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tubeiteffiiig. Behold ns as vra ara. Immensef
Bo it is, and all used in our own Mnsfc and Art'
f^*r5PiaB0SASD ORGfillS
m which we lead nH, and SATE buyers
from 825 to 350 on each lnatrcmcnt sold.
LITE HOUSE! Right yen ara. Dixie’s bias
ing son don’t oven wilt ns ono bit. £2?~ See .onr
SPOT CASH PRICES, with cr
«... -f Ll~ Lr a.t.. /
until Nov. 1. Ho Monthly Pa
meals. No interest BuyinJui
July, August, or September, at
pay when cr6ps come in. -
■Write for Circulars.
BEftlgM&Ei?
Lowest Prices Issaa
Easiest Terns possible.
Finest Instrurroots
Fine Stools ar.d Covers;
Aii F Fc : d.
Fifteen Days’ Trioi,
Full Guarantee,
Square Sealing Always, =
caves.
FORT TALLEY, G
(Office over Dow Law B
Practice in the counties of th
Circuit; in Macon and Taylor
and in the Federal Courts.
The Great. Farm, Industrial and Stock
Journal of the South
0N£ YEAR FOR $2.75
CASH IN ADVANCE.
Sample copies of the Southern Cult!
vator will be mailed FREE on applica
tion to J as. P. Harrison & Co., Drawer
8, Atlanta, Ga.
Watches, Clocks.; Jewelry, SewingMa=
chines, Gnns,Pistols: Locks, and Fnrni=
ture of allkinds repaired inbeststyle anti
promptly. Gold-Rings made to order?
Price and quality of work guaranteed to
give satisfaction. Respectfully;
F. A. Jobson.
Sept. 30—tf; Perry, Ga.
TOB WORK
NEATLY EXECUTED
—-—AT THIS OFFICE.
PERRY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 29,1887
Repew yoUr subscription now.
Houston Sheriffs Sales.
The Effects of Gambling’.
SS, Thel °™ » f6teaIs ’ per -
lowing property, to-wit: naps mote often than any other
One undivided one-fourth interest of sin,with .an imperceptible influence
J, S. Iverson, one of the defendants in on its victim. Its first pretext is
the following lands: One hundred acres l, * i , , , .
of lot No. 53, and lots Nos. 102,176,188, ^considerable, falsely termed m-
177,178,179,186,187, 189, 190. 203, 204, nocent play,with no more than the
214—total, 2,732^ acres, in the 5th dis- crf , T1 ti 0 „ . ,
trict of Houston county, and known as} ^ excitement necessary to
the “Smith Place.” Levied on as the j amusement,
property of said defendant, Iverson, un
der a fi. fa- from the City Court of Atlan
ta, Ga., in favor of Adams & Co. vs. Pem
berton, Iverson & Co., to satisfy said
fi. fa. Tenant iu possession notified ac
cording to law.
Also, at the same time and place, the
east half of lot No. 179, in the 6th district
necessary
This plea, once in
dulged, is too often “as the letting
out of water.” The interest im
perceptibly grows. Pride of supe
rior skill, opportunity, avarice,and
all the overwhelming passions of
Walton vs. E. W. Jackson. Levy made
by W. B. Goff, constable, and turned over
to me- for sale, to satisfy said fi. fa. Ten
ant in possession notified in writing.
Alsb, at the same time and place, east
half of lot No'. 179, in the 6th district of
said county, containing 101acres more
or less, as the property of E. W. Jackon,
one of the defendants, and all of lot No.
147, (except 64 acres off the east side, be
longing to V. E. Walton.) being 171 acres
more or less, of said lot in the 6th district
of said county, ns the property of C. H.
Jackson, one of the defendants, and in
his possession, under a fi. fa. from Hous
ton Superior Court in favor of Campbell
& Jones vs. E. W, Jackson, principal,
and C. H. Jackson, security, to satisfy said
fL fa. Tenants in possession notified in
Writing, according to law.
J. W. COLYEB, Sheriff.
September 1, 1887.
Adniliiistrsft)^ Sale.
By an order from the Court of Ordina
ry we will sell, between the legal hours
of sale, on the first Tuesday in October,
next, all of the real estate belonging to
the estate of E. L. Cater, late of Hous
ton county, deceased, consisting of one
store house and lot in the town of Hen
derson; one plantation of 200 acres more
or less, near Henderson, On which B. 0.
Kendrick resides; one plantation of two
thousand acres, more or less, known as
the Dr. Thompson place, west of Hen
derson. This is one of the finest planta
tions in Middle Georgia. Plenty of pine,
oak and hickory timber. Well watered,
having never-failing branches. A good
gin house, six framed and four log houses
in good condition. Information gladly
given bv either of the administrators.
F, S. (-ATEB, Perry, Ga.
B. C. KENDRICK, Henderson,Ga.
Terms cash. Administrators,
Georgia—Houston County:
The returns of the appraisers to set
apart a 12 months support to the widow
and minor children of Crawford Hender
son late of said county deceased, from
the estate of said deceased, having been
filed in office:
This is thorefore to cite all persons con
cerned to appear at the October term
1887, of the Court, of Ordinary of said
county, and show cause, if any they have,
why said return should not be allowed,
and made the judgment of this court.
Witness my official signature this Aug.
25, 1887. J. H. HOUSER,
4t. Ordinary.
of said county, as the property of E. W. 1 depraved nature ally themselves
Jackson, defendant, under a fi. fa. from! with the incipient and °rowin£
Justice Court 887th district, G. M., of! cl 0 ,
said county>_in favor of Richardson & \ loudness. Lam and dike are swept
away. The victim struggles in
vain, and is carried down by the
uncontrolled current. Thousands
have given scope to the “latent
guity avarice,” unconscious of the
guest they harbored in their bos
oms. Thousands have exulted over
the avails of gambling, without
comprehending the baseness of
using the money of another, won
without honest industry, obtained
without an equivalent, and perhaps
from the simplicity, rashness and
inexperience of yauth. Multitudes
have commenced gambling, think
ing only to win a small sum and
prove their superior "skill and dex
terity. But it is the teaching of all
time, the experience of human na
ture, that effectual resistance to
powerful propensities, if made at
all, is usually made at the commis
sion of the first sin. My dear reader,
let me implore you! Stand firmly
figainst the first temptation, under
whatever specious form it may as
sail you. “Touch not.” “Handle
not.” “Enter not into temptation.”
It is the melancholy and wellLnown
character of this sin that when an
appetite for it has gained posses-
sesion, common motive, gentle ex
citement, are no longer felt. It in
corporates itself with the whole
body of thought, and fills with its
fascination all desires of the heart.
Nothing can henceforward arouse
the spellbound victim to a pleasur
able consciousness of existence,but
the destructive stimulus of gam
bling. Another appalling view of
gambling is, that it is the prolific
stern, the faithful parent, of all
other vices. Blasphemy, falsehood,
cheating, drunkenness, quarreling
and murder are closely connected
with it. It can be said, as of an-
sin: “Allow yourself to be
come a confirmed gambler, and de’
testable as this practice is, it will
soon be only one among many gross
sins of which you will be guilty.”
Should you become* a gambler,
you will in all probability descend
to destruction with the added in
famy of having been the" slave of
all kinds of iniquity, and “led cap
tive by satan at his will.”
Gambling seizes all th passions,
allies itself with all the appetites,
and compels every propensity to
pay tribute. The victim, however
plausible in bis external deport
ment, becomes avaritious and
greedy, insatiable. Meditations up
on the card table occupy all his day.
and night dreams. Had he the
power he would annihilate all the
hours that necessarily intervene
between the periods of his favor
ite pursuit. Cheating is a sure and
inseparable attendant upon a con
tinuous course of gambling. It
pains anyone to assert their deep
and deliberate conviction of its
truth. There must be prostration
of moral principle and silence of
conscience, even to begin with it.
Surely a man who regards the nat
ural sense of right, leaving the ob
ligations of Christianity out of the
question, cannot sit down with the
deliberate purpose to win the mon
ey^of another in this way. He
must be aware that in avaritious
and dishonest thoughts—it may be
almost unconsciously to himself—
he begins to study how he may de
ceive others. Every moralist has
remarked upon the delicacy of
conscience; and that, from the first
violation, it becomes more and
more callous, until finally it sleeps
a sleep as of death, and ceases to
remonstrate. The gambler becomes
less and less scrupulous about win
ning, so that he can win. No one
will be long near the gambling ta
ble of high stakes, be the standing,
of the players what it may, with
out hearing the charge of cheating
bandied back and forth, or reading
the indignant expression of it in
their countenances. One half of
our fatal duels have their immedi
ate or remote origin in such insin
uations. 1
Fighting the Air.
Written for The Home Jocbxal.
The alternations of loss and gain;!
the preternatural excitement of the j
mind, andfthe consequent depres-1
sion when that excitement has' Sometimes there is good fun in
passed away; the bacchanalian! Paying quantities underground, as
merriment of guilty associates; the i1: were, the surface indications
loss of natural rest; in fact the “eagre. Men "worrying along
GEORGIA,—Houston County
E. S. Wellons, administrator of the es
tate of Mrs. M. Y. Downs, of said conn- other
ty, deceased, has applied for leave to sell
the real estate belonging to said estate:
‘ Tnis is therefore to cite all persons con
cemed to appear at the October Term,
1887,of the Court of Ordinary of said cor a
ty and show cause, if any they have, why
said application should not be granted.
Witness my official signature this Sept.
8th, 1887. J, H. HOUSER,
4w. Ordinary,
Sore Eyes
The eyes are always in sympathy with
the body, and afford an excellent index
of its condition. When the eyes become
Weak, and the lids inflamed and sore, it is
an evidence that the system has become
disordered by Scrofula, for which Ayer’s
Sarsaparilla is the best known remedy.
Scrofula, which produced a painful in
flammation iu my eyes, caused me much
suffering for a number of years. By the
advice of a physician I commenced taking
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. After using this
medicine a short time I was completely
Cured
My eyes are now in a splendid condition,
and I am as well and strong; as ever.—
Mrs. William Gage, Concord,N. H.
For a number of years I was troubled
With a humor in my eyes, and was unable
to obtain any relief until I commenced
Using Ayer’s "Sarsaparilla. This medicine
has effected a complete cure, and I believe
it to be the best of blood purifiers.—
C. E. Upton, Nashua, N. H.
From childhood, aiid until within a few
months, 1 have been afflicted with Weak
and Sore Eyes. I have used for these
complaints, with beneficial results, Ayer’s
Sarsaparilla, and consider it a great blood
purifier.—Mrs. C. Phillips, Glover, Yt.
I suffered for a year with inflamma
tion in mv left eye. "Three ulcers formed
on the .ball, .depriving me of sight, and
causing great pain. After trying many
other remedies, to no purpose, I was finally
Induced to use Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and,
By -Taking
three bottles of this medicine, have been
entirely cured. My sight has been re
stored, and there is'no sign of inflamma
tion, sore, or ulcer in mv eye.—Kendal
T. Bowen, Sugar Tree Ridge, Ohio.
My daughter, ten years old, was afflicted
With Scrofulous Sore Eyes. During the
last two years she never saw light of any
kind. Physicians of the highest standing
exerted their skill, but with no permanent
success. On the recommendation of a
friend I purchased a bottle of Ayer’s Sar
saparilla, which my daughter commenced
-taking. Before she had used the third
bottle her sight was restored, and she can
now look steadily at a brilliant light with
out pain. Her cure is complete.—W. E.
Sutherland, Evangelist, Shelby City, Ky.
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla,
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co,, Lowell, Mass.
Bold by all Druggists. Price $1 j six bottles, $5.
Renew your subscription now.
very atmosphere of the gambling
table |psters the temperament of
hard drinking. A keen sense of
interest may, indeed, and often
does, restrain the gambler while
actually engaged in his employ
ment, that he may possess the re
quisite coolness-to watch!"his an
tagonist and avail himself of every
passing advantage. But the mo
ment the high excitement of play
is intermitted; the moment the
passions vibrate back to the state
of repose, what shall sustain the
sinking spirit; what shall renerve
the releasedjphysical nature; what
shall fortify the mind against the
tortures of conscience, and the
thoughts of a “judgment to come,”
but intoxication? It is the expe
rience of all time that a person is
seldom a gambler for any consid
erable time without] being also a
drunkard.
I have already said that gamling
naturally leads to quarreling and
murder. Bishop Pierce said he had
often retired to his berth on steam
boats and heard charges of dishon
esty, accents of reviling and re
crimination, and hints that these
charges must be met and settled
at another time and place; and the
words would ring in his ears as he
was attempting to commune with
his God, or settle into repose.
Many young men have met a vio-
death'from this cause.
Every gambler is always “armed
to the teeth,” and goes to his hor
rid pursuit-as the gladiator former
ly presented himself in the arena
of combat. The picture receives
deeper shades if we take into the
grouping the wife, or daughter, or
mother, who lies sleepless and ru
minating] through] the®long night,
lest her midnight retirement shall
be invaded by those who bring back
the husband, or father, or son,
wounded or slain, in one of those
sudden frays which the card table,
its accompaniments and the pas
sions it excites so often germinates.
Supposes the forebodings should
not be realized, and he steals home
in the morning with beggary and
drunkenness, guilt and despair,
written on his haggard counten
ance, and accents of sullenness and
ill temper falling from hie tongue;
how insupportably gloomy must be
the prospects of the future to that
family.
These are but slight and general
sketches of the misery and ruin to
individuals and to society from the
indulgence of this vice, during the
present life. If the wishes of un
belief were true, and there were
no life after this, what perverse
and miserable calculations would
be those of the gambler,taking into
view only the present world! But
in any view of the character and
consequences of gambling, who
shall dare close his eyes upon its
bearing on the eternal welfare of
his soul! Who shall leave out of
calculation the retributions of
Eternity!
Each of the sins that enter into
this deadly compound of them all
must incur the displeasure and
punishment of the Almighty. If
there be degrees in the misery and
despair of the tenants of that re
gion “where the wofm dieth not,
and the fire is not quenched,” how-
must the persevering and impeni
tent gambler sink as if “a mill-
stone were hung about his neck,
and he cast into the sea!”
Say thou, my youthful reader,-^
looking up to the Lord for a firm
and unalterable purpose—“I will
hold fast my integrity and not let
it go.” Young Man.
Hayneville, Ga.
witnout it, rather than dig for it.
Whenever there is a genuine
“Lincoln rehearsel,” however, the
fun is all on top. A very few per
sons may fail to see it, owing to
constitutional purblindness. About
a year ago a man of letters deter
mined to'fight at one time, both
the prohibitionists and the evan
gelists of the continent of Ameri
ca. He intended to drive"the two
Sams into the dens and caves of
the earth. His policy was to force
the fight from the start, and the
impetrosity of his onset was hero
ic. He fairly filled the air with
epithets and fistric swipes, and the
vapor of sweat. Sluggling experts
declare however, that he displayed
no real “science,” for the reason
that his enemies “got away” with
him. The criticism is probably
just. The same authorities com
mend both his’elan and his stav
ing qualities. He is there yet,
what there is left of him. But
during all these months the two
Sams continued to preach to very
large congregations, and really
seemed not to know that he ob
jected. In fact it would be im
possible to tell from their manner
that they had ever] heard jfof the
row. His war upon the prohibi
tionists has been fruitful of like
barren results. His tactics were
the same. Making a demonstra
tion in force—himself being the
force—he utterly failed through
out ten months of active hostilities
to draw the fire of the prohibition
outposts. It is suspected that
this zealous patriot frequently
drank liquor when he didn’t want
it, just to demonstrate that prohi
bition don’t prohibit.
Nix.
Forty-Six Years Ago,
A Trip !to Macon from Ferry Georgia.
Writlea for The Home Jouhnal.
In February, 1841, the writer
with Dr. C.[B. Nottingham, visit
ed the city of Macon. On our re
turn to Perry, and before reach
ing Tobesofkee, two young men,
who were friends from Houston,
darted by, telling us they had a
pistol to shoot’off at the branch,
and wished us to hurry up and
join them in the sport.
I was always, when young,
afraid of pistols and frightened
horses, but admired the Doctor’s
pretty, gentle “Blacky,” as we
called him, and felt pretty safe be
hind him while the reins were in
his owner’s hands, and yet fears
came that if pistols or guns were
fired near him, fright, runaway,
and slnaShup might occur. No
ticing' Blacky, his harness and the
Doctor closely, I saw nothing un
usual or wrong, find saying noth
ing, quietly awaited events. Ar
riving at the branch, the young
men leaped from their buggy with
a tin cup and a black bottle in their
hands—holding them up they
shouted to us, “Come on! Drive
up!” We declined. They drank,
remounted, dashed on, and were
soon out of sight. 1 had never
before heard the word pistol or
shooting used in that connection,
and the thought came that their
love and thirst for drink caused
them to forget to shoot the pistol,
and didn’t know better until the
startling news came that both of
them had, in the language of the
one telling it, “Committed suicide
by shooting themselves to death
with the whiskey bottle.” The in
cident related came np—was ex
plained—find we never see a hate
ful whiskey bottle or flask, with
out thinking of that incident and
the sad fate-of the -two young
friends. J. S. J.
-'ll- 1
Except liaise the Dead.
Mr. Havird, or Newberry, S. C., Children Dying
states that he finds Dr. Biggers 5
Huckleberry Cordial will do al- At this season of the year, when
most anything except raise the warm days followed by cool nights,
dead. It will certainly cure diar- j and the eating of fruit and vegeta-
rboea, dysentery and children j ble effecting the bowels, we hear
teething. j of so many chilcb en dying. Give
*-*-< - j them Dr. Biggers’ Huckleberry Of Flog Tobacco ask your dealer for
Subscribe for The Hone .JouliXAL. Cordial* »oid Ripj’
\7FF-~:'F/F- VvivL- ■ ' FtosI
Uncomplimentary to Blaine.
Boston Gazette.—Republican.
The worst scoring that Mr.
Blane has received in a good while
comes from stalwart John Beatty,
John Sherman’s friend, who pub
lished the following in the Toledo
Bee while the State Republican
Convention was in session in that
city last week: “If the Irish
question and the Irish vole are
the main things to be sought for,
then Mr. Blaine had ^better seek
office in Ireland.” Further on the
General says: “Blaine is not by
any means as strong as he was in
1880. Those who know him best,
and people are getting to know
him pretty well, know that he is a
political Jesuit, courteous in man
ner, cordial and plausible in speech;
but silent, crafty and unseruplons
in the promotion of his schemes;
professing open friendship while
stabbing secretly; keen in his scent
of money, not particular as to the
mode of its acquisition, and lavish
in its expenditure for his own po
litical '’advancement; brainy and
fertile in resource, with au element
of meanness so audacious that it
does not always provide against
exposure. He was Garfield’s evil
genius, his detractor while living,
and most eloquent eulogist when
dead. He involved his adminis
tration in needless and distressing
complications, from the effects of
which the country is still suffering.
He used the power conferred by a
high official position to enforce his
private animosities, to execute
personal vengeance. He encour
aged his following Of Half Breeds
to strike down Secretary Folger
for being a Stalwart, and thereby
elected Cleveland Governor of New
York by a majority of 200,000, and
put it in the power]-of the solid
South to obtain control of the ex
ecutive office. He will never be
forgiven in fulljfor his treachery,
and he never ought to be. His
nomination inU888 would simply
multiply the^Mugwumps of New
England by ten, and these would
be reinforced in every Northern
State by better Republicans than
Blaine ever was. He cannot carry
New York. He could not touch
bottom in Indiana, and it is doubt
ful even if he could carry Ohio.
In short, he is a Plumed Knight
who does his fighting with his jaw,
and employs a substitute to incur
the risks of battle. We have car
ried him on our shield too long.
It is time to prod him with our
speats. The people have had
enough of him and his spotted re
cord;”
A certain octogenarian of Cin
cinnati, who married a young
Kentucky beauty, a few years ago,
is now suing for a divorce on the
ground of willful absence. He as
serts that trouble promptly began
on the wedding trip because be re
fused to transfer $20,000 worth of
property to his bride. They sepa
rated, and she refused to live with
him unless he made the transfer
An intelligent farmer who
thought that the banks were hot
safe lives in Elba, Minn. He sold
a farm for $2,000 and hid the
money in his house, and in a few
days, while his wife was at the
spring getting a pail of water, the
moiley was stolen and the house
Set on fire and burned.
Wiiiitepeg is an exception to the
saying that there is no Sabbath
West of Chicago. The streets are
empty and the churches full. In
deed, there is said to be church
accommodations for 15,000 in a
population of 23,000 and it is all
ntilized.
No Money In it.
“My mother gets^tne up, builds
the fire, and gets my breakfast,
and sends me off,” said a bright
the
and
and
their breakfast.”
‘How old is the baby?’ asked
the reporter.
‘Oh, she is most two; but she
can talk and walk as well as any
of us.”
“Are you well paid?’
‘I get two dollars a week and
father gets two dollars a day.’
‘How much does] your mother
get?’
With a bewildered look, the boy
said: “Mother? why she don’t
work for anybody!’
‘I thought;you said she worked
for all of you.’
‘Oh, yes, for us, she does; but
there ain’t no money in it.”
A Little Child Dying.
The most pitiful sight that can
be presented to father and mother
is to see their little darling suffer
ing so from the effect of teething.
The wise patient gives Dr. Big
gers’ Huckleberry Cordial to re
lieve it.
C. H MOORE’S
—IS THE PLAGE TO GET—
Shoes and Hats.
aEOCEEIHS
OF ALL KINDS.
I am also prepared to furnish
COOL DRINKS FOR THE THIRSTY.
I am headquarters for ICE and LEM-
ONS-
All of the above 1 will sell at the LOW
EST CASH PRICES.
£3§ F “Reinember I still sell SlSWJLNG
MACHINE OIL; and NEEDLfiS
for all machines.
Please give me a call, and 1 will please
you, Ybnrs truly,
OH-MOOBH
PERRY, GA
Absolutely Pure,
TliiS powder never varies. A marvel of par ty,
strength and wUoli-snnieness, '.lure eepnomhat
than the ordinary kinds, and cannot l;e sold in
competition with the nmltitnfle of low test, gimrt
weight, ainin and pb«.«p]raic powders; Sold only
In cans. Koval Baking Fowdee CO ; 10U Wall
Brieet, N. Y.
An Old Friend Dangerously 111,
Yon all know him lying there
suffering so with that fearful case
of dysentery of a bloody ty pe.
Why not suggest to him to ivy Dr.
Biggers’ Hnckleberry Cordial? It
will relieve him after a few doses.
The New York San pays its re
porters $8 dollars a column for
matter used.
.if Ten "Wan! a Good ArtiCffe
GEORGIA—Houston County:
T. O. Skellie has applied for adminis
tration on the estate of Miss Jane C;
Kellogg’, late of said cteinty, dsceased:
This is therefore to cite all persons
concerned to appear at the October
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
Sept. 8, 1887. J. H. HOUSER.
4t Ordinary.
CoMitlissioner’s Hale.
In the Fifth Circuit Court of the United
States—Western Division, Southern
District of Georgia:
In the matter of A. C. Rilley, Assignee of
B. B. Barnes vs; Eliza Adams and
others: .
By virtnfe of an Order as set apart
the final decree rendeted ih tb§ above
stated case by the Honorable, United
States Court for the Western Division
of the Southern District of Georgia, pass
ed on the sixth day of Jn!y f 1887; I will,
as commissioner appointed by the court
sell to the highest bidder for cash, be
fore the United States court house door
in the city of Macon; on the first Tues
day in October, If §7; all of the following
property, tdrteit:
All those lots or parcels of land lying
2nd being in the counties of Houston
and Crawford in said state, and in said
district and division, and known and dis
tinguished as follows:
Lot No. one hundred mid ninety-seven
(1S7); fifty acres of lot No: one hundred
and ninety-si> (196), being the northeast
comer of said lot —the Mossy erfeek being
the line; the west half of lot No. two
hundred and nineteen (219), containing
one hundred acres; lot No. two hundred j
and twenty (220k the south halt of lot
No. two hundred and twentv-one (221);
fifty acres more or less from the northwest
corner of lot No. two hundred and thirty-
one (231); five seres of lot No. one hun
dred ana ninety-six (136), with the Wafer
privileges of said lot No. 196.
All of said landbeing in the Sixth dis
trict of Houston county except fifty acres)
of lot No. one hundred and ninety-six j
(196), and the northwest comer of lot No. ;
one hundred and Linety^seven (197)fWl l;h
is in the Sixth district of Crawford coun
ty, and containing in all seven hundred
and eight and one-half acres (708%) more
or less. The said described property to
be sold as the property cf Said defend
ants, Eliza Adams, Moses Barnes, and
all the other defendants under the afore
said decree, for the purposes of distribu- [
tion to such parties as maybe entitled to
the proceeds of the saine, undsr the order
and direction of said Court.
A. PROUDFriv Commissioner. |
Atig. 25th, 1887, Macon, Ga.. !
to be maoe. * nt this, out aud 1! fr- ■
turn to us. and we will send you t
freesonjFtbiug of great value aud :
■j 1: w 1 m v* uim] ortanre toyr.n;i: '.rill start y-1.
ill lii’s'r.esa ""which will bring in m art ra -ii-
1X ligl t AW8A t an anything else in flrit wond Write to
Anyouecan do ibe work and lire r.iiiomi-. kiilu-r " ™ ^ ’ *
sex: alt az- s. ^orm tlsihg ti-w ibit jo-t coins mon
ey feral! workers. We vril; slaSt yon; dipital not
needed. Tliis is ore of tbs important, K“i:n:i:e
ehau.-fcs ft a lifetime. '1 liose who are aicbi.mr.s
Tiiul fnfon»ri8’ T, ' r ' r?l * ■'< ..-uiei r..
PGMA HILL NURSERIES,
POMONA, N. C,
Two and a half miles west of
Greensboro, N. C. The main line
of the P. & D. R. E. passes through
the grounds and within 100 feetof
the office. Salem trains mako
regular stops twice daily each way.
Those interested in Fruit and
Fruit growing are cordially invited
to inspect tins the largest nursery
in the State, and one among the
largest in the South.
The proprietor has for many
years visited the leading nurseries
North and West, and corresponded,
with those of foreign countries,
gathering every fr uit that was cal
culated to suit the South, both na
tive and foreign. The reputation
of Pomona Hiil Nurseries is such
that many agents going out - from
Gi'esiisbcro, representing other
nurseries, try m leave li e impress
sion that they ary- representing
thpse nurseries. Why do they do
it? Let the public answen
I have iii 'Stuck growing (anil can show
visitors the same) the largest and best
stock of trees, Src., ever shown or seen
in any two nttrseries in North Carolina
consisting of apj.I., poach, pear, cheery;
plum, grape, Japanese persimmon, Japa*
nfee plum, apricots, nectarine, Russian
apricot, mulberry, quinces. Small fruits i
Strawberry, raspberry, currants, pecan,
English walniits, rhubarb, asparagus,
evergreens, shade trees, rose?, <&o.
Give your order to iny authorized
agent, Or order direct from the nursery.
Correspondence solieied. Descriptive
Catalogues free to aoplicants. Address-
-J. VAN. LINDLEY,
Pomona,
Guhf >rd conn tv. N. C.-
A-JJrctE ’]
t ,M?y. GniiltJ yr.tfit fn
-j ilkiLC,
■a
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SOUTHS