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Job
Neatly and promptly exe¬
cuted at this office. Eve¬
rything from a mammoth
book to a small visiting
card printed on very short
notice. Cali and *ee our
samples and get prices.
NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
D. M. CLARK,
Attorney and Counsellor at
Jesup. Georgia.
Solicitor Wayne County Court.
JOHN W. BENNETT,
Attorney- at-Law,
Waycross, Georgia.
Will practice in all Courts
the Brunswick Circuit and else¬
where by special contract.
G. TUTEN, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
Jesup, Georgia.
Office in front of the
Brick Block, Calls
promptly, day or night.
G. W. DRAWDY, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
Jesup, Georgia
C. L. Y00MAN8, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
JE8DF, Georgia,
Office at the Jesup •Phswmacy.
answered night or day.
S. R. HARRIS.
Attorney and Counsellor at Law.
Jesup, Georgia.
HOTEL PHOENIX.
W ATCROPS Georcia
J. W. STRICKLAND, FROPK.
All modern conveieuces. Electric
Light* throughout building.
$2,00 and $3,00 per day.
SAMUEL F. ELLIS,
Dentist,
OfBee Whaley Building,
Jesup, Ga.
Sat ilia Lodge, No. S, K- off
Meets Monday nights at 8
p. m. A. J. Crooks, C. C.
A. E- Cain. K. of R. and 8- and
M. of F.
G. W. Drawdy. D. G. C.
Masonic.
Jesup Lodge No. 112, F & A M.
first sad third Tuesdays in eaeb month.
James Steele, W. M.
W. M. Austin, Secretary.
RELIGIOUS SERVICES.
METHODI8T CHURCH.
JEStP.
Services on the 2nd and 4th Sunday*
follows.
Class Meeting at 930 a. m.
Preaching at 11 a. m. and 7 r. M.
Sabbath School at 4 p.m.
Epworth League at 5 r. m.
Prayer Meeting every Wednesday
at 7 30
JOBKSOR STATION.
Services 1st and 3rd Sundays 11 A.
and 7»15 P. M.
Prayer Meeting Thursday evening 7
Read the News
if you want
_
to keep posted
LOCAL AND OTHERWISE
Mr. J. R. Broadhurst is on the sick
list this week.
Mr. W. M. Roberson is very ill at his
home with fever.
Mr. S. O. Brytiu of Hortense made a
business trip to towu Monday.
Solicitor Bennett and family have been
visiting friends in town this week.
Note Winchester advertisement. The
hunting season will soon he here.
Mr. E C. Broadhurst, the genial clerk
at Wilkins & Co's is on the sick list this
week
Our genial friend Mr. John G. Wil¬
liams, who has been working at Collins,
Ga., is at home again.
A force of men from Savannah have
been at work, for the past week recovering
the roof of the Whaley block.
Call and see my new line of sta¬
tionery—the best in town.—Knight
Pharmacy.
Chamticrlain’s Colic. Cholera and Diar¬
rhoea Remedy always affords prompt re¬
lief For sale by Knight Pharmacy
SusoritHtrs in arrears to the News
should not wait to be dunned, but should
pay up promptly. Many subscriptions are
now due.
Mr. Charlie Wages is putting up a large
cottcu gin. He is fixing up things in first
class shape, and expects soon to be ready
for business.
A eacaiae Send struck town Monday.
He bad apparently not been able to get
bold of the drug for some time and was
in bad shape.
A fine line of Cigars and Tobac¬
co* at H. W. Whaley & Co’s Drug
Store.
Mr. D. 8. Price represents the famous
Tailoring house. “Kuhn Bros.” of Louis¬
ville. Ky-. and has just received fall and
wtnter samples for 1897-98.
Mrs. M. V. Little, Mrs. Alden and Miss
Pearl Bennett left Saturday p. m. for
Brunswick and St. Simons where they
expect to spend several days.
Mr. 8. R- Bingham, who is nothing if
not enterprising, hag about completed
preparations for opening his bakery, and
expects to be ready for business in a few
days.
Burning, itching skin diseases instantly
relieved by DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Halve,
unequalled for cuts, brniees, burns. It
heals without leaving a scar.—Knight
Pharmacy.
Mbs Ruby Hudsou and Miss Vera
Gillan, two charming young ladies of
Wajcross. who have been visiting friends
in Jesup for three weeks, returned home
Monday evening.
Al! straw hats and summer dress
goods at, and below cost, for next
thirty days, at Wilkins & Co.
Don’t nauseate your stomach with teas
and bitter herbs, but regulate your liver
and sick headache by using those famous
little pills known as DeWitt* Little Early
Risers.—Knight Pharmacy.
Mr. Ponard severed his connection with
this paper temporarily almut two weeks
ago, but he did not join the Pops, as sug
gested in that week s issue of this paper,
neither was “blind tiger whiskey the cause
of it all."
The cheapest excursion of the season
will be run over the Southern Uoaii, from
Macon to Brunswick, on Aueutt 27th.
The fare from Jesup to Brunswick will he
50 cents round trip, good to return until
4 00 p. m- August 90th.
Call at W. H. Whaley 6 c Co’s
drug store for perfumeries, toilet
soaps, etc. The best on the mar
ket.
••f crave but One Minute.” said the
public speaker in a husky voice, and then
he took a dose of One Minute Cough Cure
and proceeded with his oratory. One
Minute Cough Cure is unequalled lor
throat and lung troubles.—Knight Phar
macy.
The dwelling of Mr. Tom Houston,
sight telegraph operator at Johnston Sta¬
tion, was struck by lightning last Friday.
The house was very much damaged by
the bolt. Fortunately no one was hurt
as Mrs. Houston and children were visi
ting at Walthourviile.
All the members of the Wryne Light
Troop are specially requested by Capt
Whaley to meet at their armory at 9
o’clock shaip. Friday morning. Sept. 3d.,
the company having some very important
busiaess to transact Members are re
ques'.ed to turn out in full uniform pre¬
pared for monthly drill. The Troop will
also have a tilt in the afternoon.
Boracine is a toilet powder that
dispels the disagreeable oder aris¬
ing from perspiration and prickly
heat and all eruptions of the skin.
—Kuight Pharmacy.
A large party of excursionist* from
Nail's Ferry to Doctortown came over to
Jesup Wednesday night. It seems that
boarding houses are scarce in Doctortown
and the excursionists had to make a bee
line for Jesup in order to get something
to eat- The majority put up at the Hotel
Wilkins where they passed the time pleas
antly away singing “There’s a daisy in the
dell, sweet Marie.” and other up-to date
DR. I. S. HOPK
VISITS "THE LAND OF THE
AND WRITES ABOUT IT.
Majestic Glory and Beauty as
8aw it on a Business Trip
Through Western North
Carolina.
Editor Constitution—A
business trip carried this
through western North
Over-praise is a temptation to
when the eye has been
and the fancy has been
It may have been so in this
stance, but over-statement
be no easy task in reference to
wonderland of mountain, vulky
river, of fruitful farms and
hotnes.
In a moment of happy
tion some one has called the
tain region of North Carolina
Land of the Sky.” But a name in¬
dicating attractions belonging
the earth would be equally
priate, if waving wheat fields,
uriant tobacco crops,
stone quarries and other
ministering to creature comfort
might suggest and justify a
But the glorious visions for
eye! Whatever can enliven
imagination and elevate
thoughts into higher and
moods belongs to this favored
region. From Salisbury to Knox¬
ville, along the line of the great
Southern Railway, the scene varies
unceasingly and yet is ever on the
highest scale of novelty and mag¬
nificence.
For many a mile the journey is
along the winding course of the
historic French Broad river, some¬
times skirting its waters at tne
very edge and frequently
the stream on picturesque bridges.
For the most part the course of
river is 'through mountain
now babbling over a rocky bed and
then seeming to lie for miles like a
placid lake with hardly a ripple
tell the surprising swiftness of
current.
For once the rigid claims of bus¬
iness seem to have gone down
fore the charms of nature, and
the projectors and engineers had
meant to do so they could
have contrived more successfully
to lay out their road for the
and delight of the traveler.
Alongside this wonderfully beau
tiful river view and in
contrast with It are th.
on either hand—not hills,
mountains. Sometimes they
precipitously within arms’
of the coach to a height of
feet, and again they swell and
from the margin of the river
bold and graceful curves. Then
solid wall rises before the m
train, pierced for the passage
the train, and up by many a
uous curve until reinforced by
pilot engine the summit of
range is reached and the easier de¬
scent is begun. At one point
can see below the grade he has
sed over at as many as
different levels. Central in all
this assemblage of attractions
the beautiful little city of
ville. Sitnated on an
plateau, it is like a gem set in
bosom of the mountains.
nature and art never combined
a more complete and
blending. The charm of
unique and bustling little city
been sounded far and wide, but
must be seen and felt to be
realized. Flourishing
beautiful churches, varied
interests, equable temperature,
failing water supply from
tain streams combine to make it
ideal place of residence.
Hotels and boarding
abound with prices to snit the
erage purse, as well as those
greater or less length and
This writer’s happy experience
with the Battery Park hotel
Mr. McKissick as host. This
occupies the , site . of . an old ,, , .
and from its elevated oosition
a most charming and
view of the city below and
mountains beyond. Shaded
luxurious paalors, tempting
splendidly furnished rooms,
stables, serpentine
shaded nooks and beautiful lawns
make it an ideal resting place—a
hotel home.
Front the gallaries of the hotel
the eye may travel over a horizon
entirely girdled by mountains. On
every side at distances varying
from a short walk to a score or
more of miles these eminences rise
in bold and graceful lines, three,
four, five or six thousand feet.
Not infrequently a belt of clouds
seems to cleave their 6ides, and 1 1
such times from the i summits
the observer looks down upon the
upper surface of the clouds as
upon the surface of a calm sea,
scarcely rippled by gentle breezes.
Back of these mountains so clear
to view that the sense of distance
is quite misleading, the dim and
hazy heads of other ranges 1 nd an
added charm to the scene.
One must be insensible indeed tc
the most inspiriting of all scenery
—that of mountain and valley—
net to feel a great uplift of soul as
he takes in the vision of these ma
jestic solitudes. What a boon to
tarry even for a brief season amid
such surroundings. What a balm
to the aching limbs, tired muscle,
strained nerves and even wounded
spirit, is this marvelously pure air,
vitilized with ozone, sweeping down
from the mountain heights in un¬
failing streams. And tired nature
responds in expanded lungs, quick¬
ened pulse, sparkling eye and
health hued cheek.
And then it is no small part of
the real pleasure of a trip to these
scenes of beauty and pleasure that
one can reach them so quickly and
with so little of the discomfort of
railway travel.
The well-appointed and luxuri¬
ous lines of tiie great Southern Rail¬
way, with sleepers and parlor cars,
dining cars and day coaches, atten
tive and courteous officials, and
convenient hours of travel, si ow
every possible consideration and
afford ever}' possible convenience
for the comfort and safety of the
traveler.
May duty beckon this writer
thither soon again.
1 S. HOPKINS.
Atlanta Constitution, July 8.
Electric Bitters.
Electric Bitters is a medicine
suited for any season, but perhaps
more generally needed when the
languid, exhausted feeling prevails,
when the liver is torpid and slug¬
gish and the need of a tonic and
altera'fve is felt. A prompt use of
this medicine has often averted
long and perhaps fatal bilious
fevers. No medicine will act more
surely in counteracting and free¬
ing the system from the malarial
poison. Headache, Indigestion,
Constipation. Dizziness yield to
Electric Bitters. 50e. and $1.00
per bottle at H. W. Whaley & Co’s
Drug Store.
Vim, vigor and victory :• these are the
characteristics of DeWitt’t Little Early
Risers, the famous little pills for consti¬
pation, biliousness and all stomach and
all stomach and liver troubles—Knight
Pharmacy
it heals eveiything except a broker,
heart, may be said of DeWitt’s Witch
Hazel Salve. Piles and rectal diseases,
nils, burns, bruises, tetter, eczema and all
skin diseases may be cured by it quickly
and permanently.—Knight Pharmacy,
They don t make much fuss about if
P f
, {l8(;r> tlie flimo ls , Uths pills f„ r constipa
j (jon biliousness They an d a ii stomach gripe.—Knight ami liver
lTOU i>i,. 8 never
Pharmacy,
■
■
| A Remarkable Cure ot Chronic
Diarrhoea.
In 1802. when I served my country as a
private in Company A. 167th Pennsylva¬
nia Volunteers, I contracted Chronic Di¬
arrhoea. It has given me a great deal of
trouble ever since. 1 have tried a dozen
different medicines and several prominent
rtociors without any permanent relief.
Not long ago a friend sent me a samo.'e
f { CbHmb|rlllin , g CVl , iCi Cholera and
t>iarr | u>4!1( p emedyi and a f te r that I
i bought and took 50 cent bottle, and now I
cun say I am entirely cured. 1 cannot be
j £££ JC
. ngveUraD!> £f - n rioubt wriu . me
* Sti-'indergeb. Allentown, Pa.
j Sold by Knight Pharmacy.
"E
j J.
£| t* v
s
E
l .mI .lluL pi m
► N
u
HINES
^JPpJ wtbade celTO a b ^i m nriiy aZrgfaemtntsand
MOST POPULAR SEWINC MACHINE
for tu&t a hATejraiued mere boo*. a Bay reputation from reliable by honest mantiraetorere end
dealing. There la sauaro
In mechanical non© In the world that oan equal
parte, fineness of construction, finish, beauty durability in of working
M many Improvements the MEW appearance, HOME. or lnui
as
WRITE FOR CIRCULARS.
The Rev Home Sewing Machine Go.
OauM.lf.ue. Cuomo, lu. Boston,If im. t8Uinoi»8<iu.ai,N.T.
SuIBucisoo,Cal. Sr, Lome, Mo. Dalim. Texas.
Atlakta, Ua.
FOR SALE BV
You Get
the Profits
Of Dealers, Agents, Jobbers
and from Middlemen the manufacturer. by buying di¬
rect
* mm
No better wheel made than the
Acme Bicycle
Built in our own using factory best by
skilled workmen, the
material and the most improved
machinery. Wo have no agents
Sold direct from factory to the
rider, fully warranted. examination. Shipped
anywhere for WRITE FOR
Our Interesting Offer
Acme Cycle Co., Elkhart, lad.
S. R. BINGHAM
Cold Drinks
... .of Every Description.
Cider, Milk Shakes
Lemonades
Hires improved Root Beer
Bottled Soda
Ginger Ale, Sarsaparilla, Etc.
Kept always on Ice.
All Drinks put up in First-class
Style and guaranteed to be the
Best in every respect.
-•• Whaley Block.
Give Me a Call
Thomas C. Platt.
Mr. Platt never smoked a cigar
except onoe, when he was a stripling !
in Owego. He had just left Yale
college and started a drug store in i
this now famous town of Tioga coun¬
ty. This was in the first days of the
Republican party. He then wrote
the songs for the Fremont campaign,
later for the Lincoln contests, and
later still for the Grant boomers.
He has two trunks at bis old home
in Owego full of these campaign
songs. All through New York state
there are happy geniuses with a pred¬
ilection for writing verses. But Mr.
Platt has a record in this respect
which is marvelous. A few years
ago he was the guest of the news
paper men of the Fellowcraft club.
He was called upon for a speech. ;
He looked round the board and saw
politicians of the two parties, litera
ry critics, artists and dramatists.
All expected a spesch from him.
Instead be recited an original poem
whioh he composed that afternoon
at his office, 49 Broadway, tolling of
the ultimate fate of a mischievous
yet enthusiastic pig. Mr. Platt’s
poem was the speech of the evening
and was received with roars of :
laughter.—New a York Sun.
Mot BeaponalM*. 1 ]
... Workman—Mr. , Brown, I should
like to ask you for a small raise in
ned. my wages. I have just been mar- j
Employer-Very sorry, my dear
man, but I can’t help you. For ao
cidenta which happen to our work- j
men outside of the faotory the com
pany is not responsible.—Fliegende
Blatter,
ij/j s
m
i
What is the matter
i with him test
He is laughing at those
people who don’t believe
It pays to
Advertise.,
in the News
Don’t be one of them.
You may be doing a good
business mow, but a little
money spent in advertising ’
your wares will ensure
your doing a better one.
Cheap Rates-.
for Advertisers
Palmetto House,
124 Bryan St., (Market Sq.)
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
Rates $1 and $L50 per - day
Special rates by the week.
G. W. GETSINGER,
Manager.
Tampa Bay Hotel, Fla.,.the most
tropolical resort in the world,
Tampa Bay Hotel, Casino, Opera
House, Swimming Pool, Bowling
Alleys, al: open December 3rd.
1896. Address,
B. W. Wbenn,
Passenger Traffic Manager, Plant
System.
12 West 22rd Street, New York
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Ur-,
SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JULT4, lHf.
Northbound. No N... A. Mat
81 18 •8 IS.
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Ar.
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“ Hailehur.it........ 12 12ap Up 1200a IS 20a
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“ Helena...... ••••V IZ »wp t 1 Da Ma
“ Eastman......... Mistier...... IS
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Ar. Chattanooga..... t 4 4 loop
Ar. Louisville 7 68a SlSpj sun 7 SB*
Ar. Cincinnati.<J. AC.. loo* raop; iaojH 7.so*
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Ar. Washington........ New York.......... 124*0 442a
“ 0 20a
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to 18 8. 14.
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" Washington........ 10 40? u .£
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“ Louisville. 7 Sir 7.44aj 7 40a rasp
Lv. Chnttanooza 8 e«ia lOOUp lOOOp
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drawing villa, room Pi*., c*r* beiw«m
Chattanooga. non sad Nuhvill*, Ton*., vi*
Nog. 7 and KwPr.liniaa drawing-room ticcp- iM ,
fag via earn betw.Aa I |p*r Mavon and Anhavllle, M. U,
Atiama an *nborg.
In Union Fuss Bfer sintioa, Atlnntn, f«r Um
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turIc?* ' Habo^cickT ’a
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