Newspaper Page Text
VOL. 3.
. €|| ’fit F* RJ IP 1 P* 1 i l
%|i-f §i %w Clw & Em litas lisa nE9
4.
* If You Pay Your Account we will Enlarge ycur Picture Free, which might cost you $3.98.
. ♦ For every $3.00 you trade with us we will Enlarge a Picture for you Free!
?*■ \ y *
and see the Samples. :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: ::
. We are Offering Bargains in all kinds of kurniture, Pianos and Organs.
Scholarship to
Bessie Tift
We are glad to. announce a Schol
arship at Bessie Tift College for
given to the O. C. Home
chapter C. D. C. by Pres. Jackson
‘ at the request of Mrs. Pauline Fos-j
ter. _ _ • . |
It is the wish of the ( haptcr 11 tat
this offer he open to the state. We j
appreciate this opportunity for our
Georgia’ F. I). C. girls anil feel snip;
that many will apply for the plaf-e.
As the time is short, school open
ing the thirteenth of September,
applicants should promptly send in
their names to Mrs. Peeples
No. 400 Hall St., Vahlbstar Ga.
• who will turn them over to the
/ommittec who will decide upon
Ifthe girl for this scholarship. ,
W Applicants must he Daughters of
■ thu Confederacy or eligible to metn-
in the order. The condit
ions on which Pres. Jackson gives
' tlie scholarship are as follows;
Tltc scholarship shall include lit
erary tuition for a student board
ing in the college, and who has not
already been enrolled, a previous 4
Session. _ s
The seolarship shall not be trans
ferable, and must he used the ses
sion immediately succeeding its
award..
The student to whom this schol
arship is.awarded must he able to
■•meet the entrance requirements for
Fresbmai} class as-laid down in the
catalogue of It* 10 —11, either as a
regular or irregular student.
The scholarship is awarded with
tiie understanding that the student
shall attend for the full session.
Should she withdraw for any reason
lie- pro rata amount for the time.
. she is Ih college will be granted.
The expenses of tuition, hoard,
laundry, etc. are. $l6O for one year
from which, is taken $40.50 for
scholarship, leaving $119.-‘>o for
scholar to pay.
Death of Little
Evelyn Coody.
Little Evelyn Coody daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Coody, died
last Tuesday at the home of her pa
rents and was buried at the Coody
burying ground.
I We extend sineerest sympathies
Safe Medicine for Children.
Foley’s Honey and Tar is a safe
and effective medicine for children
a,.- 1 1 does not contain opiate or
harmful drugs. Get only the gen
i nine Foley’s II ney and Tar in the
I yellow packages. Taylor & Ken
■ nington.
®l|e €ocl)tcm Journal
COCHRAN, PULASKI COUNTY, GA.. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1910.
[Battleship. Maine
to be Raised.
! BEVERLY, Mass., Aug. HO —If
plans which Pres. Taft regards fav
orably are adopted the battleship
Maine, sunk in Havana harbor
! twelve years ago, which sines then
j has concealed the secret of the dis
aster which overwhelmed her, may
;he sailing homeward on or before
Christinas, hearing a long delayed
iderelict to the nation.
*! John F. O’hurke, of New York,
sulrtmtted the plans Monday to Pres.
Taft. The plan provides for rais
ing the Maine by means of pneu*
matic caissons and steel cables.
The ship will he preserved intact,
Mr. O’hurke says, with every evi
dence of the disaster she may bear.
About 1,000 men will he required
to attend the jacks and other equip
ment and it is proposed that the
government furnish all or part of
this.force, calling out a . regiment if
necessary.
. It is further proposed that the
repair ships in southern waters he
sent to Havana to minimize the ex
pense of the work.
School Will Be
gin Next Mondcy.
\
Next Monday the Cochran Public
School for the‘white children, will
begin. It has been decided to start
the.colored, school later on account
of the small attendance during the
cotton season.
Parents should not forget:
1 .'‘To send 81.00 incidental fee
with each child on Monday.
2. To start your child the, Ist day
and keep him in every day.
14. To Refuse to send any child to
school with a contageous disease.
We must protect those under our
care..
4. To read the catalog through.
5. To stand by the school and
talk for the school.
We have as strong a faculty as
can be found in Georgia and you
owe us your support —Why send
your child away to school when he
can get just as good at home for
much less money?
We have 1 warding places for the
country children. Apply to L. H.
Browning.
Dissolution Notice
GEORGIA, Pulaski County:
Notice is hereby given that the firm
of Peacock <k Fausett is hereby dis
solved, -\ f A. Fausett retiring from
said firm. J. B. Peacock succeeds
to the business and assumes the
liabilities. All accounts notes etc.
are transferred to J., B. Peacock
Aug. 30 ,1910
J. B. Peacock.
•J. A. Fausett.
Death of Mrs.
A. V. Glover.
Our sister Mrs. A. A’. Glover, of
| Brunswick died suddenly .Sunday
night about midnight. She lmd
| been in bad health for two years,
and had a sudden attack of heart
failure. She died peacefully and
without a struggle, although she
had been a great sufferer for two
years. As Providence had decreed
that she he taken from us when she
was, we feel profoundly grateful
that at the time of her dissolution
she passed off quietly and seeming
ly without pain. She bore patient
ly and without complaint, and with
a superb confidence in the future,
all the intense suffering placed upon
her during the last two years of her
earthly existence.
Her gentle nature, kind and
merry disposition made her the
friend of childhood and favorite of
tnc young. We have known her to
abandon herself to the innocent
sports of children and the gay con
versation of the young, when at in
tervals amid their covcrsation or
laughter, her face would twitch with
pain.
It is with the profoundest. grati
tude that we extend to the magnan
imous people of Brunswick our
heartfelt thanks for. their innumer
able kindness during her last illness.
It seemed that they could not do
enough for her. They ministered
to her day and night and when stu
died buried her “beneath a Wilder
ness ©f flowers'.
Mrs. Glover leaves two sons, T.
E. and Jack Glover, of Brunswick,
Two sisters Mrs. E. L. Hays, of
Meridian, Miss., and Mrs. B. H.
Mayo, of Atlanta and two brothers,
Dr. E. M. Bailey of Acworth, Ga.
and . T. L. Bailey, of Cochran.
New Route to Sea
by way Hawkinsville
ATLANTA, Ga., Aug. 30—. The
completion of a new railroad from
Hawkinsville to Perry, Ga., a dist
ance of twenty-two miles, will, it is
sailiJl give /Atlanta a new route to
the sea. By means of the Central
of Ge°rgia and the Atlanta, Florida
and Southern this city will have a
direct route to Hawkinsville and
from there, by boat to, the sea.
T. B. Ragan, who has had the
matter in charge, has just returned
from New York where he says the
necessary funds to float the bonds,
and to insure the construction of
the road, have been subscribed.
See us before buying your paint
and painters supplies. We have an
attractive line of paints, oils and
varnishes. We can supply you
with anything necessary in exterior
or interior painting.
Cochran Lbr. Co.
Third District School
Opens Wednesday
Americas, Ga., Aug. 30. —Wed-
nesday Aug., 31, the dormitory of
j the, Third District Agricultural and
Mechanical School will open for the
; reception of students, who will eorr.e
j from all parts of Georgia and from
| several other southern states. The
examinations ftnoiew students will
begin September 1, and run through
tne2nd. Class assignments will he
made on the third and lessons will
begin on Monday the nth. of Sep
tember.
It has been left optional with the
student, heretofore, as to whether
he would wear a uniform. While
three companies were organized last
term, frith the increased attendance
and this new requirement, the com
panies will he more than twice as
as large. .
The military band that wap or
ganized last term will take up prac
ticing 4 the opening of the term
under the charge of a competent di
rector, who will he permanently
connected with the hand depart
ment.
The management is making every
effort to provide places for appli
cants.
Great Child Sav
ing Festival.
“Save the ‘Destitute!" the Bat
tle Cry. IVorfa Day for
3,000 Qeorgia Orphans,
Sat. Sept. 24th.
A grander army never moved.
There will be 50,000 Georgia chil
dren and adults moving at daybreak
Sept. 24 against suffering, armed
with cotton baskets, vegetable and
corn wagons, chips and old iron
and rag bags, with lawyer’s briefs,
doctor’s pill boxes,milliners scissors
dressmakers needles, stenographer’s
typewriters, teacher,s hickories,
banker’s notes, house keeper’s cakes
and candies, merchants winter
goods, etc.
All, all will he working that none
of the Georgia children need suffer
from heart hunger: for Work
Day will provide loving matron
mothers, ignorance—good teachers;
idleness —wise training: thievery —
honesty: sinfulness —learning of
Jesus: ruin to everyone —a blessing
to society: hell —heaven.
Is not Jesus’ cry —“Every body
must fight the ruin of my children,
must battle for your own by saving
these,” the greatest battle cry? Can
you fail to shoulder your own mus
ket, your pick, your pen, your
check-hook, your almost empty
pocket-book?
Let Sunday Sept. 25 show SIOO.-1
000 raised in Georgia for ten, or
more, homes are pleading.
Death of Chester
Willingham.
MACON, GA., Aug. 24, 1910—
The many friends of Air. and Mrs.
Otis Willingham will regret to
learn of the death of their youngest
child, Chester, age 3 years which
occurred at the home of Mr. L. B.
Buughcom, brother to Airs. Will
ingham, Saturday evening, July
30th. The little fellow was Un
idol of their hearts and a sunbeam
and joy to all with whom it came
in contact. Every attention was
given it but to no avail.
The remains were carried to Mc-
Rae Sunday morning accompanied
by the grief stricken parents and
relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Willing
ham later returned to their home
in Cochran.
A Card of Thanf^s
I am grateful indeed to the good
people of Pulaski county for their
very kind treatment to me; in that
they so generously and readily gave
me their support for County School
Commissioner.
I feel good towards every man,
woman and child in this county,
and in this good feeling let us go
forth to higher heights of success
than has been yet attained. To do
this we must build on the sure
foundation of education, bearing in
mind always, that to accomplish
anything of this nature we must
work in co-operation.
Again 1 thank you for your sup
port and confidence.
Yours to Serve,
F. B. A shell.
fudge Whipple
Re-elected fudge.
The Judgeship race intheCordele
judicial circuit was one most ani
mated and tight drawn and as the
electoral votes stand, according to
reports, between the candidates,
Judge U. V. Whipple, present in
cumbent of the office, and Judge
Alax Land it is 7to 5 in faver of
Judge Whipple.
The circuit is composed of Dooly
county, representing four electoral
votes, Ben Hill county, two elector
al votes, Irwin county, two elector
al votes, Wilcox county, two elector
al votes, and Crisp county, two ele
ctoral votes. Land carried Irwin
and Crisp and Whipple carried
Dooly and AVilcox. There was a
tie in the popular vote of Ben Hill
which results in one electoral vote
for AVLipple and one for Land.
By a popular vottv-Judge AVhipple
has a majority in the circuit of 312
votes. Land’s majority in Crisp
was 106, in Irwin 327, making a
total of 403. AVhipple’s majority
in Dooly was 643 and in AVilcox 72,
NUMBER 14.
Fall Automobile g|
Meet at Atlanta |
ATLANTA GA., Aug. 30,—1t is
a long ways to Nov. 3, the- day of
the opening of the three-day auto
mobile race meet in Atlanta this
fall,hut already plans are pretty
| well perfected for the event.
1 nless a special race for Grand
| Prize ears is put on at the fall meet
ing the big event will he the City of
Atlanta trophy, which was won,
along with SI,OOO in gold, by Louis
Drisbrow and his Rainier at the
meeting last fall.
Already New York’s automobile
row is begining to east longing eyes
at the prize. Assistant Secretary
J. AL Nye of the Association, who
was in New York a few days ago,
found that a number of makers had
deigns on that prize. One of the
most notable of the probable con
testants will be the Lozier, a won
derful performer in endurance runs
and 24 hour races. Of course the
Rail ior company will defend and it
appears likely that there will be
fully 20 high class ears in the race.
It is reported that both Fiat and
Bentz strings will he sent to Atlan
ta for the meet and if they are it
mean the presence of such notables
as J [emery, Henroit, Robertson,
Oldfield, Bruce-Brown and Hearne.
It will be especially interesting if
Hemery ' drives in Atlanta. He
holds many of the world’s records
on (lie Brooklands track in England
and is regarded in Europe as king
of the speedways.
Grant and his Aleo are regarded
a sure entrants. Harry
I laupt-15 well ('o. has
>. Kjeldseli has
send the 8. P. O. stable
course more than probable that the
entire string of Fiats will he on the
ground. No clear idea of the field
can he secured until blanks go out,
hut the local association looks for
o(J to 75 cars at the November meet.
DOSE ALL THE WORK.
Five or six doses of Chil-Co cures
chills and malarial fever 25c at all
druggists and country merchants.
8-25-4 t-pd.
Willingham O’neal
Afiss Gallic O’neal and AH. Albert
AVillingham were married last Sun
day afternoon, Rev. F. B. Asbell
officiating. This was a runaway
match, the bride’s parents object
ing seriously.
Air. C. F. AVade’s family, of
Soporton, is visiting his father, .J.
A. Wade.
a total of 615, and the difference
gives AA hippie the majority by s.
popular vote. —Cordele Rambler.