Newspaper Page Text
County Directory.
Superior Court Officers.
W N Spence, Judge.
W E Wooten, Solicitor General.
E M Davis, stenographer.
S E Cox, clerk.
I Smith, sheriff.
Court sessions Tuesday after
3rd Monday in April and October.
City Qourt Officers.
I A Bush, Judge.
S S Bennet, Solicitor pro tern.
S E Cox, 1 lerk.
Court sessions on 2nd Monday
in January, April, July and Oc¬
tober.
Commissioners— T. R, Bennett,
Chairman, Wyatt Adams, A.
B. Joiner, J. W. Everett, and J.
G. Wood, clerk. Regular meet¬
ing second Tuesay in each
month.
Ordinary’s court every first
Monday J. G, Wood, Ordinary.
County Officers,
J. L. Stewart, Tax Collector.
0. T. Akridge, Tax Receiver,
jonah palmer, Treasurer.
Samuel Lucky, surveyor.
Green Spence, Cproner,
Board of Education.
J P Heath, Chairman, Camilla,
Ga.
Nat Bradford, Pelham, Ga.
J T Glausier, Baconton, Ga.
W E Davis, Meigs, Ga
J B Lewis, Camilla, Ga.
J H Powell, C. S. C. Camilla, Ga.
Caurch Chimes.
Methodist Church— Corner
Harney and Stephens Streets—
Rev. C. T. Clark, pastor. Preach¬
ing second and fourth Sundays
in eaoh month at 11 o’clock, a. m
7:30 o’clock p. m. prayer meeting
every Thursday evening at 7:30
o’clock. Sunday school every
Sunday morning at 9 : 45 o’clock,
I. A. Bush, superintendent. Ep
worth League every Sunday af¬
ternoon at 3:30 o’clock. The pub¬
lic coriaiiy invited to afcfc end all
church services.
Baptist C h'urch— Broad
Street. Sunday school every
Sunday morning at 9:30 o’clock;
J. L. Cochran, superintendent.
The general pnblic welcome to
all services.
Presbyterian Church -Broad St.
Rev. Archie MeLauehlin, pastor.
Preaching on the third and fourth
Sundays in each month at 11 o’¬
clock and at night. Prayer meet¬
ing every Tuesday night. Sun¬
day school at 9-30 a. m. All cor-,
•dially invited to attend these
meetings.
^0<*>0<S>0$’0<$>03>Oi£>0^0<3>0<§.0«>0<$>0<J>0 ^Professional Cards-J
^J. L. UNDERWOOD, Attorney-at-Law Real*
< and
^ Estate. J
4 Office in Bennett’s Building, Broad £ ►
street.
JF. LEWIS, - ►
L. ►
Physician Surgeon. ►
and I ►
4 Office at Drug Siore of Lewis Drug
j Go’s., during the day. Residence ►
< at night. Prompt attention given ►
4--- 4 to all calls. £ 1
3 A Bush, R D Bush MEBuab* 3
I. A. BUSH & SONS,
4 Attorneys-at-Law, 4
4 Commercial Camilla, law Ga.
◄ a specialty.
4 EL C. Dasher, Jr. W. H. Hoggaad. l
M DASH ER & HO TG ARD,
4 Attobnbys-at-Law,
4 Camilla, Ga,
3 Office in Enterprise Building.
^D. A. Dental SPENCE, Surgeon,
4
4 Pelham, Ga.
4 Office in new City Hall.
4 The best quality of work at*
4 reasonable charges. Your pa-£
4 tronage solicitated. £
Db. J. L. Brown,
t Physician and Surgeon, o
$ o Camilla, Georgia, |
Residence phone 4. Office phone 30. o
0«>0$0$0#«#0^©,0
What Mr. Bryan Really Said.
Just as sensible men might
have expected, much of the clam¬
or and hubbub over Mr. Bryan’s
Nev York speech has been with¬
out other foundation than the
hasty constructions of newspa¬
pers and the gaibled quotations
Oi. the orator’s utterance.
In an interview given out the
next day to all the newspapers of
New York and which snrely
should have had as wide a circu¬
lation as the garbled speech, Mr.
Bryan, in the deliberation of
print, said over his own signa¬
ture:
“While a greatoutcry has been
made because I have demanded
the reaffirmation of the Kansas
City platform, an attempt has
been made to show that I w$nt
to fight over again the battle of
1896, those who are best acquain¬
ted with my real views have
shown that I have been misun¬
derstood. Ever since 1900 I have
felt that the question of gold and
silver is no longer of great im¬
portance. But that does not
mean that I consider the ques¬
tion answered. I believe it has
been absorbed in an issue of
greaterimpoitance- In the same,
manner the question involving
trusts, labor unions and impe¬
rialism have been included in
that larger question, “Shall the
money changers rule the United
States?”
“I have asked why the so-call
ed conservatives, those men who
have so loudly berated me for
demanding the reaffirmation of
the Kansas City platform, do not
come out into the open and there
make plain their position. If the
Democratic party is to be led in¬
to new fields of politics, it would
be well for us to know whither
we are going. Are these con
servative leaders afraid of the
public? If so, I fear that then
suggestions hide some ulterior
motive.
“I do not favor making silver
the paramount issue of the cam¬
paign. I do not favor making
the trust question the paramount
issue of the campaign. Neither
do I believe it wise to make im¬
perialism the paramount issue
The tariff would not be accepted
as the paramount issue. But all
should be merged into the great¬
er question whicli 1 have put in¬
to words:
‘‘Shall the money changers
rule the United States?
“I am accused of arraying the
masses against the classes. It
is not so. I only desire to have
the masses protect themselves
from the attack of the over-fav¬
ored classes. The masses are
geneious. The classes are sel¬
fish. What measures for the re¬
lief of all people have been sug¬
gested in this country that the
money changers have not oppos¬
ed?
•‘Wall street is the home for
all that m self-seeking and self
centered. When a measure is
proposed for the purpose of
curbing the criminal trusts it is
bitterly opposed by all the Wall
street influences. If a measure
is proposed for the benefit of la¬
bor, Wall street sends out orders
to have it defeated.
“The idea that the Republicans
will make an honest effort to de¬
stroy the trusts is laughable,
That party depends for its cam¬
paign funds upon the bankers
who form the trusts and sell
watered stock to the public to
enrich themselves. The Repub¬
licans posers friends of labor
while the worst enemies labor
has sit high in the councils of
that party.
“What, then, is to become of
the hopes of the masses if the
Democratic party is to turn to
the same men who control the
Republican party and surrender
itself?
“Now, I do not want it to be
understood that I am making
or attempting to make a plat¬
form for the Democrats to stand
upon. It is not for me to say
that this issue or that shall be
brought forward. Let me tell
you that the hope of the masses
of this country lies with the
Democratic party.
Now, if there is anything Gficta
torial in this we fail to see ifc. If
there is anything radical it is the
radicalism of pure Democracy;
and if there is a line in it which
the “tribe of the tantrums’’ can
object to, let them point out the
line, and we will engage to, defend
it before the intelligence of the
southern democratic party,
Let us cease ti earp at Bryan
and heed his words of wisdom.
He has “rung the center.’’- At¬
lanta News.
The tendency Tendency! of medical the Times. science
is toward pieventive measures.
The host thought of the world is
being given to the subject,
is easier and better to prevent
than to cure. It has been fully
demonstrated that pneumonia,
one of the most oangerous dis¬
eases that medical men have to
contend with can be prevented
by the use of Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy. Pneumonia al¬
ways results from a cold or from
an attack of influenza (grip) and
it has been observed that this
remedy counteracts any tenden¬
cy of these diseases toward pneu¬
monia. This has been fully prov¬
en in many thousands of cases
in which this remedy has been
used during the great prevalence
of colds and grip in recent years
and can be relied upon with im¬
plicit confidence. Pneumonia
often results from a slight cold
when no danger is apprehended
until it is- suddenly discovered
that there is fever and difficulty
in breathing and pains in the
chest, then it is announced that
the patient has pneumonia. Be
on the safe side and take Cham¬
berlains Cough Remedy as soon
as the cold is contracted. It al¬
ways cures. For sale by Lewis
Drug Co.
We save feed when we give the
farm animals shelter according to
the suggestions cf a merciful care
for them. It is a sign of bad
farming, of farming sure to result
unprofitably, to sea, as one some¬
times does, beasts shivering in a
fence corner during the bitter
blasts of winter without a bite to
eat. Were such farming to pay
it would be putting a premium on
cruelty.
$100 Reward, $100.
The readers of this paper will
be pleased to learn that there is
at least one dreaded disease that
science has been able to cure in
all its stages, and that is Catairh
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only
positive cure now known to the
medical fraternity. Catarrh be¬
ing a constitutional disease, re¬
quires a constitutional treatment
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken in¬
ternally, acting directly upen the
blood and mucous surface of the
system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and
giving the patient strength by
building up the constitution and
assisting nature in doing its work.
The proprietors have so much
faith in its curative powers that
they offer a reward of one hund¬
red dollars for any case that it
fails to cure. Send for list of
testimonials.
Address F. J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, O. Sold by ali druj
75c. Take Halls family pil
constipation.
Dor Uvery Wound
USE
I)r. Tie lienor^ Antiseptic
Prevents Tnfammation and Superration,
fiot a liniment nor a salve,
31 pleasant, stainless liquid for
Wounds, Bruises, Sprains, Burns,
Colic, Cramps, Diarrhoea.
lOcand 50c per Boltle.
BRONCHODA
Tor throat and Clings.
Expectorant. . . . Antiseptic. . . . Laxative..
2Se at all Druggists.
Sherrotjs£ Medicine Co.,
New Orleans, La.
HUNTER, PEARCE & BATTEY,
Cotton Factors. Over 30 years experience.
Expert Handlers of^ —— ^
Sea Island
A wi as
Upland Cotton.
Liberal cash Advances against consignments.’
Money loaned to cotton shippers on Approvede*
curity.
Large dealers in
Sea Island and Upland Bagging,
Sugar Cloth, Twine and Ties.
WRITE FOR TERMS,
126 East Bay St. Savannah, Ga.
Atlantic Coast Line By. Go*
Florida and Cuba,
DOUBLE DAILY PASSENGER SERVICE
Montgomery, Troy, Ozark Dothan, Elba, Bainbridge, Thomasville
Valdosta, Waycross, avanna h, harleston, Brunswick
Jacksonville and all -
Florida Points
Through Pullman Cars on all through trains and to
New York, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Washington,^Richmond
And all points East over its own rails to Richmond and Norfolk.
To St. Louis, Cincinnati, Louisville, Chicago
Kansas City, Birmingham, Nashvilie, New Orleans and
ali points west and northeast.
Lv. Camilla, northbound,............10:36 am...........6:04 p m
Ly. Camilla, southbound.............8:45 am............5:00 p m
at Savannah with ocean steamship line and M & M T
Co., for New York, Boston and Philadelphia.
further information cali on or address
W. W. Cullens, Ticket Agent, Camilla,|Ga.
T. J. Bottoms, Traveling Passenger Agent, Thomasville, Ga.
H. M. Emerson,. Traffic Mgr., Wilmington, N. C,
J. A. Taylor, T. P. A., Montgomery, Ala.
J. GBAIG, w. S. LEASYj
Sen Pass Agt Wilmington, tf. 0 . D.r. Pa;s. A*t.,: 5 ama>
Sft* PECANS
Choice Lot of young trees for Winter 'and Spring Deliv¬
ery. One or two year old seedlings from finest va
'rities of nuts grown in my groves. Fine Trees
BUDDEJD AND GRAPTRD
from my very best varieties. 20,000 “Commercial”
seedlings for budding and grafting. Call and see
my groves and nurseries. Write for catalogue and
for Special prices on large orders.
(x. M Bacon DeWitt Ga.