Newspaper Page Text
Agricultural Department.
. Health Upon the Farm.
14V IIK.NHY hTKVVA IST.
A farjiii-r slumM onjov tin- mn~t
Ho mid liiw family '
.ana nhould enjoy the!
the purest nir of heaven, while t li<•
heumiful cXcreDc of the farm and,
w csoine food should p'f.o uro him !
frolH disease and warrant bi)n a
Ibufa lift*. Hut instead of tbislie i.~,
upr n
Too often surround' and by the worst
of dangers; the worst because they;
arc nnsusi>ect<*d and perhajiH invis
ibje.
The most robust health will give
way to the constant sapping inflii
■eiiee of an unwholesome atnios
p'neri'. A frequen 1 source of dan
ger exists in the imperfect disposal
of tht; household wastes. Putrefy-1
ing slops front the kitchen too of
ten saturate the soil about] the
house ; cesspools give off foul gases,
and sometimes actually drain into
wells and cisterns or springs from
which the domestic supply of water
is obtained. Drains well laid and
carried to a safe outlet may he with
out effective traps, and a hack cur
rent of drain gas may impercepti
bly fill the house. The cellar may
he damp and impregnated with
mold, the spores of which, when
taken into the stomach, produce
vomiting and dysentery. Food
kept in such a cellar is poisonous
to a weak stomach, and causes
those disorders of t hat organ and
the bowels which result in vomit
ing, diarrhoea arid dysentery. So
that these common rural com-,
plaints, may in many eases, he
caused directly by mold spores in
tly: food, besides these dangers,
there are those who centre around
the manure heaps and the barn-1
yard ; the crowding <>f shade trees
around the dwelling, and the loca
tion of the house upon low ground
where damp nir settles down from
hillsides. It is supposed too often
that had smells may not ho un
wholesome, and farmers are apt to
think of the fragrance of the manure
. in the ham-yard as one of the cred
itable adjuncts to good farming.
But wherever decomposition and
decay are progressing there unheal
thy influences are abounding, and
we recognize these hv their disa
greeable odors, intolerable to many
-ensitive persons. The sense of
smell is one of the instincts which
warn us of danger, and we cannot!
safety ignore its indications. 11 is
not difficult to prevent all these noi
some scents in the barnyard and the
stables. A lew barrels of plaster
purchased annually, and spread
about these places will absorb and
lix all these vapors, and will turn
them to their proper uses as fertili
zers of the soil. Sunlight is the
great life preserver and health giv
er.
A dense shade ma v produce the
grateful coolness, but danger lurks
even in this and when 1 there is this
coolness every evil belongingtothis
unwholesome condition may he
found. A few trees about the house,
but not overhanging it. are dcsira
hie, hut they should no: bcsodosc
as to prevent the free circulation of
air and the blessed sunshine, fi
nally, the situation of a house
should l>e upon perfectly dry ground
and higher than the barnyard, and
any other possible source of danger
a from the percolation of impute drain
age.
Pock Nutritious and Whole
some.
There is no other meat which has
been so extensively or exclusively
used by men of toil. The navy and
annv rely on pork rations more
than on all other meats.
'flic farmers of America have for
generations had pork always in the
house and on the table, in some
form, every day of the year; and
some families have it every meal of
the day, and this class of meat eat
ers have no equals in strength or
powers of endurance. The moun
taineers of Tennessee and Kentucky
have known no other meat as a reg
ular article of diet, and for hone,
muscle, strength and longevity they
can not he excelled by Jew or Mo
hammedan.
In the face of suoh facts it is ab
surd to argue that pork is unwhole
some, because men of ‘sedentary
life and feeble digestion, like the
college president and family, do
imt relish it.
There is a deal of nonsense afloat
at this time among cultivated men. !
The savings of physiologists and
chemists as-to the value of different j
articles of diet can not he accepted!
as law. any more than can the likes [
and dislikes for individuals he pro
claimed as standards in nmrftls.
The stomachs, like the character
and faces of men vary, and what
suits one may he rejected by anotli-!
or.
l. x. r>.
The Orange Crop.
“The work of moving the H >ri
du orange crop,” r ays the Savan
nah orni.Mng News, “will soon be-1
gin. Generally, the bulk of the
' crop is marketed in November ami
December. It would lie much bet
ter for the producers if the market- 1
ing of the crop were distributed
through five instead of two months.
There are two reasons, however,;
why the crop is pushed to market
as quickly as possible. The first is
the fear of freezing weather in Jan
uary and Fehuary, and the second
is the Indict’ that better prices can
be realized. Freezing weather does
not occur every winter. Often sev
eral winters pass in succession
without the occurence of damaging |
cold. There are ways that the or
chards can be protected to some j
extent from the cold, and it is not ;
impossible to decide when a very
low temperature may be expected.
Good prices are obtained for the!
first oranges that are sent to mar
ket, but wlieii the crop is large a
glut soon occurs, and prices fre
quently drop so low as to be imre
niunerative. The outlook for a leg
crop is excellent. By some it is
placed as high as a million boxes.
It is probable that this estimate is
too large. The number of boxes,
however, is certain to go a great i
deal beyond the number of any
previous year. Howto prevent a j
glut is one of the problems that or
ange growers are now trying to
solve. Jf there could be a cheap
system of transportation lor oran
ges established wherever there are
railroad and steamboat lines, so
that the crop would reach every
part of the country quickly, very
much better prices could lie obtain
ed.
It Pays to Feed Well.
It pays to feed well. A farmer
presents the following ease : Having
u good lot of cows, which i have
fired and reared myself and trained
them well to be kind and gentle in
every way, 1 do not like to part
with them. But having a lew more!
than J could well take care of this
year, ! rented out live of them to
a neighbor. One of these cows is a
cross-bred pure Ayrshire and Jer
sey, and with her first calf gave
eight pounds of butter the first
week’s churning; with her second
calf she gave twelve and one-half
pounds the first week, after the milk
was kept (the calf was fed on
skimmed milk only). This cow is
now six years old and in her prime.
The man complained of her, and !
said she was a poor cow. “What;
feed do von give her?” “No feed at
all hut the swamp meadow, and
she milks only lour quarts a day.”
1 brought the cow home, and she
was a mere skeleton in a bug
of loose skin. The
first milking was three pints. I
began feeding her as 1 knew she
deserved. 1 gave her two quarts of
[fine ground corn meal and mid
\ dlings mixed with cut, sweet eorn
| fodder three times a day, with what
j grass the pasture would afford. The
; fourth day she milked nine quarts
! the seventh day eleven and a half
| quarts ; t he first four days her milk
j made three pounds of butter; the
; last three days it made four pounds
seven ounces. This is not the full
! yield, as she is putting on flesh and |
j will do so until she weighs 150 or
200 pounds more than she did when j
she came home. If we figure this up
; the profit on this feed can be shown
! very easily. Four quarts a day at
five cents —the price at which her
I milk has been sold all summer —is
! twenty cents. That is the value of
a swamp meadow feeding. Eleven
and a half quarts a day is equal to
57.1 cents, so that this 154- cents
| profit; ami to me the satisfaction
of the thing is worth
; a good deal more than a
! day would he, for I certainly have
a good deal of regard for my cows
which I have reared from the first
I anil each of which is a pet and re
regards mo with evident kindliness
and affection. At the rate shown by
the figures ten cows would return
$2 25 daily profit for the expendi- j
ture of #1 50, which lift itself is as
much as many a mechanic in a
eitv is obliged <o support his whole
family upon. And yet there are"
farmers and dairymen who are
growling every day of their lives
that farming does not pay.'
I wish some of them i
would change places with
some of the people in towns and
cities whom they pofess to envy so
much. What a mistake they would;
make.
For the Farmers.
Notices of second growth pears;
are common with our exchanges.
Farmers write for this space
whiehis published for your special
benefit.
There is a total of about 1.820,-
; 000,000 bus hels of corn in this land
• of plenty, this year.
Most of the pork in thi country
comes from two breed of bogs—the
Polnnd-ehinas and the Berk-shires.
Mr. F. E. Tarver, of Burke coun
ty, had his barn, containing all his
j corn, fodder, meat, a barrel of flour,
and his plantation tools consumed
!by fire. Except for the generosity
iof his neighbors, who sent him
| corn, provisions, etc. Mr. Tanner's
! family must have suffered.
The island of Jersey is famous
for superb milk and butter cows
and beautiful women. And yet
these dove-eyed and jieuehes-and
eream eomplexioncd women per
form the hardest farm work, while
their sea-faring brothers and hus
bands are sailing the briny deep to
j the antipodes.
The highest point ev.ir reached
in the price of wheat in this coun
try, was in 1 sr>7, when it was ji2.80
per bushel : and the lowest price it
has touched since the civil war is
“about these days,” when it is the |
same price deducting the per
bushel. Sugar also, is at lower pri-;
ees than we recollect, since 1854.
The potato crop this year is be
low the average not less than fif
teen per cent, in New England,
where the tuber is the principal ag
ricultural product. At the west it
is also below, and the Southern de
mand promises to he larger than
usual. Those who have saved fair
crops of potatoes may depend on
good prices ere winter is over.
The gray cottons manufacturers
of Canada are so overstocked with
goods that the proprietors are re
sort ing to almost desperate meth
ods to dispose of them. In some i
cases they are sidling and making
present delivery, giving three
months’time after the Ist of next
April for payment. This practice,
it is said, is sadly demoralizing the!
market.
A large agricultural colony, com-1
posed of German e under thorough
business principles, is to he estab
lished in Oconee and i’iekens (,'oun- i
j ties, South Carolina. Fr. Bitsse
j haunt is the manager- lie ishaek
' ed by ample capital. A French col
ony for wine growing, and a flour
ishing Irish settlement, just below
Greenville, indicate 1 that state as a
favorite ground for colony-working
by Europeans.
A Connecticut farmer, who has
been feeding ensilage quite freely to
a large herd of fine cattle,states that
one of his hulls, a two year old, fed
upon ensilage, witli two quarts of
grain per day, gained over three
pounds live weight daily from De
cember to Feburary. Ensilageisex
eellent food for stock, hut should he
made of a variety of plants, and
must have arrived at a degree of per
fection in which the food elements
have attained to near their fullest
complement.
An experienced stock feeder says:
| “If stock is pastured it is better to
I have the land so used divided into
two, or better still, info three or
; four compartments. When they
j are allowed to run over all, tla-y
| keep all eaten down closely, hut by
i allowing successive portions to get
| a fresh start they do less walking,
| waste and destroy less, and a much
| greater amount of food is produced.
Whenever pastures fail grain or
! meal should be fed, and in this way
; pasturing lands rapidly enriches
it.”
A correspondent of the American
Agriculturist says that the color [in
the skin of a cow indicates color in
the butter. He has not seen
t yellow-skinK: and emv tlmj.
gave pale butter, jor n very rich eo!-;
ored skin in a cow thatui<l not give
yellow or yellowish butter till
through the winter' When the yolk,
which gives this color to the ears, 1
tiiil and skin, begins to show in the- (
calf, it will probably never shqw
less* and what butter the eoiv gives
will he of good color.
The New York Times represents
that the fruit market of tlfeir city J
this year is remarkably well suuaj
plied with every species of i>jgtSo> i
and domestic fruits, and yeti even ;
many apples sell for more pern
pound than wheat, while iJPbafrel
of pear of ordinary qualitjpvjlt sell 1
I for as much as three or i#*nr liar-'
rels of corn, and double injury
' barrels of oats. The laafmof the
Hudson Valley poaches which came
in sold readily at s(i to-jss jh!Ybush
el, ahd line Seekel pears readily i
; fetched .$lO.
Ten years ago it was said and
believed that oats could not be
raised in the low country of South
Carolina, and the same of wheat
until recently. But the district,
some years since, lias been shown
to ho very favorable to oats culture,
and a Mr. Adam Vogt has drained
a Berkeley County swamp and
raised on it the finest crop of wheat
ever produced in the state. Thus
it is shown that the principal dilli
culty in raising a given crop at the
South is simply in planting it and
according it the proper cultivation.
We cordially agree with the
Charleston (S. C.) News that, in
view of the evils which have followed
the introduction into Australia of
rabbits, sparrows, thistles, and oth
er things that have become costly
and seemingly unconquerable
plagues, the importation in the
I'niteil States of tin English spar
row. the cabbage moth, ami other
pests, and the time has come when
mure cure should be taken to pre
vent such damaging exchanges? It
would be well to forbid the bring
ing into a country of plants, or
birds, or animal.- until careful stu
dy of their lnibits bad been made.
Wo hear much of the sitpeior
methods of agriculture practiced in
various parts of Great. Britain. But
a friend who lias recently spent sonic
time in a remarkably beautiful and
picturesque district of England,
states that most farmers’ cottages
there are of one story, with thick,
ivy-covered wall; that high, cap
acious hams are unknown: that
cattle and sheep-pens are low and
inexpensive, and that labor saving
implements are scarce and un
known eallcd-for, four or five men,
nppcnrently, being einbploved to
produce an effect for which one or
two, with ordinary appliances,
would he .sufficient iij this country.
A California gentleman living in
Los Angeles has brought from Gua
temala a plant called “the melon
shrub.” It is an evergreen, which
grows about three feet high, hears a
beautiful purple and white flower,
and hears a fruit shaped like a rifled
cannon hall, some four inches long,
from two to three inches in diame
ter, and is a melon of most excellent
taste, with the outside streaked
with yellow and brown, and the in
side is yellow liken cantaleupo.Thc
shrill) blossoms and hears in fnuy
months from the seed, and is of
course deeidioiis and “tropical,"
but it is expected to withstand the
climate of Los Angeles, and the
fruit would ripen well in Tennessee
or Southern Kentucky.
Avery common failing with per
sons, and especially farmers, who
are smitten with the emigration fev
er is not to know their own minds.
(>ne is often tempted to go to anew
! place and grow up with the country
I This is sometimes otherwise. But
! one must decide this point for him
self. It is not wise for a stranger to
offer any opinion as
| the future importance of any par
ticular locality. Nor do wo feel jus
tified in advising any person as to
the selection of any place for en
tering business, even farming or
market gardening. Every person
should suit himself in this respect
But we will offer advice so far as
! this : That every person contemp
: luting a change of residence should?
be very careful, cautious, and do
. liberate in fixing himself in anew
place. And before a farm is pur
; ohaseil he should by all means rent
i a place for a year or two. One's
opinions and fancies, as well as ac
tual needs, often undergo a great
change in a year or two. and man.'
persons chafe and fret because they ,
are tied up in a place they would
rather lie out of Further, when one
is fixed in a {dace he should give
his whole mind to making that lii.-h
home and doing the best im ciiiw
i '?(%jitka I
live a hundred year.- tianre. It is ;>•
man and imt the j
' (intent ai.d happiness.
Feeding Swine.
: tearn' from the Germantown j
Telegraph that Prof Sanborn, of the
Missouri Agricultural College,- has
been making Experiments on the
feeding of swine, with a view of as
certaining to what extent the fond
changed the type and composition i
of the flesh. He fed on wholesome !
corn meal and shipgtuff'for a eer-i
fain number of days, and found
that the gain in the weight of meat !
was greater from the sUip*tull'fbiin
frciffi einWlfxiraoMrn raffl as
follows; The gain from corn meal
lift pounds, and from sdiipstutt
188 pounds. This will probably
surprise many. But the shipstutf
i produced the most lean meat, and
there was less fatty matter from;
pigs fed on that food than from
; those fed on corn or meal, j
Over sixty years ago the State of j
New York established the typical
| county agricultural fair, a system
: which has been adopted bv the lar
ger number of States, extending to
! the Rocky Mountains, in Colorado,
in 1.874. These fairs have been the
: great educators of the public in all
j t lint relates to agriculture, and are
; to-day important injuncts and
supports of many State agrieultur
jid colleges which have been found
ed since 1862. Other fairs, more
varied and comprehensive than the
j agricultural, embracing more par
ticularly the much winder range of
manufactured products, have been
held in some of our larger cities
for many years, notably those in
Boston, of the Franklin Institute in
Philadelphia, ol the American In
stitute in New York, of the Mrylnhd
Institute in Baltimore, and also
the exhibitions of Chicago, Cinei
natb St. Louis. New Orleans and
: San Francisco. Such local and spe
j cial fairs and exhibitions as those
in this and other e luntries
; have culminated in the great inter--
! national or world's expositions of
the past thirty years.
An excellent whitewash for fences
and buildings is made as follows:
Slack half a bushel of fresh lime in
a barrel with boiling water and cov
er it meanwhile to keep in the
heat. Afterward strain through a
: fine seive and add the following:
Seven pounds of salt dissolved in
hot water, three pounds of ground
rice boiled to a tbin paste, one-half
pound of Spanish whiting, one
pound of clean glue which has
been dissolved in water and boiled :
finally, five gallons of hot water.and
stir well. Keep it covered for a few
days. When lined it should b"
made and kept hot. One j fin t cov
ers a square yard. For a dark
brown color and burned umber.
An old candidate still in the field.
At the urgent solicitation. Are.. 1
desire to be supported. Hardware,
Stoves, Sewing Machines -are the
principal planks in our platform.
We’ve got anew plank, come and
s'c it. Yours in 1) Til 5' C,
H. U. CHAMBERS.
P. S.— 1 have a carriage mule
which I might be induced to sell.
W TONIC
\.\ FACTS RECARDINC
Sr. Earte’s Iran Tonis.
It will purifv and enrich the BLOOD, regulate
the LIVER and KIDNEYS, and I{e*TOKK thk
HEALTH and VIGOR of YOUTH! la all those
diseases requiring a certain and efficient TONIC,
especially Dyspepsia. Want of Appetite.lndiges
tion, Lack of strength, etc., its use is marked
with immediate and wonderful results. Bones,
muscles and nerves receive new force. Enlivens
the mind and supplies Brain Power.
■ A P SE** Cl suffering from all complaints
IL. Du w peculiar to their sex will find in
])R, HARTER'S IRON - TONIC a sa;e and speedy
cure, it gives a clear and healthy complexion.
The strongest testimony to the value of I>k.
Il.utTEß'B IRON TONIC is "that fretiueut attempts
at counterfeiting have only added m the popular
ity of the original. If yon 'earnestly desire health
do not experiment—get the Original and Best
your address to The Dr. Harter
. ~m St. Louis, Mo., for our “."DREAM HOOK. B
f of strange and useful informatioa. free.^
DR. Harter’s Iron Tonic is for Sale ey all
' Druggists anc Dealers Everywhere.
j
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
Thislvrnt'riM v.*r vatic*. A marvel of pur
ity, Ktnhg'h anc wliolsoim*n*ss. M>n cni
aoiifikni than the ordinary kinds, ami cannot
!>•• sold i;-, competition with the multitude of
low test, short weight, alum or phosphate
powders. Sold only in cans. Koval Bak-
INO Powjjkj: Cos., lort Wali-st., N. V. janSl
Receiver’s Sale.
By virtue of an order passed by the Judge of
the Superior Court of the Flint Circuit, in tin#
matter of Moon*. Marsh *Sr Cos., and others
against Thomas 11. Lyon will be sold on the
public square in the town of liarnesvllle, Osh,
sit Id o'clock a. in., Friday the nth day of No
vember, ISS4, the interest of Thomas 11. Lyon
in what is known as tin* Lyon House lot, in
the town of Iluniesville. Hounded north by
lot of 80.-** A- Matthews, east by Jackson .
street and W. K. Murphey S: Cos., south by
public square, and west by street leading to
depot. Said lot held by the said T'minus H.
lon under Imuhl lor title from John Neal,
and tin.*re being a balance due said Neal of
alniut S aid lot is sold subject to said
claim.
Also, at the same time and place, will te
sold one hundred and seventy-live acres of
lut'd, more or less, in the 11th distr'et of lp
son county, known as the Cade ahead place.
This is ;i rood farm eight miles south of
Barnesville, well located ami well improved.
To he sold for the lament of the creditors of
said Thomas 11. Lyon. Terms cash.
A. STAFFORD.
\V. i*. nrssEY,
Nov. *>. lS'l. Receivers.
o i h e Hoard Com.mission!-:its,
Roads and Kkvknvks,
ITIa K Coi’NTY, < \., October ‘-S l . IHSJ.)
By virtue of authority vested in us by an
A t of the Ocitcral Assembly of the State of
• e rgta. approved September entitled
An A { to Prohibit the Sale of Alcoholic,
spirituous or Malt Liquors or Intoxicating
Id tiers mi County of Pike, a tier submitting
the same To Ci tua!i!b*d voters of said conn
tv, r• provide a penalty and for other purposes.
NVe declare the following to be th<* result of
n;i election held as provided by said Act on
th** sixteenth day of July in the year, ISH4, to
wit: “Against tin sale* f Liquor votes;
“For the Sale of Litpior” 77 2 votes, being a
majority ••Against the sale of Liquor” ol six
ty-two votes. And that said Act Is in lull
fin-re and ctte tin said ounty of Pike from
this date; and St is ordered that this declara
tion and order be published once a week for
four Weeks In the Ha rues v tile GAZETTE and
Pike County News.
Witness our hand and official signature,
this October‘JUth, D’SL
T. J. BARPvKTT,
J. W. M KANS,
Commissioners of IT. R. of Pike Cos,. <u.
Administrator’s Sale.
Hy virtue of an order from tbe Court of Or
dinary of .Monrot* county. Georgia, will be
iid on the iirs! Tuesday in I)eeemU*r next, at
t c court house door in ‘-aid county, Iwtween
tno legal liou**sof mile, the tract of land In
said count) wh *reon (*. H. Hush resided at
the time of his death, c mtaiuing JTJC acres,
more or less, adjoining land of Newton Owen,
P. F. Matthews. .Mrs. Reynolds and Bush
child! ;. Will be sold subject to the widow’s
i dower. Terms cash. \V. 11. 11. HCsH,
Administrator of <. 11. Bush.
Administrator’s Sale.
; Hv virtue of an or from Pike court ofOrdi
; nary, 1 will sell before the court-house door in
lle town of Zchulon, Im*! ween the usual hours
of sale, on the first Tuesday in Peeember next,
one hundred and sixty nr res of hind, more or
I- ss in the first district of Pike county. Terms
! of sale cash. Sold As property of the estate of
i John I. Cottgin, deceased.
J. \ . COtiCilN,
Adntr. estate of John I. Coggin.
Bridge to Let.
7. r.Ri r.oN. <!a., Oct. 20, 1 .ssi.
Notice is hereby given that the hniluihg of
the Rriut'c jirross Flint River, at Flat Shoal? |
will be let bv the County Commissioners
Pike and Meriwether counties, on the 4th
Saturday (jjnd) in November next, 10 o’clock,
specifications can be found at the office of toe.
t ' unmission -rs of Pike county.
C. F. RKDDING,
Clerk Hoiird Roads and Revenues.
STATF. <)!•■ GF.UIWSIA—PiKK i'nFNiY.-
Wheivas, C. C. Holmes, administrator of Mr-.
A. Harnes, represi-nts to the court in ids
petition that he lias duly filed and entered on
record thu: h - has fully adndnistere<l Mrs. If.
.v. Harnes’ . state. This is then-fore to cite all
person*; eoiioi n ed, heirs anti creditors, to
show cause'll any ihey can. wliy saitl admin
istrator should not be discharged from his ad
ministration aI id receive letters of dismission
on the first Monday in January, l.kSo.
HARRY WKLLS, ordinary.
( iK')IUI A—Pike Cocnty.—-Tonil whom ii
uni concern: F.. Rose, administrator of
! h ‘"esta! “ of Martha A. Rose, appliest-. me
fr an order to sell ho j.si ttml lot in tiie town
.'■ Hane sville, on Zebulon street, Vnuirub-d
south bv J. C. Porch ami T. D. Di-wi>erry. and
\.est by"T. D. I *ev berry ; -al John R. Shoek
i toy, containing one ami one-half acres, more
or less, for purposv of paying debts oi estat*-.
aiui I will pass on Ids application on the firs.
Monday In December, i>sb
HARRY WELLB, Ordinary.
t iKOR( fIA Pike County.—To all whoni
it niay concern: 8. J. ilsiie, administrator oj
H. Knglisli, ileceastNl, applies to me for an
oiler to soil the house mul lot in the town of
Milner, in which said dt•<-eased resided at the
: .me of his death, lot containing one and one
lmll acres, and 1 will pass on his application
on the first Holiday in 1 >eeemler, issi.
HARRY WELI.s. iJrdfnury.
< JFn >ll< i I A—Pike county.—T*> all whom
it may concern: s. J. Hale, mlmhiisirator of
•the estate of Mrs. K. J. Fields, deceased ap
plies to me for letter of dismission from said
• .state, and you are hereby notified that action
will he taken on his application on the first
Mo .dav in February i.Nv>.
HARRY WELLS, Ordinary.
• JEbllblA - Pike County.— W. c. Yar
orough has applk*vl for exemption of person
aitv and setting appart and valuation of
homestead, and i will pass upon the same at
11 o'clock a. m„ on the Jfitli day of November,
;sm. at my office.
HARRY WELLS. Ordinary.
ROBERT T. DANIEL,
LAWYER,
GRIFFIN, - - GEORGIA.
imvlJ-Jy
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quality considered! novlJ-ly