Newspaper Page Text
M 4 ADVERTISER
m
I
VOL XXXIII
EDGAR L. ROGERS
To my friends and customers of Mon toe county, nnd < here, I desire to snv that
I have received, and am now receiving, the biggest, hriip ~t aim best - h‘ct>:d .*tocL <>f
fS|» tho r inij Goods, ever brought to .Middle Georgia. I rely <>n my p,>st recordu.- h guarantee
to pf*H|»l<' that I will tciv#? them iiion*, fresh nohbv, ><“l*, for their it utility dollar,
Hmn h ity retail Houm* in the South. No old ■->»<.j* worn goods, no ml or third hand
•dock, but nil fresh, new goods in the very latest novelties. I take special care in nit
•elections, him! use every effort to get ju„t such styles as will please my trade.
MY LEADERS--CLOTHING!
I still cnrrv the famous Voi rbees. Miller & KtipleV line clothing, a well as all
grades in cheaper goods, and I claim that I wil sell you a suit, 10 to 20per cent cheap*
than Macon or Atlanta.
DRESS GOODS !
Without presupmtion I sav that, I carry the best assorted stock of DraB Good and
Trimmings in the country. I have all the newest shades in Plain and Fancy .Suitings,
with Trdninings to match in Velvets, Braid,, Moire Silks, &c.
W H ITE GOODS, H A M BERGS & LACES.
Lost Minimcr f iiiiulc fur inypclf a reputation on those goods and being inspired
fjreuter JlanihcrgH, lor effort* efforts by by my niv last last year year s stieewo 1 have now a stock of White Goods, Laces and
that are the admiration and wonder of all the ladies.
SHOES AND SLIPPERS!
Slioes and Slippers are a hig factor in my stock, and I ean fit the hirge.-t or sniall
<*st loot, and also the largest or smallest purse.
It i» too much ot an undcrlakino to try to tell the people ot evervthing I have;
lint suffice it to say that 1 have i;ot everything kept in a
DRY GOODS STORE!
That you need and "'ill sell them cheaper than you ever thought you could huv them.
< ome in and take a look through, l will take great pleasure in showing you.
Yours truly,
EDGAR L. ROGERS.
Barnesville, (»a„ March 22nd, 1888.
N. B. MR. JOHN K. HOWARD is still with me, to help extend you a cordial
Welcome.
TARIFF
OR
NO TARIFF!
'i lie public is notified that I have this day purchased the entire stock ol
Groceries, Provisions, Ect.
Of Messrs. PO.NDFU & FBRTOIIER,
And have moved my large and complete stock of (IROCERIES to the
ntnnd formerly occupied hy PONDER A EL ETC 11 ER on the North side
l’ublie Square, next door to Bramblett iV Hro. The public are invited to
call and examine mv STOCK and PRICES, and you will find the
BEST AND FRESHSET
STOCK OF
PROVISIONS
IN THE CITY.
Compare my PRICES and you will conclude that it matters not whether
tho Tariff or no Tariff laws are in force.
I CM A LLK.XG E all competitors to undersell me. 1 UNDERSELL the
Cheapest.
S. B. HEAD, Agent.
FORSYTH. HA., Jan. 2, 1888. For Mrs. W. II. Head.
AY COCK-
Manufacturing Company,
MANTFACTURERS OF--
DOORS, SASH, BLINDS 5
Mantels, Moldings, Ballusters, Newels
WINDOW AND DOOR FRAMES
DEALERS IN
LUMBER, SHINGLES, LATHS ANDBRICK.
ALSO, CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS.
A) i* now have our'Factor v in operation and will be glad to see all wanting Building
Material and give prices. We feel confident we can please both in price and quality of
our work. Call before making your purchases and get prices.
Factory 13th Street, Oppoite Cotto Factory.
OFFICE PLANTERS’ WAREHOUSE. GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
N. B.—Our Blinds lire wired with Patent Clincher Machines, and will not break
l'Mise, thus preventing the unsightly appearance that most others do.
-
SMITH & MALLARY J .
MACON, GEORGIA.
STATE MANAGERS OF THE
Watertown Steam Co ■
-AGENTS FOR
PROWN’8 COTTON GINS,
Jail MM US COTTON GINS,
FINDLAY COTTON GINS,
SCIENTIFIC MILLS,
NORDYKE <k MAItMON’S CELE¬
BRATED GR|8T MILLS.
WB GUARANTEE THE
WATERTOWN STEAM ENGINES
To bo the 6afeet, Strongest, Most Reliable and Efficient Engines in the
Market, Send foj: (Circulars. _____
.
-DEALERS IN
ENGINES AND BOILERS,
SAW MILLS.
BELTING, LUBRICATING OILS,
IRON PIPE ,,,,,,. AND F1TIINGS, ,
BRASS FITTINGS.
FORSHII, MOXROE COUNTY. GEORGIA, TUI Y MORNING. JUNE 5 18S8.
Blame’s Second Letter.
In the following letter Mr. Blaine
declines positively to be a candidate
for the presidency:
PARIS, -May 17, 1888.—Whftelaw
I» e id Esq.,Editor Now York Tribune.
... 1,11 ... ,1 * c .. **i) letuin . to .
' “ •
* ^ from southern ltuly, on the
8th instant, I have learned (what 1
did not before believe) that my
name may yet be presented to the
Chicago convention as a
for the presidenial nomination of the
re publican part}’. A single phrase
of my letter of January 25th from
Florencc, whic h was* decisive of
everything I had personal power to
decide, has been treated by many of
my most valued friends as not ab¬
solutely conclusive in ultimate and
possible contingencies. On the
other hand friends equally devoted
and disinterested have construed I
Idler, as it should be construed, !
Pj be an unconditional withholding
of my name from the national com
volition. They have,in consequence,
given their support to eminent gen
tlemen who are candidates for the
Chicago nomination, some of whom
would not, 1 am sure, have eon
sen ted to assume that position if I
had desired to represent the party
in the presidential contest of 1888.
If I should now, by speech or silence,
by commission or omission, permit
my name in any event to come be
tore the convention I should incur
the reproach of being uncandid with
those who have always been candid
with me. i speak,therefore, because
1 am not willing to remain in a
doubtful attitude/ I am not willing
io be the cause of misleading a single
man among the millions who have
given mu their suffrages and their
confidence. J am not willing that
one of my faithful supporters in the
past should think me capable of
paltering, in a double sense, with
my words. Assuming that the
presidential nomination could, by
tiny possible chance, he offered to
me, 1 could not accent it without
leaving in the minds of thousands
of these men the impression that I
had not been free from indirection,
and therefoie 1 could not accept it
at all. Misrepresentations of malice
ha vo no weight, but the just dis
pleasure of friends I could not pa
lientiy endure.
ftcpubin.tn .............. Mvdoi violm-v j, the the piospects nm.nccl.
(an !,c on, 3 D 3 latk ( “
.
ous’eonlest tcst.w.i over men^ •, TheT-Toi f he issue of
and nnd ^^auu'k're" gi calci than an) n'l man, mLreT? lot 11 it
“d of C P .23;« , e c!n,-e"
(I.n the vn.mi.Ho lcpu lie ft Cl see > n f.,,. lot himself the
condition and recompense of labor
in Europe, the parly offrec trade in
the United Slates would not receive
the support of one wageworker be
uveen the two oceans.' It may not
he directly in our power as pliilan
thropists to elevate the Kuropean
laborer, but it will he a lasting
stigma upon our statesmanship if
we permit the American laborer to
he forced down to the European
level, and, in the end, tho rotvards
oflahor everywhere will he advanced
it wo steadily refuse to lower the
standard at home.
Yours, very jImes sincerely,
G. Hi.aine.
They Could Have Been Saved.
We can not but notice how man J
of the citizens of this country, of
both sexes, are apparently being
taken away before their time. One
of Georgia’s most honored sons—her
gifted silver-toned orator, not long
since fell a victim to frightful male
dy. Gen. Grant was another victim ;
and the dispatches from the world
across the Atlantic tell us that
(.renminy will ...
8 now emperor very
soon follow Ins honored lather.
Many others, scores and hundreds,
unknown to greatness, but very
dear to those around them, arc
penshtng every year from the same
scourage. It is unnecessary to tell
you that this terrible, repulsive and
loathsome disease is—cancer. Can it
be cured? Medical skill bus ap¬
parently exhausted itself, and the
surgeon's knife has cut in vain to
root it out.
Seemingly, cancer is incurable
Now what is to be done? If you
wait until the disease is upon you
it is too late. Then why not antiei
pate the monster and use the pre
ventutive. in order to avoid this
and an innumerable number of other
blood troubles, you must keep the
. blood , , . healthtul-and . , . „ . . the .
pure and
one great remedy tor this is, that
King of all blood Purifiers—“Guinn's
Pioneer Blood. Renewor.” It ex
IF- y i'T 11 J 1"V ’ and f® 1 "!ri .‘‘T CJ T " 1
t .. tion. Jlon tdelay unttl ,t ,s too
,. ... ta.l at toe A'"® 1 ';'-' fl * a ."
almanac, and vou w, I find that tins
celebrated.medicine has cured, ri^ht
here in your own country, about
every disease emenatuig from a ue
l»rav.si conditionlof the blood.
‘,li ^ |. C j' .!!' -»‘>tites ol.f taken 'i'.e’ in 'but' the i' ^pnng
; a ad ' - ;. verv
good one, that an ounce ol prevent. ;
utiyc is hotter than a pound ol cure
\°V' A ' k Vi' a l‘l’ “Guinn ,,ca T c j s 01 I j 3 ' .oncer B ood
Lenewer. 1 he druggists all sell it.
Miss Edwards, Dress-maker. Good
fitting, stylish dresses guaranteed,
Ruuiua at Mrs. Poindexter's.
THE OLD FIGHT MAIN.
AND ALL THE ELE! TS IN
FAVOR OF LLEVE ’S
RE-ELECTIO:
Two Weighty Facts—A efl De-
1 mocracy. Enthusiast ^Jeve
iana—Blaine s Deep Game
and How It Diseue-u
the ‘‘Favorite t
Sons.”
-
Here are two little faci Mr “our
fiends, the enemy, renominatej towt «y*4with HP :
* N ° president ever
becn defeated unless a dommercial
revulsion had come in ti c mean
time; and the united Dep^/hiey has
011, .Y beet, beaten twieu&iiiee the
constitution was adopted. These
are only precedents, they say,
and precedents may be o^rtin-own.
'Veil, let us take it few mure facts,
1,1 the first place, it is now evident
Giat Mr. Cleveland will enter the
campaign with the hearty and en¬
thusiastic indorsement of njs party,
wIlile if M r. Blaine runs he will
enter it only at the end ’tt tna
neuver which many r Blicans
have already denounced certainty as ^ilisrep
utable trick, with a of
leaving the supporters-of smoother
gentlemen in a very ugly-teniper.
How eouhl it be otherwk^Y Mr.
Blaine issued his Jones letto||,yfehich
was reader understood to bean official by evory^Jionest nolreito the
‘‘favorite sons that they cc*| tl take
field; and take it they did^ with a
grand rush. Now the I Mi i ides
propose to put tho laugh on J ^ Hn, to
announce in tho true Ltip V.Wi Win
kie style, thao “we dont-eoafet that
swear off zis time, ’ and tifct Mr.
wickian Blaine only sense withdrew to give the in other ^ Pick- can
didates room to slay caeUj other!
Bo Mr. Blaine is to be credjted with
having told a nice little political fib,
and the other fellows are to be
laughed at for having believed him.
A man can take defeat and smile;
but to be defeated and laughed at
—ah, that is what will .hurl!
“But we won’t nominate Mr.
Blaine,” you say. Won’t jv* xfc though
with nearly three-fourths the
delegates already chosen t$|jbe from the
controlling states known southera| for
him? True, many dele
gates are for Sherman; b fiffonnt it what
does a southern delegation condition
«' in a republican 1
Uananan, ‘ of Texas wilt / : clfhero,
x Mahoim >f
iiko Lon “-street Moshv A Go - nnd
Kluna*un "'ill repeat’ his hnmottal
^ u\v'h*it are we here for if not
and when the New
y 0 .. k ( i 0 i e <rMtion noints out w it will
be able <o do, that Sew York money
campaign, we all know how the
S()UtlK '‘ b s i. imne d c ." will in turn t un - Jt If
J' 01 ' !'«illy thmk Blame w, . 11 . not . be
nommated, p.st ponder this question :
Can you name a single convention,
s !alc ® r congressional, ussl in which
‘ , f'.' 0 ha5 ,■>»«" » l ° between
a ! n0 a,,d an F Bla,no . i tl,a t ll '«
Blame , faction has not completely
downed the other fellows, wiped the
floor with them? Even, m Virginia
tho aM l’°"’ ei ' f “ f la '. ono
not create a respectable diversion m
b‘ vor OI 'ios senatorial iceberg,
T '« convention will nominate Mr.
dam f’ and ,n tl,at a “ ' vl11 hs u P on
l ‘ l .™ th « W* ® f d,sll0 “< !st y I they
", ,n aa -'b ,n off«it.o«r man was only
playing one ot his Mulligan tricks
when lie wrote that Florence letter,
and we knew him too well to believe
him.
* A few republican editors attempt
draw consolation from the fact
Jefferson, Jackson and Harri¬
were renominated and elected
defeat. Let us see about those
In 1790 there was no
party supporting Jeffer¬
; as soon as the demo-republican
was organized it elected him.
Jackson was not defeated hy /
„ } ^ |c in 1824 . hc obl . linw l m0 e
| ec or | TOlcs t j, 0 rotcs ot - mm . c
voles than either of tho
three candidates. Hereeeivcd
, 55 872 votes i 05 for Adams,
a „j vo , , ho ,. mc] . was mado pnwi .
dent by peculiar hugger mugger in
the house of representatives, of which
the winning party has never boasted
and which patriots generally have
tried to forget. The people were so
indignant over it that they gave
Jackson more than two-thirds of the
electoral votes in 1525. 1 he repub
iieans are quite welcome to any
consolation they can draw from that
precedent. In 1839 Van Buren
beat Harrison ; the great panic of
1837—40 produced the usual results
and Harrison was elected in 1840.
Now. if there had been a panic in
Cleveland’s first term—bat the re
publicans arc compelled to admit
that all their prophecies of 1884
voted for thango, P^le .ud there in is 1884
a no
evidence that they have repented,
There is every ' reason to behove that
th i„ si st on maintaining the
regime until .Mr. Cleveland s
policy is taiHv tested. The problem
a "simple'one in the “Rule of
Three if with Mr. Cleveland un
tried, with 100,000 federal office
holdcrs working against him, with
the usual cry ^.. oi “danger to the busi
ncsj illMre witb 'personal dela
mation of M r. Cleveland and Mr.
Blaines prestige of success they /
werc sti! , una b io U) elcet tlie latl r
in i$84, how much will they fall
* hort ^SS will, all these forces
neutranzml or working the other
way ?—Ex.
Pay As You Go.
A correspondent to the Monticello
Times writing on the above subject
among other things says :
\Ye are apt to blame young men
for being destroyed when we ought
to blame the influences that destroy
them. Society slaughters a great
••You many young men by the behest,
Whatever must keep up appearances.”
be your salary you must
dress as well as others, you must
wine and brandy as many friends,
you must smoke as costly cigars,
you must give as expensive enter¬
tainments, and you must live in as
fashionable a boarding bouse. If
you luivn’t the money, borrow ; if
you can’t borrow,, make false entry,
or substract here and there a bill
from a bundle of bank notes, you
will only have to make the decep¬
tion a little while, in a few months
or in a year or two, you can make it
all right. Nobody will be hurt by
it. Nobody will be the wiser. You,
yourself will not be damaged. By
that awful process a hundred thou¬
sand men have been slaughtered for
time and slaughtered for eternity.
Our young men are coming up in
this depraved state of commercial
ethics, and i am solicitous about
them. 1 warn them against being
slaughtered on the sharp edges of
debt. You want many things
you have not, my young friends, you
shall have them if you have patience,
and honesty, and industry. Certain
lines of conduct always lead out to
certain successes.
Suppose you borrow. There is
nothing wrong in borrowing money.
There is hardly a man in business
but has sometimes borrowed money.
Vast estates have been built on a
borrowed dollar. But there are two
kinds of borrowed money. Money
borrowed for the purpose of starting
or keeping up legitimate enterprises
and expenses, and money borrowed
to get that which you can do without.
The first is right, the other is wrong.
If you have money enough of your
own to buy a coat, however plain,
and then you borrow money for a
dandy’s outfit you have taken the
first revolution of the wheel down
grade. Borrow for the necessities,
that may be well. Borrow for the
...... t nit tips
uric. , your prospects
the wrong d.rect,on. The
1 ' ' '. i-Unetly sa)s that the bor
?ower is tho servant of tho lender.
have to go down some other street
*® «**P« »««»<? knew ~me one you owe.
y° ull n mon what is the
<le»potis,n ol being in debt, more of
them would keep out of it.
.»■»» did debt do for Lord Bacon,
ee+muies. 1 . mautca mm to take
bribes and convict himself as a
criminal before Otlo.c all all ages.
What did debt do for Walter Scott?
Broken-hearted at Abbotsford, kept
the sheriff away from bis pictures
and statuary. Better for him if he
had minded the maxim which he
had chiseled over a fire-place, at Ab¬
botsford, “Waste not, want not.”
All this makes me solicitous in
regard to young men, and 1 want
to make them nervous in regard to
the contraction of unpayable debts.
Brace Up.
You are feeling depressed, your
appetite is poor, you are bothered
with headache, you are fidgetty,
nervous, and generally out of sorts,
and want to brace up. Brace up, but
not with stimulants, spring medi¬
cines, or bitters, which have for their
basis very cheap, bad whisky, and
which stimulate you for an hour,
and then leave you in worse condi¬
tion than before. What you want is
an altertative that will purify your
blood, start healthy action of Liver
and Kidneys, restore your vitality,
and give renewed health and
strength. Such a medicine you will
find in Electric Bitters, and only 50
cents a bottle.
♦*.
A Blessing or a Curse,
Two Scotchmen emigrated in tho
early day to California. Each
thought to take with him some me
morial of their beloved country,
The one of them, an enthusiastic
lover of Scotland, took with him a
thistle, the national emblem. The
other took a small swarm of honey
bees. Y ears have passed away,
The Pacific coast is. on the one hand,
cursed with Scotch thistle, which
the farmers find it impossible to ex¬
terminate; on the other hand, the
forest and fields are fragrant and
laden with the sweetness of honey,
which had been and is still one of
the blessings of the western slope ot
the Rocky Mountains, Even so does
every Christian carry with him some
l!‘t- nl ma ;:Yh r
which to bless or curse men accord -
ins. as he makes choice for God.
How precious is our influence; how
wo should watch and guard it •
Words and Weapons,
byrup ot figs
-
Is Nature’s own true laxative. It si
tne most easily taken, and the most
effective remedy known to Cleanse
the System when Bilious or Costive;
to dispel Headaches, Colds, and Fev
era : to Cure Habitual Constipation,
1 ntiigestioH. Pife^ etc. Manufactur
ed only by the California Fig Syrup
Company, San Fraoscisco, Cal.
For sale by Alexander A bon, r or
syth, Ga,
PROS AND CONS OF MARRIAGE.
Some Wisdom bv the Author of “How to
be Happy Though Married.”
\\ riling in the Quiver, the author
of “How to be Happy Though Mar¬
ried” says:
“i quite believe in marrying for
gold and working for silver; but
there should be a reasonable chance
of getting work to do, for it is noth¬
ing less than criminal foil)' to marry
on nothing a week, and that uncer¬
tain-very! On the other hand,
there is some truth in the saying
“that what will keep one will keep
two.” Show mo one couple unhap¬
py merely on account of their limit¬
ed circumstances, and 1 will show
you ton who are wretched from
other circumstances. There are
bachelors who are so ultra-prudent,
and who hold such absured opinions
as to the expense of matrimony, that,
although they have enough money,
they have not enough courage to
enter the state. Pitt used to say that
he could not afford to marry, yet his
butcher’s bill was so enormous that
some one has calculated it as afford¬
ing his servants about 14 pounds of
meats a da)’ each man and woman.
For the more economical regulation
of his household, if for no other rea¬
son, he should have taken to him¬
self a wife. Of course a young man
with a small income cannot afford to
marry if he smokes big cigars and
gives expensive drinks to every fool
who claps him on the back and calls
him “old man.” He must be par¬
ticular, too, in choosing a wife, to
selectono who is economical and who
can keep house with the least
amount of waste. Swift’s saying
about nets and cages is well known,
lie thought that one reason why
many marriages are unhappy is be¬
cause women spend their time in
making nets to catch husbands
rather than in making cages to keep
them in when caught. True, a bird
in the hand is worth two in the bush,
and we see no reason why a girl
should not do all that is consistent
wiih self-respect and modesty to
obtain a husband. She should re
member, however, that conquests
have to be kept as well as made, ami
that for a women to fail to make and
keep her home happy is to be a “fail¬
ure” in a more real sense than to
have failed in getting a husband.
“Why don’t the men propose, mam¬
ma?” One reasqn is because they
are afraid that the girls of the peri¬
od will make extravagant wives.
The other day a girl was talking
with a middle-aged bachelor. The
girl was of a by no means shy dis¬
position, so she began to “chaff” him
about his wretchedly unmarried
condition. “Why don’t you marry?
Can’t you afford to keep a wife?”
“My innocent young friend,” was
the reply, “1 can afford to support
half a dozen wives; but 1 cant af¬
ford to pa)’ the milliner’s bills of
one.” And you mothers, think not
always about getting good husbands
of your daughters, but think some¬
times how to make your daughters
fit to be good wives.
An Important Announcement.
New York, May 5, 1888.
Gentlemen: L feel in duty bound
to you. as well as to all sufferers by
rheumatism, to write you my ex¬
perience with this terrible disease,
and the use of Swift’s Specific, hop¬
ing that these words will be bene¬
ficial to all who suffer as I did.
About six weeks ago, while at
business, I was suddenly attacked
with excruciating pains in my feet,
knees and bands. So severe the
attack that 1 took to my bed im¬
mediately, and in two or three days
my joints were swollen to almost
double their natural size, and sleep
was driven from me. After suffer¬
ing the most excruciating pain for
a week, using liniments and various
other remedies, a friend who sympa¬
thized with my helpless condition,
said to me:
“Why don’t you get Swift’s Spe¬
cific and use it ? I will guarantee a
cure, and if it does not the medicine
shail cost you nothing.”
1 at once secured the S. S. S. and
after using it the first day, had a
quiet night and refreshing sleep. In
a week l felt greatly benefitted. In
three weeks I could sit rip and walk
about the room, and after using six
bottles I was out and able to go to
business. Since then 1 have been
regularly at my post of duty, and
stand on my feet from nine to ten
hours a day, and am entirely free
from pain. These are the plain
and simple facts in my case, and I
will cheerfully answer all inquiries
relative thereto, either in person or
by mail. r i riT/-,Af liOJlAo te M jiiinr nrv
11 \\ " '. 18t 151 ll * «troet ,!, ’, New York citv
,,, 1 realise on Hlocd and , Skin dis
eases mailed free.
The Swift Specific Co., Drawer
3, Atlanta. Ga.
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve.
The Best Salve in the world for
cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt
rheum, chilblains, fever sores, Tetter, chapped
hands, corns, and all skin
eruptions, and positively cures piles,
or no pay perfect required. Tt is guarantee!
to give satisfaction, or money
refunded. Price 2o cents per box.
-
A Physician From Iowa.
Dr. H. Hunk. Nevada,Iowa,states :
Have been practicing medicine fif¬
teen years, and of all the medicines
I have ever seen for the bowels, Dr.
Riggers' Huckleberry Cordial is by
far the best.
NUMBER 22
s
N^gsourr ROYAL poSotf
iiv
3$
ij
i isi
o
m
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varies A marvel of
purity, strength and wholesomeness. More
economical than the ordinary kinds, and
cannot he sold in competition with the mul¬
titude of low test, short weight, alum or
phosphate powders. Sold only in cons.
Royal Raking I’owdkk Co., 100 Wall
street. New York.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
To Justices of the Peace and Tax Payers.
Ol EORGIA—Monroe county—The law
\Jf requires justices of the peace to furnish
the Tax Receivers with a list of tax payers
in their respective districts. The Justices
in six districts have complied with this
legal requirement, and the Justices of ten
districts have not. The Board of County
Commissioners earnestly request that the
Justices in these ten districts furnish these
li.-ts of tax payers in their districts to the
Receiver of Tax Returns at Forsyth as
soon 20th as practicable, and especially before
the of June next. All tax payers in
this county who fail to render their tax
returns to the Tax Receiver, will be
double-taxed as defaulters, and will not ho
relieved from the double tax thus imposed
by law. Tax payers will take due notice
thereof and govern themselves accordingly.
J. F. GUILDS,
JOHN A. DAN I ELLY,
W. T. LAWSON,
Corns. Hoads and Rev. Monroe Co.
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APPLICATION FOR ADMINISTRATION.
G EORGIA—Momoe county—L. O. mid
R. L. Hollis having applied to me for
letters of administration on estate of Sarah
M. Hollis late of said County, deceased.
This is therefore to notify all persons con¬
cerned to show cause, if any, before the
court of Ordinary of said county, on the
first Monday in May, 1888, by io o’clock
a. m. why said letters should not lie granted.
Witness my hand and official signature,
April 2nd, 1888.
JOHN T. McGINTY, Ordinary.
NUTIGE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS.
A LL persons having claims against the
estate of At. G. Turner, sr., late of
Monroe county, deceased, are hereby
notified to present them in terms of the
law ; and all persons indebted to said estate
are required to make immediate payment.
M. G Turvbk, jr., Executor,
of M. G. Tukxkii, deceased.
April 2nd, 1888.
„ DR. HENLEY'S
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