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County Directory.
SUPERIOR COURT OFFICERS.
W. N. Spence, Judge.
W. E. Wooten, Solicitor General.
E. M. Davis, Stenographer.
J. L. Green, Clerk.
I. Smith, Shariff.
Court sessions Tuesday after 3rd Mon¬
day in April and October.
CITY COURT OFFICERS.
I. A. Bush, Judge.
S. S. Bennett, Solicitor pro tem.
J. L. Green, Clerk.
Court sessions on 2nd Monday in Jan¬
uary, April, July and October.
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS.
T. R. Bennett, Chairman, J. J. Griner,
L. G. Collins, J. W. Everett, and J. G.
Wood, Clerk. Regular meeting second
Tuesday in each month.
Ordinary’s court every first. Monday,
J. G. Wood, Ordinary.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
J. L. Stewart, Tax Collector.
G. T. Akridge, Tax Receiver.
Jomih Palmer, Treasurer.
Samuel Lucky, Surveyor.
Green Spence, Coroner.
BOARD OF EDUCATION.
J. P. Heatli, 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-tern—M. C. Bennett.
Councilmen—M. C. Benuet, F. S.
Pony, C. E. Watt, A. R. Patrick, I. A.
Bush, G. B. Cochran.
Clerk—J. L. Cochran.
Treasurer—C. L. Taylor.
Marshal—W. A. Fairelotli.
HIGH SCHOOL.
Board of Trustees—J. W. Butler, ,T.
L. Cochran, F. L. Lewis, A. R. Patrick,
J. II. Scaife, W. N. Spence, J. C. Turner.
Secretary and Treasurer, C. L. Taylor.
Cnurch Chimes.
Methodist Church —Corner Harney
and Stephens streets—Rev. C. T. Clark,
pastor. Preaching second and fourth
Sundays in each month at 11 o’clock, a.
m., and 7:30 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 CiiURCH-Broad street. Preaoh
iug every 1st and 3rd Sunday at 11 a. m.
and 7:80 p. m. Rev. E. S. Atkinson,
pastor. Sunday school every Sunday
morning at 9:30 o’clock; J. L. Cochran,
superintendent. The general public we
welcome to all services.
Puesktterias Church—B road street.
Rev. Archie McLauehlin, pastor. Preach¬
ing on the third and fourth Sundays in
each month at II 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.
Camilla Trading Co,,
■-- Camilla. Georgia -
Dealers in
Dry Goods, Notions, Pants, Hats,
Hardware, Crockery and
Glassware.
American Woven Wire and
Groceries.
-Prices Guaranteed.
Camilla Trading Co,
HELP WANTED!
100 laborers wanted at
Virginia-Carolina Chemical
Co.’s Fertilizer factory at
Albany, Ga., at $1.00 per
day.
R. B. Saunders, Supt.
Subscribe for the Enterprise,
FARMERS’ MEETING.
County Organization Perfected
in Line with the New Orleans
Meeting.
Met and organized by electing
Judge I. A- Bush, temporary
chairman and W, A. Allen, tern*
porary secretary.
On roll call the following dele¬
gates answered for thei r respec¬
tive districts
Camilla District—B. H. Davis,
Jesse Cochran, J. L. Palmer, L.
G. Collins, W. H. J ines and H.
P. Butler.
Baconton District—Lon Flem¬
ing, O. P. Meares and L. A.
Brooks.
Pebble City District—Wilburn
Williams and W. H. Branch.
11th District—T. B. Beck, J.
M. Keaton, R. B. Wingate and J.
M- Harrison.
Maples District—S. E. Cox.
Pelham District—J- J- Griner,
W* N. Spence and Jonah Palmer.
Permanent county organization
was then had by the eleciion of
Judge I. A. Bush, chairman, J.
L. Green, secretary, J. L. Pal¬
mer, treasurer.
On motion leports from dis¬
trict committees were then call¬
ed for.
Baconton District was the only
one that reported and a line show¬
ing made.
On motion Judge W. N. Spence
and Judge I. A. Bush were elect¬
ed as delegates to the Atlanta
meeting.
No further business the meet¬
ing adjourned go meet again on
Saturday, Feb. 25, at 11 o’clock.
Fraud Exposed.
A few counterfeiters have late¬
ly been making and trying to sell
imitations of Dr. King’s New Dis¬
covery for Consumption, Coughs
and Colds, and other medicines,
thereby defrauding the public.
This is to warn you to beware of
such people, who seek to profit,
through stealing the reputation
of remedies Which have been suc¬
cessfully curing disease, for over
35 years. A sure protection, to
you, is our name on the Wrapper.
Look for it, on all Dr. King’s or
Bucklen’s remedies, as all others
are mere imitations. H. E. Buck
len & Co., Chicago, 111 , and
Windsor, Canada. For sale by
Lewis Drug Co.
Stay On The Farm.
Young men, stay on the farm.
There’s health and independence
out there where the pines whisper
to each other in voices low and
sweet—where the red bug vies
with the seed tick in extending a
hearty welcome to visitors—
where the lowing of the cows, the
bellowing of the Mr. Cows, the
squeak of the swine, the croving
Of the Mr. Chickens, and the
bleating of sheep do away with
the need of an orchestra—where
joy and gladness He around in
great gobs and the very air is
redolent with perfumes of a thous
and flowers in Nature’s vast gar¬
den. Stay on the farm, young
man, and thus help to ennoble an
already noble calling.—Ocilla
Dispatch.
Grave Trouble Foreseen.
It needs but little foresight, to
tell, that when your stomach and
liver are badly affected, grave
trouble is ahead, unless you take
the proper medicine for your dis¬
ease, as Mrs. John A. Young, of
Clay, NHY., did. She writes: “I
had neuralgia of the liver and
stomach, my heart was weaken¬
ed, and I could not eat. I was
very bad for a long time, but in
Electric Bitters, I found just what
I needed, for they quickly reliev
ed and cured me.” Best medicine
for weak women. Sold under
guarantee by Lewis Drug Co., at
50e a bottle.
When a man makes one mis¬
take he usually follows it up with
three or four before he recovers
jjia balance.
Pointed Paragraphs.
Chicago News.
Too many quarrels are picked
before they are ripe.
Paying your deb' s is one kind
of a paying business.
A poor man may be a crank,
but a rich one is eccentric.
City soil is said to be superior
to country soil for wild oats.
When a doctor gives a rich pa¬
tient up it’s up to the undertaker.
The individual who keeps his
mouth shut seldom lives to regret
it.
A man always remembers his
enemies, but sometimes forgets
his friends.
It is not good for man to be
alone; that is why woman refuses
to let him alone.
A happy marriage is the usual
resultWhen love is adulterated
with a little common sense.
A wise woman never gives her
husband a letter to mail if she
hopes to receive an early r -ply.
Nothing seems to please the
relatives of a man’s first wife
like the troubles he has with his
second.
During the courtship a man de
dares he cannot live without her
—and after marriage he often
finds it impossible to live with
her.
Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liv¬
er Tablets. Unequalled for
Constipation.
Mr. A. R. Kane, a prominent druggist
of Baxter Springs, Kansas, says: “Cham¬
berlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets are,
in my judgment, t he most superior prep¬
aration of anything in use today for con¬
stipation. They are sure in action and
with no tendency to nauseate or gripe.
For sale by Lewis Drug Co.
Suppose you save a few pen¬
nies by having your job printing
done in some large city where
they can turn out work more rap¬
idly. Does the city printing office
ever do you a favor? Do the
city printers ever buy clothes and
shoes from you? Don’t you have
to pay them the hard cash after
thirty days? On the other hand
don’t you get every penny of the
home printer’s money, except
what he has to pay for material?
Mr. Merchant, give these few
questions a little consideration
before doling out a pitiful sup¬
port to the home printing office.
Senoia Enterprise Gazette.
Poisons In Food.
Perhaps you don’t realize that
many pain poisons originate in
your food, hut some day you may
feel a twinge of dyspepsia that
will convince you Dr, King’s
New Life Pills are guaranteed to
cure all sickness due to poisons
of undigested food—or money
back. 25c at Lewis Drug Co.
Try them.
When the farmers of the south
complete the proposed organiza¬
tion to fight the cotton specula¬
tive trust, and succeed in getting
prices back to a living basis then
there will go up from the trust
magnates a brawl against monop¬
olies such as the world has never
heard before. Yes, let the far¬
mers form a trust, and in turn for
the thieving they have been prac¬
ticing on cotton growers let them
pay dear for all the cotton they
get next season.—Jonesboro En¬
terprise.
Agonizing Burns
are instantly relieved, and per¬
fectly healed, by Bucklen’s Ar¬
nica Salve. C. Rivenbark, Jr.,
of Norfolk, Va., writes: “I burnt
my knee dreadfully; that it blis¬
tered all over- Bueklen’s Arnica
Salve stopped the pain, and heal
ed it wiihout a scar.” Also heals
all wounds and sores, 25c at Lew¬
is Drug Co.
Plans are on foot to plant a
good sized area in strawberries
for another year in Lee county.
Lee already ships one-fourth of
the pear crop that is marketed in
Georgia.
How Homes Are Lost.
They mortgaged it.
They let their insurance run
out.
They bought things they did
not need, because they were
cheap.
They subscribed for everything
they could pay for on the install¬
ment plan.
The father always intended to
get his life insured, but died with¬
out doing so.
They did not realize how easy
it was to get in debt and how hard
it is to get out.
Money enough went down in
drink and up in smoke to have
saved the farm.
They tried to do what others ex¬
pected of them rather than what
they could afford.
They thought it small to insist
on having an agreement put in
writing.
When the shoe began to pinch,
they really could not see where
they could retrench. Habit had
made luxuries seem necessities.
—-Success.
For Sale.
75 bushels Floradora Cotton
Seed. Extra Staple. Market
price 2 to 1 cents per pound over,
more than other cottons. Pro¬
duces as much and more than
other varieties to the acre.
Brice, $1.50 a bushel.
Apply to O. P. Meares, Jr.,
Baconton, Ga.
The easier people make money
the easier they want to make it.
Building Material,
-WHEN IN NEED OF
Columns, Balusters. Mantles, Win¬
dow and Door Frames, Sash,
Doors. Blinds, Etc.,
Write us for prices.
Prompt service. Satisfaction guaranteed.
horrja^vllle \1 arie y UJo|'k<y
"["hom Seville, ^°F3 pa. !
SEE Oil WRITE TO
W. N. DRAKE,
PELHAM, GA.
He will write your Fire "Insurance any¬
where and will be glad to
show you his
LIFE AND ACCIDENT CONTRACTS.
He will stand your bond, such as Admin¬
istrators, County and State Officers
-and other positions of trust*
!f you can’t go to see him, write him
—== —what you want, -——
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| | Tla© City T^nsorial l*arl©F,g
FRANK A. BOWDEN, Prop.
Hair Dressing, Shampooing, Shaving and Massaging. |
All the latest tonics for the scalp and face.
55 Prompt Sendee. First-class Workmen. Dr. Scaife Building.
P Shoes shined ...... in the very ' best manner. All work guaranteed.
A SftF.
Battered A Way To Outer World.
Colquitt, Ga., Feb. 13.—Four
negroes and one white man es¬
caped from Miller county jail
last night. Their means of escape
was a 2-inch pipe with which
they battered a hole in end of
cell so they could crawl through.
There was one prisoner in jail
who would not go, but it is
thought that it was on account of
having the smallpox.
The sheriff thinks he will cap¬
ture all soon. The crimes for
which the men are charged is
from cheating and swindling to
murder.
Because the carriers of other
nations are willing to do our car¬
rying for us at rates so low that
our own carrieis are unable to
compete we should therefore pay
subsidies to our own carriers iu
order that they may be able to
render us a more costly service.
This is the boiled-down argument
of the subsidists, says the Phila¬
delphia Record. It does not ap¬
peal to the hard horse sense of
the nation. We have already
carried to the limit the game ot
paying favored persons substan¬
tial bonuses in order to enable
them to engage in otherwise un¬
profitable industries.—Albany
Herald.
Among the many mysteries of
childhood is why grown people
cry when they are glad.
See that your subscribfion is
paid up to The Enterprise.