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SWIFT* SPECIFIC
U entirely a vegetable preparation con¬
taining no Mercury, Potash, Arrenic, or othes
poisonous substanoes.
SWIFTS SPECIFIC
Has cured hundreds of oases of Epl*. hello
ana or Cauoer of the Skin, thousands of cases
of Ecsema, Blood Hamors and Skin Diseases,
and hundreds of thousands of cases of Scrof¬
ula, Blood Poison and Blood Taint.
SWIFTS SPECIFIC
Hat relieved thousands of cases of Mercu¬
rial Poisoning, Rheumatism and Stiffness of
tho JoK>*«
Specific CBiTTANOOOS, Co., Atlanta, Tens., Oa.-Gentleman: June 37.1383—Swift's
In the
so mu.l Tam perfectly well. I believe It will
offset a perfect cure. Doc. Tours jKhowahd, truly,
111 West Sixth St.
BpSolflo OOWMttA, Atlanta, a.a, July 7, ISSS-The Swift
---..A ----gj. Co., f Ga.—Gentlemen: j------* I was
TQm
r*. 6.8.. and now I am as waif as f ever
truly, Conductor o. E. Hughes,
0.ft G. R. R.
urtfe Waco, of Texas, of May », 1898—Gentlemen: Tho
one my customers was terribly
^£t&e?tos ajfKajMaRi
‘ the w ~ physicians finally J giving who treated his It. Her husband
began g wife Swift’s Specific,
»nd aha naenoed to improve almost Im-
-cx—t M^rnoV^o? few weeks the was ap-
left, fours vory truly, j. e. a*
Wholesale Druggist, Austin sba«s.
Avenue.
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
free. The Swirr Specific Co., Drawer 8,
Atlanta, Oa.; Mew fork, 756 Broadway.
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
‘ / • EOKGIA—Spaj.ding Cointy.—To all
f wh.mltmay concern: J .J. Mathews
baring, Sn proper form, applied to me for
permanent letter> of administration on the
i state of Joscphene Padgett late of saidcoun
ty, (hit is to cite all and singular the credit-
or* be and and next of kin of Josiephene within Padgett,
to appear at my oflice the time
a lowed l>y law, and show eause, if any they
e.iii, be why granted permanent J. Administration should
not to J. Mathews on Jose-
phone Witness Padgett’s hand estate.
my and official signature,
this ♦3,00 31st day E. of W. August. II ISAS.
AM MOND, Ordinary.
RDLVARY’S OFFICE-Spalding Cod.n-
EHis tt, Geobgia, August29th, 1888.—.James
R. has applied tome for letters of Ad¬
ministration on the estatoof Jim Thrash, late
of said county, decease
Let all persons concerned showcase before
the Court of Ordinary of said connty, at my
office in Griffin, on the iirst Monday in Oc¬
tober, 1888, by 10 o’clock, a in., why such
letters should not be granted.
$3.00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/"ORDINARY’S V,/ Geougia, OFFICE Aug. —Spadding 29th, 1888.—D, Coc.y- P.
ty,
Elder as Executor of me last will of John Jt.
Coleman, deceased,' has applied to me for
leave to sell the lands of deceased for opur-
poec of paying the debts of deceased and
for distribution among tho heirs, to-wit:
about one hundred and fifteen acres of the
South half of lot No, 112 in Union district
adjoining all lands of Malaier, Bates and others.
Let persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary, at ray cilice in
Griffin, on the first Monday in October next,
why an order should not be passed authori¬
ng the sale of said land,
$6 00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/ARDINARY’S Georgia, OFFICE- Aug. 29th, Spalding 1888.—8. A. Oouk- and
F. tt, Scott
M. have applied to me for letters of
Administration, de bonis non, on the estate
of Wm. Scott, late of said countv, deceased.
Let all persons coucerned show eause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at
my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
October, 1888. should by ten o’clock, Led. a. m., why
such letters not be gran
♦3.00 E. VV. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/ \wFty,Georgia, hRDINARY’8 OFFICE-Spalding Cou.v-
Aug. 29tli, 1888.—F. M.
Scott has applied to me for letters of admin¬
istration on the estate of Naucy Scott,late of
said county, deceased.
Let all persons concernod show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county,
at my office in Griffi, on the first Monday in
October, 1888,by 10 o’clock, a. m., why
such letters should not be granted.
13-00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/ORDINARY’S OFFICE, 8 r Alton 3 Coin-
Tt, Georgia, Sept. 3d, 1888.—N. M.
hagap Colkns, plied administrator of Elizabeth Huff,
to me lor leave to sell a house
and lot on Taylor street, near 8am Bailey
late Institute, of said belonging to estate of deceased,
Let all county.
persons concerned show cause be
fore the Court of Ordinary of said connty
at my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
Ootober, such 1888, by ten o’clock, a. in., why
leave should not be granted.
*3X0 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
rVK^INAErS U OFFICE, Spalding Coun-
tt, Geobgia, Sept. 3d, 1888,-N. M.
Collens, ed of Robert administrator with the will annex¬ for
leave sell fifty Brown, has applied to me less,
to acres of land, more or
near belonging Brast ey, in Akins district, said county,
late to the ‘estate of said deceased,
of said county.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at
my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
*neh Ootober, leave 1888, by ten o’clock, a. in., why
should not bo granted.
*3.00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
r\RDINABY’S OFFICE —Spalding Coun-
V/ tt, Geobgia, Sept. 3d, 1888.—John O.
Stewart has applied to me for letters of ad¬
ministration, tate of Mary F. with will annexed, on county, the es¬
deceased. Haynes,late of said
L stall persons concerned show canse be¬
fore the court of Ordinary of said county,
■* my office in Griffin on the first Monday
such a Ootober, fatten should 1888, by ten o’clock a. in., why
*3 not be granted.
00. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/"ORDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Cors-
turn .y tt, of Geobgia, the 8ept. 3d, 1888.—The apart re¬
oommisssoners to set a
year i support out of the estate of J. N. Hen-
*'1 to Georgia A. Henley and her minor
children, has been made and filed in this
•fflee. Lei all persons show cause, if any
they have, within the time prescribed by
“yi same should not be set apart and
*3.00 judgment I. W. HAMMOND, of the court. Ordinary.
CONCfcRMNG SUDDEN DEATH
lu (Ironing Frequency Attributed to the
KirltnncDl .,1 Modern IJfe.
the Perhaps sudden death may be one of
penalties which w e have to pny for
a highly advanced civilization. The
feverish excitement, the incessant effort
necessary to support existence, which is
to many men a sea that has no haven, a
stanggle that knows no lull, must inevit
ably tell, one may reasonably suppose, on
tho heart s action, if a man escapes the
ordinary forms of nervous derangement.
Sudden death, whether the result of
morbid agepcies so subtle that they evade
diagnosis, or so insidious that thev an¬
ticipate prognosis by suddenly and unex¬
pectedly terminating life, is becoming so
common that it forms one of the distinct¬
ive features of modern pathology. The
form in which it commonly appears now
may be said to be tho result of obscure
cardiac affections, and it was corn[tura-
tively more rare, both in ancient times
and among our forefathers, compared
with its present frequency.
During Upj earlier and even the me
diteval centuries of the Christian era, sud¬
den death was regarded with especial
horror and in the litany of the Anglican
church t3 represented na heading the list
of the most terrible calamities incident to
humanity In pagan antiquity, on the
other band, a sudden death was held
to bo the crown of the blessings that
heaven could bestow on man. The
Greeks represented Death as a pleasing,
gentle being, while theiT conceptions of
an after life were gloomy.
Socrates regarded death as “an indiffer¬
ent accident." Much depends on the
circumstances under which death presents
itself, as well as the state of man’s con¬
science and the condition of his worldly
affairs. As years roll on death becomes
less and less dreaded. Aged people gen¬
erally leave life without regret. Julius
Caesar is said to have wished for sudden
death, but ho said so jtist before he was
slain, and when the mission of his life
had been accomplished. Charles IIcould
apologize to his courtiers for being such
a n “unconscionable time in dying.” Vol¬
taire, and Hume, and Kousseau weighed
pros and cons for sudden death, and
affected to sum up in its favor, but such
a subject is sorry matter either for epi¬
gram or rhetoric.
In nine cases out of ten death Is a
great calamity. It finds men unprepared;
it deprives them of tho alleviations which
rob the summons of many of its terrors;
it often entails embarrassment and mis¬
ery by cutting off all opportunity of
making testatory arrangements, thereby
bequeathing a direful legacy of feud and
estrangement to families who might have
lived in harmony.
The moral, and a very practical one it
is, is that the increasing frequency of
sudden deaths is to be regarded with
alarm, softened by a hope that med¬
ical science may be able to arrest its
progress, and that a proper regard for
their domestic responsibilities will induce
sensible men not to continue to defer the
proper arrangement of their affairs which
ten seconds may make too late.
The three men whose lives, tempera¬
ments and habits were peculiarly typical
of the times in which we live were un¬
doubtedly Lord Macaulay, William Make¬
peace Thackeray and Charles Dickens.
These three men, renowned writers, and
each a master of his srt, all died com¬
paratively young, and all died suddenly,
and the first two of heart disease. Death
came upon them, not with slow and
measured steps, but without note of
warning. Apparently thero was a pain¬
less passing from time into eternity.
Look at the work these men did, Ma¬
caulay had already won high reputation
for prose and poetry at the age of 23, and
the famous article on Milton, which at
once won him a reputation as a essayist,
that his subsequent performances in that
line merely confirmed, was published be¬
fore he was 25 years old/
Macaulay for over thirty years had
three lives, as it were. Ho was a politi¬
cian, he was a man of letters, ho was a
man of society; a great debater and a
good working official; a distinguished
and voluminous author; a diner out
whose company was sought for his con¬
versation by all who could obtain it.
Hard brain work in parliament and in a
man’s library is scarcely compatible with
grand dinners and breakfasts which,
with delicacies of food and wine, were al¬
most as bad as the dinners.
Thackeray and Dickens suffered greatly
from tho same cause. They were free
livers; they loved society. These two
did an immense quantity of literary
work. Thackeray scarcely fell off in
point of execution, hardly in construc¬
tion, to the last. “Denis Duval,” a
story which lie left incomplete, promised
to be as good as any of its predecessors
except “Vanity Fair,” which is it3 au¬
thor’s best work. Dickens was far mors
successful in his latter work. “Our Mu¬
tual Friend" is a performance more involved am¬
bitious than able, with a heavy,
plot; and the half of “Edwin Drood’’
that has been published is not good
enough to mako any reader wish for
more of it. Dickens overworked himself
until paralysis gave him warning, un¬
happily not heeded, and the end caine
suddenly. writer, in beautifully
A very elegant entitled “Erroneous a No¬
written essay “In
tions of Death Reproved,” observes:
particular it is thought that this final
event passes with some dreadful visita¬
tion of unknown agony over the depart¬
ing sufferer. It is imagined that there is
some strange and mysterious reluctance
in the spirit to leave the body; that it
struggles long to retain its hold, and fa at
last torn with violence from its mortal
tenement, and, in fine, that this conflict
between tho soul and the body greatly
adds to the pangs of the dissolution. But
it may be justly presumed from what
usually appears that there is no particu¬
lar nor acute suffering, not more than is
often experienced during life, nay, rather
that thero is less, because the very powers
of soffering are enfeebled, the very^capa-
cities of pain are nearly exhausted. ’
Death is to bo regarded rather as a
sleep than a conflict of our faculties; it is
repose—tho body’s repose after the busy
and toilaomo day of life.—Cor. Troy
Times.
__________
Dogas Old Blatters.
Ufa estimated that at least 500 coun
forfeits of the old masters, each of which
has been purchased galleries at a of big the prige, United ***
hanging in the
•States.
0 DiWHDyb
fig 8 Brillia: L rable! !
■■ Economic .1!
Diamond Dyes excel all alters in .Strength; 1‘urtiy, sml Fastness. None other arc
just as good. Beware of imitations, liecausc they an made of cheap and interior material.!
and give poor, weak, cracky colors. To he sure of success use only the Diamond I'Vi-s
for coloring Dresses Stockings. Yarns, (larpM*, Feathert, Ribbons, Ac., Sx. %’> • ' irvnt
them to color more good . pack - for package, than any other dyes ever made, an • to .»,»*
more brilliant and durable colors. Ask lor the Diamond, and take no other.
Send nustal fur I yc Hook, Sample C'.Ar.I. directions Nor rn!n;i' Photo.., making Ike liovn |i.ir w Billing
Do * ais r. .i .iuis'i.A 1 ... -.id kv T>: . ’ '.ddrrs.
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V. r Only l 1 ' 'Ichu?
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Magnolia -> Hams,
Cooked Corned Beef 12i c. per lb. Blue Fish, better fhan fresh Mackerel
Sweet Water Flour. Water Ground Meat. All grades Sullivan's Tobaccos
And the
BEST LINE OF CIGARS IN THE CITY.
If. MM “S™- Bill
LEATHER AND FINDINGS.
11 ill Htroot, GKIPFIN, GA
i oJJer -i! and BELOIT COST nn excellent lot of /,OW GDI' Ge.atn’ end iwelloa
Shoes H. W. IIAS3ELKC8.
New Music House.
Bramr, / — Deane 1(0) {— & Go.
One floor of our llook and Music Store to lie stocked with Pianos and Organs from a
large number of leading makers.
BEST INSMJMENTS ! EASIEST TERMS!
GET OUR LOW PRICES BEFORE BUYING.
2(> and 26 1-2 Hill Street, : : GRIFFIN, GA.
ang25d&w
This space will he oc¬
cupied soon by a New
Buggy Company.
Shipment Finest Teas,
( HACKERS, ALE SORTS, 15c. 11>.
HAMS, BONELESS SHOULDERS, ETC. FINEST
FLOUR ON THE MARKET.
BIG MONEY! ! '.,000 AGENTS WANTED at once to supply TEN’ MIL
LION voters with the only official lives of
CLEVELAND AND THURMAN
By Hon. W. U. IIexlel; also, Life of Mrs. complete. Ci.evklakd: Agents exquisite steel portraits. Voter For
Cartridge Box, Reform Trad.) Policy, &<■., Outfit report immeuse HUBBARI) soiftes. BROS
be pply quick and make £200 to i’>o0 a month. 35c.
P
G. A. CUNNINGHAM,
GRIFFIN, : : : GEORGIA,
Has Been Appointed Land Agent foi
Spalding Counly,
by the Georgia Bureau oi Immigration,
all parties having land for sale can exp
the sale by placing their property i
hands. regard the
Full particulars in to mo
uable I and a in this county can be oh
by addressing him as above. A full
houses and lands and lots cf all dcrer,
Guardian’s Sale.
By ordinary virtue of an Spalding order granted county, by the Georgia, Court
of of
granted at 8< ptember term the 1888,1 will sell house to
the highest said bidder, before Griffin during court the le¬
door of county In
gal hours of r ale, undivided on the first half Tuesday in Oc¬
tober next, one interest in a
house andlot in the and city Sixth of Griffin, cu the
corner of Solomon streets, contain-
ing one acre more or less, known as th?
Nall business place. and Well quiet—desirable improved, very convenient
to Sold for distribution. Terms cash. property.
LEILA B. LAMAR,
Guardian of James and A. M. Nall.
*ri,00.»
HOTEL CURTIS
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
Under New
A. G. DANIEL, Prop’r.
*3T Porters meet all trains. feblfidly
HIS I
-- -
INCREASE IN NUMBER
-<or>-
Suprcmc Court Judges.
A PROCLAMATION
By JOHN B. GORDON, Governor of
Georgia.
EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT,
Atuinta, July HM.
rtitution. la reference lo atnenduaenu of
that Instrument s
An Act to amend Par. of Sec. 11 of Arttcto
VI of the Constitution of thin State, as *»
to Increase the number of Judge* of the
Supreme Court of this State from three te
five, to consist of a Chief Justice and four
Associate Justices.
Section L Be it enacted by the General
Assembly of the Btate of Georgia, and it it
hereby enacted by authority 01 the same.
That the constitution of this Btate be amend
ed br adding after tho words “Chief Jne-
tloe/’ in the 2nd lino rf the 1st paragraph of
section II, article VI, thereof the words, “..nri
four in aaid Associate Justices,’' in lieu of ihean.d*
line, “and two Associate Justices
so that said paragraph «In n amended shall
read:
The Supreme Court shall consist of a Chief
Justice and four Associate Justices. Ana
jority of II the court shall constitute aijaorum. when
Sec. . He it farther enacted, that
ever the above proposed amendment to the
Constitution shall Iks agreed to by two-thirds
of the members elected to each of the tw o
Houses of the General Assembly, authorized the Govern
or shall, and hois hereby sud in
struotea, to canse said amendment to be
Congressional publitlied In at District least two it» newspaper* this State for in each the
time period of of holding two months next general preceding the
the next election.
Bex. III. Be It further enacted, That the
al>ove ted, proposed amendment rejection shall be the submit¬ elec¬
for ratification or to
tors of this Stole at the next general elec¬
for tion in to the be second held after section publication of this as provided in
Act, sev¬
eral election districts of this State, tt which
election every person shall be entitled to
vote for members of the General Assembly.
All persons voting at said election in favor
of adopting the proposed amendment to the
iknmt their ballots trillion shall the words, have written “For or ratlcation printed on of
of tbeamendmont Article VI of of the Paragraph Constitution," 1, Section and II. all
persons amendment opposed Shall to the adoption printed of said
have written or on
the! i ballots the Words, “Against ratifica¬
tion of the amendment of Paragraph I, of
Section II, of Article VI of the Constitu¬
tion.”
Sko. IV- Be it further enacted, That th«
Governor be, and hereby authorized and di¬
rected to provide for the submission of the
amendment proposed in the first section of
this act to a vote of the people, as required
by the Constitution of this State, in Par. I,
Sec. ratified, I, of Article XIII, and by this Act, and
if the Governor shall, when he ascer¬
tains sueh ratification from the Secretary of
Htatc, to a bom the returns shall be referred,
in the same manner as In ease of elections
for members of the General Assembly, to
count and ascertain the result, Issue his proc¬
lamation for the period of thirty days an¬
amendment nouncing such ratified. result and declaring the
Sxo. V. If the amendment to the Con|Utu-
tion, provided by this Act, shall be agreed
to by the General Assembly, and ratified by
the people, as provided br the Constitution
and by this Act, then it shall be the duty of
the General Assembly of this State, eonven
ing next after such ratification, to proceed to
elect (after the proclamation of tho Govern¬
or, additional provided Associate in section Justices four of of this the Supreme Act,)two
Court, from the who first shall day bo.d of January, said office 1889, tor six and years
un
til Uicir successors are elected and qualified.
Sxo. VI. Be it further enacted. That all
laws and parts of laws in conflict with this
Act be, and the same are hereby repeated.
Now, Approved October I, John 22d, 1887. B. Gordon,
therefore, Gov¬
ernor of said State, do issua this my Procla¬
mation hereby delaring that the foregoing
proposed amendment to tho Constitution is
submitted for ratification or rejection to the
voters of the 8tate qualified to vote for mem¬
bers of the General Aascmbly at tho general
electron to be held on Wednesday, October
3d, 1888, os provided JOHN in said Act.
B. GORDON,
Jambs T. Nisbst, Governor.
Secretary Executive Department.
New Advertisements.
nilNIQ UUnO price REVOLVERS, Hat to JOHNSTON tend stamp SON, for
&
Pittsburgh, Penn.
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kvVELOUS
memory DISCOVERY:
aok lean* ft la air r
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r.klrt wilkaal Bales
Wk y aallha anlftcial lydraM.
Piracy cosftrmarft by Rapeeasa Caart
Ckreat laftacrateateta carraapaafteaea
class* a* with of Dr. Wm. A.
Prospectus, world-famed opinions Specialist in
Hammond, the Daniel Greenleaf Thompson,
Mind diseases,
the great Fyscbologiat, and others, sent poet
freo by Prof. A. LOI8ETTE,
237 Fifth Are.. New York.
October Sheriff's Si
W1 L BE SOLD ON f HE Ft*
of the day Court i in October Home, •r * la neti, 0**4, before
, tbe city of
wrjpa, U>e folio
southeast part of lot No, 38. all In the mm
trkt, containing in the aggregate MS
more ov less tot the entire traeti tamvd
north by laud then known as the Jo
Uoioay land and others, east by lands J
as laud of Dr. Pritchard and others*, <
tendont* . February by Philip 1 4th,
Levied and sold the 18B8, property as deaor of
on os ,
of Walter T, Miller v». Adolphe*!
W _ f
Also, at tuc »ame time and place, wUl be
Sold all that tract or parcel of land aitnated
lying and Mae being in the saenml district of or¬
iginally Georgia, roe, then Pike No. now Spalding
county. to-wit, tot 80, end sH
that part of lol Vo. 79 which lie* north of Ml.
Zion road, containing 27* 1-in acre*, hound¬
ed north by J. T. Ellis an.HVtto»bim,idsi»,
and east by Geo C. 8t< wart, south by Ml.
Zion road, a mi wed by lands of PA.Prwen.aa
place, sanl lands formerly known na J.C.kSvg the Du-
pree place, hut lately purchased by tU
from J. II. Barnes, situated about miins
west of Griffin in Spalding «mnty,fieon*is,
Levied on and sold os the property of J. V,
King, to satisfy two mortgage A fas Issued
of J. i>. »oyd vs. j. v. Ring, and one la favor
of Edwin Bates A Co. vs. J. C. King, W, L
Ison, tenant in poM**«to», legal)* *
fled. ♦6 00.
Also, dwelling at the same time and place, will he
sold and a tho house, which two story the frame build¬
ing land on Mine is locat¬
ed. being about 29 acre# of land in Orris dis¬
trict, Spalding county, Georgia, byldt, said proper
ty bounded on the north Zian road,
west by Wm. Waddcn, east by Culpeppg-,
south P, Hill by lands Levied formerly and sold owned the by CapL H.
oa a* j
of issued J,-G K in g, t o sat is fy
from Spalding St
or of N.B. Drcwryvs.J
find* McLean, tenant In ;>os*e*tton,
Also, at same time and soafhw*s*t place, !
sold 25 acres of land off of
of tot No. 25, said land being in
couuty, Georgia. T. W. Levied Bmkaton, on and ft____
property of to satisfy one
mortgage 0 fa issued from HpaJdbig Superior
Court lu favor of Grubbs J* ''amp and J. A,
Cook, transferee, v». T, W ankatoo. T.
W. Bankston, tenant in r ion, legally
notified. $3.00.
Also, at the same tlm ■ me, will b*
sold a certain piece .t .a
thirty (30) acres, bailor a part of lot
Ho. 115 in the fourth district of Spalding
County, Jack (rttwley, Georgia, south bounded by P, Chamhlam. on the east aorta by
by P. L. Starr, west by lands of W. T. H.
Taylor. Levied on and sold as the property
oi W. T. H. Taylor, to satisfy one mortgage
fi fa issued from Spalding Superior Court In
favor Taylor. of Dnncan, Martin Martin Gray, & Perdue vs, W. T.
H. tenant iuposaee-
eion, legally notfled. time *3.09.
Also, at the same and place, will b#
sold fifty acres of land In the first district Of
originally the northeast Pike, now Spalding lot county, 88 hr being
corner of sa
dtvtjict of J, F. Davis, and county, east by it lanlol J O.
and south by land of J . O. Norton and weal
l<y other lands of J. O. Norton. Levied ea
ton. J. O. Norton, tenant in pot*
gaily notified.
Also, at the same timo and plaee, will be
sold one-third interest Jn one bmm and
premises half aero more in the city or lees,bounded of Griffiu.contaiuing the eaatL one
on
y Ninth or New Orleans street, west by an
Alexander, Iley, north by vacant lot claimed by Henry
and south running si to a point be
tween Ninth or New Orleans and the alley
above mentioned Levied on and sold as the
property qf W. E. George, to satisfy a fi fa
issued from the Justice Court of the 1001st
district Benjamin G. M, of Spalding County Jn favor
of Brothers fttio.fa. W.E.Oeorge. legally
tV. E. George, tenant in possession, lOfT
notified.
Also, at the same time and place, will be
sold Akins fifty district, acres Hpaldiug of land, county, more or Georgia, lesa, la
bounded east by land of Jchn Bunn, sooth
by land of the estate of John H. Akin, west
by land of Jacob H. Akin and north by lands
of Alf. Weilinaker and John Bonn. Levied
on and sold as the property of the estate of
Nancy L- Payne, by virtue of a fl fa issued
from Hickey Spalding Akin Superior J. O Payne, Court adaiinistriitor In favor of
tb.
of Nancy L. Payne, principal, H. C. Stapr
W. W. Grubbs and S, C. Grubbs, securities.
John F. Payne, tenant In poosewion, legally
notified. $6.00.
R. B, CONNELL Sheriff, S.C.
GRIFFIN
LIGHT AND WATER CO.
Application For Charter.
GEORGIA— Svs ODIHQ Coi nty.
State and County, their successors and as
signs, allow* that they hare entered into an
association under the name and style of
“Griffin Light and Water
Company”:
that the object of said association is to erect
vicinity and conduct other business
power and personal, to purchase and hold be sued, property, reel
to sue and and to >exer
ciae all powers usually conferred ou corpora-
tions with of similar the laws character, of Georgia. aa may Said be consts-
tent company
is to have its piaceof bustnees in sold eoun-
ty. The capital stock of said company shall
be *25,300, with privilege hundred of increasing to
*50^000, in sliareaof one dollars each,
to lie called in as may be determined on tnr
the directors, provided, that
shall not commence busing
ten t»er cent.of the capital i
Said company shall have a boa
than three, nor more than five
shall elect frost their number
and such other officers as the
best. Said board of directors eL
in office until their successors
Your petitioners pray the pasal!!_
der by said Honorable Court grea ttt g 1
their application and that they and their i
oeseorsbc incorporated for anddi
term of noY exceeding twenty year*,
privilege of renewal at the expiration * of I
twenty years, for the purposes
set forth. And your petition
pray, Ac. BECK
I'ftitiouera
I certify Hurt the foregoiag is a
tract from the minutes of Spalding 1
Court. Ang. 31*4,1888.
W«. X.