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fj—Lu—-Ji . ii. ' mTi in'' J ~~~^* l>, ' ~>><ll> ‘ m—■*•
DOUGLAS GLEBBNER, Ed. and Prop
Orflkin, Ueorgla. S*pt. *9l. IIH>3
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SPECIAL NOTICES—IO cents per line
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Liberal rates will be made with parties
wishing to continue their advertisements
longer than one week
WEEKLY—Same rates as for the Dally.
Senator day says lie didn’t say it.
The voice of your Uncle Obe Stevens
is eUli fi»r II *»:»!■
When 3 eddy showed hi* teeth in the
teeth of the gale, the Utter immediate,
y subsided.
Jim Polite has just been hanged in
Ocala, Florida. Now the '1 homa»ville
Times-Enterprise wants them to quit
writing editorials about “It Pays to Be
Polite.”
— —« iii —
How would yon like to live in W ilcox
county and pay $42.36 taxes on the
thousand, which would be increased to
$67.36 if you lived in Rochelle, same
county?
The Savannah Press reminds us that
the Georgia orowd now for Gorman
were for Hill hi 1892, but thinks the
people will have no more of the one po
litical boss than the oilier.
The Waycross Utraid rays; “Const!-
utioral or not the Calvin law is doing
mighty good work in Georgia. If it is
unconstitutional it should bo natural
ized- -or words to that, effect-—-at once,
Waycr< ss Herald: “It is fairly un
derstood that J. 11. r.: till, of Savannah,
will be the inxt governor of Georgia,
unless forsooth a faster man comes to
the front, Col E-till will lie a candi
date."
If the Ohristi.-'iis who «re being killed
in Macedonia are i.o better than the
Christians of the rt i-toi Europe w ho are
looking on, then neither Christianity
nor humanity is suffering any greai
loss.
President Roosevelt says he is hands
off in the New York mayoralty election.
Mr. Jerome says the same thing. “Who
i*going to look after Mr. Low?” asks
the Savannah Press. It looks as if
Tammany would be able to look after
Mr. Low this time.
The breakfast served Booker Wash
ington aud his party has not cooled
down yet. Hamlet N. 0 , citizens have
cordially invited the proprietors of the
restaurant to leave town with bag and
baggage. What, will Rcosavelt do
about this r> ff- ction upon his bosom
friend Hooker?
Those ex >lt> d Democrats, Chari sS.
Fairchild ami R heehr H. Peckham,
have arrived ut the conclusion that irue
party spirit v> ill bo revived by the re
election of Mayor Low. Probably it is
with the same lofty idea that Bolivar
Buckner is supporting his Ri publican
nephew (or governor of Kentucky.
-4*a*»-
It 1“ said “on high authority” th.it
the sidmiuistra ion is determined to ac
quire the I’.imima Canal loute, or aban
don altogether the undertaking for gov
ernment construction ot an isthmian
waterway. This attitude is ba ed, re
port Buys, on the inadvisability of con
structing the Nicaragua Canal, and then
having some European power step in,
m <,Hire the Panama route, and con
riiuct a rival interoeeanic ship canal.
According to the facts and figures
publish? 1 in the Herald from the pen
of John’ H. Gould, no section of coun
try in the worn! has shown such re
markable giowthasthe Smith has in
the past 40 years. Advertise the South,
its ’■ sources and its climate, and there
wi.l be no trouble to get desirable emi
grants and capital to develop the coun
try.
Perry S. Heath, who co-tinues to
hold the position of secretary of the
Republican National Committee, save
it is by no means' certain that Senator
Hanna will be chairman of the com
mittee in the forthcoming campaign.
This leads the Savannah Nows to re
mark that if the Republicans are to re
place Hanna it would seem to be a good
idea for them to elevate Heath to the
place and put in his hands a banner ex
tolling the beauties of the statute of
1 mitations.
AN UTTERLY HOPELESS CASE
The following paragraph appear
ed in yesterday's Macon Telegraph :
“Senator (Hay, chairman of the
Democratic State o mmittim, being
ssked what «fleet tbo opposition of
Bryan to Gorman and to every other
Democrat of any consequence, would
have, is thus quoted In reply :
•N r.o whatever. We are tired of
acting Bryan’s name in the news
papers ' The great Nebraskan
must at last begin to perceive that
he no longer carries Georgia In the
hollow of his hand.”
The editor of the Telegraph was
obliged to know, when he wrote this
petty fling, that Senator Clay had
emphatically denied the interview
from which the quotation is taken ;
neither doos it sound a bit like him,
nor Is it in consonance with his dis
position and known sentiments
The pity of Is all is, not that the
Telegraph should take any and
every •occasion to throw off ou
Bryan—everybody in Georgia cm
account for that personal rancor,
remarkable though ft is—but that a
paper of its standing and ability
should degrade its editorial page by
the promulgation and endorsement
of a known and palpable falsehood.
All things have their use, how
ever, and the Telegraph stands as a
perpetual warning to the press of
Georgia not to let their reputation
and usefulness be ruined by petty
malice and Mm Belews partisanship.
KEEP OUT THE ROLL WEEVIL
it has been discovered that the
cotton boll weevil will not appear
in a cotton field where the castor
bean is growing. A farmer living
near Merrilltown, Texas, tried the
experiment on a forty-acre field of
cotton, and not a bull weevil or any
other insect has appeared on the
plants. He has a big yield of cot
ton, while Lis neighbors have had
their crops destroyed by tho pest.
He may put in a claim for the re
ward of $50,000, which is offered by
the State for a successful remedy
for eradicating tho weevil.
■—-—— o - — ■ —
The Resourceful Bear
Albany Herald.
The cotton bears are a plausible
t-e?.. They can make mountains out
of mole hills and mole hills out of
mountains. In short, they cun
make things appear that are not
ut d cause not to appear things that
are.
During Saturday and Sunday one
of the most destructive hurricanes
t list (ver swept up from the Car rib
beau sea struck lower and central
Fl riils and did tremendous damage
to crops of every dlscription.
Furthermore, it produced conditions
t. roug lout Georgia, Alabama, a
portion of South Carolina and north
ern Florida which caused torrential
rains and accompanying high winds.
Open cotton in the fijlds was beaten
into the ground and ruined and the
crop prospect was materially in
jur«-<
“J e’s where we score, ” said
the i iton bulls. They sat still and
pinn. d their faith to the reports of
the storm’s devasting work. But
the bears turned out and celebrated.
They fl oded the country with re
ports ot a “Broken Drought in the
Scu’h“n6tern States! Magnifiient
Rdos Restore Prospects ot Unpre
cedented Cotton Yield! Farmers
Happy I”
And the market, instead of ad
vancing, as would Pave wi med in
evitable under the cucumstancee,
actually went off nearly twenty
points Verily, the bear is as re
sourceful as a circus agent.
Os course, Teddy was in the heart of
the storm. Probably he was tbo cause
of most of the wind.
It is a fact not generally known that
the State of Georgia is a stockholder in
vhe Georgia railioad. The State owns
186 shares, on which it draws annually
$2,046 in dividends. Tnn State also
own 440 shares of the Southern and At
lantic Telegraph Company, guaranteed
bj tho Western Union. This property
has belonged to the State so long that
the comptroller ioes not know how it
came to be cwned.
A Missouri editor recently paralyzed
the community in which he lives with
the tollowing funeral notice of a prom
inent citiz' n : “The pal lb arers lower
ed the body into the grave, and as it
was consigned to flames tl ere were few
if any regrets, for the old wreck had
been an eyesore if the town for many
years. Os course, there were individual
losses, but this was fully covered by
good insurance.”
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve.
Has world- wide fume for mar
velous cures. It surpasses aiy
other salve, lotion, ointment or
balm for Cuts, Corns, Burn, Boils,
Sores, Felons, Ulcers, Tetter, Salt
Rheum, Fever Sores, Chapped
Hands, Skin Eruptions; infallible
lor Piles. Cura guaranteed. Only
250 at Uarlhk & Ward and Brooks
Ding Store
A QUESTION THAT MUST BE ANSWERED.
The Albany Herald states in an article reproduced in another column
that it would be in favor of race separation if it could b shown how that
is practicable, thereby rendering the black belt secure for the whites and
lessening criminality in the South some seventy-five per cent. What is
true of the black belt is true in almost as appreciable degree of all parts
of the South and is becoming true of the North. The “black peril,” as
cur Northern friends have christened it, .menaces white honor wherever
the negro is found. The effort to cry it down is futile and is as poor
policy as denying the existence of a cancer in the hope that it may disap
pear ; Christian science will not work in this case, even ivuen practiced
by such an eminent Christian us Goveruvr Northen, who says public
sentiment in Georgia is opposed to the prompt punishment us the black
brutes, simply because the judges, solicitors and sheriffs, sworn to up
hold the law, publicly profess to be opposed to lynching, whatever their
private sentiments may be.
Senator Tillman more properly re Resented the true American senti
ment when he said in Augusta the other night that when he was govern
or he would have headed a mob, if necessary, to hang a negro who had
raped a white woman. Rape ano-gope are naturally associated together
in the mihdi of every self-respecting citizen when thecrime is committed
in his own circle, no matter how he may talk about it at other times and
elsewhere.
We are us much opposed to profitless discussion as the Herald, and
have said little about the matter, much as we have been tempted to reply
to the many inconsistent utterances of those who claim that there is no
race problem and yet raise the moat hue and cry about it. The people
of this section have simply laughed quietly at such denials and gone
about their business, working the negro when he would work, treating
him kindly when he would allow it and just as certain to lynch him
when it should be necessary.
Race separation is acknowledged as the ideal solution of existing trou
bles by all candid thinkers. That it is considered possible as well as ideal
is shown by the fact that it is not only advocated by John Temple Graves
but Rest proposed by such Democratic statesmen Q mnjt <Hi try.sr
aud Congressman Griggs—leaders of the ol I a?.d ug D*no r racy
alike. It is idle lo say that we can not gut along labor,
since we are getting along without it more and mor» ®vwy day, «fp
planting it with white labor and improved machinery. Tua ftoath L s
grown and ; r ispered ir. spite of the negro and not because of *him ; y
keeping out a desirable class of white f arm labor, he haa since hts ’. «».-
dom boen more of a detriment to the agricultural interests thana benefit.
We do not pretend to say how this separation is to ba effected, but
once it is determined upon the means aul method will be found.
Transportation to the Philippines seems to be a plausible solution. If he
will not go willingly, let him go forcibly ; when the Anglo-Saxon makes
up his mind that a thing must be done, he does not generally wait for
the consent of the other party. When his lands were wanted, the Indian,
who had more rights here than the negro, had to go.
But the first step, the agitation of which will begin vigorously at
the next session of congress, is to deprive the negro of any participation,
nominal or otherwise, in the administration of a white man’s govern
ment. Let the ambitious leaders of the race learn that they can at
tain to no positions of honor and emolument and that there is no oppor
tunity of social recognition in a thousand years—that they must ever
remain a subject and subordinate race in this country, and they will
soon embrace the project of emigration and carry tne iqusses with them.
It will cost a mint of money, but it wil' bo an outlet for an overflow
ing treasury and check less worthy pr jects ; an dit will be worth all it
costs. As for the negro's holdings, tho gov ment cm condemn and
buy them and he’d them until they can bo sol 1 lor a prop or price. It is
a large undertaking and not to be accomplished in a day, a month or a
year ; but it is not impossible and not abhorrent to tho scheme of our
government nor to humanity.
We are told by such gool people as Ex Governor Northen Tjthat we
must not talk about these things, or acknowledge that we even thin x
them, lest we frighten off Northern capi* al and Northern immigration.
Now, the editor of tho Nowa and Sun from pure love of the work was a
pioneer in the effort to attract the North’s attention to the opportunity s
of this section for investment and settlement, long before ;Mr. Northen
found a chance to make a profitable business oat of it; but we have never
sacrificed a conviction nor smothered an utterance for such a purpose,
and we regard the spotless purity of one good woman as worth mme
than all the untold wealth of the North. It is for her sake, more than
for the material prosperity which its accomplishment will mean for the
South, that the race problem must and will be solved.
Atlanta's Wonderful Mosquitoes-
Augusta Herald.
Atlanta’s latest sensation is the mos
quito. Up to a revent period, this pest
has been Hying around in moderate
number, anil the people ot Gate City
congratulated thernselvs accordingly.
But, the other night, mosquitoes by
the million invaded the town and made
night profane and hideous. Eve.) nets
were no protection and wire screens
were not altogether proof against them.
So, the local reporters seized upon this
theme, dropped into vaudeville rhyme
and made the best of the bad bargain.
The fierce intrusion was regarded, iu its
volume, as a tribute to the superiority of
Atlanta. If the visitation iiad to come
it did not arrive microscopically, as
might happen in a small town, butmyr
iadwinged as becano’ a great metropolis-
No longer did Tybce and the Isle of
Palms have precedence in this respect.
They were outdone by Atlanta.
Then the fact was exploited that kero
sene iu Atlanta did not work as it might
in a village or common ctiy, but was
reversed in Atlanta. Two hundred gal
lons of kerosene had been applied to
the gutters and other breeding spots of
the pest, but the more the presumed!}’
devastating fluid was used the more
mosquitoes flourished. This could not
happen anywhere but in Atlanta, 'fho
law of chemistry was reversed. Ben
Butler said tnat the Democratic party
was like eats; the more of them you
killed the more of them existed. Kero
sene might devastateour insects in Au
gusta, but it increased the supply in At
lanta. The Atlanta spirit was too po
tent for kerosene. So. the people there
are all talking about the mosquito wave
and hrtw even natural laws are not the
same in Atlanta as elsewhere. Great is
Atlanta—in her own estimation. She
is like radium, the new substance, which
defies all known rules scentiiieally and
is a law unto itself.
Only Waiting for the Specifications-
Albany Herald.
Editor Douglas Gkssner, of the Grif
fin News, laceliously remarks that "the
Albany Herald, having declared against
race separation, is probably preparing
to adopt its congressman’s proposed
alternative of extermination.”
The Herald has not “declared against
race separation.” The voluminous dis
cussion of this method of settlimr the
South’s foremost problem has yielded a
magnificent harvest of theory, but not
even a husk in the shape of practical re
sult, and wo have as yet seen nothing of
sufficient tangibility to call fora “decla
ration” either pro or con.
Separation as an abstract proposition
is ideal. It leaves nothing to be desired
It removes every possibility of race fric
tion and guarantees to womanhood
that security which for nearly forty
years has been unknown in any section
of the black belt. It revolutionizes po
litical conditions and enables the South
ern states to close two thirds of their
pwesent ci iminal courts and abolish most
Os their chaingangs. All these glorious
things and a hundred more does race
seperation accomplish—in theory.
We have followed with keen interest
the arguments which able statesmen
and publicists have advanced in favor
of separation as a remedy—or the
remedy—for all the ills that are charge
able to the race problem.
But we have been able to discern
nothing on the horizon save smoke.
Nothing tangible has presented itself.
The scheme is splendid ; but continued
wr.it for the committee on ways and
means to report is becoming a trifle
irksome. What we want to see is a plan
---not an impractical chimera after the
manner of “Caesar’s Column,” “Look
ing Backward”er “Twenty Thousand
Leagues Under the Sea” but a plan
based upon something more substantial
than the mere unsupported statement
that “separation Is practicable.”
A little less “why” and a litde more
"how’’ is in order.
For Over Sixty Years.
An Old and Well-Tried Remedy.-
Mrs. Winslow s Soothing Syrup uas been
used for over sixty years by millions of
mothers for their children while teething
with perfect success, it soothes the child
softens the gums, allays all pain, cureri
wind ooiio, and Is the best remedy fol
diarrhoea. Is pleasant to the taste. Sold
by druggists In every part of the world.
Twenty-live cents a bottle. It* Value is
tncalcr.l. ?le Bestirs and i»sk for Mrs.
A inlaw a Soothing b«-iup. and taka uc
other kina.
In Memory of Dr. Charlie Wil
fred Miles.
Charlie Miles Is deadl On. Saturday,
August 15th, 1903, just as the glories of
a beautiful summer morning were
peeping above the horizon, when ’all
was hushed in quiet and sleep, how
fitting seemed the hour, the sad tidings
passed o’er the city, in accents hush id ,
by sorrow, that the silver chord was ■
loosed and the gentle spirit climbed up
into the haven of rest.
A pall of gloom seemed to fall over
every home where he was known and
loved; and men paused in their places
of business to seetuiußiy stand in awe
at this mysteiious providence >f Him
who dooth all things well and cannot
err.
It seemed impossible to realize that
the grim l<e r had struck down otw
whom everyone would have believed to
be the last to be called from our midst
in point of physical strength and great
er usefulness to bis fellow man. In all
the buoyancy and strength of youth,
budding into the successful fruition of
the hopes and ambitions of a consecrat
ed, educated, useful young manhood,
we can only wouder at this mysterious
visitation of Divine will, until the mists
have rolled away and we shall know in
that bright and glorious mot ning cf the
bright and better life in the eternal city
of God.
Dr. Charlie W, Miles, or Charlie, as
hig friends familiarly called him, was
born near Griffin, Ga., July 25th. 1879
Early in life, while young and tender,
he consecrated himsi-lf to bls L ird and
Master and-never was, he known to
falter in his Christian faith or be lax in
his duties as a Christian. He united
himself with Friendship Baptist church
in 1894.
Wh»n it came to choosing his life
work he showed his true zeal and noble
character bj studying meaicine, that he
might soothe the soffarings of others.
Endowed with a brilliant intellect, he
has for years spent every effort and en
ergy in the direction of endowing his
mind with the knowledge so necessary
for his work. After a successful course
at the well known Georgia Eclectic
College of Medioine and Surgery, of
Atlanta, he grauui ted on April 1, 1901.
He has since practiced in Griffin,
Bolingbroke aud other places, where he
met with unbounde 1 success aud was
universally popular.
In every walk of life, as son, as
brother, as friend, and above all, as
God's servant, he proved himself true.
What greater encomium could be said
of him?
Yes, the fond parents and many ad
miring friends of this young man were
looking toward the future with expect
ant eyes and buoyant hopes, but e little
cloud rose up in the distance, and the
breakers roared “a sunken ship.” All
was over. The hands that bad lifted
the burden from many a heart, that
had soothed the achimz brows of so
many, were son ver stiffened in death ;
the heart that had been big cm : uh to
hold all mankind in its gentle embiace,
was forever stilled ; tne kind aud sym
pathetic voice was forever hushed, and
the eyes, whose light w “ love, were
forever curtained by the darkness.
Now, we weep. Our hearts are sad,
and our h als bowed with those who
knew him best and loved him most.
We would comfort his family, but in
hours like these even the tongue of love
is dumb and the arms of charity too
short to help.
To the father, mother, si t-rs mid
brother, and other loved ones, whose
hearts are now torn with grief and sor
row, we can only bid you tura to Him
who wept at the grave of Lazarus, and
who suffered as you now stiffer. His
heart is still the same warm, tender
heart it was then. He it is who prom
ised to restore again the loved one to
thy sight, and raise up that dear bony
now hidden from thee. A Friend.
Savannah, Ga.,Sept. 14, 1903.
Deafness Cannot be Cured
By local applications, as they canno 1 -.
reach the diseased portion of t'e ear
There is only one way to cure deafness
and that is ny constitutional reme-ies.
Deafness is caused by an lull med < o idit
ion o? the mucous lining of the Eu- rach
ian Tube. When this tube is inflain-d
you have a rumbling sound or imperfect
hearing, and when it is entirely closed,
Deafness Is the result, and unless tho in
flammation can be taken out and this
tube restored to its normal condition,
hearing will be destroyed forever; nino
cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh,
which is nothing but an inflamed condit
ion of the mucous services.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh)
that cannot be cured by Hall’s C itarrh
Cure. Send so- c rcuiars, free.
F. j. CHKNEY& CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Haff's Family Pills are the best.
Neither Cowardly Nor Cold-Blooded-
Sparta Ithmaelite.
When the Atlanta Constitution and
certain preachers declare that the ma
jority of the people of Georgia are op
posed to lynching rapists, they show
their ignorance of the facts. Truth is
they are more nearly unanimous iu
favor of that method of dealing
with those fiends than on any other
question. And it is to their credit.
They are neither crowardly nor cold
blooded.
Waycross Herald,
The Savannah News suggests that
the negro question be allowd to rest for
a while. The agitation now going on
has been brought about by no less a
person than Mr. Roosevelt and it will
not be permitted to rest again until set
tled iu some manner.
A Boy’s Wild Ktde For Life.
With f»m'ly around expecting
him to die, and a son tiding for life,
18 miles, to get Dr. King’s New Dis
covery for Consumption,Cough and
Colds, W. H. Brown, of Leesville,
Ind., endured death’s agonies from
asthma ; but this wonderful medi
cine gave instant relief and sood
cured him. He writes: “I now
sleep soundly every night.” Like
marvelous cures of consumption,
Pneumonia, Bronchiti®, C.mghs,
Colds aud Grip prove its marc T
merit for ali Throat- and Lung tr; ü
bles. Guarantee'! bottles sin ;>rd
$1 00. Trial bottles free at Carlisle
& Ward and Brooks Drug Store.
ft ' *■
// / I ARE"
H / \ YOU A
(n 1 j i j
/ V t
you Jr, |
MOTHE'S
makes childbirth easy br preparing
system for parturition an I thus shortening
labor. The painful ordeal is robbed of
terroiß, ami the danger lessened to botßKffH
mother and child; the time of confinements• W
is shortened, the mother rested, ami child S
fully developed, strong and healthy. _ _ W
Morning sickness, or nausea arising
from pregnancy, is prevented by its use. j
As pregnancy advances, the breasts en
large become swollen and hard. Long ■
before the child is bom, they are prepar- .9
ing for the secretion of milk. It is import- ■
ant that they receive early attention. f]
Mother’s Friend softens the skin and 2- j
facilitates the secretion of Life Fluif. ■
Undeveloped breasts, hard-caked shortly «
after delivery, are the result of non- |
treatment, and likely to culminate m I
Mammary Abscess, from which so many 4
suffer excruciating pain and arejeft wiJa
IK£ BRA»n6L» HEBIAATQB' ATtA«M.&fc
administrator’s Sale.
By virtue of an order granted by the I
Court of Ordinary, of Spalding county,
Georgia, at the September term. 1903, or/
said court, will be sold before the court )j
house door in the city of Griffin. Spaldlns* w
county, Georgia, on the first Tuesday 1> ■
October, 19..3. between the legal hiur* o| 1
sale, the following described property be-i
longing to the estate of John E. Duke,/ ■
deceased, to wit: Three hundred and ■
(310) acres of laud in Akins district,? «
Spalding county, Georgia, bounded. 1
on the north by Miss Annie Wise and 1
J. B. Bell, on the east by Wellmaker and I
Akin, on the south by W. W. Duke and
Mrs. Joe Duke and on the west by J. Oeq
Ogletree. S, W. Maddox and T. J. Biles,
said land located in Akins district, .
Snaldlng county, Georgia, and known as '
th a home place of said John E Di ke,
deceased, sold to pay debts of deceased
aud for distribution. Terms of saV cash.
M. A. DUKE,
Administrator of estate of Jobu E- Duke,
d' ceased.
October Sheriff’s Sale,
Will be cold before the court he se door A
la tl ■ citv of Grifliu tin the first 'I uesday fl
in October, 1903, between the legal houi fl
of sale, the following described, property
to-wit: j
On-half acre of land, more or less, sit- ' (
nated, lying aud being In t-palding coun-’ ,
ty, Georgia, south of the city cf Griffin, j
on the extension of Eighth street, and
bounded as follows: On the east by
Eighth street, on the south by Austin
Bites, on the west by Austin Bates and
on the north by William Maxwell; hav- ■
ing on said lot two-room frame bouse. (
Levied on and sold as the property of' J
George sto satisfy a mortgage fl a |
issued from Spalding superior t on.-, in f Z 1
favor of the savings Bana of G: ifla vs A
George B.eks. Tenant In p >=sotsi >n le
gaily notified. W. T. FREEMaN.
Sheriff S. C.
Mortgage Foreclosure. j
W. H- Newton & Co. ) Spalding Superior
vs. > Court, August . i
W. J. Sewell. ) Term, 1903.
It appearing to the court by petition i
of W. H. Newton &Co. tint W. J. Sewell ,
on the 2nd day es august, 1898, executed fl
and deliverers to said \V. H. Newton &? fl
Co. a mortgage on certain land .In Spald- fl
Ing county, to-wit: Ail that tract or par- fl
cel of land, situated and lying andl eingrifl
in cl’y of Griffin, Spalding county, Leor -.IjM
g'a, iu the northeast part of said city andflfl
containing one qua ttr ('ff) ot an acre and I
bounded as follows: On the north by "
lands of f-lnimons, on the east by public
read, on the south by street or alley and
on the west by lands of Simmons as per
deed from Simmons dared July 25, 1898.
For the purpose o. securing the payment
of a certain promissory note for $350 00, 1
w/h acreult 0’515.00. made by the eaid
W. J. Sew !’ r ''»yable to W. B. Newton
& Co. with i te -est after date at the rate
o 8 per cent, per annum, aud 10 per cent,J .J
of principal and interest as attorney’s
fees, which eaid note the said defendant fl
re’uses to pay:
It Is therefore ordered that Hie ‘■aidW.flM
J. Sewell pay Into this court, on or be'or> jM
the first day ot th? next term, thep-indP
pal and inter, st due on said note and the fl
cot ts of suit; or iu default thereof, th® fl
court will proceed as to justice shall ap? fl
perialn. fl
And it is fur’her ordered that this rule ■
be published in the Griffin News and Sun, fl
a newspaper published in said Spalding fl
county, once a month for four months;
or sv.rv don said defendant, W, J. Sew
el), or his special agent or attorney, three JH
months previous to the next terin of this fl
court. E. J. REAGAN, 1
.Tudg: S. C. F, C. |
A true extract from the minutes:
Wm. M, J homas, Clerk 2
Libel for Divorce. J
Mrs Laura Joseph i State of Georgia, isl
'B. > Spalding County, X
C.H. Joseph. ) Spalding -nperior Ct. fl
The defendant is hereby nquired per- fl
tonally or by attorney to be Mid app.-ar at ■
ths nex r term o* said court to be held on ■
the third Monday in January, 1(04, then 1
and thereto answer the complaint of Mrs. fl
Laura Joseph for divorce. Witness fl
the Honorable E. J. Reagar, judge
of said court, this the 27th day of Au- ■
gust, 1903. W. M. THOMAS, Clerk. »fl
Notice to Debtors and Creditors. 1
All persons having demands against the 1
estate of John E. Duke, late of Spaldlrtg J
county, deceased, are hereby notified to ■ fl
render in their demands to the undersign- 1
ed, according to law, and all persons In- fl
debted to said estate are request ed to make fl
Immediate payment. M. A. DUKE, fl
Administrator John E. Duke. ’
This August. 3, 1003. j
&park”er’s ""'“l
HA,R balsam fl
$i teani ' es au h bomtifica the hair. SBq
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jjaS -Fulls to liestore Gray
» *.< *■ Nftlsl to its Youthful Color. 'Sy
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