Newspaper Page Text
ggf.ggg'
Feb., 24,
Offo'.&l Orpin of TfLite county
Entered nt the Veit-offlce at Clkvrland
•iVeco«d-«)to* !k!ai 1 Matti”, Jan. 'J?, '92.
North Georgia Gold-Fields.
Mr. .1. M. Ticnmn. an oxpori-
pncad mining I’tigiimm, of N.
who him visited all the grout gold
fields of this continent, scores
Dr. Spencer a well aimed and
niuchly-dose.rve-1 blow, in speak
ing of the gold mines of this sec
tion. Speaking of the great mis
take of the scientific Silliman. in
his opinion of the great Com
stock lode, in connection with
Dr. Spencer's ship at the Georgia
gold fields In says :
“i would, as n conclusion drawn
from these facts, advise the own
ers of mine» in Georgia not to
lose courage. They are not the
only people who have suffered
from missapplied science—or
science lacking its necessary com
plement. practical experience—
and political preferment. North
Carolina condoles with Georgia,
and other states can no
douht join in lument-
tation over wasted funds, invest
ed through the advice of men
whose superficial knowledge of
science has boon a curse to min
ing enterprise since the lirst dis
covery of the precious metals in
the United States. And they arc
today to be found in the gold
fields of the. south in greater
numbers than in any other part
of the country with which J am
acquainted.”
The ox peri nee of half a century
proves beyond douht, that gold
exists in paying quantities,
throughout the entire mineral
holt of .North-east Georgia. The
crudest methods are followed, in
nearly every instance, and yet
gold is saved in fairly paying
quantities. Willi improved
methods, these mines would pay
handsome dividends.
Mr. Rogers, a mining export
from England, who lias been en
gaged in practical mining for the
past twenty-live years in every
gold producing country on the
globe, gave it his opinion, after
six weeks investigation of White
county properties, tlisl our gold
fields are destined, in the near
futuro to rival those of Australia
and South America. Mr. Rogers
is a practical gold miner, and
man whose opinion commands
universal respect.
The annexation of Hawaii will
create more offices for good Dem
ocrats, Lot 'or roll!!
HOOPSKIRTS.
If they want them, wo say, by
all moans let them have them.
A Woman knows hotter than wo,
what she wants to wear, and we
know the easiest, wav togetnlong
with a woman is to give her,
her head.” We think tliis
for supplies and etc., .the year j Iceland
you dreamt of the “Jubilee,”
I-5?"A1! this—and more-
true, mid yet you—hut this
the easiest way out of thediffieul- f?°Ding into polities, and we have
tv. Of course she will look like
a highly inflated balloon—which
to the “Airy-fairy Lillian” type,
will he a veritunic god-scud,—
and to those possessing nicely
turned ankles, etc., the new cus
tom will allow the dear ones
ample opportunity to display
their lcg-itniate charms without
an ostensible effort to do so,
while crossing the streets in
March weather.
Yes, let them alone. We
know they arc sweet, anyway;
whether dressed in close clinging
china silks, or wide spreading
iiiolines, we kno v that the
dearest little woman on earth is
sworn oir until the next cam
paign, then we arc going to have
our ordinance remodeled and go
at’em in the improved (ratling
sty!e.
(With apologies to F. L. Stanton.)
The earth gooh ’round
With never a wound.
And there's yearn and months nml hours.
Hut the tardy spring
Can it ever bring
Excuse for its wanton loitering?
Ask tin: snow-hidden buds uud tlo\v»*i*b!
The Franklin Printing Com
pany and the (.'(institution hook
and joh-olliee have consolidated,
forming the largest, publishing
somewhere hid away in itsrull'les, house in the south. It will he a
tucks, gores, hems, pleats, bias
widths, shirred fronts, and other
forgotten parts of the wonder
ful creation, and that is all we
cure for anyway.
We say let them wear crino
line fathoms deep, or gauzy fig
leaves, so that they please them
selves.
General (i. T. Beauregard, the
last of tlio full generals of the
Confederacy, died Monday night
at his home in New Orleans.
‘•Tlmro is a ) hi go in llm book of fame.
On it is writtou a Ningle name
In letters of gold, on spotless while,
Encircled with stars ofquenehU'HK light;
Never a blot tlmt page hath marred,
And the star-wreathed niuno is lJcauro-
| (fill'd.”
The South at Chicago.
The Richmond Dispatch calls
timely attention to the report
that the malingers of the Colum
bian fair at Chicago propose to
present on a grand scale a negro
opera based on the piece of fiction
known us “Uncle Tom’s Cahill.’
The closing scene of tins wonder
ful opera is to represent the burn
ing of ii negro at the stake. It is
said that this scene will lie as far
as possible a reproduction of the
recent burning in Texas.
We have no doubt t bat this
grand scheme will prov e to lie
very attractive to those who arc
bunt, on perpetuating the slanders
on American slavery and on the
southern people that arc embod
ied in “Unde Tom’s Cabin,” hut
we doubt whether the south will
lie anxious to swarm to an exhi
bition where the chief and mov
ing attraction will be the revival
and the reproduction of slanders
for political effect.
Great is Chicago, and wonder
ful will he her fair!—(’oust i tut ion.
I5cl3tur;»l Chaff.
The violets tlml liUiomed
I,list week,- (in the l>min
Of the (fusliiii(f K|irin(f (met)--so sweet
Hnve shut ('(fill their blue ryes,
To tho dull leaden skies.
And had them staled up with sleet,
...
W lint you are offered some
thing valuable, for comparatively
nothing, you had best nibble a
long time and very carefully, be
fore you try to bolt the whole
thing. Some of our mountain
neighbors arc sadder, but wiser
and a few dollars hard earned—
poorer, for the lack of following
this rule.
bilious language, and are paying j to , 1othi «fertilised
him n fees to atop tho merchant in the fall, put on a little more plant
front selling your cow and horse |
on the mot'tj^ngo you gave him i have canno. to regret yonr 'action. T
have novoi* soon a farmer who permitted
which cotton had boon
killed to go unplanted, and I have yet
to hoc tho man who replanted it in any
crop but rjotton.
don’t BLOW YOUIt HAND WHEN IT IS
TOO WKT.
Tho little time gained by this plan is
far outbalanced by tho injury to the
land, for if there is much clay this
becomes mortar, and ho compacted that
it requires years of subsequent intelli
gent work to counteract the i ijnry. j
Too luafcy tenants and hired men are
ignorant of’pr indifferent to the harm
done, and hence, |jhi« mistaken plan is
often followed.
The heavy (freezes have destroyed
much insect iUfijjjftid will render our
tand more plfflflKmd easily broken by
the plow. fi$T
TITF. jpMPOST HEATS
should bo pmhed forward with vigor.
Try a comport of stable manure, acid
ihosplmto and potash. This jolts your
and in tine mechanical condition and
gives plant food well adapted to our
soils and standard crops. For this pur
pose there is nothing better than tho
formula prepared by the late Mr. Tor
man, which I give in full elsewhere in
this report. In planning f.»r your crop*
don’t go on the idea
that, it is tho number of acres rather
Ilian 1 he preparation and condition <>f
the land which marks tho successful
farmer. With our cheap and abundant
lands it seems almost, natural that wo
have fallon into this error. lint let us
realize that it is an error and resolve to
follow better methods. In the last fifty
years agriculture has made vast strides
and it is m thee© older countries where
advanced, scientific methods have been
practiced that a marked degree has
been attained, and our own state, com
paratively young and fresh, has to
depend to a large extent on outside |
assistance for the food to support our i
population.
ouit chief crop
all goes to swell the profits of other in- !
dmtriea, leaving us nothing but a lmrd
living. The consequent dissatisfaction
is causing many/armors to seek em
ployment in os in r lines of business. To i
trace tho evils of such a state of feeling (
we need only study agricultural his- j
tory in England. Her farming popula
tion is M per cent, of the whole, and i:i
1800 she imported four hundred millions ,
of hreudrttutfH. Her laboring popula
tion is poorly housed, underpaid, di -.con
tented. The average form is acres,
and m the last fApjtiy years she has lost. !
8,500,000 of her population by iimgra-■
tion.
In France, on tho coptrarv, you find j
nn energetic, painstaking, frugal peo
ple cultivating and qwning tin ir small
farms. Her rural population is 75 per
cent, of the whole, I:i 1 H.» I sin exported
one hundred and tliiriy-fivo millions of
food products, and in sixty years she
has lost only 500,000 people by integra
tion. Her farms average ton acres, but
there are four mifHons of farm* rs vh >
make an independent living on farm id'
two acres each. ' Her people are inde
pendent and hopeful for tin* future. In
England the farmuw have, in the last
century, lost by* the enclosure acts
8,000,000 acres Of label; while in France
nearly tho same timuher uf acres have
been gained by tlnf working people. In
our own state, wu sae our people bui-
dt’iuel with , j
A Sl TKJCMU apANCi; OF HAND
and umhvided as fh the best method for
managing it in ojjjyr .to make it pay
even a moderate tffieiv t. I und t
stand and appreciate tho difficulties,
which this comlifidu hralign—-and 1. in
common with many others, know thal.
the man who < xpe®H to realize a pr* So.
or to pay off clobtr.'bv Htroteldu:' hi a
credit to make a fei more bales <*« cot
ton. literally “fui.ipw" to lt«n dug ont
of the ground, tlitaja to ha c;;chajig»'d
for meat and meJKatul ft-ifi Baevs to
‘•run” a lew more Sift lints laborers, is
mukiiig a grave nfttuke. We admit
that this “old beateAnirk*' has landed
un any where but ,in prosperity. We
know'that tho flufipcial policy of the
government ban dweriini tinted against
tho farmers, but WO^fiuKt also acknowl
edge that after seoiifjxtur carefully nm-
tureil plans oml in ignominious failure,
or like Dead Son fruit Luru to ushes on
our 1 ij>h—it is the part of wisdom to try
differ nt methods. AVo have watclied
tlicHo fruit less efforts year after > ar.
audit is folly to. gu on compounding
our mistakes. Let tpt direct our atteo
lion chiefly to such
AN apportionment of OtlR CMK>rS
ns will secuve our ljbme supplies, an 1
then make such money crops us our i tr-
i ninstances will admit. One man can
control labor with eppilrent ease, and
the labor is near him, this man can af
ford to take Homo risk in planting crops,
which require rapid, anu cloun cultiva
tion. On tho other hand, I would ud-
vi ;e any man, who knows he will have
difficulty in obtaining lalKjr, to direct
his work on the limfof grasses and
stock. Begin on a Mjwill scale and build
up gradually. The owner should be
formidable competitor for much
of the work that has been sent
north, heretofore.
Kllpptd Rllppiags and Komtrcot.
The Miidisotiiiin remniks:
“Women, "etteritlly K|ionkin",”
retmirkod tho ldi^ioiiM oditof,
“are po.vriessed of mood -frequent
ly the imperative.”
.1 nut bo ; and e(|unlly potential
as imperative.
The Social Circle Sentry, ad
vertises to take Confederate mon
ey on subscription. Why cor.
Iaiuly ! We propose totakeanv-
tliin^ 1 green in color, even if it
grew on a turnip.
The Blue Ridge Post, inhuman
ly remarks; “The man who at
tempts to write spring poetry
this early should lie given strych
nine.”
We hog brother McKinney-
forbearance, and rise to explain,
that white w e aie guiltv, we
couldn't help it. W hen we sit
down in our luxurious (ifileo on
our inverted nail keg, and watch
the lambs a skipping on the bar
ren lawn, us it tries to warm its
Mood in the pale sunshine, when
we behold tho snow bird, blue
with the chill of the whi-tlintr
winds, hop shivering up to its
hilling mate, when we see all
these beautiful evidences of spring-
our heart warms up, our brain
gathers its inspiration, and spring
poetry just glides oil' tic point of
our pm, as naturally as the long-
IlaB’gahis!!
isaB'g’auis!!!
4T
* A 4 Cost!!
KNOWLEDGE
Urln^-i comfort ami improvement a-.d
tend< to jiorsonal enjoyment when
rightly u«ed. The many, who lift bet
tor than others And enjoy lifo more, with
lots expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world's best products to
tin* needs of physical luting, will attest
the value to health of tho pure liquid
laxative principle* embraced in the
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence it due to ita presenting
in the form moot acceptable and pleas
ant t<> tho taste, therofrtshing a i«l truly
beneficial propertira « f a perfect lax
ative; effectually cleansing the aysttrn
dispelling colds, headache* ami fevers
ami permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
m»*t wilh the approval of the medical
profession because it acts on the Kid
neys, Liver and Bowels without weaken
ing them and it i« perfectly free from
overy objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for ?ale by all drug
gists in 50c and Jl bottles, bat it U man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whore name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well inform' d, yoi will aot
accept any substitute if offered.
legalTdveMemfnts.
Sheriff Salcr, for March.
(IKMltlflA. win tic corjcrY.
W ILL le Fold 1m-fi.ro tho curt lu>u,r
door in Cleveland in an id cr.unly mi
the fir: t Tm-ndny in March 1.I o-
tween tho lawful hour* of vale to the
highoFt bidder for cash the following
’Tty to-w it:
Part oflot of land No. 105 in the Jlrd
Lint., said county being 25 nrren and be.
inglhe j.liee -,v! rivoil .loHCphiim lllul C.
Blalock now live. Said laud i.-« well
imj.j - ved wilh dv.itllingH and nut Ituiid-
ing« on it and van levied on and to he I
.<•11 ar- the property of Josephine and (’. j
C. Blalock by virtue of a inortgago ti fa i
irsiiod from the Sup.crior <• <urt < f sai l I
county i« favor of J. <’ Bell, Mgair*.t the
said j bine lilalock and <’. Bla- !
1 *
FOR THE i; EXT THIRTY DAYS, I WILL OFFER MY EN
TIRE STOCK OF
Dry Gcods, Notions, Shoes, Boots and Hats
AT COST
1 (!. hi- to niakr rouni for mr SPUING STOCK.
\ n - a r)i ks a n d gen ts s i i o es,
HATS,
CLOTUiNG,
“ “ DRESS-GOODS.
I MEAN Bitsiu*s».
3. A. JARRAI
ism
S3 tiKon di Fiich. f a r 5 9
(- LEV EL AN I)
GEORGIA.
WHOLE.'A!.;.
: % $ ■: A > $
A.YD RETAIL DEAL RLE EY
Tff T- : ! T H T 'G 7 W* €5
[STA.TiCH LEY, CCS EEC TI0H ELIES and CHOICE
FA MIL Y GROCERIES.
C.irei'aL'y 1*,-
A :it tin-
Lilli
' I..I
It... Ao.l'tllb .Li'-Xv'rV
I nn.'l VaK’t.wi.Vl V.iVni
|tn‘ ]»'<’,j-.'rly ft’. ('.
j pliii.c I'.t.ilm k 1.v vie:
: ti r.i.s i f,.„
! ..rit-..-Miist iiiit. it.
' > 11.. ill f.I nf
(’.('. I’.InlncU. S. K. (
nwt W. ,T. i'»..... nn<
■=“ I
> Sril lii^t . riti.l
•• i.i • nr Irss. in
1 In*. .* . O
n.fo. (’. Kl.vlork,
m i In l.r ,,,1,1 It-
Hint, . 1 J... -
17
ill.
D
D.
8 A V E K.
I),
’RL.\ ,-v:»,
aler
Cbi’B, Jey-;
m
Mi*'
• • I
:.v
ci tcl^es
Etc., Etc.
\AT r-v 1,^1
j-art
that wen) written mid employed f’ 1 ' gioctis imike.s it sell known
in the Hiiatomv of tlio comitn
i'ditor nt this season of the vear.
ly. S i ii ,j
ranted not ti
.mal.es; h
| Si l ITT
for all m
e- for all ;:;.!(,h
hci;e color.
a- , s;;crin
of oil, nm
A 1
;u i
'? A
g* •» f V-
^ i * . *s
ad j. llhig— !ea;h
and BOBiRN.
-.! raw ka!».
all il:v;
(aeu’.iiiia par
ALL KINDS OF UEPAUUNG DONE ATS!I tfi'TEST None
agent for thr
or Gas burner, and lh«
“In God wn trunt,
In man we bunt!*'
Culhlnu't Liberal Enterpciisc
“In mini you’ll bust
1 f Him you trust!
Or thus:
“If in man you trust
You'll bo sure t«* best !’*
—Ballon Argus
Or so:
Since bust wo must
It man we trust.
Before we bust
By way of trust.
Wo feel we must
Reduce to dust,
The elmp august
Who asks for trust.
Thu Gie. timid High School!
is m 'reusing' daily and we trust j
will soon have the patronage it>
two able \onni; teachers deserve. '
A Swindling Scheme.
News reaches us, from the dis
tricts lying along the foot of the
mountains, of the actions of a
certain man, calling himself Cobh,
who is proposing to loan money
to tho people of those districts, at
ridiculously low rates of interest,
for an indefinite number of years,
and asking no collateral whatev
er, beyond a plain note.
llis plan is to promise these
loans at six per cent, for any
number of years without security,
only requiring that one dollar for
every hundred the borrower
wishes, ho paid in advance, as an
earnest that the money will he
taken off the agents hands, when
he comes in person to deliver it —
two or three weeks later. In
this way he secured thirty or
thirty-five dollars from the trust
ing mountsiueers, who listened
to his plausible tale, and went
bis wav to fresh pastures.
Those who invested in the c.on-
cern are nearly all poor people,
and can ill afford to lose tlieldoor,
anoney paid this man, w hom, we veril
Hiave no hesitancy in branding as]: II ii
a swindler. by t!
Many weeks will pass; spring i pull.
merge into summer, summer into joyful anticipation of that “year Ural of oueray and determination Tmvu
autumn, and the round of the! of Jubilee,” when the men iiinl i F l ’ en , 'woiujlit to the from thin anytime;
seasons completed w ill nnd these pi nice would lmw to y<* i in |,u-! HtiU* eloanin^ «i>, repairs on fouces, the 1
.deluded men, looking in vain for, mility, when the drummer would ! SSI f “mv mws‘’ f ii’ ri i” m! ■
the advent of Mr. ( obh, with the I he an unknown quantity in th that lias been attempted. The ther-
pron.ised money. j problem of life, mat the lawyer am"'fi™ foun^flo? I
Our adv icc is not to lute at ev-| relegated to a “land where thev sewral da vs. and it wm, tliis uniform
erv tempting U it. offered by un- don't shovel snow.” ' ^ ^vlil'tue^'^'"‘^d n‘X" j
recommended anglers. j * * * anted between freezing and th."I win,' for
. , . , ... same period, the damage would have
t i Aim V oil paid vour iuitatiou t>een irrepar.-’.ile. t am informed tiiat
1 he rain and sleqt falleth and i f*»os, and dues, and contributed jV t*s' ; dities. more especially lower
.the editor gun wet h ,his nails in j to this and that ami’tether,
despair as the last spark cxpirctlvj ...
im his editorial hearth, for lack | And now
.of tho fuel the subscriber
mutividi’d one half i.t,:
Ro. SI in tt.c Isl Hi. i .
/.'hob* lot eoniiiit'.injr i.V!
loss jtiul know I!t<‘ 1 G
old Immo plinT* now in t!
\. K. Wm.mI and wfll
pi(*j i rtv lcvityd mu t’.ipi *
propDHy f'l A. E. Wood,
itu\ ti ta issiH’tl l«v S. N.
foi
Sflf-pninouneinc, Parallel Pamily Bible, iu the world.
| of lids n!' land
sr .«l county. <•
j ( l* less, and b«
cant b\ lands of Mrs. B.,bbi
I w.'st by lands nfl)r. V. si
$ soutli by tin* (’liattahocclico
I known ns tl»c Mjiifilm
j W»* 11 ill* J »1 C »\ (Ml. M’Vt'l .1 I * i V, V:
| and otln i* buildioga <<n it. S.t *
[bud now in possossion ot
I Br. John H. Alley na tenant of Mrs.
1 Gage. S.itl Ijud lf.it'.l on and to h.>
Isold as the. proj citv of Martha Gag*-, bv
v:. 11: • . fa t:t\ ti ta'i.Micd by S. N. B.’acl
|T. of said rountv for state an<! cownt v
Th# lina Plano A Organ Co., tmit<r.», 0kc, ai.i
Btgh (iraile luslnai)«ata only. Piano caarU orgaih
• kfcsx*uilty. The accompanyui£ cut rviiraaruai oar
vraiuMT aaasn maju> <>mnn.
Tnt« beautiful piano luodrl t»t cartamly th# v >
perfection aiul vtaiidH pre •uui>«ai alxita commi
k>n» without a kuoan p«ar ta tli# world.
TH* ()»LV OS* O* IT* SINU IX TUI *0»U).
Beautiful in da-sijcn. una<|u«l«>,i in quality of fc;R»«n<
nmslt. and utinurpurtaail ta a«.luUty of coaatruclioa
Full piano tut oud proportion, plaao flaub. rianr
pedal, < oitliuuoua hiuga am lock-board, ptaao au«k
rack, piano fret* of the latent dwhi^n of vrta-ia« Ui.t!
carrau piano truss#*, rtc., and unlilr #U olharpiaru
casctl or can* on th* market, ha* th* most p*rf*r»*b>p
actios. Th# lock-hoard i* atm!* in two Faction*, u.<
■rst section folding hack and Liying in th* Mo.ad
■(M'tion. in ntdv'h po*ition th* iustrun.tnt pr*s*nlA a
piano amvsaranc*. Bra *ccond motion IJta w<'<>Bd
**«.’tii»* slightly ral-*«-d, anti *vm|^n^ t>ack under tl#
m'ftcr frotit briiig* Wip *tof>-a<'tiou mn> promin**t>r.
a i- have *!*o many beautiful and artistic designs i*
high top style* tlml art* unstirpassed by any moiiufac
%ur»-r i# th«* world. Correspondence a Jicih-d. Cat#
k>gu** mailed on application. Address »U corr#
•)><>ndanoa direct to th* mnnufaclurar*. Sixs-tal
ucliicanienta offer*<l to all foreign kradr. S;tn:r!i
iustrmnent* aent on approval, anti tpiarautaad to 1/*
fur^a/«** Ail varr^tu^
r tho
US
due b
And lhut reminds us of some
• liter promises, made by voidable
orators four or live years ago, of
lent by which you were to
be enabled to get goods at vour
own price, delivered at your own
on your ow u terms yea
the world was yours, mil
possessions. You had i
hind leg, ard a down-hill
You s coked vour pipe i<> I limii'work.
His Monthly Talk with tlio Farmers
of Georgia.
iaot"
lot,:
DkIMUTMUNT (IK AtlRlcfUTVUK.
A ii.vxta, O.L., Feb. 1. tsOtt.
The l.ulf Cuhl Spell,
PtTlnms t lit* severest in ton years, has |
caustHl nlitjoht an paralysis of i
and it is only whore a great i
Mrs. WUabcth Messer
Baltimore, Mil.
Rescued from Death
All Said Sho Could Not Livo a
IVfionth
Note Alive ami Well— Thanhs to
Hood'a Sarsaparilla.
" I must praise Hood's Sarsaparilla, for ii is
wonderful medicine. I suffered 10 years with
Neuralgia and Dyspepsia
and fnimlu.4 upclN. Sometimes I would
be almost .stiff with cold perspiration. T spent
u great deal of money for medical attendance,
but I did not net any hChtkiR until mv daughter
told me about HckhIG Sarsapaiiua. an t l began
to take it. I weighed Jess than loo lbs. and was
A Picture of Misery
Every one who saw me thought I could not
* mouth. Rut I bcTia to Improve
has Huccumbed
Doth, but never hriugejh.
vim come l
prom- ■ ntH'c a month to see tli
j lawyer whom von condemned
Oporpin. the uat
anil where this
cror H is «: kn Kttt.nn.
1 vvoulil advise t ,:e riv-soeiliu^ of ttie
snm.. land just ns in ns the weather
s into permits of out door work. It has Ijeeu
too nnu'h our practice in tho past to put
111 this la.ul in ■
live another
i‘t once alter Dcfamiing with liood s SaiVaua-
villa, and have gtadunhx caihctl until I am now
perfectly cured. I . v eil, sleep well, and
am iu perfect health. I OWoaJItO
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Instead of being dead now, I am alive and
weigh I t'i lb*.’* M«8. EuzailhTH MEdSUU,
It) Bait Havney Street, BiUttmuffv'. Md.
HOODS PILLS
| Martha Gag
Also, al the j huc time ard }>!;
J nf lots of bund Nos. iV.) nnd ‘211 in
•I'is*., said county, c. jitaiuinj;
i t-evtui and one half acres, in <
j inori* hi- It ss, l!:c same In ir.g tl ... ..
conn r t*f Ini IV) nr.tl N. NV. corner < C bit
! 2*.b bounded . u the east by the loud* of •
■ J - lb Wcstnici tl.nid, <ti the mirth by j
j lands o: Daniel Westnu'ielnml, and J« til 1
: Abbcrimlhy. on the w«st by l.v.als t>f \V. i
.1. Abl eriUility. on the south by lauds oft
ij. M. Westimueiand* and Ifurtoti pl.-ue.
Hhi aaid land is the tlv elliugof J. A. |
Y»«st noielnml and a te: a it h»*u.-e, the
eame being well improved, and known
us tho J. ij. A. Wcstimiralnudhomc place
nnd now in his possession. Said proper
ty levied on and to b * s dd ns tit • pmj er-
ty of J . <>. A \Ys? t:i>nrohmd, by virtue
jot a tux ii fa issued by JS. Iilat 1; L', (..
j of said county against the said J
j Westmoreland t r bis state and county
j taxes for the year ISirj.
is. L. Buow.v, Sheriff.
^ !T tc» f *i Dviptpsit.
That Your Hair
may retain
its youthful color,
fultnass, and beauty,
dress it dally
with
Ayer’s Hair Vigor
It cleanses the
scalp, cures humors,
and stimulates a
new growth
of hair.
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co.
Lowell, Mass.
FAsElrcc’3 Wlac cf C;rM
"ih vlv- I THS3FCm2 S SOCX-ORiWOhT m,
for »».» kv tW Aebaarin; ambiW m
U . (’ountv :
Sutton tV' 1‘itelifoid t Jevelasd.
H. A. Jarrard (’b veiand,
G. U. Irvin*. . yj Cn *k
Lumpkin county:
V. C rnrllctVe,
D. How ell 1 Aurr.i is’..
v. 4 Wir iehel 1 uo.. N«-.r lJridg*,
J. J. \V. Tate x Bre YGllow.
CITATION.
GEORGIA, whivu i t.sty.
, j J AMES II Black, Guardian of Huu-
y ^ } Hah A. Black, a minor has applied
to me tor a discharge from his
guardianship of Hannah A. Black, this
is therefore h> notify nil persons coneein-
o.l to tile ti:. ir objections, if at ,v they
R'.lVc. on o: bef re tie til St !d<i;dav ill
Mur -.: i * t. «•*-<• he will be .ii.-,, barged
r-m:. in> ' uiai'titp a.*» applied for.
L. *•.'!*. Ordinary White county.
JULIUS L. DEYTON
A STOREEY AT LA W.
CI.DViLAND GEOSQ]
all bnsi
'lectiov
12-U.
~\\] ILL Attend ] • i • iptly ’• all It
r;;tru.-t*il tv #!■ < a; * CVIf-d
Specialty. m
W. S. HUFF.
1TT0R.NKT AT LAW.
DlUgi',1, C».
urn..nils for PLil.li, »,i,l Corp
tio;:!. inu.il*. Ki'.l t'lslnt*. Currci 1 ]
lUnr. .ulii'iu-4. (A;,,-. Ii. ’Sa. jj
H. II. PERRY,
ATTORNEY AT LA
Gainesvill# Gsoi'gia,
j ‘Jv'R'i'IA, \YH!TK • ot'NTY.
i T«' All. WHOM IT MAY cot URN;
T NO. D. O* Kelley, having in pint ter
form, applied to me for | rrmaiient
Letters of Administration cn the
Estate of Elizabeth Yicko j lat* ••!
I county, this is to cite all and singular,
Hie creditors and next kin of Elizabeth
i • iekerv , to be and appear at my office 1
, the first Monday in March, next, and’
| show cause, if any they can,-why perma \
| nent administration should not >’■giTiid- .
Ivj.j!' Jl J°* P ' ° ,KeMe y» ou Elizabetli
j W' itu*>s :ev hand and official signal lire
. _ "...
>/' v 'E-' > TJt tDX KASi:
c:ii:n fAfiiT
Cl*>>VK!CitT3, *
I.'r 'rfora It]oa .r.it fr.. *!»r..'rocV writ. t»
NX X v J. i.l id., r . MV YOU
***'nf IlKLU Is Axs.r
Vv t* aI'v here, an] want to alav
'o ]• itrouize u-.
m lr»* o/ ak&'s* U
r‘
Cf
elrc-jla'lon cf any sdeatlflc c-p^vj tn
world. Bi-Undid’- '• • — —
msa siiculi be
• r.vlidly IllBitrat-d. ho toTelll,
4 ‘rlihout It. Wmir, 93.0
Addr«« MCViH t
C 3mt Yu4 CD