Newspaper Page Text
®he lerald and ^foertise|
Newnan, Ga., Friday, April 6, 1888.
NIGHT BLOOMING THISTLE.
Bill Nye's Experience as a Judge and
Orator at County Fairs.
Mr. E. D. Church, Secretary of the
Aehfield Farmers’ Club of Ashfield,
Mass., informs me by the United
States mail that upon receipt of my fa
vorable reply I will become an honora
ry member of that club, along with
Georgy William-Curtis, Frof. Norton,
Prof. Stanley Hall, of Harvard, and
other wet-browed toilers in the catnip-
infested domain of agriculture.
I take this method of thanking the
Ashfield Farmers’ Club, through its
secretary, for the honor thus all so un
worthily bestowed, and joyfully accept
the honorary membership, with the un
derstanding, however, that during the
county fair the solemn duty of deliver
in' 1, the annual address from the judges
stand, in tones that will not only ring
along down the corridors of time, but
go thundering three times around a
half-mile track and be heard above the
rythmic plunk of the hired man who is
trying to ascertain, by means of a large
rnawl and a thumping machine, how-
hard he can strike, shall fall upon Mr.
Curtis or other honorary members of
t he club. I have a voice that does very
well to express endearment, or other
subdued emotions, but it is not effec
tive at a county fair. Spectators see
the wonderful play of my features, but
they only hear the low refrain of the
haughty Clydesdale steed, who has a
neighsal voice and wears his tail in a
Grecian coil. I received $150 once for
addressing a race-track one mile in
length on “The Use and Abuse of En
silage as a Narcotic.” I made the ges
tures, but the sentiments were those of
the four-ton Peicheron charger, “Lit
tle Medicine,” dam “Eloquent.”
I spoke under a low shed and rather
adverse circumstances. In talking with
the committee afterward, as I w-rapped
up my gestures and put them back in
the shawl-strap, I said that I felt al
most ashamed to receive such a price
for the sentiments of others, but they
said that was all right. No one ex
pected to hear an agricultural address.
They claimed that it was most general
ly purely spectacular, and so they re
garded my speech as a great success. I
used the same gestures afterward in
speaking of “The great falling off
among bareback riders in the circuses
of the present day.”
I would also like to be excused from
duties as a judge of curly-faced
otherwise absolutely empty. Let us
consider this before spring fairly opens,
so that we may be prepared for any
thing of this kind.
One more point may properly come
before the club at its next meeting,
and I mention it here because I may
be so busy at Washington looking after
our other interests that I cannot get to
the club meeting. I refer to the evi
dent change in climate there from j ear
to year, and its effect upon seeds pur
chased of florists and seedsmen gener-
ally.
Twenty years ago you could plant a
seed according to. directions and it
would produce a plant which seemed
to resemble in a general way the pic
ture on the outside of the package.
Now, under the fluctuating influences
of irresponsible isotherms, phlegmatic
springs, rare June w-eather and over
weather in August, I find it
believe that our seedsmen put so much
money into their catalogues that they
do not have anything left to use in the
purchase of seeds. Good religion and
very fair cookies may be produced
without the aid of caraway seed, but
you cannot gather nice fresh figs of
thistles, or expect much of a seedsman
whose plants make no effort whatever
to resemble their pictures.
Hoping that you will examine into
this matter, and that the club will al-
avs hereafter look carefully into this
column for its farm information, I re
main, in a sitting posture, yours truly,
Bill Nye.
done
any
stock or as umpire of ornamental nee
dlework. After a person has had a tansy an j ca stor oil go through
almost impossible to produce a plant
or vegetable which in any way resem
bles its portrait. Is it my fault, or the
fault of the climate ? I wish the club
would take hold of this at its next reg
ular meeting.
I first noticed this change in the sum
mer of ’72, I think. I purchased a
small package of early Scotch plaid
curled kale, with a beautiful picture on
the outside. '^It was as good a pictuie
of Scotch kale as I ever saw. I could
imagine how gay- and light-hearted it
was the day it went up to the studio
and had its picture taken for this pur
pose. A short editorial paragraph un
der the picture stated that I should
plant in quick, rich soil, in rows four
inches apart, to a depth of one inch,
cover lightly and then roll. I did so. No
farmer of my years understands rolling
any better than I do.
In a few weeks the kale came up, but
turned out to be a canard. I then
waited two weeks more and other
forms of vegetation made their appeal -
ance. None of them were kale. A-
small delegation of bugs which deal
mostly with kale came into the garden
one day, looked at the picture on the
discarded paper, then examined what
had crawled out through the ground
and went away. I began to fear then
that climatic influences had been at
work on the seeds, but I had not fully
given up all hope
At first the plants seemed to waver
and hesitate over whether they had
better be wild parsnips or lima beans
Then I concluded that they had decided
to be foilage plants or rhubarb. But
they did not try to live up to their por
traits. Pretty soon I discovered that
they had no bugs which seemed to go
with them, and then I knew they were
weeds. Things that are good to eat al
ways have bugs and worms on them,
The Unterrified Country Press.
Arizona Kicker.
There is no use in attemping to dr-
guise the fact that certain rings and
factions in this gulch have for the last
three months made desperate attempts
to ignore the existence of the Kicker.
Having failed to frighten or bribe us,
ostracism was their little game. They
determined to freeze us out. We first
became aware of this movement three
months ago, when Mrs. Judge Gilder-
sleeve gave her blow-out. At that time
we received the following card:
fountain pen kicked endwise through
his chest by the animal to which he has
awarded the prize, and later on has his
features worked up into a giblet pie
by the owner of the animal to whom
he did not award the prize, he does
not ask for public recognition at the
hands of his fellow-citizens. It is the
same in the matter of ornamental nee
dlework and gaudy quilts, which goad
a man to drink and death.
While I am proud to belong to a far
mers’ club and “change works” with a
hearty, whole-souled ploughman like
George William Curtis, I hope that at
all county fairs or other intellectual
hand-to-hand contests between out
door orators and other domestic ani
mals I may be excused, and that when
judges of inflamed slumber robes and
restless tidies which roll up and fall
over the floor and adhere to the backs
of innocent people; or stiff, hard-doric
pillow-6hams which do not in any way
enhance the joys of sleep; or beautiful,
pale blue satin pin-cushions, which it
would be wicked to put a pin in and
which will therefore ever and forever
more mock the man who really wants
a pin, just as a beautiful matchsafe
stands idly through the long vigils of
the night, year after year, only
laugh at the man who staggers toward
it and falls up against it and finds it
empty; or like the glorious inkstand
which is so pretty and so fragile that it
stands around with its hands in its
pockets acquirin'* dust and dead flies
for centuries, so that when you are
a hurry you stick your pen into a small
chamber of horrors—I say -when the
judges are selected for this department
[ would rather have my name omitted
from the panel, for I have formed or ex
pressed an opinion, and have reasonable
doubts and conscientious scruples whieh
it would require testimony to remove
and I am not qualified anyway, and
have been already placed in jeopardy
once, and that is enough.
Mr. Church writes that the club has
taken up and discussed and settled all
point of importance bearing upon agri
culture, from the tariff up to the ques
tion of whether or not turpentine pour
ed in a cow’s ear ameliorates the pangs
of hollow-horn. He desires suggestions
and questions for discussion. That
shows the club to be thoroughly active.
It will soon be spring, and we cannot
then discuss these matters. New res
ponsibilities will be added day by day
in tin? way of stock, and we will have
to think of names for th£m. 'Would it
not be well before the time comes for
active farm work to think out a long
list of names before the little strangers
arrive? Nothing serves tolotyer us in
the estimation of our fellow-farmers of
the world more than the frequent al
tercations between owners and then
hired help over what name they shall
give to a weary, wobbly calfwvho has
just entered the great arena of life, full
of hopes and aspirations perhaps, but
The inference was as plain as the
pimples on Mrs. Judge Gildersleeve’s
nose. They thought we hadn’t a -white
shirt. They thought we would attend
ith an army blanket thrown careless
life unmolested.
I ordered a new style of gladiole
eight years ago of a man who had his
portrait in the bow 1 of his seed cata
logue. If lie succeeds no better in re
sembling his portrait than his glad
ides did ;n resembling theirs, he must
be a human onion whose presence may
easily be detected at a great distance.
Last year I planted the seeds of
watermelon which I bought of a New
York seedsman who writes war articles
winters and sells garden seeds in the
spring. The portrait of this watermel
on would tempt most any man to climb
a nine rail fence in the dead of night
and forget all else in order to drown
his better nature and his nose in its
cool bosom. People came for miles to
look at the picture of this melon and
went away with a pleasant taste in
their mouth.
The plants were a little sluggish
though I planted in hills far apart each
way in a rich warm loam, enriched by
everything that could make a sincere
watermelon get up and hump itself.
The melons •were to be very large, in
deed, with a centre like a rose. Ac
cording to the picture, these melons
generally grew so large and plenty that
most everybody had to put up side
boards on the garden fence to keep
them from falling over into other
farms and annoying people who had
all the melons they needed. I fought
squash bugs, cut worms, Hessian flies,
chinch bugs, curculio, mange, pip,
drought, drops} 1 , caterpillars and eon
tumely till the latter part of August
when a friend from India came to visit
me. I decided to cut a watermelon in
Old Frederica, on St. Simon’s Island,
was at one time the largest town in
Georgia. It was established as an out
post against the Spaniards of Florida
by Gen. Oglethorpe, but the location
was so advantageous for trade that the
place became a flourishing town. Large
wholesale concerns and warehouses
were established, and trade carried on
with the Indians and trading posts of
the interior was very lucrative. Most
of the buildings were “tabby,” which
is a composition of shells and cement,.
The tabby is almost indestructible. A
large amount of it was used from the
old buildings of Frederica in building
the first lighthouse on St. Simon’s. A
great deal of it was sawed into blocks
and used in building chimneys to the
lwellings on the Island. The battle of
Bloody Marsh,” in which the Ameri-
ican forces under Gen. Oglethrope kill
ed 300 Spaniards, was fought on St. Si
mon’s Island.
ALL GENTLEMEN ATTENDING THIS!
RECEPTION WILL BE EXPECTED " ;
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
C. A. and J. P. R ussell, administrator of J as.
Russell, late of said county, deceased, having
applied for letters of dismission from their said
trust, all persons concerned are required to
show cause in said Court by the first Monday
in June next, if any they can, wiry said ap
plication should not be granted This March
1,1888. W. H. PERSONS,
Prs. fee, *5.00. Ordinary.
TO WEAR A WHITE SIIIRT.
ly over our shoulders. The object was
to let us know that Mrs. Judge Gilder-
sleeve didn’t look upon us,as knowing
what belonged to manners. It was all
right. We didn’t go. As to whether
the Gildersleeve ring came out ahead
opinions differ. Our account of the
party, headed: “Gathering of the Vul
tures,” is still going the rounds of the
press. In that article we proved Judge
Gildersleeve to be an embezzler and a
horse thief, and we adduced positive evi
dence that Mrs. Gildersleeve was a bro
ken down and played-outMortune-teller
who had been compelled to skip from St.
Louis. The Judge called at the Kicker
office next day with a shotgun, but when
we brought out more letters—proofs that
he had served terms in three prisons,
and that Mrs. Judge Gildersleeve still
had the Work House cut on her hair
when she arrived in Arizona—the
Judge didn’t shoot.
The Jackass Hill set next tried to
make us sing small. They got mad be
cause we weren’t puffiing them in every
issue. Col. Ducker had two shillings
worth of repairs made to his mule har
ness, and the Kicker didn’t notice it.
Mrs. Professor Frothingham turned an
old silk dress top-to-bottom, and the
Kicker didn’t come out with a notice
that she had received another $500
dress from Worth. Maj. Hornblower
put a porcelain door-knob on the front
door of his adobe, and we didn’t come
out and list it as one of the enterprise
bound to bring in new settlers and boom
real estate. It was therefore determined
to down us. Lily He Lisle, the red
beaded daughter of the one-leggell
County Clerk, made her debut, and we
were not invited to the blow-out.
was an action intended to break our
heart, and we promptly countered
was upon our tip that the Sheriff went up
about ten o’clock that evening and gath
ered in two bigamists from New En
gland, an embezzler from Ohio and
fugitive from Chicago, all of whom were
looked upon as the cream of society,
and were airing their frills and scallops
at the grand debut.
We are here to stay. We put up our
own shanty with our own hands. We
board and lodge ourself, and we have
not only got the cost of living down fine,
but are getting our white paper so cheap
that we can make money on a list of
thirty subscribers and three pages of
dead ads. We are going to run the
Kicker after our own style, whether it
pleases the bigbugs on Jackass Hill or
the half-starved coyotes in Poverty
Hollow. While we don’t hanker after
£e$al Icoticc:
RERVE TOHIC.
ffissjtjssr*
Nenroaa
lennen, Ac.
u alterative.
SSSSS^BSSS^SSSl
and so overcoming those aiseas*
resulting from impure or impover
ished blood.
LAXATIVE.
Actingmildlvbut surely on the bowel*
it cures habitual constipation, ana
promotes a regular habit. It
ptv» the stomach, and aids
For The NERVOUS
The DEBILITATED
The AGED.
DIURETIC.
In its composition the best and moat
active diuretics of the Materia Medica
are combined scientifically with other
effective remedies for diseases oftho
kidneys. It can be relied on to givo
quick relief and speedy cure.
Hundreds of testimonials have been reeeiTedl
from persons who have used this
remarkable benefit. Send for circulars, firing
fall particulars.
Price $1.00. Sold by DrMf 1 ***-
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Prop’s
BURLINGTON. VT.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA—Coweta County :
H. J. Lasseter, administrator of J. M. S.
Smith, late of said county, deceased, having
applied for letters of dismission from his said
trust, all persons coucerned are required lo
show cause in said Court by the first Monday
in May next, if any they can, why said app'i-
cation should not be granted. This February
•22,1888. VV. H. PERSONS,
Prs. fee, *5.00. Ordinary.
THOMPSON BROS.
NEW NAN, GA.
FINE AND CHEAP FURNITURE
*
}
- AT PRICES-
THAT CANNOT BE BEAT IN THE STATE.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
H. M. Arnold, administrator of Tas. Arnold,
late of said county, deceased,havingapplied to
the Court of Ordinary of said county for let
ters of dismission from his said trust, all per
sons concerned are required to show cause in
this Court by the first Monday in July
next, if any they can, why said application
should not be granted. This March 29,1888.
W. H. PERSONS,
Prs. fee, $5.00. Ordinary.
Letters of Administration.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
Basel Smith having applied to'the Court
of Ordinary o' said county for permanent let
ters of administration on the estate of Senora
J. Puckett, late of said county, deceased, all
persons concerned are required to show cause
:nsaid Court by the first Mom day in May
next, if any they can, why said application
should n<jt be granted. This March 29,1888.
Prs. fee, $3.00.
W.H. PERSONS,
Ordinary.
Order to Perfect Service.
GEORGIA-Coweta County:
Annie Lee Morris) Libel for Divorce, in
vs. > Coweta Superior Court
A. P. Morris. J March Term, 1888.
It being shown to the Court that the de
fendant, A. P. Morris, does not reside in this
county, and that he does not reside within
the State: It is ordered that service be per
fected by publication of this order in The
Hekald and Advertiser, a public gazette
of this State, published at Newnan, twice a
month for two months. S. W. HARRIS.
J. S. C. C. C
A true extract from the minutes of Coweta
Superior Court, March Term, 1888. This
March 19, 1888. Daniel Swint,
Prs. fee, $3.60—tam2m. Clerk.
Order to Perfect Service.
GEORGIA— Coweta County:
E. K. Head) Libel for Divorce, in
vs. > Coweta Superior Court.
W J. Head.) March'‘erm. 1888.
It appearing to the Court from the return of
the Sheriff that the defendant in the above
stated case is not to be found in said county,
a"nd it further appearing that he resides be
yond the limits of this State: It is
ordered that he appear on or before the
next term of this Court and defend, or the
Court will proceed with the ease as in default,
and that this order be published as the law
directs. S. W. HARRIS,
J. bi Li. u. o
A true extract from the minutes of Coweta
Superior Court, March Term, 1888. This
March 19,18*8. - Daniel Swint,
Prs. $4.05—oam4m. Clerk
Order to Perfect Service.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
Charles Elder) Libel for Divorce, in
vs. > Coweta Superior Conr
Maria Elder. S March Term, 1888.
It appearing to the Court by the return of
the Sheriff in the above stated case, that the
defendant does not reside in this State : It is
therefore ordered by the Court that service be
perfected on the defendant by the publication
of this order, once a month for four months
before the next term of this Court, in The
Herald and Advertiser, a newspaper
published in Coweta county, Georgia.
Granted: S. W. HARRIS^
Willcoxon & Wright, attorneys for li
bellant.
A true extract from the minutes of Coweta
Superior Court, March Term, 1888. This
March 17, 1888. Daniel Swint,
Prs. fee $4.11—oarntm.
suits in Walnut, Antique Oak, and
Bis: stock of Chambe
Cherry, and Imitation suites.
French Dresser Suites (ten pieces), from $22.60 to $125.00,
Plush Parlor Suits, $35.00 and upward.
Bed Lounges, $9.00 and upward.
Silk Plush. Parlor Suits, $50.00.
Good Cane-seat Chairs at $4.50 per set.
Extension Tables, 75 cents per foot.
Hat Racks from 25 cents to $25.00.
Brass trimmed Curtain Poles at 50 cents.
Dado- Window Shades, on spring fixtures, very low.
Picture Frames on hand and made to order.
SPLENDID PARLOR ORGANS
Low, for cash or on the installment plan.
Metallic and Wooden Coffins ready at all times, night
day.
THOMPSON BROS.,
NEWNAN, GA.
or *
FURNITURE!
I buy and sell more FURNITURE than all the dealers in
Atlanta combined. I operate fifteen large establishments. I
buy the entire output of factories; therefore I can sell you
cheaper than small dealers. Read some of my prices:
A Nice Plush Parlor Suit, $35.00.
A Strong Hotel Suit, $15.00.
A Good Bed Lounge, $10.00.
A Good Single Lounge, $5.00.
A Good Cotton-Top Mattress, $2.00.
A Good Strong Bedstead, $1.50.
A Nice Rattan Rocker, $2.50.
A Nice Leather Rocker, $5.00.
A Strong Walnut Hat Rack, $7.00.
A Nice Wardrobe, $10.00.
A Fine Glass Door Wardrobe, $30.00.
A Fine Book Case, $20.00.
A Good Office Desk, $10.00.
A Fine Silk Plush Parlor Suit, $50.00.
A Fine Walnut 10-Piece Suit, $50.00.
A Nice French Dresser Suit, $25.00.
1
Clerk.
honor of his arrival. When the proper
moment, had arrived and the dinner
had progressed to the point of fruit,
the tropical depths of my garden gave
up their season’s wealth in the shape of
a low-browed citron about as large and
succulent as a hot-ball.
I have had other similar experiences
and I think we ought to do something
about it if we can. I have planted the
seed of the morning glory and the
moon flower and dreamed at night that
my home looked like a florist’s adver
tisement, but when leafy June came a
bunch of Xorway oats and a hill of corn
were trying to climb the strings nailed
up for the use of my non-resident vines.
I have planted with song and laughter
the seeds of the ostensible pansy and
carnation, only in tears to reap the
bachelor’s button and tluj glistening
foliage of the sorghum plant I have
planted in faith and a deep, warm soil,
with pleasing hope in nre heart and a
dark-red picture on the outside of the
package, only to harvest the low, vul
gar jimsou weed and the night-bloom
ing bull thistle.
Does the mean temperature of the
average rainfall have anything to do
with it ? If statistics are working these
changes they ought to be stopped.
For nay own part, however, I am led to
invitations to eucher parties and church
socials, we don’t propose to take a snub
from any set. While we are willing to
boom the town we don’t propose to sit
up nights to let the outside world know
that some citizen has added a bath-tub
to his dug-out, or that some merchant
has just received a fresh wad of bed
ticking.
There have been hints thrown out by
the Court-house ring that we are to be
starved out. Try it on, gentlemen! M e
are now $15 ahead of the game, have
paper enough on hand for ten weeks,
and our living expenses last week foot
ed up only sixty-seven cents. We came
to stick.
Consumption Surely Cured.
To the Editor—Please inform your
readers that I have a positive remedy
for the above named disease. By its
timely use thousands of hopeless ca
have been permanently
be glad to send two ’
dy free to any of .
have consumption if they will send me
their express and post office address.
Respectfully. T. A. SLOCU3I. M. C.,
181 Pearl street, New York.
Sheriff’s Sales for May.
GEORGIA—Coweta Count-y:
Will be sold before the Court-house door in
Newnan, said county, within the legal hours
of sale, on the first Tuesday in May, 1888,
the following described property, to-wit:
Sixty acres of land, more or less, in the
northeast corner of lot of land No. 240, hound
ed on the south and east by J. T. Hearn (now
J. W. Kelly,) west by land of R. Hearn, (now
E- F. Hearn,) north by lot 241. Also, forty
acres of land, more or less, lying in the south
east corner of lot No. 241 and bounded as fol
lows: on the soutn by lot No. 240, east by lot
No. 16, north and west by lands of J. W. Kel
ly. and being measured so that said 40 acres
will lie broadside the northeast fourth of lot
No. 240; containing in all one hundred (100)
acres, more or less, and all lying in the orig
inal fifth but now the seventh district of
Coweta county, Georgia. Levied on as the
property of J. W. Kelly to satisfy a mortgage
fi la issued from Coweta Superior Court in
favor ot Hutcheson & Mosely vs. said J. V,.
Kelly. This Marct 29,1888. Frs. lee $6.ol.
Also, at the same time and place, fifty acres
of land, more or less, lying and being origi
nally in the fifth hut now the seventh district
of Coweta county, Georgia, in the southwest
corner of lot of laud No. 16, hounded on the
east bv lands at one time owned by S. F.
Steed, south by J. T. Hearn, (but now by J. y .
Kelly,) north oyJ. W. Kelly, and west by
lot of laud No. 241; and also twenty ;20) acres
of land, more or less, being twenty acres in
I respectfully invite everybody to examine my stock and get
my prices before buying your Furniture. I have the finest as
well as the cheapest Furniture in Atlanta. Write for prices.
A. G. RHODES,
85 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga,
MICKELBERRY & McCLENDON,
WHOLESALE GROCERS,
PRODUCE AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
NO. 15 SOUTH BROAD ST., ATLANTA, GA.
sixty acres being in the southeast corner of lot
of land No 24’. said sixty acres being bound
ed on the south by kit of land No. 240,on the
t bv lot No. 1H, on the north and west by
' 1 lands ot J. W. Kelly. Levied on as the prop-
— — mortgage n.
Court in
\V. Kelly.
Hay, Oats, Corn, Meal, Bran, Stock Feed,
Onions,.Feathers, Cabbage, Irish Potatoes
Dressed and Live Poultry, .Meat, .Flour,
Lard, N. O. Syrup, Dried Beef, Cheese,
FRUITS AND ALL KINDS OF PROVISIONS AND COUNTRY PRODUCE.
Consignments solicit ed. Quick sales and prompt remittances. Good, drv, rat-proof stor
age. Excellent facilities for the care of perishable goods.
Judge Tolleson Kirby, Traveling Salesman.
nd place." two
icr-s of lan;:
Every man !v.\* a bag hanging C.-Ck*
him, in which he puts his neigh' ■:'*
faults, and another behind him m
which he puts his own.
Can’t Sleep nights is the complaint of.
thousands suffering from Asthma, Con
sumption, Coughs, etc. Did you. ever
try Acker’s English Remedy? It is the
best preparation known for ail Lung
Troubles. Sold on positive guarantee at
Hie., 50c. Fcrsale by W. P. Broom,
Newnan, Ga.
AI~o, at the >;ime nine
hundred two and a half
or less, situat in ot >* .la, urn -
enth forigir.a ly sixth; district 01 Cowet::
.. ,-y..A1 s<*>. ss.r.tuecut•-*;aer:-sof :i ei s
iot or Stephen Hearn’s old place. Also, oi --
fourth 'southwest) of lot No. 17, containing
.-,a acres, more or less. Also, west half of lot
, , tabling 1 ;res, m.05 - ess, in
. •- it:: district Cow -ta county. < :
[I }03 acres, more or less. _All of Jot No. id |
mention . - • ■ ic - in th
: s • a he-s - :' corner,; ana the ] art nf_S:ephen j
, .:,•>, f; ptace beiongs-to J. Yd. Kelly and ’
1 ,1 tfi • said described nremiso belong:; 1
j to said t.W. Kelly and K >. Kelly. Levied on
: ,s ; ie pro, ertv of J. 'V. Kelly and E. 8. Kelly ;
to sati-fv two mortgage fi. ias, issued from
> >"oveta * Superior Court, one in favor of
I Hv.trhe on A Moseley, and one in favor of A.
| Hutcheson & Co., versus said J. 'V . Kedy
I and E. S. Kelly. This March 29, 18»8. Prs.
i tee $6,25 GEO. H. CARMICAL, Sheriff.
ITCf~ References
generally.
Gate City National Bank, and merchants and bankers ox Atlanta
Insure your houses against
Tornadoes and Cyclones,
with
H. C. FISHER & CO., Ag’ts.,
Newnan, Ga.
The safest Companies and
lowest rates.
rr.
Cert? CibrurtisemcuU.
TO ADVERTISERS,
A hst of u.100 newspapers divided in STATES
r aper_ _______ ...
AND SECTIONS will be sent on aopliertion—
PEEK.
To those who want their advertising to pay
we can offer no better medium for thorough
and effective work than the various sections
of our Seubct Local Ltst.
GEO. P. ROWELL & CO.,
Newspaper Advertising Bureau,
10 Spruce Street, New York.
S^Bring your Job Work to Mc
Clendon & Co., Newnan, Ga.
.V*U-V. -