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Established in 1872.
VOL. XXXI.
Published Every Saturday Morning.
A. W. LATIMER, Pub. and Pxopr.
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1-2 Col. 5,00 10.00 25.00 40.00 00.00
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All bills for advertising are due at any time
upon presentation after tirst appearance of
advertisement.
Special rates for contracts can be made with
the publisher.
All announcements of marriages and deaths
not exceeding 10 lines inserted without charge
Address all letters to The Lumpkin Inde
pendkm', or A. W Latimer,
Business Manager.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
AMES, HOOPER A- DYKES,
, Attorneys at Law,
Lumpkin and Americus, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts.
Office in Court II >use. ’Phone 00.
July 12-02.
E, T. HICKEY,
■ Attorney at Law.
Lumpkin, Ga.
Office in Court House. Practice
in all the Courts.
Jan. 15-1900-tf.
w. C. BATEMAN,
Physician and Surgeon,
Lumpkin, Ga.
Office up stairs in F. S. Singer
Building.
Phone 30 at residence.
All calls answered day or night.
Nov. 9-ly.
L. Grier,
i Physician,
Lumpkin, Ga.
Office west side public square.
Residence Mrs. Susie Siddall’s.
Calls attended promptly day or
night. Telephone 44.
Jan. 11-02.
GO W. LIDE,
i Operative Dentist,
Lumpkin, Ga.
Office in Bank Building,
Jan. 1 1901.
ORBETT HOUSE,
M. Corbett, Prop’r,
Lumpkin, Ga.
Every attention given to the ac¬
commodation and comfort ol
guests. oc!6
BANK OF STEWART COUNTY.
CAPITAL, $50,000.
Surplus and Undivided Profits, $4,000.
A. H. SIMPSON,President.
J. T. PATTERSON.'Viee-Pres.
W. L. MARDR1S, Cashier.
DIRECTORS:
A. H. Simpson, J. T. Patterson,
J. B. Richardson, F. S. Singer,
J. D. Richardson, W. L. Mardre,
B. F. Hawes, J. M. Stevens, Tom¬
linson Fort.
Jan. lst-1897.
W. L. MARDRE,
Fire Insurance Agent, Gin
House Insurance a Specialty.
Best Companies represent¬
ed.
Jan. lst-96
CHURCH directory.
Lumpkin M. K. Church, South,
L. VV. Coi-son, Pastor.
Preaching every Sunday morning
and evening.—Sunday School—9:80
a. m.
.Junior League—Sunday afternoon.
Juvenile Missionary Society on 1st
Sunday afternoon.
Kpworth League every Tuesday even
ing.
Prayer-meeting every Wednesday
evening. Regular Church Conference
on Wednesday evening before Jst Sun¬
day in each month.
Fast-day Service on Friday morning
before 1st Sunday in each month, look¬
ing to the regular Communion Service
on 1st Sundays.
Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society
an Monday afternoon after 1st Sun¬
days.
Woman’s Parsonage Aid Society on
Monday afternoon after 2nd Sundays.
“O come, let us worship and bow
down: Let us kneel before the Lord
our Maker.”—Bible.
Are you a subscriber for the Home
and Farm? If you area farmer you
should be. There is a vast amount of
valuable and useful information to be
found in twelve numbers or it. We
will furnish Home and Farm and The
Independent to any subscriber for one
year for $1.25.
. *
THE LUMPKIN INDEPENDENT.
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, PUBLISHED IN THE POLITICAL, SOCIAL AND AGRICULTURAL INTERESTS 0 E STEWART COUNTY, GEORGIA.
THREE MONTHS OF EARTH¬
QUAKE AND ERI PTION.
Great natural cataclysms are al¬
ways preceded by certain warnings
and premonitory symptoms. At
the same time, what might lm re
garded as such warnings have oc¬
curred in times past without being
followed by disaster. Should any
unprecedented cataclysm occur in
the immediate future, however,
the historian would infallibly
point to the extraordinary succes¬
sion of events which has preceded
it.
Never before in the history of
the world lias there been such a re¬
markable series of terrestrial dis¬
turbances as those which have fol¬
lowed each other day by day dur¬
ing the past three months over an
area covering practically the en¬
tire surface of the globe. From
the original eruption of Mont l’e
lne to the present time there lias
been hardly a day when the record
lias not shown earthquake, tidal
wave, or volcanic disturbance in
some part of the earth.
These phenomena have been re¬
markable not only for their num¬
ber, but for the sympathetic ac¬
tion which is indicated by simul¬
taneous occurences, though sepa¬
rated by thousands of miles. But
their most astonishing feature has
been their violence, Previous
movements of the sea bottom have
been almost eclipsed by those that
have recently occurred. Almost
at the same time earthquake shocks
of extreme violence have agitated
wide-spread areas, in this country
demolishing a large town. As to
the volcanic eruptions at Martini¬
que and St. Vincent, there is no
need to dwell upon the mighty
forces which they exerted.
Considering these simultaneous
manitestations, it lias been regard¬
ed as certain that they all have
similar origin in a terrestrial con¬
traction which is still goifig “on
and the end of which no man can
foretell. Nothing but an earth
movement of the first magnitude,
it is believed, would have occa¬
sioned such phenomena,
They have been accompanied by
lesser displays of natural power,
such as cyclones, tornadoes, and
exceptional lighting, these in turn
producing duststorms and water¬
spouts, while the entire terrestrial
atmosphere lias been affected to
the extent of many degrees of
temperature. Coldness and rail I,
which have distinguished tho pres¬
ent summer, are regarded by many
as but one result of the extraordi¬
nary earth movement which fu¬
ture historians will identify with
the present year.
The initial work of destruction
was the most awful—the eruption
of Mont Peleo, on the island of
Martinique, in the destruction of
more than 30,(XX) persons.
About the same time there ap¬
peared unusual disturbances of
the earth in many lands. Across
the Gulf of Mexico a succession of
of earthquakes demolish several
towns, caused the death of more
than a thousand persons, the in¬
jury of 3,000 others, and render¬
ing more than 50,000 people home¬
less. Immediately following were
eruptions of Mont Redoubt, in
Alaska, and Mount Colima and
Mount Souconusco, in Mexico,
and earthquakes in Portugal, and
within a few weeks there were
other smoking and erupting vol¬
canoes in Alaska, Hawaii, Mexico,
and the West Indies, destructive
earthquakes in Spain, Southern
Europe, Asia Minor, and Califor¬
nia, ami perceptible tremors of the
earth as near New York as Bay¬
onne, N. J., and noticeable chang¬
es in the elevations in Pennsylva¬
nia.
Then there were the unseasona¬
ble atmospheric conditions—ex¬
traordinarily low temperatures,
excessive rainfalls, and terrific
windstorms, which in many places
in the United States became tor¬
nadoes and cyclones, doing great
damage. The first unseasonable
cold weather occurred two days
after the Martinique disaster, and
was felt most seriously in Paris,
where during what usually is one
of the warmest spells of the year
the citizens found it advisable to
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 23, 1902*
| I f (your scriber. A own FREE Duly solocttom 50 PATTERN vents to every a year. sub- 1
MS CAL1.’SJ§
„
j Pra/lflM£,jSgU
A LADIES’ MAGAZINE.
A gem; beautiful culored plate* ; latest
fashions; dressmaking economies .fancy
work; household dhy, hints; fiction, etc. Sub¬
scribe to or, send kc for late st copy
Lady agents wanted. Send fot terms.
Stylish, Economical Reliable, Sititnlft. Up-to
date, . Absolutely
Perfect-Fit tint? Pa pci Patterns.
uib -<=$ &
BAZAR.
All Seams Allowed and Perforations show
the Basting and Sewlog Lines.
Only io ami is Cent* each—non® higher
Ask for them mail Sold In nearly every city
and town, or by hunt
THE McCALL CO.,
II3-II5-II7 West 31st St„ NfW YORK
don their overcoats and heavy un¬
dergarments. The entire summer
in New York has been exception¬
ally cold, and the cause assigned
by many is the unusual distur¬
bances in tin* interior of the earth.
Storms have been startling in
their magnitude and frequency
this year. Cloudbursts and wa¬
terspouts, or downpours of such
force and quantity that the lay¬
man could not place them in any
other class, have flooded many
states, The valleys of the Missis
tdppi and Missouri rivers, with
their abundant crops, have been
Hooded and their fields laid waste,
causing a loss i\) farmers of sover
al million dollars. The east, has
suffered, and the far west as well.
Many of the storms were accom¬
panied by lightning and hail,
which added to their destructivt
ness,
If nothing worthy of record is
accomplished by man during the
twelve months comprising the
present calendar year, 1902 will be
accorded a peculiar place in his
tyi-y smwpm ill
which he has no part. Dame Na¬
ture, with a more mighty and in¬
considerable hand than she lias
shown for many generations, has
wrought great ami widespread de¬
vastation. Thousands upon thou¬
sands of persons have lost their
lives, other thousands have been
maimed, towns and cities have
been wiped out, ami there have
been property losses aggregating
millions.—New York Times.
Trinity With Cliiiin.
Washington, Aug. 17-—The Btato
Department has received a dis
pateh from T. S. Sharretts, the
treasury expert who was commis¬
sioned by the State Department to
negotiate a tariff' treaty between
the United States and China, stat¬
ing that the treaty was signed on
Aug. 15, and that lie would sail
for the United States on the first
steamer.
The announcement contained in
Mr. Sharretts’ brief dispatch to
the State Department brings to a
successful cnnelusi n negotiations
which have been in progress for
many months for a tariff treaty
between China ami this country.
It was stipulated as one of the
features of tho peace agreement
between China and the foreign
Powerr at the close of the Boxer
outbreak, that an entirely new
fabric of trade treaties should be
made.
Dentil and J tit i it by Storm.
Savannah, Gy., Aug 18.—A se¬
vere electrical storm with high
wind passed over the southern sec¬
tion of Georgia Saturday night.
At Stillmorc the roundhouse of
tlie Air Line railroad was blown
down and wrecked.
At Waynesboro a dwelling was
blown down and one man was
killed.
At Bartow the Baptist eliureh
and the academy building were
struck by lightning and narrowly
escaped destruction.
At Swainsboro a building was
struck by lightning and burned.
Tn all the sections the opening
cotton was whipped from the bolls
and ruined. The loss from this
source was considerable.
Oxford, Ga., Aug. 19.—In the
election for or against the sale of
whisky, Newton county went dry
by a majority of 804 votes.
Hotel -is Built on Hill of Human
Hones.
Probably no other hotel in the
world but the new Potter, in Santa
Barbara, Cal., has the peculiar dis¬
tinction of being sot upon a bat¬
tle-ground of the ancients, build
ed upon into a miniature moun¬
tain by successive tiers of dead
and crumbling warriors—Califor¬
nian warriors, who once guarded
the beautiful coast at the foot of
Santa Ynez Mountains, from the
invasions of the insular tribes of
the Pacific.
A few days ago some of the must
wonderful discoveries of Califor¬
nia n Indian relics in years were
made by laborers engaged by the
Potter Hotel company of I.os An¬
geles on Santa Barbara’s land¬
mark known as Burton Mound.
Burton Mound lias beeirproved to
bo not a natural elevation, but a
burial mound of prehistoric In¬
dians, which was once the battle¬
ground where the tierce tribes of
the mainland and the Channel Is¬
lands, fought to the death in the
dim years of another time,
During the past month surpris¬
ing finds of dead men’s bones be¬
gan to be made by the workmen
engaged in grubbing out the old,
gnarled cypress trees which ob¬
structed the ocean view of the ho¬
tel. The venerable cypresses have
grown from tender young things
into the might of freedom, nour¬
ished by the loam of a rotting
race; have stretched , forth their
mighty limbs toward the moun¬
tains and the near sea with the
strength that is drawn from blood¬
ied earth ; have gripped into graves
and tightened tlu'il' roots about
the remains of departed warriors
to hold to through the years against
the ceaseless weight of the ocean’s
breath, And yielding., up their
lives at last under the American
ax, they have torn to tae light in
their fall tin* m.v-b-r- -unbraced
in their tentaoles.
Proof lias been found that the
unknown dead of Burton mound
died in fierce combat, thus bearing
out in large part the old legend of
the Bantu Barbara battle-ground,
uueqtialed for Idoodliness in its
time m all California, which is
still told by the priests of the his¬
toric mission back of the town.
On July 2(> thirty separate skele¬
tons were taken from an excava¬
tion made about ob <! tree ; an ex¬
cavation large enough only to al¬
low the workmen to cut away the
roots. The skeletons fell to pieces,
but the skulls, for the most part,
were removed intact. Several of
the skulls were very tightly en¬
twined in the roots.
hi one of the skulls was imbed¬
ded a stone arrowhead—an easy
indication of how the life inside
was struck out centuries ago. An¬
other skull was crushed in behind,
not broken, but bent in from the
blow of some heavy instrument.
The skull with the arrowhead dis¬
integrated badly when removed
from the earth ; but a relic per¬
haps more inter'sting than this
was handled without injury. It
is a thigh bone, split almost, from
top to bottom by an arrowhead,
which still is tightly wedged where
it struck. Buried with one of the
bodies was a shell paint bowl, still
containing well-preserved war
paint in cakes.
Wherever the dead are uncover¬
ed, they lie in heaps; they are not
buried as are the bones of those
who die in peace. Some lie on
their faces, others on their sides,
others doubled up; and all spraw¬
led in different directions.
Still more wonderful things are
expected to be found as the exca¬
vations progress.—N. Y. Times.
Fitzgerald, Ga., Aug. 18.—Fitz¬
gerald Foundry and Machine
works, owned by J. E. Leverett,
was burned about S o’clock yester
'd ay morning. The lire must have
been burning in some timbers all
night and was discovered about
7:30.
Owing to the fact that the fire
was remote from flic fire depart¬
ment quarters and from the near¬
est plug, there was some delay in
getting a stream on the burning
building. The loss is about $4,000,
with $3,000 insurance.
IP
U-> ^ 90
2 i'r
pi 3
I Miss Ida. M. Snyder, B
TmiMsrpr of tins I
llrooklyn lust En«l Art ( Iiib.
* J If women would pay more attention to a
their health we would have more happy
wives, mother? and daughters, and 1 if they
would observe results they would find
that the doctors’ prescriptions do hot
perform the many cures they are given
credit for.
“ In consulting with my druggist he ad
vised McEIree’s Wine of Cardui and Thed
ford’s Black-Draught, and so I took it and
have every re.fson to thank him for a new
life opened up to me with restored health,
and it only took three months to cure me.”
Wine of Cardui is a regulator of the
menstrual functions and is a most as
tunishing tonic for women. It cures
scai ular ity, and suppressed, painful menstruation, too frequent, falling irreg¬
of the womb, whites and flooding. It
is helpful when approaching womun
hood, birth and during in change pregnancy, of after child¬
life. It fre¬
quently that have brings been a dear baby to homes
barren for years, AU
of druggists Cardui. have $1.00 bottles of Wine
WINE”GARDUI
Alpine Tunnel Nearing Coin
plot ion,
The construction of an under¬
ground railway throughout the
length of Manhattan Island has
awakened an interest in other
great tunnels—those which have
been successfully completed in the
past and those which are now in
process of building. Undoubtedly
the great railway tunnels under
the Alps, connecting Italy with the
Continent, are among the most re¬
markable in the world. Mr. Her
he.i U. Fyfe, an able English wri
ter, gives, in the September Pear¬
son’s, a most interesting account
of the construction of these tun
nelB, and particularly of the Simp
Ion Tunnel, which, at a cost of
$14,Out),(XX), • to , he , completed .
is , . in .
*
about ... two from date.
years
Fyfosays:
“The Simplon Tunnel pierces
the base of tho Alpine giant, Mon
tic Leone, There are, as a fact, two
tunnels running side by side at a
distance of some fifty feet. At
present only one is being bored
sufficiently largo for ordinary pas
senger traffic; the other tunnel is
used for a narrow gauge line bv
wliieh material is conveyed from
tho workings; but it also serves
the purposes of ventilation. Fresh
air is blown in at one entrance,
and after journeying along the
one tunnel passes by cross-cuts
i it to the other, thus carrying away
the vitiated air. As the men in
charge of the drills working with-'
in the tunnel are not readied by
the current thus set up, they are
supplied with air delivered to them
through a pipe at the rate of 1,000
cubic feet a minute. Work oil the
Simplon has now been carried on
for upwards of three years, the
contractors having undertaken to
complete the tunnel in five mid a
half years at a cost of $14,000,000.
One reason for the great length
of the Simplon funnel has been
the. aim ol the engineers to keep
t he steepness of the gradients with
in reasonable limits. 'The older
tunnels, although all shorter than
the c Simplon, . ,, have gradients ...
as
steep , as 1 , in 3o o- and , , 1 in . 40; , A thus ,,
the ., money saved , by , the .
, length ol these , , tunnels . is . more
than lust by tho increased and
never-ending cost of haulage. The
highest point touched by the Sim¬
plon Tunnel is 2,310 feet above sea
the rise never becomes
ter than 1 in 50.”—Exchange.
I!,,,,,.. ehy
visited .... By the , worst , ,
was
.. its . history about . , 2 , oclock . , , , .
il)
atternoon. ... ,,, I wo negro , ,
were , blown , down , and , many lei it
’ os,
bill , ... . boards . and , shade , trees
pros! rated. The drug store of
Wright & Wooten and the Central
Hotel were partially unroofed.
At Rock mart, about twenty-five
miles from this city, Mrs. Kiston,
a prominent: woman, was killed by
lightning.
Hull Heal ing' .Journals.
Chicago, Aug. 19.—Experiments
are being conducted by the Illinois
Central with a device that may
revolutionize the freight
business.
The experiments are being made
*»«-. ofwi.ich
are titled with L>a 11 bearing jour
mils, which make the car run
easily that a single person can
move it.
This feat was easily accomplisli
to-day by many people who
were examining the car as it stood
in tlie yards. The hearing con
sists ol lour races of t hive-quar¬
ters inches bulls. > The thrust of
the car fringes around a curve.
There are 132 three-quarter inch
balls in each journal, each of
which sustained a crushing strain
of 78,000 pounds. The small balls
will sustain a weight of 38,000
pounds. The car was loaded with
50,000 pounds of steel casing and
made the trip to New Orleans,
where it was loaded with coffee
and returned to Chicago, it is
said the journals have an average
life of seven years, which is nun h
longer than the journals now in
use. The most important advan¬
tage claimed for them is great ease
with which they move, 11 pl'iicti
hie, train loads can easily be load¬
ed and can be doubled and banted
with the same power now used,
'l'his would mean great economy
in operation.
Hull cot ions oi' n Bachelor.
By rounding out the years youth
gets, Hat.
Love thy neighbors as they love
themselves.
The safest thing for a man to
do who is afraid of getting mar¬
ried is to fall in love with several
women.
A woman’s instinct makes her
as surt> that burglars have tried to
get in the house as if' they hud
left theircards.
You can never nit’ike a woman
that tho best to V 1 "*
' V, 'f'* J° nieaBur '' 0,it ,ho
cards as it she were making cus
lard.—New . , l ork , Press, ,,
Atlanta, Aug. 17.—Col. William
Arnold Hemphill, founder and for
niany years manager of the Atlan¬
ta Constitution, died to-night at
^' s residence on Peachtree street,
Gol. Hemphill had been in some
' v Lnt feeble health for a number
months, hut his condition was
luit regarded as serious, and his
'k'ath "'as a great shock to the rn
‘ l,G city.
The cause of death was apoplexy,
u:,s ^ U " M town Saturday after
noon attending to some matters of
business, and even drove to church
this morning, but becoming eud
daily ill, decided to return home
without entering,
London, Aug. 17.—Boer gener
n ls, whoso lately have been in
arms against, the British Empire,
were received by King Edward
abroad the royal yacht Victoria
iUK | Albert, to-day.
on the royal yacht a gracious
reception was tendered them—a
reception that seemed to have done
much to heal the ugly scars of
war. It was a significant oeea
sion, winn the sovereign head of a
great Power met in friendly con*
verso the three men who must, con
ti ibuted to tho Boers’gallant op
position.
——--
Jackson, . . Miss., Aug. 19.—The
death , , , knell ol the Populist party
1 1 J
........ in Mississippi has , been sounded,
and .... the organization de
is now
dared . out ol . . . tho
existence in
counties" where it has heretofore
llourished with an almost domi¬
nant membership.
Minneapolis, Aug. 17.—Online,
tin,* great pacing stallion, owned
‘‘V " ” « lh ' : Mm '
neliuha , Driving Bark to-day ol
colic. Mr. .. Ravage . valued . . the , .
unt¬
null , at , $2.),000. Online at the . time
ins , . death , , held , , , the , tour-year
-
stallion ... pacing record , of . 2:04. ,
___________
Pekin, Aug. 17.—The viceroy of
8ze Chuan reports that imperial
troops attacked tile rebel head¬
quarters tit Inchawuii, Aug. 12.
One thousand rebels were killed
and their leader, Ton Yu Hung,
wtis captured and executed.
Terms. $1.00 Per Annum
NO. 27.
BUY THE
n ■
III
II
II
SEWING MACHINE
t'SSfiS*? $20.00. This kind of machine
a can
be bought from us or any of our
dealers from $15.00 to $18.00.
WE MAKE A VARIETY.
THE NEW HOME IS THE BEST.
The Feed determines the strength or
weakness of Sewing Machines. The
Double Feed combined with other
strong best points makes the New Home
the Sewing Maehhie to buy.
Write forCIRCULARS showing ferent Sewing styles Machines the dif¬ or
manufacture and jn-iees before ,
we purchasing
THE HEW HOME SEWING! MACHINE GO.
ORANGE, MASS.
28UnionSq. N. Y., Chicago, Ill., Atlanta, (la.,
Bt, Louis,Mo., Dallas,Tex., San Francisco, Cal
FOR SALE BY
T. L. TRAMMELL.
Tlie Commoner.
(Mr. Bryan’s Paper,)
The Commoner has attained within
six months from date of I he first issue
a eimilation of 1000,000 copies,
a record probably never equaled in the
history of American periodical litera¬
l'll re. The miparaleled grow!Ii of this
paper demonstrates that there is mom
in .tlo- newspaper field for a national
l m P'r devoted to lhe discussion of po¬
litical, economic, and social problems.
To I lie eid u inns, of The Coin in oner M r.
Bryan ......tributes his best efforts;
and bis id'political events as
they arise fitoin time to time can not
fail to interest those who study public
ions.
The Commoner’s regular subscrip¬
tion price is $1.00 per year. We have
arranged with Mr. Bryan whereby ive
can furnish his paper and Tint Ixi>k
ruNDit.vr together for one year for
$1.50 The regular subscription price
of the two papers when subscribed for
separately is $2.00.
ONLY 25- §
FOR THE PUREST,
SUREST AMD BEST
CONSTIPATION CURE
IN THE WORLD. IT IS
LAXAKOLA
tho great tonic laxative. It ia the only
remedy that tlo.'s its work gently and pain¬
lessly ami at the same time acts aa a
general tonic. It never tails to relieve
constipation promptly, but at the same
time it contains valuab le tonic properties
which help you instead of hurting you. It
strengthens all the organs and purilies and
enriches the blood.
All dm iggists, 25 and 50 cents, or free sample of The
LAX. A KOLA Company, 13a Nassau St., New York.
BACKACHE
THE CIMTKKION,
The lies! Illustrated Monthly Magazine of
Tho Kind Published. -Sl .00 a yeae,
10 cents a copy.
Its pages lire filled by a brilliant ar¬
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itative and independent reviews of
books, plays, music and art, its clever
stories, strong special articles, humor
and verse, with fine illustrations, make
it a necessity in every intelligent
borne. The very low subscription
price—$1.01) per year—puts it within
I lie reach of all.
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particulars.
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nicest lasting anil most effective worm
medicine made.
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