Newspaper Page Text
jMgpHE ROYAL Baking
Powder surpasses all
Others in leavening power, in
Ppurity and wholesomeness,
y and is indispensable for use
iH. wherever the best and finest ’
* food is required. *
<
Georgia State Tests. :
“The Royal was found to be a perfectly <
pure tartrate powder, containing neither *
alum nor phosphoric acid. It was also
the highest in leavening strength. It ,
was in fact the best powder analyzed. «
- , F. PAYNE, *
“State Chemist, Georgia.” <
V VW WV X/X "X. x/XSV WX VX XXX X'XZX -X/XZX WX wv X'VX
grape cream of tartar. *
k. v-x x. X-X.-X -x-xzx wx *■*
fi tain
t ' 'g'- c
ork.
■
' 1 1 I
say, get o t to ;L-
■ conference. He chose the latter course
Id defense of himself Mr. J >nes asks
i* rhe ciiu.cb au'hinity for a'lo*-
othjpr moi to hold irregular p isituim,
by r._ Hopkins as presi-
< bn■>log ic a I scion,!.
. .. C’bc usi.'ii or l:is letter ir
|Kri-ni ihal 'Miii wa ti: to knock the
diet, discipline end and suhsiimte a
7 Dew lobm of his own. He says;
If the patioosge bad been taken away
fro m|> r. sident Cleveland, who believes
that the Sbeiman purchasing acc wuu d
have been repealed ? Take the power of
■X..S, jmaking the appoin men's for hr preacli
ers~otat»pf the bishop's bauds, aud h<
could no more throttle a cm Terence than
he could succers'ully combat the busi
ness end of a mule. P trona, e to the
president and the power of making ap
'pomtments in >he bauds of a bishop has
its effect alike onus poor mortals hire
below.
Lei’s elect bishops for four years, and
if we like the cut of their j b, we w ll
elect them over again, and if we don’t we
will do th- m like we did Benny Harri
son, reiiie them to private life or make
them Professor Emt-ri'usto s< me
r „o j. -
F position to evangelists the
itinerant ranks was growing iirihe col
lege of bishop’. The/jleih diet church
does not propose, ifs they see it, to go
specially into tb«* soul saving business,
out Ira her <akXthe lite woi kof a Jobu
B. a Char es G. Finney, or
or a J >hu VVes'ey, who, by the way, re
fused to work under the bisops, and
S'arid before the judge at i he last day and
et j y the flui'K ti and rewards than of
any church m gtrate the world ever saw
You may spell bishop with a b g ‘ B” and
evangelists with a little “e,” but here is
ous> fellow that wouldn’t swap j rbs with
k any man alive.
I The bish pis the only man in rur
£ chU'Ch who holds amffli-, the tenure of
■ wnich is duiiog life or good behavin'.
M Four years limi's the birgest pre cbir
gl and any connections! < lli iia l . We wou’i
a roan be president of the United
but four years at a time. baie
men as bishops now who wi.u du’t
■resign, like loukliug did, and
witl?
his "and me, to >,”
lam in favor of llie n-x< geoeial con-
■ fereiic< giving more liberty to the avi-i-
■ *g" preacher and less license to a oi»b >p.
■ You see, Mr. Editor, I can talk as I
■ please now because the bishops will give
■ me no more appointments forever. Y. u
have no idea how free a fellow feels when
■ b> , feels like he owes allegiance to no
|^L, wer greater than binoelf under the
tf'ari, God as bis kii.g, Chnst as
elder brother, the Holy 8 tirit his
!■ Bki , r ,er and friend, the wind of G d
in of Ins C lU'irel, the praying mil
3 ,out>d him helping him on in bin
■A''" Ma Witjkwtugs like these, a man can
Id.
w II 111. Horn L’ tfful '
h vll ~,<;" 'i ' gllUll-S
(j. • m-’V ‘■'lV "1 do.
Youth Gn'v.
SAM?. JONES
A Correction.
|||||||!|H of the 8 h ir.Hf., m de me sir
teachers of the K 'me dis'ric
paid < ff ibe 24 h of this month
will be Sunday. The followim
manner in which I intend to paj
k-re. Chulio, Van’s Valiev nnc
December 20 h, Cav« Spring
r< 14111 snd Livingston, DeuM
Fiord
I '■ I' 1 '" 1 ■ .
■ K o A , Il o'l'-" V
We
Professor which was tc
’ cross the Atlantic ocean. Professor
Hazen te-if certain some time ago that he
i could do this, but perhaps his apparatus
is not ready yet. He clings to the old
fashioned balloon, inflated with hydro
gen, though the windbag he proposes to
’ use will be of goldbeaters' skin instead
1 of oiled silk. Goldbeaters’ skin is made
from one part of the intestines of beef
cattle and is extremely thin and light.
’ Its advantage over oiled silk is that it
will not let the hydrogen leak out so
much.
The bag Professor Hazen proposes to
nse contains ICO.OOO cubic feet of hy
drogen. He counted that it would last
j SO days, and by that time he and his bal
• loon would certainly be landed some
where, if not in the next world.
The balloon will be driven and steered
by ordinary propeller and rudder,
worked by the aeronauts themselves.
When the wind is blowing from
west, Professor Hazen will
close as possible to
a small pail, dip if* full of water and
drajr if up again. He will repeat this
► "deration till he has enough sea water
to fill a large pail. Then he will let
down the large pail by a strong rope,
and it will form a sort of drag net to
keep the balloon from being forced rap
idly in the wrong direction. The prevail
ing winds on the Atlantic ocean, how
ever, blow from west to east. To take
advantage of these, which sometimes
i blow from 50 to 100 miles an hour at
high altitudes, the professor will make
his balloon ascend to a height of two
miles or thereabouts and travel at that
height. Eut it will be awfully cold up
i there.
Alwhjs Giving Satisfaction.
Brae def h’s Pills have always given
satbfsc'ioD. In fifty wars there has
b-en D' luomp'aiiit of them. That is ab< u'
their life io the U ited Statts and mill
ions of ptrsons bsve used them. There
is to di uUltl a they have <a ab’ith d
a they cure
h piles, cm
i usners, and any cisease
an impute state of the
blood. One or two at night on an empty,
Htnm-ch, for a week or two, will keep
y, u in good f.iitn and tone up the sjs
tom. They are purely veg> tab'e, abso
m ely harmless, aud safe co take at any
time.
Hold in every drug or medicine store,
ether plain or sugar coated.
Mrs. T. 8. Ha-kins, Chattanooga
Tenti., says: ‘•Shiloh’s Viralizer saved
my life.’ 1 consider it the best remedy
»->r a debilitated syatem 1 ever u«ed ”
For dyspepsia, liver or kidney trouble it
excels. Price 75 cts. For sale, by D. W.
Curry.
Instead of the point'd baaid, the
w ager young man is cieiu-shaveu this
winter. /
THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE. THUKBDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1««8,
FLXAS TRAVELERS.
Many More Emigrants to the
Lone Star State.
SOME HAVE LITTLE MONEY
And Their Tickets are Fur
nished Them by Somebody.
A Party Leaves Today.
“I have just $3 51 on earth, but wiV'
ny wife aud cbtidien I am g t>-
C« xas tomortow.”
'I be speaker was a hard wotking and
ndustiious man abohad bet u w-okiut
it the cotton factory, [c w s last Friday
bat he made the remaik.
“How are you going to get there?” he
vas asked.
“We hava been furnished t'ckeU. and
will get farm woik wbeuweget there,
t lot of us are going oUi there to do woik
f the kino? ’
Twenty-five left for Texas Saturday,
wenty-five are booked to leave today,
n d twenty-five more tomorrow. Near y
4)0 left the week preceeding.
What is stimulating lhe niovi ?”
It cau’t be hard times alone, for th'
termers have had bard timts for y are. Ii
lan’t be tberos>a*e sones of western
farmers aloue, for these are not as roseate
now as formerly.
The fact that several people mentioned
that their tickers bad been grviu
caused some to think that an emigration
rgent was working this section, seem ing
farm hands for parties in T« x ts. There
>sa law prohibiting contracts of this kind
from being made, and emigration agents
of ibe kind are charged SSOO.
Hence there is ta k.
A Tribune reporter asked an E. T., V.
& G. R. H. < ffiiiial about this yestercav,
and was told that there was no such agr nt
here and ihatsome tickets bad been i. ul
ulated for others by membeis of their
f imilies already in Tcxjf.
Ingleside Rubeat.—For diseases of
Wocmn. Scientific i leni nient aid cure,
auaran'eed. E'eg.nt aparr-msnts tor )a
des before and during confinement. Ad
dress The Ki-bioent Putstciali 71 72
Bax'**'- f' •”•*. Nashville, Tenn.
8-22 d&wSm
The hotel proprieior should be inn
keeping with the public.
B irber—“'How will yon have your hair
out?” absent-muted Editor—-TH
.eighreeu columns
FCU'.D.- ric-■>.
- 'V-
g" "I : .
i/< ’ " gf/'. S"'i'l .".H 1 . m:: '.ii,
W
4 ‘ M<i iabi'l'. tin-
said that Macadam did not recommend
rolling, but rollers were unknown in his
day, and he depended ofi the wheels of
passing wagons to do the work of con
solidating the highway that is now done
more quickly, thoroughly and uniformly
than was ever accomplished by any
method known to Macadam or*the road
philosophers of his day.
And first of all the earth foundation
upon which the broken stone is to rest
should be well rolled. It cannot be
rolled too solidly. No matter what may J
be the appearance of the earth bottom !
after the excavation is completed, it is I
more than likely to contain many soft
spots, which can be brought to Fght very
quickly by the passage of a heavy roller.
If the material is very soft and mealy,
it may be best to begin the
rolling with a
ii
er.illi li"-t ' •
( ' x 1;
—that is, begin
outer edge of the excavation from end
end, and on the second passage of the
roller let it move along parallel with the
STEAM ROAD ROLLER. •
first course of the roller and slightly lap
the portion already rolled. When a
point near the center of the road is
reached, begin on the other side of the
excavation and repeat the operation, fin
ishing at the center. Rolling is omitted
when the soil is of a hard, gravelly na
ture, or when a stiff clay is found which
presents a firm surface, but whatever
be the nature of the soil the use of a
heavy roller will generally develop weak
spots, the presence of which would not
otherwise have been suspected. This
fact may be demonstrated by passing a
heavy steam roller over the earth foun
dation after excavation has been made
for the macadam roadway. It will be
fonnd that the passage of the roller over
what appeared to be a well graded sur
face of compact material will develop a
series of humps, holes and undulations.
Utterly destroying the uniformity of the
grade jn places, and revealing many soft |
and weak places which are wholly unfit f
to sustain permanent stone roadway t
and the wagons which are to pass over it. 1
These holes and hollows should pf t
■course be filled with good, firm material t
and the rolling process continued until t
the roadbed becomes uniform in grade E
and thoroughly compact. In soft soils g
and in places where a steam roller may t
not be easily sustained or worked to ad- t
vantage, it is best to begin the rolling
with a light roller and ona of laraa di.
amecer, out tno roning snould b 6 com
pleted by the application of as neavy i
machine as possible and the surface mad
as solid and unyielding as tile nature o
the material will permit.
Use a steam roller if possible. Itca?
be purchased of any weight, from 5 t
20 tons, though steam rollers having ;
weight of from 10 to 20 tons are mos
commonly used. For all ordinary coun
try roads a roller of 10 tons in weight i.
about right.—Good Roads.
A Test of Civilization.
Not simply ccmfort and convenience
in tho daily intercourse of social life, but
economical considerations of vast impor
tance are involved in the question of im
proved roads throughout our country.
Tho most cursory study of statistics
showing the distance over the average
wagon roads of our country through
which a load of Xvheat will pay its own
transportation is a convincing object les
son to any. man concerning the wealth
producing, lalwr saving, food cheapening
effect of A farm 12 miles
from a a district with
good roads is one equal
ly good three miles removed from tho
railroad where the roads are as
they are in many farming districts wlrcMl
tho land is rich.
Civilization has been well defined as
the “aggregate manifestation of the mas
tery which mind has attained over mat
ter among a given people at a given
time.” This definition will bear careful
thought, and few physical tests moro im
mediately indicate the degree of civiliza
tion which a community has reached
than does the condition of its streets and
roads.—Merrill E. Gates, President Am
herst College.
Co-operative Roadmaking.
The system in New Zealand of con
structing roads is by what are called co
operative contracts. In these a small
party of men, generally six in number,
is allotted a certain section or length of
road: one of them is elected a “gauger”
and trustee for the others to deal for
them with the government. The govern
ment engineer states a price for the por
tion of the work, and as this is done by
an unprejudiced officer it is generally
accepted without a murmur by the men,
The results usually have been very satis
factory. Progress payments are made
fortnightly for the benefit of the men’s
families, aud the whole amount is paid
up in cash on the work being passed by
the engineer. It is the intention of the
government to provide small farms of
10 or 15 acres each for these work
men in village settlements so that they
to make their homes in
and thus in some de
gree neutralize the centralizing tendency
of modern industrial life.—Pall Mall
Gazette.
Signs of the Tinies.
Hon. John Walker of Howard county,
Mo., ventilates a plan which has the
merit of originality and probable feasi
bility also. Mr. Walker says:
"I will give §1 per acre on every acre
of land I own toward the building of a
gravel road from Rocheport to Jack
man's mill. My farm consists of 450
acres—hence I will take stock in said
road to the amount of $450. I will also
give the same amount for a gravel road
from Rocheport tdXAshlahd church or
from the church to Fayette.
“If wo could get the farmers once in
terested in such an enterprise, it wo'Ald
be but a few years until we would ±avfr
the best roads in the .
iii 2 >'i tin .'’- r-aiis
'A AA 1 , ! I’l ill, Ji , ' is , i
■ ■ '■ 1 : ..: T V ” -S'
• -.‘2
made. The press and citizens of Mi?
souri and Kansas should take this ques
tion up and not cease agitating it until
the principal towns of every county with
in the two states are joined by lasting
macadam or gravel roads. —Kansas City
Times.
The Old Time Road.
Formerly the only intelligent concep
tion of a road anywhere on the Atlantic
tier of states was two sand ruts, varying
in depth from 3 to 8 inches, carried on to
infinity or as far as the exigencies of the
traveling public demanded. The inter
vening space between the two ruts was
filled in with sand. Surcease from the
torture of these roads was sought by oc
casional turnouts to the right or left, but
soon new ruts were formed, and the last
condition of the unfortunate animals
compelled to travel them became worse
than the first. z*
Toward the interior of the state, where
gravel beds are found, decided improve
ments were made on the sand ruts. A
degree of hardness was imparted by the
gravel, which, for most practical pur
poses, was encouraging if not satisfying.
Great centers of population soon de
manded sounder and more solid road
beds to resist the general tendency to
rut, which is everywhere apparent where
heavily latien teams are numerous.—
Philadelphia Record.
A Vicious Fish.
In South America there is a small fish
that not only attacks its fellows of the
sea and river, but is greatly dreaded by
the natives, who during certain seasons
have to ford the streams in which the
Carbitosare found. Bathers are often at
tacked by them, the sharp, chisel shaped
teeth taking a bit from the flesh wher
ever they attack. They are perfect
Scavengers, eating the animals that'float
down the river—dead or alive.—Pitts
burg Dispatch.
Braudreth’s Pills are purely vegetable.
HE WANTS MONEY
ror Working for Mr. Hackney
for Sheriff.
A RATHER ODD SUIT
That Came Up in City Court
Wednesday—Will be De
cided Today.
A peculiar case came up in city couit
'Vedneaday.
This is a suit of Stanford Turnei
’ > or-d, ngiinst Mr. R <l. Hackney.
It will bi remembered that Mr Hack
•• y wns a candidate for abeiiff at th
wr. county election, and on this fact th
nit of Turner is based.
Turner c'aims that Mr Hackney ei
-aged hi* services at. $1 a day, big tean
it $2 a day, and chargee up $193 wbic 1
mount he sues for. Redoes not cal
'bia •‘ptec ion ,” '■if «n—lr« <>r >
as actual sendees.—hatia distributing
the like.
’ Mr. Hackney cairns that he owes the
negro nothing, hence the case. Turner
is represented by Wright <& Harper, and
Mr. Hackney by Fouche & Fouche. The
attorneys cefense offered a de
murrer w. ■
hei.id, but Judze bis
decision until thia
Tbeca»e of Wyatt vs. Holmes was con
rlnd»d. but the Jury has not rendertd its
verdict.
The Barrister's Retort.
A case was once tried in Limerick
before Chief Baron O’Grady. A bar
rister named Bushe was making a
speech for the defense, when an ass be
gan to bray loudly outside the court.
“Wait a moment,” said the chief bar
on. "One at a time, Mr. Bushe, if
you please.” The barrister waited
for a chance to retort, and it came
presently. When O’Grady was charg
ing the jury, the ass again began to
bray, if possible more loudly than be
fore. “I beg your pardon, my lord,”
said Bushe. "May I ask you to repeat
your last words? There is such an echo
in this court 1 did not quite catch
them. ” —” Seventy Years of Irish Li fe. ’ ’
Balm of Gilead.
The real balm of Gilead is the dried
juice of~ a low shrub in
Itris and scarce,
for the amount of balm yielded by one
shrub never exceeded 60 drops a day.
According to Josephus, the balm or
balsam of Gilead was one of the pres
ents given by the queen of Sheba to
King Solomon. The ancient Jewish
physicians prescrilied it evidently for
dyspepsia and melancholia.—Methodist
Protestant. „
The Letter “J” as a Mascot.
Is the letter “J,” like the letter “E,”
so indispensable that it is as difficult to
find a list of names without the former
appearing in it as it is to find a complete
sentence in which the latter does not oc
cur? Is the above the cause of its fre
quent appearance in the names of Amer
ica’s great men, or is it really a mascot
letter? Beginning with our presidents,
I find it as the first initial in tne names
of eight. The only i,ri?si-N.o±-
. I'!'-;:
■z? John D. r.
J. .M. Sears, J.S.
Haggin, J. W. Garrett,
John Wanamaker, J. G. Fair, John W.
Mackay, J. G. Flood, John Arbuckle, J.
B. Stetson, John Claflin, Joseph Pulitzer
and dozensof others. —St. Louis Republic.
An liißulted Scotchman.
The following story heard at Killarney
shows how differently an Irishman and a
Scotchman will take a joke. An English
man who had been fishing in the lower
lakes said to his boatman: “An extraor
dinary thing happened to me some time
ago. I lost a pair of scissors out of my
fishing book at the end of the lake. The
next year I was fishing here again and
hooked and killed a. very large pike. I
felt something very hard inside him, sol
opened him, and what do you think it
was?" “Begorra, your honor, I'd think
it might be your scissors only for one
thing." “What is that?” asked the other.
“It’s only just this, your honor, that there
never was a pike in any of the Killarney
lakes since the' world began.”
Afterward the same Englishman tried
the same story on a gillie in Scotland.
When he asked him, “What do you think
was inside the pike?” the gillie replied:
“Your scissors and nae guts; and the
Duke of Argyle—and he’s a far greater
man than the king—would not have in
sulted me sae. I’ll fish nae mare wi'
ye.” And off he walked.—“ Seventy
Years of Irish Life.”
The American who has served longest
in congress is Senator Justin Morrill of
Vermont. Ho entered the house of rep
resentatives 29 years ago and has been
in continuous service in the house and
senate ever since. Senator Dawes, be
fore his retirement a year ago, had been
in congress 86 years—lß in the house and
18 in the senate.
A learned scientist has been writing a
fine essay cu “Mau and the Age of Rea-
Jon." Have men reached the age of rea
wn?
CASTOR IA
for Infants and Children.
iy| OTH ERSjfDo You Know that Paregoric,
BBa Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, and
most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine ?
Yon Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons ?
Do Yon Know that in most countries druggists are not permitted to sell narcotics
without labeling them poisons ?
Know that you should not permit any medlcino to bo given your child
unless you or your physician know of what it is composed ?
Do Yon Know that Castoria Is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list of
its ingredients is published with every bottle ?
Do You Know that Cactoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Pitcher.
That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold than
of all other remedies for children combined f
Do Yon Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of
other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use the word
Castoria and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense T
Yon Know that one_of the reasons for this government protection was
because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely barntloss?
Yon Kn*iw that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 35
cents, or one cent a dose t
Dd Yon Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may
be kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest ?
Well, these things are worth knowing. They are facts.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria*
'l’o NEWSPAPER
PROPRIETORS.
The Tribune Company hap
on sale a large lot of good
second-hand material that
will be sold cheap on most
favorable terms consisting ol
One Minerva Paper Cutter,
One Pi oof Press,
Imposing Stones,
Card Cutter,
News and Job Cases,
he has *«n(bj»iiß(e»wr
<+.'*. F bmM ’a Sr. eet te. 1 bi* 1 t* cte
all person* cobuvrned. ki died and er «iic r*
to snow CrtUsn. if any they c »n t why eaid admin*
Dr.iat.or should *ot be dioci arged fi<m his d
mlnistratifm aild receive letter of dismi* ion
on tre tU-t Monday in Mar b 1891 This Decem
ber 4 18 3. JOHN P. DA VIS.
hMh3n * Ordinary.
YEAR’S SUPPORT.
GEORG! Floyd Ciunty:
I’oa I whnn. »r may concern: Notice Is here
by gi» en. that the bpmaisrrs appointed to ►ec
spa t and a’-bien ayeai’e mi i orc to three- minor
children «1 Willi.in L Donley deceased have
filed ih* ir Mwa'd, and unless g o i ami Sitbcif i>t
cause is -h»wn ihe Same wi 1 oe mode the judg
ment of tne c at thH Januarv t<m. 1894 of
the court of ordinary. This December h 1891.
JOHN r. DAVIS.
12 lA- J w ordi ary.
Year’s Support.
GEORGIA-Floyd <onnty:
To ad wnoni it maj concern: Notice is hereby
give-n, that the ap.»rai*t rs app inted to set apart
and assign a year’- rupp rt t • Mr*. F. it Val
■ uiine. >be uid w and minor chi d of A. R
e.nine, deceaa. d h-»v tiled rm ir award, and un
<Pß'eouti and sullici nt c «ii?e is »>ho wn th-r ea e
wilt be inadi th judgment or the c»urca r . the
.lanua r \ term, lim «f the court, of
Thia Dec* mber 4,1893. JuH.i P. D * VIS
12 6w4w Ordinary.
Citation—Lcax etoS JI Land.
GEOR I \ —Floyd County:
Toail whom it may Concern—Saiutul Funk
houser, a m mist tat or of Hrs 8 . I’ailj, d -
reaped hie in One sq-in apt It d tn ihe under
sUne • f«»r leave to *eb «lp* lind« belonging o
ihr r* a g ol baid d ceased, and >aid am i a’i n
wil* be heard ••!> the fl t Hobday 1»i January
iMXt. 'I h * 4th day of D H ember, 1893 «
12 4-w4w J >HN I*. D.-iVlS,ordinary.
SCHEDULE
White Stir Lin Sleambat Ct,
Steamers ClifforJ B Seay and Resaca.
Bost leave Home tor GS'lhi’* u unit in
tern edisre lam ItiwH Tueed y„ and
f ndsys 8:30 •.tn.
For- reen-t ort and I<x ka 12 and 3,
Fiida B:3J a.m.
RETURNING.
Arrive Rome! trnradays “lid nunrtay*.. 1:00 p.m
fl Ifll■A I# 8" V ttnd ’?P ium Hablte
HR Ui Vbi EL cured »i home witb-
VBM I I outpain.ltookotpar
■ H IIIUHLi I JcularssentFKEE.
■ ■ ■■WMMBB.M. WOOLLEY,M.D.
■ ■ AtUu a, Gt* JfficcPMjaWiuieiiallS*'
Notice of Local Legislation.
Notice is hereby;giv°n that a bill will ba in-
Vod’cert at tbe fiextresri n ft e Heirida
Ligi-ls ure t>> (JCsbiieh vorin, places jn the
evrral wards of < e< i io Rome lor municipal,
county, Hat- aiYi all >oal elections. ano to t ro
vine" in aeersßr. T boding elections at such
voting pl> c-r, ■ '
A M>a b b nF quiuajnfpx c u.,.;., < i Ployd
county to he p a i tix digest la
which .-h ill lie* entered the naue- ot all person*
who f.tl to pay tu ir t.l s r. quin d by .w,
and ro require sai ■ lax coi'ei tr to 'urni-h cor
•ectlisu.of -ne i tax <1 fau le s to h man.*
her* of ail e'ectioii pr< ciueta and veto g i.iacea
m said county. | -lav-3rd,
Year’s Support.
GEORGIA, Floyd County. *
T'l ALL « HOM IT WAYCONCERV: JU)’ICE
ishereb uiven t at tbe up r ise rippdut d
t met apai t ai.u aisico a y ar'e suppi. t o. Mrs.
Jan- I andruni. •' e widow of H. i.j Lai dimn.
dec used, have fl ed ihrir award and unless
go >ian > nflkneio cans- lie shown. tie same
wll be mad h- j dgiu-nt. of t.’e <ourt at the
Decamb-rre-m 193, of the court o ordin or
This Aov. 6th 393. JOH.s P DaViS.
11-8-law slid Ordluaiv.
Georgia, f loyoCounty.
To al whom 1. may co corn: Hanmel Fu-k
--hooser. having, m pioper form. applied to me
>• r p-i m oen < Lett is of a mud traiou de
bods min on t' eesa e of Jam a G Dailey
Uleofs id C.mntv >h e i* to clre ll and eingiil
l .rrhe c-i ditor* and next f kin ot Ja-e* G.
r»i'ey t.. be and hi per« m the within the
time .1 >we Ili lew, .1 d 1-tiow C-us if any they
Can, Whi |I- rumn-i.t »• mi 1 tr Hoti sb u d not
lo s» . uel Funk, user i n Jam aG.
eta e
my han I an t . ffici.l signature, thia
» • f Nov ui e- 1H93
.1 ’llx F. II ■ Vis. o . Diary.
RHl'I-I A Floyd Coll TV.
1- Hal Whom i mar <• ncern: Samne'Funk-
n vine. proper so m. applied to me
-m ii.n' L-ru-r- of a. mini-ir tl"ii oe
»¥ ■f"’* l W 111'he Wei an e rd on the eeta'e of
'• I'"l ey. U e Os add c unt, th a la to
■‘■h'liilar rhe cn doors and next of
th- nine allowed by I w. ano show
gMWlfan. .hey a-, wny p mianent dudn
’hmi'd i.in I e named o samue) Fu. k
n Mr ' S A D''le 'a e-tate.
• ' band and otlici.i si, nature, thia
< . t Novem b r 1813
' - n .lull * F. D > VIS, rdtnary.
! Letters of Guafdiauship.
GEORGIA—FIoyd Comity:
To all whom 1 may concern —Mrs G. W. Har
ri“, having in proper >orni applied to tne for
le’teie oi gu ,rdla rhiii <•’ the per-obs anil prop
el ty .if Gr v«r «!. Mania. B ill*'. R. Harris,
Geo B. Harris and J o. M Harri.-, of “aid
c unty, this is t citealend.iig.il rthecreoi
tor. and n> xt f kin ot nd tuicors lobn and
appear at y < fflee wi bin tne tn e all- wed by
1 w nd ih w cause. 1 any they can vhv Jet
ers i f guan ian-i ip anobld not h. gr nted to
M s G. W Ilairiß as Hch guaidi .n lor raid
tntno-a. Wit e smr hand and official sigba
tU“t i 4 4th day or Dece.nber is< 3
| 12-6 w4w JOHA P DAVIS, Ordina y,
Application for Letters of Dis
mission.
GEO 'GIA, Floyd ( ouuty:
Uh Tess. Mr« R a. P White, guardian of
' n-r m<« Deacon, represents o tne court *n
her petition onh filed lhat bhe has administered
aid The id to cite ab persons
concerned, ki d ed and creditors tobbow cause,
can, uhy ea»d tuar fan >hou d not
bn disch i. se i from her guard an hi*, and re
l» trern of i>n on the fir e t Monday ia
March, 1894. Thia Dtc Bth. 1898.
JOH < P DAVIS.
12-109Jd Ordinary Floyd County.
-Appraisers Appointed,
GE» RGI i—-Fioyd county:
• o «li whom t- may concern—Notice is h p re K y
viven, tha th M ap «r iit-re npooinred to appraise
thn p’npvrr.) ot lliiao* k. p. nn dvceaf»»d,
tiled th ir ieti>rna apd nnlos go d ana Miffi
c nut cause in ahi-wn, th» eanm will be made ths
judg.. en of the court, an th January teip)
• f (he cou tuf « r i'iHiv. 1 bi- D«*cemt>er 4ta»
I«9» JQHn P. D4VI , O diuaiy.
2 fl wJw T *
Not ce to Debtors and (poi:ors,
Al) persons b-vlng denmnds agsinst the ea
i'teof ». 8. Liiii-m l*te o' Fin'd county,
<|e<ies ed, are tn 'rti lotiflrd to npd rin tbpir
oenisuclr 'othe under-irti <1 ecco gto laiy ;
a’ <1 ail fierro > indrbtifi to ud patate ar. re
quired to ■■ k« iinui'-'ii te uiyuieui.
I'M,23rd da. ot AoV H&i.
J L. H RDIN,
E«ecmorof A. 8. L'phuii, L..
11--4 igwllg
' ' ' "•■!! ■■ ....11LJDI..I. —I I 11.11
Notice to Debtors and Cred*
itors.
A’l pe r «one having <1 Hunds against 4 been tale
of -I F. ’*ha* kiln. lat**of Flox d c<>nntv,deceased,
an< hereto notHleii c • render m their demands
to’h® ur d a« » mipg to law. and all
pe tuns iip’td'ted to s id eata’e ate required to
iua k e immediate payment
J 189 ’- \ M. A. NEVIN.
Administrator, J. F. ShaukUn, dtcMaed.