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KC)RG ... 1 A—uoii<,e rw i „ ooimt>.
b Or.tiiury’s olliee <>f saul county, Ail".
S. Betts of Worth county.
.niardiau of the estate ami per
‘‘'V,',if Annie Georgia tis has Betts, in due minor form of
Worth-county, * the undersigned ., for leave to
to
^unities, i ill the lands in Clayton and Henry
said state, belonging to said
f,,|- the purpose of paying debts
* “L-,id estate. said and ward, maintenance and said applies- and ed
jiiou of office East
tion will be heard at my in
iti:tn Gh.. on the tirst Monday in 5>ep
. Jno. »\ Bohannon,
tt-aiber. 18‘JJ. .
Ordinary D. O.
AMERICA’S REPRESENTATIVE
FASHION MAGAZINE
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THE DESIGNER,
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J J. 11. TEASLEY,
Physician and
EASTMAN, GEORGIA.
Office at residence formerly
bv J. A. Harrell Jr.
1 s IT
b
I
a pmaudl n il
3
./VO/ V il (jilt . (1 7 (/Jib, util 7 j Jij 7 (1
nice, breeze-generating,
Tur nmrer fmi * irhir.b. “ !'
- , ,
!\ t * J) you ( ()\jl; and OO}njOJ
able. jVc.l’t t-0 Hat via
Rerrmrma store.
CHAKLIEWN K
^ 7 ILL IA 33 031 ALLEY,
Builder and
Dealer in Limp. Brick,
Hair. Cernenl,
Wail Paper. e.e. Full line
Ilarawood Mantols, Jiles, (tFH tt J
u ainte, Oils, Glass, Sash,
•id Blinds.
!V 1 in] uli I
a n ■: M
Illy a I IJ IlIAs
r-*
*”
7§r/f% (Ft A IfU LLj if»Si JL
To loan on approved paper
Interest paid on time
I >■' nijit attention given to collection L'<
</■ Bf.SHOP, 8 R-, S. HARRIS,
President. Vice Pres’t
SOL HERR MAN, Casliier.
!]■ II ‘-CT0RS:—J. rts, s. Harris, Bishop, So! Hermann, 8 r. D. J. M.
s ' ! rrman B. T. Burch. :;-•>( )-l v
Avery & McMillan,
5] and 53, South Forsyth Street
ATI aNTA, GEORGIA.
Baines. Boilers, Saw
and all kinds o! Ktaciiinery
-
r -7rrttu-
_ _ ’ii
! ;; v;
U, r ‘‘ ^ Kelipse Enirine?, Frii'k ErHose
$st * Mills, Corn Mills; Fred Mills.
aw Teeth, Red Cross Belting,
« fovernors. : Engine ar d Mil! lie
' ' M.ll Supplies. Freecatalogue.
ALL OVER THE COUNTRY, *
-
INThlihSTIXG , HAPPEMXIiS .... , OK A
WEEK BOILED DOWN.
At Columbus. Ga.. Eugene Smith and
Miss Libia Satcher were married on a
street car.
The cotton mili owners of Fall River
are endeavoring to form a combination,
the trust to he capitalized entirely at
home,
At Rockwood, Tenn . Tom Dodson
was shot and insrautiv killed by Police
Johnson, who was trying to arrest
Dodson.
The government has arrested a num¬
ber of persons at Peck, Fla., charging
them with participation in the Cruui
whitecapping affair.
Colonel William J. Bryan has con¬
tributed one-fortieth of the cost,
to the new builiiug of the Cumberland
Presbyterian church at Salem. Ills., the
churcu of which he was a member when
a boy.
Mayor Jones of Toledo has outlined a
mobile accompanied by a lirstolass
singer, who will entertain peopie with
songs composed by the candidate.
§ 4 $
It i 3 said the pope has requested the
Jesuits to moderate their violence to
"arcs rey us.
The Seaboard Air Line has started a
snrV0vl,, g parry to ran a line from
Charleston lo Augusta.
At Lancaster, Pa., tho 7-year-old
daughter of John Rash was shot m the
back and killed by the (5-year-old son of
Frank Geulick. The boy confessed the
shooting.
Dwight L. Moody ana Dr. G. Camp- ^
bell Morgan of Loudon, will go to Ac
| ernacle lanta to Baptist conduct church a meeting for at three the days Tab¬
during tL-e month of September.
1 A reunion of the survivors of Doles
Cook’s brigade. Association of National
volunteers, will be held in Atlanta on
Oct. 24 and 25, at which the members
of four regiments will be in attendance.
§ § §
The Fiiipiuos have decided not
attack the Americana intrenched at
lmus.
Governor Candler of Georgia and
staff wiii attend the reunion of the
blue and gray in Evansville on Oct. 10.
The officials of the various
in tho west have reached an
and the threatened rate war has been
averted,
President McKinley has received
Canton, where he is resting for a
davs, many telegrams and letters coa-
1 granulating him ou his Pittsburg speech
I A petition from the
Woman's Disarmament league has
presented to the queen praying her
the name of womanhood and
hood to avoid war with the Boers.
One hundred negroes carried from
south have taken tho place of Italian
gtrikiug freight handlers on the Old
Dominiou docksTn Now York.
Lieutenant A. J. Dilion. Company D,
Tw’eiity-ninth infantry United
yolunteers, is under arrest at i^oir Yxc
i > ^ erson ^ a charged wnh being ab
- 0Ut ; T°'
I 6eat WU
9 a 9 6 9
Chief Justice of Samoa William L.
Cliambers is visiting ins sister in At¬
lanta.
The city council of Atlanta is cousid
ering the construction of a viaduct over
the Whitehall street railroad crossing,
= Waud much u.«ded .mFeo.rrae...
, Ia * '“‘‘““ho KZ* se?
xiol and one of the vessels sank. Six
persons, including two women, were
drowned.
It is said that Cecil Rhodes has placed
an order with Texas and Louisiana mills
for 500 000,000 feet of southern yellow
pine tor use m the construction of his
Cape to Cairo railroad.
Action has been taken by the state
department for the protection of Amer¬
icans aud their interests in the Trans¬
vaal in case of war between Great Brit
ain and the Boer republic.
At Cincinnati where Murat Halstead
lectured before the Economic ciub he was
threatened with blows by numbers of
his audience whom he called traitors for
their views on the Philippine question.
§ « §
Three regiments are in Manila await¬
ing sailing of transport next week to
bring tuern home.
Six hundred lives have been lost by
th 9 flooding of a copper mine at Besshi
island o: Shikoku.
Sir Thomas Lipton, the owner of the
Shamrock, has arrived in New York,
and is being received with much atten
tioa.
The jury in tho ease of the former
banker, E. S. Dreverof Chicago, charged
with embezzlement of park lauds, disa¬
greed ster an all night’s session.
Governor Candler of Georgia has ap
pointed delegates from each congres
sional district to attend the sessions of
the farmers national convention at Bos¬
ton.
At Binghampton, N. Y., Etta War¬
ren, a prettv young woman, committed
suicide by taking morphine because she
wanted to experience the sensation of
death.
Bryan will go to Ohio and speak in
the interest of McKean.
The makers of wall paper in London
have formed a trust aud raised p,,ces.
M Y. Darnell, sheriff of Haralson
countv, Ga., was run over aud killed by
an engine on the Southern railroad at
Mo-kmine, A.a.
The Wil der D. a,cr ac k m ilitary
organization cr Jiuoxvliie. the Philippines nas YOlun
teered to go to or
wherever the president may see tit to
sen d them
The officers of the Roane Iron com
panv. who own the large furnaces at
William Youngblood, national Re
publican committeeman from Alabama,
expresses his disapproval of the action
of Circuit Judge Shelby in displacing
Clerk N. W. Trimble of the United
States court to make room for Major
Charles J. Allison.
WILD HORSES MUST GO.
Cattlemen and Shvrpmen Monopoltm
in«- WiiU-r untl l*astm-ii«e.
Gradually, but surely, the great
herds of range horses ou the interior
plains of Washington. Idaho and Mon
tana are being driven to the wall. Sev
oral causes are working together to
depopulate the bunch grass ranges of
tlu* vast herds of wild horses that have
hitherto roamed there. Briefly stated.
says the San Francisco Chronicle,
these causes are the increased demand
for irrigable lands by settlers and the
purchase or lease, followed by fencing,
of great areas of range lands by cattle¬
men and sheepmen. The latter are
swiftly fencing in the springs, creeks
)UU j p 0m ] s that form the water sources
which are vital to range industry.
These facts denote a new era in the de
yelopment of western sheep and cattle
raising- increasing production and put
ting the industry ou a more solid basis.
It ends the indiscriminate pasturage
of cattle, sheep aud horses over im¬
mense areas of the northwestern states.
means the confining of the cattle
all ,j s heep . 0 hinds that can be aequir
ed. fenced and made more productive
and flie general extinction of the
horses. The latter are being moved off
the ranges by the tens of thousands.
Those left are forced to eke out a pn -
carious existence ou the dry pasture
lands left by the cattle and sheep herd¬
ers, where they may die of thirst in
the summer or starve to (lentil in the
winter, with no one to mourn tlieir
eUi |
While the cattle aud sheep men have
in effect combined against tlieir com¬
mon enemy, the range horses, it is no
less true Hint cattlemen look askance
at the stemLily increasing numbers of
sheep pastured in the open range conn
try. For, while the natural increase of
the bands of sheep is rapid, tens of
thousands more have been moved to
the northwest from California, The
sheep are profitable from the first year,
since the two principal . crops, ,
ami woo! coming in May and Jnno, arc
salable vitln.i the list al \ c, \.. - ->
herds of cattle mi. -t be maimi:.ed
throe or four years 1 ;: fore proiitabU* re
turns are possible. It is due to th
fact that cattlemen commenced pur
chasing and fencing the rang ■ lands
several years ago, and the sheepmen,
as a matter of self protection, have fol
lowed suit. The need and demands of
t j 1( , s h(*epnK*a for wider pnuturage have
(•arised the industry and its custom of
0 ( , CU j )V ; r ..- tj, c open ranges to be ofli
chilly'recognized by the united States
government in its measures lor polic
lag and protecting the great forestry
reserves recently set apart in Wasbing
ton and Oregon. The goveriuneut’s
primary object is to prevent lorost
j- ires< which givatly injure the watcr
j is (;il condition that they use the
_
utmost precaution to prevent any fires,
the sin; bimen are permitted to drive
their bands into the rich pasture lands
„ . ... , „ . ,, „„
serves. 'nttoLii Supervisors isavc
d,vi,ivd TT ,u«.
the various bands, the limits being
marked bv streams, ridges and other
natural boundaries. Several miilion
sheep will be pastured in the reserves
of Washington alone this summer.
While sheep are high in price the in¬
dustry will continue to flourish, and in
any event : >r many years to come iin¬
mense 1 is of cattle and slicep will
no doubt continue to occupy the great
northwestern ranges.
Care of liorrs.
Fatte n the hogs before the mercury
drops to zero, Better start in August,
even if a little grain must be bought
until the corn is rip< It will pay. The
weather for the uext three months is.
as a j-.-p., moderate. If hogs are fed as
j !n - : (-p ; ;s tp jj- stomachs < au digfst and
utilize, about 25 p< r cent is first used
f Qr and body energy in ti-mpwate
weathc-r. in extremely cold weather
they will use about <50 to <0 per cent
for heat and energy, This will depend
much upon the age and condition 'of
the animal.
We also learn from experience to fat
ten with rapidity. Different feed stubs
are req uired. Corn is the principal
one for the solid ration, Shorts, bran.
cottonseed meal are very good for the
protein they cc sntain. and a small por
ticn of rye will fatten rapidly if fed
aright- Never feed liq id and solid
feeds at the me time for the animal
will swab nv the sc
I-ecu at t an • apart,
the eds separct
after the ' r ;
is P rule for hogs wide! ar
being j fattened, but ffi*. 1
to be fed to their full capacit.
practice i wrong. If hogs arc
tlieir fill of some feed, then slop :
1 .. fterward. they can drink !
very little slop \yi thout overl aid;
tlieir stomachs aud causing disordered
stomachs for a few days. It will take
careful feeding for perhaps a week to
bring them back to a normal condition.
Keep the pous clean, not allowing tilth
heaps to produce disease germs. Also
but give care as though it were the
horse, and if attended tints it will re
turn the great*- protit of the two.-Cor.
Arnericau Agriculturist.
nUTTON s
CUTS OF
Character find Cost of the Mlf
f treat l’arl* of a Sheep.
V $
Tim mutton sheep lias been slow in
invading America, says the New York
Press. Here, as in Europe, the wool
producing Merino held almost undis¬
puted sway for many years, These
conditions, however, are changing rap
idly. Perhaps the recent depression
in the price of wool is largely no
countable for the readjustment aud
changed condition. At any rate, there
is a constantly Increasing demand for
good mutton in the United States. The
Chicago market alone in 181)4 took
nearly a million more mutton sln-ep
than during any previous year, and
the receipts during 1808 were the hu¬
gest on record. Notwithstanding th**
impetus of increased delictndjind good
prices aud the rapidly increasing pop
i
I,
i -
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if )\ h\
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^
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I (A 9t
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pi R/s
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£§i W'\ SSf
•
; DIFVEliEXT CUTS OF MUTTON.
illation, Hu* number of sheep in the
j United States is considerably lower
than in former years, The average of
the number oil hand each year. Jan. 1.
j from 181)1 to 1SP5 inclusive, was 44,
• 448,885, and the average of the iimn
her (.it hand Jan. 1, from 180(5 to ISb'.)
inclusive, was 3T,972.212. During the
: former period two Canadian provinces,
Quebec and Ontario, sent to our mnr
I ket 3 1,524,0415 head of sheep, valued at
««> ».0il(l,00>l. Tills InWtttkM «<
^ Canada still con
..... . ..... fllct , lwt
’
“ ^ , , v *«. , hn . f )St<1 , , ,, ,... .'V
-
uadian niatton a als< ' 1 ’ ade 011
priced feeds and , lands 1 than prevail In
; our own country. During the last year
the number of sheep imported at Buf¬
falo alone was 175, ( 5')7, valued at $.>74,-
882. We have also been Importing $25,
i OX),000 to $”0,000,000 worth of wool
annually during recent years.
The production of prime mutton for
American and European markets is
rapidly becoming a permanently estab¬
lished industry of vast proportions in
the United States, Our rich lands and
abundant feeds arc well smt.d to tin
etouoinical i>rod ctiou of superior mut¬
ton, au l it bus licen dearly demon¬
strated that mutton sheep properly se¬
lected can grow a large part, if not all,
of the wool demanded for American
manufacturing.
How the butchers cut the carcass of
a sheep and hov> ■ the housewife should
order her mutton are matters of inter
est lo every family in the land, The
diagram shows the method of cutting
a car •ass, and the prices given tor tin*
several cuts ai )*) ti the Clii
ca J Ilia rket fo h: prime mutton,
These weigh ? and values for the
cuts are the average s made by seven
special mutton breeds:
Log, l ,0,:n i. at 10 c
r. 8 St !) r 1 57
It; 14.5 DxintJg. 1 Xi
T pound*.
Total...................................
The leg. loin and rib are
priced cuts hat determine t
of a ca iss of matt l!LM
that fai ; • in one of these fails
tir y to meet the* requirements it the
nia kf t for high prlct-d mutton- This
“ f the leg cat. aid
* t 1 1 r>^ >*
illustration shows good front
au ,| back views of a carcass sclevtetl
3S a model at me Union stockyards,
Chicago. It exhibits a remarkably well
tilled leg. back, rib and loin, the tl**sh
Being even and thick at all points, and
profitable type of carcass to the killer
and consumer, as it contains tIn* high
,>st proportion of choice meat ami tho
minimum of cheap product mid offal,
it was taken from a 03 pound Soutb
dowu.
A HOMEMADE SUBSOILER.
An Implement to Follow the llretik*
iit k IMoh In i lay Molnoll.
A Rural New Yorker correspondent
semis to that journal a plan for making
an excellent little single horse siib
soller that works to perfection and
need not cost more than $2.30. He
worked the Implement out thus in his
home shop:
1 tirst made a model, this being cut
from thin wood, and. as good fortune
favored me. I secured just tlu* right
shape the tirst trial, The lx-am and
standard are formed of one liar of
wrought iron <5 reef long a ml live-eighths
by -Vi inches in size, which is strong
yy 1. M
Z7TT y | Hi;!:: i I
'r
IIOMKMADK SI! 11301L FLOW.
enough for a draft horse. The share, or
point. Is of a peculiar shape, and is
made of a new, large, steel "bull
tongue” cultivator “sliovd” three
inches wide. Tin* “bull tongue’’ Is cut
as shown in the figure, leaving a long,
piercing, wedgelike point. The three
fourtli inch Incisions at a a, allow the
upper half of the blade to bo bent or
rolled backward, forming n long, deep
groove that clamps very securely
around the standard of the plow,
where it is tlrmly bolted. The long,
tapering point, when the wheel is ad¬
justed for subsoiling to the desired
depth, lies perfectly flat In Its course
through the soil the curvature of the
upper half of the blade being quite
sufficient to lift, “ground mole fa-sli
ion,” the entire bottom of the furrow,
while the passage of the standard,
| through the uiidst of this uplivavp.l,
breaks and pulverizes the hitherto
hard, compact subsoil in n very thor¬
ough and satisfactory manner. The
handles are those of an ordinary cul¬
tivator, and the wheel, seven inches in
diameter, was p.nvha. ed from a scrap
| iron man for 13 cents. There being
some quite heavy forging upon the
I beam in bending it to the desired shape
and in cutting the share down to the
proper form, it will lx- necessary to call
upon the blacksmith for that part of
tie* operation.
To those unfamiliar with the practice
of subsoiling it may be well to say
that tiiis implement Is planned to fol¬
low the breaking plow, tearing up and
mellowing the bottom of the furrow
to the depth of about eight inches.
Thus it will lie plain that, if tin* break¬
ing plow be turning to' the depth of
eight inches, the subsoib-r stirs up
another eight inches dm per. leaving
the plant or seed bed pulverized to the
depth of 1 H inches.
Qneon of Devons.
Tho Dev on cow Molly V, 14,885* was
bred and is owned by .J. U. William*,
Caerhays castle, St. Austell, Cornwall,
Am Ya 'fit m
4 m - 7' -
I OKA 1, TOC VON COW.
England. She was calved in February,
181)5, got by Captain, 22 d. dam Molly,
79SS. by Sir Wat kin. 1SK5. She is a
level cow. with excellent girth, width,
size, well covered back ril s aud loins.
Sheep TieLM.
The old practice of expelling ticks by
sprinkling Scotch snuff in the wool is
at be t a mere expedient, for though it
may temporarily exp;*! tin* tick.-;, it has
no effect on the larvae, wide! soon d
velop a new crop of ticks, here is
only one sure remedy for t !:s and
that is a bath in the dipping tank.—
Live Stock.
Cotton Sh«*«*;.!•
>n >v,'cr.i are urung »
good in connection wil
t IJ Ids make ex
■cs. and the eombi
a; Il of the two if.; of work is a
*. Of course, sheep under such
.rims :.:•(> not grown in huger
till Li . .’> :t thc‘ 3 ’ ca be made very
irmers sc>( 1 the value
o lying ttcntion t ^ Hty when*;
thr are limited a t o c • :;iy.t!ty.—Dro
vers' Journal. i