Newspaper Page Text
„ .
FffiD.v v, si:pn;Mni:n t>o. 1 son.
The Tiftton Gazete.
• pul
lieu count]
«. Hi jmt li puliliilifd ev.ry h'rWaf mom-
|ng *t TU ton. Borrlen county, t-cornlu. It In dr-
"oW to the Hen Intercut of the growing clt.v of
Tifton nod the adjacent country, ami at tuch
Mkt the aunport and encouragement of thepeo-
jite of Berrien an "
I*ri'HH Opinions.
.,t «» urn, .«>») and contlguotta countie..
' The aubacriptlon price of the OAlBTTt. I» •>.W
per year, fit) cenia for ala month#, amt y.icenta for
three uioutht, nayable In advance.
The adverthlng rate* of the tlAZl.-rri are roa
Pi,table and wllllie fumUhcd j
A-tvertltlng tillla are due after Hr«t Intetthm and
all! be preaented when the money la needed.
Correepondence front neighboring to*ne It tm
tieltud and omnniuiilcatlnna o tiilmely topi»» »»
at wave welcome. Alwnyt write on, one tide nr
the paper, and don't forget ut endow your nuiiie
'it Tilton, Georgia, a,
malt matter of the aecond Claim.
Official Orpaii *f Berrle# County,
It. T. AIXUN. Editor.
Eftltorliil-Htcs.
Atlanta lias left out iiiiotlifr tnr.k
lay the* ulworptjon of her West I',ml
Bnourh.
The United Hlaten Senate is fust.
uet|Hirinyr tlie “gift of gait.” In this
line it has Iturlled the nation.
('thuttaiioogn IiiM qnuran tilted brave
ly, having laid an embargo against
all width Georgia and every citizen
thereof.
What has Bolivia and Franc- done
that, they are to tie afflicted with ne
gro ministers and consuls from the
United stutos.
The Atlanta postofflee job lias been
given to Hr. Amos Fox. The other
candidates are now declaring that
he is a—sly fox,
In the nomination of Jlornblower
tn be justice of the Supreme Court,
1’resident. Cleveland has again listen-
t-d lit the siren song of monopoly.
Murder, arson, rape—these are oc
cupying prominent places in tin* news
columns of our daily journals now.
A tidal wave of crime is sweeping
over the country.
Wall Street lias been comopletcly
“turned down" in their effort to
lighten the financial thumbscrew.
Georgia farmers and merchants were
musters of ceremony.
The State Fair at Augusta promises
to be a inanimoth affair hut a great
ileal of advertising is to he done if
the people of the Stale are to he in
formed of its existence.
Some of the administration papers
have become so hold as to assert
that "gold is the only metal that Ims
an intrinsic value.” However, their
i/mc tlisil doesn't necessarily make it
so.
That equinoctial gale which the
xvcathei prophets promised us. for
lust Friday ,uitl Saturday did not
materialize. South Georgia in enjoy
ing a grand Indian summer-Intimy
ami bracing.
And, now, it is said little Tommie
Watson selects his places and crowds
when he wants to let off liiH oratori
cal gas. Glad he spares Tiftnn and
ilerrien county the blighting iiillu-
cnee of his presence.
Way cross quarantined against
Wareshorn anil Wurcsboro qtuirnn-
lined against Wuycross. That set-
tled it and straightened up the spi
nal column of Wayoross. Site’s
young and may recover.
The Georgia military sevimidispos
ed to go to pieces. It would not lie
.1 severe loss to the Stale if some of
them would disband -those who make
it convenient not to lie on hand when
they are called upon for active service.
The Douglas Breeze says “those
people wlio sit. around amt do noth
ing whatever, hut complain that Con
gress does not bring them relief,
should have a bouid applied to the
seat of their pants.” Whipping suoli
Jieoplo as the Breeze describes would
be a useless waste of valuable time.
Neither the Wilson nor the Vor-
bee’s bills are in accord with the de
mands of the national democratic
platform. The platform calls for
the repeal of the Sherman silver
coinage law, after denouncing it as a
“cowardly makeshift.” These bills
only do a little patching up of thu
“cowardly makeshift.”
The best method of compassing
the repeal of a bad law is to enforce
Sts provisions. Secretary Carlisle
should use this method of accom
plishing the complete and uncondi
tional repeal of the Sherman act in
aooordunce witli thu national demo
cratic platform.
The fearless newspaper man is al
ways on Hie right side, and if he
isn’t In the bigginning he gets there
pretty soon.—• Albany Herald.
The wind bloweth, the water (low-,
etb, the farmer soweth, and the sub
scriber owct.li, and the Lord knoweth
that, we ure in need of our dues. So,
come a filmin'; this thing of dnn-
nin’ gives us the blues.—Milieilge-
ville Union-Recorder.
There is one county in the state of
Georgia that, lias never produced a
bale of cotton and there bus never
been a shipment of commercial fer
tilizers to one of her citizens, This
is Union county, with an area of :)S0
square miles.— Dublin Post.
Meat, both bacon ami hulk, Ims
taken another jump up, and, it is
thought, the top notch lias not yet
been reached. And cotton—well, it
is not worth enough to make a man
anxious to sell, if he Ims any, unless
he is obliged to. Ft. Gaines Herald.
Mr. Hope Tigner, of Meriwether
county, recently shipped !i0,()0()
pounds of scuppernongs to Uhicago.
The result of his venture is anxious
ly expected for if successful another
profitable avenue of wealth w'ill bu
opened lo the people of this section.
—Thonuiston Times.
Thu board of ludy managers of tiic
World’s Columbian Exposition us a
deliberative body wasadistnal failure.
Thu women did little else but light
and wrangle every lime they met,
draw their six dollars a day and ex
penses and get (lead li-atl tickets for
their friends to the fair.-—Albany
News and Advertiser.
Democrats can be united only on
the platform. It is absurd to hope
for united and vigorous parly action
on a program involving the repudia
tion of any of the platform pledges,
The papers and Ihe leaders who are
opposing free coinage are making
united parly action an impossibility.
If they will get hack on the plat
form, the day may yet he saved,—
Sparta Ishumelite.
The weather last week was the
most favorable of the season for hay
making. Should it colitinue favora
ble during the month of October an
Immense amount of hay—and of a
quality equal to thu best that is
shipped south—could 1st saved in
Thomas county ut a small cost. The
sooner mir farmers give attention to
this crop the heller it will he for
them.—Thomusville Times Enter
prise.
Now is the hardest time of the
year on the country hog. Melons,
berries, etc., that made this a land of
plenty for him in Ihe summer, are
gone, and pine-roots and charity are
his chance to pull through on until
Die crops are gathered. It is now
that lie llrst contracts those germs of
cholera (?) that onuses him lo turn
up hin toes later on, and brings
i he complaint from various sources
t Ini I ling-raising cannot lie made i
success in this country. —Wortl
Connly Local.
From vvhut wo can learn, despite
the stringency of money and general
hard times the farmers generally are
in very good condition in this | Meri
wether) county. They have made
very large supplies of corn and sup
ply crops, have bought less than
usual uuil while the cotton crop will
be short, they will have some money
to save. No credit whatever is due
the government for this, however.
To DeliiKiiiciit Stubsc-i-tlici-H,
The stringency of money mutters
forces the Gazbttk to insist, upon
those of its subscribers who are in
arrears to make immediate payment.
You may owe hut little, but the lit
tle amounts of the many who ore in
arrears would help the paper wonder
fully in satisfying the demands of its
creditors.
Statements of your indebtedness arc
being fm warded to you n3 rapidly as
they can be made out, and all who
receive them will not throw them
aside ami forget that we are in sore
need of what is due us.
We have carried the great majority
of onr readers through the dull sum
mer—we have made great personal
sacrifice lo do it.—and now that the
harvest season is here ami money is
getting easier we trust they will show
their appreciation of onr leniency by
paying the little they owe us. All
delinquents who do not. pay up by the
first, of .January will be stricken from
onr list. The Gazrti b Ims nodesire
to lose any of its subscribers, but it
is not financially strong enough to
carry a long list of scubscribers more
than one y«ar at a time.
Onr creditors are imperative with
us and we have to be imperative with
those wtio owe us.
Brunswick & "Western [Railroad
LOCAL SCHEDULE, EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 21, 1893
Between Brunswick and Waycross
manmtmxxB
n
■ HEAD i FVVAIttf.
R All,ROAD.
CONDENSED TIME TAII1.E.
Se’c Cf/aa
FIRST CLASH.
.
FIRST
CLASH.
N*. 11.
No. 1.
No. 3.'
No. o
STATIONS.
No. 4.
No. 10.
Local Frt
WyoroD# C. U. It.
llrttii'w'k
Cen.R.R. Brun’w’k
Daily
Expres*
Express
Accom.
Kxc.Hun.
Sun. only
"Dally.”
Dally
Dully.
"Dally."
5 90 p m
9 40 a m
Brunswick
1 55 pin
H lo a in
r,)fi
“fif
K. T. V.& O. crowing
1 45
7 51
9 97
10 43
Jamaica
12 50
7 13
9 43
11 25
Wnlncsvlllc
12 05
0 15
0 23 a 111
7 35 a hi
,
11 59
6 37
7 44
Atkinson
11 33
6 53
7 50
Lulatou
11 19
r ...,,
7 11
8 (SI
Nahunta
11 01
1 47
K 20
Hoboken
10 25
H (15
8 28
Seblatterville
11) Ofi
8 50
8 50
Waycros*
9 30 am
Between Waycross and Albany.
SECOND CLASH. FT Cl/M
"NS. 7. i''No. lb , KaX
Local Krt Local Krt Com. II.It.
Dally j Dally ; Express
Kxc.8un.Kxc. Hun. Dully.
STATIONS.
F’t Cl'm SECOND CLASS.
No. 4. I No. 12. ) No. 8.
f'eu. R.R. Local Krt Local Krt
Express Dally. | Daily
Dally Kxc.Hun. Kxc.Sun.
.10 in a iu 0 10 |i in
•111 15 ! 0 25
. 12 in p in o no
12 45
Till! Grunt Southern Itcincily.
People should not be deceived Into
paying money for trashy mixtures
gotten up lo sell. Botanic Blood
Balm, (It. II. H.) which bus been
made in Atlanta for the past fifteen
years, never fails to give satisfaction
as a superior building up tonic and
bl ind purifier. It is made from the
prescription of an eminent physician.
The bottle is large and the dose
small. See their advertisements and
buy that which is thoroughly en
dorsed by thousands of grateful pa-
lieutH whom it Ims cured. A trial
bottle will test, its merits.
5 50 a in,
0 41
7 05
7 40
H 15
K 45
0 25
10 10
10 20
1 35
1 50
2 15
2 .TO
2 40
3 30
4 05
4 40
5 15
10 00
10 15
10 23
<10 33
10 37
10 40
11 01
11 13
11 21
11 35
...JU 45
....12 03
...12 15
-wa ,
....llano ]
....;ia:M ,
.... 12 fill
.... l 05 u m
....I 1 10 I
.Waycroa*.
. Ware*boro i 4 5«
5 10 p m 11 45 a in
4 36
4 24
4 08
4 00
. Millwood
.. .McDonald I
— l’earson
....Kirkland
....08 M. P ' 3 48
.... Gray* I 3 43
.. Wlllacoochco ! 3 40
...Alapaha, 3 10
Enigma. ! 3 07
.. IlrookfleUl 2 50
... .Tifton.. 2 45
| 2 35
TyTy.. .
Sumner.
I’oulan...
Isabella .
... .Willingham
Davis —
Junction..
Albany...
11 10
10 23
0 35
9 10
8 45
8 23
8 05
7 55
7 05
0 27
0 07
5 30
2 17
2 05
1 57
1 50
1 42
1 30
1 15
1 10
SOUTH BOUND. 1
i
3
Sat.
only.
5
Lv
Atlanta
A.M.
8 U|)
P.U.
6 55
P.M.
1 30
...Macon Junction
11 1H
10 2K
5 00
«
Macon
11 05
19 10
4 50
• 4
!\M.
1 50
A.M.
12 49
7 30'
• 4
Tifton
.3 10
2 15
9 00'
41
ValdofU
4 48
3 45
hj.
Ar.
Jasper
6 51
6 45
4 44
5 35
8 30
7 40
Lv.
.... ...Hampton
8 45
7 24
Ar.
Talatka
10 00
8 45
?
P.K.
A.M.
NORTH BOUND. «
2
4
6
. ...Talatka
....Hampton
...Jacksonville.. .
Lake City
Jasper
Valdosta
“ ..' Tifton
“ .....Cordelc
Ar Macon Junction
" Mncon
“ Atlanta
A.M.
6 00
7 24
7 no
0 10
10 OM
11 05
p.m,
6 20
f. 42
6 30
8 40
10 45
I’,M.
A.M.
A.M.
12 5(1
12 2^
« or,
2 15 i 1 52
7 42
4 .35
4 1(1
10 10
4 5(1
4 SC
10 20
8 05
7 4C
1 45
P.M
A.M.
P.M.
Short Line to World’s Fair.
5 00 p m
4 25
3 55
3 25
3 00
2 35
2 05
1 40
1 30
GKO. W. I1AINKS,
Superintendent.
. I>. OWKN8,
Traffic Manager.
GKO. W. COATES,
Dlv. Passenger Agent.
HEADQUARTERS!
TTt A
IbjN
:<)('! I P. BOWEN,
— DEALER IN —
Greneral Merchandise.
SiiuikI Sense.
Here is wlmt Peter Cooper, who
lied worth many millions, said of a
newspaper: In all towns where a
newspaper is published every man
should advertise in it, if nothing
more than a card stating his inline
and the business he is in. It not
only pays Ihe advertiser, but it lets
the people at a distance know that
the town in which yon reside is a
prosperous community of business
men. As the seed is sown so the seed
recompenses. Never pull down your
sign while you expect to do business.
I am headquarters for the purchase and sale of all kinds of Country
Produce. I pay the highest market price for
Chickens, Eggs, Butter, Wool, Hides, Tallow, Beeswax, Etc.
Don’t dispose of your produce until you have given me an opportu
nity of saying what is the market price for it..
SIM TO PHASE ALL OF IT (MOMS
In the price and quality of the goods I offer them, but never forget that
‘Fair and Honest Dealing” is the only true road to success in any business.
TIFTON
SALE STABLES.
TIFTON, - GEORGIA,
,t. WILLIAMS, Proprietor
J. W. JOINER,
oiler li 0 ilidii,
The farmers have done well in spite
Eyes
examined and lilted free of
charge.
iuc watch repairing a specialty.
I make a Specialty of Farmers’ Supplies
E.
Through Pullman Buffet Sleeping Cars
Jack4onvilleJo Noplvxllle, via Athnta, count cl-
ini' in Union Depot at Nashville with Vc*t Ruled
Limited for Chicago.
With Velvet Train, via W.& A. U.K., from At
lanta to Chicago, making only one change from
l*alatkannd Jacksonville to Worlds Fair.
For Summer tourists’ point* In the Carolina*
connection* made with Fast Mall Train and Ve*-
tibnled Limited, via R. 71 1)., in Union Depot at
Atlanta. Close connection* via G. 1*. R. It. lor
Birmingham and Kansas City.
Sleeping Car on Night Trains
Form' Macon and Vnlatka. Passenger* leaving
Palntka can remain In sleeping car at Maemi
till 7 a. m., where breakfast can be lmd and con
nection* made with 7:40 train for Atlanta, ami
train* for Align*ta, Athens and Milledgeville,
Montgomery and Savannah and all points East,
North and Hufttli.
A.C. Knapp.
Traffic Mgr..
II. IIVHNB,
Trav. P. A.,
Macon, Gh.
Macon, Ga.
JUNE 18th, 1893.
R'l» O WN,
STATION*.
RKAO I P.
11 ;w A.M. Lv...
Macon
...Ar
130 P~.M*
12 41 P..M. " ..
Hofkee
.. “
12 40 "
120 " " ..
l.izclla
“
12 00 M.
2 40 " i " ..
— Culloden ....
.. " 10 50 A.M.
3 30 " i ♦* ..
... Yatesville ...
.. »*
10 30 »»
4 25 " l M ..
.. .ThoinaMon...
,. *♦
o:to "
5 40 " " ..
... Woodbury ..
.. “
8 15 "
010 " " ..
. ..Harris (iiv...
»4
7 45 "
0 45 " ! “ ..
Oflcsna
. . “
7 15 “
7 05 " : " ..
...Mountville...
.. »»
7 00 "
7 35 p.M. Ar ..
....Lu(irange. :
. .Lv
0 30 A.M
Connection* with Atlanta and West Point R. R.
at LaGrange. Conoco lo i* with the Georgia
Midland and Gulf at Woodbury. C. R. R. at
Harris City.
H. BURNS, •
Trav. Pas*. Agt.
Macon, Ga.
A. C. KNAPP,
Traffic Manager.
Macon, Ga.
1 tf.
P. BOWEN,
Neill-tint ». & W. Depot, TIFTON, GA.
To Tobacco Dealers!
Daily I
Exnept I
Sunday;
STATIONS.
.
I
4.00 pm J,v
Columbus
Ar
0.34 pm Lv
Richland
Arj
8.20 p m Lv
Dawson
Ar
OAlpm Ar
Albany
l,v
I have for wile about Six
Firstclass Manufactured T
into Three Grades.
Thousand Pounds of
wist Tobacco, divided
NICE SELLING SIZE TWIST.
EVERY BOX GUARANTEED.
You can save Fno cents per pound, besides freight, by buying from me.
Call at or address Cyrlonota Tobacco Manufactory, Irby, lia.
Columbus Southern Wraail
Passenger and Freight Schedule Ef
fective July 24th, 1893.
RKADUP-No.l.
RK.YP DOWN—No. .1
Daily
Except
Sunday
IU8 a m
7.30 a m
r-.uo a in
II. C. HILL,
8. F. PARROTT, General Manager.
Bnpt.
REAL ESTATE.
Wu*hlugton
ALBANY, -
Street,
GEORGIA,
uuu..i..uuui.> 1 u.»»uiiu»m.iiuiu*ii i
Kor it lamo back or for it pitlti In Hit!
side or chest, try Hftlurstlng n piece of
flAimel with ChumborInIn'H Pnin Ilitlin
and binding It onto tint nffvctnd pans.
This tranimont will cum any ordinary
caao In one or two daya. Pain Balm also
cures rheunnittam. 50 cunt bottle# tor
•ale by Tifton Krug Store.
of adverse conditions,—Woodbury
Messenger.
Both peaches ami grapes begin
bearing the second year. Indeed, it
has been demonstrated by actual ex-
peri moot s that the grape crop of the
second year’s growth will pay all ex
penses of enltivating anti harvesting,
and pay for the vines and expense of
putting them into the ground. The
grape ripens hero us uarly as those of
California, and then we are hundreds
of miles nearer to the eastern mar-
| kets. The difference in tho cost of
transportation is quite an item. Pel
ham is it07 feet above the sea level,
and all well posted grape men say
that, an elevation) of from 1100 to 400
is tlie. proper altitude for successful
grape on 11 nre.-- Pel hum Melon Index.
BOTANIC
BLOOD BALM
A thoroughly tested Remedy
FOR ALL
BLOOD aiitl SKIN DISEASES.
TliH roniv«ly S*9 hr**»n tried,
umi lion foil ml wmiiliiii, for forty year* bv
«u rmluval i»bVHUh»n, who him UR«d it
muf uivni) ‘
withuartal* nmf u*vtu> ln« nuoroft* (or *11
tllua.iftot f«r which It Is roi-oimmuMitMl. It
lutver rath to ti'>rn>»it from the first rimr,
mtlvkly mill mu-tunlly iIiIUmr mu
*«mc (terms Irotu the t-yntem thrcitph
•Hum of the »k'.n, ll\rr nml kill-
the mciuum of the »kin,
noy* without any orlnjurlett*
elRjcls. It N nut taw iwmlt of iRnoramHi
Itefreshing and delicious summer
drinks are now being dispensed ut
tlm Tifton Drug Store—eocu-c-ola,
milk shakes, soduwuti-r, etc.
ijtn
or AUHvt’Rtltlou, hut It In (utimleil u|hmi
* thurnugh knmvIiiUn
enmmen miwv and * t
of modern mcdu-.tl aolr nee. D mlHi-tnally
-. M | «-»•— •»-- l —*■—
orifle* nml •nrloue* the hi cod amt hrlnt*
A* a Kfi-.itr*! totiiq
beaith to Hu* HUtreror.
it la wltliotu ft rival, u.
beallh-glvlmr l»rt»t*ert'
r-.iernl t
ynli
U h nhtndntwly
heymtd rompail.mi* with any rrmodv ever
offered tofh® ptiblle. Itlna panm-vau
.. •red tothn pobllr. It h« iianai i n (nr all
III* remitting from Impure and Impovtr-
ialird blood-tlm eorrnit of life; qelrkly
ettrv* Werofuln
ettrv* Hrrafidn, l lcm, linrina, Mkln
iihiI t-ftfarrli.
S tiemuntlnm, l.lter, Hlrlnrr ami
iMtltlr-.* IHieaiir*, tcmiUe \Vrak*
uvtn, Nmvtii Dlicmuft, etc.
INVE8TIQATC FOI1 Y0UR8tLF.
H*nd for oor Ilooti of VnHinhlo
tMfbrvMAtlon. i.tgrther with ft wonder
fol array of rertllltfaie-t ot nioarknbU
c'tii’M from th# Almptent to the ntoet vlr*
nUnti dl*ea*«», after all known rent edit*
•tad failed. Tlieawcertlflewtea teatltjr with
tin Mnerrtalu nmtnd, that Itotnnk* Itlood
Halm I* the t»ent,chenneM. hUtekHd, great-
vat Mid mom powerful 111
, it total iMtriflcr «v»r
known to tho world.
l*mcK-|1.00 per boltV1 CLW for 6 bettlo*.
For aaloby drugghtn; If hot, f-hd ti tt*.
AdJraat BLOOD DAIM CO . Atlanta, Qa.
I). G. IRBY, Manager.
TIFTON INSTITUTE.
I have on band tho following Real Estate for
tuilo:
*1.155,00 will 1 tty a corner lot on Love Avenue
with nettt six room liotme and nwensary onb
building*.
Nice little farm of 00 norc*, 15 under cnltiva-
tion. two mile* from Tifton fan he had oft
good term* and at a bargain.
50 acre*, four and a half mile* from Tifton, on
the Tifton and Northeastern railroad. Twenty-
five acre* cleared and under force, cultivated
one rear. Six-room frame dwelling and ncce*-
*ary'outbuilding*, Fine peach or,grape land.
too aero* of land, two mile* *outhcnit of Tff-
tou No improvement*. Term*, one-half cash
and balance in one year. This tract can be hart
at a bargain.
1 have a valuable lm*ine** lot in Tifton foroalo
or will exchange for farm land nut of town.
Nice house and lot on Ia>ve avenue at a bar
gain.
you RENT.
Nice 7 room dwelling on Otli street. 3 nico
brick store* on railroad streot. 1 nice framo
store on railroad street. A few room* conveni
ently located.
16-tf. C. W. FVLTVOOlt.
The exerclHint of the fall term of the above institution will begin on-
Monday, September 4-th, 1893.
ng-
been plnced at the disposal of the undersigned for school purposes by the 'I ifton
Hitlieslloiml Company, sml tic will conduct the school miller the supervision of a
lloiml of Truitcos lo he chosen hv tho pntrous of tlm school.
Batu of Tuition—Piyablo Monthly la Advr.nco:
Primary Department, $1.50; Intermediate Departineot, $2,00; High School DepaHont, $2.50,
Tuition will he charged from Ihe time tlie pupil enters until the close of the
term. Iteductlons will ho
Heductlons will ho made for eontinuous sickness or other providential
causes of one week or longer.
Competent assistants will he employed when nccejsary. A thoroughly compe
tent teacher will have charge of the music class.
Hoard cbii he had with private families at rcnsonalde rales. Location aslieaHhy
as an, in Georgia Church privileges ample ami tho society good.
Tho patronage of the public is most respectfully solicited.
Ill Dm. IS. J. WILLIAMS, Prlm-Ipol.
C. H. GRAY,
lloase,
Sign and
Ornamental Painter,
1‘aper hanging and upholstering In all tbefr
irtmnhM. RantHt* rut. made and laid. Mat-
branchcs. Carpet* cut,
tresse* mafic to order and renovated.
Order* left at Fadrlck Rro*. *hall receive
prompt attention.
Tomberlin, Paulk & Co.,
-t OKAt.EKS IN {
Pure Wines and Liquors,
Cigars and Tobaccos, Etc,
GEORGIA.
LAKE-PARK,
will receive
All orders by mail
careful attention.
prompt and
18-Slm.
Way Cross December 29, lWI.—We tlie under
signed have known Mr. Gray for a number or
year* We rect-onuneml him a* a first class
mechanic In above line*: Warren Lott* Wia.
racker, Win. Cason, 1*. Sweat.
INSURE M PROPERTY
AGAIKST FIRE.
C. W. FULWOOD,
Oft.
Citntien.
■•<8
j
’ft!
mm
Agent For
Insurance Co , of North America of Philadel
phia.
Hartford Insurance f’o., of Hartford.
Greenwich Insurance Co., of New York ant
other old Hue companies.
Insurance effected In any locality and on
every ctow of risk*.
Office, room* 1 and 3, Love Building,. Tifton
3-f-tf.
KINCHM;
nil lowiwn of th# wueoM »»bUM had
{imaliOKOKMIO^A *n4Gt.hl>.T t# * t«j«tny». No
other iminot nocethury. Nmtcwwt Uil<tH«ot
|e#»e» my injiriuu* after eOectt. Prior* |u Sold
xIruavRtv.
BicOTWte a).,p»*- t .i>«»M8.a>
(JRORGIA—Berrien Ctmnty.
To all whon J*, may concern: Randell and
Janie* McMillan, administrator* of Malcolm
McMilliftn.iate of said county, applied toVhc nn».
deralgned. tn proper form, for letter* of dismis
sion from said administration ami “
sion from said administration ami I sill un
upon their said application at tr.y office in Natfa-
vide on the first Monday in December next. i
■* " id offic!
Given under ip'j hand ant
September 4tb 1B1K*. .
A. W. »-atti:b.„,x, iftui.uy.
tal slgnaiure, Vila
*