Newspaper Page Text
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OoubleDaily Service
jy EFFECT JUNE Brd, 1900.
SOUTHBOUND.
== s::::==:= ~ Daily Daily
No. 31. No. 27.
rrv^YorO > enn.lUir 1 00pm 12 15am
} jHalelpkla “ 8 29pm 7 20am
r’r Ealtiniore “ 550 m 9 34am
KSSngton. “ 7 00pm 10 55am
K Richmond, S. A.L. 10 40pm 2 35pm
£ Petersburg “ 11 35pm_3 30pm
lv Ridgeway Jet. 2 25am 6 17pm
trgenderion, “ 2 53am 6 40pm
iv Southern Pines," 5 57am 9 42pm
No. 403.
tr Columbia I “ 10 35am 12 55am
ir Savannah “ 2 57pm 5 00am
ir Jacksonville “ 7 40pm 9 10am
i, xampa " 6 30am 5 30pm
— ““ No. 403.':
ir Charlotte, 9 31am
fTchester 11 9 52am .
Iv Greenwood, “ 11 42am
£v Athens, 1 48pra
At Atlanta, § “ 4 00pm
iFTugusta” C. AW. C. 5 10pm
fvSew l’ork.W Y. P. &N. f8 00am 9 00pm
Lv Philadelphia “ 10 20am 11 26pm
LrN'ew York, 0.D.5.5.C0. f 300 pm
iv Baltimore, B. S. P. Cos. f 6 30pm
Lv Washington,N. & W.S.B. 6 30pm
N074037~N0. 41.
Lv Portsmouth, 8. A. I* 9 20pm 9 30am
Lv Weldon, “ 12 05am 12 01pm
No. 31
Lv Ridgeway Jet. " 2 26am 120 pm
Lv Henderson “ 2 53:un 2 13pm
Lt Raleigh “ 4 06am 351 pm
Lv Southern Pines “ 5 57am 6 12pm
No. 403.
Lv Hamlet “ 6 50am 7 30pm
No3lT NoT 27.
Lv Columbia! “ 10 35am 12 55am
Ar Savannah “ 2 57pm 5 00am
Ar Jacksonville “ 7 40pm 9 10am
Ar Tampa “ C 30am 5 30pm
~ No. 403, No. 41.
Lv Wilmington, S. A.L. 305 pm
Ar Charlotte “ 9 31am 10 20pm
Lv Chester “ 9 52am 10 55pm
Lv Greenwood “ 1142 am 107 pm
Lv Athens “ 1 48pm 343 am
Ar Atlanta § “ 4 00pm 6 05am
Ar Augusta, C. A W. C. 5 10pm
Ar Macon, C. of Ga. 7 20pm 11 10am
Ar Montgomery, A. A \V. P. 9 20pm 11 00am
Ar Mobile, LAN. 8 05am 4 12pm
Ar Sew Orleans, L. AN. 7 40am 8 30pm
Ar Nashville, N. C. A St. L. 6 40am 6 55pm
Ar Memphis, “ 4 00pm 8 10pm
NORTHBOUND
Daily Daily
No. 44. No. 66.
Lv Memphis, N. C. A St. L. 12 45pm 8 45pm
Lv Nashville “ 9 30am 9 10am
Lv New Orleans, L. AN. 7 45pm 7 45pm
Lv Mobile “ 12 20am 12 20am
Lv Montgomery,A. AW.P. 10 20am 11 20am
Lv Macon, C. of Oa. 8 00am 4 20pm
Lv Augusta, C. A W. C. 9 40am
" No. 402. No. 38.
Lv Atlanta, 5 S. A. L. 100 pm 9 00pm
Ar Athens, “ “ 2 50pm 1133 pm
Ar Greenwood, “ 4 44pm 2 05am
Ar Chester, “ 6 28pm 4 30am
Ar Charlotte, ” C 30pm 5 00am
Ar Wilmington, “ 12 05pm
• No. 44. Nck 66.
Lv Hamlet, “ 9 05pm 9 20am
Lv Southern Pines, “ 10 00pm 10 05am
Lv Raleigh, “ 1140 pm 1156 am
Ar. Henderson, “ 12 50am 1 13pm
Lv Ridgeway Jet. “ 1 20am 1 45pm
Lv Petersburg “ 4 15am 4 40pm
Lv Richmond “ 5 15am 5 40pm
Ar Washington, Penn. K. B. 8 45am 9 30pm
Ar Baltimore “ 10 08am 1135 pm
Ar Philadelphia “ 12 30pm 2 56am
Ar New York “ 303 pm 6 13am
~~ No. 402. No. 357
Lv Ridgeway Jet., S. A. L. 300 am 1 40pm
Lv Weldon, “ 4 30am 305 pm
Ar Portsmouth, “ 7 00am 5 50pm
Ar_Wash ington,N.A~W.S.B. 7 00am
Ar Baltimore, B. S. P. Co- t 6 45am
AOlew York,O.D.S.S.Co7~ + 1 30pm
Ar Philadelphia,bOTß A N. f5 46pm 5 10am
Ar New York “ 8 38pm 7 43am
Note.—f Daily Except Sunday.
Dining Cars between New York and liieh
®ond and Hamlet and Savannah on Trains
Nos. 31 and 44.
! Central Time. § Eastern Time.
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'O-0. M’MILLIN, A. G. JACKSON,
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• AUGUSTA, UA.
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B. HUDSON, W. M M’GOVEBN,
T -F. &p. a., Gen’l Agt,
ATLANTA, GA. AUGUSTA.
ANARCHISTS GLOAT
Over the Assassination of Hum
bert By One of Their Number.
ACT IS APPROVED IN OPEN MEETING
"Heath to All Moimrchs" Is Shlboleth
of the Or.ler at Paterson,
New Jersey.
There was a meeting of anarchihts in
Paterson,N.J., Tuesday night,at which
the killing of King Humbert was en
dorsed. A reporter who sought ad
mittance was welcomed, as it was said
that these anarchists wanted the whole
world to know their sentiments.
The principal speaker at the meet
ing was Earnest Crevalla, 21 years of
age. In the course of an impassioned
address he said:
“We are members of the group of
anarchists to which Bressi belonged.
He is a martyr. He has done what we
would have had him do. Ask me, do
we endorse the killing of King Hum
bert? I will answer the question be
fore you ask it. Of course we do. It
was not our instruction to Bressi to
kill, but he has done, wbat he knew to
be right, and we will sustain him and
give him our sympathy. Was Humbert
ever kind to us? No. Was he good
to the poor? No. He was a monarch,
and all monarchs, according to our
rows, must die.
“Let Nicholas of Russia tremble,
and let the new king of Italy prepare
for death. They are both inhuman.
They are inhuman because they are
monarchs. They would not consent
to take the places on the thrones if
they were not inhuman. It is a re
public that we want, and it is a repub
lic that anarchists in every country
will have.’’
Then came an implied threat against
high officials in this country, when the
young man shouted:
“They have run us out of Italy,
where to have stayed would have been
to starve, and we have come here.
Things are no better here. We are
treated like dogs in the mills. We are
considered human by Americans. We
do not starve, but there is a worse
death than starvation. It is neglect.
Who is responsible for this govern
ment? We will iry to better it by
fair means, and if we can’t succeed,
then we will resort to other methods.”
Paterson has long been a hotbed
of nuarchists. Citizens who are fa
miliar, more or less, with the work
ings of the organization say that for
years Paterson has contained more of
the society than any other city in the
United States, with the possible ex
ception of Chicago. There is a strong
socialist element in Paterson, and the
anarchists formerly worked with this
element without allowing the social
ists to know that it had the support of
the violent ones.
The anarchists tried to control the
socialists, and failing, dropped away
from that movement, denounced the
socialists because of their peacefulness
and claimed that they were traitors,
although the socialists had never tried
anything but peaceful methods and
were purely political and law-abiding.
The anarchists embraced every
strike in Paterson for a long time as a
means of fomenting trouble. During
the great silk strike three years ago,
when that industry was compelled to
locate factories in different parts of the
country, the anarchists did more than
any one else to bring about the re
moval of the manufactures. They
used dynamite, and although their
efforts to destroy fakv buildings were
mostly frustrated, they created such a
feeling of uneasiness that the manu
facturers moved.
When the empress of Austria was
murdered the local anarchists had a
big celebration, but not openly.
When the news came they slipped
out of the city and assembled at a pre
arranged point, where they held their
jollification and when it was over re
turned to Paterson. As they had gone
singly and at intervals, they avoided
general notice.
Thresher Boiler Explodes,
On the farm of Jacob Simpson, near
Pana, 111., Tuesday the engine boiler
of a thresher exploded, killing Charles
Simpson and Marion Sylvester and
severely wounding three others.
bathboxe arrested.
Ex. Director of Poet# In Cuba la In the
I.nw’e Graap.
J. E. Rathbone, until recently di
rector general of posts in Cuba, was
arrested in Havana Saturday on four
charges.
These allege the tmlawfal drawing
of two orders for 8500 each, paying
his private coachman and gardener
from the postal funds and drawing psr
diem allowance when not
dd so. He was held in bonds of 825,-
000. . ......
Francisco Gamba, one of the richest
Spanish merchants in Havana, offered
to go on Ilathbone’s bond, but the
judge ruled adverse^.
FEARFUL CARNAGE WROUGHT.
Dead Bodies Strewn In Heaps
Over Battlefield at Panama.
Peace Treaty Signed.
A dispatch to The New York Herald
from Fanarua says:
A treaty of peace between the gov
ernment and the revolutionists has
been signed.
This action followed dirfictly after
the most desperate battle of the entire
revolution, in which the losses on each
side were very heavy. Owing, it is
believed, to some misunderstanding as
to the armistice brought about by the
American, English and French con
suls, the insurgents suddenly renewed
their attacks on the suburbs of Pana
ma. The lighting lasted eleven hours
with the exception of only a few min
utes interval, and was very heavy
from start to finish.
The rebel troops made charge after
charge upon the trenches of the gov
ernment forces, pushing forward with
remarkable bravery aud with a reck
lessness approaching closely to mad
mess.
Every assault was repulsed with a
terrible loss of life, but the rebels
were undaunted, and with extraordi
nary courage aud renewed vigor re
peated the attacks again and again.
These desperate assaults were kept np
all night long, and were met with
equally brave resistance by the regu
lars.
It was 6 o’clock Thursday morning
when the revolutionists were finally
compelled to give up the attacks aud
forced to retreat to the positions they
held when the armistice was declared.
The tide of battle was turned against
them by the arrival of an express train
from Colon with 800 fresh troops to
reinforce the government. These
gave the regulars the advantage and
the rebels retired after eleven hours of
such fierce fighting a3 the isthmus
never saw before.
The appearance of the battleground
after the cessation of hostilities can
better be imagined than described.
The dead and dying were lying all
along the Caledonia road, beyond the
railroad bridge, for half a mile, some
times scattered a few feet apart and
more often in heaps, packed closely
together.
How many were killed during the
night is not yet known, but the num
ber will reach into the hundreds. The
exact loss may never be known for
many of the wounded men crawled
into out of the way thickets and those
died in the bushes may not all be
found, being recorded simply as
“missing.”
neuro school burned.
Mob In New Orleans Vent Their Fury
Against tllnchg lly Using Toreh.
The splendid Thorny Lafon school,
on Sixth and Franklin streets, New
Orleans, was burned to the ground at
midnight Friday, having been set fire
to by the mob in the fury against the
negroes. The school was the finest
negro school in New Orleans, and wa3
erected with money left by the negro
philanthropist, Thorny Lafon, who be
queathed a fortune of 8000,000,divided
equally between charities for the whites
and negroes. The school was erected
by the city three years ago out of the
funds left by Lafon, and a bust of the
negro was placed in the Louisiana
statehouse at Baton Rouge. The school
accommodated 800 colored children.
At an early hour Saturday morning
a mob set fire to thirty tenement
houses occupied by negroes at Tchoup
itoulas and Amelia streets. The flames
were extinguished before much damage
was done.
ENYOYS IN TRANSIT.
Chinese Allege That Surviving Diplomats
Are lieing Kscorted to Tien Tslu.
Friday morning’s reports received
in London from Shanghai reiterate
the allegation that the surviving mem
bers of the diplomatic corps have al
ready left Pekin on their way to Tien
Tsin, and added that the foreigners
are being escorted by troops of Jung
Lu, commauder-in-chief of the Chi
nese forces.
This move is stated to have been
taken in the hope of abating the wrath
of the powers and delaying the ad
vance of the allies toward Pekin.
A dispatch received from the same
sources state that half the foreigners
in Pekin have been killed or wounded
or have died from the privatiouu they
have undergone.
CHINESE ENTRAPPED.
American* and BrttUh Slaughter One
Thonmind of the Oriental*#
Tien Tsin, July 22, via Shanghai,
July 30.—-(Copyright, 1900, by the
Associated Press)—The latest advices
from Pekin under date of July 15th,
say that the legations are holding out.
rr he Chinese attacked the legations on
The night of July 10th, but were led
into a trap by the Americans and
British and 1,000 of them were killed.
Afterwards they continued bombard
ing the legations more freely. Among
the Chinese killed was General Ma.
The legations were subsequently at
tacked with constantly increasing fnry.
ft WINDER >I COMPANY,
Winder, Georgia.
Paid In Capital $25,000.00.
THOS A. MAYNARD, President.
A. A. CAMP, i Vice Presidents.
W. H. TOOLE, Cashier.
T. A. Maynard,
L. F. Sell,
A. A. Camp,
W. H. Toole,
We Discount Notes.
We loan money on good collateral or personal
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We receive Deposits subject to check.
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We pay taxes in Jackson County.
We are a Home Institution.
We want your business--and will appreciate it.
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STATE ST., HARMONY GROVE, GEORGIA.
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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.
TEraf PMuloii Priu
R. J. Pentecost,
A. M. Flanigan,
W. H. Braselton,
J. I. J. Bell.