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 Mon¬
day in April and October.
CITY COURT OFFICERS.
I. A. Bush, Judge.
S. S. Bennett, Solicitor pro tern.
S. E. Cox, Cierk.
Court sessions on 2nd Monday in Jan¬
uary, April, July and October.
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS.
T. R. Bennett, Chairman, Wyatt
Adams, A. B. Joiner, J. W. Everett, and
J. G. Wood, Clerk. Regular meeting
second Tuesday in each mouth.
Ordinary’s court every first Monday,
J. G. Wood, Ordinary.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
J. L. Stewart, Tax Collector.
G. T. Akridge, Tax Receiver.
Jonah Palmer, Treasurer.
Samuel Lucky, Surveyor.
Green Spence, Coroner.
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,
City Directory.
Mayor—J. H. Palmer
Mayor Pro-tem—M. C. Bennett.
Couneilmen—M. C. Bennett, H. C.
Basher, Sr., A. B. Joiner, F. S. Perry,
J. C. Turner, C. E. Watt,
Clerk—J. L. Cochran.
Treasurer—C. L. Taylor.
Marshal—J. K. Hilliard.
Night Policeman—Raymond Cochran.
HIGH SCHOOL.
Board of Trustees—J. W. Butler, J.
L. Cochran, F. L. Lewis, A. R. Patrick,
J. H. Scaife. W. N. Spence, J. C. Turner.
Secretary and Treasurer, C. L. Taylor.
Cdurch Chimes.
Methodist Church —Corner Harney
and Stephens streets—Rev. C. T. Clark,
pastor. Preaching second and fonrth
Sundays in each month at 11 o’clock, a.
m., and 7:80 o’clock p. m. Prayer meet¬
ing every Thursday evening at 7:30
o’clock. Sunday School every Sunday
morning at 9:45 o’clock, I. A. Bush, sup¬
erintendent. Epworth League every
Sunday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock. The
public cordially invited to attend all
church services.
Baptist CitunoH-Broad street. Preach¬
ing every 1st and 3rd Sunday at 11 a, m.
and 7:30 p. m. to he supplied. Sun¬
day school every Sunday morning at
9:30 o’clock; J. L. Cochran, superintend¬
ent. The general public welcome to all
services.
Presbyterian- Church— Broad street.
Rev. Archie McLaucWin, pastor. Preach¬
ing on the third and fourth Sundays in
each month at !1 o’clock and at night.
Prayer meeting every Tuesday night.
Sunday school at 9-30 a. m. All cordial¬
ly invited to attend these meetings.
WANTED— Several Industrious Per¬
sons in each state to travel for house
established eleven years and with a large
capital, to call upon merchants profitable and
agents for successful and line.
Permanent engagement. Weekly cash
salary of $24 and all traveling expenses
and hotel hills advanced in each week.
Experience not essential. Mention ref¬
erence and enclose self-addressed envel¬
ope. THE NATIONAL, 332 Dearborn
Easy Pil ^
Easy to take and easy to act is
that famous little pill DeWitt’s
Little Early Risers. This is due to
the fact that they tonic the liver in¬
stead of purging it. They never gripe
nor sicken, not even the most delicate
lady, and yet they are so certain in
results that no one who uses them is
disappointed. They cure torpid liver,
constipation, biliousness, jaundice,
headache, malaria and ward off pneu¬
monia and fevers.
PREPARED ONLY BY
E. C. DeWITT A CO., CHZGAGO
^ Don’t Forget the Name. (
Early Risers
COLD GY LEWIS DRUG CO
RULES FOR CARRIERS.
Postoffice Department Issues
Rules For Rural Carriers.
The Postoffice Department
has issued new rules governing
the duties of rural mail carriers
which takes effect July 1st
These new regulations xvill be of
interest to the patrons of these
routes, as a knowledge of them
will save trouble to both carrier
and patrons. A synopsis of
these rules is given below.
Carriers are not permitted to
solicit business, or receive or¬
ders from any person, firm or
corporation.
No mailable matter can be
handled by carriers unless prop
er postage has been paid, with
the single exception of county
newspapers.
Packages not mailable must
be delivered to the carrier by the
patron in person, and in delivei -
ing such packages the carrier is
not permitted to leave his regu¬
lar route. He must not receive
any package that will likely de¬
lay the mail, or interfere with
the efficiency of the service.
The hire for package or mer¬
chandise carried must be paid
by the patron. Carriers are not
permitted to receive any com¬
pensation from the sellers of
such merchandise.
Carriers, while on duty, are
not permitted to carry any spir¬
ituous liquors, either for them¬
selves, for sale, or for the accom¬
modation of their patrons.
Carriers must not engage in
any business which offers temp¬
tations, to solicit orders, such as
book canvassing, soliciting in®
surance, selling sewing machines
etc.
Carriers must not by any
method, direct or indirect, solicit
money, gifts or presents, nor
furnish filenames and addresses
of patrons on their route to any
person, firm or corporation.
A careful study of these sew
regulations will he of benefit to
patrons and save much needless
trouble.
Weak Hearts
axe caused by indigestion. If you eat
little too much, or if 'you arc subject
attacks of indigestion, the stomach ex¬
pands—swells, and puffs up against the
heart. This crowds the heart and short¬
ens the breath. Rapid heart beats
heart disease is the final result, Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure digests what- you eat,
takes the strain off your heart, cures in¬
digestion, dyspepsia, sour stomach, and
contributes nourishment, strength and
health to every organ of the body. Sold
by Lewis Drag Co.
The pill that will, will fill the bill,
Without a gripe.
To cleanse the liver, without a quiver.
Take one at night.
DeWitt’s Little Early Risers are small,
easy to take, easy and gentle in effect,
yet they are so certain in results that
one who uses them is disappointed.
quick relief from biliousness, sick head¬
ache torpid liver, jaundice, dizziness and
all troubles arising from an inactive, slug
glish liver, Early Risers are unequaled.
Sold by Lewis Drug Co.
New Lumber Plant for Pelham
Pelham, Ga.. July 3.—Twenty
three car loads of material for
rebuilding the Higgs ton Lumber
Company’s plant are now here.
The mill will be rebuilt at cnce.
Toe new plant is to be a much
larger one than that which burn¬
ed. with a capacity of about 50,
000 feet a day.
Lewis Drug Company
<isk the readers of this paper who are,
suffering with indigestion or dyspepsia
to call on them at once and get a bottle
of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. If you knew
the value of this remedy as we know it,
you would not suffer another day. Ko¬
dol Dyspepsia Cure is a thorough diges
cant and tissue-building tonic as well. It
is endorsed personally by hundreds of
people whom it has cured of indigestion,
dyspepsia, palpitation of the heart and
stomach troubles generally. Kodol Dys¬
pepsia Cure digests what you eat. It, is
pleasant, palatable and strengthening.
The Negro Plank.
Forcing the suffrage upon the
negro thirty-odd years ago in¬
jected into the political system of
the United States a poison that
threatens the life of American in¬
stitutions. It has been more ef¬
fective than ten other influences
in debauching the public cun*
science in political action. It
has been mostpotentin changing
party from a matter of principle
to a thing of place and peif. In
throwing upon the south the bur
den of maintaining white civili¬
zation it has been responsible for
much of the partial paralysis that
has befallen the statesmanship
there to the disadvantage of the
whole country, and has been the
slimy source of much of the cor¬
ruption rampant in the great cen¬
ters of population in other parts
of the country. Neither of the
great parties have escaped its
malign influence, and in making
it possible that national elections
may be carried on by the baldest
cultivation of the passions and
prejudices of the ignorant and
irresponsible it has imperiled the
continuance of a republican form
of government,
Negro suffrage has fallen far
short of its aims, whatever may
have been the motives in the ex¬
periment. Was it designed by
fanaticism or by hatred to humili¬
ate forevor a section that had act¬
ed upon its convictions? The
white hearts in the rest of the
country soon drew the fangs of
that viper. Was it planned by
honest by ignorant theory, in¬
spired by the doctrine cf the
Jacobins, to'benefit the negro?
Then may the negro feelingly ex¬
claim, “Save me from the godless
philanthropy!” Wt.s it willed to
insure eternal possession of pow¬
er by a minority of the whites of
the country? History has de¬
monstrated that will-power is not
also sufficient, and has taught
the lesson that bringing the ne¬
gro issue to the front is likely to
defeat its very purpose.
Against such facts, in the face
of decisions of the Supreme Court
of the land practically Rubifying
acts of the revolutionary period
between 1801 and 1877, in the
face of the formal and the delib¬
erate throwing overboard of the
negro, except for campaign pur¬
poses, in the deal which placed
Hayes in the presidency and re¬
stored the government of the
Southern states to the integrity
and civilization of that section;
in the face of the effort by the
South to resort to constitutional
means of ridding itself and the
country of the curse, the Crum
packers and Crum-backers have
insanely embodied in the platfoi m
of the Republican party a plunk
that must stir again the waters of
sectional strife and infuse into
the coming campaign the bitter¬
ness and animosities which
Grover Cleveland did so much to
assuage and which William Mc¬
Kinley would have still further
modified had he lived.
That plank, superficial and dis¬
honest as it is, should bring upon
its authors, its sponsors and en¬
dorsers the condemnation of ev¬
ery patriotic citizen of any party.
It is nothing but a base appeal to
the mudsills in American politics.
The Manufacturers’ Record
affiliated with no party, and
standing on its twenty-year-old
platform, the welfare of the South
means the welfare of the country,
appeals to the best elements of
the whole country, in business
and in politics, in education and
in religion, in church and state,
to set the seal of condemnation
upon this reckless act of partisan
desperation.-Manufacturers’
Record.
One Lady’s F.eiommea’.atisn Sold Fifty
Boses of Cfcmisra’-'s Stcnuch
and Liver Tat lit s.
I have, I believe, sold fifty boxes of
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tab¬
lets on the recommendation of one lady
here, who first bought a box of them
about a year ago. She never tires of
telling tier neighbors and friends about
the good qualities of these Tablets.—P
M. Shore, Druggist, Rochester, Ind.
The pleasant purgative effect of these
Tablets makes them a favorite with la¬
dies everywhere. For Sale by Lewis
Drug Co.
I! 1 « Purify ,. 1
1
H a
Accuracy, i
m m Dispatch .
m
® ^ pounding We use of the Prescriptions] best Drugs in and|Fatn= the con:
I ily Recipes.
m
Our methodjis up=to=date]and ac
curacy is always]obtained.
&
m tel l|| We deliver Drugs to any part cf I
the city on short notice.
ii Yours to Serve,
m
1 Perry's Pharmacy, m 1
m
m Phone No. <>. Camilla, Georgia. m
m
1
hfe-y# Sfefe&awt.'iff
✓
NO COUNTRY IS SAFE WITHOUT A STRONO NAVY
NO FAMILY IS SAFE WITHOUT A BOTTLE OP
DR. TICHENOR’S ANTISEPTIC
For WOUNDS, BURNS, BRUISES, SCALDS, COLIC and CRAMPS £7 <?
lOc and SOc and a botile of -
BRON-CHO-DA For Coughs. Colds and Sore Throat—28c
Sherrouse Medicine Co. mfrs. new Orleans, la.
Notice! ...the...
Camilla Pressing Club,
J V FIRST-CLASS WORK
__Your Patronage Solicited by
A. W. WILLIAMS, Practical Repairer,
Cleaning, Dyeing and Pressing
as»
Gent’s clothing of all kinds Hk I dye any goods any color. Special ser¬
Ladies’ clothing a specialty. vice to all commercial travelers,
^ A|| Work;done under Guarantee .
A bill has been in'./oduced to
increaso the governor’s salary to
85,000, which may make it worth
the South Georgia candidate’s
while. People make too much
money down here to fool with a
83,000 job.—Free Pi ess.
The life insurance companies
of NeV York have notified their
employees that anyone caught
hett.ng on horse races would be
at Herald. once discharged.—Wayeross