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WOMAN’S TROUBLES AND FLMAi.B
DISEASES CURED BY
Johnston’s
Sarsaparilla
QUART BOTTLES.
Painful and Suppressed Menses, Ir*
regularity, Leucorrhoca, White*, Steril
ity, Ulceration of the Uterus, changa
of life, in matron or maid, all find re
lief, help, benefit and cure in JOHNS
TON’S SARSAPARILLA. It is a real
panacea for all pain or headache about
the top or back of the bead, distress
ing pain in the left side, a disturbed
condition of digestion, palpitation of
the heart, cold hands acid feet, nerv
ousness and irritation, sleeplessness,
muscular weakness, bearing-down
pains, backache, legache, irregular ac
tion of the heart, shortness of breath,
abnormal discharges, with extremely
painful menstruation, scalding of urine,
swelling of feet, soreness of the breasts,
neuralgia, uterine displacement and
catarrh, and all those symptoms and
troubles which make the average wo
man’s life so miserable.
MICHIGAN imie-CO., Detroit, Mich.
(1. ff, DeLal’erriere, Winder, <la.
IS. USE'S SPECIFIC,
l*!ie Greatest Remedy
In the World For
Burns,
Scalds,
M- ■ -
Spasmodic Croup,
Erysipelas,
Chilblains,
Poison Oak
--and —
Old Sores.
If yonr Druggist or local Dealer doe*
tot keep it, send 25 cents iu P. O
llamps or silver for u bottle to
MRS. W. H. BUSH,
Winder, Qa.
Gainesville, Jefferson
<t Southern Hailroad.
Eastetn Standard Time.
Taking effect 6:50 A. M., dept. 6. 1899.
SOUTH BOUND.
No. 82. No. 84
Lv. Gainesville 710 a. in. 10 55 a. m.
Lv. Belmont 740a. m. 11 85 a. m
" Hoschton BHia. m. 12 10 p. m.
“ Winner 845a. ul 800 p. m.
*' Monroe 985a. m 850 p. m.
▲r Social Circle 10 15 a. m. 485 p. m
No. 80
Lv. Gainesville 12 15 p. m
Lv Belmont 4 00 p. in
Lv. Hosonton 4 85 p. m
Lv, Winder 6 Ift p. m
Lv. Monroe 6 25 p. m.
Ar. Social Circle 7 10 p. m.
NORTHBOUND.
No 8a No. 81
Lv. Social Circle 12 00 a. m. 650 p. m.
** Mouroe 12 40 a in. 625 p. id.
*• Winder 260 p. m 715 p. m.
“ Iloschton 822 p ms 763 p m
" Belmont 400 p. in. 880 p. m.
Ar. Gainesville 435 p. m. 900 p. m.
No. 85.
Lv. Social Cirole f 80 a. m
Lv. Monroe 8 10 a. in.
Lv. Winder 9 20 a. m
Lv. Heschton 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. Jefforson 660a m. 805 p. m.
Lv. Pendergrass 715 am. 880 p. m.
Ar. Belmont 7 40 a. no 4 00 p. rr
SOUTH BOUND.
No. 88 No. 90
Lv. Belmont 830 p. m. 12 60 a m
Lv. Pendergrass 860 p. hj. 115 a in.
Ar. Jefferson 9 15pm 1 40 a m.
S C. DUNLAP Receiver.
Prosperity promises to smile De
signedly upon jou this year. * You’ll
no' uiiss the small sum necessary for
you to become a subscriber to this
paper.
GEORGIA NEWS ITEMS
Brief Summary of Interesting
Happenings Culled at Random.
Working: for Deep Water.
Pursuant to the resolution adopted
at the organization of the association,
the Columbus and Apalachicola Deep
Water association has sent invitations
to the members of the rivers and har
bors committee of congress “to visit
Columbus and take a trip down the
Chattahoochee river.
A reply has been received from Mr.
Burton, of Ohio, the chairman of the
committee, which states that he will
be in the south soon.
• • •
Aid red Want! InT*tlff*tlon.
Captain E. E. Aldred of company A,
Fifth regiment, against whom charges
of conduct unbecoming an officer and
of padding his accounts bo as to re
ceive more money from the state than
his company is outitled, has addressed
a letter to Governor Candler as com
mander-in-chief, demanding an inves
tiliutiou of the charges preferred.
It is generally understood that the
form the proceedings have now taken
is favorable to Captain Aldred and
that the final resnlt will be a refusal
to order a courtmartial.
• * *
Tlielr Work Finished.
The board of engineer officers ap
pointed some time ago by General
Wilson, chief of the United States
engineer corps, to make an examina
tion and report upon the feasibility of
the twenty-eight foot project for the
Savannah river frdm the city to the
sea, as planned by General Gillmore,
has finished its work. The officers
would give out nothing as to what was
done, but it is believed they will favor
the project to give Savannah deeper
water.
• •
Insurance Company Chartered.
The Empire Mutual Annuity and
Liifl Insurance Company, a coporation
with headquarters in Atlauta.has been
chartered by Secretary of State Cook.
The company is chartered to do insur
ance business on the co-operative
plan, and therefore is not compelled
by law to have a capital stock. The
incorporators are James G. Truitt, S.
C. Calloway, W. H. Reid, E. C. Callo
way, Alfred Truitt and Samuel Bar
nett.
• • •
(inorpla Cotton Sued For France.
Samples of Georgia cotton seed will
be sent to the French minister at New
Orleans and by him they will be dis
tributed among the French colonies,
which indicates that France will ex
periment in cotton growing and that
nation may in time become the for
midable rival of the United States as a
producer of the fleecy staple.
Samples of Georgia cotton seed were
sent the Russian government several
years ago, and press dispatches this
year announce tha the experiments in
the colonies of that power have been
entirely successful. Thiß fact, no
doubt, bad largely to do with the ef
forts of the French government offi
cials to obtain samples of Georgia cot
ton seed.
Wigging May Rfleftßfd.
Attorney General Terrell went to
Montgomery county last Saturday to
represent the state prisou commission
iu the case of J. S. Wiggins, a convict,
for when the claim has been made that
ho was tnkeu to the peuitoutiary ille
gally.
Wiggins was tried for murder in
Montgomery county six months ago
and on the trial was found guilty of
manslaughter and sentenced to a term
of fifteen years.
Wheu the sentence was passed the
man begged to be taken to the peni
tentiary at once in order that his term
of service could begin without delay,
and the county officers, after receiving
the consent of the prison commission,
agreed to the request. Wiggins was
forwarded to the prison camp before
the remittitur from the supreme court
arrived. There was never any legal
form to his commitment to the peni
tentiary, due altogether to an over
sight, and now the friends of the con
vict are workin t for his release on the
ground that he is held in prison with
out legal warrant therefor.
m * *
Dublin’* New Cotton Mill*.
The bri'-k work of the main build
ing of the Dublin cotton mills has been
finished. It will require about three
weeks to build the big smokestack and
all the brick work will tnen bo com
pleted.
It is expected to have the mills in
full operation by February Ist. If
the mills prove a success it i6 highly
probable that the capital stock in the
fall of 1901 will be increased from
SIOO,OOO to $200,000.
m m •
Fir© Destroy* Saw Mill.
The saw mill of the Betts Bros., at
Aahbnrn, one of the largest on the line
of the Georgia Southern and Florida
railway, was totally destroyed by fire
one night the past week. ' As the fire
occurred near the track of the railroad,
all trains were delayed. No esti
mate of the probable amount of the
loss is obtainable, but It must bo very
large, as the plant was expensive and
there was an immense stock of lumber
in the yards.
* * *
Walden Take* Jail Uf© Kuy.
Jbte Walden, in liibb county jail,
charged with the murder of Farmer
Dixon in Johnson county, who was re
fused anew trial by Judge Evans the
past week takes his situation very com
placently. He says that if he has to
go to the penitentiary he prefers a
life sentence to one of twenty years,
as he would, in the former case, hava
a greater chance of being pardoned.
He declared it to be his intention, if
he shall finally be compelled to go to
the penitentiary, to make a model
prisoner. The young man talks of his
case in the most nonchalant way, and
seems to be insensible to the charac
ter of the punishment that awaita him
as to the terrible character of the crime
in which he participated.
• * •
It*venue Stamp Involved.
A case involving an altogether dw
point of law and which revives interest
in the murder of Mrs. Eugenia Hamil
ton Pottle, near Macon, just one year
ago, was argued in the supreme coult
at Atlanta last Friday.
The suit was a case of Small vs.
Slocum. Mrs. Pottle owned a large
plantation in Jones county, near Ma
con, valued at $13,000. She had leased
the place to a mau named Slocum who
was working it before Mrs. Pottfe was
killed. In the meantime she had mort
gaged the property to A. T. Small,
who kept a store near the place.
Soon after Mrs. Pottle’s death, the
Slocums set up a sawmill on the
property and began cutting down the
timber. Small, who had a mortgage,
brought suit iu equity against Slocum
claiming that he was wasting the prop
erty.
Slocum put up his lease as evidence.
The case was heard before Judge John
C. Hart in the Jones county superior
court. The main point in the case was
whether or not the lease was legal. It
did not bear the revenue stamp which
is required by an enactment of con
gress, and the attorneys for Small
made the point that to be a legal lease
it must bear the stamp. The other
lawyers contended that the congress
of the United States had no right to
prescribe the method of procedure in
a state court and if the mortgage had
no stamp it was just as good, accord
ing to the state of Georgia, as was one
with a stamp.
The case was decided in favor of
Slocum, and the lawyers for Small ap
pealed to the supreme court. The
poiut on which the case was appealed
involved the revenue stamp and
lengthy arguments were made by
Washington Dessau, counsel for
Small. He contended that the con
gress did have the right to rule
on evidence in a state court, and that
the judge erred in not ruling out the
lease which had no stamp.
George S. Jones, attorney for Slo
cum, argued oil the other band that
congress had no right to dictate to
state courts what rules of evidence
they should employ, and under the
laws of Georgia the lease was a good
one, as it bore the signature of both
parties, and was attested by proper
witnesses.
The case is one of the most import
ant ones brought before the court at
this session. It is a big question and
the decision will determine whether it
is necessary in Georgia to place reve
nue stamps on notes,mortgages, bonds
and other documents required by the
United States under the act of 18‘J8.
SEN T TO IIIh ANYLU.fi.
Mil. Cawthon, Who Her Son Kn
Clißtlanooja, Ik I lumtiw.
Mrs. Eflie Cawthou, the Chattanooga
woman who kil ed her sixteeu-ycar-old
son, backing him almost to pieces with
a hatchet, was tried Wednesday before
a justice of the peace, on a warrant
charging her with murder iu the first
degree.
The trial magistrate, after hearing
the testimony, and her own statement,
released her, committing her to an in
sane asylum until an inquisition of
lunacy could be rbgnlarly ueld. Mrs.
Cawthou sad on the stand that sue
had gone to hear the play of “The
Christian,” and that after the came
home sho decided that it was her duty
to kill her sou iu order to save him
from ruin.
Mrs. Cawthon was ac once sent to
the state asylum. She is worth about
$75,009.
COMMANDED THE NASHVILLE.
lion’ll of Captain Murray, of tlie Farnoui
Confederate Cruiser.
Captain Lawrence M. Murray, who
commanded the famous confederate
cruiser Nashville, before her capture
by the federal government, is dead at
his home in Maldeu, N. Y. After the
war he commanded steamers plying
between New York and South Ameri
can ports. Subsequently he served in
the revenue service at Savannah, Ga.
Illinois Hires McKinley 95,000.
Complete unofficial returns from the
state of Illinois show the total vote for
president to have been, McKinley
593,0*23. Bryan 497,930; plurality 95,-
093. The plurality of Yates, republi
can. for governor, is 65.114.
BIPANS TABom
Doctors find
A Good
Prescription
for Kiaakiitd.
ROYAL ARCANUM.
Meets every fourth Monday night.
J. T. Strange R.; G. T. Arnold, Y.
R.; W. H. Qnarterman, Secretary,
Irussell lodgenoTo”
KNIGHTS OP PYTHIAS
Meets every Ist and 3rd Thursday
evening in each month. G. A. Johns,
C. C.; J. J. Carr, V. C.; F. W. Bondu
rant, K. of R. and M. of F.; J. A.
Qaillian, Prelate; O. L. Dabney, M.
of E.; H. R. Hunt, M. A.; C. M. Fer
guson, M. W.; J. J. Smith, I. G.; R.
A. Black, O. G.
Lodge No. 333. i Wiuum) Offlct-r^—N
J. Kelly, W. At; W H Kimbell,s. W.
A. M. Williams, J. W.;G G. Robinson,
Secfc’y. Meets every 3d Friday evening
at 7 o’clock.
C. M. Ferguson. N. G. ; Z. F..Jackson,
V. G.; A D. McCurry, Secretary; J. H
Smith, Treas. Meets every Ist and 3 l
Monday nights.
(colored. )
WINDER ENTERPRISE LODGE.
No. 4282. G. U. O. of O. F.
Meets every Ist and 3d Friday night
in each month. W. W. Wilkersou, N.
G.; U. E Williams, Secretary.
"f" •'
Anyone sending n sketch nnd description may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention is probably patentable. Communica
tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Mann & Cos. receive
special notice, without charge, la the
Scientific American.
A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest eir
culattou of any scientific journal. Terms, a
year; four months, (L Sold by all newsdealers.
MUNN & Cos. 36,B ™ !d “ v New York
Branch Office. G 25 F 8t„ Washington, D. C.
MILLIONS IN IT.
Standard Oil Company's Riches Would
l'ut Croesus to l.lush.
At New York Saturday Standard Oil
certificates were quoted at 700 bid,
none offered, as against 655, Friday’s
highest. Thu par value of the com
pany’s entire outstanding stock is
§07,500,000, aud STSO per .share indi
cates a market value of §682,500,000,
the highest on record. During this
year the company lias paid §16,000,000
in dividends.
MORE MINERS STRIKE.
Thrst Hundred Kinployes of the Hadron
Colliery Have a Grievance.
A special from Wilkesbarre, l*a ,
says: Three hundred miners employed
at the Hudson colliery of the Delaware
aud Hudson company went on strike
Wednesday morning because the fore
man insisted on more “topping” on
the cars than the men were willing to
give.
Ten fnr fiv* crnr*,t PnicfH*t.V F.roccm, HcsfaumoU,
Srlmo-.i.v # N *(ii*fi*-tdl Stores and Harbors
Sho,.-. I iiev banish pain, induce sleep, and proinux hit?.
() ;iv*' w'lief! No w oar’s tint matter, one vull
and > v>o yoori. TANARUS n wmoirs ." and one thousand tcsii
ni<- - i*nt hv r.wi to auv add;ess on r**rei*ir of p-ire,
Uj luc Chemical Cos., 10 Spruce Si., New Yuik City.
PROFESSIONAL CAttDS.
8* C. RUdSBLL. E. O ARMISTEaD.
RUSSELL & ARMISTEAD,
Attorn byb at Law.
Winder, Ga. Jefforaen. Ga.
W. H. QUARTERMAN,
Attorney at Law,
Winder, Ga.
Prompt attention given to all legal
mattera Insurance and Real E>tat
agent.
A. HAMILTON,
Undertaker and Funeral
Director,
Winder,
EMBALMING
Prot'esaiona 1 Embalmer. Heaise
ad Attendance free. Ware rooms, cor
ner Broad ACandlrsts.
Winder Furniture Cos.
UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMIiKS
Everything Thirst Class.
Prices Reasonable.
C. M. FERGUSON, M’g’r.
WINDER, - - GEORGIA.
J. A. B MAHAFFEY,
Attornky-at Law,
Jefferson, • - • Georgia.
Offloe on Gainesville St., near residence-
DR. W. L DbLaPEHRIERE.
Dental Parlors,
In the J. O. DeLaPerr ero nticjc bull'*-
tng, second story. Call and see m*
when in need of anything in the line
of Deutistry. Work guaranteed.
Dyspepsia Core
Digests what you eat.
Itartificially digests the food and aids
Nature in strengthening and recon
structing the exhausted digest
gans. It is the latest discovered digest
ant and tonic. No other preparation
can approach it in efficiency. I
stantly relieves and permanently cur-
Dyspepsia, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea,
Sick Headache, Gastralgia, Cramp?,and
all other resuits of imperfect digestion.
Prepared by E C. DcWitt 4 Cos.. Cblcaao
FOR SALE BY
De LAPERRIERE.
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