Weekly edition of the Waycross evening herald. (Waycross, Ga.) 190?-1908, October 01, 1904, Image 3

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County Commissioner’s Proceedings, AUGUST TEBVJ, 1904 Ware County C <mtuU«i<>oer« in rei;u'.-«r **•’« iju ml* AugJ»t Members present W«iren L*»it; W A Cm* , l> H Benut-U sod l> * The minutes » l Ju'y uieetlug oetng tuiopted k« r ad. t tie tul.u.iing bi« dertd paid J C Reynolds, Judge city court salary M M Johnson, county phjaician • I ary City oi Waycro*«, water rent July 1st to Oct M H 4 W B D e# Co, books tor clerk Southern Bell Telegraph and Telephone Co, pboue rent J.ily 1 t • ie»t Waycros* Hera<d, printing E J Berry, clerk co, com. and Ice ~ Warren Lott, Ireight on disinfecant Lott A Jones, livery lee- tor Ju y 5 F Miller, Sheriff, fee* as per Mil rend-red tor Ju y Warren Lott, ordinary, liree lunacy trl«u Warren Lott, 3 days as c iuntv cmi’r and ca«b W A Cason, 7 dayarervice as c-iuuty c »ui.noaio ter D H Bennett, 8 da>s service as countv c .mniis-ioner D CCarroichsel, 7 days service as c.unty counuiwJ<»atr Jackson Grimes, inquc-i over bodv oi Jim Butter H J Jackson, painting died and j >il r«*>l 70 *qume» J W Adams A Co, merchandise lor j til A J Jordan, advanced W A Davis, st »«*■'•* witness **i y oyirt 6 F < filer, sherifl, 2 days service on county com uUsiouen M L Moore, purchase Mai ion Block. ROAD BILLS $.06 25.00 12 35 13 60 1.1 50 4 20 24 00 277 87 l.Uo • 7 70 14 i 16 00 14 0" MOu 1UO0 2.9" 2 00 6 oO 1657 50 R D Cason, salary aa guard A A Walden, merchandise for camp D C Carmichael, groceries for camp Dan Aldridge, merchandise for camp W H Roberts, salary as superintendent and cash J C McFoy, salary aa guard and cash P N Harley, hardware for camp Seals Pharmacy, drus;s W B James, vegetables, _ 8 F Miller, sheriff city court i.dicers cost as per hill J W Adam* A Co, laid orders as per bill Manor Trading Co, groceries tor camp B O James, groceries for camp Arnold A Walden, balance on bridge Armour Packing Co, 1 box meat Gray Lumber Co, lumher Armour Packing Co, 1 box meat J~T McGee, shoeing mules B H Thomas, 1 set harn :ss x Western Meat Market, beef for camp Frank O'Bright, guarding convicts Watt Hardware Co, hardware for camp Pauper bills for August No further business commissioner adjourned. 25 00 4 37 10.15 8 0" THE DAQUERREOTYPE. ^0.0U 45 00 15 85 2 15 289 30 66 85 93 25 22 72 107 00 53.81 ' 21 35 48 1 ; oo 11 00 75 15 46 6 79 224 00 C e.-kj Spot Cash. $28.00 Celebrated Auburn One-Horse Wagon. l|xl| Auburn one-horse waxons $28. 1U1! Auburn one-horte wagons $28 Our goods are made to order by first-class manufac turers. Open *nd top Bug- —H,rn««i mode^to g 1 **- ord.rj' Cross-Tie' and ^ Wood Wagons Turpentine wagons Light farm wagons Light and Heavy Team Collars. J. A. JONES, Waycross JGa. _ ^ ^--lA • Where Are You Going My pretty maid? I’m going to Tybee, Sir she said. And that’s the place where the people are going this year to have a good time. HOTEL TYBEE With its many attractions, its fine orchestra, its splendid bathing and its excellent cuisine is the most popular seaside resort on the South At lantic Coast. Rates, $2.50 per itv: $12.50 and fi 5 00 per’week. , ^ THE PULASKI HOUSE, 1 Is tlu .float popular place in Savannah and should be yoiir^headqnar* II ten wti*n ln(the city. WRITEiKOR ILLUSTRATED BOOKLET. * . - CHAS. F. GRAHAM. Prop. T i+********+<W***^****+*i± Harper McDonald ys. Lon a Linton'Me*. Donald, libel for divorce. In Wire Superior court, Nov. Term, 1904 Thu defendant, Lona Linton McDon* aid, is hereby requlccd to appear at the November term, next, of said court, or the first Monday id November, to ans wer plaintiffs libel for divorce. In de fault of such appearance, the court will proceed as to justice shall apper tain. Witness, the Honorable T. A. Parker, judge of said court, tbit 30 day of September,-1904. E. J. BERRY. Clerk. / THU CHRISTIAN churches >t Cod- stantlnople, Turkey, and Yokahoma, Japan, have long used the Longman A h Martinez Points for painting their febnreh-s. ' Liberal contributions of L* A M. Paint will be given for such purpose wherever a church it located. F M Scofield Harris Spring*. S. C, writes "I painted oar old homestead with L. A twenty aix years ago. Not painted since; rooks better that} houses pafntedio »he last four years. W B Barr, Charleston, W Va.. write*: * Paiuted Frankenburg block with LA II shows 'better than any buildUgt here bare ever done; stands out as thoupb varnished, and actual coat of paint was leas than $1.80 per gallon. Wears and coyer* like gold. These celebrated paints are told by the P. N. Harley Hard war eCa Syrup Barrels The Oak. Cypress and Cum -OF — The Cannon Company Odd notions Concerning Che Proeeso When It Was How. Many amusing remarks were made ut the doors of daguerreotype galleries when they were first opened In this country. A small frame containing a dozen specimens would draw a croud. One man would undertake to describe bow they were made. "Yon look in the machine, and tbe picture comes—if you look long enough." Another would say: "It Is not so much tbe looking that does It Tbe sun burns it In If you keep still." Another made It all very plujn by stating. '"The plate Is a look ing gluss. and when you sit In front of it your sbi.dow sticks on tbe plate." How It cnuie about was never known, but tbe impression became (eneral that the sitter must not wink. No operator of intelligence ever told the sitter not to wink, for tbe effort to refrain would have given tbe eye an unnatural expression. We found It s duty to tell tbe sitter to wink aa usual: that .natural winking did uot qffect tbe picture. Even then It was not always understood. One old lady jumped out of tbe chair before a sitting was balf over, raising both bauds and exclaim ing: "Stop It stop itl l winked!" Another remnrkable fact was that sitters seldom acknowledged tbelr own likenesses. "All good but mine," was tbe common decision. An aged couple after examining tbelr pictures came to this conclusion, "Marla, yours Is per fect but this does not look like me/ But tbe old lady answered, "Jeems. yours is as natural as life, but mine Is a failure." After a longer consultation tbe old gentleman said, "Wo must know each other better than we know ourselrea." At one time when Daniel Webster sat for u daguerreotype tbe finished picture was held before him. Turning away, be said: "l am not to judge of my own looks. -- It Is for you to judge, and you must decide whether the work Is worthy of your repute tlon."—A. Bogurdus In Century. MISTAKE6 IN LIFE. Brooding Over Them la Caeloi Unprofitable Work. One of tbe most unprofitable ways of spending time Is tbe practice, to wbleb many persons are addicted, of brooding over the mistakes one bns made In life und thinking what be might have been or achieved If he bad not done at certain times just what be did do. Almost every unsuccessful man In looking over his past career is Inclined to think that It would have been wholly different but for certain ■lips and blunders—certain hasty, considered acts Into which be was be trayed almost unconsciously and with out a suspicion of their consequences. As be thinks of all tbe good things of this world—honor, position, power and Influence—of which he has been deprived In some mysterious, Inexplica ble' way, bo has no patience with'him self, and aa It la painful and humiliat ing to dwell long upon one’a own fol Ilea It la fortunate If he doestuot im plicate othera-frlenda and relativea- io bla. disappointments. Perhaps, aa education hal never been free from mJ*ttk&—mistakes Indeed of, every kind—be Imputes tbo blame to hia early training, lo which bablta of thor oughness and accuracy or. again, of self reliance and Independence of thought may not have been Implant* ed. Perhaps a calling was chosen for him by Ala parents without regard to Via peculiar talents or tastes and pref erences, or If he was allowed to choose for himself It was when bla Judgment waa Immature and unfit for the respon sibility. Tbe result waa that tbe square man got Into tbe round bote or tbe tri angular man got Into tbo square bole or the round man squeezed himself Into *he triangular bole.—Success. A Hard Critic. A clergyman was rebuked by one of tbo ruling elders for sauntering on tbe Sunday along tbe hillside above tbe manse. Tbe clergyman took tbe re buke in good part, but tried to show tbe remonstrant that the action of wbleb be complained was Innocent and lawful, and be was about to cite the famous example of a Sabbath walk, with tbe phfcklug of the earn of corn, set forth In*1110 gospels, when be was Interrupted with tbe remark, “Ou aye, sir, I ken weel what you mean to ■ay, but Tor my palrt I line nefer tbocht the better o' them for breakln* tbe Hawbbatb." — Gclkle’a "Scotch Rem Iniscences." The Kancaro* Rat. One of tbe queerest little animals of tbe antipodean wilds of tbo paradox ical continent of Australia Is a little zoological oddity wbleb tbo naturalists have called tbo kangaroo rat It av erages no larger than the common ro dent of tbe Norway variety, but la a miniature kangaroo In every respect Its mode of locomotion la precisely'tbs same aa that of Msctopua glganteus. Besides this, tbe female carries Its young In pouches which nature baa provided for that purpose and In many other respects imitates tbo bablta and characteristics of Its gigantic ralativa. GASH GIVEN AWAY to Users of In Addition to the Regular Free Premiums Oo. "■"SKS"®,—- Like & Check Like This? W§ HlVI ftwardld $20000 00 ? alh to ^ on "“r*! 0 our Grant World's Fair Contest— 2139 people get checks, 2139 more will get them In the Presidential Vote Contest Five Lion-Head, cut from Lion Coffee Packages and a a-cent stamp entitle you (In addition to the regular free premiums) to one vote. The a-cent stamp cov ers our acknowledgment to you that your estimate Is recorded. You can send aa many estl mates os desired. What will he the total popular vote cast for President (votes (or all can. dldstes combined) at the election November 8,1904? d In 1900 election, 13,959,653 people voted for President. For nearest correct esti mate, received In Woolsop Spice Com pany's office, Toledo, O., on or before November S, 1904, wo wilt give first prize' for the nearest correct estimate, second prize to the next nearest, etc., , as follows: Orand First Prlia of S5,D00.00 will be awarded to the one who la nearest correct on both our World’s Fair and Presi dential Vote Conteata. 1 rtrst Mia »3,B00.«o 1 second Prise 1,000.00 2 Prises—$000.00 each * O Prises— 200.00 " 10 Prlsee— 100.00 " 20 Prises— 60.00 " 50 Prises- 20.00 1.000.00 260 Prises-' 10.00 1,000.00 0.00 2,500.00 9,000.00 TOTAL, 120,000.00 How Would Your Name Look on One of These Checks? Everybody uses coffee. If you will i -. ..... LION COFFEE long enough to get i other such value for the money. Then you will take r “ .. ill aswe—w‘"- tybody uses cofl convinced there is . we are using our advertising money so that both of us—yon as wel WE GIVE BOTH FREE PREMIUM8 AND CA8H PRIZES Complete Detailed Particulars In Every Package of LION COFFEE WOOLSON SPICE CO., (CONTEST DEP’T.) TOLEDO, OHIO. A POSITIVE GUARANTEE. Signed by deals Pharmacy Who Agree to Return Your MoneyJJ “TIf Dr- Oarlatedt’s German Liver Powder Fails to Cure You. UUARANTEK; I hereby agr«t* to refund tie money paid for t)r. CarLteadt'* German Liver Powder on t’he return of the empty bottles, the purchaser stating it han failed to relieve and cure him of any of the* diseases for which it ia recommended. This guarantee cov ers the uso of a $1 bottle or four 25c bottles or two months' treatmen Signed: SMJojr Dr. Carlstedt's tier man Liver Powder a rt wonderful remedy, u prescription utted for over fifty years by an eminent German physician in hie practice both In Europe and thin country and sold by thousand* of drug(;i*l-« all over the world, tin mildly natural are the of-- oQh's remedy that all K'dney and Liver trouble* give wiy toporfect health. It cures tbo worst cases und many have been cured \vb » had tried eveiy known remec v. Symptom* of Liver Complaint: Dys pepsia. indigestion rheumatism, gout, HKtn eruptions, sallowuess, constipa tion. <Jizzin<*«a. vertigo,beadach piles, pain in thd back, melancholy, bad breath, furry tongue, horrid taste, un pleasant dream*, insnmonia, undue slceplnesvnausea. flatulence,*welling of the abdomen, colickv condition of the bowels, pain snd soreness in the stomach. liver spots on the skin, loss of memory. Impaired vitalitv.dfre fore- boding** lack of energy, Indfeisioo, crankiness, blood poisoning, nervous 1 of Cairo and Quitman, Ga and Monticello. Fla. Hb PMcttg to. A«n'«, Wavcmao. Go. Judge Sweat recently returned’ from tbe Rome re-onion of Con federate veterans,and say a it waa the finest ever held ib tbe state Mo R*on For Doubt. "Oh, my, yea, he’s Away op Id Shake speare." * Is be? I shouldn't have guessed that hp had ever read • line of Shake: speare." "That’s strange. Haven't yon noticed that every little while be says In sooth?* "-Chicago RecOrd-Herald. A Little laelineA to tt Btasooll. Towns—There’s Dotting 1 hats so much as a lazy did. Browne—Well, I with there were more of thank Town# —Too do? Browne-Sure. Tbs more lazy men there are the leee competition we'd hart lo bnafns— —Philadelphia pesN, falling hair—oh, there are lot* of them and each one emphasizes the importance of having Dr. C'arlttedt’s German Liver Powder constantly with 1n reach It is the right thing at the right time, aure and certain in effect, pleasant a d perfect In action. For vour own sake, don't neglect any of the symptom* of liver disorder or the complaint will become chrome and the ultimate, after untold suffer* inn*, is DEATH Tbe Seals Pharmacy pan tell you all about Dr. Carlstedt’s German Liver Powder; it has cored many of their customers who are recommending It to their inende. Better than testimonials lathe enars antee under which Dr. Carlstedt's German Liver Powder la sold. If It does not relieve and core von It will coat yon nothing, so go at once and procure the remedy and take along this guarantee. Atlantic & Blnniiiam naliwag company Time Table Effective July 24th,11904, OA.«TOniA Bttntk ,,Tht Hind Vw H« ll«n BwtM Quickest and best line to Macon, At- -lanta, St Louia and ail points West. Finest equipment in the South. Coach es Electric Lighted, with Fans in sum mer and Steam Heat in winter, making travel comfortable and easy. Tickets on sale to all points in the United States. If you tre contemplating a trip, ask our agent lot information—we may be able to save you money and time. . H. C. McFADDEN, R. B. POLLARD, Ticket ket Agt. General Passenger Agent, J, M, WHITSlTT, Freight Agt, ' Trains Ln/} aycross 8:30 a m*s:oo p m Daily. Trains Arrive aycross 11:15 am*6:35 pm 'iiirmiH iwinn 11