Newspaper Page Text
fierald and Advertiser.
NEWNAN, FRIDAY, OCT. 22.
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR.
What the Cross of Honor Means.
Confederate Veteran.
IThe following paper upon the aiirnifieenre of
"The Southern Crowt of Honor," prepared by Mr.
Walter A. Clark at the riaiueat. of the U. D. C.
1'liapter in Autruata. tla., waa renil on Memorial
Day by lion. H. C. Honey:]
I have been asked by these fair wo
men whose gentle hands have done so
much to rescue and preserve the sacred
memories of the past to voice for them
as truly as I can the real import and
significance of this bronze emblem with
which they are to honor these old vet
erans to-day ; to say as best I may what
this Confederate cross of honor means
to me and to my comrades of the old
war days. It is a little thing, and in
the great marts of trade it would not
count for much, and yet to him who
wears it worthily it has a world of
meaning. What is it?
It means that eight and forty years
ago there came into his life a stern and
stubborn duty that he dared to face:
that under the clarion call of a new
born flag and with the tear-wet kiss of
mother, sister, wife, or all of them-
upon his brave young lips, he left the
comforts of home to suffer hardship,
peril and privation; to feel the bitter
ness of cold and weariness and hunger;
to tread the lonely, shivering path of
midnight picket with no companions
hut the stars; to face the thunder of
belching cannon and the music of hiss
ing minies ; and to meet, if need he, a
soldier’s death, with no complaint upon
his loyal lips.
It means that during those four
years, ill infinite self-denial and su
preme self-sacrifice, in loyal and sub
lime devotion to patriotic duty, he
reached a higher plane of moral man
hood than had ever touched his life.
It means that he, if any mortal could
he, was worthy of the glorious South
ern womanhood who wrought with
tireless fingers at their hearthstones,
or ministered with glad -and willing
hands in wayside homes, or trod with
angel step and angel heart the fevered
aisles of ghostly hospitals, where pain
and death held cruel sway—the radiant
womanhood whose patient heroism
amid the dread suspense that came be
tween the battle and the published list
of slain and wounded, amid the wear
ing agony of a separation that seemed
endless, amid the weary watching for
footsteps that never came again, glori
fied the loneliness of their battle-shad
owed homes.
It means that he was part and parcel
of that immortal gray-clad host whose
uncrowned valor won the homage of
the world, and that "through its shift
ing fortunes of victory and defeat" he
fought beneath a Hag whose crimson
folds were never stained by cruelty or
wrong.
It means companionship with glori-
oui John B. Gordon, whose hero heart
and brave right arm made him "the
man of the 12th of Alay,"and a fel
lowship with Nathan Bedford Forrest,
the "Wizard of the Saddle,” whose un
trained genius revolutionized the arts
of war. It means a brotherhood with
Albert Sidney Johnston, with llill and
Stuart and Longstreet, with Walker
and Polk and Cleburne, with Hampton
and Wheeler and Butler, with all that
radiant band whose gleaming swords
Hashed always and only in the forefront
of battle. It means comradeship with
that strange, saintly soldier who daz
zled with his genius the camps and
cabinets of both continents, and then
went to death "with the love of the
whole world"—Stonewall Jackson.
It means a glorious kinship with the
noblest knight of all the generations—
kinship with him within whose roval
soul there loomed the fairest flower of
Southern grace and Southern chivalry
yes, thank God, kinship with the
courtesy and the courage, the virtue
and the valor, the goodness and the
greatness, the world-renowned grand
eur of Robert Edward Lee. And, mean
ing this, my comrades, I adjure you to
cherish it in your heart of hearts as a
•priceless heritage, and when the eter
nal bugler sounds the "taps" that end
your waning years, transmit it to your
children and your children’s children
for all the years to come. For well I
feel assured that when posterity, un
blinded by prejudice or passion, shall
give to all the claimants in the Pan
theon of fame their just and proper
meed as high in purest patriotism as
any rebel that fell at Lexington or
starved at Valley Forge as high in
lofty courage us any hero that rode
with Cardigan at Balaklava or marched
with Ney at Waterloo or died beneath
the shadow of the Persian spears at old
Thermopolae—will stand the rebel sol
dier of the South, clad in his tattered
gray, beneath whose faded folds is
shrined the Stars and Bars of an invin
cible republic that lives in history only
as a memory.
She Was Pleasantly Surprised.
Mrs. H. E. Bell, Wausau, Wis.,
writes: "Before I commenced to take
holey’s Kidney Pills I had severe pains
in my back, could not sleep, and was
greatly troubled with headache. The
first few doses of Foley’s Kidney Pills
gave me relief, and two bottles cured
me. The quick results surprised me and
I can honestly recommend them. ” Sold
by all druggists.
The Real Defect in the Regulation
Law.
Atlanta Constitution.
Though it be the subject of unending
discussion and columns of defense, the
champions of the new registration law
will never be able to convince the peo
ple of Georgia that there was justice or
reason in the provision which requires
that the registration books shall be
closed six months before the general
election, and, as a result, four months
in advance of the State primary.
That is the real, the essential, defect
in the new registration law, the one
monumental and inexcusable blunder of
it.
Its other imperfections, whatever they
may be, are of minor consequence; they
will have little or no hearing upon the
workings of the registration system.
But there is neither necessity, oc
casion, sense nor reason in the require
ment that the registration books shall
be closed six months in advance of the
election.
Its inevitable result will be, as the
registration for 1910 will prove, the
disfranchisement of some thousands of
white voters throughout tho State who
have every right to exercise the privilege
of the ballot.
It has been pointed out time ami
again how this radical change in the
registration law will produce this result,
and that it will follow cannot be suc
cessfully controverted.
It is not to be credited that, once the
people of Georgia become fully cogni
zant of the effect of this feature of the
law, they will further tolerate it.
It is too late now, of course, to change
it in time for next year’s elections;
therefore, the registration for 1910 must
proceed in accordance with it.
But it cannot be questioned that when
the results of this feature of the new
registration system become apparent
on April 1 next, and when thousands of
voters realize they have lost the oppor
tunity to participate in the year’s elec
tions, even though it be the result of
their own failure, through carelessness
or ignorance, to comply with that fea
ture of the law, there is going to be a
widespread and general demand for the
elimination of that objectionable fea
ture.
All that should be required in reason
and justice is that the registration hooks
shall be closed in ample time for a fair
and effective purging of the registration
lists.
Thirty, or certainly sixty, days will af
ford full and abundant time for proper
and careful performance of this work.
As for the rest of the law, with the
possible exception of remedying the de
fective omLsjon of a provision for the
registration of young men who become
of age between the time of the closing
of the books and the election, it will no
doubt work with as much satisfaction
as any registration law the State might
try.
But the grave, the serious defect in it,
as we have pointed out, needs prompt
legislative and remedial attention.
That the effects of its operation the
disfranchisement of thousands of white
voters—will speedily bring about this
remedy cannot for a moment be
doubted.
Pay Day Is at Hand.
Oglethorpe Echo.
Cotton, our money crop, is being rap
idly gathered. The good price at which
it is selling is causing growers to mar
ket it as fast as they can gather and pre
pare it for the market. This means
that money is in circulation. The far
mers are paying their store accounts
and shop accounts, and the merchants
and shop men are meeting their obliga
tions. And its pay-day with everybody.
Somehow we always like to "gallop
with the gang.” When other people
are paying their debts we want to be
doing likewise. And likewise, when
other people are being paid what is due
them, we want to be treated in like man
ner. When it is pay-day with other
folks, we want it to be pay-day with us
too—both "gwine and cornin’.”
But there must be some "cornin’ ”
ere there can be much "gwine” in our
case. Expenses go on in a print-shop
the same in an off-money season as they
do when it is freely in circulation, as
during the marketing time. That makes
it necessary for the "paymaster” of a
print-shop to "lay by” something that
he may keep the wheels turning during
the off seasons. It is the best he can
do to lay by enough to pull him through,
or to bridge him over, until general
pay-day rolls around again.
That’s what causes the aforesaid
"paymaster” to greet with so much re
lief the season when its everybydy’s
pay-day, both from an incoming and
outgoing standpoint. We never had
reason to more warmly welcome that
season than now.
A glance over our subscription list
tells that there should be "something
doing”—a pretty considerable amount
of it, too—in the pay-day business with
us; that weought to "getin the going”
with the many other sort of folks that
are being paid, so we can join the hosts
who are paying. Verily do we earnest
ly desire to be in the 1'anks of both
"gangs.”
Maybe, good reader, your subscription
date is one of the many that has inspir
ed our hopes, raised our expectations,
and strengthened our desires in this
matter. Take a look and see if it is
not. If it is, you know how we feel
about it. and what we are looking for
you to do. We feel sure you are in the
pay-day rush, and we are merely letting
ourselves "be seen before men” that
we may not be overlooked or forgotten,
or put off too long.
A large proportion of subscriptions
to The Echo expire during the fall. We
are glad it is that way—that so many
expirations come during the pay-day
season. It is easier then for the sub
scriber to renew; it brings us in cash
when we most need it to meet obliga
tions we had to make to pull through
the dull summer. But unless those
whose subscriptions are expiring put
us on their pay-day list we must neces
sarily be disappointed in our hopes to
join the ranks of the payers.
But why so much "gentle hinting?”
Ought it not to serve just as well, or
better, to say pointedly: If your sub
scription has expired, or does expire
soon, we are expecting you to renew;-
we need the money.
Price* Following the Tariff Upward.
Philadelphia Record.
About three years ago a member of
Congress from Illinois explained to the
House of Representatives that the
watch trust was selling watches abroad
so much cheaper than at home that it
was possible to make a good business
by buying American watches in Eu
rope. bringing them back, as they are
admitted free of duty, and selling them
at a large reduction from the list
prices.
When an American manufacturer is
selling his goods abroad for less than
he asks at home he needs some compe
tition at home; the fact that the duty
is unreasonably high is demonstrated.
But the watch manufacturers, who
had more duty under the Dingley law
than they had any justification for, even
according to protectionist theories,
wanted still more protection, and got
it from a Congress that was ever will
ing to oblige a combination in restraint
of trade. The trust had already blocked
the re-importation of its wares by in
troducing some foreign part into its
watches so that they should not secure
free admission. Mr. Aldrich’s Con
gress came to the further relief of the
trust by increasing the duty on the
cheaper grades of watch movements
and on watch dials, and by requiring
the name of the manufacturer and the
country of manufacture to be stamped
on the movement and the ease and the
dial. Many dealers now have their own
names put on the movements, eases
and dials and sell the watches as their
own manufacture. They can no longer
do this with foreign watches; if they
want their own names put on the goods
they must get them from American
manufacturers.
The result of this additional “protec
tion” for the watch trust is already ap
parent. The tariff law has been in ef
fect less than two months, and a week
ago the two largest watch-making
companies in the West advanced their
prices. The Eastern companies prompt
ly followed, and domestic watches have
been marked up 7 per cent, all over the
country for the additional profit of an
industry that already sold its products
abroad for very much less than it de
manded of its fellow-citizens.
You would be more choice of your
language if you thought you might
have to eat your own words.
CURES
.MALARIA
Malaria is due to impurities and poisons in the blood. Instead of being
rich, strong and healthy, the circulation has become infected with germs of
disease which destroy the rich, red corpuscles that furnish nourishment and:
strength to the bod}', and reduced this vital fluid to such a weak, watery
condition that it is no longer able to keep the system in health, or ward off
the countless diseases and disorders that assail it. The loss of these
red corpuscles tikes the color and glow of health from the cheek, and we
see pale, sallow faces and washed out, chalky complexions among the first
symptoms of Malaria. But Malaria is a general systemic disease, and as
the blood becomes more heavily loaded witkits germs we have more serious
and complicated symptoms; the impure blood having its effect on all parts
of the body. The appetite fails, digestion is weakened, chills and slight
fever are frequent, and the sufferer loses energy and ambition because of a
constant tired-out and "no account ” feeling. The lack of necessary nour
ishment and healthful qualities in
the blood causes boils and abscesses,
skin affections, and in some cases
sores and ulcers to break out, and
sometimes the patient is prostrated
with a spell of malarial fever which
may leave his health permanently
impaired. To cure Malaria both a
blood purifier and tonic are necessary,
in order to remove the cause and at
the same time build up the system
from its weakened and run-down
condition. S. S. S. is the medicine
best fitted for this work. It is the
most perfect of all blood purifiers, and
the purely vegetable ingredients of
which it is composed make it the
During 1900 I was running a farm on
the Mississippi river and became so impreg
nated with Maiarin that for a year I was
almost a physical wreck. I tried a number
of medicines recommended as blood purifi
ers, chill cures, and Malaria eradicators,
but nothing did me any good until I began
to use S. S. S. The result was that after
taking it for awhile I was as well and
strong as I ever was. I have never had a
chill since nor the slightest symptom of
Malaria. I hope others will be benefited
by my experience, and with that end in
view I give this testimonial, knowing that
S. S. S. is the best remedy for Malaria.
Amory, Miss. S. R. COWLEY.
greatest and safest of all tonics.
S. S. S. goes down into the circulation and removes every trace of impurity
or poison, and at the same time gives to the blood the health-sustaining qual
ities it needs. It cures Malaria thoroughly and permanently because it
removes the germs and poisons which produce the disease, and while doing
this tones up and strengthens every part of the system. When S. S. S. has
cleansed the blood the symptoms pass away, the healthy color returns to
thfe complexion. the old tired, depressed feeling is gone, and the entire health
is renewed. Book with information about Malaria and any medical advice
free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
Professional Cards.
T H O S .
1> 11 Y SIC IAN
J. JONES,
AND SURGEON.
Office on Hancock street, near public square.
Residence next door to Virginia House.
T. B. DAVIS,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office—Sanatorium building. Office ’phone 5
call; residence ’phone 5—2 calls.
MAKES RAPID HEADWAY.
Add This Fact to Your Store of
Knowledge.
Kidney disease advances so rapidly
that many a person is firmly in itsgrasp
before, aware of its progress, i’rompt
attention should he given the slightest
symptom of kidney disorder. If there
is a dull pain in the back, headache,
dizzy spells or it tired, worn-out feeling,
or if the urine istlark, foul-smelling, ir
regular and attended with pain, procure
a good kidney remedy at once.
Your townspeople recommend Doan’s
Kidney Pills. Read the statement of
this Newnan citizen:
C. L. Baker, 112 Jackson St., New
nan, Ga., says; "Riding over rough
roads has been a severe strain on my
kidneys, and as a result 1 suffered off
and on for years fr>m a dull aching in
my back. The kidney secietions were
also disordered and from this I realized
that my kidneys were in an unhealthy
condition. A short time ago 1 learned
about Doan’s Kidney Pills and procur
ing a box at Pcniston’s dfug store I
began their use. They relieved me
promptly and I am sure it will not be
long before every symptom of kidney
trouble will be banished from my sys
tem.”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name—Doan’B—and
take no other.
A certain member of the Lambs’
Club in New York is very rich, very
much inclined to conversation about his
wealth, and very economical in the dis
tribution of it the wealth, not the con
versation.
He was sitting at a tahle in the club
some time ago with a party of mem
bers. among whom was Henry Dixey,
the actor.
Several rounds of refreshments had
been bought, but none by the million
aire, although he participated each
time.
Presently he said : "You know wealth
like mine is a great burden. It is easy
enough to make money. The problem
comes in finding good investments. Do
any of you gentlemen happen to know
a good investment?’’
"Well,” said Dixey, "I suggest that
you invest in a round of drinks.”
It is not natural to stick to a person
who is stuck on himself.
ANOTHER
WOMAN
JURED
By Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Gardiner, Maine.—“ I have been a
great sufferer from organic troubles
andasevere female
Faith of Woman Saves Reputation.
Perhaps Huff seldom does better ser
vice than when we call it to our aid to
hide the faults and failings of those
near and dear to us.
There is an adage which suggests
that one should wash one’s soiled linen
at home. Bluff goes farther and erects
a twelve-foot fence around the clothes
line. Years ago there was a great deal
of talk with regard to a Scrape in
which a well-known young man was
implicated, or supposed to be. His
pretty little wife appeared to be the
only one of his relatives or friends
whom the rumor never reached. Her
friends asked one another, as friends
will, “Doesn’t she know? Is she a her
oine or a fool?” Then the scandal got
into the newspapers, but the loyal wo
man kept on in her bright, jolly way,
apparently ignorant of that which was
on every face; her open admiration of
her handsome husband gave the lie to
the vile story. People began to say that
the tale could not have been true, else
the wife could not behave as she did.
And at the last the rumor was buried—
killed by a woman’s grit. Pluck had
won the day and saved a reputation,
for people argued that if his wife still
believed in him he couldn’t be so bad.
Foley’s Honey and Tar clears the air
passages, stops the irritation in the
throat, soothes the inflamed membranes,
and the most obstinate cough disanpeai s.
Sore and inflaiivd lungs are healed and
strengthened, and the cold is expelled
from the system. Refuse any but the
genuine in the yellow package. Sold
by all druggists.
It was at a function of the Colonial
Dames at the Octagon House last
week. One of the young ladies at a
certain boeth was a dream of youth and
loveliness. A visitor desiring to help
the cause bought some trinket of her
and openly complimented her on her
beauty. The young lady blushed at the
compliment and looked more charming
than before, whereupon the bold visitor
remarked that she supposed everybody
told her she was beautiful.
"Oh, no,” replied the naive young
belle, “nobody but my suitor.”
"Why, how old-fashioned that
sounds,” remarked the visitor, as she
walked away.
W. A.
1’ HYSICIA N
TURNER,
AND SURGEON.
Special attention given to surgery and diseases
of women. Office 19V& Spring street. 'Phone 230
F. I. WELCH,
P HYSICI A N AND SURGEON.
Office No. 9 Temple avenue, opposite public
school building. 'Phone 234.
T. E. SHEFFIELD, M. D.,
RAYMOND, GA.
General practitioner. Calls attended promptly
day or night.
M. S. ARCHER, M. D.,
LUTHERSVII.LE, G A.
All callR promptly filled, day or night. Diseases
of children a specialty.
K.
W. STARR,
D E N T I S T.
For Sale—South Georgia
Farm,
One hundred and twenty-six acres.,
all fenced. Eighty acres in cultivation
balance easily cleared. Three houses,
four wells water, barn and outbuildings.
On railroad sidetrack north of Tifton,
near Agricultural School. Best land ir.
Tift county.
Price —$3,400; half cash, balance or
long time. Address
C. D. FISH, Tifton, Ga.
All kinds of dental work. Patronage of the pub
lic solicited. Office over H. C. Arnall Mdse. Co.’s
store. Residence ’phone 142.
THOS. G. FARMER, JR..
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Will give careful and prompt attention to all
IcRral business entrusted to me. Collections a
specialty.
Office over H. C. Arnall Mdse. Co.’s.
weakness. T h e
doctor said I would
have to go to tire
hospital for an
operation, but I
could not bear to
think of it. 1 de
cided to try Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Compound
and Sanative Wash
— and was entirely
cured, after three
months’ use of them.”—Mrs. S. A.
IVI i.i.iams, R. F. D. No. 14, Box 39,
Gardiner, Me.
No woman should submit to a surgi
cal operation, which may mean death,
until she has given Lydia E. Pink ham's
Vegetable Compound, made exclusive
ly from roots and herbs, a lair trial.
" This famous medicine for women
has for thirty years proved to be the
most valuable tonic and renewer of
the female organism. Women resid
ing in almost every city and town in
the United States bear willing testi
mony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
It cures female ills, and creates radi
ant, buoyant female health. If you
are ill, for your own sake as well as
those von love, give it a trial.
Mrs. Pinkliam, at Lynn, Mass.,
invites all sick Women to write
heritor advice, ller advice is free,
and always helpful.
TO THE CITIZENS
OF NEWNAN
Reese Drug Co., druggists, handle Gil-
hooley's Irish Liniment, and they back it
up with what might be called a Govern
ment bond. In fact a guarantee certificate
goes with every bottle, to the extent that
if Gilhooley’s Irish Liniment does not cure
Eczema, Rheumatism, in any form. Salt
Rheum, Lumbago or any skin ailment, you
are out nothing, as the druggist you bought
it from will give back your money and take
the certificate for his pay.
The matter is entirely in your hands.
Gilhooley Irish Liniment Go.,
ST. PAUL, MINN.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA-Coweta County:
All persons having demands against, the estate
of A. C. Pease, late of said county, deceased
are requested to present same to the undersigned
properly attested; and all persons indebted to said
estate are urged to make immediate settlement.
This Sept. CO. 1900. Pin. fee *3.75.
H. H. NORTH. Executor.
Atlanta and West Point
RAILROAD COMPANY
ARRIVAL
AND DEPARTURE
OF TRAINS AT NEWNAN, GA.
Subject to change and typographical
errors.
No. 35
6 ;45 a. m.
No. 19....
... 7 :3T» a. m.
No. 18....
... 9:03 a. m.
No. its
... .10:43 a. m.
No. 39 ..
3:17 p. ill.
No. 20
.. 6:40 p. in.
No. 34
5:32 p. in.
No. *42
... 6:45 a. rn.
No. t44
H;27 a. m.
No.
... 9:33 a.in.
No. 40
1 .03 p. in.
No. 17
8:12 p. m.
No. 41 .. .
... 7 :10 p. m.
No. 37
fi :'J3 p. in.
No. 36
10:18 p. m.
tSunday only. ‘Daily except Sun
day. All other trains daily. Odd
numbers, southbound; even num
bers, northbound.
48 PREMIUMS FREE I
Return this “Adv.” and remit ua$4.85, the Special
Trice we make you on 2 Boxes of our 6 and 10c Cigmu
Assorted Brands, which wo want to Introduce quickly
to 60.000 new customers, and v/c will send yoa in aarn»
package 1 S. & W. Med. Double Action Nickel Plated
Felice Revolver, worth *7.00; 1 Stem Wind and Set
Gold Plate Watch, vutue W; 1 Hollow Ground Keen
Cutting Ringing Steel Ruxor, priced 1 Set (6) Triple
Silver-Plated Tea Spoons, worth *1; also 44 other Big
gest Value Premiums which we hove not apace to men-
tion. worth from 10 cents to $1 each, provided you
remit $4 95 with order and allow us to REFUND YOUR
MONEY if you are not pleased with goods. This
“Adv.” v/ill not uppenr after we enroll 60.000 new
customers. Give fame of your Express Offlce and
Ordct TODAY. Reference Sonlnera Express Co..
Bank of Montgomery.
Address, CANDOR SALES C0 n Candor, N.C., U.S.A*
W ANTED—Success Magazine wants an ener
getic and responsible man or woman in New
nan to collect for renewals and solicit new sub
scriptions during lull or spare time. Experience
unnecessary. Any one cun start among friends
and acquaintances and build up a paying and per
manent business without capital. Complete outfit
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA-Coweta County:
By virtue of an order of the Court of Ordinary
of said county will be sold at public outcry, on the
first Tuesday in November. 1909, at the court
house door in said county, between the usual
hourB of sale, the following real estute situate in
Cedar Creek district, Baid State and county, to-
wit:
An undivided one-fifth interest in fifty (50>
acres of land, the same being a part of lot No.
201» in said district, and bounded as follows: On
the north by Mrs. Frances Ballard estate, on the
east by J. P. Stamps, on the south by Rich Moore
and on the west by lands of John M. Brown'*
children. Terms Cash. This Oct. 5. 1909. Prs.
fee. $4.12. J. B. BROWN.
. Adm’r John M. Brown.
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA-Coweta County:
By virtue of an order of the Court of Ordinary
of said county, granted at the January term, 1909,
of said Court, will be sold on the first Tuesday in
November, 1909, at the court-house door in the
city of Newnan, in said county, between the legaf
hours of sale, at public outcry, to the highest bid
der, for cash, as the property of the estate of T.
T. Bohannon, late of said county, deceased, the-
following property, to-wit:
A certain tract or parcel of land containing
103.45 acres, more or less, and being out of the-
central part of lot of land No. 84, in the Sixth dis
trict of said Coweta county, and being all of said
lot except about 62 acres ofT of the north side
thereof, owned by J. H. Bridges, and 65 acres, more
or less, off of the south side thereof, owned by J.
R. Cole; and except also five acres, more or less,
out of the southwestern part of said 103.45 acres,
more or less, and which said five acres, more or
lesR, is irregular in shape, and lying west of the
public road known as the Burnt Village road, and
which said five acres, more or less, is owned by
Haines, and which said 103.45 acres, more or less.,
is bounded north by J. II. Bridges, east by E. F.
Pitman and P. B. Vineyard, south by J. R. Cole,
ami west by said public road and J. H. Bridges.
Also, 36 acres, more or less, out of the southeast
part of lot of land No. 55, in the Second district ot
said Coweta county, and bounded north by public
road and Thomas McDonald, east by Miss Nancy
Neely, south by David Neely, and west by T. A.
Bridges.
Also, a certain town lot in the town of Sharps-
burg, in said county, fronting west on the Ter-
rentine road, and bounded north by Roy Bridges,
east by Mrs. Annie North, south by J. S. Benton,
and west by said Terrentir.e road, containing two
and one-fourth acres, more or less, and on which
is’ located a dwelling and other improvements,
and being the residence lot of deceased. This
Oct. 5, 1909. Prs. fee. $12.33.
W. M. BOHANNON,
Administrator of the estate of T. T. Bohannon
deceased.
Sheriff’s Sales for November.
GEORGIA-Coweta County:
Will be Hold before the Court-house door in New
nan, Coweta county, Ga., on the first Tuesday in
November next, between the legal hours of sale, tc
the highest and best bidder, the following de
scribed property, to-wit:
One black horse inule about 8 years old. named
“Dick.” Levied on as the property of E. P. Floyd
to satisfy a fi. fa. issued from Coweta Superior
Court in favor of Bradley-Banks Co. vs. the said
E. P. Floyd. Defendant notified in terms of the
law. This Sept. 27. 1909. Prs. fee, $3.06
Also, at the same time and place, all that tract
or parcel of land lying and being in the city of
Newnan, Fifth district of Coweta county, said
State, and known as the Kinnnrd house and lot.
described as follows: Beginning at the southwest
corner of the John Jackson (.now W. G. Post) lot.
on the north side of Washington street, thence
north along the line of said Jackson .now Post) lot
272 feet, more or less, to H. C. Arnall’s lot, thence
west along said Arnall land 106 l’eet, more or less
to land of H. C. Arnall, thence south along the
land of said Arnall to Ruth Kinnard 272 feet,
more or less, to Washington street, thence east
along the north side of said Washington street
10C feet, more or less, to said beginning point-
containing seven-eighths of an acre, more or lesa.
Levied on as the property of Mrs. Ola Mooney and
M. B. Mooney to satisfy a fi. fa. issued from the
City Court of Newnan in favor of J. H. Johnson,
executor of G. L. Johnson, vs. the Haid Mia* ~‘ a
Mooney and M. B. Mooney. Defendants in fi. fa
notified in terms of the law. This Oct. 6, l>w.
Prs. fee, $6.41.
Also, at the same time and place, a certain tract
or parcel of land lying and being in the Second
district of Coweta county, Ga., containing Id■
acres, more or less, being the north partoi lot f^o.
191, except 10 acres, more or less, in the northwest
corner of saki tract, and cut ofi' fiom fund tract D.»
a public road; also 20 acres on the south sale ol
said 113 acres in the shape of a parallelogram
containing 83 acres, more or less, and Lounaeii
as follows: On the north by Mrs. Nancy xour.g.
on the east by Nathan Young, on the sou J
by Hubbard Carmical. and on the west by
and instructions free. Address, “VON.” Success : y # Carmical. Levied on as the property of
Magazine, Room 108. Success Magazine Building, j H. Walker to satisfy a fi. fa. issued from the
New York City, N. Y. | City Court of Newnan in favor of Mrs. Ella M.
Leverett vs. the said S. H. Walker. Defen »
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