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LUXURY WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL!
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Watch our noxt advertisement.
loxt adverti
■MON
• is always the same.
One package is just like another.
It is uniform in every respect.
Big Pemiuins For Farmers.
GOLD IN F/i’DUrFIE.
i “
Has Midas Touched t«»r* Uocfcs !n That
Counlj?
Atlanta, Any. 3.—State Geologist j i; -
W. S. Yeates has left the city for Me- j
Duffle county, wherG he goes ro make j
further investigations upon the gold j
veins of that section, some of which I
have been found to be most remarkable ] o
in extent and richness. | »
There are three mines in the northern
section of McDuffie county, which Pro
fessor Yeates proposes to take up, es
pecially at this time, and give them a
thorough examination. These are the
Latham, the Porter and the Edwards.
They are aii in the same gold belt with
those which' have recently made such
rich yields, and all of them have been
worked at considerable profit.
The development of the gold bearing
veins of that section, which extend up
into Lincoln and Walker counties, is
proving productive of marvelous results.
It seems almost as if Midas had touched
the rocks of McDuffie, as nearly ail are
teeming with the yellow metal, and in
some cases in such profuse quantities as
to seem airno-t fabulous.
Dollars
Your
Old
Clothes Redeemed
IV- uiii reduce
r I'
We dean your •
oar Clot (line hi I by mail- | w c dye
>nk neat a <1 tidy l inger. j (mui! v
new - ult i lion, ‘.'so 1, idles w >iv: J
died Suit. I Han't forgot to try the
r faded Suit.
.-a p tronage given special atten
iiAOi^COiiO lili! Ai UlinJii'J \\Oilivb
A U, liio Te. lor.
JLl Dill lilt 'j I I O J t i\Wj
’ A YN KSHoaO, GFORGIA.
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282 : Strom
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OFFICK and WQn j;
Forth A tigusia.
IT NEVER VARIES
If you like one package you will like all
The Southern Inter-State Fair, to be
held at Atlanta in October next, has de
cided upou a very tempting schedule oi
premiums for agricultural products
Here are some of the principal items:
-$1,000.00 for the best county exhibit,
$500.00 £or the second and $300.00 for
the third best exhibits of this character
Besides these, each county making a
worthy exhibit, that does not take ;;
premium, will be awarded a special
prize of $100.00.
There are five premiums offered for
agricultural exhibits made by indivia
uals. These prizes range as follows:
$300.00, $200 00, $100 00, $00.00 and $40.-
CO respectively. Then comes an exceed
ingly liberal offer for exhibits of hay
ana forage, headed with premiums oi
$100.00 and $50.00 for first and second
best displays of forage. These are fol
lbwed by $10.03 and $5.00 premiums for
first and second best bales of each dif
ferent- variety of hay.
The premiums offered for grain and
root crops are also - very liberal. $10.00
and $5. 00 premiums for the first and
second best bushels of each. These pre
miums are offered in great detail and
full information is given iu the pre
mium list issued by the Association.
Send your name to Secretary T. H.
Martin, Atlanta, and secure a copy oi
this list. It contains numerous prizes
for which you may compete With 3Yci>
chance of winning.
LAST ACT OF LOTTERY.
LlOn COFFEE is not glazed or coated with egg mixtures and chemicals, but is
an absolutely pure coffee, full of strength and flavor.
In every package of LION COFFEE you will find a fully illustrated and descriptive list. No housekeeper, in
fact, no woman, man, boy or girl will fail to find in the list some article which will contribute to their happiness,
comfort and convenience, and which the}- may have by simply cutting out a certain number of Lion Heads from
the wrappers of our one pound sealed packages (which is the only form in which this excellent coffee is sold).
WOOLSON SPICE CO., TOLEDO, OHIO.
Perfect Passenger
Service.
Money! Money l
Money
©
IV 3 6 i
Watchmaker and
Jeweler,
The Direct Route
Between Afi
Principal Points
IN
Georgia.
Alabama and
PENETRATING the
Finest Fruit,
Agricultural,
Timber, and
Mineral Lands
SOUTH.
At G per cect on 10 years time !
e are prepared to negotiate j
loans on improved city and j
Farm property in sums of uotj
less than three hundred dollars 1
I
at 6 per cent, interest, for ten j
years il desired.
Can secure an advance of 50
per cent, on the value of the
property offered as security
Call and see us.
LAWSON & S0ALLS,
Waynesboro, Ga.
—tr
w.
I). BECKWITH,
RESIDENT DENTIST,
Luclty Miners Piling on Claims at K1
. lieno anil Fort Sill,
j El Reno, O. T., Ang. G.—The last act
; in opening the Indian lands of the
I Comanche-Kiowa tribes began todav
I
| when the winners in last week’s lottery
were permitted to file on their claims.
The filing began iu El Reno for the Ei
Reno district, and at Fort Sill for the
! Lawson district. At each place 125 of
j the lucky ones were permitted to file in
j the order that their names were drawn
; from the wheels. The filing at the rate
of 2.50 will continue daily until the en-
I tire 13,000 claims have been disposed of.
It is estimated that at least 2,000 or
j 3,000 claims drawn at the lottery will
| never be filed on. There will uudonbt-
i euly be u lively scramble for teem by
i the thousands of people who did not
l win iu the lottery.
Today also the auction sale by the
| federal government of town lots at Aua-
: riarko, Hobart and Lawton began. At
i each place tnousands of people hare
j waited for days the opportunity to pur-
| chase lots.
Carelessness Costs a Life.
Almox, Ga., Ang. G.—O. L. Yandi-
griff, superintendent of the Newton
county chaingang, by the careless hand
ling of his pistol yesterday lost hi.4 life.
Superintendent Vandigriff was direct
ing a squad of meu who were loading
rock at the Freeman quarry when lie
placed his baud upon the scabbard in
which his pistol rested. Iu some way
the weapon was dislodged, dropped to
the ground, muzzle upward, and was
discharged. The bail entered Vandi-
griff's breast and passed entirely through
his body. He lived only a few hours.
nrifBFB fin
s nil a It lit a H
Li hid is !i
lit
Manufacturers (High Grade,)
oors, Blinds, Glazed Sasli
fviantels, Etc.
Georgia
*T” "~f /*"*•* "
Rarefied Hun:or of the Ilockies.
High up on the Laramie range there
Is a little station called Sherman—a
mere watering place for trains on the
Union Pacific railway. Near by it is
a gigantic pyramid of stone GO feet
high and GO leet square at the base,
which was set up by the railway as a
jnouument to Oakes Ames and Oliver
Ames.
In the latter eighties there arrived r.t
Sherman a shabby person of melan
choly aspect, who put up a “shack”—
western for shanty—not far from the
monument. Ostensibly, he was pros
pecting, and he continued to prospect
for three years without accomplishing
any results, so far as could be ob
served. At the end of that period the
management of the Union Pacific re
ceived from him a communication de
manding the immediate removal of the
monument from the premises, which
he claimed as his under the homestead
law.
The matter was regarded in a hu
morous light at first, but subsequent
proceedings developed the fact that
the squatter had what lawyers call a
“case.”
The stranger, it seems, had located
on a section of land which did not be
long to the Union Pacific—the same
section cn which the monument had.
by an inadvertence, been placed. lie
knew very well wiint be was about,
and the upshot of the affair was that
the railway had to pay $5,000 for the
quatter's tract in order to make its
title good.
The monument, by the way, is dis
tant only about 100 yards from the
station, and it is a favorite trick of ex
perienced persons to induce green
travelers to attempt a run to the pyra
mid and back during the two minutes
of the train's wait. In nine cases out
of ten they fall on the way back,
bleeding at the nose, the air being so
rarefied at that elevation of 8.300 feet
to forbid such exercise.—Saturtiay
Evening Post.
Rill
Aii:! W»>ik of all Kinds m
UoivriDg, Ceiling, hiding, Finishing, Moulding,
iis, liriuge, RaiJr ad and Special Bills to order.
fsb 2i.’ aOj- l) v
Yellow Pine.
iYIonLUnnr Etc.
car
r n FOPi
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fa
5 uLdft di
zm
.L yy
•Just arrived this week-
nip liuta loiga Turnip.
lute Flat Dutch Turnip.
Fed oi Purple Top Turnip.
I cut hern 7 Top Turnip.
Yellow Aberdeen Turnip.
Golden Bail Turnip.
JjOng Cow Horn Turnip
trapped Leaf Flat Dutch Turnip,
and other varieties.
Also—A Fresh JJne of PURE DRUGS for sale by
H. B. McM ASTER Druggist and Seed ist,
WAYNESBORO. GEORGIA. ’
HORKAN’S GREAT BARGAINS!
-In seasonable and serviceable
JUDGE PRICE DEAD.
Waynesboro, Georgia.
High-Class work a specialty
WAYNESBORO, ; : GEORGIA,
(Office-OverCitizens Bank.)
Office horns: 8 to ! a. m., and from 2 to4
p m. Specsal attention to crown and brid;
Braes
work. Satisfaction guaranteed. Charges
reasonable. The expense of a trip to a
arge city Saved patrons sep3,’!)8—by
IN THE
THROUGH RATES AMD TICKETS
FURNISHED UPON APPLI
CATION TO ALL POINTS
North, South,
East, Wsstm
Central of Georgia Railway,
Ocean Steamship Co.
\ .> v:
wfr
'D> N .r v ^
’YY-JdBc lst
FAST FREIGHT
AND LUXURIOUS i
PASSENGER ROUTE 3
TO New York,
Boston
AND
THE
Complete Information. slates. Schedules ef
Trains and Sailing Dates ol Steamers Cheer-
tifity Furnished by any Agent of tho Company.
PRECR/PT10
CAREFULLY COMPOUNDED.
s e carry iu stock a large as-
ortment of
Healing Salves,
Toilet Articles,
Cosmetics,
Perfumes,
Patent Medicines,
and a complete list of Hygienic
appliances.
Seed. _— ee our Botan
ical catalogue.
To Arms !—A fleet of Spanish
mackerel coming up the creek
The old reliable the kind your fathers _ that JMUSt be Caught. Kow is the
used to take. The one that never fails
Was United States Treasurer Under
President Buchanan.
Chicago, Aug. G.—Judge William C.
Price, United States treasurer under
i President Buchanan, died here today at
; the home of his son-in-law, William S.
: Newberry, aged 86 years.
! Judge Price settled iu Sbringfield,
Mo., in the early thirties. An ardent
believer iu slavery, he became promi
nent in the ranks of the Democratic
party, and when Buchanan wa3 elected
he was made treasurer,
i W'hen Buchanan ordered Major An-
j derson ro his force at Fort Sumpter,
1 Judge Price believed the south was be-
| lug betrayed aud resigned his office iu
auger. He was with General Prince at
I the battle of Pea Ridge, and was cap-
; tured by the federals and confined in
: the prison at Alton, ill., till September
18G2, when he was exchanged.
Judge Price had beeu in ill health for
■ some time, owing to his advanced age,
! and death was not unexpected.
co.oplsts Welcome Change.
Capetown, Aug. G.—The Cape Times
! welcomes the change of policy an-
| uonneed iu the house of commons by
Colonial Secretary Catuberlain in re
gard to the treatment of the Boers who
shot natives, saying that close associa
tion with the Boers, with the daily con
sequences of the career of brigandage,
had already impressed the colonists with
the necessity of a change of policy.
Negro Hanged at .Memphis.
Mejh£IS, Aug. G.—Nathan Caruthers,
a negro, was hanged in the jailyard at
noon today for the murder of Charles
Nee be.
Makiis^ I! Rather Personal.
This is credited ::s one of General
Lew Wallace’s Turkish jokes: There
lived in Staiuboul. Turkey, a well to do
Turk named Ismad Ismail Ilassam
He was endowed with oriental wit that
slood liim well in hand when be was in
a tight place. A neighbor called on Is
mail one day and wanted to borrow his
donkey to use an hour. Ismail made a
Tew salaam and said:
“Neighbor. I am sorry, but my hoy
started on .the donkey an hour ago to
Scutari. By now he is gayly trotting
over the hills far from the sacred pre
duets of Stamboul.”
Just as Ismail finished his speech a
donkey’s loud bray was heard in (In
stable. which was under the same root
as Ismail's house, but in the rear. The
neighbor said:
“Ah. I hear your donkey bray.”
Ismail protested that his neighbor's
ears were deceived and that the noise
was not a donkey's bray. Then the
donkey, which was supposed to be jog
ging along toward Scutari, brayed
twice loudly. It was too much, and
the neighbor cried:
“Oh, that is your donkey, Ismail. Al
lah help me. I can now borrow him.”
Then Ismail said:
“Which do you believe is lying, the
donkey or me?”
The neighbor bad to give Ismail tlie
benefit of the doubt and went awav.
JVe are furnishing nnr friends arid 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, Towels, Ready-Made Sheets, Piilow
Cases, Lace Curtains, Rugs, Carpets, the finest iine of white and
red Damask ever seen in Augusta, for 25c. a yard.
Buudie Remnants oi Calico and Worsted and ever) tiling
you want for yourself and family, at the LOW PRICE STORE.
P. D. HORKAiM & CO
842 Broad treet, AUGUSTA, GA.
iKr
If You 're a Judge
of good liquors I am
willing to accept your opinion of my
famous George E. Payne’s Private
Stock Pure Rye, distilled and bot
tled for me by Angelo Meyers & Co.,
Philadelphia. Pa.
If you are cot a judge, j-on map rely upon my
guarantee of its purity anil age. and upon tlie t*^-
tiinonv of people who have used it. I would like
to rend you a small order; a lar. er one will follow
tl per lull quart; *8.75 four quarts. Order what
you want. 1 have it
SOUTH CAROLINA SALOON.
mavll,1901- by
GEO. E. PAYNE,
11U Broadway,
Proprietor.
AUGGSTA, Ga.
(toads MARK nreiSTESEO NO. 174-38,)
FROG POND
CHILL AND FEVER CURE,
nti: ORIGINAL NO CiiRt NG PAY.
50 CENTS A COTTLE.
Have You Seen It.
\Ve keep Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup
Pr-pm'n in plain view, hut if you
dori’i happen to see it, why ask for
it. The manufacturers guarantee
it to cure dyspepsia and all forms of
stomach troubles.
Sold by ir. p,. MCMasfer, Waynes
boro, Ga. h q Bell, Mi)len, Ga.
THEO. D. ELIXE, E. H. HINTON,
General 'Supt. Traflo
J. C. HAILE, Gen’l Pose. A*rt.,
SAVANNAH. GA.
to cr.re. Don't waste time and money
experimenting with new cures. But go
for the best from the jump. Frog
| Port! is ike ounce of prevention and
pound of cure combined. Ask for it—
take no substitute, if your merchant
dees net scli it write to us we will send
it direct for 50 cents.
].B. DiYENEORT k CO., Augusta, -Ga.
HffiJSB YOUKJOJB FKINTBNtt TO v
/ Vine CITIZEN JOB OFFICER aynes- 1
f£ti«.o.»!2ass5affi|j/
For sale in Burke county bv all fiist-eiass
Druggists, and all leading merchants
june22 1001 - hm
laity Batlmata* chaarfully fnrnlabad^ Advertising rotes on application.
time to buy Angle Rods, sittkers,
etc., with which to stop the said
fleet. Sold by
L. R. FORD.
J.VINURDEY NURSERY CO
POMONA, A. C.
1,000,000 Trees and Vines
Large stock of shrubbery.
apU3,I901—by_
Four Hundred liea Strike.
Memphis, Aug. 7.—Four hundred meu
employed iu the Memphis car and
foundry works walked out yesterday be
cause of a disagreement with the man
agement on the subject of pay days.
Bow Hates Oi er Central.
Low rates to Buffalo, N. Y, via
Central of Georgia Rail way,account
of Pan-American Exposition Choice
of routes via rail or water Cali on
any agent of the company for full
information, rates, etc.
Why Spiuera Are Not Insects.
The spider is not an insect, though
probably nine people out of ten would
class it under this term. With scor
pions and mites spiders form a class in
the auimal kingdom known as Arach-
nida. This name is derived from a
mythical personage called Aracbne.
the daughter of a purple dyer of Lydia,
who was fabled to have challenged
Minerva to a trial of skill in spinning.
So indignant was the goddess at this
act of boldness that she forthwith
transformed the hapless challenger
into a spider, presumably in order that
she might have the best possible op
portunity of practicing the art on
which she prided herself so much.
Spiders differ from insects in five
main particulars. Their eyes are sim
ple instead of compound, they have
eight legs in place of six. they do not
pass through the metamorphoses
which are characteristic of insects,
they have no antenna 1 and their
.breathing is accomplished by means of
organs which combine the functions of
lungs and gills, instead of by tubes
pervading their bodies. These paints
of distinction are sufficient to deter
mine the fact that it is impossible to
class spiders as insects.
Send us the news of your section.
If ihe action of your bowels is not
easy and regular serious complica
tions must tie the final result-. De-
Witt’s Little Early Risers will re
move this danger. Safe, pleasant
and effective, h b. MCMaster.
THIS SEASON
We will offer to tbe Public the bestfiues ol
That has ever been for sale in AUGUSTA,
Our SHOES will be sold strictly on their melits anti on our guarantee of iheir re
liability. We will have some special offerings to make as the season progresses, due notice
of which we will given to the public.
In medium-priced SHOES, the lines we carry have no superior. In
kyyrm: shoes,
such as are needed by those exposed to the inclemency of the weather. We have made sp
clal effort to secure SHOES that will give ample protection to feet, snd keep them dr,
No trouble to show our Shoes.
GOULEY & VAUGHN
T
826 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA.
ESsY”Agent or HANAN & SON S Flue Shoes.
MOBLEY BROS.,
FOUNDERS
Orders promptly attended to.
MA CHINISTS,
Wayneboro, Ga.
CASTS TTrESEETS ana FEIDA -
XftSSMfY-sj: Dealers in Grist Mills. Cotton Gins, Pres
Feeders and Condensers and d*> all kinds t
s-cjglue and Boiler repairing. Building Gin Brosr
and repairing Gins a specialty. All kinds oi
done on short notice. We get upallkiDds of mouldings Window and aa
juneli >e—
SsiS
.. .. .
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