Newspaper Page Text
Lec>a l. 4d vert i srmen ts.
uF/iHnlA
Mr- A lift
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V. s.
i OmnlT.
i II Unanlian K-fli’ I*. mid
Alvnn Fp .-ilian -till. Iiavniu a]it»lii*l to tli<-
'.iiirt "f ' Irdlnarv «>f —id fount) lor 1 •-tli r-
. 11n-nil—l»n alf lwr-oM- . onn rm-1 ar.- r.
, iir>->l t., -lion mum In -aid ( url l>y tin- nr t
Mondny mV. immy n. d.if any tin y can
-old appll* ill* n -hould not '. *r*
J.-rn. 1. lflK.
•Ta. f.-> W.
1. A I’KHIU K.
Oroiimt ;
hv
ll.i-
DlrtMlS.-lON
<Ir.ORfM i t’. wi'tn (Vmnty
A. Untn, t.tiiirdmn of K
i. i ..-.ii* Hntn
,,n"l Mmy I i* H" Hiim. minor- linym* H|.|iln«l
• ), Ui<* Court of »•r*»tiinr> of -mil County tor
I. .tir- of <ll«Tiilnnlon from til* nnnl truat. all
, nml »r« r«
nid iloiirt lij' 'in
ii.r-on-
ri<iulri-l O' -how
flr-t Monday i'
ffi liruHry moil if mil tln-v ran. nlij nid hi
tdiratlon n’muld not In. «r»llt«l
Tlii- -Inn. WM
I'r- f«- tf
I, A I’l Hid I..
i ndlt.Hry
I.KAVK TO HULL
i.roiuii a 'wrtn t’ont.tj
Mr- H'—i K Inwtor. iidminlntrntri*
,,f[, l ,,-t. r iIih .-h-ikI. Iiavlii* I
flourt of Ofirtlnary of mild i-ounty fot Imm to
,11 tho Innd- of -nid d.--. Hand, Mil fior-an*
. . I rn<l nr* r.»]Uin»l t-i allow < io -< in mid .
t.v th. find Moiidny In K. I.rtiar) m xt if
tfi. y run, why »nld Hid'limti"" -liotild tt.
l-rantod. Tl. • -an 1 ^ ^
I r- fan «...
, f E-tati
•ourt
any
,t In
i' Milt 1 1
i irdinnri
VoTli.i: Tt i DEBTOR* A Nix IlKDlTt ill-
(.l OltOIA. Cl W'dH I'otlllty.
All in r»onn liiirinif dninaiid- atfinn- tin ■
fiito of Mr- V.’ K Vln.- hit- of -nnl '-dint’
di- i iim-I. nr* In r.-l.y n.tifliyl t , r. »»'!••» >" W •
,1, mini.I- to II.i- unit. T-mm-d iir-ronlmi/1* In '
„„,i nil |ii r»oti« Ind.-lit. d t" -nid .-tati an* r
nmr.-d to milk. Imnnnliato paritn-nt.
’ tin- h„v KM. I'm »l Htnnn.li
Admr Mr- W K Vim- n-n d
.Yoticr of Election.
<,K« « «'w» ta <Vv!st.
WMKHKAf. On icrount of tlit* > *
Vux*‘T Cl* rk «»f th*- Court <>: Cow»-t»i
» "tintj »ra . « vim.' v cswt» iii -bhI in
Mild count.V. ITIS T#f KKliPOKK <»H 1
Uftvtu That an Jclo-.tion • ►*■ h»* «i on .1h:i 1".
Hue f.,r th* purp* -* *»t itu- h <>*rk tor -hM
Hii|»*Tlor «'our! in mwi f*»r **v.v.t' »l.i-
L A. HJCIiDCK. <>r*l ran
.T H.M'OOMX’M.t otmei—i**n-r
.1. N. hKWKitli. Comm^M.«m* i
.T. C M* K«iY. ♦ fiinniiM-i'jr* i
1 W AUNOLI). l>*mn»W**ion« r.
,1 W. IITTCHINHoN, Coinmlft-»on. r
(Hohrd Commi**-ion»*r** lv<»wU him! ){• v. rm**.
-nifl «onnt a
. J ii iwuncancni*.
Foil CI-KIIK SUPKRIOK COl.'KT.
To tin V.it. r- of Cow-rtH county: 1 hrrl.y nn
nonncM rnywlf n . andldatH f ,r Ch-rk Mu|n-rior
Court, nulijarf tothr Hotion of »h<- d.-mo. ratir
t arty. In dnlttR tliin, I win!) to-tat. that I havi-
tn*♦*!. ajdiointolto art h- < h-rk until after th*
, l.H’tion thorrfi>r* . the dntie- of th*- otflr. will i
hinder m.- from tiiakinp a raiira— of th. . nun i
1T I
I will appr.- iate the enpjiort of toy friend-,
and w ,-h to thank them lor th. warm e*pr*w- |
on- ah i.dy made in my l.ehalf.
I,vm it Tl n.M n
Land of Promise
tile ci'iumns of the lesser temple; j mile! So colossal are these stones
and the crested eagle, with its out-'that the tempi* 5 acquired the name
f Oontitineil from .'Jrti Pn^c >
ret out at every possible chance
VVe otten procured strange things
to eat. and had still stranger feel
ings after eating them. Soon we
reach'd thf top, and there burst'
upon our \ tew a most wonderful
' > .
anti ttiagnificcnt scent—the Anti-
Lt-hanon mountains, with i heir
gray sides r.f barren rocks. As we
descend, the red earth is fading
away into pink; the mountain
streamlets laugh as they join their j^y eagle ot liaalbek.
rippling hands, making music as
spretd wings in the portal, occu-j “the Trilithon”—“three-stoned”—
pics the same relative position,and j from their presence. I here is
After going to the Grand New
UHKI
iota o. Hinplmtn
mlt UlVoKC.K
Cnw.-ta Super - r t ourt.
Marrli T< rtn
I f ki
ll..• ilrfrlulAnt ir. till-
RESOLUTIONS.
On Onath of Wm. D. Hardy, Adopted by
Ouartniy Conference Turin Circuit
Noxember. 1904.
lak. 11 Hinpliam t
Ttijnk. II. H.nuliatn
lllxivt Htnt.nl ram .... ,
V..a nr. Iii-n liy rummanili«l tn lx- amt nj
■ -nut term .,f-aid Stipi rlor Court, |
Thf subject of this i-ketcli. Wni. 1).
, i.i uni- n.,r , . Hardy was born in Oowotn county. (h».,
i,«.nr nl tlm Pi-Xt trrm *,f-altl Sup, e,or *..ourt,i -
l.. lm Imld In anil for raid County of Coweta. , April l'Jth, lfHR, Htlil depart.'d this life
on thr tlrnt IMonilay in Mur, h, MAC,, tlo-ii Hint 1 «. ■ /,_ yiu-/,k n khli
thru to air w, r tin filaintiff Hi a Ilia I for total I lit Tuntl, (r«., MlilCll V, l.KM
.hvor. i. a-in tault ofnii. li api-arniirn thr Hrother Hardy in early manhood
flour! will j.ro. m*l tie r.-on »« to .tun.in mat l
appertain Wilm- 'In- llonoral.lr H. » .
liS J "' U " " f -"V^YMr. cirri, J1 ’
though they were rushing to a 1 Hotel and getting dusted off,some
wedding of the nymphs; far below 1 of us took a twilight view of the
we behold a glimmering landscape, 1 noble ruins and the surrounding
fertile fields whose waving wheat neighborhood and the snoyvy
wears a golden crown. Yonder, mountains before supper. Modern
j to out right, Mount Hermon, the ; Haalbek is 3860 feet above sca-
; hignest culmination of the Anti-: level, and has about 5,000 popuia-
Lebanon range in the valley’s i tion, of whom are 2500 Metawileh,
'southern extremity, far away in 1200 Greek Catholics, 1100 Mos-
!the back-ground, with his memory , leuis, 100 Maionites and 10c Or-
1 of poetic dews on his brow, sits thodox Greeks; and has three
enthroned. It seemed as if yve Christian churches and several
i were approaching a temple of schools, a specially sacred Mosque,
glory.” And truly w,; were. As and military barracks built on the
we rapidly descended and swept ancient ramparts N. W. of the
through the great valley with its j town, and a number of as good ho
modern plowmen and ancient, tels
stocks, the sun began to paint the]
apparrutly represents the same;one in the quarry about a half
idea, as the wings of the Egyptian mile away cut out and measuring
doorway. ‘Under the shadoyv of 168 by 14 by 14 fe<-t toady for re-
thy wings shall be my refuge’is moval, along the length of which
the most general expression in I two carriages abreast could easily
which the figure appears in the drive Tiuly when one sees these
Hiblical imagery; ‘The Sun of gaeat stones end the heights to
righteousness shall rise with heal- yvhich erected one cannot but
ing in His wings,’is the thought think of “giants living in those
which is more directly illustrated !days.” It was the glory of the
Temple of the Sun to have no
room or chamber hidden from the
sun, “whose walls yvere pillars be
tween which the mountains and
skies were framed, whose bases
even towered above the worship
pers’ heads, and whose capitals
blossomed against the blue of the
heavens, and yvhere all day long
the sun sought his setking yvor-
shippers and all night long the
stars sent down their light. Add
to the,cyclopean vastness of this
granite and marble every concei
vable d-dicacy in relief of acanthus
and lotus, of geometric pattern and
interlacing vines and wreaths; peo
pie the niches with the figures of
the gods and goddesses; gild the
s the East affords, besides
the Acropolis of liaalbek,’ so j capitals again with the gold of
sky with sunset glories, fleecy j called from the entire temple pre-! votive gifts; fill the air yvith in-
clouds in greatest profusion of 1 cincts having been transformed by j cense and the courts with worship
coloring began to flit across the! the Arabs into a fortified toyvn,, pers, and an incomparableandin-
joinotl thf M. K. C’liuroh,South ut Cokc-H j western horizon— first glimpses of! with main street down the south , disputable testimony is here for
I JUKI. K* ill llivolti K
I iillro. rttint. r Ittak. f In t owna Hti|
VM
diarli-M I Iraki- '
th.
iurt, Mari Ii
Term, IUWi.
To , liarli« S I'rak
alaivi- K,at»«l rani.
Yu,1 ar.. Imirlijr .-..tnti.an.l.-.l to In-ami ap-
pwir nt tin- tin, loriti ol -aid Hup. rtor Court,
loin li.-l.l III ami lor-Bid (luiinty of fowota,
on th. flmt Monday in Mar,-h HWi. than and
llnrt"t, an-wit tin nlntntlff in a lth.-l for
total (ltvorr. a- in il.-fmilt of aiioh ajipnarnnco
tin-Court will |ir,K .-.«l th.-rooti aa ,0 Jttkllo
may appnrtain. Witnt
irr.a-tnai. Judy
I MM
Clinpol tliik circuit
— j lie traiiHlurml to Trnti
1 rm, where he remained n conatnnt mem
tier until his Father called him home.
He left testimony not in words alone,
di fondant ,n th. |,ut in his daily walk and conversation,
dint he was ready when the summons
called. A princely soul ho* gone to the
heavenly home, bnt he ho* left a rich
life to bleu* the world.
Wo, who loved him in life, atill lovt
1 the hunger of the human heart for
are i God and of its incompleteness and
the Homiroliln R. W.
I -aid ('nnrt.thla I*- . Tl.
I. TCKl’iKK. Clerk.
Some years later j a Syrian sunset to our party, and 'side ot the great temple.
ancient pillars and other remains “The Phoenician remains
were passed, when, in the rapidly 1 distinguished by the colossal size restlessness. If in ignorance, if
lessening distance, burst upon us j of their stones and the marvellous I cruelty, if in ways superstitious
beyond our last station the cy-i precision of their execution, the and unworthy, and in symbols ini
clopcan ruins and magnificent col ■ Graeco-Roman Dy t he equisite | possible to us, God was adored,He
of the ancient liaalbek. or I regularity of and elaborate orna-iwasyet adored, He was yet wor-
Phoenician, i mentation of the details; and the i shipped!” It is here that “our *
umns
Heliopolis,
Egyptian,
where
Graeco-Roman,
NOTICK ItlinCBTilRM AND CREDIT* IRS.
4 iKtiiun 4, Cowt ta County
All ti.-mnna Imvmt: ilomantl- iiRitin-l tin- •-
t«1o .if A W Hill In I • -,f -mil PottnlT,
il.-i .n-,.l ar. lii-r.-Iiy n..tto ri-mlor in tliolr
(l. iiianil- I", tl.. uti'l' r-lttn.-l a i ofdlnp to law ,
nntl all ii.Tnotin in'li'l-t.- l In-aid o-tato ar, ,'»•
.iinri-l to mak. tnimxlnit. imynii-nt.
Tli.- Noi - <«M
\a B. tint!
Admin•-!'at,-: A W Hill,
COMI’I.M VT IT H. T.AND
Mm Mary Floyd • -w.tn -y-..r..r
!. nl ran .
William B - w. .; ' 906
To William H. Sw.-arnipT d.-t. ndani in tho
iiIhiv.- - liitod hi- A -'i ar,-111 r. l-.y l oininand
ml to la- and nppiTU nl ill- m *t t, *niof th" -aid
Muporior Cour*. to • ln-ld in and for -aid
Comili -o' Ho flr-t Motidai in March, IWffi.
tluoi ami th, r.-to iin-w, 1 '.h>- plalulitf - ,’om
plimit I11 ,1. limit th. Court will ,iro
,1 i d tli. r, 11 n- to'ii-' • . oi.v npticrtnin
Witm— Iho Mon h W Kr. ctuiiTi. .IndR.-ol
Haul «'out ‘I ■!• I -I.. 1 .Inin. Ml"
- TCKNER ' l.-t
and | Arab by the towers, loopholes,and 1 noisy years seemed moments in
him for what he waa and ns and follow ] /\ r ab have left their handiwork, other evidences of military design, the being of the eternal silence.”
intent aud unceasingly over tho way by; , lHaa]bek " js mQst ljkc) won] as well as by the inferiority and' To the south of the Temple of
CZ''f.!^nor''■>! Phoenician origin, being really irregularity of their general con. the Sun is the smaller, hut withal
Rnildor and maker i* God.” a contraction of Baal-Heka’a, the struction. Since the excavations great. 1 emple of Jupiter in better
The Rriol stricken family lmv<- the j final guttural syllable having been carried out by the Germans, the ; condition, with elaborate and enor-
lost in the passage of the word remains of a Christian Church of nious ornamentation, and a row of
through the Greek, in which was Byzintine work have been dis- nine columns sixty-five feet high
no correspondent to the Semitic | covered. There are many eviden- supporting a roof of such fine
Ain. Baalbek is at once a physi- j ces throughout the ruins that the sculpturs
Ai l'' I. • • :• 'N
nm .\mknhmkn".
CHAtiTKH
rtn 1' .r.iity
UHdWIU
To the I1.’Ii"-mI.'.
Th
fully -lit 1 .v*
I. Thai ' 11 • "i 1 "rntimi
nlnsl liy tli. l/. -M-latui .,1 th.
gin. t'.wit it- l>r.in- ;..il
III—.M 1- lit N* ■,'TUIM. ' >,
- Thai hur.i •• • • ' the I u-.m— ot
HK.d . or],' ration i-that n ri noral liankiliR
fiiiainoMH.
a. That'll. .Ti, 11 1 . hart, r wa-praiitMilhy
thu la'Kialatur. d On '■ini. i,f ami
a|i|iroTtal on < k l,On r .1. s-7.
4 'lint -aid .hart, lac inr l..cr. ii’iirml-
aincitn* Hympathy of nil who luicw him.
May the Divine Ruler of all. tench them
to know and belmvi Hint their loved one
till* only gone to 11 happier home, where
mifforiiiK and unhappiness ure unknown.
Therefore. Resolved 1st. That in the
death of brother Hardy, the ohureli lias
lost one of it* most zealous and ermsi cra
ted members, th, state an upright
and honomble citizen, flic communi
ty a kind, generous frieml. hi- family
an nft’eofionnte. loving husband and 1 “assembly,"
father.
Und. Tiiai wr. the members of this
Quarterly t'o.'itoreiioe. honor In- mem
ory because of ins Godly life, and strive
more earnestly to-emulate that example
of constant faith which c!inrueteri/od
Ins life.
;ird. That wu herewith extend o\irj.-m-
as to be easily taken at
cal landmark and historical monu buildings were never completed.” that height for fresco. How were
nient. The name "Heliopolis” is ; < )ne goes # in at a guarded tee- such stones taken from the quar
a Greek term meaning “City of ; door leading to three substructural r * es anc * elevated so high? is a
the Sun;" while
to mean
‘Baalbek' seems
passages or vaults, under the
Lord” and “town,” or Great Temple Court, the masonry
Baal referring in; of which is large enough to sup-
Syrio—Asiatic worship to the Sun port ? good part of the world upon
Godithe sun being one of the the passages themselves being
chief divinities ot the people |. Of separately large enough tor the
these buildings, Robinson in his largest U. S. freight cars to pass years ago.
question ever recurring to the ob
server. Its entrance doorways are
exquisite lor carving. On one of
its inside walls —the right—is a
tablet erected in memory of Ger
man Emperor William’s visit a few
I.ater Researches,” says,
There arc also here seen a Sara-
, la Hank ri .
.lul. iinurpor sympathy to hi* loved ones, and
Mai. ..t <>,-.r ,, rnv tlint tliev muv In- re-unit, d in that
uni ],la, ■ ■ if linnl- •
home above.
itli. That tlies- resolutions lie i-preud
Oil the records of this oouforenec: that
the seoratary b> instruotod to furnish 11
..1
-lr.-
i.nil
- 1 liart-T and
l .nn-'ti.r* liav. ink, 11
;• 1 lint tin- In-dim,-.
11,Inn r.1- .1, • r. it nr.- n-
li. Tlint it ,1
iU< Htoekli'.ld.-r-
ItniJHT B.-ll 'll dir
tl. Tliat thi
follow*
ta) That tli.- uni" f tin- • >r|. ratem 1*
•banged from Thi 0 * • .. • that "i
♦•Karlint~ ami Tr»d<-i - hank
th) That th< -aid. .r|i'iration i ■ m.'.<1 from
Now nan. a t. r h. i :' oi Atlanta. Fulton
4Vmntv.<-u » |liioh -I...I! I- tin- jinn, tail ottio.-
of Uiocori„irat on an l r.-.ii.. n ■ if a majority
of it* IVmr.l ..f Dir.v' ,'*
7. That attach,«l hoi. rnarkuil "Kxhihit
A 'laacrt t ««i i-oji* ‘ tin |,ro>'. .iliiii,'*of it-
ai„.-k In .hi. r- ar.tlnii/nu- tin am. tnlnn lit* il>.
aired
H. That ..ttai. Ii.d h, nt„ mark. :l Kxhihit I
M" I* a < ortihod copy , f tin pri*- .-link'- <>f it- .
thank of Diroff.i*- authori/im; tin am,ml I
moot*) ili-irwl I
H That a--" ni n ndnl. all ,.t their niiht-
lKiwora ami |,r.viloR. - er.int.-l h.v it- ohartoi
la, ratifl.xi and oonfirm.xl un i -tand mid n
main infill fom
III IVtH.,mor- ] rax i iiat thin aiitili.-.itnin la
fllial anil r<- nl.-I in th** nth,-,' of th, Honor
aid* S*'< r* tary ,-t -la', a- provnlial t»v lit"-.
He-]., (full' Mjlimittoil
Th. i ..u. ta VCiii)
Kx W. I> M A.Nl l.V. I'M - nl. '.it
tioi*. Wright. l'o>t and Newman,
prominent lawy«-r- el Now uin. were
in uMenTanoo hi dude, Keith - eonrt
Matiilay S.noia Kiiforjiri- (hi.'.etto
Sickening. Shiverini: Fits
of Ague and Malari.i. eati he vli.-v. d ,
ami cim i nil Kl- 'trie IV.iter- This
I* a pur imiie in, dieiti. of . -p.-eial ;
benent in M. lai11 I'"' h x-ut- n trni>
corativ.-ititiii. in•• ■'! tl- o’-.e- . .iriv-
ing ir*iiii sn-iv out * a tli. - v -1. -11 ’. Ii i-
liiiii-ii i<> h pr< lei:, i in Qailliito, having
Itinn nf tie- ilrii^' - li.i I iii ' . It
K S Mnml t\ .if H- • ri T. -
•-My tun! ’ was '. ' i.nx w v
nl fovi .. ini i.ail!,; lie
trie Mill- - v> i. " - ' '
T ill ;-t., ami ih i - o ■
61V. gnttr iii'
on
)iuMi -atioi'
In through with ease. When we as-
vastness ol plan, combined with eend to the ^oor of the Court; cenic Guardhouse with an Arabe-
elaboratencss and delicacy of exe- above and proceed from front to ; sque doorway immediately facing
cution, they seem to surpass all rear of the great enclosure, one j the Jupiter temple; and to the X.
others in Western Asia, in A'rica, | proceeds from the entrance porti- i E. of the Acropolis a halt-rufnxl
and in Europe.” While Stanley, co. once reached by a broad flight; circular building, once a beauty,
in his "Sinai and Palestine,” ob-!of steps 33 leet high, or propvlaea: the Shrine of Venus—in Byzan-
, serves. “The ranges of columns; into the outer or hexagonal court,; tine days used as a Christian
copy to tin family oi Hrother Hurdy und , . their peculiar grace to then into the great court of the ’ church—and not far away a ruined
i the edifices, belong to the same pantheon, wherein the Christian Mosque with quadruple sistee, and
age of later Roman magnificence ! Basilica of Constantine once was j pillars evidently taken from the
which has left so many proud elected on an elevated platform; J ruins of the Acropolis at random;
memorials of itself throughout the then comes the Great Temple of and hereabouts a lovely stream of
i East. But there are touches of the Sun, some 300 feet long by j water flows past the walls to the
an earlier antiquity which give it i 160 feet wide, and once having 54; west amid a region of beautiful
a true connection with the history columns around it, each in three 1 spring verdure,
oi Palestine and Egypt. Its situa- pieces iron clamped, but now only 1 As we went hither and thither
tion was probably fixed by the six on the South remaining, the, through these wonderful remains
of ancient antiquity, and saw
names scribled in so unwarranted
the great caravan route between of the bases to the top of the en-
Damascus and Tyre, as Petra be- tablature and perfect types of Cor-
tween Damascus and the Gulf of iuthian capitals and entablature,
the columns about 7 feet, 3 inches
W M Thomas,
.!.' B Walkkr,
A. S. Garmical,
Commit t*
necessity of a sanctuary to greet; others in ruins at its base, all be-
the travellers and merchants on ing 90 feet high from the bottom
Elath. Its name, even if we can
| not connect it with any Biblical jin diameter near bottom, the capi-
spot, evidently points to its con-j tals as large each as a small cot
I nection with Baal. “ ‘To the gods tage, being alone 14 feet high,
of Heliopolis” is the inscription The outer wall of the Temple of
which still testifies to the plural- the Sun is 10 feet thick and com
ities of divinities worshipped here, posed of nine stones about 30 feet
The influence of Egypt is indicat- long and. 13 feet high.
ed not only by the legend of the
sacred image brought from the
Egyptian City ol the Sun- ‘On’
•Heliopolis’ but by some striking
peculiarities of Egyptian architec
ture; as e. g., the Egyptian sym
bol 01 a winged globe is in one of
the reees-es 01 the gr.-at court; an
Etrvptian capita! crowns vne of
are as nought when compared with
places, we could not refrain from
feeling almost as Mark Twain in
the same location, as he says: “One
might swear that all the John
Smiths and George Wilkinsons,
and all the other pitiful nobodies
between Kingdom Come am!
Baa’.bec, would inscribe t heir {>oor
little nam-'S upon the walls of
Baalbec’s magnificent ruins, and
would add the town, the county,
and the State they came from—
B-•* th ‘se * an< ^ swearing thus, be infallibly
'correct. It is a pity some great
ruin does not fall in and flatten
three cyclopean blocks in the j out some ot these reptiles, and
west wall of the temple, their 1 scare their kind out of ever giving
length respectively being 64 feet.
63 1-2 feet, and 63 leet, their trans
verse sections being 14 by 11 teet
and resting upon masonry 20 feet
kigr. ;• would only take eighty
-nones 64 feet long to irak-.- a
their names to fame upon any
walls or monuments again, for-
, ever."
We go hence owr Anti-Lebanon
to Damascus, .“The Paradise ot
M-diomet. ’
| To be '■•..iiliuued.