Irwinton bulletin. (Irwinton, Wilkinson County, Ga.) 1894-1911, November 03, 1911, Image 5
EOCArtREVITIES’ Short and Various Kinds of News Items Picked up in Town, County, and * VI 1 Elsewhere Do not allow your kidney and bladder trouble to develop beyond the reach of medicine. Take Foley Kidney Fills. They give quick results and stop irreg ^arities with surprising promptness. For sale by all druggists. ■» • ♦ I^Miss Rosa Byington visited rela tives and friends at Milledgeville the first of this week. * * * Col. G. H. Carswell made a busi ness trip to Savannah the first of the we&. ♦ ♦ ♦ Several from here attended the Ma sonic Brand Lodge, which convened in Maein this week. -4^ * * * Miss Annie Lindsey has returned from Atlanta, after spending some time with relatives there. *. * * Mr. Frank Cannon, of Macon, spent last Friday with his sister, Mrs. H. C. Wood, at this place. £* * * Mrs. F. C. Manson spent last Tues-1 day with friends at the Central City. ♦ *. * A Mr. Frank Carswell, of Abbeville, spent part of this week with his broth- * * * Miss Julia Todd, of Mclntyre, spent er, Mr. J. A. Carswell, at this place, last Friday and Saturday with friends here. * * * E. C. Momand invites you to come and look over the new line of fall goods that he has just received. ♦ * ♦ If in need of a “Barnesville,” “Wrenn & Sons” or “Ames” Buggy, call on J. E. Butler, Ir- ‘ winton, Ga. * * * 5 or 6 doses of 666 will cure ■ any case of chills and fever. 251 ♦ ♦ * । Mrs. Mamie Joyner, of Sandersville, spent this week with relative., at this place. * » * Miss Carol Nesbitt is now assist ing Prof. W. C. Stokes in the school at this place. * * * ■ Mr. Sam W. Hatfield, of Macon, ' spent last week-end with home folks I at this place. । ** * j In another column see the announce- j ment of Col. E. L- Stephens for solici- ! tor of the Dublin judicial circuit. * * * Mr. Fred Everett, of the Central. City, spent last Sunday with his; parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Everett, I k at this place. '* * • Miss Annie Wood delightfully en tertained quite a number of her friends at her home on Mclntyre 1 street last Saturday with a Hal lowe'en party. Quite a number of her friends attended and all seemed to en joy the occasion verv much. WH&ia * * * cents. 5 or 6 doses of 666 will cure any case 'of chills ana lever. 25 cents. * * * More people, men and women, are suffering from kidney and bladder trouble than ever before, and each year more of them turn for quick relief and permanent benefit to Foley's Kidney Remedy, which has proven itself to be one of the most effective remedies for kidney and bladder ailments, that med ical science has devised. For sale by all druggists. PROGRAM OF Y. P. B. The Irwinton Y. P. B. will meet at the hojne of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Hat field oh next Saturday night and the following program will be carried out: Anti Narcotic. Devotional exercises. Roll Coll—Facts about Cigarettes. Minutes. Reading, “The Man that Was”— Miss Jimmie Hatfield. Debate. Resolved, That it is worse for a girl to smoke than for a boy. Affirmative, Miss Carol Nesbitt and Mr. Joe Player. Negatives, Messrs. J. J. Ragan and Lee Hatfield. Business. Social hour. FOR SALE—ISOO bushels of Ap ple Seed oats at 80 cents per bushel. C, H. RICHARDSON, R.F.IX 1 Ivey, Gm * * * * * * Mr. E. C. Momand invites you to call and look over his line of RED GOOSE school shoes for children before you buy. * * * I have just received a new lot of buggies and will be glad to show the mto you and quote you prices if you will call at my store any time. It will pay you to see me and get my prices before you buy. E. C. Momand. * * * Mystery Surrounds Death. The body of Caroline Doctor, 31 years bld, daughter of Simon Doctor, a wealthy real estate operator, was found in the cluster of bushes in up per Washington Heights, New York. There were no marks of violence, but an inquiry as to the cause of death j will be made. According to a relative the young woman had been subject to I nervous attacks since the suicide of ! a brother-in-law a year ago, and twice had disappeared from home. To Run Trains By Phone. Vice President and General Mana ger Coapman, of the Southern Rail way company, announced today that in pursuance of its policy of bringing its lines to the highest possible state of efficiency, the Southern Railway company is preparing to extend its sytem of dispatching trains by tele phone over its line between Chatta nooga and Knoxville, Tennessee, on the Knoxville division, a distance of 111 miles. Tiny Girl to Unveil Tablet, A 12-year-old girl is coming from Sioux City, lowa, to unveil the tablet that will be dedicated at Newark, N. J., on November 6th, to mark the spot where John Catlin kept New ark’s first school in 1676. The girl is Margaret Catlin Francher, six gen ; erations removed from the old school ; master. She will bo accompanied by I her grandmother, Mrs. E. G. Hoyt, of ; Bioux City. ■ —■—————> Southern Bell Enjoined. Circuit Judge Crow, at Birmingham; issued a temporary injunction re straining the Southern Bell Telephone company from raising its local tele phone rates. The bill for the injunc tion was filed in the name of the state of Alabama. The case promise! to be a lon- drawn out one. Special Notices. 1 I will in Irwinton on Mon da y an d Tuesday, of each week, for the pur pose of doing Dental work. First class work at reasonable prices. All work gua ranteed. Dr. M. t. Godwin, I Toomsboro, Ga. TAX NOTICE—SECOND ROUND. I will be at the following places on the days mentioned for the purpose of collecting state and county taxes for the year, 1911: Irwinton, Nov. 6 and 7, from 10 o’clock a. m. to 2 p. m. High Hill, Nov. 8 from 10 a. m. to 2 p. m. Turkey Creek, B. C. Arnold’s store, Nov. 9, 10 a. m. to 2 p. m. Griffin, Nov. 10, from 10 a. m. to 2 p. m. Toombsboro, Nov. 77, from 10 a. m. to 2 p. m. Bethel, Nov. 13, from 10 a. m. to 2 p. m. Gordon, No. 4, from 10 a. m. to 2 p. m. Ivey, Nov. 15, from 10 a. m. to 2 p. m. Bloodworth’s, at home, Nov. 16; all day. J. H. PENNINGTON, T. C. big Labor Convention. f On Thursday, November 9, Atlanta will entertain the largest convention of state organized labor ever held in the state of Georgia, and on the floor of the convention hall will be repre sentatives from every union, while equally prominent will be delegates from the various farmers’ unions in Georgia. This congress will be called in Atlanta to nominate a candidate for commissioner of commerce and labor, an office created by the state legisla ture during its last sessiep,, Legal Notices. Administrator’s Sale. GEORGIA, Wilkinson County. By virtue of an order from the court of ordinary of Wilkinson county, Ga., will be sold at public outcry on the first Tuesday in November, 1911, at the court house door in said county, be tween the legal hours of sale, the fol lowing land belonging to the estate of William Veal, to-wit: One hundred and eighty-three acres of land, part of lot ! (181) one hundred and eighty-one, and in the 26th laud district of said county; also one hundred acres of land being the northeast half of lot number one. hundred and fifty-seven in the 26th land district of said county. Terms cash. J. B. VEAL, Administrator of Wm. Veal. ' This, Oct. 2, 1911. I GEORGIA, Wilkinson County: 1 By virtue of an order from the court ! of ordinary, will be sold at public out ’ cry before the court house door in said , county, between the usual hours of sale, on first Tuesday in November, 1911, the following real estate: Four hundred and thirty acres land, more or less, - known as the J. N. NcSmith home place, adjoining lands of Mrs. Lord H A verb's place, W. B. Freeman, Jr. and ’ i Wm. Bales. Sold for distribution. Sub , j jcct to dower. J This, Oct. 2, 1911. .1 I. B. STEVSON, • Administrator on Estate J. N. NeSmith. i f GEORGIA, Wilkinson County: By virtue of an order from the court i of ordinary of said county will be t sold before the court house door in Irwinton, between the usual hours of ’ sale, on first Tuesday in November, 1911 • to the highest bidder for cash, the fol = lowing real estate: One hundred and i ninoty-one acres land, more or less, ‘ - known as the M. M. Bloodworth Sr., I j home place, adjoining lands of M. M. Bloodworth Jr., M M. Jones, J. M. Fountain. Sold for distribution. This Oct. 2, 1911. , H. M. BLOODWORTH, -| Admr. Fst. M. M. Bloodworth. J ' I have just received another j car load of GOLD MEDAL FLOUR and will sell it to you at right prices. E. C. Momand. LANDS FOR SALE In the Heart of the Best Farm ing Section of South Georgia. Farm—lmproved or unim proved, level, pebbly farms, with sufficient buildings and cleared lands; in good communities, near . schools, churches and towns, on public roads, running water; on good terms. Any size farm you want at prices from $12.50 to S4O per acre. , 1600 Acres—9oo acres cleared, three miles of road frontage, on two public roads. Price, sls per acre. 800 Acres—Two and a half miles of Thomasville, on two public roads, 400 acres cleared, a good 8-room dwelling. Price, S2B per acre. 6600 Acres—Seven miles of three goo—.-du hrd cmfwyppp three towns, 250 acres round timber; 250 acres cleared; two settlements. Price, S3O per acre. 300 Acres—One mile of sta tion, four miles of town, on pub lic road, 150 acres cleared, and 8-room dwelling. Price, S3O per 1 acre^ 200 Acres—Two miles of town on public road; 6-room dwelling, 100 acres. Price, $25 per acre. 100 Acres—Four miles of town, one public road, a 7-room dwelling, 75 acres cleared. Price, $27 per acre. 75 Acres—Three miles of town, on public road; 5-room dwelling. Price, $35 per acre. 50 Acres —Two miles of town, 1 on public road, a new 5-room dwelling. Price, $35 per acre. Write for my booklet of farm lands for sale. In this boolet you will find anything you want. Write, wire or call on W. E. CRAIGMILES, Thomasville, Ga. Citizens’ Bank Bldg. Phones 28 and 391.; 1 N. R. USHER. . Naval Captain Who Mey Bo Promoted to B» Rear Admiral. / * . I / . I I ; - x:<. \ Will > E w b <OB NO FAITH IN BANKS. ; Savings of Aged Negro Discovered By ! Men At Work. Electricians working in the cellar of I ' the home of Judge Randolph H. Bain, ‘ ! at Louisville, Ky., were startled when ' , they came upon buckets of gold and I • silver coins hidden in niches of the j . wall. Their finds they carried at once ' t to Judge Blain, who discovered that J the treasure belonged to ‘‘Uncle Wil- i liam” Stepney, a negro man servant in the Blain home for over thirty ■ years. Without faith in banks, he had ; accumulated nearly S3OO in coins oi i all denominations, using tin buckets'! to hide the money in. He was prevailed upon to risk de positing what the electricians found, and the rest he had concealed in a ; national bank. TAFT HASVISIO’J OF ; POSSIBLE DEFEAT : Mate Rather Pessiteiia 13- ■iass at Chicago. ; WEARIED BY LOHG TRIP His Hearers Ascribe His Gloomy Ut -1 ; terances to Physical Weakness —He । • Says the Republican Party Faces a i Crisis. President Taft surprised a large au dience at the dinner of the Hamilton : club Monday by what most, of bls hearers construed as an admission of; the possibility of Republican defeat j in the coming national election. He . ' i was speaking to what had promised j to be an unusually enthusiastic audi- i । ence of Republicans. j Those present hastened to ascribe i the president’s utterances to weari ness after his long tour of speech ■ ; making and especally after the three days’ hard ‘‘campaign” in Chicago. It j was his last public utterance in Chl- J cago before leaving for Pittsburg. . j “Now, we are at —some people I । ' think —the crisis in the Republican ; ' party with reference to its continuance | ! in the guidance of the nation," the I i president said. “I am hopeful that the I I good- people of the country, who know i | a good thing when they see it. have I only chastened us in an off year in ; order that we may do better here-1 1 ' after, but with no intention of shift- ' ing from shoulders that are fitted to j ; bear the burdens of the present prob- I le.ms and carry them to a successful ■ solution, tq those which arc untried and which have new theories of action i that we do not believe in and that we i don't believe the people believe in. j । ‘‘However, if so be It, that they de i sire to make a change, we shall loy ! ally support the new government un-. : tier any conditions with the hope it; i will inure to the benefit of the conn ! try, but with the consolation that, if • i sfter one trial the people think they! : ougU^ to go back to the old part; 1 ! that has served them so well in the i progressive days of the nation, they j ■ will do so—we can bear that, my i friends; that is all.” The address before the Hamilton; i club, in which the possibility of de feat found expression, followed the । laying of the cornerstone of the new i home of the Hamilton club, one of the • - leading Republican clubs of the mid- j - die west. ' Killed By Side Comb. Investigation of the death of Miss; Emma Worth, whose body was picked | up on the steps of a drug store in ! Buffalo, N. Y., shows that her skull I was fractured by the teeth of a side ! comb in her hair. She apparently j slipped on the steps as she was en । tering the store and fell backwards I on the comb. , I i — ‘ I -1 v ' INSANE PASSENGER. Harry Crieger Creates a Big Stir Aboard An Illinois Central Train. Becoming violently ins^pe while a passenger aboard an incoming train on the Illrnois Central railroad, near Magnolia, Miss., says a New Orleans dispatch, Harry Crieger, a machinist, iof New York city, suddenly sprang I from bis seat in a crowded ear, and, : yielding a large pocket knife, slashed ; six other passengers before he was ; ] overpowered by trainmen. With the exception of A. R. Middle ton, of Brookhaven, Miss., who was brought to the city for at’ention, none j of the wounds of the others are be- 1 lieved to be serious. Crieger, who is 33 years old, was' on his way to New Orleans to vis’t his f wife. He was lodged in the house of 1 detention on the arrival of the train. Motorist Kills Farmer. Because he allowed hfs prejudice against automobiles to carry him to; the extent of drawing a pistol 00%a; passing car, Sam Whither, a wealthy 1 Cleveland county farmer, lost his life near Shelby, N. C. Facing the drawn weapon in Whither’s hand and bel'ev ing that he intended carrying out hisi threat, Lucius Randall, a prominent I Gaffney, S. C., business man, shot i Whither twice, killing him instantly. Knighthood for Borden. In connection with the visit to New ‘ York of Canada's new premier, Rob । ert L. Borden, it was declared that j before long Mr. Borden will be ! come Sir Robert Barden. The Duke i of Connaught, the new Canadian gov ■ ernor general, is said to have brought ; with him an offer of a knighthood, 1 and it will be granted among the new ■ year’s day honors, if not before. Irwinton Railway Company I ' * Local and Proportional Freight Tariff Publishing Rates A 0 N * Classes and Commodities LOCAL TARIFF NO. 1 Applying Locally on Traffic BETWEEN STATIONS ON IRWINTON RAILWAY CO. Issued Sept. 16, 1911. Effective September 25, 1911. GEO. H. CARSWELL, Secretary. J. L. BYINGTON, President. APPLICATION OF TARIFF. Rates shown herein may be used only when no other rates apply. I When governed by classification which also contains distance rates, I they will take precedence over the distance rates in such classification. They may not be used either by themselves or in combination, in prefer ence to any specific tariff rate. APPLICATION OF COMMODITY RATES, ' Whenever a carload (or less than carload) commodity rate is estabnsn ed it removes the application of the class rate to or from the same points on that commodity in carload quantities (or less than carload quantities, as the case may be.) Rates Apply in Cents per 100 Pounds, except Where Otherwise Shown. < Per ■ Per . BETWEEN Per Ore Hundred Pounds Ter. lot .Fer Per Car lyo Bn Lbs Ton L-tad ;Paund. IRWINTON, CA. ; j . —— ~ j—T , AND I 2! : I ! C D i EjH F GJ | v.t.|M s[O i P J K McINTYRE, GA.isc'lMill. » o'» I 2-2 3 1-2 11,1!| 9ij 8 *SsC 7 »•' -2?4 00 « Rates Apply in Cents Per 100 Pounds, Ext-P* W .ere Otherwise Showr. | BETWEEN Georgia Commissioners' Stau- Per Lba Per Ton 2,000 T*' . . . ...... . Pound/ jbs dard Kates «it hout _ IRWINTON, Ga. - J Percentage — j J anp - £ 4 * ! I’e i i - ~ Per One Hundred Pounds Aar u u j A T. - r - । ~ * » i • 7- pp- ? t j ■. ■ i i । . ,-r- .. ; ; j — |B| 7 , 5 2 l-2 ; < :»«' 8 ; 5 ‘Bs| 30 50 1 3 MCINTYH S, GA. . We Have Just Completed The enlargement of our Store, which makes it twice the original size, and have filled it with the very best lines of Hardware, Crockery, Housefurnishings and Agricultural Implements Seeing is believing, so we invite the public to inspect our new store and stock. BALKCOM HARDWARE CO., 362-364 Third Street MACON, GA. V<e Do Printing ii > ■,: want anyt-ning f*. the lol.or- Ing '■ ‘-ng v-. w■' be ■ to servo nil ar when yuti <,-/ .< . an order u- you can re.-t ossnred of M ace tc I?:" o-cond t none in Gf>< rg'a: C- :uu t -ctiecks, bvu I. ! cbe :*:>, blanks, wedding . irions, r>'C? : .p’. books, business ear-! , v.sit n g esc letter heads, note beads, bill heads, book binding of all kind, and in fact anything you used in printing. See or write us for samples and prices. Alilledgeville News Milledgeville, Georgia, r — fbley Kidney ’ Pills What They Will Do for You They will cure your be ckache, strengthen your kidneys, cor rect urinary irregularities, build up the worn out tissues, and eliminate the excess uric acid that causes rheumatism. Pre vent Bright’s Disease and Dia bates, and restore health an 4 strength. Refuse substitutes. c "■ : rains rt I O Nvnno v