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THE....
ARNOLD-SORRELLS
DRUG
Athens,
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PAINT
....CO.
Ga.
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tilt BANNER SUNDAY MokNIND, AUGUST to, i<»02.
PREMIER BALFOUR AND
THE BRITISH CABINET
Has Difficulty In Re-arrang
ing Minutes.
THE DRUG STORE I
That Leads in Prices and Goods
Our Stock is New and Complete.
SPECIAL 'Attention given Prescriptions by an
Experienced Phaimacist
SEE US for your Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Wall
r.-iper, Pictures and Picture Framing, House and i/^
Sign Painting. ^ ^ ^ ^ rtl
ARTISTS flATERIALS.
DUBBED “HIS KALEIDOSCOPE.”
FIRE LOSS OF $40,000.
HANGING AT WARRENTON.
Large Store in Milledgeville Totally
Destroyed.
Milledgeville. Ga., Aug. 0.—A Arc
occurred in the store of the Joseph
Dry Goode company, coiner Wayne
and Hancock streets yesterday. The
stock of good*, valued at ahout $45,000,
according to W. W. Gnlloway, book-
keeper for the company, was totally
destroyed by fire and water.
The origin of the Are is unknown.
The store had been closed for the day
not longer than 10 minutes, when C.
H. Bonner, who docs business next
door, discovered smoke Irsuing from n
closed window In the side of the build
ing and gave the alarm. Mr. Joseph,
the head of the company, was less
than one block away when the alarm
Bounded and some of the clerks were
on the street near hy.
Examination made last night Indi
cates that the fire started at iho bun
dle counter. The most plausible the
ory Is that it was duo to an electric
.wlfa.
The itock of goods Is u total loss,
owing to damage from fire and water.
Th# Injury to the building is slight.
The company carried insurance
amounting to $32,000, distributed
among several companies.
For awhile adjacent buildings occu
pied by C. H. Bonner, groceries and
whisky, and Joseph Staley, were
Imminent danger. If either of these had
caught Are It Is likely the entire block
would have burned.
Jesse Gibson Executed For Assaulting
a Little Girl.
Warronton, Ga., Aug. th—Jesse Gib
son. a negro, was hanged In the coun
ty jail her yesterday morning at 10:30
o’clock fur an assault committed on
the little 8-year-old daughter of Mr.
Bartow Bacon, on the morning of June
20. Just six weeks ago.
Gibson was brought in from the Ma
con jail, where he has been for safe
keeping. late Thursday evening by
Sheriff Robinson, and a guard was
placed over him.
,.o the death watch and those ahout
him he stoutly denied his guilty, and
on the scaffold repeated Hie assertio
He said he was ready to go, hut that
be regretted being hanged for a crime
of which he was innocent.
Ills body was offered to his family
but was refused, and a grave was pro
pared and the body buried by order of
the sheriff.
Will Bore For Oil.
Knoxville. Aug. 0.—The East Ten
nessee Oil Pipe I.ine company, recent
ly organized by local capitalists, is
preparing to bore for oil near Coal
Creek.
f. w di
Work
and a
rill begin in a very
strike" is confidently
e vicinity of Clinton,
west of this city,
rl oil companies arc
on lands for oil pur-
lieved Clinton is in
it will piove a good
Monuments,
iesr~'
Grave - Enclosures.
Inscriptions and Design
Work a specialty
STEEL AND IRON
FENCES FOR CEMETERY.,
ROBERTSON
Marble Works.
Look Pktiaot, Please.
Phatographer O. O. Harlan, of Eat ir,
O., can no so now, though for years he
couldn’t, because he suffered untold
agony from the worst form of indiges-
All fth-ySiftiatrs-aiiaTBeiflolnegTailed
to help him till he tried Electric Bitters,
which worked such wonders for him
that he declares they are a godsend lo
sufferers from dyspepsia and stomach
troubles. Unrivaled for diseases of the
Stomach, Liver and Kidneys, they bnild
up and give new life to the whole sys
tem. Try them Only 50c. Guaranteed
by W. J. Smith & Bro., and H. R
Palmer A: Sons. Druggists.
t Camak & Company, t
£ FIRE INSURANCE j
* —AND— X
5 —LOANS— 5
a Office No. lb Clayton Street. .
For Sale
Vacant lot between my home
and the bridge on Oconee St
MRS. T. A. ADAMS.
N” 467 Oconee street
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
FOR SHERIFF.
nyself a candidate for rt
s Sheriff of Clarke county.
John W. Wier.
FOR CLERK SUPERIOR COURT.
I hereby announce myself a candidate for
Clerk of the Superior court of Clarke county
Ki.meu J. Ckaweoud.
FOR TREASURER
1 hereby announce myself a candidate for re-
FOR TAX RECEIVER.
1 hereby announce myself a candidate for re-
election os Receiver of Tax Returns tor Clarke
county. J. H. Dokskt.
FOR TAX COLLECTOR.
1 hereby announce myself a candidate for rt
•lection as Tax Collector of Clarke county.
H. H. Linton.
FOR CORONER.
I hereby announce myself a candidate for re-
election as Coroner of Clarke county.
B. T. Rookrm.
FOB REPRESENTATIVE,
am a candidate to represent Clarke county
he next General Assembly.
Tnos. J. Shackeia\>hi>.
Dots mean dollars.
LARGE REWARD FOR CAPTURE.
Georgia Outlaw Rivals Tracey In His
Deeds of Daring.
Waynesboro, (la., Aug. —Charley
JefTcoat, alias Charley Johnson, has
created a lot of excitement in Burke
county during the past two weeita.
Several posses have been scouring tho
country for him. but to no success
Jeffeoat or Johnson belongs tc
gang of horse thieves who have their
headquarters iu the Edieto river
swamp near Aiken, S. C- His cua
tom was to steal horaas in Burke,
Emanuel, Screven and Johnson coun
ties, Georgia, and get across th* river
with them. He has been long suspect
ed. aiid upon a trip to Emanuel re
cently he killed Deputy Sheriff Flan
ders, who was endeavoring to arrest
him. lie then escaped to Carolina
and when located there, in an effoit
to arrest, he killed) the doputy Rherlll
,■£ Aiken county, South Carolina. He
again escaped and came to Georgia,
He is now in hiding In the Savan
nah river swamps In the upper part 01
this county. lie has been seen eev
ei ul times since coming to Georgia
during the last week and in as slick
an artit lo as the famous Washington
outlaw. Tracey. lie met a gentle
man in the road the other day, and
at the point of a pistol compelled him
to undress and go to his home with
out any apparel. Another time to
went up to a grist mill not far froffl
his swamp hiding place and compelled
the miller to put a bushel of meal on
the* back of a horse. Thes he mount
ed, said good morning and rode away.
The sheriff of this county has been
very zealous in searching for the mur
derer, but up to the present timo uU
h:a efforts have come to naught.
The authorities of bothjthe stattBj—
Georgia Carolinsr— ae“wvir
as the families of the murdered oftl
cers, have offered large rewards for
Joifcoat's capture. The rewards of
fered aggregate $1,560.
RcgS
from ('.
>f th.
Broken With Shot.
a.. A nr;. 0.- A special to
brings news
io from Del
champs on th*- Mobile and Bay Shore
railroad of a negro named William
KRis by J. O. Cleveland. The killing
was done with buckshot from a double
barreled gun. Cleveland met the ne
pro in the road and asked him if he
had threatened to kill him. Ellis
said “yes,’* at the same time drawing
a revolver and .-napping it at Clev<
land. The pistol failed to fire, when
Cleveland reach, d down in his bugg;
and got his gun and kilb-d the negr.
the first load of buckshot breaking
his neck.
Hebrew-American Regiment.
New York. Aug. 9.—As a result of
the riot at tflo funeral of Rabbi Jo
seph, a movement started several
months ago for the organization of a
Hebrew American regiment in this
city has received a now impetus. Four
hundred members already have been
secured.
Big Property Increase.
Dalton. Ga., Aug. 9.—Tas Receiver
L. W. Thomason has filed his report
of the taxable property of Whitfield
county. The returns show an in
crease <.f $111,377 over last year. The
aggregate taxes for 11*1*2 is $3,326,947.
Convention Nominates.
Hendersonville, N. C.. Aug. 9.—
Hon. J. M. Gudger, of Buncombe, haa
been nominated for congress to repre
sent the tenth district by a large and
enthusiastic convention.
Poisoning the ystem.
It is through the bowels that the body
is cleansed of impurities. Constipation
keeps these poisons in the system, cans.
inn headache, dullness and melancholia
at first, then nnsightly eruptions and
finally serions illness nnless a remedy is
applied. DeWitt's Little Early Kisers
prevent this trouble by stimulating the
liver and promote easy, healthy action
of the bowels. These little pills do not
act violently but by strengthening bow
els enable them to perfo-m their own
work. Never gripe or distress. The
Orr Drug Co.
For Whooping Cough
use Cheney’s Expectorant
A Cure for Cholera Infantum.
-•Last May,” says Mrs. Ourtis Baker,
of Book waiter, Ohio, "an infant
child of onr neighbor's was snffering
from cholera infantnm. The doctor had
given up all hopes of recovery. I took a
bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Kemedy to the house,
tellinc them I felt snre it would do good
if used according to directions. In two
days’ timo the child hadfnlly recovered
and is now (nearly a yearsinoe) a vigor
ous, healthy girl. I have recommended
ibis Kemedy frequently and have never
known it to fail in any single instance.
For sale by all druggUts.
NOTICE^
This is to notify all persons owing for
pavement assessment now due, and also
persons against whom fi. faB. have been
issued for property taxes, that the same
will be levied within 30 days from date
of this notice nnless the same are paid
This notice is final, as my instructions
from the finance committee are positive
Respectfully,
B. F. CULP, City MatBhal.
This July 22nd, 1902.
SLEDD WILL LE.AVt EMoRY.
enders Resignation to President
James E. Dickey.
Atlanta, Aug. 9.—Professor Andrew
. .edd. of H.nory college, whose article
on the negro question In ths July Is
ini- of The Atlantic Monthly Muga
/me brought forth so many havgh crit-
u isms, yesterday morning tshdered
his resignation as professor of Latin
to President James E. Dickey.
The resignation comes as a result
of the attacks that have been made
on Professor Sledd. In his letter tc
President Dickey he states that he has
hern misrepresented, but fearing that
his remaining on the faculty of Em
ory may cause the college embarrass
ment in consequence of the light
which he has been placed, ho feels
it his duty to resign.
Professor Sledd leaves the timo for
tne resignation to gn Into effect to the
discretion of the college authorities
but suggests September 15. This
done. It is understood, for ths reason
that he is now at the head of the sum
mer school and is preparing many
boys to enter at the opening of the fall
term. If he were to leave at this
time they would be put to great incon
venience.
Chamberlain’s Oolio, Cholera and DL-
arhoca Remedy haa a world wide repu
tation for iu cures. It never fails and is
pleasant and safe to take. For sale by
all druggists,
Conservative Newspapers Are Pain to
Confeaa that the Cabinet Changes
Are Rather a Reshuffling Than a
Strengthening of the Ministry.
London, Aug. 9.—The new cabinet
list which Involves the resignations of
91r J. Corst, vice president of the
board of education; Lord Ragland,
parliamentary soeretnry to the war of
fice, and Jesse Colllngs, parllamenti-
ary secretary to the home office, tends
tp show that Premier Balfour Is experi
encing considerable difficulty and prob-
ably obstruction as well, In the re ar
rangement of tho ministry, which Evi
dently Is still Incomplete. ^here
are still many anticipated resigna
tions and promotions. With these are
connected the names of the earl ot
Halsbury, Lord George llainlltou, sec
retary of state for India; Viscount
Cranborne, under secretary to the for.
elgn office; Gerald Balfour, president
of the board of trade, and others who
have not yet been announced.
The changes the premier has suc
ceeded In effecting excite no enthusi
asm even in his own party.
The News dubs It "Bnlhour kaleido
scope,” and the conservative ’newspa
pers are fain to confess that the cab
inet changes are rather a reshuffling
than a strengthening of the ministry.
No striking ability has been Introduc
ed Into tho government among tho
new names. The admission of George
Wyndham, chief secretary for Ireland,
to the eablnet and the appointment of
Austin Chamberlain as postmaster
general are generally welcomed, but
great disappointment Is expressed on
all sides that the Marquis of London
derry, who Is thought to have proved A
failure as postmaster general, should
be given the new and Important fiost
ot president of the board of fSucatiou.
The disappearance yj J. Gorat Is
rather regretted, and is thought prob-
a-iy to be Ju6 to his always outspok
en criticisms of the government.
Some among tho new men are con
sidered to he promising; but, on the
whole, the changes are thought to bo
saic rather than brilliant.
Perhaps the most remarkable ap
pointment is that of Andrew Honar
Law as parliamentary secretary to the
boanj’of trade. Mr. I.aw Is an iron
merchant of Glasgow, and was born
Ifi 1858. He Is a son of the Rev.
James Law, of New Brunswick. Ho
has only sat In parliament for two
years and has only spoken about
twice since he was elected; but upon
these occasions he revealed great In
tellectual power. He Is a man of
good business capacity, but. being
only a business man and without pow
erful connections, his choice for the
office allotted him by the Tory pre
mier Is considered unusual, If not sur
prising. It Is fully expected that fur
ther changes In the cabinet will bo
made during tho autumn session of
parliament.
In response to a question put by
John G. Butcher, conservative mem-
her of tho house ot commons, regard-
Ing the advisability of appointing
member of the royal family to be vice
roy of Ireland, with a permanent resi
dence there. Premier Balfour said
that such a step might possibly be ad
visable, but that it would entail pro
longed controversies and a now aet
of parliament and it. therefore, can
not be carried out at the present mo
ment.
BOY FALL8 300 FEET.
Test MaUe ot TLLuT;al Signals.
New York, Aug. 9.—Officials of the
New York Central ratiioad have made
a complete test of tie rerr-ntly Invent
ed s> stem of electric signals in engine
cabs, which are intended to prevent
collisions. It is to he the intention
of the officials, if the system shall
prove of practical use. to install the
signal on all locomotives passing
through the Park avenue tunnel.
Knok County Democrats Win.
Knoxville. Tenn.. Aug. 9.—The en
tire Demociatic ticket was elected in
Knox county hy majorities ranging
from 1 in to 1.550. This Is tho first
time In tho history ot the county where
the full ticket was elected. One or
two Democrats have at times been
elected, but the county has always
been considered safely Republican.
Acts Immediately.
Colds are sometimes more troublesome
in summer than in winter, it’s so hard
to keep from adding to them while cool-
off after exercise. One Minute Congh
Oure cures at once. Absolutely safe.
Acts immediately. Sure core for
conghB, colds, croup, throat and lung
troubles. The Orr Drag Co.
\ J. K DAVIS, I
t Electrical Contractor, |
a Full and complete as- $
\ aortment of Electrical #
i and Telephone supplies J
a on hand at all times. $
J Wiring for lights, bells, #
i motors, fens, etc., neatly J
■ and promptly done.
% Satislaction Guaranteed.
} PHONE - ”08,
A COR. COI.I.HOH AVB. AND CLAYTON ST.
Lucy Cobb Institute,
ATHENS, GA.
The exercisos of this school will be
resumed Sept. 10, 1902. For catalogue
and further information, apply to
M RUTHERFORD, Principal.
®EBB3B3B3B3SB'2BB3B3£> a &&m333G!SS3SSBSBB£SSB
l DRUGS BY MAH.
And Yet Received No Greater Injur,
lea Than Bruises.
New York, Aug. 9.—Falling 3U0 feet
down tho sheer side of a cliff In Engle
wood. Robert Scott. 13 years old,
reached the bottom with no greater
Injuries than bruises. When he ro
gained hie sense*, however, he was so
weak that his cries for help did not
reach far beyond the lonely spot In
which he had fallen.
Scott lay In the bushes at the bot
tom of the cliff for nearly two days,
being discovered finally by boys. They
summoned aid, and Scott was carried
home. Two doctors were called. They
found not a bone broken, and express
the belief that the hoy will recover.
Get our 1902 Catalogue. It lists in its 250 pages over 10,000 articles.
Dings. Medicines. Toilet Articles, etc. It will place oar inagnifioent
Drag Stock at yoar command and save yon money. It lists all the articles
usually fonud in a drag store, and hundreds of rare preparations, both
domestic and imported, not found In any other store. 0 0 0 0
WRITE FOR THIS CATALOGUE.
Tracey’e Body Sent to 8alem.
Portland, Oro., Aug. 9.—The body
Of Harry Tracey, enclosed In a pine
box rests on a baggage car truck at
the union station hero this morning.
It Is guarded by three of the five men
who fired the shots which subsequent
ly earned Tracey to take his own life.
Tho body will be shipped to Salem to-
day. The guards carry with them
the famoui 30-30 rifle with which the
convict did such deadly execution and
which will be given to Governor Keat.
Pernna 59c
Fletcher’s Oastoria 22c
Mennen's Talcum Powder 10c
Bromo Seltzer. 25o size 15c
Wampole’s God Liver Oil 05c
Kilmer’s Swamp Root 05c
Warner's SafeOure 09c
Oarter'B Pills 15c
Pinkham’s Compound 65c
Paine’s Celery Compound 05o
Wine of Cardni flue
Stuart's Gin and Pu hn 65c
B. B. B 65o
Bradfleld’s Female Regulator .. ,68c
Ayer’s Hair Vigor .68c
Fountain Syringe, 2 quarts 50o
Stuart’h Dyspepsia Tablets iJ6o
Kodol 36o
S. S. S 68c
Laxative Bromo (Quinine 16c
Black Draught I6o
Mile's Nervine U’Jo
Chenoy’sEx pectoran t 15o
Cutnra Ointment 37c
Poud’s Extract 33o
Allcock’s Porous Plasters........ lOo
Henson's Capcine Plasters I6o
Viola Cream 34o
Our Native Herbs H8c
Lemon Elixir 35c aud 69o
JACOBS’ PHARMACY,
ATLANTA,
GEORGIA.
©EEBSKBESE’SEEtaSSaSSiBn SSSSBSSSBSSSSSSSSSS
Forest Fires In Oregon.
Ashland, Ora., Aug. 9.—Forest fires
are raging in the Siskiyou mountains
in the Beaver, Hungry and Grosse
creek mining sections doing much dam.
age to timber. Reports connect their
origin with the bitter feeling that has
grown up among the miners la that
section against the timber land locat-
ere, who have during the present year
filed notices ot location on thousand*
We are Leaders.
Sash Doors and Blinds
Rough and Dressed Lumber,
Brick, Lime and Cement.
A_t The Riglit Price.
Our job department is now under the supervision of Mr.
W. T. Mayfield, who will he pleased to serve you with esti
mates on any and all kinds of first class work. Come and
see us.
Lyndon Hanufacturing Co,