken the world’s record for the greatest
number of words written on a postal
card.
Mr. Glenn, after seventy hours of la
bor and the wearing out of two dozen
pens has written the immense number
of 12,097 words on a postal. The rec
ord before this feat of Mr. Glenn was
5,200 words, aDd when it was made it
was considered to be one that w'ould
never be broken. W. T. Hicks, .winner
of the second prize, also smashed the
cjjpfccord, though he was behind Mr
Tuenn.
The contest that caused Mr. Glenn
to make this record >yas inaugurated
by the of At
lanta, office supply dealers. This firm
offered a number of prizes for the con
testants. The interest that it created
w y as surprising even to the promoters.
Mr. Glenn is a well known and r/rpu
lar young Atlanta man and his feat is
one that will doubtless make his name
knowm throughout the civilized world.
The contest consisted in writing on
an ordinary postal card (3 1-4 by 5 1-2
inches) the greatest number of times
the sentence, "Waterman’s Ideal Foun
tain Pens, sold by Mower-Hobart Cos„
61 Peachtree St.”
The rules stipulated that the writing
must he in ink. only blank side of pos
tal card can be used, No lines must
cross each other. Sentences must be
written on postal as printed above.
Every postal must contain senders’
name and address.
The first prize was Waterman’s very
finest Ideal “Pen American” Fountain
Pen, with new spoon feed, elegantly
and heavily mounted with so]Jl silver,
value $lO. Second prize, a -M Water
man’s Ideal F-4fin Pen; tjfrd prize,
a $4 Ideal Pen; fo,lth prize,
a
!•*"• -gf .-Jin Fountain Pen' i—
. V
£#IVE CAPTAIN LEA-Y DEAD.
■ ’Jjts First Governor of Gram and Once
jr Bluffed Germans.
The navy department has received a
telegram from Admiral Mortimer L.
Johnson, commanding the Boston navy
yard, stating that Caniain Richard P.
Leary, United died j
morning at Marine hi ifpltal, CheiSesnj&l
Captain wajyhe first
.if Guam ffi'-r i). ye land ramify *
the poiAiessiofl OTV-jj United JStj,
gard by his fei(*Ygra:iors of
the nerve he shtSwecT In thF"presence
of two German war ship? in the harbor
of Samoa,'doping the stirring
times which wound up in the tremen
dous hurricane that wiped out the
German and American navies in these
waters in 1899.
ANARCHIST UNDER ARREST.
Wife of Grossman Gives Him Away
to the Authorities.
Rudolph Grossman, editor of The
Austro-Hungarian Gazette, in New
York, was arrested Friday, charged
with assaulting his wife with a knife.
Mrs. Grossman declared her husband
to be an anarchist and said that he re
peatedly told her he would consider
himself highly honored if he could but
do to Prpsident Roosevelt what Czol
gosz did to President McKinley.
She alleged that her husband on
December 9 last addressed a meeting
of i v 'Vrchists in the city, where he was
introduced by Emma Goldman.
CHILDREN VICTIMS OF FIRE.
Three Little Ones Lose Life In the
Burning of Their Home.
At Buffalo, N. Y., early Friday morn-
Tng three children of Madara Grizella
were burned to death in a fire that de
stroyed a two-story frame building In
Lombard street.
They were aged ten, seven and
three. The mother and a baby two
days old were carried from the build
ing on a mattress*
FLOATING IN RIVER
Body of Long Missing Nellie
Cropsey Found By Fisherman.
DEEP MYSTERY FINALLY SOLVED
James Wilcox, a Former Lover of the
Girl, Is Held By Authorities Un
der Suspicion of Being
Her Murderer.
Five weeks of mystery and specula
cion as to the fate of Miss Nell Crop-
Bey terminated at Elizabeth City, N.
C., Friday at 10 o’clock when the body
of the missing girl was found floating
in the river opposite her father’s
home.
The body was discovered by J. D.
Stillman, a fisherman, who was return
ing from his nighf’s fishing trip. Upon
discovering that the floating object
was the body of a young girl, he im
mediately notified the committee and
Coroner Fearing had the body brought
to the shore.
When the body was found it was
face downward, All the wearing appa
rel was intact with the exception of
the rubber which Nell wore on the
night of her disappearance, and that
was missing.
Body Little .Decomposed,
With the exception of some slight
discoloration of the face the body was
in a good state of preservation and lit
tle decomposed. The body was easily
identified as that of Nell Cropsey by all
who had knoevn hej in life. The spot
where the body -was found had been
dragged several times since her disap
pearance, but with no result.
Coroner Fearing summoned a Jury
of prominent men from among the
crowd that had assembled on the spot
where the body had been brought
ashore, and called in three of the best
physicians of the city to make a thor
ough and exhaustive autopsy to learn
if there were any signs oLviolepce on
the body.
James Wilcox, a former lover, was
last with her. He is under SI,OOO bail
for investigation by the grand jury. He
is suspected as the murderer of the
girl.
Naval Reserves Protect.
Anticipating uiat trouble may be
brewing for young Wilcox, the naval
reserves have been ordered out to
maintain order and peace and to see
that no violence is offered Wilcox. By
order of the mayor all barrooms in the
city were closed. Wilcox has been re
moved from the mayor’s office, where
he had been since his arrest Friday af
ternoon, to the county jail for his own
protection, and a strong guard has
placed around the jail.
The family of the dead girl refuse
to express an opinion as to the cause
of the death of Nell Cropsey, but an
uncle of the girl is reported as hav
ing said:
“I never have yet heard of a drowned
person floating face downward.”
The mother of the girl is completely
prostrated, and little can be done on
the part of relatives and friends to
comfort her. She has watched daily,
hoping for the return of her daughter
alive, and the sad ending of the disap
pearance has completely broken her
down.
Verdict of Coroner’s Jury.
The verdict of the coroner’s jury was !
as follows:
“We, the coroner’s jury, having been
duly summoned and sworn by Dr. I.
Fearing to inquire what caused the
death of M. Cropsey, do hereby
report thatJfcom the investigation
made by* thro'. *\hyslcians of Elizabeth
City, and opinion and also
from our Ella M.
.Gfropsey came to. death by being
A-icken a blow on temple and
ML being drowned in Pasquotank
Cl er. W T e have not yli investigated
fiat' heard any testimony as to who in
flicted the blow and did Jhe drowning.
We are informed that one James Wil
cox is charged with same and is now in
custody. We recommend" that investi
gation as to his or arty'one else’s prob
able guilt be had by one or more mag
istrates in Elizabeth City township and
that said Wilcox be held to await said
investigation.’’
WILL NOT LEAVE CAROLINA.
Senator McLaurin Denies Widely Pub
lished Report. v
In a dispatch to The Greenville (3.
C.) News Senator John L. McLaurin
denies that he will take up his resi
dence in Washington and quit politick
in South Carolina.
He says he has formed a law part
nership with F. L. Wells, of Washing
ton, for the purpose of keeping in
touch with his profession, and that his
public duties demand he should have
an office in Washington.
FIRE STOPS FESTIVAL.
Christmas Tree Starts Blaze Which
Destroyed Big Building.
At Chicago, Saturday night, a Christ
mas tree loaded with inflammable or
naments and candles caused a fire that
destroyed the Alexander apartment
building, a six-story structure corner
of Bowen and Cottage Grove avenu\s-.
The loss will exceed SIOO,OOO.
Twenty families lived in the building
and the flames spread so rapidly that
a score Of periont barely neaped with
their ilveti
WHITE FRONT.
THE UNION STORE,
23! Mumt Anil, CBATTAKOOGA, TEE
__ T * *
t. Vl ' ...... J- , ■
Wc arc Hie cheapest store in the city fn 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.
r ", M 'Vt •
. f . *4 *
Now is. the time to get fine Glasswaro- FREE. Tickets with every 25
cent purchase. You get something Pith 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.
BARGAINS IN DRY GOODS.
All-Wool Red Flannel, per yard ..10c
23 yard3 Brown Domestic- .$1
Table Oil Cloth 10c
Standard Calico 4 to 6c
Canton Flannel 5 to 10c
Black Figured Brocade Sateen..
Outing Flannel 4 1-2 to 12 l-2c
Bleached Domestic 4c
BAhuiAINS IN HAT3.
We trim our Hats to suit you, and
save you 50c to $2 on a Hat.
Ladies’ Trimmed Hats 69c
Ladies’ and Misses’ Walking
Hats, a SI.OO Hat for 47c
La m $3 Trimmed Hat $1.98
Ladies $4 and $5 Trimmed Hat. .$2.98
BARGAINS IN SHOES.
Men’s Brogan Shoes, as they last, 79c
Ladies’ Dongola Shoes 9Sc
50 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 got Chil
dren’s School Shoes ..65c to $1.50
Rubbers of all kinds.
BARGAINS IN CLOTHING.
Men’s Jeans Pants, one pair to a
Bestrojers of Hi[li Pries ana OriiiMors of Half Price.
COME TO SEE US.
W. E. WALKED & eO.
EVERY MAN
HIS OWN DOCTOR.
Sy J. HAMILTON AYERS, it. 9.
4 000 page Illustrated Book, contain!** valuable Information pertain
>*bg to diseaeee of ike ha ns an system, akoviaf hew t* traat and core wife
Amplest of medicine* The book contains analysis of courtship and
Carriage | rearing and management of children, becidea valuable pre
scriptions, realpei, eto., with a fall complement of faota in materia c&tdr
) -.1... .■; ’ i •' 5 , < ***,* ’; T f „- .
lea that every**# nhonld know. '
This moat Indlapecaable adjnnot to every well-regnlated honschold will
be mailed, postpaid, ta any address on receipt a' price, SIXTY CENTS,
Lddreu • > • . - .
ATLANTA PUBLISHING HOUSE.
110 Loyd Street, ATLANTA. (lA.
WE ]DO== J
Fid! Ww Tnh in,iT,nr
NO. 33.
customer .. . 25c
Men’s Black Cheviot Pants 75c
Men's Black Beaver Overcoats,
with Velvet Collar, for $3.87
Men's raw-edge Melton Suits in
jirown ancWJxford Greys ....$7.50
Men’s Suits, Grey Cheviots, fancy
lined, French faced, a $6
suit for $3.37
Men’s sl2
Boys’ Knee 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 25c
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 raifty 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 69c to $5.00 r