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SYMPTOMS of
CHRONIC CATARRH.
S Descrihed by Dr. Hartman, one
' oftheGreatestAuthoritiesand
" Writers on Catarrh.
The symptoms of chronic catarrh
. vary according to the stage and ex
act location of the disease. Th
fret stage of ca'arrh of the nose
ftU d head produces discharge from
he nose, sneezing,pain in the eyes
, a ud forehead, weak, and sometimes
watery eves, occasionally, loss of
memory. I» the last stage the dis
charge ceases and dry. offensive
acabsformib the nose; polypi
growths sometimes form in one or
both nostrils, and the pain in the
head and eyes is much less. Unless
omethingis done to prevent, the
catarrh will follow the mucous
membrane into the lungs, where it
will be followed by ccugb, night
sweais, rapid loss of flesh, and
othje dread symptoms of consump
tion
. p -ru-i.a is a specific for every
case of catarrh, whether the dis
is located in the lungs, kid
pev-or stomach. The dose of Pe-
Tu 'na-fihou’d bea large tablespoon
full before each meal and at bed
’tiniu. Women and some delicate
men should begin with a tea
■spoonfull, and slowly and gradual
ly iternase to the above full dose,
Fieu books on chronic catarrh,la
tTrinpe. c<'Ughe, colds and consump
tion are being sent to any address
by The Pe-ru-na Drug Manufac
turing .Company of Columbus
hi o-
Valuable Farms (or Boil or
sale
We have On hand a
number of good farms
for rent or sale. These
farms have come into
our hands at very rea
sonable figures, and
we are in position to
offer them at low
prices and on most
favorable terms. Ten
antsand buyeiswould
do well to consult us
before trading. We can
rent or sell. To good
parties, wishing time
on Farms we are
pared to offer bargains
Come and see us
Hoskinson & Harris.
CITY TAX NO TIE.
Notice is hereby given that the
last halt of city tax is now due.
Persons failing to pay the same
are liable to execution. Oct. 13'h
1894
Halsted Smith
Clerk Council
Citation-* to Sell,
F1o»<l oounty:
an .* ho , m “ ““r concern ; A. H. Mill*, Ka
ot Kilin, deeaaa.d has ia tlue
r,n applied to the undersigned for leave Bo
bc'cngiug to the eetate of said de
neased, and saidapnlieaUou will be heard on the
Monday I. Nov. let day of Oct.
’ John F. Davin,
Ordinacy
PROFESSIONAL COLUMN
DENTIST*.
J A. WILLS— Dentiet—208 1-2 Broad Hirer
~ over Cantrell and Owens store.
attorney*
J T Tem^ , B^i (li^‘° rneyiat L * W ’ Maßon
Rome Georgia.
. J “"Mf sutjsi -
A, “™> ■>
Rome, Ga.
Attorneys at law. Ofttc
in Masonic Teiaole. Rome, Ga.
W^iiy. A^P ,VKß ~ A ttorney and Goul
■ at Law—Rome, (ia.
W H V w - starling —Ennis
* Ten,'lF' Attorneys at law. Masonic
temple, Rome, Ga. feb23.
D and Burgoo’
’ Ward re ** dence 614 avenue A, Fount
I , ojflrg IGN p—Fliysietan and Surgeoii
. ' Pit of 42 *'’ f « s »>t»tal services to the pec
P®ce at C’ronila 166 "urrenuding country
Broad street * and drugstore,#
OdrufTst a " C - A ' Trovitt
JW. resided No!2i r ° ad Btroot
*at W T?e 'itt hy t , ’ i I a '; a “ rt Surgnn ' *
. s ‘f eu ‘‘V P.ro£,BßUsii*|.o<jll t
l(f It' I
• ' 'e
MAGIC EXPLAINED.
THE STAR TRICKS OF HINDOO CON
JURERS MADE EASY.
The Mango Trick Explained by Kellar, the
Magician It Is the Sam. Which Globe
Trotter Stevens Claims Is Mlraoulmuly
Performed by Yogi Men.
The sleight of hand performance of
Mr. Muskelyne, a remarkably clever
juggler, have excited a great deal of in
terest in London. Not only are his
tricks skillfully done, but his explana
tions of other tricks have attracted much
attention among a class of men who
seldom visit the halle where feats of this
sort are presented.
The Mail and Express recently pub
lished an article from the London Spec
tator in which the writer describee one
or two tricks which he saw in India
and whitth mystified him greatly. Here
is one, which, by the way, is described
by Thomas .Stevens, the globe trotter,
who says that the Yogi men, who per
form it, are aided by an occult force that
the world is as yet ignbrant of.
• A juggler placed a cloth over the pave
ment of the street, and presently he
removed it, and there was a mango
growing between the stones. ‘ ‘The jug
gler, ” adds the writer, “one of the he
reditary caste, did undoubtedly make a
leaf spring out of the ground? did make
it grew into a dwarf mango, and did
hand the mango from ft to be eaten. It
looked wonderful because of the appar
ent simplicity of the juggler, but he per
formed his'feat in four processes, and
between each he shook out his chudder,
or muslin wrapper, so that it passed for
an instant between the spectators and
the plant. The writer had no doufct
then and has no doubt now that this
was done not to conceal anything, but
to distract attention momentarily; that
the first leaf, the upgrowth of leaves,
the dwarf mango and the mango on it
were all of wax or other carelully made
imitation, and that the whole miracle
was marvelously rapid sleight cf hand. ”
To Americans who arc interested in
this sort of tiling this mystery is almost
amusing. It was exposed several years
ago by Kellar, the prestidigitateur. Four
or five years ago Kellar publicly offered
11,000 to anyone who would perform a
trick which ho could not duplicate and
1 which he could not prove to be done by
wholly human aids. A number of per
sons who had recently visited India im
mediately deluged him with descrip
tions of this and other specimens of
oriental jugglery. Os course as they
could not perform the trick themselves
they did not compete for his money offer,
and therefore they were not publicly
answered.
Kellar, however, gave me personally
' a full explanation not only of these
; tricks, |>ut of several others which have
I long baffled the cleverest of the occi
■ dental investigators. The magician has
I spent more than 15 years of his proses
! sioual life in India and the far east, and
' he has closely studied the tricks of the
I native jugglers with more or less profit
to himself. This is how he explained
the mango or pineapple trick 'as nearly
as I can recall it:
“The first time I saw the mango
trick,” said he, “was in Bombay in
1879 or thereabouts, and the man who
did it was the most skillful conjurer 1
ever saw in India. Even after I had
learned the secret of his illusion I could
not help admiring its ingenuity and the
dexterity with which it was performed.
The juggler and his twocomrades chose
a spot before the Prince of Wales’ stat
ue on the plaza. He first laid down a
bag on the hard ground and then drew
from it a large bandanna handkerchief.
Digging a small hole in the ground
with one finger, he buried a pineapple
seed, and over this he placed his hand
kerchief. He carefully smoothed out
the cloth, rubbing swiftly from left to
right After this maneuver was ended
he made several passes with his arms
over the handkerchief, while his com
rades beat industriously upon their
drums and blew upon their pipes.
“Suddenly, to my surprise, I saw the
handkerchief begin to slowly rVe in the
center and gently sway from aide to side
as though a plant were really sprouting
to life from the seed which he had
planted beneath the cloth. When the
handkerchief had risen like 3 tent to a
height of about 12 inches, the conjurer
stopped his incantations and cautiously
lifted up the left hand corner o< the
cover and peered beneath it Then,
plunging both hands underneath to the
accompaniment of loud and discordant
music, he threw aside the cloth and
showed a full grown pineapple plant.
“This is the way he did the trick, as
he afterward admitted to me:
“In smoothing out the cloth he reach
ed into the bag, the mouth of which
was conveniently placed near the hand
kerchief, and whisked out a hooded co
bra snake. The moment the /entile was
laid down it began to coil. That made
the handkerchief rise. When it had
reached its full height, its angry hiss
ing meanwhile being drowned by the
music of the assistants, the performer
looked under the cloth, taking care to
draw the corner close to the mouth of
the bag. Then he adroitly whisked ont
a hollow pineapple from the bag under
neath the cloth. It was now the work of
a minute only to force the snake into
the apple, close the aperture, and the
trick was done. Benjamin Northrup
in New York Mail and Express.
Lace and Brocade.
If yon have any treasured short
lengths of old brocade, you may produce
them now and make the fronts of one of
the long Louis Seize waistcoats of them.
And if yon are happy enough to possess
old lace you can make them up en jabot
to wear with the same. It is to mount
the lace on bands of muslin, keeping the
folds quite soft and using as few stitches
as possible. In this way the tender sus
ceptibilities of, the, fabrjc .are' .spared
and when the jhbot fashion Mj oyer am
done with 'the lace nwains to be used
lh some other way. —Fashion Journal-
- ’ . ’ J
THE HUSTLER OF ROME SUNDAY OCTOBER 28 1894,
THE WAR AND THE MISSIONS.
Where They Are Located and the FomdbJe
Danger to Them.
Every one interested in mission work
in eastern Asia will watch with concern
the war which has just broken out,
anxious lest any personal friends bo in
danger and mission enterprises be seri
ously hampered. The fact that all three
countries involved are mission fields
and that the prominent cities of all are
occupied with a greater or loss force of
missionaries makes it necessary to look
at the situation fairly and candidly.
In Korea the Presbyterian board oc
copies Seoul, Fusan and Gensan on tho
fast coast and Pyeng-Yang in the in
terior. Os those Fusan and Gensan are
the only places liable to injury from
the Japanese fleet. But the work in
both places is comparatively recent and
not so well established as at Seoul. The
Methodist board has little established
work outside of Seoul and has with
drawn all its missionaries from tho in
terior stations to tliat city.
The Society For the Propagation of
the Gospel, Church of England, has
some missionaries at Seoul and Che
mulpo. In Seoul the missionaries are
practically safe, being under the care
of the United States legation and the .
protection of United States soldiers
from the ship-of-war at Chemulpo, the
port of Seoul. So far as Korea is con- i
cerned, therefore, there need be no great
anxiety.
In Japan the principal port that may
fear attack from the Chinese fleet is
Nagasaki, occupied by the Reformed
(Dutch) church, the Methodist Episco
pal church and the Church Missionary
society of England. It is probable, how
ever, according to the latest reports,
that the foreign fleets will protect this
city, and thus the missionaries there
need fear no attack. The same may be
said of Yokohama and Tokyo, where al
most all of the missionary boards are
represented.
Attention will be especially attracted
to China, for there, aside from the dan-
I ger of injury from the Japanese fleets,
j there is the still greater danger of inju-
I ry from the hostility of the people. The
action of the foreign governments in
enforcing the neutrality of the ports of
Amoy, . Canton, Ningpo, Chin-Kiang,
Fuchau, Shanghai, Hankow and Tien
tsin, all of which are mission stations,
relieves the situation very much, as
there are very few other cities along the
coast that might suffer from an attack,
almost the only one of importance be
ing Chefu, where the Presbyterian
church and the China Inland mission
have a large force of laborers and con
siderable property.
The greatest danger, however, to the
missionaries, as we have said, is not
■ from the Japanese fleets, but from the
hostility of the Chinese to all foreigners
i without drawing distinction between
; Europeans and Americans on the one
hand and the hated Japanese.—lnde
pendent.
A MYSTERIOUS PROJECTILE.
At a Recent Te ‘ In I'ns«sa Tt Produced
Amaxeiueot Among the Experts.
The so called magnetic shell, which
i has been used at the trials of English
I armor plates at Okhta, near St. Peters
burg, has made an extraordinary record,
j The shell was fired at soft St. Chamond
plate at right angles, and the penetration
waslO’o inches. Another shell penetrat
ed 16 inches. One shell was discharged
at a 6 inch Harveyized plate at an an
gle of 20 degrees. The projectile passed
through the plate and backing and fell
about 400 yards beyond, a performance
which filled the scientific experts pres
ent with amazement.
Further trials will be made, but for
the present no plates of the requisite
strength are forthcoming, those already
used, which were manufactured special
ly for the purposes of the trial, being so
shattered as to be useless for future
tests. The general impression among
military experts is that the magnetic
shell is not a new shell at ail, but sim
ply a new invention adaptable to any
mo.lain projectile.
One of the shells that had undergone
the secret process was exhibited. Al
though it had passed through one of the
armor plates, it was in an undamaged
condition, and as it showed no traces
of fastening whereby the new invention
could be attached to it the spectators
concluded that the improvement must
be a cap of softer metal held on to the
top of the shell by magnetism. This
nurses the hard point of the shell at
the impact Mid so helps it to penetrate
the surface of the plato until it reaches
the softer metal behind. This, at all
events, is one of the guesses at the prin
ciple of theviovel projectile.—Pittsburg
Dispatch.
Sags and Gould Are Out.
Russell Sage and George Gould are
said to have disagreed of late, and their
relations in a business way are so severe
ly strained that there may bo an open
rupture at any moment. The Gould
and Sage interests have always been
closely united. George Gould’s wife
and his sister Helen, seconded by the
family physician, have, so runs the
story, induced him to give up working
as hard as he has been doing and to
take life easier. The purchase of the
Vigilant was in furtherance of this
plan. Sage, whose whole being is wrap
ped up in money making, has no sym
pathy with this programme and is much
displeased at young Gould’s long ab
sence in the present critical condition
of business affairs.—Washington Post.
Atlanta’s Sensation.
The sensation in Atlanta is the preach
ing of a 13-yeur-old negro boy, Charley
Johnson of Gibbs, La. He is of a light
giugei cake color. He was converted,
he says, at the age of 8 and felt an im
mediate call. He is now going to a theo
logical seminary, where ho is taking a
course in Bible study. He has none of
the awkwardness of youtti, apd Jiis
vbice is peduliarfy fieep/' ‘dtis thoughts
MTO-of a higii charactet a fid bro express
ed in excellent language.-—Atlanta Con
stitution. f ' ■ '
ANTICIPATING FAME.
BESANT’S PATHETIC STORY OF “PAUL
THE WANDERER.”
The Quiet Dignity of u Mau Who Wimi Liv
ing For Poaterity—A Pretty Little Skit
Written In the Kngilxh Nowliat'a Inimi
table Style,
I knew him for several years before
his death. Wheu 1 firat made his ao- ,
quaiutance, lie was already an old man.
He was also, as was evident from the
first, a very poor man. He went about
Shabbily dressed. He carried biscuits
in his pocket to the reading room on ,
which he lunched or took snacks at in- '
tervals during the day. Perhaps be had i
dinner afterward, but I always auspect
ed his dinner to be an uncertain and a
movable feast It was understood tliat
he was something in the literary way. |
I got to know him by sitting next to
him day after day. We exchanged the
amenities of the reading room, apolo- .
gized for crowding each other with >
books, abused the talkure, vcmarked on
the impudence of those who go to the ■
room in order to flirt and so forth.
Wheu I got to know him better, 1 ,
made little discoveries about him, as, ;
for instance, that he liked a glass of
beer in the middle of the day and that
he oould not afford the twopence. I may
say, not boastfully, that I was able to
offer him this little luxury. We used
to go out together for the purpose. He j
was good enough to take an interest in I
my work. He proved to have a consider
able knowledge of books and gave me
considerable help in this way.
One Sunday 1 met him in the street. '
We stopped to speak. Ho lamented the
closing of the museum on Sunday. For
his own part, he said, he would have
the reading room open every day in the
week. Why close the avenues of kuowl- ,
edge? Why damn the fountains and'
springs of wisdom? So we walked and
talked. He was perfectly dignified in
his manner, though his great coat was
so thin and shabby that one might be
ashamed to be seen with him. He stop
ped presently at the dour of a house in
High street, Holborn.
“I lodge here,” he said. "Will you
come up stairs and see my hermitage?”
I remember that he called it grandly
his hermitage. Ho led the way; the
stairs were dark and dirty; he took me
to the filth, or fifty-fifth, floor. He liv
ed in the back attic.
“This, ” he said, “is the cell of the
recluse. I live here quite retired. There
are other lodgers, I believe, but 1 do
not know them. I live here with my
library in simplicity. The air is whole
some at this height. ” '
He threw open the window and sniff
ed the fragrance of the neighboring
chimneys. The room was clean; the
furniture was scanty; there was no fire
in the grate; on a shelf wore about 25
books—his library. The man looked per
fectly contented with his hermitage.
There were no papers on the table,
nothing to show that he was a writer.
1 do not know how he lived—certain
ly he did no work at the museum—but
he never borrowed. In one corner stood
a woo-Ten chest. He lifted the lid and
nodded and laughed.
“Aha!” he said, “now 1 am going to
reveal a secret. You didn’t know, no
body at the museum knows, the people
in the house don’t know, that 1 am—
what do you think? —a poet. It is 30
years since I paid for the publication
of my collected poetical works. Yes,
sir, and I am going not only to commu
ni:'.,te tills secret to your honor—in safe
keeping—but to present you with a
copy. There, my young friend!” He pro-,
duced a thin volume. “I am Paul the
Wanderer.” In fact, the title page bore
the legend, “Collected Poetical Work
of Paul the Wanderer. ”
“Thirty years,” he repeated. "There
were 500 copies. The press received 50,
the public bought four; there remained
446. I have now given you one. There
now remain 443. I have bequeathed
these to the public libraries of the na
tion. Sir, you are young. You will
yourself perhaps publish your poems.
Remember for your comfort that it
hikes 50 years, or two generations,
for the noblest poets to take their
proper place. Greatness —true, stable,
solid greatness, not the empty applause
given to an ephemeral favorite—re
quires 50 years at least Go, sir! Take
the lxx>k I have given you, and in after
years, when I am gone, tell the world
that you knew—Paul tl»e W’auderer!"
I wrung his hand in silence and left
him. More than 50 years have passed
since he published that work. No one
has yet spoken to me of Paul the NVan
derer. But I now understood his digni
ty, his self respect and his content He
was anticipating and enjoying bis fu
ture fame. He was living for posterity.
Present poverty and neglect were noth
ing.—Walter Besant in London Queen.
Another Mammoth Statue.
The sculptor Nikolaus Geiger is put
ting the last touches to his statue of
Barbarossa, which is to symbolize the
ancient kingdom in tire Kyffhauser
monument, to be unveiled in 1896. The
Barbarossa appears at the end of a ves
tibule in the style of an ancient castle,
on the steps of the throne upon which
he is sitting like the sleeping figures of
the courtiers, with fabulous animals of
the old mythic world. Barbarossa is rep
resented at the moment of waking from
his long sleep. In his right hand is his
sword; his left hand strokes his long
waving beard. Contrary to all other
figures of the old hero, he is here repre
sented as an actual emperor, with the
features of a noble man. The whole
monument, hewed from the rock, will be
about 80 feet high. The figure of the
seated monarch is about 30 feet high.
—Loudon Sun.
The following is a list of the dates of
. fpupdinuof ,t)ie qJxles.L.cplLeges iq, |h&
Um Led States: Harvard, 1636; William
and Mary s i«92; ►Yale, PrincetofiJ
1746; University, of Pensylvania, 1749;
! Columbia, 1754; Brown uuiversify,
■ 1764; Dartmoutli, 17C9; Rutgers, 1770.
‘‘AN ATTRACTION PARTICLE." .
Interesting DiscloAurvn Made at the Con
vention of the Hritlflh Association.
The annual disclosure of the latest
discoveries in various branches of science ;
being made at the convention of the
British association, Oxford, is an inter
esting budget. Lord Salisbury's address
at the opening of the conference at
tracts widespread attention. He pro
i claimed himself a scientific agnostic,
but the most remarkable feature of his
. paper was his outlining of the marvels
of unsolved problems to which modern
science is now devoting itself. He paid
a sympathetic tribute to Darwin's great
work, but refused to acknowledge the
jellyfish as his ancestor on any evidence
yet offered. He attacked Weissmann’s
theory of natural selection in evolution
and affirmed that the present day has
brought a return to the belief thatcrea
j tive design was supreme.
I It has been in these meetings of the
several divisions of the convention that
the latest discoveries and theories have
been presented. A year ago the biolo
i gists, who had believed for years that
■ they wore on the point of solving the
i mystery of life, acknowledged them
selves baffled. Now Professor Schaefer,
l president of the section of physiology,
announces the discovery in each tiny
animal cell containing life of what he
terms “an attraction particle. ” It should
be remembered that when the biologists
discovered the cell principle of life they
thought it impossible to. subdivide tliese
< infinitely small atoms, but the mioro
i scope has shown the existence of this
small particle hi each cell, which is
itself a structure sui goneris, having a
definite existence and a definite function
'of its own. It is almost as minute an
object as it is possible to conceive. In
a cell which is magnified 1,000 diame
ters the central particle appears merely
of the size of a pin point. Yet this al
| most infinitely small object exerts an
extraordinary influence over thcwhole
cell, which may be many thousand times'
its size. It initiates ami directs those
processes which result in the inultipliq
, cation of cells, and indirectly thefefqro
1 it is concerned in directing the general
growth of the individual and uttimate
;ly the propagation of species. It is
shown, then, that the principle of life
is contained in a particle 1,000 times
smaller than the smallest object which
the best microscopes of a few years ago
were able to perceive, and tho latest
name for the unsolved mystery of life
is “an attraction parti ole, ’’—New York
Bun’s Loudon Letter.
WONDERFUL GOLD DISCOVERIES.
Western Australia Stories Which Rend Like
Fairy Talee.
The stories of wonderful gold discov
, eries in western Australia were con
, firmed by an official dispatch Thursday.
The details of the principal fiiid near
Coolgardie had already reached Lon
don. A party of six wero returning from
I an unsuccessful prospecting •tou-’r on May
)8. When in camp one night, they sep-
I arated to test anjl examine tho nt igh
! borhbod. A man nained Mills came to
one of the many large “blows” Which
are characteristic of the'country. He
was astonished on. rubbing liis hand
j across a protruding pit re ‘of sftfAu to see
gold standing out proi'nini atly. He
J knocked a large piece off a bowlder, and
1 at his feet lay a magnificent specimen
j literally studded W*i th editse gold,’ while
I before him, dazzling his eyes, yas a
! magnificent reef of almost pure guhl, a
i fortune in itself. Mills, taking several
pieces from the reef, placed them in his
bosom, and carefully covering the reef
with earth found his mates. On the
next morning 25 acres were pegged off,
and the adjoining blocks at each end
were also taken up. , One man went to
town and bought a dolly, the largest he
could procure. In one day they dollied
1,000 ounces, and in a short time had
nearly SIOO,OOO worth of ore. On Juno
23 they packed it in a cart and landed
the treasure at the Union bank. Tho
manager weighed tho gold, and it turn
ed the scales at 4,280 ounces.
A few days after the discovery be
came public. One lump has been taken
from the reef containing more gold than
ora It weighed 240 po«m.s and is
worth $20,000. Os course there is im
mense excitement in the region, and
many other discoveries are reported, but
there is unlikely to be anything left for
late comers.—London Letter.
New York Police Methods.
It came out at the police board meet
ing in New York last month that when
ever any big strike or riot has been go
ing on out of town Superintendent
Byrnes has obtained permission from
the Western Union Telegraph company
to tap its underground wire at Broad
way and Houston street and receive
prompt news direct from distant points.
Little of importance during the recent 1
Chicago strike came into the Western
Union office that he did not know about
almost as noon as it reached tho news
paper offices. The superintendent admit
ted that this arrangement had been of
immense service to him, and that had
tho strike extended to within reasona
ble limits of New York city his arrange
ments were all perfected. The Western
Union people have consented to make
this arrangement permanent
Huntington'* Superstition.
It is said that Collis P. Huntington’s
desire to sell the $2,000,000 palace
which he has just completed in New
York is his belief in the old supersti
tion that old men who grow rich build
fine houses for their funerals. He ex
pected to move in three years ago, but
it was only last year that the house be
gan to get near completion. In tho
meantime his health had become less
and less vigorous. His age and his years ;
of hard work and worry began to tell I
upon him. The superstitiou came back ,
with renewed force, and he began to
think a great deal.stout it. • ’At ldri?s>A• 1
pectnne absolutely iSUll'llßuid that 8111 >uld
he yipve in the first function to which
fifs friends would come would., be hisju
tfrt'ai; Then he decided that h 6 would
not even keep tjie house in the family.
—-Brooklyn CitiaOn. “ '
TROUBLE i
The Well known Firm of Lanham !
Sons ofThe 4th Ward.
CAUSE SERIOUS TROUBLE
To the Merchants of this en
tire Section. Theycutprices
so low that Con oetitors
are knocked out. Start
ling Figures.
The well-known fiCni of L»ti
ham & Son, of the Fourth Ward,
are causing serums trouble to the
merchants of this city.
They cut prices so low that none
dare compete with them. Just
think about it!
I :V , p
i
<■
LARGE HEAVY ■
BLANKETS '
2Oc EACH.
A GOOD COMFORT .
OR QUILT FOR 25c.
PC ‘ • (
‘ i" ‘
LADIES ALL '
WOOL HOSE, i
12 and a h alf
centsper Pair.
Jeans as low as 1 Oc.
AH j Wool J Flannell
1 Oc.
*» *!. ' J?
A w. ** ** ***
Sea Island yd wide 4
& a half cents.
Yd wide Bleached
Cotton 5c
CHECKS 3 1-2 c
SHOES!
SHOES!
SHOES!
Baby shoes as low'as
2O;cts.
Clothing cheaper s
ithan anywhere] else in
the city.
DRESS GOODS.No
tions and everything 1
else in propotion.
Sugar Coffee Flour
and Groceries at whole J
sale or Retail below.the
regular price.
Tinware, Stoves,
Crockery etc, at hard
time prices.
LANHAM & SONS
316 TO 326 STH AVE.
| :
&236BROADSTREKT i
I. '