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CITY DIRECTORY.
Municipal, County, Churches, Lodges.
lilTY OFPICKKS.
Mnyor.—F. P. Hudson.
Clerk.—E. M. Cooper.
Councilmen.—H. N. Finch, W. A- Fos
ter, W. It. Grifttn, W- O. Hitchcock: W.
2. Spinks.
COUNTY OFKlCKltS.
Ordinary—It. A. Chiles.
Clerk Superior Court—W. J. Baker.
Sheriff—W. N. Anderson.
Treasurer^J. O. Hitchcock.
Tax Collector—W. H. Moreau. "
Tax Receiver—J. H. Craton.
Surveyor—(>. M. Willey.
Coroner—J. S. Adair.
County School Commissioner.—W. Z.
Spinks.
BOAKD OF FDUOATION.
J. W. Hay, R. \V. Russom, J. B. Bng-
gett, J. A. Grogan, T. B. Williliuins.
CHURCHES.
METHODIST 1 .
Rev. A. F. Nunn, Pastor.
Preaching third iifui fourth Sundays at
11 n.m. and 7 p.m.; Record Sundays at
7 p.m.: flftllSund lys at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Sunday School at 0:30 u.in. S.,Brown,
Supenntentdent.
Prayer-meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m.
Rev. J. M. Spinks, Pastor.
Preaching tirst and third Sundays at
11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Sunday School at 0:80 a. m. Dr. T.
Foster, Superintendent..
Pruyer-meetiug Thutsdny at 7 p.m.
I.ODOKS.
Masons—Meets second and fourth Sat
urday nights in each month.
Odd Fellows—Meets first and third
Suturelay nights in each month.
"Woodsmen of the World—Meets first
mid third Saturday nights in euch month.
Superior Court—A. L. Bartlett, Judge.
W. K. Fielder, Solicitor-General. Metis
second Monday in February uud first
Monday iu August.
Court of Ordinary—R. A. Chiles, Or-
dinary. Meets first Monday iu cnch mouth.
' TAM. A POOS A CIRCUIT.
A. L. Bartlett, Judge.
W. K. Fielder. Solicitor-General,
Pudding—Second Monday iu February
and first Monday in August.
Haralson- Third Monday In Junuary
mnl July.
Polk—Fourth Monday In February and
Aug' st.
Douglas— First Monday in May and
third Monday in November.
JUSTICE COURTS.
Dallas, IO8O1I1 district—J. R. Lawrence,
J. P.; (). C. Glllett, N. P, Mjets third
Wednesday iu each month.
Aourntree, 1008,1 district—J. W. Tib-
elts, J IV LI 1) Paris, N. P. Court
fourth Saturday*.
Burnt Hickory, 832d district—T J Tib-
livits, J. P.j A V Cochran, N. P. Court
first Saturday.
B as well, 1414th district—II N Hagan,
J. L\; U H O’Neal, N. P. Court second
Monday.
California, 1041.1 district- DeWitt Rags
dale, J. P.; A P Griggs, N. P. Court
first Friday.
Cains, 051st disfrict—L J Taylor, J. P.;
Z B Fuller, N. P. Court first Saturday.
Eutah 1207th district—I S Verner, J.
p.j D W Craton, N. P. Court first Satur
day.
llirani, 1381st district—J D Compton
N. P. Court first Wednesday.
Nineteenth, 83!ith distikt-J M Cole,
J. P.: J D Brown. N. P. Court tirst Sut-
uraay.
Twentieth, 1081st dirfrict—G W Grogan,
J. P.; II N Ilevyille, N. P. Court second
Saturday.
Tallapoosa, 1443.1 dLtrict—J II Hutch
erson, -I. P. Court first Saturday.
Pumpkinviue, 180iih district—Jessie
llitcock. J.. P-; W J Harris, N. P. Court
second Friday.
Raccoon, 15041b district-W II Crews,
N. P., J. 'I'. Monk, J. P., 4th Saturday.
' Umfrles u 1201st district—11 II Owen, J.
p . j q- iiix, N. P. Court second Satur-
d.y.
Union, 1553rl district—B F Hagan, J.
P. Court first Saturday.
Weddiugto Vs 042a ciistsict—J W Mize,
J. I\; 6 P Arnold, N. P. Court fourth.
Friday. , _
lloxana, 1506th district—J h foster,.
J p ; R T Groguu, N P. court first Sat
urday.
B. E. L WHITWORTH
Attorney auil Counselor at Law,
DALLAS - - - GA.
Special attention given to collections.
Otlice above Bartlett & Watson.
Dr, /M». Slaughter,
—DENTIST.—
P rices reasonable and very
best work.
Crown and bridge work a specialty.
Money to Loan*
I nm prepared to negotiate loans on Im
proved farms at 7 per cent, interest on
loans of i)l,000 or over, uoa 8 percent in
terest oh sums less than one tliou-und
dollars, by taking first mortgage on farms
offered us collateral. No commissions
charged, tint applicant must pay fur ab
stract of title unit inspection fees.
A. J. CAMP,
scp!2-6m Dallas, Oh.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Condensed Schedule In Cffoet Novtmbor f, ItOt.
•NcTTi
STATIONS.
k.vChiUlttnoogtt •
Ar Dal ion
Ar Home
Ar Atlanta
Lv Atlanta
Ar Macon
Ar J tittup
Lv Jesup
Ar Jacksonville .
•No. 8
"it 4num
8 O': a in
9. 10am
11 50am
12 0.*i pm
185pm
•So. U
6.05pm
7. 14pm
8 15pm
io.30pm
10 45pm
18.55am
5 20am
5.80am
8 30am
;t.o ptn
4 10pm
5.15pm
7.45 pin
lias Cured Thousands, Will Cure You.
If you niu liuuoied uitn Kidney or
Bladder troubles, sucu us Diopsj, Bright’s
Disease, Calurrh, Gravel ot the liuu.tder,
Albnincii iu Urine and Unhealthy de
posits, or too lrcqueut discharge of tbu
uriue, pain i . the back and bladder,
dropsical swell ug uf :lie feet and i.gs,'
etc , etc., we guaraulin lh.it by using
■smith's &uru Kidney (Jute, u eomplele
cure will lio effected.
Price 00 cents und $1.00. For sule by
A. J, Cooper.
No. 8 carries Pullman Steeping Car Chntin-
nooga to Atlanta
No. 14 Is solid. Vostlbuleil train Chattanooga
to .laclisonvlllo carrying Bagpagc Car. Dav
Coaches and elegant Pullman Drawing Room
Sleeping Car. through without change: also
Sleeper Ailaula to-UrunswIck.
STATIONS.
•No. 13
•No 15
Lv Atlanta ..."
Ar Romo.
6.30ntn
7.8 inm
8- 34am
9.45am
lO.OJum
5.15pm
5.00pm
7.10pm
8.88pm
•-50pir.
10.40pm
5.55am
Ar Dalton *
Ar ChatianooffS
Lv Clmt tiinootra
Ar Lexington
Ar Cincinnati «...
7.80pm
8.15nm
Ar Louisville
8 15pm
loTSSim
1 I5um
6.40am
Lv Chattanooga
Ar Nashville
1.85pm
6 55pm
•No 1
?.55titn
lU.MInm
No. 13 carrlos Pullman Sleeping Car Atlanta
to Cincinnati.
No. Ill carries Pullman Sleeping Car Atlanta
to Cincinnati and Chattanooga to Louisville
8TATTON8.
•No. 49
•No. 12
•No. 30
Lv Chnltnnoogn
Ar Knoxville
|i.55nm
l.topm
136pm
T.4Wptn
S 15pm
b. I5nm
0. |5um
lOdftpm
1.40am
Ar Morristown.
Ar Hot Spring!
Ar AxhovlUe
Ar Salisbury
10.55am
18.45am
2.15pm
8.:i5pm
10.47 pm
5.20am
3.05am
4.88uin
5.5ium
112Snm
Ar Qrecnsbora
12.50pm
4.02pm
Ar Kalclsti
Ar Norfolk
0. Hham
Ar Washington I... ....
Ar Now York |
6.42am
12.43pm
I'.SOpm
0.l3mn
and Danvtllc to Richmond, arriving
Richmond O.S& n.m. also ruilman Sleeping Car
Danville to Norfolk.
No. 30 Is solid train Chattanooga to Salls-
hnry. with Pnllman Sleeping Car Chattanooga
to Balls, ury and Salisbury to New York
stations. 7 »No 4J i»No.
V.55nm 10.35pm
I.IOpinj 1.40am
2.30pm 1 3.05am
5.45pm: 7 IHHttn
0.53am . .. .
12.43pm I 7.l3um
Lv Chattanooga.
Ar Knoxville
Ar Morristown
Ar Bristol
Ar Washington.
Ar Now York
No.' 42. cnrrles ruilman Sleeping Car Chatta
nooga to New York without change.
No. 30 carries Pullman Sleeping Cor Chottn-
noegato Knoxville, Knoxville to New York via
Hugersiown and Harrisburg.
Tl
IN#.
8TATH
Lv Rome.
Ar Anniston....
Ar Birmingham.
Ar Jackson.
♦No. 23
5. 2 ipm
7.87pm
9.55pm
TOtfam
fc.Oiam
8 loam
♦No.
v.20am
11 .in a in
9.55pm
4.30pm
6.*J9atn
Ar Vicksburg I | I 6.50am
Ar Shreveport. 1 1 112.46pm
No. 15, Pullman sleeper* Meridian to New
Orleans and Shreveport.
CONDENSED STORIES.
How Cole Younger Won the Friend*
ship of Major Foster.
“I boo that Cole Younger, the for
mer bandit, who was paroled from
the Minnesota penitentiary two
years ago, has been granted n con
ditional pardon, which will admit
of his returning to his former home
in Missouri, which reminds mo of u
story about the famous bandit
which shows thut even thieves have
an honest streak,” said Robert S.
Parsons of Springfield, Mo., to a
Washington Star man.
“A United States detachment,
under command of the late Major
Emory S. Poster, look part in the
battle at Lone Jack, Mo. During
the engagement Major Foster was
shot and, it was thought, fatally
wounded. The Union troops wero
defeated and fell hack, leaving their
wounded. Mujor Foster and his
brother lay in u cabin when a young
bushwhacker who had once been
their enemy came in in u half
drunken condition and, seeing the
condition of the major, told him to
prepare to die, as he was going to
get even. As he was about to pull
the trigger a young fellow dashed
forward, knocked the pistol up,
seized the rowdy and threw him
from the cabin. He told the offi
cers that lie was C'oio Younger and
promised to look out for their pro
tcetion. Major Foster thought lie
was going to die and decided to con
fide in Younger. He asked him to
take $700, his watch and chain and
other valuables to his mother, who
lived in Warrensburg. Four days
later the major was notified by his
mother that she had received the
package intact. From that day
Younger had no better friend than
Major Foster, who worked hard un
til the day of bis death to secure
the parole on which Younger was
released two years hgo.”
•No. 15
7.15ptn
S.43pm
lO-Ulpm
Lv Rome.... nr
Ar Uud-den. nr
Ar Attnlln. lv
answer. That night she spoke to
her husband about the occurrence.
“Why,” said the husband, laugh
ing, “that man is the Rev. Dr. llill,
late president of Harvard universi
ty and recently appointed pustor of
tiie First church. — Philadelphia
Ledger.
The Minlntern Agreed.
The recent death of Dr. Harrows,
president of Oberlin college, recalls
an incident in connection with the
parliament of religions over which
he presided during the World’s fair
in Chicago. At the conclusion of
one of tiie meetings, which wus char
acterized by debate and dissension,
ho was asked:
“Is there anything upon which
the parliament did agree r*
“Well, yes,” said Dr. Barrows.
“We all-agreed that if any one of us
should lose his money duriug the
fair the public would not concern
itself as to how we lost it, but how
he came to have it to lose.”—Detroit
Free Press.
Taking Timber.
That picturesque Philadelphian,
Richard Vaux, used to repeut many
of Thomas Moore’s amusing Btorics,
having known tho Irish poet well
during his residence in London.
One,of the best of theso was thnt of
the blockhead who was purchasing
a horse and who, wishing to know
something of his leaping powers,
put the question:
“Will lie take timber?” '
“lie’ll jump over your bead,” wns
the unconsciously witty reply of the
dealer.
• A Simple 8trlng of Pearl*.
One Now Yorker wns telling an
other how beautiful Mrs. John IL
Drexel looked at n function tho pre
vious evening, though she was sim
ply dressed and wore not u sign of
decoration save a simple string of
pearls. “Don’t know anything
about the cost of women’s dresses,
of course,” said,tluf other, “but the
‘simple string of pearls’ you ^pcok
of wus selected and matched by a
famous expert und cost $20,000.
Each pearl swings from a diamond,
which in turn is fastened to u bund
of spurklers. It’s a ‘simple string
of pearls’ with a vengeance.”
•Dolly. 4-Dntly except Sunday.
C. H. ACKERT. O. M.. Woihlngton. D. C.
W. A. TURK. P. T. M.. Washington. D C.
S. B. HARDWICK, O.P.A.. Washington. D. O.
C. A.BENSCOTEK, A.o.P.A .Chottnnoogn.Teni
i. K. SHIPLEY, T. P. A. Chattanooga, Yens.
Didn’t Need the Job.
A woman in Portland, Me., pass-
Tiioifiri by u garden saw a rather shab-
6.35am bilv dressed man working on some
®’ 2ua “ trccB.
“What are you doing to those
tree trunks ?” asked she.
“Girdling tlicm, madam, with
printers’ ink and cotton to keep off
the cankerworms,” answered the
man. ,
“Well, I wish you would come
and girdle ours. Wliat is your
name?”
“Hill,” the man replied; but, al
though the woman repeated the re-
, Dcgermlng Corn.
The degerming of corn—thnt is,
removing the yellow germ from the
tip of each kernel—is necessary in
all corn for export, because the
germs when corn is in tho hold of a
vessel start u fermentation which
spoils the wliolo cargo. The prod
uct each year of this degerming is
ubo-ut 5,000,000 gallons of corn oil,
which lias heretofore been used to
adulterate linseed oil, but now a
process for clarifying it and remov
ing its peculiar odor bringR it into
competition with olive and cotton
seed oil.
Free Seats and Drees Clothes.
Oscar Hammerstein, the New
York theater manager, is a grent
stickler for evening dress at the
playhouse, especially among guests
of the management. “The least a.
deadhead can do,” he says, “is to
dress up. It makes me tired to see
a man in free seats in a sack suit.
If he and his friend are in evening
dress, they look like $4, oven if they
ain’t.”
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
Consented labor digs the grave
ot worry.
The odds in favor of marriages
tire two to one.
Nothing saddens a man like be
ing jollied hv a woman.
A wise .saw is presumably one
that has cut. its wisdom teeth.
Never get bet ween a dog and
his bone or between a man and
his hobby.
Things that formerly came to
those who waited now go to those
w|io hustle.
Experts are guided in their
judgment, of liquors by the smell;
these who taste are more or less
misguided.
An old baclieldr .says that a
marriage dowery is a lump of su
gar intended to nullify the bit
terness of the dose.
A .jeweler says that, diamonds,
are not worn us tough as formerly.
Of course not, but just. wait, un
til the baseball season opens.
Ignorance and conceit are
twins.
A blind master and a deaf ser
vant make an ideal combination..
Great men are ordinary men.
with.their shoes carefully polish
ed .
The best man in a controversy
is the one who does the moBt lis
tening.
Only a newly married man ever
dodges when his wife throws
things uf. him.
One day’s exercise with a wood
saw is worth two weeks of physi
cal culture.
It is easier to judge some men
by their coats than by their prom-
issary notes.
No Cordelia, we can’fcconecien-
tiously recommend tho footpad
for cold feet.
FOLEYMiONEY^IAF.
•toss the cough and
Three Times the Value
OF ANY OTHER.
ONE .THIRD. EASIER,
ONE THIRD FASTER
Agents wanted m all unoccu
pied territory.
Wheeler & Wilson M’f’g. Co.,
Atlanta ,Ga..
Blessed Sleep.
“Supposing you woke up ?omo day
and found yourself a millioneirc—
what \1 you do?”
“Go right to 6ldcp again, so that
the knocking of the tax assessors on
tho door wouldn’t annoy me!”—Bal
timore Herald.
"I WISH YOU WOULD OOME AND 01UDX.B J
OURS.”
She Struck an Average.
Husband—Urn surprised at you,
"Maria! How could you have the
face to tell the judge you were twen
ty-four when you were forty-eight
last month ?
Wife—Well, dear, I told him the
truth. I gave my average age.—To
ronto Moon.
An Indication of Advancing Age.
“After all, you know, a man is as
young as he feels.”
“After all, yes. That is to say, ho
doesn’t brag about being as young
as lie feels until lie’s old enough to
know better.”—Philadelphia Press,
Sense Versus Poetry.
“What is more welcome than a
full moon?” whispered the poetic
young man.
“Why, a full coal scuttle,” replied
the practical girl and then he said.
A girl’s smile often tows a
young man iu ami her fat,Iter’s
boot toes him out.
You can atop a stream by dam
ming it, but. yon can’t Htop an
automobile that way.
Marconi should' next, proceed
to till a lohgfelt want by invent
ing wireless politics.
Quito a number 08 men have
managed to. mount, the ladder of
fame by hanging on the the coat
tails of others.
The more experiences we have
with health foods this ntore sym
pathy we have for our old (•russ-
enting friends, Nebuchudnozzer..
Always tired—l'he wagyiv
wheel.
It is easier to call a pretty wo
man. a kleptomaniac than a thief.
Anybody, "can write a book
nowadays, but it takes a man ot
nerve to read them.
Most young men who-assume a
military step on the street could
not, even march with tho Salva
tion Army.
quest about going to girdle her i no more.—Chicago. News,
trees, thejnan reiunaecL an evasive
A cyclone should not be spok
en of as the wind that sighs.
It takes all kinds to make up-
this life o# ours, but it seems that
there is an awful lot of some-
kinds,
If a man took as mueli pairs
to make his home attractive as-
he does the club room he would
have no need for the club.
Tourist—Is that a home for
lone spinsters?'
Guide—No, it is a- house where
they tegster the pressure of gas-
Tourist—What’s tire dillmr-
eua»‘i *