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That hacking cough continues
Because your system is exhausted and
your powers of resistance weakened.
Take Scott’s Emulsion .
It builds up and strengthens your entire system.
It contains Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites so
prepared that it is easy to take and easy to digest.
ALL DRUGGISTS: 50c. AND SI.OO
TEDDY ROOSEVELT, BOXER.
A New Toy Sold by Street Fakir Finds
a Fast Market.
When the great whirlpool of pedes
trians from Broadway and all of the
side streets west of it in walking dis
tance of City Hall square settled into
the Chambers street channel 'toward
Brooklyn bridge at sunset, says the
New York Times, a street merchant of
novelties lKted his strident voice and
announced clearly, so that not a word
was lost in the c rash of traffic:
“Both men are in the ring. You will
observe Teddy on the right. lie is in
splendid conditioh. And on the left
you will see that Mike Donovan i
prepared for the battle of his lift*.”
The street merchant of this kites
toy attraction held wp a slab of grom
board upon which stood two figures o:
heavy papier maclie. Both of the tig
ures were of men stripped t<> the waist,
their torsos bunched heavily with rails
cles. The faces were plainly drawn
from photographs of President Roose
velt and Mike Donovan, who was once
the trainer and boxing partner of
James .1. Corbett and other famous
prize ring fighters und one time box
ing companion to the president of the
United States.
“Time!” called the fakir, and he wig
gled his thumb and little linger, which
were attached to rubber strings below
the green board.
Brooklynites stopped aoruptly, and
the flood of people arouml the corner
from Broadway to the north became
congested.
The fakir’s thumb moved, and Mr.
Donovan whirled his left arm rapidly,
an-.l Mr. Roosevelt drew back his chin
with a seeming realization that Mr.
Donovan intended to strike a blow.
“Soak ’im, Teddy!” called a Flatbush
pater familias.
“(live him the good night wallop!”
yelled another excitedly.
Then the fakir twitched nis little fin
ger, and Mr. Roosevelt straightened
out and whirled his left arm three
times, his right twice, and then ducked
his head and swatted the Hon. Mike
Donovan on the optic.
A howl of delight went up from the
Roosevelt admirers.
Mr. Donovan then came up, sidestep
lied and in a clinch beat the Roose
vcltian head.
“Time!” called the fakir. “To yer
corners, gents.”
The traffic policemen tried to stop
the fight, but the man witti the latest
novelty observed the city ordinances
by moving on a half inch.
“Second round!” he called.
The second round found Roosevelt a
bit groggy. Mr. Donovan swatted him
with right and left.
The suburbanites bought the novelty
with recklessness at the close of the
round, and the traffic policemen
hustled them away.
The third round found Mr. Roose
velt knocking out Mr. Donovan’s teeth,
and there was more shelling out of
silver.
To a fat policeman the fakir ob
served:
“I guess you’d better call the wagon.
I’ve got more dimes on me that I can
lug away.”
An Architectural Eruption.
A worthy but rather illiterate nan
who had come suddenly into the pos
session of a large fortune was consult
ing with his architect relative to the
building of a costly mansion. The gen
eral plan had been decided upon, but
the details had not been considered.
“You will want a portico, of course?”
said the architect.
“Oli, yes.”
“Any particular design?”
“Wen, smoothing oriental.”
“That would be a good place for you
to have caryatids.”
“Why,” said the other, somewhat
puzzled! “I—er—had that when I was
a boy. It broke out all over me, but I
got well of it. What has that got to do
with a portico?”
According to Horault, • during the
siege of Baris by Henry IV. a famine
raged and bread sold at a crown a
pound. When this wAs consu m'd the
people, maddened with hun f W\ ex .
humed the dried bones from the char
nel house of the Holy Innocents and
from .these made bread.
Complies with all requirements of the National Pure Food Law, Guarantee No. 2041, filed at Washington.'
An old soldier writes about
ARIOSA Coffee: “Your coffee
is the best and richest coffee I ever
drank since I left the service, from
’6l until 1 received your coffee
yesterday.’* A soldier knows coffee
by the taste, and the way it makes him
feel, and would sooner go without
his bread than without his coffee.
Arbuckles* ARIOSA was the first
coasted, packaged coffee, packaged for
AN EASY SOLUTION.
How the Section Boss Got the Tool
House In the Right Spot.
A bout teu years before the Eastern
railroad was leased by the Boston and
Maine that portion of the old road be
tween Kwampscott and Salem was in
charge of Section Foreman Timothy
Moynalmn.
IJis strongest point was in doing
just as he was told and doing that
with energy and accuracy. So when
he was notified from Beverly by Road
master Stevens that the section lengths
were to be changed and that be was to
move his tool house from the westerly
end of Salem yard to halfway between
mileposts 15 and 10 he started out with
the determination to move the house
halfway, no more, no less.
To get this halfway point he sta
tioned one of his men at milepost 15
and another at milepost 16, and at a
signal they started to walk toward
each other until they met, and to a
point opposite their meeting place the
shanty was moved. This method of
getting the correct distance did not
quite suit Moynahan, especially when
he remembered that one of the walk
ers was taller than the other and the
other tripped several times on the way
down.
He carried this in his mind for near
ly a year, when he met the engineers
measuring through for siguals and
asked them to tell him as they meas
ured if his house was just halfway or
not.'
When the measurement was taken,
the house was found to lie sixty feet
nearer milepost 16 than 15, and Moyna
han. on being told, remarked that lie
thought lie could iix things just right.
Later in the year the engineer mot
Moynahan in Salem ?wid asked him if
Ills tool house was now halfway be
tween the mileposts.
“It is.” lie replied. “It’s just half
way.”
“Did you have much trouble moving
it?”
“No trouble at all. I just let it stay
as it was and moved the milepost.”—
Boston Herald.
A LOAN REPAID.
The Fourth Earl Stanhope and the
Gentlemanly Highwayman.
The fourth Earl Stanhope when on
his way homeward late one dark
night was held up by the most gentle
manly of highwaymen, who preferred
his request for money or the noble
man’s life in quite the nicest way. It
happened that Lord Stanhope had not
any money with him and was disin
clined to yield the alternative.
“\~our watch, then,” suggested the
gentleman at the opposite end of the
pistol. That watch, the earl explained,
was dear to him. He valued it at 100
guineas and would not surrender it.
“What I will do,” he said, “is to bring
and deposit in this tree the worth of
the watch in money, and you can call
and get it tomorrow night.”
“Done, m’ lord,” said the highway
man.
The law knew nothing about this ar
rangement, and the earl did as he had
promised. He placed the 100 guineas
where the highwayman might at his
leisure collect it. And there, so far as
he knew, the matter ended.
Years afterward he attended a great
banquet in the city and found himself
pleasantly entertained by an extremely
well known man whose signature was
good for a sum In several figures. Next
day came to Lord Stanhope a letter in
closing the sum of 100 guineas. Ac
companying it was a note begging his
acceptance of a loan granted some
years previously to the man who now
forwarded it.
That loan, said the letter, had ena
bled the sender to gain anew start in
life, to make a fortune and to renew
acquaintance at dinner on the previous
ntglit with his lordship. The city mag
nate and the highwayman of earlier
days were one and the same.—London
Standard.
Obliging.
Prisoner—l’ll reform, judge, if you’ll
give me time. Judge—All right. I’ll
give you thirty days.—Cleveland Plain
Denier.
Philosophy is a good horse in the
stable, but an arrant jade on a jour
ney.—Goldsmith.
Jf) )1 r
JjuQL
protection of consumers, roasted o
and the pores of each berry sealed with
a coating of fresh eggs and pure sugar,
to hold the goodness in and make the
coffee settle clear and quickly. Better
than fresh roast. Warming a
little develops the flavor and makes the
grinding easy. Our enormous coffee
business, exceeding the next four largest
firms in the world together, reduces our
anci::..t r'wit.
Hn’v a liitb' IK'f•>;••> ITaunilvTs tinn
w;s able to scud into the field nearly
1 < m'.opp men.
The army of Torah, king of Ethiopia,
consisted of 1.,>00,C00 men and 300
chariots of v,*:ir.
Hannibal during his campaign in
Italy an l Spain plu ulered 400 towns
and destroyed 300,000 men.
Sesostvis. king of Egypt, led against
his enemies 600,000 men, 24,000 caval
ry and twenty-seven scythe armed
chariots in 1401 B. C.
The city of Thebes had a hundred
gates and could send out at each gate
10,000 fighting men and 200 chariots—
in all. 1.000.000 men and 2,000 chariots.
Hamilear went from Carthage and
landed near Palermo. He had a fleet
of 2.000 ships and 3,000 small vessels
and a land force of 300.000, men. At
the battle in which he was defeated
150,000 wore slain.
“Home” In Our Language.
In no other language, according to
the London Telegraph, is there a word
expressing the ideas and associations
which are aroused at ilie sound of the
simple yet heart touching word “home.”
A Frenchman once translated Cardinal
Newman’s hymn, “Lead. Kindly Light.”
and in his hands the beautiful line
“The night is dark, and I am far from
home.” became “La trait est sombre, et
je suis loin de mou foyer," the trans
lator having been obliged to use for
home the French word which describes
the green room of a theater. The Ital
ian and Spanish “easa.” Ihe German
“haus”—their “hoim” is too general to
hare any particular value —and the
Russian “doma” all refer to a building
of some kind or other and have none of
the memories and associations that
cluster round the precious English
word.
Horses on Snow Shoes.
Horses wear snowshoes in Dakota
in winter. Thus equipped, they trot
lightly over drifts wherein they would
otherwise sink out of sight. In some
parts of Dakota the snow lies all win
ter long eight or ten feet deep, but a
crust forms on it. and with snowshoes
men skim over it easily. So do snow
shod horses. The equine snowshoes are
made of boards twenty inches long and
fourteen inches wide. An indentation
to fit the foot is branded on each board
with a hot horseshoe, and the con
trivance is fastened on to the hoof
with an iron clamp and a boit. After
a day or two of practice a Dakota
horse becomes an expert snowshoer.
Diamonds In His Shoes.
Diamond ornaments in shoes hark
back to the days of the Revolutionary
war and were worn by merchants of
Boston in those days. Thomas Russell
of Charlestown, who died in 1796, was
one of the most active of business men
of his day in Boston and the first to
engage in the American trade with
Russia after the Revolution. Ilis dress
was typical of his time and is thus
described in an old print: “He usually
wore a coat of some light colored cloth,
small clothes, diamond buckles at the
knees and in the shoes, silk stockings,
powdered hair and a cocked hat and in
cold weather a scarlet cloak.”—Boston
Herald.
She Was Mistaken.
“Permit me to ask you, madam,”
said the lawyer, who was a friend of
the family, “your real reason for want
ing a divorce from your husband?”
“He isn’t the man I thought I was
marrying.” explained the fair caller.
“My dear madam.” rejoined the law
yer. “the application of that principle
would break up every home in the
country.”—Chicago Tribune.
A Sly Thrust.
Miss Ann Teek—Really, some of the
young girls nowadays are positively
awful. The idea of a girl being en
gaged to two young men at the same
time! It’s just shameful! Miss Cut
ting—Besides. you find it aggravating
also, don’t you ?—Philadelphia Press.
His Fatal Mistake.
“Adam wuz his own boss, wuzn’t
he?”
“Yes. an’ ef he hadn’t gone ter sleep
at de wrong time he’d ’a’ been so
yit v ”—Atlanta Constitution.
In the true life of the individual each
day is the beginning of anew year.—
Jordon.
Sew are of OtataoMta fr <’Hl*wrh shat Con
tain liaranrr.
As worrarj will surely deetroy the in of
and eomplttaly derange the whole sys
tem when entering it through the mucous
sm faces. Buch articles should never he heed
except on paeacriptloiiH from reputable phy
sicians, ae the damage they will do ie ten fold
to the good you can poseihly derive from
them Hall’s Catarrh Cure manufactured by
F. J. Cheney A Cos,. Toledo, 0.. contains no
mercury, and is taken Internally, acting di
rectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces ot
the syatem. Iu buying Hall’s Catarrh Cure
oe sure you get the genuine. It is taken in
ternally and made in Toledo. Ohio, by F. J.
Cheney A Cos. Testimonials free.
fikir Sold by druftgiets. price 75. per bottle
.v. - - ,
SOLD IH SCALED PACKAGES
okily- m your
average cost per pound, and enables us
to give you better coffee for your
money than you can buy in any other
way. Ih ere are more packages of
ARIOSA sold in the United States
than all the other Coffee packages
combined.
If your grocer will not supply, write to
t i , ARBUCKLE BROS..
New York Ciy.
THE TRUE CITIZEN, SATURDAY. JUNE I, 1907.
Ot Interest To Women,
To such v. omen as are not seriously ont
of health, but who have exacting dutD*
to perform, either i*. the way of house
hold cares or in social duties and func
tions which seriously tax their strength,
as well as to nursing mothers. Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription has proved a most
valuable supporting tonic and invigorat
ing nervine. By its timely use. much
serious sickness and suffering may be
avoided. The operating table and the
surgeons’ knife, would, it is believed;
seldom have to be employed if this most
valuable woman’s remedy were resorted
to in good time. The "Favorite Prescrip
tion” has proven a great boon to expectant
mothers by preparing the system for the
coming of baby, thereby rendering child
birth safe, easy, and almost painless.
Bear in mind, please that Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription is not a secret or
patent medicine, against which the most
intelligent people are quite naturally
averse, because of the uncertainty as to
their composition and harmless character,
but is a MEDICINE OF KNOWN COMPOSI
TION, a full list of all its ingredients being
printed, in plain English, on every bottle
wrapper. An examination of this list of
ingredients will disclose the fact that it is
non-alcoholic in its composition, chemic
ally pure, triple-refined glycerine taking
the place of the commonly used alcohol,
in its make-up. In this connection it
may not be out of place to state that the
"Favorite Prescription” of Dr. Bierce is
the only medicine put up for the cure of
woman’s peculiar weaknesses and ail
ments, and sold through druggists, all
the ingredients of which have the un
animous endorsement of all the leading
medical writers and teachers of all the
several schools of practice, and that toe
as remedies for the ailments for which
"Favorite Prescription” is recommended.
A little book of these endorsements will
be sent to any address, post-paid, and
absolutely free' if you request same by
postal card, or letter, of Dr. R. V. Pierce,
Buffalo. N. Y.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure con
stipation. Constipation is the cause of
many diseases. Cure the cause and you
cure the disease. Easy to take as candy
THE WORST CLIMATES.
Three Pieces Where Weather Condi
tions Are Unbearable.
“Speaking of rank climates,” said a
globe trotter, “I have experienced the
three worst.
' ‘Oi these three unspeakable climates
I give the palm to the strait of Ma
gellan. There is rain on an aver
age 250 days in the year. The wind
blows a hurricane from January to
December. The thermometer never
rises much above the freezing point—
a year round of raw, bitter days of
rain and snow.
“Next comes Sierra Leone, on the
African west coast. That low lying
marshy region has an average temper
ature of 81 degrees, and the annual
rainfall is 189 inches—enormous!
There are. too. the ‘smokes.’ These
are mists, smelling like oyster mud,
that rise continually from the marshes,
giving marsh fever to nine out of ten
of the white men that breathe them—
a year round of hot and sticky days,
with vile smelling clouds of mist and
whirring clouds of mosquitoes.
“Last come the high tablelands ol
central Asia, where the lack of mois
ture in the air makes the days Saha
ran and the nights arctic—days like a
redhot furnace, nights like a January
blizzard. Before this range of tem
perature no human constitution can
stand up.”—Cincinnati Enquirer.
THE ZOO CATERER.
Special Knowledge Required to Run a
Wild Animals’ Hotel.
“To run a wild animals’ hotel—for
what is a zoo but that?—requires a lot
of special knowledge,” said an animal
keeper. “How would you, for in
stance, know how to provide for a
rhinoceros or a tapir? If you don’t
eater right for your animal guests, if
you don’t give them what they want,
they pack up and quit the hotel, you
know—that is to say, they die. Jt
amounts to the same thing.
“Yes. it takes special knowledge to
feed a zoo. You wouldn’t know, would
you, that an elephant requires 150
pounds daily —no more, no less —of
rice, hay, straw, roots, bread and bis
cuit?
“A hippo wants more. Give him
roots, hay and grass, 200 pounds of
them, and he won’t register a single
kick.
“A giraffe with its dainty appetite,
asks only for fifty pounds a day of
chaff, salad, grain and clover.
“Rut don’t offer vegetables to lions
and tigers. Eight pounds apiece of raw
horseflesh, with plenty of hone and
gristle, is their ration, year in and
year out.
“VVe have our farms, too, to supply
our table, just as lots of other hotels
do. Only our farms are queer ones.
One is a mouse farm. In it. with the
help of traps, we raise a tremendous
annual crop. Another is a worm farm,
where we produce yellow meal worms
by the thousand for our birds.”—Ex
change.
Marie Antoinette’s Books.
The unhappy Queen Marie Antoi
nette possessed an important library of
4,712 volumes, consisting of plays and
romances, little books ala mode, the
works of Pascal, Bossuet, Fenelou.
Bourdaloue, Massillon, lioileau. Cous
seau, Corneille, Moliere, Voltaire and
many others. She loved music passion
ately and had a large collection of
operas in eighty-nine numbers. The
bindings were by Rlaizot and were
uniform in red morocco, with the arms
of France and Austria stamped upon
them. The execution of the work was
poor and the decadence in the art of
binding evident. The glories of the
art of Padeloup and the Heroines had
passed away, and the revolution effec
tually killed whatever knowledge re
mained of the ancient skill of the
bookbinders. Half a century later saw
its revival in France, and the art has
since flourished both there and on
English soil.—London Spectator.
How Eeeiies Defend Themselves.
Beetles have other defenses than
their cuirass, such as nauseous or caus
tic liquids, which they expel on provo
cation, and, strange to say, certain bee
tles actually exude their blood, charged
with noxious products. The practice
is confined to the chrysomelidae, some
of the timarehae and adamonia, the
coccinelidae and the meloidae. The
blood of the coccinelidae has a strong,
disagreeable odor like that of the whole
Insect. That of the tixuarchae is odor
less, but has an astringent flavor, and
in the case of the Timarehae primeli
odes is venomous. The blood of the
mloidae contains much cantharidine.
EOYI3H DESIRE FOR WORK.
Often a Sign of Arresied Development
Instead of Strength.
Fa rents often think that their son is
especially promising because he wants
to get to work young, wants to leave
school and be earning. This is never a
sign of strength, hut always of weak
ness. When a buy wants to get to
work in-teau of gutting ready to work
it indicates arr .bod development.
There is n b one probability in fifty
that a boy who desires to leave school
at the sixth grade and is allowed to do
so will ever amount to anything. It is
pot the fact that he does not have as
much education as the other boys, but
that he does not have their purpose to
get ready for the doing of things.
Teachers often greatly err in dealing
with siuii boys and their parents by
trying to show how important it is
that they should know what they will
learn in the seventh and eighth grades,
whereas that is the loiv-t -part of it. Tt
is a case of arrested development usu
ally. and this is what should be treat
ed. treated as a disease.
We make a lot of talk about defec
tive sight and hearing, and we do well,
but it is vastly more important that
we “got busy” in defective mental pro
gressive development. There is a near
sightedness of parents and pupils that
is criminal. It contributes to delin
quency and, as T think, is within the
status of and subject to court punish
ment.
It sometimes shows itself in diverted
attention, in dissipated interest and
often in overathletic or fraternity zeal.
The college theory is that the frater
nity chaps are the elect, but life does
not show that. The data are imperfect
at present, but there is enough to make
it wholly probable that when the fig
ures are in it will be clearly shown
that in the last fifteen years when fra
ternity life has been extra social and
extra political in clannishness much of
the fraternity zeal indicates approach
ing arrested development. It is en
tirely clear already that this is charac
teristic of the high school fraternity,
because it almost invariably means
that a set of felloe’s dare not trust
themselves to win honors in the open
contest, but seek it as a favoritism by
means of a little band of social high
waymen, as many of these high school
fraternities are.—Journal of Education.
Portrait Eyes.
We ail know that the eyes of an oil
portrait appear to follow one all
around the room. That is because the
painted eyes have the pupils in the
center, and naturally they stay there,
no matter what the position of the ob
server. In life, however, the pupil
could not remain in the center unless
the head was turned. This is the so
lution of a somewhat perplexing and
yet a very simple problem.
a soldier, being asked if he had met
with much hospitality in Ireland, re
plied that he was in the hospital near
ly all the time he was there.
V I RAT-01 .A ft*
iifilWTOgyTTßi§.
1 rarm • *4 to th* firwta
.*• &**V. Dm.; AardtanfK
■tmA ***** lilfti U **&*-
■*■!*s
<*■?& tu'.k
iiELP IS OFFEIEIi
r© WOHTB7 YOUNG P£OFL,R
W® ysraowft*' rwjieegt all youc peiw**, **s&=
tk>.mr means or educatowsi, wl Hr
efeftafn a tlMs>ough baasineas training awl peefW
tfs*. t wrSte by first mail for owr luafei-MtiM
Simwis, incifcoor.denceandprfjbaW*3Mr*aiß
are gnsuwateecl. Efron’t delay. Write baJt&r.
The Ga.oA.'a. Business College, Mae on. Gsw
v • si i.J Oi "If c 52
ctv.fS -jf , W -pimcHiis
,-g5?
|?j RUBBER STAMPS ~
unj'IdATERS. RUBBER TYPE. INK PADS.!
STENCILS.;
_7oLli i K.A I t.- <x fvU o'" IR c j if.'
JRASS. GERMAH SILVER & t ■QoWf, f!
ALUMINUM CHECKS. LINEN \. -2- /
MARKERS. &C. \SO/ t
7. 7 HR DADST. AsjGUS7A.fiAN/
. P L£ T £ SSttSSS
MILL OUTFITS.
In, Pvn, t)®* Mill *oii Stelaarl® Oytfli#
Castings.
4 ttlroad, MIU, MjtehtniPt*’ *ntl Factory -mppU*
Salting, Packing, Injector®, Pipe Fitting*
Str, Flies, 011 rs, B!tc
AST o<nti wry day: work 180 kanda,
QMRSRD'RON WORKS*SUPPLY CO
—— f|/
BOTANIC
BLOOD BALI
CURES THROUGH THE BLOOD
BLOOD POISON;
|pi| Bone Pains, !tch
ingjSoaiy Skin,
0 Id
j Sores, Suppur
aling Swell-
Eczema, from Bad
B ‘“g.B“ r ß. by tags and all
Blood Humors.
Blood Poison is the worst disoase on
earth but the easiest to cure when ego. a
you take Botanic Blood w
Balm (B. B. B.) ,It acts
directly on the poisons in
the blood, driving all poi- gift k*,3 __
sonoui matter from the m\f /■ Spr?}
system and sending flood 1/ Va* r /*kJ|
of pure, rich blood di- f? i ■[***'i'Jm
rectlv to the skin surfaces# j l ® f j/r' ,
and Sores-Eruptions and|f\ VG r
Pimples are quickly heal-|j\
ed and cured, \ a E
time the body is strength-1
ened and the skin taken
on the red glow of health
and pure blood. For \” 1 f P® J
Rheumatism, Bone Pains, • * T
Aching Shoulders, Swol- Rheumatism
len Joints. Hawking and Caused by Bad
BIM4 bat Easily
Risings, Boils, Oar bun- Cured DJ. 8.8.8.
cles. Itching Skin, and all evidences of im
pure blood, take Botanic Blood Balm. It
stops all aches and pains and heals every
sore by simply purifying and enriching the
blood. For cancerous sores, shooting, sting
ing pains it is the beet remedy made.
CURES ITCHING ECZEMA
Matery blisters, open itching sores of ail
kinds, all leave after treatment with B. B.
8., because these troubles are caused by
impure blood, while B. B. B. kills the poison
and purifies the blood and heals the sores.
Sold by Druggists, or b 7 Express, SI.OO
B. B. B. cures when all else fails, and is
advised for old obstinate cases of bad blood.
Sample free by writing to
BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga.
MeMaster’s drug store.
Jamestown Exposition
RATES FROM WAYNESBORO, AS FOLLOWS;
beah.m ticKet $23 25 sold daily Apl l 9th to Nov 3i)th
6 dh v “ 19.35 “ “ 1 - 4
15 “ IG.'oU 4i “ •* “ 41
Coach excurs’ulU.lO Hold each Tuesday ; limit 10 days.
KLi dors’d 4 'iio! g,oo(i in parlor or
sice plug cars
COAST LINE “NORFOLK FLYERS.”
! v Waynesboro !*' ‘JH arn I.v Norfolk ’.. O'l ip m
Ar Augusta 12 k‘> o'™ \ v Augusta.... H:‘,V■, a
Lv Augusta ::K pin Lv ugu-Ua, . 1 > p -a
Ar .Norfolk 7:li0 a m Ar W a nt8"oro 2:47 p m
Th roupli Pn !rn>m -'h't'pui.: C i-- from \ag At i. vi i
ATLANTIC COAST LL'iS R R CO
Write for a beautiful illustrated 'o'de*' • intaining maps. • l ea**riptive matti r,
list o.f Hotels, eto. For reserva’i nsoraip information addivss
L II Met IIU.UAI. C A, Augusta Ga
VV J GKAIG Pass fr-f Man T t! WHITE, tj. n Pa* M At
AViliningt n N O
Miss Lizzie Vaughn, ZmsTumZ
Spring Millinery
You are cordially invited to call and inspect my
stock of fine Millinery. I have an experienced New
York trimmer this season.
Miss Lila Hughes* Augusta , Ga
Dealer in Fashionable Millinery, Hats, Notions, Novelties.
Ribbons, Flowers, Feathers, Etc.
The ladies of Waynesboro and Burke County are cordially
invited to call and see my stock and learn my prices before
buying elsewhere.
Pattern Hats and iTiHinery Novelties
You are invited to look over my excellent and well
selected stock of Millinery, Hats, Novelties, Etc.
i have an experienced trimmer who v/iii
be pleased to attend to your wants.
HRS. A. M. WELLS,
Waynesboro, - Georgia.
Liberty Street.
1. G. BAILIE ,S- Cos.,
832 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
Wall Papers, Mattings, Carpets Squares,
Rugs, Window Shades, Room Mouldings’
Awnings, Picture Framing a Specialty.
not a customer, why ut? i always give vou the best, meats,
charge no more than others deliver at, vour homes and will ap
preciate vour trade. Trv some of this nice beef. Phone 70.
R. F BATEMAN.
DO VOU EYE It < > RDER ANY
AVI I I?*ilv aUi OR, WI\EW>
WELL, IU VOU do, TRY
JOHN H.KAHRS
877 Broad **t„ Augusta, (la.
You will get it on the next train without fail.
Whiskey From 1,50 to „.<)<> I{ q„i.
J. H. LEVY’S
CI.SH.UiOB HOUSE.
205-207 W ashington Street 5
AUGUSTA GA.
• LYE AND BOURBONS.
’Per Quart Per Gallon
XX Bye - $ .50 $1.60
XXX Rye - 60 2.00
Levy’s Pride 'ye . .75 : t oo
Levy's Ex Fine - .75 3.00
Golden Eagle Rye - .75 300
Planet Rve - .75 300
Levy’s XXXX - .90 3.50
Golden Grown - .90 3.50
Extra Family - IJK) 4.00
Wedding Bell - I.CO 4.00
Imperial Cabinet - 1.0:1 4.00
Levy’s Monogram - 1.25 4.50
Premium Rye - 1,25 5.00
Harvard R.ve - - 1.50 6uO
Roanoke 2 -damp Bourb .75 3.09
Spring Lake 2 st.p Pour 1.50 300
CORN WHISKIES.
N (J Corn 3 yr old .50 1.50
N C Corn 4 vr old .50 2 Oft
N C (’ornsyr old .75 2.75
N (' Corn 6 yr old .75 3 no
Corn Malt. .75 3^,
We guarantee ail goods as represented. A trial or
der will make you a customer. No goods shipped C.
O. D. Money Order, Postal Note or Cash must ac
company orders.
I have (bought some
Fins Gail Is
and ray customers
vv ill be treated to
'some of the finest
Meats it is oossible
r
to buy If you are
GINS, BRANDIES, WINES-
Per Quart Fer Gallon
XX Gin ... .50 J.SC
XXX Gin ... 50 2.00
Two Stamp Gin - ,7,3 300
Imperial Gin - . 1.00 400
Cognac Branay - . 100 4. no
Rock at dR ve - - .50 200
u eaeh and Honey - 75 30!)
Banana Brandy - . n-q
■inger Hr - n v - _ 50 2.00
y Wine-$1 50. $2. $3 per gallon.
Fori Wine- -$i s', $2, $3 per gall n.
"Weet Catawba -Vine-1 oft. 2. 3 per gallon
Blackberry Win --I.’ I 50. 2 per g.YU.n.
CASE GOODS.
ihree Feathers and Keystone Rye tn .lugs 15
> cars Old 2 t'o per quart
c- arva and. Rye ane Spring liakfe Bottled in
bond and Black Label 1 5o p;r quart.
Lewi tit! Upper Ten Old Cunuingham 125
pt r quart.
'Hina’s P losnhata Gin, Ruchu Gin, Duffy’s
Mnh, u*m>es9 Malt 100 per quart.
C rn M, i.i 1 75.; unart.