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Ordinary** Advertisements. j
v ~ " A. —“
O RDIN CfoUNTY, GaT
Sic administratrix of
(Hn Mtt ’btotlct of
beginning atpoint on
Hunter
and Doray streets, thence north along
Doray street 40 ft and back west same
width 80 ft to Leach street, being part of
land lots 40 and 41 ofthe Leach property
as per plat of Harry Krouse of April 15,
1886.
Also, part of land lot No. 47 in the
14th District of Fulton county, Ga., com
mencing at a point 150 ft south of North
Are., same being south-west corner of a
certain tract sold by Miss Mary Smith to
ff. F. Spalding ana W. B. Sheldon on an
unnamed street, thence running south
along said street 114 ft, thence east along
an unnamed street 200 ft, more or less,
thence north 114 ft, thence west 200 ft,
Aore or less, to starting point, same lying
south and adjoining said property con
veyed by M. Smith to W. F. Spalding and
W. B. Sheldon, April 18th, 189 L
Also, part of land lot , No. 55 In the
14th District ofFu.ton county, Ga., com
mencing at point on east side of Violet
Ave., 200 ft north of intersection of said
avenue and Haygood street, thence east
120 ft to a 10 foot alley, thence north along
the west side of said alley 50 ft, thence
west 120 ft to Violet Ave., thence south
along east side of Violet Ave., 50 ft to
starting point. The same being known
as Jot No. 105 as per plat of Auction sale
of B. W. Goode & Co., of said property
A ffi?*fertStahalotNo. W in 14th
District of Fulton county, Ga., situated as
fallows: Commencing at the south east
corner of Venable street and Orchard Ave.
and running east along the south side of
Orchard Ave. 501 ft to Fowler street,
thence south along the west side of Fowl
let street 110 ft, thence west parallel with
Orchard A.vb., 601 ft to Vcneable street
thence north along the east side of Vena
ble street 110 ft to the starting point, be
ing lots 8-4 5-6-7-8-9-10-11 and 12 of the
Harris property as per plat of Frierson
■& Leach, January 14th, 1892.
Also part of land lot 55 in the 14th Dis
trict of Fulton county r Ga., commencing
at a point on the east side of Violet Ave.,
350 it north of Haygood street, thence
north along east side of Violet Ave., 50 ft,
thence east 120 ft to 10 foot alley, thence
south along said alley 50 ft, thence west
120 ft to Violet Ave., the starting point,
same being known as No. 11l of 8. W.
Goode & Co., plat of the A. P. Wright
property, ApnllOth, 1889.
Also Land lot No. 188 in 14th District
of Fulton county. Ga., one quarter acre
more or less, adjoining the land of Samuel
Bland south east,and the land of Smith on
the north east and R. Pickens on the
west and also Albert Thompson on the
south, said lot known now as Felix
Bland’s home.
Also one half undivided interest of city
lot No. 8, Commerce street, Albany,
Dougherty county, Ga., improved,for the
purpose of paying debts of the deceased
and for distribution among the heirs.
Let all persons concerned show cause, if
any thete be» before the Court of Ordinary,
in Griffin, GLren the first Monday in
November, 1898, by 10 o’clock, a. m., why
such order should not be granted. Oct.
3rd, 1898.
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Bpaldiho County,
E. A Huckaby, administrator de bonis
non, on the estate of Nathan Fomby, de
ceased, makes Application for leave to sell
forty-t#» acres of land off lot No, 18, in
Line Creek district, of Spalding county,
Georgia, bounded as follows: On the
north by C. T. Digby, east by R. W.
Lynch and J. A. J. Tidwell, south and
west byj. A. J. Tidwell—for the purpose
of paying debts of deceased, and tor distri
bution among the heirs. Let all persons
concerned show cause, if any there be, be
fore the court of Ordinary, in Griffin, Ga.,
on the first Monday in November, 1898, by
10 o’clock a. m., why such ordef should
not be October termHß9B.
QTATE OF GEORGIA,
O Spalding County.
J. H. Grubbs, guardian of H. W., Sarah
L„ Mollie, T, J, and C A. McKneely and
Amanda M. Burke, has applied to me for
a discharge from the guardianship of the
above named persons. This is therefore to
notify all persons concerned to file their
objections, if any they have, on or before
the first Monday in November, 1898, else
he will be discharged from his guardian
ship, as applied for. Oct. 3,1898.
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
Administrator’s Sale.
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County.
By virtue of an order granted by the
court of Ordinary of Spalding county,
Georgia, at the October term of said court,
1898,1 Will sell to the highest bidder, be
fore the court house door, in Griffin, Geor
gia, between the legal hours of sale, on
the first Tuesday in November, 1898: Two
hundred acres of land in Mt. Zion district,
said county, bounded as follows : On the
north by F.E. Drewry and J. F, Dickin
son, on the east by Dickinson, south by
Bing Dunn, and Widow Yarbrough, for
the purpose of paying debts of deceased,
and for distribution among the heirs.
Terms cash. Oct. 8,1898.
A. B- Shackklpord, Adm’r ...
of J. J. Bowdoin, deceased.
Guardian’s Sale.
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County.
By virtue of an order granted by the
Court of Ordinary of Spalding county,
Georgia, at tbe October term of said court,
1898, I will sell to the highest bidder, be
fore tbe court house door in Griffin, Ga.,
between the legal hours of sale, on the
first Tuesday in November, 1898, fifty
acres of land in Union District, said coun
ty, bounded as follows: On the North by
A. Cfcletree, Eart, South and West by J.
J. Elder. Sold for the purpose of enr
of wards estate for
„“®“®aintenance and education. October
8.1898. Martha. J. Gqlwan,
Guardian.
F»u’l Tobarro Spitaud Siutae lour Life
■t t,. oacco oaxily and forever, be mag
petic. lu!l of Lfe, nerve anti vigor, ta%e No-Vo
' wo»der-wo: kcißuatJhttta-t weak men
stiong ah druggists, 60cer Si. Cureguaran
c? and »ampie free. Address
bterlfng iiemedv &>• Chicago New Yor>
I' . .
1 TENMYSON’S FAITH.
TMe Prefclem •< tks Fatarw I4fe risd
the Deualeeet laterwt.
A reader of the “Life of Tennyson,"
by hie eon, will be struck by the toot
that no subject interested him so deep
ly te the problem of the future life. Rs
observe that it was always a
problem to him, one that he was oon
stantiy raising, that would not stay set
tled. To be sore, he was a believer in
immortality, but not a restful believer.
He was all the time digging up the
roots of his faith to be sure they were
alive. The old question would not stay
unanswered. The reader of his poetry
observes the name thing. He is always
on the side of faith, but of a somewhat
disturbedftaftb He belonged to that
“metaphysical society” which Invited
into its membership believers of all
shades, with all shades of unbelievers,
whose object was to raise and answer
> doubts about God and the future life.
He was the spokesman of the scientific
doubt of the age, fluttering over the
dovecots of faith, but hardly settling
and resting and nesting therein.
One observes the contrast with this
fluttering faith who reads the poems of
Milton, with their abiding faith in the
future life. This is the spiritual con
trast between “In Memoriam” and
“Lyoidas. ” In Milton's requiem, even
under its paganised form, there is a ro
bust and jubilant faith in God and
eternal lire No question sifters. The
mind and heart are satisfied. The dear
friend is beyond ail doubt among thp
saints and choirs above. One regrets
that Tennyson’s mental structure per
haps could find positiveness and rest on
: questions of politics or poetry, b 0
must perennially dubitate—to be sure,
with the hopeful balance of probability
—over questions of faith. “I believe I
know, ” heonee said, “the quantity of
every word in the English language
except scissors, ”■ but one seems to
tect a tremulouswess in his best exprori
sion of faith, “I hope to meet my Pilot
face to face, when I have crossed the
bar. ” —lndependent.
HARNESS REINS.
Made From the Stoutest of Leathe*.
A Word About £taa«.-*4lda.
The reins of a set of single harness
are each about 13 feet in length, there
of a double harness .about 15 feet. For
business harness reins are made of
leather, tanned black; the reins of car
riage harness are madeof russet colored
leather.
Reins require to be very stout, and
they are almost always made of steer
hide, the leather of which traces are
made, these, however, being of more
than one thickness. Occasionally lines
for light or for cheap harness are made
of cowhide, but not often. As a rule the
best of-leather is used? lor the reins
even in cheap harness. There can be ob
tained fronrtbe hides of leather suitable
for reins strips from seven to nine feet
in length, so that reins are always of
necessity made in two pieces.
The loops, or hand holds, often seen
on the reins of track or road horses are
commonly made of lighter leather
stitched together and then sometimes
stitched to the reins, but more often se
cured to them in such a manner that
they can be shifted on the reins to suit
the convenience of the driver. The
three loop hold, which is called the
Boston hand hold, is commonly used for
track driving. The single loop is the
one used by moat drivers on the road.
There are patent hand holds made of
metal. The wooden buttons sometimes
seen on reins, used as hand holds, are
made in pairs, one button of each pair
having a stem, with a thread out on it,
which goes through the rein and is
screwed' into the other button of the
pair on the opposite side.—New York
Sun.
Sowing Fanny Seed.
, During early October is a good time
for sowing pansy seed for next spring’s
supply of plants for bedding out. The
reason for fall sowing out of doors to
that the plants are not then subjected
to the hot, drying influences of the
house, which are so likely to bring on
red spider and other troubles.
Prepare a bed of very rich, porous
loam on a well drained location. < Place
over it a fiame to be filled with forest
leaves as a protection to the little plants
over winter. After sowing the seed in
the bed sift a very light covering of soil
over the seed, merely enough to hide
them. During the wooess of germina
tion never allqw tire bed to dry out, as
moisture is essential to perfect germina
tion of any seed.
As severe weather approaches cover
the bed with a few inebee of litter of
some sort, forest leaves being preferable.
At the proper time in the spring the
seedlings may be pricked out of the soil
in the seedbed and transferred to the
bed in which they are to bloom.—Wom
an’s Home Companion.
Owe Day at a Time.
It is a blessed secret, says tbe British
Weekly, this of living by the day.
Any one can carry his burden, however
heavy, tilt nightfall. Any one can live
sweetly, patiently, lovingly, purely,
till the sun goes down. And this to all
that life ever realty means to us—just
one little day. Do today’s duty. Fight
today’s temptations, and do Dot weaken
and distract yourself by looking for
ward to things you cannot ass and could
not understand if you saw them. God
gives us nights to shut down the cur
tain of darkness on ou.littie days. We
cannot see beyond. Short horizons
make life easier and- give us one of
ibKve, true, holy livi||. W
fer wfeol#-
Werth D|se«Mle«,
’•Doctor, I don’t know what’a the
matter with me. I can’t sleep nights
any more.”
“Um I Let’s see. What to your buri
ness?”
“I’manightwAfchiDan.”
“Ah, your cate tea ren»arhabl«me.
I must write it up for our Monthly
Medical Record.” -Chicago Newa
PAY KUFFBft
TIPS THAT MUST BE GIVEN ON THS .!
BIG OCEAN UNERB.
Ths I*»mh» Who 8oek« to Bvere This 1
Dysteaa «r Mild ■taokmalltae Mm rite
•• BmiWl Msdt M toonMbl*
The fee system is more rigidly en
forced on a big passenger steamship
than anywhere else, It totaeefW
places where reßnmts damandlhafr fees
and tall you the emniwt that they think
you ought to give them. While the
waiters at restaurants aad hotels expect
fees for their services and will hint and
may perhaps make it embarrassing for
you if they are not paid they hays I
not gone So far as t '! you thpt they
want a fee and prv.-.ribe the amount.
Even porters do not dotbat They oemne
around, brush your coat -nd hat and
run the whisk over your trousers, but
it is seldom that they ask you fornay
money, let alone a specified amount.
On the passenger steamers the stew
ards regard their fees as & matter of
right as much as the steamship com
pany regards your passage money. It is
possible to avoid paying the fees, as
they are not collectable by law, but the
passenger who does not pay them will
have trouble in getting his luggage oft
the steamer, and it would to well for
him to keep off steamers afterward
where any of the servants of that beat
i are employed. . ■
The stewards seem to have some sort
of fee guidebook or black listofpubenr
gers who do not give fees,' so that they
can make them suffer on future tripa
Certain fees are regularly fixed-and sx
: pected, irrespective of th* «Mt of the
stateroom or the style in which a man
travels, while certain other fees depend
dn the Style. Foran ordinary passenger
there are fees to be given to the state
room steward,the saloon steward, the
deck steward, the smoking room steward
and the barber and bath man.
The fee to the steward who looks
after your stateroom is about 10 shil
lings. The steward.who waits on you
at the table should receive the same fee.
The deck steward, for bringing you an
occasional drink and looking after your
steamer chair and rugs, expects 5 shil
lings, but he will take half a crown.
The smoking room steward expects 5
shillings, and if you are in the smoking
room a great part of the trip he feels
that he is entitled to as much as the
stateroom steward or your waiter. A
bath every day on the passage can be
had for a 5 shilling fee.
These rates are fixed by long custom.
The stewards can tell whether or not a
man understands the rates and if he will
pay.at the end of the teip. If they do
not think that he will, they give him
hints from time to time until they get
some assurance on his part that ho
recognizes the obligation of the fee sys
tem. If they think he will not pay, he
will have a hard time of it He will
find that his stateroom to not well made
up; that he does notrget care when ho
is seasick; that he is served last at the
table and does not get the- things that
he ordered; that the wrong drinks and
cigars oome lo War in the smoking
room, and that his sttamer-ebsif is con
stantly lost. Tbeservants are as effec
tive as seasickness in making a man’s
trip miserable.
These fees are not to be paid until
the last day of the trip. The servants
very speedily find out at which place a
passenger is to get off. If making his
first trip,' they are pretty sure to know
it. It is advisable for him in that case
to tell his stateroom steward and his
waiter that he will give them the regu
lar fee at the end of the trip if they
serve him properly snd that if they do
not they will not get a. penny. If he
tells them this in the proper way, he
will get as good service as the man who
is well known.
The last morning of the teip the state
room steward comes round for his fee.
If the passenger does not offer it, the
steward suggests that it .to customary
to give him a fee, and that the regular
fee is half a sovereign. If Anything less
is offered him and ha thinks ha can get
a half sovereign by refusing to accept
less, he will at once hand the proffered
sum back and say in an insolent way
that he never takes lees than the regu
larfre. ,
With many passengers, particularly
women, this remark and the tone ex
tract the Ift shillings. The saloon stew
ard does the same thing. The stewards
work in with each other, and if" a man
succeeds in avoiding the stateroom stew
ard the saloon steward will ask him for
both himself and the stateroom steward.
As a man cannot get off the ship until
it stops, there is no way of escaping
these demands, which will be repeated
during the last day of the trip until the
passenger succumbs. —New York Home
Journal. -p ? T j'.. 1
Genuine.
Mrs. Parvenu—That picture in the
corner is by an old master.
Mrs. Swart lei gh—lndeed. I would
never have guessed it.
Mrs. Parvenu —Yeo, the man I
bought it from gave me a written guar
antee that the painter wan past 75 be
fore he done a stroke on it—Chicago
News. .
In Van.
Mamma (at the breakfast table)—
You always ought to use your naptha,
Georgia.
Georgie—l am usin it mamma. I’ve
' got the dog tied to the leg of the table
[ with it.—Chicago Tribune.
Much of the artificial coloring of
foods is traditional and not meant to de
ceive. Thus candies are colored obvious
-1 ly to please the eye and add to the at
-1 tntotivenees of the confectioner’s show
case, and likewise butter and mustard
are colored with no intent to spoil their
parity. r
The average age at which women
■ marry in civilized countries is 28)<
rateeandif he will
p
Butrotttol Mtamt I
Modern Greek peasaute exchange a I
gold and silver wedding ring, and they
drink wine from the asms cup But the
regular ritual of the Greek churoh or
dains Mw* eolenm betrottai pronefloe the
actual marriage, in which are used gold
Kia Hix ver weaaiDw nngv mewea uy
the priest, the gold ring being given to
the man, the silver ring to the woman.
The form of the espousal is than repeat
ed, and the rings are pieced on the right
hands and then exchiMaged that no in
feriority maybe botokaawd by the wom
an Wearing the silver ring and also to
Indicate a common ownership of prop
erty.
An Armenian mother usually chooses
her daughter’s husbanA After all busi
ness preliminaries are settled between
the families the bridegroom’s mother,
accompanied by a priest and two ma
trons, visits the bride and gives her a
ring in token of espousal, and with this
ring the couple are ultimately married.
Among the fishing mmmunltlaa very
ancient and elaborate rings are used,
and they descend as heirlooms from
generation to generation.
In Japanese marriages arranged be
tween very young people the girl re
ceives a ring in evidence that the union
is binding. In Malabar an old native
custom seats both bride and bridegroom
on a dais, and a relative washes the
feet of the bridegroom with milk and
puts a silver ring on the great toe of the
right foot. He then hands a gold ring
to his kinsman, and a necklaoe and
ehapl et of flowers are put on the bride’s
Mo* and heads —-Lofyio*! MbH
The seven wonders of Korea are: (1)
The marvelous mineral spring of Kiu
shanto, one dip in which is a sovereign
cure for all the ills that human flesh is
heir to. (2) The double springs which,
though far apart, have a strange, mys
terious affinity. According to Korean
belief, there is a connection under
ground, through which water ebbs and
flows like the waters of the ocean, in
such away that only one spring is full
at a time. The water possesses a won
derful sweetening power, so that what
ever is cooked therein becomes good and
palatable. (8) The cold wind cavern,
Whence comes a never ceasing wind so
piercing that nothing can withstand it
and so powerful that the strongest man
cannot face it (4) The indestructible
pine forest, the trees of which grow
up again as fast as they are cut down.
(5) The floating stone, a massive block
that has no visible support, but, like
Mohammed’s coffin, remains suspended.
(6) The warm stone, situated on the
top of a hill and said to have the pecul
iarity of spreading warmth and heat
all round it (7) A drop of the sweat of
Buddha, for 80 paces round which no
flower or vegetation will grow, nor will
birds or other living things passover it
—Brooklyn Eagle.
Salat Moran aad the Petatn.
St Norah was a poor girl, says the
London Punch, who prayed St Patrick
for a good gift that would make her not
proud but useful, and St Patrick, out
of his own head, taught her how to boil
a potato. Asad thing and to be lament
ed, that the secret has oome down to so
few! Since the highest intellectual and
physical life is dependent upon diet—
since the cook makes, while the physi
cian only mends—should not she who
prepares our pies be as carefully trained
as he who makes our pills?
Certainly whatever may be the
knowledge or the ignorance of the serv
ant in the kitchen, the mistress of the
house, be she young or old, ought to.be
able, like St. Patrick in the fable, qhtjjf
her own instructed head to teach Norah
how to boil a potato m broil a steak so
that they may yield their utmost of rel
ish and nutriment.
Until she can do that, no woman is
qualified to preside over a household,
and since few reach adult life without
being called to that position in the
household of husband, father or broth
er, the legend of St Norah has a wide
significance.—Youth’s Oompanion.
Th« Northwest Indian and Mis Wars.
The Indian of the plains it afar more
picturesque individual than his brother
or cousin of the coast He doesnot erect
totem poles and has no timber for the
purpose if so inclined, but he is suffi
ciently spectacular himself without re
sorting to grotesque carvings and paint
ed wood. His saddle, with its leather
hangings and wooden stirrups, is in
itself a remarkable aggregation, and
when set off with his goods and chat
tels tied in bags, rags, strings and
straps the effect is remarkable. He
wears the castoff garments at his white
brother in such original combinations
that he looks like the personification of
a secondhand store. Sometimes the
adoption of a pair of guernseys as an
external covering gives him quite an
athletic appearance. He wears his hair
in Gertrude and prefers ear
rings about the size of half dollar coins.
A mosquito net or handkerchief is his
favorite head ooverihg, and if he as
sumes a hat it is ss an additional and
purely ornamental appendage.—Detroit
Free Press.
“Few students of Napoleonic histo
ry,” says the London Chronicle, “are
aware that Dr. Antomarchi, who at
tended upon Napoleon I during his last
illness at St Helena, to buried in the
cemetery at Santiago de Cuba. He had
a brother living in that island, and
after the emperor’s death proceeded
thither and lived at Santiago, exercis
ing his skill as an oculist gratuitously
among the poor. After his death in
1825 a public monument was erected to
his memory in the local cemetery. ”
•———'
tew. la Marly Devs-
“Yes,” saM Adsm-toEvo as As twi
light drew about the aged couple, sof
tening their liDeameute to a semblance
of youth, “how well I remember the
day we met! You wore a diffident
sir”—
That was alL—lndianapolis Journal.
11 , i d m a—.
t ■' - ‘ ' 1 Wjh&B - ■ v'- -'
I A W if 1 w
AU Covatuhlto, Imitation, aad SaMltatea an tat Bx
periments that trifle wHh and endanger the health off
Infisnts and Chfldreu-Experience against Kxpertaaent.
What Is CASTOR!A
Castoria is a substitute fbr Castor OH* Paregoric, Drops
and Soothing Syrups. It Is Harmless and Pleasant. It
contains mrMiwr Opium, Morphine nor erihtr Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colle. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It aariaeilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach aad Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. M
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend. 1
OkNUINH CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bean the Signature of
msuaiM■
f Jr y
The Kind You We Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
▼me eawrawfe T 9 ferrnrr. mw wmi em
] mi
liillo I
—GET YOUB —
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