The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, February 18, 1888, Image 3

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SAVED IS LEG I SCROFULA or THE l,rnt^x; v, Oa., August II. 1^7. ,i™«tl."l w„ b of the t"? 8 < vor »lnc« 1 was * FJciimc harrassimt aud painful involve beyond the Particularly became fearfully d, the till’boue. baclcrlun Tn order to through save my ilie life flffh the doe- Into determined to amputate my log bo low gfr^^=Fl?S knee. The operation was successfully BStS?^5S foot, and offensive tho sores that and my fellow rationing workmen hole* we re so stand the stench and would move could ^Las/wlnter not I was rorsumlcd to try S. S. S. »ra last effort 1 consented to do so. and about sever months ago I began taking effects the oPthe cnooltlo. I f “>n began to feel the good began medicine, the offensive running to grow I. as amt loss and finally ceased, the moors "“fluid healed, my flesh became firm and today, after using twenty-one ;, rturo M*ar»of*ihe ! suffered »«*•••« for lt;i so tnanv until i years, y v 01 except ■ »hp • ..........mh« perfectly *~»rredly healed healed ulcers. ulcers. to know of the almost ! i me to write, unu a Will consider it a pleasure ure -------- as v. dl ns a " W. duty lion^'o^UUiohla^'im r er their left I refer the'truth'of to Dr. F. to my stotomaut. Very gratefully goers. ^ Treatise on Wood and Skin DlsoascMiiaileQ free The- Swift Specific Co.,1 Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga» fcrr /rffrafc smt.---ki T .t5^afcqs »AU3H« y rrzLXzxc*XTCv-~T New Advertisements. Q? gfafe.pi - ,A MONTH. No capital required V pj IA good cluince to make money. ^ Apply for territory al once II H, Lauder 1 ach Co. Newark, N. J, ffi ® H® L |u BLI T I fir* WANTED. |35 a Oj m £ fjl I I bS W week and ex pen- n v 8es P a iil. steady work. New goods. Samples free. -1. F. HILL A CO., Augu ta, Maine. A v R o E u consumptive Have 5 and ;k, struggling will in against diaoase, and slowly their health drifting by to the grave, many cases recover ihe timely use of Parker’s Ginger Tonic, but delay is dan¬ gerous. Take it in lima It is invaluable for all pains ar.,1 disorders of stomach and bowels. 60c. at Druggists. CiPffi'S OK MEAT. Finee and Cheapest. Made Dish Flavoring stock for S-oups, e? and Sautes. Annual sale LIEBIG COMPANY^ OF MEAT. Aninva’uable tonic. “Is a eess and a boon for which i a ions feel grateful.”- 8.. “Medical Press,’ “Lancet,” 4c. GENEISEHllii OF BAKON LIEBIGin fac-siraile label Highly recommended as a oap instead of alcoholic drinks. LIEBIG liPAM’S EXTBAtT OF MEAT. To lie had of ah Grocers and Chemists. 8 le Agents the United States (wholesale only) C. David <t Co., 9 Fenehurch Avenue. don, England. A prominent New York Company, with a \ established and highly munerativebusiness (practically a ly), largely patronized by Merchants, Bank ers. Corporations, and the general public, sires an active and responsible in every State or City. 100 per cent, limited investment guaranteed. Mates already under contract. Address THE UNION-NATIONAL Tit Broadway, New York Harper’s ILLUSTRATED. Harper's Maoazinb is an organ of gressive thought and movement in department tions of life. Besides other attr it will contain, during the year, imi ortant articles, superbly iilustra ted, on the Great West; articles on can and fore gnindustry; beautifully tran d papers on Scotland, Norway, erland, Algi rs, and the West Indies; novels ells; by William Black and W D. number, novelettes, Henry each complete Lafcadio in a and by James, Atnelie Hives; short stories by }Voolson illustrated and other popular artistic writers; and lit papers of special erary interest. The editorial are conducted by George William William Dean Howells and Charles Warner. Harper’s PER VEAIt. HARPER’S MAGAZINE........£4 HARPER’S WEEKLY................ 4 HARPER’S BAZAR................ 4 HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE........ ’3 * nited Postage free to all subscribers in states, Canada or Mexico. The volumes of Uio Magazine begin the numbers for June ai d December each year. When no time is specified, scriptions wib begin witli tho number rent at time of receipt of order. Bound volumes of Harper’s Magazine, three years back, in neat cloth binding, he sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt $3 00 per vo ume. Cl th cases, for •JOee.ts each—by mail, post-paid. Index to Harper’s Magazine, cal. Analytical and Classified, for | legi, to R, one inclusive, vol., 8vo, irom cloth, June, $4 00. 1850, to office Remittances should be made by of money order or draft, to avoid loss. tisement Newspapers are not to copy this without the expre s order of per 4 Brothers Address HARPER 4 BROS.. New -fn fop># BY CHARLES J. BELLAMY. Copyrighted by by tho Author, with and him. pnbl. arrangement CHAPTER IX. ’ WEAK MAX. It was at dusk a few days after Jane Graves had come in the UUingsworthsthat she stood at the dining room window. It was almost in sight of her old dreary home, and yet another world; how strange that the two should lie so near and not change or shadow each other. But Jane Graves was not the girl to trouble herself over hard ques¬ tions. She breathed her new atmosphere in unmixed delight, while latent senses awoke each day only to lie gratified At this moment she stood in a very charm¬ ing attitude leaning lightly’ against the window casing, her prettily rounded arm raised to play with the curtain tassel. Her master rather liked to linger in the dining room * id read his evening paper. Occasion¬ ally lie would glance at the girl who had such pretty )K>ses; ho had quite a taste for pictures, and then she afforded him an excuse for uot a little cynical philosophy. Mr. Ellingswortb had one peculiarity that would certainly seem very commendable. He never spoke rudely to any one; it would have been impossible for his finely grained nature. She thought him polite and kind, and in her in¬ nocence imagined I is was the usual manner of the well bred w ith their hirelings. The other servants km;-., that humiliation was a part of their required week’s work, which their wages were considered to pay for; and expected to see the thunderbolt fall on this foolish girl who did not know how precious wms the purchased privilege of being cringed to. Hut strange enough the thunderbolt did not hasten. Suddenly the girl started, and a deep flush lit up her dark face. Up the walk, to the front doorway, came the man of whom sho thought, with his own lordly stride as if ho were a prince, indeed, as he deserved to be. Her heart was in a sweet glow; he had found her out, and had come for her. She would leave all these beautiful things with rapture for him. Mr. Ellingswortb saw the man’s figure at the front gate, and the girl's start,.aud smiled rather disagreeably. He had won¬ dered before why her lover didn’t come, and here ho was at the front door, no doubt ex¬ pecting to be enug-'pineil in the parlor. Jane Graves gliT.V'i into the hail. Suddenly grown shy at the maiden passion of her own heart, she slowly opened the front door. What would he say first? Would ho take her hand which had grown so white and soft lately? Would he ask to kiss her, and with beating heart she stood in the open door¬ way. It had now grown almost dark, perhaps he did not see her plainly. “Did you ring?” she asked foolishly, while her heart sank down, down, would it never stop? “Is your mistress in?’’ What was this—some strange mistake? Could he not see who it was held the door open for him? “Mv mistress, Miss Ellingswortb? why yes, she. is in the ]>ar]or.’’ It must be a joke, but now he bail frightened her enough, and how they would laugh together over it. She was attempting to smile, when she heard the par¬ lor door open behind her. “Yes, I am here.” It was Bertha Ellings- worth’s voice. The visitor passed in, and Jane Graves shut the outer door heavily and sank upon the floor, pressing with both her hands against her bursting heart. Then she leaped upon her feet in sudden madness and hurried along the hall to the parlor door. What right hart this rich woman to steal away her lover? She would care only to amuse herself with him for a few days and then her servants would be told to shut the door in his face. Such cold creatures as she never love; passion they know nothing of, only the passion to break honest men’s hearts. Why not warn him? Oh, but what was Jane Graves to him? he might remind her how ho hail spurned her front him once. Jane Graves went back into the dining room, now grown dark, and threw herself into a chair. Tho poor cannot fight against the rich. Ah! but she could hate her mis¬ tress’ white face. She could curse her in her thoughts with all the evils in the universe. The girl burst into a passion of tears. “What is the trfiuble, little girl?” It was her master's voice. 8he had forgotten him. The girl heard him draw a chair near hers, but she did not uncover her face. “Was your beau unkind to you? Well, don’t have anything more to say to him, then, Jennie.” Why! the elegant Mr. Ellingsworth was actually kissing his maid! What difference did it make? the one she loved hail thrown her away, and trampled her devotion under his feet. She even let him draw her shapely little head to his shoulder, and take her hands away from her face. They hid her lipis, he said. Then the door bell rang. Mr. Ellingsworth ivas actually kissing his maid! Mr. Ellingsworth answered the bell him¬ self—a breach of etiquette not frequent with him, even under the liberalizing influence of village manners. you,” and “Mr. Breton, charmed to see there v.'ai not the faintest trace of ill humor in liis perfectly trained voice. The old gen¬ tleman might have been the most opportune of guests. But his daughter had not been schooled enough for such self control, and she started to her feet as her parlor door opened, almost in consternation. There was quite a study for character in the room at that moment. Curran had not arisen; his lips might have been closed a little tighter than usual , but his. face did. not even reveal surprise. Mr Breton had reached tne center ot rt»e room before he saw whom Bertha had been enter¬ taining, but now he Mood in astonishment— which he had no concern to hide—snapping his black eyes from the young lady who was soon to be his son’s wife to this weaver in the mill, who did not seem so much out of place in this fashionable parlor, either. The crisis had come, and Bertha was entirely unpre¬ pared for it. Her heart was fluttering wildly, and for the moment whe wished she had never seen the man whose presence embarrassed her. A moment before she had forgotten there was such a thing as wealth or rank, devoutly confident such a man as her guest could stand before kings; but the door bad opened and let in the breath of pride and caste, scattering the halo about the poor man’s head. Suddenly she looked with new repugnance at him she had just thought so sublime. Why did ho not go? She was flushed with vexation at his stubbornness in delaying. Had ho no sense of propriety, to court a social meeting with her aristocratic father, who would ridicule hint without his guessing it, and the blunt mill owner, who would be sure to insult and browbeat him plainly? She expected to see him rise awk¬ wardly and shuffle out of the room, perhaps pulling his forelock respectfully to the com¬ pany that was not for such as be. CHAPTER X. WEAK WOMAN. Curran glanced keenly at tho face of his beautiful hostess, whose wonted serenity had all gone, then he rose to his feet, and stood, while she spoke his name in the briefest form of introduction. Ho did not seem offended by the stare of surprise Mr. Breton had for him. It was a new experience to the mill owner, meeting his workmen in fashionable parlors. “Curran, is it? 1 was sure I had seen you in tho mill, but you had on a white apron then.” Mr. Breton laughed familiarly, but he did not hold out his hand. Couldn’t Curran see how rudely ho wat treated ? Mr. Breton’s laugh and tone rasped Bertha's finer sensibilities, so that she was at onco indignant with him, and disgusted with Curran who seemed to bear it so uncon¬ sciously. Curran’s brow was unruffled: ho hail only folded his arms across his breast, sometimes a sign of excitement with him. “Mr. Curran had the good fortune, I be¬ lieve, to do my daughter a groat service.” Mr. Ellingsworth’s manner was the perfec¬ tion of well bred rudeness. It expressed tho infinite elevation and polish of the person who assumed it, far above tho very natural feeling of disgust at the presence of so vulgar a person as this workman. It suggested irre¬ sistibly the great contempt such a person ought to call forth, but at the same time that Ellingsworth was uuapproacbablo by even as vulgar a thing as contempt. “Indeed!" exclaimed Mr. Breton, as he seated himself, “I will thauk you, too, it was a good job for you, and I will see it don’t hurt your interests any, cither.” “How do you like your work?” went on Mr. Breton in his harsh mill voice. “I hope you ain’t one of those who don’t know when they are well off.” “I can keep from starving; that is well off, I suppose.” Mr. Breton was at loss but for a moment. “But you poor people don’t save what you get. You ought to economize.” Curran’s eyes flashed dangerously, but he bit his lip and kept silence. Mr. Ellingsworth saw a scene was immi¬ nent. How little tact Mr. Breton showed in patronizing tho young man so provokingly before the golden haired goddess whom be had no doubt fallen in love with. Something must be done. “Excuse ate. Have you had any serious trouble with your wound, Mr. Curran?” “I have only lost a few days; that is noth ing," he answered quickly. “But it must be considerable for a poor man!” broke in Mr. Breton, witli his grand air; “I will direct my paymaster to make it up to you.” Curran glanced across the room at Miss Ellingsworth. He expected to see her face flushed with anger. She would leap to her feet iu indignant remonstrance to shield him from such impertinence, all tho generosity of her nature in revolt against such return for his devotion to her. She was looking at him, but much as a girl looks at a strange animal she has been pet¬ ting, when suddenly they tell her he bites Curran turned away from her and ground his teeth. Then he looked at Mr. Breton. “Can’t your paymaster make up for tho pain, too, as well as the lost time?" Mr. Ellingsworth was at his wit’s end. Ho saw the cloud gathering in the workman's eyes, and that his lip trembled with sup¬ pressed feeling when he spoke. “How long have you been in town, Mr. Curran?” he said to change the conversation if possible into safer channels. “Only six months." “Why,” volunteered Mr. Breton after an awkward silence, “that is about as long at the mill hands have been fault finding so loudly.” The old gentleman looked sharply at him. “I don’t suppose you would tell who has been making the trouble.” “Yes, sir.” Curran had risen to his feet., the flush of offended self respect in his cheeks. When I came here I found the mills paying you 13 per cent, dividends, while the help who ground them out for you, were crushed almost to the earth. I felt bound to tell them, as I now tell you, that tho owner has no more God given right to all the profit of their work than they to all the profit of lus investment. ” “And you are the man who has been stir¬ ring up this mischief here!” cried Mr. Bre¬ ton, almost starting from his chair. He had caught him at last then. “And do you say that a man isn’t entitled to the interest on his money? My money represents a thousand such lives as yours; L ough' to have a thou¬ sand times the pay.” He had more terrible guns than of the batteries of logic for the rebel, but he could not resist the temptation to explode the fallacies of his class before he let him go. The young man's eyes flashed beautifully. “Your money represents a thousand lives, then, out of which you have sucked the life blood? And at how much do you value a human life? As much as 81,000 for a soul' A thousand dollars for all tho joys and hopes and possibilities of a human life? Your val¬ uation is too miserably small. I tell you,” and Curran threw out his right hand in a magnificent gesture, “I tell you, a human creature ought to have for its service a good portion of the comforts and delights tho world is so bounteous with. Anything less is slavery, a slavery worse than negro bond¬ age. Do you call it pay that you give tho hopeless men and women that weave gold for you on your looms? Rather say the daily recurring fact of hunger chains them to your mill.” Mr. Ellingsworth had sunk back in his seat in despair; he might as well resign him¬ self to the situation since it seemed beyond his power to change it. Mr. Breton was likely to hear some startling truths before he succeeded in refuting this dangerous young man. Perhaps it was just as well, too; there is no sense in a man’s making his money as the rich do, by one kind or another of imposition or injustice and then affect such ridiculous unconsciousness. There is no sense in being blind and stupid about how one comes to be rich, the comfortable fact rematufbg. What was the use of Breton ling wtttt turn a young giant as uus: “I pay my help market prices of labor. don’t propose to make them gifts.” The gentleman handled his cane nervously, he could punish the man enough laU-r. felt Ellingsworth’s sharp eyes, he must of something to absolutely overwhelm argivaent* of his workman. Ho ran iu his mind the smooth axioms of his anil tried hard to recollect some of the perfect syllogisms of the political economists. Curran stood, his el! ow restinr ■ -• the liack of tho chair he had been sitt P i nn at¬ titude so dignified and agr tial Mr Ellingswort h glanced across u, ms daughter to see if she had observed it. It was not quite so inconceivable, after all, that Bertha might have taken a fancy to him But then his whole associations had been wi’’ 'hei>oor, and what possible harmony, evei i a mo¬ ment—then Mr. Ellingsworth i n inhered the maid servant crying at this moment iu the dining room. “Naturally you prefer to let your half clothed ill fed bands make you the presents; they earn you big dividends; you throw them a crust of bread, the market price of labor you call it, and put the dividends in your own pocket,” “But it's my money made the mill, and my management runs it.” “As for the money,” retorted Curran, “per¬ haps you inherited a part of it, saved by tho tax laid ou the poor of the last generation, or you borrowed it, perhaps, on interest, and made the help in your mill ]>ay the interest every penny of it; how else could it lie paid? You did not make your money; no man can till $3,000,(XXI out of his farm, or dig it out of a coal mine. You simply took it. Tour new mills are paid for out of wages you ought to have given your help; you call them yours; the new machinery comes out of the®. They are the real stockholders in it all.” Mr. Breton had sprung from his seat, but Curran went on unflinchingly. "It isn’t earned, it is simply defrauded. The manage¬ ment is doubtless good, but no management amid, in the righteous course of justice, bring such vast fortunes into the hands of a few men; while the thousands who work for them live and die with the consuming thirst for happiness never for one hour assuaged iu their souls. - ’ The old gentleman had come up close to him as he spol and as ho finish i'll, Cur ran looked down family uitoaface almost piirplu with passion. It occurred to hint that Mr. Breton was about to have an attack of apo¬ plexy. The hand that held his gold headed cane fairly trembled. “You have earned your last penny in my mills!” the old gentleman shouted at him. “Wo ought to have laws to shut up such ineu as you.” that “Mr. Ellingsworth,” said Curran, as gentleman rose to his feet, “I ant very sorry to have brought such a scene into your parlor; it seemed unavoidable after what was said to me, ami it seems likely to prove more un¬ fortunate for me than for anybody else.” No one thought of anything to say. Mr, Ellingsworth vaguely wondered where the man picked up his neat way of talking, but then the wealthy, after aU, have no monopoly of talent. Curran cast a withering look of contempt on tho mill owner. “I am sorry, too, to bo deprived of* the chance to win my daily bread.” He did not notice that the expression of the girl’s face had changed, or that she had started to come to him, but there was a grandeur of wrath in his faco and bearing that awed her. She stood in the center of tho room, with heaving bosom and fright¬ ened, troubled eyes, watching hint out of tha door. Then her father came baek through the hall with his sarcast.c smile finely curv ¬ ing his thin lips. How beautifully he had known how to pre¬ serve his own honor. It would have been base and ignoble in hint to liave crawled out of her parlor at the entrance of her father and Mr. Breton, self confessed unworthy to sit in their presence. And for all their wealth and power and vantage ground, careless of what it must cost, he had thrown their in suits in their teeth and shown himself a grander man, a thousand times, than either of them. The warm flood of returning feeling swept over her soul. She could not bear one more cruel word against him now. Before her father could speak she had hurried into tho hall and shut fast the door so that she should not hear the bitter sentence that was just parting Ills lips. What strange impulse moved her that she should go to the outer door and look eagerly down the street? But her insulted guest hail not lingered. In a moment more she was at the gate, anil saw his tall form only at u little distance. No doubt he was thinking sadly, or perhaps angrily, of her, us he walked, and he could not guess that sho had repented, and was eager this moment to beg his forgiveness, with all the sweet words sho knew. Bertha glanced back at the house in hesitation. She could see the slim outlines of her father's figure shadowed on the curtains. She could not hear what ho was saying. It was this: “It is one of Bertha’s freaks. All women are subject to them.” “But I don't understand,” insisted Mr. Breton, wiping the perspiration from his heated face. “I don’t understand how sho can bring herself, a girl of her notions, in entertain a f . ia Rim this. How long do you supjxjse this lia-s been going on? Ever since the dog adventure, very likely. If I were Philip”- “But you recollect I ant only' three days returned from my trip, and am entirely un¬ able to tell you how many times she 1ms met this very 1 striking individual. Don’t hurry yourself into mental decline by try ing to ex¬ plain on logical principles a woman’s ))er- formanees,” smiled Mr. Ellingswortb. “And I wouldn’t take tho trouble to suggest mis¬ givings to Phil. I would rather trust the girl’s nature, and I think I know it, than di 1 - pend on a jealous lover’s reproaches. Why, my dear friend, I would stake my life on the girl’s attachment to the traditions of her position. Our wives and daughters nm thrice more intolerable, unreasonable aristo¬ crats than we. If she had been guilty of a touch of foolish sentiment reaction is cer¬ tain, and ah' will only despise the man the more because of her season of blindness.” “But sup; •■•ing the reaction came loo late,” sugg ted Mr. Breton “Then it lx.ter not come at all,' he con¬ tinued. “The very character you give Lor would make three people perfectly miserable —the man sho refuses, the man she marri . nod.herself '' CTO >K CONTINUED.3 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 groat 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 of worn out slioes. and their -lacings were the coverings of hoopekirt wire dyed black. Toward the close of the wax many of them sold for $30 and $40 per pair—Jennie H. Judsou. Tho (Serin* of <’«n*«in»t»tl»n. l)r. Brown Hequard, who has been preaching that bail ventilation of sleeping rooms Rod |xor and monotonous food are the great causes of pithisis, treated of that disease at the last meeting of the Academy of Sciences, in Paris, taking many of his examples from England. Wherever population is dense, and sleep¬ ing rooms ill aired or overcrowded, con¬ sumption prevails. Dr. Bailey reported that in Milbank prison there were, out of 100 deaths, forty-five from this disease. According to tho illustrious French doctor, a room in which a consumptive person sleeps is reeking with contagious germs if the air he exhales is uot carried off. But how get rid of it in ill built houses or very cold weather, when it is as dangerous to op n windows as to keep them shut? To meet this difficulty Dr. Brown Se- quard showed the academy an apparatus the of his invention. A reversed funnel, shape of a lamp shade, is placed at the end ofca tube, so arranged in its curves and angles that when it is placed lieside a lied the reversed funnel will lie above tho sleeper, and draw up the air ho breathes. The other etui runs into the chimney of the room. If there is none it is taken through a heating apparatus to an air hole. The heat is great enough to hum the disease germs.—Ixmilon Standard. iilen Out of Their Element. Even ho (lid Pitt hold up his hands iu consternation, after a talk with Wolfe, the hero of Quebec. Even so did a secretary of state declare that Nelson was the greatest hxd lie ever talked with. You must take a man upon his projter ground, you must measure liis strength where liis strength lies. Tho duke of Wellington w. s not an impulsive soul, wlio could get ui' from the dinner table, draw hii svrord anti swagger about tho room bragging that he was to surpass all the soldiers of antiquity, ns Wolfe did in Pitt's presence. We wonder not that the minister 1. ! I up bis hands on Wolfe’s departure, with words to the effect, “Must we trust our army to tliat idiot?” Yet the great duke, long after Waterloo, paid a large sum to get back a letter written by him on the evening of tho battle, which letter lie instantly burned, saying that when he wrote it ho was tho greatest ass in Europe. I fancy that, had we seen the letter, we should in so far have agreed with the great but by no means exemplary duke. There is the streak of tho fool in tho wisest of men. It was very apparent in Solomon. There is tho streak of inca¬ pacity in the most capable man. And it grows most con .tpicuous when ho strays beyond his proper measure. What mere graceful titan a swan in tho water? What ; ” ’ a-.vl:wa»l than the swan wad¬ dling ou shore.—Longman's Magazine. Ihe oily scs-Akohiile Vegetable medicine put cp ta It all liquid disease* form ever arising discovered. from biliousness cures and blood impurities. cleansing the A safe, sure, and gentle r.iUi ir‘Ic, system thorough! V. The old style is slightly hitter. The New is pleasant to the taste, and the best medicine iu the world for children. Price $100. VXeDONAI.I) I>!U’0 CO.. N. Y. CiW Rule Nisi. Walter T. Milldr, j Mortgage, Ac AdolphusC versus Schaefer, j February -uperior ' eriu, Court 1888. of surviving partner Co./ of I Spalding County A. C. Schaefer 4 Georgia. Present, the Honorable James S, Boynton, Judge of said Court. Court It appealing to the by the petition of Walter T. Sillier that on the first day of Ap ii in tin year of our Lord Fightcen linn died and Seventy-two A . O. Schaefer <v Co , a firm composed of A. C. Schaefer and Geo. Y. Barker, made and delivered t,. said Wal ter T. Miller u e rtain mortgage In which the sum of Six Thousand Dollars was ac knowledged to be eue the said plaintiff, -Iiieh said mortgage deed bears dale April 1st 1873, to secure the payment of said amount <’u , whereby they conveyed to said ■ •alter T. Miller ihe fa lowing described property .to. a it; That tr-etor parcel of land lying or being n the 3d Distil t of originally Monroe, then Pike, now Spalding County, and known and distinguished Forty-seven in the plan of said district us No.^ (47), Seven ty-n’nc (hi), (7ft), Seventy-eight Two (7S>, and Fifty- one each containing Hundred and Two and One-half (303!. 2 ) acres; also, Seven- No. live (75) acres in the northwest corner Fifty of lot Seventy-seven (77); also, (50) acres in southeast part "of lot No Forty eight (48), ait in same district, containing in the aggregate Nine Hundred and Thirty-five (URT ,) . ,i», more or less, in the entire tract, boi ded north by load then known as Jno. G. i ih*dsay’g land and others, eoat by land the: known at land ol Dr. Pritcha d and otle -. south by Ruck (.reek, and west by lat of Squire Massed aud others, being pre uiscs conveyed by Philip 4l E McDaniel describ to said defendant* e ebruary •«, lsft8. as cd in foregoing petition: conditioned that if said firm of A, C Schaefer <te Co. (of which A. C. Schaefer is now survir.g partn r) should pay off and discharge said debt of I Six Th< nsand Dollars accoid rig to its tenor nftd efl't! t, that then “aid Deed of Mortgage should be void. Audit further appearing that said debt re mains iihpaiu: It Is therefore Ordered, that said A. ( . Schaefer, surviving partner as atorc-aiJ, p:iy into ihrs (’curt by the first I ibn of :le- i t xt term thertof, tie principal, ) it ,«.re.-t »i;.d i ! v . ■ oh -aid Mortgage, or j -bow i a -t ! :.t to: ‘ i:rj. if there be j and that on failure of said A. C. Sehae er. ! surviving partner as aforesaid, so to do, the equity of redemption in aud to said niort I * * *F* mV'scd* Iorever t,ier ’' a! '‘ r ! j t al: 1 0 V Vu-torther Ord-red, That this Rttl t „. , ,b)i f |i, d in the Gkiffin Ni ve¬ mo: !i for four month*, of m rve 1 h -aid A. C. 8' lender in- P ‘rti v a aforesaid, or f. - -..ceiui a or ai at least three months before next !i t! is Court, By the t nit, February 8th, BOVnTO\ 18*8. JAM£.8 S. Judge S. C. F. C. Call A Hammond, Petitioners At'orney*. I. W. M. Thomas, Clerk of the Snperior Court of Spalding County, Georgia, do by certify the above to be a true from 'he minutes of said Court at term, 1883. W. M Thomas, feb0o*m4m Clerk 8 C, 8 C March Sheriff's Sales. tYTILL VV BE Ii«rch aOLDOM THEFIEBT TtJtfi day in am tetWMB Ib« lagst hoars ot talc t> -fore the door of th* Cqpit House, tn the city of Griffin, Bpalding ootut ty, to-wit: Georgia, the following described proper tjr, Sixteen of land acres more or leas oft o lot 1OT lit ’!.e rd District of originally Henry now Hpaldlt g county, bounded east by the road from Kunny bide to Griffin and south by tha road leading from the Oriffia sad Sunny Bide road to li. T. Pstterson’*, north and west bt the remainder of satd lot asm her 107; *tid tract so leried on being 840 feet square. Levied on and sold OS th* proper y of Z. T Dor*ey by virtue of a fl fa issued from flpalding Superior Court)" fav¬ or of Nancy O. Hsdawsyrs. Zac h si mb T. itorrcv. Tenant in potrewion legally noti¬ fied. $0,000. Also, at the same time and place, will b* sold twenty seres of land In a square ell of lot number 53 in the4th District of original ly Fayette now Spalding county, bounded east by lot number 53, south by the Savan¬ nah, Griffin A North Alabama railroad, west aud north by remaidcr of said lot. levied on and fold as the property cf Luc* K. Reeves to satisfy two fl fas, one 'ssned Iron fit alding County Court in favor« f B. R. Blakely vs. Luey E. lieere*. •fflce.a and one in Bp fa* or of W. B Reeves for use of of aid ing Superior Court vs. W. B Reeve* sad Sir*. Lucy K. Reeves. Mrs. Luey notified. K. Reeves, ten¬ ant in j ossessiott, legally Fd.OO. Also, at the same time and olace, will be sold the following property, to wit: on* wood shop nnd land upon which it is built, in the city of Griffin andt cunty of Bidding now occtti led or re inert by Pink Body, boun¬ ded :>* follows, north by Meriwether street, running along raid street twenty ene feet, east by W. t . Trammell, miming back *fty feet, south by property of T A. Warren, held as guardian of tho wirren chtttlrWB, Warren and watt by Warren properly held by a* gusr of the tools' District, G M , in favor of J. B. Cleveland vs. T. A. Warren, guardian. Prop erty p mied out by plaintiff's L. attorney ana levied on tty G. D. Johnson, C., ana lary tnrncd oTcr to me- Tenant in p o me salon legally notified. PMB. Also, at the same time and place, trill bo sold one quarter of an acre of land in th# city of Griffin, bounded a* follow*: On the west by Sixth street, on the north and ooot by J. \V. Little and on the South by an al¬ ley. Ia vied on and sold as th# property of J. W Little by virtue of a tax fl fa itta*d by J. for W.Travis,T. 1887 C., for State J. sod W. County LlUie. tax the year versus Levy made by J. W. Travis, T. _C, and turned over to me. Mrs. fl. tenant in possession, legally notified. Also, at the same time and place, wut Da sold one vacant lot in the eity of Orifim cou'aiuing one-lial? acre, mere or Veto, bounded as follows: On the we t by How Orleans and street, on the by C. north P. Newton by Colteg* and street on the east on the south by George Btai ’ Levied OB and sold as the property of ' iry Hntta, to satisfy one tax tt fa fort*! County tax - issued ny J. W. '1 ravl* > n favor of State and Conntv v - Starke a* agent for Henry Butt. . j made by J. W. Travis, T. C., aud turned over to me. Tenant in tioesesaion legally notified. tdOO Also, at the same time and place, will b* 'Old one house and half lot in the city b^tss, of GriS*, containing one acre, more boon ded as follows : On tha north Cv CoT LoBege tS* street, east by John Tillman lot, on OB sout . by laud of W. Y. Trammell, oft th* w est by land of J. 1) Boyd. levle l on and sold as the property of IMek Flcmtster, to satisfy one (ax H fa issued by J W. Trtvla, T. C., for State and Count;, taxes for 1887 in favor of State and County vs. Dick Fle«x- ister. Levy mads by J. W Travis, T. C., and turned over to me. Tenant in posses¬ sion legally notified fid 00 Also at the same tium aud place, will bft sold one acre of land in the Hill city of Griffin, bounded J. on the Mills, west by the south street, an1 on Mat the north \V. by Hammond’s B. on children. Levied by W. Oft and sol i as the property of W. W. Ham¬ mond's children, to satisfy two tax ft tot one m favor of 8tat« sad County vs t*. W. Hammond for children, aad ope la flavor of Hammond’s Mate and County children. vs J B, Mills. ft Ml 8f*nt lftttvd for by J W. Travis,T.C., and tarttod otor to mo. J B Mills, tenant In possession, legally no¬ tified. $0.00. R 8, CONNELL, Bherit, 8. C. Ordinary's Advertiwmfntffi / VKIHNARY’d OFFICE. Spai.dino Cotm- V/ tv Georgia,J anuaiy30th, 1888.—B. H. Bloodworth, Guardian of Minnie Bloodworth lias applied to me for letters of Dismission from said Guardianship. Let all person* concerned show eaftse be¬ fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at my office in Griffiu, on the first Monday is Maieh, should 1888, by teno’clock, a. m., why such lettc s not HAHMOg bo granted. *3. 00. E. W. yp, Ordinary. _ X V RDiNARY’S OFFICE, 8r*una» Ooc* 3. V/ tt, Georgia, anpllied January 3Ut, 1888.— J. Maugham bos to me for letter* of Administration, tie bonis non, on the eatato of Jno. C Mangliam, late of said county, do ceased. Let all persons concerned show cause be¬ fore the Court Griffin, of Ordinary of Mid Monday county, at my office In on the first in March, !888, !>y ten o’clock a. m., why such letters should not be granted. $3.00. E. \\ HAMMOND, Ordinary. ( \R DIN ARY’8 OFITCE, Spa umraOom- \ / Tr, Georgia, January 31st, 1888— 1. J. Acmiiiistration Mangbam has applied to me of lor letter* W. Msng of on the‘e*tate 8. ham, late of said county, deceased. Let all person* concerned show cause be- forc the Court Griffin, of Ordidsry of s*ld Monday county, at la tny office in on the first March, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why such lefers should not ho granted. $300. E. W. H iMMONI), Ordinary. / \J VRDINARY’8 OFFICE, 8palm!v« Cot a tv, Georgia, January 31st, 1888.—Jas. Ad- R. Ellis has applied to me for letters of mini*t ration, de honi* non, on the estate of Wi liam Ellis late of said eonnty, deceased. Let all persons concerned shew cause before the Court of Ordinary of said county, at my office in Griffin, on th* first Monday in March, 1888, by ten o’clock a. m.,wby suck letters should E. not be HAMMOND, granted Ordinary. »3(X) W, / ORDINARY’S OFFICE, t 1888.—W.B.Had paldijvo Coen- tt, Georgia, Jan.9tb, son, admini Irator, ha* applied to me for lat ter» of di*m> -ion from the estate of Ihos. Lyon, late of • dd county, deceased. Let all ner.-i":« concerned show cause be¬ fore the ‘oum T Ordinary of said Monday county, in at my office iu Griffin, on tne first why such April, 1888, by ten o'clock*, m., letters should not be granted >(115. __) W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. /“kHDlNAE l ’8 OFFICE, SPALomo Cacx V/ tt, Georgia, Feb. 3rd. 1888 —John H. Keith as ndimnisttrator on estate of W-8. Brow n nnd has lot applied belonging to me for said leave to sell front a house to estate, ing on Broadway street on the north: bound cd west by an alley, north by Broadway 1. street, cast by Abbie Wilkins, south by A. Warren sold to pay debts due by said es state and for distribution. Let all j ersons concerned ehow cause be fore the Court of Ordinary on the first Mon- day in March granted. next why the application should tot be $3.00.___ E, W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. _ /'YRDIN U AKY’8 OFF1C*. 8pau>wo Cocx- tx. Georgia, Feb. 3rd, 1888.—Jobs M, Bi-hop, Administi ator of estate of Gil** Blah | op, deceased, has tendered hi* resignation Bi-bop aa :uch administrator and Henry 11 has consented to accept said Administration. The n.xt of kin are hereby notified to ap¬ pear at the Court of Ordinary on th* ltd Mondy in March n r xt. by ten o’clock a. as. and show cause why said Henry K. Bishop * !) BOt 1 E.*^HaMVOND, Ordinary. *K nn