Newspaper Page Text
THE CLAYTON
'ii .*f
Post-office
bit me.
aadltseea-
THERE IS NO PAPER LIKE THE HOME PAPER TO HOME PEOPLE.
CLAYTON, RABUN COUNTY. GA . APRIL 9.19(>3.
NO. is:
PRESIDENT OFF
• TO THE WEST
Coes for a Nine Weeks’ Visit to
His Rough-Rider Constituents.
PALATIAL SPECIAL TRAIN
JLargc Crowd at Pennsylvania Railway
Station to Bid Him God-Speed.
Sternberg Makes a Coup.
President' Roosevelt, at 9:05 ofcloca
Wednesday morning, started on bis
western trip under the most favorable
auspices. As the special train pulled
Out of the Pennsylvania station in
Washington the president stood on the
platform of his private ear, tipping
his hat and smiling In response to the
enthusiastic cheers of hundreds of ad-
■fhlrers and personal friends.
i The station and platforms were
crowded with people anxious to ex
tend to the chief magistrate their good
Wishes for a safe and successful Jour
Jfcy. Notable precautions were taken
to insure the safety of the president.
Uniformed officers, headquarters de
tectives, plain-clothes men and' secret
operatives Surrounded the president
and covered, every point.
The most notable incident connected
with the president’s departure arose
\ out of the presence at the etatjont^f
Baron SpeiA Von Sternberg, the Ger
He wan the only mem
iplomatie corps who wen^ the result of n
STRIKERS ENJOINED.
Superior Court Judge Lumpkin at At
lanta Issues Restraining Order
Against Unions.
At Atlanta, Thursday night at I
o’clock, Foote ft Davies, printers, se
cured an Injunction against the unions
engaged In the Btrike now on in the
Job printing offices of the city.
Judge Lumpkin, of the Fulton coun
ty superior court, read a petition on
behalf of Footo ft Davties, and signed
a temporary restraining order directed
to the Atlanta Typographical Union
and the Electrotypers and Sterotypers’
Union.
The order commands these organiza
tions to desist from seeking to force
or compel the employees of the Foote
& Davies Company from quitting
work; desist from using force, threats,
abuse or coercion for this purpose;
desist from driving off the customers
or of persons desiring to have printing
or other like work done by the Foote
ft Davies Company, and desist from
using threats or menaces of ruin or in-
<ury of such persons qr their business
or property for this purpose.
In the petition Hied by the Foote &
Davies Company a number of charges
are made against the union. It Is al
leged that each of the unions concern
ed have entered Into a combination In
restraint of trade. It Is alleged that
they have conspired to rum the bus!
ness of Foote & Davies.
The fight Which occurred near th«
Foote ft Davies place of business sev
eral days ago Is also mentioned in Uk
05-
petition and it is charg& that this was
Another- ct
tpe prelldent off
flkosr tlon As that
jgeeeted
ed
baron
bald be In Washington In June
when he returned, and upon receiving
an affirmative reply the president said:
“That Is good. We will have somo
long rides together.” *
' The baron told the president that
his horses were in India and would
'/■ - hot be here for some time. Instantly
the president gave orders that during
Us absence his riding horse and that
of Mrs. Roosevelt should be placed at
ilv’QMI
disposal of Baron and Baroness
Von Sternberg. “I should be very
much pleased,” said he to the baron,
“if you and the baroness would rido
tkam whll-i I am away.”
”Aa the train drew out the president
called:
“Gofid bye, baron, I appreciate your
Mjttnftg very mqch.”
' ’"No member of the president's Imme
diate family, except his sister, Mrs
Cowles, was at the station, Mrs. Roose-
velt and the young children being down
/ the Chesapeake bay on the Mayflower,
said. Miss Alice being In Porto Rico.
Several members of the cabinet, In-
ludlng Secretaries Cortelyou, Wilson
nd Hitchcock, were present. Other
members of the cabinet had taken their
formal leave of the president at the
white house. ,
The train is one of the finest ever
run out of Washington by the Pennsyl
vania railroad, handsomely equipped
and manned by a crew of picked men
The only change In the personnel of
the party as heretofore announced was
tthn M. McCoy, who went as special
nbresentatlve of the Pennsylvania
rluro&d, Instead of C. R.- Rosenberg.
, Ml addition to those officially desig
i nAed as members of the president's
A-|&rty three secret service men and
two postoffice inspectors accompanied
the president aa a personal bodyguard.
The journey as planned will occupy
nine weeks and three days, and the
party will travel a little more than
n^les.
at Harrisburg a Surprise,
ent Roosevelt’s train arrived
urg, Pa. at 1:10 p. m. and
for nine minutes. The run
in was uneventful, the
spending moot of his timejn
The train made no stops af-
"except for water.
In Harris-
Including the’
k
dbnsplracy.
rge' made In the
[lawful iheans have bl
among the means adopted, It Is alleg
ed, being bribery.
Judge Lumpkin set the preliminary
hearing for April 11 at 9 o’clock In the
morning. ,
WOMAN (AND BROTHER HELD.
Mrs. Griffin eng Sam Knowles Bound Over
linder Circumstantial Evidence.
At the preliminary trial at Eaton
ton, Qa., of Mrs. John Griffin and her
brother, Sam .Knowles, under suspl
cion as murderers of John Griffin, the
woman’s husband both the prisoners
were remanded to jail -Thursday to
await trial at the September term ol
the superior court.
Mrs. Griffin had her nine-months ol 1
baby In her arms when the verdict was
read, and she burst Into bitter weep
ing.
The evidence against them, whllo
very strong apparently, Is only circum
stantlal. Judge W. F. Jenkins, In their
defense, spoke seven hours and made
a very able argument. Judge W. B
Wingfield closed for the prosecution In
an argument equal to that of his oppo
nent.
Ball will be asked, and it Is possible
that Judge Lewis will allow It, as the
evidence Is only circumstantial.
It is reported that new evidence has
been secured by the prosecution. Just
before his death Griffin told a friend
that if things did not change around
his house that he would make another
Wllcoxen case. He referred to a case
that occurred In the county two years
ago, In which the destroyer of his
home was killed by Wilcoxen.
RACE ROW IN RAILWAY SHOPS.
Delicately formed and gently reared, women will find,
in all the seasons of their lives, as maidens, wives,or moth
ers, that the one simple, wholesome remedy which acts
gently and pleasantly and naturally, and which may be
used with truly beneficial effects, under any conditions,
when the system needs a laxative, is—Syrup of Figs. It
is well known to be a simple combination of the laxative
and carminative principles of plants with pleasant, aro
matic liquids, which are agreeable and refreshing to the
taste and acceptable to the system when Its gentle
cleansing Is desired.
Many of the Ills from which woman suffer are of a tran
sient nature and do not come from any organic trouble
and it Is pleasant to know that they yield so promptly to
the beneficial effects of Syrup of Figs, but when anything
more than a laxative Is needed it Is best to consult the
family physician and to avoid the old-time cathartics and
loudly advertised nostrums of the present day. When
one needs only to remove the strain, the torpor, the con
gestion, or similar ills, which attend upon a constipated
condition of the system, use the true and gentle remedy—
Syrup of Figs—and enjoy freedom from the depression,
the aches and pains, colds and headaches, which are due
to Inactivity of the bowels.
Only those who buy the genuine Syrup of Figs can hops
to get its beneficial effects and as a guarantee of the ex
cellence of the remedy thd full name of the company—
California Fig Syrup Co.—is printed on the front of every . .
package and without it any preparation offered as Syrup
of Fl|»-Is fraudulent and should be declined. To those
whp know the. quality of this excellent laxative, the*’"'y;'jl; -
offer of any substitute, when Syrup of Figs Is called ’ ;
for. Is always resented by a transfer of patronage to.
«O0j|e first-class drug establishment, where they do / ;
' amend, nor seU false brands, nor Imitation-J.;
ffedleU^The genulne^arttcie may Be bought of all
* reliable druggists everywhere at 50 cents per bottle. ;: v\/.
■
AliMNIA
§f\
•*'WH.'
i ! ilrassj|f
iV&WLr.:'"?
St V/V
1
PROPER ANTIDOTE.
Nurse ( excitedly)—Oh, doctor, 1
have just given the patient a teaspoon
ful of Ink by mistake. What shall I
do?
Ooctor (calmly)—Give him a blot
ter to oat right away.—Chicago News.
SUBORDINATE.
Mr. Byrnne Coyne—Ah,- sweetest
one, may I be your captain and guide
your bark down the sea of life?
Mrs. Barymore (a widow)—No, but
you can be my second mate.—Detroit
Free Press.
CLOSE TO THE PEOPLE.
Doan a Kidney Pills have leaped into Public levor beesuae the people can writo direct
to the maker* and secure a trial tree. Thus has been builded the greatest lama
and largest sale known to any Kidney medicine in the world.
!S, .
back that 1 could not walk. I used the (am
ple of Doan's Kidney Pills with tuch good re
sults I sent to Toledo for another box, and
they cured me.—Sabah E. Cottrell, Cur
tice, O. •
Falmouth, Va.— I suffered over twelve
months with pain Id tbp email of my back.
Medicines and platters gave onljt temporary
relief. Doan’a Kidney tills cured me.—F. 8.
Brown, Falmouth, Va.
West Haven, Conn.— Eight months ago I
took a severe pain in my back. The sample
box of Doan's Kidney Pills helped me so
much 1 purchased two boxes ; am on my sec-
oud box. My heart does not bother me as it
used to and 1 feel well.—Sarah E. Bradley,
No. 8T7 Elm Street, West Haven, Conn.
Colored Employees of Coast Line Strike
Because One Wat Mobbed by Whites.
Because a negro cursed one of the
workmen In the Atlantic Coast Line
Bbops at Wilmington, N. C., Thursday,
over tw<^.hundred fellow workmen al
most mobbed him at the .noon hour
when all the men knocked oil for din
ner. The negro, whose name Is San
ders, was badly beaten, but no very
rious Injury resulted.
Senders, with 600 other nogroeB, Is
employed about the Shops to do heavy
work. 4a a result of the trouble,the
of negroes walked out and
remainder of the-
lUfi
Houston, Tex.— I took the eaiftplo of
Doan’s Kidney Pills with such great benefit
I bought a box at our druggist’s. Used over
half aud stopped, because iny urine which
before had obly come dribbling, now became
eo free. X had medicine enough. I had lum
bago and the pills rid me of It. I should have
written sooner, but you know how soon a well
person forgets about being sick.—Mr. C. H.
Hoescke, No. 3319 McKenny Ave., Houston,
Tex.
loin paius overcome. Swelling of the
limbs and dropsy Signs vanish.
They correct urine with brick dust sedi
ment, high colored, pain in passing, drib
bling, frequency, bed wetting. Doan’s
Kidney Pills remove calculi and gravel.
Relieve heart palpitation, sleeplessness,
headache, nervousness, dizziness.
FREE — QRANO FOR SPRING KIDNEY ILLS.
Doan's
Kidney
rills
Fostsb-Uilbcrx Co., Buffalo, N. T.
Plbase send me by mail, without charge,
trial box Doan's Kidney Pills.
gtfttG
(Cot out ooupon on dotted line* and mall to
~ * --Mil bun - ' - * " “
To Cotton (tinners.
Va ItaiufMtart the Matt Canplala Una
of Cattoa Bla Maahiun af Anj Company
la tba World, namalj,
PRATT,
WINSHIP,
MUNGER,
EAGLE, .
SMITH.
We also male*
Lintors for Oil Milts,
Engines and Boilers.
Va alia tell nerjlhl*g Moaatarj ta complete a
ng Outfit
lieiara Sinning Outfit nil furnish our o.iS-
lomert with hill dahlled p.iM and ma
terial klllt far omtructloa af naeemrj
houses for our plants without astro charge.
Tba Continental Gin Company,
Birmingham, Ala.
WRITE rOB OUB LATEST CATALOGUE.
Malsby & Co.
4| South Forsyth St y Attaita, Ga.
Foftor-Mliburo Oo., Buffalo, N. T.)
Medical Advice Free—Strictly Confidential.
FARM
iiEEDS
• anuttVEw* wash
PEL7Z*
7 lust Is it I
Catalog
WELL DRILLING
MAr'KtlWTPmW.
r. H. Hattox, of Kara, Miss., writ*. aeMbmjL.
1 wUl say that I have never »eeo a Well rirlllin*
aeldae tl .t would eqnal the "Ohio" Machine for
1 of the fountryj. It ie the f»»te»f m.chh^e
with it since
the country. It
!Sttr»‘«Kor°
Portable and Stationary
Engines, Boilers,
Saw Mills
AND ALL KINDS OF MA
Complete Kite carried fa
IMMXDTA TX wUpt
feet Machinery, Ixxreat Price, aad
Write ns lor calm
etc., before buying.
awlWiSSfe t i