The Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1890-1900, July 24, 1890, Image 1

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JOHN H. HODGES. X^i'oprictor. DEVOTED TO HOME INTERESTS, PROCRESS AND CULTURE, S— 1' ■ — = iS PRICE: TWO DOLLARS A. Tear. VOL. XX. PEKEY, HOUSTON COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 1890. NO. 30. WILLINGHAM’S WAREHOUSE. •:A % COTTON FACTOR MACON, GEORGIA. Good Facilities, Clnse Attention to Business, Liberal and Square Dealing. Money Loaned to those who Deal with Me at 8 per cent Per Annum. Send. ITotslx Cotton,. C. B. WILLINGHAM. J. L. Hardoman, W.D. Nottingham. HARDEMAN & NOTTINGHAM, Attorneys at Law, Macon, Geobgia. Will practice in the State and Federal Courts. Office 306 Second Street. Geobgia—Houston County: Wm.R. Brown has applied for letters of administration on the estate of Mre. Amanda C. Brown, deceased. This is therefore to cite all persons con • cemed to appear at the August term, 1890, 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 July 3rd, 1890. J. H. HOUSED, Ordinary. GEORGIA—Houtton County. E. S. Wellons, administrator of the es tate of Thomas Hardison, has applied for leave to sell the real estato of said dec’d: This is, therefore, to cite ‘all persons concerned to appear at the August term 1890 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 July 3rd, 1890. J. H. HOUSER, Ordinary. GEORGIA—Houston County: C.D. Dennard lias applied for letters of administration upon the estate of Elizabeth Smith, deceased: This is therefore to cite all persons con cerned to appear at the August term, 1890 of the Court of Ordinary of said county, and show cause ,if any they have, why said application should not be granted. . . , . , ... Witness my oflicial signature tins July 3rd, 1890. L „ „ J. H. HOUSER, Ordinary. Geobgia—Houston County: N 0. Cody has applied for letters of guardianship of Charlie Turner, a minor: This is therefore to oito all persons con cerned to appear at the August term, 1890 of the court of Ordinary of said coun ty, and show cause, if any they have, why said application should not he granted. Witness my official signature this July 3, 1890. J- H. HOUSER, ’ Ordinary, Geobgia—Houston County: J V. Frederick, of Macon county, Ga., haa applied for letters of iidmimstratiou on the estato of Isham Davis, deceased: This is therefore to cito all persons concerned to appear at the August term, 1890, of the Court of Ordinary of Hous ton oonnty, and show cause, if any they have, why said application should not be ^Witness my official signature this July 3, h01 jseR, Ordinary. GEORGIA—Houston County: E S. Wellons, administrator of the es tate of T. Warren Smith, of said county, deceased, has appliedfor dismission from liis trust: This is therefore to oite all personscon- cemed to appear at the August term, 1890,of the court of Ordinary of said conn- fcy, and show cause, if anythey have, why said application should not be granted. Witness * my official 8 May 1,1890. ‘ J.H. HOUSER, Ordinary. GEORGIA—Houston County: E. S Wellons, administrator of the es tate of Stephen L. Thompson, late of said county, deceased, has applied f >r dis mission from his trust! This is therefore to cite all persons concerned to appear at the August term, 1890, of the Court of Ordinary of said county, and show causo.if any they have, why said application should not be ^"witness my official signature this May 1, 1890 j H HOUSER, Ordinary. GEORGIA—Houston County: Chester Pearce, administrator of the’ the estate of Simon Felder, of said coun ty, deceased, has applied for dismission from his trust: ThiB is therefore to cite all persons concerned to appear at the August term, 1890, of the Court of Ordinary of Baid county, and show cause, if any they have, why said application should not be ^Witness imy official signature this May 1st, 1890. J. H. HOUSER, Ordinary. Attorney at Law, Judge of.Houston County Coubt, Pebky, Geobgia. Will practice in all the Courts of this Circuit except the County Court. The True Issue. Skipped a Cog:. the currency, to proper bounds and in a comparatively short period a Monroe Advertiser. i healthy status of affairs financially j I was waiting at the railroad de- That the laboring people of this: would be manifest all over this pot at Cairo, HI., and fell in with 'a young fanner and had quite a ASK YOUR MERCHANT FOR- PRIDE OF PERRY SHBBTI ZfcTGK THE BEST AND CHEAPEST HOMESPUN. TO BUILD A HOUSE Terms, SecvLie FliilASS INVESTMENT THE INSTALLMENT PLAN, TATUE STOCK THE INTERSTATE Building and Loan ASSOCIATION. For particulars, apply to JO EX H. HODGES, Agi Perry, Georgia. 'OR MEN ONLY! r LOST or FAILING MANHOOD; ._ner*l and NERVOUS DEBILITY; Body and gad, Effect* III of Errors or Bxoei*e*m()H or Yctmr. KutsstlfyfrnmSOSUUaandJT*r*If*Csoatifeh WHtetkmJ RUNS EASY. ?CINS FAST. f Cleans SEED f PERFECTLY. | Makes FINE SAMPLE. NEVER CHOKES or -.BREAKS THE ROLL. i-THE CELEBRATED COTTON BLOOM this mak« of Gin Mid Is used on no ggSE*tS mac* etABAsnxD maa» HIKE OF FREIGHT st any B. B. SM.U01, or the landia* or sny Begulsr Bteemboat Hue lu the sSoSf If we hevo uo Agent ue«- you. address the General Southern Agent, H.W.HUBBARDV£££’Ti&r 3 Toni $35. -SUTIl Trl»^ iosc d lU. S. STANDARD “scales •,GucMlu,Tu. We have for sale, in any quan tity, the following standard legal blanks: Iron-clad Aotes. Mortgages. Landlord’s Liens. Bond for Titles. -Warrantee Deeds. Administrator’s Deeds. State Warrant and Mittimus. Summons—County Court, Enforcing Lien. Forthcoming Bond. Magistrates’ Summons . Possessory Warrants. Magistrates’ Subpoenas. Summons of Garnishment. Complaint on Accounts. On short notice we will furnish any other blanks called for, at the same price for wi ich they can be bought in Macon or Atlanta. government are oppressed is a fact well-nigh universally conceded, and attested by indubitable evi dence. The last quarter century’s histo ry bears upon its pages proof pos itive that this oppression and the burdens under which the people are laboring have been imposed by the government through a par ty whose greed seems to yearn for nothing save the perpetuation of the hold of that party upon power. This oppression is the offspring of national financial measures that have brought increasing poverty to the working and toiling millions of the land, and turned the streams of wealth into the pockets of the few. These measures are and have been the prolific source of a widespread political corruption that is the bane of our government and the most manifest evidence that a submissive race of freemen can, through the channel of cor ruption, be made a race of slaves. To combat these measures is the purpose and has been the endeavor of that democracy that claims equal rights to all men. The desire for relief from the oppression brought about in this way, and which tells more loudly upon the agricultural than almost any other interest, -gave birth to the present movement among the great farming classes who have al lied themselves to fight against all measures that tend to depress one class of citizens and to elevate an other. Financial burden is an inevita ble sequence of government, but when .that burden is so arranged by financial management as to work detriment to some classes of citizens, and special benefits to others, then it is that injustice comes in, wrong is done, and the wronged have a right to complain. Hence it is that the farmers’ alli ance is knocking at the doors of national legislation, and demand ing that their cries be heard, for re lief from the unjust financial bur dens that have been placed upon them by the national govern ment. Right at this point in their pro ceedings on this line the farmers need to consult closely their chart and compass, and to take especial note of their bearings. From our standpoint the relief demanded by our farmers must come from other sources than that of national legis lation in their behalf. The burden of which these toil ing sons complain must be rolled off and the decisive battle of relief must be gained by a reform of the tariff, the imposition of an income tax. and the expansion of the cur rency by legitimate and constitu tional methods. Special remedies may be applied, but the old sore, with its accompanying evils, will still remain. Every well informed farmer knows that the heaviest and most unjust tax he pays is that forced from his pocket by the operation of the present tariff. He knows, too, that about four-fiftbs of that tax is never covered into the treas ury of the government, but flows into the pockets of special classes who have grown rich and are grow ing richer from these taxes. Under an income tax the millionaire’s millions of income.from their mil lions of non-taxable bonds, would help to bear the burdens of govern ment, whereas, under the present system, these vast millions pay. not one dollar of tax. That the currency is too con tracted to meet the demands of business, is too patent to demand argument, and is known to every informed citizen. Herein is where the farmers’ liens, mortgages and poverty have their birth, and the present financial system will con tinue to give birth to these until its generating capacity is destroy ed by wise, healthy and just finan cial legislation. This and this alone will bring the needed relief to all classes. On this tariff re form, income tax, and currency ex pansion platform, the aUied farm ers should* plant themselves and country. Brother alliancemen, this is the line npen which the battle must be fought to the end, if we would Calfskin Politics. New York World. The republican candidate for governor of Vermont is named C. S. Page. Some irreverent person, as narrated in the story of Green Mountain politics told in the World calls him Calf-Skin Page, because he has grown rich dealing in that commodity. It is not that, how ever, but Carroll S. Page. .Ho one ever heard of Carroll S. Page in politics until recently, and then after he had concluded that he might as well as not be the §1,500 governor of his state. He seems to have had an easy task to secure the nomination, for pur chasable Vermonters are cheap. A dollar is a pretty big thing un der the shadow of the Green Mountains; an “ad.” in a country weekly is a preventer of bankrupt cy, and a free ride on a railroad is fame. The truth is that a real modern Green Mountain boy nre- fers a 50c. railroad ride free to $1.00 worth of anything else. Upon these characteristics Page has traded. The tactics df the campaign for the nomination were worthy of the candidate. He wrote a piece” for the newspaper, advising all “meat-butchers,” tin- peddlers and store-keepers to add to their profits by collecting calf skins. He “printed this piece in the county papers” and paid for it at advertising rates. This made the county papers solid. Then he sent a telegram to every newspaper in the state announcing that he had won. This captured the doubting. Finally he distrib uted railroad tickets to the dele gates for a “round trip.”' The re sult is that he is the republican can candidate for governor of Ver mont, having captnred the nomi nation by thoroughly apropriate methods. The New Englanders’ passion for getting “something for noth ing” and for trading or selling anything they possess, is of great service to the aspiring politicians of that section, from Reed down to Page. the battle of relief is won. These Syortsmen in India and Africa have always regarded a wounded elephant as one of the most dan gerous and revengeful animals: Frank L. James, of England, a well know African traveller and entertaining writer, had occasion recently to test this propensity of the beast, and met with fatal re sults. Instead of stamping his as sailant out of existence, as is some times the case in such encounters, the enraged brnte pierced Mr. James’breast with a task, and he died soon after. A weak galvanic current which! will sometimes cure tooth-ache, may be generated by placing a sil ver coin on one side of the gum and a piece of zinc on the other. Rinsing the mouth with acidulated water will increase the effect. Glynn county has instructed del egates for Geo. N. Lester for At torney General. France has over 250,000 carrier- pigeons trained for war service. It Seems Strange. It seems strange that anyone will make nse of qninine and suf fer from such distress as fulness in the head, headache, fullness in the head, dizzy sensations, intes fi nal iritation, nausea, paralysis, etc., when all the good effects of qni nine are secured by the nse of that harmless discovery of Dr. John Bull, of Louisville, Ky., known as Smith’s Tonic Syny?. No harm ful effects ever follow the use of this syrnp, and it tastes so good has never yet failed to cure a case of chills and fever, even when qninine and other preparations did no good- It is well to take a fight.unitedly as one mad until ^ 03e Rftor any severe exposure as lengthy chat with him about agri cultural matters. We took 5 the same train and got Into the smoker, and we had scarcely left Cairo when a young man sat down in the seat facing us and began to throw three cards about, relates a writer in the New York Sun. It was the old, old game, and I smiled in con tempt. Not so with my acquaint ance, however. He was at once interested, and when I denounced the game as a swindle he replied: “Well, I dunno about that. I believe I kin pick out that keered. “It wasn’t three minutes before he bet $5 that he could, and won. Then he bet $10 and won. Then he bet $10 more and won.” You were bom lucky,” said the sharper. “Don’t you wanfc to raise your bet?” “I guess so. I’ll go yon $75 this time.” I expected to see him lose, of course, but he won, and as he did so the other uttered an oath about a rod long, and put up the cards. I suw that he was greatly perturb ed, and said: “What’s the matter, old man? 1 “That’s what I would like to know myself,’’ he angrily exclaim ed. “I’m no professional; I’m a farmer’s hired man. About two weeks ago a chap came along and offered to show me how to work this for $25. I took it in. This is the first time I’ve tried it in public.” “And you are about $100 out?” “Exactly. Hang me for a yaller calf, but the durned machinery has skipped a cog, blown out a fine, broke a piston rod or bust a biler on me somewheres, and I’m so near dead broke that I can’t raise a chaw of tobacco. I orter known better. Kick my shins if I ever did have sense enough to burglar ize a haystack, and here I’ve gone broke and mada a fool of myself to boot!” ‘ Canning Fruit. Indiana Farmer. A poultry peddler drove into Ellaville not many dayB since and on stopping his wagon noticed a peculiar commotion among his chickens. Some were streched out like asleep, others were swag gering around like hammers and others still were fighting like fury and blazes. When the peddler reached for his little brown jug to treat a thirsty friend to a little spirital consolation, he then dis covered that the jug had turned over and spilled all its contents. 1 It then dawned upon him that his chickens were on a howling drank: —Schley County News. An agitation has been started in Paris by a small bat influential journal to chase the English from the opera. The grievance appears to be not against English residents, who, for the most part, accustom 1 themselves very rapidly to the po lite exigencies of the polite, bnt against the unfortunate tourists who are brought over by the “spe cially conducted” agencies. These, says the journal in question, come to the opera in most ignoble style, with untanned shoes, check ulsters and billycock hats. They often occupy the best places, and are thoroughly repugnant to their French neighbors. The writer of th(particle calls upon Parisians to “chase the English from the opera until they know how to present themselves in decent style.” Coining is an improvement on the old-fashioned method of pre serving pound for pound in sug ar. It retains more of the fresh and natural flavor,is far less troub le to prepare, and more economi cal. All fruits may be canned with or without sugar, as the sugar takes no part whatever in the pres ervation of the fruits. For flavor ing ice creams and waterices it is desirable to can the fruits without sugar. Choose only perfectly sonnd and fresh fruits. It is false eoonemy to purchase fruit on the verge of decay, even at very reducedlrates, as they quickly fer ment after canning, and yon not only lose fruit, sugar and labor, but yon very often lose the jars as well. All large fruits after paring should be immediately thrown in to cold water to prevent discolora tion; then boiled in clearwater un til tender, then again in the simp as directed in the recipes follow ing. Small fruits retain their shape more perfectly if - sugared one or two hours before cooking, a quar ter teaspoonful of alum to each pound of sugar hardens - the fruit and gives it brilliancy. Large-mouthed glass jars with porcelain lined or glass tops only shonld be used. They should be thoroughly heated before filling, filled quickly through a wide monthed funnel to overflowing. A silver spoon-handle should be passed around the inside of the jar to break any air bubbles that may be there, and the top screwed on without delay, stand the jars while filling on a folded towel to prevent breakage. After sealing stand the jars in a warm part of the kitchen over night. In the morning the oovers shonld again be tightened as the glass contracts after cooling, and put them away in cool, not cold, dry dark closets. In a week examine each jar care fully without shaking or disturb ing more than neccessary. If yon find the lids slightly indented, the contents free from air babbles and the liquid settled, yon may rest assured they will keep. If you find the opposite, open the jars immediately to prevent bursting. This fruit may be reeooked and used at once bnt is never satisfac tory if again canned. Use only the best granulated sugar. Frait canned with an inferior quality of sugar is never clear and is also more liable to ferment. The surplus juice that exudes from small fruits, such as straw berries, raspberries and plums, may be Btrained and boiled for jel ly- A porcelain lined kettle, rather broad than deep, is best Cop per and brass must be thorongly cleansed with salt and vinegar, and even then the articles are more or lesB imbued with verdi gris that is produced by the action of the acids. Small oil stoves are most con venient for canning, preserving or jelly making, the kettle being im mediately over an even and intense heat, the contents boil quickly, thus retaining color and flavor. If the directions are carefully followed, and there is not too large a quantity cooked or scalded at one time to prevent the carefnl management of each jar, not one can in a hundred will be lost.— Table Talk. Where Votes are “Suppressed.’ National Democrat. Small industries—the enter prises that employ from five to twenty people—lie at the root of permanent progress and improve ment, and it is highly important that they shonld receive consider- ation from our people. It needs no lengthy argument to prove where in all classes of onr people are to be benefitted by small and diversified industries. They give employ, ment to labor; they increase the home demand for supplies and farm products; they establish mar- that children will ask for it It- kets for the consumption of raw it will keep off as well as cure a are the demands that the farmers j col<3. in the north, south, east and wesfcl Snow covers the central Alps shpuld make-upon their legislators, j auc i continues falling. In the dis and never cease, to press them; e,-:—: nfooWVflmmorrmt ,*nA orUn_ and^ never cease to press them of salzkammergut and adj until they shall have been grant-: cen (; country everjdhing has a win- j try appearance. ed. Reform the tariff to an. eqnita-' ble and legitimate basis, pnt on a Sick Headache and 1 .are in-. and naturally increase the profit arising from such production. This is a matter in which the farm er is as deeply interested ns th merchant. Reputation. In 1888 Florida cast 86 percent, of its possible vote,and Connecticut cast 77 per cent., according to cal culations published last year in the New York Press, a Republican paper, edited by Mr. Robert P. Porter until-he took charge of the census. These figures convince Mr. Henry Cabot Lodge that there is a fraudulent suppression of the vote in the South. In 188S West Virginia cast 88 per cent, of her vote, and Massachusetts cast 60 per cent., in view of which fact Mr. Lodge demands that the vote in the South be counted by F eder- al officials. Mr. Lodge opposed the amendment to the Davenport- Rowell-Lodge bill, offered by Mr. Lehlbach, a Republican, that would make the Federal election law apply to Massachusetts as well as to West Virginia. According to the same Republi can authority in 1888 Texas and Virginia each cast 75 per cent, of its possible vote, and New Hamp shire cast 72 per cent, Vermont cast 68 per cent, Maine cast 61 per ceDt., and Rhode Island cast 45 per cent, which figures satisfy Messrs. Rowell and Lodge that the vote in the South is not cast, or if cast is not counted. The vote cast in West Virginia was 88 per cent, in Florida 86 per cent, in North Carolina 84 per cent., in Ohio 84 per cent, in New Jersey 82 per cent, in New York 80 per cent., and Pennsylvania 76 per cent If any one is not convinced by these contrasting figures that intimida tion and false counting previal in the South he should apply to Mr. Henry Cabot Lodge to have the figures explained to him. How generally intimidation and false counting prevail in Mr. Lodge’s own section of the country can be seen by comparing New England with the Northwest In diana cast 99 per cent of her vote, Kansas 95, Nebraska 94, Minneso ta 92, Wisconsin 83 and Michigan 82 per cent. Connecticut cast 77 per cent, New Hampshire 72 per cent., Vermont 63 per cent, Maine 61 per cent, and Rhode Island 45 per cent It must occur to Mr. Lodge that elections in New Eng land are little better than a farce. Arkansas cast 68 per cent, of her vote, which is better than four of the New England states did. Louisiana and Rhode Island each cast 45 per cent Alabama cast 56 per cent, which is better than Rhode Island and very nearly as good as Massachusetts. Georgia, Mississippi and South Carolina seem to be the only States that in this ratio of voting rank below Rhode Island. The Northwestern group of States cast 83 per cent, of its vote; the South, outside of six States^ Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Mis sissippi, Louisiana and South Car olina, cast 75 per cent. The six New England States cast 63 per cent, and the six Sonthern States above enumerated cast 45 per cent, bnt one of them, Arkansas, cast a higher per centage than New Eng land. Mr. Lodge’s section of the coun try seem to be in as great heed of Federal returning boards as the South. The main difference be tween them is that most of the Representatives from Hew Eng land are already Republicans, and the Lodge scheme Js to get Repub lican Representatives from -the section where the people elect Democrats. The reputation of a man is made np of what people say abont him. In a like manner the repn tation of a medicine depends on what they who have used it say. No remedy in the world has so good a reputation as a blood rem edy as B. B. B. It is a successful physicians prescription and qnick- ly cares both mild and terrible cases of bad blood. Dr.L.A. Guild, Atlanta, Ga., writes: Wm. Sealock, living on my place, bad an ugly running ul cer on his arm which ordinary remedies failed to control. As a materials grown by the farmers last resort I placed him on a use A Wise Platform. It is well to throw a little novel ty into advertising matter. An ad vertisement containing only hard facts, without a particle of Bpice or life thrown in to leaven the whole, is apt to weary the reader and dis- -courage him from following -it through to the end. Make your announcements lively, make them brief, and make them timely. - Exactly the opposite is express ed in a gold mine “strike” and a railroad “strike.” The money annually spent for cosmetics by the women of this country would paint 17,000 houses, allowing $75 for each house. The Emperor of China has sent the German Emperor a large box of playthings—little dragons and things—for his five little sons. Said one lady: “I wish my chil dren looked as bright and healthy as yonr’s do.” Replied the other lady: “Mine would look just as sickly and puny as yonr’s if I did not occasionally give them Dr. Ball’s Worm Destroyers.” A Purely Vegetable Remedy, exempt of mineral poisons, bad odors and taste, acting on the liver, kidneys and system, caring Headache, Rheumatism, Bladder and Liver troubles, is the nonpareil of all horn* prescriptions. national income tax, and expand separable. T^_it Now is the time to subscribe for the HOlU J0UB5AL. - ‘ . ' . ’ . ... ’ ' > of B. B. B. and the nicer began to heal immediately, and effected an entire care. It is a remedy well worthy of confidence. Dr. J. E. Hall, Druggist tt Americas, Ga., writes: A planter near this place had several of his best laborers effected with Syphilis He got them B. B. B. and pro nounces them alLwell. A gang of A. P. & U* railroad hands use B. B. B. with great benefit to counteract the effect of swamp ma laria. Qnill toothpicks, as a rale, are imported from Frtnce. The largest factory in the world is near Paris, where 20,000,000 are annually produced. BucIcIcEt »»Arnica. Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Colds, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped ands, Chilblains, Corns and all Skin Eruptions, and posi tively cures Piles or no pay re quired. Tt is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money re funded. Price 25 cents per box For sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert. The Atlanta Constitution recent ly submitted-the following skele ton platform as the proper one for the democratic party to stand upon in the fall elections and in the coming great struggle of 1S92: Opposition to federal interfer ence in. elections. The free coinage of silver. Tariff reform and the redaction of'taxation. An honest and economical ad ministration of the affairs of the government in all its departments. This is good democratic doc trine. It is a fair and reasonably full summary of democratic faith. Reduced to practice, the masses of the people would find relief from the governmental burdens under which they labor, and there would be no obstacles bnt self-imposed ones between them and prosperity. 'Give the people that much and their future will be secure, if they shall deserve to have-it so. Give the people of the south that much, and with wise economy, the estab lishment of every possible smaller industry and the making of the farms self-sustaining, greater pos sible prosperity was never known on earth than will then bless the south throughout all her borders. And that much can be given to the people of the south only through the agency of the demo cratic party. Lively Advertising-. A Scrap of Paper Saves Her Life. It was just an ordinary scrap c f wrapping paper, but it saved her. life. She was in the last stages of consumption, told by physicians that she was incurable and could live only a short time; she weigh ed less than seventy pounds. On a piece of wrapping paper she read of Dr. King’s New Discovery, and got a sample bottle; it helped her, she bought a large bottle, it helped her more, bought another and grew better fast, Continued its nse and is now strong, healthy, rosy, plump, weighing. 140 pounds. For fuller particulars send stamp to W. H. Cole, Druggist, Fort Smith. Trial Bottles ofrais won derful Discovery Free at Holtz claw & Gilbert’s Drugstore: MONEY LOANS On Houston farms procured at the low est possible rates of interest. As low, if not lower than the lowest. Apply to W. D. NoTTrxGHAjr, tf Macon, Ga. Administrator’s Sale. Agreeably to an order of the Court of Ordinary of Houston county, will lie sold at auction, before the Dow. Law Bank, in the town of Fort "Valley, said county, on the first Tuesday in Angast- next, within the legal hours of sale, ti e following property, to-wit: One dwelling lot situated on First street in said town, and fronting on said street seventy-seven feet, and being the north half of the Harriet Hurley lot. Also, one dwelling lot, fronting on Sec ond street one hundred and five feet, now occupied by Jack Turner, and bounded on the north by Jasper Mitch ell’s lot, eastby the Braswell lot, and south by the Griffin lot. Also, three dwelling lots fronting on the Perry rail road in said town of Fort Yaliey, two of said lots fronting 60 feet, and one of said lots fronting 80 feet on said railroad, all of said lots joining, and bounded as fol lows: northwest by Harriet Hurley lot, northeast by said Perry railroad, south and southeast by the Tisscher lands and the Alex McKellar lot, and southwest by vacant lot of said estate. Also, one va cant lot joining' said three lots, and bounded as follows: on the southeast by three vacant lots of said estate, north west by Bill Whitfield’s lot, and ou the south by the Visscher lands, said lot being in the: Sold* as the property of the late W. T. Gulledge, deceased. Terms, one-half cash, and one-half Oct. 15th, 1890. W. S. HARVARD, Adm’r. June 17th, 1390. CONSUMPTION I COUGH or COLD BRONCHITIS Throat Affection SCROFULA. I lasting of Flesh Or any Disease tchere the Throat and lungs are Inflamed, ZacTs e/ Strength or Kens Votcer, you can be relieved and Cured by SCOTT’S EMULSION or PURE COD LIVER OIL With Hypophosphltes. PALATABLE AS MILK. A ah for Scott’s Emulsion, and let no ex. planation or solicitation induce you tS accept a substitute. Sold by all Druggists. SCOTT A BOWNE.Chemists, N.T, m