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E3BBBBBBBBB2 1 GOI m As soot 63 ceries into our \ wj by Norman & i\ We ha tjj new, but if you in order to savt ^3 seasonable grroc ($} unload and ope | ?? | ...WE to supply your every i rih increase the value of 1 CD supplying everything ?5 ACTION." ^ WE APPI goods cheaper than w I W m and if you are one of ( m Kopnma nna ura ..rill i~> Mi wwwviiiv yjiiv. vvv< will v ?& $ | THS ?g Corner Main ai Bbbbb^BBB^ ' : ISM IN AKSniCA. Er. il VarderveMe. Fcrerr.ocl Exponent of Socialism, Gives Vi?wo. New York, August "0.? Einil \ ;:ndervoldc, leader of tne Socialist part} in Belgium, and one of the foremost exponents of socialism in Europe, who ha:; arrived here accompanied by Senator Houzeau, to attend a m< ting of the inter-parliamentary union in St. Louis next month declares he is watch. Ing tho growth of socialism in Amorioa. with keen interest. There is no occasion for alarm over the spread of social revolution, which, he says, la in progress here to even a greater ex. tent than Europe. "At first, in tho nature of an Importation from Germany," he continued, "the doctrines of socialism appear to have spread to a considerable class of those who call themselves nativeborn Americans. "During the last five years especially the movement seems to have gone forward by leaps and bounds, until now there are many who believe the doctrines of socialism, whereas ten years ago they would have as soon have thought of calling themselves anarchists. "In Europe there is no opporruntty of anything but a peaceful revision, tho military powers are too strong. In the United States, there Is tho opportunity. I think, but not the desire for any such radical measures. But tho movement is of slow growth, it is certain, and the day will come, in the life, time of the young men of today when this country will be ruled according to the doctrines which socialists teach. "Strikes, of which there have been many, and trusts, which I hoar so many persons sp aking or as a monaco to the country's future, arc only stopping stones In the development of socialism and should bo achieved phllo. aophi rally." PLANS FOR REUNION. Georgia Division of Confederate Vet erana. Savannah, Ga., August 80.?P. A. McGlasLan, commanding the Georgia division of Confederate veterans, has completel the full plans for the state reunion in Rome noxt month. In the parade will l>e four divisions each, under a bridle commander. These brigades are to pass up liroad street In Rome from First, avenue to Sixth avenue, and at this Juncture Gorv eral McGlashan will pass. staff and generals from other states will hold the review. The troops will makn & turn at the review, stand and will 7" lBBBIEBEBBB NG IN i as we can make t new stand, located i /lurphy. ven't got a dollar's want some rare ba ; the expense in mo :eries now on the rc n up same. ARE need in the eating line, but < the service he gives you, ant that is first-class in the wa RECIATE OUR EVERY CU< e will, and we do not believt - WE W >ur customers now, you knc onvince you of the absolute E UNIO nd Bachelor Streets 3BBBBBBBBBB; ^:i li.i m'jiie.g d.'.y iIn*re will I).1 chUil;. ^ jx ?r: making on the program. Congm.- :.n Ma.l r : : ? a - been so lectrd to make the a ' . or welconic. The n ponsc v.oi made by Captain '"fry I'm 02. VICTORIA TO GAIL. Largest Steamer On Pacific Coast to Make .'oyagc.. Seattle, Wash,, August ;?0.?One of the lr.rqn-st steamships on the Pacific coast, the Victoria, will saii front here Nov. 15. carrying a diinlr.;:. 1 \posi. tion. Over $l()t'.(i(iO Is .eing ? xptnhod in fitting up the vers. 1 for exhibi tion purposes. The ship will carry no passengers, but exhibitors, and na cargo but exhibits, the object of the trip being to place the products of the United States before the Orientals. The ship wili visit not only Russian, Japanese and Chinese and Australian ports, tint a number in South America the voyage lasting six months. Honors Requisition. Denver, Colo., August 30.?Governot Peabody lias honored the requisition made upon him by the governor ol Texas for E. E. Bruner, who is wanted in Baront county, Texas, on the charge of assault with intent to murder. The requisition was presented twice before it was rejected because of some technical errors in the papers which have since been corrected. Habeas corpus proceed' lngs have been instituted by Bruner which may delay his extradition. Killed Son With Knife. Pittsburg. August 31.?-Crazed by the effects of liquor, Prank Ixopold, a German, aged r?0 years, residing at Heldelburg, a mining town near hero murdered his 11-year-old son early to. day with a butcher-knife while the child was sleeping. I>eopol(l then walked into Carnegie, a mile away, where he gav ( himself up. It is said I,eopold drank a quart of whisky on his way home from work. Squatter Ousted from Land. Ttale<gh, N. O.. August HO.?In 1RRG this city bought from Dr. Eugene Orissom a lot in tho sulmrn.s of Raleigh as a site for the State Agricultural Mechanical college. Grissom gave a deed to the state atrtl money was paid him. The deed was lost, and he declined to give a duplicate. Four years ego a man came here from Colorado while Orlssom then lived and squatted on the land. Chief Clerk Moody, of the state treasury, found tho long lost deed, and tho squatter la ousted. TO IMC he necessary impro at the corner of Mai worth of odd nor ol irgains, we will giv ving same. We hi >ad, and as soon as A L W A as we have always contenck I as we go into our new buil y of something to eat for bo STOMER, LARGE OR SMA j that another concern in U FANT YOl >w that every word of the al reliability of every claim th ~'r ;ji N GRC L.'l WAONO WHIPPED TO DEATH BY MOB. Eulloch County Comes to Front With Another Tragedy. filatesboro, Ga., August 30.?-Sebastian McBrlile, a uegro man living near Portal, in the upper part of Bulloch uuuiiio, w us ititit'ii out 01 aid aousi: Saturday night by a mob of five men, carried out in the woods and whipped severely and then shot, from the effects of which he died soon afterwards. Before death came, however, he related to a numlMjr of while men and negro people the manm r In which- he was ha:'.i'.i d an.l told the nuiuots ol thine ol lii.s ast. lie .-aid the men ci. no to his house and l ailed him at lie door. \\~ieu it was <.;? -nod the ir.< n came in with guns : n i held his v.-ife at hay while they i-i.i r'.-d a . A.".or they had 1 if- hi j wife heat i - evt ra! i .. 15: ; Sou: n ;im it !lrlde> returned ; ? his lion Ik. .!> :> aten and shot i:i the hack i:i m v. nil places. Scv< nil of the .vhite noigltln rs wera notified and went to sue tie negro and took his tcstimonv After his (loath Coroner 1). () tftnndford wast notified and held an inque.-t. Tiie hilling was done qutlo a dis> tanee from this place, ami !t was impossible to learn all the details of the crime. The verdict of the coroner's Jury was obtained, however, and the sheriff has gone to arrest the persona named in the verdict of the Jury. SHORTAGE OF $69,000. 8afety Deposit Boxes of Mrs. McVlcker Shows Same. Chicago. August 30.?With tije opening of the safety deposit boxes where Mrs. J. 11. McVicker kept tier wealth and the finding of a will, has coma tho announcement by attorney L>. B. Condce, of a mortgage of $69,000. Th<t amount of money and bonds found, If olofAd ? ' rw. o /% /\ *_ 11 -? V niutoil, ? H n UUIIOI fiUllgl/UV) WIIIIH $250,000 was the total amount counted. Attorney Condee, representing Hot. are McVicker, the stepson, declined to discuss the seeming shortage, further than to .say that he hoped the money would he found in some other place of safe-keeping. The will found wa? not opened. NEGRO LYNCHED. Body Was Afterward Thrown Ir.to ths Tennessee River. Nashville, August :!0.?A special tfl the Banner froin Hickman, Ky., says that Joseph Rum pass, a negro who attempted rape upon Miss Topsy Clay, aged 15, a white girl, in this county, wa* capture*! by a posse of citizens v ' ' 1<3BS3&&333&< :w Ql vements, we will r in and Bachelor St d stock in our store e them to you durii ive thousands of dc we get into our YS PR id, the man who appretiate ding, we go with the dete i.L. i i 4. rv in mail ctnu ueasi. uur in1 LL; we guarantee that i nion County keeps the stoc JR BUSIM >ove statement is true, but lat we make. CERY Evei >N, Manager. ?05 and lodged In jail. He was taken from jail by a mob last night and lynched. His body wag thrown into the river. Motor Drivers Taking Precautions. New York. August .10.?In view ol the fatal accident during trie automobile races at St. Louis, because ol dust clouds obscuring the view of the competing drivers, plans are being made to obviate the same danger in the Vanderbilt cup race over a long Island course Oct. 5 This will be done by sprinkling the course with Kerosene oil at. the approaches to railroad crossings and turns. The course is 10 miles in length and owing to the cost, only the danger polnta tw111 VlSl ^ll^il mil uu v/iicu Scheme of Lawyer. Jackson, Miss., August 30.?A Oren' a<la lawyer lias on foot a plan by which ho intends to capitnllzo his earning powers, estimated at $3,00(1 per annum, and establish a $20,000 or ganization. In order to carry out his scheme he wants some or the business men of the town to form a company and buy his stock, and then help in Increasing the business or the concern. The promoter of this rare scheme, il carried out. is going to have his Ufa Insured for a sufficient sum to maka tho investment of the incorporators safe in case he should die or go out ol the legal business. Storm In Lowndes. Valdosta, Ga., August 30.?A report from the Clyatteville district states that a small cyclone passed through that section Monday afternoon. A very dark cloud came up ami there was a good deal of wind at this place. In the Clyatteville district the wind blew down many trees, and In some places the forests were almost wiped bear of timber. Many fences were also blown down, though no injury to persons is reported. Vice Admiral Rolland Dead. London. August 30.?The death is announced of Vice Admiral W. R. Holland, retired. Ho was born In 1817. Admiral Holland received a gold modal irom mo nniieu stales government for saving part of the crew of tho Unite*) States brig Somers, upset off the island of Sacrlflcloe, on the west coast of Mexico. President Stratton Denies Report. Mobile. Ala.. August 30.?President D. Stratton, of the Mobile, Jackson and Knnsas City railroad, has returned from a trip to the <uist and emphatically denies the rumored sale of. his road to the 'Frisco system. > zasoaoasssa J/RTEF noveour immense : reetsand until rece ! ever article is frei ig thtnext few day; liars /orth of this ; new aiarters, we J-l. jh \' > epar" s your buaness is constant! rmination jto climb higher otto is: "SATISFACTION 1 no living nan will sell y< k of goods tiat we do. I ESS - if you are not one of our \ COM PA rything to eat for A PLANNED TO MURDER. Five Negroes Arrested In Alabama for Attacking f-'amily. Opelika, Ala., August :I0.?Monday morning there were brought to this city and lodged in the county jail five negroes, supposed to be members of a "Before Day" club, and implicated in an attempt to murder a ..amlly living a few miles from this city, near Ouewa cia postoffice, and there is great excite, ment in the neighborhood of the caj>ture and the attempt at the crime. Tho capture was made through the confession of two members of the gang, secured after persistent effort out the part of the citizens of the neighborhood. The two members state that the negroes of the community had organized for the pun>o.se of murdering, H/L.W1UH nuu uu-ruuiK, uuu me ursi family to receive this treatment at their hands was to have been Mrs. Maggie Plott and her three children, residing on a plantation near Chewacia. A negro by the name of John Cook was to kill Mrs. Plott and her daughter, Miss Pearl Plott. aged about 18 years. Another member of the band was to kill her two sons, Jim, aged 15, and Riley, aged 12. The house was then to be plundered, kerosene poured upon It, and the bodi's of the murdered members of the family, and the whole then burned. The attempt to rarry out tho plot was made on Sunday evening, Aug. 7, Cook working at the window of Pearl Plott's room .and another working underneath the house. Cook had succeeded in prying open the shutter, which barred the window, but Pearl was awakened by the noise, and called to her brother. lie arrived In the room Just as the negro was in the act of climbing in at Hie window, and he hastily fired his gun at htm, missing him, but frightening him and the accomplice away. The affair was kept as quietly as possible, .except that tho citizens of the neighborhood began at once a systematic Inquiry into the matter, with the hope of ultimately securing some clew to the brutes and effecting their arrest. After about a week's Tabors, a confession was secured from two of thn members of the gang, and Monday five of thom were taken into custody?John Cook, Homer Peterson and Ella Peter. Ron being taken at Chewacla; Nancy Mangrum in Hear 7, and Fletcher Dawson was found In Opelika. When in time of strife a crowd of politicians st ps in to save their party It Is always safe to guess that they save it for themselves. ?, /* a ( . mau, ES393S3EB|| i 1 ^S" I stock of Qro- re ntly occupied S sh, clean and ? 5 for the cash Q year's pack of ra will begin to &j ED... 1 ly making efforts to still in the scale of pR IN EVERY TRANS- CD du the same class of [As - customers, and will Dd NY, 1 lan and Beast, m Jll Seeing Crooked is about as bad as not teeing at all. To the distorted vision the things of life ? must seem ugly and misshapen, and what was intended to be one of the greatest pleasures is turned into a nightno oe I* is not necessary to suffer thus if y u will* nonsuit pructicil opticians such as we are known to be. WV can ' vcrc )cne aov d f.*n'. or distortion >v means of properly udjus'el giass-s Y ?u hou'd not fail to have lbs matter attended at once if you are so afflicted. No charge for test or examination. Dr. McCreery Glymph, Eye Specialist. M. & P. BANK BUILDING. Tako Stairway on Main Street. Hours 8:00 a. in. to 12 m. lto6pm. THE Cash Bargain Store A Big Drive in Youth's and Men's Pants. Thin [h no pho*t Htory, we JilwayH *eU our goods just as advertised * . We have nlaeed on the m>?r- . v, kef. todsy our entire line of * Youth's and Men's pants at Aotu d t'o-t, and those wh > are in need of pants will do the wise thing to call at once and tnake their selection bofore the stock is broken. OXFORDS! OXFORDS!! We are a'so selling our entire li< * of Misses' and Ladies' Oxfords at cost.^"* firs. D. N. Wilburn , .