Old Series, Vol. XVII, Wo. 22i New Series, Vol II. No. 43. ROCKINGHAM, N. ... THURSDAY, APRIL, 18, 1901. SUCCESSOR TO THE BQCKIMGHAM HOCKET, .1.00 pes ins n mia io iraiEOOT. r MRS, CARRIE NATION COMES TO GRIEF Joint-Smasher Is Banished From Kansas City, Mo. FOR OBSTRUCTING STREET Missouri Atmosphere Is Not Adapted For Loo-Haired 3Ien, Short-Halred Womeo aud Whlstllag Girls," Re-marked-Police Judge. Kansas' City, Mo., April 15. Mrs. Carrie Nation, who was arrested yester day, charged with obstructing the street, was arraigned before Police Judge McAuley this morning, fined $600 and given until 8 o'clock thi3 even ing to leave the city. The judge warned Mrs. Nation if she was found in the city alter that hour she would be arrested and placed in jail. She agreed to leave town and 15 minutes later boarded a street car for Kansas City, Kan. Mrs. Nation appeared in court early, accompanied by her brotner and a wo man friend. The court room was liter ally jammed with people and the people, filled the doorway and crowded the ball. Several cases were called before Mrs. Nation's, and she watched the proceed ings with manifest impatience. When Judge McAuley finally asked Mrs. Nation what she had to say to the charges against her, the little woman rose instantly and delivered herself of fierce tirade against the police and-the court She pleaded that she was merely waiting for a car when arrested and was making the best of her time in the meantime by talking to the crowd that had gathered. Carrie's Ire Aroused. A policeman testified that several cars bad passed without Mrs. Nation at tempting to get aboard any of them. This caused Mrs. Nation's ire to rise and she flatly denied the statement. "There was no car in sight," she snapped, "and I want you to know that I am a lady and tell the truth. " Jude McAuley then gave his decision and warned Mrs. Nation not to ceme to town again. The fine wiU be held over Mrs. Na tion in case she returns to the city, and until she is released from the court's or der she is practically barred from visit ing Kanias Oity. Mrs. Nation pleaded that she wished to gd to Leverty, Mo., within a few days, and asked if she would be permit ted to pass through Kansas City enroute. Judge McAuley answered in the affirm -fttive, but warned., Mrs. Nation not to top off here. "Missouri atmosphere," said he, "is not adapted for long-haired men, short haired women and whistling girls. " The crowd clapped loudly at the de cision, Mrs. Nation submitted mildly aud promised to leave the city immediately, remarking that "tho town was filled to OTerfiowing with hell broth. " A crowd of several hundred followed the joint-smasher as she left the court room and made for a car and soon saw her started for the Kansas sido. AGAINST THE GOVERNMENT Revenue Tax Upon Kxport Hills of Lading Unconstitutional. WASHitatox, April 15 In the Uni ted State! iupreme court an opinion was handed down today in the case of the Fairbanks vs. the United States. The case involved the constitutionality of the war revenue law imposiuof a tax upon export bills of lading. The court decided against the government, hold ing that provision of the law uncoiisri tmtionaL .The . decuion was, handed down by Justice Brewer, and Justices Harlan, Gray, White and McKenna dissented. Validity of Divorces. Washington, April 16. The United States court today decided a number of cases involving the Validity in one state f divorce decrees granted in other states. The court held practically that in cases in which the decree is granted in states where the husband and wife have made their legal residence it is valid in any part of the United States, but that in other cases in which there is no legal residence in the state in which the decree is granted they are invalid. PRITISHBAGGED BY EOERS Reperted Capture of General French and 500 Soldiers. Loxbox, April 15. It is said that a private telegrrm has been received to theffect that General French, with 500 British troops, have been captured by the Boers while his force was enveloped in a mist on the hills. The war office has no knowledge about the rumored capture and entirely dis credits the report. 1 DECISION AGAINST BOERS British May Ship Horses and 31uies From United States,. Nzw Orlkaxs, April 1. Judge Par, Ian in the United States circuit eourt today handed down a decision dismiss ing the suit brought by the Boer repre sentatives here to prevent the shipment of mules anc1 horses out of New Orleans to the British army in South Africa The decision is a Jengrhy one. Shot In a Saioon. Miodlesborouqh, Kv., April 15 -John Martin shot and killed Wes Tur w, aged 22, son of . one of the old Tur er feudists, at M -.run's saloon. Tne ialoon was shot full of h-es a short time after Turner was killed ly un known parties, supposed to be i'ursers. 'Martin has closed his place, but ha no Wen arrested. PostcHice RobbiM!.' WASgiNerroir, April 15.--Chief Post office Inspector Cochran has receive a a dispatch announcing that the postofSce at Washington, IndJI was robbed last bight, Stamps and money order funds were stolen, but the amount is not yet GENEROSITY OF GEN. CARR Public Schools Library 3Iovement In North Carolina. Durham, N. C April li The pub lic school library act passed by the last legislature gave impetus td a more that will ultimately result in every school in Durham county getting a library. As soon as the provisions of the act, were made known eix schools in : the" county deposited $10 each with Super. intendent Massey and claimed the addi tional $20 $10 from the county board of education and -410 from the state board thus insuring a $30 . library for each of the eix schools. So many schools iu the county want ed to take advantage of the library act that the board of education called a meeting and it was decided- that the county would give $10 to every school that raised an additional $10. 2sov General 'J. S. Carr; one of the state's most liberal and philanthropic citizens, has come forward and offered to take the place of the state in giving the other $10 to all such schools that may wish a library; Superintendent 'Massey thinks that each of the 50 or more schools in the county will take advantage of this gen erous offer.. , FAR AWAY FROM KINDRED North Carolina V oman Dies In a Foreign Land. Chaklotte, N. C, April IS. News has-been received here of the death fof Mrs. Fannie A. Cam ah an at Bomba, Equador, on March 31. She left Char lotte with her husband, Frank Car na- han, about six mcothilftgf jfpSl)enver, Cola Mr. Carnahan is an expert miner and war em ployed. tbJere by a mining; company, which later decided , to send him to Equador. He sailed from New York, with his wife and little . child, about three months ago. The cause of Mrs. Carnahan 's " death 'was enteric fever. Mrs. Carnahan was one of the bright-, est young women who has ever, lived in Charlotte. For some months she was local editor of an afternoon paper known as The Penny Post. She was very highly esteemed by the people of Charlotte. She was a native of Knoxville, Teun., aud was 33 years of age. TO PUTA STOPTO GAMBLING Mayor of Winston Making It Hot For the Sports. Winston, N. C, April 15. Mayor O. B. Eaton has decided to mako war on the gambling dens of Winston. He proposes to enforce the anti-gambling law passed by the last general assem bly, which is so stringent and search ing in its provisions that if not en forced it is likely td get the mayor and"1 police iqto serious trouble. The mayor says he will not spare any one. He believes that several young, as well as old, men are engaged in the business here. Every member of the police forco will be required to take oath once a week that they do not know of any gambling going on in the city. They were sworn for the first time, in compliance with this law, this morn ing. THE LATEST IN TELEPHONES important Inventions of a North f Carolina Man. Durham, N. C, April 15. C E. Egan of the Interstate Telephone company has placed on the market an invention of his own which teaches telegraphy. With his little instrument it is claimed that a beginner can learn to "receive" as easily as he can learn ' to send, and that, toor without having to pay a teacher. Mr. Egan has made several important inventions, among them being ft' wire less telephone, which was recently pat- en ted. -ThestelesTaph? teacher has been examined by the Postal Telegraph com pany and it is highly iudorsed. It wiU make learning telegraphy easier and the student will be more accurate, it is claimed. MARTIN AND HIS STEALINGS KxTreasury Clerk Confesses to More Theft. Raleigh, April 13. Major W. H. Martin, ex-clerk, who confessed to the embezzlement of penitentiary; funds from the state treasury, now confesses that he stole funds of the insane asy lum, blind institution, agricultural de. partmeut and Agricultural and Mechan ical cbllege. ft,These thefts were discovered yester day. Today an examining committee went to the penitentiary and saw Mar tin." He confesses, but declares he stole from these simply to pay back stealings from the penitentiary fund. His steal ings from the penitentiary are found to slightly exceed $16,000. Work on the Southern Railway. Kvoxviixe, April 12. George R. Loyall, superintendent of the Asheville division of the Southern railway, an nounces here that the Southern is pre paring to expend a very large amount on grade reduction's, new trackage, eta, between Asheville and Salisbury, N. C. He says the work will begin soon and wili cost more than that now being done on the Knoxville division," which means an outlay of over $500.000.. Another Road For Oxford. Oxford, N. C, April 15 It is now almost certain that Oxford is to have another railroad, which will make three roads running into the town, there al ready being two operated by the South ern system. The new road has been partly graded and will be a branch of the Seaboard. It will run from Oxford to Dickerson's station on the Durham and Northwestern, 4 miles from this place. Trans-Appalachian Railroad. M org anton, if. CI, April 15.The two engineering corps on the Trans Appiachian railroad are making rapid progiess with the surveys. Captain W. Ji Walton's party is now camped on, Johns river, 4 miles north of Morgan ton. aud Mr. F. P. Tate'i corps is 4 I miles west of Vaile Crucis oh the Wau- tau ha ri cr A most excellent line has e n secured as far as the surveys ex- CUBAN CONDITIONS ARE IN CONFUSION Observations of Prof. Schur man of Cornell University. - IGNORANCE OF MASSES Opposition" to the Piatt Amendment 4 Comes From the Poorest ana Most Ignorant Classes-Educated People 'Appreciate Its Necessity. -- Havana, April 15. Professor James Schurman of Cornell nniversity, who mailed for New York, has been in Chba i for ten days, studying" the political situation.- He visited jfour province of the island and was clowjy, interested, la public opinion. . .. President fichurman in an interview said r y f j "The people of Cuba1 -are , Iesaf excited over the menace to Cuftau sovereignty supposed to be contained in the -Piatt amendment lhanare the Republicans of Havana. Indeed,' business" ru eh and owners of property univerlyfivbs J Immediate acceptance" of ,tne -amendment, although many told the they did not dare say so publicly,'-;; '; . 'The present political uncertaihty is paralyeiag tot the movetnenti'df capital, which ar.iiHttspensable'fortne jrecov-: ery of the prosperity of-thjedslanid. So, too, a majority of the educated men of the- countryrecOgnize " the necessity, from the Cabaa poinr :ofvlew, of) the protection aid security guaranteed by the Piatt amendment. The, opposition Comes from the poorest and most ignor ant section of the community, although how far they have views of their own and how far they are influenced 'by wire-pulling politicians it is very diffi cult to determine. "I have talked with both white and colored men and one-third of thepopu lation of Cuba is colored. Many'of these have no ideas whatever on the subject. On the other hand, I have been sur prised by the earnestness -with which both white and colored colored, per haps, more than white have declaimed to me against the amendment as a men ace to their liberties, as an insidious scheme for reducing them to colonial dependence as oppressive as that ' from which the war with Spain delivered them. . ' Imaginary ills. "Of course the knowledge of these X people is ill-proportioned to their zeaL The measure they oppose has no exist encesuch is their idea of the amend-, ment'-and radf-theirtilttide'ward the product of their own imagination. Nor can you argue them out of this state of mind the less so as they represent, the class that fought both insurrections against Spain for the iudepeudence of Cuba. Nothiiig but the fact of aselfJ governing Cuba will convince these peo ple that their liberties are not in danger. "Our military government has pre-'1' served order, established sanitation, built public works, opened schools and contributed to the restoration of prop erty, but, like every other military gov ernment, it is incapable of generating confidence, sympathy and affectionbe tween rulers and people. "The great desideratum in Cuba is the immediate substitution of civil gov ernment of Cubans, for Cubans, by Cu bans, for the military government of the United States. But such a govern ment vfill hrve no chance of success at home or abroad without the guarantees earried-iu the Piatt amendment, which, I am fully persuaded, is desired in its essential contents by a majority of the people 6f Cuba. f . k i I Proposed Solution! L.,l'Ther.United States must Insist upon acceptance of that amendment. Oppo sition of the Cuban delegates must be overcome. I believe both ends can be attained by a conference between a com mittee of the convention ahd President McKinley. The Cubans will then state their desires to the highest authority in the republic, and the very opportunity to do so will predispose then to b4 con- ciliatory, and the tact and diplomacy of the president, combined with the self interest of the Cuban delegates, will discover a way, either by denning the conditions of intervention .or abandon ihg the lseiof Pines,y ipecifying the number oi coanng stations, or by some other Jor mil. concession to reath ah S jstment which will save the face of the elegates and enable them tolretoxa to their 6 political partiesi 1 bringing 'peace with honor. " At $he .same time, the firmness .l ithe 3reiaeniiiay jBfiia2Iij trusted to maintain the substance of an act "of eongress, the terras off which Jhej is required to substantially enforce. 4 "Then wi) 1 follow civil . government. J m Cuba ,bjr Unbans and a renewal of cordial relations with the United States, and this consummation is devoutly to be wished." MONEY FOUND IN HER TRUNK Dying Woman Begs to Escape the Potter's Field. Charleston, April. 16. Miss McCon don Kaiser, an aged inmate of a public almhouse h-re, died recently, but be fore her death begged piteously for burial in a cemetery instead of in the potter's field.. Persons interested in her case raised funds for a decent buriaL Later when the woman's trunk was examined, it was found that she had 340. Not wil ling to spend the money, even on a fu neral, she let it remain concealed, and now the full amount has been given over to the city. jjj. llWfr m m-t i.-t li- , - -' New Battleship Maine. Philadelphia, April 16. It has prac tically been decided by the Cramps Shipbuilding company to launch the United States battleship Maine on Me morial day. Survivors of the original Maine and the widows ' and orphans of the sailors killed in Havana harbor will fee invited to attend the launching, j.,.-. . -- , i" ' i Porte After Young Turks. Constantinople, April IH, Tbt Porte is attempting to conclude treatie? with the powers with the object of get tiu? bold of members of the Young Tnrk? parry who are seeking refuge in -- MURDERED FOR HIS MONEY Tire Jlarderer Quickly Captured and S,!riBhot'tmBth9'r J , ,. HMsraa Tla. April 15. Julius Es- kewt whiW manar ot the Armstrong turpentine camp near nere, was snot and killed by Jimt Kerbyv a negro last nights ;Ekew had fl 50 on 'his person and the negro" wanted the money. Af ter Eskew was dead Kerby 'started to ward the body lor the purpose of rob bing ,Mni, but wai-lrightendlaway. He escaped Into a swamp, where he was captured with the aid of bloodhounds. , While SherlfT Perry was awaiting in the depot with tho hegro'tptake hinx to St Augustine, unknownfparties-fired through a window atfd put five bullets into, Kerby V back.. He thought he would die and. made a confession,, implicating Robert" Lee, " another negro.', . Blood hounds are nowalter Dee. K r EskeTCWas well andfavorablv known In. Florida. ,The crime has .caused in-1 tense excitement in pt., Johns county and there may be a' double lynching. fciBjBilili': w PEO; WRONG WAY Officer Shot to Death While Trying to Held a-Prisoner. MrifPHisL ApU 10. -r-Constable ias FarTeil,t M Arlingtoii, this county,-arrested Frank Crofford, a ne-. ejxo, wanted inHississippi bn the charge of murder. .-The negro' was held in a room pending , the arrival of a man to Cbff6rdi s decided to rescue nim, precipitating- trmall-siiwd riot. They made an attack, breaking a door in Tne fcWubte Warned tbetu he would hoo,'and nhallji struck one of7 (he ne-1 groes with thjUbntt end of his pistoL The" cartridge exploded, the ball enter ing the ifSleoUi bodyiHe died in a short while and the prisoner escaped-, - -. Florida Vegetable Crops. 'Milm, Flat? April 16. From Aprils td 11 there were shipped 3 from Miami 18,310 crates-of tomatoes. S. J. Sleigh & Co. received returns from a carload containing 491 crates, which brought $2. 60-per crate net. Basing the calcu lation on these returns the farmers re ceived for, the; 18,301 , crates f47,582. 60 cash. "The Little River and Lemon City districts are sending forward about the same number of crates, which would make a total cash 'receipt in the six days of $95,165.20. The present indications are that the shipments wiU be heavier for the next few weeks than during the past week. Although prices have de clined some, yet the farmers are making large profits. Daring the same time several hundred crates of peppers, egg- plant and cneombers were "shipped; .bringing the trucker good money. -MOktgomery, Ala., April id. The board of revenue of Montgomery county has decided to visit New Orleans in a tbody for the purpose of inducing mem bers of the good roads convention to visit Montgomery on their return home. The convention members will stop over at intermediate points, and where a city will furnish "material and hands they have agreed to lay 1 mile of road free of cost. Their object in doing this is to introduce in southern cities machinery which . they claim is unsurpassed for road building purposes. Still Discussing Convicts. Tallahassee, April 15. Strong .feel ing of suppressed excitement pervades hotels and resorts of legislators in an ticipation of the probable renewal of the discussion of the, disposition of convicts. The senate has resolved that the state board should lease convicts for four more years undejr bids submitted. The house defeated s similar resolution. It is expected theirj friends will try to se cure a reversal pf the house's action. Opponents of the lease system include rmost of the strongest men in the house. Clear Combine at Tampa. Tam?a, Fia., f April 13. The Ameri can Cigar company today consummated the purchase of three cigar factories in this city; The factories are those of 8eidenberg & Co., the Abof-Manrara company and Julius Ellinger &Ca The, deal inclades also Ihe1 brands and real' estate of these companies. The plants 1 formeril belonged: to the Havana-Amer ICaU VMUXyU.Jt SUU Bl 13 1113 OUIJ clear Havana factories in Tampa thus jCas Jpurchased r by she American Cigar company - t I I M jaettsimlt Voitii ralr. ' ALLAHAS&EK. April U. The Florida le.le Fair association has decided o be come incorporated and inaugurate an Aoaual State fair and hold the-first in jacKsonvme, iov. 14 to zx nexc Jack sonville,. Tampa, jOcala and San ford bid for thrf 'yeat's'fair but Jacksonville offered the best inducements grounds and privileges receipts and 15,000 cash and captured the fair. The association juuned necessary committees to push -the project. 'f:rf' " 1 ' Decrease in Car Used. Birmingham, Ala., April 10. The re port of the Alabama Car Service asso ciation for the month of March, issued yesterday, shows that the railroads com posing the association handled 43,301 cars, as compared to 43,321 ears for the corresponding month of last year, a de crease of ISO cars, which is accounted for by the scarcity of cars. Baking Powder Made from pure f cream of tartar. SaLiai'tlie food - agamst altmu Men vs fhcrreaCcst fhe present day. ML JOHN." CAPERS rXPft1Wt,'i United States District Attorney South Carolina. , -ashington, April 15. Among the appointments made by the president to- i cay was that ox John u. Copers, to be attorney of the United States for tho. district of South Carolina-, . : " Mr. Capers is a son of the Right Rev." Ellison Capers, Protestant Episcopal bishop of South Carolina. He has held an attorneyship in the officeof the at torney general at Washington for the past eight years and was at one time pri- -vate secretary for, former United States Senator M. a Butler, who secured for hhn'his position in the attorney gener- ' -The appointment of John" G. oers l to be United States district attorney of . South Carolina was a great surprise to residehtsin that state, although tumors of it have been afloat for sometime.. Mr. Capers will succeed .Abial La th r op, the, present district attorney for South Carolina. In 1896 1 he. refused to support Bryan for president, and again worked against the Democratic candi date in 1890. He . never has aligned himself fully with the Republican narty, howeven.; Lathrop was appointed four years ago, , upon the - recommendation ' of E. A. Webster, Republican national commit teeman from South Carolina. It is said; charges were made against Lathrop. i ' -. ... . .', .. "r. l WIERD AND GHASTLY, MUSia JS , The Wind, Whistled la the Wounds of a Corpse. Greenville S. C, April 10. In the. trial of James B:ddutheteTday br, the murder of Edward Hayes in the ;"Dar Corner'Ythe ghastly tquestton arose.whethejthe wind could blow into the bullet "wounds iu a corpse and make a distinct sound. Holland Howard testified that Sud- duth ba4 told him .'tharttjbUe ha carried 1 on his hack the corpseof the man he is, charged with having murdered, the night wind, rushing through the gullies and around and over the broken and torn sides of the mountains, blew - into the gaping bullet hole in the corpse's back and whistled through the body just as it whistled and shrieked and moaned through the baro branches Of the trees. , Howard swore that Sudduth told him that he carried the corpse from the plaoe where he had done the killing to the river, and there got rid of it, the trunk in one direction and the severed head in another. GRANDMOTHER AT 26 YEARS Story of Girl Who Married When WalhalLjCS. ttTlSbril 13rirre: ported by reliable authorily that there is a woman " living in the moiaffeahs? of A this (Oconee) county who is f6yrsUf and has 14 children, all living, ahd one grandchild. The woman married when only 11 years old and has enjoyed re markable health ever ainco. It is wonderful how tnese mountain people ignore the law, yet they attach very little importance to any of the laws. They do just as they feel inclined to do, regardless of the results, and it is very seldom that when any oneridlatss-M the law it is ever kuownioutside of their mountain settlement, and' while' this woman has been married for 15 years it has very recently feached the outside world. It is doubtful if , there is a simU lar case anywhere on record. , v ... I Building a XewlTown., ; , ; . , Laurens, S. a. Aril 13.1-Mr. J; X Garlington, who is devoting his time and energies to the development of the town of Garlington, which is situated' in Jack's township, this bounty, on the Seaboard Air Line, was hereon day. He was acoompanied by Mr. J. G. Livingstone of Massachusetts, repre senting the Yemassee Oil company. One of the, first enterprises at Garlington will bet the erection of an oil mill plant, to be placed this spring. Garlington is situated in a township of intelligent and progressive citizens, with a splendid soil, and there is no reason that the town should not show at 'once a vigorous de velopment. . . f "? Chargeable to Whlikrl I Colvmbi A. , S. C. , Atril n s. Barnard Ji.1 Evan s, brother of ex-Governor John Gary Evans, is in jai herp, charged by a'coroher'S jury "with "tile murder" of John J. Griifijir freight representative Of the f Norfolk and Western- hulroad here. The killing occurred in Evans' bedroom. Nothing is kndwn, as to the cause of the tragedy. Evans was drink ing heavily. Deceased leaves a ife and" Mvea ehildrtail,: 1:11 1 I 1-" Fire la vyilmlagtoa. V Wilmington, N. C. , April 15. Fire here this'morning caused about ,$10,000 damages to the four stores owned by C F. Von Kainpen and the stocks owned byX H- Hardin, druggist, and J. W. H. Fucbs. grocer and whisky dealer. Explosions of whisky caused the fire to spread and mace the damage greater than it would otherwise have been. The losses were fully covered by insurance. Murdered In His Store. Columbia, a C, April 13. W. S. Lee, a merchant of Whitmire, Union county, who was also crippled from rheumatism, was murdered in his store by unknown persons last night. He went to his store in his night clothing to investigate a noise, and surprised the burglars, who beat his head into a pulp. The store was robbed of money and pis tols. There is no dew.-s- ' mmmem Greeawood Municipal .Election. 1 Greenwood, S. C, April li At the municipal election here J. B. Parks was elected mayor by a vote of 233 over the opposition of J. G. Jtnkins. who., polled j J. a Chipley, A. & Her, J. F.aieKeller. X K. Durst, H. F. Hartxogahd J. W. , SprOleS. ' '.m. mm0& Object to the Dispensary. t Colcmbxa, a C, April 12. A mass- meeting of Rock Hill citizens protests against the establishment of dispen sary in that town and the names of 540 a - a w . women signed to a use proies5 axo ' AVcgebhlc rTqiaratlonlbrAS slmilating tbeTcod andReula tisg uStaoachs iiislBweb cf lrdnwtBslXcsUoitCheeTful itessandRestContalns ndtDcr ppmmJSforphine norrlliieraL 1SOT NAllCOTJC. finAtfr SJtt- Apefeet Remedy for Constipa tion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea. and Loss of Sleep. f Tac Simile Signature of kewyohk; TTT7 gpa ?1 r -r. tt cxact eo py 0 r ymAtPt a . I Do you buy ' jjp ft I TTTi TVTl Tl (Ttfl ff.l i v A' -:i dry: v-- ' jl ; v -i ; i.m P;JJ . r? f If 'ifH nun 1111 II lltll llll I HI II 111 I I llllllll 1I1IIIII III! II. i-i rH j IIIUUIIIVIIU UUUIII I IS 1 1 U V4 UUIMI lllll -ffl Bigg's Old Stand i SollstheEurest and Freshest on the 1 .market, and as rea sonably cheap as a business man ;can afford to sell them. We, now have on hand the best.oftwo good stocks, 1,hQse tr it 1 . 4 of Mr S. B D. Mclvae. Ma S. Biggs, and W. E. Davis us , and will be have their friends call around. It wont do you any harm to come in. -Dxop in to see us. We will be giau Remember the Bigg's has whatever the drug line. JlllJifWIifi m m m 1 m 1 so p 1 I We have a fine assortment of .Cutlery, Soaps, Lamps and perfumery. No better in to wn aucLiio n t- mm. I mutujgUiaatronaoCH public, ana assuring that we propose to give received, we are, . mm 1 r Tory respectfully, (S3 TfSTTiir nimii i ui iiii'Hr pr Bigg's Mt WWW T WWW WWW lllll 15! IMU For Infants and Children. The Kind You. Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of For Over THf etMTAUM MMNNT, MKVIW MTV. ' s s.-t 1 .' ros .and Mr. tW. A. S, Johnson are with pleased to 1 1 a. to see you, Old Stand you want in And iu other 5-1 cs o ,cheai them value 5-r i Old Stand. ! M Ills SAa Mlfef Ml ttf - 1 " ' Y T IT 1 . s Mm- l -AUK- ' 1--- ".i.' Thirty-yfs iiiiisi ' 2Z f ... itlid. pjatfad to s tocaLti r . i s - Si.