Newspaper Page Text
/giS^,VESTIBUI£h
[IMITEO
Double Daily Service
I>; EFFECT JUNE 3rd, 1900.
SOUTHBOUND.
Daily Doily
No. 31. No. 27.
[,v New York, Penn.lt.B. 1 00pm 1215 am
[ jT Philadelphia “ 329 pm 7 20am
Lv Baltimore “ 550 m 9 34am
],v Washington, “ 7 00pm 10 55am
Lv ltichmond, S. A. L. 10 40pm 2 85pm
I.v Petersburg 11 35pm 330 pm
Lv Kidgeway Jet. “ 2 25am 6 17pm
L'THenderson, “ 2 53am 6 40pm
Lt Baleigh, “ 4 06ain 7 10pin
I,v Southern Pinos, “ 5 57am 9 42pm
N o
Lv Hamlet, “ 6 60am 10 32pm
No. 31
Lv Columbia J " 10 35am 12 55am
Ar Savannah “ 2 57pm 5 00am
Ar Jacksonville “ 7 40pm 9 lOain
Ar Tampa " 6 30am 5 30pm
NoTToS
Ar Charlotte, " 9 31am
Lv Chester, “ 9 52am
Lv flreenwood, “ 11 42am
Lv Athens, 1 48pm
Ar Atlanta, § _ “ 4 00pm
Ar Augusta, C. IW.C. 5 10pm
Lv New York.N. Y. P. <fc N. f8 00am 9 00pm
Lv Philadelphia “ 10 20am 11 26pm
Lv New York, 0.D.5.5.C0.j 300 pm
Lv Baltimore, B. 8. P. Cos. f 6 30pm
Lv Washington,N. A W.S.B. 6 30pm
No. 4037 No.' 41.
Lv Portsmouth, 8. A. L. 9 20pm 9 80am
Lv Weldon, “ 12 05am 12 01pm
No. 31
Lv Ridgeway Jet. “ 2 25am 120 pm
Lv Henderson " 2 53am 2 13pm
I.v Raleigh “ 4 06am 351 pm
Lv Southern Pines “ 5 57am 6 12pm
No. 403.
Lv Hamlet “ 6 50a:n 7 30pm
" No- 31. No.' 27.
Lv Columbia! “ 14135 am 12 55am
Ar Savannah “ 2 57pm 5 00am
Ar Jacksonville “ 7 40pm 910 am
Ar Tainpa " tS 30ain 5 30pm
No. 403, No. 4L
Lv Wilmington, S. A.L. 305 pm
Ar Charlotte “ 9 31am 10 20pm
Lv Chester “ 9 52am 10 65pm
Lv Greenwood “ 11 42am 1 07pm
Lv Athens “ 1 48pm 8 43am
Ar Atlanta § “ 4 00pm 6 05am
Ar Augustu, C. A W. C. 5 10pm
Ar Macon. C. of Ga. 7 20pm 11 10am
Ar Montgomery, A. A W. P. 9 20pm 11 00am
Ar Mobile, L. AN. 305 am 4 12pm
Ar New Orleans, L. AN. 7 40am 8 30pm
Ar Nashville, N. C. A Bt. L. 6 40.am 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
I.v New Orleans, L. AN. 7 45pm 7 45pm
Ly Mobile “ 12 20am 12 20am
Lv Montgomery,A. AW.P. 10 20am 11 20am
I.v Macon, C. of~Ga. 8 00am~ 4 20pm
Lv Augusta, C. A W. C. 9 40am
No. 402. No. 33.
Lv Atlanta, 5 S. A. L. 100 pm 9 00pm
Ar Athens, “ 250 pm 1133 pm
Ar Greenwood, “ 4 44pm 2 05am
A r Chester, “ 6 2irm 4 30am
Ar Charlotte, “ C 30pm 5 00am
Ar. Wilmington, “ 12 05pm
No. 44. No. 66.
I.v Hamlet, “ 9 05pm 9 20am
Lv’sSuthern Tines, “ 10 00pm 10 05am
Lv Raleigh, “ H 40pm 11 56am
Ar. Henderson,* “ 12 50am 1 13pm
Lv Ridgeway Jet. “ 1 20mn l_4spm
Lv Petersburg “ 4 15am 4 -iOpm
Lv Richmond 5 15am 5 40pm
Ar Washington, Penn. R. R. 8 45am 9 30pm
Ar Baltimore “ 10 03am 11 35pm
Ar Philadelphia “ 12 30pm 2 50am
Ar New York ** 303 pm 6 13am
No. 402. No. 38.
Lv Ridgeway Jet., S. A. L. 300 am 1 40pm
Lv YYeldon, “ 4 30am 305 pm
Ar Portsmouth, “ 7_ooam 5 50pm
Ar Washington,N A W.S.B. 1 06 am
Ar Baltimore, B. 8. P. Co- t_^_4sara
Ar New Vork,O.D.S.B.Co. fl 30pm
ArPblladelj A N. f 5 40pm 5 10am
Ar New York “ 8 38pm 7 43am
Note.—ft Daily Except Sunday.
Dining Cars between New York and Rich
mond and Hamlet and Savannah on Trains
Nos. 31 and 44.
J Central Time, § Eastern Time.
GEORGIARAILROAD
For information as to Routes
Schedules and Ratos, both
Passenger and Freight
write to either of the uudersigned.
You will 1 receive prompt reply
and reliable information,
0. 0. M’MlLblN, A. G. JACK3ON,
G. A. Pas 9. D pt., G P. A.,
G. F. WILCOX, S. A.,
AUGUSTA, GA.
.E. MAG ILL. * 0. D. 00X,
Geu’L Agt., Gea’l. Agt.,
ATLANTA. ATHENS.
W. W. HARDWICK w. 0. M’MILLIN,
Gen’l. Agt., ' S. F.&P. A.,
MACON. MACON.
M. B. EUDBCF, W. M M’GOVEEH,
•T. F. & P. A., Geu’l Agt,,
ATLANTA, GA. AUGUST A
A ronslng campaign year is upon us.
Keep abreast of affairs by subscribing
uew. We’ll sire yea tke news.
Legislative
• • • ‘Brevities
Bill Is Constitutional.
Attorney General Terrell, the legal
advisor of Georgia, says that the depot
bill is constitutional, Iu a written
opinion sent to the legislature he de
clares there is no legal objection to the
depot measure as it is contemplated.
The opinion was sent to Governor
Candler and later transmitted to the
house in the form of a special messags
from the governor. It is brief but to
the point, and is in line with an opin
ion rendered by Attorney General
Terrell last March, iu which he held
that the interest on the public debt is a
part of the public debt and therefore
any money provided by the constitu
tion for paying the public debt can
also be applied to the payment of in
terest thereon or “to any other cons
titutional purpose,” Raya the attorney
general iu concluding his opinion.
* * *
Will Require Waivers.
The Btate will require waivers of
damages from adjacent property own
ers in the event it builds anew union
depot on the Western and AtlanUo
property.
The appointment of a joint commit
tee to require and secure such waivers
was authorized by the house.
The resolution was by Mr. Hamby,
of Rabun, and calls for a joint com
mittee of three from the house and two
from the senate, who are charged with
the dudv of immediately securing
these waivers before any action is
taken on the depot measure.
These waivers are to be filed with
the comptroller general and kept on
record iu his ofiict, and are to become
the property of the state as a bar to
any claim for damages in building the
depot.
* * *
Osteopathy Bill.
The first gun of the fight that is to
be made over the osteopathy bill in
the general assembly was fired when
the general judiciary committee of the
senate took up the bill by Senator
Harrell regulating the practice of os
teopathy in the state. It will be re
membered that a similar bill allowing
osteopaths to practice iu the state was
passed at the last session of the gen
eral assembly, but the governor vetoed
it, aud the bill now before the commit
tee is practically the same as iho one
introduced last year. It seeks + .o*give
all the osteopathic doctors who are
graduates of recognized colleges of
osteopathy the right to practice in
the state, while under the present
law they are required to stand the reg
ular medical examination.
* * *
State to Own Institutes.
Mr. Jordan of Jasper wants the state
to take in charge the establishment
and maintenance of farmer’s institutes
in this state. The president of the
State Dairymen’s Association, aud the
president of the State Agricultural So
ciety are to be constituted a board of
control.
They will meet semi-annually and
serve without salary, except actual ex
penses in attending such meeting.
They are to report annually to the
commissioner of agriculture and em
ploy a superintendent of institutes and
pay him a reasonable salary, he to have
entire charge of the institute work.
Under the bill the commissioner of
agriculture will be required to set
aside annually $<3,000 from the pro
ceeds of fertilizer tags for the purpose
of carrying on the institute work.
* * *
Pensions For Aged Widows.
Mr. Blalock has iutrpduced a bill iu
the house to carry into effect the
amendment to constitutional amend
ment giving annual pensions-! to the
widows of all ex-Confederate soldiers
who by reason of old age and infirmity
are unable to support themselves.
* + m
Money Fpr Teachers.
Mr. Blalock, of Fayette, lias intro
duced a bill in the house authorizing
the treasurer to draw on auy funds iu
the state treasury to the amount of
$600,000 to be used iu paying school
teachers monthly ns provided iu the
act of IS9B.
The treasurer is directed by the bill
to draw on the first of March $300,00 0,
and on the first day of April a like
sum, or as much as may be necessary,
and the treasurer is authorized to pay
the teachers monthly, the same to be
repaid from the school fund when the
same shall be paid into the treasury.
* * *
State to Make Exhibit.
In the senate President Howell
offered a resolution providing for the
appointment of a commission to make
a display of the state’s resources at
both the Buffalo exposition and the
exposition to be held later in Charles
ton.
The resolution provides for a com
mittee of three, to consist of the com
missioner of agriculture, the state
geologist and a third person to be
selected by the governor. The com
missioners are to serve without salary
and to incur no expense save such as
shall be expressly authorized by the
general assembly,
* • *
Child-Labor Bill.
The final hearing for and against
the child-labor bills before the com
mittee on labor and labor statistics oc
curred Monday afternoon and the
meeting resulted iu one of the liveliest
discussions that has so far developed
in any committee room.
At the close of Ihe session a sub
committee of five members was ap
pointed to take nuder consideration
the two child-labor lulls aud report
one of them back to the committee in
the form in which it is to be returned
to the bouse.
♦ * *
To Visit Penitentiary.
At a meeting of the penitentiary
committee of the house Monday after
noon, Chairman Toomer appointed a
sub-committee to visit the penitentiary
camps in north Georgia in company
with a sub-oommittee from the sen
ate. The house members appointed
were Representatives Brock, Harrell,
Bruce, Turner and Lawrence. The
members of the party left Atlanta
Monday night on their missioa. They
will go first to Camp Lookout in Walk
er county, one of the penitentiary
camps recently established.
GROWTH OF THE SOUTH.
Llitof Now Industrie* Kstnbliilicd l)nr
-1 ii K the l’ast Week.
Among the irore important of Ihe
new industries reported for the past
w r eek are brick works at Palmer, Fla.,
aid Valdon, Miss.; bciler works at
Pensacola, Fla.; broom factories at
Cadiz, Ky., and Cuero, Tex.; a cigar
factpiv at Wnycross, Ga.; cold storage
plant at l’iue Bluff, Ark.; a cotton gin
at Gadsden, Ala.; cotton mills at Dub
lin, Ga., and Baton Rougo, La.; elec
tric light plants at Arkadclphiu aud El
Dorado, Ark., Bristol aud Crossville,
Teun., aud an electric light plant to
bo established at Nashville at a cost of
$150,000; a flouring mill at Gadsden,
Ala,; a $50,000 furniture factory at
Texarkana, Ark., and others at Knox
ville aud Brownsville, Tenn.; grain
elevators at Westwego, La., and Nash
ville, Tenn.; hardware companies at
Columbia, S. C., Amarillo, Tex., and
Charlestown, W. Yn.; ice factories at
Toccon, Ga., and Port Gibson, Miss,;
a $225,000 irrigation company at
LaGraugc, Tex., a $25,000 lime and
stone company at Bristol, Tenn.;
SIOO,OOO lumber companies of Mem
phis, Tenn.; aud Charlestown, W. Ya.,
and others at Ilolloudale, Miss., Ro
ganville aud Wells, Tex.; machine
shops* at Columbia, S. C., aud Knox
ville, Teun.; a mattref sand bed spring
factory at Knoxville, Tenn.; a $2,000,-
000 mining and manufacturing com
pany at Bristol, Ya.; a SIOO,OOO coal
mining company at Clarksburg, W.
Ya ; a cotton oil mill at Hagee, Miss,;
packing houses at Tampa, Fla., and
Gulfport, Miss.; a galvanized iron
roofing and siding plant at Hammond,
La.; a sawmill at Midland, Fla.; u
shingle mill at Wolling, S. C.; a shoe
factory at Corsicana, Tex.; a soap
factory at Knoxville, Tenn.; a $160,-
000 sugar factory company at Whar
ton, Tex.; and at New Orleans a sugar
refining company with a capital of
$600,000; telephone companies at
Charleston, S. C., and Nashville,
Tonn.; au underwear mill at Athens,
Ga., and a $250,000 wheel works at
Jacksonville, Fia.—Tradesman (Chat
tanooga, Teun.)
ATLANTA MARKETS.
COmiKCTEO WEEKLY, —47
<*roo©rioA.
iloasted coffee, Dutch Java .$lB.lO. Gold
Star, $16.50. Arbueklo *13.30. Liou *12.80.
Iter 100 tli chsks. <in-ell coffee, choice
U@i:#e; fair 10; 4 '. prune 9.0 p;,.
•'-ugar, standard granulated; New York
New Orleans granulated 5%c. Svrup,
Now Orleans open kettle 25 (5,40 c.
Mixed, choice, 20 (a> 18c. Salt, da ry
hacks *1.30(5/* 1.40;do hbls.bulk $2.25; 100 3s
c'2.85; ice cream *1.25; common 65<®70c.
Cheese, full cream (w 14.
Matches, 05-. 4554<&55c; 200s *1.50(51.75; 30(is
*2.75. Soda, boxes 6c. Crackers, fcoda 0;;
cream 7c; gingersnaps 0\ Candy, eommou
stick 7;: fancy 12(514;. Oysters, T. W.
*2 10(5*2.00; L. W. *1.20.
flour, Grain and Meal.
Flour.all wheat, first patent, *4 90 second
patent. M. 49, straight, 13.90: extra fancy
-.3.80; fancy, i3EO; extra family, *3.20.
Corn, white, f;9;; mixed, 57:. Oats, white
40c; mixed 36 •: Texas rustproof 40.?. ltye,
Ga., *l;Western 10c. Hay, No. 1 timothy,
large bales, *1.00; No. 1 small bales, 95c;
No. 2,90 c. Meal, plain, 58; bolted meal 54c.
Bran, small sacks *I.OO. Shorts *l.lO.
•took meal, *l.lO per one hundred
pounds. Cotton seed meal *1.15 per 100
pounds; hulls *7.00 per ton. Grits *3.00
per bbl; *1.40 per bag.
Country Produce.
Eggs active, 20(5/2lc. Butter, active sale.
Fancy Jersey, 17^(5/20•; choice 15516. Idve
oouitry, receipts light; hens 15(527>£c; large
fries l-(520o. medium fries 14'5)16, fair
sale. Dunks, middle. 22,!-^(524c; I’ek
ii g
pound 11(5 12c: fries 13 a 14c; broilers \l'a
15c; ducks 14 a 15c: cocks 8(5 10e. Turkeys 13
(al4c. (lame—Babbits, each, 1 Orat-1
squirrels 10;; birds 18, ! i(/20j; o’possurn
35(5.40. Irish potatoes, northern stock,
70 fa’ 75<‘ per hu.-hel. Honey, strained
>i(s 7; in comb 5 (5> 7-, very dull. Onions,
85 (qj 90c per bushel. Cabbage. green,
fair sale, H 4 '(®itje. Driedfrult, apples
5(5/7; California peeled peaches 14(515.
Provinion <.
Clear sid ribs, 7%J; luilf ribs
(*£■•: rib bellies B>£(s 9; cured bel
lies Sugar-cures hums 10J£(g>13. Lard,
leaf Bbest
Colton.
Market closed easy: middling 9 7- 160.
lkHniGcirui
Winder, Georgia.
Paid In Capital $25,000.00.
THOS A. MAYNARD, President.
L. F SELL, # ~
A. A. CAMP, 1 Vice-Presidents.
W. H. TOOLE, Cashier.
T. A. Mnvnard. R. J. Pentecost,
L. F. Soil, K. L. Carithers,
A. A. Camp, W. H. Eraselton,
W. H. Toole, v 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 contain* !>• lead and hence ib guaranteed not
,to ohalk, firaofc, rub off, peel nor bliiter. It will adhere to wood, Tiu,
Iron, Galvanized Iron, Stone or Tile.
PARIAN PAINTS dry hard with an enamel-like glo** that At
permanent and can be waehett or scrubbed
PARIAN PAINTS will cover more surfaoe aud outlast all oth
jer paint* and will not oome off except by wear. It is guaranteed to
hold it* original color,
Call at our store and get a Catalouge explaining
all about PARIAN PAINT.
We now have our store paoked full of NEW GOODS at OLD
PRICES and will be glad to wait on •our ma*y friend* and customer*.
WE BELL THE CELEBRATED
I MeSHEIIRY GRAIN DRILL, 4
Theory drill that will *ow oat* succewfully.
We are also prepared to sell all kind* of HARROWB, inoludmg
| CLARK’S TORRENT and VARIOUS MAKES of TURNING PLOWS,
Infaot anything found in a firstclas* HARDWARE STORE’
Call and see u 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.
TwifPlain M Mil