The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, January 10, 1888, Image 3
ft* only tw-AlMhofie VsgsUMs nsdieiae pat ap la
a»5Ss-®FS It cures aii^seMW aristoJTrom biliousness
THE
Griffin Foundry
r AND—
MACHINE WORKS.
Take pleasure in announcing to their
friends and patrons that they are ready to
exeoute orders for
Ini! Brass Caste,
Drawings, Patterns, Mill Gearing
An J ;>!acftinery of every Description Shafting
Pulleys, Hangers and
REPAIRS ON
Staticaaryand PortableEngines,
Boilers and Machinery,
*ipe Work, Pumps and injector?
Presses, Saw Mills. Etc., Etc.
■ sTWe respectfully solicit your orders.
C.H. OSBORN,
i , Proprietor.
*- "* ..................
New Advertisements.
PATARRH £ jENT. MPLE TREAT LDCr inuL
3 We mni
w enough enough to to convince. convi B. 8. Lau'ekbvch
& Co., 778 Broad-st. Newark, N. J.
PATENTS f. a , imaiH
Washington. IP. t
Send for circular.
IU' T/\/\ PER i RIGHT and SAMPLES
./CENT f E11EE to men canvassers
for Dr. Scott’s Gentine Electric Belts,
Biushes, Ac. Lady outs wants Write I for Elec¬
tric Corsets. LJuick sales. at once
for terms. Dr. Scott, 844 B’way, N. Y.
$525 Agents’ profits per month. Will
prove it or pay forfeit. New
portraits just out. A $:’-.50 sam¬
ple sent free to all. W. IT. Chidester &
Son, 33 Bond st. N. Y.
Vol CONSUMPTIVE
for Alt mu Affection! luiw uom if u the throat and lung*, and tUaeasca
*rUtag md mck, from impure > blood and exhaustion. The feeble
to fo the thegrare, --------, rtrumriinfr will will - In in i ««alnst disease, and slowly drifting
grave, : many cases reoorer thetr health by
LIEBIG COMPANY’S
EXTRACT OF MEAT
Finest and cheapest
MEAT FLAVORING STOCK
gpg
simjiBiiniwsiiis,
Annnal sales 8,000,000 jars.
N. B.-Genuine only with fac-simile of
Baron Liebig’s
SIGNATURE IN BLUE INK
across label.
Druwwuts ° f Rl1 8torekee P cr8 >° r0l; ers and
LADIES!
**• Vw Ow» Dyeing, at Home with
PEERLESS DYES,
They will dye everything. Tney are 60 ld
•verywhgre. Price 10c. a package—40 oolors.
-they have no equal for Strength, Bright¬
ness, Amount in Packages or for Fastness of
t^olor, or non-fading Qualities. They do not
crock or smut. For sale by 8. W. Ming-
hatna Drug Store. Griffin Ga. tnar23d<fcw
advertisers
•:an learn the exact cost
• an} proposed line ol
advertising in American
papers Geo. by addressing
P. Rowell & Co.,
■ 'ew*pap ep Advertising Bureau,
tO Spn«, St., Hew York.
Mnd 10''* , OP lOO-Pnge Pan&phleJ
ARSY Li fL Sty I
W U4. Never fall to
f V»»c!a’ * ?*&££! 1 bla!j * ^
Ifoax C
A SHIP. OF ’49.
By BRET HARTE.
{Copyrighted by Houghton, Mifflin & Co., and
publishedarrangement with them ]
CHAPTER VTI.
■Between 3 and 4 in the morning the
clouds broke over the Pontiac, and the
moon, riding high, picked out in black
and silver the long hulk that lay cradled
between the iron shells of warehouses and
the wooden frames of tenements on either
side. The galley and covered gangway
presented a mass of undefined shadow,
against which the white deck shone
brightly, stretching to the forecastle and
bows, where the tiny glass roof of the
photographer glistened like a gem in the
Pontiac's crest. So peaceful and motion¬
less she lay that she might have been
some petrifaction of a past age now first
exhumed and laid bare to the cold light
of the stars.
Nevertheless this calm security was
presently invaded by a sense of stealthy
life and motion. What had seemed a
fixed shadow suddenly detached itself
from the deck and began to slip stanchion
by stanchion along the bulwarks toward
the companion way. At the cabin door it
halted and crouched motionless. Then,
rising, it glided forward with the same
staccato movement until opposite the
slight elevation of the forehatch. Sud¬
denly it darted to the hatch, unfastened
and lifted it with a swift, familiar dex¬
terity, and disappeared in the opening.
But as the moon shone upon its vanishing
face it revealed the whitening eyes and
teeth of the Lascar seaman.
Dropping to the lower deck lightly, he
felt his way through the dark passage be¬
tween the partitions, evidently less famil¬
iar to him, halting before each door to
listen. Returning forward he reached
the second hatchway that had attracted
Rosey’s attention, and noiselessly unclosed
its fastenings. A penetrating smell of
bilge aroso from the opening. Drawing a
small bull’s eye lantern from his breast
he lit it, and unhesitatingly let himself
down to the further depth. The moving
flash of his light revealed the recesses of
the upper hold, the abyss of the well
amidships, and glanced from the shining
backs of moving zigzags of rats that
seemed to outline the shadowy beams and
transoms. Disregarding those curious
spectators of his movements, fie
turned his attention eagerly to
the inner casings of the hold,
that seemed in one spot to have been
strengthened by fresh timbers. Attack¬
ing this stealthily with the aid of some
tools hidden in his oilskin clothing, la the
light of the lantern he bore a fanciful re¬
semblance to the predatory animals
around him. The low continuous sound
of rasping and gnawing of timber which
followed heightened the resemblance. At
the end of a few minutes he had succeeded
iu removing enough of the outer planking
to show that the entire filling of the casing
between the stanchions was composed of
small boxes. Dragging out oite of them
with feverish eagerness to the light, the
Lascar forced it open. In the rays of the
bull’s eye a wedged mass of discolored
coins show with a lurid glow The story
of the Pontiac was true—the treasure
was there! •
/
the treasure was there !
But Mr. Sleight had overlooked the log¬
ical effect of this discovery on the natural
villainy of his tool. In the very moment
of his triumphant execution of his pa¬
tron’s suggestion the idea of keeping the
treasure to himself flashed upon his mind.
He had discovered it—why should he give
it up to anybody! 1 had run all the
risks; if he were detected at that moment
who would believe that his purpose there
at midnight was only to satisfy some one
else that the treasure was still intact?
No. The circumstances were propitious;
he would get the treasure out of the ship
at once, drop it over her side, hastily con¬
ceal it in the nearest lot adjacent, and
take it away at his convenience. Who
would be the wiser for it?
Bu* it was necessary to reconnoiter first.
He knew that the loft overhead was
empty. He knew that it communicated
with the alley, for he had tried the door
that morning. He would convey the
treasure there and drop it into the alley.
The boxes were heavy. Each one would
require a separate journey to the ship’s
side, but he would at least secure some¬
thing if he were interrupted. He stripped
the casing and gathered the boxes together
in n pile.
Ah, yes, it was funny too that he—the
Lascar hound—the d-d nigger—should
get what bigger and bnllier men than ha
had died for! The mate’s blood was on
those boxes, if the salt water had not
washed it out. It was a hell of a fight
when they dragged the captain-Oh,
what was that? Was it the splash of a rat
in the bilge, or what?
A superstitious terror had begun to
seize him at the thought of blood. The
stifling hold seemed again filled with
struggling figures he had known; the air
thick with cries and blasphemies that h«
had forgotten. He rose to his feet, and,
running quickly to the hatchway, leaped
to the deck above. All was quiet. Th«
door leading to the empty loft yielded to
his touch. He entered, and, gliding
through, unbarred and opened the door
that gave upon the alley. The cold air
and moonlight flowed in silently; the way
,
of escape was clear. Bah! He would go
back for the treasure
He.lmd reached the passage when t he
door lie laid just opened was suddenly
darkened. Turning rapidly, he con¬
scious of a gaunt figure, grotesque, silent,
and erect, looming on the threshold be¬
tween him and the sky. Hidden in the
shadow, he made a stealthy step towards
it, with an iron wrench iu hi> uplifted
hand. But the next moment his eyes di¬
lated with superstitious horror; the iron
fell from his hand, and with a scream,
like a frightened animal, he turned anil
fled into the passage. In the first access
of hte blind terror he tried to reach the
deck above through the forehateh, but
was stopped by the sound of a heavy tread
overhead. The immediate fear of detec¬
tion now overcame his superstition: he
Would have even faced Hie apparition
again to escape through the loft: but, be¬
fore he could return there, other foot¬
steps approached rapidly from the end
of the passage he would hove .to trav¬
erse. There was but one chance of escape
left now—the forehold he had just quit¬
ted. He might hide there until the alarm
was lover. He glided b^ck to the hatch,
lifted it, and it closed softly over his head
as the upper hatch was simultaneously
raised, and the small round eyes of Abner
Nott peered down upon it. The other
footsteps proved to be Renshaw’s, but,
attracted by the open door of the loft, he
turned aside and entered. As soon as he
disappeared Mr. Nott cautiously dropped
through the opening to the deck below,
and, going to the other hatch through
which the Lascar had vanished, deliber¬
ately refastened it. Iu a few moments
Renshaw *eturned with a light and found
the old man sitting on the hatch.
“The loft door was open,” said Ren¬
shaw. “There’s little doubt whoever was
here escaped that way.”
“Surely,” said Nott. There was a pe¬
culiar look of Machiavellian sagacity in
his face which irritated Renshaw.
“Then you’re sure it was Ferrieres you
saw pass by your window before you called
me?” he asked.
Nott "nodded his head with an expres¬
sion of infinite profundity.
“But you say he was going from the
ship. Then it could not have been he
who made the noise we heard down here. ”
“Mebbe no and mebbe yes,” returned
Nott, cautiously.
“But if he was already concealed inside
the ship, as that open door, which you say
you barred from the inside, would indi¬
cate, what the devil did he want with
this?” said Renshaw, producing the mon¬
key wrench he had picked up.
Mr. Nott examined the tool carefully
and shook his head with momentous sig¬
nificance. Nevertheless, his eyas wan¬
dered to the hatch on which he was seated.
“Did yon find anything disturbed
there?” said Renshaw, following the di¬
rection of his eye. “Was that hatch fast¬
ened as it is now?”
“It was,” said Nott, calmly. “But ye
wouldn’t mind fetchin’ me a hammer and
some o’ them big nails from the locker,
would yer, while I hang round here just
so ez to make sure against another at¬
tack.”
Renshaw complied with his request;
but as Nott proceeded to gravely nail
down the fastenings of the hatch, he
tuAed impatiently away to complete his
examination of the ship. Jibe doors of
the other loft3 and tberr fastenings ap¬
peared secure ami undisturbed. Yet it
was undeniable that a felonious entrance
had been made, but by whom, or for what
purpose, still remained uncertain. Even
now Renshaw found it difficult to accept
Nott’s theory that de Ferrieres was the
aggressor and Rosey the object, nor could
he justify his own suspicion that the Las¬
car had obtained a surreptitious entrance
under Sleight’s directions. With a feeling
that if Rosey had been present he would
have confessed nil, and demanded from
her an equal confidence, he began to hate
his feeble, purposeless and inefficient alli¬
ance with her father, who believed but
dare not tax his daughter with complicity
in this outrage. What could be done with
a man whose only idea of action at such a
moment was to nail up an undisturbed
entrance in his invaded house! He was so
preoccupied with these thoughts that when
Nott rejoined him in the cabin he scarcely
heeded his presence, and was entirely ob¬
livious of the furtive looks whi h the old
man from time to time cast upon his face.
“I reckon ye wouldn’t mind,” broke in
Nott, suddenly, “ef I asked a favor of ye,
Mr. Renshaw. Mebbee ye’ll allow it’s
askin’ too much in the matter of expense;
mebbee ye’ll allow it’s askin’ too much in
the matter o’ time. But I kalkilatc to pay
all the expense, and if you’d let me know
what yer vally yer time at, I reckon I
could stand that. What I’d be askin’ is
this. Would ye mind takin’ a letter from
me to Rosey, and bringin’ back an
answer?”
Renshaw stared speechlessly at this ab¬
surd realization of his wish of a moment
before. “I don’t think 1 understand
you,” he stammered. .
“P’r’aps not,” returned Nott, with
great gravity. “But that ’j not so much
to you ez your time and expenses.”
“I meant I should be glad to go if I can
be of any service to you,” said Rens haw,
hastily.
“You kin ketch the 7 o’clock boat this
morning, and you’ll reach San Rafael
at 10”--
“But I thought Miss Rosey went to
Petaluma,” interrupted Renshaw quickly.
Nott regarded him with an expression
of patronizing superiority. “That’s what
we ladled oat to the public gin’mlly. and
to Ferrers and his gang in partlckler. We
said Petalumey, but if you go to Madrono
Cottage, San Rafael, you’ll find Rosey
thar.”
If Mr. Renshaw required anything more
to convince him of the necessity of coming
to some understanding with Rosey at once
it would have been this last evidence of
her father’s utterly dark and supremely
inscrutable designs. He assented quickly,
and Nott handed him a note.
“Ye’ll l<e p&rtickler to give this intei
her own hands, and wait for an answer,*'
said Nott gravely.
Resisting the proposition to enter then
and there into an elaborate calculation of
the value of his time and the expenses of
of the trip, Renshaw found himself at 7
o'clock on the San Rafael boat. Brief as
was the journey it gave him time to re¬
flect upon his coming interview with
Hosey. He bad resolved to begin by con¬
fessing all; the attempt of last night had
released him from any sense of duty to
Sleight. Besides, he did not doubt that.
Nott’s letter contained some reference to
this affair only known to Nott's dark and
tortuous intelligence.
[to 3* coYmtcxa.] •
PNEUMONIA A GERM CiS-ASE.
Sabi In Bo Infectious bat Not Contagion**
Froth Air and Eurcln.
And now the theory is held that pneu¬
monia, too, is to be classed as a ‘rerra dis¬
ease. The authority for this <■in ion it
Dr. A. G. Siebert, a German-American
physician of New York, oue ol the most
competent authorities on the subject in
America, and an indefatigable investiga¬
tor on modern scientific methods of the
causes degree of pneumonia, and especially the
to which the weather furthers this
disease.
“It is my belief, certainly,” said Dr.
Sieliert, “that pneumonia is an infec¬
tious, though not a contagious, disease.
People do not take it from each other,
but they may take it from the same
place. In my practice, as a very com¬
mon tiling, in the same family, two or
more would have it. In a Bavarian
prison, out of 500 inmates, sixty-two died
of pneumonia in one year in one ward.
Not another ward was touched. Dr.
Emtnereich was the physician attendant.
He ordered the floor of this ward to be
tom up. Beneath it there was found a
filling of reftise, impregnated with moist¬
ure in the proportion of 27 per cent, tc
the whole mass, from the washings which
had dripped through the boards. The
rubbish was analyzed under powerful
microscopes, and in it were discovered
miasms, which a few years ago Dr.
Friedlander had pointed out as being
found conAantly in the lungs of people
who had died of pneumonia. This is one
indication.
The infectious diseases begin with a
6udden chill. So does pneumonia. Pneu¬
monia lasts generally from seven to nine
days, disappearing with a crisis and a
profound sweat, and when the crisis is
past, the patient, though weak and ex¬
hausted, is otherwise perfectly well.
This Is the character of fever and the in¬
fectious diseases. Again, among people
exposed even to the severest conditions of
winter weather in the open air pneumo¬
nia is a thing almost unknown. The
Arctic explorers in the extremes of ice
and snow and in pure air had no pneu¬
monia. They had many other diseases,
though, incident to cold and hardships.
Pneumonia occurs in summer as well as
in winter, proving tliat cold is not an in¬
dispensable cause. All physicians of
much practice have found cases of pneu¬
monia originating in the same house at
different times of the year, and it is fre¬
quently the case that those who have it
once have it again. The latter fact is
well known. An explanation of this,
which is at least allowable, is that the
locality is the cause of the disease rather
than special susceptibility in the people
attacked by it.
“Pneumonia is a house disease, as is
the case, according to my belief, with
inflammatory rheumatism and diphtheria.
Cn the warm air of the house the system
is made sensitive to the cold, but the cold
is only the producing cause. It prepared
the coddled lungs for the pneumonia poi-
lon which had its real origin in damp and
iirty rooms or cellars.
“What is the cure? Well, the steps to
the cure have unhappily advanced but
little. But the relief and the prevention
ire—no medicine and plenty of fresh air.
[f you have consumption, a dangerous
sold, or the fear of pneumonia, I should
say, if you cannot fresh air anywhere
ilse, go to the Arctics for it; but get tliat,
it all events, if you want to live. A con¬
sumptive who followed my advice lived
two years longer than any expectations
iiad been held that he could live. Wliat
was the advice? No medicine and a voy-
ige ia September down the Atlantic
coast, with directions to keep on deck as
long as was up, rain or shine, and to
sleep witli the porthole open, except when
it rained. His friends prophesied that he,
being seemingly in the last stages of con¬
sumption, would come back in three
weeks a corpse. In three months he
;ame back with an added weight of fif¬
teen pounds. He lived two years longer,
pursuing the fresh air regimen. On his
leathbed lie told me that the open air
bad given him those two years. His was
i genuine case of tuberculosis, too.”
“What, then, is the connection between
she weather and the cause of pneumonia,
if, as you believe, pneumonia is a germ
iisease?”
“No poison e:vt enter the blood except
through a raw surface; and it is only
where the respiratory tract lias been ins¬
tated tliat the poison germ can enter the
lungs.”
“What weather, then, prepares the
lungs for the reception of the poison
seed?”
“Whenever you find three things—
humidity, cold and a wind of over fifteen
miles an hour—look out for pneumonia.
February is pneumonia's carnival month,
and by actual statistics, I have compared
the weather constituents for each day for
a space of three years, with 600 cases of
pneumonia occurring during that time.
In this comparison the facts are tliat regu¬
larly on the days of humidity, cold, and
high wind the pneumonia statistics reach
their top mark. This is not theory; there
is the record. The worst pneumonia ac¬
count is n<,t necessarily on the coldest
days, for wi.ii extreme cold there is very
probably together no extreme humidity. I: I-the
two that ravage. Dry cold
makes no such score. Consumptives who
thrive well in the high and dry cold of
Davoes, Switzerland, in winter, suffer
most in May.”—Chicago Times.
Shoes of the Confederacy.
Two ladies of our acquaintance,
wealthy and exclusive at the beginning
Of the war, were glad, during its latter
years, through the great change wrought
in their fortunes, to find that their skill
in making shoes, slippers and gaiters
could furnish them with a modest in¬
come. These shoes were constructed
from old broadcloth coats and pants,
pieces of bombazine and any available
black goods; their soles were often cut
from the leather tops erf worn out shoes,
and their lacings were the coverings of
hoopskirt wire dyed black. Toward the
close of the war many of them sold for
$30 and $40 per pair.—Jennie 8. Judsnn.
The Only Remedy
FOR
Contagious Blood Poison.
Mr. D. B. Mum, Hated, South Candina,
writes : “ 1 wa* amicted with a terrihi" c mm
of blood poiaon for about thirteen inontl.!. I
w as treated by th. beat physician!, and used
various kind! of remedial, but received no
.ubitantial relief. 1 finally bottle* tried U>o Swift
Specific, and about four cured me
aotind and well.”
Col. B. II. Kleosr, editor and proprietor of
tbe Opelika. Ala., limes, under date of
August i, ml, write* *■ When 1 won
a tracted young a nian, disease through which tad Mere has lion, »tn.-k I. oou to
me for year*. Some five <>r sU year*
alnee I ww frov.bled with pain*, on a a to
make It difficult for me to walk. Having several
advertised the a h. S. In m> pa|*r for
years, I concluded I would fry It to ire if
there wai any efficacy In the medicine. I
commenced using It at-eordlng to directions
and used half doaeu bottles. I wav once at a
way station mil** and, have getting left, felt I walked the
seven and never any return
of Iheotd malady. After experiencing th.
good effect* 1 must say 1 am satisfied with
the result. Mice I am sixty eight years and of ag* *ad
I feel now when a young man and can go to
the eight ease necessary set op from six
to thousand ems without any Incon¬
venience. 1 tend you this without solicit*
Mr. F. Wnehl. Ill North ISST, Avenue. Chicago, “I deem
under dste of June 12, write*:
ceived It my duty from to thank excellent you for medicine. the cure I I re¬
your con¬
tracted a very severe case of Wood poison,
tag about I two years ago. drug Hearing the of your
medicine, of which went to persuaded a store, to buy pro¬
preparation prietor of hi* which me b# said a
ow n, was
a sure cure. I used six bottles of his stuff
and grew worse all the time. At lost I got
disgusted and despaired of a cure. 1 met a
friend who told me that your medicine had
cured him. I went to the tame druggist Ho
again and demanded your medicine. re¬
luctantly sold me twelve bottles, and I am
now perfectly cured. I writ# this for the
benefit of sufferers, fo prevsut their being
deceived l.y false representations. I thank
you again for the benefit derived from your
medicine."
permanently will welcome dangerous discovery effects of of 8. 8. mercury 8.
your as a
boon to humanity. The medical profession,
always wary of proprietary medicines. secretly, Is
coming to the slowly, of 8. and H. 3. In In some coses cases of blood dis¬
use
order. Of course o medicine that cures
poisoning blood of Iu Its worst form must purify the
every disorder."
Treaties on Blood ami skin Diseases mailed
fltee. Tac Sw Drawer igr Sncctnc 11. Atlanta, Co., (is.
“SANS SOUCI”
BAR AMD BILLIARD PARLOR.
-)o(-
Saloon stocked with the Best
Wines, Liquors, Cigars, Etc
IMPORTED CIGARS a Specialty.
-}o(
1020 BROAD STREET,
COLUMBUS, : : i.GA
J. H. tCWARDS. Proprietor.
gep‘20d6ui
Libel for Divorce.
Jane l’ack j Libel for Divorce in Spalding;
vs. Fack.J Superior Court.
Jim
It appearing to the* rt that the defend¬
ant in the above stated ease, Jim Pack, re¬
sides without the State of Georgia, and by
the return of the fcueriff that he could not
be found in the county : It is ordeicd by
the Court that the defendant, Jim Pack, be
and appear at the next term of this Con t to
answer said libel; and it is farther ordered
that s.'-rviee of the same be made upon the
order defendant, Jim Pack, by publication month of this
in the Gkiffin News once a
for four months before the next term of
this Court. This, August 12th, 1887.
JAMES S. BOYNTON,
Judge S. C. F. C.
E. W. Hammond, Libellant’s Attorney.
Georgia, Spalding County.—I, Court Wm. M.
Thomas, Clerk of the Superior of said
county, certify the that the foregoing is a cor¬
rect copy of 1887, order granted Court, at the Au¬
gust term, minutes of said said Court. as This, appears 12th
from the of
August, 1887. WM. Cle M. THOMAS,
oct7®am4m.
Patented Feb. 8 , 1887 .
vv>ooc^o.^
With Sliding: Detachable
Springs, ht Better than
Whalebone or Horn,_4P
and guaranteed never to
break* Price. |i.3s«
For sale by leading wholesale and reta3 estab¬
lishments.
MAYER, STROU8E & CO.
410 Broadway, N. Y., Manufacturers.
New Advertisements
TO ADVERTISERS
A fist of 1000 newspapers divided into
STATES AND SECTIONS wifi be tent on
application—FREE. those who their advertising
To want to
pay, we ran offer no better medium for thor¬
ough and effective woik than tlie various
sections of our Select Local List.
GEO. P. ROWELL & CO.,
Newspaper Advcrt'sing New Bureau, York.
10 Spruce street,
MICROBE KILLER
Is now the rage in Austin, Tex. Mr. Kadam,
Nurseryman, He Cures Every Austin, Texas, is doit,is the Inventor.
Disease that have
failed to enre. Over 500 persons in and
around Austin are now using it Se-<t r r
ctri ulnr of his treatment sh win r .
staternenl-* and testimonials of cu <-
Adre?s
Wn. RAGMAN’S, Microbe Killer,
AUSTIN, TEXAS.
_ _
$100 to $3000 tsr
Agents preferred who ean furnish their own
horses and give their own horses and give
their whole time to the business. Spare mo
ments few vacancies may be profitably in towns employed ana cities. also. B. F. A
Johhsoh & Co,, 1006 Main St., Richmond.V*
Admiiiistratrtljrs Sale
pptfilglt lowing described property tc-wlt: 257
acres of I -nd. more or lees, in Mt. 7.ioo Di*
trict the place Spalding where Cgu»ty. B. P. Georgia knows •»
time of hi* death, Crowder lived at the
and bounded east by F. E.
DrewryandR Bowden D. Williamson,southby 4.
J. and Mrs. Ysrbp“* 1 > —*
B. Crowder and J. L. Mayn
O. ject Norton. to mortgage Term* ef in safe,
Loan and a Trust favoi
This property Company. having tieen,
Tuesday in December, bid on th* 1st
Crowder off by R (;«d
for 12,300 and he having failed to
comply with of his the term* of safe and pay the
amount bid and the Administratrix
having off< red him a deed, the above proper
ty is sold at the risk of said R. C. Crowder
H ARRIET 8. CROWDER,
Administratrix of ft. P. O-vwder. dee d
$6.00,
Administrator’s Sale.
U, virtue if 1 . older granted by the Court
f' rdi i:i*J f n il,sing County, Will be sold
'•> e gh b.i'dt- . betore the Court bouse
o-u hi s .■! • uutv, on the first Tuesday in
btuaiy next,within the legal hours of ealc,
.1 f t. u nis: (««,*• rty, town One hundred
“ ;i “v ; *i 1 '| utr.cr acres of land Store Or
l nh.u Ltrict of SpuUHng County,
< 1 irf the -< u;h half of tot of land No. 85,
1 . .lU.drU . ruth by 8. A. a. A A, C, Karlin,
eii't In lauds of estate of J .K. Allen and Olt
the south at:d wi st by Thorn"- Moore Sold
ns the property ot James Dorset!, late of said
county, now decea-ed. Property i* well im¬
proved, is well watered and has some good
woodland ou it. Terms cash.
N. M. COLLENR
Administrator.
February Sheriff’s Sales.
W T T i day LL BE in February SOLD ON next, THE between FIRST TCFJ9 the le
rat hours of sale, before the door of the
Court House, in the city of Griffin, Spalding
Connty, Georgia, the following described
property, One house to-wit: and lot the city of Griffin,
in
containing less, one-fourth of an acre, more or
and known as the Thomas lot, bounded
north by lot of Mrs. Fannie Brown, weat by
Sixth street, south by lot of Mrs. Thomas,
east by lot of Perry Williams. Sold as the
property of T. A. Warren by virtue of a fi fa
issued from Spalding Superior Court in fav¬
or of C. L. Pitta ana B. r. Blanton, trans¬
feree. vs. T. A. Warren. Tenant in posses
sion Also, legally notified. $3,00.
at the aame time and place, one taw
mill carriage, saw frame, circular am, track
and frame, and large !»e»t. earti and mry
piece connected with tl, j -aw mill and sold
to be delivered at the th< , - I -, * where the
saw mill is now located, in L .u Creek dis¬
trict, at the F. A. Putman saw mill. Sold
by virtue of a mortgage fi fa issued from
Spalding Blanton Superior A. Putman. Court in favor ot W. U.
Also, at vs. the r. time and place, $3.00. will! be
same
eold one and one-fourth acres of land, more
or County. leas, in Georgia, the seoond district of Spalding
bounded north byC, H.
Osborn, south, sooth east by by a road road running running north and
a east and west,
and west by Ool. W T,Trammell. Sold as the
property of Warren Fuller, to satisfy one fi
fa issued frem the Justice Court of the 1001st
district. O. M., in favor of J. C. King for the
use ot Talbott Brothers vi. Warren Fuller.
Levy turned made by G G. Johnson, L. C., and
over to me. Tenant in poaaession
legally Also, notified. the and ( 6 . 00 .
at same time place, will be
sold twenty acres of land in the northwest¬
ern corner of lot of land number ten in the
1067th District, O. M., of Spalding County,
bounded north by a road dividing said
lafid from lot number eleven, on the eaurt by
land of J, D, Boyd, and south and west by a
part of said lot, blonging to 8. W. Leak.
Levied on and sold aa the property of 8. W.
Leak to satisfy one A fa issued from Spald¬
ing Superior Court ia favor of Lockwood A
McCltutock vs a. W. Leak. Tenant in pos¬
session Also, legally the notified. (6.00.
at same time and place, will be
eold fifty acres of land, being the eest half
of one hundred acres off of lot number bine
ty six, known as part of Chatfieid lot, bound
ed as follows: on the north by Richard Man
ley, cast by Stilweli A Keith, south by John
Graiftl&nd. Ransom place, Levied and west by soldo* land of the Beaton
on ana prop¬
erty of R. A Ellis to satisfy ona fi fa issued
from in favor 1 he County of Patopsco Court of Spalding County
Gnauo Co. vs. R. A.
Ellis. fied. Tenant in possession legally noti¬
Also, at the time aad place, 9100 will .
same be
sold ten acres of land In the 1065th district
U. M., of Spalding County, bounded on the
north by the Griffin and Mt. Zion road, on
the west by Mrs. C, J. McDowell, and on the
south and east by T. W. Flynt, trustee for
wife.
T. W.
fl fas in 1
Flynt, trustee, etc. Levy ma4e’ by J. W.
Travis, T. C., and tnrned over to me. Ten
ant in possession legally time notified. and $3.00.
Also, at the same land place, will be
sold ten acres of in the 1065th district
G. M ., by of the Spalding Griffin County, and Mt. bounded Zion on the
north Wm, Waddell, and road, on
the west by land J. C. King. on Levied the south
and east by of on
and sold as the property of J. C. King, to sat¬
isfy one tax fl fa in favor of the State and
County vs. J. 0, King. Levy made by J. W.
Travis, T. C -, and turned over tojme. $3.00. Tenant
in posses <ion legally notified. and place,
Also, at the same time will be
sold one boose and lot in the city of Griffin,
containing one half acre more or less, bound
ed north by W. E. George, west bjr Third
street, south by an alley and east by J. Irby
lies. Levied on and sold to satisfy two tax
Thrash. fi fa* in favor Levy of made Stitc by and J. County W. TraYto, vs. T. Dick C.,
and turned over to me. Tenant in possession
legally notified. (8L00.
Also, at the same time and place, wul be
sold one honse and lot in the city of Griffin,
containing ona acre land more or less, bonnd
ed north and east by lands of U. N. Lawton’s
estate, south by Nettie Matthews and west
by IIill street. Levied on and sold as the
property of Dock Thrash, to satisfy two tax
tl fas in favor of State and County vs. Dock
Th rash. LevymadebyJW. Tenant Travis, T. C,
and turned over to me. in posses¬
sion legally notified. ELI., $3.00.
It. 8. CONN Sherifl 8. C.
Electricity Eclipsed
TH*
CHICAGO ELECTRIC LAMP
Most brilliant ltfht produced from
any of quality of ksrossns. No den¬
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wanted sample in sad circular*. sxeiusiv* Agent*
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nr cm* m. re., rum*, niia*.
K’c'Jw 'in
m\\ holse mm m?
COLUMBUS, - GEORGIA,
.TOE MeGHF.E, PropV.
-)o(--
The best place in Columbus to gets bath
or clean Steve. Give ns a call when ia th*
city. JOE McGHEE.
nus PATiJB