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BILL ARP’S LETTER
Bartow Man 44 Dissects" Book
Written By a Negro,
INJECTS SOME SPICY COMMENTS
Free Horn Son of Ham l»rr!«n-» Tlisrn
**1h No (loot! In IBs Nrsto’* and
Will I »m Aitrtie* With Him.
The race problem has bobbed up
again at the north. The Hon. William
Hannibal Thomas but-Herod* Herod
in his denunciation of the nogro, and
Tbe New York Hun seems to indorse
him. 'Thomas is a negro freeborn in
Ohio, but came down to Honth Carolina
and served in the carpetbag legislature
during tho reconstruction |>oriod and
afterwards bold judicial office and says
in the preface to his book that he has
been studying the negro for thirty
years and is more and more confirmed
in his opinion that there is no good in
him neither socially, morally, iudus
trially or politically. His remarkable
book has recently issued from the well
known press of the Macmillan Co., in
New York, anil Tho New York Hun
devotes u good part of a page in re
viewing it
The author says tho race is slowly
but surely degenerating-that the
negro is by nature a savage with an
inborn ferocity and knows uo such
emotion as mercy that he is a beast
in his domestic relations and will sell
t.Ue virtue of Ui« wife or bin daughter ft
and lose no social position among his
people or in his church. That the
negro preachers are the worst of tho
race. They stalk into negro sanc
tuaries, overshadow tho pews, invade
the precincts of domestic life nud de
spoil the family and yoko virgin inuo
cxtice with brazen guilt. That the
negro churches are debauching ren
dezvous. That negro religion is a
farce aud worthless to reform or r*
generate them, and the most heinous
crimes aro committed by those who
read and write aud are members of
negro churches.
He says that the negro is a brute in
the commission of crime aud is a
craven coward after it is committed,
and when oaught. nnd punished be
lieves himself u martyr, and if he es
capes tbe ganowB would repeat bis
crime with np sense of wrong do
ing- He has nflv conception of virtuo
or truth, no fear |f hell or damnation,
but with the haiikman’s rope around
his neck is going straight to heaven.
Tho author mildly condemns lynching
for certain outrages, not because it is
cruel or itlogal, but because it does
not deter other negroes from sim
ilar outrages. He says, however,
that ho ha* not yet found that an in
nocent man has ever boeu lynched.
He advocates force ns the only practi
cal remedy for the negro—force—oon
Irol—subjection to tbe white race, uot
iu a state of slavery as beforo tho war,
but in one of fear and obedieuee.
Ho goes still further and suggests
tho extermination of the inferior ele
ments of the race Because it is better
to have individual extermination than
race extinction. But space forbids
more of these anathemas and tho won
der is that the book was written by a
negro of the north and that a reputable
publishing house would chaperon it
before northern people and that u
northern editor, who has been for
years and years lampooning the south
ern people about the negro, should
now give this hook his quasi endorse
ment.
What does all this mean? We
know that they did not love the negro
at Akron aud Pan a, nor iu tho slums
of New Y»wk city, but we thought he
was still safe in the sanctum sancto
rum of Republican mlitors. What is
behind this new departure?
An agent has reeoutly been to our
town distributing sensational circulars
about a new book just issued in St.
Louis m which the author asserts that
the negro is a beast and he tries to
nrove d bv the Bible as well as bv
scientific research. This book is but
a revival of the former book called
“Ariel,” and published about thirty
years ago. It is rothreshing of old
straw, but seems to be a brand new
dootriue up north aud has the indorse
ment of numerous preaehers aud col
lege professors. One preacher up in
Maine sav.s that if it had beeu writtou
forty years ago there would have beeu
no civil war, for their people would
not have fought for the freedom of a
lot of beasts.
Then again l see iu a recent edito
rial in a Republican paper an evidence
of weakness aud reaction about the
negro and tho editor asks, “Can it bo
possible that the two hundred millions
of money sent by the north to educate
the southern negro Lsn all beeu wast
ed?” Apologies nre now iu order. In
addition to all this it has been asserted
by ibose who know that Mr. McKinley
fins changed front aud that no more
negroes will bo appointed to office, Is
{.be north about to abandon the negro
and turn him over to the mercy of his
former masters? If so, the negro will
be the gainer, and so will the south.
That is all we have asked for all these
years—just to be let alone.
Thev were they our negroes before the
war and nre our negroes yet. We
don't give them offices or allow them
to sit on our juries, nor ride iu our
cars, nor find lodging in our liotols,
nor take pews in onr churches, and
but for northern interference they
would not. have been allowed to vote,
either state or national or munici
pal, but wo pay them for tbeir labor
aud give them a fair edneatiou. But
for fear of shocking our northern
friends the w hipping post would have
long since been the force that Thomas
says must - he used and then the 6,000
that are in tbe state and connty chain
gangs of Georgia would have been re
duced to 500 or a less nnmber.
A bad negro who fear* not God nor
regards man, cares not a great deal for
j the gallows and less for the chaingaug,
j and nothing for a term in jail, bat h«
'does dread a good whipping. We old
masters all roinember that. One good
whipping will last a negro for years.
The ebaingang effects no reform and
does not last six months. But the
average negro docs not need oorporal
punishment often; ho needs a boss.
Thomas is right when he doolares
that they are getting worse instead of
better, especially in tbe town# and
cities. Read the Atlanta papers and
ask the Atlanta police. Ask Judge
Broyles to compare the records of his
court. Ask the judge and solicitor of
any court. They are growing worse
everywhere, except on the farms and
plantations, where they are controlled
by landlords, who are nearly as much
their musters as in the oldeu times,
If they don’t use physical foroe they
exercise a will power that exacts tbe
utmost obedience. The landlord is
the boss.
Thomas is right when he asserts
'hat they have no conception of domes
t)c virt »« '‘" ,1 They seldom
,ll! ‘ rr y according to law, but just take
11 P “ U( * I’ 1 ’*' 'hey feel like it.
1 Imre are more negro children in
lhia town a'" 1 t)Vt ‘ r y ,),h(3r towl1 who
ure born out of wedlock than those
w * 10 arft 6orn in it. Neither man nor
wif « nor church member loses oaste
for notorious infidelity to the marri
age relation. As Thomas says most of
th « preachers are on that ime. Right
no K ro preachers are now in our state
ebaingang and as many more U tbe
county gaugH. I asked a uegrw the
°^ er what the} turned their
preacher off for, and be said, “it were
for some onreglarities.” Home of our
negro school teachers get the same
reputation and have to step down nnd
out. We had one here a few years
ago who was highly educated and
wrote a beautiful lotter, but he got to
kidnaping little things and ran away
in tiie night and didn’t stop until he
got to Africa and was made a bishop.
But Thomas does not tell us how to
exterminate them, nor where to draw
the line between the inferior olasses
and those who shall be allowed to live
nnd multiply. He exbaiiHts bis indig
natiou without defining the mode and
manner of the remedy. I suppose we
might transport the men and boys over
to tho Philippines but and that turn would the army be
loose upon them,
expensive, or we might drive them out
west and let them statffe to death or be
killed off by the Indians. Any way
would satisfy Thomas if it exterminat
ed all the bad ones. We are doing
reasonably well on that lino, for besides
lynohings for the usual crime, which I
hope will be kept up diligently, we
have retired about 5,0(J0 to private life
in the chamgaugs of Georgia, aud 15,
000 more in other southern states.
That amounts to a partial extermina
tion and is better, for we get their
lnbor during the process.
We ought to take up every trifling
vagabond and send him there, for
idleness is the parent of vice and
crime. If he had douo something
send him for doing it and if he hadent
done anything then send him for doing
nothing. And as for those snatch
thieves who are pursuing aud robbing
tho ladies of Atlanta I wouldent send
them to tho ebaingang until the.v had
been wlnppeit once a week lor a
mouth. Force is tbe thing—the force
of a cowhide on the naked skin. That
is the remedy for black and white in
Delaware, aud neither a snatch thief
nor a bank robber dares to stop in tbe
stutc. They hurry through to auother
state where there is no whipping post.
When we got a legislature .that has got
wisdom and moral courage enough to
exterminate the dogs and protect the
sheep they will re-establiAh tho whip
ping post.
But about the Beasty book that says
the negro has uo soul. I suppose it
was manufactured to sell nud fool
somebody. As my nigger Bob once
said to Nabor Freeman: “Effen a white
man got a soul nud a nigger liaint got
no soul how about a mellater?” That
is a conundrum. And how about the
Indians and Chineso aud Cubans aud
the Arabs? How much coloring does
it take to germinate a soul? How
about such high-minded philanthropic
negroes as Booker Washington, Presi
dent Council!, Bishop Gaines, Bishop
Turner and the bishop of Louisiana,
who are doing their utmost to reform
their race? I had rather risk them aud
many other good negroes for souls and
salvation thau uiauy a white man I
know. How about my laitbful Tip, who
was born and raised in our family nnd
has been loyal and loving to his mis
tress and her children all these years,
and how about, old-time servants in
almost every family who owned ne
groes and whoso devotion never died
when freedom came?
No. Let Thomas aud Company write
books to perplex the north and make
money for themselves, but let us and
our negroes alone. Just keep bauds
off aud we will manage them. We
need them in our fields and furnaces
and mines and on our railroads. But
for their labor as slaves tbe south
would have been fifty years behind iu
the clearing of our forests, building
our railroads aud developiug our min
eral resources. But for them the
south would be inundated with a horde
of foreigners who bring with them all
sorts of isms and religions and strikes.
The negro has his faults, but if his
presence will keep immigrants away it
wilt be a blessing. It is still the des
tiny of the south to perpetuate an un
contaminated white race who will save
the republic from anarchy and ruin
or from imperialism.
P. S.—We read that eitermination
has beguu at Terre Haute and Indian
apolis. I hope Hannibal is happy.—
Bill Art. iu Atlauta Constitution.
NEGRO CREMATED.
Citizens of Terre Haute, Indiana,
Avenge Outrage and Murder
of Young 5chool Teacher.
A apecial from Terre Haute, Ind.,
says: Ida F'inklestein, aged twenty, a
school teacher, while walking through
a lonely atrip of woods late Monday
afternoon on her way home from her
achoolhouse, was assaulted by a negro
who shot her in the back of the head
aud cut her throat.
After the assault had been committ
ed Miss Finkleatein rau for half a piile
to a farmhouse with the blood stream
mg from her wounds aud fell uncon
seicuB on the .doorsteps.
She was later taken to the hospital
in Terre Hante where she died at 11
o’clock Monday night. arrested
Tuesday morning the police
the murderer, who proved to be George
Ward, aged twenty-seven, a car works
laborer.
He at first denied tbe charge, but
later made a full confession. He said
the girl taunted him about bis color
aud then slapped him in h.’s face, and
in a fit of anger he shot her aud than
cut her throat.
At noon a.crowd gathered in front
of the jail and succeeded in battering
down the front door. by They were
driven'baok, however, the jailer,
who tired ovor tLeir heads with a shot
gun. Three deputy sheriffs
,,r„i.k bj .ctlering ibot. but ». »t
Th r .°’»"“m»r'i»or. M .d .. th»
news of the foul deed became more
generally known and arrangements
were being made to take the prisoner
before tbe court for bis sentence at 3
o’clock, but before this could be done
the mob again formed and broke into
the jail while the sheriff was at the
courthouse.
A rope was placed around the ue
gro's neck aud he was dragged to the
wagon bridge across the Wabash river
three blocks away and hanged to the
Ai-AwhrirW ina vuriage-
1 he victim was beaten with ... sticks .. .
and shot at by members of the mob
and he was unconscious when hanged
and in all probability dead.
When the body was dropped from
the bridge oqe strand of the rope
broke and tbe leaders of the mob,
thinking that their victim might drop
into the river, hauled the body up
again and it was dragged to the west
side of the river and burned.
The stake was omitted. The body
was in a horizontal position, the feet
protruding at one end, the head at the
other. The fire had barely been start
ed when a man arrived w ith a can of
turpentine, which was fed to the eager
flames.
After that combustible oils seemed
to flow spontaneously toward the fire
aud the flames leaped high while the
body of the wretched murderer was
slowly consumed.
There was no attempt at disgniseWn
the part of any members of the mob.
Within ten minutes of the time wheu
the mob reached the bridge with the
viotim the people began to assemble
in ever increasing numbers.
When the body was taken down to
be carried to the fire the bridge west
of the draw’ was barricaded and the
crowd was stopped there between the
east bank of the river and the bridge
to the city. On the draw was crowd
ed, with thousands of men, women
and children gazing at the awful
spectacle of a human body being
surned in vengeful flames,
In all that crowd not one word of
sympathy for the wreteli was to be
heard, though many deprecated the
final act of burning.
CHINESE BEHEADED.
Two of the Condemned Officials Are
Put to Death In Pekin.
Chi Hsu,former grand secretary,and
Hen Cheng Yo, son of the'notorious
Hsu Tung, were publicly beheaded in
Pekin Tuesday. The street in which
the execution took place was guarded
by French, German and American
troops. The condemned officials were
taken to the ground in carts, escorted
by a company of Japanese infantry.
Chi Hsu met his fate in a dignified
manner, walking from the cart calmly
aud fearlessly. Hsu Cheng Yo was
stupefied with opium.
Work On Cotton Mills Resumed.
Work has commenced on the Wood
ruff Cotton mills at Spartanburg, S.
C,, after a few weeks’ suspension.
W ILL NOT VISIT MEMPHIS.
President Declines Invitation to B«
Present at Confederate Reunion.
A Washington special says: A de
legation of leading citizens of Mem
phis, Tenn., headed by Senator Bate
aud Senator-elect Carmack, called at
the white house Friday and invited
the president to attend the monster
meeting of United Confederate Vet
erans to be held in Memphis on May
28, 29 and 30. The president express
ed his regret that arrangements al
ready had been made which would pre
vent him from visiting Memphis on
this occasion, but he hoped to be able
to do so before the summer was over.
CUDAHY RECEIVES OFFER.
n
Kidnapers Will Return Ransom Honey
Under Certain Conditions.
E. A. Cudahy, the Omaha packer,
whose sou was kidnaped to secure a
reward of $25,000, is in receipt of an
anonymous letter declaring that upoa
dis assurance that the kidnapers will
not bo punished, all but $5,000 of the
ransom money will be returned to
him. The letter was mailed at Wan
’kegan, HI., Tuesday aud seat to
Omaha.
^Vestibuieu CT r [iMlTEb
A
l ly/T
Double Daily Service
I Seaboard Air Line Railway
Time Talile.
Lv Cordele SAL Ry. 2 10 pm 6 05 pm
Ar Abbeville „ 3 15 pm 7 05 pm
“ Helena “ 4 05 pm
“ Savannah “ 8 25 pm
it i t 11 59 pm
ArCoiiimoia “ 4 36 am
“ Camden 6 43 am
“ South Pines" 10 05 am
“Raleigh (4 11 50 am
“ Petersburg “ 4 38 pm
“ Richmond “ 5 40 pm
“ Wash’ton Penn Ry 9 30 pm
! i‘ " “ 11 25 pm
* l 1 2 56 am
c v Yrrk r ‘‘ “ 6 13 am
Ar Cordele S A L Ry 2 10pm
Lv Portsmouth “ “ 5 o0 pin
Lv Cordele 2 10 pm 9 00 am
Ar Americas % 5 10 pml0 02am
“ Richland 4 04 pm
“Columbia “ “ 5 20 pm
| “ Ilurtsboro “ “ 5 46 pm
“Montgomery “ “ 7 40 pm
Lv “ L – N 9 35 pm
j ^r Mobile “ 3 15 am
I Ar New Orleans “ 7 40 am
Chair cars between Savannah and ;
Montgomery. Magnificent buffett
sleeping car service Lorn Savannah,
Dining car Savannah to Hamlet, and ;
SuS‘(J? N
K t |l m0re ' K “' li ‘ a “ d °"
r
L S Allen.
Gen Pass Agt., Portsmouth, Va.
Wm Butler, Jr., Ga.
Tritv Pass Agt., Savannah,
A Clean Face
{ is necessary to good looks. For a
good, smooth shave, an up-to date hair
cut and sbampoor, go to the Tonsorlal
Parlors of Newcomer, In Peoples Bank
building. White barbers and best of
service given to all patrons. If you
are troubled with dandruff I can give
( you a complete cure at small cost,
R r j n g jour razors to me to hone,
Claude Newcomer,
In Peoples'Bank Bid.
-
| Lanier« Dekle,
CORDELE, GEORGIA.
BUGGIES,
WAGONS
and Harness of all kinds. “Wood’ mowers
and rakes. Cofltns, Caskets and Metallic
Cases. We won’t be beat on prices for the
cash. Send us your orders.
Undertaking – Embalming,
ROBERTS – EDGE,
Physicians – Suroeons.
Cordele, Georgia.
Specially prepared for treating
chronic diseases. Office over City
Drug Store. Calls answered day oi
night promptly. 6-29
! *
A TEXAS WONDER,
M
1 ii>'
One small in bottle oi Hulls P Great
discovery _ cures all kidney and
bladder troubles, removes gravel,
i cures diabetes, seminal emissions,
tvenk and lame backs,rheumatism,
and all irregularities of the kid
neys and bladder in both men and
in women, regulates bladder troubles
children. It' not sold by your,
druggist, will be sent by mail on
receipt of $1. One small bottle
Js two months’ treatment, and will
pure any case above mentioned.
Dr. E. W. Hall, sole manufae
urer, P. O. Box 629, St. Louis,
Mo. Send for testimonials. Sold
by all druggists, and H. J. Lamar
– Sous, Macon, Gr.
Read This.
Cuthbert, Ga., April 2, 1900.
This is to certify that I was
affected with gravel and that I
took, sixty drops of Hall’s Great*
Discovery and it completely cured
me. It is worth $1,000 per bottle
to anv one need ing it.
J. T. STEVE N S.
GOVERNOR CANNOT HELP.
Many Appeals From Counties Where
in Smallpox Exists.
An Atlanta dispatch says: Governor
Candler is receiving repeated requests
from the authorities of various coun
ties of the state for aid in suppressing
smallpox.
In many cases these county authori
'*® 8 vrant the governor to issue procla
mations of quarantine, send special
physicians to take charge of the dis
ea8e or send large quantities of vac
c * ne points, none of which the gov
ernor » 8 empowered to do under the
I aw - He does send to each county a
few vaccine points to supply immedi
ate necessity, but there his power ends
CHARLESTON GETS LEFT.
Conferees Disagree to Appropriation
For Her Big Exposition.
A Washington special says: The
conferees on the Louisiana exposition
bill met Thursday. They agreed up
on the amendment to close the gates
on Sunday aud disagreed to the ap
propriatiou for the Charleston, S. C..
exposition.
• Albany – Northern Railway,
To Take Effect B A. M. Monday, Jiw>* l–, 1809.
Central. Time Standard
Between Albany and Cordele.
South Bound North Bovin
First Class Firn CLH
.
Dally 21 Sun- 11 17 t Stations. is 8uu- i2~n? n
exc pt ' il ay Dally Dally d ,y *** M jj
Sund'y Mid. only. Pas. Pas. o» SttOJil
Pas. Pas. M X c
A. M. A. M. P . M. Arrive Leave w. M ’ M. P.H
9 80 9 40 CO 30 . Albany Beloit . 05 ^ 00 rff
8 58 9 19 CO 10 .. . 26 xt 21 0*OtOCCC>
8 40 9 04 K? 56 .Philema 41 ^ 30
8 27 8 56 tO 49 . Oakfield JL. « w 49 yjt 44
8 07 8 46 tO 38 Warwick 59 TjUfJ 54
7‘43 8 34 tO 28 . Raines . 11
7 15 8 15 M* 10 Lv .Cordele Ar m 30 O. 25
J. S. CREWS, Gen’l. Manager.
Georgia Southern and Florida Railway Co
Time Tables—In Effect January 22d, 1899.
SvCbJect to C2ia,«.ar» "Wltikciat ITotlcw.
NO. 5 NO. 8 NO. 1 SOUTHBOUND NO. 2 NO. 4 NO. 4
m 1:20 a to m Lr .....Cordele.....Ar -B BiS86SS§8i a m % ac
u I, It ....Arabi..... II 1— 1
M II M Ashburn... t. ' «« gst»£g§s*$8 U r—
..
M 2:30 •* II It ..Tlfton..... M '' • a 44 oo»o*a
..
3:21 •* 44 44 Sparks.... 44 * B 44 SJS
...
•4 4:06 “ «4 44 Valdosta... 44 p m
..
5:00 “ 4* “......Jasper......“ si etc
5:43 “ :23 “ “ White Springs “ ~ 44
6:05 “ 44 44 Lake City... 44 - 44
..
7:40 “ :ltf «• 44 , ..Hampton... 44 - 44 -a
4* it 44 ...■Palatka..., ss - 44 ®
System, Connects and with at fRlatka Sc. Johns with and Florida Ocklasvaha Kaet Coast River Railway, J. T. – K. VV., and Plajw
steamers.
NO. « NO. 4 NO. 2 NORTHBOUND NO, 1 NO. 8 NO. I
am 2:50 a m 2:08 p m Lt.... Cordele....Ar pm 1:30 am 1:20 pm
® it 2:34 “ 2:25 “ ” .... Vienna .... ” “ 1:12 a 1:02 “
M 2:39 “ ” ...Finehurst... ” “ 12:57 “
II 2:55 “ 2:48 “ “ .... UuadilU.... ” “ 12:40 r 12:42 “
«D ii 3:05 “ ” ....Grovania.... " “ 12:31 r “
O M 8:55 “ 3:53 “ >> Sofkee .... ” a m 11:4i p m 11:45 *•
ii 4:15 “ 4:16 “ Ar......Macon.....Lv “ 11:20 “ 11:25 “
• :80 pm CH ES. 7:33 p ra Ar....Atlanta ....Lv a ra 7:50 p m 7:60 P m
1:00 a m n ..Chattanooga..” ” 3:06 » 2:55
55 6:40 ” ” ...Nashvllis.... ” p m 9:30 a m 0;W
•d a S 7:82 p m » .St Louis.... ” ” 8:55 '» 8:46
.
Trains 1 and 2. and trains 3 and Trains 4 carry Pullman also’ Buffet Sleeping local cars
St. Louis and Jacksonville, Fla. 3 and 4 carry sli eeper
Macon and Palatka. Trains 5 and 6 are shoo-ffy trains.
Full information from the undersigned.
D. G. HALL, T. P. A. O. B. RHODES, Gen. Pass; Aft, Uaoos,
8 Kimball House, Atlanta, Ga.
HARRY BUNNS, h\ P. A.. Jacksonville, Fla.
WILLIAM CUEOKLET SHAW, Vloe-Presldent, Macon, Ga.
Photographs,
Cofield’s Photograph Gallery,
Over Old National Bank, Cordefe,
Is the place to get the very finest
Platino finish photographs in «
South city; see Georgia. his samples Call and while be in con- the IP
*
vinced.
J. I. COFIELD, Photographer.
R. L. WILSON, President. B. H. ?ALMEE, Cashier,
in { .1 n
II 1 LIU LI,
State, County and City Depository.
Capital and Surplus,
Corner 7th Street and 11th Avenue.
j. o. Hamilton, President, w. c. Hamilton, Vice-President, l. c. Edwards.
1 WflJ J] i 1
j j in. IV.
! • It
Capital Paid in $25,000. i
Wo solicit the business of firms, corporations and
viduals. offering them courtesy, promptness and iiabilty.
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Our fee returned if we fail. Any one sending sketch and description
any invention will promptly receive our opinion free concerning the
ability of same. “How to Obtain a Patent” sent upon request.
secured through us advertised for sale at our expense.
Patent taken out through illustrated us receive and special notice, without charge,
The Patent Record, an widely circulated journal,
by Manufacturers and Investors.
Send for sample copy FREE. Address,
VICTOR J. EVANS – CO.,
{Patent Attorneys,)
Evans Building, a WASHINGTON, 0.
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what eat. ,
you
It, artificially digests the food and aids
Nature in strengthening and ream
SffiSSSS!;: No preparation
ant and toniq. other in-!
can approach it in efficiency. It
stantly relieves and permanently Heartburn, cures j
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Stomach, Nausea, i
Flatulence, Sour
Sick Headache, Gastralgia,Cramps and
all other results of imperfect digestion. I
Price50c. andfl. Larsfe size contains 2*4 times
sruaitsixe.BooUaUaboutdyspepsianmile(ilres COeWITt
Prepared by E. a CO^ Chicago.
Money to Loan
I am prepared to loan money on farm
at the lowest rates oi interest. Tiuic-,
years. Oan be repaid at any time.
secured within a few day g after
Is received. Any amount from SIM to
If you want to borrow money call on me.
S. R. FIELDS,
Cordele, Ga
Dr. C. H. Peete.
EYE, u EUR, utlu ’ NOSE and uuu
KG8 Cherry Street.
Macon, Georgia.
If von have something to sell,
1 ' J know M,(,w *>• it A a
ment 1B thls . I>»l>er will do the