Newspaper Page Text
ipsl-
XO ALL POINT3
ill, South SoFitMl_
g >ov. 5, isos).
Southbound.
No. 403. No. 41.
rSftT^ ia ’“SS’ , 4SK
g-ffSLiij. 'a. c. 1.. opg_ _
rnCrtsmoutb, 8. A. L- *8 45pm *9 20fira|
l r 'iS 11 10pm 11 43,ui*
Ai "TZ~ nn 12 56am 1 35pnJ
lr.H e £ 0n - 2 22am 8 30pm
f'SSa Pines, 4 27am 600 pm
.Tyrilmiagton, 3. A.L * 305piv
TTHariotte, “ *8 00am*lQ25~pm
u Greenwood, 10 45am 1 12am
f. Athens, 1 24pm 348 am
, winder 1 56pm 4 28am
Santa,’ _ 350 pm 6 15am
" NORTHBOUND
No. 402. No. S3.
1* Atlanta, S. A. L. *loopm *8 50pm
ti Winder, 240 pm 1040 pm
if' Athens, 8 08pm 1105 pm
J Greenwood, 6 40pm 146 am
ir Chester, 7 53pm 4 OSam
Monroe, 9 30pm 5 45atn
frTCharlotte, S. A. L,, * 8 20pm *5 00am
painlet, “ *H 10 P m * 7
k Southern Pines,S.A.L. *l2 02am *9 00am
Ar Raleigh, “ 2 03am 1113 am
u . Henderson, 326 am 12 45pm
Ar. Weldon, 4 55am 2 oOpnl
Ar. Portsmouth, 7 25am 5 20pidi
Ar. Richmond, A, C. L., *8 15am *7 20pm
Ar. Washington,Penn.R.R. 12 31pm 1120 pm
Ar. New York, 6 23pm 6 53am
•Daily. ♦ Daily except Sunday.
Nos, 403 and 402.—“ The Atlanta Special,”
fioli-,1 Vestibuled Train of Pullman Sleepers
ai Coaches between Washington and At
iicta, also Pullman Sleepers between Porta-
Eocthand Charlotte, N. C.
No-. 41 and 38.—“ The S. A. L. Express,”
fc'ji Train, Coaches and Pullman sleepers
between Portsmouth and Atlanta.
Both trains make immediate connection
4 t Atlanta tor Montgomery, Mobile, New Or
leaa-, Texas. California, Mex'CO, Chatta
nooga, Nashville, Memphis, Macon, Florida.
F rTickets. Sleeners, tc., apply to
JOS. M. BROWN, G. A. P. D.,
W. 13. CLEMENTS, T. P. A.,
E. J. WALKER, C.T. A.,
7 T’ryor Street, Atlanta. Ga.
S.LDAVIS, Agent, Winder, Ga.
E. ST. JOHN, Vice President and Gen. Mgr.
V. K. McBEE, Gen’l. Superintendent..
H. W. B. GLOVER, Traffic Manager.
L. S. ALLEN. Gen’l. Pass. Agent.
(ieneral Office*, Portsmouth, Vo.
am sim
The Greatest Remedy
in the World For
Burns,
Scalds,
Spasmodic Croup,
ars-a sawKmKaEOaOHMUHBn>nnBBkMJCW
Erysipelas,
Chilblains,
Poison Oak
-“and--
Old Sores.
E yonr Druggist or local Dealer does
>-t seep j r> 6ea d 25 cents in P. O
* or silver for a bottle to
MRS. W. H. BUSH,
Winder, Ga,
‘ Trade Marks
Designs
r A *TW ' Copyrights Ac.
IWckir SIS?*? 1 ® a B ketch and description may
i aentlnS s ?? rtai !} onr opinion free whether an
'* Probably patentable. Comraunlca
entfril otA)!^onfl<lent‘al. 0t A ) !^ onfl<len t‘al. Handbook on Patents
Patent V , 1 agency for securing patents.
*W^^ kei ?.^ Erou ? h Munn & Cos. receive
aT T tlce ' w >thout charge. In the
.Scientific American.
t!aMni°J2 e, Y Illustrated weekly. largest dr-
Tev ' /*'„* any sclentlflc journal. Terms. t3 a
iUllml^^? 0 Ji ttl8 • t l * Sold by all newsdealers.
ffl St|Co. 3e,B ™*">- New York
ach Office. 625 F St, Washington. D. C.
Prosperity prom Ist s to smile be*
tl) ; ue( ! , y pou you this year. You’ll
,,liss the small sum neeessary for
•' 4 o become a subscriber to this
paper.
PROHIBITION PARTY
Holds Forth la National Conven
tion In the City of Chicago,
PLATFORM MADE OF A SINGLE ISSUE
i
Campaign Will Be Waged With the Sole i
and Determined Purpose of Squelch
ing the Liquor Trnlllc.
The prohibition party will make its
national campaign this year upon a
platform of a single issue—the liquor
traffic—all other issues being sub-or
dinated to this one question.
The national convention of the pro
hibitionists met in Chicago Wednesday
and in three sessions, morning, after
noon and evening, cleared up all bus
iness except the nominations for pres
ident and vice president, which went
over for Thursday morning. The
convention in point of numbers was
considered ono of the greatest ever
held by the advocates of cold water.
Just privious to the fall of the gavel
the delegates from New England states
marched into the hall in a body, each
carryiug a canteen stamped with the
letters U. S. inverted aud bearing the
legend “Anti-Canteen.” They were
liberally applauded. After the con
vention was called to order Chairman
Stewart proceeded to deliver a formal
address.
The report of the committee on per- ■
manent organization and order of busi
ness recommended Samuel Dickie, of
Michigan, for permanent chairmau
and Colonel R. S. Cheves, of Tennes
see, for permanent secretary. It was
adopted. The platform says in part:
“We declare there is no principle
now advocated by any other party
which could be made a fact in govern
ment with such beneficent, moral and
material results as the principle of pro
hibition, applied to the beverage li
quor traffic, that the national interest
could not be promoted in any other
way so surely and widely as by its as
sertion, through a national policy and
the co-operation therein of every state,
forbidding the manufacture, sale, ex
portation, importation aud transporta
tion of intoxicating liquors for bever
age purposes; that we stand for this as
the only principle proposed by any
party anywhere for the settlement of a
question" greater and graver than any
other before the American people and
involving more profoundly than any
other their future, and financial welfare
and all the patriotic citizenship of this
country agreed upon this principle,
however much disagreement there
may be to minor considerations aud
issues, should stand together at the
ballot box from this time forward un
til prohibition is an established fact in
the United States with a party in
power to euforce it and to ensure its
moral and material benefits.
“We submit that the Democratic and
Republican parties are alike insincere
in their assumed policy to trusts and
monopolies. They dare not and do
not attack the most dangerous of them
all, the liquor power. So long as the
saloon debauches the citizen and
breeds the purchasable voter, money
will continue to buy its way to power.
Break down this traffic, elevate man
hood aud a sober citizenship will find
a way to control dangerous combina
tions of capital.”
The platform was received witn the
wildest enthusiasm. Every sentence
in condemnation of President McKin
ley was greated with shouts of approv
al and cries of “hit him again,” the
delegates standing on their chairs and
yelling themselves hoarse.
“I have another resolution com
mended by the committee on resolu
tions,” said Professor Hopkins, the
chairman. He then read the following:
“Resolved, That it is the sense of
this convention that the right of ballot
shall not be denied any citizen on ac
count of sex.”
After considerable discussion was had
a rising vote was called for, and the
platform and additional resolution fa
voring woman suffrage was adopted
bv a practically unanimous vote, amid
a "tempest of cheers. Some delegate
started “Blessed Be the Tie That
Binds,” and the whole assemblage
joined in a thunderous song of praise,
even the throngs in the gallery taking
up the old hymn.
The convention then adjoorned un
til 9:30 o'clock Thursday morning.
BOERS STILL IN EVIDENCE.
Their Renewed Activity Give* Briton*
Plenty of Work,
Telegrams reaching London from
South Africa indicate that the renewed
Boer activity increases in proportion
with Lord Roberts’ acquiescence, so
the completion of the commander in
chief’s enveloping movement supposed
to be in progress is anxiously awaited.
The latest news supports the reports
that Boers succeeded in piercing Gen
eral Rnndle’a lines and penetrated
southward.
MINISTERS ARE SAFE
Foreign Representatives Were
Protected By Government.
ARE WITH THE RELIEF EXPEDITION
W aslilngton Officials Are Greatly Relieved.
Some Details of the Fighting lie
fore City of Tien Tsin.
The following cablegram was re
ceived at the navy department late
Wednesday afternoon:
“Che Foo, June 27. —Secretary
of Navy,Washington: Pekin force
and ministers reported with Pekin
relief expedition intrenched eight
miles from Tien Tsin.
“Ivempff.”
The developments of the day re
specting China were important and
interesting. The Chinese minister’s
report of the departure of the foreign
ministers and their guards from Pekin
greatly relieved the officials at Wash
ington, who took it as the first tangible
evidence that the imperial Chinese
government had a full realization of
the enormity of permitting the minis
ters coming to personal harm and of
doing all in their power to observe the
amenities of international exchange.
At the state department it is said
that if it shall be explained that the
imperial government did this, not with
a purpose of rupturing diplomatic re
lations, but simply to insure the
safety of the ministers, which they
were unable to guarantee as long as
th f remained in Pekin, there is still
ground for an amicable understand
ing.
The keenest interest is shown by the
officials to learn the conditions under
which the ministers left Pekin. Min
ister Wu’s dispatch was ominously
silent on that point, and though the
minister himself maintains almost ob
stinately his confidence in the non
existence of a state of war, it is gen
erally admitted that it will be difficult
to accept his conclusion if it shall
transpire that the Pekin government
itself has sent the ministers away with
their passports or, what may come to
the same thing, with a guard as safe
conduct.
Notice has come to the government
that the cable companies have again
re-opened communication telegraphi
cally with Taku and Che Foo. This
arrangement has been made by means
of the Russian telegraphic system con
necting with the Siberian railway sys
tem. A European agent has managed
to-re-open the lines, though the means
of communication between Che Foo
and Taku and Tien Tsin are tortuous
and probably precarious.
NEWS FROM LONDON.
A special dispatch received in Lon
don Wednesday from Chee Foo was as
follows:
“The fight of the allied forces
against the combined boxers and Chi
nese soldiers barring the road to Tien
Tsin opened at daybreak. One hun
dred and fifty Americans -were among
the 2,000 international troops. The
Chinese soon broke under heavy shell
ing and then the arsenal was attacked
and the guns were gradually silenced.
The fight was practically over at noon.
“The keen friendly rivalry for the
honor of first entering the city result
ed in the Auieiicans and British going
in neck aud neck, with the others
close up.”
The composite brigade of 2,300 men
who raised the investment at Tien
Tsin and pushed on to help Admiral
Seymour, has relieved him.
SULZER COES TO LINCOLN.
t
Party of New Yorkers Confer With Bryan
Regarding Vice Presidency.
A special from Kansas City says:
Congressman William Sulzer, who is
being boomed for vice president on
the Democratic ticket, and Richard
Croker and ex-Seuator Murphy, of
New York, will have a conference at
Lincoln, Neb., with W. J. Bryan be
fore attending the convention.
Sterling Price, of Texas, who has
opened headquarters for Mr. Sulzer,
received a telegram Wednesday from
that gentleman saying he had left New
York for Lincoln. Another telegram
stated that Messrs. Croker and Mur
phy would be in Lincoln on Iriday
night.
Rosing To Nominate Towne.
L. A. Rosing, chairman of the Min
nesota Democratic state committee
and delegate at large to the conven
tion at Kansas City, will make thjt
speech placing the name of Charles A.
Towne before the convention as a can
didate for vice president.
Two Instantly Killed.
By explosion of a boiler to a thresh
ing machine at Cross Hill, S. C.,
Wednesday, William P. Fuller, a
young graduate of Clemson college,
and Marshal Owens, were instantly
killed. Two others were seriously
hurt.
mb* bmkic cipae
Winder, Georgia.
Paid In Capital $25,000.00.
THOS. A. MAYNARD, President.
L. F. SELL, } -r, .. .
A. A. CAMP, ( Vice-Presidents.
W. H. TOOLE, Cashier.
T. A. Maynard, !♦! R. J. Pentecost,
L. F. Sell, 111 A. M. Flanigan,
A. A. Camp, !♦! W. H. Braselton,
W. H. Toole, jJi 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 ohalk, orack, rub 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 surface aud outlast all oth
er paints and will not come off except by wear. It is guaranteed to
hold its original color,
Call at our store and get a Catalouge explaining
an about PARIAN PAINT.
We now have our store packed full of NEW GOODS at OLD
PRICES and will be glad to wait on our many friends aud customers.
WE SELL THE CELEBRATED
McSHEIIRY GRAIN DRILL,
r
The only drill that will sow oats successfully.
We are also prepared to sell all kinds of HARROWS, inoluding
CLARK’S TORRENT and VARIOUS MAKES of TURNING PLOWS,
Infact anything found in a flrstclass HARDWARE STORE’
Call aud 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 ug.
WINDER DRUG CO.,
Winder. - Georgia.
ISi iii Plain 1 Prill,