Newspaper Page Text
‘'TTT'TTi
Ciittoln A $ Journal.
i •■V- 2 me
4 I
i i A
i
VOL, X.
RAM’S HORN BLASTS
, HE best self
w T help others. is • helping
Altruism is the
h’ / highest individual
lift i ism.
• The shield of
YU M4 faith will fit the
the hack.
t ■1 Ton cannot fat¬
ten your soul on
furniture.
S Full gratitude is
the spring of free
giving.
We live to die that we may die to
live.
Love is the evidence of God’s life
in us.
The shield of faitli will not fie the
back.
The infernal must fall before the
.eternal.
The poor in goods are often rich in
.grace.
God’s W'ork must be done in God’s
way.
Eloquence is not of the lungs.
Wisdom seldom runs in a rut.
Man is ever greater than his tools.
The death of self is the life of the
soul.
True religion is duty linked to the
divine.
In ancient days the addition of a
.-ross to the signature did not always
indicate that the signer could not
write, hut was added as an attestation
of good faith.
Kearsey IS Plum!),
’ " f - Dealer-la -
ilquor^ Wines, Tobacco and Cigars.
DISTILLERS OF
HAL -3 K URG CORN WHISKEY.
REG. DISTILLERY 612.
10 com sold on credit.
1260 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA.
ESTABLISHED IN 1887.
fHE OLD RELIABLE LIQUOR HOUSE.
Send your orders to
r FINK.
Importer and Dealer in
Wines, Liquors, Ciaars and Tobacco.
Special attention $8.00 given to the Jng Trade. Liquors of all kinds,
from $1.50 to $2.00- a gallon. Six year old North Carolina
Corn at per gallon. Prompt attention given
. Mail Orders. Cash with the order.
847 Broad Street, Augusta, Georgia.
jfi
yi
’
HAS RETURNED
I And will make Augusta his home
Sgllfife .. permanently.
A Dr. N. E. Alford’s
Deputation has been established by
mm s ||p| effecting cures when treatment by
Igp popular physicians of acknowledged Why t,be
•BSC ass vij; I®? ability ? proved But powerless. and investigate.
10 t ipid be and come carved when these
Why cut facts
uncontrovertable are at your
door. Special attention given a 1
diseases of the female sex. Consultation free. Office horns 8 u.m. tofip.m
-
DirTN.E. Alford,
1102} Broad Street. Corner of Ixollock Street, (Up Stairs),
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
‘To thine own self be true.and it will follow, as night the day, thou caus’t not then be false to any man,”
LINCOLNTON, GA , THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27. 1902,
The Children Don’t Find It Hot.
“Have you ever noticed,’’ asked a
thoughtful citizen, “how few children
ever complain of the heat? Grown
people grumble at the hot weather
from morning till niglit—and all night
too, for that matter, but you seldom
bear a child say that he or she is
too hot. Boys and girls play all day
long—and play is hard work, some of
it—they run from morning till night—
children seldom sit down—but they do
not take time to abuse tho weather.
A boy will drink unlimited water
every time he gets a chance: he can
eat watermelon until he almost ex¬
plodes, and can cover three ice cream
sodas at a sitting; but you never hear
him say he is tired of hot weather.
The little girls, too, are great water
drinkers—they prefer ice cream to all
cool beverages, however, and love to
parade with their little parasols and
fans; rarely, though, are they ever
heard to wish it was not so warm.
I wonder why this is—are children
more patient than their elders, or
are they merely so profoundly in¬
terested in their own little affairs as to
he obviously or indifferent to states
of temperature? I wish I knew.”—
Detroit Free Press.
A young wothan of eighteen who
has married a mature gentleman of
seventy-two protests that it was a love
match, pure and simple. She says
that she would be no young man’s
slave. According to the proverb she
must prefer to be an old man 3 nurse.
It is all a matter of taste.
CURIOUS FLORAL PUZZLES.
Hydrangea That Blooms Beautifully Blue,
But Changes to Pink.
Florida has a good many floral puz¬
zles as well as beauties. Sometimes
the colors of even the most familiar
flowers are modified curiously by soil
or climate or both. One of the most
f ;! .niliar examples is the case of the or
dinary spiderwort, Tradescantia Yir
ginica. Every Northern child who has
been blessed witli’tbe inestimable priv¬
ilege of a country home and life has
gathered these grassy beauties, with
their fleeting azure blossoms, and
watched them fold their deep blue pe¬
tals and dissolve into a drop of liquid
ultramarine. In Florida is the same
plant, with tl\e same curious spider¬
webs spinning from its broken and
separated stalks, but its petals are
j ink, and the bright drop cf liquid blue
degenerates into a faded and ghostly
suggestion of damp decay.
Another more remarkable example
is the common hydrangea, Hydrangea
hortensis of the catalogues. Farther
north this is a familiar flower, with its
overgrown heads of white or pale pink¬
ish flowerets. In Florida it is in its
glory, branching out into a broad pyva
‘ mid, six or eight feo-Hn diameter, and
completely covered with the most
splendid azure globe'.. The pale pink
give ■ place to a bine that rivals the sky
itself in depth and brightness. The
plant seems to have found new life and
dressed itself in new beauty for its
Southern homo. jyHvV
A search for tliir blue hydrangea
i:i the catalogues is vain. No such
thing is mentioned V.'hite hydrangeas
there are, and pink, lmt.no blue.
This magnificent blue hydrangea
came from a cutting taken from (lie or¬
dinary pink variefygxihd (astonishment transplanted
from Georgia. To Hie of
its Florida owner ijjjLiomed blue,, and
1 all flow
ers in Southern Florida. But the ex¬
periment lias been tried of taking cut¬
tings from tins “blue hydrangea” and
planting them in the North, when they
at once lapse into the old familiar
pinkish form of flower hearts. Even
planted in a tub with sandy soil and
imperfectly fertilized in this latitude,
the result is the same. The blue van¬
ishes and the pink returns.
TIib Ueseent of the Horse.
| J The present domesticated descended liorse is
supposed to have from horses
1 taken frcm Higher Asia. Ol' course
i they have been crossed until there are
| many breeds. The liorse is not men
i tioned in connection with Abraham’s
cattle, but it was known to the ancient
1 Egyptians, who took horses in ex
change for bread in Joseph's time.
When Jacob was carried to Ids old
homo to be buried many people with
chariots and horses followed in the
procession. As a general thing the .an¬
cients preferred the ass to the liorse,
because more easily kept and man¬
aged, but from the earliest times there
were cavalrymen in the armies of the
Old World. The animal is mentioned
often in Scripture, and Job’s descrip¬
tion cf tho war borso is lire and
thrilling one.
Come Gooil Advice.
Tiie country editor should not fail
to realize the influence he may exer¬
cise in the shaping of public affairs,
says the Spirit Lake (Iowa) Beacon.
He should counsel wisely, read care¬
fully, think deliberately and express
himself in no haphazard fashion. The
editor of a country paper who delivers
hr.lf-baked opinions and slashes around
simply to attract attention, is account¬
able for a serious waste of oppor
trinity.
Only Indian Newspaper Suspended.
The Cherokee Advocate, the only
paper ever printed in an Indian tongue,
is about to suspend publication, owing
to changes in tlio government of the
live tribes. The Cherokee is the only
tribe having a written language. It
was invented by Sequoyah, a Chero¬
kee, ia 1S2G.
refs Accustomed to It.
The first time a woman loses her tem¬
per it nearly scares her husband to
death; after that it startles him just as
much when she doesn’t.—New Yevk
Press.
Two German Investigators conclude
positively that there is nothing in the
popular belief that hay fever is pro¬
duced by irritating pollen from plants.
The Royal Colonies were: New
Hampshire, New York. New Jersey,
Virginia, North Carolina, South Carr
liua and Georgia.
NO. 26 .
red ii meins
- M si H ■ -IK
slUi aSH Boots, Shoes &
Ly -
I
:■ . : I I
■ m mm 'V' w%S> Hotter Bargains and Better
y'a Y/'A
Shoes than ever was
R. O. TARVER, Manager Before.
Our One Dollar Brogan is better. Our One Dollar and Twenty-five
Gents Brogan beats the world.
Our One Dol.ar and Fifty Cents Shoes are simply Our superb. Two Dollar and
Our Two Dollar Yici Kid Shoes a big value.
Fifty Certts Hand-sewed Shoes are the best on the market.
We can give you Lndips Shoes at 75c, but the Shoes we want to sell
rou are $1.00 and $1.25 Ladies every day Shoes and our $1.25 and $1.50
Ladies Dress Slices. They are BED HOT BABG A INS and don’t you
forget Shoes. it. Now our $2.0& Ladies Shoes are as good as anybody’s $3.00
We never forget the Children and Babies and this line of Shoes thi*
ieason is better than ever before.
HATS! HATS! HATS!
Our prices in Hats are simply Tornado Swept. We give you Boy#
Hats 10c, a real good Hat 25c. Men’s Felt Hats 65c, Men’s Extra Good
Felt Hats $1.00, and so on to the end.
We don’t expect any one to come within a mile of us this season in
Price and Quality. When is the city be sure to Call and Examine and be
Convinced.
i IPS kSt&aB® 3
$
i
907 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
i » rt
lias inaugurated a'great Slaughter sale. It is the
Cheapest Store
in the City.
All summer shoes and Oxfords, Men’s Women’s and Children's will go
positively at cost.
: AT REDUCED PRICES. •
MILLINERY—The BeeHIive has had a very successful Millinery
Reason and it can well afford to dispose of the remainder ol the stock at
half the regular cost. A. COHEN, Proprietor,
910-913 Broad St.. Augusta, Ga.
-When von visit Augusta call on
Louis J. Schaul
THE RELIABLE OLD PAWNBROKER, Shot Guns For $4.50.
Jackson Street
First Oldest door from Pawn Broad, Shop in AUGUSTA, GA.
C. A. WYLDS,
DISTILLER. & li K
^ Buy direct from manufacturer and save middleman’s profit. 1
t Wines JUG and TBADE Liquors A SPECIALTY. of all Kinds Si
Satisfaction guaranteed. Give me trial order,
833 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.