Newspaper Page Text
ijpS AND DOWNS IN THE LIFE OF
A CLERK.
O B Y DA N1EL EJAjYS NT SBet.
‘ Y r,i> eny
out here?”
^"^OQQQCOGCQOQQOQQ^QOOOCGOQOGQCQCQGQQQ
>i>r cousin is coming ] opening of our story covering a pe-
ile
,.f Misfortune :>ml Misery Willi a
A T-i!
i: ii'I>3' Ending—The World Seemed All
. ,, Park For n While.
liunu
clerk’s life, ordinarily, is a very
.iniin one with I ut little varie-
, ;,:[!> daily routine. lint Mr.
. it. Morton, of No. SO Vesper
. , Portland Me., aid a:i t-xpn-
vt .'etiliy which has uiade hi-
, ; , ,w a very happy one In twll-
.. reporter of what he went
. , ; jgh, he said :
■ i -..id been suffering with stem-
. .... ; : ee.liio for about two years. Ev
•v J iv about ten o’clock in she
, ^ rubig and laree o’clock io the at-
ioon I became faint and felt so
t, M that, if I did not sit down I
.... ; ;.i fall. That sensation usually
j _■;•:! f.,r about an hour, and when
came I had no appetite for
lunch.
1 sr.v Dr. William’s Pink Piils
p, r p ;; ie People advertised in
o; on iy papers about a year ago
decided to try them. I felt re-
lief from the first box and after I
j,... j ?. ken six boxes my disease
... ... .-.rod. I do not take them now
hat always keep them in the house
I have to id my friends what these
pi!!.- have done for me and should I
know of any out’s being sick as I
was I should surely recommend Dr.
Williams’PiDlt Pills for Pale Peo-
j r . Morten’s statement was pub-
!i. !' : l in the Portland Express, af
he had sworn to it before Mar
tha!! II. Purrisgton, a notary pub-
Thousands of people are making
•r.-rinus and often fatai inroads on
iicitilh every day by hurried
c uing and only ban masticating
their food. So common has this
practice become in this country and
so apparent are the results that we
have been called a nation of dys-
Proles. Because of the overwork
ed condition of the stomach which
this careless habit causes, the blood
i! e sarily becomes poor from iack
,;i the essentials which go to make
:: oil blood, and the system, cot be
ing supplied with the nourishment
i; needs, gradually becomes run
ij iwn. Those organs which are the
v ,.Ki>t from any cause, being sup-
p.i.nl only wl'h unpoverisbed blood,
n.turaily show the effects first and,
it was with Mr. Morton, it is usual
ly the stcmacli upon which (IDs
i; k of nourishment reacts. Thf*
hr! gs on, first indigestion, then
dyspepsia and other stomach trou
bles. But, if the blood is made rich
wTh the elements necessary for the
nourishment of the body the trou
ble will disappear.
The most effective remedy in ill *
world in cases of this kind is Dr.
William’s Pink Pills for Pale Peo
ple. They act directly on the blood
and nerves. This makes them in
valuable not only for stomach trou
ble but also for such diseases as lo-
motor ataxia, partial paralysis,
St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia,
••rheumatism, nervous headache, af
ter-effects of the grip, palpitation of
the heart, pale and sallow complex
ions and all forms of weakness eith
er in male or female. Dr.Williams’
Pink Pills for Pale People are sold
by ai; dealers, or will be sent post
paid on receipt of priee, fifty cents
a lnx, or six boxes for two dollar-*
and fifty cents (they are never sold
in bulk or by the hundred) by ad
dressing Dr. Williams Medicine Co,
Schenectady, N. Y., Be sure to gel
the genuine; substitutes never cur
ed anybody.
Dr. Henry J. Godin,
EYE SIGHT SPECIALIST,
n“ Fine Optical Goods and Mauu
■or of bpectaeles and Eye-Glasses.
Dealer in
lacturcr of tepectaeles
CONSULTATION FREE.
Mroger Phone, 793. 928 Broad Street
AU.-USTA, GEORGIA
Lvf 5 Opposite Planter’s Hotel.
RESULT OF A RUNAWAY.
Three Seri-
One Person Killed and
ousiy Injured.
Nashville, July 2.—A special from
Somerville to The Banner says one per
son was killed and three were seriously
injured as the result of a runaway acci
dent.
Tue carriage was occupied by R- D.
Whitson, his son and daughter of Mem
phis, and Ab Henderson, the negro
driver. ,
The team became frightened an
boited down a hill, at the foot of wmen
was a bridge spanning a deep g al JT-
r !’k« t. • i »i Vvni R rvn n nli tU6
he team missed the bridge, and tue
carriage with its occupants was preci
pitated into the gully.
Henderson was killed by being tram
pled to death and Mr. Whitson had his
arm fractured. His son and daughter
were badly hurt, but the extent of their
injuries has not been ascertained.
Try one of our clubbing offers.
y covering a
nod of five years. He- was now ihe
Dims hia [general superintendent of all flu
ke sa ex- j colonel’s business; tbe hardest rsner
com pan- j and the surest shot in that part of
a dark hain-d yomh of eighteen.
“Yes, papa says that
pect her to-morrow.”
What too deuce does elio
me speaker as h
makes inis remark half
htsii from the saddle ha
a i-.inmg and look-, at
ion
wo
the country.
may ex- ; The uext morning after the ;
| events narrated, while the family;
want i were at breakfast the colonel asked j ! -° A-’ 8 * sa>u-.fied
The Fallowing: Are Some of tlie Beet ami
Cheapest Ever Offered.
Pan-American Exposition, BufTa-j
!o, N. Y., ay 1st to November 1st, 1 *
1D01 —The Pan-American wiii be
worth many an effort.
The question of traveling to and
from she Pan American Exposition
at Buffalo is one to be carefully con
sidered.
When you buy your ticket you
that you
wm j BY J.5.TR1GG ij
COPYRIGHT, 1301. BY ||
J.3.TRIGG.ROCKFORD, :A.|5
CORRESPONDENCE 50UCITEO 51
i||^—
Fashionable Millinery, Novelties, & Notions,
FLO WEBS, FEATHERS, RIB BOA'S, Etc.,
Waynesboro, : : : Georgia.
The ladies are cordially invited to inspect my stock before they
iy elsewhere.
Don’t forget it.
buy elsewhere. You can save monev bv buying goods at home.
oct.8,1893.
to come cut to this wild place for?” j who would ride to Ft. Leavenworth f have selected wisely. You will de
bts companion growls. | to meet his neiee; looking first at N jre to travt>1 comfortable, pleas
n, „ome now, Gerald, you are ! Gerald. Receiving no reply he | antly, promptly and to secure l><
loo hard upon (ho feminine gender j asked his son would he not go. The ; most of interest on your ourney.
-eves yene has not soared on them ! boy was delighted at the prospect. I The matter of returning home,too
J !U !,dVP - As the boy, RiH Os- | but wished Gerald to go with him, I must be considered as after you
(L.r.io, makes this remaik, he looks ! but he declined, saying ho had j have done the exposition, Buffalo,
Ul ' companion curiously, with a ; some business that required his ini- i Niagara Falls and vicinity, you’ll
m miration.
mediate attention.
strong mixture of
*'■ blonde gianr, is what h9 sees j Half laughed and ordering two
srauiiing six teet two inches In his ! horses started for the tort. A short
riding boots, straight as an arrow, I while after his arrival, the old-fash-
wuh long curls of gold falling upanrioned coach dashed Mi.
broad shoulders, eyes that rival th
asure blue above him, but which
have m them peculiar shadows, that
one instinctively feels should not
ho there, with his young friend, or
with his comrades if any are in
trouble, these eyes can melt with a
woman’s tenderness, but in anger
they flash and flame like streaks of
nghtning in an April shower. His
iarge firm mouth Is shaded by a
heavy moustache of the same c-ulor
as his hair.
As the boy Half makes this Iasi
remark, Gerald pay3 no attention,
save a mocking laugh, and spring-
info his saddle, Half doing likewise,
and they both dash away over the
plains.
Gur story is one of the wild West
during the seventies. Theseene, on
one of Col. Osborne’s iarge cattie
ranches. His family is small con
sisting only of himself, his son Itaif,
and the old housekeeper, who after
the death of the Colonel’s young
wife, when Raif was two years old,
refused to leave.
The boy Ralf was idolized b}’ his
father, and is the pet of the whole
ranch. Forty-five cowboys answer
ed to the roll-call at the general
round-up once a year, when the cat
tle were branded, counted, etc. With
these men our story has little to do.
They were all true and tried, and
were to a man devoted to their em
ployer and his son. With Gerald
Ardenno, however, we will have
more to say. His coming among
them happened in this wav.A bunch
of the men had been riding hard
all day. and weary and tired, had
stopped a little distance from the
corrai. The sun was low in the
heavens, sending out long shadows
across the plains. Suddenly there
was the sound of horse’s hoofs. The
men looked up and coming straight
towards them was a solitary figure
on horseback. On he came, in a
long swinging gallop, nor did he
draw rein until within a few feet of
the party. Reining in his horse,
a magnificent black stallion, and
giving the military salute, he calm
Ralf was near, looking for bis
cousin; he did not know her, as
ihey were both children the last
time that he saw her. Presently he
saw a young lady alight from ifm
stage, and look inquiringly around.
“This,” said Ralf, “must be ray
cousin Liilian,”
“Yes, my name is Lillian, and I
am expecting someone from Uncle
John’s to meet me.”
“Well 1 am his son, Ralf is my
name I knew that you would not
know me as I was a little fellow
when last I saw you.”
“Yes, I remember you now,”
They both laughed and approached
the horses.
“You can ride, I suppose,” asked
Raif.
“Oh yes,” although I am from the
East, ‘T consider horse-back riding
one of my accomplishments.”
Ralf, ail this time, had been look
ing with undisguised admiration at
his cousin; and as she figures prom
inently in our story I will describe
her: she is small, hard’y attaining
medium height, with a form full
and rounded, an oval face, crowned
with a luxuriant head of coal black
hair, which hung in ringlets around
a throat as white as snow. Her
eyes, by’ far the most expressive
feature of her face, are hard to de
scribe. Large and dreamy, when
in repose their color is dark grey,
but when excited become almost
black, Taken all together, she is a
woman,(for she is twenty).that most
anyone would have taken a second
look, at first sight. Reared in that
classic old city—Boston. An heir
ess in her own right, her father
being one of the richest men of
their city, and a widower, having
lost his wife when Lillian was
twelve years old. The girl had
been splendidly educated. Had be
come surfeited with society, hom
age and flattery’, for many a gallant
hear, had bowed at her shrine, but
though kincl and courteous to all,
there was none that had yet captur
ed her proud, way ward heart She had
taken a strong fancy to go West.
he tired and wish to'go quickly and
comfortably.
The Central of Georgia Railway
by reason of its desirable connec
tions both rail and steamship off.-r
leg a choice of two routes, wiii best
fill every requirement necessary to
successful and comfortable Pan-
American journeys from the South
east,
Through direct connections are
made through Atlanta, Athens, Au
gusta and all rail or through Sav
annah, thence the palatial and com
fortable steamships of the Ocean
Steamship Company to New York
or Boston.
See any agent of the Central of
Georgia Railway or drop us a pos
tal, as probably we will have some
thing in the way of special maiter
about the Exposition we can send
you. J. C. Haile, G. P. A ,
Savannah, Ga.
MEN AND BOYS’ CLOTHING!
TWENTY COWS ON* FORTY ACRES.
A friend with only 40 acres of land
wishes to keep a dairy of 20 cows and
asks for information how best to use
his farm to this end. To begin with,
it may be assumed that this number
of cows cannot be kept on such a sized
farm to be pastured. They will have
to be soiled, fed green foods, of which
more can be grown than grass ou a giv
en area of land. For the latitude
where our friend lives, central Iowa,
we would suggest sowing field peas
and oats every two weeks up to May
15, then successive planting of corn in
one or two acre tracts up to June 25,
these followed by a crop of millet cr
sorghum cn the land from which the
oats and peas have been removed.
Enough corn should be planted to fill
a silo for the principal forage ration of
the cows during the winter. Where
this course or one similar is followed
it is possible to pretty nearly keep a
cow the year round on an acre and a
half of good land. In any event, the
ration for 20 cows would have to be
fortified with some food bought from
outside, such as bran, oil, cotton seed
or gluten meal.
i A magnificent stock now ready lor the inspection of the
trade. The largest and most select ever brought out.
DANDELIONS AND PLANTAINS.
A lady reader in Illinois wishes to
know how to gc-t rid of plantain and
dandelions from her lawn. We know
of but one method, and that i3 to dig
them out by hand and keep everlasting
ly at it until the lawn is rid of them.
j One can get a great many of these
ny ;agent or representa-1 weeds dug up for a small amount of
Dressy Spring Apparel for Ladies.
We could expatiate at great length upon the superiority ot
this department and write a volume upon the surpassing nature
ol our bargains, but these points are well-known, and we simply
ask the ladies to call and inspect.
J. WILLIE LEVY,
Outfitter for Men, Women and Children,
fab25,’99—by
8-14 Bioadway, AUGUSTA, GA.
Machinery of all Kinds.
... Cr_ Xj.A.
^andersTille, Gra.
Call on
Uve for full information.
COLONEL SAM A. HAWK.
Prison
ly surveyed the group The men | After a long letter which her father
returned ihe salutation and looked
with admiration at the horse and
rider.
“Light stranger, and join us,” said
Jim Armstrong, the leader of the
gang. The man thus bidden, dis
mounted, and joined the group; re
marking—
“Gentlemeo will you ailow a
stranger to stop with you to-night?”
“Yes, provided you are not too
much of a tenderfoot,” remarked
Jim smiling.
The man addressed, at the word
“tenderfoot” smiled a little satiri
cally, and answered —
“Weil, I am perfectly willing to
stand any test that you may fee!
disuosed to put upon me,” glancing
involuntarily at his \V inchester ly
ing beside him, then at his horse
quietly grazing near by. Supple
menting this by brushing his hair
hick from his broad brow, and
disclosing a long scar at the root of
the scalp.
“ t his,” said he, “was made by a
Sioux, and I have two more on my
body if you care to see them. I
have been a scout lor five yearn,
serving most of my time under
Genera! I decided to move
farther East, so here I am.”
' At the mention of the general s
was a little stir of inter-
name there was a little
est among the men. ButJimArm-
gfrong sprang to his feet and grasp
ing the band of the stranger, ex-
"You^are! — You must be ‘Yellow-
O'ZYS’u your service, or
rather tbat is the nan>» I So by o»
the plains, but my real name is Ge-
raid Ardenne.”
«It makes no difference, we know
and will try and keep you with
^Mng'as possible; I know .be
colonel will be delighted if you slay
for to-morrow we commence our
' r A°'“o P it”provedi ongoing to,he
t h the colonel made ariange-
ran -fh Gerald to stop with him
me , Dt3 iu the “round-up” was
over Giuf Gerald proved so efficient,
over, uu tented to remain,
“.“ d .L e f“ f/oo .ba ranch, no... the
had received from hi3 brother, say
ing Ihe she would like to see the
broad nlains; ihe immense herds of
catile, and I expect if the truth
were known, some of the wild, west
ern men that she had read so much
of. At first her father strongly’ ob
jected, telling her that the Indians
were not always quiet; that there
was no society out there, and that
she would wish she were back again
almost as soon as she got there.
But the willful beauty pleaded and
coaxed unlii finally her father gave
in, so here she was. Oa their way
home, Ralf did his best to amuse
her, and everything seemed so
strange and still. The broad prairie
with its waving grass stretching
miles and miles away. The blue
sky overhead and tlie feeling of
freedom and liberty, as her horse
bounded over the turf heneatn her.
“This is a good horse,” she re
marked as she patted its glossy
neck.
“Yes, very good,” replied her com
panion, ‘ but. you have not seen any
tiorses yet: you ought to see Ge
rald’s.”
“Gerald! Who is Gerald, asked
Lillian ?”
“What, do you mean to say’ that
you have never heard of Gerald or
‘Yellow-haired Jerry,’ as they some
times call him ’”
“Why of course J haven’t. How
do you suppose I could have heard
anything about him. I guess he is
a man from the name.”
“Aye, you bet he ir—-but confi
dentially he does not like the la
dies.”
His companion laughed, and re
marked carblessiy:
“I expect that his appearance has
bad something to do with his aver
sion to the ladies or in other words
that they do not care for him on
account of his looks.”
Ralf smiled, a little peculiar
smile, and only said:
“Well you can judge for yourself
pretty socn.”
“Why! Does he stay with you
all ?”
“HesuieJy does, he is father’s
superintendent out here and the
Warden of iJie (ioveruiueut
at Atlanta.
Huntington, W. Va., July 2.—Col
onel Sam A. Hawk, warden of the gov
ernment prison at Atlanta, Ga.,is50
years of age and has an interesting fam
ily. His wife, a southern lady, the
daughter of Captain Mallory of Mem
phis, Tenu., is highly cultured and ranks
as a leader in social circles here. They
have three sons, aged 20, 15 and 12.
Colonel Hawk was formerly a mer
chant ana later engaged iu steamboat-
iug on the Ohio river. Iu 1890 he was
appointed by President Harrison to look
after the public domains iu Arizona,
which position he filied acceptably, not
withstanding agents of large cattle syn
dicates attempted to murder him on dif
ferent occasions. Once he was corner
ed iu his room at a hotel iu Prescott.
He was handy with a gun and shot two
of his antagonists.
In 1896 he was appointed warden of
the state penitentiary of West Virginia
and brought this institution up to
a standard never known in the his
tory of the state.
The people of Atlauta will find him
an agreeable gentleman and wiii have
no cause to regret his appointment.
money just before the circus comes to
town by boys wbo are too big to crawl
under the canvas. It may be noted
here tbat much of the trouble with
weeds on the lawn comes from care
lessness in the matter of fertilizing it,
manure full of weed seeds not killed
by fermentation being used. Some
times weed seeds are washed on to the
lawn from higher land, and sometimes
one has a good neighbor who will raise
on bis place enough foul seeds to poi
son the lawns of all Ills neighbors. We
have a piece of an old file fastened
jfcito a convenient handle and kept
sharp, with which we keep our lawn
free from the pests mentioned. We
wish that we Itnew of an easier meth
od, but we do not.
Saw Mills, Engines,
: oilers 5 Fittings,
Howing machines
THRESHING
MACHINES, Sc.
Gin Repairing, a Specialty.
Orders from Burke county giveu special attention.
fpW" On all work sent in bv 1st of June next, I will pay
FREIGHT ONE WAY!
All work Guaranteed.
Dollars ! Your Old Clothes Redeemed!
GREAT POWER PLANT.
Bolton
Chattahoochee River Near
Will Be Harnessed.
Atlanta, July 2.—Atlauta is soon to
have a new industry which, when com
pleted, will involve the expenditure
of northern and local capital amount
ing to §1,000,000 or more, and which
will mean more industrially than any
single plant in this section of the state.
Its effect will be far-reaching, and it
will practically revolutionize manufac
turing conditions in and around At
lanta.
The new plant provides for the har
nessing of the Chattahoochee river at a
point about 4 miles 'from Bolton by
means of a dam with a 40-foot fall and
the erection of a splendid plant which
will supulw the manufacturers of At
lanta with a maximum capacity of 20,-
000 horsepower in electricity.
While the bulk of the money invested
in the new enterprise will come from
the north, several well known Atlanta
men are interested in the venture. Al
though all plans are now complete, none
of the interested parries care to have
their names mentioned iu the matter.
Work ou the plant will be begun at a
very early date.
PLANT TREES.
You will be reading this just at the
time to plant trees. It is always iu
order and a patriotic duty to plant
trees every springtime. Plant ever
greens for a wind break around your
home; plant trees in tbe front yard for
shade and for beauty; plant fruit trees
iu the orchard; plant elms and maples
by tbe roadside. Get your neighbors
together and plant trees on the school-
house grounds and in the cemetery.
Next to grass the tree is nature’s bene
diction, tbe beautifier of her land
scapes, tbe modifier of her climates,
shade for the summer, and leafless
limbs a shield from wintry blasts.
Trees are better tbat men—some men.
They will gratefully reward your care,
will gladden you with shade and ver
nal beauty in summer, protect yon in
winter, return you luscious fruit and
flower and till tbe June morning with
bird songs. We sincerely pity tbe man
who can only look at a tree to size up
how much firewood or lumber or how
many feneeposts it will make.
We will reduce your Clothing bill by mak- | We dye yourfaded Suit,
iugyour clothes look neat and tidy longer. : Oulof town p«tronage given special atten
We preserve your new Suit. tion. Also Ladies work.
We clean your soiled Suit. I Don’t Forget to try the
Scheme Instituted by the Illinois Cen-
tral Railway.
Chicago, July 1. — About 200 em
ployes of the Illinois Central were re
tired today on a pension, under the sys
tem approved by President Fish and
General Manager Harrahau today aud
which became effective at midnight
last night.
Their pensions will be based on their
average monthly pay during the last 10
years of their service, they being al
lowed monthly a certain per cent of this
amount for each year of their total ser
vice.
To carry out the pension scheme tbe
company has provided a fund of $250,-
MILLIONS OF WILD PIGEONS.
Only the older men now recall the
visits of the countless millions of the
wild pigeons which in the spring of the
year 40 years ago used to swarm all
through the newly settled west. Birds
in such .vast numbers were not to be
found anywhere else on earth unless :t
might be sea fowl on some ocean isle
on tbe South American coast. The
pigeons swarmed on to the newly
sown grainfields and picked up every
kernel not covered with earth. They
would locate a roost in some dense
grove of timber and break tbe timber
down by tbe weight of their numbers
and nests. It did not then seem as
though this bird could ever be exter
minated, but the fact remains that
there is probably not a live specimen
left in North America today of the pas
senger pigeon. Whether they were all
trapped and slaughtered or whether
the destruction of tbe forests destroyed
their food supply and they migrated to
some other land will never be known.
HOW TO PLANT THE SHADE TREE.
This is tbe tree planting season. For
shade trees in the north we have noth
ing more reliable, graceful and hardy
than the" water elm. We suggest the
following method of planting—one we
have followed very successfully for
000, ancfeach year a snm not to exceed | many years: Co into the woods and se-
$100,000 will be set apart for the pension i lect trees about three inches in diame-
allowauces for the year.
A Brljrht Boy Wanted.
The publishers of tbe famous big
illustrated weekly uewspaper,Pen/t-
sylvania Grit, are now placing rep
resentatives at every post office in
Georgia and they desire to secure
the service of capable hustling
agents in each of the foliowing
towns of Burke county: Girard;
Hlllis; Keysville; LawtonvillejMid-
ville; Munnerlyn; Roeers; and in
such other towns as are not already
supplied. The work is profitable
and pleasant. A portion of Satur-
urday only is required. Over 5,000
agents are doing splendidly. No
money whatever is required. Every
thing is furnished free. Stationery,
rubber stamp, ink and pad, adver
tising matter, sample copies, etc Pa
per9 are shipped to be paid for at
the end of each month. Those not
sold are not charged for- Write to
the Grit Publishing Co, Williams
port. Pa., and mention The True
Citizen.
ter, get as much root as possible, trim
the tree to a bare pole eight feet in
height, plant the tree six inches deeper
than it grew in the woods in a well
prepared mellow bed, mulch heavily
and see that the tree is watered the
first season should tbe weather be dry.
A tree so planted—and it may be an
elm, a maple, a box elder, a sycamore
or linden—will grow and develop into
a thrifty, handsome tree. A tree with
but few feeding roots cannot sustain a
big top and if cut bac-k as stated will
only make new wood, as new roots are
able to support new growth.
SiMU DM Ah
Opposite H. H. MANAU, the Tailor,
WAYNESBORO, GEORGIA.
$ 1.00 YEAU , _
'fP Tt tS9S-" r; -'' ■ ' ‘
ifvLYv-' \ .r ' ; .
• .'•{ ''•' • •
V- . • . L
i h
i vy c;c-
iaterest.
. 'TO FC.US
.LMC PA223...
ou? ot thousands con-
•t a family necessity. It
:: - .1-, pure rad inspiring,
lie .„f*iier.is, while varied, are
running and of the highest
It contains neither sen-
r.it.onaiism nor provincialism,
iifis number is constantly increasing.
'.nraro'. a Most Liberal Terms.
: Cents a Copy.
| for a samp!: copy and we will send you an elegant
v UvJ.. £ vu engraving, vo by 05 inches in size, of Landseer’s
?? f 11 TN'ff - i*-* - 3 J N * . .irViA*
famous painting “ Defiance, or Drag at Bay.” Mention this offer when you write.
Address WOMAN’S i!OMH COMPANION, Springfield, Ohio
H 4
VBSBHBES
nodal
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
This preparation contains all of the 1
digestants and digests all kinds of j
food. It gives instant relief and never j
fails to cure. It allows you to eat all
the food you want. The most sensitive
stomachs can take it. By its use many
thousands of dyspeptics have been
cured after everything else failed. It
is unequalled for all stomach troubles.
PROF. P.M, WHITMAN,
209 7th St., Augusta, Ga.
GIVES FREE EYE TESTS for all defects o?
sight, grinds thei proper glasses and WAR
RANTS them.
Lenses cut into your frame while you wait.
li can't help
but do you good
Prepared only by E. O. DeWitt & Co., Chicago
The SI. bottlecontains2H timestfce50c. size.
•Sold by H B McMASTER.
Dr. Caldwell’s Sypup Pepsin cures
sick headache. Sold by H. B. Me-
Master, Waynesboro; H.Q Bell, Mil-
len.
Iiotics to All
Who Have Machinery!
I have located in Wayoesboro. and wiliigi ve
prompt attention to all repairs on any kind
of Machinery. PlumbiDga specialty. Orders
left at my home, or at S. Beli’s store will be
given quick attention.
id t cii iu» liuuic. ut aii
given quick attention.
E. W. CHANDLER, Machinist,
jan 26.1901—by
FREE OF CHARGE.
—-riicine or glasses
F. C. YOUNG,
ISLINGTON BARBER SHOP.
WAYNESB )RO, GA.
My shop is nicely fixed with water ami
every convenience. I solicit the public pa-
ronage. Special attention given to work
or he ladie dec5.’*XI—
Shoe Making,
REPAIRING, Ac.
I am located on NewSt., Cobbham, where
I am prepared to gi ve satisfaction in mending
Shoes and Harness at short notice. °atislac-
tion guaranteed. I solicit a share of your pa
tronage. When in need of any kind of SHOE
repairing, ring TELEPHONE, No, 2. I will
rail for the work.
rev. P. J.MAJOR, Waynesboro.Ga.
POOR COPY