Newspaper Page Text
iIBERAUTY^
kKDINAWRINCIPIES I
The First National Bank °J Cochran |H
jSnaECM J. B. THOMPSON. Cashier. R. H. PEACOCK, Asst. Cashser.
jApfe
PROFESSIONALS.
DR. C. T. HALL,
Dentist,
Cochran, - Georgia*
Q&cc over J. J. T.yl ot’i Store.
R. L. WHIPPLE.
Physician,
Cochran, - Georgia.
Cab answered Day anil Night.
Phone 264. Residence 273
HERBERT L. GRICE,
Attorney-at-Law,
Hawkiruville, . Georgia.
DR. T. D. WALKER,
Physician and Surgeon,
Cochran, Georgia.
L. A. WHIPPLE,
Attorney-at-Law,
HAWKINSVILLE, GA.
Huggins Building.
M. H. BOYER.
Lawyer,
HAWKINSVILLE, GA.
Huggins Building. Rooms 27 and 28.
T. D. WALKER. JR.,
Physician and Surgeon,
SURGERY A SPECIALTY.
Calls Answered Promptly at Any Time.
Leave Calls at
WALKER'S PHARMACY.
DRS. LANFORD & WALTERS,
Dentists,
Office on Main Street,
COCHRAN. - - GEORGIA.
P. O. Box 93.
Dental Work Done in all o( its Branches.
H. E. COATES,
Attorney -at- La w,
HAWKINSVILLE, GA.
J. J. TAYLOR, President J. P. PEACOCK, Vice-President.
J. A. WALKER, Cashier
QJurlmm Hanking (Emnpang,
C apital $25,000.00. Surplus $40,000
(fturlirmt, Okxinjia.
We Solicit Your Patronage.
ITAYLOR SAW MILLS LEAD
j In Simplicity, Capacity, Durability, Nona Better
_ Buy Macon Mod© Machinery and ■▼old
\ exoeMwlro Freights and long waits lor B«paix|
Steam and Gasoline Engines
Portable & Stationary Boilers
Complete Ginning, Sawing and SUugle Outfits
r~-vQ Funiu.Teilis. Towers. Ritfns, Acitylsas Li|k'lsg Plaits
EYUYTIimS in mashmuy and supplies
WT NALLAST MACHINERY CO^STsa
If Your Business
Isn’t Worth Advertising
Advertise It For Sale.
W. E & WARREN GRICE,
Attorneys-at-Law.
Hawkinsville, Georgia.
Office over George’s Drug Storey
Commerce Street.
H. F. LAWSON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Rooms, 8 and 9
hoggin’s BUILDING.
HAWKINSVILLE, GA.
DR. R. J. MORGAN,
Physician and Surgeon,
Cochran, Georgia.
Offioe Phone 13. Residence 28,
MARION TURNER
Attorney at Law
HAWKINSVILLE. GA,
Offices I and 2. Huggins Btilding.
DR. J. A. GEORGE,
PHYSICIAN ANI) BUIIGItON,
CHRONIC DISEASES.
Microscopic Examination of Urine
and Blood.
Calls Attended Promptly.
Office ’Phone Number - - 203
Mrs. Manning’s Residence No. 845
Walker’s Pharmacy Number - 9
COCHRAN. GEORGIA-
■■■■ I‘ -v AUR TIME,
r* knowledge
AO 1 and experience
£ | in the printing
Oclle business.
When you are in need of some
thing in this line
DON’T FORGET THIS
jcwjmfsiri
jiAiiiiiYi
OUR
ADVERTISING
COLUMNS
are read by the people j
because it gives them
news of absorbing in
terest. People no longer
go looking about for
things they want—they
go to their newspaper
for information as to
where such things may
be found. This method
saves time and trouble.
If you want to bring
your wares to the atten
tion of this community,
our advertising columns
Should
Contain Your
Ad ' i
□□□□□□□
rlf You Have a
Printing Want
WE WANT TO KNOW
WHAT IT IS
Putting out good printing
is our business, and when
we say good printing we
don’t mean fair, but the
best obtainable. If you
are “from Missouri” give
us a trial and we will
Show You
LOOK OIJtI
FOR THE
—CARf*H
DO YOU know of anyone
who is old enough to
read, Mho has not seen that
sign at a railroad crossing?
If everyone has seen it at some
time or other, then why doesn't
the railroad let the sign rot
away ? Why does the railroad
company continue to keep
those signs at every crossing ?
Maybe you think, Mr. Merchant,
“ Most everybody knows my
store, I don't have to advertise.”
Your store and your goods need
more advertising than the rail
roads need do to warn people
to “Look Out for the Cars.”
Nothing is ever completed in the
advertising world.
The Department Stores are a
very good example- ey are
continually advcu’3) .g---and
they are continually doing a
good business.
If it pays to run a few ads 'round
about Christmas time, it cer
tainly will pay you to run ad
vertisements about all the time.
It's just business, that's all, to
ADVERTISE in
PAPER
GEORGIA
NEWS
Dalton. —Superintendent T. S. Lu
cas of the Dalton public schools 13
opposed to the sale in this city ol
the sensational five-cent novels sc
dear to the heart of youthful Ameri
ca. Superintendent Lucas ha 3 con
fiscated a number of these books
from boys in the public schools and
at a meeting of council recently he
asked that body to take steps to abol
ssh their sale in Dalton.
Savannah. —Originating in the plant
of the Savannah candy factory lire
destroyed the factory, spread to the
storage shed of the Atlantic Coast
Line freight depot and destroyed
that and a quantity of valuable
freight before its progress could be
cheeked. Loss estimated at SIOO,OOO.
Macon. —James A. Blair of New
York was elected president of the
Macon, Dublin and Savannah railway
at the annual meeting of the board
of directors in Macon. He succeeds
Homer Loring of Boston, Mass. Tue
firm of Blair & Co., New York, now
hold controlling interest in the road,
it is understood.
Washington, D. C. —Population sta
tistics' of the thirteenth census, an
nounced included: Blakley, Ga., 1,-
338, against 804 in 1900.
Gainesville. —Dr. E. M. Nighbert,
with headquarters at Spartanburg, S
C\, passed through Gainesville en
route to Jefferson, where he was call
ed by request of the county author
ities to put under way the work of
tick eradication for Jackson county.
He is in charge of tills work for Geor
gia and South Carolina for the bureau
of animal industry, United States de
partment of agriculture. He .-tates
that throughout Georgia there is much
interest concerning tick eradication
and that it now looks like it will be
no great while before Georgia will
be rid entirely of the deadly Texas
fever or cattle tick.
Macon.—With a record of twenty
two years in the state penitentiary
without a reprimand, Jim Daniels
went out free from the Bibb county
chaingang on parole given by Gov
ernor Brown upon the application of
Dr. O. C. Gibson. Daniels was con
victed of being an accessory to the
murder of another Negro in Jasper
county. Daniels' brother was hanged
for tlie murder, and Daniels went up
for life.
Thomaston. Thomaston bids fair
to eclipse her reputation as the sec
ond largest retail mule market in the
state this year. The demand for
mules has been unusually heavy and
shows no signs of letting up. To
February 1, 41 carloads of miller
averaging 30 animals to the car, had
been sold. This makes a total of 1,-
230 mules sold that were shipped in
from the West.
Thomasville.—With peach, plum,
pear and other fruit trees in bloom,
fig trees in leaf, mockingbirds singing
and the perfume of flowers on the
air, it is springtime in earnest in
South Georgia, although according to
the calendar it is still winter.
Dealing.—Recently about one mile
from Hearing, John Welch, Ed Gay
and two colored men were cutting
a ditch through a marshy place in
the middle of a large field, when one
of the men spied a little hole of wa
ter and started for a drink. As he
approached he saw something which
proved to be an alligator about three
feet in length. He growled and flirt
ed his tail. In a few seconds Mr.
Gator was alone. On reflection they
got a pitchfork and captured the
’gator and brought it to Hearing.
Franklin.—Heard county has come
forward with a loud and emphatic pro
test against the statement that it
wants to be abolished. On the other
hand, say prominent citizens of the
county, the county lias more to be
proud of than any one of the three
counties which it was alleged would
absorb it.
Americus. —-While the destruction
of the fruit crop here by a late
treeze seems well-nigh a foregone
conclusion, farmers are very much
disturbed over conditions resulting
from lack of rain here during the
winter season. The rainfall has been
very light and in consequence the
ground is bone dry at slight depth
and in no' condition to insure a crop
this year. Where plowing has been
done at all it is largely upon the sur
face, and the plowshare turns up dry
dirt at the depth of a few inches.
Farmers assert that this creates a
condition, general throughout South
Georgia, that is most unfavorable, and
unless a long season of rain in the
early spring supplies the amount oi
moisture essential to the making oi
a crop there may be a great shortage
in the yield of corn, cotton and other
products. Not in many years has the
rainfall been so sparse, and fanners
view conditions as rather alarming.
Statesboro. —A sea island cotton fac
tory will likely be established here
at once. Savannah capitalists are
largely interested. The promoters
contend that the growers of sea island
cotton are at the mercy of New Eng
land spinners and foreign consumers
There are 39,000 bales of sea island
cotton used in the manufacture ol
automobile tires a year. The finished
products from the sea island crop sell
for $100,000,000. while the entire sea
island crop of 96,000 bales sells for
SIO,OOO. Farmers, merchants, fac
tors and fertilizer manufacturers are
interested in the movement.
A Sad Face.
He— What a sweet, sad face Bhe
has.
She (in a huff) —Enough to make
any one sad to have such a face as
that.
Constipation causes many serious dis
eases. It is thoroughly cured bv Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. One a laxative,
three for cathartic.
Happiness grows at our own fire
side and is not to be picked in stran
gers' gardens.—Douglas Jerrold.
PIIES CURED IN « TO 14 DATS
Toxir druggist will refund money If PaZO OINT
MENT fails to cure any case of Itching, Blind,
Bleeding or Protruding Plies in Cto 14 days. ouc.
Reforms come slowly because we all
would rather wield the ax than bear
the knife.
Garfield Tea purifies the blood and eradi
cates rheumatism. It is made of Herbs.
An undertaker knows a lot of “dead
ones” that he is unable Co bury.
Constipation is an avoidable misery—take
Garfield Tea, Nature's Herb laxative.
Social fame lasts as long as the
possessor is present.
c*u*"t* r* o aiQ>vO. * t
(9 oo Drops]
ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT
AYegefable Preparation for As
similating the Food and Regula
ting the Stomachs and Bowels of
I Infants/Chilukln
j Promotes Digestion,Cheerful
nessand Re st. Contains neither
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral
Not Narcotic
Propt o/ OU DtSAKVEirmfiEJL
JKtmjtJttn
4lx Stmnm ♦ \
/frthfl'fe Sm/ts
Antse SttJ *
fopprmunt • \
DiCnrl***UsMU*+ k
Worm Setd - I
CiorS/td Sufor ■
■ Hmk/yrttn F/nvot *
Aperfecl Remedy forConsl'ipa
lion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea,
Warms,Convulsions.Feverish
■rss and LOSS OF SLEEP.
fac Simile Signature of
The Centaur Company^
NEW VORK.
At 6 months old
35 Dosfa-JjCents
Guaranteed under the
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
‘1 Am Cured”
“The future looks bright to me,” writes Mrs. Helena
Gabriel, from Lisbon, Ohio, “now that I have found Cardui,
the woman’s tonic. lam cured of my many female ailments,
and have regained my good health, by using Cardui. It is
the only remedy I care to have in my house. I would not
be without it. Cardui is building me up, and helps me
whenever 1 take it.”
Try Cardui. It will help you. It acts on the weak,
worn-out, womanly organs, and helps them back to health.
Cardui is a good tonic for women who are well, —to
prevent them from feeling sick.
CAR
The Woman’s Tonic
In the past 50 years, Cardui has been found to relieve
pain and weakness, by its gentle, building, stimulating ef
fect, upon the cause of the trouble. This famous medicine
has, every year, added several thousand more women, to
the list of those it has relieved or cured.
• Cardui has helped headache, backache, sideache, ina
bility to walk, and other serious symptoms of womanly
complaint It will help you. Try it Sold by all druggists.
Ir If if orrin
' 11 kogdy: ■
fl TV) establish our work In every cemetery IQ r* _ Hfl
fl A in ttl9 South, that our gmv>rior work BB WAY tZ, lovO.
F&sSgj v, * or rj mgy be known, we make special offer ot r*3 i.
’ B the two monuments shown ar.d at such H i,E\SyZ JBB
EStt® » niffeic am r fl prices never before heard of. These prices ■
|Wf UvUWIN. \ ■ do not represent their value, but are made B * .
iSSCi Aiiu 3 IQT.g fl as an advertisement. Both monuments are JflAtlcep Ul JeSYLa H
’ fl heavy, substantial, made of choicest lisrht w ~~~~
raSy Ptv. K, I«U9. fl or dark Georgia marble (choice of either).
BB!com4 a, V« an fl finished by best mechanics, guaranteed JaJ
KjKnj H to be perfect In material and workman
rr 1 Jk| Bhip ' * li^n — \
K— ~The prices include names, dates of I u in* 3B DiTl
■ FulifclfTrrri I birth and death and a verse of two I l.jt wf,’ 4 thiejf
■l2in » 28 In. Die! I lines, monument and lettering to be I UQ * m
■ Basa thick. I I just as shown in designs. We prepay L ”*•
■ eu-axO-s. I I freight to any Railroad station in _^^fl
SS.-5&. I Georgia or Alabama. Included also
is s, foot stone with initials.
When ordering, send the lettering wanted, give your post offloe, ship* I
gS ping point and color of marble wanted, light or dark. Orders will be shipped in two to four weeks, ■
B wim the understanding that if the goods are not found to be perfect and as represented, money will ■
■ be refunded. Cash must accompany each order. Remit by r. O. order or personal check. If you ■
fl wish other designs sent, give some Idea as to amount you wish to invest.
THE McNEEL MARBLE COMPANY I
I rh- Suulli'. IMonnmtat.l P1.,i.l Marietta. GEORGIA I
Roots
Barks Herbs
That have great medicinal power, are
raised to their highest efficiency, for puri
fying and enriching the blood, as they
are combined in Hood's Sarsaparilla.
40,366 testimonials received by actual
count in two years. Be sure to take
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Get It today In usual liquid form or
j chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs.
Cure* E*m ijg f g— f
Wont Cass* /9 PKf" f"
to Stay Curad /f * * l—
reT# FIT
*jfiL CURE
To pros* to any suSsrwr that Bp
t'.epsy can nosltirnly b« cored and to
jSEffiSSR ahow you now wa ara curing tha
JtEmrSm wont cum of long standing wiihoor
wondfrfui new Kiro traatmant. Wa
wdlsend any •uJferur a four wecka
traatmant fraa. Our treaUnaat
jflpSljgfy ia positively harmlaaa aud aafa. It
MoHv contain* no Alcohol or dangerous drags.
The fits will atop at one*. Ton will faal
battar right from the start. All that ia necaasary to get the
four weeks fraa cnedieina is to sand your name and ti
pruss and mail address, telling how long you hare bean
sick and how oftsa attacks occur. Dsa'l belay. Delay*
ara Dangerous, ,
Klro Remedy Co., 275 Detroit St, Flint, Mich.
GASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the Ai,
Signature /Am
* w
ft J[v In
X Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTHIA
TNI OINTAUN tOMMNT, NCW TOWN •ITT.