Newspaper Page Text
W. D. B CHAMBERS, Proprietor.
VOL. XI.
FALLACY
—OF—
Mere Cheapness.
We occupy the position that the term
“cheap,” as implied by pretending to
offer any article of goods for less than
its real value is, to deal mildly, mis
leading upon its face, and should be
shunned by sensible, thinking people.
"No shoddy” is our motto for all the
term implies.
To those expecting something for
nothing we cannot supply your wants;
on the other hand, if you desire full
value for your money you are the class
of custom we are hustling for.
filioßs! Sloes! Sloes!
We have the best shoes that money
and experience can produce.
Heywood shoes for men, every pair
warranted, “no shoddy,” $3.50.
Custom made Shoes for ladies at
$2.00 to $3.00.
Our “Vicious” shoes for ladies at
$1.50 to $1.65, are the best in the city.
Oxfords for ladies from SI.OO to $2.00.
Our Godman line of Kangaroo Calf
women’s shoes at $1.50 are the best
made for great wearers.
Our “Cannon Ball” shoes for men
and boys at $1.25 and $2.00 cannot be
excelled; made of home tanned leather,
full stock calf.
“Battle Axe Shoes!” Yes, we have
a full line of women’s Kangaroo shoes
of that make at $1.35.
Men’s “Battle Axe” Brogans at $1.35.
Boys’ “Battle Axe” shoes, $1 00 to
$1.15.'
ilrfy-to-Wear Cliiiig.
Men's All-Wool Suits, $6.00 to $7.00.
Have been reduced from SIO.OO.
Our SB.OO to $12.00 suits are elegant
ly made and excellent values.
We have recently purchased about
300 suits for men and boys at a sacri
fice price and are in position to sell
good all-wool suits from that lot at less
than first cost.
“Nox All” Hats.
Latest styles for men at $2.00. The
greatest hat to be had at that price.
We have “No Name” hats at $2.50
to $1.50; none better made.
Straw hats, up-to-date styles, at 50c,
75c and SI.OO.
Dry Goods Depart
ment Complete,
Ix 4 Brown Domestic, standard, 5c
yard.
Best Cotton Checks at 5
a yard.
American Indigo Blue Prints, 5c yd.
Standard Fancy Prints, 5c yard.
Shirting Prints, percale styles, 5c yd.
Dress Ginghams, good, at 10c yard.
Prench Ginghams, at 15c yard.
Lawns from 5c to 20c yard.
Best feather-proof ticking at 16c yd.
4x4 Bleached Domestic, 5c yard.
Better grade Bleaching, 7 to 10c yd.
Ladies’ Shirtwaist, the 75c grade, re
duced to 50e. The SI.OO and $1.25 qual
ities reduced to 75c. These prices are
not profitable to us, but an actual loss;
desire to close the line out.
Men’s Elastic Seam drawers, 50c
Pair.
Men’s Balbriggan Undershirts, 25c to
50c.
Ladies’ Cause Vests, 10c, 15c and
2 =c each.
Me have an almost innumerable
number of good values that we cannot,
f' r want of space, call attention.
Hope to have the pleasure cf seeing
°ur friends and demonstrate our grati
tude for past favors. We remain
Yours respectfully,
Garmany Bros.
-■ i Montgomery Ave., Chattanooga,
Tena.
DADE COUNTY SENTINEL.
DR. CHAPMAN’S SEItMON
A SUNDAY DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED
PASTOR-EVANGELIsr,
SnlMect: The How in the BOupcl
Message Filled With Sweetness and
Help—ln This AVorld at Bett We Get
Only th* Half or Things,
[The Bev. J. Wilbur Chapman, D. D , is
now the most distinguished and best
kuown evangelist in the country. He was
second only to Dr. Talmage, but since the
cleaUi of that famous preacher Dr. Chap
man has the undisputed possessibri Uf the
iuJpit ns the preacher la influence the
plain people. His services as an evangel
jst arq in constant demand. liis german?;
have stirred the hearts of men ntl Women
to r degree u:iappronelid by anv latter
day divme. J. W ilbur Chapman was born
iq Richmond, Ind., June 17, 1559. He was
educated at Oberlitf College and Lake For
est University, and graduated for the min
istry from the Laue Theological Semina
ary, Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1882, His ser
mons are simple and direct, so that their
influence is not so much due to exciting
the emotions as to winning the heaHe nUd
convincing the minds of those Who hear
mm. Dr. Chapman rtOW in charpe ot
the Fourth Presbyterian Church, New
York City.]
. York City.—The following sermon
13 one prepared for publication by the
ltev. J. Wilbur Chapman, America’s best
known evangelist, who is now preaching to
overflowing congregations in thin eitv. it
is entitled “The Bow in the Cloud,” and is
founded on the test, Genesis 9: 13, “[ do
set My bow in the cloud, and it shall be
for a token of a covenant between Me and
the earth.”
It may seem at first thought as if this
'"■“re a tpuei' tfXt to choose from which to
give a gospel message, and yet all the
works or God are so wonderful that one
h 8 but to get the key to unlock the door
leading into them to rind them tilled with
sweetness and with help. The rainbow i
no exception to this rule. It is hardly
possible for one to look upon the bow that
spans the clouds after tx storm without an
exclamation of delight.
One would think that it wAuifl grow mo
notonous, for we have 'seen it so many
times, but. quite tne opposite is true. Sun
sets differitheYare as unlike as two things
cou j possibly be. Indeed, it must be true
ta&t one is never like the other. But rain
bows are always the same. And yet in
spite of this we are charmed as we look,
and inspired as we study.
The first mention of a bow is in the
text. It is uofc said th&t this is the
time the rainbow has appeared; far from
the very nature of the ease it has always
been in existence since trie worlds began
to be, but this is said to be the firtt use
of it. The last mention Iff ft rainbow is
Revelation 4: §; “And lie that sat was to
look uponligea jasper and a sardine stone;
and tberC was a rainbow round about the
ttv one, in sight like unto an emerald.”
You notice that the expression used is
“round about the throne” and here for the
first time we find ti rainbow in a complete
cirgie.
, I? ave only seen L,C half of it here,
which is surely an illustration of the fact
that in this world at best we only get the
l o' We-only get the half of
truth. Take the great doctrine of the
Acgnement; who is able to understand it?
But it is very helpful to know that we are
not obliged to understand it, but only to
receive it. God is satisfied With it, and
He fully comprehends it, and when we
stand with Him in glory We shall see the
other half of the bow, and our hearts shall
rejoice. We only see the half 9f life here.
At its best it is a mystery. Over and over
again, when xve wanted to go to the light
we were compelled to turn to the left, and
a thousand times because of our perplexi
ties and trials we have cried aloud:
“How can these things be?”
But we must learn the lesson that we
must trust Him where we cannot under
stand Him. The day will come, when
seated at Ills feet wc shall see the other
half of the bow of our life, and wc shall
know indeed that all things have worked
together for good.
The last mention of the bow in Revela
tion tells us that it is to be like an emer
ald, This is certainly Very strange, for
one has never beheld a green rainbow
here. Six other colors must be added to it
to make it Complete. The color, however,
js not without its suggestiveness. Green
is the color that always rests the eye. It
is for this reason that the hillsides, the
waving branches of the tree, and the grass
beneath our feet, are bo restful on a sum
mer day. Is not this a hint that heaven
is a place of rest as well as beauty?
There are three primal colors in the
rainbow, red, yellow and blue. If you
drop the red and put the yellow and blue
together you have green as a result. Red
is the color of suffering. Surely if is a
hint as to the thought that when one
passes through the gates of peai'l ho leaves
suffering behind him. There is to be no
red mark in heaven. Christ finished His
sufferings upon Calvary, and never a pang
shall meet Him again. We finish our suf
ferings, too, when we say good-bye to this
weary road we have traveled, and the gate
of heaven that shuts us in shuts suffering
out.
I.—THE CLOUD.
We know what the cloud was for Noah
(for this text which I have quoted has to
do with him), and a cloud in Noah’s day
was not unlike the cloud of yesterday;
but in the thought of the sermon the cloud
is sin.
It would make one heartsick to read the
history of sin. First, in the world, begin
ning with Adam, going to Noah, reaching
the howling mob about the cross on Cal
vary, coming down to the present day,
when the whole world seems to be touched
with its power, the most terrible thing in
the world is sin. Second, in the home,
blighting and blasting that which is a
of heaven, and wrecking that which
God meant to be a safe vessel to carry us
through the turmoils and strife ever round
about us. Third, in our own heart, giving
us wrong conceptions of God, and drag
ging us toward hell, even against our will.
The blackest thing in all the world is sin.
The cloud does two things: (1) It ob
scures the sun. The cloud of sin docs the
same thing. No one ever yet has had a
true vision of Jesus Christ with the least
particle of sin in his heart or life. “Blessed
are the pure in heart, for they shall see i
God.”
A poor fellow converted in one of the
missions in Chicago, who was thought be
fore his conversion to be hardly worth the
saving, was so wonderfully transformed
that a committee waited upon him to find
the secret of his changed life. He answered
theii question in just one sentence:
“I have seen Jesus.”
This vision ever changes the life and
transforms character.
12) The cloud compels us to see things
in a false light. God made the works of
His hands to be seen in the sunlight. We
must not judge them under the cloud. And
witn me eiouci oi cin across a mans iiinin
he can have no real conception of the
Bible; lie must certainly be prejudiced
against the church. Scatter the darkness i
that hovers over rour mind, and the Bib.e
will become to you tlie very thought oi I
God. while the church will compel your ad
jY— ACROSS THE CLOUD GOD CAST
HIS BOW.
To see a bow three things are necessary.
First, there must be a cloud; we certainly
have that in the world’s sin. Second, the
sun must be shining; we have this condi
tion met in the fact that God is light, and
in Him there is no darkness at all. Third,
the rain must be falling. Wc lave this in
Isaiah 55: 10, 11—“ For as the rain cometh
down. ayJ the snow from heaven, and rc-
turneth not, thither, but wAtereth the
sjirth j aml rriakfcth it bring forth and bud;
IMt it rimy give seed to the sower; and
bread tb the cater; so shall My Weird bii
that goeth forth out bf My mouth; it shall
not return rintd Me void, hut it shall ac
fcbrrtplish tnat which I please, and it shall
prosper in the thing whereto I sent it.” -
Or, we might put it—first, in order that
we may bo saved, we must acknowledge
ourselves to be sinners. This is the cloud.
Second, we must have some conception of
God’s haired of sin. This is the light,
Third, we must be persuaded that He
oved Us and gave Uimsrilf for us. This is
the rain. Witn these conditions iriet. the
how Of pfbmisc spans the cloud Of A sinfril
life-. ‘ , .
hi. —the seven Colors.
Tf I should hold a prism in my hand and
Hih light of day Bliould touch it, there
would be refracted at once seven colors,
as follows: Red, orange, yellow, green,
blue, indigo and violet. There never lias
been a rainbow in this world hilt these
have been seen in ritbre dr less prominence.
In mV ineSsftgO now, the prism js thb cross,
Ond the light is God’s truth. AS it strikes
j this long prim it breaks up into seven
dolors Thb feeven together give us the
HinbbW.
First, forgiveness. Psalm 32: I.—" Blessed
is he whose transgression is forgiven,
whose sin is covered.”
The word forgiven means taken off.
What a wonderful thought it is! Oh,
what a load of sin we had tri carry! How
it did weigh ns down! Hpw day hud night
we went er.yirig tumid, saying, “Oh,
Wretched trinri that lain. who shall deliver
mes‘ l Resolution never lifted it a particle.
Reformation only seemed tb make it heav
ier. Then He came, and stooped down, or
whispered to us just one sweet word,
“Forgiven!” and when we realized it the
burden was taken off. To receive all of
this we have but to yield to God. Trying
to make ourselves better only adds to the
cloud and. deepens our despair.
The second cblor is cleansing. Psalm 51:
7—“ Purge me with hVssdp: ftgfl I shall be
mean: wash nte. and I shall feb Whiter than
snow.
ibb little bunch 6f hyssop carries us
back to the Passdybr night, when the
anib ums slain ftriu its blood collected. It
w.-is n>;t kind that one should take a brush,
art a bunch of hyssop, and dip it in the
blood and sprinkle the posts of the door.
The commonest thing that grew in the
East was hyssop, It represents faith. One
had hut to step to the door of the erittage
and stoop down to plitbk ft bunch bf hys
sop. , The cbmhipnest thing ip all this
world is faith. We have, faitri. in each
btrri'r, Whether We express it in this word
br not; and the faith that one has in his
mother-, in his father, in wife or husband,
if turned toward Jesus Christ would save
his soul. It is one thing id be forgiven, but
the colbr deepciis, and the truth sweetens
jvrien We know that because of the shed
blood of Jesus Christ we may be made
clean. “The blood of Jesus Christ His
Son e'eanseth us from all sin.”
The third color is justification. Ro
mans 4: 25 —“Who was delivered for our
offences, and was raised agam for bur jus
tification,’'.
One iiligHt be perfectly sure of his for
giveness. and know that it meant sins
taken off, and might be confident of his
cleansing, but there is the memory of the
old life of failure which is ever to him like
a shackle when he would run to God. Jus
tification is sweeter by far than anything
we have jet learned. When Christ rose
for our justification He stood before God
as a kind of receipt (as John Robertson
has said Land when God looks upon that
receipt He knows the bill is paid.
“Jesus paid it all. All to Him I owe.
Birt had left a bitter stain, He washed it
white as snow.”
But justification is even better to me
than this, for when one is justified before
God he actually stands as if he never had
sinned. .
The fourth color is—sins covered by the
sea. Micah 7: 19—“ He will turn again, He
will have compassion upon us; He will sub
due our iniquities; ana Thou wilt cast all -
their sins into the depths of the sea.”
It is very comforting to know that ihere
are some depths in the ocean so deep that
they can never be sounded. Our sins must
have gone ns deep.
There is also another thought of com
fort; if a body is east into the ocean where
the waters arc not very deep, when the
storms come and the ocean is in a fury,
the storm, as if with giant hands, takes the
dead body and casts it upon the shore.
But there are depths in the sea so great
that no storm that has ever yet swept across
the face of the deep has stirred the waters.
Thanks be unto God. our sins may be sunk
so deep in the sea that they will never be
cast up against us again. The color deep
ens And the truth grows sweeter still.
The fifth color is—sins removed. Psalm
103: 12—“As far as the east is from the
west, so far hath He removed our trans
gressions from us.”
It has been proved that the distance
from east to west could never be meas
ured. This is certainly inspiring. But
there is something better for me than this
in the fifth color, for when I am told that
my sins are as far from me as the east is
from the west 1 know that the east and
the west can never be brought together;
nor can the saved sinner and his pardoned
sins ever meet again.
The sixth color is Isaiah 44 : 22—“1 have
blotted out, as a thick cloud, thy transgres
sions, and, as a cloud, thy sins; return un
to Me, for I have redeemed thee.”
A man cannot blot out his own sins.
Some have tried it with their tears, and
have lost their reason. Some have at
tempted it by works of mercy, and have
given up in despair. But God can easily
do it. For sins to be blotted out may
mean the same as for man’s account to be
blotted out. I may have a bill charged
against me on the books, but if on the op
posite side is credited a sufficient sum of
money to meet the indebtedness, it is
blotted out. But the expression must mean
more than this. It mean! that when one’s
sins are blotted out by God they are as if
thev never had been.
The seventh color seems the climax of
all. Ezekiel 33: 16—" None of his sins that
he hath committed shall be mentioned un
to him: ho hath done that which is lawful
and right; he shall surely live.”
We have an idea that, although our sins
have been forgiven and we may have been
justified, when the great day of judgment
comes we may be obliged to meet them all
again. But this is not true. Once and
for all hath He put away sin by the sac
rifice of Himself, and the sins of our lives
shall not acain be mentioned to us.
IV.—GOD'S COVENANT.
The bow was God’s covenant then. Now
God’s covenant is His Word, and upon
this Word we may depend. Notice the
number of times God uses the expression,
"J will,” in Exodus 6: 0-8:
“Wherefore, say unto (he children of
Tsrael I am the Lord, and I will bring you j
out from under the burdens of the Egypt- j
ians. and I will rid you out of their bond- i
age, and I will redeem you with a stretched
cut arm. and with great judgments: and I j
will take you to Me for a people, and I will ;
be to you'a God; and ye shall know that I
am the Lord your God. which bringeth
you cut from under the burdens of the
Egyptians. And I will bring you in unto
the land, concerning the which I did swear
to give it to Abraham, to Isaac and to !
Jacob; and I will give you it for an herit
age; 1 am the Lord.”
He ever waits to till the covenant which
He has made with Christ concerning us.
If we would have the joy of saltation, we
need but two tilings: first, we must be
lieve God; whatever our feelings may be,
we must believe: second, believing God,
we must act as if wc believed Him. The
one gives us life. The other gives us joy in
life’s possession.
Sonij men are born to command, and
cithers get married.
OHloial Organ of Dado COunty-
TRENTON. GA. FRIDAY. MAY 23.1902.
NEGRO’S DEADLY AIM
Ends Earthly Career of Three
Officers and a Citizen.
INCIPIENT RIOT IN ATLANTA
Negroes Defying Arrest Barricade
Themselves in a Store and Do
Deadly Work—Torch Was Ap
plied and Three Were Killed.
r. r s
Ail Atlanta, UiL, -special says: Ail
effort by officers ol* the law to arrest
negro outlaws who had barricaded
themselves in a store resulted Satur
day morning in the most fatal riot
that has ever occurred in the history
of the city. Severs men were kiHed,
including three policemen, a white cit
izen arid three negroes.
The most exciting scenes prevaiifeit
at the jllrice of thb rjot arid every Avail
able policeman, with military, called
out by the governor, had all they could
do to keep down a general riot.
The scene of the tragedy was on
McDaniel street, a few hundred yards
outside the city limits, where mem
bers of a notorious gang of negro out*
laws hitd assembled to defy arrest;
The county police first, attemfited td
raid thb iliace aiohe., and later the city
police were called upon for aid. Still
later the governor was appealed to
and the military ordered out.
In the barricaded store were three
negroes. It is believed there were at
first as many ne five and two escaped
before ddyllgbt. The stofri IVas a small
arsehdi ih which wfei'e a number of
winchester rifles and a small gatling
gun. It was a rendezvous for a gang
of thieves ahd tntitderers. Withirt
were sharpshooters who picked off thb
men on the outside witWjjtf !
deadly effect. Every
showed himself ho was
The Torch Apfßted.
The torch was finally brought into
requisition and amid&Ahe flames was
heard the crack of|§se rifles. Thb
flames accomplished what the bullets
failed to do. Two of the
gang rushed out, on(u dMtfflf and the
other, the leader, was burned up after
his body had been riddled with bullets.
Before .the riot *33 ended three
brave officers had been shot to death,
one citizen had fallen with a rifle in
his hands, two negroes were killed and
many others had beeh wounded.
The dead are: Ed Battle, a bailiff
in Fulton county; H. G. Ozburn, a po
liceman of Fulton county; Thoma'*
Grant, a city policeman; Edward Crab
tree, a city policeman; Will Richard
son, the negro desperado who killed
these men; James Harrison, a negro
who attempted to escape from a sew.-
er; Milton Grisby, shot in a nearby
yard, died in Tower.
The wounded are: S. A. Keriin,
beaten by negroes; W. A. Wright, a
county policeman, wounded in the
left shoulder; W. T. Jackson, a street
car -man, wounded in hip; Owen
Heard, a county policeman, wounded
in the thigh; Call Officer Spradlin,
wounded in the arm; Shepherd Finzed,
haekman, shot through the hand.
During the entire affair at least 3,-
000 shots were fired. Citizens had
joined the police, armed with shotguns
and rifles. The outlaws could not be
seen, but the house was riddled with
bullets in the hope that a stray shot
might do its work.
The outlaws were cool and shot with
great accuracy. One by one the offi
cers and members of their posse were
picked off and every bullet - went
straight to its mark.
After the burned body of the negro
was found, an angry crowd of white
men seized it and started with it to
ward the city. Chief Ball threw a
cordon of police across a street at the
city limits and took the body away
from the crowd and had it sent into
the city in a wagon.
While the procession was passing
Will Gregg, a negro, was heard to re
mark that it was n shame to kill ne
groes that way, and he had no sooner
spoken the words than he was riddled
with bullets.
When the governor was notified he
immediately called out the military,
but the soldiers arrived too late to
take a hand in the fight.
Origin of the Trouble.
At Atlanta Friday night five negroes
waylaid and tried to murder ex Police
man S. A. Keriin on McDaniel street,
just outside the city limits. A passing
trolley car saved the ex-policeman's
life.
The assault was made by negroes
with whom Keriin had trouble when
he was a member of the police force.
The affair was reported to County
Chief of Police Turner and he detailed
three of his men to work on the case.
Late Friday night the county police
reported that they had located some of
the would-be murderers in a negro
house on McDaniel street.
PHILADELPHIA RECORD SOLD.
Attorney Stenger Buys the Stock of
the Big Newspaper for $2,300,000.
By order of the United States court
of eastern Pennsylvania, James M.
Beck, special master commissioner,
sold at public auction at Philadelphia,
Thursday. 9,050 shares of the 10,000
shares of The Philadelphia Record
Publishing Company, par value, SIOO.
William S. Stenger, of Philadelphia,
bought the stock for $2,300,000.
SAMPSON WILL IS FILED,
Widow Gets Everything Except $4,000
Life Insurance.
The will of the late Admiral William
T. Sampson was filed at Washington
Saturday. It leaves (everything to
the widow, save $4,000 life insurance
which is left equally among the fou;
daughters. In the petition asking for
admission of the will to probate, Mrs.
Sampson, who is nambd fts sole exe
cutor, says the admiral died possessed
of stocks and other securities valued
ft $8,500 and a tract of land at Man
chester, N. Y., known as the Marmon
Hiii farm, valued at SIO,OOO. The will
is dated Key West, Fla., April 16. IS9B.
_r. . ... -
STEADY WORK ON NEW ROAD.
Cuthbert Extension of the G., F. and A.
is Being Rapidiy Pushed.
Track laying on the Cuthbert exten
sion of the Georgia, Florida and Ala
bama Railway Company has begun at
Arlington and is proceeding toward
Cuthbert steadily,
Sonie of the gradihg forces below
Cuthbert have finished their work ahd
will now commence on the Cuthbert
end. When this five or six miles is
graded the entire line from Arlington
to Cuthbert will be the rails
ANOTHER ROAST FOR^XIE.”
Civil Governor cf Leyte
Sends In Bad Report,
The secretary of war has transmit
ted to the senate committee on Philip
pines a report made by Captain J. H.
Grant, civil governor of the province
of Leyte, P. I.’ concerning differences
of understanding between himself and
General J. H. Smith concernig the'con
trol of affairs In that province.
Captain Grant vigorously condemns
the actions of General Smith.
FIVE DIE IN FLAMES.
Hotel
i Point Pleasant, W, Va.
Five persons perished in the hurtl
ing of the American hotel at Point
Pleasant, W. Va., and three were se
riously injured. Two residences also
burned and the total loss amounts to
$30,000.
Three of the victims farmers
summoned as grand at the
criminal court.
THIRTY DAYS CARRIE.
Mrs. Nation Sent and Fined For
Smashing Esar Fixtures.
At Topeka, Kans, F'rlday, Mrs. Car
rie Nation was sentenced to thirty
days in prison and to pay a fine of SIOO
by Judge Haen in the district court
for smashing bar fixtures stored in
a vacant barn in February, 1901. She
would not appeal the case and went
to jail.
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■/M VHBf B UIV half regular prices, in our big free sundry catalogue. Con-
B - /, Hi ; „J|L tains a world of useful Information. Write font.
If IP RIDER mm WANTED and eihib t a sauiplo
■! ’ |l' t&a le model Bicycle of our manufacture. You can make siw
BE U ■ to #6O a week, (. sides bavins'a wheel to ride for yourself
B SB WE WANT a reliable person in each town to distribute catalogues for us In
I wK exchange for a hicyclo. Write today for fret c&taioyue and our Hpecial otter#
J. L. MEAD CYCLE CO., Chicago, ill.
mm
AND
SHORTEST ROUTE and QUICKEST TIME
TO
ST. LOUIS AND THE WEST.
PULLMAN SLEEPERS ATLANTA TO ST. LOUIS
WITHOUT CHANGE.
CHICAGO and the NORTHWEST.
TULLMAN SLEEPERS ATLANTA TO CHICAGO
WITHOUT CHANGE.
NEW TRAIN to LOUISVILLE and CINCINNATI
PULLMAN SLEEPERS ATLANTA TO LOUISVILLE AND
CINCINNATI WITHOUT CHANGE.
Cheap Rates to Arkansas and Texas
ALL-RAIL AND STEAMSHIP LINES TO
NEW YORK AND THE EAST.
TOURIST RATES TO ALL RESORTS.
For Schedules, Rates, Maps or any Railroad information, call upon or write to
L W THOMAS, Jr., 11. F. SMITH, CHAS. L. HARMAN.
General Manager, Traffic Manager, General Pass. Arent,
Nashville, Tenu Nashville, Tenn. Atlanta. ~a.
PROHIBITS MACLAY’S HISTORY.
Santiago's Controversy i3 Again Aired
in House Proceedings.
The house spent the day Saturday
in discussion of the navy appropria
tion hill and the most important fea
ture of the discussion involved ri revi
val of the Sampson Schley controver
sy. This arose over an amendment to
the bill, which was presnted by Mr.
Mudd, of Maryland, and which was
adopted, prohibiting the use of Mac
lay’s history of the navy as a text book
at the naval academy. The considera
tion of the measure was not completed
before the house adjourned for the
day. .
SHOCK FELT IN VIRGINIA.
Earth Tremors Frighten Inhabitants
of Pearisburg, Giles County.
Pearisburg, Giles county, Virginia,
reports that an earthquake of consid
erable severity was felt there Satur
day night about 11 o’clock. It was ac
companied by rumblings which lasted
some time.
Quaker City Too Slow.
The executive committee of the Na
tional Association of Manufacturers
at a meeting Monday decided to move
the general offices oi' the association
from Philadelphia to New York.
A CROAK FROM CROKER.
Ex-Tammany Boss Has Ceased to Med
dle In New York Politics.
Richard Croker began an interview
at London E’riday concerning the af
fairs of Tammany society with an em
phatic declaration that he had ceased
to meddle in New Y'ork po itics. “Thir.
ty seven years of political fighting is
enough for one life,” he said, "and I
am done with it, I tell you once and
for all.”
He expressed regret that there
should be trouble in Tammany and ex
pressed the hope that Mr. Nixon would
return to office.
STAMPEDE TO GOLD FIELD.
Over Six Thousand Prospectors Rush
Upon New Eldorado in Utah.
A special from Salt Lake City, Utah,
says: An army of 6,500 prospectors
from almost every state in the union
has begun tlio rush into Thunder
uumntain, the new Eldorado, of fabu
lous richness. Not since the •memora
ble stampede to the California gold
fields in 1849 has the frenzied search
for’iß yellow metal reached the pres
ent stage nor have such alluring pros
pects been held out since those excit
ing days.
London has 690 acre* of dock3, Liv
erpool 543 acres.
SI.OO a Year.
NO. 1.
An Advertiser?
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IF SO,
TH H3
Dai County:
Sontinel. i
Witli a large and increase (
ing circulation in Dade*
County, Ga., and in<
Northern Alabama and *
Southern Tennessee, <
IS YOUR FRIEND..
OuMlates are Very*
Reasonable.
Results are
Splendid*
OUR MOTTO:
“Work Unceasingly for
Thoso who Favor Us With
Their Advertising,” has made
us mauy warm friends.
To the Prospective
Advertiser
We want to soy, that if eu
v
trusted with your *work in
our territory, w,e shall
spare no pains to serve
you acceptably.
We don’t care who,you are,or
where you are, if you are
engaged in a legitimate
business and care to place
an “ad” with ns, notify
us, aud we will get your
business before onr large
list of subscribers.
ADDRESS
DADE
COUNTY '
SENTINEL,
W. D. B. CHAMBERS, top..
BOX 69,
TRENTON, - GA-