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SATCD US LEO I
SCROFULA
BOHF
tM.3
laTBoXIA, On.. August 11. l.v-7.
*«r*SWtPT8rECIVic irSiitlcnien—I I'O., Leon Atlanln, aflhclei 0».: Vltb
liavo
?™ Kanm affliction lnereas-l paluful until the malady
harras-slnft and bejon.l the
Particularly left left i~ boTaroe tearfully suast &
kiK.ut le" bo: belns ns less If painfully aff—-------, tl.e ulcers
fourteen years ago. on my
right Jl-e leg ha.1 eaten through the flesh into
bone. In order to save my life the doe-
cws determined to amputate my leg below
run knee. The ration M. Miller was anecessfully of Atlanta,
mrfonnwl Lml be l>r.H. V. Llthonia. But the
Dr. W. P. Bond, of
loss of my leg gave me still only temporary and re-
iinf The poison was In my system
soon began to show itself again. In a short
t me after large ulcers appeared on my left
lea covering it from the knee to the Instep
ivnnuenily while at work I could be tracked
l.v the blood which oozed from the holes huge
rX.,,,.g anil tile sores and fellow rottenlng workmen
were so offensive that my
could not stand the stench and would move
# l£st*wluter last •ffort l"wa» 1 consented persuaded to to do try so. 8. S. and S.
about seven months ago X began the taking effects the
crieclflc. 1 cam began to feel good
uf the medicine, the offensi ve running began
to crow les- and less and becamo Anally ceased, the
ulcers healed, my flesh Arm and
solid and today, after using twenty-one
bottles. I am as bale and stout a man of my
■me as there Is In Georgia. I am seventy one
v?ars old. but feel now younger and stronger
than I (ild when I was Nothing twenty five. be I weigh of
about 111) pounds. Is to seen
the terrible disease, or to remind me of the
torture I suffered for so many years, except
miraculous “ftSS?ilve'aimost cun? effected on n?r by S. S. S.,
fsnil I rnil upon thevse who wish to know the
rj rticuhirs directly from me Jo write, and I
tviii consider their it letters. ft p!cu»»r»j I refe ab wi r to ll Dr. ns ft U. duty V*
to Ht.n'i. nrswer Llthonia. to the truth of mj
of r.a gratefully
statement, Very gouts
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mallca
free. Th.i.Sv.'ki SfnctSiO fo„>
Drawer ■>, A tlanta, Ga.
THE
tin foundry
AND-
MACHINE WORKS.
fake pleasure in announcing to their
.lends and patrons that thoy are ready to
execute orders for
i«! Brass Castings,
drawings, Patterns, Mill Gearing
ind Machinery of every Description
Pulleys, Hangers and Shafting
REPAIRS ON
Stationary and Portable Engines,
Boilers and Machinery,
’ine Work, Pumps and Jnjectorr
Presses, Saw Mills. Etc., Etc.
'Jf "We respectfully solicit yonr orders.
C. fl. OSBORN,
i i- Proprietor.
d .. ../iwr-Mtfa—r^Wbu.im II r*ne»acwr>
New Advertisements.
$350 |A MONTH. No capital required
|A * Apply good for eliance territory to make a! once money. B. S,
Lauderbaeh Lauderliath Co. ( Newark, N. ,T,
PATENTS Wa.Ijt. Send A. for I.eilHAlY circular. Ik. C
...ANTED Immediately, Ladies to work
|U for a wholesale house on Needlework
WW at their liomes. (Sent any distance).
Gootl pay can be made. Everything furnish
ed. Particulars free. Address Artistic Needle
work Co., 135 Sth St., New' York City.
~
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleanses and beautifies the hair.
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Fails to Restore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Cures scalp diseases and hair foiling
50c. et Druggists.
_
The HINDERCORNS.
safest
LIEBIG lllPMn EXTRACT
OP MEAl. Finee and Cheapest Meat
Flavoring and Stock for Soups, Made Dish
es Sauces. Annual sale 8.000,000 jars.
LIEBIG mm EXTIillT
OF MEAT. An invaluable tonic. “Isasuc
cess and a ’ 'or which rations should
feel gral ful,"- -Ste "Medical Press,”
“Lancet, 1
filROIIE Will HGE SlfiMTHE’
OF BARON LIEBIG in fac simile across
label Highly recommended as a night
oap instead of alcoholic drinks.
LIEBIG COMPANY’S EXTRACT
OF MEAT. To be had of ali Storekeepers,
Grocers and Chemists. Sole Agents for
the United States (wholesale only) C
David & Co., 9 Fenehurch Avenue. Lon¬
don, England.
r ■Ux-Mr.'-* Me *
ADVERTISERS
•-an learn the exact cos'
of an) proposed line o
advertising in America*
papers by addressing
Geo* P. Rowell & Co.,
Newspaper Advertising Bureau,
lO Spru e St., New York.
%end 1CH13 tor lOO-Page Parr.phln
FARM AND GARDEN.
PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS ON PRUN*
.ING AND TRAINING YOUNG TREES.
Timely Advice About Sheep—"’Weevils and
Infested Iteans—-A Promising New C«r>
rant—Explicit Directions for Making a
Serviceable Wagon Jack..
The present is an opportune season for
studying other people’s inventions and
exercising one’s own ingenuity and clever¬
ness in the workshop. All farms, by the
by, do riot include a workshop among
their outbuildings, but in our opinion u
room or shop set aside for the storage and
use of tools is a necessity. All will agree
it is a convenience; thosq who have tried
it claim that it is an economy.
LUjEju
A HANDY WAGON JACK.
For the benefit of such readers as da
possess a kit of tools, a work bench, etc.,
is presented the following cut of a wagon
jack recently illustrated and described in
Rural New Yorker.
The base F (sec cut), made of two inch
plank, is 6 feet wide and 2 feet long. E
is a hollow tube, made of hard wood inch
stuff, inside of which A slides up and
down; E is mortised into a base 2 inches
from the end, and D is mortised into
the base 5 inches from E; D is made from
a piece <Jf 2 1-2 by 2 1-2 7 inches long; C,
the lever, is 27 inches long. The length
of A must be according to the height of
the wagon axle; B, the catch, is hung to
E by a hinge. The lifting is to be done
with the foot.
Among the Sheep.
The wisdom of providing shelter against
cold storms and chilly winds has been
inado apparent, oven in the more southern
exposures. The old idea that sheep do
not require drink and that their wool will
keep them warm without shelter is an ex¬
ploded one. Extra care during the win¬
ter season in way of both feed and shelter
pays in the long run, and must be given
if best results in wool and mutton are ob¬
tained.
Bear in mind the fact that sheep thrive
much better in dry than in wet seasons,
and provide when it is practicable, high,
dry locations for winter quarters. Low
damp places uro bad for all animals,
and especially so for sheep.
On the subject of feed for sheep, particu¬
larly the animals that are to have lambs
in the early spring, Rural New Yorkei
has given some sound advice, in which
occurs the following: Cottonseed
is not a desirable food for any
breeding animal, for tho sufficient rea¬
son that its effects encourage abortion.
Again, fine foods are not suitable for
sheep, which masticate their food most
thoroughly. Corn and other carbonaceous
foods are also not good for sheep except in
small quantities. Seeep are warmly
clothed and do not require so much car¬
bonaceous food as other animals do. They
are kept for wool and lambs, chiefly, and
as tho wool contains 10 per cent, of nitro¬
gen and tho lamb needs special provision
for its flesh and bone, foods rich in nitro¬
gen and phosphoric acid are required.
Hence, clover, as pasture and hay, should
be the main feeding for sheep, and bran
and oats, with a little corn only, should
furnish the grain food. Three pounds of
good clover hay and four ounces of mixed
bran, oats and buckwhqjit would keep a
sheep of 100 pounds’ weight in good con¬
dition, along with as much oat and pea
straw as it will eat.
Keans Infested with Weevils.
An English experimenter lias lately
published a report giving the results of a
series of trials with beans infested with
weevils. The general impression prevails
that provided the plumule or radical be
not injured, the plants do not materially
suffer from the mere perforation and par¬
tial consumption of the cotyledon.
The report of the English experimenter
makes it appear that for a time plants
raised from seeds thus perforated show
no signs of weakness, but when the flow¬
ering period arrives then the blossoms
produced are few and small, the plant
withers and sometimes dies without pro¬
ducing a single pod. Additional experi¬
ments made with five different varieties
showed that the total product was so
greatly diminished as to leave no ground
for doubt that the presence of the weevil
in the seed is highly detrimental, affecting
to a very considerable degree the repro¬
ductive powers of the future plant.
jm P.
lift tei
WEEVIL AND PERFORATED BEAN.
The injury done to peas by the pea
weevil, is of the same character as that
of the bean by the bean weevil, though
the letter insect eats several holes in the
seed, while the pea weevil makes only
one. The injury to the vitality of pea
plants produced from buggy peas may shown not
be so great as that to the beans, as
by the experiments mentioned, though
positive proof of this is lacking. At all
events, one should be careful to secure
sound peas, as well as sound beans for
seed. The small line between the weevil
and bean, in the cut, represents the
natural length of the bean weevil.
A New Variety of Currant.
The new currant introduced last season
under the name Crandall is supposed to
be a hybrid between the cherry currant
and Ribes Aureum. The introducers of
this new variety, which originated in
Kansas, describe It ns bluish black In
color when fuly ripe, aval varying in size
from one-quarter to one-half of an inch in
diameter, and growing in bandies of flvo
to eight berries each. The flavor of the
fruit is said to lie peculiar to itself and
superior to the English black currant.
Professor Budd, of Iowa, lias expressed
himself as believing the Crandall to be
valuable for general cultivation. Vick,
the well known New York seedsman, says
that the currant worm does not infest this
variet y, and that it adapts itself to almost
any soil. It appears to be especially
prized for preserves"and jellies.
A Word About Alfalfa.
Alfalfa is a perennial plant, which
flourishes best in warm climates and deep,
rich soils; the roots grow long and large,
and when once.established in a favorable
location an immense amount of fodder
will be produced for several years. It
succeeds admiralty in California, where
its long tap root seems to defy drought,
and is especially well adapted to our
southern states; but it is not suited to a
ha: 1 pan or close compact clay soil or
t..iu lands, but delights in soils where its
long tap roots meet with no obstruction.
There is uo better plant known for pro¬
ducing a large amount of fodder for soil¬
ing purposes from a small area of ground
adapted to its growth, and it is also used
for hay, although owing to the woody
fibre of its stem it is not equal to red
clover. It lias been grown to sonic extent
in the northern states, and even in
Canada, but being of southern origin its
best results are to be expected in warm,
dry climates on soils adapted to its habits.
The seed can bo had from almost any
seedsman, and the quoted price is fifteen
cents per pound. If sown broadcast the
land should be rich, well prepared aud
free from weeds, otherwise the plants are*
liable to be overrun and killed out, for its
first growth from the seed is not a vigor¬
ous one, and for this reason many put it
in in drills from one to two feet apart, so
that the weeds can be kept down until the
plants have gained the mastery and are
able to take care of themselves.
More Dean Meat Than Fat.
There is a decided tendency among our
more progressive breeders to build up
breeds of bogs and cattle with more loan
meat than fat. This movement lias been
brought about in part by the growing ob¬
jections of consumers to so much fat,
especially where pork is concerned, and
the waste entailed. In feeding with a
view to the production of more lean meat,
close pens and large rations of corn have
given place to a run for liogs in day time,
with a warm shelter for the night, and a
varied ration in which corn forms but a
small part.
i’ruuing Tree?.
A Kansas correspondent in Prairie
Farmer, adds an interesting chapter, il¬
lustrated with a plain diagram, to t he vast
amount of literature already published oh
this important subject. The correspond¬
ent alluded to believes that one-lialf of tho
trees lost south of parallel 40 (legs,
north Is caused by improper training or
heading of the young treo the first two
years of its growth, both in tho nursery
and in the orchard. Nursery culture is
not conducive to the proper heading of the
trees in his opinion. Tho want of room
for tho growth of the side branches, and
the cutting back of the main central stem,
is the invariable practice . the first year
from tho graft. As a consequence, a
largo number of limbs start out, often
three or four, that dwarf the central stem,
and then to cap tho climax the planter,
when setting out liis trees in the orchard,
cuts out the main stem.
PROPER AND IMPROPER WAV OF PKVNTNCi.
While the Kansas correspondent does
not seriously object to tho very usual
mode of training two limbs from opposite
sides of the stem of a tree, lie considers it
to be far better for the growth of all abovo
for only one limb to start from the stem
at any one place. Four to six or eight
inches apart is better. These limbs should
radiate from tho txunk or stem like the
spokes of a wheel, alternating from side
to side of the tree.
As for height of first limb 1. the
ground, the planter should be governed
by his latitude. From 37 decs, m -17 dogs,
north, twelve to eighteen inches ii by far
the best to prevent sun scald : : :d I he it-
taeks of the round headed borer. Fig.-. 1
and 2 illustrate the propt r tr.-ihir.:: of he
limbs in a horizontal position n the
trunk. A limb growing this way v ill not
split down by either ice, wind* or •■•.light
of fruit. The reverse of this i • n in
the acute fork in Fig. 3. The jr.ee lit a of
the limb to the trunk on the up;;: d s
imperfect, the swaying of the 11; ib le. ho
wind or storm and the entrance of ’-
tire causing early decay and spliuii ..
In conclusion this writer says: "it v.-.'Il
he profitable for a planter to procure hi
grafts, plant in row nr f . : ri.d
two to three feet in tin row. With ti.i-i
distance apart, by good cuh are and pro;.; r
training, ho can raise a tree worth a f-'coiv
of many of those from our overerm !
nurseries.”
On the Country
Saving is not always economy
Gentleness cannot be kicked into < w.
Walnuts are the latest wrinh: !' r •' .1-
tening turkeys.
Remove the*seeds bofotv fe d -
kins to cattle.
The safe way to get go I in:Ik cl>v... :.t
to raise them.
Water cattle frequently < ;
have free access to it.
Dampness is a great profit: ■
ease among poultry.
Put all farm machinery a: •.
first rate order during leisure i ■
winter.
Dr. Salmon, chief of rite Imr.
dustry, says that pleuro-pnent■•:<>:
cattle no longer exists west i f
ghany mountains.
The development of v. h :!
in Dakota has been truly v> .
area sown to spring wheat t- .
crop is placed by the governor ;.t
acres, and tho yield at about i
bushels, or nearly double the s
of 18.80. or nearly one-seventh
tire wheat production of U
country.
CAPITAL PRIZE, $150,000.
‘‘Wcdo herebyct rlifyUtatwc MtpeiriMi th«
Arrangement* for i .i the mot' i '*• mid
tirly Drawings of Their, State Ix,i
tro! tery Company, and in pci ■ and ge that iuid ecu tht
the Drawings then .
same are conducted with honesty,
and in good faith toward all parties, and
authorize the Company onrsiarairi to n|e this attached < <
with far-similes of it
dvcitl i ircr.h ”
y / “"VA- ,
♦ Sy: fFc'■ ■’*' a v / *'■
• “ --$■..... A v .V-—'•
.
c- ■ ^
jt
{OJitsi Unionn*.
Wo the undersigned Banks and Ban ken
will pay all Brizes draw n in The Louisians
State Lotteries which may be presented at
our counters:
jr. CI.04SE.ENBV. I*re*. I.a. Nai l 5H
I*. L4IACX. PreuNtutsHat l »li.
A. BAA.IkWIX.Pres. W. O.Xal l Bant
C’A It I. 11(1114'. l*re*. E ulon A’l Bank
u NPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION !
Over Half n Million Distributed.
Louisiana State Lottery
Incorporated in 1808 for 25 years by the Leg
.siaturc for Educational and
noses—with a capital of $1,000,000—to
i. reserve fund of over §550,000 has
added.
By an overwhelming popular vote its
chisc was made a part of the present Staf
Constitution adopted December lid, A. D., 1871
The only Lottery ever voted on and ci
doraed by the people of any State.
It never scales or postpones.
Ft* Grand Single Autulier llraniRgi
take place monthly,and the Grand Quarterly
Drawings, (March, regularly September every and ihreo December). months
June,
A SPLENDID opportunity TO WIN l
FORT UNE. SECOND GRAND DRAW.
ing, Class B, in the Academy of Mi sicNew
Okleans, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1888.
213th Monthly Drawing.
Capital Prize, #150,000
^NOTICE.-Tickets Halves, $5. Fifths, are $2. Ten Tenths, Dollars $1 only
list or PHIZES.
1 Capital Piuze or $150,000..
I (5hand Prize of 50,000... .
1 Gband Phize of 30,COO.. .
2 La hoe Phizes of 10,000.. .
J Labge Prizes o> 5,000,. .
20 Pbizss or 1,000.. .
50 “ 500.. .
100 “ 300.. .
20.1 “ 200.. .
500 “ ICO.. .
A PPUOX1M AT I ON I'BlZEf
100 Approximation Prizes “ of $300. 200.
700 “ .
100 “ “ 100. .
1,000 Terminal “ 50.. .
2,179 Prizes, amounting
Application for rates to elubeshonld b«
made only to the office of the Company ir
New Orleans.
For further informaUon POSTAL write NOTES, clearly, Exprest gi\|
ing full address.
Money Orders, or New York Excliange ir.
ordinary letter. Currency by Express (at
our expense) addressed
M. A. DAUPHIN,
New Orleans La
or M. A. DAUPHIN, Washington, I). C.
Address Registered Letters tc
r.W (MtUiA S 8 S AVIOXAl BA.tK
New Orleans, La.
RCiWinWIRFP t IVI LIVI D Lil That tl»«“ presence o!
n Ciemran Beuiireirarr
ami Early, nbo are in charge ut tin
drawings, is a guuantee of absolute fairnesi
and integrity, that the chances are all er|iia:
and that no one can possibly divine whsi',
numbers will draw a Prize.
REMEMBER that, the payment of all
Prizes is GUARANTEED BY FOUR NAT I
NAD BANKS of New Orleans, and the In
Tickets arc signt J bj the President of an
stitutien, whose chartered rights are recog
nized in the highest Courts; therefore,
beware of any imitiiti ms cr anonymou
t hemes
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Eclectic Magazine
Foreign Literature, Science and Art,
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I888~44th YEAR.
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Foreign Literary Notes, the Science discoveries and Art.
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AUTHORS.
Ft. Hon, IV. E. Gladstone,
Alfred Tennyson,
Trofessor Huxley,
Trofessor T Proctor, yndall, B.
Rich. A. A,
J. Norman Loekyer, K B. 8
Dr. W. B Carpenter,
E. B, Tyler,
Prof Max Muller.
Prof. Owen.
Matthew Arnold.
E. A. Freeman, D. C. L.
James Anthony Fronde,
Thomas Hugh"*,
AlgenonO. Swinburne.
William Black,
Mrs. Oliphant,
Cardinal Newman,
Cardinal Manning,
Miss Thackeray.
Thomas llardy, Bi'chanar,
Robert
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Address Harper Bros., New York.
Acini iniNtratrix’A
will sell to the highest bidder'betOTelbe
door of the Court Hoase in Spalding Countv
Jeorgia, on the first Tuesday in February
next, lowing daring described the legal hours of sale, the fob
acre* of l-rd, property I In Mt. k-wit: 257
trict, Spalding more Cou- or ewe. Georgia, Zion Di*.
the place wbere R. P. ty, C’owder knows a*
time of bis death, lived at the
and bounded cast by F E.
J. Drewry Bowden and 8 D. Williamson, south by t,
and Mr*. Yarbrough, west by W.
B. Crowder and J, L. Maynard, and north by
O jeet Norton. to mortgage Terms of safe, cash. Sold sub-
a in favor of the fi rria *
i Loan end Trust Company.
TM« property having been, on the 1st
Tuesday Crowder in December, bid off by R Cod
for $2,300 and behaving t»fi +d to
comply with his the terns of *ale and pay the
amount of hid and the Administratrix
Inning offered him a deed, the above proper
ty is sold at the risk of said R. C. Crowder.
HARRIET 8. CROWDER,
Administratrix of It. T C* ,wder, dec’d.
♦G.00.
Administrator’s Sale.
" ’• 1 i "«i.-r granted by the Court
‘ | “t«Ung iieioto County, will be sold
the Court bouse
! tv, on tbe Unit Tuesday in
’> • Hi.n the hgal bouraof aste,
■ .1 t A ; property, nrter tow it of i One land hundred
o :*• a <; acres more or
‘ ><‘-on i(Strict of Spalding County,
being she i-ouih half of lot of land No. S6
b hi nded north by 8. A. O. A, C, Kerllu,
east by land* of estate of J E. Allen and on
the south aud w < »l by Thorn** Moore. Sold
a* the property ot James Dorset!, late of said
comity, now deceased. Pi<q«>rty is weB Ur,
proved, is well watered and has some ribod
woodland on it. Terms cash.
N M.COLLENS,
Adminlstrster.
February Sheriffs Sales.
W 1 LL BEHOLD ON lie KSTTUK8
gal Court honrsof Rouse, Bale, before loor Of fit
In tbocity of Griffin, Spalding
County, Georgia, tne following dt-erlbea
property, to-w4t:
One house and lot m the. city of Griffin,
containing one fourth of an sere, more or
less, and known as the Thomas lot, bounded
north by lot of Mrs. Fannie Brown, wait by
Sixth street, south by lot of Mrs. Thomas,
east by lot of Perry Williams. 8old as tbs
property of T. A. Warren by vit :uc of s fi fa
issued froru Spsldtng Superior * . urt in faw
or of C. L. Pitts ana B P Blanton, triit*,
feree. vs. T. A. Warr. n- Tenant In poases¬
sion legally notified. $3.00.
Also, at the same, tin:' i.d place, one taw
mill carriage, saw frai' ' :.r saw, track
and frame, and large ! ..i, .., and eveiy
piece connected with the *aw mill ami sold
to be delivared at the the premises where the
saw mill is now located, In Line Creek dis¬
trict, nt the F. A. Putman saw mill. Sdld
by Scalding virtue Snnerior of a mortgage ft fa Issued f«j#f
Blanton Court in favor of W. M.
vs. F. A, Putman. $3.00,
Also, at tho same time and place, will be
sold one and one-fourth acres of land, mor§
or les*. in tho second district of Spaldinjf
County. Georgia, T>y bounded north by C, a.
Osborn, euri u road runi.i g north and
south, south by a road running east and west,
and west by Col. W T Trammell. Sold as the
property of Wat ren Fuller, to satiefy one ft
fa issued frem the Justice Court of the 100]*t
district, G. M., iu favor of J. C. King for tho
use of Talbott Brothels vj. Warren Fuller
Levy made by G, D. Johnson, L. I
turned over to me. Tenant iu
legally sold Also, notified. at the same time land and place, wL» JR M
twenty acres of in the northwest¬
ern corner of lot of land number ten In the
1007th l>istrict, G. M., of Spalding County,
bounded nertli by a road dividing said
land from lot number eleven, on the east by
land of J. I). Boyd, and south and west by a
part of said lot, blonging to 8. W. Leak
Levied on and gold as the the p property of 8. W.
Leak to satisfy one fi fa issued from Spald¬
ing Superior Court in favor »f LockwoflidA
McCiintoek vs 8. W. Leak. Tenant iapoa-
ression ADo, legally tho notified. $0 00.
at same time and place, will bs
sold fifty acres of land, being the east half
of one hundred acres otl of lot number nine
ty six ksow n as part of Cliatfleld lot, bound¬
ed ns follows: on the north by Richard Man¬
ley, east by Blilwell <fe Keith, south by John
Ransom place, and west by land of Beaton
Grant land. Lev ied on and sold as the prop¬
erty of R. A. Ellis to satisfy ona fl fa issued
from'lie County Court of Spalding County
in favor of Patapsco Guano Co. v*. R. A.
Ellis. Tenant in possession legally not!
fled. $6.00.
Also, at the tame time and place, will be
sold ten acres of land In the 1065th district
G. nortlRiy M^ of the Spuldirg Griffin County, and Mt. tiounded Zion road, on the
on
the west by Mrs. C, J. McDowell, a*don the
south and east by T. W. Flynt, trustee for
wife. Lt vied on and sold aa the property Of
T. W. Flynt, trustee, etc., to satisfy two tax
ti fas in favor ot 8 ate and County v*. T. W
Travis, Flynt, trustee, etc. Levy made by J. W
T. C., and turned orertome. Ten
ant in possession legally notified. $8.00.
Also, at the same time and place, win be
sold ten acres of land in the 1005th district
G M., of Bpalding County, bounded on the
north by the Griffin and Mt. Zion road, on
and the west by Win, of Waddell, J. C. King. and on the south
east by land J.C. King, Levied on
and sold as the property of to sat-
i-fy one tax fi fa in favor of the State and
County vs. J. C, King. Levy made by J. W.
Travis, T. C., and turnedover tojme. Tenant
in A1m>. possession at the legally same time notified. and place, $3 will 00. be
sold one house and lot in the city of Griffiu,
containing one half acre more or less, bound
ed north by W. E. George, west by Third
street, south by an alley and cast by J. Irby
lies. Levied on and sold to satisfy two tax
ii fa* in favor of bt*te a» d County vs. Dick
Thrash. Levy made by J. W. Travis, T. C.,
and turned over to me. Tenant in possession
legally Abo, notified. time and $3,00. will
a', the game place, be
sold one house and lot In (ho city of Griffin,
containing north and one acre land lands more of or N. less, Lawton's bound
ed east by G.
estate, south by Nettie Matthews and west
by Hill street Levied on and sold as the
property of D ck Thrash, to satisfy two tax
ii fas in favoi •* State and County vs. Dock
Thrash Lev made by J W. Travis, T. C,
and tun:i 1 o - r to me. Tenant in possea-
sion legal;/ n lied. Sheriff $3.00, C.
It 4. COXNEIJ-, 8.
/”VRDINAR'. ’ OFFICE, 8'faldisg Cocx-
VF ty, Geoi ia, Jan.Otb, 1SS8—W.B.Hud
son, admini.-tiator, has applied to me for Ifaoe. let
ter* of dismission from the estate of
Lyon, late of said county, deceased.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county,
at my office in Uiiflin, on the first Monday in
April, 1888, by ten o’clock a. m. f why suck
letters should not he granted
$0.15 E W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
Notice to Heirs,
Tu the heirs of Shattecn Q, Mitchell, of
Spalding County, deceased: John H. Mitch¬
ell, eseentor of the last will and testament of
Shattecn C. Mitchell, deceased, has made ap
plication to have a aetthmcDt made be¬
tween himself, as executor, and the heirs of
said deceased Snch settlement wil be made
•teforc the Court of Ordinary first of Monday Spalding in
County, Georgia, on the Interested ia
March, 1888. Let all persons
said e*t'te be- present at that time and repre
sent tiu ir claim* against said estate.
E. W. HAMMOND,
fannsry 10 b. 19*-$3 W. Ordinary.