Newspaper Page Text
s the hto soft
or, prevents It
n hair has become
es a new growth.
- - | color ‘
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A Jf
.B.H.Davld-
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i ned^T^Q three year* with
,n f
vu
b» myjwalp
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9838
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came out all over
soft and
Armfy set.”—J. H. Pratt,
nctf.
Ayer’s s mtmm Hair BV Vigor,
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► Shady - Jackson :
■
S'. —-{CAN- SURPRISE}.— . ' ■' '
ler Friends this Season
As never before, both la
STYLE AND LOW RATES,
—{AT}—
Hr. L Us Hey ta.
apr.4d4w2m.
<sw Advertisements.
BONANZA WKtfttt^VrGZ? SEO.A.SCOXT.tiow Voracity
« OSGOOD»
0. S. Btatord Sctha
3 TON $35.
i °ihi fr F r ’ fniP ffi'
Binghamton, N. Y.
H1NOERCORN8.
.SciaticMns RHEUMTlG^i
Rheumatic, Paine Sciatic, Weaknesses, Shootiv :, Buck harp Ache, and
oscular and
ferine Sc. Chest pains, relieved in 1 minute by
SfcCuticuraAnti-Pain Plaster™!
i instantaneous nain-killin strengthening
>r. 25 eta; 5 lor 91. At druggists, or of
eb Bxuo an» Chemical Co., Boston.
AM •lit Pimples, blackheads, capped Dl LlO CO
and^oily skin cured by Cuticu- •
CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH
IYR0YAL PILLS
m am mum mw>.
^m^eSust
SHOE I-AS
GENTLEMEN.
•3 SHOE FOR LADIES.
*^*“**“ *| OR
a 01.70 BUYS SLJHW/li SUMIVOt
finaaimasaBS! for
ne W^L. ^Douglas |2.00 Shoes
FOR SALE BT
JERMAN & WHITE,
CRIFFfN.
r.n. |o»erfnmiSt.rl .'Vr* «f WteA
lo-
*1
5
Counties.
c * OOKKU WA *»-
Au<i . WdJifaHPBbeguiie, wed aim by huque by
or cinque.
VV r D. UtulHon spent
Atlanta. . yesterday in
i lie cat bird baa tome—no more
frost thin year. "
Hon. Seaborn Ueese, of Sparta,
was here yesterday
CoJ. Oscar Rogers, of Sandwsville,
waa in the city yesterday.
Miss Susie Stewart left yesterday
to visit friends at Haralson.
U. H. Steele, the prosperous young
merchant of Cresweli, wa» in the city
yesterday.
H. H. Stafford, of Augusta, was
hei e yesterday to place insurance on
the new miH, j v „
_
The town was full of strangers and
visitors yesterday, just as all boom¬
ing towns are.
George Seymore has no superior as
a mixer of all seasonable drinks.
Call and see him.
Richard Fntml, of the Jackson Can¬
ning Factory, is in the city. He
came up yesterday.
Dr. E. R. Anthony visits Hampton
daily, his business being a profes¬
sional call to a very sick child.
Mrs. J, T. Stephenson and Miss
Rosa Layton returned yesterday
afternoon from the Teachers conven¬
tion at Athens.
Cols. R. L. Burner, Tom Cabahias,
— Stone, Sib. Wright, el at., of For¬
syth, were here yesterday on legal
business.
Col. Seaborn Reese, of Sparta,'
whose resemblance to Gov. Gordon
iB very marked, was here on legal
business yesterday.
Miss Lula Belle Towns, a most
charming young lady of Senoia, re¬
turned home yesterday after a pleas¬
ant visit of two days to this city.
Tnis being the first Saturday in
May, "there will be large picnics at
High Falls, Zebulon and Mt. Zion,
and perhaps at other annual meeting
places. \
On Thursday night there was a
white frost in low places in several
portions of the county, but no injury
was done to the fruit or young plants
in gardens.
When you want a refreshing julep,
punch, or any other iced drink, call
on George Seymore. His beer is the
finest in town and his afternoon
lunch will catch you for all time.
E. T. Kendall, of Cresweli, was in
the city yesterday and reported a
slight frost in that section of the
country yesterday morning, but not
sufficient to do any damage.
Don’t forget the matinee this after¬
noon at Patterson’s hall at 2:30, by
the Maude Atkinson company. The
play will be the popular comedy
drama of “Frou Frou.” Admission
25 and 50 cents.
J. M. Sperten, postmaster of Cow¬
ry, Ga., and a prominent citizen of
Fayette county, was in the city yes¬
terday. Mr. Sperlen is just putting
up a 11,500 house at Lowry and re¬
ports that station on the A. & F. as
booming.
On last Sunday a very difficult op¬
eration was performed on Singleton
Allen, of Cresweli. He was suffering
from cancer of the bone in the knee,
and his left leg was amputated by
Dr. Westmoreland, of Atlanta, Drs.
N. B. and T. E. Drewry and R. H.
Taylor, of this place, * beinf present
Allen is convalescing rapidly.
The Satillo club met at the brick
warehouse yesterday afternoon and
resolved to leave next Wednesday
for Prentiss’ Saw Mill, if arrange¬
ments could be made with the rail¬
road. The following names were put
down: W. H. Powell, J. D. Boyd, T.
J. Brooks, C. P. Nall, D. H. Peden
Lee Patrick, F. G. Bailey, W. c! j
Beeka, E. W. Hgmmond, Wm. An¬
drews, J. T. Manley, J. H. White,Sr.,
J. M. Bishop and J. W. Sparks.
There will doubtless be others.
How true it is, as the Practical Me¬
chanic says, thousands start well,
but never finish one thing at a time.
They have a dozen things on hand
and no one completed. Time is
wasted on unfinished work. Always
finish what you begin. One thing
finished is worth a hundred half done.
The completion of an undertaking
yields more pleasure and profit than
dozens of plans. The man who is al¬
ways planning or scheming is rarely,
if ever, successful. He often furnishes
ideas for others, who go persistently
to work and finish what his ideas
suggested. “That was my idea—my
plan,” we frequently hear some one
say, but the man who carried it out
was the one who benefited himself
and others. Do not begin what yon
cannot finish. What yon undertake
to do, do, and reap the reward of
your own ideas and skill. Tins is
good advice both in and out of your
shop.
The superior merit of Ayer’*Cherry Peeto*
ral as an anodyne expectorant in due to a
skillful combination of the meet powerful in¬
gredient*. Nothin# like it ha* ever hem at¬
tempted in pharmacy, and it* success iff the
can* of onimonarv
The development of the modern
newspaper has had no more remark¬
able effect than the change it has pro¬
duced in the prevailing ideas with re¬
gard to advertising. Twenty
modest and general way,
upon with some degree of
and the professional man who offered
his services by public advertisement,
was condemned outright as necessa¬
rily a quack. The change from that
day to this has been almost com¬
plete, and yet it has come about very
gradually, and there are some trades
and professions in which traces of
the old traditions remain.
Long after the dealers in many
kinds of merchandise bad learned the
value of advertising and had profited
prejudice, who preferred to perish in
respectable seclusion rather than in¬
vite the public to them. This was
the case not only with lawyers and
doctors, but with jewelers, tailors,
to flourish only in the dark. The
fashiohable tailors long clung to the
idea that advertising was not
respectable, and there are a few old-
timers yet who cannot bring them¬
selves to anything more undignified
than private invitations to their cus¬
tomers, and look on aghast while
younger rivals fill the columns of
the newspapers with attractive de¬
scriptions of their goods and gather
in the custom that used to go to
them. *" *.*, t,
■
The thing to be particularly notic¬
ed is how completely newspaper ad¬
vertising has been separated from its
association with an inferior class of •
trade. The great advertisers now
are the leading houses, not alone in
the extent of their business, but in,its
recognized character. The finest
goods of every sort, the most fash¬
ionable clothing for men and women,
toemost costly furniture, carpets and
ornaments, whatever a purchaser can
possibly want that is rich and fine as
well as what is useful and cheap, he
expects to find described for him in
the daily paper.
And the result of this is beneficial
both tor the dealers and for the pub¬
lic. The largest and best advertisers
SUE3SS SSE
dlities for shopping have wonderful,
ly increased and the people buymore
and better goods than they ever did
before. They are better dressed,
their homes ore better furnished,
they enjoy more of the comforts and
luxuries of life than at any previous
period, and one main cause of this is
the general quickening of trade that
naturally results from intelligent ad¬
vertising, —. _ .J
---------
.
_
Smith's Wife.
When tke day to o’er, and the evening)* come,
The cattle are led, the milking done,
Smith take* hie rest ’ueath theold shade tree,
Fromjihe labor of the land hi* thought* are free
But hie faithful wife, from sun to sun,
Takes her burden up that’s never done;
There is no rest, there to no play,
For the good of the house die must work al-
way.
And in the end this faithful, over¬
tasked woman will break down be¬
neath and herneverendingroundof she Ues her couch of work; pain,
as upon
8mith will have ample time to be¬
moan the selfish economy which clos-
short-sighted requi ? Dr. Pierce’s Favor¬
so
ite Prescription lease of life, would and have brought given her
a new the
blush It is the of girlhood only remedy to her for cheeks overworked, again.
“worn-out, and feeble women gener-
erally. Sold by all druggists, under
a in positive case,orprice($1.00) guarantee Of satisfaction
ly every refunded. prompt¬
A Supposed Incendiary.
Joe Plummer, a well known negro
barber, is now in limbo charged with
the crime of arson, and from the evi¬
dence which will be produced at the
trial which takes place today, there
seems bat little doubt that he is
guilty of starting the fire in George
& Hartnett’s store on Thursday
night. He was arrested only a little
while after the fire, as suspicion
pointed very strongly to him, and
yesterday two warrante were sworn
out, one for arson and the other
being for stealing a quart of whisky
from the store daring the day on
Thursday. The deed was a dastard¬
ly one, and ifjtbe man is guilty, he
should be punished to the extent of
the law. We make no comment on
the case but await the action iff the
court today. ,,
ft la a Curious Fact.
That the body to now more susceptible to
benefit from medicine than At any other seas¬
on. Hence the importance of taking Hood’s
iHPii
A Fish Valued by a Lady.
W: •ladv?
J.E. owns a very-
flue cow yielding a
good deal of % her lar-
H waa f milk The ma de cause one
to’milk going to the
stall »w she found her
lying down and a pig iudustri-
ously pulling awa; her teats.
Dr. T. H. Dill, was ar-
rested at onday, and
committed to jail on two chargee-
one for practicing medicine without
license aud one for bigamy. He had
'zzzrgzz.iz’z denies
other wives. He the charge,
and says the other wotoen were simp¬
ly his paramours.
The barns, stables and contents ou
the plantation of WffiiapSuinerford,
near Vienna, were burned Sunday
night. Three or four hundred1 bush¬
els of earn and a large quantity of
fodder were destroyed. Four mules
were extricated with difficulty, after
was incendiary. There was no insur¬
ance.
A large covey of partridges flew
into Cuthbert Monday morning and
became terribly demoralized. They
got scattered and completely bewild¬
ered. Two of them flew into the res¬
idence of the editor of the Liberal,
ope of which was captured. The oth¬
er escaped through the window.
They seem to be crazed by the sur¬
roundings and would fly against
houses, fences or anything that stood
before them.
5J$.t Talbotton Snnday night an Mike at¬
tempt was made to assassinate
Maloney, a young irishman- Ma¬
loney was returning from Geneva,
and when near the camp ground
some miscreant fired upon him from
behind some pines. Threeshots were
fired, one taking effect in Maloney’s
ankle, making a dangerous wound.
There is no clew to the would-be as¬
sassin, and Maloney has no idea as
to who did the shooting.
Consumption Curable.
Since the fact that consumption is
both preventable, and in its earliest
stage curable, If the it has lost much of its
terror. first 5 symptoms are at
' “ - tto pr o
p er reme-
* ^ jjp ^
lung-scrofula. this formidable Like many other dis¬
eases one grows out
from of impure.blood, diseased liver. and Hence, this, in turn, have
a we
toe hacking cough, the pains inchest,
tom? Jf haftShS’
the result of depraved blood and a
diseased liver. The use of Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery will arrest
all such symptoms, restore the liver
to of healthy blood action, and send streams Of
pore into every orpin.
druggists.' - -■
The Piny Last Night.
An appreciative and intelligent au¬
dience greeted Maude Atkinson at
Patterson’s Hall last night. Her
role of Stephanie in “Forget Me Not”
was handled by this brilliant actress
in a masterly manner and will not be
forgotten for many a day by the at¬
tentive audience. In her part of the
scheming adventuress she was pleas¬
ing to her hearers and certainly
showed that she was mistress of her
art, and can be excelled by few if any
in this part. Tonight this excellent
company present for the first time
here, “Leah or the Forsaken,” and
all lovers of this pure drama should
not fail to see them. We haverarely
seen a company who became such fa¬
vorites with the play goers or who
received so much praise as this one
did last night. “Frou Frou” will be
presented at the matinee this after¬
noon.
Little, “But Enough,”
as Mercutio said of bis wound. We
refer to Dr. Pierce’s little Pellets,
which are small, swift, and sure, in
cases of sick headache, indigestion. biliousness,
onstipation, and
LOST
At the varnished picnic ground walking on stick, Thursday
a nice val¬
ued as a keepsake. will Any person re-
turning the same by returning * to - r
owner
D. W Pat
To Dislodge the Enemy
When it takes the form-of I disease diseam ot ot the kid
wJof^mpltohme^ Rtoi
as
XG it HI ......... V IgOrUMlB • MWftJB) | -'yy?* BUfoT
ru:i vfl la.Uitii’ Sftwsps advantage In these . etui ■
u uses,
»UWi 1 believe should bo moroTre-
.jUPiiL uiul that w that the policemen
become familiar with all sections of
the city , and thus aro rendered more
valuable in any emergency.—8L Louis
Utobe-liemocmL
Tm r iret Ai:urirau Silk Drew.
The t! I silk drew made in Anicric*
Uioi'j xtM c m lb f f.-tufod fomnler by of Governor Georgia, Ogle lhi
v. • HI. to
q-.,ee;i«« jr-cted hi.-colony t tawge to-become Oglettutaiw rich ex*
on
all; Rii ;in‘T and viniculture, uml the
X-'Ort-'T
NOT A PIMPLE ON HIM NOW.
Bud wed with M
would
I eotinot say i
cura Remedies.
ssr
hapra lmir ta say, with the most pejfect raecsas.
His to now splendid, and there to not a
pimple on him. 1 rucommend the Cc«oe*A
So'atrssfrxtfara
8 ,0 ]i JA 0 W00D8UM, Norway, Me.
A Fever Sore Klght Years Cored.
I extend to you the thanks olous of my cus-
> has bom cored by using the
say he is now entirely well,—sound as a dol-
Severe Scalp Disease Cured.
A few weeks ago my wife suffered very much
from a «u1
ceivea no!
used until ^
,
promptly yielded to this treatment.and in a
short while she was entirely well. There ha*
been no return of the disease, and Cutkuua
ranks No. 1 in our estimation for diseases of'
th RBv”j.
PRESSLEY BARRETT; D. D.,
- Raleigh. N.C.
Cuticura Remedies
Are a v“{£°s?.ssk. positive enre for every awsjyet form of skin,
ss S
thyosia.
Send for “How toCure Skin Diseases, 1
Sir'*’ 50 illustrations, and lOO testimo-
solutely BABY’S KigSMKf, SI
pure.
Every Muscle Aches.
and Sharp Weaknesses Aches, Dun relieved Pains, Strains, la
one
minute by the Cuticura Anti-Pair
Plaster. The first and only plaster. instantaneous
pain-killing, stre ngthening 25 eta.
sswwas
n;*
WHELES 3 STAMP
___ -PRESS CO.—
748 REYNOLD STREET, AUGUSTA GA
Agents Wanted! Catalogue FREE!
RUBBER STAMPS, SEALS,
BADGES, CHECKS, STENCILS,
STEEL STAMPS, &0.
Sole of
Tho Wheless StamD Printing Self-Inking Press. Rubber
Baweto
yott value the life of yoar
S^ims^any incmable ^sic
I c . V««fc-S7 wfifel-
i'te.Kii’r*
SRC C!?HS.
[to.dime
ioos R i
iav .mriwert« ----- , so early rrow
—
■
■■
J. H. M I
! ' '
' I
JJ,
**- We warrant
”
and
'
. ^.........
'
SB-
Sash
Dresset* and Rough Li
GKimN, .... I
J&Jk . i'
prices that you formerly paid *nd price now j ■MtoghAgl
You p a ^,cr8^0*1|H fl h t Sas h S1 :
* 10Xl6
$200l
•ynJI onellidel
” ” Wank
For Dressed and Matched Lnmber $1 .fM
Try ns and if you are not i
nov2fri, »Ew8ffl • ■