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rn« I'aiMUr. Pretty Ornemlly Acres
Tll«t One Miuul.l lluy tlru 1'itintlng.
WhtcU I’Irene lllm—SmlamiMit le Ca
pable of Ctl111Vret Ion ami Will Improve.
'•Horv do people buy picture?" Colin
, Campbell Cooper repeated. "Well, I
suppose the majority of collectors con-
suit, the advice of a dealer or tome ar
tist, and yet there are those, not pre
tentions connoisseurs, either, that know
a pood thing when they sec it. ami
evince unusual wisdom in their pur
chases, To some, however, seif reliunce
In investing on a large trale iti paint
ings him proved rather n disastrous ex
periment Tlie other day a collection
made by a man thirty or forty yeans
ago was sold. There w is hardly half a
dozen good things In it, simply because
ho bought and he did not know wlmt he
was getting.
•'Art in lid* country is gradually wak
ing up. I'aril a ps the Centennial might
lie called llm American Heiniissance.
Wo know liilinitely more nbout art than
our grandparents ilhl, nml with oppor
tunities Increasing from year to year it
la fair to suppose our children will aluiw
a atlll more marked Improvement In
taste. Greater facilities for traveling
have done much to bring about a cliinige
In our little world, and the tendency of
onr art la rather toward thn cosmopoli
tan tlmn provincial. Naturally, time is
required to odneuto the publlo tuste
along artistic linos.
“I think jieople will buy more pictures
when they umleratnnd painting Is not an
accomplishment merely a pleasure to
the eye, but that it is a part of educa
tion, of civilization. It will require
time to realize this. Exhibitions ure
visited and the majority like to look at
pictures with nu admiration ruthur
a iheinornl. When the picture la out of
ght the impression Is gone. With a
general diffusion of art paintings will
be bought not sololy because they ap-
poal to the senses, to personality, lint
for their artistia qualities; not simply
, liooauso the subject illustrated le rather
a pretty idea, but booanso the work is
technically a good art production."
Stephen Ferris soldi “The world is full
of good plotures to be bought for rea
sonable prices, but unfortunately many
thousauds of dollars, many fortnnos, ure
epont for nonsense, whllo good work re
mains unsought and unbought. Com
mon sense is happy capital in picture
baying as in nay other hnslnoss. One
enn hardly provide a set number of rules
to bo observed in buying. Many books
havo been wrltton on inilitury sclouco,
yot tho world has seen comparatively
few fiuo generals, Judgment rules tho
world, and in picturo buying ono porsou
is tnoro successful than another because
a spirit of superior intelligence dictates
his purohaeo.!."
Thomas Bakins would liko to have
people buy pictures that please them
and appeal to their taste. “Tho major
ity are afraid to buy wlmt they like;
they must have some one elso’e advice.
Woll, tf they start with bad art, por-
hapa before lolig thoy will come to tho
good. Let people buy wlmt thoy want."
“1 have not thought muoli ubout buy
ing pictures," snid Mr. Frederick Wnngli,
"We artists ure more uhiotly concerned
In trying to soil them. It is the privi
lege of (lie artist to paint plotures which
appeal to people; which they understand
and want to have for their own. But
he should havo a high etnudard, and he
cannot aucueed If he lower it- to cator to
the populur tuste. Ho is fortunate If in
working uut his Ideas he pleases the
public end yet does not lose Ills indo-
S mdenco nor forfeit hts originality.
is work may ho appreciated by large
numbers, but It is always certain that
some few will recognize Ills endeavor
and will wnnt to buy it.
“In the Old World art is accessible to
all. The Luxembourg and the Louvre
are filled permanently with the master
pieces of all ages, the best that have
been done. There, too, the spirit of
onion is Btrong among artists. They
gather together aud talk of everything
pertaining to the art world, consequent
ly they live entirely In a congenial cli
mate and they grow and develop in nu
essentially art atmosphere. Impression
ism? Yes, this is the great word nowa
days. Many have an ides that it is a
synonym for vaguely treated and par
tially unfinished pictures. Impression
ism claims to record facts as observed
by the artist. Sincerity to nature is
its aim. After all, there is nothing
so beautiful as troth, and the nearer
we get to it, as we find it in nature, the
better artists we are.”
“Many Americans buy pictures," Mr.
F. de B. Richards responded, “because
they have accumulated money, and
pictures are the proper thing to have.
Generally they know very little about
it, and a dealer does the work for them.
If people purchase pictures to flatter
their vanity, let them spend big sums
and buy high priced pictures. If they
buy for pleasure, let them buy what in-,
lerests (hem. 1 remember meeting Ed
win Forrest after a sale. ‘I’ve bought a
picture,' said he. ‘They told me not to
do It, ljecanse very likely it is not origi
nal. But it pleases me, and 1 should
buy it if it were by somebody 1 never
beard tell of.' A picture pleasing to the
eye 1s a source of education for the time
being at least. Adverse criticism may-
lead a man to scrutinize it and stndy it
more closely than if he had bought one
be did not like half so well."
“I think I should he Inclined to bay
what I liked personally,” was the opin
ion of Edwin Swift Batch, “not forget
ting that the pictorial qualities should
not be lost sight of in the desire to get a
pleasing subject. Good handling, the
proper placing of values and meritorious
color, allied to a sympathetic subject,
will tend to keep onr interest in a paint
ing alive.”—Philadelphia Times.
The oldest mine, which is now worked
as a copper mine, is in the Mnsashi
province of Japan. It was opened 1,183
vaar* "<»n,
THE BENEFIT8 OF READING.
An English Convict Ran Across n Work
on Chemistry Which Gave Him Ideas.
Good and expensive scientific works
are to lie found in a prison library,
and the perusal by illiterate men, as
tho bulk of convicts may be said to
be, leads very often to strange and
curious rciiults that aptly illustrate
the truth uf the poet's axiom of a
little knowledge being a dangerous
dfing. I had occasion once to entei
prisoner's cell and search it in his
presence. To my surprise I found
the man's library hook was a large
and excellent work on chemistry.
The convict was extremely ignorant,
and quite incapable of reading in
telligently so abstruse a work.
"Have you rend this book?" I in
quired of him.
“Ycssir, I’ave,”he replied proudly.
“And what were you reading about
last, Jones?"
“About hair, guv'nor.”
"Well, what does the author say
about hair?”
“Ho says as 'ow hair is composed
of two kiuds of gin.”
“Gin!" I exclaimed in amazement
at this astounding statement. "Well,
Jones," I continued, "that fully ac
counts for the authorities keeping
your liair closely cropped.”
“The hair I'm a-talkln about,"
Jones lucidly explained, “is not tho
'air ov tho 'end, but the hair wo
breathe. You bloomin screws,” he
added, "think yer know hev'rythink,
hut when it comes to the p'int yer
don't know nothink."
"Go on, Jones," I said, highly
unused, “What about the gin?"
“Hatmospheric hair," Jones pro
ceeded, dogmatically, “is composed
of two kinds of gin—hoxygin and
nitrogin. Now listen, guv’nor, and
learn something useful to teach yer
kids, Hoxygin is a much stronger
and moro intoxicntln spirit than ni
trogin; so much so, in fact, that
nachure makes use of the bloomin
nitrogin to dilute the bloomin hoxy
gin."
"I think, Jones,” I said, preparing
to leave the cell, "you lincl bettor
read your chemistry over again be
fore airing your scientific knowl
edge."
"It’s my private ’pinion," Jones re
marked sagely, “that them 'ero
scientific toffs hlndulge in a glass or
two of that- most intoxicatin hoxygin
now and ngen; and that’s what
makes ’em so bloomin clever."—
London Tit-Bits,
Ilooksolllng Is llimlness.
Tho publisher anxiously awaits the
literary wares whioli will satisfy tho
demand of the moment. It is by
selling them that he lives, and con
sequently he wishes to buy them.
But still he will buy them on the
lowest terms possible, in order to
make the highest profit, for he is a
merchant. The histories and novels,
the epics and lyrics, tho essays and
philosophical uystems, are merchan
dise. If l’lato and Shakespeare are
famous, their fame alone makes their
moi'chimdlso merchantable. But if
they uro unknown, the marketable
value of their merchandise must he
tested by the current public taste.
Con we fairly select one class of
traders and insist that they shall he
philanthropists? '
Dealers in chinaware, for instance,
may we justly require that they
shall buy at tho highest prices all the
howls wo paint, or offer them on
commission, and pay us large annual
profits because docalcomaiiia is an
art so olovatlng and rofined and
most of the artists are so poor?—
Georgo William Curtis in Harper’s,
The Jupautie Hell.
The Japanese language ha! no
equivalent for our word “hell.” but
has the word "jigoku" instead. ,Ti-
goku consists of, first, eight immense
hot hells, ranging one beneath the
other in tiers. Each of these hells
has sixteen additional hells outside
its gates, liko so many antecham
bers, so that there are in all 136 hot
hells. Second—Thero nro eight large
cold hells, each with its sixteen ante-
hells, making the some number of
cold that there ore of hot hells. Be
sides these 272 hot and cold hells
for offenders of the common sort,
the wily Japs have twenty mam
moth "hells of utter darkness,” into
which will he consigned the spirits
of children who take the name of
Dai Butsa, or Great Buddha, in vain.
—Boston Globe.
Few Aeeldenta on English Railways.
The Englishman who, following
Charles Francis Adams, declared that
the safest place in which to spend an
hour or two is an express train on one
of the main railways, has had hia idea
confirmed by the fact that last year only
five passengers were killed on all the
railways of the United Kingdom, where
as in the streets of the metropolis alone
147 deaths and 5,784 personal injuries
resulted from accidental circumstances
connected with the vehicular traffic.—
Boston Transcript.
Paleface Grooms Wanted.
In the Indian camp on the Grand
Rondo river are seventeen marriageable
Indian girls, some of whom want white
men for husbands and shun the idea of
marrying one of their own race. The
father of one of these girls offers an in
ducement of 200 head of good horses to
some young white man who will marry
his daughter. The old Indian states
he must be a young man of good char
acter and address and able to provide
his wife a good home.—Asotin (Wash.)
Sentinel.
EROS COMES TO STAY.
Once a fowler, young and artless.
To the quiet grconwoqd name;
Full of skill whs he and heartless
In pursuit of feathered gaiuu;
And betimes he chanced to see
Croc perching in a tree.
"Wlmt strange bird In that, 1 wosderf*
Thought the >*<•«» r h.and spread his snare.
Eros, chuckling at the tdundev.
Gayly scampered hero and there.
Do bis best, the simple clod
Could not snare l ho agllo god.
Blubbering, to hU aged master
• Went tho fowler In dismay.
And confided his disaster
With that curious bird that day;
"Master, bast thou ever heard
Of so 111 disposed a bird?"
"Heard of him? Aha, most trulyl"
Quoth tho master with a smile:
"And fliou, too. shall know him duly.
Thou nrt young, hut bide awhile.
And old Eros will not fly
From thy presence by and by.
"For when thou art somewhat older
That Name Eros thou didst see,
More familiar grown and ladder,
Slii'll become acquaint wiih then:
And when Eros comes thy way.
Murk my word he come* to stay."
—Kugeliu Field in Chicago N’ewa.
No Use for a Circulation Liar.
A London insurance titan said yes
terday: "We have in London one
of the most unique newspapers in
tho world; for, while it is published
every day in the year except Sun
days, a copy of it is never sold or
circulated. The Evening'Telegraph
of London is issued each afternoon
from the office of The Daily Tele
graph, which paper is a morning
daily issued bIx times a week, and
has tho largest circulation of any
paper in England, and with one ex
ception, the largest in the world.
"The proprietors of The Daily
Telegraph, in printing the evening
edition, which is copyrighted, do so
merely in order to protect them
selves in the right to tho ubo of the
name in case they ever care to issue
an evening edition, and also to pre
vent any ono eke from starting such
a sheet and gaining the great advan
tage which the use of the title, Even
ing Telegraph, would give."—Phila
delphia Record.
VftUe Ilnlr In Elisabeth'* Time.
Queen Elizabeth had eighty wigs
in her collection, and her cousin,
Mary Queen of Scots, hod “os many
as a hundred," and among the incon
gruous presents made her while con
fined a prisoner in gloomy Loch-
leven, previous to her being behead
ed, wigs were numerous I Gentle
men who particularly wishod to
please their lady friends presented
them with wigs of tho latest shade
of hair and newest style of coiffur
ing. Fancy a gentleman of today
presenting his sweetheart the new
est thing in ventilated bangs or the
last idea in back hair.—Washington
Star.
Good Connection*.
Patchem—I hear that the executed
man was quite well connected.
Slashem—Quite right The elee-
trio circuit was very complete.—
Kate Field’s Washington.
A Wonderful Carpet.
There will be ou view in the after
noons of tho next few (leys wlmt may
probably witliont any exaggeration be
called the finest Persian carpet in the
world. This is the Holy Carpet of the
Mosque ofArdebil in Persia—a carpot
which for size, beauty, condition aud
authenticated age 1b entirely unrivaled
by any known example.
Tho dimensions of the carpet are 84
. feet 6 inches by 17 feet 6 inches. The
ground of the body of tho fabric is of a
rich bine, covered with a floral trneery
of exquisite delicacy and freedom of
treatment. A center mednlllnn of pulo
yellow terminates on ita onter edge In
sixteen minaret shaped points, from
which spring sixteen cartouches—font
green, four rod and eight cream; and
from two of these again are, as it were,
suspended and hanging in the direction
of tlje respective ends of the carpet, two
of the sacred lamps of the mosque. But
the most extraordinary dotnil of all la
the pale oreom cartouche placed within
the border at the top end of the carpet,
bearing ita inwoven inscription, whioli
is thns translated; “I have no refuge in
the world other than thy threshold.
My head has no protection other than
thy porchway. The work of the slave
of this Holy Place, Muksond of Kashan,
in the year 043.”
Now 043 of the Hegira is 1533 of our
era; so that the carpet was actually in
existence, in the mosque of the sacred
city of the Suffavian dynasty, at the
time when Queen Elizabeth sent An
thony Jenkinson on an embassy to Shah
Tamasp. It need not be said that carpets
thns signed and dated are extremely
rare, and are historically important as
forming the points de repere for the
students of oriental art.—London Times.
The Chiosgo.Falr Is going to be the
largest representation of fine arts and
national trades displays the world has
ever seen.
The projeot Is one of the most
enormous ever put on foot, and its
success will redound more to the honor
and oredlt of the American people
than any other enterprise which has
ever been put on foot within the
States.
The Fair will cost over 332,000,000,
more than twice as much as expended
upon nny other Exposition the world
has ever seen. Every branch of every
line of American industry and art will
present a full and artistic display, in
which nearly all the nations of the
earth will present national displays in
chargeof natives in costume. In other
words, small parts ofjevery nation will
be transplanted to America to interest
and Instruct Americans.
Only about half of the necessary
capital has been raised. Congress has
before It n $5,000,000 appropriation,
which would be more in the nature of
a loan tlmn anything else, ns prollts
on the Fair will enable the directors to
reimburse nil subscribers, and yet
there Is great opposition, especially on
the part of Southern Congressmen, to
the appropriation being made.
By all means, extend fills aid to the
World's Fair at a time when It is so
muoh needed. An enterprise in which
the glury and ltunor of American peo
ple is wrapt up, and whioli will do
more for their material progress than
ought elso they could do, most not fail,
TUB OAU.AN'l' ROMAN.
The Largest Aerolite.
What is believed to be the largest
aerolite ever known to have fallen is ly
ing in the Caspian sea, a short dis
tance from the peninsula of Apsheron.
The aerolite made a terrific noise as it
rushed through the air with incredible
speed, and the white hot mass made a
light that illmninated the country and
sen about for a great distance. Those
who saw it were were struck dumb with
consternation. When it struck the
water immense clonds of steam arose,
and the hissing could be heard fora
great distance. Huge masses of water
were thrown upward, and the sight to
those who were not frightened was a
most beautiful one.
So enormous is the aerolite that it
projects twelve feet above the water,
and save for its fused black crust, which
gives it the appearance of having been
varnished, it has every appearance of be
ing one of the usual rocky formations
met with along the coast. Scientists
are deeply interested in the phenomenon,
and a number of them are making
preparations to visit the peninsula to
examine the aerolite,—Cable Letter.
i COI.DMRIAN EXPOSITION.
1VJE 0O WOT tVAWT TUB 111!Pl'H-
1,1 CAN MACHINE.
The Constitution, which Imd an in
terview with Capt. Hobbs, through
Frank Stanton, who was at Cumber
land a day or two ago, compliments
the gallant old Roman highly ns fol
lows :
“Chairman Hobbs, ol the Democratic
Executive Committee In Dougherty, is
one of your strong-willed, uncompro
mising Democrats. An old soldier,
who left a limb In the war, he is a hero
amongthe veterans of the Confederacy
wherever he Is known; and since the
war he has done great service to the
State in the Democratic ranks. Jlr.
Hobbs Is a genial gentleman, a man of
strong physique and personal magnet
ism. mid Is,always ready to talk poli
tics from a Democratic standpoint. In
answer to a question: ‘What is the
outlook for the Democrats In the Sec
ond district?’ he said, n few days since;
‘It will take hard flghtln g to whip the
fight, but we have been fighting hard
all along, and will continue on tlint
line! Ben Russell lias been a power
for good In.our,district; he has worked
day and night for the success of Democ
racy, und the people will stand to him
limn for man. lV’e are going to whip
the enemy.” 1
An article from Washington which
reviews the rccqrd of the People’s
Party candidate, makes some startling
disclosures in regard to the blackness
of that gentleman’s record. He intro
duced, in two Congresses, a bill to pay
Union soldiers the difference between
the depreciated currency paid them
fur pensions, and gold. Quotations
from his speeches made In Congress
show him to be a South-lmter of 'the
Billy Chandler order, and he took
every occasion to vaunt the bloody
shirt before those upon whom lie de
lighted to cast Ills bitter aspersions,
Not only that, but he has denounced
Democracy, in unmistakable terms, as
a “hungry, rebellious, man-hating,
woman-selling gang,” nnd other
terms as hateful to true South
ern manhood. In the face of
all this we do not believe It possible
for men to leavo the Democratic party,
whatever their hostility to some few
of Its principles to support a black
guard and a ruffian. Nor even do we
understand how a man with true
Southern Instincts can offer their sup
port to a political demagogue nnd
turncoat who so thoroughly hates and
despises the loyal section which they
represent. We are glad he has been
shown up In hts true colors. It still
further strengthens the solid old De
mocracy of the South.
Everybody Vies Tobacco In India.
It is not, as among the English, that
only some men smoke tobacco, hut with
rare exceptions in India all natives, men
and women, indulge in this weed in
some form or other.—Chambers' Jour
nal.
Probably the estimate of the earth’s
population for the year 1891, made by a
learned German statistician, is the most
nearly accurate of any yet made—1,480,-
ooo.ono
Thu Hkkald is indebted to Mr. J. S.
Davis, the junior (Chautauqua) brother
and perhnps best beloved of all of the
host of friends that Dr. W. A. Duncan
has in Albany, for a basket of delicious
grapes that came from Dr. Duncan’s
White Hill place yesterday. There
were three varieties of the grapes, the
Delawares, the Niagras and the Con-
eords. All were delicious and showed
beyond question that these popular
varieties of grapes can he Cultivated to
perfection here in Southwest Georgia
Dr. Dunoan’s vineyard on White Hill
is yet quite young, but there is an im
mense amount of the fruit for ship
ment this season. The grapes from
White Hill can be purchased at.the
store of Capt. Y. G. Rust, on Broad
street, and none better are to be had in
the world.
Written for the ALBANY DAtl.Y ncRAl.n.
The most splendid political machine
the country lias ever known is named
the Republican party. Arising In an
emergency In one section in behalf of
a cause ohamploned by some of the
ablest of American statesmen, with
followers whose zeal and honesty nnd
intelligence could not well he ques
tioned, after a life of thirty years it
merely merits the encomium pf being
a splendid machine. The name of
party nnd the claim of principles Is
simply an error. Confronting this
machine Is n party which, whatever its
mistakes, has ever been true to Demo
cratic principles—a party of the
Union, which, when the Union divided,
of course found itself divided. This
which is cast upon it ns a shame is
upon its escutcheon an honor. It was
a party of the whole country, and
when the country divided the party
divided, nnd when the country united
the party united. The Episcopal
church was united throughout the
country, nml when the country divided
the Episcopal church divided, and
when tlie country united the Episco
pal church united. Was that bit of
history nny stigma upon the Episco
pal church? That Democrats fought
valiantly on both sides proves that
there was Democracy on both sides,
and tlie malicious cunning of Repub
lican journals nnd platforms that cre
ated a prejudice against the Demo
cratic party North because of the
course of tlie Southern people, many
of whom were Democrats, is an illus
tration of n remorseless machine rather
tlmn a patriotic party of the Republic.
For twenty-five years the so-called
Republican party 1ms lived for itself—
for the profit and prejudice of Its man
agers. There lias been little legisla
tion called party legislation that the
country would not have been better off
without. It 1ms descended, from a
party of public-spirited, pure-minded,
even though fanatical members, to
merely a machine for keeping hot sec
tlonal animosities and for rewarding
its followers with the spoils of victory
FOr twenty-five years it has imd no
higher nlm than to abuse nnd villlfy a
conquered people. It has used every
art nnd skill to misrepresent them at
home nnd abroad. It Ims done every
thing possible to stigmatize the silent
dend, who nobly died in vnin. There
is in history no worse record of mean
ness-party meanness. Looking over
the legislation of tile Republican ma
chine lor a quarter of a century, and
it lncks the stamp of conservative
patriotism. It is now a merely lifer
cenary organization, living upon the
vnior of tlie past, and addressing itself
to old prejudices and to the most
selfish interests of one clnss of tile
people.
The leaders of the Republican party
to-day, as a class, are far inferior to
those Who founded nml swayed the
party thirty years ago. Compared (o
tlie Democratic party as to age, it is n
youngster, Uut it was once robust and
grand, and now seems, in Its earlier
attributes, to have largely gone to
seed. It has no longer the vigor of its
youth, but that of mere party greed,
oliiceholdiiigand personal aggrandize
ment. Tlie Third Party movement, in
every guise, is keeping this political
waif to retain power it holds only to
abuse. Tlie Third Party movement in
the South cannot be in harmony with
Southern interests, hut must be a dls-
regarder of the South’s best interests.
We do not want the Republican ma
chine over us locally in the South.
We do not want it to legislate for us
at Washington.. We do not want it in
the White House. Dkmocrat.
The jolly Georgia editors are now
on their way to Mexico and the West
by a good jug full.
THE ONLY ONE EVER PRINTED,
®»* You Find Ibo Word?
There is a 8-inoh display advertise
ment in this paper, this week, whioli
has no two words alike except one
word. The same is true of each new
one appearing each week, from the
Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house
places a “Crescent” on everythingthey
make and publish. Look for it, send
them the name of the word, and they
will return you book.
■ N THE IttHfAL
There have been many comment
late oil the supposition that the 1’! _
Party might carry one or twQ State;
in which case it would very probab]| _
throw the eleotion of President inti ’
the House and thgt of Vloe-Preside»
into the Senate. !
Pursuant to the above the New Yot||
Herald has the following: \
The electoral college now oonslst,,
of 444 votes. A majority necessary
elect is 228. If both Mr. Cleveland ant j
Mr. Harrison fail to get that nunjltw '
and assuming that the Third Patti
candidate will not get it, there will b,h,,
no election by the people, and it wlluj
devolve upon the House to choose ; J
President from these three candidate^
The voting in the House will be bj
States and not by members. The rep
resentation of each State will have out
vote. The one Representative u
Idaho will have a voice equal to tli,.
thirty-four Representatives of New'
York. A majority of the States, 23 ot
tlie 44, is necessary to a choice.
But tlie.people of the oountry wil'
submit to no such state of affair:,
This Third Party supposition is iner*
barren speculation, and there is nor
even a thinking man in tho countrj
who believes that they will get a single
vote in the electoral college. 1
Tlie people may rest assured that ns?'!
it has been heretofore It will be this
time, and that when Cleveland is
elected President It will be in the
usual way, and not by the House of .
Representatives. '
Two lepers, In the last stages of the
dreadful disease, have been found at
Boise City, Iowa. It,
Albany people go away In summer!
for pleasure alone. They don’t need'
to go off for their health.
BUSINESS INSTITUTE!-
whs
Bookkeeping, Photographo, Telegra- last c
C , taught by experience teaohers,
ms easy. Call on or address,
G. W. H. STANLEY, ,
129 Broad street, Thomasville, Gail
1-aO-Oin.
CITATION-
STATE OF GEORGIA, I
Oououkrty County, j
To All Whom It Mny Concern:
Mi-8. C. E. Odom, widow of Z, J. Odom, de.
censed, having, indue form, applied to me for
the appointment of appraisers to §ct apa.. for .
her a sum necessary for her support and main,
tenanco for tho space of twelve months out of
tlie estate of Xebulou J. Odom, deceased, ami I
also to set apart for tho use of said Mi’s. C. K £1
Odom a suiliciont amount of household fund- jpl
turc; and said appraisers having been up.
pointed, and having filed in my office their re
turn, assessing nnd setting apart the sum of
Ono Thousand Dollars as a year’s support, this
is to cite all and singular, tlie creditors nnd
next of kin of said X. J. Odom, to ho ot my office
on tho first Monday in August, 1802, nnd show
ennse, if any they can, why said provision
should not he admitted to record, and stand as
judgment of this Court.
Witness, mv hand and official signature this.
Istday of July, 181)2. SAMUEL W. SMITH,
Jy7-4t Ordinary Dougherty County, Gn.
CIATI0N.
A DITlf NINTH ATRIX
DISMISSION.
- •
8TATE OF GEOltGIA, DoUttUBHTY County,
Miss KIlnThorn, administratrix of the estate ol
Jnsoiih E. Thom, deceased, having Hied her up
plication in this offico to be be dismissed from
said trust, this is to notify nil porsons concerned
to show cause on or before tho first Monday in
October next, why snid application should not
be granted.
Witness my hand nnd official Bignnturo tins
0th day of .July, 181)2.
SAMUEL W. SMITH,
JyS-td Ordinary Dougherty County, Go.
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