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LUDOVIC LOCALS.
' • i
VIOLET.
Cane grinding ia the order of
day in our community.
Mr. R. H. Perkins, of Sam, is
friends in Ludovic.
Until this week we have been
very warm weather for the
season.
Mr. Prank Knight .has ju9t re¬
turned from a business trip to
Savannah.'
Miss Susie Grooms, of Ludovic,
is spending a few days with her
brother near Callie this week.
Everybody is about through
their crops, aud bird
is now largely indulged in.
Misses Gertie and Lena Shear
ouse, 'two charming daughters of
Mr. Bob Shearouse, were pleasaut
visitors to Mr. Joe Grooms’ fami¬
ly last week.
Ifotillt’s Opportunity.
Iu an old fable of the East there
is a story which runs as follows:
The gods of heathen Iudia were
said to be able to make a man,
old, decrepit and ugly or middle
aged with strong, brawny arm,
with possibilities of a long and
happy future; a woman, on whose
face time had made furrows of
care or one from whose cheek age
had chased the rose of beauty and
the smile of childhood. To make
man or womau at any stage of life
gave one was an easy task for any
god, bn* none by himself could
makd that most wonderful mech
auism denominated a “youth,”
Peering to accomplish this, they
snmmoued a council of the god
heads, aud after days of toil and
uights of labor their efforts were
crowned with the production of
this being. When presented to
the world, he was received with
oheers ot approbation, for all
could mate every phase of life
but this—the “wee tot” prattling
around the mother’s knee looking
upward into her byes only to re¬
ceive an approving smile. All
could make the “kid” from eight
to fifteen “creeping to school like
a snail;” the old man who had
climbed tor many years the hill of
life, had reached its .summit and
descended its western side.
Jjo wonder there was joy at the
presentation of such a person—no
wonder there was t\ qu^s^ou °f
such momept us the following:
“Now you have youth, what will
yon do with it?” A pertinent
question indeed. The answer to
wljich determines our joy, our
sorrow, deoidos our weal or woe.
“Eternity, where shall I spend
it?” “Youth, what shall I do
with it?” Both are highly im¬
portant, both of intrinsic value.
The proper solution of the former
is brought about ouly by a correct
answer of the latter. Youth is
importaut from any standpoint
from which we may view it—it is
a bright golden coiii of two faces,
one retr >spective upon time mis¬
spent, upou opportunities mis
app'ied; the other prospective
upou the great theatre of life,
Young man, upon this theatre
you have your entrance and your
exit—you will make your entrance
from the age of sixteen to twenty
five. This is the most dangerous
age of life, during these years
dial upon your face declares the
future mau. Let me say again,
vonth is the most important stage
ot,i„. From *bn. to tw.oty
five vou are subjected to serious
and diverse temptations
which vou must, rjse or to which
vou must succumb. Y"U have
’
»»1> etod voqr profession and al
re«(?y made a fortune, or von have
proved to the world that your
future life shaU be that of a vaga¬
bond ; you have been placed be¬
hind the bars in the darkness of a
dungeon, or yon stand in the sun¬
shine, companionship and first
line of your benefact. rs; you are
a servant, a menial, a slave, or a
leaisl^tor, a master, a mau.
This last is all that you may
hope to hecome in this world.
Every youth oan make a roan hv
}ookiug onward, upward at the
bright side of every problem;
every opposition contrary to the
physical world makes him strong¬
er and better; every youth can
educate his hand to work, his
hea/t to love, his mind to rever¬
Then be a mau, humble,
truthful, honorable, obedient,
brave, symmetric and well round¬
ed. Kuow something about every
thing, and everything aboqt some -
thing.
Vou am the Woods to guide the
ship of state over the turmoil,
confusion and rocks of party
strife ai d to land her in a port
where all is serene, and over whose
breast there rise no waves of dis
sentiou. Act well your part and
world will soon be at peace.
Nor is this ali the entrance.
Listeu to what the poet says:
“If you will, you can climb the ladder
To the highest rounds of fame,
And write in glittering colors,
The letters of your name.
“If you will, you can scale the mountain
That leads to wisdom's height;
Though the road be long and rugged,
It will win you laurels bright.
“If you will, you can be a hero
In the battle of life you fight,
By pleading for truth and justice,
And standing firm for right.
“If you will, you can scatter sunshine
Around you as you go;
And plant for the good of others,
Flowers to bloom and grow.
“If you will, you can have the guidance
Of a brightly beaming star,
To the world of lasting beauty,
Through the pearly gates ajar.’"
This last is the exit from the
stage of life. Three score years
aud ten have been spent. Your
sun has risen, passed through the
zenith and hid his face behind the
western horizon, you look back
upon the world in darkness, upon
a life spent iu duty, upou youth
robbed by death of its beauty iu
this world, only to be taken up
and to be received into that home
with the plaudit of “well done
thy faithful one,” where youth is
crowned with joys and pleasures
evermore.
Then be a man !
J. E. Brannen.
Athens, Ga., Nov. 22, 1900.
T. L. AKI rsrs,
PULASKI, GA.,
ls ready to repair your Watches, Clocks
and Jewelry. First-class work and sat¬
isfaction guaranteed.
Also, dealer in Dry Goods, Groceries
and Notions,
The New York World
Thrice-A-Week Edition.
Almost a Daily at price of |||eekly.
The presidential campaign is over, but
the world goes on just the same and it is
full of news. To learn this news, lust as
it is—promptly and impartially—all that
you have to do is to look iu the columns
of The Thrice-a-Week Edition of The New
York World, which comes to the sub¬
scriber 156 times a year.
The Thrice-a-Week World’s diligence
as a publisher of first news has given it
circulation wherever the English lan¬
guage is spoken—and you want it.
The Tbrice-a-Week World’s regular
subscription price is only $1 per year.
We offer this unequalled newspaper and
The Bulloch Herald together one year
for$1.65.
The regular subscription price of the
two papers is $2 00.
1 Three Papers a Week i
FOR ABOUT THE I £
PRICE OF ONE, (■
*■
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i ! news while it is fresh, paying |
very little costs. more Either than one is |
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i
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or ^ 0 ’ 1 ' price. You can
j i ST^SSfijSSlhlft | |
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want a great paper and a *
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Besides general news, the
j Twice-a-Week much agricultural Journal has J
] matter *
and other articles of special i
interest regular contributions to farmers. It Sam has j
| Mrs. W. by *
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John Temple Graves, Hon. |
[ 0. H. Jordan and other die
tinguished writers. t
subscriptions Call at this for office both snd leave your You £
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BO YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
Patents
Trade Marks
Designs
Copyrights Ac.
Anrone Bonding a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain owr opinion free whether an
invention rictly is probably patentable. Communica¬
tions st confidential. Handbook on Patent!
sent free. Oldest aaency through for securing L CoT patents.
Patents taken Munn receive
tpecial notice, without charWt iu the
Scientific American.
A hsndsomelr Illustrated weekly, largest ctr.
eolation ot any sciemiao Journal. Terms. $8 a
feuKshfefe year: lour months, fL Sold by all newsdealers.
THE RUSSIAN CABMAN
He makes a single vehicle do
WORK FOR TWO DRIVERS.
A Sort of “Box and Cox” Game Which
He Plays With H1. Partaer Enables
Him to Save the Coat of Lodflmfi
and Stable.
The cab driver of Russian towns dif¬
fers In many ways from our own jehu,
although in the matter of having a
ready answer which does not turn
Sway with wrath for both friend and
foe he seems to be closely related.
There are no large cab owners and If
those of the tram companies be ex¬
cepted no large stables in either Mos¬
cow or St Petersburg, aud almost ev¬
ery driver owns or has at least a share
In the lot he drives. Although at lirst
Bight cab driving In the capitals of the
empire can hardly be considered as a
village Industry, yet In Russia it is
considered as such. The “isvoshtehlks,”
as the flymen are called, are nearly al¬
ways members of far distant village
communes, who spend the whole or
part of the year at town work, but
who remit the greater portion of their
earnings to their native place, and
themselves return to ft when agricul¬
tural work or fishing Is at a premium
and when city work or health gives out.
This connection between farmer and
factory band, townsman and tiller of
Boll, Is characteristic of all Russian in¬
dustry; It Is no uncommon sight to
see a cotton or linen factory empty
during harvest. The coachman of the
city Is generally a member of a peas¬
ant family, whose males outnumber
the females, so that some of the for¬
mer are forced to forsake the allot¬
ment, which proves Insufficient to pro¬
vide support or labor for them all, and
turn to the town for a living. He
comes to the busy center, learns his
way about it, buys a “droshky,” a
small but not uncomfortable vehicle on
runners, and a four wheeled chaise of
about the same size for summer use,
takes out a license from the police and
makes a start. His horse (for, unlike
the London brother, be seldom has
more than one) he brings with him
from the farm, or perhaps, to be literal,
It brings him, and often the possession
of the animal Is the reason for the
driver's change of fortunes and of
scene.
This isvoshtcbik is a strange object
as he sits on the narrow board which
serves him as a seat at the front of bis
droshky, clothed in a long blue gown
which reaches the ground, Is heavily
quilted with down and tied in at the
waist with a strap or ornamental cord
and a heavy sheepskin cap over his
ears. He lives a nomadic life, seldom
having any fixed residence or stable In
the town, and he is thus often to be
seen asleep In hls droshky, while bis
horse feeds at the public troughs which
the local authorities put up In almost
every side street.
One may see him, when he has put
down a passenger and earned his fare,
go to the nearest corn merchant, buy
Just sufficient hay and corn for one
meal for hls horse and place it In the
manger. Then he gets fodder for him¬
self from the ambulant venders of
black bread, tresca (odoriferous cod¬
fish) and weak, milkless tea who stand
at the corners of most Russian streets,
and afterward he sleeps peaceably in
his sleigh until hls horse be rested and
fit for another Journey. Then on ho
goes again until, some hours later, ho
repeats the process at the other end of
the town.
At night he plays “Box and Cox” with
hls partner, with whom he forms a lim¬
ited liability company. At a fixed time
he must meet him in some tavern yard,
take out his own tired horse and sur¬
render the droshky. The second man,
whose horse is fresh, now takes hls 12
hours and at the appointed time in
the morning must meet in the same
tavern. After a week they change
over — the night man takes the day
work, and vice versa. Thus one ve¬
hicle, with no lodgings or stable—for
the men rest In the pothouse, the
horses In the yard or sheds adjoining
It—supports two men whose sole object
In life is to earn and save enough to
enable them to leave the city and re¬
turn to the land, the mistress of every
moujik’s affections.
The isvoshtcbik Is an excellent ex¬
ample of that absence of fixity of tariff
Which is so prevalent throughout Rus¬
sia, for in the matter of charges he Is
a law unto himself. When you show
signs of wanting a droshky, all the
drivers within hall assemble and bid
one against the other for the custom.
This one will take you for so much,
that one for less and so on. One takes
one's choice, a good, fast horse and
(mart sleigh at a good price or a bad
one- for a fraction of it. Should one,
however, select a poor looking beast,
the drivers left behind will make en¬
couraging remarks as one drives away.
“He is lame,” “He stumbles,” “The
driver is drunk,” they will shout In
chorus until one is out of earshot. One
natural result, of this elastic system
Is that the old law of supply and de¬
mand makes itself felt, for, while fares
are low during slack hours, they are
apt, at close of play or commencement
of storm, at once to "rise several
points.”
The lsvosbtchik Is not a bad coach¬
man, generally driving with a very
tight rein and somewhat furiously! He
shouts at everything in hls way and
constantly encourages hls not unwill¬
ing little steed with such remarks as
“Now, Vanka (little John), earn your
dinner,” “It is not far,” “The day is
cold,” "At the end are food and rest,”
“God Is good.”—London Field.
from Tf» to Tannin.
A lot of newspaper editors In Europel
are asking, “How did the Chinese get!
their modem guns?” Why, they sold
ten and tiomrht them, of course .—V
WHEN IN METTER
-CALL ON —
F B SHUMAN SON
For your Dry Goods, Groceries. Etc.
Good uew goods and low prices.
Good Calico 5c per yard,
Percal 8c i>er yard,
Good Suit of Clothes $4 up.
And all other goods at lowest prices.
When in need, come and examine our
stock before buying.
OLD TIMES, OLD FRIENDS, OLD LOVE
There are no days like the gowi oid days-
The days when we were youthful;
When humankind were pure of mind
And speech and deeds were truthful;
Before a love for sordid gold
Became man’s ruling passion
And before each dame and maid became
Slaves to the tyrant fashion.
There ate no girls like the good old firle—
Against the world I’d stake 'cm
As buxom and smart and clean of heart
As the Lord knew how to make 'em.
They were rich in spirit and common sense,
A piety all support in;
They could bake and brew and bad taufiV
school, too,
And they made the likeliest courtin.
There are no boys like the good old boys
When we were boys together,
When the grass was sweet to the brown bare feet
That dimpled the laughing heather,
When the pewee sung to the summer dawn
Of the bee in the billowy' clover,
Or down by the mill the w hippoorwill
Echoed his night song over.
There is no love like the good old love—
The love that mother gave us.
We are old, old men, yet we pine again
For that precious grace—God save vs.
So we dream and dream of the good old time*.
And our hearts grow tenderer, fonder,
As those dear old dreams bring ioothing gleam*
Of heaven away off yonder.
—Eugene Field.
WELLINGTON’S DECISION.
When the Moment to Strlkn Had
Come, He Did Sot Hesitate.
Badajos lies in Spain five miles from
the Portuguese frontier, It was the
key of a situation. Wellington’s chance
was to strike at Badajos before the
French marshals could combine and
crush him. Ilis task was both in front
of him and behind him. lie lacked
transport; he lacked food for the men;
the soldiers were eating cassava root
instead of bread; the bullocks were
weak and emaciated. All this was the
doing of the parliament at home.
But Wellington knew that the mo¬
ment to strike had come, and he seems
to have hesitated very little, riacing
no faith in the tongues of the I’ortu
guese, he made hls plans with ail pos
aible secrecy. The guns for the siege
were loaded on board the transport at
Lisbon and consigned to a fictitious ad
dress. But in the river Sadhao they
were placed upon smaller vessels, and
finally they were again landed and
drawn by bnllocks to Eloas, a post in
the possession of the allies. Having
stationed two-thiids of his force under
General Graham aud General Hill to
prevent a most probable interference
by Soult and Marmont, Wellington ad¬
vanced, reaching Eloas on the llih of
March, 1812. He had made the most
Incredible exertions. *
The stupidity of the Portuguese had
vied with the stupidity of the govern
ment at home. Wellington had been
carrying the preparation for the cam
paign upon liis own shoulders. If he
was to win Badajos, he was to win it
with no help save that from gallant
and trustworthy subordinates. He was
ill withal. Even iiis strangely steel
like nature had bent beneath the trou¬
ble of preparation amid such indiffer¬
ence. But on-March 1G Beresford, with
three divisions, crossed the Guardiaua
on pontoons and flying bridges, drove
the enemy’s outposts aud invested
Badajos.—Stephen Crane in New Lip
pincott’s.
THE CITY OF HONGKONG.
18 In One of the Mont Unhealthy
Spots on the Globe.
In spite of all the precautions that
have been taken, the perfect sanitation
of the city, the fine natural drainage,
the cleanliness of the streets, Hong¬
kong is one of the most unhealthful
spots on the globe. With its tropical
heat the lofty peaks that half encircle
it catch the clouds that the rapid
evaporation create, and they are
squeezed like a sponge, the floods of
rain pouring down in streaming tor¬
rents.
The houses lack light, although they
are built as well as they could be, with
perforated ceilings, through which the
air circulates, admitted from openings
pierced by the outer walls. The floors
are brilliantly waxed, carpets, owing
to the great dampness, being dispens¬
ed with. The great difficulty is to se¬
cure light and proper ventilation. The
streets are very narrow, and the tower¬
ing walls of buildings opposite ob¬
struct the light in frout, while at the
rear the courts of terraces crowded
with foliage cast a heavy shade from
that direction. In the gardens, while
plants flourish luxuriantly, there is no
grass, but the ground is green with
moss, just as it grows in damp, shady
places in cooler climates. The heat
and the great humidity are destructive
to health, aud it Is doubtful if there is
a single normal liver iu the whole of
Hongkong.
English women who come out with
complexions of cream aud roses grow
thin aud sallow. The Hongkong com¬
plexion is a startling grayish green,
and the old resident has with this pal¬
lor dark bluish circles under the eyes.
The least exertion includes exhaust¬
ing perspirnticu, and people become
gaunt and thin.—Boston Transcript.
Itnllnuys Without Tunnels.
There are, naturally, a number of
curves through the Urals, but
tunneling has been avoided. The
tvriter did not see a single tunnel in
the Ural range. It is a remarkable fact
that during the Transsiberiau railway
inspection the writer did not observe
tunnel anywhere, and even after con
tinuing the Inspection right into the
heart of Russia about 2.000 miles more
had been coveted before he saw
lirst tunnel; this after 0,000 miles
overland railway inspection.
The Russian railway engineer will
blow up a small mountain than
a tunnel, leaving a yawning
between the rocks, with two
of rust” at the bottom thereof
a souvenir of bis activity; or, if lie
that, after going to the mountain,
mountain is not likely to yield fo
his instructions are to circumvent
by a long detour. Anything to avoid
The primary aversion to
in Russia is not alone their
cost, but tlieir subsequent cost,
tunnels, like houses, always have
SOni< ‘ thillg the matter with them.”—
I. G. WILLIAMS,
METTER, GA,,
the freshest, cheapest aud I rent
stock of Groceries in town.
Call around and see for yourselves—ifc
wont cost you any tiling to look.
"ZtotD is tfye time to J r
Subscribe.” J J, r
The Bulloch Herald
IS THE
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE COUNTY
and contains more pure reading matter n
11 i | section than any of other Georgia, weekly and newspaper is free from in this dis- n
II gusting medicine advertisements which ii
<•§>! infest so many local columns. rz
axvj 'XKOAK '■mmmmmwm
?■*> ir* y < i-‘ v , evi «■»*, s-»r, «.*« s»>, i-*»« <•
Subscription, $1 Per Year.
“NOW IS THt TIME TO SUBSCRIBEV
THE CRIMINAL CUCKOO.
n * *■ One Exception to the Klnrf
•> ,inl,,re " f Bird*,
Bad temper and cruelty are perhaps
the most obvious signs of mental de
generation in the beasts. The larger
monkeys, for instance, become as bad
tempered as a violent man when they
grow old, and many In tlieir treatment
of other animals arc cruel as we use
the word iu regard to man. Among
the carnivorous beasts the eat amuses
itself by torturing a mouse, and the
weasel tribe kill for sheer love of kill*
ln ®- No sl,ch ‘•ruelty is seen among
eagles or falcons. Fierce as their tem
l )ers 11 ro - tll0 . v do not torment other
birds which they catch or kill for klll
iug’s sake. Good temper is general
among birds,
Except the cuckoo, such a thing as
an ill tempered wild bird is unknown.
Nowhere in the race can a temper like
that of the Tasmanian devil or the
wild hunting dog or the Cape buffalo
or tlie baboon be found. Even those
which in spring are thieves and egg
robbers arc not mauvais couchenrs at
other times. Good temper and good
fellowship in society, n personal affec¬
tion to each other to which the beasts
offer no parallel, industry and inde¬
pendence, intense devotion and fore¬
sight in tending their young, with oth¬
er very human and engaging traits of
character, must all be credited to the
race of birds.
Among these kindly and simple na¬
tures the cuckoo is a monster. Let
there be no mistake on this subject.
Ho unites in his life and character,
from the egg to the adult bird, prac¬
tices and principles to which the whole
race of warm blooded animnis offers no
parallel. He is an outrage on the mor¬
al law of bird life, something so fla¬
grant aud so utterly foreigu to the way
of thought of these kindly beings tiiat
if he did not exist he would be incon¬
ceivable. It is not merely that he is a
supplanter and a changeling. Hls
whole nature Is so evil that in the
world of birds, he is an incarnation of
the principle of ill, an embodiment of
vices which would if understood or
adopted by other birds put an end to
the existence of the race. — London
Spectator.
TRAINING WATCHDOGS.
The Method That In Used hr a Ger¬
man Instructor.
Although it is generally believed that
watchdogs are “to the manner born,”
It seems that a certain amount of train¬
ing helps very much to turn out a real¬
ly good one. This system of training
has developed into a regular business
in Berlin, where one Herr Straus has
an academy from which watchdogs
are turned out by the hundred every
year.
His system is educational and is ap¬
plied to almost every kind of dog. He
first teaches the animal obedience by
training it to perform certain “tricks”
at command and then trains It to dis¬
tinguish between a visitor and a bur¬
glar and what part of a man’s body
should he attacked to render the man
helpless.
Outside of the gate the trainer places
a dummy representing the burglar, and
to the latch Is attached a string. By
means of the string the gate is opened
slowly, until the head of the dummy
becomes visible, when the dog is
taught to fly at its throat. Herr Straus
Is very particular about this. He makes
hls ,lo K s nttaek tl,e throat or the upper
! )art of ,be bod >’ always. Sometimes a
real ,nun ' vdl P added takes th e place
°t the dummy, and of course lie is well
paid for his services,
dogs, it seems, may lie made good
watchdogs, but the St. Bernards and the
Rusalan wolfhounds are the best Where
property of great value is to be guard¬
ed. For dogs not so fierce ns they are
a different system of training is used.
They soon learn to guard anything
committed to tlieir care, but are not so
quick to attack an intruder as the
fiercer dogs are.—Philadelphia Times.
Slant Sever All Connections,
“My wife tells me that if the Up¬
towns don’t have their telephone taken
out we must have ours removed.”
“Why is that?”
“Oh, she and Mrs. Uptow n aren't on
speaking terms at present.”—Philadel¬
phia Bulletin.
XVlint lie Sold.
Landlord—When you gave Klckhard
sausage for hls breakfast, what did he
say?
Waiter—He said it was a horse oti
him.—Chicago Tlmcs-IIcrnld.
.. iff GBOCEET BOSUSS!..
I have recently established a Grocery business at
the stand fronting the square, recently occupied by C.
M. Martin, and will endeavgr to keep a fresh and com¬
plete stock of the Choicest Goods.
. . .Nice Line of Fruits, Vegetables and Confections. ..
always at lowest prices. Give me a call.
A. J. WIMBERLY.
Save Your Money.
What is the use in paying
2 l-2c for vour * Collars and 5e
TOP Guffs, WnGVI yOU Can JJ©t
them laundried just as good at
2c for Collars and 4c for Cuffs?
The Georgia Steam Laundry
has had an agent here for the
past three years, and their work
has always given satisfaction.
I am responsible for all laun¬
dry left with me, and will make
good any and all losses.
B. P. MAULL
UP-TO-DATE.
98
NEW HOME.
DO YOU KNOW
that the NewHoiiieSewiugMachiue Co.
do not experiment at the expense of the
public, by requiring a change of Shuttles
find Needles every yenrortwo? The same
shuttle and needle used in theirlatestim
proved machines will work equally ns well
iu their machines sold fifteen years ago.
DO YOU KNOW
that the rog-gearinginotionas used by
the New Home and chniuless bicycle is re¬
cognized, universally, as the most posi¬
tive and unvariable power known? For
teat very reason your watch has “cog¬
wheels.” Why not buy the best?
Office, 120 Whitaker, Cor. State St.,
SAVANNAH, GA.
FARM LOANS.
Brannen & Moore, States
boro, Ga., negotiate loans at
the lowest rates.
J. F. WILLIAMS. T. J. GRICE.
WILLIAMS & CRICE,
DEALElt IN
FAHCY GROCERIES AND LIQUORS.
,JUG TRADE A SPECIALTY.
fiOMtamnmtt of P f0duc< Sdtolttd.
340-2 West Bread Street, H M M M SAVANNAH, GA.
Church Directory.
M. K. CHURCH, SOUTH.
Rev. W. J. Flanders, Pastor. ■
Preaching each Sunday at 11 a m and 7:80 p tu.
Class meeting each Sunday at 10 a m.
Sunday school each Sunday at 3 p m.
Prayer meeting each Wednesday at 7:80 p m.
STATESBORO BAPTIST CHURCH.
Preaching on the 2nd and 4th Sundays iu each
month at 11 a m and 7:81) p m.
Prayer snd Praise service every Thursday evening
at 7:80 o'clock.
Sunday school every Sunday at 10 a m. W. C.
Parker, Supt.
Baptist Young People’s Union every Sunday after¬
noon at 3 o’clock. It. J. H. Debouch, President.
PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH,
Eld. M. E. Stubbs, Pastor.
Preaching every 2nd Sunday and Saturday in
earb mouth at to a iu.
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.'
W. H. McMeen. Pastor.
Preaching 1st aud 3rd Sundays 11 a. ni. and 7 p, in.
Sunday school every Sunday at'10 a. in.
Prayer meetlnir every Tuesday at 7:80 p. m.
Town Directory.
Mayor—J. W. Wilson.
Cuunellmen— L. J. Mcbean, J. (i. Bliteb, W. H.
Simmons, B. T. Outland, J. I,. Olltff.
Recorder and Treasurer—W. H. Elite.
Marshal—J. E. OlllIT.
Council meets second Tuesday nights.
County Directory.
Sheriff—John H. Donaldson, Statesboro, Ga.
Tax Collector—P. R. McElveen. Areola. Ga.
Tax Receiver-A. 3. Her, Harvllle. Ga.
Treasurer—Allen bee. Areola, Ga.
County Surveyor—H. J. Proctor, Jr., Proctor, Ga.
Sitkrior Court—I th Mondaysin April and OcUi
■r; B. D. Evans, Judge. Sundersville, Ga.; B. T.
Rawlings. Solicitor General, Sandersville, Gs.; 8. C.
Groover, Clerk, Statesboro. G*.
Coi'NTT Court—M onthly sessions Qarterly on Wednesdays
after first Mond days In each month. sessions
Wednesdays a fter flrst'Mnnth In each three aroaths
beginning Donaldson,' in January. J. E. Brannen, Judge;
J. H. Bailiff. Statesboro, Ga.
ordinary's Court— 1st Mondays in each month
C. s. Martin, ordinary, Statesboro, Ga.
JU8TICE COURTS
44th District—Shep Rushing, J. P., Green. d*y. Unit Ub.
R. R. McCorkle, N. P„ Green, Gu. Court
Saturday iu each month.
45th District-G. R. Trepnell, J. P., Metier, Ga.
J. Everitt. N. P.. Excelsior, Ga. Second Saturday.
4«th District—R. F. Stringe’, J. P., Echo, Ga.
R. G. hauler, N. P„ Endicott. Cx. Second Friday.
47th District—U. M. Dsvls, J. P., Ivanhoe, Oa
P. H. Brannen. N. P. and J. P., trie, G». Feurt
Friday.
48th District—A. W. Stewart, J. P.. Mill Ray, Ga.
C. Davis. J. P., Zoar, Gs. Second Saturday.
1320th Dtetrlct—T. C. Pennington, J. F.. Portal
Gu. E. W. Cowart. Portal, Ga. First Friday.
1340th Dtetrlct—J. C. Denmark, N. P. and J. P ,
Enal. Gu. Fourth Saturday.
1523rd District—Z. A. Rawls, J. P., Rufus, Ga.
W. Parrish, s'. P.. Ncllwood, Ga. Friday before
second Saturday.
4547th District—W. J. Richardson, J. P. and N. P.,
Harvllle, Ga. Third Friday.
1209th Dtetrlct—J. W. Rountree, J. P., Statesboro,
Ga. J. B. Lee, J. P. and N. P„ Statesboro, Ga.
Second Monday.
1575th Dtetrict-W. P. Donaldson, N. after P., Billet. third
M. E. Cannon, J. P., Bliteb. Thursday
Suuday.