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THE . . .
AUGUSTA .
SAVINGS .
BANK, . .
S05 Ilrnail Street,
A l! fit’ST A, GEORGIA.
W. B. YOUNG,
President.
J. G. WEIGLE,
C as hi or.
SAVINGS ACGOl'.Vis!
THE
CITIZEN.
3 >
Interest Paid
On Dej o’.lls. j
Volume 19.
Waynesboro, Georgia, Saturday, May 5, 1900.
Number 3.
Accounts
THE | Pays interest
PLANTERS
LOAN AND
SAVINGS
BANK,
Augusta. Ga. j I ‘ c - H £3& nt
I W. Ci Wakdiaw
ORGANIZED 18 01 Cashier.
MEMORIAL ADDRESS.
DELIVERED BY HON. T. vV. HARDWICK,
OF SANDERSVILLF, APRIL 26th.
Over the Graves of Our Confederate Dead
at Waynesboro Introductory Remarks
by K O. Price, Esq
Loxlies of the Memorial Association
—Ladies and Gentlemen :
With flowers in our hands a no
sadness in our hearts, we have as
sembied to pay the annual tributt
to our honored dead.
Tills is a noble custom inaugurat
ed by Southern womanhood, which
tact makes the day ail the mort
sacred. It is a day for memory and
for tears.
A mighty nation bends in tearfu-
reverence over the graves of it-
lionored dead, and pays to noble
dust the tribute of its ioye.
There is no language to express
the debt we owe those gallant son.-
who died for us, we can but stanc
by their graves, and in the hushed
and hallowed siience, feelj whai
speech has never told.
I am proud to say that to a cer
tain extent the battle lines of tht
sixties are things of the past. Tht
judgment of the appeal to arms has-
been duly entered by Providence
and loyally accepted by the people
of the South. They have met the
changes wrought by the sword as-
becomes brave and honest sons of a
common soil, and putting on the
bieast plate ot honesty and loyalty,
they stand to-day for the highest
ideals of Christian citizenship.
The smoke from the battle bat-
now been doing service in the
clouds for 35 years; within that pe
riod fraternity has taken the piact
of strife, and former foes now sit ii
life’s deepening twilight, and re
count the deeds done in the brave
days of the sixties without the
slightest trace of bitterness 01
hatred.
I think one of the grandest ex
hibits that Providence will make tc
the new century, whose rosy dawn
is almost visible, will be the mat
who wore the blue and the mat
who wore the gray, with then
hearts and hands joined, waiting il
honorable brotherhood down the
declining pathway of age, speaking
with equal pride oi the progress
and i>rosperity of a glorious re-unii-
ed country.
But no progress or prosperity will
ever make the people of the Soutl
forget tnose gallant sons who dieo
for the lost but hallowed cause.
And the grizzled old warriors wh<
are with us to-day, representing tht
armed chivalry of a once proud peo
pie, may heaven’s richest blessings
ever attend them, their brilliant
story of daring and defeat will bt
transmitted to you by the orator ol
tne day, whom it is now my pleas
ure to introduce, Hon. T. VV. Hard
wick, of Sandersviile, will now ad
dress you:
Ladies of the Memorial Associa
tion of Burke county, Veterans 01
the Confederacy, Ladies and Gen
tlemen: —When the Greeks return
ed Irom Marathon, all Athens re
joiced with the triumphant living,
and honored the brave and galiani
dead. Home honored her great
captains,Hcipio, Pornpey and Cae^ai
with such splendid and imposing
triumphs that the historical recital
of their magnificence seems to tl.e
astonished reader some dream ol
more than Aiadin splendor, and the
return ol the English fleet to Brit
ain’s waters after the battle of Tia-
falga was a blaze of incomparable
splendor, and the worn body of tht
heroic Nelson was laid to rest Amid
imposing ceremonials In Westmin
ister Abbey by the side of theKiDgs
of the country he nad served so
well. But, Marathon was won! Mil-
tiudes and the Greek* triumphed.
The Roman captains whom I have
named were returning from long
aud splendidly successful cam
paigns of foreign conquest,and“were
bringing in triumph home,
The spoils of unnumbered cities
To deck the shrines of Rome,”
and England’s mighty admiral had
died as he had lived, in all the gla
mour of glorious and unbroken suc
cess!
We have met to-day to celebrate
the return of no victorious army;
we have gathered,not as the Greeks
gathered, nor as the Romans, nor
as the Britons to celebrate with
clanging trump and martial splen
dor some triumph of our arms, but
with true hearts as the sparkliDg
lewids, with pure and consecrated
memories as the embroidered clotbs
of gold, with religious reverence in
the place of military enthusiam, we
have met to commemorate the gal
lant lives and heroic deaths of those
beloved sons of our South land,
whose bones are scattered all over
Dr. Tichenor’s Antiseptic smells
like peppermint candy and is “just
as gooa”but a different purpose. Try
it next time you get hurt or have
Colic. Only 50 cents a bottle by
druggists.
Miss Florence Newman, who has
been a great sufferer from muscular
rheumatism, says Chaimberlain’s
Pain Balm. Is the only remedy
that affords her relief. Miss New
man is a much respected resident
of the village of Gray, N. Y., and
makes this statement for the bene
fit of other simiiary affected. This
liniment is for sale by H.B. McMas-
ter.
t,and as far North as Pennsylvania
ir d Ohio, who were not conquerors,
and yet, icere not conquered!
I do cot think it would be appro
priate to this occasion, since it has-
been done so often, and can be done
so easiiy, to cal! your attention to
the numerous instances in which
Southern valor proved superior t(
Northern numbers; to show yon
how more recent history, as the bit
ter prejudices of sectionalism have
tied gradually away, has done full
justice to the bravery and valor ot
’he boys who wore the gray, but if
these days in which political apos
acy and the greed for Northern
gold transform some who ought to
be true, into modern Judases, and
cause some of the would be leaders
of the so-cailed new South in their
blind worship of the golden caif,anc
iu their mad scramble for politics
ulace, to impugn the mo’tives anc
attack the cause of these dead sons
>f the old South in whose honor we
nave have gathered to-day. I deen
it a duty 1 owe to the sacred dead,
to your kindred and to mine, to sai
a few words in defence of those
whose l;ps are now forever stilled,
who sealed their faith with theii
blood, and died calling on the great
Ruler of the Universe to witnes.-
the justice of their cause!
It has become too frequent in our
day and time for men of Southern
oiood and lineage, would-be leaders
of our people, to apologetically as
sert that our people iought lor a
cause that they believed to be right.
Many years ago I heard an oratoi
upon an occasion lure this make
this stateineut.and boy as I was, im
biood burned and tingled at the
covert insuit to our people, so cun
ningly veiled in the imphasis giver
to this one word—beiieved.
I think a distinguished gentle
man from Virginia, for expressing
in terse and pointed words, my sen
timents upon an expression of this
kind. Taunted,uot many years ago,
upon the floor of our national con
gress, by sneering detractors, with
slurs upon his Southern biood and
war record, he was at iast goadeo
into a reply by the gruding conces
sion that the gentlemen from Vii-
giuia might have fought for a caust
ne believed to be right.”“Mr. Speak
er,” said he, “the gentlemen from
Ohio infamously slanderes me, 1
fought for a cause that I know to be
right!”
Consider, for a moment, the pe
culiar status of the two sections at
the beginning of the civil war.
Mason and Dixon’s iine, once the
important line that separated the
territories of Pennsylvania ano
.Maryland, at first friendly colonies
of the same crown, and afterwards
sister states iu the same great re
public, bad in 1861 become the
boundary line of two great ana pow
erful sections, whose interests wen
antagonistic,and whose people were
nostile, aud were soon to face each
other in the bloodiest conflici
known to history. To the South ol
this line lay the richest and fairest
domain God had ever given to man.
while the region of the North,
though less favored by nature, \va-
mhabited by a great, restless and
energetic people, wnose ceaseless
industry and untiring energy had
caused its less fertile fields to bloom
and had planted on every stream
some station of manufacturing in
dustry! On the one side of this line
lay a puritanical civilization, on the
other, a feudal system; on the one
side, commercial wealth, manufac
turing opulence; on the other agri
cultural independence; on the one
side austerness of spirit had found
expression in the enactment and
enforcement of the celebrated blue
laws of New England; on the other
freedom, liberality and even laxity
of opiniou bad as its exponents, a
hard-riding, pleasure-loving aristoc
racy, with whom life was held
cheaper than the smallest insult to
sensitive honor! In other words
there were two systems, two civil
izations, as seperate and distinct as
night and day, as water and wine.
In New England and the lvorth,
there had been exhibited the evo
lution of tbe puritan civilization,
grand in its way,, and stern and un
relenting in its character; the same
spirit that had withstood the en
croachments of royalty, and resist
ed the oppressions of tyranny in
the Old World,existed in the North,
the same blood that had poured it
self out so lavishly in the cause of
the parliament against King
Charles, wended its slow and reso
lute course through gthe veins of
New England and the North; it had
come over m the historic ‘’Mayflow
er,” and had planted itself with sol
emn chant and serious prayer in
rhe new born world; it had cast the
obnoxiously taxed tea into Boston
harbor,fired the first gun at Lexing-
! od, and lit the fires of iiberty that
were to enlighten the world!
But in the South, the old South,
(God bless her hallo wed name!)
there existed still another civiliza
tion; while the weary and careworn
puritan had sought refuge from his
>ld world troubles in the North, to
the South had come a vastly differ
ent class of settlers! Here had come
the younger sons of noble and illus-
rious families in the old world,who
were seeking to mend their broken
fortunes in this marvellous “El Do
rado” beyond the Western Seas,
Here the traditions or the old coun
try still lived and were still cherish
ed, and we find the Second Charier
proclaimed King iu Williamsburg
before he was in Loudon, Here is
a climate unequalled for its mild-
ness aud heaitnfulness, and on soil
unexcelled for its fertility and fruit-
fulnes, these cavaliers of modern
days built up their system. Year
a ter year aud decade after decade,
their prosperity increased until
their feudal system grew beyono
the bounds of any example in an
cient or modern history. Almosi
every plantation was a baronial es
tate, almost every farm house a cas
tie, and every Southern gentleman
was a veritable lord, and to add to
their happiness, filling their lives
with joy, and blessing their homes,
were the ladies of the old South, the
product of generations of refine
ment and of centuries of culture,the
angels of the sick, the queeDS of so
ciety. fitted by birth, training and
education to adorn the highest plac
es in the land. With such inspira
tion as this, small wonder is it, that
these cavaliers of the old South
were
“No laggards in love,
Or dastards in war.”
that although to New England had
belonged the honor of firing tht
first musket for freedom, yet to the
South had been due the successful
conduct and glorious termination
of the revolution; that in peace,hei
sons had woven the immortal fa
bric ot the constitution and filled
the high offices of the nation; that,
in war, they had covered the stars
and stripes with eternal glory on
land and sea, had crippled tbe com
merce, and had captured, or con
quered in fair fight, the finest ves
sels of the English navyr had van
quished the most highly disciplined
soldiery of the age, during the rev
olution; had defeated and slain the
naughty Paekinham at New Or
leans, and borne the ensign of the
republic with heroic valor across
the burning plains of Mexico, and
planted it at last in triumph iu the
ancient capital of the Montezumas!
So different were these two sys
terns, and so antagonistic were their
interests that many quarrels sprang
up between tl\em, of these the most
important arose over the slavery
question, but, to my mind, the mer
its of that question are not involved
in a defence of the South’s legai
aud constitutional position, for the
reason that the quarrel at last be
come so bitter that the Southern
states determined in the exercise
of what they considered their sov-
erign rights to withdraw from the
Union and form a seperate govern
ment of their own, and it therefore
follows, that, iudepenaent of the
merits of the slavery quarrel, inde
pendent of either the wisdom or
policy of secession,if our people had
the right to secede, any attempt to
co-erce them to remain in the Un
ion was tyranny, the exercise of
mere brute force without legal right
to do so.
While ine ordinances of secession
were being passed, the New York
Tribune at that time the leading or
gan of the Abolition party, declared
editorially, tnat the states ought to
be allowed to depart in peace, as
they had that right under the fed
eral contitulion, and this view is
overwhelmingly sustained by histo
ry. The one maD, above all others,
who was the author of the federal
constitution, and who has justly
been styled its father, was James
Madison of Virginia—in number 39
of The Federalist, Mr.Madison said*
and mark you at that time no dis
pute existed between North and
South, “The constitution will be a
federal and not a national act, as
those terms are understood by ob
jectors, the act of the people form
ing so many independent states,
and not one aggregate nation, as is
obvious from the single considera
tion that it is to result neither from
the decision of a majority of the
people ol the Union, nor from that
It preserves the flesh when lacer
ated or wounded in any way. Stops
the bleeding, stops the pain and
heals quicker than anything. That
is what Dr, Tichenor’s antiseptic
does. Try it when you get hurt. Ask
druggists for it.
of a majority of the states; it must
result from the unanimous consent
of the several states that are par
ties to it—each state in ratifying
tbe constitution is considered as a
soveriegn body, independent of ai)
others, and to be bound only by ifl
own voluntary act. “Patrick Henry
the great revolutionary orator, op
posed its ratification by the people
of Virginia, on the ground that the
statement in its preampie, “We, the
people of the United States,” meant
a consolidated and not a confeder
ate government. In answer to this
objection, Mr. Madison said, “vvh<
are the parties to it? The people,
but not the people as composing
thirteen sovereignties;were it a con
soiidated government a majority o
the people wouia be sufficient foi
its establishment, aud as a majority
nave ratified it already, the remain
ing states would be bound by the
act of the majority even if they re
probated it. Sir,no steie is bound by
it, as it is, except by its own con
sent.” As a further proof of the
meaning and intent of the conven
tion that framed the constitution
the minutes of that body show that
Randolph of Ronoake submitted tc.
it a series of resolutions embodying
what was knowu as the Virginia
plan, the first resolution of whicl
read as follows: “Resolved, that it
is the sense of this body that a na
tional government, consisting of a
supreme legislative, judiciary ano
executive ought to be established,”
and that when these resolutions
were reported back to the commit
tee of the whole, on JiMie 20tb, 1787
on motion of Mr. Ellsworth, the
words National Government, were
stricken out, aud the words, “Gov
eminent of the United States, sub
stituted therefor. After tbe con
vention adjourned, and the consti
tuiion that resulted from its labors
was submitted to the several states
for ratification or rejection, its rati
fication was opposed in sev
eral of the states on the ground
that by adopting it the several
states might surrender their sover
eignty, and every leading national
ist, including Madison,, Jay ano
Hamilton, strenuously denied it!
This opposition was, however, only
overcome in several of the states
by the distiuct agreement ano
promise that several amendments
would be immediately 7 adopteu
which would clearly and unmistak
ably guard against the usurpation
of power by tbe federal govern
ment—of these the most important
was the tenth amendment, which
provided “That every power not by
this constitution expressly delegat
ed to the United States” and of this
amendment. “It is consonant with
the second article in our present
confederation, by which each state
retains its freedom, sovereignty,and
independance, and every right not
by this confederation expressly del
egated to the United States, in con
gress assembled.”
It is clear, then, both from the
constitution itself, and from a his
tory of the political events sur
rounding its formation and adop
tion, that the union was a confed
erate republic, with delegated pow
ers. Washington calied the con
stitution a compact—so did Alexan
der HamiLou —aud all the states
men of that period agreed that it
was a government with delegated
powers,having only such rights aDd
powers as were given to it, and be
stowed upon it,by the several states
who were its sponsors and creators,
aDd I wish to ask, who will attempt
to assert or maintain that mon
strous proposition, as horrible aud
impossible in politics as iu religion,
that the creature is, or can be, supe
rior to its creator!
Not only does history demonstrate
the sovereignty of the states after
the adoption of the federal consti
tution, but it also bears witness to
the universal acceptance of that
doctrine by both North and South
for many years. In 1798 the “Alien
and sedition acts”of congress,which
authorized the president to order
out of the United States any for
eigner whom be might regard as a
public enemy, were promptly pro
tested against and nullified by the
legislatures or Kentucky and Vir
ginia. In December, 1814, the New
England States becoming dissatis
fied with the conduct of the eecond
war with England, met in conven
tion at Hartford, Connecticut, dele
gates being present from Massachu
setts,Rhode Island,Connecticut, Ver
mont and New Hampshire, and al
though the proceedings of that con
vention were held behind closed
doors, but it is evident both from
The greatest triumph of modern
chemistry is Dr.Tichenor’s Antisep
tic. As a dressing for wounds, burns,
etc., it simply has no equal. Pre
vents inflammation, preserves the
flesh and heals like magic,Fragrant
as tbe “iast rose of summer” and
cooling as a breeze from off the
deep, blue sea. Soli by all “up-to-
date” druggists.
the public address that it issuedj
and from the resolutions adopteo
by 7 it, that it was the purpose of the
New England states, to either force
a change in the conduct of the war.
or else,in exercise of their sovereign
rights, to withdraw from the Um'oD
and form a seperate government o)
their own. In 1832 South Carolina
passed an act that nullified an op
pressive tariff law. For this she was
threatened with war. but after wad
ing through peace commissions and
compromises, was finally lorgiven
It 1859 eleven Northern states as
serted their sovereignty by passing
which not only nullified the provis
ions of the Fugitive Slave Act oi
longress, but even abrogated a sol
emn provision of the federal con
stitution itself, and yet, in 186I,with
i consistency most remarkable, iu
order to enforce tbe one, and repeal
the other, they assumed the hypo
critical grab of “preservers of the
Unon,” and the very states who
had first violated the compact ol
confederation, appeared in arms to
enforce it. In 1814 the right ol New
England to secede was unquestion
ed, and yet, in 1861 under the same
constitution and laws, it had be
come “treason” for the South to do
so. Might has again iu tbe history
of tbe uniyerse proven superior to
right, and I bow to the will of tht
Great Ruler of of heaven and earth
and rejoice that we have once mort
a re-united and happy country ;that
the South is in tne house of her lath
ers ODce more, and is there to stay,
hut, thank God, she is not there iD
sack-cloth and ashes, debased, hu
miliated and apologetic, but with
her old proud mein, conscious of the
justice and fairness of her cause,
willing to forget in a generous and
manly spirit, and with her great
heart throbbing with ioye and sym
paty for the noble sentiment that
aot long ago prompted the chiel
magistrate of the nation, himself a
federal veteran, to lay his tribute ol
nouor and respect upon the bier oi
her immortal dead! She is back,
with no marks of dishonor upon
ner escutcheon, but with the ever
abidiDg memory shat_the brightest
pages of American history havt
heen written by her sons,
that there is not a star iu the glori
ous banner of tbe union whose lus
tre has not been increased by the
deed of her sons, and not a stripe
that has not been bathed in her no
blest blood! She remembers that
less than two years ago her sons
marched side by side with the sol
diers of the North against a com
mon foe aud demonstrated once
more in generous and friendly em
ulation the brilliancy of southern
chivalry, that on land her gallant
son, the knightly Wheeler, won the
chief laurels of the war, while on
sea a son of her younger generation
lead tbe forlorn hope at> Santiago,
covering himself with glory,and ex
emplifying once again the desper
ate quality of southeru courage.
It has been customary upon occa-
casions like this, to eulogize those
magnificent cheiftains, who with
splendid courage, and matchless
skill, prolonged the contest,uneqhal
though it was through long years.
Victory after victory did they wid,
all that genius could ccncieve ana
courage execute did they accom
plish, through four long years of
terrible war they followed tbe
Southern cross with unfaltering
tread through seas of blood and car
nage. The God of-hattles had de
creed that they should not succeed,
but iu his infinite mercy had or
dained that they should not be van
quished by superior valor iu battle
but by famine and want, that they
should oe overcome, but not by bet
ter generalship or braver soldiers,
but by money, numbers and sup
plies. No feeble words that my pen
could trace, or my tongue utter,
could add one single leaf to the un
fading chaplet that adorns the brow
of that mightiest general of hi3 age
—the immortal Lee; Nor words are
beautiful enough, sweet enough, or
even sacred enough, with which to
attempt to enshrine the memories
of Stonewall Jackson, and Albert
Sydney Johnson, but I invoke the
presence and assistance of that
“spirit that doth prefer before all
temples the heart upright and
pure,” that I may be enabled to en
twine my simple laurel wreath
about the brow of the lowly Confed
erate private, to fame unknown,and
may place, with reverent hand, my
modest and unassuming tribute up
on bis humble and unmarked grave!
All honor to the glorious leaders
who bared their breasts to the
storms, and bent their minds to the
problems of tbe conflict, but hail!
twice hail! and thrice hail! to the
wool-hat boys who slept in the
trenches, who shouldered the mus
kets, who marched barefooted and
ragged, unfed and virtually unpaid,
from one long years end to another,
to face on one battle field af
ter another, a foe that vastly out
numbered them-, was well fed, well
paid and well supplied. No ambi-
(Continued on our Editorial Page )
HOLLEYMAN’S
COMPOUND
ELIXIR
FOR
HORSE
Colic.
The 2 biggest farmers in Georgia and South
Carolina—Capt. Jas. M. Smith says of it:
“Have tried them. Hollej man’s is the best
ot all. Keep It all the time.”
Capt. R. H. Walker says: “Holleyman’s
is worth its weight in gold. I have saved as
many as three horses lives per month with
it.”
Holleyman’s Comoound Elixir
50 CENTS.
Horse Colic under
-PAYABLE IN-
Will cure any case of
the sun.
N. L.
make it.
WILLETT DRUG
AUGUSTA.G A.
CO.,
TAX RECEIVER’S NOTICE.
The Tax Payers of this county aud request
ed to meet me at the following places on
dates mentioned for the purpose of making
their tax returns for 1900:
FIRST ROUND.
75th dlst. Rogers Fri. IAav 4th
TOli dist Cates’Store Mon. MavTth
74th disl. Bark Camp X RdTues. Mav 8th
73d dist. Midville, Wed Mav 9th
71st dist. Harrell’s store Thur Mav 10tli
SECOND ROUND.
67th dist Green’s Cut, Mon Mav 14th
66th dist Shell Bluff P O Wea Mav 16tli
68th dist Girard Thurs Mav 17th
64th dist Court Ground, bridge Fri Mav ISth
70th dist Cates’Store Mon Mav “1st
73d dist Midville Tues Mav22d
75th dist Birdsvtlle Wed Mav 23d
74th dist Herndon Thurs Mav 24th
71st dist Oatts Fri Mav 25th
72d dist Gough’s X Rds Mon Mav 28th
69th dist Kilpatrick’s X Rds Tues Mav 29th
K5th dist Kevsville Wed Mav 30th
67th dist Grem’s Cut Thurs Mav 31st
61st dist Millen. Daniel, Son
A Palmer’s Fri June 1st
67tli dist Neelv’s School
House, Tues June 5th
The law requires the Tax Receiver to ad
minister the oath to each tax paver while
making their returns. Please remember this
and be prompt, avoid being double-taxed
and save me delavs. Books close June 9th,
On everv Saturdav from April 1st to June
9tli and during session of Superior Court, I
can be found at Dr, McMaster’s drug store,
W. L. MIMS, Receiver Tax Returns, B.C.*
marl7,’99
Spring ...
Goods . . . .
have
arrived!
One of the
Largest
Prettiest
Stocks
ever shown in Waynesboro.
Fits Positively Guar:
anteed.
MANAU,
Tlie 0:^.IX-023
V£aynesboro, Georgia.
INSTALLMENTS,
Loans negotiated
improved farms at reasonable
rates of interest and small com
missions. We are now prepared
to negotiate loans for our clients
on BETTER TERMS THAN
EVER BEFORE.
LAWSON & SCALES,
Waynesboro, Ga.
nnvl ..’88—tf
J . W C 0 0 L E Y ,
D E N T I S T,
■WAYNESBORO, - - GEORGIA.
Office at the Opera House,
Good
A RDENS and j|
FARMS MADE |
Better by Planling Alexander’s
SEEDS.
Our Seeds have given the best
Satisfaction all over the South,
Those who plant them tell their
neighbors of their success. It is
not cheap Seeds that you want, but
those of the highest quality and
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Show your practical economy. If
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Flower Seeds and Bulbs of high
quality, write to us.
Our 1900 Seed Catalogue,
also 2-states Almanac sent free.
Send for tt, PrompL shipment of
orders.
ILEXlliiDERSEEDCOli
900 Broad St.,
AUGUSTA, - GEORGIA.
Shoe Making^ fl
REPAIRING, Arc. Rh. ,
I am located on New St., Cobbham, where
I am prepared to give satisfaction in mending
Shoes and Harness at short notice. Satislac-
tion guaranteed. I solicit a share of your pa
tronage. Orders left at Mr, Neely’s store will
receive prompt attention, and I will call for
work and deliver it to any part of the city.
P. J. MAJOR, Waynesboro, Ga.
Georgia
Railroad
For information as to Routes,
Schedules and Rates, both
il
DODGE, the Rubber Man!
E. W. DODGE, . _McappJsiL.lt,,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
Rubber Stamps, 10c. line. Wax Seals. $1
Corporation and Commissioners Seals, $2.25’
Notarial Seals,'$2. Daters 25c. Pens and Pen
cils 15c. 3 A lonts Rubber Type, wiih ink and
holder 25c, Badges, Ste ncils, Cotton Brands,
&c. decl0,’98—by
ONTRACTORS’ ^
^BUILDERS'^
MILL SUPPLIES.
Castings, Steel Beams, Columns and Chan,
nel Bolt3, Rods, Weights, Tanks, Towers, <fco.
Steel Wire and Manila Rope, Hoisting Engine*
ind Pumps, Jacks, Derricks, Crabs, Chain and
Rope Holsts.
trcast Every Day. Make Quick Delivery.
LOMBARD IRON W0RKS& SUPPLY CO.
AUGUSTA. GA
G
AND
ORDINARY’S NOTICES.
G eorgia—Burke county.—Whereas*
R. M. Murphree. administrator of J. J-
Murphree. late of said county, deceased,
has applied to me for letters dismissory from
said estate.
These are, therefore, to cite and admorish
all persons interested, to show cause, (if any
can,) before me, at my office, at 10 o’clock, a.
m„ on the first Monday in July, 1900, why
said letters dismissory should not be granted
in terms of the law. This March 5th, 1900,
GEO. F.COX, Ordinary. B. C, Ga.
G EORGIA—Burke County.-Whereas,
S. . Watson Perkins, administrator of
Susan W. Perkins, late of said ccunty de
ceased, has applied to me for letters dismis
sory from said estate,?
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish
all persons interested, to show cause, (if any
they can,) before me at my office, at 10 o’clock
a. m., on the first Monday in July, 1900.
why said letters dismissory should not be
granted in terms of the law. This March 6th,
GEO. F. COX, Ordinary, B.'C, Ga.
I
write to either of the undersigned.
You will receive prompt reply and reliable
information.
Jno, Ferguson, A. G. Jackson,
T. P. A„ G, F. & P. A.
AUGUSTA, GA.
S. E. MAGILD, C. D, COX,
Gen’l Agt. Gen’l Agt.
ATIjANTA, ATHENS.
W. W. HARDWICK, W. C. McMIELIN,
Gen’l Agt. C, F. <fc P. A,
MACON. MACON.
M. R. HUDSON, W. M. McGOVERN.
T. F, & P. A. Gen’l Agt.
ATLANTA, GA. AUGUSTA.
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
It artificially digests the food and aids
Nature in strengthening and recon
structing the exhausted digestive or
gans. It is the latest discovered digest-
ant and tonic. No other preparation
can approach it in efficiency. It in
stantly relieves and permanently cures
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea,
SickHeadache,Gastralgia,Cramps,and
all other results of imperfect digestion,
prek-ared by E C. Dewitt & Co.. Cbicaao.
H. B. McMaster, Y/aynesboro Ga.
F. O. YOUNG,
ARLINGTON BARBER SHOP.
WAYNESB JRO, GA,
My shop is nicely fixed with water and
every convenience. I solicit the public pa
tronage. Special attention given to work
or the ladies. dec5.’9fi—
TELEPHONES :
Bell, 282; Stroger, 802.
OFFICE and WORKS
North Augusta.
YOUNGBLOOD LUMBER CD.,
Manufacturers (High Grade,)
Doors, Blinds,JG lazed Sash
JVLantels, Etc.
■A.TTGKCTSO?j&., G-EOEG-IA.
Mill WorK of all Kinds in Georgia Yellow Pine.
Flooring, Ceiling, Siding, Finishing, Moulding, Etc., Car
Sills, Bridge, Railroad and Special Bills to order.