Newspaper Page Text
Enormous Business Being Written By The
.
Of Georgia.
Home Office ; . ¢ ’ Athens, Georgia. '
Hon. J. L. Webb, President. Jno. A. Darwin, General Manager.
e—— e e B B A A A
A T 3 s 1 NNY T ' 1
OFFICIERS OF MORGAN COUTNY DIVISION.
STEVE A. TURNELL, President, Madison, Ga, SAMUEL B. COHEN, Sec’y and Treas., Madison, Ga.
DIRECTORS — Dr. J. F. Webb, Monticello. W. A. Reid, Monticello. Jno. H. Hunter, Madison. Theo. W. Welch, Rutledge. Dr.R. W. Trotter, Madison. Street A. Perkins, Madison.
Albert H, Winter, Madison. Wm. 4. Bearden, Madison, Dr. H. T. Harris, Madison, Dr. L. C. Robbins, Rudden.
W,.——___—_“WW
Amount of busiress written first 6 Months of 1903 §3,6 7,421. Amount of business written during November $674,000. Death claims always paid promptly.
Ample time given to every member for paying premiums. Average cost has been less than $6.75 per SIOOO. per year.
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Below will be found a list of a few of the people, in around your home who are taking out Policies in this popular Company:
William N. Jones,
G. W. Stinson, Sr.,
R. A. Jones,
Chas. E. Welling'on,
W. P. H. Epps,
5L Mc.\l&'hucl'
Zellie McMichael,
Alfred A. Penn,
Potomac R. Deal,
Sarah F. Puerifoy,
Richard L. Beal,
Floyd H. Malone,
William O. Nibbet,
Arthur L. Faulkner,
Robert A, Polk,
Lizzie Malone,
William W, Malone,
R. L. Webb, Division Agent, Monticelio, Ga.
Chas. L. Wellington, Assistant Agent, Moniicelio, Ga. John Henry Benton, Assistant Agent, Monticello, Ga.
The Boy Bandit's Swecthcart.%
The young girl who was engag
ed to be married to one of the boy
outlaws in Chicago is to enter a
dime muscum and sell his pictures
and her own to defray the expense
of his trial, and then if heis con
demned to death, as he of course
will be, she is to marry him on the
scaffold,
Many will regard this as a praof
of woman's “lovely loyalty to man”
in times of trial, but it is merely a
phase of hysteria.
It bélongs to the same realm as
the devotion of the morbid minded
to the condemned criminals—
those sentimental women who fre
quent prisons and shower tears
and bouquets on murderers,
1t is quite possible that this dime
museum heroine, had she married
her lover, would have deserted
him for another before two years
passed or testified in the courts to
his abuse and cruelty. There is
nothing beautiful in this girl's de
votion. |
Her lover is a self-confessed
murderer of the most appalling{
type. He had not even the exc\uel
of povety of anger for his deeds.
He was able to obtain cmpluy-‘
ment, but he preferred to be a
loafer and to let other men work‘
and kill them and take their earn- |
ings.
The really loving and womxmlyl
woman would be prostrated by thel
enormity of such a lover's crimes,
and while she might try to earn
money for his defense, bclic\'ingl
that he would reform if given a
chance, she would shrink from the |
thought of marriage and thank |
God she was spared the awful fate
of bringing the children of such a
man into the world
There is nothing admirable in
sustaining and upholaing such a
criminal. It is theatrical and
spectacular, but not grand or
noble,
It is one thing to say to a man,
“No matter what vou do 1 shall
always love you und try to help
you,” But it is another to say,
“No matter what you do I shall
stand by you and fight for you.”
To some men such an assertion is
an incentive to wrongdoiny. |
The deeply loving nature is
strongly stirred by the danger ons
sufering of its object. Itlongsto
protect and comfort and sustain
the loved one through the ordeal.
But when that ordeal has been
Oscar C. Price,
* Ida A. Hecht,
Allen M. Malone,
Alice I. Cardell,
Mattie Lou Malone,
Durrell Smith,
William F. Malone, Jr.,
Hattie O, Malone,
Lovic P. Hyatt,
Lucius S. Kelly,
Ella C. Stone,
Jno. J. Cardell,
Maud T. Lane,
Whitman N. Hooper, Jr.
Willlam H. Wilburn,
Manson Sigman.
3. H. L. Wison,
brought on by dcliberate brutal
crime, crime which has caused
other homes to be devastated and
other women to suffer loss of dear
ones, there is no grandeur in the
attitude of the womun who makes
a hero out of the assassin wnd
rushes to the scaffold in order to
\carry his ignominious name thro'
life.
l The young man's friends may
‘call her ‘‘game,” but they feel no
l incentive to lead noble and worthy
lives because of her act. They
must rather feel stimulated to earn
such a proof of feminine devoticn
themselves,
1 have no doubt that in the low-.
1y walks of life to which these peo
ple belong there are good hard
toiling fellows who are neglected
and misused by their sweethearts
and wives, It must be discourag
ing to such men to see the hyster
ical devotion bestowed upon a
cut-throat and robber. Woman's
love should keep men up—not en
courage them to go down.—Ella
Wheeler Wilcox, Copyright, 1903,
by W. R, Hearst.
Lave the Living.
Do not keep the alabaster boxes
of your love and tenderness sealed
jup until your friends are dead.
Fill their lives with sweetness,
Speak approving words while their
ears can hedr them, and whie
;thcir hearts can be thnlled and
made happier. The kind things
’_vuu mean to say when they are
| gone, say before they go. The
‘tlnwcrs you wmean to send for their
| coffing,send to brighten and sweei
‘en their homes before they lcave
|them, If my friends have alabas
ter boxes lad away; full of fra
grant perfumes of sympathy and
atfection which they intend to
[break over my body, 1 would
much rather they would bring
them out in my weary and troubled
| hours, and open them, that I may
| be refreshed and cheered while 1
[need them, 1 would rather have
& plain cofin without a flower, a
funeral without an culogy, than a
[life without sweetness ot love and
[sympathy. -Let us learn to an
'noint our friends beforehand for
| their burial. Post mortem kind
ineu does not cheer the burdened
spirit. Flowers on the coflin cast
no fragrance backward over the
weary way.—>Select.
Emma E. Phillps,
Oscar Phillips, ,
Marly L. Minter, .-
Emma J. Minter,
Annic L. Minter,
RoLt. Lec Holsenbegx,
Daniel A. Holsenbeck,
William J. McMichael,
William |. Stone, -
Willian M. Stone,
Mary E. McMichael,
William 11. Middlebrooks, Jr.,
Wiiliam If. Ma'one,
John S. Williams,
Susan . Lane,
Ora Bay Wilson,
Ludie Keliy,
HOLIDAY RATES.
Via Central of Georgia Railway.
During the Holidays, excursion
tickets will be sold between all
Ticket stations on the Central of
Georgia Railway, at rate of a fare
and a third plus twenty-five cents
for the round trip.
~ Excursion tickets will also be
on sale from all stations on the
Centarl of Georgia R.R. to points
on connecting lines south of the
‘Ohio and Potomac, and east of the
Mississippi rivers, as follows:
Tickets will be sold to the gen
eral public Dec,, 23, 24, 25, 30
and 31, 1903, and Jan., Ist, 1904,
limited'to Jan. 4th, 1904 for re
turn passage: To Teachers and
Students of schools and colleges,
upon presentation and surrender
of certificates, Dec., 16 to 22. 1903
inclusive; final limt Jan., 8, 1904.
For prompt and reiiable service
see that your ticket reads wvia
Central of Georgia Railway.
Any agent of the Company will
cheerfully furnish additional in
formation on request.
Yeung Men and Women Attention
The North Georgia Agricuitu
ral College, established by the
state, ofters the greatest and most
payMg invesment. Tuition free,
board chéap, climate healthful,
surroundings cheerful, discipline
exact, scholarship high. It has
distinguished graduates, carnest
students, able teachers. It holds
the state championship fororatory’
and has the finest cadet corps un
der a most distinguished West
Puint graduate.
For particulars, write to
Dgr. E. S. Avis, President,
Dahlonega, Ga.
y
Hendersoen's
Barber Shop.
1 have engaged the services of
Jim Goolsby, who is known by
the people of our county asan up
to=date barber. Give him a cali
and he will shave and cut your
hair for 25 cents,
To PATERT Good Idea
MONEY B
# THE PATENT RECORD,
Sabecriptions 1o The Putent Record 014 por casta
Give Penn Bros. your job work
THE MONTICELLO NEWS.
Take this Chance to go to Califor
nia or Puget Sound.
August Ist to 14th, inclusive, $47.50
round trip from St. Louis and $45.00
from Kansas City and St. Joseph. Con
sult nearest ticket agent about our
through tourist sleepers to California
~and Seattle,
| Cheap To Cool Colorado.
} ‘Every day we sell excuision tickets to
)I(‘rulnrmlo and Utah resorts at approxi
| mately half rates, with return limits all|
summer,
| To Minnesota’s Beautiful Resorts.
Daily, reund trip tickets to all Min
nesota resorts at a mere trifle over half
rates. With her 10,000 lakes Minnesota
offers a wealth of summer attractions.
Write for a lisit of Minnesota boarding
houses and hotels.
’ Homeseckers’ Exegrslou.
The first and third Tuesdays of each
momh at approximately half rates to
see the magnificent crops of the west
and northwest, and to help you secure a
home in that rapidly developing region.
Write us, describing your trip. THE
BURLINGTON LINES are the main
traveled roads through the west and®
northwest.
J.N.MERRILL, L.W.WAKELEY,
Gen'l Southern Agt., Gen'l Pass'r Agt,
ATLANTA, GA. ST. LOUIS, MO.
Right After Christmas.
Encouraged by the splendid
success of over 6,000 graduates of
the Georgia Alabama Business
College, many of our young
friends will enter that institution
at Macon right after Christmas.
The low rates, .personal instruc
tion, thorough qualification of pu
pils and prompt placing of all
graduates, have given that institu- |
tion decidedly the largest patrou-fi
age in the south, and brought it§
over 1,000 more calls for graduates |
this year than it cou'd furnish, |
—_— i
IMPRCVED TRAIN SERVICE TO
MACON. i
Effective Sunday, Sept 13th, |
the Central of Georgia Railway
will extend to Macon its trains
Nos. 27 and 28 at present being
operated between Covington and
Gordon. There will be no change
in the schedule of those trains be+|
tween Covington and Gordons
Train No. 28 will arrive in Macon
at 1 p.m. and No 27 WMI leave
Macow retnrning at 2:35 p. m,
This arrangement affords much
quicker schegule and through
train service and avoids lay over
at Gordon.
EEREA et CERR
Talk up for Monticello and sce
her grow. ;
Mollie E. Middlebrooks,
Elizabeth A. Pearson,
Lucy Alice Williams,
Emanuel I. Lindsey,
John Comer,
Juhn H. Benton,
Mary E. Minter,
Mary V. Lane,
George P. Loyd,
John E. Pye,
Clara Burke,
James A. Stone,
Glenn B. Eliis,
Charles H. Pope,
Mattie F. Jones,
Burtoa C. Kelly,
Charles W. Pope,
Our Boys and Girls are to
be commended for their
.
Wisdom.
It is very gratifying indeed, to note the increasing interest on
the part of our boys and girls in education—especially in busi
ness education; for there in nothing else in which they can invest
their money that will bring them such large and certain profits.
The general favorite in this state, particularly this section,
seems to be the Ga.—Ala. Bus. College at Macon, Ga., which
is not surprising, for it certajnly offers them unparalleled advan
tages, guaranteeing positions UNDER A $5,000 BANK DE
POSIT.
Ga.--Ala. Business college,
Macon, Ga.
Oid Sores, Itching Piles,
Ec ZEMA' Skin Diseases,
ABSOLUTELY CURED.
HERMIT SALVE,
25 AND BO CENTS A BOX,
Sold by all Drugpgists, » Take no other,
Old Family Remedy 2% years.
Isam P. Malone,
Abbie Benton,
John L. G. Woods,
John B. Ellis,
William F. Ellis,
Thomas A. Hutchinson,
Judson C. Loyd,
Mary L. Kelly, -
Monroe Phillips,
Ida O. Phillps,
Theodore J. Chaffin,
Jas. J. Ohaffin,
John C. Thomason,
Andrew J. Thomason,®
Sallie U. Thomason,
Mary E. Pope,
Olin J. Minter,
Edgar C. Pope.
White
.
Barber Shop.
e
I have opened a white barber
shop in the Monticello Hotel next
room to the post office. 3
Two polite white barbers will %
be always ready to do your work
in a comfortable manner.
I will greatly appreciate your
patronage at all times—assuring 1
you the best in the shop i
Service by the month at the %?
rate of one dollar; one hair cut at
25¢, and one shave loc,
Call to see me
sttt
s Ty e o
J. P. Williams.
Wanted Superintendet’s Place.
I would like to make a trade with
the proprietor of a farm for the
supeiintendency of same. Had
about forty one year's experience
can give references.
W. E. Dennis,