Newspaper Page Text
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Cor. Broadway and Jaek;-on ts
Augusta,
MEMORIAL SERVICES
A’. St. Michael's Church Last Sunday His
Was ?a Grand Success.
-lol-
At tbe Episcopal church co »un-
dsy evening last a solemn <iu:l btau-
tilul memorial service h moring ihe
memory of our rmirderei p.-ecident
was held. After the usual church
service the choir sang "Nearer toy
GocJ to Thee.” the favorite, song cl
Mr McKinley which has been ren-
# -% vo , - _ dered hur-dreos of times at different
Ajf©Oi. 0ld. | places in ’.he United States since
j his death Mr. Porter, the eminent
divine, then delivered an eloquent
sermon of which he kindly furnish
ed The Citizen (ha manuscript
and we publish it below. The pa
triotic pong "America” kb-: after
terward sung by all and with a ben
ediction the service closed.
gave He us McKinley. Statesman, i where hapclness, peace and a per*
philanthropist, man and lover. All i f «ct harmony abides. Thou wast
history records no grander death of
man, to him it was God’s way. and
(hat was enough. He was as one
who “wrapped the drapery of his
f.dthfui of the tiiir-uts thy Lord gave
r.n.i by His promise to the faithful
lay down to
Soda, "Water
AND ICE CREAM PARLOR.
•toi-
$
The Model Establisment
OF ITS KIND IN THE U. S.
|he J|me
The Survival of the Fittest.
WAYNESBORO, GA., SEPTEMBER 2 1901
Tlie court of inquiry which Ad
miral Schley a9ked lor is now hav
ing daily sittings hearing testimony
that Schley is either a caitiff, liar or
coward as Sampson intimates.
I It is about, settled for the present
I that the trusts have whipped tbe
f fight in the great strikes up North.
I The laborers up there had better
! not monkey with J. Pierpout
| Morganism and trust prosperity all
I at the same time.
There are a plenty of reformers
and plenty of people who want to
be reformed, but every fellow warns
it his way and they don’t agree. So
the world goeB on with reform do
ing a scant business.
The president reminded the ko
dak fiend he had gone to the limit
with him and publicly berated one
for his impudence in trying to
“snap” as he was coming out from
church Sunday last. This is one o'
his unofficial acts that will be quite
generally endorsed.
A writer in a Vienna paper wants
to know what became of (he inhab
itants of Pompeii who escaped
while the city was being covered up
with ashes from Vesuvius. We con
fess the question is too much for us, j j
THE EMPLOYER ASB THE EMPLOYED
Eila Wheeler Wilcox asserts what
is rune times out of ten true when
she tells of one who often felt for
those out of work, but who finally
modified It and gave up much of
his sympathy because he came, “to
ihe conclusion that the majority
who are out of jobs have themselves
to blame; that there are more effi
cient workers wanted daily' and
hourly than can be supplied; lhai
the most provoking th ; ng of all is
the fact that so few iake any interest
in their work.”
How literally true this is as to the
employed generally; and especially
as to ihe black people who are em
ployed in any capacity. The best
wages always go to those who work
skillfully and work faithfully for
the interest of the employer along
with their own. Why should not
the interests of the employed and
ihe employer be mutual? Of course
bould. If one’s means of sud-
but suggest that he ask some of the port comes from the work
'bluff '
ne
w „ v „ crfif cj
ballet gills who are constantly b:uff . f rom another it is easy to see that
ing the world wuh their youth.ml-; upholding the employer’s inter
ne?s * i esi he perpetuate '-he means afford-
, " .. , . , , ,, ! ed him to live. '1 his is not a dis-
The doctors at ih9 beasiue of ihe • puted question at all. The wonder
martyred president did what they j j 3 that it is ever neglected or for-
could, but their earnest scientific i jr OJ t fcn at all. By observing the rule
modesty did not sayo ; OI - ma fclng the employer’s interest
pervading p:e- j ot ,] 18 employed, at once such
: service becomes ir.dispensible. Nat
urally an increase of appreciation
follows with increase ot confidence
| and remuneration and just here is
! erected the best co operative un-
Tom Johnston, mayor of Cleve- j derstanding know n to man. When
land Ohio—every one knows Tom — j the laborers and the employers of
has been suggested as a Democratic ' tbe earth act up trv this rule there
nominee for president. Tom was J wiil never be another strike,
instrument! in causing the Ohio i
work and
them from tbe all
turing, and driving them into
splcuousness by enterprising (?) pa
pers tumbling over each other in
efforts to make money by it.
convention to sit down suddenly on I
Mr, Bryan. Mr. B has behayed !
very nicely, recommends Tom and !
further declares he is not in it any
more himself.
So much has the srhere of worn
an’s work widened in the iast twen
ty years we are beginning to expect
her in any capacity. We hear of a
cattle queen with complacency and
would not be surprised to know of
her elbowing J. Pierpont Morgan
as empress of the ocean greyhound
lines. We respectfully suggest, that
Hetty Green ought to be ‘Duchess
of Wall street.”
Burton and lit-
attended Sam
Herndon.
Correspondence Citizen.
i Miss Sue Jones is guest of rela-
! lives here.
Mr and Mrs. J V
I tie daughter, Ruby,
’ Jones’ lecture Tuesday night.
Rey J B. Greiner will preach at
| Fair Haven Sunday morning, and
j evening at Herndon.
Mrs. Robt. Law and Mrs. T. E
Watkins are on the stek hst this
week. Their many friends hope
for them a speedy recovery.
Col. H C Fisher, of i.ewnan, spent
a few hours here Tuesday.
A. P. Wiggins and E. A. Gordon
have been confined to their rooms
The Atlanta Journal. News and | with chills and fever for several
Constitution have named a com 1
rnitte consisting of Jno. A. Bryce
chairman, W, B. Roberts, Esq., and
Hon. Clark Howell to raise a fund
for a monument to be erectedjn At
lanta to William McKinley. We
days.
Perking.
Correspondence Citizen.
Mr. H. C Perkins,
of Augusta,
have a subscription list and will be! was here on Wednesday on a little
gio<i to receive any sum, however ! huntingexpedition, but on account
large or small which will be for-j ^e high winds failed to bag much
warded to the committee promptly’ j same. _
The great purpose of this move-1 Rov. Mr. Davis, of Halcyondale,
ment is apparent to every citizen of j he ,U on Thursday.
Georgia.
Doesn’t the question oflen bother
you, dear reader, What does Canada
want to forever tag on to England
for; Is it some old worn out seoti
ment that, has Jong since served its
day but still clung to withont reas
on; or is it that Canada fears a want
of ability to govern itself? Surely
if the hardy folk across the lake-
will just pass the ordinance of seces
sion Uncle Sam will see that no
crowned head ever puts foot over
there any more, and stop that wet
nurse business.
i The fleecy staple is beginning to
come in rapidly now’. The Perkins
ginne.y is continually humming.
your
ET TU BILLY !
And William, the war lord, is
winking slyly and approvingly at
France. Poor old Turk, he is awful
jy8ick! And John Bull is not in if.
John had belter turn loose the
Transvaal and look out for (h^ Tm k
and the Suez Canal. The future is
not as bright for Elngland as it was
at the beginning of Victoria’s reign;
ana then she has lost prestige since
the war with the Boers, which has
cost so much in money and lives
Other nations of Europe by their
disregard of her are showing diplo
matic contempt for the old bny late
ly, and do not heed the blustering
old robber. He has long ruled the
wave but times are changing rap
idly and other nations are arming
the 9eas The Ursa Major under
the pole star is a tremendous power
now on land and sea, and has out
generaled all Europe in China. John
Bull may well put on his studying
cap. The late Turkey incident is
npt without grave portent. 1
— Now is the time to insure
gin houses and dwellings.
W. M. Fulcher.
Agt. Waynesboro, Ga.
scotrs
Emulsion
of Cod Liver Oil is the means
of life, and enjoyment of life to
thousands: men women and
children.
When appetite fails, it re
stores it. When food is a
burden, it lifts the burden.
When youlose flesh,it brings
the plumpness of health.
When work is hard and
duty is heavy, it makes life
bright.
It is the thin edge of the
wedge; the thick end is food.
But what is the use of food,
when you hate it, and can’t di
gest it?
Scott's Emulsion of Cod
Liver Oil is thefood that makes
you forget your stomach.
St. Matthew xx part of verse 28:
-“To give his life a ransome for
many.”
We mourn a great man fallen as
we stand beside the bier of the na
tions dead. The good, the great,the
true, the stesdfasr, the man of
mighty deeds, whom the world “de
lighted to honor” has passed away
and in awe our nature cries “how
long,0!God of our fathers,how long”
shall such things be and a God of
love and mercy reign ?
The man who loved his God and
fellow men striken by a murderer,
the embodiment of hatred, evii and
chaos,triumphant and right smitten.
But after all how powerless that
coward was, the instrument of hell
which strikmg did its worst and set
a martyr’s crown in Paradise. The
halo of glory which time shall nev
er dim in lieu of worldly honor.
You and I shall write upon the tab
iet of our souls McKinley the Good
and nations yet to be shall praise
him for the principals he maintain
ed. He liyed for good but he died,
died by a vicarious sacrifice for
mankind. His life was filled wuh
worn aniy tenderness and a gentle
ness amidst stern duties that drew
out thelove of these with whom he
came in contact.
He stood the bulwark of and rep
resented a perfect home, he hover
ed like n lover over her he called,
wife, and while childless the great
father heart that beat in his bosom
brought the littie children to him
without a call. He came into his
his high office when smoldered the
ashes of a dead strife, a man of par
ty far, far above ail parlies through
what he did. Men who bad met
brothers in deadly combat,and seen
a generations come and go with a
glimmer of the estrangement left
were reconciled by his act. He saw
the sons of these men marched
and beat down a common foe
to humanity, with ODe flag waving
over them and one united country
at their back. He remembered that
the blue and the gray were both he
roes and above all things else.
Americans with a deathless name
for firm and unchangible courage;
to achieve victory or endure defeat.
Such men cannot die, for “there’s a
deathless name that the moulding
vault shall spum.”On earth we shall
know him no more, the workman
has gone from among U3, but his
work goes on.
For us he was the “blood of the
Martyr” and “the seed of the
church” In the name of humanity
hail, great heart for ihou did’st not
live or dte in vain. Thine was the
life which left upon the shores of
time the “foot prints” which shall
give to the ages courage to press to
to nobler lives and grander possi
bilities and thine was the death
w'hich to thy soul brought no fears
for stayed on Christ.” it was ready
to cry in his spirit to God'Tt is Gods
way” "thy will be done.” In gnel
we bow, yet, there is a “bow in the
cloud. The co-equal to Washington,
Jpfferson and Lincoln, perhaps ail
in all a greater man than either
who by his death precipitated a
crisis that could not be avoided “be-
mc’ dead yet speuketh” to us to
smite and spare no longer that foul
fester on the nations body—the an
archy, the atheistic venom, the ni
hilism his murder represents. Thank
Gcd the one and indivisible coun
try stands fast. Murder may’ do its
daGardiy work —a chieftaiu be
swept out of this worlds exhistence
but‘ the government at Washing
ton still lives.” Law must triumph,
it came from God and is of God and
ought else represents the devil.
"We pause to day amid a grief
Tliat sweeps in full majestic power;
And at God’s Throne we seek relief
To burdened hearts in this sad hour,
c ueh afioul him, and
pleasant dreams.”
Inscrutable aie the ways of pari-
dise, we cannot by searching find
out Gcd. We cannot tel! why it is
that the innocent must suffer for
iho guilty, but all device record
proves it so. “It is God’s
just as it was God suffering in Him
self upon the Gross, arid we lose the
foret* of that awful fact it we think
of our Lord other than as God. So
pure as not to see Iniquity and yet
“the innocent suffering for the
guilty,” suffering in His own person.
O! the desolated homes, the hearts
broken, the vows forgotten, the
abandoned children, the deserted
wives who suffer not for what fh< j y
have done but through the wicked
ness, the sin of others to appetite,
hab t,or to wrong.By those who have
abandoned them to their fate. The
man whom we mourn died not be
cause of any act of his own but be
cause he represented law and order,
the majesty of that law’, for which
the wounded vlctem plead when in
the first moment of injury he cried,
"let not that man be hurt.” He
died for us, that by his death we
might see the spirit of the Master
on earth was yet alive. It is very
strange, past finding out. why in
the world’s redemption it had to be
that in His own person God suffer
ed in our stead, the wretchedness
of scorn, of bate, of buffeting, of the
crown of thorns, the houndiDg on t
the garden of submission, to the
sweat as blood, to the cross with the
nail marks and the spear thrust but
it was so. There was no other way-
save for the Holy One to suffer ic
our stead The vicarious sacrifice
is God’s w’ay and through suffering
alone we advance to better lives.
The suffering which brings the
greatest result is that produced by
mariyruom, the death which comes
because of what the victim did for
its fellow man. It was the suffering
of the “lifted up” wh ch drew “all
men” uuio to “Him whose follower-
have conquered a world, the suffer
ing which G;d—Our Father—or
dained and which must be right as
through it we reach the high ideals
of manhood and womanhood. It is
the pathway by which we reach the
peace, the resignation which says
“They will be done.” It is not for
us to criticise (ha wisdom of indi
vidual acts in the life of our dean
ruler.
He moved undaunted upon a sea
ot storm ana difficulty. He weigh
ed in great scales the welfare of a
nation, he decided slowly and with
calm deliberation and when th<
conclusion came nothing moved
him from his course. He belonged
to no mere party or part of a country
and in him for the first time tLi
na t i cj n found a man whom all the
peop.ie loved, a man who loved
fellow men and at whose hier
the people bow ic veneration. Now
as we look back over this grief, ;h
passing away nf a great man, whose
cup of honor was filled to the brim
the mind >-ejoices at this highest
type of American manhood, proving
to the world a man of the people
the loyer of home and wife could
thread uusuiiid the web and woof
of political life with <ruth and God
as his only standard. Nothing ever
moved h : m from the first or loosen
ed his hold fo the Kingdom of his
Lord. The Christ Spirit was in hi
life and shone as the morning star
of glory as the death dews gathered
upon his brow. From any stand
point, beyond expression his death
was a magnificent proof of faith
l*o him the dark river had narrow
ed down, it was but a step from
time to immortality and Christ
stood waiting gd the otherside,
angels ready to bear his sou! into
the rest of Paradise.
He was ready’ for he had made
the Christ life his own. His Lord
had been the just suffering for ihe
ur.jast “the Lamb which once was
Slain,” and be, His servant ‘ washed
in tho blood of that Lamb was om
of condemnation fur siu and a wait
ing soul to be w:th its God, its King
and elder brother. We turn the page
of history to find few characters so
grand as that of our late President,
full of sweetnes,.full of humanity,
full of a desire to do well his part,
ambitious to do right and with a wide
and real charity’ full of tolerance
for those who honestly differed
with him He ministered to a uuit-
ed people, forgetting a dead past
aod march’g on to a glorious future.
He accepti d the burlhens of the
state and bore them well, to find his
country willing to go forward to the
suppression of despotism and cruel
ty, and to spread the broad folds
O f her starry fl ig over the Lies of
the sea as it said through him“stand
back the giant of the west pro
claims in the hams of ihs great Je-
hoyah these people henceforth,
• o death thou hast entered into
‘ the j >y of try Lord” Thou wast
ihe sacrifice needed for the fulfil
ment of divine decrees, and we
know, inscrutable though it be, that,
ic was best. We need the painting j
forward to the way which thou I
nast gone. God teaches His way j
through trials and thro’ woes that]
are hard to bear because we will
not learn (hem otherwise, and if we
will, through thy blood we may see
way” | the bow’ in the cloud where tho S in
of Righteousness is shining to fell
ia Christ we are the children of God
passing through the wilderness,
while a land of plenty’ in the eternal
home is not far away. William
McKinley accomplished great
things, acts whose munificent re
sults are too broad and deep for us
to fathom, hut over it all there rests
this halo He was capable of being
what he was, and of uniting the
hearts of bn countryman, of mak
ing his country fnlfii its manifest
destiny and holding a world in
check, ru a htng into wrong, because
first, last and always he was a
Christian, a man of spotless honor
and a gentleman.
•‘He fell at post of duty,
And the nations heart is wrung;
No death of greater beauty
By poet hath been sung
In silent deep he shares the sleep
That falls oti old and young.
:: Hunter, ::
SAUCE & BATTEY
What are their thoughts, O! Nation 1
Where he lies calmly dead,
That held thy highest station,
Thy twice elected head;
Does anger still thy bosom All
Or sorrow reign instead?
O! ye, who ware his brothers.
Sons ot this mighty state,
Put off the rage that smothers
A! 1 that is good and great;
His courage high, his chanty,
Oh! Strive to emulate.
Out of the crime and madness,
Out of the gloom and paiu.
Out of the shame aud sadnoss.
The purpose of God is plain—
That the nation rise through sacrifice,
And turn its loss to gain,”
The Churchman.
Factors,
Cotton
And Wholesale Grocers,
Ga.
iAVANXAH,
JvyL
Money loaned Cotton Shippers
on approved security.
T. P. FAGAN
-Dealer in-
\yioes and
Liquors,
BOTTLE AND CASE GOODS.
PETITION FOE CHAETEE.
these
shall be forever free”
A Glorious land has felt the shock
Of atheistic hate and gloom,
But still she stands upon the rock.
And chants no requiem other d om.
ir you have not tried it, send for
rras sample, its agreeable taste will
surorise you.
SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists,
400 Feari Street, New YorK.
£Oc. and $1.00; all druggists.
Shall passion lift its liuid head
And threaten all this fair domain?
Shall free-born men and women tread
Tlie courts of unjust rule again?
Not while we boast of Christian men
Whose wisdom, faith and manhood
prove
That justice here is founded on
A matchless Law whose heart is Love.
We praise Thee, Lord,for Freedom’s right
We praise Thee for Thy spirits light.
We praise Thee for one Martyred great,
And still we praise Thee as we wait.”
Hunter Davidion.
God help us to learn well the
lessons of these hours of sadness, for
they are given to us for our good
and they are many. God has given
our land great opportunities and
He is welding her for mighty work
the battleground for truth and
righteousness and as He raised the
men of old time for the hour and
deed and as He gave us heroic
and noble lives to meet tbe deed, so
In our time of grief when tin
hand of God lies heavy upon us we
know that He does not willingly af
flict the children of rneu and tha’
in our grief He hath done well and
what Is best and we know that “in
the deep damnation of this taking
off.” God hath once more forged the
golden iink upon mankind to show
again the brotherhood of mankind,
all for each and each for all as in
Christ’s name it ascends the scale
“and lends a hand” to those who
need it. We stand where the em
blems of sorrow meet our view,
where ere It rests for all the best
America had to give, the noblest,
the purest, the flower which made
the whole world better, has been
taken, and there is but left to us to
write upon the grandest monument
ever raised to worth and greatness -
the human heart of all the race:
“Thi-. was a man ” Let us seek to
emulate what McKinley left, an
heritage nf honor to state and
nation. God was his guide. The
ruler of seventy millions of people,
he did his best, for in the Rock of
Ages lay his truM. And so great
spirit hail and farewell, thou has
passed from earth and around thy
spirit’s brow perhaps the garland of
celestial victory rests, Tbou art
QTATE OF GEORGIA—Counts’ of Burke-
0 To the Superior court of said county:
The petition of Andrew Brinson, Ransom
Burton, William Coles Edward S Jones and
Edward Bryant all of said county and state,
respectful'v shows:
1st. That they desire for themselves, their
associates and successors to be ome incorpo
rated under the name and style of ‘-tlie
Charity and Good Will Society.”
2d. That he term lor which petitioners ask
to be incorporated is twenty yea,s, with tlie
pri vile"- ot renewal at the end ot that time
3d. That said society is not organized for
individual gain, its objects and purposes
beingtocare lor tbe sick, bury the dead, to
promote charity and domestic tranquility
among its members and foster the relation
of friendship and good lellowship among
each other.
■ith. Petitioners desire to be vested will)
corporate authortiy to enforce good order,
receive donations, make nurctases, sue and
he sued and effect alienations of realty an I
personalty r.olforthe purpose of trade and
profit, but for the purpose of promoting tlie
general design and object of tlie society as
hereinbefore set otit-
5th. That ^aid society shall hive for its
•erritory the county of Burke, with its prin
cipal lodge in or near Millen, Georgia, sixty-
first (til) district, with the privilege of chang
ing l iie same or establishing branch lodges.
With privilege of establishing lodges in tlie
adjoining counties of Screven, Bulloch aud
Emanuel.
(ith. The petitioners also desire to have
power to (raine such by-laws, rules and regu
lations aud elect such oflicers as may be
necessary to properly carry out the purposes
of said society.
Further: That they be allowed to have a
seal, and to exercise all power u->ually con
ferred upon corporations of similar character
as may be c: nsistent with the laws of Georgia.
Petitioners therefore pray an order invest
ing and clottiing them and their successors
iu office with the Powers herein praved for,
■S. H. JONES.
i E a PALMER,
Petitioners Attorneys.
STATE OF GEORGIA—County of Burke —
1 Geo O Wainock clerk of the Superior
Court of said cou ty of Burke, hereby certily
that tfio above and foiegoing petition is a
correct copy of tlie original application for
charter on file in my office
Filed thisZotli day of Sept , 1931.
GEO. O. WARNOCK, Clerk.
Special attention given to
the Jug Trade of Burke County.
You can get quick attention.
Bell
602 Campbell Street, Oppofite Union Depot,
Rhone 456. G-ecrglSl.
’ n
GA
PBICE-LXS^
Few Leader
SPOT
Li lli
Naples N ot Trash
r^EORGIA.—Bcuke County. — w hereas,
P. W. Carswell administrator of the es-’
tate of L M. Brinson. late of said county, de
ceased, applies to me lor leave to sell ail
tiie real estate belonging to said estate.
r l liese are, therefore, to cite and admorlsh
all persons interested, to show cause, (if any
can,) before me, at my office, at 10 o’clock, a.
in,, on the first Monday in October,{190!, why
said leave to sell should not lie granted.
GEO. F. COX, Ordinary, B C. Ga.
Johnston A Fulloright, Attysl
Good Coffee. 6 3-4 c.
Better Cofl’ee, 7 1-2.
Arbuekle’s Coffee, 12c,
Granulated Sugar, 5 7-Sc.
W. & C. Sugar, 5 3-4c.
Sterling Fall Potash, Gc.
Bailey Bros Tobacco, 36c.
Early Bird Tobacco, 37c.
Sweet Pea Tobacco, 37c.
Schnapps, 37c.
Good Rice, 4 l-2c.
Best Rice, 6c., Best K. Oil made, 15c. Gallon. Shoes—Men’s
Best Oil Grain Creole, $1.15 pr., Lest Oil Grain Tie, 01.15 pr.
Best Call Tie 01 15., 2-qi Oil Can, 5c., S-qt Dish Pan. 5c., 4-qt
Covered Buckets, 5c., 6-qt Milk Pail, 5c., 2-qt Rice boiler, 5c.
Girard Spot Cash Store,
1 EORGIA—Burke County.—Whereas—
T Geo. O. W-rnock, has applied to me (or
permanent letters of administration on the
estate of H. U. Reeves, tate ot said county,
deceased
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish
all persons interested, ic show cause, (if any
I hey can.) before me. at my office.at lOo’ctoek
a. in., on tlie first Monday in October, RWi,
why said permanent letters of administrat on
should not be grantsd in terms of Ihe law
GEO. F, COX. Ordinary, R. C.
EORGIA—Burke County. — Whereas,
J~ Geo O. Warnock applies to me for per
manent letters of administration on the es
tate of Izatus Jenkins. Sate of said county,
deceased.
These are. therefore, to cite and admonish
at! persons interested, to show cause. : if any
they can,) before me, at my office, at lOo’cl’k,
a. in..on the first Monday in October, 1901,
why said permanent letters of administration
should not be granted in terms ot ih- law.
GEO. F COX, Ordinary, B.C.
♦
t
♦
$ . , Write th
Alexander: Seed I
Company,
Georgia.
i Augusta^
For their tree
Catalogue
Buy seed early
as seed are ad-
yancing in price.
MISS CAEEIE SULLIVAN.
DKAI.KR IN'
J. G. HAE3ELER, Manager,
GIRARl), GEORGIA.
exsxsxsxsxsx$*?><5>
I
LIVERY,JALE
FEED S TABLES.
Corner Myriek and
Barron Streets,
WAYNESBORO, GEORGIA
I have opened ? Livery, Sale and Feed Stables, corner
Myriek and Barron streets, and solicit the patronage of
| the public. Well equipped turnouts, and good, stylish
^ horses for hire at reasonable rates. Shall keep lirst-dass
stock for sale. Those in need of Horses and Mules should
see me before buying.
orner My rick and Barron Sts., Waynesboro, Georgia.
N. B,
As :t is too late in life for me to learn to keep books now, noth
ing charged nor tickets made, Ail is cash. Don’task credit.
To AUGUSTA * . *
. . . and ivETURN.
FREE TICKET
Go see the Big Show for Nothing I
[UDjg~ Write for particulars to
FLEMING & BOWLES
Lsta#, O-eozgrla,.
(»WiLUH£RYr¥ FLOWER^
FEATHERS, F.UCHINGS. and
EIBB OKS,
846 Broad Street,
Over Mulflerin’s Store,
Augusta, : Georgia.
Complete line ot Children s and'
Infant’s Caps, Hats and other
Novelties.
OEDINAST’S NOTICES
f'l EORGIA—Burke County.
It
Whereas,
Lbas T. Fargo, principal creditor, has
applied to me tor permanent letters of ad
ministration on tlie estate ot Thos B. Dan
iels, late of said county, deceased.
These are. therefore, to cite and admonish,
all persons interested, to show cause, (if any
can, before me at my office, at iu o’clock, a.
m , on the first Monday in uctober. 1WU why
said permanent letters of aeministratiou
should not be granted in t- rrns of the law.
(itO. F. COX, Ordinary, B. C.
And whereas it is necessary that a guardian
be appointed to take charge of tiis property
and no one applies or is likely to apply for
such guardianship. Ordered that all persons
interested show cause before me at the next
term of tbis court why letters of guardianship
or the property of said lunatic should jnot be
vested iu the Clerk of the Superior court ot
said county or some other fit and piope per
son. This sept. 2d, 1901.
GEO. F. COX, Ordinary, B. C. Ga.
G EORGIA—Burke County—Whereas-
'i homas Brinson was recently commit,
Ted to tlie lunatic asylum of this state where
he is at present confined as a Loj-tless insane
Ji u
* OitSWTIS'£ *
6C6 ana 60S Broadway, : AUGUSTA, GA
Bell Phone 1675. Strowtr Phone27*
Feb 19 ’97—
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