The Columbia sentinel. (Harlem, Ga.) 1882-1924, May 27, 1886, Image 5

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Columbia Sentinel. PUBLISHED EVERY THUBSDAY AT HARLEM G BORGIA. ENTEBED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AT THE POST OFFICE IN HARLEM. GA. ""THURSDAY, MAY 27 ISsG nTwi - Is to inform you that your subscrip tion i* due, and as we need the money, kindly ask all in arrears to come up and give us a helping hand bv paying up their subscription. CITY AND COUNTY DIRECTORY CITY COUNCIL. J. W. BELL. Mayor. W. ARNOLD. W. E. HATCHER. W. Z HOLLIDAY. M. FULLER. COUNTY OFFICERS. G.D.DARSEY, Ordinary. G. W. GRAY, Clerk and Treasurer. B. IVEY. Sheriff. O. HARDY, Tai Collector. J. A. GREEN. Tax Receiver. J. C. GOETCHIUS, Coroner. MASONIC. Harlem Lodge, No. 276 F. A. M., meets 2d and 4th Saturdays. CHURCHES. jtaWist—Services 4th Sunday. Dr. E.U.Cars well. Sunday School every Sunday. Superin tendent—Rev. .1. W. Ellington. Methodist— Every 3rd Sunday. Rev. W. E. Shackleford, pastor. Sabbath School every Sundav, H. A. Merry, Sant. Magistrate’s Court, 128th District, G. M., 4th Saturday. Return day IS days before. W. B. Roebuck, J. P. Eight Men Shot. H A STREET FIGHT AT MARTIJiSVILLE, TA. Odo Instantly Killed and Four Probably Fatally Wounded- Three Men Not Concerned in the Row Seriously Injur ed. Washington, May 18.—Saturday night an anonymous circular was is sued and posted up all over town. It seriously reflected on W. K. Terry, a young business man, and his father, the late Wm. Terry, a prominent citizen. Tuesday morning Terry telegraphed for his two brothers, J. K. and Benjamin Terry, living at Aiken station, twenty miles away. They arrived at 1 p. m., and after a brief consultation went to the print ing office and demanded the author of the card. The printer told them it was Colonel P. D. Spencer, a mem ber of the Town Board and one of the leading business men. Tuesday evening, soon after the tobacco factories had closed for the day and the streets were filled with operatives returning from their work, the Terry brothers started in the direction of Spencer’s factory. When about half way they were met by Spencer, with his brother and several friends. W. K. Terry addressed a feu words to Spencer, who told him not to shoot. Just then some one tired a : pistol, and the shooting become general. Forty shots were fired. W. K. Terry was shot from the rear, the ball entering near his spine and lodg ing in his right breast. Jake Terry was shot through the abdomen and fell dead. Ben Terry was shot through the neck and in the body. Spencer was shot in the hip, and‘his business partner, T. Wieton Brown, received , two balls in the groin and is thought to be fatally wounded, Jones, a saloon keeper, R. S. Gregory a clerk at the Lee Hotel, and Sandy Martin, a colored mechanic, are all seriously hurt. The last two were hit by stray balls. The Terrys are well known and are members of an old family and occupy a high social position. None of them are married. Saturday afternoon W. K. Terry circulated a card ridiculing the tax bill passed by the town board, of which Spencer was a member; but this did not justify in public opinion the eard which followed it at night and which brought on the tragedy. Laying Bare a Child’s Brain. Delicate Opera! i«H Upon the Skull—The Patient »s the Hoad to Recovery- New York Tribune: Little Joseph Sullivan had just come out of the Brothers’s school at Mott and Park streets at noon the other day, and had started for his home at No, 20 Mul berry street for his dinner when he was asked by one of his companions to get a ball which had gone under a wagon and stopped near the horse’s hind feet. He did not want to do it at first, as there was danger from the horse, which was known to be fract ious. But his companions dared him to get it, and being a plucky little fellow he could not stand this, and dove under. the wagon and grabbed the balk Before he could get away the horse kicked violently backward, and one of his feet struck the boy on the head, and he fell unconscious, as if dead. He was picked up tenderly bv a policeman, who said that he was dead, and many tears fell over the mangled form of the boy, for he was a favorite with every one. In a little while the boy gasped for breath, and ' then nn ambulance was called and he was taken to the Chambers Street hospital. Dr. Outerbridge found that there was a compound fractuie of the frontal bone in the boy's skull, the whole forehead being crushed in and presenting a horrible apjiearance. Nothing could save the boy’s life but prompt heroic treatment. He was taken to the operating room and laid upon an adjustable table, so that his head could be laid in a proper posit- 1 | ion for working. Then with a sharp I : knife the surgeons made two incisions in the scalp after cutting away the ; hair on the patient’s head, at such au i angle that a triangular flap could be ■ raised frem the bone. The skull was ' found to be greatly depressed at the ' point where one of the corks on the horse-shoe had struck, and the inner ; table of the skull was evidently com minuted. Taking a trephine the surgeon ! sought for a place where the bone i was firm, and then began to bore * I through the skull. Slowly the in strument was sunk through the outer ; table of the skull until the blood was seen in the borings, indicating that the diploe had been reached. Then ' greater caution was used and a probe was employed at intervals, after several turns of the trephine, to see the depth of the boring. The boy , seemed to be slowly sinking, and ' stimulants were given by injection to j keep the heart at nearly its normal action. The brain was reached at 1 last and a small button of bone was ' taken out, exposing the inflamed brain i surface. The inner table had been j broken into splinters, which had got loose and been forced into the dura mater. Small clots of blood were j found and these were taken out. By ! the use of an instrument known as the elevator the depressed portion of the . skull was carefully raised so as to take the pressure off the brain. The release of the pressure was noticeable at once in the brightening up of the boy’s condition. His respiration was once more natural and the heart was stronger. The splinters in the brain were taken out with forceps, and a special form of forceps was used to break off the rough edges of bone. Enough pieces were removed to make a hole in the skull about the size of a half dollar, and then the whole exposed brain was washed carefully with an antiseptic solution. The boy’s condition improved all the time, hut he was evidently suffering from great shock. When the skull had been arranged so that it would remain in position the flap was drawn over the exposed brain and the wound was dusted with iodoform and bandaged. Then the boy, who had begun to show signs cf returning consciousness, was placed on his cot. His age was in his favor and his re covery is now assured —Sick Headache, a Beiwation of oppression antLdnllnesH in the head, arc verv commonly produced by indigestion; morbid despondency, irritdbility and over sensitiveness of the nerves may,a in a majority of cases, be traced to tiic same cause. Dr. J. H. McLean’s Honueopathic < Liver and Kidney Balm and Fillets will por-i- ! tively cure. For sale by all druggist. Greenesboro Herald: One of those heroines of whom the world hears but little, lives near Lexington in this State. Her name is Sallie Hansford. Her husband has been bedridden for nine years with rheu matism, and she has had four chil dren—two boys and two girls—to support. Last year she bought one hundred and seven acres of land, much in original forest, and with the aid cf two boys, fourteen and fifteen years old, cleared five acres. She cut down the trees, rolled the logs, split the rails, built the fence, burned the brush with their help alone and raised nine bales of cotton, also corn I and peas, enough for her own use, and paid her rent, her store account, and forty dollars on her land debt. She has bought her meat for this year and paid for it. In addition to i this she has done her cooking, milked j her cow, and gone to market with eggs, chickens and butter, selling enough to buy ail the clothing needed for her family. She is indeed a heroine, and we will wager anything that we have, she is a Christian heroine at that. _ . Jonesboro, Texas, Dec. 29th, 1885. To Dr. J. H. McLean, St. Louis, Mo. —This certifies that my sister, Emily Crews, j was taken fifteen years ago with, a breast dis- I ease in connection with menstrual derange ments which produced a severe cough and j general debility, rendering her helpless and . unable for any kind of service, and after baf fling the skill of* some of our best physicians and using several hundred dollars worth of* | various medicines on her to no good. Last j June I procured a bottle of Dr. J. H. McLean’s Homceopathic Liver and Kidney Balm, which 1 at once began to help her, since then she has i used seven bottles, and to our joy is restored to good health, is gaining flesh and has be come strong and able to do her housework, she is entirely relieved of her troubles and we would not be without the medicine under any consideration. W. M Crews. For sale.by all druggist. MEN ONLY A QUICK, PERMANENT, CERTAIN CURE FOR Lost Manhood* Nervousness Weakness, Lack of Strength, Vigor or Development* Onnsed by indiacrotions. exooMe*. etc Benefit* fn a day; Cure* uaunlly within a month. No Deception nor Quackery. Positive Proofs, full description and «? Iter of advice in plain sealed envelope, free. RIE MEDICAL CO., NT. GLOBE HOTEL BARBER SHOP Shaving, Hair Cutting and Shampooing done in the neatest and most scientific manner by Mclntosh & Roberts. Hotand cold bath. Give us a call. Polite attention. ' “Chumps” Who Gather in the Ducats at the Expense of Suffering Humani ty. The (Haling (’all Exhibited by Non-Professional Frauds. 1 1 The country is flooded with bogus medicine men, mid in a few cases a heavy capital is all they have to sus-' tain their prestige. Numerous cleverly j concocted certificates are forced upon the unsuspecting, purporting to have 1 1 “snatched from the grave" some poor | victim of blood poison or other dis . ease, when to our knowledge the identical person lay groaning in ' agony while the public were reading j of their remarkable recovery. Another serious offense is the pub- lication of erroneous statements con ; cerning various drugs, such as are daily prescribed by our best phys icians, declaring them to be deadly poisons. lodide of potash, which ; seems to receive their greatest con-, demnation, when prescribed by> physicians and in the proper combi ! nation with certain compounds, s not only harmless, but forms one / i the most powerful antagonists Ji I blood poison known to the niedit .world. B. B. B. (Botanic Bld I Balm) contains iodide of potas This company hold hundreds f , genuine certificates from persons w have been cured of various disew ; arising from an impure state cf 3 | I blood by the use of B. B. B. % question now is, if iodide of potass such a terrible enemy to health, v is it that the Bloixl Balm Co. h made within two years the most f I antic sales amt cures ever be; made on American soil ? Wherever introduced it take® lead of all Blood Remedies son cheap and speedy uire of all Bit Skin and Kidney Diseases, Scro| Ulcers, Rheumatism, etc., Ohl England Outdone. Soddy, Tenn., Nov. 8, ’8 I have had a bad ulcer, or rum | sore, for 20 years, which no do | has ever been able to heal. I afflicted before leaving England, the doctors over there could cure me. For some time I 1 been using B B. 8., and the efl astonish every on--, and I enc several pieces of bone which it worked out. My health is rap improving, ulcers nearly all hea and I am far better than I have 1; in 20 years. I will send you ac< fieate soon. Mrs. Jennie Williams, Near Chattanooga, Tei ‘‘Lone Star State ” Dexter, Texas, June 16, 18S5 ** * One of our customers left 1., bed for the first, time in six monti after using only one bottle of B B. He had scrof .la of a terrible for that hud resisted all other treatinet, B. B. B. now takes the lead in tli section. ’ Liedtke Bros. .. 1 She is lot Dead- ’’ It has been reputed that I wj, dead —but I am not. For four years I have been afflicte| with a severe case of Blood Poisoi Rheumatism, and Neuralgia. M flesh shrank away, my muscles seemei to dry up and form into little knob joints were swollen and painful am all concluded I must die. I have use! five bottles of B. B. B. and I havi' I gained 60 pounds of flesh, and an now as sound as any woman, Belle Dunnaway, , Atlanta, Gr Send to Blood Balm Co., Atlant . Ga., for their Book of wonders, fi t i For sale at the Drug Store <i; Dr. D. L. Peeples, Harlem (J "; aug-tja AUGUST GUIEN. pnryß FLORAL JRSERY, NO. 1483 BROAD STREET, - - - AUGUSTA, GA Boquets, Wreaths,'osses, Horse Shoes, MARRIAGE BELIUT FLOWERS, Etc. At all seasons. Give me a call'ou come to the city. AUGUSTE G UIEN. FOR T. FINEST Spring and inner Ming GFCO ° I. C. IVY'S. HIS Stock this season is nnequaled’- All Wool Suits from *5 ur>. Youne men old men, tall men, boys, children}]. for you can be fitted. A first-class Tailor in the store to make anv alteration desir'barge. I. C. LEVY 836 BROAD STREET < Home Council. Retake pleasure in calling your attent.on to a remedy so long needed tn carrying children safely through the critical stage of teething. It isan incalculable blessing to mother and child. If you are disturbed at night with a sick, fretful, teething child, use I itts Carminative, it will give instant relief, and regulate the Dowels, and make teething safe and easy. It will cure Dysentery and Dinrrhina. Pitts’ Carminative is an instant relief for eohe of infants. It will promoie di gestion, give tone and energy to the Womach ami bowels. The sick, puny, IBiflering child will soon become the fit and frolicing joy of the household. lis very pleasant to the taste and oly costs 25 cents jer bottle. Sold l , b druggists. For sale at Holliday's Drug Store • fculem, Ga., ami by W. J. Reggie, of I (rove! own. Burial Outfits. Cases and Caskets. ’ Vhite Marbleized Cases for infants andehil | fren at elegant styles, with glass full length. BcHideH thus- , we hav,. ~ full utock o f Collins I <f imitation ol flue wood, which are verv hiind lonie and eheap. J I VVe also have a full line of Dressing Material for inside,and Ornamental Platen, etc. We are iiermicer m the State, and parties wanting such foreUk tl'iewhe’ri!*" 1 ' "" b ‘" J. F. Hatcher & Co., HARLEM, GA. Augusta, Gibsen & Sandersville R- R Augusta, G. and S. Railroad I t „ Auouhta, GA.,Dee. 10, ’BS. f In effect Sunday, December 11, 1835, at 5 p. Except Sundays—Passengers and Freight. t . A i I - Nl ‘- a. m. Li-uvc Gilwm 5.03 | Lv.Augusta ,’(i : 2B Stapleton. ..5:45 | “ Wcßb-riu.. .7:02 « Ir’l’li 6:00 1 “ Gracewood 7:23 .. M“tt>ewß. .6:15( “ Richmond. 7:36 « n,ith «:23| “ Hepbzilml. 8:08 <( Kcvh 6.35 | “ Jiatli 832 “ «- r >o| “ Built <> S at ! ■ : I “ Ki-.vh ,9 20 Hephzibah. 7:17 | “ Smith 938 Richmond...7:37 I “ Matthews.. 950 Gracewood.7:47 | “ Pope. .10 14 . WoHtcria.. .8:03 | “ SUpletou .11138 Arrive Augusta. .8:30 ArriveGibsuii It 38 T N<>. 3. P M. INo 4 P M Leave Gibson 1:45 | Leave. Augusta 5 oil Stapleton.. .2 47 I “ Westm-ia. ..5 27 £°P« 211 I “ Gracewo<,d.s 42 Maffhewa. ,336| “ Richmond .5 52 „ Keys 404| “ Bath 624 J. ?, u !' 1 ke “ Burke 639 2 atl ' ■ 454 l “ K <vh 654 .. ’1 e plizibah.s 18 | “ Smith 769 t< !>. / ‘' I millllll / (J’l Richmond. .5 531 “ Matthews. .717 Gracewood. 6 051 “ Popo. 732 Wcsteria .«20 | “ Stapleton '7 47 Arrive. Augiwta.G 47 | Arrive Gibson 8 20 \ ‘ STTNDaYS-I’ASSENGERS only ’ , .... «. .. No- 1 A. m. I No. 2 A. M •‘ < l® vc Jji'isi.n,... 6.10 I Leave Augusta.. .8 00 u Stapleton . ..6.531 “ Western . 8:27 : u MatJhcwH.. ,7.23 “ llichmond. .8:52 ~ .Hmith 7.31 “ Hephzibah .11:12 Ke/ 8 7:46 “ Bath 9.24 li.i Burke... . 8:02 “ Burke 9.40 1 Bath 8:17 I “ Keys 955 L Hephzibah.. 8.32 | “ Sni’ttli. /.' 10.10 “ Richmond. . .8.531 “ Mathews JOJ7 Gracewood. 9.03 ' “ p,,,,,. 10.32 “. VVesteria 9:18 | “ Stapleton 10.47 •rive Augusta 9.45 1 Arrive Gibson. 11 29 No. 3 f. m. 1 No. 4 r M hvve Gibson . .3.20 | Leave Augusta.. S.OO Stapleton. 4.03 1 “ Wesmria. 3:27 < J/Th I “ Gracewood..3:42 Matthews.. 433 I “ Richmond. .3:52 t Smith 4.41 | “ Hephzibah.4:l2 Keys 4:56 | “ Bath 4-24 5:H| “ Bnrke 510 lr‘ ! '1 , 5 2 *’l “ Keys 4:55 Hephzibah.s:3B I “ Smith ... 5:10 Richmond. 5:58 | “ Matthews 518 Gracewood.6:oß I “ p O pr 5-33 Weeteria...6:2B| “ Stapleton. 5G7 ve Augusta.. .6:50 Arrive Gibson « : 30 11. M. MITCHELL, President. Special Notice. uLparties indebted tome for medical ~ H <-T v ice are requested to come forward at onee, cither by note or the cash ds’ WU1ll “ lr necounts iii an attorney’# A : J Sanders M. D. IMPROVE YOUR STOCK! Stalll '° n Strath ™re, Jr. will • the Spring season at my farm in Co luniliia county, four miles west of Harlem pedigree. ; iliitt], Mi ss Tavlorby s \i V' S " °° <lf oi<l Membrino*; . JtliUl , fil(ll . ;,ourlh ’ (arrie D TERMS: reason, sls for insurance. Fifty -non’ HH.H.S. “‘Apply ’to PeC rak>S * nay be ,nude foV s. C. LAMKIN, — GA. JESSE THOMPSON & CO. MANUFACTURERS OF BOORS, SASH & MINDS Mouldings, Brackets, Lumber, Laths and Shingles. DEALERS IN Window Glass and Builders’ Hardware, Planing Mill and Lumber Yard, Near Central Railroad Yard, Augusta G a , Day & Tannahill, A \ a 11 ' \ .s' / V / ■ \ ■>< headquahtehb fob Carriages, Wagons, Coach Materials, Saddlery, Harness, Leather, Shoe Findings BELTING-. Fhe Finest and most varied assortment of Children’® Par nages ever brought to the City, all S’ ° Br ’ Tidings of Comfort and Joy veh; whleiH "•* **• We •* °®« w $35.00. have one, as the price is'within thereiwho *lll ° W '‘ H “ hor *®’ " r » ooM, should I DAY & TANNAHILL. - - AUGUSTA GA w. D. BOWEN, Manufacturer and Dealer In Guns, Pistols, Powder, Shot, Caps, Catridges, Fishing Tackle, Etc 1028 Broad St., Augu.ta, Ca. All work and repair done with neatness and dispatch. Globe Hotel, AUGUSTA, GA. J. W. Gray, Proprietor,