Newspaper Page Text
Sk r toe Citizen.
The Survival of the Kitt
est.
WAYNESBORO, QA.TfkbRuIkyIT
uH Or
HI jj y rOT
ULi J s fl, tO I
ILL
POLICEMAN KEILLY
ESCUESACONNETICUTWOMAN FROM
horrible torture.
. -,vd guess to tell
lartners. If you
guesses as the
c:r.i see how near
2d frop Ear
Early Rose,
Onion Sets,
Peas,
ds Etc.,
S
& 3
imul at FORD’S
O) RE. in Nee W
> RuiPlieg.
ns a r ria I an
C't v net d. Rem m
t the place—
■V xtore
5 g -* d 2 y 1 ^
cr )
©V
Georgia
0
luilding,
-3 what you eat,
e(
n contains all of the
digests all kinds of
• hist:: nt relief and never
■ It allows you to eat all
■; want. The most sens! tive
(a take it By itsuse many
ef dyspeptics have been
everything else failed. It
5 all stomach troubles.
it da> vsa flood
7 ir.V.'iTT&(Chicago
us;:- ; times the50c. size,
i A ST t;
«0
vf m
!
1 on 10 \ ears time
- paree to negotiate
i 'prove * c'ty and
in sums of not
• hundred dollars
: interest, for ten
Mrs. William Cotter, of Hartford, the Vic
tim, Tells the Story in an Intervieiv.-A
Terrible Experience.
“It was horrible,” said Mrs.Cotter.
“I almost wished for death to re
lieve me. But help came in time
and I am very grateful.
“Tell you the story ? Yes, indeed.
■ never grow tired of telling it. Sev
eral years ago I was taken with
ueuralgia and suffered untold mis
ery. I tried a great many doctors
and several remedies with the re
sult that I found temporary reliel
out I was not cured and began to
(ear that I never would be.
Then Policemen Reilly, who Is a
neighbox of ours,recommended that
I try Dr. William’s Pink Pills for
Pale People and I did so. I thought
that the first box gave me some re
lief, and my husband insisted that
I kept on taking them. I did and I
can truly say that these pills are the
only medicine that ever perman
ently benefited me.
“I used to have to give up entire
ly and lie down when the pain
came on. My face would swell up
so that my eyes would close. The
pills cured alHhis and I have had
no return of it for the last three
years, I keep the pills constantly
on hand as I believe they are a won
derful household remedy.
“To Dr. William’s Pink Pills lor
Pale People I owe all the comfort I
have enjoyed lor the past three
years in being free from neuralgia
and I am glad to be able to recom
mend tbem.”
Many who are now tortured with
neuralgia will read with interest the
above statement which is beyond
aoubt as it was given over the sig
nature of Mrs. William Cotter,
whose husband has been Democrat
ic Registrar of Elections in Hart
ford, Conn., for over ten years, and
who is weli Known throughout the
State.
Mrs. Cotter who lives at No. 42
Winsor street,Hartford,is the moth
er of a happy family, and is now en
joying excellent health.
Dr. Wllliams’PinkPiils forPale Peo
ple will not only cure cases similar
to that of Mrs.Cotter but, containing
as they do, all the elements neces
sary to gi v e new life and richness
to the blood and restore shattered
nerves, they have proved efficacious
in a wide range of diseases. They
are an unfailing specific for suen
diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial
paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica,
neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous
headache, the after-effects of grip,of
fevers and of other acute diseases,
palpitation of the heart, pale and
sallow complexions and all forms
of weakness, either in male or fe
male. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
for Pale People are sold by all
dealers or will be sent post-paid
on receipt of price, fifty cents a
box; six boxes, two dollars and
fifty cents, by addressing Dr. Wil
liams Medicine Co., Schenectady*
N..Y.
Bnyins a Title.
It is not expensive to become a noble
in Bavaria. To be made a simple “von
costs a matter of £75. to be raised to
the “fitterstand" £100, to be made a
“freiherr” £258. to be made a “graf
costs £500. while to be made a prince
only costs £1,000. These prices are only
for one person, hut the government
kindly makes reductions in the case of
whole families wishing to tur "
all at once. Thus for £2.000 or £3.000 a
small family can be made princes,
though they are only permitted to use
their title within the kingdom of Bava
ria.
!!! '“ aa advance of 50
' i ‘ ,il °Q the value of the
o! ^' re( l as security
D d sec us.
& SCALES,
aynesboro, Ga.
They Were Stayers.
After a dinner given by Stephen
Trice of Drury Laue theater, all •
guests but Theodore Hook andthe
Ttcv. Edward Cannon retiree,
was suffering from gout, hut as . -O
disregarded his hints to retire he stoic
off and left them in high talk
On the following mormn*, Pr)C
<1 tiiml of his servant. “I ray, at v ha
time did those gentlemen go last
”-G.!"airr replied John.
gone, sir. They have just rung foi e
fee.”
often.Sxw.Ortsi
3 Oil and Fertilizer
vf il S t* i 6
• - <1 Niiiugle Outfit's
Las tings.
' LR : r» and Factory uppltt
< = £; ln J*t-*ior8, Pipe Fitting*..
Flies. Oilers, Etc.
Water TIpht Bulkheads.
-Another meritorious so called modern
invention, the water tight bulkhead, is
now attributed to Chinese experience.
In a paper presented to the InstitU-
of Marine Engineers the use of the
bulkhead principle on Chinese jun *■_
from time immemorial was pointed ou •
tter ' J da y ■ work 180 hands.
<E|00 l»r K. nefchennN Anli-Dlorrtls
iMOA if
* MN WORKS* SUPPLY Of
~— AUGUST A. OA.
May be worth to ^bSStaf/Sm incOTte”
[ have a Child who soils tedding iro^ ^ ^
j nenceof water aurim? P * rou [,ie at once
* ***SNTIST*
or*
Phn
rno, )fr ;(17 - -i, : AUGUST A, GA
h7 ° H *rower Pboue27U
• 0. YOUNG,
BARBER SHOP.
Killed in Sawmill.
T o,i 28 —William
Crestvlew Fla ; n "J owa „. s sawmill
Rye wes ivii y hprame
srs-
bruised that death came to his leliet.
CifnT E , SB)R0 ’ GA -
oa . Vt -‘«ence y r “JEM* ^ateranc
New Florida Postmaster.
ie^as^tmen'c'onrmiss^oned 1 postmaster
at West Bay, Fla.
Distinguislied Georgian In
Race For Governor.
HIS VER / SUCCESSFUL CAREER
Beginning at the Bottom Rung, By
Close Application, industry, Intelli
gence, Honesty and Frugality, He
Has Climbed to the Top.
hvenipnko t nxed with
Specift^o*. 1 K0ll C't the public pa
file C a! tt ttentlou give- *- -----
‘'“'j yuuuu
given to work
d ecc.-SS-
Arlvertiainr rate* on apDlloatton
The career of Colonel John Hol
brook Estill, of Chatham county, whose
candidacy for the governorship of
Georgia is attracting so much favora
ble attention in all sections of the
state, is an inspiration to the youth
of the land having the courage to “do”
and the stamina to “stick." It is a
present and potent illustration of the
fact that industry, frugality, intelli
gence and honesty will win if consist
ently adhered to in all the walks of
life, and of the old .proverb that “What
ever is worth doing is worth doing
well.” It is one of the cardinal princi
ples of Colonel Estill's life to do well
everything that he undertakes; to go
into and master details; to get a firm
grasp upon the small particulars, and
thus secure a dependable hold upon
the larger matters. No man is more
careful to be sure of his footing and
none more confident of his ground
when he has taken a stand. He does
not jump to a conclusion, but arrives
there by the conservative process of
reasoning, after taking into considera
tion all the points of view. That his
reasoning is in the main always cor
rect and his judgment sound could
have no better exemplification than in
his own fortunes. Beginning at the
very bottom rung of the ladder after
the war of secesslou—working as a la-
places, as member for Georgia on the
Democratic National committee, as
chairman of the executive committee
of lh" First Georgia congressional dis
trict and as chabman.* of the state
Democratic executive committee. His
time, his talents and his purse have
never been denied to the party when
wanted. He has never held an impor
tant political office, for the reason that
he never sought to do so. Several
desirable presidential appointments
have been within his grasp if he chose
to take them, but in each instance he
declined to accede to the importuni
ties of friends and recommended oth
ers for the places. While holding aloof
from office holding under the national
government, he has accepted positions
of trust In his home county and city.
It is as a business man, however,
that Colonel Estil! ranks the very-
great majority of his fellows. When
ever and wherever he has served the
public—on political national or state
committee, on school hoard, on county
hoard, or elsewhere—he has been call
ed upon to deal with the business side
of the matter under consideration.
This is because of his success in the
management of his private affairs. Be
ginning with the wage of $1 a day in
the press room of The Morning News,
^e has not only become the proprietor
of that property- and made it one of the
most prosperous publishing establish
ments in the south, issuing every day
in the year a newspaper that would
be a credit to any city in the United
States, but he has taken rank among
the first as a bank official and financier
whose judgment is always accepted as
safe when there is doubt among his
conferees. As an editor, he commands
respect for his thoughtfulness and con
servatism, without surrendering con
viction. As a business man, he com
mands confidence for his thoroughness
and the ability to comprehend a large
problem without losing sight of the de
tails. It has been said—and no doubt
with good reason—that his newspaper
and printing establishment is one of
Don’t tio the top of yonr
Jelly and preserve jars in
the old fashioned way. Seal
them by the new, quick,
absolutely sure way—by
a thin coating of Pure
Eeliued Paraffine. Has
no taste or odor. Is
air tight and acid
proof. Easily applied.
Useful in adozeii other
ways about tho house.
Full directions with
eacli cake.
Sold everywhere. Mndefcy
STANDARD OIL CO.
S? Distiller of PU8E COR -
&
.VA
hiskies.
fk
VS
0
W.
Guaranteed quality rml proof,^>erGal. $1 50
H
m
Wines i nd liter. B-ay* - JUG TRADE OF BURKE Solicited.
KEARSEY & PLUMB,
1269 Broad Street, AUGUSTA. Ga.
; - ISMSfM000000^0000
m
m
Ei P. Shewmake, President.
A. M Boatwright, Secretary
-Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
For a Free Aeci- q
5
dent Insurance
G
Policy good lor §
6
one}car wiiteto §
COLONEL J. H. ESTILL.
O
o
9 r
IMAM,
§ The Popular
9
I Liquor Dealer,
A uoufcta.
0 eoigia.
All it rests U 2 cents Q
i yi'Ur let;, r £5
Mantels, Tile, Grrates, Hardware, :
: : : Doors, Sash and Blinds.
ROUGH and DRESSED
tFXtbTtE LTJMBEB.
LATHS, BRICK, Etc.
fc37 BROAD STREET, : : AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
01 O
HOI n tif f'f
CONFOUND
FCF
HORSE
ELIXIR
Colic.
The 2 biggest farmers in Georgia and South
'arolina— Cat t. Jas M. Smith says of it:
Have tried Ihem. Holle man’s is the best
ail Keep it ail the Orne.”
Capt. R. Ii Walker says: “Holleyman’s
•> worth its weight in gold. I have saved-ns
man* as three horses lives per month with
Holleyman’s Compound Elixir
50 GENTS.
Will cure any case of Horse Colte under
lie sun
‘-'old by all the merchants of this county,
-..vp am substitute s id ,o be tb -
mtame thing or as good.
a. L. WILLETT DRUG CG,
AUGUST \. G \
ak? it.
LIVERY, SALE
FEED STABLES.
Corner Myriek and
Barron Streets,
WAYNESBORO, GEORGIA
iN 1 have opened ? Livery, Sale and Feed Stables, corner
f Myriek and Barron streets, and solicit the patronage of
| the public. Well equipped turnouts, and good, stylish
*; horse^ for hire at reasonable rates. Shall keep first-"Jass
' stock for .sale. Those in need of Horses and Mules snould
see me before buying.
:fl bxsixtsoxt,
| Corner Myriek and Barron Sts., Waynesboro. Georgia.
as it is too late in life for me to learn to keepbooks no’ . noth.-
"ing charged nor tickets made. All is cash Don’t ask i-redlt.
borer in the printing establishment
which he now owns, and for a labor
er’s wages—he has climbed by his own
efforts to a position of comfort and im
portance. By zeal, by labor, by untir
ing energy-, by the exercise of mother
wit and calm judgment, he has risen
from the position of an employed me
chanic to that of an employer, finan
cier and man of affairs. And notwith
standing his altered position, he en
joys relating anecdotes of his early
struggles as a mechanic more than
telling of his later triumphs. Nor arc
the friends of his more strenuous days
forgotten, S as a number of them have
reason to know. Once a friend, always
a friend, is his style.
Colonel Estill is in his sixty-second
year, and looks fifteen years younger.
He was born in South Carolina, but is
a Georgian, blood, bone and brain, hav
ing lived in this state since his youth
and given the vigor and strength of
his manhood to defending the state in
war and building up her interests in
peace. He takes pride in the fact that
he was a private in the Confederate
army and fought in the ranks with
“the’boys in butternut and jeans” un
til he was so severely wounded in Vir
ginia, where he w-ent with the‘Eighth
Georgia regiment, that he had to be
sent home. And while still an invalid
from the wound he volunteered to aid
in the defense of his beloved city of
Savannah against the invading army
under Sherman. His military record,
as honorable as man could wish, is em
balmed in the records of the troops
that Georgia sent to uphold the Con
federacy and punctuated with the
scars of bullets upon his body. His
military title, however, is the laurel of
peace, bestowed for both military and
civic services rendered in patriotic
love for the commonwealth. It was
first conferred by the lamented Gen
eral Alfred H. Colquitt when he was
elected governor, in 1878, and after
wards reconferred by each succeeding
governor up to and including the ad
ministration of Hon. W. J. Northen,
which ended in 1894.
While Colonel Estill has never been
a politician in the ordinary meaning
of the word, he has always taken a
deep interest and often a leading part
m the political affairs of Georgia and
the south, and his politics has always
been of the straight Democratic brand
without the slightest qualification. The
party has always known where to find
him, and the leaders have consulted
him with respect to matters of great
moment. He has served, among other
the most thoroughly systematized busi
nesses in the country. No loose ends
are left hanging anyhere. The whole
concern moves along like a piece of
well oiled machinery-. The same ef
fort to effect co-operation, and success
in that effort, characterizes all of Lis
enterprises. He is at the head of a
building and loan corporation that has
assisted a great number of wage earn
ers to own their homes or lay aside
something for a “rainy day.” He is an
earnest advocate of living within one’s
means, which principle he applies to
corporations as well as to individuals,
lie thinks that no obligation should be
contracted without arrangements being
maue to discharge it; that if a man or
a corporation make a debt the means
of paying it off should be in sight.
Personally Colonel Estill is a teeto
taler. No man has a greater abhor
rence of the drink habit than he. At
the same time he recognizes that ev
ery man who takes a drink of liquor is
not a drunkard, and that every man
who refrains from drinking is not a
saint. He believes in temperance, hut
not in state prohibition, for the rea
son that temperance cannot be incul
cated by legislative enactment any
more than morality can be forced by
means of a policeman’s club. He fa
vors local option with respect to the
liquor traffic, because experience has
taught that no community can he su
perior to the majority sentiment there
of, and no community can have even a
decent semblance of prohibition un
less the majority of its people are in
favor of the total suppression of the
liquor traffic. Under the existing local
option law in Georgia, when the ma
jority of a community decides against
the sale of liquor it is within the pow
er of such community to have the traf
fic suppressed. Local option is based
upon the sound Democratic principle
of local self-government, and no sys
tem of government has ever been de
vised that is more satisfactory- than
that of permitting the people to de
cide for themselves under what code
of morals they shall live. He believes
that it is always safe to trust the ma
jority- of a free and enlightened people
to do what is right for their own good.
Colonel Estill is Thirty-second de
gree Mason and a past Junior Grand
Warden of the Grand Lodge of Geor
gia. He is also one of the oldest mem
bers of the Independent Order of Odd
Fellows in Georgia. In religion he
is an Episcopalian, and is a vestry
man of St. John's church of Savan
nah. W. TROX BANKSTON.
PROF. P. M. WHITMAN,
2G9 7th St.. Augusta. Ca.
IIVES FREE EYE TESTS for 'Meets o*
:ght, grinds the proper glasses j; 1 ' 7 WAR
RANTS their...
Lenses cut into your frame wLiu-> you wait.
FREE OF CHARGE. -U—
j JIHUEfOEY! KUf&hHY 00.
smmmmmwMmmmm)
V,<S)
isiffif Augusta’s Popular
Clothing House ::
{Makes Big Reduction!
P£M| Ten cent. Cotton is nothing in comparison
00, to the money you can save by purchasing your
0702 Clothing, Underwear and other wearing appa-
from us.
mm
POMONA, N. C.
1,000.000 'frees and Vine;-
La’-ffe stock of shrubbery.
pll3,I901—by
W. I). BECKWITH,
RESIDENT DENTIST,
WAYNESBORO, ; : GEORGIA,
(Office-Over Citizens Bank.}
Office boms: 8 to 1 a. m , and from 2 to4
j m. Specsal attention to crown and bridge
vork. Satisfaction guaranteed. Charges
■easonabie. Tite expense of a trip to h
We have made enormous reductions on all
Winter goods.
Special Reduction on Overcoats ; all
sizes and styles.
(pi! ^LEVY'S 30H&C0MPAHY,g>
AUGUSTA, GA.
a# 0 000 0 «
r*?p nftv fcJivpil patrons
sep.V a *—bv
i That Fit Fight,
]nrt —
i That WemjgM.
iluU That Are RIGHT.
AUGUSTA
Dental Parlors,
PlCVLFSS nKSTCiTRY
Lowest Prices All Work Guaranteed
Crown and Bridge Work n Specialty.
POORE & WOODBURY,
821 Broad St., Augusta, Georgia.
Bell Phone, 520,
e*u •» o* wto» ****■
I cun make
a coat that don’t
bunch up and
hang like a rag
in Iront; a coat
that fits to the
backufthe 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
h’ps; don’t draw
bacKot the knee,
and fit smooth
over the instep.
TELEPHONES:
Bell, 282; Stroger, 802.
OFFICE and WORKS
North Augusta.
Manufacturers .'High Grade,)
Doors, Blinds, Glazed Sash
IVXaxLtels, Etc.
Mill Work of all Kinds in Georgia Yellow Pine.
Flooring, Ceiling. Siding, Finishing, Moulding, Ere Car
Sills, Bridge, Raiir ad and Special Bills to order.
feb 2I.’l!i00 b v
The Best Time
If you care to M
as if your clcftcs
are selected wit!
To select tall clothing is right now.
This best of all stocks is at the top-notch
of fullness with us—just opened up, and are
handsome, exclusive styles that have been
made up especially for the particular buyer.
Full line Ladies’ Tailor-Made uits and
Skirts, odd and walking skirts, Henrietta and
Silk waists, and ready-to-wear hats. Ladies
are invited to visit our Ladies’ department.
Complete line of well-made children’s clothing.
J WILLIE LEVY,
taste, call. THE TAILOR.
Waynesboro, Ga
Oufltter for Men, Women and Children,
^ BEND YOUR JOB PRINTING TO
’THE CITIZEN JOB OFFICE.Waynes
qorn, Ga. Justice?Court Blanks a spe
Cialtv K*tlTr*t*iloh»»TfnPy rm1shed>
g—\
844 BROAD STREET,
Augubta, Ga.
f £9- by
. -L-L • -