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Eloped With Tifton Girl
Miss Hattie Squires, a most beautiful and modest maiden of sixteen summers,
living three miles east of Tifton, was married to Mr. Cecil E. Bower, a worthy young business man of our city, last Sunday
afternoon at the Methodist Parsonage, Rev. E.M. Whiting officiating, and the strength of the matrimonial tie has been tested
by the court of ordinary, restoring to the father his beautiful daughter, who as a bride, was in company with the groom but
an hour or so.
Arriving in the city, Mr. J.R. Squires, father of the bride, immediately
swore out "kidnapping" papers for Mr. Bower. Placing them, in the hands of an officer, the two men appeared at the home of
Mr. A.P. Jones, who immediately went on the bond of the groom. Seeing that Mr. Squires was enraged beyond reason, Mr. Jones
asked him to have no disturbance at his house, to which Mr. Squires replied, " I shall not, but my daughter returns home with
me this night, or she or I die." Believing it best for him to take her, became reconciled by morning, Mrs. Bower, though over
her protest, and strongly so, was persuaded to go.
Thinking that all would be well, Monday morning, Rev. Miller, Col. Fulwood
and a representative of the Gazette accompanied Mr. Bower to the Squires home (leaving the groom in the background),
hopeful of bringing about a reconciliation and returning with the bride. In answer to a question put to her there, Mrs. Bower
replied, "Yes, if Father and Mother will only give their consent, I will gladly join Mr. Bower, for I love him."
Returning to the city, habeas corpus papers were sworn out requiring Mr.
Squires to produce his daughter in court, Tuesday. The case was entered into and forcibly argued, and at the close of the
argument, Judge Walker said, "You may draw an order restoring the daughter to the father, in accordance with her desires as
spoken to me privately." Before affixiing his signature, however, the matter was left to Mrs. Bower to make her decision.
Here was the test of her very soul as the young heart's blood rushed through
her weeping, nerve strained form. What must she do? Between whom of the two pleading men then before her must she go, the
father from her conception or the husband to whom she had but a few hours ago entered into a life contract? Sad indeed was
her picture. For fully ten minutes she weighed it all, when slowly and seemingly reluctant, she removed the ring from her
finger and placed it into the husband's hand, then left to re-enter her father's home.
Being a young man in every way worthy of Miss Squires, her father in court
said that he had no objections to Mr. Bower personally, only the way in which he got her. Thursday, Mr. Squires called
on Mr. Bower, shook hands with him, told him he had no objection to him personally, and that if he wanted to call on or write
his daughter he was free to do so, with her consent, and if she wanted to see him he would send for him, or if she wanted
to come to see him, he would bring her. A reconciliation appears to be only a matter of a few hours.
The young lady, who has acted in the latter part of the affair with rare
good judgement, is said to have expressed herself at being anxious to join the man of her choice when a little time brings
sober reflections, and this in turn brings about a condition of affairs that will be just to both her parents and to him.
-Tifton Gazette (Georgia), October 1907
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