The morning call. (Griffin, Ga.) 18??-1899, November 04, 1898, Image 3

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Ordinary's Advertisement*, _ > J Marta Fofd.aa administratrix of the estate of I’»8 B- Ford, deceased, makes application for leave to sell the following real estate described as follows: Part of land lot 110 in 14th District of Fulton county, Ga., beginning at point on the west side of Doray street, 80 feet north from the N.W. corner of Wqit Hunter and Doray streets, thence north along ’ Doray street 40 ft audbackwest same width 80 ft to Leach street, being part of land lots 40 and 41 of the Leach property as per plat of Harry Krouse of April 15, 18 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 Ave. same being south-west corner of a unnamed street, thence running south along said street 114 ft, thence east along an unnamed street 200 ft, moip or less, thence north 114 ft, thence west 200 ft, more 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, Aprillßth, 18J1. 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 sduth along east side of Violet Ave., 50 ft to starting point. The same being known as lot No. 105 as per plat of Auction sale ofß. W. Goode & Co., of said property April 19th, 1887. Also, part of land lot No. 79 in 14th District of Fulton county, Ga., situated as follows: Commencing at the south east corner at Venable streetand Orchard Ave. and running east along the south tide of - Orchard Ave. 501 ft to Fowler street, thence south along the west side of Fowl ler street 110 ft, thence west parallel with ble street 110 ft to the statffog 3t6i«Ri>e inglots 8-4 5-6-7-8-9-10-11 and la of the Also part of land lot 55 in the 14th Dis trict of Fulton county, Ga, commencing at a npint on the east side of Vfoiet Ave., 850 ftnorth of Haygood. street, thbnce 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 S. W. Goom& Co. , plat of the A. *P. Wright property, April IQth, 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. 3, Commerce | street, Albany, Dougherty county, Ga,, improved] for the purpose of paying dqbtß of the deceased and for distribution among the heirss Let all persons concerned show cause, if Any there be, before the Court of Ordinary, in Griffin, Ga., on the first Monday m 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, Spalding County. J. H. Grubbs, guardian,of H. W„ Sarah L„ Mollie, Tk 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 therefoie 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 8,1898. J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary. ■ ■■■ *■ -■ STATE OF GEORGIA, Spalding County. E. A. Huckaby, administrator de bonis non, on the estate of Nathan Fomby, de ceased, makes application for leave to sell forty-two 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 by J; A. J. Tidwell—for the purpose of paying debts of deceased, and for 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 order should ■- not be granted. October term, 1898. » 'J. A. DRI’WRY, Ordinary. *■ - ACTIVE SOLICITORS WANTED EV ERYWHERE for “The Story of the Phil ippines,*’Murat Halstead, commissioned by the Government as Official Historian to the War Department. The book was written in army camps at San Francisco, on the Pacific with General Merritt, in the hospitals at Honolulu, in Hong Kong, in the American trenches at Manilla, in the insurgent camps with Aguinaldo, on the deck of the. Olympia with Dewey, and in the roar of battle at the fall of Manilla. Bo nanza for agents. Brimftil of original pic tures taken by government photographers on the spot Large book. Low prices. Big profits. : Freight paid. Credit given. Drop all trashy unofficial war books. Outfit free. Address, F. T. Barber, Sec’y., 856 Dearborn St., Chicago. BO YEARS’ MM It LrillklM .. W Trwe Marks Copyrights Ac. I Anyone sending a sketeh and d pecri ptton mB» qnlekly ascertain onr opinion free wfifether an PTobably sent fwSirft dfe..-Shift AMt A m - ‘ 1 ■* ' ‘ " SUucate Year Bowes* WMh Cn-m-eta. a® ; . V I- A meaeOßt Latta*. I It takes a clever man to find a good word to say on every wqasion. It is said of Thomas Bailey Aldrich that he once received a letter from his friend. Pro fessor Edward S. Morse, and found the handwriting wholly illegible. Mr. Al drich was not at a loss for an answer. In due time »there came to Mr. Morse the following reply: My dear Morse, it was very pleasant to receive a letter from you the other day. PertmpaJ have found It pleasanter ft Lhad btedsbls to decipher it I don’t think I mastered anything beyond the date, which I knew, and the . signature, at I guessed. ’ There is a singular and perpetual charm in a letter of yours—it never and it never loses its novelty. haven’t read yet. I think I shall take another shy at it today, and maybe I shall be able in Mhe course of a few years to make out what he means by those t’s that look like w’a and those i’s that haven’t any eyebrows.” Other letters are read and thrown away and forgotten but yours are kept . forever—unread. Otfo of them will last a reasonable man a lifetime.—Youth’s Companion. A Very Pradent Yoang Maa. Os William and John Scott, after ward Lord Stowell and Lord Elton, Lord John Russell used to tell this story: When they were young men at th* tar, having had 4 a stroke at proton siouak luck, they determined to cele brate the occasion by having a dinner at the tavern and going to the play. When.it was time to call for the reck orfng Wiilia m Scott dropped a guinea. He and his brother searched for it in vain and came to thb conclusion that it between th? boards of the » ’’This 4a a bad job,” said William, " "we must give up fhe’jlay.” “Stop a b|L” said John. “I know a trick worth two of that, ” and he called a waitress. SOtW “Betty,” said he, "we’ve dropped 2 guineas. See if you can find them. ” Betty went down, On her hands and knees and found, the guinea, which had rolled under the fender. “That’s a very good girl, Betty,” said John Scots, pocketing the coin, “and When you find the other you can keep it for your troufile. ’’ And the pru dent brothers went with light hearts to the play and so eventually to the bench and the woolsack, . r Fish In Icebound Waters. Fish do not breathe air, but the life supporting constituent of air—oxygen gas—which is soluble in water to the extent of three voluqjes in ibo at ordi nary temperatures and fbur in 100 at I freezing point. The water containing the dissolved oxygen is made to pass over the gills, where it is separated from the blood only by a very thin membrane, through which the gas is able to pass. Fish in icebound rivers have to de pend entirely upon this store of oxygen for their respiration, and if it becomes exhausted they are suffocated, just as we shoved. Ifo ii deprived of oxygen. It rafely happens, however, that any considerable area of water is entirely covered with ice, especially in the case of rivers. Holes and cracks are almost sure to occur here and there, by which the oxygen of the air can reach the wa ter and become dissolved in it During a long frost fish may always be found congregated beneath air holes in large numbers. They are there to breathe.— Exchange. Early Uae of Tobacco. ■ I have heard my grandfather say that one pipe was handed from man to man round about the table. They had first silver pipes ; the ordinary sort made use of a walnut shell and a Straw. Tobacco was sold then for its weight in silver. I have heard some of our old yeomen neighbors say that when they went to Malmesbury or Chippenham market they culled out their biggest shillings to lay in the scales against the tobacco. Sir W. R., standing in a stand at Sir Robert Poyntz’s park at Acton, took a pipe of tobacco, which made the ladies quit it until he had done.—“ Brief Lines Set Down by John Aubrey,” 1669-96. The Philosophical Tailor. How often have I taken away a gar ment for a fault which did not exist and which I of course never intended to rectify. How often have I taken back the same garment without it ever hav ing been unfolded and been commended for the alteration which had not been made, and then been reprehended for not having done What was right at first. A man to be a good tailor should be either a philosopher qr a mean, cring ing slave, whose feelings had never been excited to the pitch of manhood. —* * Life of Francis Place. ” Literary Parautf. Fynshly—What is Wally doing now? i Harrison—-Well, when I last saw him he was engined in a literary pursuit. Fynshly—lndeed! I didn’t think he had enough taain to write. Harrison—He wasn’t writing. He waa chasing a newspaper that the wind had blown ayvay.—London Fun. Prayar Xam a Grateful Heart. Prayer as the expression of a sincere and grateful heart may haVe its uses, and doubtitea has. But in the mouth of a man who loans money at 200 per eent interest on chattel mortgage it may as well be omit ted.—Columbus Press-Post *so* "There is an old woman,” says a London paper, “who has -a milk stand in St. James park, who has stood at it for 63 years. Her mother kept it before her and her grandmother before that, the latter havingheen in possession for 12 years.” ‘ '/ I ■ ■■■■■■ II ■" ■ " "■'"F The officers of a leading London hos pital believe that the general increase of cancer is dos to excess in meat eat ing * HE SAVED THE MILK, ft Reqalired Ctoala* to Da It, bat Ha Was Equal ta tha Oocoblob. “Talking about oows,” said Andy Henderson, “I really think that I had one of th® most peculiar experiences with ths animals in question that ever befell a citizen of west Texas It was soon after I went to El Paso, some ten years ago, and before I had got familiar with the vagaries of the El Paso cli mate. “I had settled on a very pretty ranch some miles out of the progressive fron tier city and was doing nicely until I deaided to go into the butter business. I sent east for a dozen fine Jersey oows and began operations. Well, the cows Eon, and I hustled the butter busi trom the jump. Things progressed y for a month, when the weather grew very warm and the atmosphere very dry. The Rio Grande dwindled until a roach could have waded across. Every bit of moisture disappeared, but this did not affect me, because I had a fine artesian well on the ranch and plenty of water. I observed, however, that my cows were losing milk day by day, until at last they were perfectly dry. I was astounded, for they had plenty of feed and lots of water from the well. I couldn’t understand it and determined to investigate.* “I got up an hour before daylight and examined the cows, and, to my aston ishment, I found the udders of the oows heavy with milk. I did not milk the the animals, but simply watched and waited developments. Day dawned and the cows lazily meandered into the pas ture, and I followed. The sun came up, and with the sun came the terrible dryz ness, but it didn’t feaze me in the least. What knocked me out was the sight of my cows’ udders. They were growing smaller and smaller as I looked until they were as flaccid as a punctured tire. Then I tumbled. The dryness of the at mosphere simply evaporated the milk through the walls of the udder. “What did Ido? Why, 1 varnished the milking apparatus of the beasts and the milk couldn’t ooze through the flesh. That stopped it. ” —New Orleans Times-Democrak A SENSE OF HUMOR. It !• a Precious Gift and Helps to Light en Life’s Way. I regard a sense of humor as one of the most precious gifts that can be < vouchsafed to a human being. He is not necessarily a better man for having it, but he is a happier one. It renders him indifferent to good or bad fortune. It enables him to enjoy his own disoomfl- AWe- » Blessed with this sense he is never unduly elated or cast down. No one l can ruffle his temper. No abuse disturbs his equanimity. Bores do not bore him. Humbugs do not humbug him. Solemn airs do not impose on him. Sentimental gush does not influence him. The follies of the moment have no hold on him. Titles and decorations are but childish baubles in his eyes. Prejudice does not warp his judgment He is never in con ceit or out of conceit with himself. He abhors all dogmatism. The world is a stage on which actors strut and fret for his edification and amusement, and he pursues the even current of his way, in vulnerable, doing what is right and proper according to his lights, but ut terly indifferent whether what he does finds approval or disapproval from oth ers. If Hamlet had had any sense of hu mor, he would not have.been a nuisance to himself and to all surrounding him. —London Truth. Spending Money. It is an excellent thing to give chil dren as soon as they arrive at about 12 years, or even before, a little allowance for spending money and an account book. Show them how to. keep an ac count of small expenditures and make it a condition that they do so if they wish to receive their allowance. There is no instruction more necessary to chil dren than instruction in the wise man agement of money. Children should be taught early what true economy is and to exercise their judgment—not their fancy—in making purchases. A little instruction now, and experience if need be, of the genuine discomforts of extrav agance may save them from much suf fering in after years. New York < He Had Changed. A widow once called upon an artist and asked him to paint a portrait of her husband. “When can he sit?” inquired the artist “He can’t sit at all,” said the widow, “he’s dead.” “Then you will have to furnish me with his photo graph,” said the artist “He never had his picture taken,” said the widow. Nevertheless the artist undertook the job, and when he had finished the work he asked the widow to come and see it “It’s a fine picture,” said she, “and you’ll please send it to my home—but how the old man has changed.” -Bos ton Herald. o He Saw tha Play. They were giving “She Stoops to Conquer” in a small provincial town. A penniless individual, anxious to see the play, stalked past the ticket office in a careless, Independent sort of way. When stopped and asked by what right he went in without paying, he replied: “By what right I lam Oliver Gold smith, the author of the piece they are going to perform!” “Ah, beg pardon, sir. ” said the check taker, making a bow. And Goldsmith walked in to see his play.—London Answers. * ” Vritf U It Ever Thai? The whole crowd of men raved of her beauty, * - She was divine, they said, incompar ably divine, and gloriously beautiful So she waa, just as they had said. /■: But one man did not think sa I Her brother. Vim J l Si. ' z .... 7 ’ -1 EATING IN GERMANY. THE SARCASMS OF A VICTIM WHO SURVIVED ITS CHARMS. j He Kick* All the Way Dowa tha HIM at Few la Partteelariy laritated Over a Dteh e« ftafaiii Hone Kodlsh Served With Froeau Whipped Cream. When you have examined the con stitution of the German cuisine, you are tempted to grow loquacious. You are conscious of having discovered that the psychology of a nation cannot be constructed upon a mere analysis of its • made dishes. Your estimate of Brillat- Savarin sinks. * He could not tell you what you are, even from all the menu., of your lifetime, Freiligrath’a philo sophic conclusion that “man Is What he eats” you straightway qualify as true only when referring to cannibal- I ism. And you will aver that only in the case of paleolithic man oan you I construct a man from the crumbs that I fall from his dinner tabla. And this you will want to prove, and oouae quently will grow talkative with pre senting of much evidence. And yet, in your sane moments, you will have a sneaking affection for the statement that a German is a German because be eats what be eats. As a gen eral rule he may be said to eat five I times a day. But his hunger is con stantly being stilled. He starts early in the day with a cup I of case an lait and a small buttered I This keeps hips' going till 11 I o’clock, when he demolishes a slice of buttered rye bread spread with slices I jafftard boiled egg, raw chopped beef or cheese. This he washes down with a glass of ale, thus stilling his inner man I till dinner time. Dinner takes place to ward 1 o’clock and consists of soup (generally nourishing), a plate of meat, I with potatoes and fruit (cranberries, I prunes <w aprioots), occasionally cheese, I seldom sweets, rarely a green vegetable. Three hours later coffee is taken, served with a piece of cake or thick bread and butter. This is the hour pre- I« clous to the gossip and the busybody, I the time for spreading scandal. Toward I 8 o’clock the appetite again asserts itself. The hour of the übiquitous sau sages has arrived. Their name is legion, and they share the honors with slices of ham, smoked goose breast, pieoes of raw pickled herring, and in summer hard boiled eggs and potato salad. Such is the German method of spread ing the meals over the day. Os course there are exceptions. Many families have two ample meals a day, but the bulk of the population eats mostly but tered bread and snacks. In justice to I Germany one must say that tha fare in many a home will compare favorably with that tA many an American family. I In the German restawStot the ouisine is on the whole monotonous and the food singularly insipid. All meats seem to have the same flavor, an are served with the same heavy, viscous sauces, and invariably escorted with the same soaplike potatoes. Stodginess and heavi ness are the great blots on the German I fare. The element of variety, too, seems considered superfluous. In the concrete the subject is almost too painful to face, the difficulty being to steer dear of exclamations denoting positive offensiveness. Some of the kickshaws which figure regularly upon the German table are reputed to be most sustaining. They certainly are intense ly and ostentatiously wonder inspiring. oOne preparation is everywhere met with under the name (more or lees pho netically spelled) of beefsteak ala tar tare. Its basis is raw chopped beef; | this, spread out into a pat of elliptical shape, is crowned with the raw yolk of an egg, raw finely chopped onion is sprinkled over it, a garniture of gbet- I Irins is added, and the whole is eaten I with much gusto and no worse conae- I quences than a durable thirst. In many of the dishes you discover I all the humor, feeling and imagination of a Wagnerian composition. You find I the resolute desire to build up harmony upon discord. Os this nature may be considered the traditional menu of New I Year’s eve, carp, pancake and punch. I These three, brought into immediate I juxtaposition and consumed in plethoric quantities, generally have the desired I effect—that of inducing a hysterical I good humor. For stodginess nothing beats the fa vorite dish, panache. It consists of I pickled pork, sour cabbage and a puree of split peas boiled down to the con sistency of stiff dough. Experiments on this mass produce deplorable capers and cause one to grunt mournl ’ully. A va riety of this diet is fount I in Berlin. You substitute boiled balls of dough and indifferent prunes for the peas and cabbage, and yon have the dish popu- { larly termed “the Silesian kingdom of heaven.” Oold eels, imbedded in a translucid, glutinous substance, figure in all workmen’s taverns, while roast goose is de rigueur for all • ilenmities. A dainty which we have recently met with in Berlin recalled Darwin’s remark that “hardly any ea periment is so absurd as not to be wort h trying. ” It consisted of finely powdered horse radish served up with frozei i whipped cream. One may sum op one’s judgment by saying of German cookings wihat the art sritiosaid rtt nature, “It hue infinite potentialities.” Not the least of there is its ambition to discover victims that survive its charms only in the form that the walls of Jericho survived the trumpet hlsst of Joshua. —LLppinoott’s Magazine. Carrier pigeons in Chi na are protect ed from birds of prey by* a little appa ratus constating of thin bamboo tubes fastened to thehfaxta’ ba tire with thread passed beneath the wings. As the pigeon flies along the action of the air through the tubes produces a shrill whistling sound, which keeps bir <ta of prey at a respectful, distance- A I V/nO 3 U ft IM S The Kind Yun Have Always EkM*Bt«imd wrtddi has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of ■’*** ««pwYisiot» atece its inflsncy. Ail Counterfeits, periments that trifie with and endanger the Ireatth of Inftuita and Child ran—Wwy»r4srerea .eyaM—S Kxpairim«u>t» What is CASTOR IA and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and PteMMML ft contains netthar Opijun, Morplrina W /Narcotie g substance. Its ago Is Its guarantee. It destrbfs Worms J ! and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoeal'MFd Wi»<l Colle. It relieves Teething Troobles* eares Constlpatfcm and Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Ponscea-Thc Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORtA ALWAYS Bam the SigaMßra at _ x" r Jr' f The Kind You Have Always Bqitglii In Um For Over 30 mu ii inr? ■■ ’.jaasTj*" 1 ivu-iis;i iTr'-iioa.ir iTiirigiT i■ ■ «■ —■ ■« * ‘if- % ) ■" —GET YOUR — JOB PRINTING ■. 7 > r * . ■ ; DONEAT The Morning Call Office, “"""” : assess- . We have Just supplied our Job Office with a complete line oi Btetiotcr» * ’ . ''''V i , ■ '• kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way ot LETTER HEADS, BILL BTATBMENTB, « IROULABB, ENVELOPES, NOTES, MORTGAGES, PROGRAM JARDS, POBWS DODGERS, "7 E.C BK, ‘'i v ' i ' We r-rry xwt iue of ENVEIXtfER vw iftuef : tthttsda An attractive POSTER cf aay size can be iwued on snort noUm, Our prices for work ol all kinds will compare favorably with those obtained roe any office in the state. When you want fob printing ol any int I ''“ii '' fiV tB--’- caU Satiafection guaranteeu. . ESSSSSESESEEreaasHEESMSn I i ■ . I n I ALL WORK DONE I With Neatness and Dispatch. ’ ’ ■ i■ < T I . .... A ■: Out of town orders will receive prompt attention I ' J. P.&S B.Sawtell. •t *'• ■■ ■ ■*., - ■■