The true citizen. (Waynesboro, Ga.) 1882-current, October 05, 1901, Image 2

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r=Sfifcfi5E£r3i?SMKS( Waynesboro, Monday, October 14th. The World’s largest, aud best • trained animal Exhibition, BROS FAMO ^ HO WS!" Twice Daily, Rain or Shine at 2 and 8 ? p. in. LATEST THING IN BEES. Beekeepers Are After tbe Red Clerer Honey—Tlic Long Tougpcd Ree. The latest fad in bees is a strain with long tongues that can extract the nec tar from the deep tubes of the red clo ver blossoms. Beekeepers have for a i of long time coveted the honey in the red t “C Cotton Growers Protective Association. The citizens of Burke county vvno are interested iu the of cotton Just Oae Bottle. Scammon, Ivans., Nov 19,1900.— Pepsin Syrup Co, Montieello, III. ”,,, ' . , , pepsin hvrup ud, ;vion:ice!io, in. are respect fully requested o meet; : __ Ahoi ,! rhree months ago I hi tne coure house immediately a.t- |m(J OHCasinil to use , !>m ething for er the root, adjournment n. m ; COOj , lf ., ftJI , m . One bottle o f Dr er the r-oon adj court on Monday court, October 7t ianizuig t n Growers ciatiou an on, fir*!, da , for the purpose branch of ifit Protective A irzition a’reativ M , )f; constfpatior well’s Syrup Pepsin was all. 3 r ,iil •t or on be C i.-t per Capita entrance feu and 2-i it;us oiuuiu | dt: s.- lion W. A Broughton, of 1 M’di-on, i-> president of the G-’Or i gi- S :> <■ Association L'* ail come. | KmvABD A Carter, Organ z *r. j ENGLISH OF THE ENGLISH. 300 wonderfully educated Dogs, Ponies and Monkeys. A herd oi performing Elephants. Grandest of all street procession at 10 a, m.; a perfect half-mile glimpse ot fain land for the children. General admission reduced for this date to Children. 15 cents ; Adults, 25 cents. Waynesboro, Monday, Oct. 14th MANY AMERICANS KILLED BY B8LQMEM SURPRISED AMERICANS. ] Soldiers Were at Breakfast When At tacked by 400 Rebels. | Manila, Sept. SO.—General Hughes, | from the Island of Samar, reports the | arrival of Sergeant Markiey and one Company C, Nilltll Imantry, i private at Tauuau, from the fight at Almost Annihilated. j Bal£mgig *- T> ere , over 40 men , of . Com - j paiiy G, Ninth infantry, were killed by THREE OFFICERS SLAIN troops insurgents, who attacked the while at breakfast Saturday last. The men who have reached Tannau say that the officers of the company, who were at first reported to have es caped, were killed with the majority of the company. The troops were attacked while unprepared by 400 bolomen, of whom the Americans killed about 150. Many of the soldiers were killed iu their Washington, Sepr. BO.—In addition | quarters before they had time to grasp to the enlisted men, three commissioned j their rifles. General Hughes is going to the scene of the disaster aud will personally com- Their Names Are Thomas W. Coiine! , J First Lieutenant Edward A. Bum- j pus ai d Major surgeon R. S. Gris- | wold—-Corrected Cablegram. officers of Company G, Ninth infantry, are supposed now to have been killed in the action in Samar, Philippine islands, last Saturday. The officers are: Captain Thomas W. Connell. First Lieutenant Edward A. Eumpus. Major Surgeon It. S. Griswold. A question havin* arisen as to the ac curacy of the cablegram received at the war department yesterday from Gen eral Chaffee, the cable company was di rected to repeat it. The repetition dis closes some inaccuracies that materially change the message. As corrected the dispatch reads: “Manila, Sept. 20—Adjutant Gen eral, Washington: Hughes reports fol lowing from Bassey, southern Samar: Twenty-four men, Company C, Ninth regiment, United States Infantry, 11 wounded, have just arrived from Balau- giga; remainder company killed; insur gents secured all company supplies aud all rifles, except three. Company was attacked during breakfast, morniug Sept. 28. Company 72 strong; officers, Thomas W. Connell, Captain Edward A. Bumpus, fiirst leuteuaut; Dr. It. S. Griswold, major surgeon. (Signed) Chaffee.’’ As corrected the dispatch shows that j Company C of the Ninth suffered tne j disaster. No company was mentioned | in the dispatch made public yesterday. The serious discrepaucy between the original aud the corrected dispatches, however, is that rhe latter indicates that the commissioned officers of the compa ny are missing, perhaps killed, while the former indicated that they escaped. The father of Captain Connell resides in New York city. He telegraphed to the war department today that he is in receipt of a cablegram from the quar termaster of the Ninth regiment saymg that his son had been killed iu action. mand the troops. A new branch of the Karispunan has beeu established at Tarlac, capital of the province of mat name. The object of the society is rhe slaughter of wanes. Marceiino Marivilie, president- of Bay. ang, is chief of the new branch, which includes numbers of the native constab ulary who were recently armed. One policeman admits that he was taxed and was ordered to make bclos. A reg ular collection has been made by the or ganization from the natives, either by persecution or threats, uprisings having been planned. Tbe conditions in Tayants and Ba- tailgas are not reassuring. The worst form of guerrilla warfare prevails there. The insurgent, forces are distributed un der cover along every road aud trail aud wait for travelers in ambush. The insurgent leader Cabaiios, who be longed to General Cailles’ command, but who refused to surrender with Cad ies, is retreating to the mountains. The main forces of the insurgents are scat tered in bands over the province, where they dig up rifles when there is an op portunity to use them. clover blossoms, and the Italian bees when introduced into this country were j *'-■ existence in (’oorgtft, Ali.-si"' P supposed to be able to reach it, and the ! PL ' ( -xih “mi other R r ‘’* A '! job was placed in their hands. But|; : £ states. 1 he t bj after a lapse of time it was discovered '*'!? VY ' ,: ex pi a-tied that but a small per cent of them did any work on red clover blossoms. Of late the fact lias beeu developed that some bees have longer tongues than others. Various ingenious contriv ances have been made to get the ex act measurements of the bees’ tongues, and it has been found that they vary in length all the way from fifteen one- hundredths to twenty-three one-hun dredths of an inch, the last named be ing very rare. If I am not mistaken, a few perhaps have exceeded this. It seems that the required length is about twenty-five one-hundredths. Every beekeeper of note is now busy improving his stock along this line, aud if you were to pick up a bee journal of the present you would find in most of the advertisements of queen breeders the announcement of the tongue length of his breeding stock. Everybody is confident that it will require but a lit tle time and patience to add a length to the tongues of all bees, for there has been so much attained in breeding bees in other ways that this does not seem impossible. It is well known that the common red clover is perhaps the heaviest nectar producing plant known, and honey from it is of fine quality. The value will not altogether lie in the honey crop, but the complete fertiliza tion of the bloom will add greatly to the seed crop, thus benefiting the farm er, concludes A. H. Duff in Kansas Farmer. bottle of Dr Ctid- I iuve i heuti doing bn-inem with your firm j over year and find it iiko your j . j medicine, profitable and rd;-a~nnf. Phi?. L. Kroner, Editor “Seaintrton Miner.” i , Sold hv H. B Mi-Master, Waynes fiO c v n t s | — — — s annua MONEY SAVED. NOTICE. THE CAREFUL CAPON. Will Mother Yonng Chickn, Brood Them, Scratch For and Feed Them. Besides furnishing an abundance of excellent food capons are very useful in taking care of broods of young chickens. They take them without any troublo and care for them just as well, and we think better, than a hen. We have now three capons with broods of 20 chickens each. They are always glad to take the chicks. They will scratch for them and feed them in the daytime and cover them at night and take as good care of them as a hen and will carry them as long as the chickens will stay with them. As soon as the chickens are large enough they can be taken away and another brood given to the capon. Ca pons never molt as do other fowls, and their plumage becomes very long. Owing to their large size and long plumage they can carry a much larger MAKES FIERCE ATTACK. FERNANDINA’3 BIG DEAL. I Botha Commanded Force of Fifteen Hundred Boers. Durban, Natal, Sept. 80.— A force of 1,600 Boers, commanded by General Botha, made an attack which lasted all day long. Sept. 20, on Portitaia, on the border of Zalnland. The burghers were finally repulsed, but at a heavy cost to rhe garrison, whose losses were an officer and 11 men killed. Five officers and 38 men were wounded. In addition, C3 men are miss ing, of which number many are believed to have been killed or wounded. Tbe Boer commandant, Opperman, and 19 burghers are known to nave been killed. “London Is n X ice Pl2-ee i? Yen Know the Lasgaage.” That hackneyed American maiden 'who said London was a nice place if you knew the language was not a bit absurd. We sneak English, hut we have built up our forms of English ex pression upon the English of a few shires of the old country as it was spoken between two and three centu ries ago, while they have been blending and changing the' speech of all their home peoples during the same period. The result is that an American can hardly utter a sentence in England without calling attention to the differ ence between his speech and that of the people about him. Only yesterday, after IS months’ resi dence in England. I rushed up to •-) con ductor in Charing Cross station and asked, “Which car for Bromley?” lie stared at me, and I knew I had spoken a foreign tongue to him, because street vehicles like omnibuses aud horse ears are called road cars and tram cars, and there are no other cars iu England. If you ask a guest at your home in England whether he likes his meat rare, he asks what you said because he does -not understand you. lie calls meat underdone when it is not thor ouglily cooked. - If you tell him you fear the asparagus is canned, he is at a loss again, because he would have said it was tinned. To ask him to pass the powdered sugar will again set him to wondering, for he calls it icing sugar generally, though he knows that it sometimes called caster or sifted sugar. And if you have candy on the table you may not call it so without betray ing your foreign origin, for he calls candy “sweets,” abbreviated from “sweetmeats,” and used to designate all preserves, puddings, pies, candies and jams. To go further along the eccentricities of English at the dining table most persons know, I suppose, that the beet Is called beet root, cornstarch is corn flour, corned beef (or a particular cut of it) is called “silver sides of beef’ and napkins are serviettes.—Julian Ralph in Harper’s Magazine. T will be as Hie following places on dates given betow (o eol’eet taxes for 1901. wlrch are now due Please meet me prompt.lv. Mate rate, It; county, $1.31. making {9 75 on 1 he !hoosand; (Sk i Alexander, Oc . 22:1. til h Lively’s Store, Oct ‘23d, and Nov. 2Cth. KX h ‘-Irani. Oct 24th. and Nov. 271h. 07th Greens’ CutvOct 29th. Bath Tarver’s, Oct 30!h. UKih Hatcher’s.Store, Oct 31st. <;• I 1 nw!nn, November 12th. ti'st Milieu, November 131 li. 73tl M ulvi’ !e, November ! till and 29tli. 72d (tough, November 19!li. (ilst Perkins, November 2-'tn. 7!st Harrell’s. November 21st. 7tlh Laws’Store. Dec -illi I will be in my office during court, and on Saturday s.anu each day from Dee 1st to 20th when the law requires me lo close. Office back of Court house. Re pectfuily, J. M. WARD,T. C. B. C. Sept 23th, 1901. S. 0. POORE, -DEALER IN Ail Kiwis of Furniture, 942 Broad St. AUGUSTA, CA. ' • Before purchasing give me a call and get my prices, which are the lowest in the city. [Tempt and polite attention guaranteed. a fj E,i £ H iS331 *eeslZ2> aawaaga ! I i Riot lit Barcelona. Madrid, Sept. 30. —The anniversary of the revolution of 1868 was celebrated at Madrid and other towns yesterday. At a meeting of 20,000 Republicans and Socialists, at Barcelona, the crowds pro- Property of Town improvement Com pany Sold. Jacksonville, Fia., Sept. 39.—For a week past rumors have been in circula tion in Jacksonville that a Lig deal was pending for Fernandina propertv, but j ceedea to lay a wreath upon the monu- just what the conditions were could not ! 1110111 General Prim, the once famous , , , „ - • i insurgent leaner in Sd:uu. The mobs be learned, as citizens of Fernauama in comded with the polfce< who lired ° 1 ° u the city admitted a trade was beiDg i response to a voliey of scones. Three of made, but declined to give particulars j the persons participating in the demon until the deal was consummated. J Btrations and two police officers were Now, however, it is learned that the wounded, trade has been closed and that the I Emory’s Matriculation, suit pending in the circuit court, and! Oxford, Ga., Oct. 1. —The attend- argued here in regard to the raxes on ance at Emorv coll is stead ily in- property, will be withdrawn. The deeas } __ of transfers have just been executed iu i creasing. New men-are coming in every Fernandina, whereby the large property j day from ail parts of the Union, a nusu- interests of the Florida Town Improve- j her having matriculated from as far ment company were transferred to Fred ; north as Columbus, O., and ss far west W. Hoyt, as trustee for the syndicate i as the Indian Territory. Tne attend* scratching for and feeding chicks. brood than a lion. They are especially valuable for taking care of chickens hatched by artificial means. The great trouble connected with artificial incu bation has been in raising the chickens after they are hatched. It is not only a great deal less trouble to have ca pons carry the chick, but a much larger per cent can he raised. We avoid the crowding that we have in brooders, and the heat, being natural, is of course just what we need. If you do not use an incubator they are very serviceable in taking the first chicks hatched iu N the spring. You can give the chicks to a capon and either reset the hen or put her to laying again. When meat alone is desired, the large breeds, as Brahma, Cochin, Langshan, etc., are best, but for carrying chicks we would advise the use of the smaller aud more industrious breeds, as Leg horn, Game, etc. The Plymouth Rock, Dorking and Wyandotte fill tbe middle ground and are useful for either pur pose.—O. M. Watson, South Carolina. morning: Glories For Sheep Forage Morning glories, the annual purple flowered kind, will yield 40 tons of green feed per acre, are drought proof and highly nutritious, equal to the best clover, and can he cut, cured and thrashed. I sow them all over my farm. Sheep annihilate them. They never go to water when they can get them. They can be sown in young cul tivated corn and the whole cut up a=d shocked. They will cut five to seven tons of dry feed per acre.—J. C. Nor ton, Kansas. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Central Time at Jacksonville and Savannah. Eastern Time at Other Points. Schedule in Effect June 30th, 1951. northbound. No.34lNo.Ti lUailylDaiiy Lv. Jacksonville (P. S) “ Savannah tSo. Rv.) “ Barnwell “ BJackville Ar. Columbia Lv. Charleston, (So. Ry “ Summerville “ Branehvilie " Oranpeburg “ Kingvilio Ar. Ooiumbia Hydrocyanic Acid Ga» Fumigation. “Stored grains and other seeds may be fumigated with hydrocyanic acid gas of required strength and for suffi cient time to insure the destruction of insect pests without injury to the ger minating quality of the seeds and with out rendering them injurious as foods.” This is the opinion of Professor Town send of Maryland, who has thoroughly Investigated the matter. Lv. Augusta, (So. Ky.) Lv. Gramtevilio ....’ Lv. Aiken Lv. Trenton “ Johnston Ar. Columbia, Lv. Columbia, (Bldg “ Winnsboro “ Chester “ Rock Hill Ar. Charlotte St Ar. Danville . 7 -:-)() 12 3ua i 13a 8 IX'a 12 25p 3 50p 4 12p 55oy| Gi5a 7 Deal 11 Ojp 7 4ja|l2tlv/Ut 9 05a 9 28a 19 24a 11 10a 26‘jp 3237 3 a'jp 3 52p 4 orp 5 45p ooop C50p 7 3Sp 853p 9 Otp Ar. Richmond Ar. Washington “ Baltimore (Pa.RR). “ Philadelphia “ New York 12 4fca liOUa 7 35a 9 15a 11 35a 2 03p 2 Ola 2 45a 4 05a 5 4ua 9301) 10 lop lioop 11 2Up 2 lea 8 17a 8 OSa 9 53a 1320 O40p 900p 11 85p 2 alia (5 23a n Sue tjQUPiep of c 5 me 3 s zar By JULES VZmZ The title is a premise of . an absorbing story. The author's name is a guarantee of its fulfillment. And readers are not dis appointed. Far from it. They are more than pleased: they are entertained and delighted with the charm ing story. Would 3’ou like to read the story’ ? We believe you Would. Therefore we shall publish it serially in our columns, beginning in the near future. There will be no dull evenings for our read ers while this story is running-. ?• f f ?t Mi XI Li A A | Ticklers ! ♦ <r o Sni-ce-M treads on the heels of every right effort, ja-st as tree of <>ur y "ids hs every hirg- else. Honest merchandise with honest prices ara emiji to assortments, together with liberality and prompt service tho infer.ttve to our rif..rrs in making ours the be3t general lino in Wayneabnn*. A hviy gbncp in "ur Dry Goods Department will tell the whole story, variety. Dante F-ishion’s ideas. The season has found us ready to meet ill * demands of ihe fail trade, and the light of cash buying iipirs up •: he way t<. economy here. Everything in DRYGOODS. No better quaiily argument can he offered than our guarantee to sell you the best, anywhere, anytime for the money. „ cr****’ 5* A nice assortment of Silks plain Black, White Brocades, Taffetas beautiful designs at prices “not to hit your purse hard ” Ail-wool pants warranted.hy manufacturer backed up an tee ‘not to rip ar.d tear.” at a very low asking price. by our g::ar- Wheo In need of a new hat did you ever feel ihe need of relying u;>- nn a vvetl-kno.vn name 1n the hat as an assurance that you arc getting value received for the money. For instance: Suppose you had“ money to burn.” and decided t*» puy $5 for your ha». Would you not ask for the well known make-either a Stetson, Knox, Miller or Dunlap? Oc. the other hand suppose that instead of wishing to invest $/>, you a-k yourself the question, can I not f >r $} buy a hat as genteel in appearance and a.s durable in quality as the high price goods? What brand or name of hat would you decide upon ? ff you have reasoned this point 7 ns your inter est to come to get) ns. MISS CARRIE SULLIVAN. — Djcalek in ^HlLLlNERY, r FLOWERS^) FEATHERS. RUCHINGS. and ous, 8h) Broad Street, Ovvr Mulherin’s Store, Augusta, : Georgia. Complete liue ol Children s and Intant’s Caps, Hats and other Novelties. . < Writs tha | V Alsxandsr: Sscd I «• Company, | I Augusta i « Georgia. | SHOES, Paganini. 1 he violin wizard of over a ing one day before ihe t mperor and Ms strings hut one of hi-< magical fiddle. Ti he hrei ght such wonderful melody that Break all Imf one nf our lines of shoes, t hundred years ego when play- court. purposely broke ali tha eii u? from 'hat solitary string Royally was fairly bewitched, atii'h, sink, forget all hut eur -f 1, at) ar.d $2 -hoes, and more shoe music, more fa-hion melody, will come out of that one than m:vy dealers get out of a dozen lines of Sfuses. These ^h'<es are tnade for boih men and women’s feet—particularly made for the woman who desires to clad her feet stylishly and yet eco nomically. It comes in a!! Ieaih^rs, ai! lasts, a!! tees—One PRICE A money-saving opportunity will be lost it you fail to fake w arning. We wili save you money Our prices tell more in half minute than “big words and hrag talk” can do in a week. Iu our Grecery Department the power of cash D fully illustrated. A little of your time spent locking through these goods will net. be wasted. Come to see U5 everyb idy who want to get best goods for the least money. GEO. F. BRINSON & BR0., ’Phone, 69. Waynesboro, Ga. Lv. Columbia Ar. Spartanburg .. “ Asheville Ar.JKnoxville Ar. Oincinnaii Ar. Louisville 11 3Ja 3 lOp 7 lop 4 Goa i oop r sup 7 20a 10 :20a 2 00p 7 I Op 8 Fa insr comprising the purchasers. ance iu the senior class numbers 35, the The amount paid for the property was i juuior class 50 aud the sophomore Go. $100,000. The property consists of abou one-third of the town. Ic includes about 1 mile of water front, consisting of the lots of the creosote works of McGiffiu & Co., docks from Caihoan to Alachua aud Center streets south to Beech street and the Center street docks and warehouse-:. The purchasers are ail citiz.tis of rer- nandina, aud it is said their object in purchasing the property was to stop lit igation and put ihe property on the market and to improve it for the benefit of the town. The purchasers are F. W. Hoyt, J. Mizell, William Mizeli, S. A. Swann, W. O. Jeffreys, S. Chadwick, W. E. Page and J. H. Prescott. L. L L. FOB THE LIVER The freshmen number 60, with about the same number iu the sub-freshman class. The total number iu school this year is about 275, a large increase over last year s attendance. I BOWELS. Use this pleasant, purely Vegetable remedy,and keep well this summer. ATLANTA TEE MECCA OF ALL SISET SEERS. Crowds, such as have not visited Atlan ta since the Cotton States Exposition of 1895, will soon turn toward that city again for the greatest Iuter State Fair ever held iu this country. Every hotel, fvery boarding house is receiving appli cations for accommodation from ali parts of the south aud the country at large, and wheu the gates of the great show open on October 9ch, there will bo, it is expected, the greatest opening day crowd that ever passed through those gates. Every railroad has allowed one fare round trips, including a ticket to the Fair grounds, and this excursion rate is having its effect. The Fair is nearly at band, and within much less than a week the rush will begin. Iu the matter of special attractions this year the Fair management is spend ing nearly $35,000, and the demand for space for exhibits has far surpassed, tnac which is available. The result will be this year the greatest Fair, from a com mercial as well as an amusement stand point, ever held iu Atlanta. News and Notes. Big crops of wheat, oats and barley are reported for the Canadian north west. “All signs,” says the British consul general, “point to a tremendous devel opment of the sugar industry in Cuba.” The almost total failure of the Sibe rian grain crop is reported. Plowing for macaroni wheat should be done very early, the preceding sum mer in case of spring sowing. In a Baltimore public park they have in the playground section a “kinder garten farm” for giving children some ideas about farming and gardening. Farming on a large scale as an in vestment for capital, a strictly busi ness enterprise which offers better profits at less risk than most indus tries, is a topic of the present. A commercial wool show will be held at the Fan-American exposition in October. SOUTHBOUND. No.33 Daily No.35 Daily Lv. Louisville 7 45a 7 3up Lv. Ciucinmiti 3 3Ua 8G5p 1 Lv. Knoxville “ Asheville “ Spartanburg Ar. Columbia 1 55a 7 05a 1035a 215p b iefi 3lOp 0 lop 9 HOp Hv. New York(Pa-R.R) “ Philadelphia “ Baltimore Lv. Washi’gt’n (So.Ry) it Blip G 05p 8 27p S>o0p 1215iit 3 50a (5 22a 11 15a Lv. Richmond 11 3 ip 1201111 Lv. Danville 4 Hoa 0 48p Lv. Charlotte “ Rock Hill “ Chester “ Wiunsboro Ar. Columbia, I Biug St 8 2Ua 9 10a 9 44a 10 28a 11 35a 955p 10 490 11 lop 12 Ola 1 Uoa Lv. Columbia, (U. D.) “ Johnston “ Trenton Ar. Aiken Ar. Graniteville Ar. Angus, a 120dm 1 40p 1 52p 2 30p 2 21p OOjp 3 oJn (3 05a 0 28a 7 30a 6 ota 7 45a Lv. Ooiumbia (So. Ky) “ Kingvilie “ Orangeburg “ Branchvillo 3U0p 3 46p 4 42p 525p 642p 7 30p 11 40a 1 20p 133p 3 Oop 7 40p 1 35a 2 32a 3 45a 4 25u 5 57a 7 00a Ar. Charleston Lv. Columbia (So. Ry.) “ Blackville “ Barnwell “ Savannah Ar. Jacksonville (P. S.) 1 10a 2 52a 3 07a 4 50a 9 15a 1 For their tree ♦ Catalogue ^ Buy seed early ❖ as seed are ad- % ♦ yanciDg in price. S Worn Q d * si it C-24 J&3. .. ... V i‘% : | SLOOAYSAR . l . I- <- f. ■; - • v . • - -■ ' l ps==aj j \ yri jm . ' I fA' \ i '\ .. ; h , ■-1 i : V . : r.7, ; - ; > / ...\ . - i .A in year; Drugs ! Veteran’s Day at Atlanta. Within a week an office will ba opened in Atlanta where Confederate Veterans may register and secure a free ticket for himself and wife to attend the Inter-State Fair on Confed erate Veteran’s Day, Wednesday, Octo ber 16th. A record breaking crowd is expected at this time from all over the state. The registration office will be in charge oi a committee of Veterans, which will keep it open on the day set aside for tbe heroes in gray so that visitors may register and receive free for fieir wives ««d them- • • V Sleeping Car Service. Excellent daily passenger service between Florida aud New York. Nos. 33 and 34—New York and Florida Ex press. Drawing-room sleeping cars between Augusta and New York. Pullman drawing room sleeping cars between Port Tampa, Jack sonville, Savannah. Washington and Yew York. Pullman sleeping cars between Charlotte and Richmond and Charlotte and N orfolk. Dining oars between Charlotte and Savannah. Nos. 35 and 30—U. S. Fast Mail. Through Pullman drawing-room buffet sleeping cars be tween Jacksonville and New York and Pull man sleeping cars between Augusta and Char lotte and Charlotte and Richmond. Dining ears serve ali meals enrou! e. Pullman sleep ing cars between Jacksonville and Columbia, enrouto daily between Jacksonville and Cincin nati, via Asheville. FRANK S. GANNON, S. H.HARDWICK, Third V-P. & Gen. Mgr., Gen. Pas. Agf., Washington, D. O. Washington, D. C W. H. TALOE, R. W. HuNT, As’tGen. Pass. A.g’t., Div. Pass. Ag’t., Atlanta, Ga.Charleston. S. O. PRESCRIPTIONS CREFJ LLY COMPOUNDED. We carry in stock a large as sortment of Healing alves, Toilet Articles, Cosmetics, Perfumes, Patent Medicines, and a complete list of Hygienic appliances. Seed.. —See our Botan ical catalogue. So Arms !—A fleet of Spanish mackerel coming up the creeK that must be caught. Now is the time to buy Angle Rods, sinkers, etc., with w’hich to stop the said fleet Told by L R. FORD. 11 A M ■■■ :' ■■ ■■ : i M r!o-> , : T •• - j it & I ' j A ! li M H ' 5 F i ! t; - y > j . ; t - .. in ti ; N I B i-<. \ .-A i! V UT -Vn • J \\! ,/r- . ■ in-.isirateo. its t waited by ex- hill of interest izine it has no sa- if any. equals. V,f i i l; r ]i l It already baa 3(0,0 A S-lvj T-yib"i Send Tea O famous painting: D Address W'G.M.- :AI TO FGG2 .-,;V NAffAiBffi PASS... ! nvired? c-I thousands con- .i.i, r. 10 and inspiring. ; 3 r ?ms, while varied, are < rtahijriir and of the highest ; . it con rains neither sen- rjtnllsiii r.or provincialism. nn..<bar is constantly increasing. .-•! Tenss. " • ■- s '* - - .v; i send you an elegant ■ ■-?. in size, of Landseer’s i: .a this ofler when you write. • ■, '*• Ohio HGLLEYMAN’s COMPOUND ELIXIR FOR HOR E Colic. Tbe 2 biggest farmers i n Georgia and South Carolina—Capt. Jas. M. Smith says of it: “Have tried them. Holle- man’s is the best ot all. Keep it all tbe time.” Capt. R. H. Walker says: “Holleyman’s is worth Its weight in gold. I have saved as many as three horses lives per month with it.” Ho!ley mas Compoound Elixir 50 CENTS. Will cure any case of Horse Colic undei the sun Sold by all the merchants of this county Do not take any substitute said .0 be thf la tne thing or as good. N. L. WILLETT DRUG CO, AUGUSTA. rt\. make it. 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Designs Copyrights &c- Anyone sending a sketch and description niaS quickly ascertain our opinion free whetner Invention is probably patentable, tmnmnn. - tions strictlv confidential. Handbook on Pate sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in .he Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly- -V , MUNN & Co. 36 " 1 '” 1 ’™- Hew York Branch Office. 06 F BU WwnlMton, O- C. .