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WITWP GLEBSNEB. rd. and Prop
Even the dogs are dying of sunirtroke
n th»»t vannted snninimr resort whore
the legislature is sitting.
It is the way of tins uueqnifl world
The waterworks these hot summer days
in order that the fountain may pity.
-*-
Town Topics insists upon being the
originator of the Cleveland third term
loom. All right; we acknowledge it
wasn't us.
—-
And still the cry is being raised In the
bouse that a lobby is woi king in the in
terest of the convict lessees. There
niust be some mistake about that,surely.
Those burglars who got shot while
breaking into a drug store in Atlanta
deserved all they got. A man runs
enough risk tn entering a drug store in
broad daylight when it is open.
The Sparta Lhnmi'liti- thinks the way
to a greater Georgia lies through the re
peal of the emigiation agent law rather
than through sn exhibit at St. Louis.
And it would be less expensive.
The appointment of Hon. Henry G.
Turner as associate justice ot the su
preme court in place ot .Imlgc Samuel
Lumpkin, deceased, is one that reflects
Ihe greatest credit possible on both the
bench and the governor.
After Cedurtown had dined and
wined the country editors, she took
them ont and showed them the iron
works. Junta gentle reminder ot the
fact that first conies this world, then
the next and then the iron works.
After all the difficulty Governor Tcr
<dl had in getting a South Georgian to
eept a supreme court judgeship, there
I'ght to be no more talk about South
eorgia not getting its share of offices.
< uth Georgians simply do not want of
fice. _
The Atlanta Journal rather derisively
calls upon Mr Tigner to name the lob
byists whom he declares to be working
•gainst all substitutes for the present
convict system. Did the Journal ever
name any lobbyist when it was raising
a great deal bigger hullaballoo about
them only a short time ago?
J ““Mr7Rockefeller is quoted as having
•aid that when he wants anything he
praysfor it. Mr. Rockefeller was prob
ably misunderstood, and the word he
really used was no doubt ‘pays,’ says
the Columbus Enquirer Sun. No, the
quotation is probably correct; Mr.
Rockefeller prays and then the people
have it to pay.
The Thomasville Times-Enterprise
propounds this profound theological
question • ‘‘ls It any worse to catch a
fish on Sunday than to catch a yellow
legged chicken for the preacher’s din
ner?” It seems to us that this depends
largely upon there being no yellow
legged chicken and the fish being for
the preacher’s dinner in lieu thereof.
The doubtful States have been
summed up as follows by experts on the
political ait nation: California, 10 elec
toral votes; Colorado, 5; Connecticut,
7; Delaware, 3; Idaho, 3 ; Indiana, 15;
Maryland, 8; Montana, 3 ; New Jersey.
12; New York, 89; Oregon. 4; Rhode
Island, 4; Utah, 8, and West Virginia,
7. Here is a total of 120 votes. The
surely Democratic States cast 154 votes,
leaving 35 votes to be obtained fiom
the doubtful Stales in order to secure a
majority.
There is at least originality in this
advertisement of a Kansas dry goods
store “One of these nights a mouse
willi iawa match on your pantry
siielf, iear sister, »i,i ih ■ fie will spread
till it reaches yoio n.-iu, awl you es
cape with your li.>. ' i '<l only in your
night garments, touch asp ctaeul.it
opportunity to create a sensation
doesn’t occur ofteuer than once tn a
’.ifetimo, and how will you meet it?
Dear sister, will your night clothes be
such that the firemen will want to
plunge into the flames an 1 die, or will
you loo! ke the pictures on the bill
board <
E-..tor Henry VZateraon’s estimate of
the Republican party in Kentucky is as
follows: ‘The Republicans in Ken
tucky, ns seen'ud judged by the con
vention of yc .'relay, embraces, for the
most part, a Heterogenous mass ot pot
wallopers, cranks and darkeys. Upon
tne stage and the outer edge of the
crowd the onlooker might obseve a
fringe of nondescripts; the man of busi
ness, who, for the moment fancies
hinisi If in public life, and is ready to
go d iwn into his pocket f oi the needful;
the tt-lf styled gentkman in politics,
who, where he is not the merest sham
pr.d cheat, equal to any villainy, so it
> • e.i ealed, h- a blockhead, deceived
Yr tl conceit; that lie is serving his
com try; the corporation counsel and
y£icial, st ill scared by the hobgoblin of
aid Sixteen to One and the dread mem
i ry of 1896.”
MEAT TO CONTINUE HIGH-
Conditions thin year all seem to
admonish tbe farmer* of the South
t j devote more at’ention than ever
to raising hog* aril cattle for meat
Hir-i in Sou hwest Georgia, savs
' the Albany Herald, and it applies
toali sections of the State, our farm
ers should raise at least enough meat
to do them every year, but it be
| c im*H all the tnore important for
i them to do so when the price of
i meat is to be fixed by the cost of
production In the West, plus the
freight and the profit that must te
paid to st least t no or three dealer#
through whose handsit must pass
before the Georgia farmer who has
to buy it gets it into his smoke
house.
The shortage of the corn crop of
thia year which is predicted by Sec
retary Wilson, of the Department
of Agriculture, after a trip through
the West, means that the people of
thia country will continue daring
the next year to pay high prices for
meat. The chief cause of the ad
vance in the cost of moats last year
was the partial failure of the corn
crop of 1901. Corn being the chief
food for cattle and swine, especially
in the West, it is easy to understand
why the price of meat advanced
with the up ward tendency of that
oeieal. Those of our farmers who
have had to buy either corn or meat
this year have been paying well for
it.
Secretary Wilson does not esti
mate the shortage of the crop th’s
year, but it is clear that he expects
n big falling eff in the yield. This
is the direct result of the cool
weather that prevailed in the spring
throughout the entire North and of
the floods that have swept through
the valleys of the West, where the
greatest corn crops are made.
It need not be doubted that meat
will be as high all next year as it
has been this year, and our farmers
in Southwest Georgia will do well
to begin now to prepare for it.
THE ADVANTAGE SOCIETY HAS
OVER HELL.
A female revivalist up in its
neighborhood having stated that
she would rather see her daughter
in hell than in society, the Indian
apolis Sentinel is impelled to make
these few thoughtful remarks :
“To the unreflecting mind hell
may present some advantages ovtr
‘so-called society ’ It is said to be
easier to get into, and to be not so
expensive. But, on the other hand,
it is much harder to get out of, and
that is probably a weighty consid
eration with those who are in.
Any one who gets tired of society
can quit, and usually no protest will
will be offered. And then there is
a chance for vacations. In the
heated reason one oan drop out and
go to some wat ring place. Our in
formation is to the effect that hell
presents no such advantages, but is
rather in the nature cf a continuous
performance, with the spectators
soldered to their seats.”
TRY IT ON THESE-
If the Atlanta Journal really
wants to find out and publish the
names of some lobbyists and help
land them in the “den” of the Ful
ton county jail, it might turn over
the following article from the A’-
bany Herald to one of its bright
young men and let him follow up
the trail:
The editor of the Heral 1, a mem- |
b“r of ths Dmgherty count, ,• biard
of education, has received during
thu last few days two imitation
type written let era purporting to
be from county school commission
ers of diff rent oounti-'S of the State
protesting against the uniform
text-book bill now pending in the
legislature and urging the ir divid
ual addressed to “write or wire at
once to your representatives seek
ing their influence against the pas
sage of the pending bill ”
One of these letters is dated from
another place, but w 3 notice that it
was mailed from Atlanta, the en
velope bearing tl e Atlanta post
murk. The o!h *r is dated frem At
lanta and purports to come from
live county sch •fl commissioners
who uro represented as having
called on the State school commis
sioner to “request him to protest
against the passage of the bill
under the present conditions.”
It.is perhaps safe to conclude that
t'cae county school commissioners
arc not congregating in Atlanta and
sending out this literature on their
own motion and at their own ex
pense, and it would be interesting,
therefore, to know just whose un
selfish patriotism it is that is behind
’this work. Isn’t it barely possible
- „ . —- - —— —■ '- ‘ •* —*--t—_ . ....
that It i» one or more of the book
concerns?
Verily, it look.* like we have
reached the point in Georgia where
it is almost impossible to get any
measure in the interest of the p<o
ple of the Slate through the legis
lature when the interests ot Individ
uals or corporations are to ba af
fected by it.
The region of Ophir, once regarded as
mythical, and located at one time or
another in every country near the In
dian Ocean or the Red Sea, is now be
lieved to have been certainly in the
Zambesi region of Africa, in what is
now Rhodesia, according to a writer in
Collier’s Weekly, A writer in the
“Engineering and Mining Journal”
tells uh that the mines there must have
been fabulously rioh, for the Bible de
clares that three thousand talents of
the gold of Ophir (about eighty million
dollars) went into the temple at Jeru
salem. The old mines in the recently
discovered region namber many thous
and, and several hundred of them are
being worked over again. There are
also ruined cities, forts and temples,
and the whole region was apparently
once inhabited by an Arabian people.
The fact that Arab traders handled the
gold accounts for the ancient belief
that the Biblical Ophir was located in
Arabia.
Here is what the World says that a
nickel will do in New York city:
Buy a twenty-two mile ride.
A day’s outing at the Zoo.
A trip to Coney Island.
Enjoyment at the music halls.
A square meal of five articles of food.
A bed and lodging for one night.
A glass ot beer and all the free lunch
you want.
Songs by great singers in the phono
graph.
Worxs of great philosophers and
writers.
Self education by means of cheap
books.
Take a letter around the world.
Buy crepe for your funeral.
Where living is so cheap, why is it
that a man with a salary of from $2,000
to $5,009 will rob a bank?
Those beautiful stories that have filled
the public prints about the wheat fields
of old Kansas, far away, seem to nave
been pipe dreams. The Savannah News
is authority for the statement that “a
college student who went from New
York to work in the harvest fields of
Kansas has written a letter to his fa
ther in which he says the rumored
great scarcity of labor, the high wages
being offered ami the kidnapping of
tramps to work in the field is pretty
much all nonsense and without founda
tion. In his own case, lie says that he
had a hard time finding employment,
and it was only after he promised to
work without wages, for his board, that
he got a place on a farm. He wrote for
his railroad fare back home, and he
says he means to come East quickly.”
Yellow Jack says a preacher came at
a newspaper man in this way: “You
editors do not tell the truth. It’you did
you could not live; your newspapers
would be a failure.” The editor replied :
“You are right, and tbe minister who
will at all times and under all circum
stances tell the whole truth about his
members, alive or dead, will not occupy
his pulpit more than one Sunday, and
then he will find it necessary to leave
town in a hurry. The press and the
pulpit go hand in hand, with whitewash
brushes and pleasant words magnifying
little virtues into big ones. The pulpit,
the pen and the gravestone are the great
saint-making triumvirate.” And the
great minister went away 7 looking very
thoughtful, while the editor turned to
his work and told of the surpassing
oeauty of the bride, while in fact she
was as homely as a mud fence.
SIOO Reward, SIOO,
The readers of this paper will be pleased
to learn that there is at least one dreaded
disease that science has been able to cure
in all its stages and that is Catarrh.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive
cure now known to the medical fraterni
ty. Catarrh being a constitutional dis
ease. requires a constitutional treatment.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood and mu
cous surfaces of the system, therefore des
troying the foundation of the disease, and
giving the patient strength by building
up the constitution and assisting .nature
in doing its work. The proprietors have
so much faith in its curative powers that
they offer one Hundred Dollars for any
case that it fails to cure. Send for list of
testimonials,
Address F. J. CHENEY, &CO, Toledo,
Ohio.
Sol 1 by Druggists, 75c,
Hall s Family Pills are the best.
For Over Sixty Years.
an Old and Well Third Remedy.-
Mrs. Winslow s Soothing Syrup ,ias t.een
ejsed for over sixty years by millions of
mothers for iheir children while teething
with perfect success n soothes the child
softens the gums, allays all pain, cures
wind nolle, and is the best remedy sot
dlarrtwea. Js pleasant to the t.>u»tu. Sold
by druggists in every pr-rt of the world.
Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is
tnoaloulal 1< r and ask foi
Winlow's Soc-mag Sriur. and take no
other Li nd
iCASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
Keep it Dark.
Thomasville Times Enterprise.
People near a certain prominent
hotel have been slightly ainu*edand
mightily wearied by the publicly
displayed amative tendencies of a
Florida bridal couple who have
billed and cooed undeterred by the
derisive glee or patent disgust of
beholders. There was never a
truer statement than that old one
about there being a time and place
for everything.
-J'he Times-Enterprise is a firm
believer in billing and cooing. In
fact, we are an officer in the Society
for the Promotion of B and C. in
Private Places. We are also a mem
ber of the Society for Prevention ot
B. and C. in Public Parks and
Places.
We think ill good people will
agree with us in our attitude in re
gard to this matter. Nothing can
be more desirable on a summer
moonlit night thar. a certain amount
of and cooing judiciously
distributed over a vine clad veran
da. But keep it dark, young folks.
Everyone who has ever been to
New York will recall the acrobatic
cavorting of his gorge at the bench
scenes in Central Park and a Coney
Island car.
We trust that this soul-sickening
custom will not invade Georgia. If it
does, we will have a bill intri duced
at the next session of the legislature
to make it a capital offense.
The office slangist says of the cus
tom : “Throw it out of the win
dow, ” and the poet exclaims :
To bill, to coo, to say goo-goo
Does very well at night;
But if you would have sense that’s
good
Don’t do it in the light.
Brutally Torturpa*
A case came to light that for per
sistent and unmerciful torture has
perhaps never been equaled. Joe
Golobick of Co’usn, Calif, writes.
“For 15 years I endured insuffer
able pain from Rheumatism and
nothing relieved me though I tried
everything known. 1 came across
Electric Bitters and it’s the greatest
medicine on earth for that trouble.
A few bottles of it completely re
lieved and cured me.” Just as
good for Liver and Kidnev troubles
and general debility. Only 53a.
Satisfaction guaranteed by Car
lasle & Ward and Brooks Drug
Score.
Served In Army 64 Years.
Charleston, S. C., July 25. —Sergeant
James Condon, the oldest soldier in
the United States army in active ser
vice, died suddenly at his residence
in this city Friday. For the past 18
years he has been on duty at the South
Carolina Military academy as drum*
mer. Captain Condon was 74 years
old. He was born in Quebec, Cana
da. He enlisted as a drummer boy
when he was 10 years old. He had
long since passed the age for refine
ment, but refused a pension, deeming
himself able to perform active duty.
Tragady in a Barroom.
Knoxville, Tenn., July 26.—-At Lofol
lette, Tenn., Jerry Jars-isao, former
sheriff of Granger county, but travel
ing representative for a locai brew
ery, was shot and killed In W. CA
Smith’s saloon. He Wiled Smith's
son and fatally injured Smith by shoot
ing them before he fell The row was
over an account. Jaxnigan was one
of the best known men in this section.
Night Was Her Terror.
“I would cough nearly all nigh
long,” writes Mrs. Chas. Applegate
of Alexandria, Ind., “and could
hardly get any sleep. I had con
sumption so bad that if I walked a
block I would cough frightfully and
spit ub blood, but when all other
medicines failed, three $1 00 bottles
of Dr. King’s New Discovery
wholly cured me and I gained 58
pounds.” It's absolutely guaran
teed to cure Coughs, Colds, La
Grippe, Bronchitis and all Throat
and Lung Troubles. Price „50c and
SI.OO. Trial bottle free at Carlisle
&Ward and Brooks Drug Store.
The Foundation or Health.
Nourishment is the foundation of
health —life—strength. Kodol Dys
pepsia Cure is the one great medi
cine that enables the stomach and
digestive organs to digest, assimilate
and transform all foods into the
kind of blood that nourishes the
nerves and feeds the tissues.
Kodol lays the foundation for health.
Nature does tbe rest. Indiges
tion, Dyspepsia, end all disorders of
the stomach and digs stive organs
are cured by the use of Kodol.
Sold by Brooks Drug Store.
ihe March of Progress.
As long as penp’o oo b. t ier
they were con eir to do wi Lent
the railroad, tlie tckgrapb, tho i- 1-
epnone, &0., but who, m this pro
gres-ive age, wju : di.-pon o
these ueee ■: itics i? So '■ i* ’.v .
flour. As long as you u-o inferior
flour and know nothing cf th
merits of Bransford's “Clifton,"
you may ba satisfi* d v, ish your
bread, cake and pastry, hut if you
try one sack of “Clifton” the “cake
is dough” with all inferior flours.
Your grocer sells it.
THROUGH TREACHERY
CIUDED BOLIVAR FELL
Second Officer In Command of ,
Fort Proved Traitor.
HE SHOT COMMANDING OFFICER-
Afterward Turned Guns on the Rebels
and Surrendered to the Government
Forces —More than a Thousand Men
Killed In Engagement.
New York, July 25. —According to
stories brought here by the French
warship Jouffrey, cables the Port of
&pain correspondent of The Herald the
capture of Ciudad Bolivar and the de
feat of the revolutionists was great
ly facilitated by the treachery of the
second officer in eammandi of the fort.
He is said have have shot the com
manding officer, turned the guns on
the rebels and surrendered to the gov
ernment forces. It is estimated that
1,50 U men were killed and wounded
during the fighting.
LONG STANDING LITIGATION
Over $16,000,000 Estate Settled-Re
calls Startling Yachting Accident.
New York. July 25. —One of the most
•tartling accidents in the history of
yachting around New York has been
recalled by rhe appelate division which
has handed down a decision settling
the long-standing litigation over the
$16,000,000 estate of William T. Gar
ner, the print goods manufacturer, who
with his wife, his brrother-in-law and
a guest, was drowned by the capsizing
cl his yacht, the Mohawk, in the har
bor July 20, 1876. The estate is di
vided among throe daughters. Mar
quise Deßreteuil, Lady Gordon Cum
ming and Countess Leon DeMoltke-
Hultfeldt. The court set aside part ot
the will because of the death ot Mrs.
Garner and divided the estate accord
ing to the remaining provisions of the
document.
Garner, at the time of his death,
was the most extensive manufacturer
cf print goods in the country. His
wife was Miss Marclelitl Thorne, de
fendant of an old southern family.
GUESTS HAVE NARROW ESCAPE.
Commercial Hotel at Nashville Partial
ly Destroyed by Fire.
NashvHle, Tenn., July 25.—Tho Com
mercial hotel wae badly damanged by
fire at an early hour this morning, and
the rear end of the building was com
pletely wrecked. All of the guests
were res-cued and some of them with
difficulty. Ono guest ran down the
stairs clad in an undershirt and on
the way rescued a woman who had
fainted. A mother and her 5-days-old
baby were nearly suffocated when res
cued by the firemen.
The fire is supposed to have started
from a lighted cigar or pipe that was
left in a coat belonging to a waiter.
The loss is estimated at $7,000 and
Is fully covered by insurance. The
building was occupied alternately dur
ing the war by confederate and fed
eral soldiers and was at one time the
headquarters of General J. C. Davis,
of Ind., who killed General “Bull” Nel
son in Louisville.
The building is owned by President
Keith, of the Fourth National bank,
and will be reconstructed.
Cotton Corner Hurts Britain.
London, July 25.—Replying to a
question in the house of commons Gen
eral Balfour, president of the iboard
> of wade, said 700 cotton factories in
Lancashire were working on short time
and that 360,000 operatives were af
fected. This was due to the difficul
ty in securing raw cotton. The quest
tion of cotton growing in the British
empire, in order to create a supply out
side that of the southern states of
America, was receiving careful con
sideration and the board of. trade was
prepared to give any practicable help
to those interested in the matter.
Made Ascent of Mt. Tacoma.
Chicago, July 25.—A dispatch to The
Tribune from Tocoma, Wash., says H.
M. Sarvant, of Tacoma, and Dr. W.
M. Betts, of New Orleans, have just
retuMied from an ascent of Mount Ta
coma. Tliis is the first time in four
years that the big rock has been scaled
as the ascent is growing more difficult
every season.
Woman Prisoner Recaptured.
Detroit, Mich., July 25.—'Mrs. Ellen
McKee, who escaped from Sandwich
jail night before last by climbing over
a 15-foot stone wall, with a look made
from a water pail, was captured today.
' Mrs. McKee was wanted in Ireland for
the alleged embezzlement of $2,500
while postmistress of Tubbermorea, a
suburb of Dublin.
Judge Turner Accepts the Office.
Atlanta, July 24.—Hon. Henry G.
Turner, of Brooks county, has accept
ed the appointment to the office of as
sociate justice of the supreme court
made vacant by the death of Judge
S unuel Lumpkin, and tendered to him
by Governor Terrell. Judge Turner
expressed his hearty appreciation of
the honor the governor had' done him
In tendening him tho place upon the
highest court of the state, and said as
Ms health had greatly improved, he
felt In a position to accept the offer.
HERE’S A BABY
Its Mother is V/ell.
The babr is healthy because during the
period of gestation its mother used tbv
popular ami purely vegetable liniment,
Mother’s Friend
Mother’s Friend is a soothing, softening,
relaxing liniment, a muscle maker,
Sr mid freshener. It puts new powei
into the back and hips of a coming ’ ,lothe D
It is applied externally only, there«
no dosing and swallowing of nasty drugs,
inward treatment at all.
The state of the mother during
may influence the disposition and future
of the child; that is one reason why moth
ers should watch their condition and
avoid pain. Her health, that of the child
and their lives, depend on keeping fr«
from r.ain worry and melancholy. Be oi
good cheer, strong of .heart and peacefu
mind. Mother’s Friend can. and will
make you so. Bearing down pains, morn
ing sickness, sore breast and 1 ‘ ISO “ I “ a
all relieved by this wonderful remedy.
Os druggists at Jl.oo per bottle
Send for cur book “Motherhood free.
TilE BRADFIELD RCUULATOK CO.. ATLANTA. GIL
Rule Nisi to Foreclose
Realty Mortgage.
Spalding superior Court, January Term,
It appearing to the court by petition of
Savings Bank of Griffin that George
Beeks on the 24th day of February, 1897,
executed and delivered to said Savings
Bank of Griffin a mortgage on certain
lands in Spalding county, to-wit:
One-half acre of land, more or less, sit
uated, lying and being in Spalding coun
ty Georg’a, south of the city of Griffin, on
the extension of Eighth street, and bound
ed as follows: on the east by Eighth
streets, on the south by Austin Batts, on
the west by Austin Bitts aud on in©
north by Williim Maxwell, having on
said lot a two-room frame house; for the
purpose of securing tne payment of 24
certain promissory notes all dated Ijebru
ary 24, 1897, and due each for the sum of
#2 25, one note on the 24th day of each
consecutive month, commencing with the
month of March, 1897, and enaing with
the month of February, 1899, made by the
said George Beeks payable to Savings
Bank of Griffin with interest after ma
turity at the rate of eight per cent, per
annum, and ten percent, of principal and
merest as attorney's fees. That thi re is
now due on said notes the sum of $42 75
principal and $16.19 interest to this cate,
which said notes the said defendant re
fuses to pay.
It is therefore ordered that the said
George Beeks pay into this court, on or
bef.ire the first day of the next term, the
principal and interest due on said notes,
an 1 the costs of suit; or in default there
of. the court will proceed as to justice
shall appertain.
And it is further ordered, that this Rule
be published in the Griffin News and
Sun, a newspaper published in said
Spa'.diug county, once •* month for four
months; or served on said defendant,
George Beeks, or his special agent or
attorney, three months previous to the
next term of this court.
E J. REAGAN,
Judge Superior Court.
Robt. T Daniel,
Plaintiff’s Attorney-
A true extract from the minutes:
Wm.M. Thomas, Cler
Libel for Divorce.
E. L. Ballard i State of G< o'gla,
vs > Spalding C junty,
Fannie Ballard. ) Spalding superior Ct.
The defendant, Fannie Balls rd, is here
by required, personally or by attorney, to
be and appear at the nexttSnperior Court,
holden in and for said county on the
first Monday in August next, then and
there to answer tbe plaintiff's complaint,
as in default thereof the Court will pro
ceed as to justice shall appertain. Wit
ness the Honorable E. J. Reagan, judge
of said court, this tbe 7th day of May
1903. W. M. THOMAS, Clerk.
BLAKELY & ELLIS
f * XX < X
iXzrJ y*Xjr
Funeral Directors
All grades cloth-covered. Metallic aid
Wood Coffins and Caskets. Prompt aid
careful attention. Free Hearse. Carriages
ar d all details attended to. Embalming
or easonable terms. Calls answered day
and nlarht
Libel for Divorce.
Charles E B'Stwick ) In the Superior
vs. .-Court of Spalding
Willie G. Bostwick. ) County, Georgia.
The dfeiidrinl, Willie G. Bostwick, is
hereby required, personally or by attor
ney, to be and appear at the Superior
Court, to beholden in and for aid county
on the first. Monday in August risxt, then
and there to answer the plaintiff’s com
plaint, as in default thereof the court will
proceed as to just ice shall aopertam.
Witness the Honorable E. J Reatran,
judge of said court, this the 2d day of
June, 1903. Vv M. M. THOMAS,
Clerk.
Notice to Debtors und Creditors.
GEORDI X —Spalding County.
All persons having claims and demands
against the estate of J. 8. Boynton, de
ceased, will present the wrae to me in
terms of the law. All per ons indebted
to the said deceased are hereby requested
to make immediate payment.
- ■<« <- DANIEL, Admit,
firiffin, Ga„ May 4, ISO? .