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■IDE HOI JOURNAL,
The Great Farm* Industrial and Stock
- Journal ofthe South
ONE
YEAR FOR $2,75
CASH IN ADVANCE.
Sample copies of the Southern -Culti
vator will be mailed FBEE on applica-
tioii to Sja P. Habbbson & Go& Drawer
8, Atlanta, Ga. • ‘
yoB woi-i.12:
JfSATLT EXECUTED
—AT THIS OFFICE.
A- C KILEY>
Attorney at Law*
FOET VALLEY, GA.
(Office over Dow Law Bank.)
i Practice in the counties of the Macoii
! Circuit; in Macon and Talor counties
< aiui in the Federal Courts.
JOHN H. HODGES, Proprietor,
Devoted, to Home Interests and Culture.
TWO DOLLAHS A Year ia Advance.
XVII.
PEKRY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MAECH 3S 1887.
no. m
REPAIK ttOBKi
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Sewing Ma
chines, Guns.FistoIs; Lacks, and Furni
ture cf allkinds repaired in best style and
promptly. Gold Bings made to order.-
Price and quality of Work guaranteed td
give satisfactioh. Beepectfully,
F. A. Jobson.
Sept. SO—if. Perry, G«.
RenGW your subscription row.
5
VsTifis U;LLd iriisli
Editing With Scissors.
Wealthy Men Here and.Abroad.
Psat Living—h -W.'t'Ks Kaiiaaf—Hard Drink.
ItB-l’tor .Tealonsy—
Policica". .Pi./ — > i»!oat I'assiana
Thu iv.■ 3toney.
Philadelphia CaU.
Th e above remark is frequently j
Demorest’sfor April.
Free England and Democratic
Air Navigation.
Demorest’s for April.
Among the securities to be dealt
A Freak of Nature.
Albert Cotton; in Waterloo News.
In the early history of south
western Pennsylvania, in Somer
The alarming disease of this
country is nervous debility and
prostration. It goes under
luany names but it is essen
tially tlie same cpmp]:v:.i.
Hospitals and private institu
tions for nervous patients are
crowded. The average of life
in the United States is de
creasing every year. Sudden
deaths from nervous collapse
among our business, profess
ional and public men are so
frequent as scarcely to excite
remark. The majority of sui
cides, committed without ap
parent reason, or under so-called
“depression of spirits,” are
really prompted by nervous
prostration, which is a fruitful
source of insanity and crime
wifii all their grief and horror.
These facts are startling.
They threaten the very life of
the nation. They assail the
springs of' its power and pros
perity. They wreck manhood’s
strength and woman’s useful
ness and beauty.
Every one should know the
causes. What are they ? The
answer is easy and terribly
plain: Our vicious personal
h abits; our careless and lawless
eating and drinking; the in
tense mental and physical strain
arising from our mad race after
money, position and influence;
the fears and straggles of pov
erty; the use of narcotics and
stimulants; our fashion of.
turning day into night and
night lido day; and, briefly,
our desperate willingness to
pay any price for an hour’s
pleasure or success. So we
' burn life’s candle at both ends,
and All the lunatic asylums
and the graveyards.
The disease from wliich we
suffer and die is, in plain Eng
lish, Nervous Jjyspejjsia, as it
is seated in the Nerves and in
the organs of Digestion, Assim
ilation and Nutrition. Healthy
digestion being impeded or des
troyed, the whole body, nerves
included, is literally starved;
even when there is no emaci
ation to tell the sad story.
Nervous prostration sends
out its warnings:—headache
in the morning ; a persistent
dull heaviness or aching at the
base of the brain; wakefulness;
] css of appetite and disgust with
food; loss of mental energy and
interest in ordinary duties and
business; restlessness and anx
iety without any assignable
reason; eructations; bad
breath; foul mucous on the
teeth; occasional giddiness;
palpitation of the heart; sai-
lowness of the skin; coated
tongue and gradual failure of
strength and ambition.
- The remedy is a total aban
donment of the habits and cus
toms which cause the disease
in each individual case, and the
use of Shaker Extract of Hoots
(Seigebs Syrup) to cure the
mischief already done. This
g reat remedy, prepared by the
haker Community of Mt. Leb
anon, N. Y., is especially adapt
ed to. eradicate Nervous Dys
pepsia. To do this it acts
directly and gently but power
fully upon the disordered stom
ach, liver and kidneys, restor
ing their tone and vigor, pro
moting the secretion of bile, ex
pelling waste matters from the
system,and purifying the blood.
Upon the nervous system
Shaker Extract(SeigeVs Syrup)
acts as a safe and wholesome
anodyne without the slightest
narcotic effect,-and then leaves
the: nerves to regain their nat-
ural tone and strength through,
its wonderful influence upon
the function of nutrition.
It is safe to say more nerv
ous dyspeptics have been re
stored by it from the depths
of miseiy to a fresh, enjoyment
of life and labor than by any
or all other forms of treatment
combined.
made in connection with newspa- America lead the rest of the world in for the Consolidated Stock, Ex-
pers, and is too frequently meant in very rich men. The free play change of New York are those of get county, and not far from the
as a slur. On the contrary, under of modern industries and the ab- ’ the National Aerial Navigationj Maryland linel an emigrant pitch-
proper circumstances, it should sence of a paternal government
be regarded as a compliment of a, favor the growth of enormous for-
high character. The same paper'tunes in the English-speaking
may be ably edited with the pen J countries. Outside of the Jewish
and miserably edited with the; bankers, such as the Rothschilds,
scissors. A mistaken idea pre- j a nd Herr Krupp, the great gun-
vails that the work of the latter is j maker, there are very few million-
mere chiid’s play, a sort of hit-or- ] a j r es on the Continent of Europe,
miss venture, requiring hardly any j n p rus3 i a , Herr Krupp has an
brains and still less judgment; that income of 5,000,000 marks, about
the promiscuous and voluminous j $1,250,000 of our money, on which
clippings are sent in batches to he pays $37,000 tax to the govern-
the foreman, and with that the ed
itor’s duty ends and that of the
foreman begins.
Instead of this, the work re
quires much care and attention,
with a keen comprehension of the
fact that each day’s paper has its
own needs. The exchange editor
is a painstaking, conscientious,
methodical man, always on the
alert, quick In’ appreciation, reten
tive in memory, shrewd in discern
ment. He reads closely, culls
carefully, omits and amends, dis
cards and digests, never iguoring
the fact that Variety is a great es
sential. There are sentences to
recast, words to soften, redund
ances to prune, errors to correct,
headings to be made, credits to be
given, seasons to be considered,
affinities to be preserved, consist
encies to be respected. He knows
whether the matter is fresh or
stale, whether it is appropriate,
and whether he has used it before.
He remembers that he is catering
for many tastes; he makes raids in
every direction; he lays the-whole
newspaper field under contribu
tion ; he persistently “boils down,”
which with him is not a-process of
rewriting, but a happy faculty of
expunging without destroying
sense or continuity.
His genius is exhibited in the
department, the items of which
are similar and cohesive—in the.
suggestive heads and sub-heads,
in the sparkle that is visible, in
the sense of gratification which the
reader derives.
A bright clipped article is in
finitely better than a stupid con
tributed article. The most suc
cessful paper is the paper that is
intelligently and consistently edit
ed in all its departments, whether
by pen or scissors.
Another curious ease of appa
rent sensation in a member of the
body after it had been amputated,
comes from Elorida. George W.
Clay’s arm was amputated, put in
a box, and buried. Soon after .he
began to complain that the fingers
on the bnried arm were cramped,
and that there was sand between
them. His physician and his sis
ter had the box dug up and open
ed, and found the fingers cramped
and the sand between them, just
as George had said. They ar
ranged the arm properly, and re
buried it. Clay said while they
were gone he felt an awful pain in
the amputated arm, and then came
a sensation of great relief, and
there was no longer the old. cramp
ed sensation in his hand.
Every citizen owes duties to the
eomuhity r in which he lives.
Chief among them is his duty to
lead a moral life, for be has no
right by vicious conduct to corrupt
his neighbor’s children, or offend
their sense of propriety. Other
wise, if one has a right to live im
morally, so has another; so have
all, and general action on this idea
would make up a veritable modern
Gomorrah.
The absorption of the Baltimore
& Ohio railroad by the West Point
Terminal corporation makes' that
great system the most gigantic
jn the country, controlling 16,000
miles of railroad.
A current event—The plum
pudding.
The Public Interested.
When manufacturers of an arti
cle are asking the people to eon-
j sume their wares, it is indeed re-
i freshing to know that- they are re-
| Iiably endorsed, as illustrated by
: the united endorsement of Dr. Har-
: ter’s Iron Tonic and Liver Pills
by the druggists of St. Paul.
ment. Next comes Baron Roths
child of Frankfort, with about
$680,000, and Baron Bleichreder,
whose income is about $600,000.
There are only two other Prus
sians with an income over $300,-
000. We beat the world in mill
ionaires. This is accounted for
by the fact that on the Continent
the railroads and telegraph are
owned mainly by the government,
and the profits on transportation
accrue to the benefit of the nation
al treasuries. In the United
States the railroad and telegraph
are in private hands, and the man
ipulation of their stocks, as well
as the profits of the business, goes
to pile up the enormous fortunes
of our Jay Gould, Yanderbilts,
Stanfords, Huntingtons, Sages,
not to mention the hundreds of
others who have become million
aires as the result of the manipu
lation in the stocks of corporations.
It may be worthy of note, in pass
ing, that wealthy real-estate own
ers, outside of the Astor family,
are not very common In this coun
try. Our laws provide for the
breaking up of great estates , upon
the death of the head of the house,
and this puts a check to accumu
lations of landed wealth in a few
hands. But personal property, in
the form of the ownership of
shares in corporations, can be bet
ter kept together in this country,
and it will be noticed that in the
wills of Commodore Vanderbilt
and his son Wm. H., provision was
made for concentrating the wealth
on one or two of the heirs. The
Astor estate in New York has
been held together, it is believed,
by an evasion of the law regulat
ing the discount on bonded proper^
ty. But the time, must come when
it will be scattered among all the
heirs.
Not Used to Sympathy.
“Come in, my poor man,” said a
benevolent lady to a ragged tramp,
“and I will give yon something to
eat.”
“Thanky mum; don’t care if I
do.”
“I suppose,” continued the lady,
setting a square meal before him,
“your life has been full of trials?”
“Yis mum; and wust part of. it
wuz I alius got convicted.”
Company. A corporation is actu
ally in existence, with a large cap
ital, whose aim it is to test the va
rious inventions designed to give
man as complete control of the air
as he now has of the water and the
earth, in carrying him from point
to point on the surface of the
globe. One good, may result from
the war in Europe. It is known
that there is a French bureau
which has made successful experi
ments in air navigation. Captive
balloons proved useful in the last
European war. Observations from
them gave some idea of the move
ments of the enenr. ! s various corps
d’armee. A navigable balloon or,
aerostat, un der s me sort of con
trol, would be of the utmost value,
as, moving from point to point, it
could discern and inform the gen
eral commanding what the ene
my’s designs were. It is known
that a Captain Banard and others
have been able to navigate the
air when there was not much wind
blowing. But the full results of
the experiments have been a well
kept military secret. Undoubted
ly, war in Europe would devolop
all that has been done in serial
navigation. But why waitfor war?
Surely there is enough public
spirit among wealthy men to con
tribute say a quarter of a million
of dollars to test the various in
ventions. The existence of the com
pany, whose shares are to be dealt
in for the Consolidated Stock Ex
change, shows that some well-to-
do people, at least, are willing to
risk their money in enterprises of
this kind.
A Merited Rebuke.
The imports of sugar were no
doubt heavier last year than in the
fiscal year ending in June 1884
That year there were imported in
to the United States 2,756,416,896
pounds of sugar, or more than one
million, three- hundred thousand
tons. At the average rate of duty
on imported sugar the tax was
more than fifty-three and three-
quarter million dollars. What an
enormous burden on one of the
necessaries of life! Put sugar on
tne free list—Sparta Ishmaelite.
Leander Smith, an aged citizen
of Milan, Indy died not long ago,
and the administrator of his es
tate, in taking an inventory and
appraising the effects, discovered
a large amount of hidden treasure,
$1,950 of old gold coin being
found in a jar of rancid lard,wkile
other large sums were found se
creted in other places.
One of the most forcible stump
orators that ever took the field is
the farmer whose plow strikes a
snag.
Boils, imples, hives, ringworm,
tetter, and other manifestations of
A gentleman prominent in legal
circles in Boston was recently rid
ing in a train, and in the seat be
fore him was a young and gaily
dressed damsel. * The car was
pretty full, and presently an el
derly woman entered, and, finding
no seat vacant but the one beside
the young lady mentioned, sat
down beside her. She was a decent
ly dressed woman but apparently
of humble station, and she carried
several clumsy bundles, which
were evidently a serious annoy
ance to her seatmate. The young
woman made no effort to conceal
her vexation, but in the most con
spicuous manner showed the pas
sengers around her that she con
sidered it an impertinant intrusion
for the new comer to presume to
sit down beside her. In a few
momenta the old woman deposited
her packages on the seat, and went
across the car-to spsak to an ac
quaintance she discovered on the
opposite side of the aisle. The
lawyer leaned forward to the of
fended young lady and courteous
ly asked if she would exchange
seats with him. A smile of grati
fied vanity showed how . pleased,
she was to have attracted the no
tice of such a distinguished look
ing gentleman. “Ok, thank you,
ever so much,” she said effusively,
“I should like to, but it would' be
as bad for you as for me to sit be
side such an old woman.” “I beg
your pardon,” he said with undi
minished deference of manner, “it
was not your comfort I was think
ing of, but the, old lady’s,—Boston
Herald;
ed his tent one night on the
banks of the Turkey foot river, a
tributary of the Youghiogheny, a
a beautiful mountain stream. The
occurrence was in the early part of
the present century, and was not
an uncommon affair, but what fol
lowed in the long years that have
since passed is the wonder and ad
miration of all who have seen it.
The family in question was
doubtless in search of a' suitable
site for a future home, and dream
ed of.no ill ere the time of that en
campment. Daring their tempo
rary halt one of their dear chil
dren was stricken down and buried
in a lonely and; uninhabited spot'
in the little valley. It is supposed
that they (the parents) planted
six small yellow poplars—three on
each side of the grave—to mark
the resting place of their darling
child. Years passed, and the pop
Iars grew, and to-day they may be
seen by the traveller as one undi
vided and solid trank to the height
of about seven feet, where they
divide, and are known for miles
around as. “The Six Poplar
These bodies are of nearly equal
size, being each about two feet in
diameter and about one hundred
feet to the lowest limbs, straight
and clear of knots. In the vacu
um at the place of separation there
remains a rude stone, which marks
the date of buriaLand the name of
the deceased. The land has been
cleared of other timber, but that
tree—or trees—stands alone some
distance from any habitation.
Poverty in Washington.
Philadelphia Times.
The Unseen Forces of Nature.
Members of the Women’s
Christian Temperance" Union of
Moorestown, New Jersey, told a
saloon keeper that if he would
sign the pledge they would buy
his stock of liquors at the market
price. He took them at their
word, and the fire water was all
poured into the gutter.
Nature is ever undoing what she
has already done, ever pulling her
own work to pieces, as though dis
satisfied with - it, and wishing to
build it up anew. She brings
flowers, trees, men and women into
existence, tends them with loving
care, brings them to maturity, and.
consigns them to decay. The sun
rises to the zenith, only to sink
again beneath the horizon. Win
ter melts into spring, and spring
into summer ; but summer passes
into autumn, and autumn into
winter again. And so it is with
greater things as well. The earth
upon which we live had its begin
ning; can we doubt that it must
also meet its end? Even as we
pass our little day upon it we can
see it change before our eyes,view--
ing, as it were, but one short scene
in the mighty drama upon which
the curtain must fall at last.
Forces, animate and inanimate,
are ever at work—above, below
and around us. Islands are raised
from the sea; mountains open and
belch forth their .fiery torrents
upon the country for miles around;
floods perform their work of de
struction; glaciers move slowly on
ward, and sweep hamlets and vil
lages away. And the unseen
forces of nature are working as
steadily and as sorely as the seen.
That “we die daily” is no mere
figure of speech; at every breath
we cast off part of our substance,
effete matter, from whieh the life
has departed. And the earth dies
daily, too.—Theodore Wood in
Sunday Magazine.
There is a lage class of men in
Washington who are in a most
impecunious condition, and who
make heavy draughts upon the
pnrses and patience of those with
whom'they manage to become ac
quainted. Some off them have
been rotated out of official duties,
which has unfitted them for any
other business. Others imagine
that the party in power owes them
an office, either at home or abroad,
and some have claims, which if al
lowed, would make them wealthy,
but all wait, and it has been truth
fully said that they are getting
“broker” and “broker” every day.
They sleep in cheap lodgings, eat
where it is convenient, and drink
every time they are asked. They
are good fellows for the most part,
and they were once respectable cit
izens at home, but they are stuck
fast in Washington and cannot get
away. They bear a worn and anx
ious cast of face, and only smile,
as above stated, when invited. Po
litical cripples they are, waiting
for the waters of Siloam to be
troubled, and it will be a long time
before their wants are granted.
Meanwhile they modestly request
the loan af a dollar until the first
of the next month. Denied, they
will ask for fifty cents—nay, they
will take a quarter, and I once had
one to fall back to a request for a
horse car ticket. I was after
wards told that at a neighboring
bar two horse car ticket’s were re
garded as equivalent for one dram
of bad whiskey. We have dark
shadows with the bright Washing
ton life.
Houston Sheriff’s Sales.
On the first Tuesday in April, 1887,
within the legal hours of sale, I will sell
before the court house dtjor in the town
of Perry, Houston county, Ga.-, the fol
lowing property, to-wit:
The' undivided one-fifth interest in
that tract of land in the 10th district of"
Houston copnty, by original survey*
known as the Dill Parker lands, contain
ing 107(;{ acres, more or less, being the
worth half of lot- No. 110, .and rerert
iff the eastern part of lot No. 117. Lev*
; ed on as the property of Willie Parker
o satisfy a fi. fa. from Houston O unty
"’onrt, December term, 1883. in favor of
J B. Philips & Go. vs. Willie Parker/- ;
Notice of levy giveD.
March3,1887*. J. W. COLYEE, Sheriff.
County Banff’s Saf<3-
Wiil besoid before the court house
door in the town of Perry, Houston coun
ty, Ga., within the legaI,hours of sale, on
the 1st Tuesday in Aprit, 1387, the fol*
lowing property, to-wit:
- One hundred bushels of com, more of
less, in crib; 2,000 pounds Of fodder,-
more or less, in carriage house; 20 bush
el =; of cotton seed, more or less, in car
riage house. All on the Ab. Marshall
place at this time: property more parfcic*
ulirly described in the mortgage. Lev
ied on as the property of John H. Hose*
Jr., by virtue of a mortgage fi. fa, returns
able to March term, 18S7, of Houston
County Court, in favor of W. Brunson
vs. John H. Hose, Jr>-
J m TUTTLE,
March 3,1887. County Bailiff,
’Little Belle Me Nichols, of St.
Louis, while playing with her pet
Scotch terrier, accidentally locked
herself in a small and nearly air
tight Closet. The dog at once ran
down stairs, and by his actions in
duced a servant to follow him to
the closet, where they found the
child unconscious. Belle would
have died in a few minutes more
but for the terrier.
piirridiaitis Sale.
GEOKGIA—Houston Countt:
Under the order of the Court of Ordi*.
nary of said county, I will sell before the
Court House door in said county oh the
1st Tuesday in April 1887, within the le*
gal hours of sale, the house and lot iri
Perry known as the J. B. Cofield lot, oh
Swift St. Two-tbirds interest being thd
property of Virgil and Milfoil Heard,
minors, and the other one-third being
the property of J. M. Heard. Sold fof
division. Terms cash.
•T. M. HuABD;
Guardian for Virgil andMilton Heard.
They don’t believe in being in a
hurry in Brooklyn. A resident of
that city who found a man trying
to commit suicide by hanging, tel
ephoned his discovery, to police
headquarters, and then awaited
the arrival of an officer. When
the officer reached the scene the
man was dead.
The workingmen of Cincinnati,
at a. general meeting, have repu
diated Henry George. They re
fused to indorse his land theories,
and intimated that they had heard
enough of him. The country sym
pathizes with them, for it has also
heard enough of George.
Rev. John White, a colored
preacher, of Greenwood, Arkansas,
who will be 102 years old in July,
has taken out a license to marry
Mrs. Edie Smith, who is a giddy
girl of 65 summers. The Rev.
John has been preaching eighty-
one years, and has been married
twice.
Senator-elect Reagan, of Texas,
is said to be a model of kindness
and good humor in his domestic
life. He is never cross, and never
swears.
Mi'afislons Escape.
The cave animals of North
America, according to Prof. A S.
Packard, comprise a total of 1721 King’s New Discovery for Con-
W. W. Reed, ctyugglst, of Win
chester, IncL writes; “One of my
customers, Mrs. Louisa Pike, Bar-
tonia, Randolph Co., IncL, was a
long sufferer with consumption,
and was given up to die by her
physicians. She heard of Dr.
A Merced, California* farmer
has poisoned 20)000 jack rabbits
in the last four years, and yet, in
spite of the warfare against them,
they are said to be rapidly increas
ing in number, and are becominng
a veritable plaugue to the Merced
and Fresno farmers.
Astonishing Success.
It isthe duty of every person who
has used Boschee’s German Syrup
to let it3 wonderful qualities be
known to their friends in curing
GEOBGIA— Houston County:
The return of the appraisers to set apart
a 12 months supports for Mrs. Mattie
Bryau and Estelle Bryan, widow and
adopted daughter of C. S. Bryan, dec’d,
out of the estate of said? deceased, has
b3en filed in office this day!
This is therefore to cite all persons coh«
ceroed to appear at the April term 1887,
of the Court of Ordinary of said county
and show cause, if any they have, Why
said j retuan should not be allowed and
made the judgement of this court.
Witness my official signature, this
February 13th, 1887.
j H. HOUSES,
Ordinary,
GEORGIA—Houston gountt:
D. H. Houser, administrator of the es*
tate of -W. H. Houser, deceased, has ap
plied for letters of dismission from said
trust:
This is therefore to cite all persons con-'
cemedto appear at the May term, 1887, of
the Court of Ordinary of said county, and
show cause, if any they have, why said
application should not be granted.
Witness my official signature this Jan,
27,1887,
J. H. HOUSES,
3m, - Ordinary.
Geobgia—Houston County ■
Tho return of the appraisers to Set
apart a 12 months support for Mrs, Lilly
B. Collier and her minor children from
the estate of W. E. Collier, late, of said
county deceased, has been filed in office
this day:
This is therefore to cite all persons con*
cerned to appear at the April' term,
1887, of the Court of Ordinary of said
county, and show cause, if any they have,
why said return should not be a’lltwed
and made the judgment of this court.
Witness my official signature this Feb*
ruary 18,1887. ' J. H. HOUSES,
4t.
Ordinary
GEOKGIA—Houston County:
• E. S. Wellons, Administrator of the es
tate of Ft. W. Shirah, of said cohntv de
ceased, has applied for dismission' from
his trust.
This is therefore to cite
all persons
concerned to appear at the April term,
1887, of the Court of Ordinary of saia
county, and show cause, if any they have,
why said application should notbegrant*
ed.
Witness ray official signature this
December 23,1886.
JOHN H. HOUSEB,
3ni. Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Houston County-
Josiah Bass has applied for permanent
letters of administration on the estate of
Mrs. E. j. McCoy, of said connty, de
ceased:
This is therefore to cite all persons
concerned to appear at the March Term,
1SS7, of the Court of Ordinary of said
eounty.and show cause, if any they
have, why said application should not be
granted.
Witness my official signature this Jan,
20,1887.
j. H. HOUSEB,
Im. Ordinary.
GEORGIA,—Houston County.
C. Ml Chapman, Administrator of the
estate of Mrs. M. J. Chapman, of said
count;.-, deceased, has applied for dismis--
sion from said trust.
This is therefore to cite all
concerned to appear at the April
1887, of the Court of Ordinary of
A ,. n , ° county, and.show cause, if anv they have.
Consumption severe Cougus,Group vrhy said- application should not be
fact
color.
Asthma, Pneumonia, and in
all throat and lung diseases. No
person can use it without imme
diate relief. Three doses will re
lieve any case, and we consider it
the duty of all Druggists to rec
ommend it il • poor, dying con
sumptive, at least to try one bot
tle, as 80,000 dozen bottles were
d last year, and not one care
where it failed reported Such
granted.
Witness mv olficiaJsignnturr this De*
cefcber23,188S. JOHN li. \ SEE,
3m . »Ji 0: :.rv.
GEOBGIA—Houston Count: :
H. SI. Harvard and J. W. istmap,
administrators of the estate of Jerry W.
Christmas, of said county deceeseu. have
applied for dismission from said trust.
This is therefore to cite all persons
concerned to appear at the April
j tennl887, ofthe Court of Ordinary of said
■si i i ,1 - T_, »r—-—. . ^ - I county, aud show cause, if any thev hav»
walked to lIus city, a distance, of j medicine as the German Syrup j why said application should riot bo -
- - j six miles, and is now so much im- : cannot be too widely known. Ask. i granted.
Only 2 per cent of the working; proved that she has quit using it. I y0 nr druggist about it. Sample! officialsignature this Jan*-' ~
class attend church in London. i She feels she owes her life to it.” S bottles to trv. sold at 10 cents, i 1887 ' HOUHBB,
impure bicod are cured by Hoods n- pi/ca Tobacco ask your dealer for Wright s Drag Store, Fort \ alley, i all Druggists and Dealers, in the! Pay
Sarsaparilla. *-oia Ga. 1 United States and Canada, JHome
Sample! V 1 '
to it.” j bottles to try, sold at 10 cents, i ^ ' L '
Free Trial Bottles at Mathews & ;i Regular size, 75 ceDts. Sold by I _1
Virrhf.’c: Timer S\1yy.’A TV.., -»r.A ^ * 1 ^
■