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Mill Work gVLYL
DESCRIPTi ON
I YE LLOW PINE LUMBER
FACTORY AND SAW MILL EQUIPPED WITH LATEST IMPROVEMENTS A;T
^c)
OF EVERY
f mmti ORGANIZATION THOROUGH IN EVERY DEPARTMENT.
1
FULL LINE iN STOCK AND PROMPT SHIPMENTS ASSUP'r,!
■ ' T —=- PRICES.CATALOGUES.ETC..UPON APPLICATION.
Perkins Manufacturing GoIugiista.Ga.I
To produce the best results =
in fruit, vegetable or grain, the
fertilizer used must contain
enough Potash. For partic
ulars see our pamphlets. We
send them free.
TELEPno
Roll 9
Sold
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ip l si Qwg* $*
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Waynesboro
AKE no mistake!
See tria
is on every package of
I till
you buy*
Hifl+r
0 li&a
V f/v
0/(&f
Ml l 1 ' < l /
its purity*
It guarantees
No coffee is
unless it is in a J pound
sealed packet with the
head of a lion on the
front* Then you get
pure coffee—the highest
grade for the money*
Watch our next advertisement.
now become the leader
of all package coffees?
^ And why is it used
millions cf homes ?
m
Because it does not
sail under false colors*
It is an absolutely clean,
pure coffee* No glazing,
no coating with egg
mixtures or chemicals
in order to hide imper
fections*
Just try a package of
and you will under
stand the reason of its
popularity.
In every package of LI@ih1 fDOFFEIS! yew v/i!l find a fully illustrated and descriptive
list, No housekeeper, in fact, no woman, man, coy or girf will fail to find in the list seme article
which will contribute to their happiness, comfort and convenience, and which they may have by
simply cutting out a certain number of Lion Heads from the wrappers cf our one pound sealed
packages (which is the only form in which this excellent coffee is sold).
WOOLSCN SPiCE CO„ T0LE20, OHIO.
Premiums For the Ladies.
There will be abundant opportunity
this fall for the ladies of the scinthla.ii
to prove their skill in matters domestic
aud be well paid for their trouble m the
bargain.
The premiums offered in the Depart
meat of Woman’s Work of the South
eru Inter-State Fair, to be held at Ac
lantu Oct. 9 to 20, have been greatly in
creased and cite classification changed
so that ail have a fair showing. There
are premiums for work done in country
homes, and there are premiums for
work done in city homos. Ail are large
ana well worth winning
Every sort and character of preserve:
fruits, vegetables and melons are repro
seated in the classification, with premi
urns ranging from $1.00 to $50.00.
Breads, cakes, condiments and pickle:
come next, with premiums ranging fro
$1.00 to $25.00.
Fancy work of every imaginable kind
with plain sewing, knitting, quiltmak
ing, dressmaking and art work, ail come
in for a liberal share of the premiuu
money offered in this department. Sen
for a premium list and capture some of
the prizes. Secretary T. H. Martin, At
lanta, will mail you a premium list on
application.
Don’t Pen Turkeys.
“I do not wonder that there are so
many failures made in preparing tur
keys for market when we take into
consideration ’ the course so many
breeders take in fattening their birds,'
says George Wolf in Farm Poultry
“I have frequently seen flocks of tur
keys penned up in a building for the
purpose of fattening for market, :
it was a failure every time. This is
no more than should be expected, for
turkeys are cf a wild nature, and
soon as they are cooped they be
quarreling, chasing one another about
and constantly worrying for freedom
They soon tire of their food, grow thin
and will, when killing time comes,
weigh less than when first cooped, with
the expectation cf fattening them.”
Georgia
Perfect Passenger
Service. -
The Direct Rout©
Between Ail
Principal Points
IN
Alabama and Georgia.
PENETRATING THE
Finest Fruit,
Agricultural,
Timber, and
Mineral Lands
.SOUTH.
iiroacf
For information as to
schedules and Rates
Routes
both
nin nm
IN
THE
iiuumi
write to either of the undersigned.
You will receive prompt reply aud reliahl
information.
C, C. McMillan, A. J. Jackson,
O. A, Pass. Dept. G, P. A.
G. H. WILCOX, S. A.
AUGUSTA, GA.
mi GEO. A. PATRICK,
(Formerly Winkler & Patrick.
DENTIST OFFICE,
626 Broad Street,
Augusta, - - Georgia
Office Hours— 8:80 m., to 6p.m.
df»P!Y. T GA-_
S. E. MAGILL,
Gen’i Agt.
ATLANTA.
-V. \y. HA P.D WICK
Gen’i Agt.
MACON,
M, R. HUDSON,
T. F, & P. A
ATLANTA, G
C. P, COX,
Gen’! Agt.
ATH KNS
W. C. McMILLTN
S. F. A P. A
MACON.
w. m. McGovern
Gen’l Agt.
AUGUSTA.
SOCIETY BADGES!
Society Badges t Society Badges
/g~- r Manufacture'
<^E,W. BSDSE, 5’“^,:..
V*——— -* Stencils Cottor
Brands, Ac.. 221 Campb
Ac.. 221
Broad and Ellis, Augusta
1 St., between
Ga. augtUHIM
HOi.LEYMAM’3
CONFOUND
eli m
FOR
horse
Colic.
Money!
Money!
THROUGH RATES AND TICKETS
FURNISHED UPON APPLI
CATION TO ALL POINTS
N&rihi, SmsMish
Ernst? VI!esi s
The 2 biggest farmers in Georgia and South
Carolina—Capt. J as. M. Smith says of
"Have tried them. Holie.* man’s is the best
o! ail. Keep it ail the time,”
Cayt. It. H. Walker says: “Iloiieyman
i is wortli its weight in gold. I have saved:
j manv as three horses lives per month with
it.”
i Ho!ley man's Comaound Elixir
50
| Will uurc any ca
the sun
CENTS.
e ot Horse Colic under
At 6 per cent on 10 years time
\\ e are prepared to negotiate
loans on improved city and
Farm property in sums of not
dess than three hundred dollars
at 6 per cent, interest, for ten
years if desired.
Can secure an advance of 50
per cent, on the value of the
property offered as security
Call and see us.
LAWSON &. SCALES,
Waynesboro, Ga.
s ep 15.1600— tf
The newly discovered oi! wells It
Texas have au asphalt base—In fact
the thick black fluid which pours from
them is but little else save liquid as
phalt. While not so valuable a product
as would have been petroleum oil wltl
a paraffin base like the Pennsylvania
oils, the Texas product has a large
sphere of utility as fuel and for all pur
poses for which asphalt is used. Thi
first uses made of it will be in the line
of fuel.
S3 ^ CT5 3R. ZH .rs. „
Bears the si The Kind Ycu Hays Always Bougf t
Signature
cf
Bold by all the merchants of this county.
Do not take any substitute said -o be ike
kune thing or as good.
N. L WILLETT DRUG CO,
AUGUSTA. Ci\.
make it.
Central of Georgia Railway,
Goean Steamship Co.
FAST FREIGHT
AND LUXURIOUS
PASSENGER ROUTS
Toilfew W@rk f
th! *t.2.13Ky
Csmpleta Information, Sates, Schedules of
Trains and Sailing Dates of Steamers Chssr-
lully Furnished by any Agent of the Company.
THEO. D. KLINE, £. BT. HINTON,
General Supt. Trade Manager.
J. C. HAILE, Gen’i Pass. Agt.,
SAVANNAH, GA.
Try one of our clubbing offer*
pt’Dra
I Illuiu
Watchmaker aud
Jeweler,
WORK FOR THE ROPE.
Eleven Murder Cases Booked For
Trial at One Court.
Dublin, Ga., July 8.—It has devel
oped that John Robinson, the negro
who on May 24 assaulted and murder
ed Bertha Simmons iu this county, and
who was recently captured in Savan
nah, is wanted in several other places
for murder. Yesterday a negro from
Jones couuty identified Robinson as the
man who several years ago murdered a
negro girl m that county and escapee.
It is also stated that he murdered a
woman in Hancock couuty.
At the July term of the Laurens su
perior court eight murder cases, two for
arson and one for assault,are to be tried.
The murderers for trial are:
J. J. Webb, Frank Davis and Jack
Haskins, for the murder of Oscar Can
non, July 4, 1900; John Robinson, for
the assault and murder of Bertha Sim
mons; Jonas Snell, for the murder of
Jim Hall, nine years ago, and who was
recently captured at Valdosta; Joe
Coates, for the murder of Sol Robinson
a few weeks ago; J. L. Graham, for the
murder of a man named Mimbs, a few
months ago, and U. L. Perry, for the
murder of Jack Hester, la- t September.
Webb, Haskins, Davis and Graham are
white men. The other capital cases to
be tried are Jack Graham and Dink
Fish for arson and Will Huggins for
assault.
ijt DENTIsT *
603 arm 608 Broadws
Bell Phone 1875.
Fab 16.*97-
y. : A UGUSTA, GA
Ktrower Phone 27-j
SAMPLE’
•JC 3 * (Y.tton.Pa.v, Grist,
SL Oil and Forilii2»r
K- 33 e. 5 I
Gin* rrtfFB, Cai
8ui!<3in?t Bridge
TS.
till anti S!i!ntri« Outfit*
GUT FI
1 and Slii
oiWfng, Bridge £ .-*,-4-? y>
Facto:y. Eurnaos liD^S.
and Kail road <--J
Raflroad, Mtli. r.nd Factory unmleg.
Beittr.?. Packing. Injectors, Pipe Pitting*,
Saws, Files, OilGrs, Etc.
vig- Cast every day; work ISO hand*.
LOMBARD IRON WORKSX SUPPLY CO.,
AUGUSTA, OA.
8 K NO YOUKJMK PRINTING *J O
THE CITIZEN JOB OFFICE,Waynes-
l boro, Ga. Justfcet-fiouri Blanks a” sr-e- J
‘ ' J
^ c!*!tv K*tUB*t*S 0h««rft>l!v tonitaiied^
vVaynssboro, Gsorgla.
High-Class work a specialty
HE LOST HIS JOB.
Forced to Seek Employment For Up-
Iloiding ; he 1,aw.
Atlanta, July 9 —L. J. Fletcher,
brother-in-law to Sheriff Joseph Merrill
of Carroll couuty, and one of the brave
men who stood with the sheriff iu the
jail, preventing a mob of 500 men from
taking out and lynching a condemned
negro criminal, is now in search of em
ployment in Atlanta as the result of his
action in upholding the law aud protect
ing the home of the sheriff ana of him
self.
The story of the attack ca the jail at
Carrollton and the repulse of the law
less mob that clamored for the life of a
negro murderer will be readily recalled.
Fletcher and Senator Hamrick are the
two men who stood with, Sheriff Merrill
and fired upon the mob as it swarmed
into tiie jail and up the stairway, kill
ing one man and wounding another.
The effect of their action was almost in
stantaneous. The mob withdrew aud
the majesty of the law was upheld.
Now Fletcher, having been discharged
by his employer in Carrollton for acting
j in protection of his homo and the law,
must seek employment elsewhere.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
our hens in Germany:
An Ascnt oi flie Ilfiiser Kan Keen la
vestlsralinu American Fowls.
Through unofficial sources the inter-
estir.g fact has been learned here that
‘Emperor William recently sent to this
country a trusted agent to study care
fully and report on the character and
habits of the American lien, with tin
view of introducing into German barn
yards a strain of new blood for the im
provement of the native fowls. This
development lias led to the discovery
that the hens of the fatherland for the
last few -years constantly have been
growing derelict in duty In the impor
tant matter of laying eggs and that as
a consequence Germany not only
threatened with an egg famine, but
also that the ultimate result of the
present tendency cf gallinaceous af
fairs will be extinction unless some
thing is done to arrest the forces o
decay that have seized the German
hen. Accordingly the kaiser’s agent,
Count von Luckier of Silesia, is no
preparing an extensive report of his
observations of the American lien, par
ticularly as to the diet and habits
which he perceives to conduce to her
remarkable fecundity. The count spent
three or four months in this country
iu the prosecution of his mission and
only recently returned to Germany.
While here he traversed extensively
the farming regions of New York and
New Jersey, whence the main portion
of the egg aud chicken supplies of the
metropolis comes, and also visited a
farm in Ohio whose owner makes a
specialty of "raising” eggs. It is said
that his observations at this Ohio farm
convinced Count von Luckier ot the
unquestionable superiority of the Amer
ican hen over her cackling but deca
dent sister in Germany as nothing else-
did that he saw in the United States.
To give early demonstration of the
truth of his contention the count car
ried back to the kaiser’s domains sev
eral scores of the finest specimens of
American liens obtainable. He will
cross tin* American breeds with the
German stock in the confident expecta
tion of securing results that will prove
the correctness of his theory and at the
same time be so entirely satisfactory to
Emperor William that he will no lon
ger have cause to despair of his so!
diers and other faithful subjects being
tide to eat German instead of foreign
jggs. which not only cost more, but are
not so enjoyable to tlie German palate.
If Count von Luckier's experiment 's
successful, it is expected that there
will he an immediate demand in Ger
many for American lions, and by the
process of wholesale crossing of Amer
ican with the native fowl, it is believed,
the kaiser before long can boast cf bav
in his realm that great desideratum,
a perfect hen. one that does more lay
ing and less cackling.—New York Trib
une.
w
OFHCK siicl Y ORK
North Augusta.
Tices of Fowls.
“Satan finds some mischief still for
idle” liens “to do.” This fact is impress
ed on us as we notice that so many poul
try keepers have to write about this
season each year, the hens having been
confined closely for several months, to
ask how to cure some vice which their
fowls have acquired. We notice, toe,
that vices break out in very serious
form in places where the hens get plen
ty of exercise in scratching for their
grain. Scratching doesn't furnish va
riety enough, and some hens are more
disposed to certain vices than others.
Some breeds, too, are more prone to
vice than ethers, and it seems to de
pend mostly on the disposition. We
never had any trouble with Brahma
or Cochin bens by egg eating, feather
eating or picking the combs of the
males. Still we think that under fa
voring conditions they would develop
such vices and have no doubt that they
often do. They simply are more con
tented and less easily tempted than
some of the others.—Farm Poultry.
I \
Si IS? 5 ij s
g J ft- | | ,
i \ ? i n’f in \ 11
15 *
i i m n **«
iJ
H I
E . !
-Ui
urers .'High Grade,
Poors, JBiincis, Glazed Sas
[Vlantels, Etc.
AAO'OrTirS'X-^, GrlEIOSSG-
jMlli Won; of all Kinds m Georgia Yellow Pine.
Hi!
Homing. Ceiling,, biding, Finishing, Mou
Bridge. Raiir ad and Special Bills to order.
ia;ng, Etc., Cai
Just, arrived this week—
mp. Ruta B?:ga Turnip.
Into Flat Dutch Turnip.
Red or Purple Top Turnip.
Southern 7 Ton Turnip.
ellov,
4’
Aberdeen Turnip.
Long Cow Horn
Golden Rail Turnip.
trapped Leaf Hat Dutch Turnip,
and other varieties.
Also—A Fresh Line of PURE DRUGS, for sale by
H. B. McMASTER Druggist and i
WAYNESBORO, GEORGIA.
AUDI
seecust.
HOBKAM’S GREAT BARGAWS!
In seasonable and serviceable
We a re furnishing our friends and patrons with the best line
of Dry Goods ever brought to this city.
Just a few quotations to give you an idea what we have- to
furnish you with : Large-size Fleece-Lined, Extra-Heavy Vests
for Men. Women and Children, at 25c. each.
Hosiery, Belts, Corsets, Tovtds, Ready-Made Sheets, Pillow
Cases, Lace Curtains, Rugs, Carpets, the finest line of white and
red Damask ever seen in Augusta, for 25c. a yard.
Bundle Remnants of Calico and Worsted and even thing
you want for yourself and family, at the LOW PRICE STORE.
. HOF
842 Broad Street, AUGUSTA, GA
Ti;? f’avoroiles.
The Favorcl’e fowl is the favorite
breed of poultrymcQ in France, and it
also h:is many admirers iu this country
nd iu England. The Favorolles are
quick growers and respond favorably
THIS SEASON
We will offer to the Public the bestjiues ot
That has ever been for sale iu AUGUSTA,
Our SHOES will be sold strictly on their merits and on our guarantee of their re
liability. 5\ e will have some special offerings to make as the season progresses, dne notice
of which we will given to the public.
In medium-priced SHOES, the lines we carry have no superior. In
HLAIilVL SHOES,
such as are needed by those exposed to the inclemency of the weather. We have made sp
cial effort to secure SHOES that will give ample protection to feet, and keep them dr,
No trouble to show our Shoes.
GOULEY & VAUGHN,
826 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA.
£gS“Agent or HAN AN & SON S Fiue Shoes.
MOBLEY BROS,
y.Jiilkv ifellllllllf
4® ~
L. . / ;
;;. ^ . •' _ ' }
TCY'd " "Vi?
fc - ' Wv. i'*- f
MACHINISTS.
IVaylie boro, Ga.
CL'LS'Z'S TXTrXSIDiEVHTS anu FEIE-Y”
Dealers in Grist Mills. Cotton Gins, Prf*
-At Feeders and Condensers and*io all kiniis^oi^
glne and Boiler repairing. Building
Fra, r neY rk * me oa6hortn otlce. We get up all kinds"of moulding
' Window and d’
junell'uS—ki
Advertising rates liberal.
I
Job Printing promptly executed
7AVOROLLE HEN.
to tbe French method of fattening. Tba
illustration shows a fme hen of this
breed. She was bred and is owned by
Mr. T. R. Robinson, secretary of the
English FavoroIIe club. Tbe cut is re
produced from The Poultry Monthly.
The pilei th u annqy you po will
be quickly and permanently hfaled
it you use DeWitt’s Witch liazei
Salve. Beware of worthless coun
terfeits. h. b. Mc&iaster.
EKKINS, President. j HAU3ER. Mans'?
High-Grade Heavy Saw Mil! Machinery.
Georgia Iron Works,
Founders and Machinists,
AUGUSTA, : ; GEORGIA-
SlcciftUitB* Lid Fttimafes made on mills AC .,j
auglo,1900—bv *- 1 1
TaJp.-- ' -