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Money! Money
Money !
At 6 per cent on 10 years time
We are prepared to negotiate
loans on improved cdy and
Farm property in sums of not
less than three hundred dollars
at 6 per cent, interest, For ten
years it desired.
Can secure an advance of 50
per ceut on the value of the*
property offered as securitv
Call and see us.
LAWSON & SCALES,
Waynesboro, Ga.
epl 5.1800—11
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^ Write for latest book' g
& let on “How to Deposit ©
§ by Mail ” p
^ Our Savings Depart- g
^ meat pays 4 ]»er cent per y
g annum, cotnpo u n d e d y
^ January and July. Sums p
g from $1 and upwards re- g
P ceived. §
g Our assets are more g
g than $?, 00.000. Now is g
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g foundation upon which g
g to build your fortune. 2
0 Money in stockings g
g earn nothing — besides, g
g thieves breait through
g and steal.
8 SAVINGS DEPARTMENT
o
r\ OK THE
turn
AUGUSTA, G A.
officees;
R Jos B. dimming, C. G. Goodrich, ■ ^
President. Vice-Pres.
£ A. S Hatch. W. H. Barrett.
y Sec-Treas Attorney. q
X trustees: rj
X John W. Dickey. A. F. Pendleton, 5
X K. A. Graves U. H Cutnm’ng.
X Kobt. W. Sliand.Geo. E. Goodrich
OGGGO£K>C<5GCX50C-S0G0050w0i
(TRADE MARK REGISTEnED NO. 17438.)
FMOG POND
CHILL AND FEVER CURE.
THE ORIGINAL NO CURE NO PAY.
30 CENTS A BOTTLE.
The old reliable the kind your fathers
used to take. The one that never fails
to cure. Don’t waste time and money
experimenting' with new cures. Bti i go
for . the best from the jump. Frog
Pond is the ounce of prevention and
pound of cure combined. Ask for it—
take no substitute, if your merchant
does not seli it write to us we will send
it direct for 50 cents.
J.B.DOTPORT&CO.. Augusta, Ga,
For sale in Burke comity by nil first-class
Druggists, and all leading merchants.
j u ne 22. ISO I — b m
10000000020000000'::;
LIFE
mukmt
GRATIS!
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For a FREE ACCI- g
DENT Insur a uce
Policy good for cue
year, write to
PAUL BEHAI,
The Popular j
Liquor Dealer, i
*
Augusta, Georgi i *
[IPPP All it costs is y
2c. for your letter. ;J
SQQQOQQQOOOQOGQZS20ZO2Q )
Cotton, 8 aw, G rig t,
Oil and Fertilizer
COMPLETE
^ MILL OUTFITS
Castings.
Gin, Frees, Cano Mill and Shingle Outlies
Building, Bridge.
Factory, Furnace
and Railroad
Railroad. Mill, Machinists’ and Factory Supplies
Belting, Packing, Injectors, Pipe FlttlDgs
Saws, Files. Oliera. Etc.
IBST Cast every day; work ISO handt.
LOMBARD IRONWORKS* SUPPLY 00.
AUGUST A. GA.
Soft
Harness
You can make your har
ness as soft as a glove
and as tough as wire by
using EUREKA Hnr-
ness Oil. You can
lengthen Its life—make it
last twice as long os it
ordinarily would.
EUREKA
Harness 01S
makes a poorlooking har
ness like new. Made of
pure, heavy bodied oil, es
pecially prepared to with
stand tho weather.
Sold everywhere
in cans—all sizes.
Kiada by STANDARD OIL CO.
^ t lie greatest ambition of Amor-
ican lucii and women is to have
homes blessed with children. The %
woman afflicted until female dis- j-j
ease is constantly menaced with p
becoming a childless wife. No $
medicine can restore dead or- m
gans, but Wine of Cardui does gf
regulate derangements that pro- f)
vent conception; does prevent F
miscarriage: does restore weak fc
functions and shattered nerves | v
babies to liomes
f
barren and desolate for years, yf
Vv'inc of Cardui gives women the U
and does brin
br
| Vv
1 healtli and strength to bear heal
thy children. You can get a
| dollar bottle of Wine of Cardui
' from your dealer.
[UMEorfABni
143 Market street,
Memphis, Tenn., April 14,1901.
In February, 1901,1 took one bottle of
"W ine cf CVrdui and ono package of
I Thedford’s Black-Draught. I had been
i married fifteen years and had never
; given birth to a child until I took Wine
of Cardui. Notv I am mother cf a fine
baby qrirl which was born March 31,1901.
J The baby weighs fourteen pounds and I
feel as well as any person could feel.
Sj Now my home is happy and I never will
be without Wine of Cardin in my house
B&nn. Mrs. J. W. C. SMITH.
. i cr advice and literature, address, caving
I symptoms. “ The Ladies’ Advisory Depart-
nier.t , The Chattanooga Medicine 'Company,
Chattanooga, Tenn.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Central Time at Jacksonville and Savannah.
Eastern Time at Other Points.
Schedule in Effect .Tune SOth, 1901.
Sleopiaf; Car Service.
Excellent daily passenger service between
Florida and Hew York.
Nos. 83 and 3-1—Hew Yoik and Florida Ex
press. Drawing-room sleeping cars between
Augusta and Hew York. Pullman drawing
room sleeping cars between Port Tampa, Jack
sonville, Savanna!:. Washington aud Vow York.
Pullman sleeping cars between Charlotte and
Richmond and Charlotte and -Norfolk. Dining
cars between Charlotte and Savannah.
Hos. 35 and 3d—U. S. Fast Mail. Through
Pullman drawing-room buffet sleeping cars be
tween Jacksonville nnd Hew York and Pull
man sleeping ears between Augusta and Char
lotte ana Charlotte and Richmond. Dining
cars serve all meals enroute. Pullman sleep
ing cars between Jacksonville and Columbia,
enroute daily between Jacksonville and Cincin
nati, via Asheville.
FRANK S. GANNON, S. H. HARDWICK,
Third V-P. & Gen. Mgr., Gen. Pas. Agt.,
Washington, D. C. Washington, D. C
W. H. TALOE, R. W. HUNT,
Au’t Gen. Pass. Ag’t., Div. Pass. Ag’t.,
Atlanta, Ga Charleston, S. O.
CONCERNING SILAGE.
|t Hns an Important Field of Useful
ness on the General Farm.
Corn, from tlie case with which it
can be converted into silage, is per
haps entitled to stand at the head of
all forage plants for this purpose. Tho
solid stems, flat leaf and proper ratio
between its liquid and solid constitu
ents seem to favor it for this work.
The plant, however, is comparatively
poor in protein.
Of the legumes clover is probably the
most valuable plant both for hay and
Dare-Deviltry as Amusement,
What is generally conceded to ba the
most sensational and life-imperilling
amusement act in the world will be one
of the big features at the Southern Inter-
State Fair wuich will begin in Atlanta
on October 9. This is Fitzpatrick’s au
tomobile act. In au automobile lie rides
to the top of a 170-foot iuciin-e which
barely gives the machine space to run and
uown it at full speed. This act
shown for three mouths in Madison
Square Garden, New York City, where
NORTHBOUND.
No.3-
Daiij
No.a f
Dailj
Lv. Jacksonville (P. S)
“ Savannah (so. Ry .)
“ Barnwell
“ Blaekvillo
Ar. Columbia
8 Oik
12 25q
8 56|.
4 12^
7 45?
12 3oa
4 13a
4 28a
fi i.V
Lv. Charleston, (So. Ry
“ Summerville
7 Uu
7 41a
9 OJa
9 28a
10 24a
11 ICa
i 1 OOP
1200b
1 2 Oiill
“ Kingville .7
Ar. Columbia
4 05h
5 40a
Lv. Augusta, (So. Ry.)
Lv. Granite ville ....'
Lv. Aiken
Lv. Trenton
“ Johnston
250p
11 2of
305p
3 52p
4 07l
9 30p
10 lap
ii'obp
11 20p
2 10a
n 25a
817a
8 00a
0 55a
_ . . r .
Lv. Columbia, (Bldg St
“ Winnsboro
“ Chaster
“ Rock Hill
Ar. Charlotte .'
5 55p
6 50p
7 -Jop
8 ojp
V OJp
Ar. Danville
12 La
1.20
Ar. Richmond
6 00a
ti lop
Ar. Vv ashing!oii
Baltimore I.Pa.ER)
“ Philadelphia
“ New York
7 3ca
9 15a
11 35a
2tXsp
9 09p
11 35p
2 5"a
0 22a
Lv. Columbia
11 30a
7 20a
10 2t)a
20 -p
7 lop
“ Asheville
Ar. Knoxville
715p
Ar. Cincinnati
7 blip
3 I, a
Ar. Louisville 1 7 50p
ST*ai
SOUTHBOUND.
£To.o8
Daily
No.So
Daily
Lv. Louisville
7 ion
V 3-ip
Lv. Cincinnati
8 30a
8 top
Lv. Knoxville
“ Asheville
“ Spartanburg
Ar. Columbia
1 55a
7 05a
10 35a
2 lop
8 25a
3 00p
6 lop
9 30p
Lv. New York(Pa.R.R)
“ Philadelphia
“ Baltimore
Lv. Vashi'gt’n (So.Ry)
330p
0 05p
S27p
9 50p
1215nt
5 50a
6 22a
11 15a
Lv. lticillE0x1(1 ...
11 3 n;
1201m
Lv. Danville
4 35a
5 48p
Lv. Chat .vine
“ Rook Hill
“ Chester
“ Winnsboro
Ar. Columbia, (Bldg St
ti iUa
9 10a
9 44a
10 2oa
11 35a
hop
10 4 Jp
11 lap
12 Ola
1 boa
Lv. Columbia, (U. U.)..
“ Johnston
“ Trenton
Ar. Aiken
Ar. GianiteviUe
Ar. Augusta
!200iu
1 -10p
1 52p
2 30p
2 21p
30jp
8 5Ja
C 0.3a
G 28a
7 30a
6 5 Ja
7 45a
Lv. Columbia iso. Ry)
a oo?
a 4tip
a 2p
5 25p
6 42p
7 80p
1 fcoa
2 32a
3 45a
4 2oa
5 57a
7 00a
“ Orangeburg
“ Branch ville
“ Summerville
Ar. Charleston
; * * * *
Lv. Columbia (So. Ry.)
“ Blacltviile
“ Barnwell
“ Savannah ...
Ar. Jacksonville (P. S.)
1 40a
120p
iasp
305p
7 40p
1 10a
2 52a
3 O.'n
4 50a
9 15a
A SILAGE FED COW.
silage. Its heavy yield, richness in
protein and soil renovating qualities
will command the attention of all pro
gressive agriculturists. Clover, with
the possible exception of alfalfa, can
probably be grown and placed in tbe
silo at a lower cost than any other for
age crop.
Vetch is another valuable legume. It
will thrive in a greater variety of soils
than clover and can be sown as a catch
crop either in the spring or fall. It is
very palatable to stock and about equal
with clover in nutritive principles and
adaptability for silage.
Alfalfa is also a good silage crop.
This plant under favorable conditions
will yield a crop representing perhaps
a greater value per acre than any other
forage crop grown. With the silo this
ci'op can be made of inestimable value
to the dairying and stock growing in
dustry in semiarid sections.
Field peas make a good silage crop.
They are rich in protein, but stock do
not relish them quite so well as clover
and alfalfa. Some unsatisfactory re
sults have followed attempts to ensilo
peas and vetch when grown with
grain. While the grain will materially
aid in holding the vetch and pea up,
thus facilitating the harvesting of the
crop, too large a proportion of grain is
undesirable when the crop is to be en-
siloed. The hollow stems of tlie grain
carry more or less air into the silo,
which is thought to accelerate fer
mentation and consequent deteriora
tion of the silage.
The best forage plants for silage are
generally those with solid stems and
which carry over 20 per cent of solid
matter in their physical structure.
Very succulent plants, such as cab
bage, rape and immature corn, clover,
alfalfa or vetch, when carrying much
less than 20 per cent of solid matter,
are unsuited for silage.
Recorded results of a large number
of experiments with silage warrants
the conclusion that plants are in the
best condition for silage when they are
fairly well matured. Corn is seemingly
in the best condition for tbe silo when
the kernels are nicely glazed, just after
the roasting car stage.
The problem of sweet and sour silage
continually comes up, and much the
orizing has been indulged in. That
some silage is exceedingly sour is a
well known fact, but the cause of this
condition is not well known. Results
obtained from experiments seem to in
dicate that there are at least two con
ditions which favor the development
of organic acids In silage—i. e„ imma
turity of the plants and extreme com
pactness of the silage. A good ex
ample of the former is shown in imma
ture corn silage.
Corn silage which though extremely
acid was exceptionally well preserved,
possessed au agreeable odor, and cows
ate it with avidity. There Avere no ap
preciable harmful results from feeding
this exceedingly sour silage. The period
of feeding, however, was brief, only ex
tending over two weeks.
The first cut represents a dry Short
horn cow which from Jan. 1 to May 1
Continuous Tlllas'e anti Pens or Clo
ver Can Replace Fertilizer.
By deep breaking, thorough harrow-
ing, repeated sowings with pea vines or
clover, we can soon make any of our
poor southern farms so rich that it will
nay us to grow our own wheat and quit
buying flour and fertilizer, says Dr.
Hunnicutt of the Georgia Cultivator.
The great scientific principles that
make farming"pay are much the same
in eA'ery section. We need to study
these more and apply them constantly.
They arc simple and easily learned.
They never fail to give success Avheu
obeyed.
Wheat cannot be cultivated after
sowing. Therefore it must be cultivat-
cd before sowing—that is, we must so
prepare the soil that the crop can do its
best without further cultivation. Can
Ave do this? We can. How? We must
break the soil as deep as Ave can either
with or Avithout subsoiling. The essen
tial point is to be sure to break it deep.
Then we must make it fine and firm by
repeated harrowing. This Avill enable
the soil to hold the rain water where it
falls. It will also enable it to furnish
the same water in proper quantities at
the right time to the growing crop.
The breaking can be done any time
from noAV to the last of September, tho
5 earlier the better.
i The harrowing should be repeated as
j often as convenient. Every time avo
1 roll and liarroAV avo increase the soluble
plant food in tlie soil. lienee we in
crease the power of the soil to yield
and decrease the necessity of buying
potash and phosphoric acid.
We do not say you must quit buying
these, but AA-e do say you may quit. If
you keep up this continuous tillage and
sow peas or clover, your soil Avill soon
be in condition to grow such crops as
will be independent of bought fertiliz
ers.
Go to work preparing your Avhont
land at the earliest opportunity. Con
tinue to pulverize it. right up to tlie day
of sowing. This will insure you a good
yield of wheat or oats.
Now let us analyze one hundred
pounds of wheat piants.
POUNDS PER HUNDRED :
All of this comes from
the atmosphere and
the rain.
t f f £, -i‘i V : iYTa:
jppgp r; . rr r!
Carbon
47.691
Hydrogen.
5.54
Oxygeu
40.82
93.55 J
Soda
0.09
Magnesia ..
Sulph’c acid
0.20
0.31
Chlorine
0.01
1 ron
0 06
Silicas
2.5
3.45
Nitrogen 1.60
Phosph’c acitiO.45
Potash 0.65
Lime 0.~y
3.0J
As you see these are
used in small quantity
!>v the plaut and are
supplied in profusion
bv the soil.
These.the plant must
have or die. Most I
soils are deficient in |
them and the farmer ‘
must a.H them to get
good crops. I
“ L PP
CONTROL OF SEX.
Professor Sehcncli Says Dieting of
tlie Mother Should lie-in Early.
At a recent session of the zoological
congress in Berlin Professor Schenck
of Vienna repeated his belief that tlie
sex of au unborn child could be iullu-
enced by. suitable diet, says the New
York Sun. He said that the diet treat
ment could only be successfully applied
to women, not to men. He added that
the question now is at what period the
dieting should begin. He suggested
that it should be as early as possible.
Dr. Schenck declared that he did not
seek to adapt his theory to business
purposes. He added that his services
had uever been asked for by au impe
rial couple whose children are all
daughters, doubtless meaning the Rus
sian imperial family.
SHEEP FED ON SILAGE.
was fed daily, without grain, 40 pounds
of cloA'er silage and Avhat mixed clover
hay she would eat up clean. This coav
The second cut represents Cotswold
l of grain. This was fed until
March 15, 1901, w’hen they were photo
graphed. The illustrations are intro
duced simply to sIioav that silage lias
an important field of usefulness on the
general farm.—J. Withycombe, Oregon
Station.
Consequences.
A woman threw a paper out on the
roadside, and the consequences were a
buggy ruined, a young horse spoiled, a
child crippled for life.
A man lit a match in a barn, and the
consequences were the barn was burn
ed, the stock roasted, the grain a total
loss.—Farm Journal.
Boer Association Formed.
The Boer Independent Association
of the United States has been organ
ized at Newark, N. J., with Edward S.
Wilde as president, Jeremiah O’Rourke
and Adolph Poortman vice presidents,
Benedict Prieth treasurer and Louis A.
Zuegler secretary, says the New York
World. The association will work in
the cause of the Boers and preserve ev
ery publication in tlie United States
that makes misleading statements
about the South African republics.
The association will be supported by
voluntary subscriptions of its mem
bers.
Racing- In Macon.
.: p
In connection with the Southern In
ter-State Fair, Oct. 9ch to 26th in Atlanta.
Mr. O. Mowers, one of the most noted
horsemen of the country, has de
cided to give a six days’ racing meet,
for harness horses aud runners at Ma
con, beginning Occ. 7th. After the meet
the horses will all go tc Atlanta, wnere
the racing Avill begin on Oct. 16rh and
continue for 10 days. Mr. MoAvers Uas
leased the Macon track for five years
and the racing there, it is expected, will
raise the standard of the horses to be
seen in both cities.
LLEHENTS OF
PLANT FOOD
Letter From the State Chemist
In Regard to
ANALYSIS OF A RICH SOIL
Every Farmer Has It !n His Power to
ImproA’e Ills Soil by Proper
Tillage and Fer
tilizing.
Apples are likely to be fine property
this fall.
Marvellou3 Trained Dogs.
In connection with the Bench Show,
which will be the principal feature of
the first four days of the Inter-State
Fair, in Atlanta Oct. 9ch to 2Gth, there
will be shown the greatest tronp of train
ed dogs in the world. This is Lavelle’s
Great Danes, dogs Aveighing from 150
to 250 pounds, the largest in the world.
These dogs in their marvellous exhibi
tions have astounded the largest cities
of the country. In bringing them here
the Fair management believes it has
secured the best trouo of trained dogs in
LETTER NO. 2.
Whilst few farmers ever find such a
perfect soil as I described to you iu the
last part of my last letter, yet every
farmer has it in his power to improve
the soil he starts with however poor it
may be or Avharever its nature may be,
by judicious tillage, fertilizing, drain
ing, ditching, liming, sanding, claying
aud terracing, according as the con
ditions of his soil may indicate. He
should especially consider his soil and
decido to what crops it seems to be best
suited, and then devote his energies to
raising those crops rather than others
which thrive poorly.
If noAV we proceed to analyze
a soil as avo did a plant a short
while since, we should expect to
find iu it some of all the elements we
found in the plant, more especially in
the ash of the plant. Let us take the
analysis of quite a rich soil; here is
about what we should havej taking one
hundred pounds of the dry soil, we
could, by mean of a careful and skillful
chemical analysis, separate it into the
following parts:
pounds per hundred:
] These are elements
I Avhich the plant is ob-
Carbon | liged to havo, but is
Hydrogen. . .12.07 [-not dependent on the
Oxygen I soil for them as it gets
I most all it needs from
J the air and the rain.
Silica 71.55] The elements in this
Alumina— 0.y4 i part of the soil are
Iron 5.17 I either not absolutely
Magnesia... 1.03 I essential to the plant
Soda 0.43 | life, or the plant could
get along with very
small amounts of
them.
Thus you see, by a study of these
analyses, that you find in the soil thj
same elements which we found in the
plaut we analyzed in our first letter aud
also in this wheat plant. The carbon,
hydrogen and oxygen which we find in
the soil are of little or no use as plant
food because the plan; gets its store of
those foods out of the atmosphere. It
derives its carbon from the carbonic
acid in the air. You will remember
that I wrote you iu one of my letters
last year about the importance of water
and carbonic acid, and as it is ant here
I will repeat the paragraph:
“The water from which the hydrogen
and oxygen come is given us free in the
form of rain, and the carboe also iu the
form of carbonic acid which is breathod
out continually into the atmosphere by
every living animal on the surface of
the earth; by every chinmey and hearth
stone which warms a happy family; by
every factory smokestack aud locomo
tive which minister to our AA-auts and
necessities. Carbouic acid forms the
principal part of all this smoke although
it is not tho black part Avhich we' see,
but the invisible part which is clear aud
colorless like tup air. Vast streams of
it are pouriug out constantly iuto the
air; AViiy does it not stifle aud suffocate
us as it would if poured into the rooms
where we live? It is because all plant
life lives on it, the great forests absorb
it. The crops of Avheat, corn and cotton
consume it; the lilies and the roses eat
it and drink it. They take this deadly
gas into their wonderful little bodies,
and work it over aud over, together with
the water which they suck out of the
soil, nutil they have separated the car
bon from the oxygen with which it is
combined in carbonic acid,liberating the
oxygeu aud appropriating the carbon
in building the cells and tissues and
organs of which the piant is composed.
This process of the piant iu taking its
carbon out of the air is a most wonder
ful one, aud goes on only under the in
fluence of light or in the day time, and
the leaf of the plant is the only active
organ concerned in taking the carbonic
acid out of the air. The leaf of the
plant is formed of very numerous little
cells placed side by side; ou the under
side of the leaf there are air spaces be
tween the ceils, and oA-er the Avhole leaf
there is a tiiin skin. Iu this skin there
are uumerous sruail holes through which
the air passes. When it passes iuto the
leaf Avnilst me sunlight is shining upon
it, through some strange vital power mo
little cells of the leaf, under these con
ditions break up the carbonic acid of the
air, retaining the carbon aud setting the
oxygen free, which passes out again into
the air. When night comes the carbon
thus obtained undergoes a change aud
passes into the circulation of rhe plant,
going to the various parts of the plant
where it may be needed.
So we see that growing plants tend to
purify the air by consuming its carbonic
acid gas, which is injurious to animal
life, aud by giving off pure oxygen gas
in its place, Avhich is beneficial to ani
mal life. Animal and plant life thus
stand in mutual aud beautiful relations
to each other. Plant life inhales car
bonic acid and exhales oxygen; animal
life inhales oxygen aud exhales carbonic
acid.
The auimal, iu his lungs and blood,
causes carbon to unite with oxygen to
form carbouic acid; whilst the plant in
its cells causes the carbon of the carbou
ic acid to separate from its oxygen.
Analysis siioavs the percentage of car
bonic acid iu the air to be small. Thus
a hundred gallons of air is composed of:
Oxygen. 20 99 gallons.
Nitrogen 7S 98 gallons.
Carbonic acid 00.03 gallons.
Yon say this is a very small
amount of carbonic acid. Yes, it
seems so, but when you come to
consider the enormous bulk of the air
it actually is very large. There is so
much of it that the volume of air which
rests on one acre of your farm, calculat
ing for a height of only 50 feet above
the farm would contain 90 pounds
of carbonic acid gas, aud this amount
never grows less, even when the crops
are feeding on it, because it is being
constantly renewed from ocher sources.
Therefore, Avhilst you need never fear
any lack of the essential element, car-
bon, it is well for you to appreciate
where it comes from and how import
ant it is. I have said the oxygen and
hydrogen found in the plant came also
from the air; really they do not come
from me air itself, but they come from
the water which floats in the air -n the
form of clouds. These descend as rain
upon the soil and are drawn np through
tfie roots of the plant, and the oxygen
and hydrogen, of which water is com
posed, are appropriated by the plant.
You, of course, appreciate the import
ance of these two elements of plant life
because yon know only too well how
crops suffer iu a dry season. We will
consider the other elements in onr next
letter. Yours truly,
John M. McCandless,
State Chemist.
PRESCRIPTIONS
Cl :F 1 LLY COM CURDED
" !■ in stock h irue as
sortment of
FJeailng aives,
Toilet Articles,
( os me tics.
Perfumes,
Patent Medicines,
complete list of Hygienic
Bees.
Seed.—Eee our Botan-
icai Catalogue.
So Arms! — A fleet of Spanish
mackerel coining up the creeK
that must be caught Now is the
time to buy Angle Bods, sinkers,
etc.. wi*h which to step the said
fleet Told bv
latest
Fits
and
i
JU
ft. FORD.
My New
Fall Goods
Are now in.
A full line of
seasonable goods
in ail the
shades,
guaranteed.
Suitings
pants goods a
specialty. Call
and see them be
fore they ha\
been picked
When
need your
suits re in e i
that I a in read v
to serve you.
MANAU,
(THE TAILOR)
Waynesboro, Ga.
e
over
you
fall
liter
Perfect Passenger
The Direct Route
Between All
Principal Points
“spepsia Gura
IN
Alabama and Georgia.
PENETRATING THE
Finest Fruit,
Agricultural,
Timber, end
IVlineraS Lands
SOUTH.
IN THE
ueorgia
It ail r
OS'
For infcriri;;tion
schedules aud
to if out
Bates, both
THROUGH RATES AfiD TICKETS
FURNISHED UPON APPLI
CATION TO ALL POINTS
Smuth
Easts W&rnim
Centrai of Coorgla Railway,
Ocean Steamship Co.
FAST FREIGHT
AND LUXURIOUS
PASSENGER ROUTS
to Rg&w York,
the E&sf,
Complete Information. Sates, Schedules et
Trains and Sailing Dates ol Steamers Cheer-
tu.iy Furnished by ar.y Agor.t ol the Company.
IKEO. D. KLINE, E. H. HINTON,
General Supt. Traflc Manager.
J. C. HAILE, Oen’l Pass. Agt..
SAVANNAH. GA.
PffilO MB HUGH
write !o either of the undersigned.
You will receive prompt reply aud reliable
Information.
n n
McMillan,
G. A, Pass. Dtpt.
A. J. Jackson,
A. O. DAWSON, S
AUGUSTA, Git
S. E MAG ILL,
Gen’i Agt.
ATLANTA,
v . W. HARDWICK,
Gen’I Agt.
MACON.
S. W, WILKES,
T. F, <Si P. A
ATLANTA. GA.
C. D, COX,
Gfcii’l Agt..
ATH K>"8
W. C. McMILLIX
S. F. A P. A
MACON.
w. m. mcgovern
Gen’l Agt
AUGUSTA.
Watchmaker
Jeweler,
PROF. P. M. WHITMAN.
209 7th St., Augusta, Ga.
gives i-.ree eye tests for aii defects oi
Sl 8^t, grinds tiie proper glasses ami WAR*
RANTS them.
Lenses cut into vour frame while you wait.
FBEE OF CHARGE.
tells if you nea.
~cdicine or mussel
W
vaynesboro, Georgia.
High- lass work a specialty
G
QNTBfiCTORS' ®
^BUILDERS’
JLL SUPPLIES.
UK. C-EO. A. PATRICK,
(Formerly Winkler & Patrick,
DENTIST OFFICE,
626 Broad Street,
Augusta, - - Georgia
Hours— fc:S0 a. in., to f>p Q 1
dera.’fiS -
Shoe Making,
REPAIRING, &c.
I am located on New St., Cobbham, v. i re
lam prepared to give satisfaction, iu n: V J
Shoes and Harness at short notice. :-:;!i- -
tion guaranteed. I solicit a share ofyovr i ;;
tronage. When in need of anv kindo; - H" 1 ]
repairing, ring TELEPHONE, No, 2. I vul
rail for tlie work.
• pv. P. J. MAJOR. Waynesboro.On.
Society Badges i society Badges
<^lw;dodg1,|} s „„,.
————— -1 S tend is
Brands, dro.. 221 Campbell tit
AXD
Castings, Steel Boaraa, Columns and Chaa.
jel Bolts, Rods, Weights, Taijka, Towers, Ao.
st,el Wire and Manila Rope, Hoisting Engines
»nd Pumps, Jacks, Derrioks, Crabs, Chain and
aopo Hoists.
** Ca»t Svery Day. Mate Quid Delivery.
LOMBARD IRON WORKS! SUPPLY CO.
APOVUTA. OA.
F. 0. YOUNG,
ARLINGTON BARBER SHOP.
WAYNES£5 IP.O, GA,
My shop Is niceiy fixed with water and
every convenience. I solicit the public pa^
ronage. Special attention give:
r.r he ladle
D. BECKWITH
RESIDENT DENTIST,
WAYNESBORO, ; : GEORGIA.
(Otficc—Over Citizens Bank.)
Office horns: 8 to 1 a. m , and from 2 to4
p. m. Specsal attention to crown aud bridge
work. Satisfaction guaranteed. Charges
reasonable. The expense of a trip to
arge city saved patrons. sep3,’88—by
I
Digests what you eat,
This preparation contains all of the
digestants ana digests all kinds o!
food. It gives instant relief and never
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.
if CaJl ? t S2e5p
isart d© good
Prepared only by E. O. De\Vitt A «'•>.,( H m :o
Thefil. bottle eontains2!4 times the50c. ^ize.
Sold by H P McM.ASTER.