The true citizen. (Waynesboro, Ga.) 1882-current, November 16, 1901, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

ANTEED S i O VES, Ranges, Mantels. TILING and GRATES. ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. THE LENS. .a rir est Stock Low. I'iCOS Tin Roofing and Galvanized Sheet Metal Work, a Specialty. REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONE. SLUSHY, Phones, B. 100. 1009 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga. IT Q. m ! Ai ¥1 big stock of y s Lj i-j. DAT & I'AIN IN A AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. We are still at the front rank with ^tiidelm-Icor Wagons, t §? Columbus Buggy Company's Vehicles, Fme Forrest era tddiety, g QiyEM CH IU P PLOWS k SUPSDIURS, | HARDWARE AND CUTLERY. /; awMdMawBMweBasBBaBawBaBfflBgBMBaaMBamga^taaaaaHBBa /; QT 5 TE OF GEORGIA—Rckkr County:- O By virtue cf an o'der of the Court of Or binary of said county will be sold at. pubic outcry on the first. Tuesday in December. 1SK)! at the court bouse in said county, between th ‘ ‘ Wonderful Effect Upon It of the Hent From u Blau’s Hand. Some years ago the writer paid a vis- :;U hours of sale, the following real I it to Alvau Clark at Cam Bridgeport to T. P. FAGAN i —Dealer in estate iu said county of Burke, said State to-wit: Alt that tract or parcel of land lying, situ ate and being in the county of Burke, State of Georgia, containing two bun. red and fori v iive 21?) acres more or less, bounded Norlh by lands Martin Moore and the estate of Mrs, Elizabeth Brinson. East by lands of J. K. Rodgers and il s. W. IS. Cullen. South bv binds of the estate of Jordan Joiner, and on the r\ est by lands of the estate of Mrs Eiiza- b tli Brinson, said tract being known as the L M Briiison-Carpenter place, Also ail that tract or parcel of land lying situate and bring in the G >th and Odd District G >.I said county and state, entraining fir- teen 15. acres more or less at and near Mur - nerlyn station on the Augusta A Savannah railroad, b und J North by lands of Adda It. Boiles, East by lands of J. D. Berry,.South bv public road leading from Munnerlyn to Hab ersham, and on the West by lands of Adda R. Boiles, Abo all that lot or narce! of land contain- ng one-fourth ot an acre, lying, situate and being in the.village of Munnerlyn, Ga , said county and on the right of way of the Augr.s- ta & Savannah railroad, bounded North by Main Street. East and South by lands of Ad da R Holies and west by said right of wav. and known as the Chance Sto e Lot. Aisoall that tract or parcel of land lying, situate and being iu said district, county and State and near said Munnerlyn station, o:- posite the Chance residence and fronting with equal width the fifteen acre tract above escribed, commencing at a corner opposite the Chance horse lot and bounded North by Die public road eadiugfrom MunnerLn lo Habersham and on the East,South and Wesi by lands ot Adda R, Holies, said tract con taining five acres. Also at the same time and place, will be sold, the following descr bed personal prop erty; 1 bay mare about seven years old; iSur- :'ri horse about,!) years old; 1 dark horse mu'e about five years old; 1 dark mare mule about ears old; 1 two horse wagon; 1 top buggy; i open buggy; 100 bushels of corn; l,0eu lbs. of .;dder, and all of the farming implements of the late L Jl. Brinson deceased. Tlie sale w ll continue from day to day and between the same hours tiil all of said prop erty i , sold. Terms cash. This 10th day of October, 1901. B. W. CARSWELL. Admr. of L. M. Brinsou. Johnston & Fuilbright Attorneys. ines and Liquors. 3Y/j x.:: L W BOTTLE AND CASE GOODS. Special attention given to the Jug Trade of Burke County, You can get quick attention. 002 Campbell Street, Opposite Union Depot, Bell ’Phone 450. <3-002:gfla,- We will offer to the Public the best[iues of a That has ever been for sale in AUGUSTA, Our SHOES will be sold strictly on their melits and on our guarantee of their 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 The Handy Shears. A fellow city lot fancier living near me, who, by the way. is one of the best hands I know at coaxing chickens to maturity, has a pair of large scissors which he puts to more uses than I had ever dreamed such implements could he employed for. He had a little patch of crimson clover, for instance, and every morning, armed with his scissors, he would repair to the patch ar.d cut his clover, using only the tender, leafy portions. Then he would go to the run way of the chicks, where his inevitable shears would be again brought into requisition to cut the clover into small pieces for the youngsters. If he has a piece of meat or some vegetable of very firm texture left from a meal, he gets out his scissors and proceeds to cat it into little pieces fer his charges. In short, I never suspected the possi bilities of a pair of common, rather large scissors until I had seen thv> many uses made of them by this gentleman. If your wife doesn’t happen to have a discarded pair which you can “win” when she isn’t looking, pay a visit at once to the hardware store and buy them. You’ll never know what you have missed until you are the proud possess or of a pair of “chicken scissors.”— Treat M. Right in Poultry Mouthly. Tlionprht It Was a Fake. The first incubator made its appear ance in this country in 1845. A Yan kee put one on exhibition on Bread- way, New York. He charged a shil ling to see the wonder and out of curi osity was well patronized. His ma chine was considered a fake. Men would not believe that an egg could be hatched anywhere except under a hen, so the showman began demonstrating to prove the virtue of his invention. He would break eggs from the ma chine to show the different stages of incubation and finally succeeded in convincing a good many that it was not a fraud. Time has proved that it was far from being a humbug. witness the esting of the huge lens for the famous Lick telescope. At the end of the long, dark room the largest film glass then hi the world was set up on edge. From- a distance of about fifty feet a pencil of light was flashed into the heart of ’.lie disk and reflected back into the observer's eye. The slightest imperfections, if any, in the glass would then he revealed by the curves of ligb: and the lines of polarization. “Now,” said Mr. Clark, “I will show you the wonderful sensitiveness of the lens to outside influences. Every hu man body gives out heat and when brought near to extremely sensitive substances affects them to a greater or less extent. Now watch.” He walked down to the lens and hob his hand under it about two feet Instantaneously a marvelous spectacle burst into view. It seemed as if the great glass disk had become a livin volcano, spurting forth jets of flame. The display was dazzling. Wavin leaping, dancing, the countless tongues of light gleamed and vibrated; then, fit fully, reluctantly, they died away, leav in.g the lens reflecting oniy a pure, un troubled light. “What is it? How do you account for the wonder?” were the eager ques tions. “It is only the radiation of heat alter nately expanding and contracting the glass. If I had put my hand upon the lens itself, the phenomenon would have been even more violent. To a person ignorant of lenses the al most supernatural sensitiveness of mass of glass weighing several hun dred pounds was astonishing, but to the scientist it is an everyday matter, for he has instruments that will ter with unfailing nicety the approach of a person fifty or a hundred feet away.—Youth’s Companion CONQUERED HER RIVAL. Iu farm shoes, uch as are needed by those exposed to the inclemency of the weather. We have made so cial effort to secure SHOES that will give ample protection to feet, end keep them dr No trouble to show our Shoes. GOULEY & VAUGHN, 826 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA. Agent or HAN AN «& SON S Fine Shoes. MOSLEY BROS., F©UNOE : MA CHINISTS, Wayne bo I'D, Ga. CLASTS TUESEBYS ana FSEDATS Dealers in Grist Mills, Cotton Gins, Presses Feeders and Condensers and do all kinds of En gine and Boiler repairing. Building Gin Bras r and repairing Gins a specialty. Ail kind of mouldings, Window Its Good Point. Gentleman (to house agent)—The great disadvantage is that the house is so damp. House Agent — Disadvantage, sir? Advantage, I call it. In case of fire It wouldn’t be so likely to burn. Teaciting; a Dost. To teach a dog to “speak” hold some dainty before him wheu be is hungry At first he will not know what is want ed, but say “Speak!” to him, and when he barks, which he is pretty sure to do when he finds the morsel still beyond his reach, feed it to him at once. He will soon associate the work “speak” with the bark and the daint.v. Attention, Young Men. The state, recoga'zing the neces sity of your obtaining an education, his established at Dahlonega, a col iege where you can ha ye theadvan- tage of a §10,00000 equipment, and a faculty, each man a specialist In his department Tuition is free and board is only $8 00 a mouth in dor mitory. $100 will cover cost of year. It is your college, built for you, sup ported by you, and s’ands ready to help you. It is not a town school, but a real coliege, being one of the Ove male colleges of the state. Ir costs no more to go to a real college than to one only in name Don’t cheat yourself by going to a school without library or scientific labora tories. Write to Pres. J S Stewart, Dablonega, Ga., for a catalogue. I A Pretty and Patlietie Story of Jenny Lind mid Grisi. We have recently read a beautiful incident Jenny Lind and Grisi wen both rivals for popular favor in Lon don. Both were -Invited to sing the same night at a court concern before tlie queen. Jenny Lind, being the younger, sang first and was so dis turbed by the fierce, scoruful look of Grisi that she was at the pciut of failure when suddenly an inspiration came to her. The accompanist was striking the final chords. She asked him to rise and took the vacant seat. Her fingers wandered over the keys in a lovin; prelude, and then she sang a little prayer which she had loved as a child. She hadn’t sung it for years. As she sang she was no longer in the pres ence of royalty, but singing to loving friends in her fatherland. Softly at first the plaintive notes floated on the air, swelling louder and richer every moment. The singer seemed to throw her whole soul into that weird, thrilling, plaintive “pray er.” Gradually the song died away and ended in a sob. There was a si lence—the silence of admiring wonder. The audience sat spellbound. Jenny Lind lifted her sweet eyes to look into the scornful face that had so discon certed her. There was no fierce ex pression now; instead a teardrop glis tened on the ioDg, black lashes, and after a moment, with the impulsive ness cf a child of the tropics, Grisi crossed to Jenny Lind’s side, placed her arm about her and kissed her, utterly regardless of the audience.— Our Dumb Animals. BREEDING FOR EGGS. A Few Sujjsgestinn:: cu Eoiv to Get 200 Essrs Per Ilea Per Year. More poultry m i and women get from 100 to 1Z5 t-g.r: per hen per year than over that an sunt. Ami why? There nro onlv four iTu£0Z3 vrnv first, the stock; second, the houses; third, the seed; fourth, the rare given. Again, there are only two classes who make money by keeping penury— the person who has only a few and ’.be one who makes it a business. Two hundred eggs per hen per year are not an unusual event, uucl there’is no reason why ev ery poultryman should not have that kind. It is not necessary to have trap nests to find cut your layers. The ;soul try- man who has to use them for that pur pose is not the one to make a success cf poultry keeping, because if he has to depend on a-contrivance it is only proof that he cannot place any depend ed: v on himself. As soon as one has tc rely on others it is high time that he gives up the business. If you want to find your layers, stay with your fowls, pick them out, hang up a daily egg rec ord and watch it. If you have net the time for tin's, then you certainly be long to the middle class. Unless you give the fowls ail your time you can not expect them to make money for you. Unless you know your fowls they will not make you money, even if you do give them all your time. If you have a hen that is a known layer and she is undersized or too large, don’t breed frpm her. If yen do. you art- wasting both time and money. Stock has greatly improved in the past five years, but egg production has not. When poultrymen devote more time trying to find out which way and how is the best to feed, then they will increase the egg production. Because John Jones tells you that bis way of feeding is the best that is no reason why you should adopt it until you know it to be a fact. Because Sam Jones tells you that one variety cf chickens will lay more than the others don't sell what yon have and get them until you know it is so. Poultrymen are too ready to listen to the other ! fellow. My method cf obtaining aud holding great layers is as follows, no matter what the variety kept: As soon as the pullets are fully ma tured they are carefully watched. A« soon as one starts to lay she is removed to her permanent quarters, punch marked, a record hang up, date cf hatch, pen hatched from, etc. This goes on until pens are full. Those that are backward in starting are pm. in a different building, we counting them as culls. The pullets aud record: arc carefully watched. We do not breed from these as pullets, but wiii breed from the cream cf them as year lings. They are now yearlings, und we start to hatch. Each egg is marked with pen number. When put iu inc-u bators. same is set down in a ledger for that purpose, also giving the num her of male bird and what pen he was hatched from. When the eggs are din to hatch, they are put in pedigreed egg trays. This keeps each pen cf chicks separate. They are then punch marked and placed in brooders, which are grouped in colonies, separated with tine mesh wire, so that the chicks can not get mixed. The cockerels are re moved as soon as possible and fattened for market. We pick cut a few. those that we think will make extra good ones, and then turn them on free range. Soon the pullets are removed, each lot to a separate house and yard, and then we wait for the first eggs. You must start your feeding for leavy laying soon after the chick is hatched. This part cf poultry keeping is entirely too much neglected. I be lieve more damage is dene by letting the cockerels remain with the pullets while growing than from any other cause. It will put them back two months in their laying, and they will never make as good birds. It certain ly stunts them. A pullet must he la the best of condition if you expect her to be a heavy layer, and you must keep her that way if you want her to keep on laying. My experience teaches me that we must have large framed birds, and to get that kind you must start feeding as a little chick. You can put on flesh any time, but there is only one time to form large bones, and that Is on the start.—C. A. Dul ling. White Holland Tnrbcy, She Was an Observer. “Did George wriie to you every day while he was traveling around?” “Yes. every day.” “What regularity!” "Yes. hut I discovered that every one cf the letters was written here in his office before he started, and ail he had to do was to drop one in the postoffice wherever he chanced to bo.” “And bow did you find that out?” "The *e’ in his office typewriter is broken.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Tar:::hS Isy Experience. “We shall need.” said the officer who was arranging for the government ex pedition. “food supplies for six men aud a boy.” “Supplies for eight men.” said the secretaty. jotting it down. “What else?’’—Chicago Tribune. r.m■ rff (.11- ofiTf;-, 'RDF. P. M. WH! d09 7lh or , Augusia, « rs s TM A 'j « 6 2 a •iq 1 -- SYS TESTS grinds iii*j proper ari HANTS them. Lenses cut into your frame while FREE OF GHARSE. ic- ail defect', Gses and V,"A ’ -diems c ociety |<pi.W. B836E,‘ j Brands. <sc. 221 (.Mnspbeii'!‘'bt-i’ | Broad sue! Libs, Augusta.. Ga at'" ;/ 1 iiadgev i Made ’""Sims ociety Badges 1 Mnnufa.-tar raraj r»n «tir.vr &F- .U C V The Newest. In AUGUSTA i WiiiUB Qijf. •a G-t have ■UY .■acLies price store saves you money on every article *. No matter what prices others make, you will (i 'ihe Lowest Prices Here. Cloaks, Fuk Skirts kl l: t\ a o( Onnervv Dres; >ar, Sacks, i Goods ’9 Wrappers •Jo p 200 200 CO r>r line wh save you on all shove lines, upham Lace Curtains. $2 value $1.00. i Lace Curtains, 62.50 quality Si.50. ace Curtains at 25 per cent, of price k.sk/4^ aild S. 0. * Home Made 30c lor stout, fast color Georgia arpets; 50c for extra super-wool Carpets. t ’a rpet s; 35c lor wo 1 stair Carpets ; 500 Rugs ct v dOc ou ihe doil.ii-. Unde rwear cheaper than any place ia town. You -a ve mono} on what you buy of § s o §Mf h j? IN* Ms. S *i Ik La S La pi .4 td? 2 | AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. Dollars ! Your Old Clothes Redeemed! We will reduce your Clothing agyonr ciorhgs look r.etU us ti We preserve vournew Suit. W’e clc-sn your soiled Suit. ! by rank- i We dye your faded Suit, y lunger. [ Omof i-ivvn p tronatre given special atiue tion. a iso Ladies work. I Don’t Forget to try tba WAlffiHO 1)11 Ai CLEANING WORKS, Opposite H. H. MANAU, the Tailor. YNESBORO, GEORGIA /—s-r^n*’ =fc=Ni -GAR LI SUED A. D . 1846. Importer and Wholesale Dealer in Fine Liquors, Fine Wines, Havanna Cigars, NfUiaier’nl Waters, jEto. GO 1 and 802 Broad St., Agent tor Venve-t.’Iiquot—Fonsardin, Urbar.a Win iugusta, Ga. Anbenser-Busch Brewing T_ GK ds CO., AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. ;LEPEONES : Bell, 282 ; Stroger, 802. OFFICE and WORKS North Augusta. no ltu Manufacturers (High Grade.) The illustration shows a white Hoi land turkey bou. These birds are very popular with many poultrymen. and in some markets they are preferred to the bronze or other breeds. An Ontrage. An old gentleman was present at the reathng of the will of a distant rela tive. He had hardly expected to find himself remembered in it. but pretty soon a clause was read in which a cer tain field was bequeathed to him. That was good, but the document went on to bequeth the old gray mare in the said field to some one else—a man with whom the old gentleman was not on friendly terms. That was too much for his equanimity, and he interrupted the solemn proceedings and brought a smile to the faces of the company by exclaiming: “Then she’s eating my grass!”—Pear son’s. Jo* PWSTTTN*. Uvci-Hulnf The Highest Coart, The Denver Times says that when Tom Bagnell was justice of the peace at Altman, the highest incorpo rated town In the country, standing 12,000 feet above the sea level, he had occasion to fine a disorderly character $10 and costs. The victim of the operation of justice objected to the finding of the court and announced that he would take an appeal. What? Appeal, would you?” asked the astonished court. "You can’t come any o’ that, now, This is the highest court in the United States, and you can’t appeal.” Send u» the new* ot yova eection. WOMAN’S TROUBLES ARB FEMALB DISEASES CURED BY Johnston’s Sarsaparilla QUART BOTTLES. Painful and Suppressed Menses, Ir regularity, Leucorrhcea, Whites, Steril ity, Ulceration of the Uterus, change of life, in matron or maid, all find re lief, help, benefit and cure in JOHNS TON’S SARSAPARILLA. It is a real panacea for all pain or headache about the top or back of the bead, distress- Diff pain in the left side, a disturbed condition of digestion, palpitation of the heart, cold hands and feet, nerv ousness and irritation, sleeplessness, muscular weakness, bearing-down pains, backache, legache, irregular ac tion of the heart, shortness of breath, abnormal discharges, with extremely painful menstruation, scalding of urine, swelling of feet, soreness of the breasts' neuralgia, uterine displacement and catarrh, and all those symptoms and troubles which make the average wo man’s life so miserable. HICUIfiAX DBCS CO., lie trait, m.fc, Stic by H B. HcMASTEB, W»;/«e|b jro, Be, Doors, Blinds, Glazed Sasli MMntels, Etc. -A-TTGKCTS oxa., g-eoeg-ia Mill WorK of all Kinds in Georgia Yellow Pine. Flooring, Ceiling, Siding, Finishing, Moulding, Etc., Car Sills, Bridge, Railr ad and Special Bills to order. feb 24.’1900-b y __ AC GCST Dental Parlors, rUSLKSS dextistby. Lowest Prices All Work Guaranteed Crown and Bridge Work a Specialty POORE & WOODBURY, 821 Broad St., Augusta, Georgia. Beil Pbone, 520, l y ft H A J53L ---v-U u i mayll.1901—by If You’re a Judge of good liquors I am willing to accept your opinion oi 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 not a judge, jou map rely upon my guarantee of its purity anil age. and upon the tes timony of people who have used it. I would .e to rend you a small order; alar cr oue will *<>_<>» $1 per tu[l quart; 75 four quarts. Order wnai- you want. I have it. SOUTH CAROLINA SALOON, GEO E. PAYNE, Proprietor. 1114 Broadway, - - AUGUSTA,Ga.