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RHEUMATISM and CATARRH CURED
BY
Johnston’s
Sarsaparilla
QUART BOTTLES.
IN THE SHADOvToF DEATH.
A Whole Family Cared.
Mrs. C. H. Kingsbury, who keep* a
millinery and fancy poods store at SL
Louis. Gratiot Cos., Mich., and who is
well known throughout the country,
Bays:
“ I was badly troubled with rheuma
tism, catarrh and neuralgia. I had
liver complaint and was very bilious. I
was iu a bad condition; every day I be
gan to fear that I should never be a
well woman; that I should have to
settle down into a chronic invalid, and
live in the shadow of death. I had
JOHNSTON’S SARSAPARILLA rec
ommended to me. I TOOK FOUR
BOTTLES AND IT CURED ME, and
cured my family both. lam very glad
that I heard of it. I would cheerfully
recommend it to every one. I have
taken manv other kinus of medicine.
I prefer JOHNSTON’S to all of them.”
, MICHIGAN OKI'S CO., Detroit, Mich.
G. >V. BeLaPerriere, Winder, Ga.
IS, SUS SPECIFIC,
The Greatest Remedy
In the World For
Burns,
Scalds,
Spasmodic Croup,
Erysipelas,
Chilblains,
Poison Oak
--and--
Old Sores.
If year Druggist or local Dealer doej
tot keep it, send 25 cenla in P. O
Stamps or silver for a bottle to
MRS. W. H. BUSH,
Winder, Ga.
AIL! ■ -1 .. ™— l. ■
Gainesville, Jefferson
& Southern Railroad.
Eastetn Standard Time.
Taking effect 0:50 A. M., Sept. 9, 1599.
SOUTH BOUND.
Na 81 No. 84.
Lv. Gainesville 710a .m. 10 55 am.
Lv. Belmont 740a. m. 11 85 a. in.
“ Hoechtou 810a. m. 12 10 p. m.
•' Winner 845a. m. 800 p. in.
*• Monroe 935a. m 850 p. m.
Ar Social Circle 10 15 o. m. 435 p. m
No. 81
Lv. Gainesville 12 15 p. n,:
Lv. Belmont 4 00 p. ra
Lv. Hoschton 4 85 p. m
Lv, Winder 5 15 p. in.
Lv. Monroe 6 25 p. in.
Ar. Social Circle 7 10 p. m.
NORTH BOUND.
No 83. Na 81.
Lv. Social Circle 12 00 a. m. 650 p. m.
“ Monroe 12 40 a a 625 p. a.
'• Wiuder 250 p.m. 715 p. m.
“ Hoschton 822 p. m. 758 p. m.
“ Belmont 400 p. m. 830 p. m.
Ar. Gainesville 435 p. m. 9Oop. m.
Na 81
Lv. Social Circle 7 80 a. m.
Lv. Monroe g 10 a. m.
Lv. Winder 9 20 a m
Lv. Hcschton 10 40 a. m
Lv. Belmont 11 15 a . m.
Ar. Gainesville 11 45 a. m,
Jefferson Branch.
NORTH BOUND.
. , „ No. 87. No 89.
Lv. Jefferson 6bOa m. 805 p. m.
Lv. Pendergrass 715a.m. 830 p.m.
Ar. Belmont 740 a.ro. 400 p.tr.
SOUTH BOUND.
Na 88 Na 90
Lv. Behnont 835 p. m. 12 50 a m
Lv. Pendergras* 850 p. . 115 a us.
Ar. Jefferson 915 p. in. 140 am,
8 C. DUNLAP. Receiver.
Prosperity promises to smile be-
upon you this year. You’ll
no' miss the small sum necessary for
you to become a fcubscriber to this
paper.
SIXTY WERE KILLED
Fourth of July Excursionists Meet
Death 0a Trolley Car.
HLRLED DOWN AN EMBANKMENT
Bodies of Victim*, Men, Women and Chil
dren, Torn and Crushed In a Hor
rible Manner.
Nearly a hundred people, passen
gers on a car bound for Tocoma,
Washington, were plunged down a
gulch at Twenty-sixth and C streets at
8 a. m. Wednesday.
Those who were standing on the
platform dropped off, only to be
bruised and wounded by the heavy
body of the coach, while others inside
were killed and maimed before they
knew what had happened.
The car jumped the track and was
smashed to kindling wood in the bot
tom of the chasm, over a hundred feet
below. The dead will number nearly
three score, for there are many of the
injnred who will never recover and
who are expected to die at any mo
ment, aid there are at least sixty of
the passengers of the car now in the
various hospitals and under the care of
their own physicians.
Residents of the nearby towns
Edison, Lakeview, Parkland, Lake
Park and other places—were coming
to Tacoma to spend the Fourth. Their
journey was nearly at an end when
they met death in a horrible manner.
Crushed, maimed and mangled, the
unfortunates were dragged from be
neath the wreck of the car and laid on
the grass.
It was a spectacle of carnage such
as is scarcely ever observed, even in
war, for carwheels and timbers make
more horrible wounds than bullet and
shell. The agonizing cries of the
wounded and the dying as they lay on
the sides of the gulch and on the bot
tom or were held down under heavy
timbers that bad once formed a part of
the wrecked car, could be heard for
blocks away.
ALARMING DEATH LIST
Is Result of Hoboken Conflagra
tion-Many Tug Captains
Charged With Murder.
A New York special says: The
frightful figures of fire caused at Ho
boken are running far in excess of
what at first was supposed to be the
list.
The Herald estimates the number
of lives lost at 279.
The World’s estimate is 326.
The Journal puts the figures at 396.
The property damaged will probably
exceed 310,000,000.
The search for bodies persons who
perished in the fire has been kept up
unceasiugly. Up to the stoppage of
work Monday night, sixty-seven bodies
had been recovered.
A sensation was created Tuesday by
an announcement from Mayor Fagan,
of Hoboken, that he will prosecute all
leading boat companies against whom
charges of refusing to save lives can
be substantiated.
An effort is to be made, also, to have
the licenses of offending captains re
voked.
SMITH FIREI) FATAL SHOT.
Alleged Murderer of W. B. Moore Cap
tured at Pensacola, Fla.
Will Smith, a notorious negro with
several aliases, was arrested in Pensa
cola, Fla., Monday night on the charge
of killing W. B. Moore, of Grovetown,
Ga., on May 19th, at Molina, Fla.
Seven negroes have now been arrested
iu connection with the killing, but
Smith is th > one who fired the fatal
shot from a winchester, w hich struck
young Moore iu the neck, instantly
killing him.
SOAKS MAY PROVE ALBL
Mon Arrested In Virginia an a Gobel Mur
der Suspect Claim* Innocenca.
Robert Noaks, arrested at Big Stone
Gap, Va., as a Goebel murderer sus
pect has given out a statement wherein
he says that he left Frankfort January
25th, and had not been in the state of
Kentucky again until April 14th, and
that he could prove au albi when
placed on trial.
General Rot ha Under Heavy Rond.
Advices from Cape Town state that
Commandant Philip Botha, who was
captured by the British May 17th, has
been released under heavy bail. He
is to reside in Aliwalnorth until con
clusion of preliminary examination.
Keiupff Was Mistaken.
Admiral Kempff has acknowledged
the error he bad made reporting the
presence of the foreign ministers with
Admiral Seymour’s column eight miles
out from Pekin. His cablegram Fri
day morning admits that there is no
knowledge of their whereabouts,
GEORGIA NEWS ITEMS
Brief Summary of Interesting
Happenings Culled at Random.
After the Doctors.
Accompanying the presentments of
the grand >ury made to Jndge Lumpkin
in the Fulton county superior court
was a report of the committee on med
ical colleges and physicians, which is
highly sensational in its nature. The
report submitted by the committee, of
which George E. Johnson was the
chairman, was adopted by the grand
jury.
Fifty persons are alleged to be
practicing medicine without being
properly registered. Five who are
alleged to have been indicted are said
to be still practicing. Ten physicians
who are registered are alleged to be
improperly registered.
• * *
Co-Reeelver Appointed.
In the United States court at Atlan
ta Wellborn Hill was named by Judge
W. T. Newman as co-receiver for the
bankrupt firm of Wellhouse & Sens.
The appointment was made by con
sent of all parties and with the under
standing that Albert Steiner, who was
originally appointed, and whose re
moval was asked for by a number of
dissatisfied creditors, would not be re
moved. ,
• * *
Re-Union of Forty-Second.
July 21 at Atlanta has been selected
as the date and place for the annual
re-union of the veterans association of
the Forty-second Georgia. By having
it on July 21 the members may also
attend the meetiug of the Blue and
Gray which is to take place July 20,
for the purpose of aiding in establish
ing a national park. The committee
has invited Congressman L. F. Liv
ingston to deliver the address of the
occasion.
* * •
Illegal Sentences.
It has developed, much to the sur
prise of the prison commission and
other officials of the state, that there
are prisoners in the penitentiary serv
ing life sentences for criminal assault.
It is known to those familiar with the
Georgia law that such a sentence is an
impossibility, as in case of conviction
for the crime the law provides the
death penalty, and where a recommen
dation to the mercy of the court is
made the statute says that the defend
ant shall be sentenced as for an assault
with intent to con.mst an outrage.
The limit of this sentence is from one
to twenty years.
Kntnnton’e Shoe Factory.
The Eatouton shoe factory will soon
be in full operation. The machinery,
which is claimed be the best and latest
Improved, is nearly all in place.
• • •
Order Signed For Warrant.
Judge Addison Brown, of the United
States court, Las signed an order in
the case of John F., W. T. and E. H.
Gaynor, aud B. D. Greene, on a mo
tion for a warraut to remove them
from New York to the jurisdiction of
the southern district of Georgia, for
trial, for alleged conspiracy to defraud
the government.
• * *
Ileilened By Request*
First Lieutenant Malcom H. Ayer,
of the Floyd Rifles, Second Regiment
of Infantry of Macon, has resigned
his commission. It seems that Ayer
resigned through the request of Cap
tain Corbin, of the Floyd Rifles. Ac
cording to reports Ayer had not been
attending the drills regularly and did
not seem to show enough interest in
the affairs of the company, and his
resignation was asked for.
+ * •
Spanish Gun* on the Way.
Spanish cannon for Lieutenant Tom
Brumby’s grave in Oakland cemetery
will arrive in Atlanta within a few
days. The gnns have been shipped
from San Francisco, via New Orleans.
The gnr.s were taken from the de
fenses of Manila. They are appropri
ate decorations for the Georgia hero’s
grave, since they were the very guns
against which he fonght as he sailed
into Manila bay with Dewey at the
outbreak of the Spanish war.
* • *
Bonds Not Jfec®?sarj*.
The R. P. Manlee Company, con
tractors for building the new Coffee
county jail at Douglas, have com
menced work on the building. This
will be a very neat and substantial
brick and steel structure and will cost
about 87,000. Last year the county
built one of the handsomest court
houses in the state at a cost of $18,000;
this year $7,090 more for a jail, mak
ing an aggregate of $25,000, and all
without issuing bonds. At the end of
the year the county will have paid the
whole and be free from debt.
• • *
Colonel Trammell Head.
Colonel Trammell, chairman of the
railroad commission of Georgia, died
at his Marietta home at 5 o’clock Fri
day morning, after an illness of six
weeks, suffering from a complication
of troubles, chief among which was an
acute stomach disorder, combined
with a condition of extreme nervous
ness, bordering on nervous prostra
tion, which a bad circulation of the
Ri*PA*N*S tabuies
Doctors find
A Good
Prescription
for Mankind
T‘ r fv> rrr, •,:>> rVtirrisis Oncers, Restaurants,
'• - CmrJ Si-.ircs ?.id r.ri^rs
• ' ■’ ■ ' : r ;M. p,.ir indi t e sirrp ji and :it int.g ':le.
' ru':r w... is ;!it n.,:.. . ti : ;i
( ' • X‘D win ir* and one l; • i s,u' **?!—
~ 1 • ' ’ r * 1 i#’ or, tni >, 1
...v Cw,, St. ( Nett YoikC.iy.
~ = ■
ROYAL ARCANUM.
Meets every fourth Monday night.
J. T. Strange, R.; G. T. Arnold, V.
R.; W. H. Quartermaa, Secretary,
RUSSELL LODGE NO. 99""
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS
Meets every Ist and 3rd Thursday
evening in each month. G. A. Johns,
C. C.; J. J. Oarr, Y. C.; F. W. Bondu
rant, K. of R. aud M. of F.; J. A.
Qnillian, Prelate; O. L. Dabney, M.
of E.; H. R. Hunt, M. A.; 0. M. Fer
guson, M. W.; J. J. Smith, I. G.; R.
A. Black, O. G.
Lodge No. 333. Wiuaei) Officers—N.
J. Kelly, W. M ; W H Kimbell.S. W.;
A. Al. Williams, J. W.;G W. Koniuson,
Sect'y. Sleets every 3d Friday eveuiug
at 7 o’clock.
C. SI. Ferguson, N. G.; Z. F. Jaelnoo,
V. G.; A D. AieCurry, Secretary; J. H.
Smith, Treas. Meets every Ist aui 31
Monday nights.
(COLORED.)
WINDER ENTERPRISE LODGE.
No. 4282. G. U. O. of 6. F.
Meets every Ist and 3d Friday night
in each month. W. W. Wiikerson, N.
G.; C. E Williams, Soorotary.
If yon have something to sell, let
the people know it. An advertise
ment in this paper will do the work.
f: 50 YEARS’ '
.
*am s f l j j 1l j
V m *5 It S J
iiiifciilr 11 1 1 1 jfh nffci jil)n
t Trade Marks
Designs
r ff IT* Copyrights Ac.
■ Anyone sending a sketch and description may
qnlckly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention is probably patentable. Communica
tions strictly contldentiaL Handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Mann & Cos. receive
tpccial notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely Illustrated weekly. largest cir
dilation- of any scientifle Journal. Terms, W a
year; four months, $L Sold by ail newsdealers.
MIINN & Cos. 36 "’™* 4 *" New York
Branch Office. 635 F St* Washington. D. G.
blood rendered difficult to overcome.
The death of Colonel Trammel
has cast a gloom over the capitol. The
news of his death was received when
the statohouse officers came down to
their work, and there were many ex
pressions of sorrow. Colonel Tram
mel was kuown to every man in the
building, from Governor Candler to
the janitors. He was loved and re
spected by them all. He has been a
friend to all the officials, and they
realize what their loss will be.
Already there has been talk as to
who would succeed Colonel Trammel
as a member of the railroad commis
sion. Colonel Trammel has been
chairman of the body since 1890. The
office has a salary of $2,500 a year at
tached, and the appointment is for six
years, of which one has expired. As
the commissioners select tbeir own
chairman, however, it lies only with
the governor to appoint a maD to fill
*he vacancy.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
I Q BCiSSLL. E. C AF.iTISTRiD.
RUSSELL & ARMISTEAD,
Attorneys at Law.
Winder, Ga. Jefferson. Ga.
W. H. QUARTERMAN,
Attorney at Law,
Winder, Ga.
Prompt attention given to all lega.
matters. Insurance and Real Estate
agent.
A. HAMILTON,
Undertaker and Funeral
Director,
Winder,
EMBALMING
By. Professional Embalmer. Hearse
and attendance free. Ware rooms, cor
ner Broad & Candler sts.
Winder Furniture Cos.
UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMEKS
Everything' First Class.
Prices Reasonable.
C. M. FERGUSON, M’g’r.
WINDER, - - GEORGIA
J. A. B iIAHAFFEY,
Attorney-at Law,
Jefferson, - - - * Georgia
Office on Gainesville St., near residence.
DR. W. L DeLaPEKRIERE.
Dental Parlors,
la the J. C. DeLaPerrere brick bmU
lug, second Btory. Call and see nie
when in need of anything in the •
of Dentistry. Work guaranteed.
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
It art! ficially digest* the food a ndlaid*
Nature in strengthening and recon
structing the exhausted dige9*.i v£ or
gans. It is the latest discovered digest
ant and tonic. No other preparatiO
can approach it In efficiency. It in
stantly relieves and permanently cure.
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, au ® e n a i
Sick Headache, Gastralgia,Cramps,ana
allotherresultsof imperfeetdigesbo .
Prepared by E C. DeWltt A Cos.. Ctjlcaao
FOR SALE BY
De LAPERRIERE.
A rousing campaign year Is upon os.
Keep abreast of affairs by subscribing
now. We'U giTe you the uews.