Newspaper Page Text
to—
POHHLAS Ed. and Prop
!t is probable that after the experi
ence of the Baltimore fire insurance
companies will put a specially high
rate on fire-proof buildings.
is Mr. Cleveland in the ranks to
at ay, or will he desert again as soon as
the conflict impends? Hit •'convictions’
cat ry him Into some queer positions.
The Albany Herald is obliged to ac
knowledge Il s deficiency as a metro
politan journal, in that it can not
manufacture wrr news.
"Have all the Alabama farmers gone
ootton mad?” asks lhe Albany Herald.
“Very likely; and we also notice a few
on thia side of the line who are similar’
ly afflicted.
The net loss to the insmance compa
nies in the Baltimore fire turns out to
be only $31,095,132, instead of $75,000,.
< T —something of a difference. The
Joss of property is $85,000,000.
'
The Knoxville Sentinel says: “Ow
ing to the Eastern war (t is announced
by Serge W. Alexanderovsky that the
imperial guard bandsky of Russia will
not tootsky at the bl. Louis Fair.”
< 1 —•-- —-—
The Thomasville Times says the
American eagle may be the national
bird, the tir key is the table bird, tbe
buzzard is he scavenger bird, but the
beu is the bird that pays the best.
A Missouri man sued his wife for a
divorce because she kept the hens iu
the house. With eggs at recent prices,
the good woman was hardly to be
blamed if she kept the hens in a safe.
Hon. O. B. elevens has returned
from Washington more confident and
aggressive than ever in his support of
Hearst, whom he discovered unex
pectedly strong in all parts of the
country.
--
The Jacksonville Metropolis notes
that ‘ ‘Atlanta, wit h all of its wicked
ness, has built fifteen churches at a
cost of $500,000 with.n the past three
years. There is hope for salvation
there yet.”
Hon. Joe Hrh ill, of Bibb, who is
at the head of the probing committee,
says that no other instil utions in the
State show up so well as the I’niversi
ty of Georgia and the Slate Normal
School.
When the Atchison Globe man wants
tosayanyt.hingheaays.it. His latest
remark Is that it must be a queer ex
erience. to freeze to death ami then
1,0 to hell afterwards. Such a sudden
change, you know.
The president is so thin skinned he
thinks people can see through him.
He did not go to the Hanna burial in
Cleveland because he feared that his
attendance at the funeral would tie
construed as hypocritical.
■ ■. ■ —I -
The Dawson News says: “While
others come up short, Terrell county
never fails to make her share of a big
cottonerop ” Terrell’s greatest agri
cultural product, however, is the State
commissioner of agriculture.
A Boston newspaper has paid the
Japanese navy the highest compliment
within the limit of its vocabulary. It
has called it “the James J. Jeffries of
the Eastern Seas.” Higher praise is
not conceivable in the Boston mind .
The onlv county officer in Butts
without opposition is J. M. Ham, the
ordinary. Strange no one wants a
elice of Ham, especially when the peo
ple seem so hungry, politically, thinks
the Macon News.
The Dublin Courier-Dispatch says
that “if John K. McLean, the biggest
gold-bug of them all, can say a few
words of praise for Hearst aod assert
his fitness for the presidency, it looks
to us as if the smaller fry could with
decency cease their carping.” But it
. is always the small fry that do the most
carping The carp is a dirty fish, any
how.
—
William J. Bryan says of Marg Han
na that even his political opponents
recognized the strength of his person
ality and his many admirable qualities
and that lie was one of the most force
ful figures in modern politics. But
Mr. Bryan should take consolation
from the fact that, as the Savannah
Press points out, we still have Cleve
land.
The Augusta Chronicle’s political
reporter says that Mr. Hearst has a
splendid nucleus in Augusta, as well as
tn Georgia. The uncertainty sur
rounding most of the other possibilities
has been wanting in his case and this
fact alone has brought many to rally
around his standard. The aggressive
position assumed by his leading paper
on public questions has been another
factor securing a following, and the
rumored favoring of Hearst by Bryan
has done much to give him support
from the ranks of the anti-Cleveland
branch of Democracy.
THE GREATEST LIVIHG REPDBLI
-
A Republican paper says there la
not another Republican alive who
can take Hanna’s place. Where
upon the Houston Post asks:
‘•What’a the matter with Grover
Cleveland?”
We suppose the Post was speak
ing somewhat sarcastically, but tbe
very next paper we picked up was
the Savannah Press, a great ad
mirer of Cleveland and persistent
advocate of hie renorninution.
which tn a heavy editorial says
that its favorite’s chances are im
proved by Hanna’s death. “For,”
says the Press, “Mr. Cleveland has
the very elements which made Han
na solid with ‘the captains of
industry' and with the business
leaders of the country.”
Here we have the frank admis
sion that there is no essential dif
ference in the characters of Cleve
land and Hanna, and such being
the case we see no reason why the
former should not now be electee
to the pedestal of the greatest liv
ing Republican. But it sounds
rather funny to hear this advanced
as a reason for his nomination by
the Democratic party.
THE GEORGIA PEAOH-
Hon. WiPiam H. Fleming, form
erly member of congress from the
Tenth district, has been indulging
in some rhapsodies on the Georgia
peach. He represented the peach
growers before the interstate com
meroe commission in their move
ment to get cheaper rates and better
freight facilities. The railroad men
claim that the Georgia peach w»e
shown as much consideration as the
California peach. Mr. Fleming
then paid a tribute to the Elberta
as the flnest specimen of fruit on
earth. He said of it:
In form and coloring it’s more
attractive than the apple that
tempted Eve in the Garden of Eden.
In fragrance it, is more delightful
than the rose that grew in the vale
of Cashmere.
If you touch it, it is more velvety
than the cheek of innocent maiden
hood.
When yon tas f f» it yon imagine
you are feasting on the nectar of
the ancient gods.
And if by any means its pent-up
soul could find vocal expression it
would make in our ears sweeter
harmonies than Orpheus when, as
we are told, the bears and the
spotted lynxes oumo down from the
mountain and danced to the music
of the flute.
MR. BRYAti’B ATTITUDE.
Mr. Biyan bus been so persist
ently represented as a disturbing
factor in the politics of this country
and the counsels of his party that
even some of his friends have come
to the conclusion that, to say the
least of it, he talks too much. Yet
when he comes close enough to as
certain what he really says, ami not
what is distortedly reported by un
friendly papers, it is hard to find
anything objectionable in his utter
ances or his attitude.
Mr. Bryan claims the ad
dresses he is making all over the
country ar a simply for the purpose
of holding the Democratic party to
its traditional principles and to
stem ttio tide of commercialism and
imperialism that threatens to make
opportunists of us all, despite our
selves.
Since even his enemies, in the
lucid intervals when they have not
been stirred up too much, give him
credit for sincerity and patriotism,
it must be admitted, then, that his
purpose is good and his motives are
patriotic. But it is said that he is
asking absurd and impossible things
and thereby preventing a reorgani
zation of the party: among other
things, that he asks for a distinct
reaffirmation of the Chicago and
Kansas City platforms at St. Louis
and that the campaign shall be
waged on the same linos as in 1896
and 1900. Well, he has just made
two addresses in this State and is
not reported as saying anything of
tbe kind. He has defended those
platforms and shown how so much
more gold has been added to our
currency as to effect the same re
sult as if silver had been remone
tized, as the .Democrats said it
should be. The body of his address
was against trusts and corruption
in politics.
What, then, is Mr. Bryan’s of
fense, that he should be so persist
ently assaulted and misrepresented
by those who call themselyca Dem
ocrats? It is that he advocates the
solidarity of the party, not by tak
ing in the discordant elements that
wrecked and betrayed it tn the last
two campaigns and putting them at ,
tbe head of its affairs now, but by
purging itself of traitors, renegades
and time-servers of all kinds. He
wants the par y to app al to tbe
| conscience of rhe country and show
Ito the vo.»TH of all parties tbas it
stands for something besides hun
ger for the offices and a willingness
to betray a..y trust in order to get
them.
This is the attitude that natural
ly exasperates the elements that b
would oust out, a« well as some
“prac'icalp liticians” who follower
him eagerly when they thought, be
would be successful. It may n L
a pol'cy to win tbe election, bn n
appeals to that vast army of Dem
orats who cm not see the us f
electing a Democratic presides
whose policy shall differ io no ways
from that of a Republican.
Leap Year aril Proposals.
August:'. Herald.
Those who have bachelor maids
for friends and are anxious to see
them married, or who are them
selves bachelor maids, have been en
deavoring to show how it is tl e
proper thing for the women to pro
pose not cnly during Leap Year, but
the natural and expected thing for
them to do the proposing at all
times.
The line of argument is that, it is
woman’s nature to be unable to
change her spontaneous likes end
dislikes in affairs of the heart as m
everything t Ise, while it is a man’s
nature to modify his inipube by
argument, by expediency, by con
sideration of interest, tbe question
of duty and so on. For this reasor,
the woman’s preference ‘s far in we
apt to result in a happy marriege.
According to this reassurance, bless
ed indeed is the man who is chosen
deliberately By the woman whtwe
instincts ha 1 e directed her to him,
and most urn ortunate is the man
who marries the woman he has
long loved but whom he has to beg
and entreat to mirry him.
Be this as it may, there is no gtrin
■saying Hie fact that women love to
be wooed, and it is safe to say that
leap year or no l-ap year, 190 1
continue to see men doing m- t. ,
the propose..*
John D. Rockefeller, Jr., in lectur
ing to his Sunday school class a short
while since, said that Christianity as
he understood it was getting all out of
the world that one could. That defi
nition fit his father so completely that
he qualified it and said he meant get
ting all the good things out of the
world you could. But he didn’t ex
plain what he meant by the good
things. His last definition might be
taken to mean all the money one could
get out of the world.
Journalists are not apt to s’ inpathize
with Russia in her war with Japan
Russia is the countsy where the press
has fewer rights than anywhere on
earth Last year eighty-three news
papers in dominion of the czar were
suspended, twenty-six were forbidden
to take advertisements, which was
equivalent to suspension, and nearly
three Hundred editors were warned to
conform more thoroughly to the com
mands of the censors or go to Siberia.
The pencil pusher has a poor show in
Russia.
- -■ ■ ——i 111 — . •
Colonel Reeves, of the Hardeman
(Tenn.) Free Dress, thus writes of the
death of Colonel Wm. J.Lemp, the St
Louis' 4 brewer: “We announce with
deep persons' so-.ow the death of Col
onel William J. Gemp of St. Louis, fie
was a man of many fine traits, aud we
can say of him as we said recently of
his friend, Colonel Pabst, of Milwaukee,
we shall not soon look upon his I’ke
again. We learn with satisfaction that
the business however, will jutin u«;
the old stand. Requiescat in pace.
The suicide of the cashier of inc
Merchants an 1 Farmers bank of Mil
ledgeville, with $23,000 shortage as
treasurer of the State sanitarium, the
result of cotton speculation, is a warn
ing to amateur speculators that should
not pass unheeded. He who seeks to
get other people’s money without
earning it wi'l not always hesitate to
use other people’s money to get it
with and thereby lies the speedy road
to rum.
The Athens Banner asks: “Who is
Georgia’s choice for the p: esi deucy ?’
and the Columbus Enquirer-Sun re
plies that this cannot be told, but it is
easy to say who will be the choice after
the national Democratic convention
performs its work. The nominee of.
that convention will be Georgia’s
choice.
Hon. Martin V. Calvin, of Richmond
county, will be a candidate for re-elec
tion to the legislature. Mr. Calvin is
the author of the vagrancy law and
other reforms which have won him
much distinction throughout the State,
and is one of the general assembly’s
most valuable members,
“GREEN SICKNESS”
The unhealthy complexion
of green sickness is changed
to the rosy blush of sood
health by Scott’s Emulsion.
Green sickness is one of
the forms of blood disease
found in young women. The
change from girlhood to wo
manhood • often upsets the
nervous system, weakens di
gestion and throws the blood
making organs out of gear.
Scott’s Emulsion puts new
heart into pale girls. It tones
up the nervous and digestive
system, and feeds the blood.
It is a natural tonic.
Remember that 30 per cent,
of these cases go on into con
sumption unless prevented.
Scott’s Emulsion prevents
consumption.
We’ll send you a sample free upon request.
SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl Street, New York.
The Dublin Courier-Dispatch is sel
dom wrong. t says: “Mr. Bryan
and Mr Hearst may have formed a
combination for all we know. It mat
ters little to us whether they have or
not One thing, however, is certain,
u riles- Ji the signs fail, Hearst will be
the next Democratic nominee. And
this year it looks ve -y much as if nomi
nal on means au election ”
Governor Terrell has requested the
authorities of the St. Loins exposition
to fix a day in Sepcemoer as Georgia
bay. He -eceived a letter a few days
ago from P’esideiit Francis asking at
what time it would suit the people of
the State io have a day set apart known
as Georgia Day, and to this letter the
governor replied that he thought some
time in September, would be tbe best.
The First AT American Cable.
It is a fine thing for the United State t
to have its own cable across the Pacific
Ocean, the laying o' which wa
b>v r centiy con: pie ed. Tb's one, how
ve', w ' not the f1..3t to tpau that r.cesu,
a : though it Is a common mistake that i'
j. I’bn first a)'-BiiJsh cable was suc
u’ly laid almost a year pi tor to ones
' t also a com a-on mistake in dietiu .
■ . .'.self r ' a means of c ring stomach
Is. Natme intemiei you uo .it heait.ib
and the s.omach tc digest the - ood so as
.0 give -ou strength and h Jth, If-orr
stomach is not doing this for you, take a
do,eof Hostetter’s Stomaca Bitt'j.s b ■
ore each meat, it will restor the stom
ach to its normal condi ion and cure indi
gestion, dyspepsia, constipation and live,
troubles.
WOMAN BURNED TO DEATH.
She Died Before Aid Came.
Victim’s Clothes Caught on Fire and
Quitman, Ga., Feb. 20. —Mrs. Wil
liam Ingram, wife of a prominent
farmer residing in the vicinity of Mor
ven, was burned to death Friday in
the presence of her son and husband.
Her clothing caught fire from the
lames of a burning stalk pile near
the house. Her little boy was with
the unfortunate woman, but could ren
der no assistance, and her husband
arrived too late to assist her.
The victim was highly respected
in this county.
Mysterious Ctrcc’vitani e.
One was pale and sallow and tbe
other fresh and rc iy. Whence the
difference? She who is blushing
w.th health uses Dr. King’s New
Life Pills to Maintain it. By gently
arousing the lazy organs they com
pel g< ol digestion and head off con
s’ipat ion. Try them Only 250, at
t Jarlisle & Ward and Brooks Drug
Store.
Relief la One Minute.
One Minute Cough Cure gives rc -
lief in one minute, because it kills
the microbe which tickles the mu
cous membrane, causing the cougb,
Jat the same time clears tbe
1 gm,draws out the inflammabon
d heals and soothes tbe affected
-1. One Minute Cough Cure
rcogthens the lungs, wards off
pneumonia and is a harmless and
never failing cure in all curable
< sea of Cougbs, Colds and Croup
One Minute Cough Cure is pleasant
to take, harmless aud good alike for
young and old. Sold by Drewry
Drug Store.
„ _»Ark.3C.fci>.®
Bears the S? T ‘ !o You ' ;3V9 ' '■’* 9 * s
A Cure tor Eczema.
My baby bad Eczema bo tad that
its bead was a solid mass of scabs,
end its hair all came out. I tried
many remedies but none seemed to
do any permanent good until I used
DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve The
Eczema is cured, the scabs are gone
and the little one’s scalp is perfect
’v clean and healthy, and its hair is
growing beautifully again, I can
not give too much praise to DeWitt’s
Witch Hazel Salve.-—FrankFarmer*
Bluff City, Ky. In buying Witch
Hazel Salve look out for counter
feits. DeWitt’s is the oirginal and
the only one containing pure Witch
Hazel. The name E. C. DeWitt &
Co. is on every be: Sold by Drew
ry Drugstore.
STILL SPEAKING
OF STRICKLAND
The Siste Paper- < otitinnne to Print Coin.
pUi»-nr»ry Notlren of H>ui.
Columbus Euqnirer-Sun.
'a-/-,|
i-WsT i
'■Pne *ta te pa
pers continue to
print oomplimen
r.ary notices of
H n. J M Strick,
land, of Griffin,
and his candida
cy for prison
commission er.
Mr. Strickland
ho a .dnds wherever he
goes.
Pike Co. Thues.
H -n J M. Strickland hss just re
turned from a t -nr of Southwesf-
Georgia, where be went in interest
of his candidacy for Prison Commis
sioner. He is well satisfied with his
race.in that section of the State.
He will begin a canvass of the
Northern part of the Ssate in a few
days. His friends are enthusiastic
in his b-half and confidently predict
his overwhelming success. Tne
people of the State are dissatisfied
with Turner’s administration and
are anxious for his defeat. This is,
doubtless, Joe Sid’s last race.
FRUIT GRO.vERS IN SESSION.
Georgia Association Elects Officers at
Fort Valley and Adjourns.
Fort Valley, Ga., Feb. 20. —'Members
of the Georgia Fruit Growers' asso
ciation spent the morning visiting
the large orchards around here as the
guests of the Georgia Fruit Packing
company. At about 12 o’clock most
of the members had returned and a
short morning session was held.
The election of officers tor the en
suing year was then taken up, with
the following resuit:
Dudley M. Hughes, president; P
A. Matnews, first vice president; F.
O. Summerour, second vice presi
dent: Frank W. Hazlehurst, secretary
and treasurer.
it was determined to hold the nex
meeting in April and Marietta was
selected as the place. Quite a num
ber of delegates left on the "noon train
south, and by night very probably all
will have left.
To Rebuild Albany Plant.
Albany, Ga., Feb. 20. —The plant
of the Albany Pine Products compa
ny, which was destroyed by the fire
Wednesday morning will be reb’
with as little delay as possible.
The company owning the plant is
capitalized at $30,000, and the stock
holders will make good the sum lost
in the fire. The total loss is placed
at $20,000, there being only 54,000
insurance. The plant had been in op
eration for a little more than a rear,
and was a money making enterprise.
It is probable that the new plant
will have a much greater capacity
than the one destroyed on Wednes
day.
All Who Vse Atomizers
In treating nasal catarrh will get the
bear results from Ely’s Liquid C .C'-n
Balm. Price including spraying tube
75 cants Sold by druggists oi me lie! by
Ely Brcs,, Warren St, N. Y
New Orleans, Sept, 1, IPOO
Messrs. Ely Bros: IS' Id two bottlei of
vour Liquid Cream Balm to a custotrc ',
Wm Lamberton, 1415 Delachaise, St
New Orleans; he has med the two bo,
es giving him wonderful and most
HM’sfac orv results. Geo. W. McDui .
Pharmacist
Have You ludlgcstJon.
If you cave Indigestion, Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure will cure you. L
bas cured thousands It is curing
people every daj—every hour. You
owe it to yourself to give it a trial
You will continue to suffer until
dotty it Thre is to other
combination of digestants that di
g.:?t snd rebuild *t the same time
Kodol does both, Kodol cures,
strengthens and rebuilds. Sold by
Drewry Drug Store.
scan a<lan Au il Fate.
Mr, H, Haggms, of Melbourne.
Fia., writes, “My doctor told me I
had Consumption and nothing could
be dot ” for me. I was given up to
die Tbe off sir of a free trial bo* tie
of Dr King’s New Discovery for
Consumption, induced me to try it.
Resul is were startling I am now
on the road to recovery and owe all
to Dr. King’s New Discovery, It
surely saved my life.” This great
cure is guaranteed for all throat and
lung diseases by Carlisle & Ward
and Breoks Drug Store, Price 500
&$1 00. Trial Bottle free,
C'A.STO'K.XA..
Bears the it • YOU HaV» MWBJS
Signature /fl- , J -&-
All Eary Riser,
A strong, healthy, active consti
tution depends largely on the condi
tion of the liver. The famous little
pills known as DeWitt’s Little Early
Risers not only cleanse the system
but they strengthen the action of
the liver and rebuild the tissues
supporting that organ. Little Ear
ly Risers are easy to act, they never
gripe and yet they are absolutely
certain to produce results that are
satisfactory in all caaes. Bold by
Drewry Drug Store.
O -A.» M- c_> £l. X A .
fentin _/f The Kind You Haw A!way> Burt
SigMtws
Women as Well as Men 1
Are Made Miserable by j
Kidney Trouble.
Kidney trouble preys upon the mind. dis.
courages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor j
* j I-I
and cheerfulness soon 1
disappear when the kid- J
neys are out of order *!
" or diseased. ■
Kidney trouble has |
become so prevalent <
J that it is not uncommon
' for a child to be born 1
3 afflicted with weak kid- ®
neys. If the child urin- 3
ates too often, if th.
ivv uitcn, ii the
urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child
jeaches an age when it should be able to
control the passage, it is yet afflicted with
bed-wetting, upon it. the cause of*j
the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the first j
step should be towards the treatment of I
these important organs. This unpleasant 11
trouble is due to a diseased condition of the#,
kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as 1
most people suppose. '
Women as wall as men are made mis.
erable with kidney and bladder trouble,
and both need the same great remedy’
The mild and the immediate effect of
Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold
by druggists, in fifty
cent and one dollar g
sizes. You may have a[
sample bottle by mail
free, also pamphlet tell-
ing ail about it, including many of the
thousands of testimonial letters received
from sufferers cured. In writing Dr, Kilmer
& Co., Binghamton, N. Y., be sure and
mention this papU *
Don’t make any mistake bnt rest
member the name. Swamp-Root, Dr'l
Kiltrer’s Swamp Root, and th*’ addresa/
Binghamton, N. Y., oneveiv bottle.
March Sneritf’s Sales
Will be sold before the court house doer
in the city of Griffin on the first Tuesdiy
in March, 1904, between the legal hours
cf sale, the following described property,
to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land situated,
lying and betrur in the city of Griffin,
bpalding County, Georgia, in the north
east parr, of Said city, eontain'Dg ore
quarter of an acre, and bounded as fol
lows: On the north by Siuunous prop
erty, on the vast by Public Road, on tbe
south by a i-treat or alley and on the J
west by lands of Simmons, as describedin el
deed fr m Fimnions dated July 25,1898. “
Levien enanii Told a- the property of W. J.
Sewell to satisfy a mortgage fl fa issued '
from Spaldir g Superior Court in favor of >
W H Newton & Co. vs W J. Sewell.
Ten nt in pocst s-ion legally notified
vlso, at ihe same time and place, will “
be s< d the fol owing described property, |
to-wit: That lot of land in village of j
Sunny fide, Spalding Ccunty, Georgia,/!
containing one acre, more or lees, and I
bounded as fol’ov. -: on be north and I
we?t ov lot of G. W Wood, on the east by 1
Public R< iod on tbe south by Henry |
-flair. J ■/ n and sold as the pr p- 1
erty of J. ■ . Starr to satisfy ■ 1! fa issued 1
from th: J. P Court of the 1069th Dis- |
trier., (4 M, in favor of J H. ’-tarr vs 1
Starr & Bostwick, principals, and J. W, I
S: arr, security Tenant in possession le* I
galiy notified
Also, at, the same time and place, will |
be r old th following described property, |
to wit. Ten (10) acres u land in the .
northwest corner of lot i ui»her two hun- I;
dr-d and twenty-r.i e (22. ) in Spalding .
counoy, Georgia, bounded as follows: On I
th north by* Mary Bostwick, on the east j
by Manley and RhodeI*, 1 *, on tbe wes' by *
ithod's nd on ihe south bj oth> r lands
ot bailie E Bostwick. Levied on and
sold as the property of Chas. B. Bost
wick, agent for Sallie E. Bostwick, to
s-tis'v two ipx fl fas for the years 1902
anil 1903, iss> ed .y T R. Nutt, T. C., in j
favor of-t 11 »id County versus C. B.
Bostwick, agent for Sallie E. Bottwi -k.
Tenant in possession lege Uy notified.
Levy made by T. B. Thurman, L. C., and
turned over to me.
W. T. FREEMAN,
Sheriff S. C Ga. i;
Administrator s Sale. I
GEORGIA, Spaiding County—Ordinary s
Office. vj ’
M J Maddox, rdministrator of the es
tate of Ebent zer Maddox, deceased, makes
application for leave to sell certain lands |
of said deceased lying in said county of J
Spalding, to-wit: All of lot No. 72 in H
the 3rd district of Spalding County, Geor- W
"la. except a strip of thirty acres running *
irom tbe youth line up into the center of
said lot owned by T, 8. Maddox Said
lor. bounded on tbe north by J L Mad
dox, on tbe east by C. A Cooper, on tbe
south by Pike county and on the west by
N. L and M J. -Maddox, containing ons
hundred and seventy acr s, more or less,
being the dewer of the late Mrs. Terreey
Maddox
Also, forty acres of land, being in a
;uare in the northeast corner of b'tNo I
5« bounded on the north by W. W,
Grubbs, on the east by dower of Mrs. 4
Terr' sy Maddox, ou the south by M- J,
Maddox and on the west by Mrs Burk.
Also, certain personal property of the
said K. Maddox > J
Sold for the purpose of distribution. vJi
Let all persons concerned show cause.iro/1
any there b■. before tbe court of o’tl'n- J
a-y, in Griffin. Ga, on thefirrt Monday in
March, 1904, by ten o’clock a. m.vby
p’ieb applica .'.on should not be granted.
This February 1, 1904.
J. A. DREWRY,
Ordinary.
Hasal XrirsX
CATARRH
Ely’s Cream BalmC; , '“ E ’W
cleanses, soothes and heals f i" t
the diseased membrane. 1
It cures catarrh and drives \
away a cold in the head
quickly.
Cream Balm is placed into the nostrils, spreads B
over the membrane and is absorbed. Belief is 1®- 1
mediate and a cure follows. It is not. drying—doc* I
not produce sneezing. Large Size, 60 cents at Drug
gists or by mail; Trial Size, 10 cents.
ELY BROTHERS, 66 Warren Street, New York
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
Notice is hereby given to all debtors of
the estate of Mrs. Hattie Reeves, late of
Spalding county, deceased, to make im
mediate settlement; and all creditors of
said estate will present their claims, prop- ,
erly proven. *
JONES B. REEVES, Adm’r.,
Montgomery, Ala., Jan. 25, 1904. I
A«b Wbb»t«.
gOyMtMMISUHtWQMOa.
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