B t
THE,
Democratic Banner,
T. H. MCNEII.I', J
Proprietors.
W. A. STF.WART, )
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Three Months 'snfvntl*
Months --"J S:
One xear
Sent by Mail. Payable In advance.
iiriii
AJP I'HE DEMOCRATIC BANKER > S
ORIGINAL County Union, subscriber*
will please tike notice,
Entered according to postal regula
tions at the postoffice at Dann, N. L., as
second class matter.
DUNN, Harnett County, N. C.
DUNN, N. C., June 4, 1902.
THK BANNED with this issue
greets its friends under a new
management. Ihe earnest
purpose of the paper will be, at
all times, to present all ques
tions which arise, and all mat
ters which are embodied in it?-
columns, in an honest and tear
less, but a fair, impartial and
truthful manner.
With this policy outlined we
desire that its inlluence be car
ried to every home in Harnett
and adjoining counties, and
hope to have the generous co
operation of all our friends in
accomplishing this purpose.
"Friendly support and en
couragement on the part of my
friends," said James Gordon
Bennett, editor of the New York
Herald, "has made me what 1
am, and my paper what it is."
These are significant words
when we consider this great
man and what he has ac
complished, especiall}' the good
he has done and continues to
do.
In this country no one man
can accomplish much without
the aid of others in furthering
his designs. Kind and helpful
words spoken to a young man
when in a despondent mood,
so enthused and emulated him,
that he became one of the
greatest jurists the Anglo-Saxon
race has produced. This young
man was afterwards Lord Chief
Justice Caliidge of England.
"The Aveekly newspaper,"
said Thomas H. Benton, Mis
souri's greatest Senator, "is an
educator of the rural classes,
the star that guides this class
of its readers into a haven of
morality and uprightness. It
is their pillow of cloud by day
and their pillow of tire by
night."
We cannot hope to accom
plish what might be inferred
from the language of this great
statesman.
We do hope and intend to
put this paper into the homes
of as many people as possi
ble, with such influences and
ideals, that the child or adult
who absorbs these ideals and
influences will be bettered
thereby.
We shall make an energetic
effort to lay before the public
the resources and possibilities
of Harnett county. The in
tegrity of its people, the rapid
strides recently made in re
ligion, morality and education.
The characteristics of its genial
citizenship together with its
thrift and enterprise, in all
sections.
Peace in South Africa.
Late last Sunday dispatches
were received at the War Office
in London, stating that terms
of peace had been signed and
the army of the South African
Republic had been surrendered.
The war has been going on for
more than three years. The
English treasury is drained of
eight hundred million dollars.
The lives of thousands of young
men have been lost. The Boers
have fought a gallant and hero
ic fight. They have lost heav
ily ; the young manhood of the
Republic has been mercilessly
slaughtered. The brave women
have been seen in the ranks un
der Generals Botha and Dewet
fighting beside their husbands,
fathers and sweethearts, but
like Spartaeus have been over
powered by superior numbers.
We have not learned the
terms of peace, but it is to be
hoped that they will have ex
tended to them the same forms
of government the Canadians
and Australians now enjoy.
Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy-
Is everywhere recognized as
the one remedy that can al
ways be depended upon and
that is pleasant to take. It is
especially valuable for summer
diarrhoea in children and is un
doubtedly the means of saving
the lives of a great many
children each year. For sale
by Hood & Grantham,
kuMtt bounty Ptotfom> j
At a convention of the de-1
mocracy of Harnett county held
at Lillington Monday, the coin
mitt* e on resolutions made the
following report, which was
unanimously adopted :
We the Democrats of Har
nett county in convention as- j
sembled, do resolve :
1. That we re-atirm our al
legiance and loyalty to the time
honored principles of the Demo
cratic party as enunciated by
our fathers ; and upon which
our republican form of govern
ment was fashioned.
2. That we pledge the nomi
nees of our party, State, Con
gressional and Judicial our
undivided support.
3. That we congratulate the
people of North Carolina upon
the redemption of every pledge
that the Democratic party has
made to give them good,
economical, and efficient State
government.
4. That we congratulate the
people of the state upon the
adoption of the amendment of
our State Constitution, restrict
ing electoral, franchise to those
who arc tit to exercise that
great right by reason of educa
tion or inherited qualification
for self government: whereby
the domination of the Anglo-
Saxon race is established in the
State for all times to come, and
which makes impossible in the
future the rule of ignorance
and prejudice.
5. That we congratulate the
people of the State of North
Carolina upon their awakened
interest in the cause of popular
education, whereby a four
months school has been secured
to every public school district
in the State; fulfilling the
pledge of the Democratic par
ty in that particular which par
ty has always fostered and en
couraged the cause of popular
education ; and we pledge our
selves to relax no effort in the
furtherance of that glorious
cause until the school houses of
the State shall be open for
eight months in each year for
the free education of the youths
of our beloved commonwealth,
believing that money thus ex
pended will return to the State
in a four-fold degree, in an en
lightened and cultured citizen
ship, in whose hand the des
tinies of North Carolina will be
secure in all the periods of the
future.
•0. That we tender to Gov
ernor Ohas. I>. Aycock the
thanks of our people for his
superb and heroic efforts in the
cause of popular education, and
we pledge to him and his co
laborers in this great cause our
most loyal support.
7. That we advocate in
creased appropriations by the
General Assembly to the Con
federate veterans of the State
and to their widows to the ut
most limit resources; thereby
paying in part the great debt
the State owes to those im
mortal heroes who gave their
lives and the strength of their
youth to her defence.
8. That we favor improve
ments in our public roads as in
our opinion nothing contributes
more to the enhancement of our
agricultural interests than the
building of good highways,
which bring the farmer into
closer proximity with his home
markets.
9. That we recommend to
our State Convention the adop
tion of a resolution pledging
the Democratic party to protect
every interest with impartial
vigilance and fairness' in the
imposition of public taxes; as
we believe that the future glory
and prosperity of our State de
pends upon the development of
our wonderful resources, which
can only be done by the invest
ment of capital within our
borders, a great part of which
must come from beyond the
limit of our own State, con
trolled by associations with
corporate power.
10. That we denounce all
trusts or organizations of cap
ital formed for the restraint of
legitimate trade, or that in any
way militates against the in
terest of the people; and' we
pledge our most earnest hos
tility to ail}- man or party who
may favor or justify such op
pression ; and we look alone to
the Democratic party for re
lief against those trusts already
formed and those to be formed
under the fostering hand of the
republican party, which has al
ways been the friend of the
trusts, notwithstanding hollow
and meaningless professions to
the contrary.
WANTED—Ladies and Gen
tlemen to introduce the "hot
test" seller on earth. Dr
Win e s Electric Comb,, patent
ed li 69 Agents are coining
money. Cures all forms of
scalp ailments, headaches, etc ,
yet costs the same as an ordi
nary comb, Send 50c in stamps
for sample. D. N. Rose, Gen.
Mgr., Decatur, 111
Dyspepsia Cure!
Digests what yon eat.
Itartificially digests the food and aids
Nature in strengthening and recon
structing the exhausted digestive or- j
gans. It is the latest discovered digest- j
ant and tonic. No other preparation I
can approach it in efficiency. It in
stantly relieves and permanently cures
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea,
Sick Headache, Gastralgia,Cramps, and
all other results of imperfectdigestion
Prepared by E. C- DeWltt 4C0.. Cfrcage
For sale by Hood & Grantham.
Ooportuniiies for Young
Men.
The need of the practical ed
ucation of the youth of our
State becomes more essential as
the years whileaway. Th e
State's resources are now un
dergoing a development that
has never been heretofore re
alized in this commonwealth.
This question is not one of man
ual training a-* represented in
Boston and other cities , where
•tome fellow with an "overheat
ed conscience," is undertaking
to establish that our people can
not and will not perform man
ual duties. Our people already
.have that training, it has come
to them by intuition and en
vironment. The training we
are here speaking of is that
training which will equip the
young men of our State to en
gage in-skilled labor.
The Internal Improvement
and Industrial development of
the State indicates that North
Carolina will soon be a great
commercial and manufacturing
State. These conditions will,
require a large amount of skill
ed labor. The work incident
to these industries must be
done. We wili have to adjust
ourselves to these new phases.
If the young men of the State
do not prepare themselves to
'fill these positions, many of
them lucrative—all good pay
ing positions, the owners of
these interests will have to look
to other lields for it. How
shall this be avoided? The
answer is apparent. Equipp
themselves by obtaining an in
dustrial education.
Spain is d> ad. This is not
the Spain which spread terror
over all Great Britian by de
nying that Elizabeth was the
lawful Sovereign. This is not
the Spain that annihilated the
Incas and Montezumas. Why ?
Because her institutions of
learning, great and small,
governed by mad heads, an;
turning out minds by the
thousands fumbling in the past,
groping in Latin accents and
childish legends—all wedded
to an ante-Armada state of
civilization. When a citizen of
Barcelona proposes a modern
school instead of a bull-ring, he
and his citv are unpatriotic;
when a handful propose the
same advance they are rebels.
We should profit by this ex
ample. If we do not keep in
touch with progress and de
velopment, the spirit of which
now environs us, soon we will
be relegated to the past and de
servedly classed as retrogrades.
The educational movement of
the South, and especially of
North Carolina, should cause
the young men of ail classes to
diligently consider the situation
in regard to their future op
portunities and possibilities.
"This sturdy rural popula
tion," said Senator Mills, of
Texas, "is an economic resource,
of greater value than all their:
fields and mines and forests and
industries." This is entirely:
correct . This substantial rural!
population is these State's most i
valuable asset, it remans even
true in North Carolina that
"Princes and lords may flourish
or may fade. A breath can
make them as a breath has
made. But a bold peasantry,
their country's pride, when
once destroyed can never be
supplied."
Virulent Clincei* 4'ui-cil.
Startling proof of a wonder
ful advance in medicine is giv
en by druggist G. W. Roberts
of Elizabeth, W. Va. An old
man there had long suffered
with what doctors pronounced
incurable cancer. They be
lieved his case hopeless till lie
used Electric Bitters and ap
plied Bucklen's Aiyiica Salve,
which treatment completely
cured him. When Electric Bit
ters are used to expel bilious,
kidney and microbe poisons at
the same time this salve exerts
its matchless healing power,
blood diseases, skin eruptions,
ulcers and sores vanish., Bitters
50c, Salve 25c at C. L. Wilson.
Subscribe for THKBANNKK.
DELEGATES.
Below we give a list of the
delegates from this county to
the State, Congressional and
Judicial Conventions.
Anderson Creek, State Con- j
vention—Join) S. Johnson and
Daniel McCormick.
Congressional Convention —
John S. Mcßae and 11. 1). Mc-
Cormick.
Judicial Convention—lT. I).!
McCormick and flngh Black, j
Avel'asboro—State— E. F. •
Young and O. P. Shell.
Congressional—l>. H. Mc-!
Lean and J. C. Clifford.
Judicial—G. Iv. Grantham!
and II V. Moulton.
Buckhorn—State—B. F. Har
rington and R. S. Abernathy.
Congressional—R. T. Spence
andJ. T. Dewur.
Judicial—L. S. Mann and T.
B. Lanier.
Black River—State—J. C.
Williams and S. G. Collins.
Congressional—A. W. Greg
ory and S. 11. Stephenson.
Judicial—B. F. Williams and
M. W. Denning.
Barbecue--State—E. P. Har
rington and John Darroch.
Congressional—A. I). Wad
dell and T, W. Harrington.
Judicial—John A. Clark and
Jas. C. Swan 11.
Grove State Thos. I).
Stewart and J. A. Stewart.
Congressional—J. A. Stewart
and J. M. Stewart.
Judicial—Thos. D. Stewart
and J. M Stewart.
Hector's Creek State—D.
Matthews and Neill Smith.
Congressional M. McN.
McKay and J. IT. Wilborn.
Judicial —James A Smith and
Curtis Sentor.
Jolinsonville—State— R. C.
Beldin and 11. A. Morrison.
Congressional—A. McDonald
and P. Cameron.
Judicial—A. C. Buie and W.
J. Smith.
Lillington—Slate—S. A. Sal
mon and A. M. Shaw.
Congressional—C, McArtan
and Charlie Rich.
Judicial—U. 11. and J.
11. Grady.
Neill's Creek—State—G. 11.
Long and Dr. J. F. McKay.
Congressional—F. H. Taylor
and C. 11. Biggs.
Judicial—N. A. Stewart and
Prof. J. R. Baggett.
Stewart's C ree k—J. M.
Hodges and Geo. D. Elliot.
Congressional—J. M. Davis
and J, A. Parker.
Judicial—D. J Parker and
J. C. Parker.
Upper Little lliver—State—
J. 11. Withers and J . L. Bethea.
congressional—T. A. Har
rington and J. B. F. Stewart.
Judicial—S. \V. Withers and
D. I>. Stewart.
A resolution was adopted by
the convention making every
Democrat of Harnett county
who may attend either of the
conventions a delegate to said
convention and have the same
rights as duly elected delegates.
No instructions were given to
the delegates but we learn that
the county will be unanimous
for Hon. \V. R. Allen, of
Wayne, for Judge Superior
Court, and Hon. Arinistead
Jones, of Wake, for Solicitor.
In the State Convention there
will be some opposition from
Harnett to Judge Clark for
Chief Ju-tice hut it is general
ly conceeded that the county
will he unanimous for ex-
Judge Connor for Associate
Justice.
In this Congressional Dis
trict there are quite a number
of very good men aspirants for
ihe nomination. A conservative
iintimate of the convention at
j Lillington Monday showed that
it he present incumbent, Hon.
J.I). Bellamy, of Wilming
ton, had 90 per cent, of the
i votes of the convention.
11.10 IKII HAITI!
0 o
If you wish to please your
wife and make your home hap
py, buy .a Ball Bearing New
Home Sewing Machine. None
run lighter and it cxcells all
others iir durability It has less
machinery to wear and conse
quently it is seldom out of fix.
It is not only one of the best,
machines made hut one of the
I cheapest on the market.
Hep airs of All Kind.
We carry parts an attach
ments for all first class makes
of machines. Any one desir
ing repair work of any kind
will please notify us and we
will call and get the machine.
Yours for business,
GAINEY & JORDAN.
Bears ihe Ths Kind Vcj Have Always Bought
7
Cuba is a Republic.
During the third week in last
month the American flag was
hauled down and the Cuban
; flag raised at Havana.
The little Republic under the
nurture and protection of the
United States has launched
out into the Arena of National
independence and sisterhood of
nations.
i The same pet e tal, on whit h
Ihas stood a statue of Queen,
Isabella, of Spain, for four,
j hundred years ; was used to j
'place a statute on which isj
j chiseled the burning words:
I "Cuba Libre." President!
IPaI m a has been inaugurated.)
]A party of U. S. Senators at- ,
I tended his inauguration and j
'returned not very favorably im-l
! pressed with the outlook for the ,
(young Republic. Senator Jones
}of Aruansas being one of the I
j number.
The young Republic begins
.'with a deficit in the treasury of
j about $2,000,000, together with
L a heavy encumbrance ou the
landed estates.
These estates are valued at
$184,000,000 on which there is
• a mortgage indebetdness of
nearly $107,000,000.
I in addition ihey have a heavy
municipal indebti dnc'ss on (he
. 1 city of Havana, Santiago and
|in fact nearly everv city of the
.! Island.
The country has had a loyal
: and patriotic soldiery, which
fought and braved hardships,
. selfdenials and privations more
terrible than Spanish bullets,
. which have been equaled only
in our own American Revo
l lution, and the Boer War in
South Africa. No doubt a great
. demand for pensions will be
made by those who are disabled
1 On account of faithful service in
the patriot army. They de
. serve it richly. The question
that will necessarily arise, is
- the government able to respond
to the needy in their distress,
i The outlook is not encouraging,
but they have very fertile lands
. and considerable commercial
resources. With patience,
. zeal and determination on* the
part of the people under
• the leadership of that
: hero, General Palma, who, like
I out* own beloved General Wash
ington—richly deserves to be
. | styled the f-ither of his country !
j these economic questions will
> j be settled.
I ™
Call at Hood & Grantham's
" drug store ana get a free sample
■ 'of Chamberlain's Stomach and
• Liver Tablets. They are an
ielegant physic. They also hn-
II prove the appetite, strengthen
I the digestion and regulate tlie
liver and bowels. They are
'! easy to take and pleasant in
' | effect.
li
Hereditary.
>
t
[■ There can he no doubt that
,i what is known as hereditary
I has much to do with the suc
cess or failure of human life.
> The illustration drawn from the
( family named Jukes, in con
. trast with that of Jonathan Ed
wards, is most striking—so
r striking, indeed, that it is dif
ficult to believe the statements
, concerning the two. Of the
Jukes family, it is said on good
[authority, that, beginning with
. j "a good-for-nothing fellow." in
. 1720, twelve hundred descen
, dants have been traced, all
. having been paupers, criminals,
| imbecile, insane and licentious.
Only twenty of them ever learn
[ ed a trade and ten of these
, learned it in the penitentiary.
They cost the public over $l,-
250,000. The family of Jona
than Edwards began with the
godly preacher and pastor in
1703. Fifteen hundred of his
descendants have been studied,
and aixong them not one has
. bc-n an imbecile, or a pauper,
j only one has been insane and
j but six have been criminals,
jDn the other hand, 383 were
' I college graduates, 13 were c >l
- lege presidents, among them
• two Dwiglits and one Woolspy,
the three greatest presidents
Yale has ever had. In law and
medicine, in railroading and|
■ mining, in army and navy in
! literature and statesmanship,
the family has been at the
front. Other instances of sim
ilar facts have been pointed out.
and the facts'can be accounted
for only on the theory that
heredity has much to do with
it. Many might say, all to do
with it. Journal and Mess
enger.
CASTOR 5 A
For Infants and Children.
Flie Kind You Have Always Bough! j
of I
Another Daily Twin Oastred.
The following is taken from
the Smith field Herald, and is
not a matter that interests them
alone but our people as well.
We heartly endorse every word.
It reads*
"EDITOR JIERAI.D :
Dear Sirs :—I have just seen
a petition going around among
the people of our town asking
that another passenger train he
put on the road between Wil- j
son and Fayettevillc. This is a!
movement in the right tlirec-j
tion and I hope that all the !
other towns along this line will
take the matter up and circulate
like petitions if they have not
already done so. If ever a peo
ple needed help we do. I cannot
think of any place we can go
lon a train and get back without
| staying a day and night. Four
.Oaks is seven miles from here,
jlt takes twenty-three hours to
imake a return trip there. Ken
jly is only fourteen miles but it
i takes twenty-live hours to go
'and come. Dis true the local
i freight carries passengers I u* it
runs about the same lime as
j the regular passenger trains
J and its schedule is about as un
| certain as moonshine. The
I fast trains pass here, but i hey
'slop at only n few points and
I ai;e midnight.trains vr e are
j not accustomed to traveling at
; such unseemly hours. The way
'things are arranged we have
for local travel only one train
each way a day. The need of
another train has been talked
btfore and I have heard that
the railroad people said it
would not pay. They never
| will have much local travel so
' long as things continue as they
are Our people want to ride
on vehicles that will go and
come. We do our traveling
mostly on buggies so 'a§ not to
be away from home at night.
Along this line of railroad we
I have built factories, mills, to
! bacco warehouses, banks etc ,
[and we feel that we deserve a
better train service. The At
lantic Coast Line is a great
! railroad system. We are glad
i that it passes through our coun
ty. It has alreadv done much
for the development of the coun
ty but it could help us more by
putting on another train which,
if properly scheduled, would
furnish us a satisfactory ser
vice.
Citi/.KV.
Smithfield, N. C., May 24, 'O2.
• VOTISU BY ELECTRICAL APPA
RATUS IN CONGRESS.
For a number of years there
have been efforts from time to
time to economize time in the
house of representatives by
doing away with the tedious
roll-culls by the establishment
of an electrical voting .system,
whereby, instead of tiiking
;nearly an hour to call the roll,
each member simultaneous! >
presses an "aye" or "no" hut
ton on his desk and the machine
does the rest. This time killer
of a roll-call, though, is ;oo pre
cious a thing to the minority to
he done away with. It is the
filibuster's chief weapon, and
neither side is willing to give it
! up.
As far back as 1877 an elec
triciau perfected an apparatus
by which the vote of the house
could he taken almost instanta
neously. Each member pressed
his "aye or "no" button and a
register above the speaker's
desk showed the affirmative and
negative votes and the majority
for the winning side. The house
refused to adopt it; it did not
suit filibusters, or even the men
then on the majority side, who
did not know how soon they
might need the aid of the long
roll-call in defeating some
measure.
The question of electrical
voting in the house has again
conio to the front, but it will
v»vv probably be to the
rea —Wilmington Messenger.
COMMISSIONER'S SALE.
j
On the 7tli ilii" of July Io''2. it lH*ing
Ist Aloiiilay, tlie under-igned us Commis
sioner appointed by Harnett Superior
| Onrt in the action in said Court de
pending entitled .1. W l'ipkin, AdinY.
of Lewis Pipkin against M. C McNeil!.
M.* 11. McNeill and ot.!ier=, heirs at law
|ofA. S McNeill. ''Will sell at public
auction the following described lands
lying and being in Harnett county,
North Carolina, to wit:
All the following tracts of land be
longing to the heirs at law of A. S. Mc-
Neill, deceased, lying.on and near the
fork of t ape Kear and Upper Little
Iliver.-. I'll- Ist tract known a- (he
Sun lie tract beginning :it the umuih of
I jp* r Lit Ile Kiyer and is bounded 0:1
1 lie Norli by the lands belonging to th*j
heirs of l.et\i- i'rpkin, deceased, on the
Kan by 1 ape. Fear rher. oil the South
bv tile l:i !« of J. L, Siriiii 1! mi ||j(-
We.»t by the lands .j j Smith and
the land belonging to lit.- b. ir> of Lewi
l'ipkin deceased. AUO a 10111 r tract oF
:1G acres, more or less, including ISis;- or !
Uear I-lands known as the k *K\a s!
tract."
Hour of sale 12 o'clock m. Terms
of sale one half ca-h and balance in f!
monllis. Title reserved until pay:nent
of purchase price. This .\f.»v* 2tWi .
1 02. Sale at court house door
ton, N. C.
A. C. HOLT.OWAY"
Commissioner.
The nicest thing now is that 3-011 can find at
one of the nicest line of Ladies' and Misses
READY-TO-WEAR AND TRIMMED IIATS
for this Spring. All the latest 1902 styles fcc.
All invited to mmo and select a hat that will please you.
Remember we have a pleasing line of
Dress Goods
and Trimmings 111 and arriving.
LAST BUT r-JOT THE LStfST
is the Great Offering on Shoes fur the next 30 days.
Wo will sell for fh* next 30 days any and all shoes from the
finest Vicis in Men and Ladies' down to the common dress lines
at prices not heard of before. Yes, low dowh.
Come for bargains in shoes. This is no "bosh" but a true
fact or certainty.
To be truly wi-e is to know a value and obtain it.
Call to see us at once during any time in 30 days and we
will please you.
Truly,
Baucom Co.
DUNN, N. C.
EBADQUABTOES
FOR
hpn in need of anything of the inner man call up
GXOB® 6EOGEII CO
'Phone JNo. 24.
*
who are prepared to fill your wants at any time.
We have moved into new quarters at E. Lee's old stand
on 1 corner of Wilson and Main streets, opposite Layton it Pear
son, where we will bp pleased to have the public call on us and
invite inspection of our stock of
Heavy and Fancy Groceries.
Our stock is always fresh and clean as we are in the business to
sell goods and not to leave them on the shelves for an indefini c
time. We carry the most complete line of
CAKES, Km CANDIES
that can be found anywhere in this section,
We have added a Feed Department to our business and it is our
intention to keap constantly on hand IIAY, OATS. CORN, COT
TON SEED HULLS, MEAL and everything else 111 the feed line*
We pay the top of the market for all kinds of Country Pro
duce and guarantee 100 cents worth fur every dollar spent with us.
p . U TIHT Hi-
In addition to our well selected stock of
ancy Grrooeries,
we have a nice line of Misses and Boys fancy Shirts. Also a bis
lot of Misses and Boys Shoes tint we are offering to our cus
tomers at reduced prices. . Old price $3 50, reduced to $3.00.
We have a few nice dress patterns that will suit any one. See
them.
Sec our line of pant goods before buying. We can save you
money and give you a nice quality of good.
Bring us your hams, chickens, eggs_ etc.
Yours to please.
P. G. A. TART & SON.
XJSTP wft tch this space
£■■■■■ every week for
My stock of Silk Mouslinps, Organdies, Dotted Swiss, Lawns
ifec., tfce. are going rapidly. Call and make your selections be
fore it is too late.
R"dnc p d prices on Ribbon, Laces, Apliques &c,
Lmbr-llas from 39 cents up. Examine my line of warrant
ed aoiivl Leather Shoes before buving elsewhere.
m
Greo. E. l 3 rince.
PIIONE NO. 20.