Newspaper Page Text
EXCURSION RATES.
What It Will Cost to Go to Macon, Co¬
lumbus and Augusta.
The Central railroad offer* the following
excursion rates to the Georgia expositions:
TO THE STATE XAIB.
To be held at Macon, Ga., November 5th
to November 10th, inclusive.
Bartlesville...........................$1.35
Milner................................ 1 50
Orchard Hill........................... 1.60
Griffin................................. 170
Sunny Side........................... 1.85
Hampton............................. 1.90
Brooks Station........................ 1.9)
genoia................................ 2.1*>
These rates lnclndc admission to Fair
ground. Children over 5 years old and un¬
der 12 Half Rates. Tickets will be placed
on sale November 4th to 10th, inclusive;
good to return until November 13th. inclu¬
sive.
TO THE CHATTAHOOCHEE EXPOSITION.
To be held at Columbus, Ua., November
15th to December 1st, inclusive.
Barnesville...................... .....>3.30
Milner................................. 3.30
Orchard Hill........................... 3.30
Snuny Side............................ 3.30
Hampton.............................. 3.50
Brooks Station....................... 3.25
tenoia................................. 3.40
These rates include street car fare and ad
mission 5 yea..B to Exposition and under 12 grounds. years, half Children rates.
over placed
Tiekets will be on sale November
14 th to 80th inclusive, 2d, good to return on, and
until December inclusive.
TO THE AUGUSTA NATIONAL EXPOSITION.
To be held at Augusta, Ga, November 8th
to December loth, inclusive.
Barnesville............................$4.90 5.05
Milner................................. 5.15
Orchard Hill..............
Griffin.................................5.25
Sunny Side............................ 5.40
Hampton.............................. 5.45
Brooks Station ......................... 5.50
genoia................................. 5.65
The rates inculde transfer coupons to and
from the Exposition, grounds. and Children also admission
coupons to the over 5
years and under 12 years, half rates.;Passen-
gers mutt purchase tickets before getting on
train, as coneuetors wi.l lot be authorized to
observe the above rates Tickets will be
placed on sale November 7th. and continue
on sale until and including December 15th,
1888, unless otherwise ordered. Tickets will
be limited five days from date of sale, but
in no ease later than December 17th, 1888.
Gen. E. T. CHARLTON,
Passenger Agent.
rr
Customers, Aught, To be Bought
Boarders, Silver Gold,
Agents, Orders, MerchaHdise or Sold,
gervants or Place, Geods to Appraise,
Lawyer or Cass, Opening To Days
Musical Teac iers, Announce,
Popular Preachers, Houses or Acres,
Cooks, Butchers or Bakers.
Books, Boats,
To Hire or Let, Dress Votes, flounce
O Sloes, skirt or
First Basement, Floor, A A cure Handy for Valise, disease,
To Casement, Cheese, A MnslinChemise,
Purchase a Pet, Teas,
Horse, Mare, Bees,
Bloodhound Monkey or Bear, gpitz Or Peas, . Prone
or Are
Free from Fitz, To Make Known,
To Hire a Hall Your Store,
Driver Elegant or team, Carriage,Dry Hosiery, oods,
An
Play,Concert AuOpulent Marriage, Ball, Upholstery, Picnics.
or
8katee, Excursions,
To Plates, Knick-Knacks,
sell to gay creatur'sDlvei sions,
Pearls, Diamonds, Clothes Increase ReadyJ Trade, Made,
<Jf
Rings, Coal, Coke and Woo d
Curls, Pictures,
Wash for Features, Lectures,
To buy Odd Things, All Kindsof Food
Or sell Odd Things, Works on Theology,
Cats, Rats, Magic, Wealth Astrology, and Felicity,
Mats, World-wide Publicity
Flats Flags, Rags,
Pantaloons, Bats, Bags,
Hate, Nags,
Resplender tCravats, Dress shirts or collars
Mutton or Beef, Almighty Dollars,
Financial Relief, House for Rent,
Stocks, Store, Tenement,
Clocks, Cash to be Lint,
Locks, Cash to be Spent,
Socks, Scent,
Portmenia or Box, Tent,
Pig, Sheep or Ox, Roman Cement,
Or Even a Beau- Go-
Then in a Trice, Read the Advice,"
Taks the Advice Far Beyond Price,
Written Below— Written Below—
ADVERTISE
-IN TIIE-
Daily News
To Business Men.
XT OLABORED ARGUMENT IS NEEDED
-Lv in these days to convince 1NTELL1
GENT men that it
Pays Well to Advertise
New Advertisements
TO ADVERTISERS
A list of 1000 newspapers divided into
•TATES AND SECTIONS will be sent on
application—FREE. To advertising to
those who want tlie'r pay
we can offer n» better medium for thorough
and effective work than the various sections
•f »nr Select Local List.
GEO. P. ROWELL & CO.,
Newspaper Advertising Bureau,
10 Spruce street, New York.
A GREAT YEAR
m the hiitory of the United States is now upon
Every parson of intelligence desires to keep
Pace with tne course of its events. There is no
witter way to do so than to subscribe for
The Macon Telegraph.
Its news facilities aae unsurpassed bv any paper
iu the South. In addition to the fullest Associ¬
ated Press dispatches. It baa special correspond¬
ent* by wire and letter neighboring from all Important States.
Points in Georgia and the Wash¬
During the present session of Congress
ington will be the most important and most The in-
foresting news centre In the country.
she Washington Correspondence be had. 0 / the Telegraph is
Its very beet that oan the latest
regular correspondent furnishes
,*ws and gassip In full dispatches. Frequent
peoial letters from Hon. Amos J. Cummings, Frank
somber ot Congress trom New York, if.
Carpenter, freown andw. writers A. Croflfat. at the three capital, of the best dis*
*e«s tke newspaper lives tawd important Issues of the
most
Telegraph is a Democratic Tariff Reform
P*P«r. It Is thoroughly Cleveland in line with Democratic the policy
sf President and the
'*Ujr,*»ayWr, . . - - -*7 00
Owlly, dx m.atfal, .... 4 OO
•*■117, thra* mob tin, • • • . * OO
U»‘ly, o*« mutk, .... .75
W Hkly, dm yMr, . .100
*■*« OMk la advance. Address
mnuoura,
Ml rag Osonou.
If You Are Sick
With Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism
sla, Biliousness, Blood Humors, Kidney
Constipation, Female Troubles, Fever and Ague,
Sleeplessness, Partial Paralysis, or Nervous
trution, use Paine’s Celery Compound and
cured. In each of these the cause is mental
physical overwork, anxiety, exposure or malaria,
the effect of which is to weaken the nervous
tem, resulting In one of these diseases.
the Cause with that great Nerve Tonic, and
eesult will disappear.
Paine’s Celery Compound
l ame K.Bowen, s Celery Compound Springfield, cannot Mass., be excelled writes:—
a Nerve Ionic. In as
wrought a great change my My case a single bottle
disappeared, and with nervousness entirely
of the it the resulting affection
stomach, heart and liver, and the whole
tone of the system was wonderfully invigorated.
Cclety7om^d fSlCk “ 1 h8Ve been ’
Will Cure You!
Sold by druggists. SI; six for * 5 . Prepared only
by \\ jells, Kichardson 61 Co., Burlington, Vt
For the Aged, Nervous, Debilitated.
FINE PERFUMERY AND TOILET SOAPS.
-Also, a full line of-
Drugs, Patent Medicines, Paints, ,0ils, Brushes
And Druggists’ Snpplea, at bottom prices, can ALWAYS be found
AT DREWRY’S J )RUG STORE
28 Hill Street,GRIFFIN, GA.
WE KEEP ON HAND THE FINEST
Flour, Sugar and Coffee,
CIGARS AND TOBACCO.
1ST At the LOWEST PRICES of any one in the city. We have the finest
Whiskies and Brandies
AND BEST OF ALL TH%
FLAT SHOALS CORN WHISKY!
which is noted to be the finest that is made. All of the above for medical purposes. Com
and see ns.
GEORGE & HARTNETT.
difcwtdee25
A. LOWER,
Practical Jeweler ai Dealer ii Dianas, Watches,
JEWELRY, CLOCKS, &C.
Special attention given to Repairing. 20 Hill Street GRIFFIN, GA.
I will have to-day nice mixed fish.
Oysters Shrimp, Crabs,
Birds, Bananas Celery, 35c
Pickles, gallon, only doz.
70e
Sweet Pickles, 85c Pickles, gallon, gallon.
Plain 60c
Cheese 15c lb to-day.
A large lot of A. E. Crackers just received;
different varieties. Schweppe line ginger
soda water and Lemonade 12c per bottle.
lb any Patent flour $1.65 to-day.
dVE. JVLXL3L.S
W. M. Holman & Co.
-HAVE FRESH---
-> Hams,
Cooked Corned Beef 12| c. per lb. Blue Fish, better than fresh Mackerel
Water Flour. Water Ground Meat. All grades Sullivan's Tobaccos
the
BEST LINE OF CIGARS IN THE CITY,
HOW ?
HATS, SHOES ANI) GROCERIES of
R. F. STRICKLAJSD,
NO 57 HILL STREET, GRIFFIN, GA!
f^“500 prs. of Sample Shoes at less than w sale prices. Also a good
cf
MEN WOMEN S-AND CHILDREN’S SHOES,
Bought regular, at reduced prices. Calicoes, Sheeting and Checks, all
marked down. Kentucky Jeans, all grades, 15 to 37^ cents per yard.
We have a full line of Mens’ Womens’ and Childrens’ Hose at 10 to 25
Out childrens’ mixed and black hose at 10 cents per pair is the best
thing in town for the money. Handkerchiefs, Towels, Corsets, Flannel
and Cuffs, all at the lowest prices. Give me a trial and I will save
money. R. F. STRICKLAND.
-SoS--
SPENCE & SMITH,
BRICKWAKEHOUSE,SOLOMON St
LsVAre now ready to do your work. Repairing buggies and wagon* is a feature o
business, on which skilled laboronly is used. Bring ns your work.
SST'We will build vou anything on w heels—Buggies, be Phaetons, Surries, Wagons, Ca
Drays and Delivery Wagons. Sign painting will a feature of no little importan
Nothing but good work wil'* be done. Will not take a shoddy job for any price. With
II Spence at the helm you cannot fail to get fair dealing. Call on us before yon buy.
SPENCE & SMITH ,
Solomon Street, Criffin, Ca.
Shipment Finest Teas,
CRACKERS, ALL SORTS, 15c. lb.
HAMS, BONELESS SHOULDERS, ETC. FINEST
FLOUR ON THE MARKET.
Warranted to color more goods than any other
durable dyes ever made, and to give more brilliant and
colors. Ask for the Diamond, and take
no other.
A Dress Dyed T FOR
A Coat Colored
Garments Renewed j cents.
A Child can use them!
Unequalled for all Fanoy and Art Work.
At druggists and Merchants. Dye Book free.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & C0„ Prop.., Burlington, Vt
Old Dead Hen.
Theie'are two kinds of old men—
old live uicn and old dead men.
An old dead man is on® who, out of
pare habit, clings to the ways, man
ners and customs of bis ycuth, and
insists that others shall also stick to
them so far as lies in his power to
make fbem.
We are not here ulktog so much
of the phyaicul old age which merely
counts yesis. as of that mental old
Age* or rather mental fossilmip. which
barnacles itself to ooe custom, one
usage, one mannerism, one method
and one fashion, and will not and
cannot, even after a time, leave it for
a better one. This species of dead
men may be but 35 years old. They
may be 70. They ait sometimes in
official chairs or behind bank screens
or at bookkeepers desks, and largely
on tne possession of gn.y hair, or no
hair at all, endeavor to exact from
younger men that deference which is
due only to superior wisdom coming
of greater experience but is not due
i
to a change in the hirsute pigment.
They are sometimes obstinate,
abrupt, rude, overbearing, cross and
peevish, and can no more accomo
date themselves to change or emer
gency than an old woman can accom
odate herself to a young woman's
bonnet. They are old dead men,
and belong properly in comfortable
coffins and newly furnished graves.
This is a world of rapid changes.
It is changing all the time. It has
always been changing, for change in
all things is the natural and inevita
ble order of creation, and whoever
sets his or her face against it und ar
gues or tries to enforce the method
they first learned but so few years
ago, when we take the real value of
time into estimation, is simply and
vainly trying to resist an overpower
ing force.
Robbery In Monroe,
On Tuesday evening of last week,
says the Monroe Advertiser, Mr. J.
R. Hall got off the cars at Frank
vilie depot,the East Tennessee,
Virginia and Georgia railroad, in
this county, and was going on the
railroad.towards Juliette lo where the
construction gang was at work on
the railroad, in search of woik, when
he was met by two negroes. Jim
McGehee and Jim Greer. While on*
of the negroes engaged Mr. Hall in
conversation, the other sought opjor
tunity and knocked him senseless
aod robbed him of a small amount of
money and what other things of val
ue he had. Upon recovering his
reason, Mr. Hall proceeded to Juli
ette and made known the facts, where
upon a posse of men went immediate
!y in search of the robbers. Shortly
after committing the robbery the
two negroes were seen by the rail
road bands skulking about, apparent
ly with a view of crossing the rivti.
These hands being snspici us of the
negroes, resorted to a coy and appie
bended them. When ikeu before
the magistrate at Juliette, they very
readily confessed to having commit
ted the crime, giving tho details of
the same and their reason therefor.
Rumors of the crime, in the mean
tune,having brought together a num
ber of citizens of that community, at
that juncture excitement had reached
a high pitch, and there were nppre
heDsions of summary punisnment.
But prudence finally prevailed and
the matter was left in the hands of
the law, aod on Wednesday the rob
bers were lodged in jail to await fur
ther legal proceedings.
The Colored Democratic Tote.
Ex-Minister to Liberia Taylor, a lead
ing colored man, said recently that he
thought Mr. Cleveland wculd receive
this year in the northern states 240,000
votes cast by colored voters. L'. Thomas
Fortune, another leader of the colored
race, thinks this estimate is about cor
rect, but Fred Douglass and other color
ed republicans say that the above estim
ate is altogether too high.
Probably it is, but many colored cit
iziens will vote for Mr. Cleveland this
year whi did not iu 1884. Greater ef
forts are being made to induce them to
do so, and the obstacles to be overcome
are not so serious. Iu 1884 it was time
wasted to try to get colored people iu
the north to vote the Democatic ticket.
They had been fooled into the belief
that the election of a Democratic Presi
dent would work great ,ujury to them,
and a large number of them, inc, edible
as it may appeal, actually believed that
if Mr. i levelaud became President slav
ery would be re-esiabliabed. In conse
quence, they voted a'most solidly for
Mr. Blaine.
During three and a half years of Dem
oeratic aminisfrati >n, however, they
have found out their mistake, and have
become convinced that they have Loth
ing to fear from Mr. Cleveland, who
has made it apparent that he proposes
to look to th eir interests as closely as to
those of any other class of citizens. He
wants them to prosper, and if he can do
anything, compatible with the publio
good, that will help them to advance, he
will not hesitate to do it. His interest
in them is shown by the fact that he haa
appointed 785 of tnem to public office,
with salaries ranging from $1,000 to $2,
000 • year, while several of them hold
positions which pay $5,000 to $10,000 a
year. The most important offices held
by them are those of recorder of deed# at
Washingtcu, James Matthew Trotter;
minister to Hayti, T. E. W. Thompson;
minister to Liberia, E. E. Smith, and
consul at Demara. H. F. Downey.
The colored voters have for years
held several northern states in the re
publican column. They have voted
that ticket almost to a man. Auy
change, therefore, iu the vote cast by
them must be to the advantage of the
democrats. Unless the signs fail, there
will be a change of some importance.
Certsiuly it is about time for the color
ed people to see that the republic Ft
party bas no use for them after they
has obtained their votes.
Tho city and county offices Hi New
York are very rich plums. 1 his i* H.e
reason we hear ol so much figii ing
and scratching ov* r the local nomtna
tions. The sheriff of the coun'y of
New York is tvt r:h in eu oitti.T i '8
almost as much as tin 1 i’i <1* id of
these United Sta'itL* r>"vv>v.-s
no stated salary, this ex> coti v >* officer
of New Fork, but the fees piovided
by statute amount to $40,000 a ytm
—or $120,000 lor the term. He has
nine special deputies,a cashier, five
bailiffs, a secretary and eleven clerks.
In all the sheriff appoints 85 officers
and handles in a year bait' a million
dollars in fees. The county clerk to
be elected in New York in Novem
her receives a stated salary of $15,
000 a year. His deputy receives
$5,000 and his cashier $3,000. He
appoints sixty persons, whose gross
salaries reach $00,000. The three
coroners receive $5,000 per annum
each for four years. Each coronsr
appoints three physicians, who get
$3,000 apiece. The president ot the
board of aldermen, to be elected
next month, gets $6,000 per annum.
His term is two years. This is why
they sell out Presidents and sacrifice
parties. This is why we weep.
. ms f a? 7;u. r
nYvt*rtiurn, »ureu.*,'108pn»ooSt.).\/h*r ovmJo it IS NfcVV tsiivcrtwift
>*i;t j t
Guardian’s Sale.
By virtue of an order granted by tbs Court
of ordinary September of Spalding county, 1 Georgia, sell
^ranted at term,1888, -will to
tbe highest bidder, before Griffin the court house,
door of said county in during the le¬
gal hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in Do
cembcr next, one undivided half interest in
a house and lot in the city Sixth ofGriffiu, on the
corner of Solomon and streets, eon
taining one acre> more or less, known as the
Nall place. and Well quiet—desirable, improved, very convenient
to business cash, property.
Sold for distribution, Terms
LEILA B. LAMAR,
Guardian of James and A. M. Nall.
$0.00
WATCHES!
★ JEWELRY, ★
DINNER AND TEA SETS!
-)o(- -
DECORATED LUSTRE AND PLAIN WHITE
ENGLISH GRANITE WARE.
DECORATED AND PLAIN CHINA PLATE
SETS, GLASS. TiN AND WOODEN WARE.
KENTUCKY COOKING AND HEATING
STOVES. SEE THEM AND PRICES.
NOVELTY CO.
BOOTS, SHOES AND LEATHER
22 sins’ Sine Store 22
Hill St. IUll St.
Home-made Shoes and Leather a Specialty.
fiFWe warrant all work and shall make itapointto misrepresent noth
ing. Just received a large shipment of Gents, Ladies and Misses fine goods
and school shoes for Children.
H. W. HAShELKUS.
A. S. MERHaF
Calls your attention to his
Super! Line of Furniture!
COMPLETE SUITS OR SINGLE PIECES.
Suits ot 9 Pieces from $20 to SI 00, Tables, Chairs
Bedsteads, Spring Beds, Wardrobes, Etc,
A limited number of Sewing Machines of the best
makes lor sale very low.
I am always night. ready to serve my customers, both
day and
Mrs. E. E. CR ,
20 IIILL STREET,
---If AS AU. TJIK--
: Styles: of: Millinery
AND TRIMMINGS.
Saxony Wools, best goods and all asorted colors. Also, 6emuui-
n Wools.
Call ar.d ezatnine my goods and prices.
oeflMAwtm
PxldI Mill, Tax**, Jaa* X!) IW-TSa
•wl/t Uaaaas Bprrlfla Oa* <*« Company cMWrcn AUait*. Ga—0*0 troubled
rhrumMUm : my *iut boll* for «u about
with „ two
Wa nn h hied* ot nw*ll-
(MUi rst tne ui»hi*«i au aunpp B t rw ,
tn t *b« 14 not ft hfclt, hftftrtf ftftd fiwailh?
Jail»afflicted srtrl twelve year* old. Another afellfS h*4
to thft Mm* wey, end I
ft hi aalnf the H. B. &. And Anticipate a prompt
And p< fmftucnt cure. If. C. Waoooksb.
tpACiilo Rich IIfix. AU*nUk, Mo, July <!•.—Oftntl«m«a; 7, ifW The Swift
Co., Our
ltUM girl wh«o but three w<*k» old broku
out Wi Ith ocMmn. We tried thft prraertpUon*
jpic |(ma s(m« B ona bottle wa* (nn# hor haad !«fan to
il. and th* by tha oomplatanr t!m« ,ha Ourad. halt tahon Mow ,tz
um wa* af tl>*
jUM ■■Arty i - a ly full child. ae<l I hoaty fc I n bead but eiy hair—a duty to robutt, male*
Uii« fll itatwoant, lunwctfall/. *t T. Beoaa.
to 1 WM I eootiActad blood boiton, and at one*
•oneht * [.hy*lo(*n. who treated m* for mv-
aral montba. Hy By., ht« adrlc* I want to Crab
urebard Sprint*, whar* obaerrad. hit court* of
treatment ared, I thoufht, wae eareftilly th* t reooe-
a* but neat aprtnx pint.
plea The** Satan gradually to appear Ihoreaeed on my face and body.
to core* ar.d run-
etn* ulcer*. I wae ad*l*ad to try S. S. S., and
lmmadlately tmproT*. slowly after laklut ftr*C. ft but I ooptmenoed rapidly M
at more
afterward*, tell of troubla. and aoon My nothin* remained to
oughly my claatuial. aad blood t* now thor¬
end I my <>*t«in free from
taint, owe my present condition-*
perfect thl* cure - to your that medicine I cheerfully
•utfored trlve (latement other* who bar*
a* t hare i. may reap the ram* benefit.
Haaov Ituay, ft W**t Ninth St,
Honan. La., May iX USA—Th* Swift Specula
Co , Atlanta, (ta.—Centlemen : About two
year* tlrely azo l Wk*£t wa* wa* >ny general Jo deblliuted health that ear* I war abaoet *«».
____„ . _
ihftt uf 04 * G
grJwift should f<T*
th< thought It i
Altar taxi is a thorough courts, my h*>Alth
as<t ateai fh ruturnad, and I must aay that
Joftitm Bngi.Tofv, Drugflcl
Trcftltto on B!o.vi and Hkln !>1«4 muhni mailed
rr<** Tuf. Swutt Ri ucunc Co- l>ra««rl
Atlanta, Ga, ,
G. A. CUNNINGHAM,
GRIFFIN, : i : GEORGIA,
Been Appointed Land Agent foi
Spalding County,
the Georgia Bureau ot Immigration, and
parties having land for sale can expedite
sale by placing their Property m hia
Full par'kulara in regard to the moat val¬
lands in this county can be obtained
addressing him as above. A full list of
and lands and lots ef all description.
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that appl leaf ion will
made to the next legislature for the paa
of a bill amending the charter of th«
of Gritlla so as Vo allow the Mayor and
of said city to fix a compensation
the Aldermen of said city not to exceed
dollars per annum.
NovemberSheriffs!
WILL BE SOLD OS THE FIRST'
of /.T the Court ln House, iu Mxt, th. city before of th Orta
MYissRfisr-**'
district HI_____ ftiui hosadid JENSte
county, north 1
Conn in favor of A. A. Snidery*. J.<
to " - Horton, tenant In poMresnoo, 1
gaily Also, 1 notified. at the time and Mjgffib trill
same p>«M. tP be
*old ooe lot of Undtn *tUd Stete --
known a* lot No. 38 la the third t
originally Guorgia,oo Henry
county, less,
or (rounded north
Lyman Andrews, Travia eaat and by W.T. Chamber*, byC. Weatmore west w ’
south 8.
da Waldronp, executrix of Amur \.
deceased. C. B. John _
and Walilronp.t
in Al*o, trotmeegion, legally notified.
at U>e aarac time and piece, will
sold ten acre* of tapd iu a
by a hedge, known a* the
situated, lying a*d being in th# idol*
G. M of npaldiog County, QeoMria,
ea»t road running from Griffis „ __
what <>n a north to
is known a* Beak*'Mil), jneliniidaof
city limits of Griffin on the northern bound#
ry. Levied on aa the property of the MHl
l*fy one a fa tented from ttT •—“---*“*
the 1001st district G,M. la
A Elite vs. W. M,*W. C.
tratora of Ja*. A Beck*. Levy _ made __
U. Johnson, L. O., and turned wt to . me.
lenant in po»«ewkm legally notified. erSTSe $6.00,
sold Also, at the same time end place,
three sere# of land more or less is the
city of Griffin, Spalding County, Georgia,
bounded on the east by Hill street, sooth by
part Moore part and of north same by lot, F. west D. Dtemuk*. by Mrs. Y. being L.
part of Die place on which T. W. Thurman
now resides. Levied on and sold as the
property of T. W. Thbraan, te satisfy a fi
man T, W. Thurman,tenant in i '
legally notified. R. CONNELL,
B, I
Ordinary’s AdvertlsaiMiits. m
tminisuatoron wtats of Haney Scott,
deceased, d, has applied land tome foe leave to soli
twenty-two acres of belonging to ae¬
tata of deceased, lying In LtneCroek dis¬
trict in mid county.
Lei all i
for* the C
at ray office hi fit id
November, 1888, by o’clock, a.
such leave should not be granted.
13 00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
-
/ \ RDINARY'S OFFICE—SvaldIM Ooc*.
V/ tv, Gnonoia.Oet. 1st, 1888,-Eamnel A.
and Brunei* M. Scott, Administrator* ones,
tate ^psSi^&'tsaaett of Wm. Scott,deeeeeed, have applied to
said county.
Let all persons concerned show cense be.
fore the Court of Ordiuarjr of «nM county, at
November, my office In Grlfibi. on tbe first Monday ta
1388. by too o’clock, a. m., why
such leave should not be granted.
#3.00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
RDINARY'S OFFICE, Srumnt Coon.
V/ tv, Gsonaia, Oct 1st D«8.—Alex.
8. and 8, W. Murray, as executor* of A.|U.
Murray, leave deceased, bare applied to ate o
to sell lands belonging to estate of A
G. Murray, late ot aald county, da reaped.
Let. all persons concerned show earns #-
fore the Court of Ordinary cf wM eounty at
November, my office in 1888, Grmtu, v- tbe brat Monday tat
sach leave should by not ten be o’clock, granted n. a., why
$3.00 W. HAMMOND, Ordinary
QHMNART^ OFFICE, 8r*^ixoC»»n-
turnof the oommlieiontrs to set apart n
rear’s support out of the estate of Edmund
Kendall to Henrietta Kendall bus been made
*ud filed in thla office. Let all person* shew
esuse, if they within hare, the time prosbrtbed should by law,
set auy and made why tbe same judgment not be
apart of Die
oourt.
*8.00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
—------— ................, . -...... .e n al . i f -la.. .. . '
Administrator’s Sale.
By virtue of an order from the Ceurt of Or¬
dinary, Spaiding will be sold before tbe court bone#
door ot county in the city of Griffin,
on the first Tuesday In November next, be¬
tween the legal hours of sale, the lauds be¬
longing to the estate of Wm. Woodward,
late of said county deceased, to-wit:
land 303*^ lot acre* No. 22 more Cabin or less, district, the same being
in containing
20acre* more or less and the west half <3
land lot No. 10 in aald Cabin* district eon.
taining 101U acres more or leu. Bald land
will be aold in 2 or 8 tracts. Sold for the
purpose the of hetrsofsaid paying debts and distribution
among deceased. This OeUL
1888. Terms cash. N. M. COLLEN,
Adm’r de bonis non of W, J. Woodward.
$6.00.
Administrator’s Sal©.
By virtue of an order from the Oourt of Or
din ary of Bpalding conuty there will be sold
before the comt house door of said county
in the city of Griffin, on tbe first Tuesday in
November next, during the legal hours ot
sale, th# following property to-wit: 90 arras
of land more or leas in Akins district in said
county, situated in the northwest corner of
lot No. ’ 110, bounded on the north aad east
by Jacob T. Chapman,on th* south by 9. F.
Chapman and the public road leading from
Jaekson to Zebulou and on the west by J. F.
Chapman and Jae. Askew. Bold for the pay.
ing of Robt. debts and Brown, distribution deceased, among sold the noire
and as the
Terms property of the estate Oet of said deeeeeed.
cash. This 3rd, I860.
f6 00. N. M. COL LENS, Adm’r.
Administrator’s Sale.
By virtue of an order from the Court of
Ordinary there will be sold before tbe court
honae door of Bpalding eounty. in the city of
Griffin, on tbe first Tuesday In November
next luring the legal bonra of sale, the lands
belonging to the estate of Elizabeth Hofi,
deceased, to-wit: One house and let in tbe
elty of Griffin near tbe Sam Bailey Institute,
bounded on the eonth by Taylor 8treet, Earn
by the lot of Mrs. Hatton, west hy T. G. Ma
Afee and north by an alley, containing X of
an acre more or less. Sold for the purpoae
of paying debts and distribution amengthe
heirs of the deceased. Terms cash. TThie
Oct. 3rd, 1868,
#6.00 N. M. COLLEN8, Adm'r.
Administratrix’s Sal©
Will be sold before the court bouse door te
Griffin, Georgia, between on the first Tuesday legal hours in No¬
vember next, tbe of
sale, by order of Court of Ordinary, the foi-
lowing real estate, to-wit: 297 acre* of tend
in Mt. Zion District, known as th* home
place where B. P- Crowder lived at the time
iaiwupu nuu mte, *■> wivsigui wee* ”e tut
Browder and J. L. Maynard, and north by
O Norton. Term* cash. Sold subject te a
mortgage ln favor ef Th* Georgia Loam and
Trust Company. Sold a* the land often a*,
tate of R. F. Crowder to pay the dabtaof the
estate and for distribution. Grid lend ssdd
at tbe risk of B- C. Crowder, who formerly
boa^tuad land and Called to pay tbeameon#
HARRIET ft CROWDER,
Administratrix ef *.f. C r owder .