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111 Ml and Southwest.
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D- "ToITtHBO u N D.
■ No. 403. No. 41.
■ i- r,mt r, K. *ll OOain *9 00pra
B. Se* I°j* • r 6 00pm 4 30am
■ washing oll - „ r 9 00pm 9 05am
■■- ■,.-s'-rE-.T4spdr-*aoim
■ Portsmouth, b. A. tl l i pm n 43am
B VfeJJon, 12 sg am i 85pm
m Henderson, 2 22am 336 pm
B- Bakigh 4 27am 6 03pm
B. Southern Pine.. i 4a m ? 00
H Hamlet,
*JOSpg.
■ * C 53am *9 12pm
“ 00am_*1025pm
B-r, “ *8 13am *lO 55pm
lO 45am 1 12am
■ Greenwood, 124 pm 348 am
B' •]!, 1 56pm 4 28am
Bit,' 350 pm 6 15am
Wr" nortlTbound.
m No. 403. No. 38.
B Atlanta, S. A. L. * 100 pm *8 50pm
B'wmder 240 Pm 1040 pm
B Athens 303 pm 1105 Pm
B'rZnwood 6 40pm 146 am
B'Hct 7 53 P m 4 08am
■.Monroe', 9 30pm 5 45am
L- * 8 2 °P m * 5 00am ~
“ *ll 10pm *7 43am
* *l2 05pm
B'SoutLrn Pines,S.A.L.*l2 02am *9 00am
■ Raleigh “ 2 03am 1113 am
■ Henderson, 326 am 12 45pm
B' Weldon, 4 55am 2 50pm
B'.Portsmouth, 7 25am 5 20pm
■~Riehmon(l. A. 0. L.. *8 15am *7 20pm
■[ Washington, Penn. 11. B. 12 31pm 1120 pm
■ Sew York, 6 23pm 6 53am
■Daily. + Daily except Sunday.
■v 403 and 402.—“ The Atlanta Special,”
■id Vestibuled Train of Pullman Sleepers
ftd Coaches between Washington anil At
■ta.also Pullman Sleepers between Ports-,
■cth and Charlotte. N. C.
ftto-. 41 anti 33.—“ The S. A. L. Express,"
■id Train,Coaches and Pullman sleepers
■ween Portsmouth and Atlanta.
Hgotli train* make immediate connection
■ Atlanta lor Montgomery. Mobile, New Or
■ns Tesa*, California, Mexico, Chatta-
Hoga. Na.'tiwlle. Memphis, Macon, Florida.
ft-.rTicket*. Sleepers, etc., apply to
■ M. BROWN, G. A. P. D.,
■ W. B. CLEMENTS, T. P. A..
■ E. J. WALKER, O. T. A.,
■ 7 Pryor Ptroet, Atlanta, Ga.
H.LDAVIS," Agent, Winder, Ga.
ft. ST. JOHN, Vice President and Gen. Mgr.
K. McBEE, Gen’l. Superintendent..
Bi. W. 11. GLOVER, Trr.fflc Manager.
Hi. S. ALLEN, Gen’l. Pans. Agent.
■ fieneml ((dice*. Portin on t li. Tn.
I Job #
[Printing
Jest work at the most
I reasonable prices*
1 ■ smc,
Greatest Remedy
I In the World For
turns,
fcalds,
spasmodic Croup,
Erysipelas,
B2isorj Oak
I -and-T
2!l So res.
Dealer doe.
taW;; 1 2 5 ceuta i„ P. 0
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*^ S - W. H. BUSH,
>. Winder, Ga.
n, °ng the Ozarks.”
and f' g Apples, is an
Soug, D * erestin g book, with
,tti ins to fr • iI^ SSoar i scenery. It
be lt o f n A' raiSin? in that £ reat
** of he oir> meriCa ’ the ,outhern
?royy tr . * 9 1* of interest to
*H*ker ini, t 0 everjr fa rmer and
**££? Im* " tm “ and *
re€ - Address,
J- E. Lockwood,
Kansas City,’Mo.
HARRASSED
BY FILIPINOS
Insurgents Shoot Flaming Ar*
rows Into Garrisoned Towns.
ONE TOWN PARTIALLY BURNED
Guerrilla Warfare Continues and
Frequent Attempts at Am
bush Are Made.
A Manila special says: Of late the
insurgents in Albay province, Luzon,
have adopted harrassing tactics against
towns which the Americans have gar
risoned. They camp in the hills and
mountains and constantly fire upon the
American outposts. When the troops
sally against them they scatter, re
turning when the Americans retire.
They shoot burning arrows, and
have thus burned a large part of the
town of Albay. Indeed, most of the
larger towns in the province are prac
tically deserted, except by the garri
sons. Scarcely any of the inhabitants
return to their homes. They are camp
ing in the interior, and it is supposed
armed insurgents prevent them going
back.' It is reported that there is much
suffering among them owing to lack
of food. Asa result of these condi
tions the hemp business in that sec
tion is seriously hindered and ships
going for cargoes are compelled to
take gangs of coolies to do their land
ing. Hemp held in the interior is
quite inaccessible.
General Bell will take two regiments
and a battery through the provinces
of North Camariues and South Camar
ines, going there on transports. Many
insurgents retreated to that part ol
the island from Cavite and Batangas
provinces.
Another expedition will soon atari
to garrison towns along the north coast
of the island of Mindanao.
Guerrilla warfare continues south ol
Manila. Two attempts have been made
to ambush the Americans. Colonel
Schwan, while returning to Manila
with his staff and an escort of 10C
from Batanges, was attacked by th<
insurgents. The latter were dis
persed, but the Americans had seven
men wounded.
Lieutenant Colonel Beacom, witl
six companies of the Forty-second in
fantry, had a two hours’ fight with
General Pio del Pilar’s command,
which attempted to ambush the Amer
icans along the trail through Morong
province near the lake. Here also
the insurgents were dispersed, but the
Americans had several wounded,
among them a captain.
General Bell is operating southward
through Zambales province with 1
small force.
Another expedition is proceeding
northward fromSubig. It is reported
that the insurgent general, Alejandro,
has recovered from his wound anc
has assembled a large force in thai
district.
The bubonic plague continues. Eight
cases were reported last week among
the natives and Chinese. There is nc
excitement, however, and business and
social life in Manila are undisturbed.
Smallpox is prevalent among th<
natives along the railroad, and in th
towns on the northern coast. Twc
officers of the Thirty-sixth infantry
have died of the disease and anotke*
officer aud several soldiers have been
stricken.
LEGAL BARRIER REMOVED.
Seaboard Air Line Can Now Proceed With
Consolidation.
What is claimed to be the last legal
barrier to the consolidation of the va
rious lines composing the Seaboard
Air Line system was removed Satur
day by Judge Waddill, sitting in the
United States circuit court at Rich
mond when he delivered his opinion
refusing Ryan’s application for in
junction.
The state senate committee at Rich
mond has, by a vote of 10 to 20, de
cided to report favorably the bill to
incorporate the proposed new line
from Richmond to W ashington.
OVER A MILLION LIABILITIES.
■ 11 •
Fnmonl New York Stock Broker File*
Petition In Bankruptcy.
A New York dispatch says: Anthony
W. Dimock, twenty-five years ago a
famous stock operator, head of the
firm of A. W. Dimock & Cos., bankers
aud brokers, Wall street, filed a peti
tion in bankruptcy Saturday. His
liabilities are set down at $1,292,735;
his assets $l5O.
Russia Admits Coal Free.
On the proposal of M. DeWitte, the
minister of finance, the czar of Rus
sia has consented to the importatioi
of coal, exclusively for the use of the
Russian railways free of duty until
September 1, next.
A VIGOROUS PLATFORM
Adopted By the Anti-Trust League
At Conference held In
Chicago.
After a heated debate Thursday
night the resolution committee of the
anti-trust conference, in session at
Chicago, decided to report in favor of
government ownership of railroads and
for their seizure on payment of actual
value without payment for “watered
stock or other fictitious values.” The
committee also unanimously favored
direct popular legislation as a moans
of obtaining the result.
President Lockwood, of the anti
trust league, said that he regretted
that William J. Bryan’s name was
mentioned in the discussions and de
clared it was his intention to keep
polftics out of the conference.
The platform unanimously adopted
by the committee declares for govern
ment ownership of all public utilities
and natural monopolies, government
money, the referendum and direct leg
islation and the withdrawal of all pro
tective tariffs from all articles con
trolled by a trust. Among other things,
after urging the organization to de
prive trusts of their power, it says:
We make no assault upon business
combination, for diminishing produc
tive cost or augmenting productive effi
ciency. What wo do ask is combina
tions for coercing producers and les
sening production. It is Bucli combi
nations that constitute the trust evil
and they we would abolish, root aud
branch.
When oppressive trusts are exam
ined they are found to be combina
tions not for augmenting wealth, but
for hampering its production; not for
making things plentiful and cheap,
but for making them scarce and dear.
Their strength lies in a more intense
concentration of monopoly privileges.
The platform particularly attacks
the Standard Oil trust to which it says
monopoly engendering laws have com
mitted the regulation of the peoples’
needs and rights in one department of
industry. “Their needs aud rights in
another have been by similar laws
committed to the beef trust. ” A num
ber of set speeches were heard at the
morning and afternoon sessions of the
conference.
The night session was in the form of
a mass meeting, w hich was held in the
Auditorium and brought out some of
the strongest speakers among the del
egates, including John P. Altgeld, F.
S. Monnett, Samuel M. Jones, John
S. Crosby, George Fred Williams and
Tom L. Johnson,
Resolutions introduced by Judge
Fleming, of Kentucky, were adopted
by a rising vote, strongly condemning
the currency bill before congress.
A committee to prepare a memorial
to the United States senate against the
bill was provided for and the people ol
the country urged to gather at court
houses, school houses and other pub
lic plaeas to protest against the meas
ure.
SOUTHERN PROGRESS.
U*t of New Industries Established Dar
ing the Past Week.
Among the new industries reported
the past week, the more important are
an acetylene gas company and an au
tomobile manufactory in Virginia;
brick works in Tennessee; bridge works
in Alabama; a canning factory in North
Carolina; coal mines in Arkansas and
West Virginia; a cotton gin manufac
tory in Texas; cotton mills in Arkan
sas, Georgia, Kentucky, North Caro
lina, South Carolina, Tennessee; a
Cotton seed oil mill in North Carolina;
two electric light plants in Texas; an
electrical supply company in Tennes
see; an electric switching device’manu
factory in Kentucky; engine works in
Virginia; flouring mills in Georgia and
South Carolina; foundry and machine
shop in Texas; two furniture factories
in North Carolina; ice factories in
Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee,
Texas; and irrigation company in
Texas; lumber mills in Florida, Geor
gia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas;
Virginia; a natural gas aud oil com
pany in West Virginia; phosphate
mines in Tennessee; a planing mill in
Mississippi; a shipbuilding and dry
dock company in Virginia; stave fac
tory in Georgia and Tennessee; tele
phone companies in North Carolina
and Tennessee; a veneering factory in
Alabama; zinc mines in Virginia.—
Tradesman (Chattanooga, Tenn).
English Agents Killed.
Advices from Rangoon. British Bur
mah, state that British Commissioners
Kiddle and Sutherland, who had been
engaged in the demarkation of the
Burmo-Chinese boundary, have been
murdered in the Monghem district.
Consul Lifton was wounded, but es
caped.
Railroad Bridge Damaged.
Three spans of the Tallassee and
Montgomery railroad bridge, across
the Alabama river, were washed away
Tuesday night. The river was in a
frightfully swollen condition by the
heavy rains aud considerable damage
is the result.
MINDEIBIIIG CIIPAID,
Winder, Georgia.
Paid In Capital $25,000.00.
THOS. A. MAYNARD, President.
L. F. SELL, ) _ . . .
A. A. CAMP, \ Vice-Presidents.
W. H. TOOLE, Cashier.
DIRECTORS^
T. A. Maynard, ; + i R. J. Pentecost,
L. F. Sell, p A. M. Flanigan,
A. A. Camp, !♦! W. H. Braselton,
W. H. Toole, p J. I. J. Bell.
We Discount Notes.
We loan money on good collateral or personal
security.
We receive Deposits subject to check.
We buy and sell New York Exchange.
We pay taxes in Jackson County.
We are a Home Institution.
We want your business--and will appreciate it.
PAINT! PAINT!!
Do you want to Paintyour dwelling?
If so we have added to our stock of Hardware
PARIAN PAINTS, OILS ETC.
PARIAN PAINT contains no lead and hence is guaranteed not
to chalk, oraok, rab off, peel nor blister. It will adhere to wood, Tin,
Iron, Galvanized Iron, Stone or Tile.
PARIAN PAINTS dry hard with an enamel-like glois that is
permanent and can be washed or scrubbed.
PARIAN PAINTS will cover more surfaoe and outlast all oth
er paints and will not come off except by wear, It is guaranteed to
hold its original oolor,
Call at our store and get a Catalottge explaining
all about PARIAN PAINT.
We now have onr store packed full of NEW GOODS at OLD
PRICES and will he glad to wait on our many friends aud customers.
WE SELL THE CELEBRATED
McSHERRY GRAIN DRILL,
The only drill that will sow oats successfully.
We are also prepared to sell all kind* of HARROWS, including
CLARK’S TORRENT and VARIOUS MAKES of TURNING PLOWS,
Infact anything found in a first class HARDWARE STORE’
Call and see us at the same old stand,
STATE ST., HARMONY GROVE, GEORGIA.
Benton-Adair H’dw. Cos.
WINDER DRUG CO.,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
Druggist,
WINDER, GA.
Fresh Stock of Drugs always on hand.
PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS
at Prices to Suit the Times.
Headquarters for all the leading
Brands of Cigars and Tobaccos.
When in the city come and see us.
WINDER DRUG CO.,
Winder, = Georgia.
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Fancy and Plain 1 Prim