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H Ypu Are Sick
wuu Headache, Neuralgia, Kh. uraatism
^a, Biliouanees. Blood Humor*, Kidney
Constipation, Female Troubles, Fever snd
gleepletoneas. Partial Paralysis, or Nervous
tration, use Paine’s Celery Compound and
cured. In each of these the cause is mental
physical overwork, anxiety, exposure or
the effect of which Is to weaken the nervous
tem, resulting in one of these diseases.
the c.vt'sx with that great Nerve Tonic, and
hksult will disappear.
Paine's Celery
••Kine’sOelet las, L. Bows*. i^Teh, Springfield, Springfield* Mass. Maaa.,
jry Compound cannot be excelled
ft Nerve
0 f the stomach, heart and liver, and the
tone of the friends, system if sick was wonderfully I have been,
I tell my Compound as
Celery Cure
Will You!
Sold by druggists. $1; six for Burlington* 15. Prepared
b r WtLiB, KiCHARhfiON & Co., Vt.
For tbe Aged, Nervous, Debilitated.
FINE PERFUMERY AND TOILET SOAPS.
-Also, a full line of-
Drills, Patent Medicines, Paints, ,0ils, ! Brushes
And Druggists’ Supples, at bottom prices, car] ALWAYS be found
AT DREWRY’S jDRTTG STORE
-.28 Hill Street,GRIFFIN, GA.
WE KEFP ON HAND THE FINEST
Flour, Sugar anil Coffee,
CIGARS AND TOBACCO.
pgr At tbe 1,0 WEST PRICES of any one inthe city. Wc have the finest
Whiskies and Brandies
AND BEST OF ALL THE
FLAT SHOALS CORN WHISKY!
which is no cd to lie the finest that is made. All of the above for medical purposes. Com
GEORGE & HARTNETT.
d<V wtdee‘i/>
A. LOWER,
Mai Mil li Mi* it llwin nine,
JEWELRY, CLOCKS, &C.
Special attention given to Repairing. 20 Hill Street GRIFFIN. GA.
I will have to-day nice mixed fish.
Fresh Oysters Shrimp, Ci abs,
Rice Birds, Celery,
Bananas only 35ccloz.
Mixed Pickles, 70c gallon, 85c gallon,
Sweet Pickles,
Plain Pickles, (10c gallon.
Cheese 15c lb to-day.
A large lot of A. E Crackers just fine received; ginger
20 different varieties. Schweppe bottle.
ale, soda water and Lemonade 12c per
50 lb any Patent flour $1.65 to-day.
J. 3VC- MILLS
W. Holman M. & Co.
-have fresh---
Magnolia -> Hams,
Cooked Corned Beef 124 c. per lb. Blue Fish, better than fresh Mackerel
Sweet Water Flour. Water Ground Meat. All grades Sullivan's Tobaccos
And the
BEST LINE OF CIGARS IN THE CITY,
HOW? to Save Money
By buying your DRY GOODS,
HATS, SHOES AND GROCERIES of
R. F. S TRICKLAN D,
NO 57 HILL STREET. ... - GRIFFIN, GA:
g3?”500 prs. of S pie Shoes at less than wsale prices. Also a good
line of
MENIWOMEN S AN I) (11J LDREN ’S SHOES,
Bouytu regular, at leduced piict-s. Calicoes, Sheeting aW Checks, all
marked down. Kentucky .leans, ail grades, 15 to 37^ Hose cents per yard.
Wo have a full line of Mens’ Womens’ and Childrens’ at 10 to 35
cents. Out childrens’ mixed and Idack hose at 10 cents per pair is the best
thing in town for the money. Handkerchiefs, Towels, Corsets, Flannel
Collars and Cuffs, all at the I'nvrd prices. Give me a trial and I will save
you m „ney. F. STRICKLAND.
SPENCE & SMITH,
\ OPPOMTJ: 11RICK WAREHOUSE,SOLOMON St
MPAie n < w read} to do vntir wnrk. Repairing buggies and wagons is a feature o
their business, on which -killed labor only is uwd Bring ns your work
j ar We will build V a anything on w heels-Buggies, Phaeton-, hurries W agons, t a
Drays, and Deliver) Wagons. Sign painting will be a nature of r.c it le ira|'4rtan With
Nothing but coe.il work wilt be .1. ne V\ Ml not take a sh.widy all Job onusLefore fo, any pries. buy.
H. Sven <• at lb. helm jou cauin t fail to tot (air dealing, < you
SPENCE J* SMITH ,
Solomon Street, Griffin, Ca.
Shipment Finest Teas,
CRACKERS, ALL SORTS, 15c. lb.
HAMS, BONELESS SHOULDERS. ETC FINEST
FLOUR ON THE MARKET
1 § l MtlRISd, lifted pU
MR. HOKE SMIHI.
icotmxvKD raou saooxn raos.)
grandchildren would t»e gray neau.d if
not laid away in their grave*; ami the
tribute that we would in the meantime
have paid to the protected monopolies else¬
where w ould have amounted to more than
the entire aum then invested in manufac¬
tories, and the truth i», attest, crar manu-
i'actorits would not be helped. They are
uot helped today; they certainly would
not be helped then. To whom will we
sell when our manufactories grow to the
enormous propoitions that I have de>
scribed? Alongside of our manufacturing
progress will come the manufacturing pro.
gress of other states, and tbe ceusutnera of
this country will not be enough to utilize
the products After •;-nrgia has beeu bled
for years upon I er i. oltural pursuits by
reason of a tri n;e- iu«ing tariff, she will
reach the time inn ner o»u manufactur¬
ing interests have developed, and there
be tio consumers in the United
to pay her tribute; her product*
he compelled to seek the markets of
world in which to tiud places for sale,
lhe tariff, instead of then helping bet
would check them. If
wishes manufactories ; if the farm¬
of Georgia wish a home market from
located in Georgia, free the
interests of our state from a
of tariff taxation, which can jnatly
termed robbery, and the profits
the hands of the farmers and
in Georgia will be
sufficient, to build the manufactories
for Georgia, with money saved within
Georgia’s own limits.
To my mind the home market idea is in¬
ridiculous, not only for the reasons
I have already given showing that the
of Georgia would prosper
reason of a reduction of the tariff, but
by examination of . the history of
states I find that the growth of the
under a protective system
taxation at the expense of the farmers
failed to build up the agricultural in-
ol the states where the manufactor¬
are located. Ours is a broad land.
transportation enables the consumer
find what he needs, if it gs within the
of the United States, and producer
consumer will come together without
to state lines. There is nu better
of this fact than the history of
MAssAt m'SE-n..
considered the typical manufac¬
state ol the country. From
to 1880 the capita! invested in manu¬
industries increased front $133,-
to $303,80(1,189; the number of hands
from 217,421 to 352,255, and the
of the annual product from $255,545,-
to $631,135,282. It will be a long time,
the most favorable auspices, before
Georgia manufacturing products can
expected to be worth so much (money.
how fared the agricultural interests of
in the meantime’.'
In I860 there were 35,105 farms valued at
in 188 there « . re 38,406 farms
at $116,197,415. Shore were 3,338,-
acres in farms in I860, and 3,369,079 acres
1880. There were raised in I860, in the
3,103.109 bushels of barley,
corn, oats, rye and wheat;
1830 only 2,819,656 bushels
raised, the amount of each crop fall¬
off from 56,000 bushels in buckwheat to
500,000 in oats.
In 1860 there were 509,638 horses, mules
cows, other cattle, sheep and swine;
1880 the number bad been reduced to
In I860 the farmers of Massachusetts
13,592,627 pounds of butter and
in 1880 they made only 10,485,115
In 1860 they raised 3,201,901 bushels of
potatoes; in 1880 they raised only
bushels.
In 1860 the population of Massachusetts
1,231,066, and in 1880 it was 1,785,085.
Out of Massachusetts' fourteen counties,
of them, in spite of the general in¬
in population from 1860 to 18f»,
a less number of inhabitants in
ami it is a fact that there are deserted
in every part of Massachusetts, and
the gain in population since 1860 has
entirely confined to the large towns
villages, the farming communities hav¬
either Iftst population or remained at a
If the enormous growth of the manufac¬
in Massachusetts did nothing for the
interests In the state, how can
be claimed that the farmer* of Georgia
be so wonderfully blessed by tbe
of our manufacturing interests?
You have been told that the protective
system originated in 1789 and received
first the approval of southern statesmen,
this fact is mentioned for the purpose
making you believe that a protective
will advance your Interests. You
also have been told that the
tariff bill, known as the “Ham¬
tariff,’’ was a tariff which aver¬
only 8 per cent on imports, and the
itself provided that it should cease at
end of seventeen years, for It was be¬
by the statesmen of those days that
8 per cent tariff lasting seventeen years
all the subsidy needed for the benefit
the manufacturing interests of this
Yet to-day the proposition to re¬
the 47 per cent tariff to a 40 per cent
is bitterly denounced as a free-trad*
Nor should you be misled by
claim that yotir Interests will be ad.
by tbe
OKXK1UI. PBOSPEB1TV
from a protective tariff,
I have not the time today to discuss the
of the tariff upon the laborers en
in protected enterprises. I am con¬
that for the work which be accom¬
the average American laborer re¬
no more pay than the Kuropean la¬
but of one thing I am sure, if he
more, the tariff does not affect the
for while the laborer is prevented
buying tbe necessaries of life at Eu¬
prices, nothing prevents Kuropean
lalior from coining over to this
to turn him out of his work or re¬
the amount of hi* pay
To show that the general growth of the
has not been produced by the pro¬
tariff, I give yon the following
facts which are obtained from an
source;
Under a low tariff, our population,
appears from the census, in¬
from 1840 to 1850 36 per cent.;
1350 to i860, ::5 per cent, In 1870, after
years of a high protective tariff the iu.
of population was 23 per cent,, and
1810 to 1880, 30 per cent.
According to the census of 1860. the value
our manufactures was $1,885,861,676, an
for ten years under a revenue
of ss per cent- The commissioner of
census, for the deeada of J860 to 1870,
the increase of manufacturss a*
per cent., and the increase from 1*70 to
at 58 per cent. These facts show that
increase of manufactures was greater
the Walker revenue tariff than un¬
the high protective tariff of Morrill
A* to wages, which wore extremely low
th* Warker tariff, under that tariff
rose steadily for fifteen years, nntll
On account of a depreciated rurrea-
wages wet* high from 1*00 to 1070, yet
1*70 to UNO Ussy fell 40 per cent., sad
the wage* of tbs meet highly pro¬
Iadostriee are lower than ever
The failures from 1873 to 187*
heavier than under all tbe year* of a
tariff for s generation. In 1*77 w#
more strikes, labor riots, lockouts—
eaforosd Mlans a s th e e ia aay tea
aedee partial tara trad*
taMe pray see d by **f ffbilpat.
—
% <
Warranted to color more goods than anv other
I S* <l6 > aIld W give more brilliant and
nifotSer Co or *' A “* for the Zhmond, and take
A A Dress Coat Colored Dfeti } 1 for /^
Garments A Child Renewed j C Eirr^.
can use them!
Unequalled for all Fancy and Art Work.
At druggists and Merchants. Dye Book free.
WELLS, RICHARDSON Sl CO,, Props,, Burlington, Vt,
SPECIAL ELECTION.
For Member of the LeglN-
latnre for Spalding Co.
OablNARi e Orru I8?fc. t- i i
ficALiiiBU Co , Gcori.ia, Not. 10,
By vntue of an order granted by Jno. B.
Gordon, Governor of Georgia, it is ordered
that tn election be held at the court louse
und in the various election oreoinels of the
County of Spalding on Tuesday, the 4th day
of Decemiier. 1888, for Representative General Assembly of the
County of Spnlding in the
ol the State of Ueorgia, to fill the vacancy
caused by the death of Hon Noah M. Ool-
’.en», Representative elcci to said General
Assembly. It ordered that this I*
1* fnrther notice
published in the Ueirrm Daily Nkws and
the Gulf riN Wbkki.i Skwh and the Griffin
Daily and Weekly Sun until the date of said
election.
Witness my hand and official fignstuie.
K W HAMMOVD
Ordinary iff Spalding County, Geotgi .
For Sete!
10 acres *ooi la- d lU-ifo ci,r|Hj uv linbts.
The wood will nearly pay for It, nnd then t In¬
land is worth ov*-r price Hfked for it .’43
acres, 100 in woods part inside of city lim¬
its. 5«t acres inside city limits 12 acres h
side city limits, with good n*w bouse house upon
it. 05 acres inside city limits, 1 room
outhouses, bams, fruits, Ac.
All above tab be divided in lo’sand sold
at Houses large profits. and lots in different portion* af tlie
city for sale and to rent
0. A. CUNNINGHAM,
Real Estate Agent
New Advertisement*
TO ADVERTISERS
A list of 1000 newspapers divided Into
STATES AND SECTIONS willle sent on
appl teat ion — FB E E.
To those who want their advertising to pay
we can offer n* better medium for thorough
ami efTectue work than the vsrion* sections
*f etlr Select Local List.
GEO. P. BO WELL A Go ,
Newspaper Advertising Bureau.
10 Spruce street, New York.
The Toy the Child Likes Best
—IS THE—
“ANCHOR”
Stone Building Bloch,
Heal Stonffi. Three Colon.
’ ACi.Kv**PKiM*!rr-ft>rchiUI
reu of all omr. for tl.rfl, or
$2.‘0 a good aTerage box.
Deneriptire Cataloena mat
I post free on application to
F. Ad. Richter & Co.,
910 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
•?».>, ,/ , -i .ut' ^rttalffii
FU J*. v i:\% Vs»M«r
of the Million, demonstrates that Oka coun¬
try has (rows mostrajddl.v finders revest >
tariff. •
per cm t. A,era,
ofiaciean p rrenl.nl
over preri- ia r c a • ••
oasd«> »'l- f .r ih.- tw -
forl*yrar, <1 e >■ a d . <
Lines of Progm*. under Wei- un<h i M< >
ker tariff. r 1 11 tai f
IHO-ISfV above Die
cenoita of
nw«.
)*opuUtlou .......... as.sl ai«.
Wealth ............... IM$ til.
Total Fojetifn ft.reixn commerce, commerc* per m | 4x*i
CH|lltft................. 19.9 UU
of rai .....
R.lrad. per capita.
Capital in m: sills, tare*
Total wage* in laauo-
fartnres...............j lSD.,1
Wages lisnit..............I in manufacture*
Products per
—...........
Value of farms..........
Farm tools and machio-
ery................. s;.t
Lire stock on farm.-. .! 17.3
In conclusion, let me urge you never to
be frightened from the support of princi¬
ples—right snd justice—by the clamor of
those who may taunt yon with defeat. A
great struggle has been made for tlie ben¬
efit of the masses of this entire country.
It has not been successful, but tlm tight
must still go on! There Is an effort by th*
combined monopolists to com .-titrate the
power and tbe wealth of (be Union into tbs
hands of a few, and they would snateli the
control of all things from the masses and
make ours a government bv th- moneyed
powers of the land, and the protective
tariff is one of the most efficient instru¬
ments by which they hope to reach suc¬
cess. Steadily and fearlessly we must
keep up our fight. If is one In behit'l ,f
the masses of the entire conn’ rv *-
peefnll v concerns til' • ir -
Approach the examination of th • ques¬
tion from any direct.o-, you ploaan, iniestl-
gate earnestly and honestly ami t, u-
cltuion must necessarily be that Georgia’s
prosperity and progress are i.rin - •• ra-
pered if not throttled by an tnsidt. i nil
unjust system of taxation which rob* us of
tbe profits of onr labor.
The object which I have in speakin? is to
appeal to each one of tnv hear¬
ers for an unpuieliasable support
of tariff reform in times of i ol t cal victory
and in times of political defeat.
(As Mr. Smith was about to leave the
stand he was asked to give his opinion of
the recent railroad deal in Georgia, snd be
said):
I feel no besitatiou in declaring my op¬
position to the temporarily successful com¬
bination which lots been made of the rail¬
roads of Georgia. The privilege:! which
railroad corporations are granted are
given for the good of the
entire state.
Combinations to prevent competiou by
railroad companies are forbidden by our
conatltution. That great, friend of the
people,
KOBERT TOOMBS,
a* iu the constitutional convention
of 1877, and provisions can there
1 properly used,
will protect the people of Geor¬
gia from the effort to bottle up
merchants and farmers by consolidat¬
ing the entire railroad interests of the
state. The legislature is now in session.
With the aid of the attorney-general a hill
can be prepared by which charters
can lie forfeited unless combi-
rs ions arc ah •>><* >6,. •, if
Georgia is to be protected against this un¬
hallowed coalition, now is the time for
action. Don’t wait uutil your hands have
become tied and your legislators controlled
by the captivating influences that will en¬
deavor to ensnare them. You will hear la
Athens that although you fouud it neces-
sarv to lev. r *" 0(1 , i- i o North¬
eastern railroad to protect yourselves
against the Georgia railroad, the
good gentlemen who have charge
of both these roads will favor
y, u, nil! arrange freights to suit
your merchants and build up Athens ia
preference to ary other city in Georgia.
The people of Savannah will hear that
theirs is to lie the greatest port in the un¬
ion, New York city scarcely excepted ; and
tbe people of Brunswick will be thoroughly
satisfied that their city is to be made larger
than Savannah. So on tluough the entire
list of cities of Georgia suggestions of in¬
tended preferences will be thrown out for
the purpose of leading astray the citizens
by an expectation upon i! e r part of
more than they are entitled to.
My friends. le uot allured
to sleep by such deceptive influence.
There is a higher staudard ban gam which
should move each citizen of Georgia ; it is
the standard of justice. No one city in tbe
state should seek an unfair advantage over
her sister city, and all of the cities in Geor¬
gia Bhould not be willing to combine to
seek an unfair advantage against the agri¬
cultural interests of the state. Wc should
all join hands to demand simple justice;
that justice which we will only obtain by
destroying the combination- unconstitu¬
tionally formed ond handled in the specu¬
lative marts of Wall street.
It is not my purpose to attack the pres¬
ent management, who bare endeavored to
violate tbe laws of Georgia by the contracts
which they have sought to make, lint to
call your attention to the fact that the
powers of to-day may not be the powers
of to-morrow. Railroad managements
change rapidly on Wall street, and there is
no telling who will be your railroad mas¬
ters by the rising of another son. The
combination which they have made will
enable them to make and unmake the
cities o{ Georgia; it will enable them to
place speculative Georgia. values upon our
property in ami from
what we all hear about Wall street there
is reason to tsar that some of iu business
men now and then engage in speculation*.
They will endeavor to parcel out our state,
and to crash oat all new railroad enter¬
prises; they will simply have us by th*
throat snd w# will he helpless, excel t^t
their will, unless ws hurl them to th*
ground. Inform your legislators that un-
leas they support measures which will pro¬
tect you from this railroad combination*
they can never expect to receive pour sup¬
port again.
Pimples. Sores, Ache* and Paint,
When b hundred bottles of sarsaparilla or
other pretentious specific* fail to eradicate
in-born scrofula or contagions blood poison,
remombpr that B B B (Botanic Blood
Balm! has gained many thousand victories,
in as many seemingly incurable instances
Sena U> the Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga„
for “Book iff Wonders,’ ’ and be convinced.
It Is the only true blood romrixu.
G. W Messer. Howell’s X Ronds, 6a.,
writes: “I was afflicted nineyears with sore*
All tbe medicine I could take did me no
good. I then tried B. B. B., and $ bottles
cured me sound.’’
Mrs. 8 M Wilson, Round Mountain, Tex
s. writes. “A lady friend of min* was trou
led with b nbs and pimples on her face
nd neck 8be took three bottles of B. B. B.
and her skin got ssft snd smooth, pimples die
appeared, Ja*. I,. tod her health improved greatly "
Bosvorth. Atlanta, G* . writes:
“Borne years ago I contracted blood poison
I had bo appetite, my digestion was rmne»l.
rheumatism hardly drew up my limb* sc { could
walk, my throat waa cauterized fivt
time* Hot Sprit p gave ms Bo benefit, snd
my life wasoue of tortureB».f! I gfiveB. B.
B a trial, and surprising a* it may seem,
the use of * bottles cured fisfi." novtfi-lni
WA T CITES
★ JEWELRY, ★
DINNER AND TEA
DECORATED LUSTRE AND PLAIN
ENGLISH GRANITE WARE.
DECORATED AND PLAIN CHINA
SETS. GLASS. TiN AND WOODEN WARE.
KENTUCKY COOKING AND
STOVES. SEE THEM AND PRICES.
NOVELTY CO.
BOOTS,SHOES AND
Hi)) affllSWMOID.u, s
Home-made Sho<‘8 and Lenther a Specialty.
2-&T We warra,.i all w.jrk anii ehaii make it* point to misrepresent noth
ing. Just re, ?iycd a large shipment of Gents, Ladies and Miwses fine goods
and school shoes for Children.
H. W. HASbEliKUS.
A. S. MURRAY
Call* vour attention to hi-
of Furniture
COMPLETE SUITOR SINGLE PIECES.
Suits ot 9 Pieces from $20 to $100. Tables, Chairs
Bedsteads, Spring Beds, Wardrobes. Etc.
A limited number of Kewius: Machines of the best
makes for sale eery low.
I am always ready to serve my customers, both
day and night.
Mrs. E. E. ( ,
20 HILL STREET,
-Hit SI1 TMV-
Latest: Styles: uf: Millinery
AND TRIMMINGS.
Stifihy Moat* best foods *afi all useriafi colors. Also. GcroMut-
wn Woos
^ «rftadfrw la* ' .fit
ii; fira ri nn» ( T i*to R - ta n >
-
—..
•smarts *U i
from
wttk.OT lands
■sake* SWSbftN l _
Ask yew Drag* tst.
E. R. Anthony, Griffin ar d VI V, Swie
Ochard Hill, (in.
WE PAY AGENI S’SiSRS’.E’'
AND ALL EXPENSES. To travel or for hr.
csl work; SLOAN rlstc which preferred- Mnrolfacturcrs."A*4 also salary
wanted. A DO..
George 8t., < ini innati. O. novtBMTt
----------------------
Administrator’* Hale
By i trine of an order granted COfiblj, by the court
of rdinsri.of the h gi.ccObiddr HpaMtng before the we eOBit will
sell to »
tion.-e d or ii, <i itfinduring the legal honrs
■ ff-lie, on the first Tuesday In D > ember,
loa.ilc fo’iowii.g property belonging to
the < st.iic ,-f 3'm. Fcolt, late of -aid county,
le . cl loi iliepuipu-c of distribution
.•rnongst II < heirs, lo wit: At-ont two hoii-
ii, i d \< r3y acre* of land, rnor or less,
Ijm in L i e i re. k dj-plot, in said county,
all in one body and known as the land that
Was -ct rpHtl as n rtowevto Mrs, N»iu*y
Scott out of tlie r slate of Win. Scott, dc
cased, *a' il bounded *s follows: On t 1 e
north b; Glenn Sanson, • sst by S. A, Scott
son'll by F. M Scott, west by W.V. Miffiaid
Land Land III in elegant elegant netgborhood. Nearvliurch-
es and - bools. Moet desirable i roperty,
Terms e*-h S. A St 0TJ\
V M, SCOTT,
Adrn’rs de lamia non Win. Broil, dee d
$6 O').
For Sale.
Old Poor Farm of Spalding Go.
Situated about four miles from the court
house, consisting of -’ riVf sen s of land, of
which about 45acres in the w oils Contain*
a good five room dwelling house, one tenant
house in good repair, crib two good stables and
one good corn
To be sold on terms of >* wish, balance at
one and two veal's, with Interest.
VI 1'ATRIUfc. _
T J BROOKS.
T. K MILLS,
pllAon.VwtdecI County Commissioners
Farm and House and Lot For Sal*
A 202’ , acre farm in 3 miles of Griffin, tie
86 acres in wood*, 126 ia splendid Mate
cultivation, eloarsd of stumps and rock*, lit-
»d for stock, improved farm machinery. will Machin¬
ery, corn Rnd fodder lie sold with
farm If wauled. All ready for fmsines* a noth
I er year. Also.* large roomy house and
acre lot in Griffin, (ia. For particulars
dress me at Griffin, care I’lark A Son.
septlOdAwSiu THAI) CLARK.
HAIR BALSAM!
Clfixttaoff *n<1 hGAutlflee the halcv
Pi.Griotee at 1 ixtiriftot growth.
Never Feilt to Rector*
Heir lo H* VeolhlWI Color. feUiSH
OurBffiBr«Jj)(H»»*aBr«*fi<} hair
m£rnJlim£2MM!Si£m HH
HINDER CORN 8 .
*e cure. 16 cwnU at I)ivigjrlf»t* ilicool
DecemberSberiffsSales
awor or me court noose, in me city m uro-
&‘!K3»^V Fifty of land c 3F‘*’ less, '“f in L'aicn 1 ”
acre* more or
District, Sp-dingCounty, II, Georgia, bounded
on the nirrtii by **. Og It tree,, west in
land of Mrs, Andrews, south by land of H,
It Gibaoo and t homes Head, cast by wad
of Richard (ilb«on. tsivied on and sold ss
lb* property of H. T. Gitmon bf V*M*e of
a it fa Issued from 8 pal (ling Hope rior Court
tn favor of A. Y. Bizzell vs. N. T.Oibeo*.
M Y Gibson, tenant ia poseemioB,
notified. snd (
Alan, st the sstne time clsra. will ha
sold 35 acres of land In the lOotith district of
Spalding County, said land bring the south
cast corner of Mid lot that ia north of th* 8a-
bounded on the north by a part of said tot
number 63, east by 1', rl.In* Brothers, seett M
bj road dfivsBnah, and Griffin and North Alabama Lev- rail
west by J. II. Htarr, t rust* *
Ld on snd sold as the property of Lory K.
Ri eves lo satisfy three ft fas Issued from the
Justice court of the 1068th district G. M. le
favor snd of E. fit T. Issued Croedcr vs. Lory 1068th K. Berra, district
one e from the
G VI tn favor off. C. King for tbe u* at
Malcolm Meissen rs. Lucy K. Reeves end C.
U. it. Wilson. <d turned Levy made by Tenant B. C. Hoed, ia L,
a over to me. ftf.CIO, pose**
«i,>n Also, legally the notified. time and place, will he
at same M
•old fifty acres of IsnJ in the Holding 1009th dirt riot
Guorgut. of originally Henry now county,
being the southeeetconmr of let ■M
min er 40 of said district, and branded
north of O. by L. lands Dupree, of Jr. T. E. and Smith, fir, south cast by land -
Mrs. Kendall 8. C. * Levied Milam, ---------------- west the by land rty ■ ?
on ss p ro pe o
J. 3. Beasley Bcaslc, to ,u satisfy Mu.i( on* uu. 6 » fa i issued frees
Justice court of the 1068th district#. M. In
favor of A.8. ftf.W. M nr r* r, e motors of
A. O. Morrey, ri. J. I. ffesily. Ad other jas-
tirc coart • fas io my bands. Le vy made by
HU. Meed, L. U , and turned over to me.
1 J. Beasiy, tenant in possession, legally
notified. 96.00.
A lap, at the same time snd place, Loose »«l be n
sold one two story brick (tore ob east
side of Hill street, Griffin, U«wgto, defidnSedst rampied
a* n hardware store and fnrtlter
nlug beak », feet nsofie or lam and
bounded d south hy fin alley oi avenue. Lev
led on and nd sold as the prratnty of Chas, H,
Johnson, % Hr., Hpefdlng , by virta* __________ of s mortgage fi fa ■M
issued from Superior
or of John Neal vs. Chaw. H. J
Tenant 16,00. in l>''•session K. 8. CONNELL, legally i
I
Ordinary'* Advfirtl
i xjn, hRDINABY’B OFFICE—Srsr.Diwo^ors 1888.—Henry
Gsonota, Jfov. Mb, C m
Burr, executor at Rhode H. Doe, beeRtopli*
to me for leave to sail two city tototf firiSm
to-wit; One two room bones r
n*r of and IMh and four Poplkx , I
acre, Taylor one room tot on
street, one acre, of th* property of
rl I'l, , 1 ^ u Doe's T l [t * — fifitau, . i.iOi i. X— ,_ late X —. of .. w said .. w m eounty, — - — — - . —
dec cosed. _
Les all person* cunceniod
•———
niwmn,
KLiSlif. ij
j
Let fill
tore tl
D^etbm leave*
fUcb s
tSJOO EJ
■ li i
Lawton, ri sK,: ha* applied ;LW.!£L£saiS& to me wm » sen
, ,
by land of Di smoko ends. ------
by land of 8, H. Wilson, to
H Wilson and A. R. Lawtoti
Dlsmnke.; L sold for distribution, a» the proper mi-
ty of M. Lawton, Into of mid ommty,
ceased. i *
I*t ell persons concerned show cats* be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county at
my December, office in 1888, Grutn,, c- the o’eloclr, first Monday to m
by ten «. **., why
su.’h leave chould not be granted.
ff .00 __K. W . HAMMOND, Ordinary
( \H I > fN A RY’W'oF FH E-S e* lpmo Cot*
G. t/ Matthews, Tl, Gkokou, administrator Mot, 2nd, estate 1*8$.—Joe. of io~ •0M
on
sephene Vadgett. has applied
leave to aell the lends belonging
tate for the purpose of paying the (
said deceased.
Let ell person* ounce road show erase be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary, at my effioe in
Griffin, on the first Monday in ttoeembfil 1888
by ten o’cloc k, a. m., why such leave should
Dot be granted.
*3 00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/"'VRDINART’S VT OFFICE -Srau>aaCoi%
Stanley, tt, Gepaou, Oct. of 87th, fiam'I 18HU4L M-
administrator Ballsy k*»
a >piied to me for letters of diemieeton from
s administration on the estate of gam’l
Hailey, late nf of said Miitd county, rntmtv. deceased. ilrrMuml ' £
Let ell persons concerned show coagt be¬
fore the court of Ordinary of sold county,
st my office In Griffin on the first Monday
in February, letters should 1880, by ten o’clock a. m., why
such uot he g< smed.
*6.15. E. W HAMMO!«D,Ordinary.
Administrator’s Bale.
of By ordinary virtue of of ati order granted by the court
; highest bidder Hpaldiag county, 1 will sell to
tlie before the oourt house
, door in Griffin dnringtbc legal boom of sole
j on tbe first Tuesday in Deceuilwr, 1868, the
; following property belonging to the estate
| of Nancy bcott,late of raid county, deceased,
I for the purpose of distribution amongst the
heirs, to- wit: Twenty-two sores of lend more
: or less, in Line Creek district of said coun¬
ty in the northwest corner of lot No. eighty
seven, Flint l«ing all vf said let on west side of
river, adjoining lands of F. M. Jt g. A.
B< ott on the northwest and south, raid lends
in churches. good neighborhood, Terms near sohools
[ easb.
T. M. SCOTT, Administrator
I6.0C. of Nancy lloott, deceased.
Executors’ Sale.
By virtue of an order from the eoert of
Ordinary, door will Spalding he sold before the court
house of county iu the city of
Griffln,on lb«fln»; Tuesday in December next,
between the legal hours of sole, that part of
land lot So. 12 In Fourth district of originally
Henry, thea Fayette, now Spalding w7Gordon, county, oeiw
which was owned by Jas. *®
deceased, iy iug ia Ml. Zion district and ' 4
106 les*. con
tainlug acres, more or Also, one
. undivided half iup rest in the lot on VbeZcb-
nlon road in lhe city of Griffin known m the
Henry Alexander lot, said lot contoiwtotg i
; ' of let an will acre sold, more 8. or Gran lee*. (The whole afi.su
tie tl and owning K |g.
I lerest, consenting.) Sold as tbe pro
] the benefit estate of of A. G. and Murray, deceased. fit!
heirs creditors,
feet. Term- of sale, one-half rarh,
j in twelve month- with interest st*i
alf.x. r
*" s.xrr
t$. uu.
4-V- V — rao---..
*7
Guardian’s
By virtue of an order i
of groatod ■deary at of
sej
the highest *oh1
door of 1
gel baeweof aal%< 8BSC?j>v
vmbft next.
corwor w* i
uudogaae NsHptare