The Camilla enterprise. (Camilla, Ga.) 1902-current, July 29, 1904, Image 3

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0 ^0^0^0^04 0 »0 'i'0‘t : o ji0<j.0w0<si0# Do You Want a Refrigerator? If so I can supply your wants at small cost. Sample Refrige¬ rator to be seen at the Camilla Trading Co’s, stores. I guarantee them to give satis¬ faction. Give me your Older. Council Williams. M«OwO»>O >> owO<; )OxWi'Q^oVo^0^o Notice of Application to Open New Road. GEORGIA. Mitchell County. J. R. King and others having applied for the opening and establishment of a new public road, commencing at the Colquitt county line near J. D. Max¬ well’s in the 761 Militia district of said county and running thence in a north¬ western direction and near the south¬ east corner of lot of land number 50 and terminating at the Moultrie and Pelham road. Said road to be second class. Notice is hereby given that said appli¬ cation will be finally granted on the second Tuesday in August, 1004 next, if no sufficient cause is shown to the con¬ trary. This July 12, 1904. J. G. Wood. Ordinary and C. C. C. Application for New District. GEORGIA—Mitchell County. The petition of a number of citizens of the 625 malitia district have asked that a new militia district be laid out of said district commencing at the Colquitt county line between lots of land Nos. 250 and 251 in the 9th district and run¬ ning North to the Dougherty county line (the stuno being bounded on the east by the lines of Colquitt and Worth counties)-then west along the Dougher¬ ty county line to lot No. 8 in said dis¬ trict, thence south to No. 258 and thence east to commencing point between lots of land Nos. 250 and 251, embracing and including in the new militia district 84 lots of land. The commissioners having been duly appointed as required by law who have submitted a. report recom¬ mending the establishment of the same as a new militia district. Said petition 1 laving been approved by me, and pro¬ ceedings entered on the minutes of the Ordinary’s court and the same having been transmitted to the Governor of the State as the law directs and having been acted upon by the governor and said dis¬ trict having been numbered 1611 G. M. It is ordered that this notice of said new district be published in the Camilla En¬ terprise for 80’days as required by law. Tills July 1st, 1904 J. G. WOOD, Ordinary. Application for Dismission. GEORGIA—Mitchell Countv. W. N. Segier, Guardian ol Daniel O. Bustle, Ida Beasley formerly Ida Bustle and Allie Minton, formerly Allie Bustle, has applied to me for discharge from his guardianship of said wards. This is therefore'todiotify all persons concerned to file their objections if any they have on or before the first Monday in August next, else he will be discharged from liis guardianship as applied for. J. G. WOOD, Ord. M. C CITATION • GEORGIA—Mitchell County. Maria Jones having made application for twelve month’s support out of the estate of Jacob Jones, and appraisers duly appointed to set apart the same, having filed tlieir return. All persons concerned are hereby required to show cause before the court of Ordinary of said county on the first Monday in Au¬ gust 1904, why said application should not be granted. This 1st fiay of July 1904. J. G* WOOD, Ordinary. Application for Dismission. GEORGIA—Mitchell County, W. B. Lewis, guardian of E. D. Lew¬ is, has applied to me for a discharge from his guardianship of E. D. Lewis, This is therefore to notify all persons concerned to file their objections if any they have on or before the first Monday in August next, else said W. B. Lewis will be discharged from his guardianship as applied for. Witness my hand and official signature, this the 1st day of Ju¬ ly, 1904. J. G. WOOD, Ordinary. Notice. This is to notify all persons concerned .that there will be let to the lowest bid¬ der on the second Tuesday in July next, the contract for building a Court House in 1603 District G. M. Said Court House to be built as per specification now on file in my office. Sealed bids are required for the same, the Commis¬ sioners reserving the right to reject any and all bids so desired. J. G. Wood, Ord. andC. B C. R. R. MRS. SNIPES, SHOT THROUGH WINDOW OF HER H0M n , PASSES AWAY. Morgan and Arch Tindall and Matthew Thompson Are Track¬ ed by Dogs and Anested— Strong Circumstancial Ev dence Is Claimed. Thomasvilie, G a . July 2 5.— (Special.)—Mrs. L. R. Snipes, who was shot in bed by an un¬ known assassin early Sunday morning, at Han sell, 1(3 miles north of Thomasvilie, died this afternoon. Morgan and Arch Tindall and Matthew Thompson, three boys, about twenty years old each, are in jail here charged with the murder The evidence against them is entirely circum¬ stantial, but the chain of circum¬ stances pointing to the guilt of one of them is hardly wanting a link. The bed in which Mrs. Snipes was shot sat within 3 feet of the window from which the pistol was tired. Powder stains are on the sill of the window, showing that the pistol must have been leveled on it. Two shots were fired, only one of which took ef¬ fect. It penet rated one lung and one kidney and lodged in the wo¬ man’s back. Dogs were taken to the scene at 9 o’clock on Sunday morning by Sheriff Plight of Thomas county. It required but a short time for them to strike a trail The trail led up to the Tindall home, a quarter of a mile away, beyond a freshly plowed cotton field. The tracks of two persons running crossed this field to the Tindall home. Here a pair of muddy shoes were found exactly fitting the tracks. A well had been freshly dug in the Snipes yard and some of the fresh clay on the shoes was ex¬ actly that found at this well and nowhere else in the neighbor¬ hood- - It is generally considered that the assassin intended to kill Mr. Suipesinstead of his wife. Snipes says that last week Arch Tin fall wrote ar insulting note to his (Snipes’) daughter, and that he roughly abused young Tindall for the insult. This is described as the motive. Mrs. Snipes was a highly respected woman and has a large family of young children, A great deal of feeling is expres¬ sed in regard to the dastardly deed. “DO IT TO-DAY.” The time-worn injunction, “Never put off'’til tomorrow what you can do today,” is now generally presented in this form : “Do it‘to-dav!” That is the .terse ad¬ vice we want to give you about that hacking cough or demoralizing cold with which you have been struggling for sev¬ eral days, perhaps weeks. Take some reliable remedy for it to-day— and let that remedy be Dr. Boscliee’s German Syrup, which has been in use for over thirty-five years. A few doses of it will undoubtedly relieve your cough or cold, and its continued use for a few days will cure you completely. No matter how deep-seated your cough, even if dread consumption has attacked your lungs, German Syrup will surely effect a cure— as it has done before in thousands of ap¬ parently hopeless cases of lung trouble. New trial bottles, 25c; regular size, 75c. At Lewis Drug Co. J. L. Hall, Moultrie. Moultrie, Ga., July 18.—James L. Hall, a prominent attorney, died here this afternoon. He was about 50 years old and for ten years a member of the local bar. He served one term in the Legislature, was solicitor of the Southern circuit for one term and is well known throughout the state. He was a prominent member of the Baptist church and of the Knights of Pythias. His funeral will take place here tomorrow- Health and Boards. The State Board of Health askbd the legislature for a appropriation and police to force its regulations. Last year the Board received S3,000 and no specific punishment is mentioned for violation of the board’s rules. Now it is better to spend 810,000 and get results than to spend S3,000 and get none. And the power of enforcing its edicts should by all means be conferred upon the board. The health of a state is its most important asset. All the schemes for immigiation, all the benefits of top crops at top prices, all the progress and prosperity of a sec¬ tion, count lor naught unless the health is good. People will not come to a town where the small¬ pox flags dot the landscape, where filthy streets, and garbage gorged back yards breed disease germs. In many cases the lo¬ cal Boards of Health through carele ssness or inefficiency fail to perform their duties. The State Board ought to be invested with enough money and power to keep conditions sanitary allovcr Geor¬ gia. Statistics gathered by the im¬ migration officials bear out the charge that Europe is dumping into this country hordes of unde¬ sirable immigrants, who are swelling the criminal and insane classes and filling the jails and charitableinstitutions. Pur ingthe the firstfour months of the present year, according to the data re¬ ferred to, there were in the jails and asylums of the country near¬ ly 50,000 foreigners who had been in the country less than five years. Of thin number some 20,000 were insane, and the rest criminals of greater or less degree. Of the whole number nearly 25,000 were confined in jails or asylums for life, and over 10,000 of the others were confined in jails for more than two years.—SavannahNews. Cured of Chrome Diarrhoea After Tea Years of Sufferin’. “I wish to say a few words in praise of Gliamberlain’s Golic, Cholera, and Diar¬ rhoea Remedy,” says Mrs. Mattie Burge, of Martinsville, Va. “I suffered from chronic diarrhoea for ten years and dur¬ ing that time tried various medicines without obtaining any permanent relief. Last summer one of my children was taken with cholera morbus, and I pro¬ cured a bottle of this remedy. Only two doses were required to give her entire relief. I then decided to try the medi¬ cine myself, and did not use all of one bottle before I was well and I have never since been troubled with that complaint. One cannot say too much in favor of that wonderful medicine.” This remedy is for sale by Lewis Drug 06. To The Georgia Press. As my Star Building was com¬ pletely destroyed by the great lire in Covington on last Satur¬ day night I lost not only all my books and papers, but the book and list of members of the Geor¬ gia Press Association, and am, consequently unable to re-estab¬ lish a correct list of tne members without their assistance. I, therefore earnestly request all members of the Association to write me at once, and give me the name of their respective pa¬ pers, in order that 1 may be able to re-establish a correct list of the membership. Georgia exch inges please copy I am yours fraternally, J. W. Anderson, Treas. Georgia Press Ass’n. Covington, Ga., July 13, 1904. Safeguard the Children. Notwithstanding all that is done by boards of health and charitably inclined persons, the death rate among small chil¬ dren is very high during the hot weath¬ er of the summer months in the large cities. There is not probably one case of bowel complaint in a hundred, however, that could not be cured by tlie timely nse of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. For sale by Lewis Drug Co. t ' :c~®a«5eg*B8B8B8B®B®sc g®s®E©8«saBe Beesons ssbo3«h«bo t ■ L Hanging in Camilla. 0 9 B U 8 K a n 8 15 ■ • 8 ti a e o I still hanging around selling u u am the door groceries and will appre¬ n ciate a share of your patronage. Carry a complete line of • ■ D Sour and Sweet Pickles, ♦» • ■» 13 8 Cl also nice ■ II ft a line of Olives. 8 « »> » n Bring your laundry to me and I will have it fixed up in first-class style. n « <■ H r ’Phone 18. Crawford C. Baggs, Broad St. 8 u H r /, V W VA^W 0 o t .3888BCB8B8B.R.!!8B8E#BSgSSC$S8E8B8S9B9B9B8B83B0B.B'? Notice! ...THE... •f Camilla Pressing Club, FIRST-CLASS WORK Your Patronage Solicited by ( A. W. WILLIAMS); Practical Repairer, Cleaning, Dyeing and Pressing Gent’s Clothing Of all kinds. (”7/7/ •ZhZ-'lZ* 1 dye any goods any color. Special ser Ladies’ clothing a specialty . W . Jlfl ■:, 111*" e , USBB i Lamar’s Lemon : Ajff V 'wirifftPo*. Vhm*4U. ■■ Laxative cures g Constipation, Bil¬ Dothan, Ala., I-jlils ItprsL |, iousness, Indiges¬ April 16, ’04. tion and Headache. I have used La¬ ^ ..v IS jh’r./T-’.r-1; I Acts promptly mar’s Lemon Lax¬ a and powerfully on ative in my family Si |Mil the bowels yet is and Would not bo gentle and pleas¬ without it. It is ant in action certainly a valua¬ T does not gripe or ble medicine. sicken. It can’t J. A. May, hurt you-it can Chief of Police. help you. On sale at all good drug stores. SO doses for SO cents. OWNED AND MANUFACTURED BY LAMAR, TAYLOR & RILEY DRUG COMPANY, Macon, Ga. MASSEH(rALF 4<rf/ycr flY STAND Is at the Depot. ■<"~T am here to furnish to the PubIi<f"V Brick, Rough and Dressed Lumber At prices that are Fair. See me and save money. [ carry a nice, new line of GROCERIES. My motto shall be: “Fair Dealing and Prompt Service.” Command me and your goods shall be delivered at your door. Phone 42. J. F. Clark. Klint River Sc North-eastern Ry. Co. Effective February 4tli 1901, 10:30 a. m No. 3 No 1 Daily Miles Miles No 2 Daily No i A. M. STATIONS PM 10 30 0 Lv Pelham Ar 25 4 10 10 40 1 ACL Junction 24 4 00 11 05 6 Cotton 18 3 18 11 10 2 Riley 15 3 13 11 13 1 Hinson 13 3 10 11 23 H Florid e 11 3 00 11 35 2i Akridge 9 2 50 1150 2 Sale City 6 2 35 12 00 1 Jonesboro 1 2 25 12 10 2 Tuton Junction 0 2 15 12 20 3 Port Arthur 3 2 10 12 30 3 Ar Tichnor Lv 0 2 00 Connections: JVo. 1 Pelham Ga., Atlantic Coast Line No. 2 Tichnor Ga., Georgia Northern Tty. J. W. Byrd, Gefi. Man. D. M. Rogers, Gen. Sn_ t