The Darlington herald. (Darlington, S.C.) 1890-1895, May 11, 1894, Image 2
m DABIHGTOH MLD
PUBLISHED WECKL]
FOR THE P
-BY-
J. J. IIILLIAM8, -
WALTER ». WOODS,
Pablbher.
- E4li«r.
srB8Cmi>tlON UATK8:
(FAVAIII.K !!f AMVAfTO*.)
Onu Year - - - - $1.( 0.
Six Montlis .... .80
Tliree Mouth* - - - .8R
FUIDAY, MAY 11,1804.
II Is PrahlUtiai.
In the test cutes from Florence,
that were argtrcd before the Supreme
Court, a few days ago, it was
decided that prohibition is now in
force. We have not space for the
publication of the decision, but the
mere statement of its tenor will be
sufficient As things stand it is
absolute prohibition and most re
main so until the meeting of the
Legislature.
The Hkram> has never been in
favor of prohibition, but as it is tin
law, so declared by the highest
tribunal of the State, it is the im-
perutiye dnty of all good citizens to
observe it, and use their influence tt
prevent ita violation. Those who be
lieve in the high Koense system will
simply have to wait until the Legis
lature meets and then present then
side of the case. Even if prohib
tiou is unwise it is at least houesi
and stands on an entirely diffe/eni
footing from such an iniquity as the
Dispensary law.
If those prohibitionists, who made
themselves so conspicuous in ad
vocating and enforcing the Dispen
sarp law will now display the saim
zeal in lighting for prohibition, the\
will, even if they accomplish in
good, at least not be open to tin
charge of insincerity.
Is There IVtlhiag ii a Name t
With all due resject to the great
est of all dramatic poets, the immor
tal Shakespeare, we are very much
disposed to think that there is some
thing in a name, and to furtbei
assert that very often a man or an
organization is serionsly handicapped
by being given an inappropriate one,
In thus differing from such an ac
knowledged anthority os Shakespeare,
we feel that we are almost as bold a*
the backwoods preacher who slated,
in a sermon, that St. Paul said that
a certain thing was true, and that
Dr. Clarke, the great commentator,
agreed with him, but that lie begged
leave to differ with both of thes<
learned gentlemen, and so we will,
with all due hesitancy, join issm
with the dead dramatist
This line of thought has beet
suggested by the organization of the
numerous military companies in our
Slate, and as it seems that there are
more to follow we take the liberty ol
suggesting some names, the appro
priateness of which we are sure will
meet with prompt recognition ot
the part of those who are int B rcste<l
It seems that Governor Tillman and
John Gary Evans are the only He
formers that have been honored by
having companies named for them,
^nd we submit that this is base in-
gn.‘itnde. Why not name one foi
B. 11. Hemphill and another foi
Hngh Wilson, the great Dispensary
advocate, but we refrain from furtbei
remarks and will merely suggest tin
names, leaving each command t<
•elect at its pleasure.
Hemphill Braves, Press and Bun
ner Guards, One X Light Artiller>
Traxler Heavy Infantry, Four N
Light Dragoons, Whiskey Monopoly
Supporters, Senator If by Rifles, Di*
pensary Defenders, Blind Tiger !).•
stroyers, Governor's Spies, UegLtei
Heavy Artillery, fsirry Gantt In
viucib|es, Billy Stokes I’at riot*, Du
pensary Supporting Prohibitionist.-.
Palmetto State Debaucbers.
When Mr. McLniiriu wasattorue\
general he persisted in carrying .
pistol, although it was contrary (•
law. We suggested that when In
went to Washington that it would l»
a good idea to let him organise al
the memliers of Congress into ■;
military organization, in order tlur
they might protect the capital
against invasion, if our advice Inal
been followed our law-makers would
ba able to manage Co.veyV army oi
trani|N without the assistance of the
police. Senator Irby carries a pistol
also, but he would not make so safe
a leader as Mr. McLaurin for the
latter would tie siire to stand even if
the tranijw were armed, which is
I'roiiHlilv more than out be Mid for
Jlr.lrbjr.
; ,r * a,, T ■ ,r ■ ^ ^ » f the heights of Gettysburg? The
, come up at Burning- ^ ^ ^ | thunder of that charge, the roll of
IVstMt.
uestion of raising a pension
“ uthei
rs.
ident,
wbek.
inkthafeif we beard less of
greed we would have more
respect for the family. They are in
good financial condition, and it seems
that their desire to make money off
the old Confederate soldiers is' never
satiated. We are tired.—Abbeville
Press and Banner.
Had the above article apjicnred in
jSorlhern paper, it ;would have
been met by a perfect storm of in
dignant protest from the Southern
.papers, and cited os an illustration
of sectional animosity and misrep
resentation. Its appearance in a
South Carolina paper, edited by the
president of the Press Association,
who was a Confederate soldier, makes
it infinitely werse, and in the highest
degree, discreditable lioth to the
head and heart of the writer.
Jefferson Davis was a trnly great
man in even- respect, both intellccn
ally and morally, a patriot and i
statesman and will stand ont in
history as one of the most prominent
tignres of the Nineteenth century.
The defeat of the cause to which he
gave the grandest and best years of
his life did not, in the slightest
degree, detract from the grand ner,
nobility and dignity of his character,
and the grand spirit he displaced in
the hour of disaster, his devotion to
his people under misfortune and his
unswerving constancy to the prin
ciples for which lie hod so heroically
contended, made him, were that
|K>ssible, greater in the dark hour of
defeat than when the legions of Ijee
were waving their blood-stained but
triumphant banners in the awful
storm of battle. When his cause
whs lost, he, with .a dignity that
challenged the admiration of the
world, and without a murmur, re
tired to the shades of private life,
and never, on any occasion, did he
either thrust himself upon the at
tention of the people of the South
or ask any assistance at their hands.
Since his death Mrs. Davis has pur
sued the same course and the charge
that she is trying to extract money
from the old Confederate soldiers is
bolh cruel and false. She is in no
wise to hlume if some of those sol
di! rs wish to show their recognition
of her husbands services by securing
her a pension, which, we arc free to
to say, if she needs she ought to
have.
It is to the everlasting glory of
Kentucky to have given birth to
such a man os Jefferson Davis, ami
not only that State but the whole
South, and we might also say the
whole country, is richer for the in
fluence of liis noble and unselfish
life. His great soul is beyond the
reach of calumny now, his memory
is enshrined in the hearls of all who
trnly love the South, with its grand
history and traditions, no slander
can, for one moment, dim the
brightness of his imperishable fame,
but while this be true, it is none the
less the duty of those who were
liying while he was at the head of
the Confederate Stales to repel any
reflections either m the character of
the great dead or that of his loved
ones who still survive.
Other Southern papers may do ns
it seems to them best, but one thing
is very certain, and ibat is lh<;t no
such reflections, ns made by the
Press and Banner, will ever go un
noticed as long as The Heu.vi.ii is
under its present management, or
the heart of its editor pulsates with
love for his section or with grateful
recollection of those truly illustrious
men who have made it forever
faraons in song and story.
Baak-Kerplug, Shorthand and
Penmanship.
We have recently preparedibooks on
ii-idiove,inpedalfy adapted to“Ilinn,
udy." Hi-nt on an days trial. Hun
nils have lieen lamented hnmlrvds of
l illars by ordering mir puhliention*
V'by tint you'.'Should you later deeldo
i enter our College, you won).I reoeiv
nslit for the amount paid. Pour weeks
‘V our method ol'teaeiiing b-sik keep
• ' is e<|Uiil to 12 weeks by the olii
.Ian. Positions guaranteed under eei
.in conditions Send for our free illtis
ated IN! page eutuliiglie and “stall
•ur wants." Address—J.K.Drauglinn,
’nVl.— Dmughou’s Praetleal Jtusi-
less C dlege and Bell's I of Shortliaml
■ml Telegraphy—Nasl.vllle, Tenn. It
rcacher*, (KKIKtiideiils Ihe past year
N'o vaeatioii. Euler ane time ('heap
sinrd X. II. We pay Avon rash for all
.'H'vMleieM as Usik-kr pers, steno-
’I'rtphers, teaehers, clerks, ete., iv|s>r
•st to us, provided we lill name.
Antler in Ihc Pablic at Large.
If you want a good hair cut or an
easy shave call at the Cleveland
House Burlier Bbop, on Pearl street,
and you will be waited on in tirst-
clnssstvle. I also shampoo—remove
dandruff in its worst stages.
IIkniiy A. Bkown, Barber.
MEMORIAL DAY EXERCISES.
squares of red. But where in all
the annals o* history has there been
a j a more gallant and desperate charge
I nil OftkalO. ' HirtL'/xf f-’a sHvSainn sin
Nothing could more fofoibl# shdw
the love of l he jieople of Darling
ton, for our dead soldiers, than ihe
tremendous out pouring of all classes
of citizens yesterday afternoon to
take part in the exercises <>f the day.
The Methodist Church was lit led to
its utmost capacity and large num
bers of people were unable to gain
admittance.
The veterans, under Gen. James,
about fifty in number, were escorted
from the armory by the Darlington
Guards, on reaching the chnrch they
marched throngh the open ranks of
the children and girls and boys, the
veterans entering first, then the
guards and the children last. While
the procession Was entering the
church Miss Jennie Hast, the organ
ist, played a beautiful march. The
exercites were opened by the reading
of appropriate passages of Scripture
by Kev. J. E. Carlisle. This was
followed by a beautiful piece of
innsic, sung by Messrs. Wild8,Jame8,
Wood and Powell. A fervent and
appropriate praver was then made
by Rev. Mr. Carlisle. The exercises
in the church were closed by an
other fine vocal selection. Mr. Hngh
Wilds had charge of the music and
Miss Jennie Hast piesided at the
organ.
When all had gathered around the
monument, the speaker, Kev. Mr.
McAru, was very gracefully intro-
dnceil by Mr. E. Keith Dargnn.
Of the address, a part of which we
publish, we have only space to say
that it fully met the highest cx-
pectatious of the audience and was
unquestionably one of the finest
memorial addresses that has ever
been delivered in Darlington.
After, the address a number of
little girls sang a beautiful selection.
They were accompanied by M rs. A.
M. Woods on the organ and Mr,
•Spinks on the cornet After this
the floral tributes were laid on the
monument and the large crowd
slowly dispersed.
There was a beautiful floral
anchor, resting on a bed of pansies,
placed on the monument in memory
of Gen. Kershaw.
Rev. A. U. McAn’s Address.
Laiiies anuUenti.emex : When
I received the invitation to deliver
this address my first impulse was to
decline. It seemed more proper that
cannon, the rattle of musketry and
the shunts of combatant's still rail
through the world, and the smoke,
the frowning hill, the grey lines mov
ing steadily through the hail of
death, the desperate death grapple
mid the silent cannon will be re
membered as long as the world
endures.
And a hundred battle fields
witnessed the same deeds of valor
and bravery. In the thickest of the
fight these men laid th' inselves
down by thousands to sleep the
sleep of death. And the world
talks of them and sings of them *ud
wanders at them while they sleep—
aye and will talk of them wherever
true heroism is admired and loved.
And what country does not envy
the South her brave and noble
women ? Those who fonght for
their country with their prayers,
their tears and their songs of Dixie:
the wife as she girded her husband
for battle and sent him forth to
death. The mother as she brushed
back the hair from the impatient
brow of her boy and implanted upon
his fair young forehead the last
mother’s kiss. Oh! I have heard
before oi the mother who gazed
proudly upon her dead soldier boy.
But never before have I heard of the
mother who stood by her dead child
and wept that she had no other sons
to dedicate to country and to truth.
Talk about your Spartan heroes
with their brave deeds and Spartan
mothers, bidding their sons return
with or upon their shields. I tell you
when in the centuries yet to come
the world will seek for examples of
heroism, patriotism and devotion to
principle and truth, it will look not
to Sparta but to the men and women
of the South. And boast no more
of I'olaud and Switzerland with their
great deeds and brave men. Their
deeds are equalled, their bravery
surpassed, their glory eclqMted by
the soldiers of the Southern Con
federacy.
It is a significant fact that so
imuiy have gathered together to-day
to revive the memories of the past.
Women by their presence honoring
the cause they so much loved. Grey
haired men showing by their pres
ence that the fires of patriotism have
not burned to ashes upon the altars
of their hearts. Yonng men and
women showing in their very faces
the spirit of their fathers. But in
S. A. WOODS & CO.
We take pleasure in Announcing to our
friends that we have, for their inspection,
the best selected and most beautiful
Stock of Dress Goods.
that we have ever handled, which will be
sold at prices that are astonishingly low.
We have also everything in the way of
the glorious history of our fathers.
The war was not fought in vain,
nor did our heroes die in vain. As
year by year we thus recall the niepi-
ories of the past and summon onr
dead from the fields of Virginia and
the plains of the Carolinos, let the
enemies of truth trembie.
There is a tradition in Switzerland
that William Tell the champion of
Swiss liberty slumbers in his grave,
and if Switzerland shall ever need
Ids help, rising from bis slumber
and passing down the mountains, he
will lead the Swiss once .nore to
glory anil liberty. This is but a
superstition. But it i. more than
a superstition that tells us our dead
heroes but slumber. Let honor be
impugned, let courage be questioned,
let homes be threatened, let country
be imperiled or truth assailed, and
me thinks a hundred thousand
sepulchers will give up their dead, a
hundred thousand heroes will rise
from their slumber, a hundred
thousand swords will leap from their
scabbards, a hundred thousand gray
uniforms will move once more
throngh the smoke of buttle. Once
more the hills throb with can mm,
onee more the wild charge to the
trembling ramparts, once more the
surge and din of battle once more
the wild rebel yell far np the bristling
battle heights, once mere the mad
shont of victory. These men are not
dead. They can never die. They
have taught their sons whether they
wear the blue or gray to fight for
honor and truth. We still see their
gray uniforms moving through the
smoke of battle. We still see the
marks left by their bleeding feet
upon the desperate march. Ay and
we sec too the tears of our mothers,
tears of agony but never of shame.
And by the most sacred thing of
earth, our mothers tears and our
fathers blood, wc swear we will guard
well the name they have left ns,—ai
name clothed with honor and glorv. 1
They have taught us to honor and tliey Avill find everything they need in the
i
1
*
9
Etc.
A large stock ol* Ladies’ Underwear can
always be found, besides everything else
to please the fancy of the ladies.
In every department our stock will he
found complete and the wants of the
Gentlemen have not been forgotten, as
one should make this address who 1 all this goodly company upon whom
had himself been an actor in the' does the eye delight to dwell ? The
dark drama of the sixties, or had j veterans—the old glorious battle-
at least been a witness of those scarred veterans of the Southern
bloody scenes and brave deeds. It j Confederacy. With faltering steps
hardly seemed proper that one should
speak of onr dead heroes and their
mighty deeds upon the field of bat
tle, who had never heard the war
drams throb nor th* cannon peal
forth its notes of death—bora when
the battle flogs were fnrled and tbe
and slow they inarch to-day. No
glittering swords, no faultless uni
form, no bristling bayonet No
faultless banner unfurls itself and
floats proudly in the sunlight No,
their swords do not flush as they
once did, bnt their dented edges
camion was resting npon the field of; and stained blades tell of desperate
battle. It seemed more proper that
one should speak of our dead heroes
who had witnessed their deeds of
valor, who bad charged with them
throngh the clouds of buttle and
leaped with them upon the frowning
breastwork.
It seemed more pro|HT that
who had taken part
drama should lift the
Harness washed, greased and dress
ed for $1, by W, C. Young.
the scene of battle and show ns
these men as they moved through its
smoke and thunder. Bnt after ni»re
mature refiection it seemed exiindit-
ly proper that one of a younger
generation should lay this tribute
npon the graves of our Southern
soldiers. It is high time that the
young men and women of the South
should let the world know that they
are proud of the courage of their
fathcis and prond of their glory,
that they honor their indomitable
spirit, revere their hallowed memor
ies and love the cause for which they
died.
We rejoice to-day that the sword
and cannon sin miter. But we rejoice
because this peace was born mid the
clouds and smoke of battle and
snatched from the red-mouthed
cannon. It was accepted only when
the country conld demand no more of
her brave sons—when honor was
unstained, courage unquestioned and
truth was vindicated—otherwise
we would blush at the very name of
peace. With snch u cause us this
we fear not the veidiot of history.
We go before the world’s tribunal
with supreme oonfidtnce in our
cause. And yet we arc told to stop
discussing these questions. Yes, lot
us stop discussing them with bit
terness and passion. But we will
not stop discussing them dis
passionately and looking calmly at
the stern, undying facts of history.
We will not by onr silence condemn
ourselves. We will not let the North
persuade the world that we were
wron2 and tell the younger gen
eration of the South that their
fathers were traitors. Yonng men
of the South learn to honor and de
fend the cause for which your
fathers died. Young women of the
South learn to love the cause for
which your mothers suffered, and
prove yourselyes worthy of this
legacy they have left you.
The South takes her place in
history and in song with Greece,
1’olund, Switzerland, Scotland and
the original thirteen States as champ
ions of truth and liberty—her glory
no less bright because she lost.
That was a wonderful stand the
brave t>00 made at Thcrm6i>oluc.
That was a dcathles* charge the
brave JOO made at Balaklava. The
world still sees through the smoke of
Waterloo the charge of the Old
Guards against toe adamantine
work. No uniform they wear, but
volumns conld not tell of braver
deeds than the simple words, they
wore the gray.
And that old tattered banner I
Around it cluster a thousand mem
ories. ’Tis clothed with glory, Tis
( wreathed with fame. What emblem
In that dark | of freedom ever waved more proudly
curtain from on the battle field than the stars and
one
way of wearing apparel.
In The Grocery Store
can be found everything in the eating line,
love the truth, to defend her in the
struggle of life, to die for her in the
shock of battle. They arc not dead.
AmL«hould country or truth demand
our lives, these men will urge us to
battle and lead us to victory.
When one visits the North he is
struck with the way in which the
North honors her dead champions.
Figures of bronze and marble crowd
the parks and public squares. But
tbe Booth needs no outward pomp
or show to remind the world of her' . . .
slumbering heroes. Our solders UOlll 111 Staple aild fancy grOCCriCS.
need no gilded mausoleum, no | ^ o
muffled dram, no roll of music!
throngh long Cathedral aisles to
mark their resting place or tell their
glorious deeds. If the South bad a
Westminister Abbey for her great
dead the world would vandalize it
and claim our heroes as its own.
They are too great for one country,
their fame is world wide and the
world claims its own heroes.
If the South were to raise a shaft
to honor her dead and 1 were asked
s.
A. WOODS & CO.
If you don’t go
to select an appropriate figure to | tj n j. i • ±r
crown its summit, I would select the I -DUl’GlOOteU. Ill tllO
truth — crown less and
Crow nless save for her Summer.
1 bars of the South ? Well might it
wave proudly. A great country had
sworn to protect it, heroes were
dying to save it and a mighty nation
was to hail it as the emblem of its
freedom and holies. It droops sadly
to-day—the ragged emblem of a lost
•cause. But we love it for the mem*
ories that cluster around it. We love
it for the glory it has won. We love
it for the cause it represents. We
love it for the tears and blood in
which it was bathed. Ds pierced
folds and shattered shaft tell how
brave men died. Planted upon the
battle heights, it told the foe where
heroes stood. Moving proudly on
to where the cannon thundered it
told the waiting foe that heroes came
to win or die. Hail to the tii.g
which has waved proudly over a
hundred desperate conflicts mid
fallen from the nerveless gnisp of
nameless heroes. Hail to those
drooping folds which even in defeat
have never trailed. Suryivors of
the Southern Confederacy, we hail
yon mightiest and bravest of heroes
—your faoie and glory rivalled only
by your dead comrades who fell by
yonr side in the shock of buttle oV
who have since fallen in the hard
struggle of life
They have taught ns how to fight
and die. You have taught us how
to fight, and, when fighting could
pot avail, you have taught us how to
live
If great deeds, brave heroes and a
just and noble cause are the criterion,
when the volume of history shall
have been closed, there will not be
a brighter page than that inscribed
to the South. When history calls
the roll of Nations, foremost among
them all will stand the Southern
Confederacy, grace in every motion,
beauty in every lineament, clothed it
is true in the garb of mourning
—njion her face the paleness of
woe—her cheeks stained with tears,
but. shining in her eyes the cleart
light of an undying imiqiose and
tt jam her pule forehead the crown
of Eternal truth — more glorious by
far than the wreath upon the vic
tor’s brow.
Tell ns not to forget the past.
Every noble impulse of the human
soul, every high and lofty aspiration,;
every true faculty of head and heart
bids us remember the courage of I
conviction, the love of truth, the in
domitable will, the brave 4<tede uud
figure of
swordless,
intrinsic worth. Swordless save for
her matchless beauty. Gazing with
sad and half-averted face upon her
dead and defeated champions, but
with finger pointed forward—ever
forward—to where the smoke rolls
at>ove the field of battle anti the
cannons sob.
The war is ended. The cannon
and sword are resting npon the
ancient battlefield and the tangled
gross and (lowers of May are waving
above them. On Virginia’s fields
and Carolina’s plains the blue uud
grey are slumbering together and
their graves have sb-'keu hands
across the bloody chasm and stand
shoulder to shoulder in the rude
strngglcof life. Withoutonethought
of bitterness towards those who
fanght against us, as only brave men
fight, wo lay the wreath tip'>n Ihe
{ [raves ot our Southern heroes mid
eave them to their glory.
“On fames eternal eaioping ground,
Their silent tents are spread;
And glory guards with soli-mo round,
Tile tiiroilae of the dead.”
Ntolen.
A few weeks ago a light saddle cov
ered with red leather, luiviiy a Mc
Clellan tree, two skirts (the under one
much tbe smaller) u-nl a girtli that
lies instead of buckling. A liberal re
ward If returned to A. E. D:
Mrioni.
Male.
Alxmt Five or Six Thousand feet of
seasoned yellow pine In any (|U.iiitity
or slin|H‘> 81wed about twelve months.
Apply at The Hkuai.ii office for
further particular*.
1\ li. ALLEN,
Merchandise Broker
It presents heading Houses of Ihe
country. Will meet all legitimate
conipcliliou. Solicits patronage of the
uicreluiuts in tills section.
ED—The Mor-
I phinc or Whis
key Habits painlessly ami permanently
in 10 days to ;t weeks for A'i. Proof of
care before you pay a cent will Ik- for
warded free. Write nt once, U. Wilson, I
Fleming, Texas. Tobacco habit cured'
for $2. '
KZILIL
You will find it to your interest
to examiue our large aud well-
assorted stock of Shoes, as we
feci confident in our ability to
suit the taste of the most fas
tidious. We have shoes at Till
prices and in all styles, from a
No. 12 Brogan to a Cinderella
Slipper.
Have just opened a new stock
that is complete in every respect
and we invito special attention
to our line of
Brown and
Russet Shoes,
Now is the Time
To Buy a Life-Time Article at
CREiuf mm puce
Sterling Silver
Spoons and Forks.
One-third less than they were sold at
not long ago.
I.
iLight.i Med j Hv’y.
Tea spoons, per do/.'ijs III 0!t|$l-Vno
DesT spoons.perdoz. 19.00 2300 2N.50
Table spoons.perdozj 24.001 3.1.001 41.IM
Des’t forks, per doz| 19 (10, 2:1.01 >| 2SA0
For both Gentlemen and Ladies.
The prices will be us moderate
will
Table forks, pei doz
24 00
M.Offl
41.00
.Sugar spoons, each
.Telly spoons, each
I’ap spoons, each
Fair salt spoons
1,10
2..>o|
3.50
2.00
2.7.->j
8.50
2.00
8.2.1
4.00
2.00
2.501
8.00
Fuller knives, each
2.2.5
8.2.) 1
4.00
Oravv ladles, each
4,10
5.001
0.00
Cream ladies, each
2.2>
8 25:
4.30
Fiekcl fork*
1.50
2.00|
8.00
We engrave 3 letters
on each piece free.
Write to us for De
signs of Spoons and
Forks,
, , The fight on the silver question
kJiucs we have a full hue of has reduced the price which may go
Hats, Umbrellas, Etc.
as the quality of the shoes
warrant
Give us a call if you want the!
latest styles.
In addition to our stock of!
Woods & Milling.
CAOTIOJf.—If a denier offer* W. t.
Dougins shoes at a reduced price, or sap*
he lias them without name stamped on
bottom, put him down as • fraud.
W. A.
up at any time.
- Jams Allao & Go.,
285 King St., ~ S. C.
To the Publ ! c.
In It. nrnf McCullough & Cooley'*
Stable*, Exchange Street,
DAKLINUTON, - - - 8. C. |
Horse • Shoeing a Specialty.
All Kind* of Itepuir Work Done With
Neatne** uud Despatch.
A CHEAP LINE OF OOKFIXH AL
WAYS ON HAND.
TERMS: CASH OR RRRTER.
Flow, buggy and Wu^ou Wotk. I
it.! Ws L. Douglas
M o ftJOCT best in
OtlwCl THE WORLD.
W. I*. DOUGLAS Shoes are •tylUh, easy fit.
ting, and {rive better satisfaction at the prices nd*
vertisod than any other make. Try one piiir and
he co-iyinccd. The stAmpini? of \v. L. Douglas'
mire and price on the bottom, which guarantees
th. ir value, saves thousands of dollars annually
to tho,o who wear them. Dealers who push tlu-
s:.le of \V. L. Douglas Shoes gain customers,
which help; to increase the sales on their full Hn*i
of goodThey can nflord to sell at a less nrol'.t.
aud we believe you can save money hv buying all
your footwear of the dealer advertised below.
Catalogue free upon application. Address,
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mam, Sold bj
fc’sle bf Ai X. iWA,
When you are in the city don't fail to
cull al ihe Enterprise lintel llarlicr.Shop.
It is Ihe only tirst-cinss shop in the city.
Fashionable hair cuts, tirst-class shaves
ami tbe
Great Arabian
Egg Shampoo.
I Four polite barters always on band to
wail on yon.
MIXON & HAKLEE,
; Proprietors.
To Flower Cultivators.
Those who wish to purchase auy
plHiils or summer bulbs can save money
by sending their orders to me. 1 have
made arrangements with several of the
largest tlorlsis in tbe country, whereby 1
cun deliver tbe plants nt catalogue prices.
Tbe cost of ' sansporl al ion i- very often
u consideralde Item on small orders and
Ibis cun te' saved by sending tbe orders
at one time. Cnlalogues ean lie consult
ed nl Tiik IIkiiai.d oftlee. Tbe prices
for both plains and bulbs will te- found
very rca*onahle and a very moderate
amount of monev can secure enough
bulhi) lv mkv 8 Yliry •‘Uow.
* W.D. WDS,