Newspaper Page Text
JP*
The Survival of the Fittest.
|pt. All thfs people would be bene
fited 5 her.; while the canal will on
ly be for tne benefit of ilie few' in
the commercial v’orld.
“EQUAL PARTNERS.”
“Dry as Statistics.”
It is fairly obvious that the study cf
Btatistics is not exactly what would
be termed a popular pastime, says
WAYNESBORO, GA. J NUARY 23. 1902.
May be there will be a duel up In
IUme on (lie European plan.
Hephziblh.
Correspondence Citizen.
Jan. '21 - Rev. J M. Wailer preach-
! ed an « xeellent sermon tn the Bap
f jiit church Sunday morning ReV.R. permitted to see the opening chapters v.-
It PPCiriH that no prison hH3 oyor . , i our readers a suggestion of the treat in si
A. Eansdell preached at night, |
A Thrillinp- Story of Elystery by Wintlirop M. Daniels in The Atlantic-.
Librarians do not discover any exteu-
Howard Fielding. 1 sive * { i en iand for statistical literature.
We have secured the serial rights for this story Sir John Lubbock, if I remember
in our paper and will begin its publication in a rightly, iOUllti HO plftCC 101 *1 sillg u
few days. volume of figures in his hundred best
The following comments by one who has been kooks, and in that flood of articles on
viil give
store lor
been built that can always prevent
escapes.
Prr
lure
sugge:
them:
f. W H Clark gave a good lec j “Equal partners” in wliat? There is
before ibo M. E Sabbath a mystery locked up in this title. And
Another good thing for our acei
dental presiden*; the Roosevelts
never got in the Newport 400
CoEpLowry of Atlanta tried to
invefgte Capt D.G Pu r st\ of Savan
nah, over to his style of political
thinks, but the Captain wouidn
> i
so thunk. He’s a Democrat,
i'ho fact that Hon. Mr. Depew
and lady will not attend banquets
this winter authorizes the report
that the po a t prandial muse of ora
tory will lock up her speak-material
and haul < ff iier jii> c-ails for a rest
ocl-ool Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. J no Carswell, wife of Prof.
Jno. Carswell, and a little infant
died to day at Spread, and were,
brought h re Sunday for burial.
The funeral serv T ices occurred 31 >n-
day aDerrxion in the Bap’.ist church.
S^rvirus were conducted by Rev.
J M. Waller and Rev. R A. Liens- ■
dell.
3fr. Cal Lamar and family have;
in seeking its solution the first person
we meet is Brenda. She is somewhat
of an enigma herself. The author calls
her “the smooth product of all the so
cial refinements.” But that may mean
a great many things. After reading of
the stabbing of the actress why should
Brenda wish to go to the scene of the
crime? The broker's name mentioned
in the newspaper account may have
something to do with it.
“Books That Have Helped Me, by
i Authors Great and Authors Small,”
the same significant silence seemed to
be maintained. There were some very
! curious bocks that had apparently
j proved helpful to certain persons, (rut
j there was unbroken testimony of a
1 negative kind that nobody had ever
i been helped by a blue book.
I To say of anything “as dry as sta-
tistics” is at once to consign it to the
nethermost limbo of aridity. Such is
ANNOUNCEMENT.
Why should the policemen whom
moyed into the village and are oc- Brenda meets in the doorway “seem
copying the Acton house. j to fill ail the space and their heads to
At a session of church conference tower to the housetop: And then it
very strange that the policemen
i i ill-* church Saturday, the
is
should exchange glances when Brenda
Providence seems to be general
ly on our side and e nfers blessings
at times least expected. No longer
than last week the noble lord Dou
glas of Oscar Wilde fame left the
United States, declaring he would
never return again.
The paragraphers had best get to
work again; the railroads continue
to pull bark from the Atlanta ca>
shack. The fact is the mud sill-
have sunk so low they have reach
ed the hadesocene strata and the
railway magnates are afraid to go
after them.
The Darien Gazette speaks out in
meeting and most always gives a
right talk. It says that ’‘too much
money is spent on education in
in Georgia,” and its true when it
comes to the benefit the tax payer
gets in return for it. Perhaps the
common school system will change
for the better some day.
day tor meeting in conference was ; inquires with anxiety if the actress is
changed from Saturday before the dead. But New York policemen are
third Sunday to the Saturday bef< re very suspicious.
the first Sunday. i That’s a queer police captain whose
: picture we get in a few bold strokes of
Letter List ! the ^^“medium stature and very
Unclaimed letters remaining in heavy, having the build of an ape, with
the Waynesboro post office Jan. 20, preposterously long arms, which swung
_ oirnlooulxr whan lif> rrmvpfl * # $ hlTltfll-
1902:
Capt. D. G. Purse is doing al! he
can to develop the resources of
Georgia aud particularly diversity
of planting interests If Georgia ev
er goes into the great sugar indus
try it will be greatly indebted to
him. He has been unfiigging in
z~> il to develop and build up South
ern Georgia.
Hon. Boykin Wright, of Augusta,
has been appointed Attorney Gen
era! to fill the place made vacant
by the resignation of Hon. Joseph
31 Terrell. This is a most meritori
ous selection and certainly a de
served compliment to one of the
best lawyers in the state, as well as
one of the finest gentlemen of Geor
gia.
The spitting ordinances of most
cities apparently become dead let
ters very soon after enactment, It
is a herculean undertaking to re
form this detestable nuisance; but
men, who want to be called gentle
men, never reflect how low and un
gentile such habits are. In Atlanta
the ladies have to go into print to
complain against the neglect of the
police in enforcing the anti spitting
law.
Lish Brown.
Geo. Brown.
Wash Collins.
Wilkins Chance.
Chelson Connerly.
B. B. Elliott
Julia Forrth,
,T. W. Glenn.
Nelson Hannah,
Brisler Laval.
William oapp.
Sterlio Sharp.
Mary F, Scruggs.
Nannie Walker.
Annie Warner.
Thomas Quinney, Postmaster.
Sleigh.
Correspondence Citizen.
Jan. 21.—The conflict between the
school board and patrons of Berlin
school has terminated. The patrons
of the school won. Consolidation
will not work, and hauling children
is a thiug of the past — for the pres
ent at least.
Mr.Sterling Rhodes has moved to
Burke.
Farm work has begun.
A Contrector.
“What does your father do?” asked
the teacher of the new boy.
“He’s a contractor.” was the reply.
“A railway contractor?”
“No. ma’am; a sausage contractor.
He ties up the ends after another man
has filled them.”
ly cynical and smiling without pur
pose.” True, “a man may smile and
smile and smile and yet may be a—
gentleman.” What bothers me is that
1 do not see why liis gaze should fas
cinate Brenda and why he should not
permit her to leave the house after the
actress has been carried away in an
ambulance.
Now Brenda appears better. In an
elegant room “in the presence of Dr.
Blair, whose manner avas that of the
world wherein she had moved, Brenda
gains part of hlr seif possession," The
author evidently did not intend that
“smooth” should have a sinister mean
ing. Still there is something mysteri
ous about Brenda. She tells the doctor
that she obeyed “an unaccountable
impulse” in coming to the house. And
why should she turn white and wring
her hands?
But noAv we are coming to some
thing. Brenda is confessing that Al
den, the broker mentioned in the news
paper account of the crime, was an ac
quaintance of hers. And so there is a
man in the case this time—at the bot
tom of it, perhaps.
That was a fervid love letter of the
broker to the actress. It would do to
go with “The LoA'e Letters of an
English Woman.” It was very incon
siderate in that police captain to want
Brenda to go into the room where the
actress was stabbed. Of course Bren
da would turn faint. I don’t like that
police captain. The next chapter will
doubtless explain Brenda to my entire
satisfaction.
Different Methods.
“Whatever became of Lamb?”
“Oh. be played the markets and went
broke.”
“And Wolff, what became of him?”
“Oh, he worked the markets and got
rich.”—Puck.
the .verdict upon the finished statis
tical product. As for the methods em
ployed in constructing such tables—
Aveigbted averages, index numbers or
curves of error—these to the wayfar
ing men are hidden and ingenious re
finements of cruelty, to be avoided at
all hazards or at least forgotten with
a shudder and a prayer.
How He Fooled the Dos.
A gentleman who is fond of studying
wild animals in their natural surround
ings once had an opportunity of seeing
for himself an example of the cunning
for which the fox has become prover
bial.
As he avus standing near the bank of
a river one winter day, he saw a fox
run out upon the ice and make straight
for a hole. At the edge of the opening
he stopped, turned, folloAA-ed his tracks
back to the bank, ran doAvn the stream
and paused to aAvait developments.
In a little while a dog came tearing
out of the woods, with his nose close
to the ice and snow. He ran along the
ice AA'ith his head doAvn, following the
seent until he readied the opening. It
was then too late to check his speed.
He plunged into the water and avus lost
under the ice.
The fox meantime had waited in
plain sight to watch the effect of his
little trick. After the dog came into
view the fox remained perfectly mo
tionless until he saw his old enemy
disappear. Then, with a look on his
face which seemed to combine a good
natured grin Avith a mild contempt, lie
went nonchalantly off about his busi
ness.
. None Too Liberal.
“Mr. Linger spends a great deal of
time with you, Molly,” said Mr. KU-
tish to Miss Frocks.
“Yes, but that's all he does spend.”—
Detroit Free Press.
It is now said the soul is in the
spinal coiumn because a frog’a .-.pint
showed life a long time after its
brain was removed. That won’t do
if we reason by analogy, for a Burke
county man says ho cut off the heart
of a loggerhead terrapin and threw
it over the yard fence, and while ih
family was enjoying the terrapir
stew for dinner the head caught a
young chicken by the foot and held
it until it thundered next day.
Mr. Bartlett in an address before
the house of representatives in con
gress a few days ago on a point oi
order raised upon a new peusiot
law proposed by 31 r. Jenkins, o’
Wisconsin, took a very wide range.
He did Bishop Warren A. Candle'
the honor to quote a greater part o?
the oration he delivered lately in
presenting nome crosses of hono-
for the Daughters of the Confeder
aey. The bishop’s red hot oratorj
was received in tespectfu! silenc
by‘'the other side ot the^house.”
GOOD ROADS.
No man can be brave who considers
pain the greatest e-ril of life or tem
perate Avho regards pleasure as the
highest good.—Cicero.
By the time Ave get what we want in
life we want something else a great
deal more.—Saturday Evening Post.
Repairing
&
ms
The good roads impulse that th<-
Southern Railway is encouraging
is one from which more benefit t
the country will spring thin anj
that has struck the land for years
Good roads is what the whole S -uth
wants, has always wanted and nev
er had. The history of the w >rM
shows nothing so conduces to tin
prosperity and civil zitinn of a
country as good roads. The growth
of communities begin with the ad
vent of easy communication. We
rust and retrograde unless mankind
can mingle and swap ideas The
greatest advance the world ha-
made began at the birth of railroads
and when it gets so that an automo
bile car can fly to any door the uni
fication and equalization of peoples
will grow at once as complete as
conditions will permit between man
and man
Indeed we believe that far great
er benefits would accrue to this
great nation If the $300.(100,000 dol
lars (bat will be spent in building
the isthmian canal were first spent
in ramifying the whole land with
macadamised roads t<> every ham-
Never thought of .such .
sign for a medicine did you
Well it’s a good sign ft
Scott’s Emulsion. The.hoc!
has to be repaired like othc
things and Scott's Emulsion i
the medicine that does it.
These poor bodies wear out
from worry, from over-work
from disease. They get thin
and weak. Some of the new
ones are not well made—and
all of the old ones are racked
from long usage.
Scott’s Emulsion fixes all
kinds. It does the work both
inside and out. It makes soft
bones hard, thin blood red,
weak lungs strong, hollow
places full. Only the bcstiVia-
terials are used in the patching
and the' patches don’t show
through the new glow of health.
No one has to wait 1 -is turn.
You can do if~yourself—you
and the bottle.
This Brenda enigma is deepening. In
Elsie’s room, after giving his opinion
of hoAV the murder Avas done, this po
lice captain (I find my aversion to him
groAviug) “turned to Brenda Avith a
questioning leer.” He even admits that
he thinks the murderer may liaA'e been
a woman.
But what is this? Dr. Blair saw a
well dressed young woman leave the
house about the time the crime was
committed and go in the direction of
BroadAvay. It was on BroadAvay wo
first met Brenda. But the doctor is
sure he Avould not kuoAV the woman if
he Avere to see her again.
Notwithstanding Captain Neale’s in
nuendoes, Brenda bears herself admi
rably. It is true that she contradicts
herself, but all of us do that some
times. And that police captain with
the ape arms is so horrid! But I would
like to know Avhy Brenda is so much
interested in Elsie, whom she has never
seen. Perhaps the next chapter will
tell.
The plot thickens and the mystery
deepens. Alden impresses me very fa
vorably, but Brenda gives me a shock
when she almost faints at sight of the
knife with which the stabbing was
done. But the dramatic way in which
Captain Neale exposed it was enough
to make any woman of refinement
faint. Police captains are noting if
not spectacular.
So Brenda was not Miss Williams,
as she had announced herself to the
policemen at the door, but the daugh
ter of Duncan Maclane, a prominent
millionaire. And here is a poser: “Dr.
Blair,” she whispered, “you will not
say it Avas I Avliont you saw leaving
this house?”
Noav Captain Neale begins his inqui
sition again. At any\rate, we shall
learn something about the New York
police and their methods. Brenda en
gaged to Alden? And the engagement
broken that day? This grows excit
ing.
Alden arrested for the crime—for
A Profitable Investment.
“I was troubled for about seven
years with my stomach and in bed
half my time,” says E. Demick. So-
mervill, Ind. “I spent about ^l.OOO
and never couid get anything to
help me until I tried Kodol Dys
pepsin Cure. I have taken a few
Pottles and am emirely well. ’’You
don’t live by what you eat. but by
■\ hat you digest and assimilate. II
yo*’r stomach doesn’t digest you'
food you are realy starving Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure does the stomach’-
work by digesting the food. You
don’t have to diet. Eat all you want.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure cures all
stomach troubles, h. b Mi-Master
We have reduced the sub
scription price of The TRUE
Citizen to $1 00 a year from
August 10ih, 1901. Ttie cash
must accompany the name
Those who are in arrears for
past amounts, will pay up to
August lOih, 1901, at the old rate
and from that date at the new
rale. Statements are now being
made out for old amounts due.
and we ask immediate attention
to thenri
The Citizen will be kept up
to the high standard maintain
ed for years past. The best sto
ries, telegraphic news, agricultu
ral reports, local happenings
and report-* from a good corps
of correspondents form a
weekly budget of news that can
not he secured elsewhere.
We hope to visit every home
in the county arid will appreci
ate your patronage.
We club with somo of Ihe very
best city' weeklies printed Read
the list, select your paper and
send us your name.
The following papers together
with The Citizen for one year.
Home & Farm $1.25.
Atlanta Semi-Weekly Jour
nal and map $1,75.
New York Thrice-a-Week
World $i 65.
Atlanta Weekly Constitution
$1 75
Savannah Semi-WeekiyNew-s
$1.75
The Semi-Weekly Chronicle
$1 5U.
Respectfully,
SULLIVAN BROS.
Follow Your Nose!
And you will co-ne to our stora, and everybody knows
We’re best and CUP]A PEST!
Our ftock of Dry Goods. Notions, Clothing, Hats and Caps
is complete and we are receiving new goods every week. Come
and see those lovely dress goods ; and so cheap.
SIIGP]3—We boast of the largest and best stock ever in
this section. Men’s, Ladies, Misses, Hoys and Children’s. Tn e
Sovereign Quality and Clover Brands direct lrom factory, Wtrthi-
mer, Swarts & Co, St. Louis, Mo. Sold under a refund guaran
tee. Our Amigo tor men aud our Rijeur for ladies and the \Y<-b-
,stvr school shoes for the children—a dictionary with each pair.
1 our Milwaukee Highland Call, the new tonage, are all strictly
up-To-date, and the prices are right. Our stock of Farmers Hard
ware comprises everything needed on the farm. Our China and
Queensware, Crockery and Glassware departments overstocked.
“Words are women, deeds are Men,’ is a slander on the fair
sex and it the author of this expression could see the Ladies about
our counters as they gather in the bargains from this department.
He would retract ott the spot What a pleasure to invite a friend
to dinner when know every dish brought ou the table will excite
admiration and you don’t haye to “go broke" on them eit er.
—The Citizen $1 00 a year caeh
Liberal clubbing rates. See an
nouncement
NOTICE.
AdvvrtWnv rat** Uh*r«l
T«a Par»»>-
Lamar’s Lemon
Laxative.
Cures
Constipation,
Indigestion,
Headache,
Biliousness,
L. L L for sale by all
Druggists
Notice of extension of the Millen & South
western Railroad.
Whereas, the Stockholders of tho Millsn
Southwestern Railroad Company passed
and sent to its hoard of directors, the follow
ing resolution:
(Whereas, it is deemed to the interest of
the Millen & Southwestern Railroad Com
pany that its line be extended He it there
fore resolved, by the stock-holders in con
vention assembled, that the hoard of ,-iree-
tois take the necessarv and legal steps to ex
tend said road lrom Stillmore in Emanuel
County, to Waycro<s in the county of Ware,
said extension being tlirough the Uou ties of
Emanuel, Montgomery to Vidalia or Lyons
ou ilie Seabord Air Line Railway,from there
through tiie ounlies of Montgomery, Tat-
nall. ppling, P erce and Ware to Waycross.
The distance being about eighty (80, miles
and in a southerly direction, and also that
said road be extended iroin^Milien. in Burke
County, through the Counties of Burk- and
Screven to some point at or near Sylvania,
in Screven County aud thence to some point
on the Savannah River in said Screven
County. Said extension being about thirty-
five (3c) miles and in a Northeast direction
towarus sylvania and then tn a Northern di
rection to said pointon said river.)
Be it therefore resolved, that the above and
foregoing resolution of the stock holders ot
saidMdlen & Southwestern Railroad Com
pany be and the same art hereby concurred
in by 1 lie board of directors of sa’d road.
Beit further le-olved, that the Millen <S
Southwestern Railroad be extended from
Stillmore in Emanuel County, to Waycross
in the County of Ware. Said extension go
ing through the <ountie. of Emaniel and
Montgomery to Vidalia or Lyons on tiie Sea
bord Air Line Railway, aud front tliere
through t he Counties of Montgomery, Tat-
nall, Appiing, Pierce and Ware to Waycross.
The distance being about eighty (80) miles in
a southerly direction, and also that sa d road
be extended lrom Millen, in Burke County,
through the Counties of'Burlte and Screven
to some point at or near Sylvania. in Screven
< ou ty. and thence to some point on the Sa
vannah Ri er in said Screven County. Said
extension heing about thirty-five miles and
in a Northeast diieciion toward Sylvania
and in a Northern direction to said point on
said river.
Itisfurth r resolved bv said board of di
rectors that notice of said extensions of said
road be given by publieat ons once a week
for lour weeks in the newspaper in eacli of
said counties herein mentioned, in which
the Sheriff of such County does his leg -i I ad-
ver ising. prior -to the lime the right to build
said extensions shall be sought *o be ex
ercised, and that at the expiration of tiie
publication above provided, that a certified
copy of the same, and the necessary papers
for said extensions, he filed with the Secre
tary of State of Georgia as provided bylaw,
whereupon it will be prayed that the charter
tor said Millen & Southwestern Railroad
Company b amended so as to authorize the
building of said extensions.
Resolved further, that these resolutions be
entered in tiie record of th- proceeding of
tliis board of directors
This 23d day of December. 1901.
GEOK HA-Emanuel County:—I. Frank
R Durden, Secretary of the Millen & South
western Railroad Company do certify that
the fo egoing is a true copy of tiie original
n solut ons passed by the board of directors
of said Railroad Company on the23d day of
Decei. her, 1901, as the same appears on re
cord in tee proceeding of said board of di
rectors.
v\ ii ness my hand and seal of said Company
this 23d day of December 1301.
LSeal| FRANK K. DURDEN. Secretary.
After Publication of tliis notice once a
week for four weeks in tiie newspaper in
which ihe Sheriff's advertisements are pub
lished in e cli of tiie Counties through which
said extens ons wi I run. a certified copy ot
said resolut iens and advertisernenls will be
filed in tiie office of the Secretary of State of
the siateof Georgia, and an amendment, to
tiie i barter for said Milieu and Southwestern
Railroad Company prayed for authorizing
said extensions to be built as above desig
nated.
'I his 23d day of December, 1901.
MILLEN & SOUTHWESTERN RAIL
WAY CO.,
Per D. B. DURDEN. President.
F. II SAFFOLD, Generai Counsel.
Our drug department is supplied with tre pure, fresh medicines,
when you are sick and need yedicine, you want the best, and
that’s what you get if you buy of us. Our line ot Garden Seed
you get it you buy of us. Uur line ot Harden Seed
are the best We also have a nice line of Candies, Chewing
Gum “nd Fruits. Our Grocery Department is equipped with a
lull-line oi best goods. We have the finest liue ot Canned Goods
ev'r seen in this section. tire Moca and Java Coffees, all
at right prices. We have a lew mules yet unsold. We oiler
lor cash or on time, with security. Terms to suit.
Yours, for business.
The Brigham-daxton Co.,
GIR \RD, Ga.
A l l/s. A. AT. "VYells
— Dealer in —
Fashionable Millinery, Novelties, & Notions,
FLOWERS, FEATHERS, RIB BO ATS, Etc.,
Waynesboro, : : G-eorgia.
The ladies re cordillv invited to inspect my stock belore they
buy elsewhere. You cn sve monev bv buying goods at home
Don’t lorget it. ocuya*.
■GO TO-
McMASTER’S :
DRUG STORE,
FOR YOUR
Pure Drugs & Medicines.
i '8SSh
Augusta’s Popular
Clothing House ::
mm
Makes Big Reduction!
bm
Ten cent. Cotton is nothing in comparison
to the money you can save by purcha c ing your
Clothing, Underwear and other wearing appa
rel from us.
We have made enormous reductions on all
Winter goods.
Hg’gT’ Special Reduction on Overcoats ; all
sizes and stvles.
§888
#i7ci LEVY’S SON^GOMPaHY,#)
838 Broad Street, AUGUSTA, GA.
mm
mm
stabbing the girl whom he loved! Ab-
This picture represents
the Trade Mar!: cf Fcott’s
Emulsion and 1; n ihe
wrapper of every botde.
Send for free sampie-
SCOTT & r.OWXE,
409 Pearl St,. New Y<. 'k
50c. and gi. a!l druggists
surd. What blunderers these police
are! Ah, here is the explanation—
“And by the way, Neale, you don’t
think Alden did this thing, do you?”
“Not on your life,” said the captain.
I thought Alden was very rash to
quarrel with Captain Neale, telling him
of his bad reputation. We have not
found out much yet. but this is going
to be a story worth reading, if only for
the picture it gives of New York po
lice. The idea of a police captain ar
resting a man for murder because he
calls the police captain a thief!
A Clever Jap.
A marvelous feat is recorded of a
young Japanese student. He entered
the University of Berlin some years
ago as a medical student, being then
entirely ignorant of German as well as
of science, yet in three months he pass
ed an examination conducted in Ger
man, including several branches of the
medical curriculum.
The St. Lawrence.
Vessels of 4,000 tons can ascend the
St. Lawrence river to Montreal, a dis
tance of a thousand miles from the
sea. Only one other river in the world,
the Amazon, is navigable to such a dis
tance for craft as large.
He is a good physician who adminis
ters medicine to the heart in the shape
of wit and humor.—Chicago News.
PERFECT PASSENGER
AND SUPERB
SLEEPING=CAR SERVICE
ALL PRINCIPAL POINTS
Southeast
Connecting at
SAVANNAH with
STEAMSHIP LINES
PLYING BETWEEN
Savannah and
New York,
Boston,
Philadelphia,
Baltimore
Carden
Seed! : :
Potatoes 2d Crop Early
Early Rose,
Ooion Sets,
Peas,
Turnips,
Collards, Etc.,
Everything
you want
South Carolina Saloon.
Old North Carolina Corn $1.50 and $1 75 per gal]
Defiance Rye Whiskey 2 per gal., best in the world
for the money.
Out of town and mail orders have special attention.
SOUTH CAROLINA SALOON
^GEO. E. PA YJYE, Proprietor,
1114 BroacTway, : : : AUGUSTA. GA..
mavli'l °
• •
• •
AND ALL POINTS
NORTH AND EAST
Complete information, rates,
schedules of trains and
sailing dates of steamers
cheerfully furnished by
any agent of the company.
THEO. D. KLINE, W. A. WINBURN,
General Sup’t, ' Traffic Manager,
J. C. HAILE, General Pass’r Agent,
F. J. ROBIN80N, Aee’t General Paes'r Agent,
0AVANNAH. OA.
can be found at FORD’S
DRUG STORE, in Nedy
Company’s Building.
Give us a trial and
be convinctd. Remem
ber the place—
Ford's Drug Store,
(Neely Co’s Building,)
Waynesboro, Georgia
FOR RENT.
A
FIVK horse farm well improved, about
four miles from Waynesboro. Apoly to
JOHNSTON & FULLBRIGHT.
Advertising rate* on application.
:: Hunter,
Pearce & Battey
> Cotton Factors,
'And Wholesale Grocers,
:: - Savannah, Ga.
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t
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■to; 1 '
Money loaned Cotton Shippers
on approved security.
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AUGUSTA
Dental Parlors,
PtINLKSH DSSTISTKf.
Lowest Prices All Work Guaranteed
Crown and Bridge Work a Specialty.
POORE & WOODBURY,
824 Broad St., Augusta, Georgia.
Beil Phone. 520.
IBlIfUhnTinninHiii