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THE . ■ ■
AUGUSTA .
SAVINGS .
SANK, .
S05 Broad Street,
AlfiL’STA, GF.ORUIA.
W. B. YOUNG,
President.
J. G. WEIGLE,
Cashier.
SAVIXtiS ACCOUNTS
SOLICITED.
Interest Paid
On Deposits.
^r^sEsmaam
1
i
n
H
E
TRUE CITIZEN.
THE
PLANTERS
LOAN AND
SAVINGS
BANK,
Augusta, Ga.
ORGANIZED 18 0
Pays interest
on Deoosits.
Accounts
Solicited.
L. C. Hayne,
President,
W. C. Wardlaw
Cashier.
i Volume 19.
Waynesboro, Georgia, Saturday, June 2, 1900. Number 7.
' a W Pi ^
THE CUCUMBER BEETLE.
The Early Insect Tliat Catches tlie
Cucurbits.
The striped cucumber beetle is the
first insect to attack cucurbits in the
spiine. Hardly have the seedlings
pushed through the soil before these
small yellow and black striped beetles
begin feeding on the leaves and suceu-
eins. In the grub or larval stage
met is usually overlooked. It is
her. wirewormlike creature with
head and tail. The adults pass
CUCUMBER BEETLE—LARVA AND ADULT.
the winter in the ground. They come
out during warm spring weather and
attack various kinds of foliage with
ravenous appetite. They eat dirty,
tough and even poisonous foliage with
avidity. After a few Cays’ feediug,
their hunger being appeased, their food
is confined to tender parts of plants,
and it is difficult to induce them to eat
foliage coated with foreign substances
such as the arsenites. A. L. Quintance
of the Georgia station, who has made
a study of these cucurbit pests, says no
one Hue of treatment or one insecti
cide seems satisfactory and best re
sults are probably from the conjunc
tion of several remedies.
idroct application of poisons to fo
liage lias not proved satisfactory, ac
cording to Mr. Quintance, because
when the arsenites are sufficiently
strong to kill the beetles burning of
foliage is almost sure to result. Vari
ous kinds of covers have been recom
mended for covering the plants as they
are pushing through the soil and later.
Most commonly used are ordinary
boxes with top and bottom open, the
lop lining covered with cheesecloth.
A domelike covering may be easily
made by crossing two halves of a bar-
iel hoop and putting on a cover,
tloth or paper wire covers are used by
some growers.
Planting an excess of seed is advis-
as the injury becomes more dis-
hibuted. ;U1( 1 after the beetles have
satisfied their hunger the plants should
binned out to the proper stand,
mting also will frequently al-
°" the plants to get well started be-
01 e ,lle beetles make their appear-
a uce, and their effects on the plants
Uot he so severe.
value of squash plants as trap
U '• ; !1 early spring for the striped
cucumber beetle has recently been de-
hoastrated. Professor Sirrine of New
, 11:1:5 * °uud that if squash are
e uu.ii around the margins of fields,
i,,!!* " r ® Te days in advance of plant-
° , lli ° niaia crop of melons or cu-
1 l!lliel ' s aU(1 again four or five days
evm llie beetles will to a considerable
‘ 011(1 fewl on the squash. If neces-
b' 1 Planting of squash can
S o o U : uk ‘ atter four or five days. As
u n the main crop begins to come
mi! sll °uld be sprayed with berdeaux
f ur ° to render the plants distaste-
jj , ? lac ‘ beetles and to let the beetles
as t<: un fhe squash plants, but as soon
nii,\. k e 8'in to feed some of the
sunk ? slloult ^ he dusted with an ar-
’-,? S I)aris green, and many bee-
e ' ; V1] 1 he killed.
i UOt advisa hle to dust all of the
Eve,- the Poison at first,
nbm,'. clays m ore of the trap
aud a .?^ ouId lje Ousted with poison,
apl)lie»*--° Ul<1 be d0ne thoroughly. The
aud ti !' UUS of . P° ison to the trap crops
ou tn o e sprayin S of bordeaux mixture
as ne ”<j® ain erop should be continued
l
Early
THE NEW RICE CULTURE.
In Sonthvrestern Louisiana and
Southeastern Texas.
In 1SS4 aud 1885 a few farmers from
the northwestern prairie states settled
on the great southern prairie extending
aloug the coast of Louisiana to the
Texas line aud began at once to adapt
the machinery to which they had been
accustomed—gang plow, disk harrow,
drill, broadcast seeder and twine bind
er—to the rice industry. Where prai
ries were intersected by a creek that
could be used to flood them they were
surrounded by a small levee thrown up
with a road grader or a plow with wing
attachment. Large crops were pro
duced. The prairies were practically
free from injurious grasses and the
water soft. The ricefields were han
dled like the bonanza wheat farms of
Dakota, and fortunes were made.
Levees were cheaply constructed.
Little attention was paid to drainage.
Work was carelessly done, the object
being apparently to plant a large acre
age and secure a certain number of
bushels. Ultimate failure was certain
and hastened by a succession of dry
years, in which creeks failed and reser
voirs were found to be expensive and
unreliable.
To provide a reliable supply of water
pumping plants for raising water from
the streams were gradually put iu. The
elevation of the prairies above the
streams varies from G to 3S feet, the
larger portion being from 15 to 25 feet.
At first farms aloug the streams aud
lakes were irrigated. Gradually large
surface canals were constructed on the
slightly elevated ridges of land which
exist in-nearly every township. These
surface canals are built from 20 to 150
feet in width, according to the area to
be watered. The sides of the canal are
raised from four to five feet with plows
and scrapers or with grading machin
ery. Side gates are inserted in the
embankment as frequently as necessa
ry. Laterals are run from the main
canal to accommodate remote farms.
Powerful pumping plants are erected
on the bank of the river at the bead of
the surface canal. These canals where
well constructed aud operated preve
entirely successful and make the rice
crop a practical certainty over a large
section of country.
Scarcely had the surface canals been
accepted as a success when southwest
ern Louisiana was startled by the an
nouncement that there were strata of
gravel at 125 to 200 feet under the sur
face of the entire section containing an
unlimited supply of water which would
of its own pressure come so near the
surface that it could be readily pump
ed.
Pipes of two, three, four, six and
eight inches in size have been sunk to
the gravel and pumped continuously
for months without diminution of the
supply. Such is the facility with which
these wells are made that a six inch
tube has been put down to the full
depth required, 200 feet, in 14 hours.
A system of such wells may be put
down 30 to 40 feet apart, and each one
will act independently and furnish as
much water as if it stood alone. Such
a combination of wells may be united
just below water level and all be run
by one engine and pump. Water rises
naturally in these wells to within 20
feet of the surface, and a number of
flowing wells have been secured. The
total cost of an irrigating plant suffi
cient for flooding 200 acres is from
81.500 to $2,500. It requires about 70
days’ pumping for the rice season.
Such, in brief, is the new phase of rice
culture in this country, as pictured by
Dr. S. A. Knapp, a government ex
pert.
A Handy Corn Marker.
An easily made labor saving device
for those who mark corn ground both
ways before planting is shown in Ohio
Farmer. If the rows are to be feet
apart, make as follows: From a two
inch plank cut four wheels (B) 14
inches iu diameter aud make a frame
of scantling (D D) V/> feet wide and
long enough to hold the wheels when
3Yt> feet apart. Now take a 2 by 4
piece (...) KP/t, feet long and mortise
edgewise across from wheel to wheel,
so as to project
one inch from ^ ^ /A
the edge of each
wheel. The axle
(C) can be a
scantling two
or three inches
square and
rounded at the
ends to revolve in the frame. Put the
tongue iu the frame, and iu the back
piece of the frame put two pegs to han
dle by.
In using this marker raise up when
the edge of the piat is reached, and the
weight of the crosspiece will cause it
to swing to under side. Have cross
marks right, when beginning at the
sides of the plat, and drive straight.
If rows are wanted three feet apart,
cut the wheels 12 inches iu diameter
and set three feet apart in the frame.
The edges of the wheels and of the
crosspiece should be sharpened slight
ly with a drawing knife. The illus
tration shows only cue end of the
marker aud one of the four wheels.
SHEEP FEEDING RACK.
A Device Witli Some Feature* That
Are Out of the Ordinary.
Some of the ordinary feeding racks
for sheep have various faults. The
sheep run their heads and necks clear
into the fodder, which causes chaff
aDd the like to lodge in the wool of
their heads and necks. Then the feed
ing sheep are apt to crowd each other,
which is a serious objection, particu
larly with horned sheep, aud much
harm may result. Sometimes sheep get
into the habit of jumping into the
racks; lambs nearly always do so—lie
on the hay and befoul it. These and
other drawbacks brought out the rack
here described by a Farm and Fire
side correspondent:
The rack is a box 10 feet long and 15
inches high, similar in construction to
the old feeding rack, except that the
sides and ends are tight, for the sheep
are expected to feed from the top in
stead of from the sides.'
The interesting part of the rack is its
cover, which is constructed in the fol
lowing manner: Lay a six inch fence
board lengthwise centrally upon the
rack, having it rest on the ends of
same. Crosswise to this nail on short
pieces of board six inches wide and
just long enough to rest on the sides
without projecting. Space these boards
IS inches from center to center, which
will be about right for average sheep.
They should also be tapered down to
2\n inches at each end, and be sure not
to have any sharp or ragged edges
about them, nor anywhere else about
the rack; have everything smooth. It
will take 11 crosspieces for a 1G foot
rack, and such a one will accommodate
24 sheep.
This cover, as so far described, is to
be hinged to the rack by mean’s of
three T hinges, so it may be easily rais
CORN MARKER.
Varieties of Okra.
The tall growing okra, once every
where grown, has recently been sup
planted by smaller and tenderer varie
ties. The Dwarf Green, Dwarf White,
White Velvet, Density and New South
are all candidates for favor. In point
of vigor and productiveness none is the
equal of the tall growing, but in quali
ty all of them are perhaps superior.
The Dwarf Green stands next to the
Tall Growing in vigor and productive
ness, but is perhaps equaled by the
rest in'table excellence. Since a row
or two of any variety of okra will sup
ply an abundance of pods for even the
largest family, the finer and smaller
Varieties are preferable for family use.
Fine Wm Deans.
Among fine wax snap beans for home
use a leading place is claimed for the
saddle back wax. The pods are ten-
FEEDING RACK FOR SHEEP,
ed and lowered when it is desired to
fill the rack with hay or fodder. A
piece of small rope or clothesline is to be
fastened to the middle crosspiece of the
cover just opposite the hinge. This is
run over a little pulley fastened to a
joist above. A snap or hook should be
fastened to the other end of the rope
and a small ring tied into the rope at
the proper place, so the cover may be
secured in an upright position when
filling the rack, by catching the snap
into the ring.
This cover is not yet quite completed.
Some means must be provided to pre
vent sheep from jumping upon the
rack.- This is accomplished by setting
up three standards IS ©r 20 inches high,
one at each end of the cover and one
in the center, aud they may be braced
as shown in the illustration. To these
is nailed another fence board, and then
the feeding rack is complete.
Georgia Station Corn Notes.
If the rows of corn be four feet wide
and the plants three feet apart in the
rows, the yield will be greater than If
the rows be wider and the spaces be
tween the plants correspondingly less.
The nearer the plants stand on a
“perfect square” the greater will be
the yield.
It is a good practice to broadcast har
row the cornfields about the time the
plants are coming up, and it may be
done to advantage until the plants are
several inches high, using a harrow
with slantback teeth.
Plowing should be at intervals not
greater than ten days, using a shallow,
wide spreading cultivator. One inch is
deep enough as a rule. Cultivation
should cease, as a rule, when the first
tassels commence to appear, and at
this last cultivation eowpeas should be
sown broadcast at the rate of two to
three pecks per acre.
The Bur or Globe Artichoke.
The bur or globe artichoke, cultivat
ed extensively in Mediterranean coun
tries, is a vegetable of very delicate
flavor for the table and quite different
from the Jerusalem artichoke, which is
grown as forage for hogs and other an
imals.
The bur artichoke is commonly prop
agated from suckers which are produc
ed around the crown. These are pinch
ed off or cut off except two or three,
which are left to produce the flower
heads. Black, turfy soils are especially
suitable for its cultivation. The shoots
are planted 2*4 feet apart in rows three
to four feet apart, the care required and
the methods of cultivation being simi
lar to those used in the case of cab
bage, eggplant, etc. Suckers planted
in this way will yield heads in autumn
of the first year. At the north when
bur artichokes are grown from seed the
seed is sown in hotbeds in February
or March in rows about three inches
apart, and the plants are finally thin
ned to about the same distance apart
in the row. These are ready to trans
plant when they have four leaves.
They should be set out three or four
together in a hill, the Hills 18 to. 36
inches apart in rows three to four feet
apart.
A Cross of Game and Cochin.
We have tried crossing the ‘White
Indian Game on the White Cochin, and
the results have been most excellent
The feathering on the legs characteris
tic of the Cochin is greatly, diminished,
in some almost absent; the leg is in
creased in length, the feathers on the
body lie close, the carriage is upright,
and the docility of the Cochin is en
tirely lost. The head is more slender
than in the full blood Cochin, yet thick
er and shorter than that of the Game.
For the table thdy are unsurpassed.
The meat is fine in texture, of a gamy
favor and not dry, as is the flesh of
nany fowls, breast full and plump and
legs and thighs large. The chicks are
extremely hardy, scarcely one being
lost after hatching. They require but
little attention, are good rangers and
on the farm would forage for their own
living under ordinary circumstances.
When in full feather, however, a very
high fence would be required to confine
them.—E. P. Niles, Virginia.
HOLLEYMAN’S
COMPOUND
ELIXIR
FOR
HORSE
Colic.
-PAYABLE IN-
Tbe 2 biggest farmers iu Georgia and South
Carolina—Capt. Jas. M. Smith says of it:
“Have tried them. Hollej man’s is the best
ol all. Keep it all the time,”
Capt. R. H. Walker says: “Holleyman’s
is worth its weight in gold. I have saved as
many as three horses lives per month with
it.”
Holleyman’s Comoound Elixir
50 CENTS.
Will cure any case of Horse Colic under
the sun.
Sold by all the {merchants of this county. £q negotiate loans for OUT clients
Do no.t take |any substitute said to be the o
tame thing or as good.
N. L. WILLETT DRUG CO.,
INSTALLMENTS K.
Loans negotiated on
improved farms at reasonable
rates of interest and small com
missions. We are now prepared
make it.
AUGUSTA-G A.
on BETTER TERMS THAN
EVER BEFORE.
Til EECEIYEE’S NOTICE.
The Tax Payers of this countj aud request
ed to meet me at the following places on
dates mentioned for the purpose of making
their tax returns for 1900:
FIRST ROUND.
75th dlst. Rogers Fri. Mav 4th
70.h dist. Cates’Store Mon. Mav7tb
71th disl. Bark Camp X Rd Tues. Mav Sth
73d dist. Midville, Wed Mav 9tli
71st dist. Harrell’s store Thur Mav 10th
SECOND ROUND.
ti7th dist Green’s Cut, Mon Mav 14th
6Gth dist Shell Bluff P O Wen Mav ICth
oStli dist Girard Thurs Mav 17th
34th dist Couit. Ground, bridge Fri Mav 18th
0th dist Cates’ Store Mon Mav 2lst
73d dist Midville Tues Mav22d
'5th dist Hirdsv:lle Wed Mav 23d
'4th dist Herndon Thurs Mav 24th
71st distOatts Fri Mav 25th
T2d dist Gough’s X Rds Mon Mav 28th
39th dist Kilpatrick’s X Rds Tues Mav 29th
K5th distKevsville Wed Mav 3oth
87th dist Gref li’s Cut Thurs Mav 31st
31st dist Millen. Daniel, Sont
& Palmer’s Fri June 1st
87th dist Neelv’s School
House, Tues June 5th
The law requires the Tax Receiver to ad
minister the oath to each tax paver white
making their returns. Please remember this
and be prompt, avoid being double-taxed
aud save me delavs. Books close June 9th,
On everv Saturdav from April 1st to June
9tli and during session of Superior Court, I
can be found at Dr. McMaster’s drug store,
W. L,. MI MS, Receiver Tax Returns, B.C.*
marl7,’99
LAWSON & SCALES,
Waynesboro, Ga.
novl ..’88—tf
Good
GARDENS and
FARMS MADE
Better by Planling Alexander’s
SEIEIDS.'
Our Seeds havq, given the best
Satisfaction all over the South,
Those who plant them tell their
neighbors of their success. It is
not cheap Seeds that you want, but
those of the highest quality aud
which will give the best results,
Show your practical economy. If
you wish Vegetable. Field, Grass,
Flower Seeds and Bulbs of high
quality, write to us.
Our 1900 Seed Catalogue,
also 2-states Almanac sent free.
Send for tt, Prompt shipment of
orders.
If troubled with rheumatism, give
Chamberlain’s Pain-Balm a trial
It will not co9t you a cent if it does
no good. One application will re
lieve the pain. It Also cures sprain?
and bruises in one-third the time
required by any other treatment
Cuts, burns, frostbites, quinsey,
pains in the side and chest glandu
lar and other swellings are quickly-
cured by applying it. Every bottle
warranted. Price, 25 and 50c. h.b.
McMaster.
Charter Issued.
Tallahassee, May 16.—Letters pat
ent have been issued for the incorpora
tion of the McIntosh Casava company,
with a capital of $20,000.
There are some things you can j
do withodVbut you can’t afford to
risk another day without a bottle of
Br. Tichenor’s Antiseptic,the great
est chemical discovery of the age.
Heals cuts, burns, gun-shot wounds,
etc., quicker than anything. And
don’t forget that It cures colic, too,
while you wait about ten minutes.
For further information, apply to
any one who has used it.
SADDLE BACK WAX BEANS,
der and stringless, round, smooth and
fleshy. The meat is solidly joined be
tween the beans.
It is recommended not to plant them
until nights are warm, as they are
more tender than green podded varie
ties, though the plants are vigorous
and prolific.
When an Orchard Needs- Stimulating:.
As to the indications when a bearing
orchard needs stimulating the eminent
pomologist Dr. Warder once said,
“When the growth of the terminal
branches fails to make an annual ex
tension of at least one foot in length,
the tree should be stimulated by ma
nuring the land and giving it thorough
cultivation.”
When you start out to “tackle”
the finny tribe don’t forget to take
a bottle of Dr. Tichenor’s Antisep-
tiseptic. Nothing equal to it for fin
wounds, fish hook wounds,bites and
stings of insects and it i9 no bad
thing for “snake bite.” Remember
it cures colic also while you wait
about ten minutes. Any druggists
can sell it a9 fast as you can buy it.
Price 59 cents.
DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve
Cures Piles. Scalds. Burns.
Subscribe! Subscribe!!
News and Notes.
Yale will be the first university in
the country to establish a school of
forestry. The new school will be start
ed next fall.
According to the best estimates,
there are about 10,000,000 acres of land
in the five states bordering the gulf of
Mexico well suited to rice cultivation.
The amount which can be irrigated by
using the available surface and arte
sian flows does not exceed 3,000,000
acres, and as best results require rota
tion of crops, only one-half that
amount, or 1,500,000 acres, would be in
rice at any one time.
According to the report of Statisti-
cian^Hyde, there remained in the farm
ers’ hands on March 1 about 158,700,-
000 bushels of wheat, 773,700,000 bush
els of corn and 290,900,000 bush
els of oats. And these figures repre
sent respectively 29 per cent, 37.2 per
cent and 36.5 per cent of last year’s
wheat, corn and oats crops, as compar
ed with 29.3 per cent, 41.6 per cent and
3S.7 per cent of the crops for 1S98, re
maining in the farmers’ hands on
March 1.
Entomologist J. B. Smith of "New Jer
sey states that arsenate of l^ad must
be used in larger proportion than other
arsenical poisons for spraying, but that
when used at the rate of two pounds
to 100 gallons of water it may be em
ployed with entire safety to the plant
and as an insecticide will then equal
paris green or London purple used at
th» rate of one pound to 125 gallons.
“Chops,” for which there is ready
sale for expoi't purposes, are made
from the lower grade apples by chop
ping the whole fruit into coarse pieces
and evaporating them.
Be sure your spraying formula is
right and then follow it closely.
Half rotted manure is more valuable
than well rotted, because the former
contains a larger amount of nitrates.
Job Printing promptly executed
Obituary Notices Charged For.
On and after this date. March
11 tb, 1899, all obituary notices from
any source will be charged for as
advertisements at the rate of one-
balf a cent a word, cash to accom
pany the copy, or properly vouched
for. Our reason for this rule is that
obituary notices occupy space
that could be used by matter of
more general interest to the av
erage reader. Again the fam
ily of the deceased or com
mittee requesting such publication,
are in many instances non-patrons
of the paper, and really borrow
them to read the article in which
tbey alone are interested, hence
our rule charging all for such pub
lications, Should copy be sent
without cash, and you desire copy
returned, please enclose postage.
Dealer in-
Millinery, Ribbons and Flowers,
Spring and Summer Styles,
A complete line New Spring
Goods, Notions and Novelties
for the Ladies. Call and see
my goods and prices.
Up-Stairs over Mulherin &
Co’s., Shoe Store, Augusta, Ga.
apr!4,1900
Spring . . .
Goods ......
have
arrived!
flLEMNDER SEED CO.,
900 Broad St.,
AUGUSTA, - GEORGIA.
-Sr
One of the
Largest
Prettiest
Stocks
ever shown in Waynesboro.
Fits Positively Guarj
anteed,
MANAU,
Tlxe T'.A.IXj©3=5
Waynesboro, Georgia.
DODGE, the Rubber Man!!
w nnnnF 221 campten st,
nr. LtUUUL, AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
Rubber Stamps, 10c. line, Wax Seals. $1
Corporation and Commissioners Seals, $2.25-
Notarial Seals, $2. Daters 25c. Pens and Pen
cils 15c. 3 A fonts Rubber Type, with ink and
holder 25c, Badges, Ste ncils, Cotton Brands,
Ac. decl0,’98—by
c
ONTRACTORS' so
-^.BUILDERS' ^
supplies.
Castings, Steel Beams, Columns and Chan
nel Bolts, Rods, Weights, Tanks, Towers, <fco.
Steel Wire and Manila Rope, Hoisting Engines
and Pomps, Jacks, Derricks, Crabs, Chain and
Rope Holsts.
tr Cast Every Day. Make Quick Delivery.
LOMBARD IRON WORM SUPPLY CO.
AUGUSTA. GA.
Shoe Making,
REPAIRING, Ac.
I am located on New St., Cobbham, where
I am prepared to give satisfaction in mending
Shoes and Harness at short notice. Satistac-
tion guaranteed. I solicit a share of your pa
tronage. Orders left at Mr, Neely’s store will
receive prompt attention, and I will call for
work and deliver it to any part of the city.
P. J. MAJOR, Waynesboro, Ga.
Augusta Real-Estate
Is the safest investment you
can make. Those who have
noted the rapid strides ol devel
opment made in Augusta in the
past 5 years, and are familiar
with the vast number of new
buildings, manufactories, indus
tries, etc., that are now in course
of construction are buying real
estate in Augusta, because of the
certainty of great enhancement.
At the present time we can
sell lots in the growing section
of the city for $250 to $500 on
the installment plan ol $10 per
month.
This is better than Building
and Loan Association Stock
which has proved so disastrous
to thousands of stockholders and
as sale as a government bank.
Write for prices, location,
plats, &c..
ALEXANDER & JOHNSON,
705 Broad Street,
AUGUSTA, ; : : : GEORGIA
oct!4.’99—lira
ORDINARY’S NOTICES.
50 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
Patents
I RADE IKIARHS
Designs
Copyrights Ac.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
qnickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention is probably patentable- Communica
tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patenta
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Munn 4 Co. receive
tpecial notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest ci»
cnlation of any scientific Journal. Terms, $3 a
year; four months, |L Sold by all newsdealers
MUNN & Co. 361 Broadway, New York
Branch Office. 625 F St., Washington, D. C.
TEESSPASS NOTICE.
All persons, white or black, are hereby
warned not to tresspass by hunting, fishing
or otherwise on the following tract of land,
to-wit: In the 75th District, G, M., contain
ing about 13,00 acres bounded by E. Daniels,
H, P. Jones, on North; W. O. Wadley, Wm.
Walker on East; R. H. Mnrphey, on South;
J. V. Jones on W"est. This land is ray own
and the law will be strictly enforced. Thl
April 14th, 1900. GEO. W. JONES. ’
SEND YOUR JOB PRINTING TO .
G eorgia—bukke county,—whereas,
R. M. Murphree, administrator of J. J.
Murphree. late of said county, deceased,
has applied to me for letters dismissory from
These are, therefore, to cite and admorish
all persons interested, to show cause, (if any
can,) before me, at my office, at 10 o’clock, a.
m., on the first Monday in July, 1900, why
said letters dismissory should not be granted
in terms of the law. This March 5th, 1900,
GEO. F. COX, Ordinary. B. C, Ga.
G EORGIA—Burke County.- Whereas,
S...Watson Perkins, administrator of
Susan W. Perkins, late of said ccunty de
ceased, has applied to me for letters dismis
sory Irom said estate.
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish
all persons interested, to show cause, (if any
they can,) before me at my office, at 10 o’clock
a. m., on the first Monday in July, 1900,
why said letters dismissory should not be
granted in terms of the law. This March 6th,
1900.
GEO. F. COX, Ordinary, B.^C,Ga.
Kodol
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Digests what you eat.
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Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
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SickHeadache,Gastralgia,Cramps,and
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feb 24,’1900-b y