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A telephone c:i f.hc Farm not c:i*y
means convenience and cor; vert for the
user, but it adds value to the land and will
enable you to sell your land to a better ad
vantage. Telephone sendee on the Farm
can be had at very low cost.
Write for our free booklet. Address
Farmers Line Department
SOUTHERN JBELL TELEPHONE &( d& %
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xPLzE-w
SctiJn Pryor St„, Atlanta, Ga.
All-day Singing at
Coombs Schol House
Coomb- School House,
Oct. SO, 1010.
■ An nil day ringing and dinner on
the ground was very much enjoyed
by a congregation of about two hun
dred and fifty people, although the
\/eather was cold, and wraps were
very much in demand. At 10:30
services were calied to order by Rev.
E. T. Pritchett, who appointed
Pr-of. A. li. .Jones chairman.
■Song: “Hear Him Calling” lead
by the chairman,
Miss Martha Lyks, organist.
Prayer by Rev E T Pritchett
Committee on arrangements ap
pointed by Chairman, A. H. Jones,
S. W. Smith, and Tom Grumpier,
who reported that eaeli leader sing
three songs per lesson as follows:
M H Jones leading,
Miss Martha Lyles, organist.
S W Smith leading,
Miss Sarah Critnsley, organist.
A H Jones leading,
Miss Martha Lyles, organist.
MisS'Sarah Grimsley leading,
Miss Lillie Mullis, organist.
J J Sanders leading,
Miss Mittie Abney, organist.
Miss Lillie Mullis leading,
Miss Sa&h Grimsley, organist.
A H Jones leading,
Miss Sarah Grimsley, organist.
12:30 adjourned for dinner.
2 p. m. reassembled.
A H Jones heading,
Miss Lillie Mullis, organist.
S \V Smith leading,
| Miss Carrie Lyles, organist.
M H .Jones leading,
Miss Mittie Abney, organist.
a ir /ones leading,
Miss Carrie Lyles, organist.
S W Smith leading,
Miss Carrie Lyles, organist.
Miss Sarah Grimsley, leading,
Mis Lillie Mullis, organist.
.1 J Sanders leading,
j Miss Lillie Mullis, organist. ,
A 11 Junes leading,
i Miss Lillie Mullis, organist.
Dismissed by prayer by Rev. E.
T. Pritchett.
RESOLUTION OF THANKS
Whereas, as we a part of the'Pu
laski County Singing Convention,
have enjoyed the unbounded hospi
tality of the warmhearted people of
Coo mbs School and vicinity 7, we ex
tend our deep appreciation for the
royal manner in which eve have
been entertained.
E. T. Pritchett,
JL G. Harrell,
Committee.
A. H. Jones, B. G. Harrell,
Chairman, Clerk.
Copper Plate Engraved
Cards and Invitations,
Embossed Monogram
Stationery, tJAn At
tractive Line Samples at
Journal Office,
Notice of Sale
By virtue of the powers vested in j
me (Recorded Rook ot deeds Pulas
ki Co., '.la., Volume 7 Pager; :‘> )2 —
31)3 ) by the heirs at law of the late
Mrs. Antionetto Walker, deceased,
I will.setk before the court house!
door at Hawkinsviile, Georgia
outlie first Tuesday in Decem
ber, 1910, within the legal hours of;
sale, to the highest and best bidder
for cash, reserving in me the right
to accept or reject any and all bids, :
the following described realty 7 to
wit:
la»t of land number 219 in the
21st. District of Pulaski Co., Ga.,
containing 202 1 2 acres, more or
less.
Situated south west of Cochran, Ga.,
three hundred yards of Cochran
and Hawkinsviile public road and
~' 011* o: ,y ojiiy from the
t'hiiij. of Coctnaii, cu e -i. ...
res in good state of cultivation, one
hundred in woods, some very fun
timber is in this tract. On thip
farm is one five room dwelling,
painted and t*o rooms oeiiod r.nd
painted, a good barn,smoko house
ind two tenant houses. This
place*is known as the Dr. V. H.
Walker place.
This October 17, 1910.
J. J. Dennnrd, att’y. in
fact for the heirs at law of
the late Mrs. AntioneMe
Walker, deceased, P. (>.
address, Pineview, Ga. 10-20-7 t
Dressed in “Blank and Yellow"
Not “Football Colon” lot tin
color of the carton containing F<>
ley’s Honey and Tar, the best anti
safest cough remedy for all cough-;
and folds. Do not accept a substi
tute hut sec that you get the genu
ine holers Ifor.ev and Tar in a
yellow carton with Mack letters.
Kept by Taylor A Kcnnington.
1 V owo jiOf it Uiuitw
Route No. 2
•las. !i. Mil'll, and family were
the guests of W. D. B'ankensh.p
and family Sunday. ,
Mrs. L. D. A.-hell lias been very
ill for several days, hut we are glad
to Know that she is improving.
Mrs. W. I). Blankenship D vi. it
lug her daughter, Mrs. J. M. Cook.
Slut le Lloyd and family visited
relatives at Plainfield last week.
J. M. Cook, of D.-dge county,
planted this year 1.5 ets. worth of
velvet beans. From Die growth he
hauled in four two-horse wagon
i tads'of fine hay 7.
Bufort Sawyi r, of neat' Enfpin*.
visited his .mother, Mrs. V\ . is.
Blankenship, last Sunday.
A Household Medicine
To be really valuable must six w
equally good results irnin eaeli
inenda r of the iamily using it. bo
dy’x Honey and Tar does just this.
Whether for children or grown per
sons Foley’s 11/ney and inr is best
and safest for all coughs and colds,
round at Tayloi A Keimingtonk.
Where He Mode His Money.
Years ; g.» a geuilein.-iu settled in the
south of England and became very
popular in the neighborhood. The
county families could never discover
how he had made his money, hut
were satisfied by bis solemn assurance
that it was not in trade. Nothing
could exceed the ordinary gravity of
his demeanor, which indeed caused
him to be placed on the commission
of peace, but now and then, without
any apparent provocation, he would
burst into such a laugh as no one ever
heard before except in one placet
Where they could have heard it puz
zled the county families for five and
twenty years, but at last he was be
trayed unconsciously by his own
grandchild, who, after a visit to a trav
eling circus, innocently exclaimed,
“Why. grandpa laughs just like the
clown'” —James Payn.
Well Answered.
“Why do you weep over the sorrows
of people -in whom you have no in
terest when you go to the theater?"
asked the man.
“I don’t know,” replied the woman.
"Why do you cheer wildly when a
man with whom you are not acquaint
ed slides to second base?”—Washing
ton Star.
Nick Lamar Kills
EjUgcr.e Gunn.
Americas, Ga., October SO. —Eu-
gene Guiui, 30 years old, a press
man by initio, was shot and almost
instantly killed at a late hour last
night. The killing was done by j
Nick Lamar, according to state-i
meats of witnesses, and appears to
have been unprovoke 1
Lamar, Gunn, and Walter Glo
ver, with sever-1 companions, were
in a room of the old Jackson hotel,
when a fight ens'ued. Glover and
Gunn struggle.l from the room into
the corridor, when Lamar, it is said,
rushed up, pistol in hand, and o
pened fire, his first shot missing
Gunn, while the second penetrated
his heart. Lamar immediately left
t’ v i:v‘."L ’ v.t Wit air./tfm mid-
L.igin ...... In id jit .l r
There is eon i lefahlc foeliiig ex
pressed to: lay over the homicide
last night. Gunn leaves a young
wife and several small children.
A.aeiieus, (hi., Get. 31. —The
killing of Eugene Gunn 1 ere late
Saturday night cofitinucs the sen
sation of the hour and is discussed
upon all sides, Lamar has been it
jail since the (rajedy, whi’e the ar
rest of Walter Glover, who was 1
gaged in a fight with Gunn who.,
the latter was killed, has since been
effected. Both Lamar and Glover
will !«' held in jail until the homi
cide is thoroughly investigated.
They are prominently connected
socially, a fact which adds interest
to the Moody trajedy.
It is current report tint Glover
called loudly for Lamar to shoot
Guim, which thus connects him
j with the homicide. Just three
] week.; ago Lamar figured in another
j pistol episode here, while there is
i -till aiso her case against him upon
Tie court docket, tiiat of wantonly
■shooting down ... policeman here
two years ago and for which offense
Ibe lias never been brought to triad
! by the courts.
| •• He ins long been known as a
1 ■ ■ ’ man when nr<iiised. He
! leads a life mo.-lly of idleness, play
ing ball mostly in ' summer with
south Georgia teams, having tin
reputation of being a good amateur
pitcher. However his character
was such the past few years the A
inerieus team would not allow him
to Income a member at any time.
Horse- Dsntists.
In every large city I here are now
dentists who devote’their entire atten
tion to horses, and they are kept sur
prisingly lmsy the year round. The
equine dentist is of course provided
with special instruments for the ex
traction and filling of the teeth of ani
mals needing attention. It is rather
interesting 7 to observe an operation in
horse dentistry. One of the instru
ments. calk'd a speculum, presents the
appearance of an ivory handle and
four small bars of nickel working on
a ratchet and crossing one another in
such a manner as to form a hollow
square that can be made largo or small
by Hie turning of a screw. Setting
this device to the proper size, the
horse denlist will slip it genlly into
the suffering animal’s mouth, which,
dr.ring the operation, is kept partly
open by a groom, and when Ihe instru
ment is fitted upon. say. one of Ihe
•back teeth the beast’s moutli is kept
open as wide as possible.—Harper’s
Weekly.
The Parson Eird.
Among the feathered inhabitants of
New Zealand there is a bird called the
parson bird, or tui. It is about the
size and shape of a blackbird, but has
a pair of delicate white tufts at its
throat and is a glossy dark green oth
erwise, yvliicli looks black ill the sun
shine. It can be taught to crow, to
speak, to whistle tunes, and. besides
these tricks, it lias a repertory which
is not often equaled by any other
feathered songster. At vespers it has
a note like the toll of a bell or the
clear, high note of an organ. It can
mimic every bird in the bush to per
fection. It will break off in the mid
dle of an exquisite melody and indulge
in a strange melody of sounds which
are impossible to describe, but If you
ean imagine “the combination of a
cough, a laugh, a sneeze, with the
smashing of a pane of glass,” it will
be some approach to the idea.
Starting a Family Jar.
“No man ever obtained anything
worth having without working hard
for it,” said Mrs. Bickers to her hus
band, who was in a discouraged mood.
“Quite true,” replied Mr. Bickers
reflectively. “I remember that I ob
tained you without the slightest diffi
culty.”—Liverpool Mercury.
OUR BIG :-:
SHORT CROP SALE!
Lasts Only One Week
Longer!
WrwILL SAVE _YOB MONEY!
Cut Prices on All Dry
Goods and Shoes!
|
LOCAL ITEMS
W. .!. Bell, of Mucin, wit- in t’ e
city today.
! Organs on ea:-v tenn- at Jack: on
| i< uaniture Co.
A sjMvi.al service nr old people
| md wliut-ihs will *l>e held at tin*
1 Wctlmui-t eliuivh Sunday, Nov. (i*h
:i II m. Conveyances wi I lx
I ti*i i:oel for those who am not .-.* !■■,
1 o walk to the church. Every >
i' ; cordially ie.vdcd to attend the a
servic *c,
Malting hnd Bug.-; <d:e:;> .T Leh-
I s ’ l r,lnl:: ' 1! ' '
; R, W, Dy! * ham
j ind Dryer at i lawkinsvillc.
The Georgia State Fair at Maeoi.
lu-i keen well attended fiy tin* pen
ile of Cochran and community thia
wet k,
\V. IL Peacock lies for sale a
numher of line Jersey cows, fresh it.
milk. They are on display at Co
ley’s stahlo.
Tlie next Lyceum attraction will
he the Jeanctt Cling Company on
November Kith.
John Robinson’s eiretts gav:* an
j tiiusually clean .-how Saturday af
j criioon. On account of it hemp
Saturday night, there was no night
* performan -e. Although'there was
I i large crowd in the city a!! day,
i order was observed and only a few
j arrests made.
Notice the four page xul of San:
j .\aivlitz in tl.i- i sjie.
1. McOff is In New York CLy.
Mr. Janies Chapnian, of Bolivia,
•South America, and Misses (V.rrie
Mae Chapman and'Mary Lamb, ot
Cochran, were the guests of Mr. and
Mrs. J. J. Blount Monday. —Ilaw-
kinsville Despatch and News.
Nice feather Is* Is for sale. Jack
son Furniture Co.
A Bit Too Clever.
Holman Hunt used to tell how
penter saved one of his best known
pictures from a serious error. The
man was doing so~’.e odd jobs about i
the house and was found frowning at [
“The Shadow of the Cross” in the j
studio—the picture in which Christ,
who has been sawing a plank in the |
workshop, rises to his full height and
stretches, his shadow forming a cruci
fix.
“Well?” asked the artist interroga
tively.
“Don’t think much of it, mister,”
was the blunt comment.
“Why?” demanded Hunt, amused,
but a trifle nettled.
“Any one that can saw wood with
out making any sawdust is a sight
clever’n any I ever seed,” was the
answer.
It was true—the floor was clean be
neath the bench!
A Camei’s SCcrrracli:
The stomach of a carnal is divfdpfjf
into four comiiarrments. and the w: ??s
of one of those are lined with Jorge
cells, every one of whk I) can !>,* np-ard
and closed at will by means of power
ful muscles. When a camel drinks it
drinks a very great deal. Indeed, it
goes drinking < n for such a very Jong:
time that . ally y m would ti.i: 11 at
it never i:,t ; i leave off. live? tlje
fact is He.i it is not only satisfying:
iis tiiirst. I. tt is filling up its ctstenv
as well. <*:;e afier another the tells
in its. sto;:::; !i are tilled with the water,
and as soi n ;;:t c:n Ii is quite full it is
tight I v clued. Then when the citiautl
hectirnes thirsty i few hours later ail
that it has t*> do is to open mil* ot
tin* ceils and allow the water to flow
o;tr. Next day it opens one or two
more cells, and so it gees on day after
day until the whole supply is er-
Ijaus !. r.. c iriotis way » nmel
can live five or even six days without
drinking at all and so is able to travel
quite ea Pv is s .Ii t' * desert, where
tlm wells are a hundreds of\ tuucs
apart. '
|
J = ;
M TRis OF OfcdlTt HI BEF, SOM. X
p Men
Of Chaiacier
IV’.en v/ho really care about
thcif appearance, always select
Shield Brand Clothing
Style, fit and individuality
are all combined to produce
that air of distinction which,
marks the well a.essed man.
Not too extreme —not too
conservative but—just right
for men of discrimination.
Shield Brand Suits and
Overcoats, stand for the best
workmanship—the best fabrics
—the best style ever produced
for the prices.
SIO,OO the Lowest,
$20.00 the Higheet.
We are always glad to
show you.
J. J. TAYLOR,
COCHRAN. GA.
MA-ta, KNOXVILLE. TENN j