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cuted at this office. Eve¬
rything from a mammoth
book to a small visiting
card printed on very short
notice. Call and see our
samples and get prices.
NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
D. M. CLARK,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
Jesup, Georgia.
Solicitor Wayne County Court.
JOHN W. BENNETT,
Attorney - at-Law,
Waycross, Georgia.
Will practice in all Courts of
the Brunswick Circuit and else¬
where by special contract.
J. G. TUTEN, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
Jesup, - Georgia.
Office in front of the Whaley
Brick Block, Calls answered
promptly, day or night.
G. W. DRAWDY, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
Jesup, Georgia
C. L. YOUMANS, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
Jesup, - Georgia.
Office at the Jesup Pharmacy.
Galls answered night or day.
S. R. HARRIS,
Attorney and OorNSKULOK at Law'
jRScr, Georgia.
HOTEL PHOENIX.
WayV-robs Georc ia
J. STRICKLAND, PROPS
AH modern commences. Electric
Lights throughout building.
$2,00 and $3,00 per day.
Dr. T. A. BAILEY.
Dentist.
Waycross, Georgia .
Office Plant Avenue over Smith,
Adams, Parker Go's. Store.
Oct. 30th ly.
—
SAMUKL F. ELLIS,
Dentist,
Office Whaley Building,
Jesup, Ga.
. No* 6, 1C- of P*
Satiila Lodge,
Meets Monday nights at 8 o’clock
p. m. A. J. Brooks, C. C.
A. E- Cain, K. of R. and S. and
M. of F.
Q. W. Dkawdy. D. G. C.
Masonic.
Jesup Lodge'No. 112, P & A M.
first and third Tttesdajs in eaeh month.
James Steele, W. M.
AV. M. Austin, Secretary.
RELIGIOUS SERVICES.
METHODIST CHURCH.
JESUP.
Services on the 2nd and 4tU Sundays
follows.
Class Meetlmr at 930 a. m.
. Preaching at 11 a. m and 7 F. M.
SabbathiSehonJ* 4 V M
Epworth League at o p. Wednesday M.
Prayer Meeting every
It*
JOHNSON STATION.
Services 1st and 3rd Suudays 11 a.
and 7*15 P. *.
Prayer Meeting Thursday evening 7 p
Have yon subscritwd for the News?
not. why not?
LOCAL AND OTHERWISE
I)r- Drawdy spent Tuesday in
nab.
Col. Harris attended county court
day.
Capt. Grace of Waycross spent Monday
in town.
Mr. James W. Poppell was in town
Monday.
Excursion to Jucksonviie on the 19th.
$1.50, round trip.
Mrs. Ardelia Leggett is visiting friends
and relatives in Appling county.
The Epworth League met at the resi¬
dence of Mrs. Lucinda Cleary Tuesday
night. *
Major Bingham is putting up a soda
water stand at Pociortown. The major
is a hustler.
Dr. C. L. Ynumans returned from St.
Simons Tuesday, where he had been
spending a week
The railroads will give a rate of one fare
for Hie round trip, for the Waycross
celebration on July 2d.
No doubt the lady friends of the Troop
will be out in full fmcc Monday morning
to see the brave sojer boys off.
Mrs George Coley returned to her
borne in Valdosta yesterday after a long
visit to frteuds aud reltuives in Jesup.
Jacob Roberson. Jr., had his foot se
vere.y cut with an axe last Thursday even¬
ing. Five stitches had to be taken in the
cut.
Dr. J. G. Tuteu and wife left for Look¬
out Mountain, Tenn., Monday night. The
doctor went to attend the convention of
railway surgeons.
Mr. Manning Nichols is again working
in tiie yards at this point. Mr. Nichols is
an old railroad hand and one that the coys
are glad to welcome back to Jesup.
We advise Capt. Whaley to gag Sank
Little alter leaving Jesup, for if Sauk ever
gets off that record breaking laugh of bis
at Mcidrim, he will break up the encamp
meut.
Now would be a good time for a revival
to !>e held. If it be hotter down below
titan the weather that we have experi¬
enced for the last week or so, the sinners
would be flocking to Join the church
The little child of Mr. James Drawdy
met with a very painful accident Wednes¬
day eveuiug while playing uear the gate.
Iu some way the child’s eye got caught by
the gate hook and part of the upper eyelid
was torn off.
You may bunt the world over and you
will uot find another medicine equal to
Ch.imlterlain’s Colic. Cholera and Diar¬
rhoea Remedy for bowel complaints. It
is pleasant, safe and reliable. For sale tty
Knight Pharmacy.
Mr. C. I.. Hasbrouck. a druggist at
Mendoti, Mich., says all of the good testi¬
monials ihut, have been published by the
manufacturers of Chamberlain’s Colic.
Cholera and Diariiiiea Remedy could tie
duplicated in that town. For sale by
Kni « hl PhHrmacv '
ASrs. McKinzie, who died in Valdosta
Wednesday, was buried iu the cemetery
here yesterday. The relatives of the de¬
started to Kastman with the body,
but decomposition leaving set in the body
had to t>e interred here.
Fa^tcher ^were married*Wednesday aft'er"
noon by Mr Sanders’ father, the Rev. G.
« Sanders, at his residence. The bride
is said lo lie a charming young lady, and
'he groom to be in great good luck.
Last summer one of our grand-chi!■
dren was sick with a severe bowel trouble,"
says Airs. E. C. Gregory, of Fredericks
towu, Mo. “Our doctor’s remedy had
failed, then we tried Chainberlaiu’s Colic.
Cholera and Diatrhoea Remedy, which
gave very speedy relief-’’ For sale by
Knight Pharmacy.
The Wayne Light Troop leave Alonday
morning at^-Sl for the encampment at
Meldritn. They are due in Savannah at
9.50, and will have alxmt four hours there
they are scheduled to leave Savannah
2-0" P- m., a-riving at Mcidrim at 2 :10.
Captain Whaley expects to caary from 35
to 40 men to the encampment. The bovs
are all impatience for the eventful day
arrive, and count ou carrying off
share of the honors. The
the inclusive,
WE HAVE SURPRISED
OTHERS
WE WIL SURPRISE
YOU
NOTEHkADS
BILLHEADS _
LETTERHEADS
£\VE[,()PJ-;S
DODGERS rumr-nr-i
BUSINESS CARDS
V[J p R1NTED aT T if E NEWS
OFFICE
AT reasonable
PRICES
TRY US
Reasons Why Chamberlain’s Col¬
ic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy is the Best.
1.. Because it affords almost instant
relief in case of pain in tlie stomucb, colic
and cholera morbus.
2. Because it is the only remedy that
never fail- in the most severe cases of dys¬
entery aud diarrhoea,
2. Because it is the only remedy that
will cure chronic diarrhoea.
4. Because it is the only remedy that
will preveut bilious colic..
5. Because it is the only remedy that
w-ill cure cpi 'emical dysentery.
6 . Because it is the only remedy that
can always be depeuded upon in eases of
cholera infantum.
7. Because it is the most prompt and
most reliable medicine in use for bowel
complaints.
8 . Because it produces no Itad results.
9. Became it is safe aud pleasant to
take.
10. Because it has saved the lives of
more people than any other medicine in
lie world.
The 2i and 51c sizes for sale by Knight
Pharmacy.
The Presidents Mountain Trip
Throiish tlte Land of
the Sky.
President McKinley’s trip to
Asheville has drawn attention to
one of the most picturesque regions
in the world. Long before the war
it was noted for its dry climate and
bracing atmosphere, and since then
newcomers have built a city on air.
The streets and the houses have
their brick and mortar, but the
real foundation of Asheville is an
exhilarating, aerial champagne
that stimulates to the point of in¬
toxication.
It is said that Major McKinley,
having tasted this beverage, ne¬
glected wine of the vintage of ’43,
and even the protection punch that
Mr. McKissick brewed in his honor.
Looking out on that grand pano¬
rama and drinking in the ambro¬
sial air that comes over the moun¬
tains, a man forgets the monotony
of every day life and loses himself
in a Nirvana of rest. A common¬
place mortal becomes poetic and
your country-cracker throws off
his shuffling gait and walks with
grace.
Hard by this Nirvana is the Gar¬
den of Eden, brought down to date
by George W. Vanderbilt. The
roads, which are perfect, wind
through miles of flowers that mingle
their perfumes in indescribable
bouquets. The wild flowers of this
region and exotics from all parts of
the world grow up together. The
mountain laurel and the rhododen
dron grow side by side, and the
running honeysuckle is joined with
rarer plants in the same border.
Miles of spruce and balsam line
the roads, and all about the hills
slopes the indigenous and
transplanted shrubs are inter
mingled so that it is difficult to tell
where nature leaves off and art
begins.
The absence of humidity from
the air about Asheville rids the
climate of the sultriness which is
oppressive elsewhere. When other
cities were sweltering under a heat
of 95 or 100 degrees, the guests at
the Battery Park hotel were enjoy
ing balmy breezes and a tempera
lure of 78.
The approach to Asheville from
Salisbury, over the Southern Rail¬
way is through a charming country
which is especially beautiful at
wheat harvest. From the ear win¬
dows you see thousands of acres of
golden grain, standing or in shock.
Governor Holt is running 10 har
vesters this week and will make
10,000 bushels of wheat.
Front^alisbury the train ascends
gradually to Old Fort, where the
mountains rise to a height of 5,000
feec. It takes two powerful en
gines to pull he train up Round
Knob. !• twelve mil-s they climb
1,4 0 ted Fourteen times thi
truck doubles round the Knob be¬
fore it reaches the summit. Rush
ing out of a long tunn> 1, the train
whirls into full view of Royai
Gorge, a grand avenue among the
mountains, with broken valleys be
tween. As far as the eye cmn reach
mountains rise to the right and
left. This grand vista is worth
cue ing miles to see. The Blue
Ridge b-eaks up into a veritable
play ground ot Titans.
From Royal Gorge the track de
scends by easy stages. In half an
hour the picturesque Swannauoa
leads you into Asheville. There
you find a clean, well-kept town of
15,000 people, surrounded by emi¬
nences crowned with hotels and
villas. The finest view is from Bat¬
tery Rnrk hotel, which holds the
site of a fort and is reached by an
electric car. There you yet a p>n
orarnic view' which is hardly equal¬
ed thig side of the Rocky Moun¬
tains. Nature has thrown out a
cordon of mountain peaks that sur¬
round the place like gigantic senti¬
nels. It is a great circle, forty or
fifty miles in diameter, and through
the middle of the valley flow the
Bwannanoa and the French Broad.
Away off in the distance a shred of
white cloud flecks the mountain
side. Farther a way another spreads
its white wings over Hominy Greek
Gap. The mountains rise to a
height of 5,000 or 6,000 feet, heav¬
ily wooded to their summits.
Asheville is 2,600 feet above sea
level, and Biltmore house is about
2,800. Over the valley of the
French Broad and the Swannanoa
a heavy mist rises soon after sun¬
rise and floats away. Sometimes
in the afternoon you can look
across and see a thunderstorm in
the mountains, twenty miles dis
When Pisgah is thus enveloped you
think of Sinai with its cloud and
its thunders, or of Byron’s descrip¬
tion of a storm in the Alps—
•• From crag to crag leaps the live, thun¬
der
From Asheville back to Atlanta,
by way of the French Broad and
the Hol6ton river, the journey is a
pastoral poem. A man who has
seen wheat harvest on the Holeton
river and the upper Tennessee, will
want to quit everything else and
go to farming. East Tennessee is
a garden from Newport to Knox¬
ville.
This beautiful region is guarded
on the northeast by the Great
Smoky Mountains. Their foothills
make the pulisHdes of the French
Broad down to Paint Rock.
The American Switzerland has
scenes to inspire a painter or a
poet. The Cherokees loved this
region and mourned when driven to
the West. Even tlte savages grew
p'-etic in the msuntains and peo¬
pled the earth and air with “ invis¬
ible ones” like to the gods and
demigods of the ancient Greeks.
They heard angelic voices in bat¬
tle and saw in the storm-wraith the
garments of a god.
Heretofore Ashville has been a
day and a half from Atlanta, but
the new schedule by way of Spar¬
tanburg, which goes on to-morrow
evening, will enable the people of
Atlanta, Macon and Middle Geor
gia 1 1 go between the suns and re
turn the same way. A business man
can l eave home Saturday evening,
spend Sunday in Asheville, and be
back in his office on Monday morn
ing. By taking one more day
cun make the round trip through
the Land of the Sky and Uffck by
the French Broad and tht/noUton
river.—Atlanta Journal/June 18th.
/
Tills Will Interest You.
Tlie Atlanta Weekly Journal is now
running a missing wird contest.
For fifty cents tuey send the AVeekly
Journal one year (Iptiop pn(/ allow the person
(-ending the subsci one guess at the
missing word. Tl e sentence selected is:
lie who l.as tieased to enjoy his
friend's — has < eased to love him.”
The missing wo d js the one necessary make
t<> fill OHt the a he ve (sentence and
l>erfcet sente. It not a catch word, but
is a plain every daw JJfiuHsh word.
To the person fiUt Aitl Jg' essing the right
word the Journal give 5 per cent of
the amount of su 1 tiptions received dur¬
ing the three months that this contest
'asts. and 5 per cent\ additional will be
evenly divided belw all other persons
who may guess the misSb^r word. fam
Toe Weekly Journal hM first class
i y | a)»er having ten pages^Qlted with tuat
u-r that will iu*er>-st all «ntiers of the
f irmly It lias a first class Roman’s page,
an admirable children’s week, depictm,nt 8 vaSt amount at
least one Morv every
of n.i-eel aiieous features, and ail om news
of the world Address ! lie JourmH, At
lanta, Ga
Read tne New« Ac
if you want
to keep posted .
Tl
V
s I
E
a N
INR
MOST POPULAR IKWINO MAOHIMt
for a mere »onff. Buy from reliable zn ami fact crers
tbittumniOM dealing. There a reputation by honest and square
A h u none in the•-world that can equal
KS#«2S£&£«5; Mec anical const ruction, lurability of working*
«r h ‘/N ■ STHoiSlk? *“
WRIT! FOR CIRCULARS.
The Rev Home Sewing Machine Co.
OuiMt.nui. CiaciOO, BosTOa, H,*a. t»C;no»B obirs,N.T.
SJJ» ILy. PWUfCIHX), 8 t, Lcpui, Cih. MO. AlUXXA, DiUAA.TSXUL (it.
ron uic av
liegnl Sheriff's Sales.
Georgia—Wayne Countv.
Will be sold on the first Tuesday in
July. 1897, at the court the house legal hours door of in
sa d county, between
sale, to the highest anil liest bidder for
cash, to-wit—One the following described it property,
tract of land Wayne
county Georgia, containing 878 acres of
lot No. 20 in the 2d (list., ttoumied as fol
lows,* lo-wit—on the East by lands of J.
A. Courvjn. J. F. Highsmith and Mary
Thomas—South F. by lot No. 19, and No land
of J. Highsmith—North by lot Three 21
—West Hundred by and county Seventy-eight line, containing
acres more
less. Said property levied on as the prop¬
erty J. N. of Highsmith, Norwood Highsmith, satisfy Guardian for fi
to a mortgage
fa issued froin the May term tW9? of
Wayne Superior Court in favor of Mein
hard Bros. & Co., and against the said
Norwood Highsmith, Guardian for J. N.
chaser Highsmith. Terms for titles. of sale cash, pur¬
This paying 1897.
June 2d,
W. B. Lyens
Sheriff Wayue County, Ga
Georgia—Wayne County.
July, Will lie sold on the first door Tuesday in in
1897, at the court house said
county, between and the legal bidder hours of sale
the highest best for cash, the
following described property, to wit—All
that tract, lot or parcel of iand situated,
lying and being in in the second county district, of Wayne
and said state, the con¬
taining Atuinson—bounded 700 acres, near the North town or lands village
cf bv ot
U. L. Moyer.—East by lands of A. L.
Prentice—West by lauds of Drury anil
Smith of Knox Said'property Bros satisfy levied on as prop¬
erty fi issued May . to a of
ta from term 180.
Superior Court iu favor of Meinlmrd Bros.
& Co., and against the said Knox Btos.
Terms of sale cash, purchaser paying
title.
This June 2d, 1897.
W. B. Lyens,
Sheriff Wayue County, Ga.
Georgia—Wayne County.
Julv, Will tie sold on the tlrst door Tuesday in
1897, at the court house iu said
eounty, between the legal hours followin of sale
to highest bidder for cash, the '.
described property, to-wit—One Hundred
aud Ten (110) acics more or less, of lot of
laud No. 42 lying aud being iu the 2d dist
of Wayne county, Ga . levied on as the
property of N. iJ. White by virtue of a
’.ax tl fa issued by W. J. O’Quinu, tax
collector of said county, for state and
county tax for die y»ar 189(1 on said laud.
Levy made aud returned to me by West
berry Bennett, L. C„ April 20 , 1807.
Terms of sale cash, purchaser paying for
title
This June 2d, 1897.
W. B. Lyens,
Sheriff Wayue County, Ga.
.\«1 mill 1st rutotNSale.
STATE OF GEORGIA. I
County ok Wayne. f
Under and by virtue of an order from
the Court of < trdinary of said County
Wayne, will tie sold at public outcry ou
the first Tuesday in in July, 1897, Georgia, tit the
court-house door Jesup, in
said Couuty of Wayne, following between the legal
hours of sale, the tract, lot or
pared of land lying and being in said
Couuty of Wayne, containing Fifteen
Hundred acres 08 land, more or less and
described as follows, to-wit: All that cer¬
tain tract of one thousand acres of fund
1820, and-which is known as lot number
sixty-tw« ,02) in the Williams Survey.
Also, all that tract of land cooluiu.ng Five
Humired acres, more or less, being the
not th half of a tract of land granted by
tlte Slate of Geotgia to Dauiel t urner on
November second ( 2 d) 1826 , and identified
by lot number sixty three (02) Third
Survey. All lying and Iteing in the
land district of said couuty. The
of said sate wilt he cash, the
paying for titles.
This 7lh day of June, 1897.
James W. Poipei.i..
Administrator with the will annexed,
the estate of Christina Prentice, deceased.
GRIFFIN
Opposite the Ft eight Depot, East side
of railroad ou post office square.
Good accommodation at reasonable
rales.
$1.00 PER DAY.
$o .00 PER WEEK.
$15.09 PER MONTH.
Tabic s*,pltul with tbc Best Ibc
Sc W*. UMFFIN,
Proprietor,
tM a
I
in
What is the matter
with him....
He is laughing at those
people who dou’t believe
it pays to
Advertise.,
in the News
Don’t be one of thefn.
You may be doing a good
business now, but n little
money spent in advertising
your wares will ensure
your doing a better one.
Ciieap Rates...
for Advertisers
Palmetto House.
124 Bryan St., (Market Sq.)
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
Rates $ L and $1.50 per day*
Special rates by the week.
G. W. GETSINGER,
Manager.
Tampa Bay Hotel, Fla,, the most
tropolieal resort in the world.
Tampa Bay Hotel, Casino, Opera
House, Swimming Pool, Bowling
Alleys, all open December 3rd,
1890. Address,
B. W. Wrens,
Passenger Traffic Manager, Plant
System.
12 West 22rd Street, New York
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
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