Newspaper Page Text
' \
school* nnd
festival at k.»
comm du
WHEN MARIA JANE 1$ MAYOR.
When ISaria Jane’s ilwtcO to the mayoralty
Tktrc'ilbe many wrox;
now apparent th-r
Tho sidewalk* will l» 5
►w. i»t thrice a dry
The nil-ys be ns fraf
mown hay.
What with parties and
•tonally a ball;
Then v*.:i la a tr..r..f
city hall.
>rroctod that
GEORGIA—Wake Cor:
Chilly.
i-mbcra of the
Whereas M. Q. Coleman, administrator of
tlie estate of 1>. K. Coleman, deceased, in his
petition duly tiled and entered on record sets
forth that lie lias fully ml minister!, d tin- estate
of I). K. Coleman. Th*s is therefore to citi
all persons concerned, kindred and creditors
to show cause if any they can. wliv said ad
ministrator should dot be discharged fron 1
Ids administration and receive letters of
dismission on the first Monday in Octoiier
next. IKS. Given nnder my hand and
official signature this July 1st left*.
WARREN LOTT.
Ordinary
of price. (.TCI cents a l*ox. or six ltnxes for
12.501 hy addressing Dr. William*’ Mcdidns
Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
* leaves your blood, and yen*ie
f eared* Testimonial below.
^ I have been treated for aesejal
. debility and chronic rfaernnatum for
V ten yeen without any ralletTtaea
' botuw of yoor medicine ha* cared me.
. s.r. CLASS. waa«otoo.na.
r JUk Yoor Druggist or Merchant For It
f CULLEN & NEWMAN,
—'^£5;
For Barb Wire Cuts, Scratches,
Caddie and Collar Galls, Cracked Heel
Burns, Old Sores, Cuts, Boils, Bruises,
l ilcs and all kinds of inflammation on
ma or beast. Cures Itch and Mange,
ft* Bon, Cut er Bure v£l tint utter tfttr th* dl
t,:a ssjiitL
lie prepared for accidents by keeping it in ye-.. .-
hac«c or Stable. All Druggists sail itoa a guarantee.
:‘1 Cure, I* Pay. Price ay eta. and $noo. If your
Orj^yistdoes not keep it tend us 2$ cts. In po*.
U^e stamps and we will seed It to yon by mall,
_ J .. ryi*, Team..Juu **h.
XVsrMrtI have m4 fwart ieH,»,ile *Nlh« on
for lURMMaa* iUAlte UaH«.ScnlcW«aad Beth Wire Cut
vith perfect tit I (fact ion, aad 1 heartily aewl it to
aJ jSrtry and Stocknrn.
C. B. XRTCXE, Uvery aad Vied Stable.
BABY BURNEO.
• ■ Gfnt ’”2 fn ^~ 1 i? f° —«* m ™>N *— rortcr’a
11.lb. bMno*,■b.lbi. OUl5im, SK*
^X.UWI5.
1,000,000 People Wear
•BEST
IN THE
WORLD.
WpcwEATSJRADEMARKsi
OP COPYRIGHTS. ^
! ‘ can i obtjijk a riTPTt
i ffis&essjst.'astsasjfe;
i ?»■*?” coqcyraag .rateri* *a*a sot
ELECTRIC TELEPHONE
“fteh. thin, the face It it ia 60 loiie
my diseased husband's, on thin the lim-
min in his moat* remoulds me all the
mere ir him. for Fat wild sit an dhrink
phwhisky an sock llmmlns hy the
boor!”—Life.
SoidSy B. H. LEV* BSO. & CO.
THE WAYCROSS HERALD, SATURDAY, ALG- 31, 1895-
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Baking
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
Wealth In MatobeleUnd.
It is not farther from America to Af
rica than it was from Europe to America
BOO years ago, whoa this country was
fettled. It is cot nearly so far. compar
ing steamship time with sailing time.
The facilities for picking up fortunes in
the fcritihh territory in Africa are as
great almost as they were even in Cali
fornia in the fifties.
Mataboleland, the region lately add
ed to the British empire, embraces al
together not less than 600,000 square
miles. It is a magnificent agricultural
land, and it will not be forgotten at the
same time that tho trouble with its na
tive African king arose from the face
that white men wero crowding into its
gold mines so rapidiy that ho became
alarmed, os well ho might have done,
and endeavored to evade agreements bo
hnd mode with the British company.
Balnwayo is tho capital of Matabele-
land, and its population has increased
twelvefold in tho last three months.
White men are pouring into tho country
in a stream. The climate is very toler
able for white men. There are people
now living who will see the heart of
Africa as civilized as Boston, for . in
stance, now is.
Oil tlie whole, why should not Ameri
can fortune hunters go to Mataboleland
and mako their pile? Enough English
men have amassed wealth • in the west
ern regions of this country for Ameri
cans to turn the tables now and see if
Yankees cannot get rich in British ter
ritory.
Tho French have obtained electricity
cheaply and utilised it for agricultural
purposes in a way undiscovered even
by Americans. A pole 40 to 60 feet
high is planted in the ground. On top
row of insulated copper
e collect electricity from
re r.ud r*Ur* it down over
to the ground. The
..<‘t a ;.ocir.&gnetifer&
■ i : i> in the midst of a
ik :. Hurled in the ground
! ;• j.ndia at a depth of
.»r-:x foe?: is a network of
«i wire. This receives the
r-.-i.ii the wire that runs
re scatters it through
tho soil beneath I ho plants. Groat re
sults are claimed us following this
utilization cf electricity in agriculture.
It hunh « up tho sprouting of vegetables
and increases the yield 50 per cent. It
increases also tho flavor, richness and
juiciness of fruits. It is said that an
electric pole CO feet high will do as
much for fruits and vegetables us ten
times its cost in fertilizers could ac
complish.
n:.w/ r.
gnlY!.’
elcctr;
down ■
What an admirable recipe for happi
ness to know how to do without things!
—Victor Jacquemont.
The /ool is always dead rare that his
own way of doing things is the best, if
not the only way, but the wise man
wonders if there isn’t a bettor way than
the one he has adopted.
Nervous Prostration.
ThU Dread Dlimn I* Vow Snccesafully
Treated. Science Ucllcvre In Food
Rather Thn Stimulation.
From the Washington, D. G, Star.
deplorable condition of the hu-
Public Spirit In Rural Districts.
The editor of Tho Now England Mag
azine) exhorts country neighborhoods to
wako up and make tho landscape beau
tiful, tho people wise, handsome and
public spirited. Among other agents to
this end noue is more powerful than the
public school, which ought to -turn out
every year noble, intelligent young citi
zens. Tho editor says:
Two Ihini;, imutt tend to «h. common ! £1, '•>>*
•rhool. at tbu country IwtU-r nurwrlow In tho , "Xl™ cr ‘ , .r 1 “P"" > «tt
ono on«-. of public Foirit wcl, in tho other, of | I “' °
inl.To.t in oountry Ilf.—tin. extension of the _ to J^’ e ' fn *he power to
•truly of onr national history and of civil gov | *® ve * Ih**th would be welcome, nutalnv! it
eminent »ral the new ettention which i« hems ! "»* >mtll the cup of suffering is full lo
rwhi to neture .tnJieiu Too little htw been | ^^ih^Jurh WJwenthe expenene.
country Hchool* In tbo past to
man body cun lie conceived tbnn tin . .
nervous prostration, when every nerve in the
system seem* to vie with the others to make
you miserable, when even the sun.-hine irri
tate* you, when the happy prattle of the child
distracts the loving parent, when life ia
haunted bv a constant foreliodiug, when the
i smoking.
is try hoy nnd girl tin* benutiful
secret* of their environment. Eynmutli
mouthy and
ml thiit Into
senriti'
cofhranicnahlp with the Ltirdu and the
and have m4«h> naturalists of some, lint every
country child ►hould lm taught enough of bo
Kilogy, of thi* science of the
tku things that grow In It. of plant life and
animal life, to make hi* world more eloquent
ucd didactic ami beckoning than it t.suuJiy i*.
\Ti\wish that every n.untry scImkiIIi
of Mr. W. Ilenrich Robb, No. Mifl New Jer-
*ey Avenue, Northwest, whose story is best
told in his Awn word*.
“For a long time.” said Mr. Rol»b, “I
suficred horribly with nervous prostration,
and tried many physician* a ml various
highly recommended r* medic* without ox-
',1 j periencing the slightest benefit. Last hill
j my business called me to 1‘ittsburg, l*a., ami
while there my mother, who remaimd in
Washington, heard through a friend of some
remarkable cure* made by Dr. Williams'
Pink Pill*, and wrote recommending that I
should try them. To please my mother, f.nd
not with any great expectations that they
would do me any good, 1 procured a box.
At thi* time nnd tor n long time prev
eondition vm* most deploral 'lo. >1 y j
And each ward In the city will bo represented
then
By lovely alderwomen and cot horrid nider-
When Maria Jano Is mayor, none but ladies
1 U> their bloomer uniform* they’ll look
very swevt
The gang to be arrested will consider it a treat.
The store* will be compelled to have a bargain
sale each day.
And for chewing gum and soda you will not
trifling ailment*.
Dr. William** Pink Pills are sold bv all
dealer*, or will be sent post paid on receipt
Fat Boy—Give me a bathing suit
Bathing Master (aside)—Johnnie, ru
across to the circus and borrow art ele
phant cover, quick.—Philadelphia In
quirer.
turn was most deplorable. Jly appetite
. one. I could not walk alone, and hnd
1 attempted to do so would have fallen.
Afler 1 had taken the pill* I felt stronger
than I hnd for ninny months. After the first
box of pill* had l*ern used bv me my pppe-
tile returned and 1 wn* alile to cut like a
horse. My leg* which hud seemed to rue like
wooden less, and my body which was fast
becoming iu the *r.me condition recovered
their normal condition after the use of Pink
Pills."
In cases of this kit*’ '• rvaet in the capacity
of n food, nourishing the : ■ r-.r* nnd creating
new blood and tissue. It is to the weakened
# nerve* what bread and beef are to the mils-
' cular system. It supplies tlu m all th«
properties necessary to build them op,
strengthen them unu mtore them to a vigor-
«. healthy condition.
Thi* is undoubtedly the real secret of tho
marvelous ]N>wer of Dr. Williams' rink
i, emaciated people who
Pills. Pnle.i _
take them quickly pain a fresh* healthful
color. Their flesh and muscle* Income firm
and solid. No medicine alone will produce
this result. It reouirec food—Mood-creat-
ing. health-giving rood, and Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills supply exactly this require
ment. No l>ettcr proof of this could l*
offered ilinn that disease* which heretofore
nave been supposed to be incurable, such as
loeoraotor ataxia and paralysis succumb to
* dcrftil remedy as readily us the moat
Oklahoma Gold.
What has become of the Oklahoma
gold boom? A month ago there were ex
traordinary reports concerning it We
were told that in the western port of tbo
territory, particularly among the hills
about tho head waters of Boggy and
Turkey creeks, a short distance south
west of Arapahoe, immense gold finds
had been made. It was no uncommon
thing fer men to be walking about
Guthrie with “shot sacks*’ full of the
precious yellow uast The town of Arap
ahoe was almost deserted at one time,
and r.t the mining camps a new town
called Golden had been started, and in
six days hnd a population of 2,000.
A weirdly interesting fact iu connec
tion with Golden was that cn ono of
i!:o hills nc«*r it a number of skeletons
and the remnants of a long deserted
camp were lonnd. A stone in this old
tamp had on it, rudely cut, the wonts,
“Gold found here iu 1870.” Who were
the ill fated miners that discovered the
Oklahoma gold iu 1870 and then died?
We Ffcall never know probably. But
it is certain that most of thoso who have
made the mad rush to the new gold dig
gings will be as much disappointed as
those lost miners of 1870 were. Perhaps
one out of every hundred will remain
at the diggings and do reasonably well.
The rest will become disgusted and go
away to some other booming place. Then
Golden will settle down to developing
| quietly and normally, liko all tho other
American mining towns. No doubt
i there is money there for those who stick
| to legitimate business. But the board-
| i/:g house keepers and grocers will get
quite as much gold as tho miners da
There never will bo any real peace on
this continent till Canada becomes a
part of tho United States. It was Canada
that made tlie foss about the seal fisher
ies question, and now Canada is trying
to get a part of Alaska away from this
country on the ground that the old line
between Rnssia and British America
was wrongly placed. Tho boundary line
treaty between these two countries was
made in 1825. It has been taken for
granted ever sinco that tho starting
point of Alaska was the Portland chan
nel. Canada contends that from tho de
scription of the surface of the country in
the wording of the treaty tho beginning
should bo, not Portland channel, but
Bekm channel. This will mean giving
np to British America tho entrance tc
the Yukon basin and 150,000 square
miles of rich mineral territory. Surveys
have been carefully made by a joint
British ami American commission to de
cide tho question, and their report is
nearly ready. So that the United States,
too, has a boundary line question to set
tle with Eiioland
5 ESCAPE OF THE PR1SOXKB.
—Texas Siftings.
Why are country people more round
shouldered than city people?
w. r. mcintosh & go.
W AY CROSS, G A.
We are opening the largest and best stock of
Furniture,Carpets, Matting
•RUGS. ETC.
Ever brought to Havcross, and will compete with any
jh or Jr.-4 for Furniture or burial cases promptly
CHEAP COFFINS.
THE SECURITY MUTUAL LIFE
&SS0&I&TI0H OF NEW YORK.
JEWIS’iIniaCalf
Shees.
TlegantStyle
Rates'One-half less th m Old
Line Co.’s—Its Proportion
from Which to Pay Death
Losses is Greater than Any
Company in Existance.
It has the largest cash surplus in pro
portion to the amount of insurance in
force of any Co-operative Life Insurance
Company, and exceeding that of nearly
all the Old Line Companies.
It 1ms not and never had a death claim
due and unpaid.
It has never lost a dollar by specula
tion, peculation, or bad management.
Its system is endorsed by Actuaries
and Statisticians as being scientifically
correct.
Its policies contain uo restrications ou
travel; they are non-forfeitable after live
years, incontestable afler two years, they
provide for extended insurance, addition
of surplus to face of Policy, and large
cash surrender values.
Its expenses of management are limit
ed, and it is the only Company that after
a term of years releases its policy holies
from further regular payments.
Its death rate has been lower, its ex
pens** of management less, and it* tic
cumulation* of policy holders’ *urp!u
larger htm that of any other com pan;
for the same time in business.
For further information address
W. F. I'e:;mman A Co.,
Gea’l. Agents fur tlie ?jtar j of Go.,
It rtood the Test.
A public writer had a partition wall
fixed up In Ids study and ordered tho car
penter to mako it. In such u way that no
sound could jienctrftte through it.
The l-.-st thing will lie to fill It in with
shavings,” k.W\ the man. and set to work.
When ho had finished, his employer went
nnd stood on one stile of the partition nnd
called '
other side:
“Do you hear me, Jantke?”
“No, sir!” was tho prompt reply.—Tag-
Simplicity of f
Student—I learn that there are cases in
which people have had from childhood an
uncontrollable desire to eat soap. What is
tho cause of that?
Learned Professor—They aro victims of
sappossonianla.
Student—U m! What does sappessomanin
mean?
Learned Professor—A desire to eat soap.
—New York Weekly.
He Knew His Relatives.
A well known Brooklyn contractor who
died recently came from a family of Irish
men noted for their quarrelsome' disposi
tions. Ills lawyer was somowhnt sur
prised when lie read his will to come across
a clause reading:
“If my relatives fight over this will
when I am dead, I will writo a codicil that
will make their heads swim.”—New York
Journal.
Had 'Em nnd Knew It.
“Ha, ha, ha, ha!” laughed tho great de
tective. “I have them now.”
For five days he had l>een on the trail
and had neither eaten nor slept.
He hnd done nothing but drink.
Under the circumstances his joyous as
sertion that he hnd 'em bore the Simili
tude of verity.—Ir>d!ut:apclis Journal.
Solid heather.
Mr. Yonnglove—These are very hard
times, my love, and you will have to
reduce your dressmaker’s bilL
Mrs. Younglovo—That’s as inconsist
ent as men are! You act just as if I
made out the bills.—Once a Week.
If you wear a moderate priced Men’s
Shoe, why not get great valuo for little
money?
Lewis* §?.60 Ima Calf Shoes are what
you want. Made of solid leather, with
Lewis* Cork-Filled Soles, they are tho
most comfortablo shoes known for all
sorts of weather. Stylish, too, and
wonderful wearers.
See that you get Lewis’ Ima Calf Shoes.
See what a bargain!
Your dealer knows all abfcut the value,
for he cells them. 1
Application for Leave to Sell.
To all wlmm it may concern:—Thomas
1'eueh. administrator ofJohamiht'onmhnjn.
deceased, has in due form applied to the un
dersigned fur leave to sell railroad stock
belonging to the e*mte of said deceased,
application w ill be beard on the first
Monday in Atigu:
July Ir!©.
13-1-t-w
1th dav of
WAKF.EN LOTT
Ordinary.
Application for Letters of DbniLs o >•
GEORGIA—Ware County:
, Don’t Limp
! Through Life
racked by Rheumatic pains. It
handicaps your whole career.
Of course you wouldn’t if you ^
could help it—and you can.
goes straight to the Liver, where ^
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Dys- ’
f Headache in| i
High Grade Tobacco
ABSOLUTELY PURE
PORTER’S
A.-TlSEPTiG HEUG OIL
■khMMHImHI