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Money! Money !
Money!
PROMISES TO RIVAL '
BONIflE MURDER CASE
ON TRIAL FOR WIFE MURDER.
At 6 per cent on 10 years time
We are prepared to negotiat.
Joans on improved city auO
Farm property in sums of not
less than three hundred dollar?
at 6 per cent, interest, for ten
years it desired.
Can secure an advance oi 50
per cent, on the value of the
property offered as security
Call and see us.
Washington Lady Found In
Dying Condition.
MYSTERY SURROUNDS CRIME
In the Room Where the Body Was
Found There Were Signs indicative
of an Awful Struggle Between the
Woman and Her Assailant.
LAWSON & SO ALLS,
Waynesboro, Ga.
d JP.Ifff—1<
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*Cy
LIFE
j INSURANCE
\ GRATIS!
1
For a Free Acci
dent Insurance
Policy good for
one year, write to
o
jat a
| TI10 Popular •
6
§ Liquor Dealer,
o
Augusta,
Georgia.
All it costs ia 2 cpnts
for vour letter.
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Lf- ; -
aafiF
(trade MARK RTGISTEHED NO. 17438.)
FROG • POHD
CHILL AND FEVER CURE
j Washington, Dec. 10.—Mrs. Ada Gil-
! bert Dennis, a fashionable dressmaker,
; was found in an almost dying condi-
; tiou in her room at 5 a. m. today un-
! der circumstances that promise to
j rival the Eonine murder case. Her
: skull was fractured, jawbone broken
and left ear almost severed from her
head. Her left arm bore bruises in
dicative of a struggle and her clothing
and bedding were saturated with
blood. She was removed to the Gar
field hospital and a large force of de
tectives were put on the case.
The name of her assailant is un
known.
The general belief is that Mrs. Den
nis was attacked while asleep in her
back room on the first floor, and that
the first blow, in ail probability, ad
ministered with the piano stool, which
was smeared with blood, rendered her
unconscious. The preliminary inves
tigation by the police fails to indicate
that there was any struggle.
Mrs. Dennis in a conscious moment
while being carried to the hospital,
said that some one had “hurt” her,
but when pressed for details merely
said:
“Never mind.”
Robbery apparently was not the mo
tive for the crime, for on the table at
trie foot of the bed was a small box
containing a pocketbook well filled
with greenbacks and other coin. There
was a bloody imprint or a hand on the
piano lid in the parlor and a window
in that room was open. It is sup
posed the assailant escaped througa
this window.
When found Mrs. Dennis was clad
in her night garments and was in Bed
under the cover. She was partly con
scious, although she has been uncon
scious most of the time since. The
detectives are satisfies tlia_ several
blows of the piano stool must have
been wieldeu with considerable force
and that there was no outcry, at least
audible. Her groans, however, were
heard by a woman of the third floor
and in the adjoining house. About the
same time Policeman Livingston and
a watchman, who were two blocks
away, heard what they believed to be
a woman's scream.
Mrs. Dennis is about 47 years of
age and. is one of the best known
women in business here. She is the
widow of Walter Dennis, an actor.
Charles R. Armstrong, of Jacksonville,
, Fia., Faces Jury.
Jacksonville, Fla., Dec. 10.—Charles
| R. Armstrong, a prominent merchant
of Jacksonville and a large property
owner and influential church man, was
placed on trial yesterday for murder
in the first degree, the crime being the
killing of his pretty young wife.
Armstrong and his wife had not
lived pleasantly together for some
time. On the night of May 2 last he
called to see her and their children
at the home of W. A. Blaisdell, tne
stepfather of Mrs. Armstrong, near the
corner of Adams and Bridge street.
While sitting on the veranda wait
ing for his wife to return, who had
gone out a short time before, he raised
his revolver and shot her twice as
she entered the front gate coming into
the house. Mrs. Armstrong lingered in
great pain until June 2, when she died
Armstrong was arrestcu and placed
in jail and would have been tried at
the spring term of court, which was
to have convened the following Mon
day, but the fire of May 3 destroyed
the courthouse records, etc., and left
things in such confusion that no spring
term was held.
Several distinguished lawyers are
employed in the case. Insanity at the
time of the homicide will be the plea
of tbe defense.
The defendant is a native of North
Carolina and is 36 years old.
11 i • — .
The Automobile to tbe Horse.
Go to. thou equine dotard!
Soon wilt thou find thy place
With other relics of an ancient taae,
The dodo, the pelicosaurus,
The thingumbob and the whatsi tsname,
An infant am I, 'tis true,
But what a hearty, lusty fellow,
With a constitution of steel, not mere iron.
Thou would’st point with scorn at my lack of
ancestry.
I would have you know
I am the fruit of generations and generations of
giant brains.
The conception of years of thought and toil have
conceived me.
As the swift moving railway train has displaced
the lumbering stagecoach.
So 1 will displace you.
I have my faults, but my virtues o’ertower
them.
What if I bust a flue
Or if my carburettor fails to carburctte
Or even if I do short circuit occasionally?
If 1 were a horse, I’d have the glanders or a
spavin
Or the unromantic colic.
Without a cause I’d shy and throw my rider.
Dost thou know, foolish horse.
Thy days are numbered?
For be it known
When man has once begun to feel
The thrill of life above the wheel
Of an automobile
He turns his pitying eyes upon (he*
And murmurs gently:
“Thou wer’t a good makeshift
In times gone by.
nivoaiug- iu me people, cut ot your calculations.
Big armies and grand navies compel the nations J
to work and strive. They banish idleness and :
cal! for honest competition. Nowadays every ■
people in Europe is trying to produce the best :
weapon, tbe finest ships.
Tiie Czar—But it's not humanity’s business tc j
produce means of destruction. We were put upon j
this earth to build up. not to do the other thing. |
All the money spent for the army and navy above !
a certain necessary amount is money diverted
from its real purpose, money invested in unpro
ductive labor.
Admiral—Your majesty was pleased to admire
our fine quick firing guns. You have seen those
mysteries of the sea—boats that travel under wa
ter, the ironclads yonder, our incomparable flotilla j
of torpedo boats—all these wonders of twentieth 1
cc-ntury technique. Arc they not evidence of mar- !
velous progress? Doesn't your majesty recognize !
that our people give their best thought, their
brightest endeavors, to the fatherland? 1 repeat
it, in my humble opinion our army and navy are
the best guarantee of peace, while the money in-
Miss Mollie Murray
t/
Dealer in-
Milliuery, Fancy Goods, Flowers, Feathers,
ccea-onuble Notions sud Noveliiep,
AUGUS A. GEOR6 f.A .
Fine Notions ami Novelties. Latest styles. Reasonable orices.
I thank thee kindly,
But, with the Alsorana,
Thou must stand aside.
G’lang there 1
You won’t do
Now.”
—Motor World,
A WORLDWIDE PEACE.
Czar
FOUGHT A DUEL TO DEATH.
of Russia Tells How
Can Be Assured.
It
Two Prominent Florida Men Shoot Out
Their Quarrel.
Zolfo, Fla., Dec. 11.—G. L. Powell
and J. S. Overstreet, two prominent
naval stores manufacturers, shot and
killed each other in a face-to-face due]
here yesterday.
Overstreet went to Powell’s still, 9
miles west ot here, to see about some
hands. The two men had some words
and both drew their guns and com
menced firing.
From what facts are at present ob
tainable both men emptied their guns
without doing any damage.
Powell then went into the house and
came out with a rifle. Both fired to
gether and both fell.
Overstreet was shot in the forehead
and Powell just below the heart. Over-
street was killed instantly and Powell
only lingered for an hour.
Powell was one of the largest op
erators and owners of turpentine lands
in Florida.
The affair has created a tremendous
sensation throughout this part of the
state.
WAR PREPAREDNESS MUST STOP.
Nicholas II. Declnron Great Armies
and Navies Must lie Reduced or a
Conflict Involving: the Whole
World May Come Sooner Thun Ex
pected—Advocates General Disarm
ament.
CONFESSED TO FIVE MURDERS.
SOUTH AFRICAN WAR.
TilE ORIGINAL NO CURE MO PAY.
50 CENTS A BOTTLE.
The old reliable the kind your fathers
used to take. The one that never fails
io cure. Don’t waste time and money
experimenting' with new cures. But go
for the best from the jump. Frog
Pond is the ounce of prevention and
pound of cure combined. Ask for i'
take no substitute, if your merchant
does not sell it write to us we will send
it direct for 50 cents.
] B. DAVENPORT & CO.. Mia. &a.
For sale in Burke county bv all first-class
Druggists, and al! leading merchants
june22.19T.l-bm
Kitchener Reports Many Boers Killed
and Captured.
London, Dec. 10.—Lord Kitchener
in a dispatch dated Monday, Dec. 9,
reports that tbe result of the week’s
work is 31 Boers killed, 17 wounded,
352 made prisoners, 35 surrendered
and quantities of supplies captured.
By advancing the line of block
houses in the eastern part of the
Transvaal Lord Kitchener is able for
the first time to carry out systematic
and continuous operations in the vi
cinity of Ermelo, Bethel and Carolina.
The columns have cleared the south
eastern districts of Orange River colo
ny and are now operating northward
of the Tiiabanchu line.
The Boers are still in force in the
extreme west of Cape Colony. They
are commanded by Maritz, who re
cently attacked Tontellboscnktop. The
Boers were driven off and Maritz was
severely wounded.
Thomas J. Hampton Hanged at Lake
City, Fla.
Lake City, Fla., Dec. 7.—Thomas J.
Hampton, a negro, who committed a
double murder at Fort White, in this
county nine years ago, was hangeS
here yesterday for tbe crime.
The doomed man showed the most
remarkable nerve and smoked a cigar
to the very moment the black cap
was adjusted. In his statement just
before the execution he confessed to
five murders, one of a conductor on a
train in Lexington county, South Car
olina, in 1887, a homicide that has for
the last 14 years been a mystery.
Other murders were committed in
Georgia. He was working in a tur
pentine camp when the Fort White
crime was committed. He escaped
and was only recently capturea.
Kruger Enjoys Good Health.
New York, Dec. 10.—Commander W.
D. Snyman, formerly on the staff of
General DeWet, recently visited Hol
land, and while there spent two days
with President Kruger and the en
voys. He reports that President Kru
ger is enjoying better health than at
any time in the last four years. Com
mandant Snyman states that it has
been definitely decided that President
Kruger will not visit the United
States.
Watchmaker ana
Jeweler,
Boers Close to Heilbron.
New York, Dec. 10.—DeWet is re
ported to be close to Heilbron with
2,000 men and to have come very
near surrounding Kitchener’s fighting
scouts under Colonel Wilson, says the
London correspondent of The Tribune.
Colonel Remington by making a night
march of 30 miles relieved Wilson
and both columns retired to Heilbron,
with a few casualties.
Tampa and New York Steamsnip Line.
Tampa, Fla., Dec. 10.—Dispatches
received here from New York confirm
the announcement made a few days
ago of the establishment of a line of
steamers between Tampa and New
York. This will be done by the At
lantic and Gulf Steamship line, which
operates between Pensacola and New
York. The company announces that
it has made a thorough Investigation
of the situation and believes that tne
line will pay. The steamers will coma
up to the docks of this city and oper
ate a regular schedule carrying pas
sengers and freight.
The czar of Russia has within the
pi’esent month declared that great ar
mies and navies, instead of guarantee
ing the peace of Europe, will be power
less to avert tbe war of the future
which may, he adds, involve tbe whole
world. He asserted that the powers,
now staggering under tbe burdens of
overtaxation, are rushing to disaster
and that the catastrophe may come
sooner than people expect. The ruler
of all the Russias sees permanent peace
for the world only by general disarma
ment, and he declared that he regard
ed It as his sacred duty to persuade the
nations to disarm.
The views of Nicholas II. were ex
pressed during the recent maneuvers
of the German fleet in the Baltic sea
while he was a guest on board Kaiser
Wilhelm’s yacht Hohenzollc-rn. The
czar was in earnest conversation with
the German admiral commanding tbe
fleet, and this conversation is reported
in tbe Frankfurter Zeitung, copies of
which have just reached the United
States. The Frankfurter Zeitung is
looked upon as the most reliable and
honorable newspaper printed in Eu
rope, and in consequence of tbe high
position it bolds in tbe political world
it3 report of the interview between the
czar and the admiral has attracted
general attention on the continent. The
conversation between, the czar and the
admiral as reported by tbe Zeitung fol
lows:
vested therein pftys abundant interest by the
maintenance of peace. The people’s money could
net be more profitably invested than in securing
peace as we do.
The Czar (shaking his head)—Indeed, and what
about those hundreds of millions you are spend- j
ing for means of destruction, today labeled the |
“best and latest,” while tomorrow you must ad
mit that they are valueless because something
new, something to offset them, was invented? A
fire investment, admiral.
Admiral—I will not deny that we are frequently
doomed to disappointment of the sort your maj
esty referred to. But if your majesty will permit
me I dare say tire competition of inventors bene
fits our home industry and consequently the peo
ple that live by industry and commerce.
The Czar—Your argument is illogical, admiral.
Powder and guns, torpedoes and submarine ves
sels, ships not destined for commerce—all such
tilings are false values. The persoi:3 engaged in
their manufacture contribute neither to the
world’s betterment nor to their own happiness.
Ironclads, grapeshot, swords and lances are not
agents of progress by any means. Their wholesale
manufacture presupposes a deficit in the making
of articles that stand for culture and economical
advancement. Besides, it is easy to prove that
the system jf armed preparedness is largely re
sponsible for the financial depressions that crop
up from time to time in all countries turned into
camps.
Admiral—But, your majesty, what lias pre
served peace during the last twenty and more
years if it was not our grand army? If we hadn't
been so well prepared as to number of soldiers
and ships, as to the latest pattern of guns and
other war material, hostilities might have broken
out on several occasions.
The Czar—Hypothesis, my dear admiral! There
isn’t an atom of proof for what you say. 1 am
convinced, on the other hand, that your grand
collection of war material is a permanent menace
to peace.
Admiral—On that point I beg to differ with
your majesty, and the people, I am sure, think as
I do. They love the army and value it for the
protection it renders the nation. And for these
services they are willing to pay.
The Czar—It is unfortunate that you and armed
war preparedness enthusiasts generally will not see
things in their proper light. As a matter of fact,
standing armies and big navies are obstructing
national development everywhere, and the people,
staggering under the weight of overtaxation for
army purposes, hate and loath the institution,
while fearing it at the same time. I teli you,
admiral, if tilings go on a3 they have been going,
the catastrophe which you hope to avert will oc
cur sooner than you think. Tne disaster will be
awful. The thought of it might make an honest
man shudder.
Admiral—I beg your majesty’s pardon. I am
only an old sea dog trying to do my duty. Now.
duty, as I take it, compels the state to do every
thing in its power to keep the army abreast of
the times, increasing and equipping it in the best
manner possible, so that, in the hour of danger—
The Czar—No, no, no. It’s the state’s duty to
avert war by other means than by laying up war
material that must necessarily lead to war. Don't
you know that the war of the future, of which
we stand in such dread, may involve the whole
world?
Admiral—Is your majesty thoroughly in earnest?
The Czar—Most thoroughly. I regard it as my
sacred duty to secure permanent peace for the
world by persuading the nations to disarm. At
the same time, I am not blind to the fact that
this grand purpose can only be achieved by the
co-operation of all civilized peoples.
This ended the conversation, tbe czar
rising and giving the signal for the dis
missal of the fleet.
<♦>
C* £ i r
ClAiX
FEED ST;
T|gy||i _
Corner My rick and
Barron Stive:..-.
WAYNESBOKO. GEOUG!
I have opened e Livery, Sale and Feed Stables, corner
My rick and Barron streets, and solicit ihe pat; on age of
ibe public. Weil equipped turnouts, and good, stylish
horses for hire at reasonable rates, Shall keep first-^.ss
stock for sale. Those iu need of Horses and Mules should
see me before buying.
2FL ZLi. SKZI>TSOISr.
% orner ?tf/ nek and Barron Sts., Waynesboro. Georgia.
m
As it is too late in life for me to learn to keep books no>.. noth
ing charged nor tickets made. All is cash. Don’t ask ; re-dlt.
< C. J 2Z
Machinery of all Kinds.
. <3-. LA2-TG
Sandersville, Oa,
Saw Mills, Engines,
3
Howfng ifSaoiiines
THRESHING
MACHINES, -See
Gin Repairing, a Specialty.
Orders from Burke countv given special attention.
On all work sect in bv 1st of June next,
FREIGHT ONE WAY!
All work Guaranteed.
1 v.-
pav
Appointments By Governor Jennings.
Tallahassee, Dec. 10.—Governor
Jennings has made the folowing civil
appointments: William C. Munroe, ol
Pensacola, to be notary public for the
state at large; Daniel Pippin, of West-
ville, to be fish and game warden for
Holmes county; Charles C. Martin, ol
district 6, Alachua county, to be nota
ry public for the state at large.
SUICIDE TRUST STARTED.
Woman’s Long Tramp.
Sandusky, O., Dec. 10.—Mrs. Mary
Ross staggered into the police sta
tion last night more dead than alive.
She had walked all the way from Buf
falo, and when 10 miles from this city
was overtaken by a snowstorm. A
fire in Buffalo, she said, destroyed all
her belongings and she started to walk
to the home of her mother in Bucyrus,
Ohio.
Died of Blood Poisoning.
New York, Dec. 10.—Father W. J.
O’Kelly, the Catholic priest who injur
ed his hand while fishing at Rockaway
Beach a month ago and who refused
until too late to allow one of his
thumbs to be amputated for the rea
son that he feared it would interfere
with his work as a priest, is dead as a
result of blood poisoning.
Promoter Expects to Have Branch
Offices All Over New Jersey.
A suicide club has been formed in
Atlantic City, N. J., by a man from
Newark named Bragie, says the New
York Sun. It is reported that ho will
organize similar organizations in vari
ous parts of the state. The local socie
ty has thirty-four members, and over a
hundred applications for membership
have been received and wil! be acted
upon at the regular weekly meeting.
The bylaws declare that once each
year the members shall assemble at tbe
place of meeting and each member
draw one bean from a jar. He whe re
ceives the black bean must between
the time of drawing and the next year
ly meeting commit suicide. A sum of
money, it is said, will be set aside to
defray the funeral expenses of each de
parted member.
Mark Twain and the Hymnboob.
Mr. Carnegie told the reporters about
this letter be had received from Mark
Twain while abroad:
Florida Ginning Company.
Tallahassee, Dec. 10.—The Florida
Ginning company has been- incorpo
rated, with a capital of ?10,000 and
headquarters at Lake C'ty, to own and
operate gins, presses, compresses, oil
and fertilizer mills, manufacture cot
ton and cotton seed and deal in theii
products.
Dear Andy—I feear you’re prosperous. Send me
a dollar and a half for a hymnbook. The Lord
will bless you, and so will I.
Samueij L. Clemens.
Postscript.—Don’t send the hymnbook, but send
the cash so I can make my own selection.
Alter the Battle.
To football captains: “Report your
casualties.”—Indianapolis News.
Waynesboro, Georgia.
tfff* Sigb-Plasa work » specialty
Flynn Re-elected President.
Birmingham, Ala., Dec. 11.—At yes
terday’s convention of the United Mina
Workers of Alabama Edward Flynn
was re-elected president. The bal
ance of the day was taken up in the
election of minor officer*. 1
Arrival of Trains.
Down day train arrives.. 9.55 a m
Down day train arrives.. 2 49 pm
Down night train arrives 10.34 p m
Up day train arrives... 5.15 am
Up day train arrives 12.05 p m
Up day train arrives 5.25 p m
Sunday’s Only.
Up day train.. 5;06 a m
Down day train arrives.. 10:42 a m
Up day train arrives 4:21 p m
Admiral—Your majesty is pleased to confer too
great an honor upon an old sea dog like me. I
am delighted to think that .vour majesty received
a favorable impression of our army and navy, for,
your majesty may rest assured, we strain every
nerve to keep the army and navy abreast of the
times, which is the ideal thing for every good
government to do.
The Czar—There I differ with you, admiral.
According to my own views, the ideal thing to
do would be to reduce standing armies and navies
Instead of keeping on increasing their strength.
This so called preparedness for war—arming on a
great and ever greater scale—is overburdening the
peoples of Europe. All governments should strive
to lessen their expenses for the army and navy.
As long as they do the opposite they are simply
upholding and perpetuating an intolerable situa
tion.
Admiral—A humane and extremely generous
thought, your majesty, but—
The Czar (interrupting)—Not a thought only,
admiral. I am devoting my life to the realiza
tion of the peace idea.
Admiral—Indeed your majesty’s big hearted
endeavors permit of no misinterpretation, but
the other powers, your majesty, the other pow-
ersl Your majesty won’t believe for a moment
that the others powers will find it to their inter
est to reduce their armies and navies!
The Czar—I am convinced that a condition such
as I have outlined will serve the true interest and
conform to the just aspirations of all the powers.
Admiral—May it please your majesty, don’t
you think that a perfect army and navy, an army
and navy ready to move against the enemy at (
moment’s notice, so to speak—doesn’t your maj
esty think that such weapons as those constitute
the best guarantee of peace?
The Czar—In order to establish true and perma
nent peace it is absolutely necessary that the
nations’ war preparedness, as constituted by their
armies and navies, be limited. The nations durst
not go on forever increasing their war strength
and heaping up war material. There should be
no further progress, so called, in the art of killing
men and animals, destroying ships, interfering
with commerce and laying waste provinces. All
that has to stop. The nations want a rest. They
have been clamoring for the cessation of war
scares, produced by the announcement that A
has better guns than B or that is building
more and better ships than Y can afford to do.
They have demanded a let up in war preparedness
for twenty years! On that point the civilized
nations are fuliy agreed, and international policy,
my dear admiral, will eventually compel the
permanent peace—policy, I say, and not armies
and navies.
Admiral—I beg to assure your majesty that my
government, like that of St. Petersburg, strives
for peace most earnestly. To preserve peace is its
sincerest wish, believe me, your majesty, but to
preserve peace our army and navy must be in the
best possible shape. We must increase and aug
ment them steadily to keep pace with the growth
of population and the armament of other peoples.
Your majesty knows the old saying: Si vis pacem
para helium. God forbid that we increase the
army and navy with the idea of carrying war
into our neighbors’ land. It’s all done in the in
terest of peace. For peace’s sake we are willing
to make any sacrifice.
The Czar—Yes, I heard this story before. You
compel your people to bleed itself to death to
furnish ways and means for keeping up a tremen
dous force on land and sea and for adding to it
constantly in a manner heretofore, happily, un
known. Neither Napoleon I. nor Frederick the
Great, neither Alexander nor Peter, neither Louis
XIV. nor our own Catherine, ever dreamed of such
armies and navies in wartime as are now estab
lished while Europe enjoys the blessings of peace.
But all your arming and the whole immense ap
paratus afoot and afloat, eating millions day by
day, don’t amount to a row of pins as an actual
guarantee of peace. The nations of Europe are
today as far as ever from declaring the perma
nency of peace. Despite your armies and navies
the blessings of a world’s peace art not yet with
in reach.
Admiral—True enough, your majesty, armed
peace demands great sacrifice. We have to pay
heavily fer the maintenance of peace by a grand
army and navy; but, your majestj-, the people are
glad to contribute to the welfare of Europe even
at considerable expense.
The Czar—Maybe, admiral, but the thing can’t
go onl Ihe sacrifices demanded of the taxpayer
•re constantly growing. Financial troubles, owing
to the expense of the army and navy, are increas
ing day by day. I tell you this tiling spells dis
aster. The public welfare is threatened at its
roots.
Admiral—Your majesty Is pleased to leave
many things, stamping armed preparedness a« a
A Golden Datii.
Mute. du Barry when at tbe zenith
of her power bad a bath so constructed
that cn touching a tap a cascade
golden Iouis, from a reservoir that w
always kept weil filled, mingled with
the flow of scented water. This device
was fashioned, it is said, to represent
the legend of Danae.
a v**r
y
An Indian Almanac.
The Indians in Canada, when they
go to hunt for the long winter, take a
flat wooden almanac, with a hole for
each day. Sundays are marked and
holidays so as to be distinguished, and
fast days have a rude fish. The owner,
moving his peg each day, keeps up
with the times.
That Fit Bight.
EL M. Ooskery,
Just received a very large shipment of jl
Beaver, Plush and Mohair
Carriage and Buggy Robes,
beautiful Lina, :
Also a full line of Horse Blankets.
Sole Agents for the famous
Babcock Carriages and Buggies,
and Jno. W. Masury & Son’s House
Paints, which are unexcelled.
733 and 735 Broad St.,
Augusta,
I can make
a coat that don’t
bunch up and
hang like a rag
in front; a coat
that fits to the
back of the neck;
a coat that fits
under the shoul
ders : the sleeve
seams are direct
ly under the
arm—not twist
ed half to the
front.
And as to the
pants—cut s o
they don’t sag;
fit under the
hips; don’t draw
bacKoi the knee,
and fit smooth
over the instep.
If yon care to M
Just arrived this week—
mp. Ruta Baga Turnip,
bite Flat Hutch Turnip.
Red or Purple. Top Turnip.
Southern 7 Top Turnip.
Yellow Aberdeen Turnip.
golden Ball Turnip. Long Cow Horn Turnip
trapped Leaf Flat Dutch Turnip,
and other varieties.
Aiso A Fresh Line of PURE DRUG, for sale by
H. B. McMASTER, Druggist and Seedist,
WAYNESBORO, GEORGIA.
as if year elettss
are selected will
OUR THANKSGIVING!
taste, call.
THE TAILOR,
Waynesboro, G;i
NOTICE.
N
NOTICE is hereby given that I will
>ly to the Honorable K. L Brin
son. Judge of the Augusta Circuit,
on the I6tb day of December, 1901, in Waynes
boro Ga„ for leave to sell at privale sale the
following described property, belonging to
Catherine D Sanders (minor ) viz: All that
lot and tract of land situate, lying and bting
in Iho r»nnntir of Ttnrbo fitoln of ^
pP§ ' ^ gives us pleasure to extend to onr pat-
rons and triends our thanks and appreciation
pSfit for our patronage during the year.
Our stock of Clothing, this
llfif season is up to the high staudardi Stouts, Slims,
which it has long ago attained. 3 an( ^
Our assortment of business and a Extra Sizes
Dress suits, extra Trousers are
the latest that Fashion has cre-
|g ated.
Our prices are always the
in the county of Burke, Stateof Georgia, con
taining two hundred and eighty-seven acres,
more or less, bounded on the"Nort.h by lands
of M. Brown and P L corker, East by lauds
of P- L Corker, Csesar Williams and others.
South by lands of Dozier Hill and James
.Whitehead and Buckhead creek, and on the
Wfst by lands or M. Brown, for the purpose
of reinvesting in lands in Screven county.
Georgia.
WILLIAM P. SANDERS.
Guardian Catherine D. Sanders.
Noy. 23d, 1901.
lowest for the value of goods we offer you.
C. LEVY’S SON & CO.. Tailor-Fit Clothier?
838 Broad Street, AUGUSTA, GA.
.- Hi.'