Newspaper Page Text
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B
ENINA
FOR WOMEN
LL1BLE REMEDY
,E DISORDERS!
3BS
MHBEassBEBaBaaaraaga—a
Sold by H B* BWcIVIaster, Druggist, Waynesboro
BUFF ORPINGTONS.
A Breeder Who is r.n Entlinsistiic
AdrJrcr of These Birds.
The Buff Orpingtons are of English
origin and are made up cf the best
blood cf three widely known breeds,
the Golden Spangled Ha in burgs, excel
lent layers: the English Dorkings, a
splendid table fowl, and the Buff Co
chins, from which they get their color
and size. The object of the originator
in forming this new variety was to
combine prolific egg production with
superior fiesh for the table, taking
pains to secure also hardiness of consti
tution, rapid growth, good form and at
tractive plumage.
First, they have the fashionable col
or—namely, buff. There is not so much
in the shade cf buff as in ihe evenness
of it. The club’s standard calls for
“clear, even, dense buff throughout to
the skin, from lemon to orange.” To
color alone is given EG points, so it is
evident that color is a main considera
tion in breeding Buff Orpingtons. The
color as demanded is difficult, to obtain.
Hence we have work here for the fan
cier to do.
The young are extremely hardy and
of quick growth. Pullets begin laying
when from to 5 months old and
keep it up the year round through ail
Child Beptlsm In Early Day*.
The following from the early court
records cf York county, Me., we give
verbatim et literatim: “At a genera)
court held at Saco Sept. 17, 1040, it is
ordered by the court that the Worship
ful Thomas Georges apd Edward God
frey, councillors for this province, shall
order all the inhabitants from Pisca
taquis to Keccbache, which shall have
any children unbaptized as soon as
any minister is settied in any of their
plantations, they bring their said chil
dren to baptism, and if any shall refuse
to submit to the said order that the
party so refusing shall be summoned
to answer their contempt at the next
general court to be holden in this prov
ince.”—Lewiston Journal.
A good friend is one’s nearest rela
tion. One’s greatest relation is not al
ways a good ci lend. — Pittsburg Dis
patch.
PROF. P. M. WHITMAN,
209 7th St., Augusta, Ga.
aDc-i, FBEc. t.YE TESTS for all defects o’
!fe“ ds tke proper glasses and V . V P
them.
Lenses cut into your frame while you w-it
FREE OF CHARGE. = S™ ~
Society Badges i >ocietyBatik s
Man u far;
Of Rubtv
Stan ps
_ - , Stencils. C
. Brands. <re.. 221 Campbell tst bt-i
| Broad and Ellis, Augusta. Ga. aiw::
&E.W. DGEGE,}:
tion
Adf-c-tMnp -—.>*» !!>.**»!
A rlvarflfitne’ nitM or> spolieotinn
STOVES,
Ranges, Mantels,
TILING and GRATES,
Largest Stock ! Lowest rices
Tin Roofing and Galvanized
Sheet Metal Work, a Specialty
REPAIRING PROMPTLY BONE.
DAVID SIjUSKY,
Phones, B. 100. 1009 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE.
LONG AND SHORT.
DAY & TANNAHILL,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
We are stiff at the front rank with a big stock of
Stndebaker Wagons,
Columbus Buggy Company’s Vehicles,
Fire Fort ess er a tc dleiy,
0L Vtt OH LL: P PLOWS & SUPSOIU RS,
HARDWARE AND CUTLERY.
T. P. FAGAN,
-Dealer in-
ines and
Liquors.
BOTTLE AND CASE GOODS.
Spcial attention given to
the Jug Trade of Burke County.
You can get quick attention.
002 Campbell Street, Opposite Union Depot,
Bell ’Phone 456. ^-■CLg’-U.StSL, ©-eorgrlSL.
S T -TE OF GEORGIA—Bukkb County:—
By virtue of an order of ihe Court of Or
dinar.v of said county will be sold at publ c
outcry on t he first Tuesday in December. 1901
at tlie court bouse in said county, between
the usual boars of sale, the following real
estate in said county of Burke, said State,
to-wit:
All i hat tract or parcel of land lying, situ
ate and being in the county of Burke, State
of Georgia, containing two hundred and forty
five '245) acres more or less, hounded North
by lands Martin Moore and the estateof Mr
Elizabeth Brinson. East bv lands of J. ft.
Rodgers and M s. W. B. Culleu. South In
lands of the estate of Jordan Joiner. and on
the West by lands of the estate of Mrs Eliza
beth Brinson, said tract being known as the
L M Brinson-Carpeuter place,
Also all that tract or parcel of land lyin
situate and being in the Goth and 62d District
G. M said county and i tate, con'ainine ti
teen 15 acres more or less at and near Jiun-
nerlyn station on the Augusta & Savannah
railroad, b und d North by lands of Adda R.
Holies. East by lands of J . D. Perry,South by
public road leading from Munnerlyn to Hab
ersham, and on the West by lands of Adda I
Boiies,
Al.-o all that lot or parcel of land contain-
ng one-fourth of an acre, lying, situate and
being in {lie.village of Munnerlyn, Ga . said
county and on the right of way of the Aug
ta & Savannah railroad, hounded North by
Main Street. East and South by lands of Ad-
<!a R Bollt-s and west by said right-of way.
and known its the Chance Sto e Lot.
Also all that tract or parcel of land lying,
situate and being in said district, county and
Stale and near said Munnerlyn station) op
posite the Chance residence, and frontin
with equal width the fifteen acre tract above
described, commencing at a corner opposite
the Chance horse lot and bounded North by
the public road eading rroin Munnerl-n
Habersham.and on the East,South and West
by lands of Adda R. Bolles, said tract con
taining five acres.
Also at the same time and place, will be
sold, the following descr bed persona! prop
erty ; 1 bay mare about seven years old; 1 Sor
rel horse about 9 years old; I dark horse mule
about five years old; J dark mare mule about
7 years oid; 1 two horse wagon; 1 top buggy;
i open buggy; 100bushels ot corn; l,ou0 lbs.’ot
odder, and ail of the farming implements of
the late D. M. Brinson df ceased.
The sale w’ll continue from day to day and
between the same hours till all of said prop
eriy is sold. Terms cash.
This 10th day of October. 1901.
P. W. CARSWELL.
Atimr. of L. M. Brinson.
Johnston & Fulibright Attorneys.
The Proofreader,
An anonymous writer in the Ameri
can Printer of New York says:
“The ideal proofreader for a small
printshop ought to be an accomplished
printer, a sensible person, a person un
derstanding the scope and limitations
of the English language, one compre
hending the true offices of punctuation,
one with a keen and true appreciation
of literature, a storehouse of exact
knowledge, a perfect grammarian,
perfect speller and with a fund of hu
mor sufficient to enable him to do his
whole duty along these various lines
without making for an early grave. If
he does not really know everything, he
ought assuredly to be able to scent out
an error and to know how to get at tlie
truth. If lie reads the proofs for
weekly newspaper also, he ought t
now all about local affairs and all
about the town or city in order to pre-
ent tlie reported marriage of the girl
who merely acted as bridesmaid and
untangle the mixed topography of the
reporters’ articles.”
THIS SEASON
We will offer to the Public the bestfioes of
That has ever been for sale in AUGUSTA,
Our SHOES will be sold strictly on their me tits 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. In
SHOES,
FARM
Henry Ward Beecher’* Wit.
On one occasion as Mr. Beecher was
in the midst of an impassioned speech
some one attempted to interrupt him
by suddenly crowing like a cock. The
orator, however, was equal to the occa
sion. He stopped, listened till the crow
ing ceased, and then, with a look of
surprise, pulled out his watch. “Morn
ing already!” he said. “My watch is
only at 10. But there can be no mis
take about it. The instincts of the low
er animals are infallible.”
There was a roar of laughter. The
“lower animals” in the gallery collaps
ed, and Mr. Beecher was able to re
sume as if nothing had occurred.
Award of-Court of Claims.
Scottsboko, Ala., Nov. 14. The
court of claims at Washington, D. O.,
has rendered a decision allowing the
estate of Harniin Caldwell of this city
$10,700 for property destroyed during
the civil war. There are four heirs to
the estate, King, George, Europe and
Miss Almena Caldwell, all of'whom
live in Scottsbora
nch as are needed by those exposed to the inclemency of the weather. We have made s;
cial effort to secure SHOES that will give ample protection to feet, i nd keep them dr.
No trouble to show our Shoes.
GOULEY & VAUGHN,
826 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA.
Agent or HANAN * SON S Fiue Shoes.
Increase of Capital Stock.
Columbia, S. C., Nov. 14. — The final
notice of the increase of the capital
stock of the State Bank and Trust com
pany of this city from $50,000 to 1100,000
has been filed with the secretary of
state. This is the bank that was recent
ly bought oat by new people and will be
continued on a more extensive scale
than heretofore.
Views of the AfivocRtes of the targe
House and the Small House.
M. Sumner Perkins writes to The
Poultry Monthly:
“I believe in poultry colonization—
that is to say, many small coops and
houses scattered over large areas and
occupied by few fowls rather than a
few very large houses occupied by
many fowls. Better put 1,000 fowls
into 50 different houses than into only
two or three large houses, even if the
latter really contains the same area as
the former. We don’t want too many
under the same roof. It is the same
case as it is with the human habita
tions in congested city quarters, the sc
called tenements or rookeries where
men, women and children are so hud
dled together that they arrive at nei
ther physical nor mental standards of
proper development. So with poultry.
It won’t do to crowd them. They need
abundant air space and to be so sep
arated into small numbers as to avoid
contagion from disease. The small iso
lated house is the ideal plan at alJ
times and especially as summer comes
on foraging room is needed and a lib
eral area for each colony of birds. Un
der such conditions strong breeding
stock and vigorous laying stock may
be maintained. It is very good policy
to have light coops and fencing built
in sections so as to be taken apart and
put together at will.”
The editor of The Monthly responds
as follows:
We publish the above not because
we believe it or indorse it In toto, bul
because we wish to give all sides ol
such questions. The colony house has
Its place, especially for breeding stock,
its greatest advantage being that it al
lows the use of larger yards in connec
tion therewith than are possible in
connection with a long bouse cut into
comparatively narrow pens. But for
houses for laying stock, especially
where bens are kept by the thousand,
and more especially for winter laying,
these colony houses come well nigh be
ing impracticable.
The assumption in the above that
the fowls are crowded or suffer from
Impure air or disease simply because
they are in large houses in large num
bers is entrirely wrong. Some of the
worst eases of overcrowding and filth
and disease we have ever seen or heard
of were in small houses. The compari
son between the crowded city tene
ments and large poultry houses would
have had more force a quarter of a
century ago. Today some of the most
.sanitary dwellings in the world are
some of these modern city tenements
and apartment houses. The average
poultryman will keep a large house
cleaner than he will a lot of small
houses of equal capacity, simply be
cause he can do it easier. On the score
of economy of material, cf time and of
labor the long house Is ahead. It Is
cheaper to build and cheaper to care
for and keep in repair. It is less ex
posed to storms In winter, and every
thing can be better kept under the eye
of the overseer. Let some of the advo-
eats of colony houses try to care for
1.000 hens each kept in 50 colony
houses in separate yards during some
of our northern winters. Let them
visit these houses several times daily
to feed, water and clean platforms and
replenish grit and shell boxes and sup
ply new litter and spray the roosts and
gather eggs and a few other details,
and some one would be looking for an
other job before many weeks bad pass
ed. It is well to have some colony
houses. They are good for the breed
ing stock during spring and summer.
They are good for the young stock
during the growing season. But when
it comes to keeping bens by the thou
sands in bouses accommodating only
20 each they are net what are wanted.
The long house is the only one to econ
omize labor, allow the use of labor sav
ing devices and reduce cost of care to
the minimum.”
L
PAIR OF BUFF ORPINGTONS.
[Shown by Mrs. Marshall at Fayette (Mo.) show
1990. J
changes of weather. They are gentle
as sitters and make excellent mothers
in fact, they are big bodied fowls, goo<
layers, healthy, vigorous, active and re
markably docile.
In my opinion there will be a lot of
money made in tlie next few years In
supplying the great demand that will
arise for Buff Orpingtons, and the
poultry breeder who possesses a fine
flock of them, small or large, is indeed
fortunate. All who see or hear of them
have a desire to own some breeding
stock. Today the demand is far in ad
vance of the supply. Prices range high,
and a scarcity exists at any price. Thi
is advantageous in a way to the breed,
for it places them in the hands of a
class of people who will breed them
well up toward perfection and push
them to the front.—Mrs. W. A. Mar
shall in Reliable Poultry Journal.
When Ileus Are Molting.
What do you feed your lieus in the
molting season? While some think it
is necessary to give an extra amount of
food of wheat and corn, they are mis
taken. Hens fed at this season with
too much grain will make them too fat.
and fat hens as egg producers are a
failure.’ Keep your hens healthy by
giving them exercise and very little if
any grain for food.
The only attention which the moiling
hens require at the hands of the owner
is a constant supply of pure drinkin
wafer and dry sleeping quarters. And
it is not wise to make the latter very
warm in tlie belief that the scanty cov
eriug of the hens calls for close protec
tion from the chilly air of the autumn
nights. Exposure to this air under a
dry roof wil! hasten the molting proc
ess. Leave the windows open till No
vember except in time of threatened
storm. Two weeks before this resume
grain feeding, and if the hens are the
right sort you will not be able to feed
them heavy enough to shut off the win
ter eggs.—Central Farmer.
Best ¥aiue. The Fewest Styi
In AUGUSTA 1
The low price store saves you money on every article you
have to buy. No matter what prices others make, you will liud
Ihe Lowest Prices Here.
Ladies ’ Cloaks, Furs,
Skirts. Underwear, Sacks, Wrappers,
Silks and Dress Goods -
25 per eenf. we save you on ail above lines.
200 nr Nottingham Lace Curtains, 02 value 01.00.
200 pr Cluny Lace Curtains, $2.50 quality.$1.50.
00 pr fine Lace Curtains at 25 per cent of price
Home Made Georgia and S. 0. Carpets.
30c tor stout, fast color Carpets; 50c for extra snper-wool
Carpets; 35c tor wo 1 stair Carpets ; 500 Rugs at 50c on ihe
dollar. Underwear cheaper than any place in town. Yoa rnve
money on what you buy of
F. D. HORKAN & CO.,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
Dollars! Your Old (Pothes Redeemed!
We will reduce your Clothing bill by mnk-
ugyour clothes look Deal a--d tidy longer.
We preserve your new ."Suit.
We clean your soiled Suit.
Opposite H. H. MANAU, the Tailor,
We dye your faded Suit.
Out of town p-tronage given special attne
tion. Also Ladies work.
Don’t Forget to try the
WAYNESBORO, GEORGIA.
Miarntory Wild Birds’ Effss.
It will surprise many people to know
that some cf the most important mi
gratory birds are now in process of
extinction because of man's cupidity,
not in killing them, but in destroying
•their eggs and thus preventing their
existence, xill of them breed in the
arctic regions, where in summer there
is the greatest abundance of insect and
fish life on which to support them
selves. Man has found these breeding
places, and so long as he can secure
fresh eggs he finds ready sale for them
at profitable prices from photograph
ers, who nse the albumen for making
the films on which their pictures are
taken. It is true if there were not this
supply photographs might be dearer
than they now are, but if this use of
their eggs means the extinction of
many migratory species of birds such
use of them ought to be prohibited by
law.—A. V. Meersch.
ESTABLISHED A. D, 1846.
CTOIE3- SCEEKEIDEE,
Importer and Wholesale Dealer in
Fine Liquors, Fine Wines, Havanna Cigars,
Mineral Waters, Etc.
601 and 802 Broad St., - Augusta, Ga.
Agent for Veuve-Cliquot—Ponsardin, Urbana Wine Co., Anheuser-Busch Brewing
iation,
■...
T. GK B-AJOLuCEi CSz CO.,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
AND WINDOW SHADES.
Planters’ Hotel.
TELEPHONES:
Bell, 282; Stroger, 802.
OFFICE aDd WORKS
North Augusta.
YOUNGBLOOD LUMBER CO.,
Manufacturers .'High Grade,)
Value of Clover For Poultry.
Clover hay contains about 20 times
as much lime as corn. This makes it
a valuable food for poultry in late fall
or early winter. The second crop of
clover Is considered better than the
first, although the first is good.
WOMAN’S TROUBLES AND FEMALB
DISEASES CURED BY
itch on nliman cured In 30 minutes by
Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion, This never fails
Hold by H. B.McMaster, Druggist.
MOBLEY BROS.,
FOUNDERS
and
MACHINISTS,
Wayneboro, Ga.
CASTS TVESDEYS ana FSIDAYS
Dealers in Grist Mills, Cotton Gins, Presses
Feeders and Condensers and do all kinds of En
gine and Boiler repairing. Building Gjn Brus r
and repairing Gins a specialty, AU kind
mouldings, Window |
Attention, Young Men.
The state, recognizing the neces
sity of your obtaining an education,
has established at Dihlonega, a col
lege where you can have theadvan-
tage of a $40,000 00 equipment, and
a faculty, each man a specialist In
hia department Tuition is free and
board is only $8 00 a month in dor
mitory. $100 will cover cost of year.
It is your college, built for you, sup
po rted by you, and stands ready to
help you. It Is not a town school,
bat a real college, being one of the
five male colleges of the state. It
costs no more to go to a real college
than to one only in Dame Don’t
cheat yourself by going to a school
without library or scientific labora
tories. Write to Pres. J 8 Stewart,
Dablonega, Ga., for a catalogue.
Johnston’s
Sarsaparilla
QUART BOTTLE8.
Painful and Suppressed Menses, Ir
regularity, Lencorrhoea, 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 hack of the head, distress-
Fnther of Poultry Breeding:.
Under the auspices of the Associated
Poultry Fanciers of Germany and Aus
tria an imposing monument has been
erected at Gorlitz, Germany, to the
memory of Robert Oettel, who is
known as the father of poultry breed
ing in Germany and Austria. Oettel
was born in 1798 and died in 1884. He
devoted 50 years of his life to the Im
provement of the breeds of poultry In
Germany and Austria and organized
societies of poultry fanciers with an ag
gregate of more than 3,000 members.
He printed a poultry journal, and was
acknowledged all over Europe as the
foremost expert on all poultry ques-, . . ,, ,
tions. By his own efforts Oettel made ! „„„ T,. „ . ,. e 8 ^ e > 8 disturbed
the town of Gorlitz the center of the . . ° , , I? ® 8 1 ° n ’ Palpitation of
fine poultry breeding industry In Ea- i ousness ^ nd tiSSn,“ffieSLne^'
rope, and each year toe members of bis umRcnlai- t. . , ess ’
associations sold more than 70,000 eggs painSi backache, legache^S^Sf?^ :
for hmpdmw purposes from blooded tion of the heart, shortness ofbreath,
i abnormal discharge*, with extremely
| painful menstruation, scalding of urine.
$I00-Dr.B. Detcheos’8 i.u-Dlaretu j swelling of feet, sorenessof the breasts!
Maybe worth to you more than 1100 if you neuralgia, uterine displacement and
have a child who soils bedding from ineonte- catarrh anH nil P * * ,
nence or water daring sleep. Lures old and La “ rrn ’ ana ail those symptoms and
young alike. It arrests the trouble at once troubles which make the avenws wo.
Hold by h. b m cMasier. iiru«tat. man ’ s life so miserable.
■ICaifiAX Dana CO., Detroit, j
Sale by H B. BcBiSTEB, Ws/sesboro, 0» t '
Doors, Blinds, Glazed Sash
Mantels, Etc.
ofi.'Cra-'CrST^., g-boe©ia
Mill Worn of all Kinds in Georgia Yellow Pine.
Flooring, Ceiling, Siding, Finishing, Moulding, Etc., Car
Sills, Bridge, Railr ad and Special Bills to order.
feb 21.’ 1900-b y
for breeding
stock.
AUGUSTA
Dental Parlors,
P4IIU.ES* nENTISTBY.
Lowest Prices AH Work Guaranteed
Crc—n and Bridge W’ork a Specialty
POORE k WOODBURY,
824 Broad St., Augusta, Georgia.
Beil Phone, 520,
If You’re a Judge
of good liquors I am
willing to accept your opiuion of my
famous George E. Payne’s Private
Stock Pure Rye. distilled and bot
tled for me by Angelo Meyers & Co.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Job printing at the right prices.
mayU,1801—by
If you are not a judge, jou reap rely upon mf
guarantee of its purity and age. and upon tlie
tiunony of people who have used it. I would in
to rend yon a small order; a lar er one will folio
$1 per fnil quart; $3 75 four quarts. Order wna
you want. I have it.
SOUTH CAROLINA SALOON,
GEO. E. PAYNE, Prop ietor.
U14 Broadway, - - AUGIJSTA.Ga.