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vi. YORK) BOSTON,
„), U aoEID* Hi A, WASH I NOTON,
RICHMOND.
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SOUTHBOUND
No. 403. No. 41.
L v,. w Yrrk.Penn.R.R. *ll 00am *9 00pin
I''.' Philadelphia, “ 1 12pm 12 05am
/; ft utiraore, “ 313 Pm 2 50am
h'-Khiagton, “ 4 40pm 4 30am
p'i.Tmoud, A. C. Ti., 8 56pm 9 05am
f VorfoTk, S. A. L., *3 80pm *9 05am
! T’ .rtsmoutb, “ 8 4opm 9 20am
l-StoT “ *ll 28pm *llssam
Henderson, “ *l2 56am *1 48pm
“ +7 82am +4 16pm
j v. Durham’, “ t? 00pm flO 57am
Lmford’, “ S 33am 5 05pm
. ' southern Pines, “ 4 23am 5 58pm
Hamlet. “ 5 07am 6 53pm
7 Wadesboro, “ 3 53 am 810 pm
Monroe, “ 6 43am^3^pm
Wilmington, “ *l2 0.->pix
Vrrhariottoj “ *7 50am *lO 25pm
\r Theater. “ *8 08am *lo66pm
Lv. Columbia,C.N.AL.lt.lt *4 30pm
Vr "Clintons 8. A. L., *9 45am *l2Ham
Ar. Greenwood, “ 10 35am 107 am
Ar! Abbeville, " 11 03am 1 35am
Ar. Elberton, ** 12 07pm 2 41am
Ar. Athens, “ 1 13pm 343 am
Ar. Winder, “ 1 56pm 4 28am
Ar. Atlanta, (Central Time)-2 50pm 5 20am
NORTHBOUND
No. 402. No. 38.
Lv. Atlanta,(CnTm)S.A.L. *l2 00n’n *7 50pra
Lv. Winder, “ 240 pm 1040 pm
Lv. Athens, “ 313 pm 1119pra
I.v. Eiberton, “ 415 pm 1231 am
Lv. Abbeville, “ 515 pm 135 am
Lv. Greenwood, “ 5 41pin 2 09am
Lv. Clinton. “ *6 30pm *2 55am
Ar. Columbia,C.N. & L.R.R *ll 58am
LrT Chester,S. A. L., *7 53pm *4 25am
ArTCharTotte, “ *lO 25pm *7 SOam
Lv. Monroe, “ *7 45pm *5 55am
Lv. Hamlet, “ *ll 15pm 7 45am
Ar. Wilmington, “ *l2 40pm
Lv. Southern Pines, “ *l2 08am *9 00am
Lv. Raleigh, “ *2 20am 11 18am
Ar. Henderson, *l2 50pm
Lv. Henderson. 323 am 1 05pm
Ar. Durham,
Lv. Durham, j
Ar. Weldon, *2 45pm
Ar. Richmond, A. C. L., 8 20am 7 12pm
Ar. Washington,Penn.R.R. 12 31pm 11 10pm
Ar. Brltimore, “ 143 pm 103 am
Ar. Philadelphia, “ 350 pm 350 am
Ar. New York, “ *6 23pm *6 53am
Ar. Portsmouth, 8. A. L., 7 25am 5 20pm
Ar. Norfolk. “ *7 38am *5 38pm
* Daily. + Daily except Sunday.
Nos. 403 and 402.—‘‘The Atlanta Special,’’
Solid Ve&tibuled Train of Pullman Slcepori
and Coaches between Washington and At
lanta, also Pullman Sleepers between Ports
mouth and Chester. S. C.
No-. 41 and 33.—“ The S. A. L. Express,”
Solid Train, Coaches and Pullman Sleepers
between Portsmouth and Atlanta. Company
Sleepers between Columbia and Atlanta.
Both trains make immediate connections
at Atlanta lor Montgomery. Mobile, New Or
leans Tesas, California. Mex'co, Chatta
nooga, Nashville, Memphis, Macon, Florida.
For Tickets, Sleepers, etc., apply to
B. A. NEWLAND,
General Agent Passenger Department.
E. J. WALKER,
Passenger Agent.
C Kimball House, Atlanta, Ga.
E. ST. JOHN, Vice President and Gen. Mgr.
V. K. McBEE. Gen’]. Superintendent.
H. W. B. GLOVER. Traffic Manager.
L. S. ALLEN, Gen’l. Pass. Agent.
Upiicrnl Offices. Portsmouth. Va.
AD.
2;
is. m sb,
The Greatest Remedy
In the World For
Burns,
Scalds,
Spasmodic Croup,
uTi-^riinnniMmi—ti—mkr^riWi'aMrrI"*^ 1 "*^ - •
Erysipelas,
Chilblains,
- -r-mmm w ■■■imiiiw
Poison Oak
--and —
31d Sores.
If your Druggist, or local Dealer does
lot keep it, seud 25 cents in P. O
itarujis or silver for a bottle to
MRS. W. H. BUSH,
Winder, Ga.
Phmt*£ N,JB,AN TEA euros Dyspep
o tCSej§v3 v sia, Constipation and ludi"
geatioa. Regulates the Liver. Price, 25 eta.
O. W. DeLaPorriere, Winder, Ga.
DIFFICULTIES ABOUND
Our Boys In the Philippines
Have Hard Times.
THE HEAT IS PROSTRATING
Morong In Possession of the Americans.
General Lawton Searching
For Major Truman.
Advices from Manila under date of
June 6th were to the effect that the
American forces have occupied the
peninsula aud General Hall’s column
is encamped at Morong.
Major Truman, marching across the
Biuaugonan, found it impracticable to
form a cordon, aud the insurgents,
with the exception of a hundred or
two, escaped through the mountains
after General Rio del Pilar, dragging
their battery by buffaloes at night. A
few, however, may be trapped.
The Washington troops have return
ed to Pasig, but the program of the
other troops is uncertain.
The present expedition shows the
difficulty which is encountered by an
army which must depend upon wagon
trains in catching barefooted bandits
in their own mountains, and all alone,
is proof that the rebels do not intend
to fight battles. General Hall left
Santa Teresa Monday morning and
marched twelve miles to Morong, up
and down rocky hills and through
woods and swamps.
Scores of men fell out, owing to the
extreme heat, and were left to follow
as best they could. The head of the
army arrived at noon, having exchang
ed only a few shots with insurgents on
their way. Groups of stragglers fol
lowed all day, but the force w r as 200
smaller than when it started. The
men were almost thirty-six hours with
out rations and it was considerable of
an achievement for them to cover the
ground they did.
En route to Morong the Americans
met flocks of Filipinos and flags of
truce, many of them young men with
the bearing of soldiers. Many dis
carded uniforms were found in the
houses, apparently those of soldiers
who had escaped by changing then
costumes from“insurrecto” to “amigo”
and walking boldly past the army
which had expected to corral them.
Few w-ere found about Moroug.
General Lawton, on board a gun
boat searching the coast for Major
Truman, stopped at Binangonan, op
posite Morong. The natives immedi
ately ran up a flag of truce, but a
delegation in canoes put off and
greeted the Americans with the usual
protestations of friendship.
AGED WOMAN TESTIFIES
As To Horrible Treatment Received At
Hands of a Brute.
The trial of Grant Bell, charged
with criminally assaulting aged Mrs.
Lumpkin, was proceeded with at Ce
dartown, Ga., Tuesday. Mrs. Lump
kin told to the jury the story of the
assault and the closest possible atten
tion was paid her recital, which at
times was dramatic and hysterical.
The aged lady almost broke down
when the climax of her struggle was
reached and members of the jury,
spectators, lawyers and court officers
shed tears without an effort at re
straint. Those who witnessed the
memorable scene say that no such
touching and impressive sight was
ever enacted in the Polk county court
house.
Grant Belf, the defendant, made a
statement in which he asserted that he
was innocent of the charge.
SATISFIED WITH HENDERSON.
The New York Republicans Indorse
lowan For Speakership.
A conference of republican congress
man of New York state to decide on a
candidate for the speakership for the
house of representatives was held at
the Fifth Avenue hotel Tuesday and
resulted iu a decision to support David
B. Heuderson, of lowa.
The conference Trent into session
behind closed doors.
CONFERRED AT MIDNIGHT.
McKinley, Meiklejohn and Corbin Hold
Secret Meeting.
A Washington special says: Acting
Secretary of War Meiklejohn and Ad
jutant General Corbin had a confer
ence with the president after midnight
Sunday night. They wepe summoned
by the president, it is understood.
What the nature or result of the con
ference was can only be conjectured as
yet, as the parties to it declined to dis
cuss it.
Mr. Meiklejohn said in response to
all inquiries that there was nothing to
make public and that the subject
under consideration wa3 not of a seri
ous character.
CLASH OVER KIDNAPER
A County Sheriff Refuses To Give
Up the Two Beaure
gards.
A "New York dispatch says: Arthur
A. Clark, father of baby Marion Clark,
who was kidnaped a week ago, and
restored to her parents last Thursday,
has filed an information against James
and Jennie Wilson aud Carrie Jones
for kidnaping. The two former are in
custody at Nyaek.
When Chief McCluskey went to
Nyaek Friday after the Wilsons Sheriff
Blauvelt refused to surrender the pris
oners, maintaining that the Rockland
county authorities had jurisdiction in
the case. McCluskey says the sheriff’s
refusal to surrender the prisoners is
outrageous and declares he will appeal
the matter to Governor Roosevelt.
The Wilson woman is reported as
saying that Carrie Jones gave her the
baby as a sick child in need of coun
try air. She was paid for taking
charge of the baby. The man known
as Wilson is said to be George Beau
regard Barrow, a lawyer of Little
Rock, Ark.
Carrie Jones, the nurso who had
charge of little Marion Clark, was ar
rested at Summit, N. J. The girl’s
real name is Bell Anderson. Before a
notary public sho made the following
confession:
“I aided in the abduction of Marion
Clark, the infant child of Author W.
Clark, of the city, county and state of
New York. In this abduction I was
prompted by Mark Beauregard and his
wife Jennie.
“I was told by them that I would
get half of any ransom psrfd for the
return of the child. I was poor, tired
of hard work and wanted money. I
was told that there would be absolutely
no danger.
“The Beauregards schooled me in
the way to abduct the child. We had
determined to take the first child that
would commands ransom.
“I met Mrs. Beauregard in Central
park. I would not let her take the
child then, I so pitied its mother.
“On Sunday I met Mrs. Beauregard
in the park again and sho was so per
sistent that I let her take Marion from
the baby carriage. We went to Brook
lyn by the south ferry.
“That afternoon Mrs. Beauregard
took the letter to the Clarks, she
herself had written and gave it to a
boy in New York to deliver to the
Clarks. I knew Mrs. Beauregard
wrote the letter.
“On Monday, when the abduction
became public, the Beauregards aud
Marion and I, Mrs. Beauregard carry
ing the baby, went to Sloatsburg. I
staid there until Friday aud then went
to the Beauregards’ flat.
“Yesterday Mr. Beauregard came to
see me, gave me $lO and told me to
leave the city. I then went to my
aunt’s home at White Oak Ridge. I
don’t know why I did this, except I
was ill and needed money.”
BANQUET OF BIM ETA LX I STS.
Bryan and Belmont Make Speeches
At Dollar Spread In Louisville.
Seven hundred and sixty-nine bi
metallists from all parts of the United
States broke bread Friday night with
'William Jennings Bryan at the dollar
banquet at Fountain erry park, Louis
ville, Ky. It was given by the execu
tive committee having charge of the
convention of the Ohio V T alley League
of Bimetallic Clubs. The supply of
tickets, which were open to all, were
early exhausted, and Fountain Ferry
park, the largest pleasure resort in the
city, was thronged with those anxious
to obtain admission. The principal
features of the occasion were speeches
from Hon. W. J. Bryan and O. H. P.
Belmont.
It was strictly a dry banquet, ice
water and coffee being all that was
handed down.
ACQUAINTED WITH BARROW.
Abductor of Baby Marion Is Well
Known At Little Rock, Ark.
A Little Bock dispatch says: Beau
regard Barrow, alias J. A. Wilson, the
man arrested in New York state charged
with kidnaping little Marion Clark, is
well known iu Little Rock. Ho be
longs to one of the most prominent
families in the state, and the news of
his arrest is the sensation of the hour.
While the news created momentary
astonishment at Barrow’s audacity,
there is but little lingering surprise at
anything in which Barrow may become
involved.
CHEST OF GOLD MISSING.
Was Shipped To San Francisco From
Sydney, Austra ia.
There was great excitement on the
steamship Alameda on her arrival at
San Francisco from Australia Friday,
when it was discovered that a box con
taining 5,000 sovereigns was missing.
Seven hundred and fifty thousand dol
lars in gold had been sent by the
steamer from Sydney.
The money was shipped in thirty
steel boxes, each containing $25,000 in
British gold.
One of the boxes was abstracted
from the steamer’s treasure room dur
ing tho voyage. Five men have been
arrested.
IF THE sewers of a dwelling
are faulty, or get clogged, it
soon becomes so foul that life
is not safe in it. That is just
what happens to you when the
Liver or Kidneys fail in their
work. The first little signs are
backache, poor appetite, changes
in urine and sometimes bowel
troubles and dropsical swellings.
Do not neglect any of these;
Deadly disorders may follow—
STOP the mischief in time, use
DdUMcbairs
Lw&lQißyßalra
which is sure to bring speedy re
lief and finally a permanent cure.
At druggists, si.oo per bottle.
THE DR.J.H. MCLEAN MEDICINE CO.
BT. LOUIS, MO.
, CUBAN RELIEF ct>~
Neuralgia and Tootlmiw
I IWallVl Vj u fl ve miuvites. Soar Stomach
and Summer Complaints. Trine. 2~ O'”it*
G. W. DeLaPerriere, Winder, Ga.
Benton=Adair
Hardware Cos.
Leaders In Low I 3 rices On
ALL KINDS of HARDWARE.
We sell Brook’s Cotton Planters at $2.00 each
and every thing else accordingly.
CAN SELL ALMOST ANY KIND
OF CULTIVATOR OR HARROW.
The superior DISC HAIIHOW on wheels ia latest and best harrow
on the market. Easy to traiißpost, and each Disc being independent,
rocks don’t interfere with its working. It thoroughly pulverizes the
soil to any depth desired.
Call at our Store and see One.
When in need of any thing in our line, remember
we will sell as cheap as any house in N. E. Georgia.
Yours for business,
Benfon-Adair H’dw. Cos.
Harmony Grove, Georgia.
Our Business Grows.
WHY?
Because our Life Insurance Cos. is , the strongest
on EARTH—SS3,OOO,OOO.OO surplus, pays beneficia
ries on receipt of proof of death.
We handle R £AL ESTATE
to the entire satisfaction of all concerned.
our Fire Insurance Co’s.
are ten of the BEST.
COME TO SEE US.
Office on Broad St.
QUARTERMAN & TOOLE,
Real Estate and Insurance Agents.
“Frank’s Cough Cure is the best I over U3ed.”—Rob’t L Taylor.
FEMALE
t=f==== FRIEND
jp| l I <C* ' TURLY
— /Celerr Gompiifl (slC)
BUILDS UP RUN DOWN
\ MEN AND WO/IEN.
"Manufactured only by MARBLE CUT DRUG CO., Knoxville. Tenn.
For* Sale by "Winder Draff Co*
Georgia Railroad.
CONNECTIONS-
For information aa to Routes, schedule*
and Rates, both
Passenger and Freight,
write to either of the undersigned.
You will receive prompt reply and
reliable information.
Joe. W. White, A. G. Jackson,
T. P. A.. G. P. A.
AUGUSTA. GA.,
S. W. Wilkea, H. K. Nicholson,
F. A P. A. G. A.
Atlanta. Athena.
W. W. Hardwick, 8. E. Magill,
8. A. C. F. A.
MACON, GA.
M. It. Hudson, F. W. Ooffln,
S. F. A. 8. F. A P. A.
Milledgevillt, Aaftiwta.