The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, January 24, 1888, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

SAVED HIS LEG I SCROFULA O if TflK mm cjoisio i f.lTDOKIA, Ga., Allan , AUfC-.st „i H, 197. ----------.. ■ , - w«.h gssrr dSJJK mother 4Mai*« suffered from acr»rul- ditary, as ray As I advanced to manhood oussymotwn*. ftW‘- 1 my n became of wora» «*» «- nnvver {lartlouluriv became fearfully Involved, -__„ the PeKlt’K fourteen L*ius less years painfully ago, affected, tee ufceM finally. prvrny about leg had eaten through Mwllfci Into right [f* boue. In order to save my Wo .the doc¬ tors I dotertotood operation to amputate ray lf*Yeiow eesafully I'rformedBy n knee, The M. Miller, was su< Atlanta, Lnd Dr. H. V. of Dr W. F. Bond, of Llthonla. But tlio h>ss of ray leg gave mo still only In temporary tuid re¬ lief The poison was Itself toy system la short soon began to show ulcers appeared again, a left rlmo after large from fcueeto on the my lustep. lea covering It the Frequently while at work I could be tracked t,Y tho blood which oozed and rottcnlng from the holes huge ulcers and the sores workmen were so offensive that my fellow could not stand tho stench and would move away from mo. persuaded _ . to . try . S. S. ^ S. Last winter I was As a last - ffort I consented to do so, and to grow less and less and finally ceased, tho ulcers healed, my flesh became firm and solid and today, halo after and using twenty-one of bottles, I am as stout a mun my ace as there Is In Georgia. I am seventy one years old. but feel now younger and stronger than I did when I was twenty five. 1 weigh about 170 pounds. Nothing is to be seen of ihe terrible disease, or to remind mo of the torture 1 suffered for so many years, except the scars of the the perfectly i I know heated of ulcers. the almost I want w to miraculous cute effected on me by S. S. 8., end I call upon those who wish to know tho particulars ill directly pleasure from me to will write, and duty I n consider It letter:;. a I refer as to Dr. cs a W. F. to answer their of Bond, of UUidflla, «a to the truth my statement. Very gratefully goong Treatise ou Blood nr.d r kiu Diseases malloo free. Ths Swift Specific Co.,1 Drawer 3, A ilanta, Ga. THE Gn!i] Foundry ;and- MACHINE WORKS. lake pleasure iu announcing to tlieir riends and patrons tliat they are ready to execute orders for Ini \ te Castiop, drawings, Patterns. Mil! Gearing . And Machinery of every Description Pulleys, Hangers and Shafting REPAIRS ON Stationary and Portable Engines, Boilers and Machinery, ’ipe Work, Pumps and Jnjectorr Presses, Saw Mills. Etc., Etc. • l4g~\Xd respectfully solieii OSBORN, your orders. C. a. i »• Proprietor. •a*Aw..-.^ji.'7«aa»fcise , s v* Utt*mmaamumemr*’- mw ,rav?isK»«>' New Advertisements. PATARRH SAMPLE TREAT Lprr H C.L. MENT. We ir.ni I wenonol, ^enough to to convince. <" B. 8. Lau kkbu h & Co , 773 Broad.nt. Newark, > ■>. PATENTS IVathinglan, F. Send A. for f.ISI circular. 71 IS. 1 V { Y JLy/yJoENT T/W\ PER i PaOHl’ and SAMPLES f FREE to men canvassers for Dr. Scott’s Genuine Electric Belts, Brushes, <tc. Lady agents wanted for Elec¬ tric Corsets. Quick sales. Write at once for terms. Dr. Scott, S4i B’way, N. V. fhpAp Improve Agents’ it profits per forfeit. month. New Will WfcVportraits or pay just out. A $3.50 sam¬ ple s.ent free to all. W. II. Cliidester & f*o n . vs Ror.d st.N. Y. ARE CONSUMPTIVE YOU Indigestion I Use l§Sp Md Melt, struggling against disease, and slowly drifting STs t? “* grave, will a ra: in many cases recover their health by find disorders of stomach and bowels. 60o. at i>ruarKl<ts. LIEBIG COMPANY’S EX TRACT OF MEAT Finest and cheapest MEAT FLAVORING STOCK FOll SHIPS, MAKE IIISHMlffi Annual sales 8,000,000 jars. N- B.--Genuine only with fac-simile of Baron Liebig's SIGNATURE IN BLUE INK lobe across label. had of all Storekeepers. Groeei* and Druggists. • < W 1 T‘ ’ A ,—-tr.sg 9k >53 advertisers : - t learn the exact cos< ■'* rai) nroposed line : rfssixig in America! P ( rs by addressing & ~o P. Rowell Co., -----■ iO spapef Arirgrtising Bureau, r pn- .it, Me w Yirk. Vnri jo- .or SOME EXPLOD ED SUP ERSTITION3. flow Mariners Catch tbe Albatross and Make Billows nitto Abe Feathers, ■Tuns much interested,” saici an old sailor to a reporter, “by an article on the superstitions of sailors. But I must con¬ fess that I was no less amused than in¬ terested. All tho old time superstitions and beliefs which have chiefly owed their existence to the exaggeration'of the jioets were resurrected, so to speak, and laid to the charge of the sailor of the present day. Nothing could be more absurd. Tiie sailor of today is no more supersti¬ tious than the average landsman, and as a rule a great deal more practical and matter-of-fact. Go on board ship and study the rigging and fitting. There is not a rope rove in a block or a plank laid without the most precise calculation and forethought. A sailor never sit9 down to do a job, from making a becket for a bucket to splicing an eight stranded wire rope, without first having worked the whole tiring out in his mind. ■There’s but one way of doing things,’ you'll hear the old lio’sun say, ‘and that is the vigfct way. ’ ••The fellow that said in that article tliat a sailor won't allow' an albatross to be ki/ied for fear of ill luck, had evidently never rounded the Horn. Why, when I went to sea first I was full of that ‘Rime of the Ancient Mariner.’ When wo neared Staten Island I looked with all my eyes for the bird. When one did appear sailing majestically along without flapping its large wings once 'in half an hour, I felt a chill of reverential awe and stood with niy mouth wide open, a whole pan¬ orama of Gustave Dace's illustrations of the poem flitting through my mind. “■ ‘What are yo doin’ ther, ’ suddenly yelled tho mate. ‘Is that matin’ sennit? If I’ve to speak to ye agen I'll make ye straddle that spanker boom for a week. Here, jump down into my room an’ get my fishin’lines; d’ye hear? Skip.’ And the mate's heavy sea boot emphasized his words. When I returned to the deck with tho lines, ‘Here, ’ says he, *git aft there, you lazy lubber, and catch an albatross. I promised that wife of mine that I’d bring her an eider down pillcr this v’y’ge.’ “ ‘Catch an albatross!’ I echoed, para¬ lyzed with terror at the thought. “ ‘If ye don’t skip an’ hold ycr jaw I’ll- Here, give me that, you booby.’ And the mate took the line from me arid led me aft to show me how to catch al¬ batross. This is a very simple operation. An ordinary strong fishing line is pro¬ cured and a strong hook attached to the end imbedded in a piece of tempting fat pork. It is paii] out astern, a piece of cork keeping the line afloat. No sooner does the albatross perceive the. (Mieioue morsel than he makes a downward swoop. Why, you never saw a prettier sight than the elliptical sweep the huge birds make, their wings stretched out as stiff as a lioard. Never a flap, sir. One wing just dashes up the water near the bobbing pork and then the bird wheels around again and drops in the water. In a moment the bait is swallowed and then the fight begins. I have seen four men find it a hard job to haul in an albatross, for it extends its wings and catches the wind; and sometimes they won’t rise, but stretch out their wings and hold water, and then something goes, the hook or the line, maybe. ‘ ‘But they generally get the big birds aboard. They kill them there and skin them. The wings they use for orna¬ ments, and the heads are hung over the stern and allowed to drag in the water, which soon leaves the skulUos cleau as a whistle. Tho softer feathers are used to make pillows or beds, but the skins make beautiful fur cloaks. , You see, after plucking the feathers out a lovely down remains on the skin which looks, for all tho world, like white fur. Why, sir, I have at home two of the prettiest curly headed little rogues of girls you ever saw, and they each have a coat of albatross fur. They’re the envy of every one in that quiet little country town in the east. ‘‘There isn't much superstition about that, is there? Why, I’ve caught as many as twenty albatrosses on a voyage. Of course, there are many captains who will not allow them to be caught for hu¬ manity’s sake. Others, again, like to catch them, and attach a piece of tin or wood, with the name of tho vessel and the latitude and longitude on it. to the I 02 ^Then, . then let them, go. again, in the article referred to, the sea gull is spoken of as a weather prophet. Now, should I don't see why what is really true 1>e caXed a -sailor's su¬ perstition.’ There never was anything truer than tho English notion that these birds take to the land before a southeast or southwest wind sets in. These winds always bring rain to those coasts, and long before they break the sky is overcast and the air moist. It is just such weather that draws the earthworms from their holes, and what* more delicious dish is there for a sea gull than the dainty earth¬ worm? Why, the fields are covered with sea gulls at such times, and yet a purely natural occurrence is called a sailor’s su¬ perstition. ■‘Another superstition that on my first voyage I found was exploded among sailors was the belief that the stormy petrel never rests, and that its appearance indicates a conning storm. There is no doubt they are remarkably restless little creatures, but they rest on the water and plume fkeir feathers the same as any other birds. As to their appearance in¬ dicating a storm I’ve never given the thing much notice; but this I know, and that is, that I have seen them flying around the stop in the calmest as well as in the stormiest weather. ‘‘No, sir, the old superstitions don't affect modern sailors very much. Steam¬ boats and short passages have done away with much of the romance of sea life and with it its superstition. In old times, when a ship took three years to make a voyage, the simple hearted sailor would welcome as a break to the monotony the appear¬ ance of the sea birds. He could not find it in bis heart to kill the creatures which spoke to him of land and its associations. He wanted company, and the birds af¬ forded it to him, and he gradually came to look upon these birds as comrades and thought it a sin to kill them. And so, what had its origin in the sailor's kind¬ ness of heart has come, to be called a superstition by men who do not know sailors as they are at sea, but as they ap¬ pear on shore—thoughtless, irnorant creatures. Alta California. There is no joy like the joy of resolved virtue.—O. Dewey. ~ ■ . Brooding Ova* If you are sick or ailing, don’t depend too muck on the medicines you take oc the remedies you apply to effect a cure. Tonics and alteratives are of great use, but attention to the rules of hygiene, mental as well as physical, will make them more efficacious. In the first place, don’t give up too easily; have cou^fee; exert your will power; don't brood over your aches and pains and symptoms, bat try to forget them ; and the chances are you will forget them so thoroughly that when you do by chance remember them you will wonder where they are. If the worst comes, and you mnst give up, then do so gracefully and thoroughly, keep hopeful, and so order all pertaining to your mind as well as your body, that the best results may be obtained from the remedies used. Half of the suffering of nervous people comes from their brooding over their ail¬ ments till the imagination gets the upper hand. Nine times out of ten all their symptoms would disappear if they would pay strict attentidn to their diet, have it light and nutritious, and avoid stimulants of all kinds—even tea and coffee; bathe daily, using friction with a brush or towel; take plenty of outdoor exercise, whether the weather be pleasant or not; and try to forget their nerves in pleasant reading or pleasant company—not excit¬ ing company, for that would only irri¬ tate—or in congenial work; and if work they must, and it be not congenial, then let them make the best of it under the circumstances and do it ‘‘by God’s law,” thoroughly and conscientiously; and they will be astonished to find how the sun¬ shine will even stem brighter, tho icy wind less cold, the noise less irritating and their friends so much pleasanter, when in reality it is all in themselves— they are only taking brighter views of life, and not causelessly irritating themselves and others around them. —Demorest’s Monthly. Curlogitie* of Literature. With many writers, especially in for¬ mer times, various curious styles of com¬ position were much in favor. One au¬ thor, for example, would compose verses with some particular letter omitted from every stanza; others would write in such a way that the line read the same back¬ ward and forward, and still others made anagrams. It vfas fashionable at one time to write verses in fantastic shajies. The forms of a bottle, a glass, or a lady’s fan were imitated, and this was done by lengthening or shortening the lines as required, though with sad detri¬ ment to the verse. Where the design was a bottle, a number of short lines would go to form the neck; gradually lengthening, the shoulder would be formed, and then the body. We read also of verses arranged in the form of “a pair of gloves, a pair of spectacles, and a pair of pot hooks.” Specimens of this kind of literary friv¬ olity are to be found in French, Spanish and English books of tho Sixteenth cen¬ tury. Both in China and Japan such literary feats are held in great esteem, even in the present day; in the latter country the poet not infrequently arranges his verses in the shape of a man’s head—thus, per¬ haps, giving a facial outline of the sub¬ ject of his verse; and though the Chinese may not make so nice a choice, choosing, perhaps, a cow or other animal for the design, they display greater ingenuity by so doing.—Youth’s Companion. The Wont Block In New York. It is the block called ‘‘the bend,” in Mulberry street. Four thousand prison¬ ers have been dragged out of ihis one block in the last two years. Four hun¬ dred arrests have been made there in one night. It is here that the crowds on the sidewalks in the daytime are so dense tliat no one but a policeman can make his way through there without difficulty. No one begrudges the police this distinc¬ tion, I may add. Here each side of the street, with its tall tenements, is duplicat¬ ed by a rear row of equally big hives, so hat it is two streets, in reality, instead one. Some cities that think them¬ selves important have no more popula¬ tion than this block. The bulk of the people are Italians. They sleep iu the rooms, a score ot more together—men, women and children—heaped in like cordwood. Those who are not Italians are the foulest wrecks that rum can make—men and women tottering on the verge of the abyss, at the bottom of which is the madhouse and the morgue. ‘•The bend” has often been described and often will be. It is the sardine box, the rat hole, tho human sewer < >f the me¬ tropolis. —Buffalo Express. ToatU Imported from Atittrliu In most districts of Great Britain toads are moderately numerous; more numer¬ ous, indeed, than might be imagined, for they are not animals that court publicity. In the face of this it is rather surprising to hear that tofids are now being im¬ ported into this country from Austria. They are packed in wooden boxes filled with moss, and on their arrival fetch a much as from $15 to $20 per 100. Toads have long been ar of com¬ merce here; in moat well ordered gar¬ dens the visitor will occasionally be startled by a quaint apparition on tho pathway, puffing like an asthmatic old gentleman, and the suburban market gardeners and nurserymen jiieir very fre¬ quently have t’'om in frames and greenhouses und about their grounds. But until recently our horticulturists have been satisfied with the exertions of the native toads iu ridding them of their slugs, grubs and noxious insects. It is possible that the Austrian toad may be larger and more voracious than ours, and this may explain the fact of its importa¬ tion.—London Globe? The State House Dome. To gild the dome of the state house in Boston cost Massachusetts $10,000 during Banks’ governorship. The color has gradually changed, and a demand w ill soon be made to renew tbe gold. Rumors remain current in England that Mr. Parnell is suffering from an in-» ternal cancer. It is also said that under his assumed name—Preston—he fre¬ quently visits an eminent physician at Paris. The sexes can be distinguished in ducks by noticing tliat ducks quack in aloud, coarse voice while a drake has a sharp, thin, peeping voice. CAPITAL PRIZE, ‘‘We do hereb} ci'rtifythatweFupet v-u- an iuiginu iris for nil the itmr : b> rud tery terly Drawings of The I < i Atat« trol Company, the ami in ; er • ' -aid aeiunl that Drawings them-, i . -, Burnt) are conducted with houcety, and in good faith toward all parties, and authorize the Company to cse this o with fac-similesof onrsignulci ei attached d»ortiscirerite " We the undersigned Banks and will pay all Prizes drawn in The State Lotteries which may be presented our counters: JT. H.OMB8BY. Pm. La. Kai l P. LASACX. PrciStat# Nat l Bk. A. BAAnWI.I.Pm. H. O. Nat’l f t HI. KOI(3f, Prra, t alon VI u NPRECEDENTED Over Half a Million ATTRACTION! Louisiana State Lottery Incorporated in 1868 for 25 years by the for Educational and Charitable noses—with a capital of $1,000,000—to l reserve fund of over $550,000 has since adued. thise By an overwhelming popular vote Its was made a part of the present Staf Constitution adopted December 2d, A. I)., 1871 The only Lottery ever voted on_ and dorsed by the people of any State. It never scales or postpones. Its Grand Mingle Number take place monthly,and the Grand Drawings, (March, June, regularly September every and three December). A8PLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO WIN i FORTUNE. SECOND GRAND ing, Class B, in thx Academt of Obleans, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, Monthly Drawing. Capital Prize, {^NOTICE.—Tickets Halves, Fifths, are Ten Tenths, Dollars $5. $2. $1 LIST OF PRIZES. 1 Capital Priz* of $150,000.. . 1 Grand Prize of 50,000... 1 Grand Pbizb of 20,000.., . 2 Large Prizes oi 10,000.. . 4 LabgbTrizes o» 5,000... . 20 Prizss of 1,000... . 50 “ 500.. . 100 “ 300... . 200 “ 200... . 500 “ 100.., . APPROXIMATION PB1ZEF 100 100 Approximation “ Prizes of $300.. “ 200 . . 100 “ “ 100 . . Terminal “ 50... . Prizes, amounting Application for rates to clubs should only to the office of the Company Orleans. For further informat‘«n write clearly, full address. POSTAL NOTES, Myney Orders, or N«w York F.xchange li ordinary expense) letter. addressed Currency by Express M. A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans La or M. A. DAUPHIN, Washington, I). U. Registered Letters tc Oil EE.INN Xf ATIOIAL U.t.tU New Orleans, Ln. REMEMBER SS5SK Early. «hu are In of absolute cfewrye faimesi *f lh< is a guaantee integrity, that the chances are all equa! that no one can possibly divine wha 1 . will draw a Prize. REMEMBER that the payment of is GUARANTEED BY FOUR BANKS of New Orleans, and are signt-l by the President of an whose chartered rights are in the highest Imitations Courts; therefore cheine? of any cr Tkt osly aen-AlcokoUe liquid VegetAli mtlhlae fat up li fsm ever dizMvmd. It cures all diseases arising from biliousness and blood impurities. A safe, sure, and gentle cathartic, The old style cleansing the system thoroughly. is slightly bitter. The New Is pleasant the world to for the children. taste, and Price the best $1 medicine in McDonald drug OO to . n. y. cur Libel for Divorce. Pack ) Libel for Divorce .n vs. Pack.) r Superior Court. It appearing to the rt that t ■ -kfc iu the above stated eas.-, Jim Pack, without the State of Georgia, and returnof the Sueriff that he cculd found in ti.e county : It Is ordered Court that the defendant, Jim Pa'-k. appear at the next terra of this Con t said libel ; and it is further ordered service ol the same be made upon Jim Pack, by publication of in the Griffin News once a month four months before the next term Court This. August 12th, 1887. JAMES 8. BOYNTON, Jutge 8. C. ¥. V, E. W. Hammond, Libellant’s Attorney. Georgia, Spalding County.—I, ffm M. Clerk of the Superior Court of said certify that the foregoing is a cor¬ rooy of the order granted at tbe Au¬ term, 1887, of said Court, as the minutes of said Court. This, 12th 1887. \YM M. TIH >M \B. oct7oam4m, Cle : L- L 5 4 £ »LLSi ___ fkfl I'erfe l' - rate ilvnlliltW. Nccr to Haiper’s Bazar. ILLUSTRATED. Harper’s Bazar is a home >me journal, journal, n combines choice literature '* lustration* willi the Ittcst ... garding the fashion*. Each _ clcverserial and short storie», praetical and timely etsays, bright poems, humorous sketches, etc I's pattern sheet and fashion plate supplements will alone help ladies to save many times the cost of subscription, and papers on social etiquette, ..... decorative art, housekeeping in all its branches, cookery, etc., make it useful in every home- hold, and a true promoter of economy. Its editorials line arc is admitted marked by it* good column* sense, that and not a to could offend the most fa*tW:<.o« fast-. Harper’s Periodicals. • PEE tF.Ut HAKFER’S B.1ZVR. *it0 HARPER'S MAGAZINE .. t 00 HARPER’S WEEKLY 4 to HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE 8 00 Postage lice to all .gi..- • iin i> in ti.e United States, Can*da.or M> .\iei> The volumes of ihe Bhasi i, if i .■ i :h< first When number for mentioned, Jternary it urk >• „i no time 1* t*ub «-• {)*>$• i•* will begin with the number curnut *: i ,.r of receipt of order Bound volumes of Harper ■> Bazar, te>r three year* back, in neat cloth binding, will be seut by mail, postage paid, or by e xt press, free of expense (provided the freight doe* not exceed one dollar per volume ), for $7 00 j>er volume. Cloth cases for each volume, fuitable for binding, will be sent by mall, post paid, on receipt of $1.(0 each. Remittances should be made by post-office money order or draft, to avoid chance of loss. tisement Newspapers without ar* the not to copy order tuia of «dver- Har¬ Bros. express per & Address HARPER & BROS., New Ark Eclectic Magazine OF Foreign Literature, Science and Art, •THE LITERATURE0F THE WORLD." 1888—44th YEAR. The Foreign Magazine* embodv tbe best thoughts is the aim of of the ablest EcriEoriu writers Magazine of Europe. It the to se¬ lect and reprint these articles. Ihe plan of theEcuucrjc includes Science. Essays, Re¬ views, Biograpieal Criticism, Sketches, Historical Poetry Pa¬ pers, Art Travels, and Short Stories. Its Editorial Departments comprise Litera¬ ry Foreign Notices, dealing with current home books Literary Notes, the Science discoveries and Art, and summarizing achievements briflly in this field, new and consisting foreign of choice extracts from new books and journals. The following are the names of some of the leading authors whose articles may Eclectic ho expected for to appear in the pages of the the coming year. AUTHORS. r.t. lion, VV. E. Gladstone, Alfred Tennvsou, Huxley, Professor Professor Tyndall, Rich- A. Proctor, B. A, J. Norman Lockyer, F. R. 8 Dr. W. B. Carpenter, E. B, Tyler, Prof Max Muller, Prof. Owen Matthew Arnold. E. A. Freeman, D. C. L. James Anteeny Froude, Thomas Hngb 0. o s, Algenon William Black, Swinburne. Mrs. Oliphant, Cardinal Newinau, Cardinal Manning, Miss Thackeray, Thomas Robert Hardy, Bnchanar, Etc., Etc., Etc. The Ei.ecxk; enables the American leader tions to keep of himself the day informed on the great world, ques¬ and Intel igent American throughout the afford no can to he without it. STEEL ENCRAVINCS. The Eclectic comprises each year two lame volumes of over 1700 pages. Each ol these volumes contains a line steel engrav¬ ing, which add* much to the attraction of the magazine. TERMS, -hiuglc copie*, 45 cents; one copy, one year, $5; five copies, $20. Tiial subsf ription for three months, $1 The EC LECTIC and any f4 magazine, $8. E. Ft. PELTON, Publisher, 25 Bond Strcetj New York. Election Notice. Spalding .Office Countv Jan. Commissioner*, j i Death Count*, 12th, 1888. this having deprived th* people of county of the able and zealous services of our lute dist nguised and esteemed associate aud a vacancy having thus occurred in this board, by authority of law we do hereby or¬ der that an election to fill said vacancy be held in the city of Griffin, and at tbe various election pree nts of tbe county of Spalding on the Third (3) day of February 1888. It is further ordered that this noice be pub fished d ily until the date of election in the city papers and that the legal number of noi * of same be posted as required by law I> e special meeting of said board, this 12th fanuarr 1*8* T. R. MILLS, C.C. j! 14tde M. PATRICK. C. C. NEW 7 Wen Ms, Arriving daily from the Leading urowern. 8 W. MiNGHAi MfMBM&m vri Z*J! t •1 Tuesday hours of tn Febrva saw the f of „„ >v , ■•'trsfiSy. ... ^ D place Spalding County, Georgia where R. P. C-owder lived ai the of his death, and add bounded bounded east east by bf F. P. E. l >I V rr Y. ul< * *nd Mr*. WflllamaaB,aoeUi Yarbrough, bp J. „ west by W, in <»vorof the O otafe Wrtybait2£ y with tbe terms of sale and pay the of bis bid and tbe ‘ ■- • 6 . 00 . Administrator’s Sale. By w virtue..f i older gianted By tbe Ceart f '( siding County, will be sold highest tender, iietoratke Court house in * ill < oanty, on the it ret Tuesday la bru:ii) it.- m, within the legal howtwef sale, a.* putpMVy, tumite Uoa bwMferaa one rind u qnsrter acres of tana more or ',.n 1 "Ion i (strict of 8palding County, the Miuiti half of let of Und No. Ml north by 8. A, G. & A, C, Karlin, by lands of estate of J E. Alien and on it. »E*E on Terms cash. N. M. COLLEN8, $ ( T9g, Administrator. Sheriffs Sales. wte. GeOi Georgia, the* to-wit: One house and lot in the oily ot Griffin, one-fourth of an acre, mere or and known as the Thom a* lot, bounded by lot of Mrs. Fannie Brown, weal by street, south by lot of Mrs. Thomae, vs. T. A. Warren, Tenant In , legally notified. |3.O0. _____ Also, carriage, at the same tinv t d place, on* saw saw franv te.-uter saw, track frame, and large U.i, « h<q and every conn 9 cted with the saw will and sold be delirared at the the premises In Tin irhiri Mi mill at the is now F. A. located, Putman a C taw a virtue of a mortgage fi fa Issued Superior A. Putman. Court in favor of W. M vs. F. one and «n< aei less, in the distnrt Georgia, bounded north north by C. east by by a road road ruin • g mad west by Col. a W TTiammell. running east Sold and west, tbe as of Warren Fuller, to satisfy one fi Issued from the Justice Court of the 1001st G. M., In favor of J. C. King for tbe ol Talbott Brothers JohnscmTuCrti®* yj, Wtrcen Fuller. made by O, D. over to me. Tenant ln iinigsa>lrn 1BEST notified. Also, at the same of time land and In plane, will ba twenty acres land tint norT corner of lot of number ten 1067th District, G. M., of 8pa north by a road from lot number eleven, on the east by of J, D. Boyd, and south and west by a or said lot, blunging to B. W. Leak on and sold as the pf to satisfy one fi fa last Roperior Court W. tn Leak, favor) vs ». Aho, legally tho notified. ’ at same time and place, fifty hundred acres of land, being the east half one acres off of lot number nine six known as part of Chatfleld tot, bond¬ as follows: on the north by McbaraWm- i ana so.d sc the prep, of R. A. Ellis to ta satisfy ana f fa issued 'he County Court t -----ToTrs. of of Spalding County / A". favor of Patapseo Guano Go. V*. R. R. Tenant in possession legally noti Also, ten at the same of land time in tbe and 106Gih place,'win place, district willi be acres M., of Hpalding Counter, bounded on tha by the Griffin and alt. Zion road, on west by Mrs. C, J. McDowell, and on tbe and east by T. W. Flynt, trustee for Is vied on and sold as the property of W. Flynt, trustee, etc., to satisfy two tax fas in favor ot 8. ate and County r*. T. W trustee, T. C., and etc. turned Levy made by J. Ten W over to me. in pra session legally notified . $2.00. Also, at tbe same time and plaoe, will be ten acre* ot land in tbe 1065th district M , of Spalding bounty, bounded on the by the Griffin and Mt. Zion road, on west by Win, Waddell, and on the sontb east sold by land of J. C. King. J. King, Levied on as the property of C. to sat¬ one tax fi fa in fever of the Stste and T. vs. J. O, King. Levy made by Tenant J. W. C., and turned over tofme. possession legally notified. and * $3 will 00. Abo. at the same time place, lace, ■ be one honse and lot in the elty of < one half acre more or less, bound north by W. E. George, west by Third Levied sooth by an and alley sold and east satisfy by J. Irby on to two tax fas in favor of 8t>te and County vs. Dick Levy made by J. W. Travis, T. C., turned over to roe. Tenant in possession notified. ffiLOO. Also, at tho same time and plkee, will be one boose und lot land in tbe city lees, ot Griffin, bound one acre more or north and east by lands of G. N. Lawton’s south by Nettle Matthews and west Hill street. Levied on and sold as the of Dock Thrash, to satisfy two tax fas in favor of State and County rs. Dock Le i \ made by J. W, Travis, T, C, turned ou r to me. Tcuant in posses¬ legally R i.<.t fled. CONNRLI, Sheriff $3.00. & C. 8, Georgia, '8 OFFICE, Jan. 2th, Fpaldino 1888.—W.B.Hed¬ Goux- administrator, tt, applied for let n , bae to me of di«mi»si»n from the estate ot Tho*. late of said county, deceased. Let all persons concerned show cause hs- Court of Ordinary of said county, my office 1888, in Gi Itfin, on the first Monday such In by ten o’clock a. m , why should not be granted $6.15. E W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. Notice to Heirs. s ,aMk£ executor of the last will and testament of C. Mitchell, deceased, has made ap to hare a aettiement made be¬ himself, as executor. *nd the belts of deceased Bach settlement wll be made tbe Coart of Ordinary of Spa ld ing Georgia, on the first Monday to 1888. Let ell persona Interested in estate be pretest at that time and repre January H»th. 7V». Ordinary.