Newspaper Page Text
VOL. I.
BILL AKE’S LETTER
Bartow Man Fat Sizz'ing Boast
For Indiscreet Prof; Slet d;
CREATOR MADE BUCK RACE INFER OR
And Status Will Never be Changed,
No Matter What is Written.
Bill "Subs" For Absent
Cook.
Little things Ul‘
fret us more thjp |>jg
ones. If I write that Neptune six¬
teen hundred millions of miles from
the sun and it-comes out in print six¬
teen millions it worries me. If I write
that the doctor sewed up hare lips and
it comes out hair lips. I don't like it.
The type didn’t know that a rabbit
had a slit under its nose. If I write
that I walked out into the garden to
ict my eholer down, meaning my an
ger, the typo thinks I meant my shirt
cu! ar. and so changes the spelling to
r uit his own idea But since i read an
editor’s defense in a New York paper
i fee! better, for he says it is amazing
how few of these mistakes are made
in the great dallies that have to he
rushed through with lightning speed.
The constant pressure on type setters
and proof readers is tremendous, but
they rarely make any serious blun¬
ders. and the intelligent reader can
generally correct them in his mind.
And so I will not worry any more
about it. There are some little things
that are of more consequence just
now. Our cook has quit, and so has
the house maid—gone off to Rockmart
for a week or two—gone to a house
party, I think. That is a 1 right, for
the cook has been faithful a long time
and needed rest. She is a good ser¬
vant and keeps a clean kitchen, and
we have had a house party ourselves
for several months. I have been sick,
hut now we are reduced to the regular
family of five and have but little to
cook and can get along on two meals
a day. My wife arranged it for me
to Sre up the stove and fill up the ket¬
tles and grind the coffee and put on
the hominy and then ring the bel for
the girls to get up and finish up the
breakfast. She said if I felt like it 1
migght sweet out tho hall and the
front veranda and settle up the front
room. Weil, of course, 1 had to split
tip some kindling and bring in the
stove wood, but I am getting along
fairly we'll and my wife thinks the
exercise Is doing me good. Last night
she hifited-that the Veranda was badly
tracked up since the rain and needed
a good washing. So this morning I
turned loose the hose pipe, on it and
she praised me a right sifiart and I
brought her some roses from m<y, : gar¬
den. We let h< r sleep until Tf?r'*room breakfast
is ready, for sh*e cleans up
and makes up Vwo'beds an*h<fc'e*!sews
all day for the grandchildren.’"BUt I
want that colored house party to
break up as soon as possible, for I
don’t hanker after this morning busi¬
ness as a regular job. Mrs. Minims
says she iikes it, and I think she does.
She has a good room in the hack
yard and good furniture and a hand¬
some lamp to read by, and her little
grandson lives with her, and I don’t
know of any colored woman that has a
better time. In fact, I know of lots of
good negroes in town who are con¬
tented with their situation and will
continue so If they are let akKne by
the northern -fanatics-, and southern
c-i :-:ztxz mn
■«. “
..v >. «.w"
shown any love for the south, and why
should he select that as organ passUh
comprehension. Professor Sledd says.
the negro is an inferior race. Tne n
why does he insist that we give him a
place in our own churches and hotels
and railroad-cars. '
It was the work of the , Creator that
made him inferior, and he will
so—and neither education nor misce
genation will ever change it so far as
social equality is concerned.
violated the law of God when he mar
according to Josephus,OP -
tians were at w?r with the Ethl °
pians and had suffered e ai in c\er> J
battle until Pharac w as a .'iSf ', ina ^
no one couid commas l.s army sue
cessfully but Moses, ho os s was j
given command an e mar ne ,vu ,
the army to the borders cf Ethiopia
and met the enemy and defeated them I !
and then marched on to. Saba, the roy- |
Tbartis^thVdSfctor'^f tte ’kig. j
saw Moses from the window cf her
tower, and he was so handsome that ;
she fell desperately In ove with him.
and sent a messenger to him to sav j
that if he would marry her she would j
surrender the city and army to him. j
Moses agreed to this and their mar- j
riage was at once consummated. Then j
Moses returned with his victorious j
army to Egypt. He did not take with j
him bis Ethiopian wife, but not long
• >
« 1f 4 * * . Vl*-’**
**« « ■V.
> $- • i ’wx- w - 'll
41 - .. r -*•*•, ‘.*V *'*' * C ' ;ai N I ^5 1 tm 4 -
•'• -
-cSt *.*
* I .if:
*
•
after he married Zipporah, the daugh¬
ter of Jethro, the Midianite.
So we must suppose that Moses mar¬
ried the Ethiopian princess as a war
measure and with no idea of keeping
his promise. At any rate it caused
trouble and shame in the family, and
so it has done ever since whenever a
white person mates with a negro.
What a monstrous falsehood to say
rhat tlie southern negro is dehuman¬
ized. r Right here Tn our town every
negro mechanic is employed at good
wages. Blacksmiths, carpenters, ma
sons, painters, draymen are all busy.
Cooks, nurses and washerwomen }$r ; &
euipiOj .ucUv—and they re
not cn y contented, but sometimes,
dare Siedd'get to be merry and laugh. Wh^re 'kicking did f
all that rot about
and cursing and beating the negro f
We tcever hear of such treatment in'
this, region. Mr. Milam, a truthful
gentleman, whose business keeps' him
on th> street, told me the other day
that he had heard but one oath
tered by anybody within a'yeaT, at##'
that was by a northern man towards
a negro who asked him a civil ques*
tion. Dehumanized, indaRd!., Ask
Tribble and Brown wtoo'-Jfive.
shop Jibe most patronage. 4VJutt ri$.i.c-»
uious folly to demand seats' in our
churches:J6>r s t»ie negroes. They have
chill®] is their own that were built
main y ! by -the charity of the white
folks. They don't want scats in our
hurches. They have schools of their
nvn that we support, and they haye
ixeursiens and base-ball Daughters and. water-,
melons and funerals and of
Zion. Oh, for shame on Sledri! I pity
vis family nnd his kindred. Ha thinks
he has found a mare’s nest, and for
lack cf something fresh has raked up
Sam Hose again. He laments the
ijnehings, but not the outrages, air'd
he proposes a remedy. Mr. Fiend van
set this down—that tho lynchyjgs wil
not stop until the ou'rnges do. When
i negro dehumanizes himself and be¬
comes a beast he ought to be lynched,
whether it is Sunday or Monday. I#4‘
.he lynching go on. This is the sen
timent of our people, and let Boston
and The Atlantic Monthly and Sletid
howl. We are used to that. Not long
ago nt had a lynching in Rome that
was to my notion. The beast was
strung up in Broad street iu the day¬
time and shot to pieces and m.uody
was disguised. The town marsha' and
policemen and a military company,
and the governor wasn't far away, but
not a soul said nay. That suits me ex¬
actly.—Bill Arp, in Atlanta Constitu¬
tion.
KNOX AS A SCRAPPER.
Attorney-General Slugs Man in Res¬
taurant Who Insulted Him.
To a representative of the Aesocl*
a ted. Press Mr. Knox confirmed the re¬
port that .he had m^^Wagtic a ^^orial difficulty
with apart,- °f
ustlWJ net-flaw v*
.ld«IMe«W-^. ■.y-.*T m Mrtnu
’
oqcur in a restaurant oh other place.
SrfSvS*
".W-T, 'ffE-r* 0 '’ "m n l h( ‘ r T
aurant of thp Garden ho,tel ; A A party
of men, ’ none whom I knew, seated
he me c l yes at an adjoining table.
Their ctfhdTIct w*fi»u..urj|jlji J-ftfli-boi.-i
terous. They talked loudly, and their
coniments upon members of my party
and upon me were insulting, to put it
•ery mildly.
Under the circumstances, accom
panied as I was by the ladies, I could
not resent their actions or the.r words
at .that time. They were evidently
?. what happened t0 him I am not
prepared to say. Those things occur
- satisfied,
y6ry quick!y , am qulte aly/e
bowe that he doCE no t fpq1 6teXt 1
t0(Jay as , do You win ri I
am l£)oking flr£t ra(e „ j
"You do not know who were in the
party of assailants? ..
. „ Xo . posit)vtIy r unders t and that
p arick^^the har]f!g T Schoen of p h ii adc iphia,
Tram-w, also of Phila
#4b e Wrty, btftf&rt
^, ve ...
that seems to be entirely unlikely. As
sat at t h e table in the restaurant,
t - y made ro reference to the action
which, as attorney general, I have
taken aga i ns t certain socalied trusts..
Tke remar j{ g w^se persenal to me and;
^ my f a mily, and weretif such a na
ture that I could do nothing but resent
them.
“I understand that as I left the res
* aUrant 3t the concItsion o( ,he diffl '
cuity the waiters suppressed the
crowd with some energy.”
The attorney general evidently was
not in the toast injured by his assail
ants, and as he chatted with the re
porter he did not seem to regard It
very seriously.
Firmin Forms Government.
The Firminist party in ^avti has
formed a provisional government at
Gonaives, with president.
“p-RO BO/VO PUBLieO.
WAYNE COtJNTY, GA., 1 , AUGUST 15 , 1
••
With Medieval Rites Solemn and
Quaint Ceremony is Performed.
ALEXANDRA ALSO CORONATED
King ,Edward Stands the Ordeal With
V Greatest Composure—Every
Stage of Proceedings Wat
Highly Interesting.
***
A .. London spe6itfl
says: King Ed
ward and Queed Alexandra 'werd
^crowned in Westminster Abbey Sat¬
urday shortly after noon.
The king showed no trace of fa
after the ceremfriiy was' con
i'cTS( it'll, ‘
.. 3#
He was cheered to the ech,o by the
ecuintless thousands which lined the
VA *
rou e -
.‘•j AVhei! the announcement was made
through the great city that Edward
had been crowned king, bells were
rung, whistles blew and the entire
populace joined' in singing the nation-'
al hymn. Throughout the city the
people shouted: “God save the king.”
.While the ceremony was bereft of
some of the elaboration and pageant¬
ry originally intended, It was replete
with spectacular scenes.and magnifi¬
cent display. The whole ceremonial
was decorative in character and pre¬
sented a constantly changing panora¬
ma around the two central figttres en¬
throned in their robes of velvet, er¬
mine and cloth of gold, amidst the dis¬
tinguished assemblage of actors, the
fulfillment of whose various roles ne¬
cessitated constant movement.
Each stage of the ceremony, with
its old world usages, furnlshed'its quo¬
ta of interest, while the interior of the
noble church, filled with offeiating
prelates in varicolored capes, with
prnces and diplomats, officers In gold
laced uniforms, with heralds, pursui¬
vants and other officers of state in
medieval costumes, with peers and
peeresses In rich robes, with oriental
potentates in many-hued raiment, com¬
ing from distant points of the now
crowned monarch's empire, with the
’dazzling display of Jewels and wealth
of color, presented a picture which in
its combined brilliancy and distinction
has never been excelled.
Synopsis of this D&y,’^
’he do ors Westminster' Abbey
were opened at 7 o’clocJfVvAt-'S Stflock
Mhe streets of LondoJ .tflobpi*fche* coro¬
nation roube'w#$ crowded with sight
Stceet binders were closed at
• t>\ - V
of , he procession reached
rM) cj- at 10; 5.0 o’clock and the
played “God Save the King."
mml . PrtveES of Wales arrived
c , , 7 •
“«». cheirfng' i:
and marked demob
stration...A*- t^e bnrstlhrobgh King geared tho ah
, people the’cor
don . of , po-Jee .. and soldier&r hut but *ir»ro *werc
ed back *- -
— ffRlwara ah»Y-Alexandra.entered t
at) | jey at yy -34 o’clock J the choir
WaR Gla( , w hen They Sald
Un ^ Me „ Thfi kjng wag rrowne(] at
li;:39 o’elook. The queen was crown
^ at ]2:5fi o’clock. The return was
^ un at -j .gg to Buckingham Palace.
way t 0 ^SFotfe Wrthct tf|b I'lHlj
flemonstration
'mgst&SEA™
palace in the afternoon stated the king
had suffered no fatigue whatever.
Re ai^dmlkl ijr&e&i&tltct*; Ev'qna? ftfA^ilFon, '(!<■$ Orleans, Con¬
sisting
! Helena and Vicksburg, h'As'arrived
Chemulpo, Corea.
FtREBUGjS ACJIVEdiNL EfaRJA.,
:
^
buildings during the day, hut the loss
will not exceed $25,000.
The police arrested Edward Fianna
g an 20 years old, and charged him
,
W ith being the pyromaniac. As a pre
cautionary th^ m easure the prisoner was
removed 1 thp -county Jail
FUSSING OVER BUM (SLAND.
*
_
Guns Sent to Marcus for Purpose of
i Shooting the Japs.
According to the Honolulu men who
are interested in the Marcus island
guano expedition, against which Ja
pan faas gent a war vessel, it is said
that tke veE sel which left San Frar.
! cisco for the island carried a comple
meat of Mauser rifles and her captain
had Instructions from the company
plant the &$&rican flag on .the
and keep 4a3ET' ’■ i'w cojfep ciled tc
i*ul it 22®^
WBltE AND BLACK MAN DIE.
' Double 'lynching at Lexington, Mis¬
souri—Victims Killed Wealthy
' Owner of a Hen Roost.
Charles Salyers, 4 yhlte, and Harry
Gates, colored,'wire taken from the
coun ty jaif at Lexington, Missouiri, by
a masked roof? at' 1:30 Tuesday morn¬
ing and lynched!*
They were*-charged with killing
Georgy W. Johnson, a wealthy farmer,
who surprised them at his hen house
near the -town ft Week'ago. <
They were, strung up and Salyers
, made a statement to the mob saying
that Gates had firod the shot that kill
ed Johnson,
* Johnson was oh<* of the wealthiest
and most respected men in the com¬
munity and the .feeling against the
two men was Intense.
Tuesday night shortly after mid¬
night, armed men arrived in town by
twos and threes iftost of them masked.
They massed finally near the yard
in which the comity jail is located.
The mob was orderly and well direct¬
ed, each'lnan doing his work efficient¬
ly and effectively.
A demand on the jailer for the pris¬
oners. meeting with refusal, several
mCn of the mob, 1 who had come well
.prepared, broke in the outer--‘door and
made for the cel s of the murderers.
It took thirty minutes to cut through
the steel doors, j
Salyers was taken out first, then
Gates.
Without further ado. the mob start¬
ed with their victims for a point half
a mile south of town.
There Salyers was granted per¬
mission to ntakftfn statement. He said
that Gates shot „Johnson after firing
three times, and that when the last
shot was fired (kites had hold of John¬
son.
Before being killed Johnson had
.cxchangged shots with the men and
Gates was found to have been shot in
■the right hip.
* Salyers’ statement-finished, the men
were strung up to a tree.
They were left hanging and tho mob
dispersed quietly.
Only one shot was fired and' that
( io quit out an incandescent light
in pasSCffiliy'on ftpriTo'lka livery stable as the mob of
the way to the eccnc
thtf lymching.,.. Ajh*# -fcOTte
had lived fit Ldxlhgton for a number
Gf'-years and left a family, had a
badwputatlon. Gates, who was tbtfty
years of ago, h»v served, a term in the
pcnftentfnry for y burglary commitied
in Lexington.
-5 \ TWO.OFFICERS WAYLAID.
_
Mysterious Murder 'Pollce
Supposed Thugs.*
OJ^ers Timothy Devin'e and Charles
T. Pennell,'patrolmen of Chicago po
iicuij’ftie'partmciit, were..ki(l.cd early
Tuesday (Horning in ft<rqjtolv.er battle
with what is supposed to Jiave been a
gang 1 of thugs. Much Mnyste.ry sur¬
rounds the' shooting, ’for bokh ' men
died before an adequate accdunt of
the shooting cduld be OBtai'ifcd—De
vino in the ambulance on'tnfe wayT.6
th e hospital and Pennell on the oper
table, while surgeons were prob
ing for the bullets,
The fight occurred just before
dawn on the Jackson boulevard and
Ashland avenue, in -the. arJstocratic
((drijused seption ,of the. west'sfiV. The shots
the entire neighborhood. Cit
'
wbp heard theming policemen
- - “ m,n ,n
; Wtoi».|»UJiicU.<*led he .Wqe
able to'i?aW i ffift®'ir fftw words 'about
“rplihers;” avi^g .descriptions of,two
men.
Killed Wife and Suicided.
1% * ’ XYl 35) miles east of Fort
A ,n&
Ja'nt Huggins, assi^t
’wife ( j.", jealous a nd killed ami then his
while iffi-a rage
(committed suicide. They leave five
children.
. *1°^ T E ACHERS DIED.
.- • ^ t . ,
-
IJBforlunate. Were B ru'‘""X ... Don Don « to t0
'
An investi
to.
of a
Cebu coaching, party of four school
teachers,* shows that the party was
i ambushed 12 miles from Cebu. Two
teachers were shot and killed at the
first volley, a third, who ran, was shot
iu the back, and a fourth, who was
captured, was shot in the chest while
; praying for mercy.
he was
It is believed that sufficient evi¬
dence is secured to convict all the par¬
ticipants in the crime.
A CRY FRt)M-BARCELONA.
Consul at Another Venezuelan Town j
Fears th e "Terrible" Rebels,
Minister Bowen has cabled the state j
department from Caracas that our con- j
sul at Barcelona has informed him by |
wire that Barcelona has been taken j
f, y the revolutionists, that they are
the town and that in his ju g
naent protection of a vessel should be
immediflely afforded'him. |
**
SHIRAS EXONERATED
Noted Income Tax Decision of
Supreme Court Revived.
JUSTICE GRAY NOW BLAMED
■ .
X
Odium that Has Long Rested * on
Shoulders of Justice Shiras
Cleared Away by Retirement
of Gray.'
A Washington special says: • Mi*.
Justice Gray's voluntary retirement
from the bench of the supreme court
o/ the United States, revives the scan¬
dal growing out of the famous decision
in the income tax case, which involved
the name and integrity of Mr. Justice
Shiras, Justice- Shiras w*as accused
of changing his vote on the final de¬
cision. declaring the income tax un¬
constitutional. He has been openly
denounced in the halls of congress, on
the stump by politicians who favored
the tax, and in public places as being
unworthy of membership in the high¬
est. judicial tribunal of the land,.,
It is asserted by those who are in a
position to know that it was not
Judge,Shiras who changed his vote on
that memorable occasion, but another
member of the court, and the finger
of suspicion points at Mr. Justice Gray.
One of the traditions of the supreme
court l« to the effect that no affirma¬
tion or denial is ever given by mem¬
bers of the court of the secret delib¬
erations or conclusions in the confer¬
ence room. During a'i these yars the
legal and political world has labored
under the Impression that it was Mr.
Justice Shiras, of Pennsylvania, who
at the eleventh hour,'changed his vote
so that*the court stood 5 to 4 against
the income tax..
Shiras Relieved of Odium.
Since the retirement of Mr, Justice
Gray, and the probable early retire¬
ment of Mr. Justice Shiras, the Uis- •
closure is made by those who know
that.it was not Judge Shiras who
changed his vote. It, is possible tbpt
no official statement from the churl fin’
Hh'erc this subject, will ever be obtained, bnt_
are circumstances recalled in'qx
ciuBtye sirpreAfeCcnurt circles, which
throw a n^w light upon what has here¬
tofore been a dark sceret.
Here are the circumstances which
relieve Judge Shims- from the odium
so long attached to him, in connection
with the income tax decision.
When the case was first argued
only eight judges sat in the ease.
When the decision was announced in
open court, the chief justice stated
that the court was equnlly divided. No
explanation of the vote, is customary,
and the public was left to guess^as .t.Q
the details of the vote. Ail tljp fudges
excepting Judges Gray,' Shiras and
Brown delivered individual opinions.
Thus the conclusion was reached thaA
those who -voted in favor of the in-;
come tax were associate Justices
Brown, itgrlan, Gray and' ‘While. Those
against It were Chief Justice Fuller
and Justices Field; Brewer and Shiras.
A hearing of tile case was .order.ed.
before a full bench, and Mr. Justice
Jackson, a democrat, who had been
ill, sat in the 'case on its second hear¬
ing. When the decision was rendered
It was found that the tax had been de¬
clared unconstitutional by a vote of
5 to 4. Justice Jackson announced the
reason for his vote, so there was no
doubt as, to the views of at least six
members of the court. Justices Gray,
Brown ( and Shiras remained silent,
and fth the'-ffnal result could only have
been reached -by a change of one of
those three votes, suspicion rested
upon Judge Shiras, because it was said
that he was a ‘V-ecporaticm -lawyer. ’
It' might have been said with equal
assurance that he was originally op
posfid. to theflax for the same reason.
He was against the tax first, last and
all the time.
The -decision of the court and the
methods by which it was supposed to
htive been reached, created a political
sdnftation all over the country, and
Judge Shiras was held up to censure
as the man who reversed himself at
the demand of the monied interests,
CONVICTS REDUCE TAXES.
Mississippi State Farm §ystem Prov¬
ing an Extra Good Thing.
Captain J. M: Parchman, warden of
the Mississippi penitentiary, expresses
the belief that^the convict farm sys
tern of th^ state' ffroviAing erc'ps aver
age well during the period, will justi
fy a reduction of the state tax levy of
nearly 25 per cent during the next
four years.
Another Armour Plant Burns.
At Memphis, Team, Tuesday fire de
etroyed the plant of the Armour Pack¬
ing Company. Loss about $115,000;
said to be uninsured.
LARGEST SHIP AFLOAT.
Gigantic Kaiser Wilhelm II Success
fully Launched at Stettin.
The new German-Lioyd steamer.
K a ; ser vVilhelm II, was successfully
launched at the Vulcan ship yards at
gtetljn Tpesday in the presence ef
jr mp e ro r/William.
*■ Kaiser Wilhelm II will be the
jgj-ggjt a nd is designed to be the fast
est ship in the world.
Best
^CLOTHING AMO MOST,STYLISH
FOR
LADIES
AND
MISSES.
SUITS,
.SKIRTS, kWAISTS,
^CORSETS,
ETC.
GOODS) BEST |
✓have ✓OTHERS
A
✓fsomethings Xtew”
/EVERYTHING /we HAVE LOIS
✓ /OUR LOWEST, PRICES EVER
ON BEST QUALITY.
The 4"For World’s fever JOHNSON'S Greatest CMH.t. AM' Fever H vrq roNie. Medicine. it is LOO ttliicS | ■
Ml forma of hike quinine aiinot in 10 dajs. pH
better than quinine ami does In a single day u-iuit r ! - - <- <!e by quniin*- i o B
It's splendid cures me in striking contras! to the feeble cures ma ^L___JI
COSTS 80 CENTS IF IT CUKK
(
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company
PASSKNGKU SCHEDULES.
Arrivals and IH'parlures at ’ Josnp, Ua.
In Effect April 15. 1 «)<)’>. Arrivals.
_
For Savannah and points North, Last anti
■ Northeast.
Train No. 24 Loaves .. 7 40 a m
“ “ 32 : ...II 20 a in
22 * . 6 40 jY in
30 : ,. 10 45 p m
78 : .. 1L 20 p no
For Waycrosw and po ntw South, TVupt;
South wo,-it and Northwest.
Train No. 23 Loaves . 5 30 a m
“ 29 n . 0 15am
“ “ 35 . 9 45 a in
“ “ S3 . 4 30 p in ' '
“ • “ 25 . 0 40 p m
GoniiooUou mails at Port Tampa.with "U. t ! . M lJi Htoriuttip oh Psnhvmiar ood Ocot
deninl Ktenmftlilp Unu f.w-K«y Wsst mid II iviimv, 1-iftlng Tort T unpa dhijisdays,
'TOr'VnrthV-r tufijrmaitd'm through'ear s >rvi !'J, twliis 'makias toeaf stqps, mi-fsch'ed
ul4» tocher points; 4pY>ly to Wilmington^N. C. - •»
W. J. CRAIG; General Eassenger Agent, ^
EMERSON,-'Assistant Traffic Manager, Wilmington, N. C. 1
-H, Ml N.‘C.*
•T:*M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager, WUmlngt'OB,
’ Illustrated playing i.ard-i cau bo so "Jr In' Ji p d)i: up >:i aupUcatton to
ngpnts of ths Plant System. , /i
i ■jiJL "
If-Yon Coiiltgalt Inariss Your Me Ipiiiate tie
.. # ‘iti.
I
:■
i I
t.
INSURANCE CO., OF CINCINNATI. 0.
Its policies are LIBER’A'l, its rates are LOW,'-and its contracts are
made SAFE beyond’question by the,sum of over $30,COO,000, its present;
cash assets.
. A TWENTY PAYMENT LIFE or an ENDOWMENT policy, if carried to
j maturity guarantees to Hie holder, a financial success in life. In event of
thp prematnre icathof the insured, bis family or estate receives, immedi
.
| ' at( ,, y> (he full am0llnt 0 f the policy in CASH. In event the insured amount lives to of
j )he maturity of bis policy, he draws himself, in CASH, tho full
| lhe po]icy as stated in the contract,reaping, at the time it is most needed,
j the fruits of his young and most successful days,
No gafcr j nves tment or deposit can he made of a small sum each year
than by buylng onp 0 f the new policies of the ONION CENTRAL,
j f yQU des)re any further, information regarding this company nearest and birth- its •
pollci r S apply in person or-liy postal, giving your age at .
’ will.he furnished by
. aDd a samp i e po H c y you
j H C onNOR, Local Agent, Jesup, Ga.
THOS. J. ARLINE,.General Agent, Savannah, Ga.
■ |
a THE WORLD'S ’ [
M M GREATEST FEVER |
MEDICINE. .
SI H For all Chill form<of and Ffver fever Tonic take John* It is
son 8
flBi |sS does 100 times in single better day than what quinine slow qui- and
?$K a V
«l nB cannot do in 10 days. It's
■B M splendid trast to t|ie cures feeble are in cures striking: made con- by j I
K quinirie. * ;
a V- Costs 50 Cents If It Cures. J J
— T— 1
PALM OIL IS BARRED.
Ruling Made that it Cannot Be Used
in Oleomargarine,
A Washington dispatch says: Mr.
Yerks, the commissioner . of internal
revenue, has made a decision cn the
question of whether palm oil in very
sraail quantities may be used in the
rcanufacture of oleomargarine. The
commission has decided in the nega¬
tive, inasmuch as the oil is only used
for imparting'color,
(AND MEN.BDYS
CHILDRENS
suns', hats, >
LARGEST FURNISH STOCK ING^f /
AND VARIETY BIGGEST^ 'f
SOUTHJP IN THE-.jT
*
IEYY .....
•.
........ ta
v •
OUR ^ 7 a*
ORBEtr* X
SYSTEM IS
PERFECT-WE^
EXPRESS OFFICE fix
PERMIT EXAMINATION
BEFORE PAYING
From riuviuumti mid North,
and Northeast.
Trniu No. 2-1 Arrived7 TO a m
“ “ 2 d v ‘g 15am
35 .. 9 4a am
33 ..... 4 30 ]> m
“ 25 _____ 0 40 p-.m
From Way' to?,‘ i an«T points West*'
Southwest anil NorthwesE. '
Train Nay,* 24 Arrives i..... 7 49 am
“ “ 32 “ 14 29 am
“ 22.*- .. (5 40 p m
“ 30 •«< *'4 .. 10 45 p m
” 78 .. J1 20 p m
The warning which the health de
partment has issued® on the. subject o£
pas leakage is in pursuance of a policy
that is strongly supported by the medi
<al profession, states the Chicago Rec
ord-Herald. An article that was pub
ipflied in The Journal of the American
Medical Association goes into the ones- ;
tion thoroughly ami supplements the^
department’s report with interesting
data. It says that the leakage in large
cities amounts to many million feet
per day, and that it is increasingly,
dangerous in quality as well as quan¬
tity, owing to the cheaper methods of
manufacture now employed. “ Th ®
original^ coal gas contained about 7
per cent, of tho very dangerous in¬
gredient, carbon monoxid. At the
present lime water gas forms almost
exclusively the. basis for Illuminating
gas, and in this product over 30 per
cent, of the gaseous materials consist
of the odorless, treacherous carbon
monoxid." The escaping gas may be
the cause of fires and explosions, but
I it is most dangerous when its action
] ig most subtle
The ‘‘pay, pay, pay” portion of thB
Boer war program has not yet beea
quite concluded.
NO. 3 .
IOWFST
PRICES.