Newspaper Page Text
I Was Weak,
*IN4 and nervous, my food did not digcsi
•“fly In fact I was In poor health generally,
I had to sleep
propped up in bed to
breathe easily
night. I had tho
grip and afterwards
a severe cough. I
found relief In
Hood's Sarsaparilla.
I have taken seven
bottles and can eat
what I please, sleep
soundly and feel
rested unless I over
w o t k. I feel as
young as I did at IS
when I use Judg
ment In my dally ex-
Mrs. I. E. Wallace erclse. I cannot be
ta to express my thanks sufficient for such
great soothing, health restoring medicine
Hood
ta* Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
Mm. Clam J. Wal-
«acb, wife ot Bev. I. E.
Wallace, clerk of Blood
*§ Sarsa
parilla
retires
Vr <%%%*%
Stiver Association ot Baptists. Calvert City, Ky.
Hood’S Pills give universal satisfaction.
•(spared by C. I. Hood b Co.. Lowell, Mass.
THE SONG OF THE GUN.
The furnace was white with steel alight
When my ne-.v born spirit came
In a molten flood of the war god's blood.
In a passion of fire and flaiuc.
I looked o'er the deep from a lofty steep
With a strong heart full of pride,
"Like a king atone on Ufa stately throne
Whose word no man denied.
My thunder spoke from tho battlo smoke.
When the waves ran crimson red,
And heroes died by my iron side
Till the foreign foomcn fled.
The sentence of death was in my breath,
And many a ship went down.
Oh, the gun.is lord of tho feeble sword,
And greater is his renown.
How the long grass hides my rusty sides,
And round me the children play.
But I dream by night of a last great fight,
Ere the trump of the judgment day.
Tor men must fight in tho cause of right
Till the timo when war shall cease,
And tho song of the gun will ne’er bo done
Till tho dawn of lasting pcaco.
—New York Tribune.
DAPIINE.
Tall, angular and peculiarly plain,
ebe was tlio vifo of n Queensland
bush carrier, and it is, I believe, an
Accepted fact that ladies of that sta
tion are not noted either for their
culturo or their refinement.
' .Crawling with heavily laden bul
lock wagons across .he plains and
mover ending scrubs would not ap
pear to he a:i existence possessed of
■many charms, and yet I believe
there is no case on record of a man
or woman vrho, having once served
:$ris or her apprenticeship to the
■trade, has ever returned to a civi-
IKned life again.
, In tho Queensland bush carrying
trade, you must understand, there
arc tl . o main arteries—tho town
ship:; c -l Hughs'.,don, Longreach and
Charleville—and from each of tlieso
places there flows continually a
stream of enormous table topped
wagons bound for t Jin stations in the
great west, all more or loss remote
from what is generally supposed to
make life worth living.
Tho existence of the carrier is
rough to a terrible degree and must
in no way ho confounded with that
■ jf t ho respectable, jog trot class who
ply their trade in English rural dis
tricts. Let me picture for you a
night’s camp of one of tlieso nomad
families.
Imagine a treeless plain, say,
rsomo 200 or 1100 miles from civiliza
tion, extending ns far as tho cj’o can
areach on every side. In tho fore
ground you will probably have a
fair sized water hole, up to tho side
of which ns you look lumbers an
•enormous wagon, piled with loading
of every kind and description and
•drawn by perhaps 20 bullocks.
'Wearied after their long day’s
march, tho team drags up 1i tho
water and then conies to a halt with
.-a deep grunt of satisfaction. Tho
:-sun, which throughout tho day has
•caused them untold agonies, now
dies low upon tho horizon, turning
the dreary plain into the likeness of
■a waveless sea and painting tho
placid water hole with colors of ever
•changing beauty. Once at a stand
still, tho work of unyoking com
mences, iind after this is accomplish-
•od the off sicler, or driver’s assistant,
bells certain bullocks and conducts
•the herd to water and tho best grass.
Tho driver meanwhile plncos tho
yokes in proper order upon the polo
preparatory to an early start upon
"tho morrow.
1 The carrier’s wifohy this timoha3
descended from her porch on tho
summit of the load, and with a
crowd of nut brown children at her
heels has set about hor preparation
of the evening meal. Ere it is eaten
tho sun has packed his pillows in
the west and dropped into his crim
son bed.
i As daylight disappears and with
out an interval of twilight, darkness
descends upon tho plain, and ono
ne sundry jewels drop out of
sure bouse pi night to. dock
tift canopy" o7 heaven, mo snnncsa
is almost remarkable, and later on
when each member of the tiny par
ty has found a resting place among
the loading or beneath tho wagon it
becomes even more intenso till only
tho whistle of a curlew, ihe cry of a
marauding dingo or tho distant
boom of the bullock bells jars upon
tho sleeping night.
By daybreak tho community is
onco more astir, and when breakfast
has been eaten the team is yokod up.
Then the woman places herself and
children upon tho top of tho wagon,
tho carrior takes his place and cracks
his heavy whip, tho bullocks sway
forward, and once more the journey
is resumed across tho same inter
minable plain. So, week in and week
out, from year’s end to year’s end,
the samo life goes forward, never
varying save when rain or soarcity
of grass makes the track impassable.
Small wonder, therefore, that the
women grow to bo hard and rough,
consorting, as they do, with none
but the sternest of the opposite sex
and daily doing work that would
test tho patience and endurance of
tho strongest man. These are somo
of tho folk who in reality do tho
building up of our colonies, although
the credit goes to another noisor,
uglier and far less useful class. But
to got back to my story.
As I have said at tho beginning,
she was tall, angular and particu
larly plain, and in spite of the glar
ing incongruity of it jt must be re
corded that her baptismal namowai
Daphne. Her husband was a car
rier on the Hidgerce-Kalaba track,
and she was at onco tho brain and
mainstay of his business.
My first acquaintance with them
occurred on the odgo of a Boreo
Borub, a dismal placo and more than
100 miles removed from either of tho
above townships. They were camp
ed bosido a big water hole, and on
dismounting from my horse I was
introduced by tho carrier with be
coming ceremony to bis wife. Great
were tho proofs of friendship they
showed mo, anil long will I cherish
tho memory of that rough but hearty
hospitality. Next morning I wont
my way, they theirs, and it was
nearly a year before wo mot again
When next I heard of thorn,
Daphne was in the township hos
pital recovering from a serious ac
cident occasioned by a fall from tho
wagon, and her husband, an enor
mously built man, •with a rough
manner which by those unskilled in
such matters might easily have been
mistaken for insolence, had that
very day returned with loading from
tho west. By inquiring after his
wife, whose illness I was awaro of
I touched tlio right string, for liis
eyes lit up, his vcico softened, and
bo answered my questions with sur
prising meekness.
“Sho is gettin on well,” he said,
“hut all tlio same it is terribly slow
Now, itfuust bo known hero that,
although tlio Kalaba hospital occu
pies IJio best position in the town
ship, even then it is, if anything,
littlo less cheerful than ah under
taker’s showroom, timut gray
plains surround it on three sides;
the township, with its ugly white
washed roofs, stares afc it from tlio
fourth, and it would ho impossible
to say which view would he likely
to have tho most depressing effect
upon an invalid. I am told that
Kalaba was only designed as a depot
for tho great west, anil I oonsolo
myself with tho reflection that in
tlio very near future tlio overland
railway will obviate that necessity.
Then it will ho scattered to the four
winds of heaven. At present it is
the decalogue turned backward.
When my business was finished I
rode up to the hospital and loft some
newspapers. Daphne being tho only
patient, I found her occupying tlio
best hod in the only ward. Her
wiry black hair straggled in rank
confusion about tho pillow, while
her complexion harmonized, as well
as a well tanned skin would permit,
with the dingy whiteness of tho
counterpane. Only tlio great dark
eyes lont relief to tho monotony of
her expression, and they were now
full of something which when read
aright spelt hopelessness of an ex
traordinary degree.
Toward tho end of the afternoon
tlio husband made his appearance,
and preceded by tho matron lie
stalked into his wife's presence.
For a moment ho stood in the door
way dazed, bewildered perhaps by
the half darkness. Then recogniz
ing his wife he advanced toward tho
bod.
“Daphne, old gal, ” ho said, with
a littlo tremor in his voice, us ho
bent over hor, “an ’ow’s it with ye
now? Ye looks better by a darned
sight.”
Bhe gave a little sigh before she
replied:
“I’m nearly well now, Bill, bet-
ter’n I ’nvo been by a long chalk.
8ilLl®..down 1 cild man, an toll us
Nervous Prostration.
ThU nmd ni»me I* Now Suren*folly
Treated. Science Believes In Food
Rather Than Stimulation.
From the Washington, D. C, Star.
No more deplorable condition of the hu
man body can be conceived than that of
nervous prostration, when even' nerve in the
system seems to vie with the others to make
you miserable, when even the sunshine irri
tates you, when the happy prattle of the child
distracts the loving parent, when life is
haunted by a constant foreboding, when the
light of life seems to turn to a smoking,
smouldering flame of torture—that’s part of
nervous prostration, just n phase of this
many-sided disease. As its grasp upon you
strengthens von lose, perhaps, the power to
walk, to talk, to think, even the power to
love. Death would be welcome, but nlnsl it
comes not until the cup of sufferings full to
overflowing. Such has been the experience
of Mr. W.Henrieh Robb, No. 809 New Jer
sey Avenue, Northwest, whose story is best
told in his own words.
“For a long time,” said Mr. Robb, “I
suffered horribly with nervous prostration,
snd tried many physicians and various
highly recommended remedies without ex
periencing the slightest benefit. Last tall
my business called me to Pittsburg, Pa., and
while there my mother, who remained in
Washington, heard through a friend of some
remarkable cures made by Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills, and wrote recommending that I
should try them. To pleAse my mother, and
not with any great expectations that they
would do me any good, I procured a box.
At this time and for a long time previousmy
condition was most deplorable. My appetite
was gone. I could not walk alone, ami had
1 attempted to do so would have fallen.
After I had taken the pills I felt stronger
than I had for many months. After the first
box of pills had been used by me my appe
tite returned and I was able to eat like a
horse. My legs which had seemed to roc like
wooden lops, and my body which was fast
becoming in the same condition recovered
their normal condition after the use of Pink
Pills.”
In eases of this kind they act in the capacity
of a food, nourishingthe nerves and creating
new blood and tissue. It is to the weakened
nerves wliat bread and beef are to the mus
cular system. It supplies them all the
properties necessary to build them up,
•trengthen them ana restore them to a vigor
ous, healthy condition.
This is undoubtedly the real secret of the
marvelous power of Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills. Pale, nervous, emaciated people who
take them quickly gain a fresh, healthful
color. Their flesh and mtiscles become firm
and solid. No medicine alone will produce
this result. It requires food—blood-creat
ing, health-giving food, and Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills supply exactly this require
ment. No better proof of this could be
offered than that diseases which heretofore
have been supposed to be jncurable, such as
locomotor ataxia and paralysis succumb to
this wonderful remedy as readily as the most
trilling ailments.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold bv all
dealers, or will be Sent post paid on receipt
of price, (50 cents a box. or six boxes ior
$2.50) by addressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine
Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
’OW ii'fe’GeS Witi? tno cninirtm an mo
team.”
Bill sat very gingerly on tlio edge
of tho bod, and as if out of compli
ment to tho peculiar cleanliness of
tho placo fell to scrubbing his face
■with a flaring red cotton handker
chief.
“The kids is fit, an the team’s
first class,” ho answered.
Then, with a gesture of almost
awe, ho assumed possession of ono
of the tliin brown hands upon tho
coverlet.
“My lass, ’ow dog poor yer ’anils
has got, to bo sure; but they was al
ways pretty ’ands to my thinkin.”
Daphne patted his great brown
paws anil allowed a littlo wan smilo
of gratified vanity to flioker across
her face. Let tho woman ho over so
old and plain, sho is never beyond
tho reach of a compliment from tho
man sho loves.
“Ail ’ow’s tho roads lookin out
bapk?” sho asked.
“A1 an no mistake, greon as a
leaf all tho way. From hero to Kid-
gereo creek there’s water in overy
hole, an the littlo wild flowers yer
used to like is that thick along the
track yor can hardly soo tho grass
for ’em. I brought yer some.” On
tho lining of his big cabbage tree
hat he took a tiny hunch of bush
bluebells nnd placed them in her
hand. It was a critical moment for
both of them. Ho was acutely afraid
of ridicule. She, for some reason
sho could not have explained, did
not know whether to laugh or cry.
Sho laid tho flowers on tho table
by her bodsido and then turned to
her husband, tho hotter to express
hor thanks.
“Bill,” sho said softly, “you wa3
alius a goo i chan to me. ’ ’
“Nay, nay, my lass; j t ou mustn't
say that. You don’t know ’ow wo
misses yor out yonder. Things ain’t
the samo at all without ye. Mako
’asto an got well an como hack tc
tho kids an mo an let’s get out of
this ’ero town.”
“Bill, I shan’t ho”—
“Shan’t bo what, lass?”
Ho looted rather anxiously down
ftt her.
“Ishar’t ho”— Tho weak voice
paused ai if to think of a word.
Then nlioseemod to choko, anti lifter
that a palinfnl silence ensued.
Finally sho said:
“I—I shan’t bo long.”
Bill gave & sigb of relief and con
tinued :
“I’m ’avin new tires put on the
foro wheels, an we’vo got a new
pair o’ steers in placo o’ Billabong
an Blossom, that were too old for
tho work. We’vo got full loadin
out to the Diammantia an back, an
when tho trip’s done there’ll per
haps be a matter o’ £20 to put in the
stocking for the kids. Get well, my
lass, an comeJjackio.jrQijr JllJMSSUD
the load. 'TBd "Lusk *svlnu, YVTi "tlio
blue sky, an tlio sight o’ thorn wild
flowers’ll soon sot yor right. Yor
ain’t feelin any worse, aro yer?”
“No, old man. Tho doctor says
I’ll bo out this side o’ Sunday.”
“That’s tho talk! We ’re camped
down yonder on tho creek, an tho
day ye’re out I’ll come up an fetch
yor mcsolf. Tho team’ll be all
fresh, an the loadin’ll be aboard, an
the very next mornin we’ll have the
yokes on an be where a man’s got
room to brenthe.”
“Why, Bill, I never’eard yer talk
so before! It’s like what the parson
who comes here every Monday calls
poetry.”
There was an ocean of pathos in ,
the man’s roply:
“Yer see, old girl, t must talk a
bit different, for yer ain’t been ill
like this afore.”
Another long silonce fell upon tho
pair. Then ho rose to say goodby, |
and his wife’b face grew, if possible, ;
paler than bafore.
"Bill,” she began falteringly, ;
“I’ve been a-tryin all the timo yer’ve
been boro to tell yor somethin, but |
I dunno how to begin. It’s this
way”—
“Out wi’ it, my lass. What’s
wrong? Ain’t they been a-treatin
yer well in ’orsepital?”
“It’s not that, Bill,” she answer
ed. “But there—I oan’t tell ye.
Flesh an blood couldn’t, let alone
yer wife. Ye must just ask the
doctor when yor got outside if Vs
got anything to say agin me walkin
with tho team. Will yer?”
“If yor say so, in course. But,
Daphne, there ain’t nothin agin it,
is there?”
“You ax ’im. ’E’ll toll yer, Bill.
But ’ero’s tho matron oomin. I
guess yer’d better be goin. Tell
them kiddies their mother ain’t for
got ’am.”
Raising herself with an effort, sho
pulled tho big man’s tangled head
down to hor and kissed him on tho
forehead with a gentleness that
would have been grotesque if the
sentimont that prompted it had not
boon so growsomely pathetic. Then
as tlio matron approached tho bed
ho went down tho corridor to find
tho liouso surgeon.
Tho latter, I may tell you, was a
rough man, imbittcred by hard
work and insufficient returns, tho
position of house surgeon in a hush
hospital being hut littlo sought aft
er by tho shining lights of tho pro
fession.
Wlion Daphne’s husband entered,
ho was engaged in writing to tho
hoard, demanding for tho sixth timo
an increase in his meager salary.
He looked up and seeing tho man
before him said roughly:
“Well, what do you want?”
Tho carrier shuffled from ono foot
to tho other with ovident uneasi
ness.
“Beg yer pardon, sir, an sorry for
interruptin, hut tho missus axed
mo to ax you if it wore likely yer’d
have any objection to ’er walkin
alongside tho team when she comes
out?”
“Whoso missis? Oh, I understand
—tho woman in the ward tliore.
Walk bosido tho team? Good heav
ens, man, what aro you talking
about! Aro you mad? How on
oartli can sho walk beside tho team?”
“I mean in course, sir, when she’s
well enough in como out.”
“Well enough to como out? Why,
man alive, she’s as well now as over
sho will ho. It was a compound
fracture of both femurs and a double
amputation. Sho hasn’t a leg to
stand on, much less to walk with.
No, no! You’d hotter look out for
a house in tho township and find
somobody to move hor about for tho
rest of her life. Sho’ll never bo able
to travel with you again. Hero,
hang it man, go outside if you are
going to ho ill.”
“I ax yer pardon, sir, hut—if yer
don’t minil I’ll just sit down for a
minute. Everything’s a-goin round
an round, an I don’t somehow feel
kinder well.”—Chambers’ Journal.
Lubbock says that tho light of fire-
fliesisproducod by tho slow combus
tion of uhosuhorus in their bodies.
The wife of Mr, Leonard Wells, of
East Briinfleld, Mass., had been suN
feriug from neuralgia for two days,
not being able to sleep or hardly
keep still, when Mr. Holden, the
merchant there sent her a bottle of
Chamberlain’s Pain Balm, and asked
that she give it a thorough trial. On
meeting Mr. Wells the next day
he was told that she was all
right, the pain bad left her Within
two hours, aDd that the bottle
of Pain Balm was worth *5.00 if it
could not be had for less. For sale
at 50 cents per bottle by Culver &
Kidd, Miiledgeville, Ga.
Ex-President Harrison saved some
money out of the President’s salary
of $50,000 a year, Beeently be scoop
ed in $100,000 in a South Africa spec,
ulation and is getting to be a ricb
man.
What is
Castoria U Dr. 8amuel Pitcher’s prescription for
and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil.
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years* use by
Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allaya
feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd,
cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves
teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency.
Castoria assimilates the food, regulates tho stomach
and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas*
torla is tho Children’s Panacea—the Mother’s Friend.
Castoria.
“Castoria Is an excellent medicine for chil
dren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its
good effect upon their children."
Da. Q. C. Osgood,
Lowell, Mass.
“ Castoria is the best remedy for children of
which I am acquainted. I hope the day is not
far distant when mothers will consider the real
interest of their children, and use Castoria in
stead of the various quack nostrums which ore
destroying their loved ones, By forcing opium,
morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful
agents down their throats, thereby sending
them to premature graves.”
Da. J. F. Kimchelom,
Conway, Ark.
Castoria.
— — — «
“ Castoria is so well adapted to chUdna that
I recommend it os superior toanypreseripUoa
known to me."
H. A. Archmm,M. D.,
Ill Eo. Oxford St., Brooklyn, R. y.
“ Our physicians in the children's deport,
ment- have spoken highly of their experi
ence in their outside practice with Castoria,
and although we only have among our
medical supplies what is known as regular
products, yet we are free to confess that the
merits of Castoria has won us to look With
favor upon it.”
Umtxo Hospital amd Diskmusv,
Boston, Hose
Alum C. Smith, Pres.,
The Csntau Company, TT Murray Street, New York City.
January 23, 1894 30 2yrs.
Lewis Blount. Jas. B. Edwards, Jr.
BLOUNT & EDWARDS,
—Lessees Of—
The Pooser Machine Works,
Repair anil sell
ENGINES, BOILERS, COTTON GIN
NING MACHINERY, PUMPS, PIPE FIT
TINGS, VALVES &c., &c.
Will repair safes, scales, bicycles and electrical
appliances. Contract for scientific plumbing,
steam and gas fitting, and the erection of private
water and gass plants either in town or country. Will make me
chanical drawings, contract for moving heavy machinery or build
ings in any part of the sta^te. Call to see us or write to us and we
will give it prompt attention. If you have second hand machinery,
which you wish to sell write to us and we will find you a purchaser.
Satisfaction or no pay. BLOUNT & EDWARDS.
July 22, 1895. Miiledgeville, Ga.
1,000,000 People Wear
lW.LDouglas Shoes
HAND dr ^no BEST
SEWED “C^yjlNTHE
PROCESS. WBRLD.
$3.00
$2.50
$2.00
$1.75
Fur Bits
Minas
Wear V. I- Dxinliu Shoes and Base from
SI.OO to $3.00 u pair. All Wjles and
Wldtto. IWs advance in leather has increased the
price o# «lb«r eaakes, but the qualit” and pi ices of
W. L. BmUIm .line, remain the name.
Take noautwtiuno-, see that name and price Is stamoed
on sole. W. MlnilM, Bbocktok, Mass. Sold by
FRED HAUG.
i July 1,1895. 15m.
I
WANTED-AN IDEASiSMSK
thing to patent ? Protect your ideas; they may
bring you wealth. Write JOHN WBDDER-
BURN & CO., Patent Attorneys, Washington
D. C., for their $1,800 prize offer.
| Sept. 25. 1895. ly
GEORGIA, Baldwin County.
W HEREAS Dr. I. L, Harris, Executor
of the Estate of Mrs. Anna K. Rob
inson. deed,, represents to theeciiirt in his
petition duly tiled and entered on record
that he hits fully administered Mrs Anna
K. Robinson’s estate. Tills Is therefore to
cite all persons concerned heirs and cred
itors to show cause, if any they can, why
said executor should not be discharged
from liis executorship and receive letters
of dismission on the first Monday in Jan
uary next, 189G.
This September 25th. 1895.
M. R. BELL, Ordinary B. C.
Oct. 1,1891. 14 3ms.
APPLICATION FOK IMMlIIMIOtV
GEORGIA, Baldwin County. i
Court of Ordinary, Sept.Terra, 1895. (
W HEREAS, J.M. Bayne, Administrator
of B. D. Brown, represents to the
Court In his petition, duly llled and en
tered on record, that he has luily admin
istered B. D. Brown’s estate. This is there-
fore to cite all persons concerned, heirs
and creditors, to show cause, If any they
oan, why said Administrator should no'
be discharged from his administration and
receive letters of dismission on the first
Monday in December next, 1895.
This 23d day or August, 1895.
M. R, BELL, Ordinary B.O.
CITATION.
GEORGIA, Baldwin County:
To all whom it may Concern:
M RS. Ctefia M. Case, bv her Attorney,
J). B. SanfoLl, having in,proper form
applied to me for permane, t letters of
administration on the estate or C. L. Case,
Idle of said county. This Is to cite all and
singular the creditors and next of kin of
O L. case to be and appear at my office
within the time allowed by law and show
cause, if anv they can, why permanent
Administration should not be grouted to
Mrs. D elia vi.CaseenC L. Case’s estate.
Witn. ss my Imndofli.-ial signature,Nov.
4th, 1895, M. K. BELL, Oidlnary, B. €’•
CITATION.
GEORGIA, Baldwin County:
To all whom it may concern.
Tr F. BELL (a credilor) having in proper
Vi form applied to me for permanent let
ters or administration on the estate of Hal
Lofton, c., lute oi sold county, this is to
cite all and singular creditors and next
of sin of Hal Lofton, o., to lie and appear
at my office, wilhin the time allowed by
law, and show cause, if any they can why
peimanent administration should not be
granted to J. F. Boll (a creditor) ou Hal
Lofton’s, c., estate.
Wittiest my hand and official signature,
November 4,1895.
M. It,. BELL, Ordinary B. C.
Cll ATfOV.
GEORGIA, Baldwin < ounty :
• nun .a ordinary, I
„ N.»v. inti i Term, 1895. f
E S. VINSON, Ad id i t'Htoroftho es-
. tale oi Mis. M. C. Vie-on, deceased,
and also Admlulstr iim mi jiih estate of
Mrs. £. O. \ ins.in i.i- hold- non, has made
application lo this cmn i lor have to eell
all of tne real estate in s ( ii , ounty be
longing to the estate. t | iiia.it C, VinBon
and E. O. Vinson d. ceased.
This is therefore to cite all persons In
terested to shoi can-e, if uuy they can, at
the December term oi tin- e no t. 1895, why
said application siioul u *i '.e granted.
Witness my h nid and ■ fli -ial signature
November 4th, 1835
M. K BELL Oidinary B. C.
Citation.
M ARTIN V. Harris, C., having In pri
form applied to mo for perumi
letters of Administration on the estati
Martin Harris. c„ late of said cou
1 his is to cite all and singular, the oi
tors and next ol kin of Mai tin Harrii
to be and appear at my office within
time allowed by law and show caus
any they can. why permanent Adiuinte
lion should not be granted to Martli
Harris. c.,on Martin Harris’s, c., eel
Witness my hand an official signa
October 31st, 1895.
M.R. BELL, Ordinary B,
NOTICE.
For Sale.
O NE PAIR Fairbauk’s Platform
Scales. Good condition. Will be
•old cheap. H. H. Stkmbridgk,
Sept. 16,1895, • tf.
A LL FARMERS indebted to tbe firm of
M. A J. R. Hines will please bring me
their cotton tbe coming season. I will pa?
highest market price. Besgectfull^^
Burvtving partner o M. A j. R. Hines.
July 39,1895. 5 8m.