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What Nerve Cerries
have done for others
they will do
for you.
lv%i \T &
mQOR
OP 15TH DAY. //.,.
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A positive cure for all Weaknesses, Nervousness,
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;; ;,v V. urnguin v.e will :-:^nd them
• .. lb:;'! i ;*t of pr •!. plain wrap-
. A Uii- -s all mail orders to
3isJ>£i’A^ co., czck'-inusuz.o*
in Waynesboro by W hitch ka i) & Co.
■ m £
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CO ®
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5 £ tn
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COPPER
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Vs.P? * • : tlSVY-tAV
Dealer in
OLD MONONGAHELA WHISKIES,
1*08 Broad Street,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
Largest Liquor House in the
South. Choice Brandies, Wines,
Gins, Rum, and Liquors of every
description. Mailorders j eceive
prompt attention.
oct7,’03—am
S BAKING
POWDER.
lb.
1 lb. 25c.; \ lb. 15c.;
10c. All the old 50c. per
lb. Baking Powders were
made and priced 30 years
igo when materials were just
:wice their present prices.
But you still pay their mak
ers 50c. a pound.
The price of Eagle is based
upon price of materials to
day. It competes only with
the 50c. powders,
f it is not as good as any
me of them, then don’t
ise it. A 10c. can experi-
nent will convince you.
[Jggp For sale by
E. C. LANIER.
mayl2,’94—
H. J. rULLBEIGIIT,
^Attorney at Law,
WAYNESBORO, GEORGIA,
OFFICK—With Hon. W. II. Davis. Will
practice in all the Courts of this and adjoiu-
ng counties. mayl2,’9I—by
C. D.Perkins,D.D.S.
606 Broad Street,
AUGUSTA, - - - GEORGIA
Opposite Augusta Hotel. nov9,88—
AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF AN IDEA.
BY BARRY PAIN.
[COPYRIGHT. 1894.1
HGLLEYiVlA^'S jgfS mg
Coin pound iLlAiHU
Will cure any case of Horse Colic
Under the Sun!
Worth it- Weight in Gold farmer'’
Of’coarse7 knew from fhc lirst that
I was exceedingly good, but Sill! it is
very pleasant to have it acknowledged.
My success is a joy to me: it is also a joy
to Birman—and this is really terrible—
to lion. Earaley Travers Wylrnot.
For in this latter I fear the reaction.
Letters, forwarded by the secret hand
of llirman, have come to him from tae
>ffiee of the Cosmopolitan. For many
editors have been anxious to com
municate with the author of “Ellen,*
care of the Cosmopolitan. He has
answered none of them, d et, just for
a minute, he has hesitated. At this
time he carefully abstains from any
thought of Maud; if such a thought
arises, he puts it out of his head again
feverishly. That is the trouble—ho
dare not think about Maud.
He starts from his chair, and paces
the room slowly in utter agony; his
brows are contracted; his eyes ache;
sometimes his hands close convulsive
ly: sometimes he draws a deep breath,
like one who is enduring a torture that
kills.
It is the reaction. It began yester
day.
Yesterday he noticed that he felt
uneasy Whenever he looked at the lit
tle oil painting of Maud that hung
above his mantel-piece. lie thought
that must be because the portrait did
no true justice to her, or because it dis
tressed him that any other eyes but his
own should see Maud's picture. Dur
ing the period of joy in the funny suc
cessful story that he wrote on the night
that Maud was buried, lie had been
ready with shoals of euphemistic cheer
ful arguments to prove that he was act
ing tinely. Yet, as a matter of fact,
the uneasiness that he felt arose from
a kind of fear. He decided to lock the
portrait away with her letters in the
bureau. As he was doing so, his eye
fell on the first note that lie had ever
received from Maud—merely an invita
tion to dinner, written to save her
mother the trouble, written in shy,
formal language, and commencing
with “Dear Mr. Wylrnot.” An impulse
seized him to look again, by way of
contrast, at the last letter that he had
ever had from her. It was written in
peneil, just at the beginning of Maud's
sudden and fatal illness. It began
thus:
‘•They tell nia I am very. Ill, Eardloy, and
they won't let me write more than jast a little
letter. They say that they will send you a
longer letter themselves all about the Illness.
Oh. my poor dear one, I must tell yo i I I got it
out of the doctors that they think I am going
to die perhaps. But I'm not! You’ve made my
life so sweet that I won’t leave it. I can't die
and be taken away from you. Do not bo do-
snairing. my lover; doctors so often make mis
takes, you know, and I am sure that I shall
get hotter. How could I die when you've made
living so well worth while? Oh. den- lover, did
any man ever love so finely and nobly as you!
I don't deserve you—no, I don't.”
The letter shook in Eardley's trem
bling hand. It was with difficulty
that he read on:
“I cried so much last night, and you weren't
there to comfort me, and I was so lonely.
Why—”
He had to stop there. His throat
moved involuntarily, and he was on
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MoNORRILL. Bascom—It. M. WILLIAM
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BUXTON <fc GODBEE. Waynesboro—P. L.
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rAIITIDN / We bought the formula and
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spurious and untrue. And any one selling
Holleyman’s Elixir without our label will by
prosecuted.
The Howard & WiHet Drug Co.,
Manufacturers,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
jan27,’94
THE IDEA TAKES POSSESSION OF WYI.MOT.
the verge of sobbing. Moving slowly
and quietly, he put the letter back in
the bureau and the portrait back in its
place on the wall. He sat down in
front of the portrait and gazed at it—
a pretty, yellow-haired girl with
mournful eyes, who had loved him
well and thought him noble. And God
had taken her and left him to the com
position of an intensely humorous story.
He had once the belief that he was a
man of feeling and honor, and he has
now'lost the belief and he cannot live
without it. Late at night he goes out.
He goes down to the Embankment with
the intention of killing himself.
He does not do it, because he arrives
there just in timo to stop another man
from killing himself. The other man,
a stranger to Wylrnot, is a young man
with sandy hair—to-wit, Mr. Albert
Weeks.
“I think,” says Wylrnot, speaking
firmly, but with a curious smile on his
face, “you had better come back with
mo to my rooms and talk this over.” lie
stops a passing hansom.
“What’s it got to do with you?” Weeks
begins.
“You happen to have saved my life.”
‘‘That’s a lie. You saved mine, though
I didn’t want your damned interfer
ence. You pulled me back as I was on
the parapet. What do you mean by
saying I saved your life?”
“Ah!” Wylrnot says, v/ith tho same
dreary smile, “that is what I want you
to come and talk about. I also had in
tended to commit suicide. Surely that
is sufficient introduction. Come now;
get into the cab.”
At Wylmot’s chambers the servant
with an anxious expression on his face,
let them in. It vanished as he saw
Wylrnot. Ho had been nervous about
his master, and he was glad to see him
no longer alone and looking in better
spirits.
Albert Weeks felt mazed and wan
dering were tho events of the last few
days that had driven him to despera
tion unreal, or was this unreal? The
two men had drawn their chairs up in
front of the fire. Albert Weeks sipped
the fragrant coffee and blinked his
ej'es; he was in a kind of dream.
Through it he heard Wylrnot speaking.
‘‘Yes, if it had not been for you I
should have drowned myself to-night.
The sight of another man on the verge
of committing exactly the same act
suddenly showed me that suicide was
running away. One should not run
away. It is not brave, though brave
men have done it through sudden panic.
You have placed me under a very great
obligation to you.”
Weeks shook his head. “You saved
me, too.”
“Xo, no, I saved you from an isolated
act. You saved me from an entirely
wrong principle. I do not know wheth
er I make myself clear. But I feel the
obligation deeply, and I will speak of it
again afterwards. In the meantime you
should know my name." He handed
Weeks a card.
Weeks glanced at it and said: “1
have no card, but my name is Albert
Weeks, and I used to live at No. 23, Har
riet Terrace, Fulham. I was a journal
ist. I failed. I used to be on the Inner
Circle, but I got kicked oif. Do you
know the Inner Circle?”
“I've seen the posters, but I cannot
say that I ever read It.”
“It’s nothing much to read, but it
was all I had to live on. I'm married,
with children. It was very difficult to
get along. Sometimes I got a short
thing taken elsewhere, not often. I
borrowed a little money on my furni
ture. When I got kicked off the
Inner Circle I couldn't pay the interest
due, and so the Jew r took the furniture.
My wife and the children have gone to
her married sister—a Mrs. Warboys.
She wouldn't have me, and she grudges
the shelter that she gives my wife and
children; they’ll come to the work-
house. I haven't lived anywhere the
last two days. To-night I sold the last
thing I had. It was my mother's wed-
ding-riiig. I thought I'd buy myself a
good dinner before I died.”
“Then why didn’t you.”
“Oh, I’d got into the habit of giving
my wife anything that I happened to
make, so I went into a post office and
sent it off to her without thinking.”
“Go on,” said Wylrnot.
“Well, there wasn’t much more. In
the letter sent from the post office I
told her I had a berth to go abroad, and
if I could make anything I would send
it. I’ve cut my name off the linen. If
I’d once got into the river, there would
lhave been nothing to identify me by.
So she’d have got used gradually to be
ing without me. And her married sis
ter would have felt she’d more claim
for support if she had no husband.
“Now, I must tell you about myself.”
“Well, of course, I know a little
about you. I've seen signed things by
you in the Cosmopolitan. I was never
one of the lucky ones—they wouldn’t
take me on the swell magazines,”
“You live in these comfortable cham
bers in perfect luxury, with a butler
and everything. You can get your
stuff taken by the very best papers. I
don’t say that you’ve made a real hit,
like the man that wrote ‘Ellen,’ but
you must be good to get into the Cos
mopolitan.”
“It's so much better, you know,
Weeks, to bo a good man than to be a
good author. I had done a disgrace
ful thing. It did not involve public
disgrace; it was not, in tho eyes of the
law, an offense at all. But it took
away my self-respect, and I did not feel
as if I could live without it. I would
rather not speak of the details,”
“Certainly not,” said Weeks.
“Now I want to talk over some plans
for yon, but I must first write a letter.
Will you excuse me?” The letter was
soon written, and given to Francis to
post.
“Now, then,” said Wylrnot, standing
before the fire, “as we have finished
cur wine we will smoke. You may
possibly like these cigars. As I said
before, without intending it, you have
placed me under a very great obli
gation. I feel sure that you, as
gentleman, will understand that a gen
tleman does not like to be left in that
position. As some slight acknowledg
ment of the great good you have done
me I have just sent instructions to my
solicitors by which you will, on my de
cease, receive a legacy of one thousand
pounds. You want money now, and 1
want to 'give you it, but, of course,
you would not consent to the humilia
tion of receiving a present of money.
A legacy is a different matter, and one
can take a legacy."
“I—I do not know how to thank you,”
said Weeks. “I could not, of course,
have accepted a present of money.”
“Now, I must tell you my plans for
you. You love your wife?”
“She and the children are—well,
they’re naturally the principal thing."
“Now, it Is quite evident to mo that
it is your duty to take them into the
country for a holiday. You look over
worked.”
“Oh, I worked pretty hard, but it
didn't oome t-o anything. 1 failed.”
“Very likely from overwork. Your
wife and children, too, will want a
change. You must be away at least
two months. When you come back, I
will give you a letter to the editor ol
tho Cosmopolitan; he will do, I may
say, a good deal for me. If you can
writo, he will let you write. If not, he
will find some other reinuner:: oc
cupation for you. And, I think, you
would probably like to discharge any
pecuniary obligation that you may he
under to Mrs. War hoys.”
“I should. But it Is impossible.
There Is no money.”
“Oh, some arrangement can easily lie
made. Let me see. Why not. horro^v
a hundred from me, giving me your I.
O. U.?
“Stop,” said Weeks; “it doesn’t take
mein. You’re giving me money; I take it
with gratitude. You’ve saved my life,
and you’ve made it possible for me to
go on living. And you’ve done it all
so kindly, treating me as an equal, and
no one’s been like tnis to me for a long
time—and, damn it, f can’t even speak
about it!” He rose and turned to the
window with a sob in his throat.
Albert Weeks holds a sub-editorial
post on the Cosmopolitan now. He has
a very comfortable little flat in South
Kensington. Wylrnot did his best to
live without self-respect. 11c lasted a
few years, wearing himself out with
work. He died of something -quite
commonplace.
NEW AN£> BRIGHT.
. “She is a great favorite with the
male sex.” “Yes.” “Why doesn’t she
marry?” “Her numerous engagements
prevent her.”—N. Y. Press.
“Can - I see you apart for a moment?”
“You mean alone, don’t you?” “Yes; a
loan—that’s it, exactly. I want to bor
row live.”—Indianapolis Journal.
! Possible Purchaser—“Now, is this
(mule perfectly gentle?” Uncle Mose—
“Well, sah, 1 nebbah knowed him to
bite anybody yit. ” — Cincinnati Trib
une.
Patient—“Can you tell me, doctor,
the cause of baldness?” Physician—
'“Nothing easier, sir. It is due to the
.falling out of the hair. Will yon pay
now, or shall I put it down to your ac
count?”—Boston Transcript.
IIe—“Suppose I should ask your
father if I could marry you. Do vou
think I would stand any chance?”
She—“No. Your case would be hope
less.” He—“Do you think he would
really say no?” She—“Not that, but he j
•would leave it to me.”—Judge.
Serial.
IIuvo you road tlio latest story
Published In the magazine;
Where the hero ami the villain
Keep the Interest hrl.sk and keen?
Well, the hero loves a maiden,
And the maiden loves him true,
While the villain seems to think
He has get a claim there, too.
Then tho maiden and tho villain
Have a stormy, angry scene;
Then the villain tries to kill her.
But the hero steps between.
Then the villain draws a pistol,
But the hero, not perplexed,
Also pulls a seven-shooter—
*****
(To be continued in our next.)
—N. V. World.
MILLIONS IN DIAMONDS.
BEAUTY AND
BUSINESS.
They Will Not Mix Any More Than
Will Oil and Water.
An Instance In Which a Pretty Woman
Stenographer Thoroughly Disorgan
ized a Staid and Methodical
Office Force.
Does a pretty face help the industrial
woman?
That was the question under discus
sion a few nights ago among a party
of men seated at a table on a roof gar
den, and between the sips of ginger alo,
cobblers and punches there were some
pertinent remarks interjected, says
the New York Herald.
“Certainly it does.” argued the young
man, with an air of conviction that
failed to impress anyone but himself.
“Who wants to see an ugly or even
homely face every time he looks tip
from his desk. I don't, and no other
man does, and it's not pleasant to have
one's thoughts broken up when dic
tating letters by a plain, angular type
writer saying: ‘Excuse me, will you
please repeat?’ One can forgive even
that when a pretty face smiles at you
as yon upward gaze.”
“I, too, like bright, attractive wom
en about an ofiiee,” said another. “<-f
course it helps a woman. When did
beauty ever fail to gain a place or fail
to get more salary out of a man?”
This last sentiment was from tho
lips of a man who married his type
writer for love, and not for the beauty
of her face or form.
“Well, I’ll tell you a little experi
ence,” broke in the treasurer of a well-
known bank note company. , “It’s a
good joke on our president, too, and
will illustrate the point i:i question.
We were short-handed in the office
and wanted another stenographer. As
usual, we had examined dozens of
women for the position, but none filled
the bill.
“Finally there appeared a young
woman who would attract attention
anywhere—not that she was dressy,
for her raiment was plain but trim—
but simply by the beauty of her face.
“Now, I am not a believer In beauty
about an office. It has an attractive
force that breeds trouble among tho
men clerks. But she seemed so anx
ious for the place and her references
were so good that I decided to leave
the matter to the president. lie talked
with her, hut, being a careful married
man, had his doubts about tho wisdom
of engaging her, but the pretty face
was too strong for even his conserva
tism.
“So he mumbled: ‘I do like to see n
pretty face, even in business hours,’
and she was engaged and reported next
morning. She was a little slow, but
we thought it was because she was
strange to the office. The second day
there was no improvement and the next
likewise.
“Then camo a rush of correspon
dence. M iss Beauty was foundered.
She failed dismally to do her work,
but neither of us could find it iu his
heart to rebuke her; the pleading eyes
of violet hue set in a face so fair were
safeguards against the well-merited re
proof that a girl of less personal at
traction would have received with
promptitude. But the end came in
about a week. Wo had occasion to
write a letter to a rival concern and at
the same time to a new customer, sub
mitting designs for a very large order.
•‘By this time our bookkeeper was
badly smitten on Miss Beauty and they
were going to some entertainment to
gether. I suppose she was making
eyes at him or he at her. At all events,
she mixed those letters up and we lost
our order and got credit from our rivals
for being grossly careless, all because
two old men had been impressed with
a pre tty face,
“The girl? 0, yes. We gave her a
letter saying she had worked for us,
but you can’t get anything inside that
office now but a plain, matter-of-fact
typewriter. The president wouldn’t
look at Cleopatra if she camo in, and
the bookkeeper—well, he shuts his
eyes when he rides on the elevated for
very fear of beauty.”
Enormous Increase In the Product Sine*
tl:e Discoveries In Africa.
The discovery and working of the
great South African mines has enor
mously increased the production of
diamonds. During the past quarter of
a century, says the New York News,
ten tons of these gems, selling for
6300.000. 000 uncut and for 6000,000,000
after cutting, have been added to the
world’s wealth. This quantity of
stonc-s is twice as great as the sum
total of all that were known to exist
before, the value represented being in
the most concentrated possible form.
A single corporation controls more
than nine-tenths of the world’s output
of diamonds, owning practically the
whole of the mines in South Africa.
Thus it is able to maintain and
regulate prices, restricting the produc
tion so that the supply may not ex
ceed the demand. Up to date it has
placed upon the market about 2.800,000
carats.
During the last year it dug and sold
S 10.000.000 worth of diamonds. During
1S03 diamonds to the value of about
615.000. 000 were imported into this
country. Since 13G8 6175,000,000 worth
of these gems have been brought into
the United States.
The cutting of diamonds is carried on
in the United States by fifteen firms,
employing 150 cutters, cleavers and
polishers. The American public de
mands a much higher quality of cut
ting than is required by European
markets. At the same time less is
paid for the work here than abroad, 62
being considered fair wages [ter diem.
The pioneer cutter on this side of the
water was Henry 1). II. Morse, of Bos
ton. In 1SC-0 he cut the famous Dewey
diamond—the biggest gem of the kind
ever found in this country—which was
dug out of a clay bank near Richmond,
weighing twenty-five carats in the
rough. In his shop was invented the
first diamond-cutting machine, which
made it possible to do the work faster
and with more precision. It has not
been adopted abroad to any great ex
tent as yet. Amsterdam, the greatest
center of diamond cutting, has seventy-
two factories engaged in that industry.
The largest employs 1,000 hands. Next
in importance is Antwerp. London
ranks third. In tho world there are
0,500 cutters of diamonds and 8.00C
dealers. The latter carry in stock
6350.000. 000 worth of diamonds, repre
senting probably one-third of all the
diamonds possessed by human beings
to-day.
to sell narcotics
A PHYSICIAN’S OPINION.
It Fut a Sick Man’s Family to a Great
Deal of Useless Expense.
“There are two things that I will
never do again,” said a physician the
other day. “Commit myself by giving an
opinion in regard to the death of a pa
tient and advancing money to defray
funeral expenses. I swore oft' on these
two things years ago. When I first
started I was so tender-hearted that
every lime I wars asked by the anxious
friends of a patient if I thought death
imminent 1 always responded that tho
patient had a very slight chance to get
well. 1 suppose most physicians err
more in giving opinions as to death
than any other. One ease I had de
termined me never to prognosticate
death again. A member of a prominent
Irish family was very sick with fever.
His relatives asked me candidly what I
thought of the caso. Without knowing
the consequences, I told them he would
die in twenty-four hours. The family
sent for the priest, had him shaved and
even ordered refreshments for the
wake. To my surprise the patient per
sisted in getting well, which so disap
pointed his friends that they never for
gave me, and never have sent for me
since, thinking I did not understand
my business.”
Locusts in Mada^scar.
Madagascar is visited every year with
a plague of locusts, which does a vast
amount of damage to the crops; but it
is an ill-wind that blows nobody good,
and so these insects arc highly es
teemed as food by the natives. Tho
locusts fly within two or three feet of
the ground, and, on the approach of a
swarm, the peoplo rush out of their
huts ami strike them down with fiat
baskets. Then the women and chil
dren gather them up from the ground
In sacks, where they are divested of
wings and legs by a severe shaking up.
These extremities are carefully win
nowed out, the bodies dried in the sun
or fried in fat, and then packed In
Backs for food or Bold in the market*.
THE JUDGE’S CARRIAGE.
The Marshal (Jets It Tahl For as Trans
portation of Prisoners.
Attorney General Olney tells the fol
lowing story about Justice Gray, of the
United States supreme court. Judge
Gray prefers riding to walking and a
carriage or cab to a street ear. When
ho first held court in Boston, he asked
the L nited States marshal to provide
him with a carriage to transport him
front his hotel to tho court and back to
the hotel after the day’s session. The
marshal was commendably prompt and
cheerful in complying with the wishes
of the distinguished jurist. From Bos
ton Judge Gray went to Providence to
hold court. He asked the United States
marshal there to provide him with a
carriage to carry him back and forth.
Tho marshal said he could not do so
without paying for the vehicle out of
his own pocket.
“Why, how's that?” exclaimed the
astonished jurist.
“Tho department would not allow
the account, and I’ll have to pay it,”
explained the marshal.
“But the marshal at Boston furnished
mo with a carriage, and had no trouble
with his accounts," said Judge Gray.
“I don’t see how he did it,” protested
the Providence marshal. “I know that
if I tried it that item in my accounts
would be disallowed.”
“Very well,” said Judge Gray. “Of
course I don't want you to pay for my
carriage,” and he paid it himself, and
the incident closed so far as he was
concerned.
Not so with the iTovidence marshal.
Tie wrote to the Boston marshal and
asked him how he managed to have his
charge for a carriage for Judge Gray’s
use between the hotel and the court
house allowed by the department there.
“Easy enough,” wrote tho BostoD
man iu reply. “It’s'plain,” he contin
ued, “that you’ve not been marshal
long. 1 provided Judge Gray with the
carriage, and my accounts went
through the department without any
trouble. You see, I put the item of the
judge’s carriage under the head of ‘care
and transportation of prisoners.’ ”
A
Tp
Mv'i-
‘ '
A YOUNG GIRL’S FORTUNE.
AN INTERESTING SKETCH.
Nothing appeals so strongly to a mother’s
affection as her (laughter just buddiug into
womanhood. Following is an Instance: “Our
daughter. Blanoho, now 15 years of age, had
been terribly afflicted with nervousness, and
bad lost the entire uso of her right arm. She
was in such a condition that we had to keep
her from school and abandon her music les
sons. In fact, we feared St. Vitus dance, aud
are positive Cut lor an invaluable remedy she
would have had that terrible affliction. We
had employed physicians, hut she received no
benefit from them. The first of last August she
weighed but 7a pounds, and although she has
taken only three bottles of Nervine she now
weighs 106 pounds ; her nervousness and symp
toms of St. Vitus danco are entirely gone she
attends school regularly, and studies with com-
fort and ease. She has recovered complete use
of her arm, her appetite is splendid, and no
money could procure for our daughter the health
Dr. Miles Nervine lias brought her.
When my brother recommended the remedy
1 m Patent medicines, and would
not listen to him, but as a last resort he sent us
a bottle, we began giving it to Blanche, and the
ejtect was almost immediate.”—Mrs. R R
Bullock, Brighton, N. Y.
Dr. Miles’ Restorative Nervine is sold by all
druggists on a positive guarantee, or sent direct
by the Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind on
receipt of price, 81 per bottle, six bottles for 85
express prepaid. It is positively free from
opiates or dangerous drugs.
For sale in Waynesboro by WHITEHEAD
& Co., and in Milien by H. Q,. BELL.
mar ’9f—
for Infants and Chisdren.
HlgOTHERS, You Know thatp a r,, or;c
iWi Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups I
most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine ?
Do Yon Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons ?
13o You Know that in most countries druggists are not permitted
without labeling them poisons ?
]Do Yon Know that you should not permit any medicine to lie given your , > ■ i
unless you or your physician know of what it is composed ?
So Yon Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that n ,
its ingredients is published with every liottle ?
Do Yon Know that Castoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel I v,
That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now cold d -
of all other remedies for children combined ?
Do You Know that the Patent Office Department, of the United States, i ,.
other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to us- ti:,- - ,j
“ Castoria ” and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offens. ?
Do You Know that one of the reusons for granting this government protection was
because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless?
Do Yon Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished f, r 55
cents, or one cent a dose ?
Do Yon Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may
be kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest t
Woil, these things are worth knowing. They are facts.
The fao-wimilo
signature of
ss on every
•wrapper.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castor!a 0
,000
0 B
-Eighteen Thousand Dollars Worth of-
Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Cloaks and Underwear,
Consigned to D. C. FLYNN S AUCTI N HOUSE, to be sold
to lie sold at 75c. on the dollar.
We have
5c. Caiico for 3|c.
5c. Ginghams for ole.
7c. Bleaching for 5c.
40 yards Fine Shirting $1.00.
Good Check Homespun 3|c.
Children’s Suits for 05c. up.
Young Men’s Suits $2.50 up.
Gentlemen’s Suits $2.50 up.
Men’s $15 Suits for $9.75.
Men’s $17.50 Suits for $12.-10.
Men’s $20 Suits for $1 1.75
Men’s, Boy’s and Children’s Hats, Trunks ami Valises at
any price you want. Children’s Solid Shoes, 25c. Women’s
Shoes G lc. Men’s Shoes 75c.
We have a verv line assortment of
at prices you have never heard of before. All-Wool Red Flannel
at 70c. ou the $1.00.
W 7 e have everything you can find in a first-class Dry Goods,
Shoe or Clothing Store, and we can save you at last 25c. on
every dollar you trade.
FLYNN’S AUCTION HOUSE,
niav5,’9i—-in
Augusta, Georgia,
—Use Imperial Baking Powders
It is bealtby.
The MERMOTOR
is the WINDMILL that turns when all others
stands still and is the oniv wheel and
TOWER mads of STEEL and
m GALVANIZED AFTER
its COMPLETION.
WE v MAKE •:• TOWERS
from 20 to 100 feet in height, ami Tilting Tow
ers up to 70 feet in height for eight, and
ten-loot wheels, that lets tlie
wheel down foroilirg, and
obviating the neces
sity of climbing
Our 10-foot geared wheel will saw wood, cut
feed, grind corn and pump water, or do any
oilier work that two horses can do.
Our Goods Received Highest Awards
at the COLUMBIAN EX POSITION,
but the award which wc value most is the ap
proval of our fellow men which* gives to us the
WORLD’S business in WIND WHEELS.
H. JEFF. DAVIS, Waynesboro, Ga.,
GENERAL AGENT.
u
p, p.
PIMPLES, BLOTCHES
ANP OLU SORES
prickly ash, poke root CATARRH. MALARIA,
AND POTASSIUM KiDNET TROUBLES
Makes and DYSPEPSIA ”
J
Marvelous Cures Are entirely removotf by P.P F.
in Blood Poison
Rheumatism
and Scrofula
P. P. r. purifies the blood, builds up,
tlio weak and debilitated. givo3
strength to weakened nerves, expels
diseases, giving the patient health and
happiness where sickness, gloomy
feelings and lassitude ilrst prevailed.
For primary secondary and tertiary
syphilis, for blood poisoning, mercu
rial poison, malaria, dyspepsia, and
in all blood and sain diseases, like
blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcers,
tetter, scald head, boils, erysipelas,
eczema—wo may ssv, without fear of
contradiction, 1 hat i’. P, i». is the best
blood purifier i-t the world, and makes
positive, speedy and permanent cures
in all cases.
Ladies whoso systems are poisoned
and whose blood is in an impure condi
tion. duo to menstrual irregularities,
are peculiarly benefited by the won
derful tonic and blood cleansing prop
erties of P. P. P.-Prickly Ash, Poke
Root and Potassium.
Sphtnqfield, Mo. . \uc\ 14th. ’ V)3.
—I can speak in the highest terms of
your medicine from my <-v;n personal
knowledge. I was affected with heart
disease, pleurisy and rheumatism for
25 years, was fronted by the very best
physicians ana spent hundreds of dol
lars, tried every known remedy with
out finding relief. lhave only taken
one bottle of your P. P. P., and can
cheerfully tay it has done me more
good than anything I have overtaken.
I can recommend your medicine to ail
sufferers ot the above diseases.
MK9. M. M. YFART,
Springfield, Grass County. M.o,
—rriCKiy />sn, i-o:.u r-oo*
slum, the greatooc blood purifier on
earth.
Aherdxe!j, O.. July 21,1891.
Msssris Lippmax Bros., S.avajir. ia.
Ga.: Deaii Sirs—I bought a bottle o-
ycur P. P P. at Hot Springs, Ark. .anu
It has done mo more good than t-ireo
months’ treatment at the Hot Springs.
Bond three bottles U. O. D.
Respe ct fullyy°urs fjEW T 0N
Aberdeen, Brown County, Q.
Car t. J- U. -5t.LnBloa.
To all vliom it may cct'.cem: I Ib-Tf*
by testify to tho wonderful proper.its
of P. P. P. for eruptions ot the skin,
t altered tor several years vitn an un
sightly aud di3Egr.jo.Vole . rupdo.i > a
my face. I tried every known remo
dy but Jn vain,until P. P. P. was m--di
and am now entirely cured.
(Signed by I
Skin Cancer Cured.
Tettlmcrjj from rA c Mayer cf Sequin.T.::.
Sequin, Tex. . January 14, 1893.
Mussns. Lippman I3:iO'-., Savannan,
On.: UentlLinen—I have tried, your ■ ■
P. P. for a disease of theskie, uses. .
known -s skin c&ncer.of thirty w r..-
standing, end ioan.!_great re'.H':.^
purified tho blood anu removes oil,,
ritation from, the sect of the
anu prevents r.ny spreading <>t t o
sores. I have taken fiveor mv
and fee! confident that another ';o“F
will effect a cure, it has also ream '
me from indignation and stou- —a
troubles. Yours truly, .
CAPT. W. M. TtU-’ ■.
Attorney at -- • •
roob n Bin Dissoses fbs.
LI
PEOPBir.TGEh,
$
6