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PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
L. C. RU4BRIX. K. 0 ARMISTKaD.
RUSSELL & ARMISTEAD,
Attorneys at Law.
Winder, Ga Jefforson. Ga.
W. H. QUAttTERMAN,
Attounrv at Law,
Windor, Ga
Prompt attention given to all loga;
matters. Insurance und Real Estate
agent.
J. A. B. MAHAFFEY,
Attorney at Law,
Jefferson, Ga.
Oilman’s old ofiico.
Winder Furniture Cos.
UNDKIITAKKRS AN D—
—FUNERAL DIRECTORS
C. M. FERGUSON, M’g’r.
WINDER, GEORGIA.
i
*• J f \ .. .j£i . y* \
Lodgo No oiW, ( i* inner) Officers —N.
J. Kellv, VV. M.; J. 11 Jackson, S. W.
W. L, I)eL iPen iero, J. W.; J. H. KiL
gore, Sec’ty. Meets every 2d Friday
evening at 7 o’clock
v.v c
J. T. Strange, N. G ; C, M. Ferguson,
V. G.; J. H. Smith, Treasurer; A. D
McCarry, Secretary, Meets every Ist
ami 3d Monday nights.
RUSbELL LODGE No. 1)9.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS.
Meets every Ist aud 3d. Thursday
evening in each month. YV. H Toole,
C. C.; It T. Camp, V.C.; W. K. Lyie.
K. of R. and Al. of F,; D. H. Hntohiup,
Prelate; L. (J. Rat-sell, M of E.; A. D.
McCarry. AI. A ; J. .T. Smith, M. YV.;
O. L. Dabney, I. (} ;R. A. Black, O. G.
ROYAL ARCANUM.
Meets every fourth Monday night.
J. T. Strange, R.; G. 'J’. Arnold, V.
R.; YV. H. Quartermaii, Secretary.
(OOIiOItHD).
WINDER ENTERPRISE LODGE,
No. 4m G. U. O.ofO. F.
Meets every Ist and 3d Friday night
in each month. Dudley George, N. Gh;
G. YV. Moore V. G.; L U. Hinton,
Secretary,
A. HAMILTON.
Undertaker and Funeral
Director,
WiLd r,
EMBALMING
By a Professional Enibalmer. lionise
and attendance true. Ware rooms, cor
ner Broad & Candler sts.
DR YV. L. DkLaPERRIERE.
DpNTAL PARLORS,—
In tho J. C. DeLaPvrriere building,
over Winder Furniture Cos Call and
see mo when in need of anything in
the line of Dentistry Work guaran
teed.
Success always comes to those who
believe iu printers’ ink judiciously
used. Let us have , your advertise
rneui- _
I would as soon think of dolug bus.
lncss without clerks as without adrer*
Using.—John Manna maker,
ALL WO MEN
Should know (hat th
“OM Time” lteiuedy,
Is the best for foul* Trouble*. Correctg all
Irregularities In Komalo Organs. Should be
taken for lh*a?eol Lite and before ChlM-Blrth.
Plasters “Old Tlae" Ceiuedfca have stood the
tost for twenty years.
Made only by New Snenoer Medicine Cos.. Chat
tanooga, Tennessee.
G. W DuLaParriere, Winder, Ga
REBEL LEADER
HEADEDFORCES
Another Big Battle Takes Place
In the Philippines.
AGUINALDO LEADS THE ATTACK
Force of Insurgents Said to Have
Numbered Five Thousand.
Slaughter Was Great.
A special from Manila says: After
cutting the railroad and telegraph at
Apalit, several milea south, for the
purpose of severing connection, the
rebels attacked General MacArthur’s
lines at San Fernando at 4:30 o’clock
Friday morning. They met with an
unexpectedly warm reception, and were
repulsed with a loss of seventy five
men, thirty prisoners and many
wounded.
The rebels' forco is estimated to
have been 5,000 men. They advanced
stealthily from the jungle north of the
city aud then divided, with the evi
dent purpose of surrounding the Amer
icans.
The outposts of the lowa regiment
discovered the enemy and retired to
their lines, where the entire division
awaited iu an intrenched position.
The lowa regiment and the Kansas
regiment received the first shock of
the attack. Reserving their fire until
the enemy was within 600 yards, the
first volley of the Americans hit the
rebels, who returned the fire wildly,
tho rent of their line failing to ad
vance. The Americans, who thorough
ly enjoyed the novelty of the situation,
awaiting the attack, sallied forth and
the insurgents thereupon turned and
fled into tho jungle. Our loss was
fourteen men wounded, and the ma
jority of them are only slightly hurt.
General Funstan’s brigade of Kan
sans and General Hale’s
brigade, the Seventeenth regiment and
the lowa regiment constituted the
force engaged.
Aguinaldo is reported to have per
sonally conducted the attack aud prep
arations were made for several days to
bring forward troops from Candababa,
aud others from Dagupan were trans
ported by rail.
Along the front of the Kansas regi
ment thirty-nine dead were counted.
The first news of the Filipino advances
was reported by a telegraph operator,
who was sent to the bridge at Apalit to
ascertain the cause of a break in one
of the wires. He was compelled to
beat a hasty retreat under fire.
A Spanish officer who has been a
prisoner in the hands of the rebels,
and who was released by Aguinaldo,
has come through our lines to Manila.
He claims to have been a witness of
the assassination of General Luna.
According to his story, the rela
tions between the two Filipino leaders
had been strained to the breaking
point because of Luna’s attempts to
assume control of affairs, and the final
rupture was forced by Aguinaldo issu
ing secret orders to the provincial
governments.
Otis Sends News of th© Assault.
The following cablegram was re
ceived at Washington Friday afternoon
from General Otis:
Manila, June 16.—Anjutaut Gen
eral, Washington: Northern insur
gents concentrated large force near
Sau Fernando and early this morniug
attacked MacArthur’s troops; enemy
quickly repulsed and driven, leaving
over lifty dead on field and large num
ber wounded; enemy in retreat. Our
casualties fourteen wounded, mostly
very slight. Preparation for this at
tack in progress several days, believed
to be under personal direction of Agui
ualdo.
Two Million People In Chicago.
Chicago’s population, according to
Chief of Folice Kipley, has finally
passed the two million mark and is
now 2,088,042. The figures are a re
sult of the census taken by the police
force.
POWDER WORKS DEMOLISHED.
Four Workmen Killed and Six Building*
Are Demolished.
The United States Smokeless Powder
Company’s factory, situated on Point
San Pedro, four miles from San Rafael,
Cal., was the scene of a disastrous ex
plosion Saturday. Asa result four
employes were killed and three se
riously injured, while six buildings
were demolished by the shock and the
resultant fires.
To the sudden ignition of the pow
der contained in the grain room the
disaster is due. A second explosion
quickly followed the first, and soon
four of the mixing houses were in
•James and were quickly consumed.
PREACHER ROASTS MAYOR.
Atlanta’s Chief Executive Is Se
verely Arraigned By Pastor
Broughton.
At the Tabernacle Baptist church in
Atlanta, Sunday night the pastor,
Rev. Dr. L. G. Broughton, took his
text from Isaiah Iviii, 1: “Cry aloud
and spare not.”
The principal feature of his sermon
was an attack upon the conduct of
Mayor James G. Woodward, which
was a severe arraignment from start to
finish, and concluded by calling for
the impeachment of the mayor.
This feature of his sermon was
built arouud the following statement,
which was accompanied by applause
by the congregation of nearly two
thousand persons present:
“Yes, I am ashamed of ohr mayor.
Our mayor is a libertine. Our mayor
is a sot. These facts are all known to
the council and need not have me to
declare them. The time has come for
the council to act. There is not a
single decent man in the city, in my
judgment, who does not repudiate our
mayor and desire his impeachment.”
It was at this point the applause oc
curred. Dr. Broughton did not let
the vehemence of his arraignment sub
side at any time, referring to “a
worse and more disgraceful occurrence
of which I cannot even make mention
from my pulpit.”
Mayor Woodward, when informed of
the severity of Dr. Broughton’s ser
mon as directed at him, made the fol
lowing statement:
“You may just say for me that I re
gard Dr. Broughton’s charges as abso
lutely ridiculous. I ask the public to
suspend judgment until I can be heard.
I will speak at the proper time.”
CONGRESSMAN BLAND'S FUNERAL
Services Were Attended By Thousands 1
and Lebanon Was Overcrowded.
Congressman Richard Park Eland
was laid to rest at Lebanon, Mo., Sat
urday with befitting honors.
The town was overcrowded and
thousands of personal friends were
present to honor his memory.
The funeral services were partici
pated in by the ministers of all de
nominations which are represented in
Lebanon.
The discourse was delivered by Rev.
Mr. W. K. Collins, of the Methodist
Episcopal church, and was followed
by the ritual of the Knights of Tem
plar and Masonic fraternities. Hon.
W. J. Bryan had a seat on the stage,
but delived no eulogy owing to Mrs.
Bland’s request that ouly ministers
take part in the services.
The cortege was the longest and
most impressive ever seen in south
eastern Missouri.
Saturday night President McKinley
wired Captain Farris as follow's:
“It is with the deepest regret I hear
of Mr. Bland’s death. He was a man
of honest convictions, and a monument
to the growing nation. Express my
sympathy to Mrs. Bland and the
family.”
IMP SURPRISED THE TALENT.
Black Mare Captured the Suburban At
Sheepsliead Buy.
Saturday was a gala day at Sheeps
head Bay, N. Y., and it seemed as if
all the town saw Imp win the sixteenth
running of the great suburban handi
cap, au event worth $lO,OOO. Contra
ry to the usual custom of coming late
to the races, the people were on hand
early, and when the time came for the
big suburban the crowd was the
largest seen at Sheepshead Bay in
years, fully 25,000 being present.
Bannockburn got second money, while
Warrenton secured third place.
FASTEST BOAT AFLOAT.
Japan’s New Torpedo Boat Destroyer
Make* Thirty-One Knots.
A London dispatch says: The new
Japanese torpedo boat destroyer Ake
bono, claimed to bo the fastest ever
built, was tested Saturday by a three
hours’ run to the Nore and return.
The new boat attained a speed of 31
knots, which is a knot ahead of the
fastest destroyer in the British navy.
JOHNSON’S ISLAND SOLI).
Land Made Famous ns a Confederate Pris
on Disposed of at Auction.
A dispatch from Port Clinton, 0.,
says: Johnson’s island,Lake Erie, which
was famous as a prison for confederate
soldiers during the civil war, has just
been sold at auction for $45,000,
The island lies in Sandusky bay, a
few miles from the city of that name.
Philter* CUBAN OIL cures
1 lillf Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Rheu
matism and Sores. Price, 25 cents.
(4. W. DeLaPerriere, Winder, Ga
IRON ADVANCES IN PRICE.
Product of Southern Foundries Goes Bp
Fifty Cents a Ton.
A Chattanooga dispatch says: Price
of southern foundry iron has been ad
vanced another 50 cents on the ton.
The prfee here now is $14.50, and in
the Birmingham district $13.75 and
$14.00 per ton. The latest advance
will probably be followed by an ad
vance of 24 cents per ton in the price
of coal mining in the furnace district
of Alabama, affecting 8,000 miners.
Sometimes when you have
lame back and feel poorly,
you stop working for the day.
But all you do is take the rest
and go right to work again when
the symptoms quiet down. That
is no way to head off a terrible
disease that is fastening its grip
upon you. Stop the first leak or
you lose the ship.
Ddßllcteans
ImlfiiMfllni
quickly cures those first irregu
larities and thus repels Bright’3
Disease, Diabetes, Rheumatism,
Jaundice and Female Troubles.
Druggists have it, $i .oo a bottle.
THE DR.J.H.MCLEAN MEDICINE CO.
BT. LOUIS, MO.
CUBAN RELIEF cn
a lltHl&l A c Neuralgia and Toothae—
I IWIIIVI Vj a g vo minutes. Soar Stomach
and Summer Complaints. Price. 2 C
G. W. DeLaPerriere, Winder, Ga.
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 ail 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 used.” —Rob’t L Taylor^
FEMALE
FRIEND
ij HI 111 If# PC® MAKES YOUN ma V TURLY
1 BUILDS UP RUN DOWN
\ MEN AND WOfIEN.
\
Manufactured only by MARBLE CITY DRUG CO., Knoxville, Tenn.
For* Sale by "Winder T)ra£ Oo
Job Printings—^
IS NEXT TO NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING,
TBE BEST ADVERTISEMENT IN THE WORD-
We have been very Fortunate in securing the services of one o!
the best and most experienced printers IN THE STATk,
and are now able to execute Job Printing of every description
in all the leading Styles.
The class of work turned out by us is acknowl 8
edged to be the FINEST and the PRICES the
LOWEST of any printers anywhere.
A TRIAL ORDER MILL CONVINCE YOU. LET IT COME.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. POOR YVOBK Is UNKNOWN TO US.
BEST QUALITY PAPER. ’ -
Every nan
HIS OWN DOCTOR.
By J. -Hamilton Ayers, M. TANARUS).
A 600-page Illustrated Book, containing valuable information^
0 taining to diseases of the human system, showing how to trea. 0 |
0 cure with simplest of medicines. The book contains ana
# courtship and marriage; rearing and management of children, - B
j valuable prescriptions, recipes, etc., with a full complement of
0 materia medica that everyone should know. ,jj
i This most indispensable adjunct to every well regulated hou*-
0 will be mailed, postpaid, to any address on receipt of price, ■
$ CENTS.
f Address,
Atlanta Publishing House*
116-118 LOYD STREET, ATLANTA, GA.
Georgia Hu
-seu I
connections!
Passenger- and Frei J
write to either of the undersign I
You will receive prompt rep ,l|
reliable information. ' •
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T. P. A. q p J
AUGUSTA. GA., I
3. W. Wilkes, IJ. K. flichoj
F. AP. A. g. A. J
Atlanta. Atheoi, §
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8. A. c. F. aI
MACON, GA. I
M. R. Hudeon, F. W. CcjJ
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MAllodge villa,' AttgmJ