Newspaper Page Text
VOLUME XVII.
DALLAS, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1898.
NUMBER 4.
FOUR FULL QUART* BY
PREPAID EMPBE** FOR
$3.15
Cam* with mil OrUmrm.
The
Characteristics
of Good Whisky*
In the preparation of Whisky, the infusion of rye or other grain is first
made to undergo fermentation, by whidh the saccharine matter and indirectly
tile starch are converted into Alcohol. In this state the liquid is called the wash.
This is submitted to distillation, and the product is denominated low wines. By
a second distillation it becomes purer and stronger, and now takes the name of
raw spirits or whisky. It is now submitted toa third distilla-
tion in order to still further purify it. This is where our
Hg| Whisky is superior. Few whiskies are ever submitted to
IlilliP the third distillation. By time certain chemical changes
I I lake place by which the natural impurities contained in the
| j I liquor arc destroyed and the whisky becomes mellow, los-
j I I ing the disagreeable odor and taste which it is apt to have
I | I when first distilled. We guarantee Gum Springs Whisky
I | 1 to be six years old. A letter from State Chemist:
. October 18th. Jnw.
ATI.A NT.'
JACOBS' PH ARM ACY. tUlan tn. Ui
Gknti.kmkn: I find the sample of whisky received from
you October tilth, marked “Hum .springs Whisky," to con min
as below:
Absolute Alcohol by weight
Absolute Alcohol by volume. ...
Fusel OH
Total Solid Reflldue in grains pe
Specific gravity at HO degrees F
The nhove whisky Is of full alcoholic strength,
is pleasant and natural. The small traces of fun . .
in the whisky are In evidence that It is a genuin
r gal Ion,.
Truce
824 .Ml
U.IM8U
jits imnquet
in the whisky are In evidence that it Is n genuine whNKv
Which Is of sullloient age to have converted the fusel oil n ,i,,
ether, which gives It an agreeable bouquet. | regard tills
a very excellent brand of whisky nnd free from all lulurioii's
substAnees. Respectfully submitted.
Met ANPI.KSS LABORATORY.
By Jno. M. Mct ’.wiu.Kss
We have contracted with the Gum Springs Distillery, of Paducah Ky
*P use *';e entire output of their plant. Gum Spring's Rye Whisky 6 Years
014—to introdifee, we will send to any address, prepaid in the .States namt-il-
Georgia, Alabama, Florida. Louisiana, Mississippi. Tennessee and South t aro
lina, Four Full Quarts Gum Springs Rye Whisky lor $3 IS On orders from
other States 35 cents extra to cover additional express charges will lie exacted
.. ,' Vc sh ,'P «u whisky in plain packages as medicine. We do not claim to be
distillers, but distillers’agents. All poods not as represented are returnable
•tour expense—and money refunded. Give nearest express or freight ollire."
Jacobs 9 Pharmacy,
Atlanta. Georgia.
nun,a,
A^OONJTOJRANKINDl
D’ TABLtR’S BUCKEYE
PILE
n2h223=
m
01 m hi yj to
1 -T A- O
* m o ° 2
? Oh
Is«"33
LajsII
CURE
A New Discovery for the Certain Cure of INTERNAL and
EXTERNAL PILES, WITHOUT PAIN.
CURES WHERE ALL OTHERS HAVE FAILED.
Tubes, by Mail, 7S Cents; Bottles, 60 cents.
JAMES F. RAILLARD, Sole Proprietor, - • 310 North Main Street, ST. LOUIS, MO.
For Sale by A. J. COOPER & CO.
SECOND DIVISION OF HIS CORPS
IS ORDERED TO CUBA.
MUST MOVE WITHOUT DELAY
R«|linsnUl Command*™ Begin ratting
Their Force* In Shape tn Comply
With tha New Orders.
A special from Savannah, Ga., nays:
General Fitzhugh Lee, in acoordanoe
with his instructions from Washing
ton, issued a general order Friday
directing that the Second division of
his corps prepare to remove to Cnba
at once. Regimental commanders in
that division are putting their foroea
in sitape to move within five days’
time.
Tlie division is composed of tha
Second Illinois, Sixty-tint Indiana,
First North Carolina, Fourth Vir
ginia, Forty-ninth. Iowa and Sixth
Missouri. It is in command of Gen
eral F. V. Greene, who is now in
Cnba, having been sent there for the
pnrpose of selecting camp sites.
The Second division hospital, Major
Russell B. Harrison, post marshal, and
six companies of the provost guard
are ordered to prepare to move at tiio
tame time.
Thero are three transports now in
tho harbor—the Minnewaska, the Mi
chigan and the Panama. These can
carry about three regiments, and it
mny be that they will be used to oon-
vey part of General Lee’s Seoond di
vision to Havana. It is feared this
movement will carry halt the Seventh
army oorpB away before the president
arrives to review it.
General George W. Davis, United
States volunteers, arrived in the city
Friday morning en route to Cnba. He
will leave on the transport Minnewaska
when that ship departs for Havana.
General Davis is to be military gov
ernor of the province of Pinar del Rio,
Cuba. He is aooompaniod by Major
R. A. Brown, Captain R. H. Vande-
mou and Lieutenant W. H. Simons,
who will go to Cuba with him. Gen
eral Davis is a member of the regular
army, having been lieutenant colonel
of the Fourteenth infantry.
BRYAN ADDRESSES LEGISLATORS.
Alabama Amanblr Slops Nobraahan
Whllo Kn Howto to flavannah. Oa.
A special from Montgomery, Ala.,
•ays: Colonel William J. Bryan ad
dressed the Alabama assembly Satur
day. He was passing through from
his home in Nebraska to his regiment’s
headquarters in Savannah, hut the
•aaembly heard of his coming and dis-
patohed a delegation to meet him,
which almost forcibly took him from
tha trairi. He was carried straight
way to the capitol.
A joint session was organized in the
hall of the house. President Cun
ningham, of the senate, introduced
Bryau eloquently. The distin
ct! visitor then addressed the
. mhly for half an hour, after which
ha held n public reception in the gov
ernor’s office. Mr. Bryan's speech
contained very little reforeuce to mat
ters of political importance. He said:
“I do not oomo as a military hero—
you are long on ndlitnry heroes. It
would seem that this late war was a
war for Alabama. We cannot have a
buttle on land that does not give ad
ditional fame to General Wheoler; we
can have no engagement on sea with-
out-additional distinction to Hobson.”
He declined to discuss ptiblio ques
tions, saying:
“But boing a soldier, I cannot
speak to you with the freedom of a
civilian. I would speak, if I spoke at
all, under limitations that would ho
unpleasant to me. What I would de
sire to say to you as a citizen, I could
not sny ns a soldier, I cannot now
discuss thcfke things that nt present
engago the attention of the nation.
“Neither wonld I care to discuss
those things wo discussed two years
ago, Imt which are not yet lnid away
to eternal reHt. Neither could I dis
cuss those matters which give, as a
result of the late war, a broad field for
■tpecnlation.”
He spoke pleasantly of Alabama,say
ing that he first received the title of
colonel in this state somo yearn ago.
“If I could meet that mnn who
called me ’colonel’ then, I would have
more confidence in his prophecies than
in thoke of the nix million men who,
in ’00, prophesied I would be—”
CUBANS VISIT M’KINLEY.
flaralR nnd Ills Associate* Were lleeclved
Only as Citlsntm, However.
A Washington dispsoh says: The
members of the Cuban commission,
hoaded by Generlii yards, called at
the white liotiso Friday afternoon
and wore soon ushered into the cabi
net room, where they were received
by the president. The mooting, how
ever, was entirely informal and unoffi
cial in character.
The meeting of the president was
very cordial, but tho distingushod Cu
bans were received ns citizens of Cuba
and not as having any official status
Nothing could be learned at llio white
house as to the subjects of tho conver
sation.
Senor Gonzalez de Quesada, who
prosonted General Garcia and the
other members of the committee to
the president, and acted as interpre
ter in the conference that followed,
said that as the conference
was of a private nature it mani
festly would be improper to make pub
lic any of its details. He was satis
fied, he said, that tha interview was
entirely satisfactory to both tho mem
bers of the Cuban commission and the
president.
During the evening Major General
Miles, commander of the army, callod
upon General Garcia at his hotel. His
call was unofficial. The two soldiers
spent a pleasant half hour together.
Powder
Stakes the food more d6fidou§ ®nd wfiolooo^io
m
■
MATY IS HOT FINISHED.
SPANIARDS CONTINUE YIELD1NU
TO DEMANDS OF DAY.
DONS ARE TURNED DOWN HARD.
Hpanloh ntilpa Refused Port Entry Right*
lu Cabo nnd Porto Hleo—Corolloo
Question Still Unsettled.
A Paris special says: The comple
tion of the work of theSpanish-Ameri-
cau peaoe commission now in session
in Paris is practically an accomplished
| fact. Tuesday’s session disposed of
, the essential features of the treaty,
| which will be embodied in the follow-
i ing eight articles:
j 1. The customary preface of tha
| treaties in the nature of an expression
of amity, of hope for perpetual pAtce.
2. The relinquishment by Spain of
her sovereignty over Cubs.
11. The withdrawn! of Spanish
troops.
4. The relinquiahmout by Spain of
hor sovereignty over Porto Rico.
C. Spain’s cessation of the Philip
pines.
(1. The withdrawal of Spanish troops
there.
7. The payment by the United
States of •20,000,000 for the Philip
pines.
8. The provision for the “open
A^oundoMsughleV’intorrupted the j d ° or ” commercial policy in the Philip-
oolonel, who concluded his remarks • ,® R ' ....... . . ...
with a compliment to Governor John- I 1 *»• rou « h th « tr « 1 /’ whioh
•ton and a wish that he would have ™ ay 1,8 “overs
another opportunity to meet those | Ulu H makes a long docn-
present when the time wonhl he more went, which Senator Cushman K. Da-
opportune for an expression of hit 1 vi f- ? f ,he TJml « ,, 1 St »‘ e * P?*°« oom -
views. There was considerable en- ! ni *"" ,on > Hn y H , "’ ll1 be found to- be one
thusiasm as Colonel Bryan resumed °. f tho ,U0R * «nt«resting papers in its
his coat.
Do you want an up-to-date, Hn
newspaper—one that will keep you
potted on affaift at home and abroad!
I’nu will antwer the quettlon qflrtna-
lively by tending tif your name and
tubteription for iMe paper for a year
->r at leait tie months.
The Easy Running
“HOUSEHOLD"
Sewing Machine.
The mostm'odern Sewing Mb
chine of the age, ebracing al!
of the latest improivements
DURABILITY,
RANCH OF WORK
SIMI
k
and
IPLICITY
Old Sewing Machines taken In exchange
I 'osiers wanted In unoccupied territory
Correspondence solicited. ’
AJ(lre*i,
J. II. Derbyshire, •
General Agent,
RICHMOND, VA.
The occasion was a vory happy ono.
Mr. Bryan left in the afternoon for
Savannah.
SEEK GOLD IN GEORGIA.
character ever written. So completely
arc the details of tho evacuation of the
Philippines stipulated that n commis
sion such ns arranged for tho Spanish
withdrawal from the West Indies will
he unnecessary.
Among the questions not yet set
tled, however, are the eosling station
nnd refigiotiH freedom iu the Caro-
Ohlo Capitalist, rnrchn.e Large Tract In
Lumpkin County.
A Columbus, Ohio, dispntoh says: ] u neHi the Spanish commission not
J. C. Rosenthal, of Delaware, O., hnving yet replied to the American
passed through Columbus Saturday en offer.
route to Dahlouega, Oa., where he Tl ;„ Americans agree to transport
will file a deed oovenng the e jtiro j the Spnnifth prisoners hornei including
properties of the DAhlonega Gold Min- , the gfll . riflo n and sailors at Manila,
ing Company of that place. This ; Pft|)tlirc d by Admiral Dewey nnd Gen-
property was purclinscd l.y the present vrA | Merritt, as well as the soldiers
owners from Christian Wahl, of Mil
waukee, on tho 2Hd eff November, tho
deal being consummated at Chicago.
As the purchase money is not stated
as to the amount, some idea of its ex
tent may be secured from tho fact that
there was 80,000 in revenue stamps
necessary upon the instrument. This
is the largest amount of revenue
nnd civilians held by the Filipinos,
whoso return tho Americans have guar
anteed.
As compensation Spain promises to
liberate all Cubans, Porto Rican nnd
Philippine political prisoners. Spanish
soldiers elected to remain in the colo
nies may do so, but it is more a matter
of economy for the Americans to re-
stumps ever purchased for a similar turn the others, as they must ho fed
HAD FUN WITH PARSON.
RolriltMH riny Pmctlrnl Jokn On a Colored
Kxhnrter Who Vl*i(e<l Their Cninp.
There is considerable merriment
among the troops stationed at Athens,
Ga., over an incident which occurred
at tho camp of the Pennsylvania sol
diers a day or two ago.
A colored preacher went to the camp
to exhort and he mounted a bnrrel and
began a long-winded sermon. Before
ho had started well on his nermon n
crowd of soldiers ran np and grabbed
him, and jerking him off the bnrrel,
placed him on a blanket and tossed
him up in the air a number of times
KENNEY AGAIN IN COURT.
I>eleware Senator Charged With Aiding
a Teller To Loot a Hank.
United States Senator Richard It.
Kenney, of Delaware, was placed on
trial Monday iu the United States cir
cuit court at Wilmington for the
second time on charges growing out
of the looting of the First National
hank, of Dover, by its teller, William
N. Boggs. Senator Kenney was last
arraigned on the charge of aiding and
abetting Boggs in misapplying the
hank lands in last July, and after a
trial lasting over one week the jury
disagreed. Since then the charge of
conspiracy has been joined to the first
charge.
purpose in the state, and perhaps one
of the lnrgest amounts ever requirod
for s similar pnrpose in tho country.
Tho properties iu question represent
4,(171 acres of mineral lands in the
immediate vicinity of Dahlouega, the
hulk of which is gold honrlng, but
with a liOO-acre tract of valunble man
ganese deposits.
The deed of transfer covers, iu addi
tion to the Innded interest, all the im
provements thereon, consisting of nu
merous mining outfits,elevators,stamp
as long as they are .kept un.l Hpuin is
unable to bear the expense-of the re
patriation.
Also, the Americans hav* rejected
Spain’s request for free shipping for
ten years in Cuban and Porto Rican
waters, they having given the Spanish
commissioners snoh poor consolation
us the latter may derive from the per
mission to reapply when the diplo
matic relations linve been renewed,
for shipping concessions under the ro-
... . n,i mn ciprooity scheme of the Dingley lnw,
mills, 105 dies, stamps, buildings, 500 (or whi ' ll Sellor D„ pny de T.onie was
horse cars, forty miles of artificial cs- negotlating in Washington when the
nalfl, railway track and rolling atook war broke out
and all the appliances and machinery | Thero lir „ ' fltm un dcr discussion
natural to an extensive mining inter- eight Hecon(lflry Sllbjectg the
, , , Spanish commissioners broached hist
The company was organized about wu(j|(> ino|lldI tbe atatus of patents
the 1st of November, most of the nm , copyri lltH , The American mm-
stock having been subscribed in ad- miBBion ^ rH hamlfi(Uo Senor Mcntero
vnnee. J ho capitalization is 85,000,000 nioH „ wj . itten raply cov6riDB these
qiiHstionn.
DAHLONEGA, GA.
A col loffo critical Ion in tho reach t f all. A.B.,
JI.h.. Nninial ami HuhIiichh Muti'u conrtM*.
(•oori lahoratoricK; healthful, Inviiforaliiit; i II-
nntf, military rilftciplina; Rood moral amt
rolltflouH Influence*. Chcnpo*t Itoard lu the
State; nliiimlmceof country produce;ej« ( »’ns*t
front 875 t«» 8150 a year} Itoard iu doruiitorieH
or private f.inii1l< H. Social license cViurno for
teacher*; full faculty of nine; all under tint
control of the Univernlty. A collude prepar
atory claim. Coeducation of ncxem Ti n Insti
tution founded npocially lor ntudent* of limited
uieuitM. Send for catalogue) to tho Provide
Jew. H. Btrwari. A.M.
TME^O
and the home office is at Toledo, with
brunch offices at Delaware, Chatta
nooga, Tenn., and Dahlonega, Ga.
The charter is under the laws of
Georgia. Ohio capital is very largely
hacking the venture.
THIRTY-SEVEN DROWSED. •
nla Vc.til Wrecked In Hay of lll.cay
With IJlHaiitrouN ItcHult*.
Advices from Lisbon state that
thirty-seven people were drowned who
wero on hoard thn British steamer
Clan Drummond, from the Clyde via
Liverpool for Cape Good Hope,
wrecked in the bay of Biscay.
The remainder of the ship’s eom^
pany saved numbered twenty-three,
who are on hoard tho British stenmer
Holbein, Captain Shurlouk, from
London and Antwerp from Rio
Janeiro, anchored off Cascaes, fifteen
miles west of Lisbon. Tho Holbein
has the propeller shafting in the tun
nel broken.
CLAIMS JURY WAS “FIXED.”
I’roNfWMitIng Attorney In thn Moor* Cna*
Milk** Homo S*rlotiM Charges.
A New York (linpateli Two
jurors in the Moore "Badger” trial
are charged by Assistant District At
torney McIntyre with having been
“fiaed.” He significantly remarks
that he regrets that the jury was not
locked up while the trial was on, and
snys that their actions will he brought
to the attention of the district attor
ney for presentment to tho grand jury.
The jurors say the reason they
failed to agree whs that five of them
believed tho state hail net made out n
case strong enough to remove all
“reasonable doubt,"
Ir* ARE READY TO ENTER YOUR
TAME ON OUR SUBSCRIPTION
ROOKS. YOU WILD NOT MISS THE
SMALL SUM NECESSARY TO BECOME
OUR CUSTOMER.
GuniM Ml 10 me Btsl.
Prices very reasonable. Obtain them
from your local dealer and .
maM comparisons.
f