Newspaper Page Text
MORE cotton
, acre at less cost, means
more money.
More Potash
r. 0 tton fertilizer improves the
. .. Vi- Id—larger profits.
:;l " , ... .. free) explaining how to
:ali works,
■ New York.
me
6p er '
!\Ve an 1
ftrm | :r
stbau :
I0"' r
p it df
I
|r
prty < !
Kail am
'fol' '■
.:n ! 0 years tin.
a red to uegotiai
,;iovf-1 c’ty an
in sums of u
lniodred dolla
interest, for tt
an advance of 5'
i the value of th
d as security
5. hGAlES,
. . i>nro, i fa
. 'lUoc.Saw.Gri
L, /. j VZ, oil end Ferttliz
. . OUTFITS
t , : ".i HI s :« Outflur-
-Castings
i--* and Factory -upplK
up, JnjeetorB, Pipe Fitting*
Files." Oilers, Etc.
ay: work ISO handi.
WORKSS^UFPLY CT
_— AUGUSTA. OA
F, 0 YOUNG,
JJXGTON BARBEE SHOi
VV - V N i SB r; to, G A,
shot fixed with waters
I solicit the public p
>;n attention given to wo-
iii» rt prfi.’f*
DE, GEO, A. PATRICK,
■u;er : y -V inkier <fe Pain
DEMIS! OFFICE,
62G Brod Street,
gust-a, - Georgia
lour*-H :2ft a. m . to f» p m
lONTRaCTORS' me
VBUILDERS’^
_WILL SUPPLIES.
mg?, Essies, Columns snd Chan
rX?’ height*. Tanks, Towers. 4c
and Manila Rope, Hoisting Engines
< Mpi. Jickj, Dsniaka, Crabs, Chain and
’ aoisa.
; “ ! Bvtr V Day. Ham Ouict delivery.
SlBflRDIRON WORKS* SUPPLY Ca
ituizrata. sa.
■ffo-,
($%
t i h
«D Efc
A :
VQi
acts
YiM *
2 . if
■ M
BYCLOPSDBA
TATI STIC-A L
UME OF . .
1,3
iid Fioures
'! Trui
oiEu,
and
itT‘ „ | iote
^ K
JJrrf J‘ a;! '
Cor
Features.
’ n United States; Parti'
r c Thousand American
- d Labor; Strength of the
1 n ' ! Jns. i h e -
nited States HVU
-ew Census
; aanCountries.
aragua Cauai
Uay-Paunce-
r e a t i e s With
‘‘tain. The Re-
Cuba With
' ed State?. The
ace c? Arneri-
^' n a lilies at the
,M Alc *«co. The
Statistics
^ ' h.s Country and
*l Navi-PV ,|!t - Progress of
'Ripai ( ' ' 10 ,9 01- The New York
Ntets... ' l ' 4 1901. Agriculture.
Facto rtai!ty -
POLITICS.
IE BOOK that belongs
EfERY OFFICE AND
HOME OF
cMjVMERICAN.
af.^ STAND ARD
I 01s viER| CAN ANNUAL,
■ Won A T ALL newsdealers.
4=0 Pulitzer Bldg., New York
The Survival of the Fittest.
■VA\ XLSIIORQ, GA. FEBRUARY" !, ifuj.
Oi),E OF WOMAN’S WAYS.
She Hates to Pay oKDIM. That Arc
MILLIONS A YEAR ! S3,500 CASH PRIZE CONTEST
INCREDIBLE AMOUNT OF MONEY LOST THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION’S GREAT
BY THE WORKING CLASStS OFFER FOR 1902.
Cieni? and Cri.sji.
“Most women hate
to spend net
money,” says an observant salesman
1 b.ayen t the faintest idea why tld.
should 1
}one?f money!
ay th
so, but I've noticed it often
fight here in the store.
•A woman will make a purchase and
pu.l out her purse to pay the bill, but if
she happens to have to part with a
clean, crisp note in making up the
u.nount she looks greatly annoyed. I've
seen women with fat wads of bright
brand new bills flustered when they
came to pay for purchases because
they hadn’t sufficient old money to
meet the charges. They would dig out
t.ie contents of their purses and stow
the crisp notes to one side, and if they
couidn t scrape up the sum in a few
cases I’ve known them to go out with
out buying.
“Others will give utterance to little
feminine exclamations of dismay and
" hastily pay for the articles select
ed in the new money. Then they will
march off with quite a show of indig
nation, just as if they had been invei
gled into spending the money.
“I know one man who always takes
his salary home in beautiful, clean cer
tificates. He has caught on to this pe
culiarity of the sex. and he says it
saves him all kinds of money.”—L'hila-
delphia Record.
Chinese Honesty.
As for the honesty of these people, I
appeal to every English merchant or
banker from Peking to Hongkong to
answer if he ever heard of a dishonest
Chinese merchant or banker. So far
from that, not only has every English
hank two Chinamen to receive and
hand out money, but every bank in
Japan has the same. The English will
tell you, half in jest, that the Japanese
is an oriental Yankee and does not
trust his own people, and they will tell
you, half in earnest, that the English
bankers employ Chinese to handle their
money because they never make mis
takes.
These people of China have never
had anything like a bankrupt law. If
a man cannot pay his debts or some
one does not secretly come forward
and pay them at the end of each year
he has “lost his face,” and so he dies
by his own hand. Yet. with all their
piteous poverty, they have no such
words as “hard times,” for everything
must be settled up at the end of the
year. There can be no extension of
time. Confucius forbade it.—Joaquin
Miller in North American Review.
i An Inle.-view W th George V. II imiion .
of Tacnma, A Man who TV k*
from Experience.
ihe money b.ivt, airouaCy hv
'killed vvnrKmerr of «sl <.<•< upui o j
figure- up to million' of u liars -0, -
is becoming grealt r ever y ye-ir
Ibis amount of money represent:--
mainly iiuie lost and the seri> t*'
off vt upon the social comfort of the*:
working men and their fatr i its i-
evidenf. M (ieorgo V Hammond,'
ofTacom-.W s , id the ti r da \-
"1 have lost ;uy -Iwn; m .ime Dili '
lam thankful to say hat I have!
not been losing any of bite ”
nu don’t took as if you had iO'»
much through sickness.”
“No, and I don’t feel so. But tIt.-
fact remains that I was a very sick
man. I took cold along in 188‘J aed
rheumatism settled in my ami'
and shoulders. I suffered for three
years and nothing relieved me un
til in April, 1892, upon the recom
mendation of m„. sister, I began the
use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for
Pale People and found relief in the
second box. I look five boxes in
all and now am entirely cured and
have had no occasion to use them
s.uce ”
Mr. Hammond resides at No. (tit)
N. Steele street, Tacoma, Wa-h.
and at the request of the reporter
made affidavit to his above state
meet before James H Dege, a
notary public, on July 5 1901.
There is a popular idea iha !
rheumatism is caused hy expusure
o cold and that some localities aie
infected with it more than oshers
T!i»- Cotton Kewtiiioa! Suvnnnali G*, from
sejitt-uibtT to April *2 OCO.—Sl.oOO IVsh
Prlz R o Asm!* for the;First Quarter of
1902.—Full Statistics Given lor Y nr
Guidance An Unpara lelrd Offer f-*r our
Read: rs.
The^Ailanta Constitution offers two cash
: prize contests from January ist to April 15tli,
1W2.
tl.500 in cash prizes for agents. These prizes
' ranee Iron) -5loo for i he highest to to l?0 for the
lowest list fro any agent (luring the p -iiod
i in addition fA50 will be divide pro rata
; among all agents who send twenty or more
subscriptions and fail to get any other prize.
liis is a liberal offer ana Hie details of it will
be Sent you by applying to the Atl nta Con-
, stu t ion, Atlanta. Ga
1 The $2,000 in;on th>- Savannah, Ga., cotton
receipts^ ii) begiven as follows:
| to the person s riling a .(early snbscrip-
: ! on t the j »tlanta Consti'ution ; weekly) t*.-
f se'her with the coriecl tstimaie on the" eot
: ton receipts of savannah >ia., from Septem-
j berl.st. IHnl to A ril loth. 19a2.
?1 UU0 il the estimate is received during Jan
uary.
foOu if the estimate is received during Feb
ruary.
.$250 if the estimate is received during March
or up to April loth.
The above are for the exact estimates, there
are besides these tlie followit g prizes that
will be paid out for the nearest estimates to
(lie Savannah cotton receipts received at any
line during the con test.
$250, $100, $75, $5U. $25, tor the next nearest
estimates in their order.
There is also a great consolation offer. $50<‘
will be distributed an ong those who fail to
secure one of the larger prizes and whose es
timates come within 5 0 bales either way
of the exact figure. This allows a margin ot
1.000 bales within which ail estimatesare sure
to receive part of the prize money offered.
The point is to strike the estimate exactly
during January. This is a possibility. In a
contest similar to this the Constitution has
had the number hit exactly and paid out
$1,000 for the estimate. In another similar
contest the estimate has come within one 01
tlie exact figure, and all the prizes ottered
have been paid out upon estimates that were
not fifty removed from the exact estimate.
Statistics))! Last S x Years.
To aid the contestants in making intelli
gent estimates hereon we give the following-
statistics of six 101 uier years:
m
Distillers of PURE C0R-J
Whiskies.
38
Guaranteed
Wines 1 nd liter,
uality and proof, per Gal. II 50.
- JUG TRADE OF BURKE Solicited.
KEAKSEY & PLUMB,
1260 Broad Street, AUGUSTA. GA
msm
H P. Shewmake, President.
A. M Boatwright, Secretary
liFE V 1
INSURANCE
GRATIS!
For a Free Acci
dent Insurance
Policy good tot-
one year, w rite to
c ~.C
C ~ -
il I
| Tha Popular
8 Liquor Dealer,
Champnsne nnd Cancer.
There is a remarkable coincidence be
tween the spread of cancer and the
largely increased daily consumption of
effervescent wines and waters among
the wealthy classes. Prior to the six
ties champagne as a drink was, even
in higher circles, partaken of but occa
sionally. nor were aerated waters con
sumed in anything like the quantity nor
with the frequency that they now are.
These beverages, and indeed all effer
vescing drinks, owe their sparkle to the
carbonic acid gas which they contain.
My contention is that the upper classes
by their habit of constantly imbibing
effervescent beverages, which are solu
tions of carbonic acid of greaier or less
strength, so prepare their mucous tis
sues as to make them a favoring host
to the cancerous fungus, if fungus it
be.—London Medical Times.
Leather Eating Ants.
It is said that in Rhodesia white ants
destroy hoots and articles of clothing
left on tables or hanging on nails. The
following is from a letter received re
cently from South Africa: “On awak
ing in the morning you are astonished
to see a cone shaped object on the
brick floor a short distance from your
bed with two holes at the top. On
closer examination you discover that
the holes have just the size and shape
of the inside of your boots, which jou
incautiously left on the floor the night
before. They have given form and pro
portion to an ant heap, and nothing is
left of them except the nails, eyelets
and maybe part of the heels.”
The Three Meal Habit.
Our three meal habit is a fearful tax
on our working capacity. It trebles the
temptation to overeating. Our cham
pions stagger under the weight of a
physiological handicap. One-half the
functional energy of the system is di
verted by the exigencies of digestion.
No other hygienic mistake has done so
much to make us a generation of dys
peptics as the custom of after dinner
work its victims, moreover, incur the
risk of contracting that form of moral
dyspepsia called pessimism. It tends
to rob the working day of its reward.
Dr. F. L. Oswald in Success.
t -
Her Sorrow.
gbe Harry, you said something last
evening that made me feel so bad.
He—What was it, dearest?
She—You said I was one of the
sweetest girls in all the world.
He—And aren’t you, darling.
She—You said “one of the sweetest.
Oh Harry, to think I should live to
know that I have to share your love
with another!
from the fact that rheumatism run
id certain famil-es, it is shown to b
hereditary and, consequently 1
disease of the blood.
Frequently an individual, in
whose family rheumatism has not
occurred, develops the disease, and
when a diagnosis of the case is
made, it Is generally found that the
ailment is due to a derangement of
the blood.
External applications may afford
temporary relief, but to cure
he disease it is necessary to treai ii
hrough the blood.
Dr. Williams’Pink Pills for Pale
People go direcUy to the seat of the
disorder, purifying and enriching
trie blood by eliminating poisonous
elements and renewing health giv
ing forces. They are a positive
pacific not only for rheumatism,
hut for such, diseases as locomotor
ataxia, partiai paralysis, St Vitus’
dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheuma
tism, nervous headache, the after-
eff-cts of grip, of fevers and of othet
-cute disease?, palpitation of th*
heart, pale and sallow complexions
and ail forms of weakness, either in
male or female. Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills for Pale People are sold
hy all dealers or w ill be sent post
paid on receipt of price, fifty cents
a box; six boxes, two dollars and
fifty cents, by uddres.'iDg Dr. Wil
liams Medicine Co, Schenectady-
N. Y. Be sure to get the genuine;
-ubstitutes never cured anybody
f
1S95-1896 |
711,257 |
4, 72
7,157.346
1896-1897 |
808,6»3 |
4.-21 1
8,7.‘S,>64
w
1897-189-1 |
1,140.479 1
6.889 |
11,199,994
1898-1899 |
1,029 681 |
3,817 |
11,274,841
f-
1899-1905 |
1 036.822 |
6,332 i
9.326.416
ft
]9ifi-1901 |
975 (iWS |
9,802 |
10,383,422
5:2: = 1
~ ~ o
c £
Q
An Old Hand.
“What, was the first thing your hus
band sakl when you. got started on
vour wedding journey ? ,
y “ Excuse me while T go forward and
have a smoke.’ You know it was the
third time for him.”-Chicago Record-
Herald.
Experienced.
He-Ycur friend, Miss Dashway, has
quite a military air about her.
Q she-N'o wonder. She has participat
ed in no fewer than seventeen engage
ments.—Chicago News.
The best part of the Kimberley dia
mond field covers nine acres only.
s ,00-Dr.E. Detcbeon’s Anti-Dloretls
May be worth to inJonte”
have a child who soils beddlngjrom 1^ ^
nence ot water during ste p We at once
yOU ^.dbyH.B.McMa S t ter. Druggist.
AdvertUring t$m on *PPH<* ttea -
Egypt’s Veiled Women.
The tasmak, or veil, may be black or
white, long or short, plain or embel
lished with rows of drawnwork or
tucks and of any sort of fine, soft ma
terial. The women cf the middle and
lower classes wear for the most part
black veils fx-om one to three feet long.
Those higher in the social gi-ade wear
white ones, and occasionally tlie'y
reach to the hem of the dress. These
are held in place by a metal tube that
is fastened over the nose and lowe:
part of the forehead by cords securely
tied behind. When worn with this ba
ba ra in the orthodox fashion, there is
nothing visible but the woman’s bright
black eyes, which see everything going
on. The tasmak and habara are cap
ital disguises, and a woman may flirt
to her heart’s content without fear of
being discovered, provided she is not
followed to her home. — Philadelphia
Bulletin.
Broke Ilis Circuit.
The shades of the goose and the tur
key were discussing the circumstances
which had attended their respective
takings off.
“Did you offer any objection when
first the cruel farmer laid hands on
you?” sympathetically inquired the
gobbler.
“Yes,” replied liis gooseslxip; “I cried
out, ’Hello, what’s this?’ ”
“What did you say next?” inquired
the now thoroughly interested fowl.
“Oh,” the goose replied, “I did not
say anything more. Just then I was
wrung off.”—Michigan Lyre.
Grease on Wool.
It is said the powdered borax will
take grease spots out of woolen goods
bettor than anything else that can be
used on short notice. Spread the skirt
out with the spot over a smooth place
on the table and rub the borax into it
with the fingers, allowing it to remain
a few minutes, then brush off with a
whiskbroom. Do this*«two or three
times or till the spot disappears, and
your skirt is ready to wear.
Personal.
The lady who had to leave the
donation party the other night be
fore it was over wdll please cull at
our drugstore and get a bottle of
Dr Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. She
has indigestion or she would not
have taken sick and if she had tak-
«n Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin she
would not have had indieestion. In
50c and $1 bottles at h B McMaster,
Waynesboro,; H. Q Bell, Mill6n, Ga.
Send o* the new* of your Mctfen.
The Constitution’s market page will give
ea<-li week the port receipts for the cotton sea
son from which you can always see the Sa
vannah. Ga., port receipts from September!,
1901, up through ti e Friday immediately
preceeding publication This will keep you
posted to within two or three dajs before the
time yon send in your estimate.
The $2XOo contest i an exuress contract to
which 'lie Const-tution will stand in every
particular. Yet it is in its nature simply an
advertisement by which the Atlanta Consti
tution combined with The True Citizen tor
orriy $1.75 per year may become better known
in this community, send us the subscriptions
to the Atlanta Constitution and our paper
at the advertised price of the two, and with
it your estimate on the Savannah. Ga , Cot
ton Receipts for the period mentioned and
we will forward at! toghteer foryou. On April
loth we trust h check for $1,00) will reach
some one of our subscribers and help make
times easier in tills locality.
Xhe Atlanta Cons itution for l c 02 will be
better than ever before. Its speeia! news
features ore unsurpassed. The Boer Britisli
War; the Philippine and Cuban Operations;
the ISicarauga t anal question; the busy ses
sion of the most important Congress we have
ever assembled, working out the details of
diplomacy, commerce, war and peace, fore
casted by the new President’s recent mes
sage; the developments of the South’s great
industrial improvements;the Charleston and
West India Exposition, now in progress; the
building and equipping of the Louisiana
Purchase Exposition at st. Louis; diversified
farm ami village industries and improve
ment; the Rural Free Deliv ry of the tann
er’s mail; the Good Roads and better schools
question; and thousands ot other important
tilings will be found fully and freely discuss
ed in the Constitution for the year. The
Farm and Farmer’s page will he nder the
able direction of Col. R J. Redding, who has
for years presided over this department to
tlie’great delight and encouragement of all
questioners The Womans’ Kingdom, the
Children’s page and other interesting de
partments will be ably conducted, and will
he especially adapted "to those addressed The
ringing editorials of the Constitution speak-
ing right out in meeting exactly what it
means in i> e dvoca- y of true democratic
doctrine and tlie development of the South,
and in b half of the great interests of the
masses of our plain people are alone easily
worth the subscription price of the paper ov
er and again.
1 he management of t lie Atlanta Constitu
te 11 will continue its former policy in all re
spects. Mr Clark Howell as President and
Editor in Chief, Mr. Robv Robinson, the new
Business Manager, and the same well-dissip-
tined corps of staff writers and head of de
partments, will ably conduct all the affairs
ot this great newspaper. The Constitution’s
long and honorable bu iness course keeping
faith with the people in ailitSugontracts con
tests, and engagements, as well as in its con
sistent and conspicuous editorial fairness
places it among those reliable institutions of
our country upon which the people may de
pend
The Sunn.5' South has been brought under
a close subscription alliance with the Atlanta
Constitution. It is now a weekly literary
paper conducted in the interest of Southern
readers. One of its avowed purposes is the
exploitation of the Southern field of litera
ture and tlie encouragement of Southern
talent. During the year contests for the best
competitive stories by Southern writers will
be announced During the past year a com
petition of inis character resulted in some
5i.fi si ries submitted, all of winch aie*well
worth reproduction and the majority of them
have appeared and will continue iu the Suu-
uy sout ’s inter sting columns.
The Woman’s Deiartment of The Sunny
South has been placed und- r the direction
ot Mrs Mary E ltrvan. Her name lias been
connected with The Sunny South for nearly
a generation. She has brought to her work
a ripened experience gained in the service
of the same clientele Tlieeharm of Iter own
personalty shines in all the writings of this
giited woman A 1 read\ The Sunny South
lias acquired a list of over 50.(00 subscribers
and during 1 lie year this figure wi 1 doubtless
be more than doubled. The price of tlie At
lanta Constitution and Sunny South is only
$1 25 per year. The price of The Sunny South
alone is 50 cents per yeacslraight to all per
sons alike. xcept v.m en clubs of It ve accom
panied by $2.50 in full payment thereof, tlie
ciub raiser receives for his work a year’s
subscription to The Sunny Noum The com
bination price of this paper with The Atlanta
Aonstitu'ion and Sunny South is only S2on.
V* liecever this combination is taken up the
subscriber may submit two estimates in the
Savannah Cotton Receipts Contest, one on
each raper. although sm scriptio. s to the
Sunny South alone do not get any estimate.
With such a great general newspaper cov
ering the world’s news and national ques
tions, and a great literary paper covering the
whole fluid of romance and fiction as depicted
by current Southern writers, you will of
course need tiie best and livest local paper,
giving current local topics and Hie latest and
best news and freshest comment upon events
of 1 eat interest We trust this combination
• secured by-The Atlanta Constitution, Su ny
South and The Tkue Citizsk will be found
best suited to all our readers. The price is
merely nominal when the service is even
half considered, only $2.00 for the three pi
pers mentioned or $1,75 for The Atlanta Con
stitution and The Tiiub Citizen including
your estimate iu the Constitution’s $2,000 cash
contest, To get tbe full benefit of the high
prizi-, send in your subscription now, so the
Constitution may receive it during January
and record it to your credit Make jour fig
uies very plain, umnis akably plain. 1 lie
statistics wilt guide you to an iutelligent
estimate. - Address all orders to
THE TRUE CITIZEN,
Waynesboro, Ga.
Augusta,
Georgia.
AH it cost? is 2 cents «
p for your letter. y
o u ■- o
OOOOOvOOOOOOOOOQOOQOOQOOOO
HGL EY^Afc's
COMPOUND
ELIXIR
tor
IIORSE
Colic.
, The 2 biggest farmers i n Georgia and South
Caroliua—Capt. Jas. M. Smith says of it:
“Have tried them. Hotle man’s is the best
ot all. Keep it all the time,”
Cant. R. H. Walker says: “Holleyman’s
is worth its weight in gold. I have saved as
many as three horses lives per month with
it.”
Holleyman’s Compound Elixir
50 CENTS.
Will cure any case of Kors4 Colic under
the sun
Sold by all the merchants of this county.
Do not. take any substitute said to be tbe
;n4ame thing or as good.
N. L. WILLETT DRUG CO,
AUGUSTA. GA.
ake it.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
Mantels, Tile, Grrates, Hardware, : :
: : : Doors, Sash and Blinds.
ROUGH and DRESSED
iSPiisnE:
LATHS, BRICK, Etc.
8^7 BROAD STREET, : : AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
LIVERY, SALE
AND
FEED STABLES.
Corner Myrick and
Barron Street?,
W AY’NESBORO, GEORGIA
I have opened ? Livery, Sale and Feed Stables, corner
f Myrick and Barron streets, and solicit the patronage of ^
!i the public. Well equipped turnouts, and good, stylish
| horses for hire at reasonable rates. Shall keep first-class
f stock for sale. Those in need of Horses and Mules should
i see me before buying. *
L, BEIITSOIT,
<*>
t Corner Mynck and Barron Sts., Waynesboro. Georgia.
■\r f) As it is too late in life for me to learn to keep books nob. noth-
. *>. ing charged nor tickets made. All is cash. Don’t ask rredlt.
PROF. P. M. WHITMAN,
209 7th St., Augusta. Ga.
GIVES FREE EYE TESTS for 'Mfects oi
sight, grinds the proper glasses and WAR
RANTS them.
Lenses cut into your frame wl.it? ' - ou wait.
FREE OF CHARGE,
J^NLIKOEYiKURSHRYCO.
pomona"n. c.
1,000,000 Trees and Vines
Large stock of shrubbery.
pU3,I901—by
W. D. BECKWITH,
RESIDENT DENTIST,
WAYNESBORO, ; : GEORGIA,
(Office—Over Citizens Bank.)
Office hours: 8 to 1 a. m., and from 2 to4
p m. Speesa! attention to crown and bridge
work. Satisfaction guaranteed. Charges
reasonable. The expense of a trip to a
aree city saved patrons. sep8,’»8—hv
♦
♦
♦
«•
♦
❖
♦
♦
! Clette
That Fit Eight.
That WegrKight.
That Are HIGH F.
NOTICE.
\ LL persons are prohibited from passing
XL through, entering upon, hunting or oth
erwise trespassing on lands rented from Mrs.
Mary E. Mandell. I will prosecute all per
sons violating the above to the full extent of
the law.
S, BELL.
Jan. 16, 1902.
EOE RENT.
FIVE horse farm well improied, about
four miles from Waynesboro. Apolyto
JOHNSTON & FULLBRIGHT.
I can make
a coat that don’t
bunch up and
baug like a rag
in front; a coat
that fits to the
back ofthe 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
bacK ot the knee,
and fit smooth
over the instep.
If yon care to look
taste, call. THE TAILOR.
Waynesboro, Ga
Machinery of all Kinds.
. Or. Xj-AJSrOr,
Sandei’sville, €fa.
Saw Mills, Engines,
Boilers, Fittings,
flowing Machines,
THRESHING
MACHINES, Ace
Gin Repairing, a Specialty-
orders from Burke countv given special attention.
On all work sent in bv 1st of June next,
FBEIGHT ONE WAY!
All work Guaranteed.
will pay
mi
ISBSf Augusta’s Popular ::
Sp Clothing House ::
§§§ Makes Big Reduction!
Ten cent. Cotton is nothing in comparison
to the money you can save by purchasing your
Clothing, Underwear and other wearing appa-
rel from us.
Tessas We have made enormous reductions on all
itP§I Winter goods.
|g||| UP£T Special Beduction on Overcoats ; all
of|| sizes and styles.
&l. C. LEVY’S S0H*»C0MPIHY,l
AUGOSTA, GA.
838 Broad Street,
a»
TELEPHONES :
Bell, 282; Stroger, 802.
OFFICE and WORKS
North Augusta.
YOUNGBLOOD LUMBER CO,
Manufacturers (High Grade,)
(
SEN JJ X OUR JOB PRINTING i(j
THE CITIZEN JOB OFFICE,Waynes
Coro, Ga. JusticesCourt Blanks a «pe
oUlty Efttimatta ohasrfal’y trnlihtd
l)
Doors, Blinds, Glazed Sash
iVlantels, Etc.
^.-cra-T2rsT.A.,
G-EOr.:
Mill Worx of all Kinds m Georgia Yellow Pine.
Flooring, Ceiling, Siding, Finishing, Moulding, Etc
Sills, Bridge, Railr ad and Special Bills to order.
Car
feb 24.’1900—b