Newspaper Page Text
to KANGiNG FIRE
__
an Rebets Reject Latest
Peace Offer of Palma. ;
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IvAlT TAPT’S ARRIVAL
t
Anxious to Lay I
kh Sides Seem
Their Case Before United States.
insurgents Carry War Into
Santiago province.
Havana special says. At a meet
ot r ebel leaders held in the town
B1 of Bejucal, Monday, it was de¬
ed, after a number of violent
icches had been delivered, not to
■ept the peace proposition of the
Jvernment. believed possible for the
It is not
(ban government and the insuig
t s o come to any definite arrange
• at /in 1 the * matter of securing peace
fore the arrival in Havana of Sec¬
taries Taft and Bacon.
the only results ,, thus ,, fai . of . Pres- r,
ent Palma’s older for the suspen
in of hostilities have been that lib
H 1 leaders, who hitherto have had
Cl’} reason to expect arrest, are cip
bating L openly in Havana again, and
conferring with members of the
vernment wiih regard to peace and
bt such insurgents in the field as
been consulted, while they ex
>95 themselves as agreeable to set
nr matters amicably, at the same
ie assume an independent attitude,
lick cannot be said to bode pai
iularly well for a prompt settlement
existing difficulties.
Tue most hoped tor just now 13
at Seer, ary Taft on his arrival will
1 matters in readiness for him to
•in adjudication. Tiie moderates
.
jc not yet willing to make large con
pious, and neither are the liberals,
peral Monacal held a conference
|th Alfredo Zayas, or the liberals,
•a late hour Monday night, but
Ith no definite result.
[Word has just been receivcd
the first fighting in Samtago prov
Four hundred rebels under Colo-
1 Dubois met the rural guardsmen.
La Maya. The result of the en
ment is not known.
Insurgents Select Generals.
The loaders of the lebel forces in
p western part of Cuba held a
[neial Li meeting Sunday near ua Cano
elected Pino Guerra to be major
peral of the first division and Loy
L: Del Castillo to he major general
the second division of the insurg
(t army. Ash*, rt, Arenciba and Guas
err chos-.-n brigadier generals.
[Congressman Govin, Romro and La
uein and others who visited Asbevt
!i other rebel leaders Monday night
(tamed to Havana Tuesday morning
a] report that the rebels have 2,
|0 men concentrated between Ar
iyo Arenas and Wajay. They do
inert the ebels said they were agree
'!>' impressed with President Roose
■It's letter and President Palma’s
‘orre for the suspension of hostiV
rs. They had little to say. however,
if (it the ;*eace negotiations.
Cienfuegos is in a state of siege.
"nmunieation by telegraph is sev
ed, not only in the direction of Ha
fiin, but to Santiago as well, It
known that Cienfuegos had not
attacked up to midnight Sun
'"it what has transpired since
time is not known in Havana.
'EPGRT on PHILIPPINE ARMY.
■' n: - Stations Garrisoned by 7.360
American Troops.
Major General John F. Weston,
inimanding the department of Lu
)n , Philippine Islands, in his annual
Tort, states that forty-one stations
been abandoned during the year,
H there are twenty-eight stations
udsoned by 7.360 American troops
1 2.488 native troops. There
are
vo brigade posts in the department.
< l! McKinley and Camp Stotsenburg
-
n, n 'i | the latter is difficult of access
exposed. For a good part of the
eai ,,!e wa gon roads ’there are im
°'' T0r S ACT DISGRACEFULLY.
bile Th sy Wrangle Injured Men
■
Died and Others Suffered.
Two Persons were killed and thirty
' •’in rt by the collision of two
eavily 'ended electric in San j
r cars
| ncKco Sunday. Following the
'' ac
Ut ’ a claE '- of authority
'^ occurred
Foveen sur §ecas of the railway and
Emergency hospital as to who
l0u ' ri render aid tn tu
"ce 6 , VOUmle ' i ' lhe
fill ,1Iy , n . , took , a haa d and the in
pred "-'0 taken to the Central Emer
u 1 hospital
p AM0us NURSE
goes HENCE.
rs ’ Wail, Daunhi.. Daughter
of Confederacy, , ,
-sses Away in St. Louis.
■ Marion Wallace Wall, (laugh
of confederacy,
who was lac
“'"‘"S t*. C.VU .ar as a ,,„r S e,
dead at sit Louis 1 , bhe bau
hed ’ was ‘
8l>ton° j,, St L uis by
ei ' ° GeneraI
m l r Iel , ®asmg confederates
“ring ti e °rk in the prison.
mu > ON DEATH
Prominent North Carolinian, Member
of .
The arrival of W. J. Bryan
Greensboro, North at
Carolina, .Monday
evening was shadowed in gloom. On
the same train that bore him and the
l' art y "'as the body of Dr. Charles
Duncan Mclver, president of the
Normal and Industrial College,
who died of apoplexy on the train.
lie was a member of the reception
committee on the part of Guilford
county. Immeditely upon his arrival,
the party was carried by automobiles
to the McAdoo betel, where supper
was taken
At 8 o’clock the city ball was crowd¬
ed to its utmost capacity to hear the
speaker,
Mr. Bryan’s speech was an eulogy
to Dr. Mclver, at whose invitation
the Nebraskan visited Greensboro 12
years ago on his first visit to North
L aiolina. He spoke in the highest
terms of thy man. He pointed out
t:i5at his life was an ideal one, and
" aid ^ he w ° uld rather die with his
t-ecord than the name and fame of
John D. Rockefeller. Governor R. B-.
Glenn followed Mr. Bryan and paid
a ljriof tribute to Dr. Mclver
|____ '
BANKERS WILL PROSECUTE.
Limit of Law to Be Meted Out to Torn
j Alexander.
A Pittsburg, Pa., special says: Thos.
! W. Alexander, who was arrested in
j Pittsburg, ive Sunday night, as a fugi
, t from justice, from Augusta. Ga.,
j v i ierei it is alleged, he is charged
j -with defaulting to the amount of
| $200,000, stated, in an interview, on
, Monday, that he would return volun
: tnrily to Augusta,
“The amount involved in this trans-
1 action is not nearly so great as the
, published reports made it,” said Al¬
exander. “I left behind securities
I vliich have either -een disposed of
,
already or will be shortly, which will
j realize sufficient nearly to cover the
^ shortage. The stories printed relative
1 j 0 letters I left behind and such
| stuff are all rot. I cannot, say any
I Thing more until I get back to Au
i g U gta and see my attorney.”
,
1 Mr. Alexander said there would be
[ no trouble about securing bail when
1 p e reaches home. The accused spent
j the day Monday in seeing the sights
j of the city in an automobile under Alex
: the guidance of two detectives.
j under says he is sorry he ran away
from Augusta, and is glad to be in
custody.
A dispatch from Augusta says; In
j reference to the statement made by
j Thomas W. Alexander, the attorney
for the firm cf Alexander & Alexan
i der says there were some assets of
| the firm that had been realized on,
but of the securities referred to by
Thomas \V. Alexander he knew noth
i n g, President Jacob Phinizy of the
Georgia Railroad bank, stated that
Alexander would be prosecuted to the
.
fullest extent cf the law by that in
I stitution.
: ------—
I SHIP TCSSED BY STORM.
----
While Frantic Passengers Prayed and
1 Fcught Amenc Themselves.
Many of the 632 passengers on the
1 steamer Massalia, which arrived at j
Xew York Monday, from Marseilles, 1
Naples ami Palermo, spent their time
, !
in prayer and weeping while the
steamer labored in a terrific gale at ;
sea on September 11. For twelve hours !
the steamer’s decks were continually |
swept by heavy seas and the passen- ■
gers were kept below. Cattle pens, |
chicken coops, boat covers and almost j
everything movable on deck were
smashed or swept overboard.
The heavy seas smashed a pen. rc- I
leasing several bulls, which flounder
’ ed about the decks bellowing with
terror.
• Meantime, the scene almost terify
jng under the battened batches of the
steamer where the immigrants were
confined to prevent them from reach
ing the decks and being washed into
the sea. They were the whole time
either on their knees praying or fig'hl
ing among themselves in a frantic ef
fort to escape from the ship’s hold.
When the gale subsided the officers
and crew were exhausted.
NEGRO COOKS TO FORM TRUST.
Servants Also Will Combine in House
Cleaning Organization.
Some of the leading negro men in
Richmond, Va., have organized the
Virginia House Cleaning company. Its
object, as stated in the charter, is to
form a gigantic co-operative “trust
of all janitors, female and male house
servants and ccoks now employed m
the homes of vhite families and m
the big offices of buildings of the busi
ness districts. The concern Intends to
substitute trained house cleaners
wherever worthless ones are found.
- '
INTO ARRANGEMENT. rurwTt
BREAKS
Visit to Cuba Causes Taft to Postopen
inspection Tour.
| . Qne resu i t G f Secretary Taft’s mis
' i to Havana is the indefinite post
i s on inspecH "“
ponement of a trip of
! eral Bell, »« l >“ chief i of ” staff. ”f«“ The> «“ "e.u
j left Washington about the etid
to have Chickamau
of the present month for
and then go westward for Forts
’ sheri(i an, Sneliing and Riley.
ENTERPRISE. COVINGTON, GA.
WOMEN’S NEGLECT
8UFFERUI8THES83EPEHAI.TY
Health Thus Lost Is Restored by Lydia
E. Pinkham's Ve^etable Compound.
How many women do yon know who
are hear periectly well and strong ? We
every day the same story over and
over agam. '‘ I do not feel well; I am
so tired all the time ! ”
w ElB f M til i!Sm
I*
ll GiliQ
Aiiss Kate McDonald
More than likely you speak the same
words yourself, and no doubt you feel
far from well. The cause may be easily
traced to some derangement of the fe¬
male organs which manifests itself in
depression of spirits, reluctance to go
anywhere or do pains' anything, backache,
bearing-down flatulency, ner.v
ousness, male sleeplessness, or other fe¬
weakness.
These symptoms are but warnings
that heeded there is Anger ahead, and unless
a life of suffering or a serious
operation is the inevitable result.
The never-failing-remedy for all these
symptoms is Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg¬
etable Compound.
MLss Kate McDonald of Woodbridge,
N. J., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:
“ Restored health has meant so much to me
that I cannot help from telling about it for
the sake of other suffering women.
“ For a long time I suffered untold agony
with a female trouble and irregularities,
which made me a physical wreck, and no one
thought ham's Vegetable I would recover, Compound but Lydia has E. entirely Pink
cured me, and made me well and strong, and
I feel it my duty to tell other suffering women
what a splendid medicine it is.”
For twenty-five years Mrs. Pinkham,
daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham.
has under her direction, and since her
decease, been advising sick women free
of charge. Her advice is free and
always helpful. Address, Lynn, Mass.
H 9 HOLD UP!
ML and consider
K
LIKE ALL
■** %
% WATERLOO
a
Vh \ 3 mdteiab, in bkek oryvii wr b'ljj 84
1 'I . / ji rfflafNtalfrs iiliy iJirariiffiaivl sold
K \ d <voywhe
*17 STiCKTOTKE
N 5IQK OF THE FISH I
fce 1 S®Hy'Ttwrs CMtAOIAN COOjnnra A.J.TOWES CO. M
TORONTO, CAM. S35TCN.r-.ASS. - KiA. ft?
---
if alii tried Ihoiiipssn's £ys Water
with weak
eyes* use
h
A- Suiter
©
Ill
'
A LOCAL MANAGER WANTED.
An Independent Income Assured.
We are going to place at once a lo¬
cal manager in every town or county
in the United States. W r e want men
and women of character, tact and !
perseverance to represent us. The
reward is complete independence and
a remuneration most generous, Our
proposition is without exception the
most liberal and best paying one ever
offered capable, ambitious men or
women. You can secure at once a
steady and assured income, Previous
experience is not necessary, All you
need is confidence in your ability, j
We have straight, clean-cut money- 1
a
m cik ui* It is the kind of a raoney
maker that you have been looking
for. There is no limit to the income
that you can make. We want to
hear from every man or woman who
desires to secure a regular income
and are willing to make money, We ;
have just what you want and can
start you at once. Write us to-day
before others secure your district.
Address CIRCULATION, No- 1»
Main street, Buffalo, N. Y.
SEEMS STRANGE.
Bacon—They say there are more
men killed in tiino of peace than in
war. Tcu’d
Egbert—That seems odd.
th . nk fhere was a g00 d deal more
canned stuff consumed in times of
now, wouldn’t you? —Yonkers
war;
Statesman.
rn. mM
Bill Ji,:! >- m 'M Mi m m T,- ;7- -t* maturely Old *
■
of ugly, grizzly, gray hair*. Use “ LA CREOLE” WAIR RESTORER. Rrico. retail.
Because tnose
JURY WAS EXPERIENCED. , 1
“Flatman, I hear you were arrested
the other day for insulting and brow
beating a janitor. How did you come
out?”
“I was tried for it and acquitted.”
“On the ground that it was justifi¬
able?”
No; the jury couldn’t be made to
believe such a thing was possible.”—
Chicago Tribune.
A TERROR.
Fond Mother—I wonder sometimes
what Bertrand’s (occupation in life
"ill be when he grows up.
Impartial Visitor—Well, I don’t
know, of course, but from what I
have observed of him since I have
been here, if he gets his deserts he
will lead the line in the lock-step pa¬
rade twice a day to and from the
shops.—Somerville Journal.
FITS, St. Vitus'Dance :Nervous Diseaser, per¬
manently Restorer. cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve
#2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,981 Arch St,„ P hila., Pa.
THE MIGHT OF PIE.
“I heard of a fellow the other day
who fell from an open window where
he was sitting eating pie, and was in¬
stantly killed.”
“I don’t doubt it. I’ve often been
knocked out by pie myself.”—Balti¬
more American.
It is unwise to use tea-leaves for
laying the dust when sweeping a
light-colored carpet, unless they have
been previously rinsed in water; oth¬
erwise the carpet may 'be badly stain
ed.
HtS-’S?fEE!VWHHfXJ;wti5TCTlJfi ’WTOTt'CW SaauSSSnS
HI? m o POISON YOURSELF
J
And remember you have no right to give it to your WIFE AND LITTLE ONES
Wh$n you ask for medicine be sure that you take it pure and free from DANGER. In asking you to use OXIDINE fa
your home we do so because we know it will CURE CHILLS and FEVERS, BAD COLDS and LA GRIPPE, and
because there never has been, there is not now, and there never will be the slightest particle of poison in it. If anyone tells
you that this statement is untrue, point your finger to OUR GUARANTEE. We make this guarantee unconditional and open
TO THE WORLD
OUR GUARANTEE any We ARSENIC, will give MORPHINE, $1,000.00 IN STRYCHNINE GOLD to or any other chemist poisonous in the drugs world in who OXIDINEi finds
Not only do we give the above guarantee as to its being free from Poison, but we go further and guarantee that
i
r IDINE
WILL CURE YOU OR. YOUR. FAMILY OF
CHILLS, FEVERS, MALARIA, BAD COLDS AND LA f
GRIPPE
And if it fails to cure you your druggists give you back your money; in other words, OXIDINE is pure, contains no poison,
and there is a GUARANTEE TO CUKE that goes with every bottle.
} Jjft 50c E IS Per REGULAR Bottle AR0 WSTELLS3 to All FORM PATTON-WGRSHAM Manufactured by DRUG CO.
FOR SALE BT Alt DEUOOISTS * |F 1
AND EVERY BOTTLE GCAEANTEED DALLAS, TEXAS, AND MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE
L y - | OXIDINE, THE CHILL CURE THAT CURES CHILLS |
ran! Hi Miann ifii—M £
'•Xl£i*ui2m*KiUUSC
msswmmMmmmemsaaaMmamm vmmm 5Ti»aarw
Tliousands of Women
suffer every month In silence, tortures that would drive a man to the edge of des¬
pair. The ailments peculiar to women are not only painful but dangerous and
should receive prompt treatment before they grow worse. If you suffer from pain,
i-: irregular functions, falling feelings, headache, side ache, dizziness, tired feeling, etc.,
• 0‘
2 follow the example of thous¬
1 ands of who have
d women
, been relieved or cured, and
take Wine of Cardui.
Sold by all Druggists %
c 7
WINCHESTER
REPEATING SHOTGUNS
are strong shooters, strongly made and
so inexpensive that you won’t be afraid
to use one in any kind of weather.
Th^y are made io, 12 and 16 gauge.
A FAVORITE OF AMERICAN SPORTSMEfI
Sold Everywhere.
fiS
AN IMPOSTOR.
Pierce—Do you see that man over
there- He is one of the richest men
in Chicago.
Pearce—Get cut! You can’t fool me.
He isn’t eating with his knife.—Som
erville Journal.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething,softens thegums, reducesinfiamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle
LEISURE.
“Hello, Pat, what are yon doing?”
“Share, an’ I spind all my idle toime
sawin’ wood."—Life._
As . , } . . safe r
a ru e Jt 13 a P, ractlCe
not to put into the Stomach any- j
thing that is not nourishing and
easy of digestion.
m I |
• ' MW
WHEAT FLAKE CELERY
food
eas j]y J converted by the diges- b
tiye - and , supplies the .1
organs nu
tritive wants of all parts 01 the
body. 30
10 cents a package .
For sale by all Grocers
The smallest apartment houses are
those occupied by bees. In a cu'bic
Eoot of honeycomb there are about
9,000 cells.
ilk 0 _ „ 1 s 1 fs i |%f M i»
V# S°% I 'la# B its Ins
I 1 3 B nPC Sfeo u “ ct * immsdisteir-
700 *?•* its •ITflcts m 10
INDIGESTION isiriap St!"' and jk.t.»
Wttit *
ACIDITY attttasari;Jli”S
removing tl>a cauo«. 10 cents.
GUARAN¬
TEED
BY A
$5,000 BANK DEPOSIT
R.R. Fare Paid. Notes Takon
500 FREE COURSES
£3\si3ElSESISISffilSI! . BoardatCost. Write Quick
| fiEORGIA-ALABAMA bUSINESSCOLLEGE. Macon, Gfc
Hill
H m t-'iac.,
.
n
It •y.’
m mi fe.
:
vmm&i g;-ifi»ff
''
■
■
11 fe:'.; '*£***t
Wmtersmith’s
BOTTLE A HILL TONIC
WILL BREA CURES CHILLS
AND ALL MALARIAL FEVERS.
Has be<?n a standard household remedy for over 40 years.
Pleasant to take; leaves no bad effects like quinine; harmless
for children. Guaranteed by all druggists. Put up in 50c
and SI bottle*. Sent express paid on receipt of price, if not oa
YOUR sale at the home drug store. Addresa
.CHILLS ARTHUR PETER A CO., General Stents. Louisville, Ky.
W. L. DOUGLAS
5 _ 3-&50 _ ^ d*»*3aOO _ s _ ^ ,
BEST IN THE WORLD
W.LQouglas $4 Gilt Edge
oannotbeequallodatanypr ce A
I T* Shoe Dealers: /
bing W. House I.. Douglas’ is .Tob
the most
complete Send in this for country Catalog
M wM % Mm
i -as
Mi / m M [fa n
i
Etl « X
m ' IT r^l
L
SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES.
Mon’s Slioeg, $5 to $1.50. Boys’ Shoes. $1.50.. $3
to 81.25. Women’s Shoes. $4.00 $2.26 to $1.00,. ► ,
Misses’ & Children's Shoe3, to antS'
Try IV. L. Douglas Women’s, Blisses
Children’s shoes; for style, tit and wear
they excel other makes.
If I could take you Into my largo
factories at Brockton, Mass.,and show
you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes
are made, you would then understand
why they hold their shape, fit better*
wear longer, and are of greater value
than any other make.
Wherever you live, you can obtain W. I*
Douglas shoes. His name and price is stamped
on the bottom, which protects you against high
EST tfttawris:
and insist upon having them. will
Fast Color Eyelets used; they not wear brassy.
Write DOUGLAS, lor Illustrated Catalog ot Fall Styles. Mass.
W. L. Dept. 1 5 , Brockton,
JM-Jlf'im ONARCH STUMP
^ * ! * PULLER2211W
Feet In IMametert
_—rV-_J Guaranteed for 12mts.Catfe»
Jok& l dsc.. ad’r'8. Monarch t * rubber Co.Lone Tree.law
(At38-'06)
Malsby & Co.
41 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga.
FB
Portable and Stationary
Engines, Boilers,
Saw Mills
AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY
Complete line Carried in stock for
JMMKDIA TE DELI VEH Y.
Best Machinery, Lowest Prices an<J Best Terms
Write us for catalogue, prices,
etc., before buying.