Newspaper Page Text
'*y
/
■
» be counted
«4^
n , m r
* forth* Daily
, *.!-*
salary of *0000 per
ill have the privilege of
» over six million dol-
-work '■"'
fe" : ■•*■ -•.’-. .......■
been elected
l Bank, ha« beta
, hkf bond being fixed at
f Times got out
t last week. It
i full of good read-
i was sent to every
the good old county
* . -I ■ > «*-
a problem gives our
1* great concern. It
which dlitftikcc magni*
will celebrate
“1 with the
i” ever seen in
. ___ centennial arch
i square will be . surmounted
pjri »twenty-four feet from
"
ilf? relatives to the scope o
as
the question of an independ-
for woman is
There are some
-
yettb be
on the whole, the
the last few years has
Marriage under
itances can no longer
i the sine qua non of
istence. The question
and unsett
(New York Press, a rabid
organ, thinks that the
will kiii the pending
ballot reform bill and
long will the Democracy be
to obstruct a free and pure
it interferes with
?” The Ohio general
f has refused to pass a
re. How long will
allowed to obstruct a free
ballot because It
The
and the most efficient
in any of the
enacted by the
iSP-. . ______________as of Indiana
---w-
The Manufacturers’ Record,
Baltimore—the South’s great
trial exponent—of which it has
said that it is “the most
i Industrial paper in the
not coniine its sphere to
a ring interests of
Uaa, but covers every line of
looking to the advancement
prosperity of the South, aqd with
last issue commenced the
of * complete weekly list of
new private and national bank
anywhere in the South.
activity in the establishment
one of the surest
cations of the South’s
•prosperity, it is interesting to
ufacturers’ Record among
and other capitalists in New
*nd New England, who look to
for information about the opportu
nities for investment in the South,
makes thk new feature ol great
ve to the people of all sections of the
c ° Bntr ^-
I ________
THE OKLAHOMA MIRAGE.
f The rush for Oklahoma is one of
unreasoning movement#
ever been been started in
'■'"*** West. The land there is only
ialr for faming purposes; there are
tow timbered tracts, and, while there
is plenty of water all over the dis¬
trict, much of it ts bod and almost
unfit for use. Take it all in all, the
, -npportanities for locating valuable
i are apt half ae good as have
oBered is some of the Western
In the last ten years,
fe nothing Strang* in the
for newly discovered gold flejds;
the prises are few, they are rich
to blind the prospectors to
and sufferings they
to endure in mining camps.
• W uc "
:• • f,
*IW" ,
:> Mt-
a reaaonlng «niu— —
ham become prevalent
Territory m a land of plenty,
motto k, “Oklahoma of
| vrlll be a cane of 'bust'’ in-----
oat of ten.
Georgia lu»* juet aa good farming
lands and almost as cheap'as Okla¬
homa. We want no boomers on it,
however, bat settlers with more
money and fewer revolvers.
There in more Catarrh in this section of the
country than nil other diseases put. together,
•ml until the hut tew year* wax supposed Do*- to
h* ineurai**. For» (treat many yen™
tore pronounced It a local disease, and pre-
scribed local remedies. local and raent,^renounc¬ l»y constantly
failing Smut-abb*. tocare with treat catarrh
ed it Science ha* proven
to he »constitutional disease, and therefore
require* constitutional treatment. Halls
Catarrh Core, manufactured by P. J. Cbeney
A Co.. Toledo. Ohio, I* the only constitution¬
al cure on the market, it is taken internally
in dost* from 10 drops the to a blood tsoapooiiM. and It
acts writhe directly upon They offer mu bun-
sysb one
TWO LONDON LITERARY WOMEN*
Pm Sketches of Mrs. Cashel Uoey md
Mrs. Campbell Pr*<-<1.
named is an Irish lady of about 60 or
66, short, stout, round faced and al¬
dressed—according to t< American
ideas—very unfaahionably, The queen
dowdify of the grand army of
dresse jd would old English Ameri- ladies,
whose apparel drive an
can woman crazy if if fitting she she were were bodices, obliged obliged lore to to
shawls, wear it Loosely plainly band¬
ed hair—natural enormous caps, “scratch”—mitts
or a
and ^rs,a°J reticule, are component «fiw parts of
c
and becoming while the thing yellow for stanned, elderly thin wo¬
men f of ela-
old woman, with an abundance
one of the most offensive of American
products, and if English the constant pencils subject
of derision from pens,
and voices, !
Although Mrs. Cashel Hoey has
been for many years before the pub¬
lic as a writer, and has produced ex¬
cellent work in Action, she has never
been fortunate enough to achieve a
wonderful paying success. She has
told me that about her *8,600, earnings average *60 week. £800
a s&gfasasfE year, or a
very thoiarger highly, part ana of —__„_______..... her ” income *- is de¬
rived from America. ?.
Having formed a literary with partner- John
‘ for copyright purposes able to protect
10 Harpers are
for
SSULS2". member of tho counsel for
permanent the management of the Prince of
Wales’ Rothesay estates. This office
brings him a financially salary of £1,000 well per an¬
num, so that as Hoey as so-
dally, Mr. and Mi*. Cashel are
in Mrs. an enviable Campbell position. Freed is graceful,
a
delicate young woman about 88. She
comes of a good family, and the
of her husband is also that of one
the gentility. dresser, and 8he is far a charmingly her health ar¬
tistic aa with as and
will permit associates a gay
fashionable set. Her novels are wide-
Of vulutt. 4.IICJV two restricted ui a wsi wwu the buusu de¬
brilliant, but are to
lineation of scenes and manners of a
fast and loose class of people—a kind
only too prominent in large cities in
this feverish ago. Her literary style
violates all canons of the art, as under¬
stood and studied by more serious
writers; nevertheless, periods, there fascination is a gla¬ in
mour in her character a
her study of whioh causes a
reader to pursue her fiction breath¬
lessly to the end, and then tossing it
away, vowing that tho time spent in
reading it might and should be more
Praed profitably has employed. been America, Mrs. Campbell having
in
The Causa of Their
It transpires that the estrangement
between Crown Prince Rudolph and
the present emperor of Germany grew
out of a remark made by the latter
/some years before Rudolph hfe accession had been to the
throne. Ho and on
very friendly terms and one day in
conversation William stated that if he
er became emperor his policy would
conducted on the same lines as that
Frederick the Great. To this Prince
idolph always retorted included that the Frederick’s destruc¬
lemes
tion of the Austrian empire. Prince
TFilliaixi did not disclaim great his intention
imitate the emperor, and
coolness arose between the
to crowns which was never
San Francisco Chronicle.
The Invalids Hope.
Many seemingly incurable cases of blood
poison, catarrh, scrofula ood rheumatism
have been cured by B. B. B. (Botanic Blood
Balm), made by the Blood Balm Co., Atlan
ta. da. Write to the® for book Ailed with
convincing proof
0 W. B, Balder, living seveumrie* Irom Ath¬
ens. ,Ga„ writes: “For several years I suffered
with running ulcers, which doctors treated
and B. pronounced B. Incurable. good A single than all bottle the
of B. did me more
doctors. I kept on using it and every nicer
^S^. We Induced Kinard neighbor A Son, Towalig*. to B. Go., B. B. write: for
a thought try incurable, it
catarrh, which he delighted m
had resisted^al) treatment It Ultin
uml wsih*?' t ;• 'l' “Jfy
R. If, Lawson, East PointGa , writes!
wife hod scrofula 15 years. She kept grow-
sng worse. She lost her hair arid her skin
ssss
«3
rpy
T
—.......... where we naturally
look for oar It Is these
consolidated lines which peopled the
great Northwest. Look at the maps
of the Northern States west of Penn¬
sylvania, and you will see it covered
with large black lines running east
and west, representing consolidated
lines of railroads, thousands of miles
in length. Traee with your finger
the lines of the “Great Rock Island
Route,” and will — that it -
you see per¬
meates Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Da¬
kota, Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas
and Colorado. Follow the lines of
the Chicago, Burlington A Quincy,
one of the finest equipped roads in
the United States, which operates
two thousand miles of road in the
States of Illinois, Iowa and Missouri.
Notice the permeating lines of the
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul rail¬
way as they stretch through Illinois,
Wiscsnsin, Minnesota, Dakota, Iowa
and Missouri—five thousand three
hundred and seventy-four miles in
all. Farther West we find the Atchi-
Topeka &, Sante Fe railroad,
running through Kansas, Colorado
and New Mexico, 'a road which may
be aptly called “a pioneer of civiliza¬
tion,” being built in advance of any
population through what was
designated on the map as the
American Desert.” On the
running entirely through and
ing the principal points in the
of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, we
the great Pennsylvania Bystem,
prising two thousand fire
and ninety-five miles. In
through Ohio and Indiana, the
gia Exhibit Car ran over this
alone five hundred miles,
at four large fairs at points
by its lines. These great lines
only afford ample facilities
splendid accommodations for
porting prospectors and
from the East to the West, but
reason that they have long
and do not have to divide the
with a number of other
neither do they have to go
the tedious process of obtaining
knows what a tax of time and
tience it requires to obtain such
sent but those who havegone
the mill, (84 roads in Southern,
in Central). Take the Chicago,
waukee & St. Paul, for instance,
it desires to populate the
along its line in Minnesota and
kota, it has only to fix its own rates
advertise a series of excursions,
it carries thousands on a train.
it makes a business of running
extensively advertising such
sions every summer, just when
far North territory looks its
when its fields are green, its
ripe, and the glow of summer
the temperature to a
warmth, Nor is }t alone for qll
great roads do the same thing,
last August, when I was North
my exhibit car, the country
flooded with posters and
and you could not pick up a news
paper without seeing anoticeof
excursions, J teti yon that the
roads are the great factors in se
curing an increase of population
wealth, and we must secure their
before we can reasonably hope
aqy great measure of success
East of the Mississippi river
is but one great line running North
and South through both Northern
and Southern States. I allude to
Illinois Central railroad, which ex
tenfis from the southern
of Dakota to New Orleans, running
through the States of Iowa, Illinois,
Kentucky, Tennessee and
a distance of ope thousand
hundred miles, This road is
much along for the South along
line in securing immigration. Every
winter it runs a series of cheap ex
cursions from Iowa to New Orleans,
affording the excursionists ample op¬
portu nitv to inspect the country.
The result of these excursions is espe¬
cially seen in Louisiana, for a number
of Iowa farmers have taken up waste
prairie lands and are meeting with
success in raising grass and live
stock. The timber lands are also
bring taken up, and mills are being
erected by Northern lumbermen,
What we in Georgia especially need
at this time, to people our State and
develop Its rich and varied resources,
is a great through line to and into
the North, under one management,
which can give ns cheap rates of
transportatipn, prgapize excursions
and advertise them. Such a linecan,
of course, only be secured by the
consolidation of a number of smaller
lines, as all the great systems I have
” L.
• • - : ...
...
rafipnpw
- y
o! the Central
, oflmmigration
mg year,
While
etted that Georgia, as
not, like many of
State#, undertaken this
work, we are to be congratulated
that at the the work is not to be left entire-
& undone, and that we have within
our limits a corporation with soul
and enterprise enough to undertake
the burden and expenses. And now
I ask this Society, which has so
large an interest in this work, and is
so closely identified with it, for a
continuance of that hearty endorse'
ment and co-operation which it ex¬
tended the past .rear, believing that
in so doing it will practically and
substantially advance the agricul¬
tural interests of the whole State.
The President—The address of Ma¬
jor Glessner is now before the Con¬
vention for discussion.
Mr. DeWolf, and others, spoke
briefly on the subject of immigra¬
tion.
Mr. Nichols—Mr. President, I have
watched with great interest the ex¬
periment inaugurated by Major
Glessner, and I wish to ask the Ma¬
jor with reference to the feelings of
the people of the Northwest towards
immigrating to the South—I did not
hear the earlier part of the Major’s
report—if those who are able to
make investments can be induced to
come out here. Now, since the ex¬
periment has been made that stock
raising can be successfully prose¬
cuted here in our country, and it is
no longer a matter of experiment, I
would like to know iftbe advantages
of our soil and climate os a stock
raising country, if they should be
presented to the people of the North¬
west, whether those gentlemen there
who are engaged in this work, if
they could have presented to them
our mildness of climate and other
facilities for stock raising could
be induced to immigrate to our
State.
.jzsz-zrs&iz ply ™ v to to the the gentleman, that I found
among those people a disposition to
move South, in order to get out of
the rigorous* climate, but at the
same time it mb at be remembered
I bad made some efforts previoi
that time—for instance, three years
ago I got up an excursion of Ohio
farmers, to come down to Americus
Last year and this year I am just
realizing from that excursion
am now having a number of parties
come dp wn and settle in Georgia. But
we have to remember this one thing
—a man cOmea down to look first,
and to see whether he would Uke
to live in our country, to see
whether it will suit him - You may
get up an exhibit and show him
what he can raise, but he wants to
see what his associations will be.
When he finally makes up his mind to
move here, he has to go back tp the
North and sell oyt hfe farm there.
He cannot always sell at his own
time-just when he wants to—with¬
out making a great sacrifice. He
cannot do this any more than you
can sell him. I know many of these
men would like to come South, if
they could selj opt their farm? where
they are. 1 have had persons say to
me that It paid them lees than three
per cent, on investment. If there
were only two or three years in which
good crops could be raised, then there
would be no difficulty in their selling
their farms. I think we have Induce-
ed a great many to get into the no¬
tion of moving to the South, and I
know they are looking this way and
inquiring after particular tracts of
land that have been advertised—
about the number of acres they
wanted—and that information we
are giving them gM thp time. I have
parties coming along—coming down
to examine the country. One great
trouble we have had, is in securing
rates* I cannot give a rate any
where north of the Ohio river. I
have got to get the consent of every
railroad to that rate. We can give
them rates from Cincinnati. How
this matter of rates has been in our
way, for those large lines of railroads
in the North and West have beengiv*
ing what they call “land excursions,”
and have been giving them a very
low rate, l>ecause they can afford it.
They lines w«ut the territory along their
peopled, These lands have, to
a great extent, now been filled up,
and the tide of emigration will likely
turn toward the South.
Dr. Green—Mr. President, I was
very much interested in the Major’s
address, especially that part of it
which spoke of the kind feeling be¬
tween the two sections ©four country,
and was gratified to hear Mm say
that the old feeling of bitterness is
fast passing away, Y tW mvr fnlnnil
bom
inMNi
of the South and people,
U ptolive'm all his
the for Northwest
sure he would sell out his farm
and come to Georgia. If you can do
anything to let these people know
that they will be received with open
arms, and that their rights will be
protected, f am satisfied the emigra¬
tion from the Northwest will
a very great impetus. _
President Nortbern~In the history
of our State, so far aa I have
it, I really believe that no
ever begun promised more good to
the people of Georgia than that which
you have heard described by Maj.
Glessner. I am glad to know
this 8ociety thinks well of it.
New Advertisements.
Road Carts! S 5
Ten per than cent, an" ^‘ per Buggies!
year Don’buy before getting oar price*and
Titl's PiBs
FOR TORPID LIVF.R.
A^p WW v^aeea-geaenawhe /«*
Sick Headache, Costiveness, Rheu¬
Dyspepsia, and Piles.
matism, Sallow Skin
Sold Everywhere,
(Continued from yesterday.)
The Georgia Midland HR
(Shortest and Best Line
With. Through Conch
es Between
COLOIBOS and ATLANTA.
ONLY ONE CHANGE TO
Washington, New York,
|Nash> ille or Cincinnati.!
Schedule in Effect Sunday, Jan. 6,1889.
TRAIN NORTH
Leave Union Depot, Columbus.... IKK p. m.
::::>;::x•*
south Bound train
Leaves Atlanta....................3:16p. Griffin—........*.......4:05 “
Leaves
Arrives in Colambns.............7.-06 “
ACCOMMODATION TRAIN.
NORTH BOCKB— (BAILT EXCEPT SUNDAY),
Leave Columbus—Midland depot, 6:50 a.
Arrives at Griffin.................3:30 p.
Arrives at McDonough........ .3:35
SOUTH BOUND-(DAIDT EXCEPT SUNDAl).
Leave Atlanta ................... .8:50 a. m
Leave McDonough................8:50 *•
Leave Griffin.......... 8 30 **
Arrive Columbus, Midland depot,.3:05p. vo
SPECIAL TRAIN—Sunday Osu.
Leave Oolnmbus—Union Depot. 8:35 a.
Arrive Griffin......,,..... 11:40
Arrive McDonough.............13:30 Atlwita...............1:10 p. “
Arrive at
*" RETURNING— South Bound.
Leave Atlanta............... ..6:50 a. m.
Leave McDonough...............7:35 «
Leave Griffin.....................8:86 “
Arrive Columbus—Union Depot, 11:35 “
Ask for tickets to Atlanta and fe, points he-,
yond over the a|Uniopl)epot, Georgia Midland and at the Tkk- office
etson sfile
M. X. GBAV, Supt.
C. W, 0HEARS, Columbus, Ga.
Gen’1 Pom. AkL
preferred whole who can furnish a horse Spare and give
their time to the business. mo
ments may be profitably employed cities. also. B. F 3
lew vacancies in towns and
JOHNSON A CO., 1009 Main St., Richmond,
Va.
N. B.—Ladies employed also. Never mind
about sending stamp for reply. Come quick.
Yours for bit. B., F. J. & Co. ap3wedfiiq
HINDERCORNS.
PARKER'S GINGER TONIC
The bell of all remedies for
Inward Pains, Colic, Iodises,
the most' effective cure for
Coughs. Colds, Bronchitis and
affections of the breathing
overcomes fiv« aervou* life and prostration. strength
and new. and f PtfpmO. .
to the weak and aged. 50c, r*»ft
'
Liquor Habit, Positively Ct:
«t Aramimiun ml maim? noun ikkm
MaSSiSSSSf!”.
FOR MEN ONLY!
cum:
f JBf! Wo
Ibe troubled with
taken and B.
‘ given tbs
> 1
man, a 1
■
'iWfeiL __ _ .........
After symptoms. Dyspepsia does
_ not get well of Itself, B
Eating „ requires careful, persistent
attention, and a remedy like Hood’s Sarsa¬
parilla, which acts gently, yet surely and
efficiently. It tones the stomach and other,
organs, <£d regulates the digestion, creates a
g appetite, ami by thus SJ fc
overcoming tho local symp- .. _v. . _ ....
toms removes the sympa- MOallnUnu
theUe effects of the disease, banishes the
headache, and refreshes the tired mind.
<• I have been troubled with dyspepsia. I
had but little appetite, and what I did eat
u . distressed mo, or did me
r ’ ean " Utfla good. In an hour
bum after eating I would expe¬
rience a faintness, or tired, all-gone feeling,
as though I had not eaten anything: M y tr °u-
blc, I think, was aggravated by my business,
which is that of a painter, and from being
more or less shut up In a q 0 ur
room with fresh paint. Last
spring I took Hood’s Sarsa- oiomaun
rflla—took throe bottles. It did me an
iuunenso .amount e f good. It gave me an
appetite, aud lay food rdf shed and satkfled
the craving I had previously experienced.”
Geokok A. Facie, Watertown, Mass.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Prepared only
Sold by ail druggets. $U six for ^
by C. 1 HOOD & to., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
.
IOO Doses One Dollar
THE GRIFFIN OIL MILL
<4 .
i
Application tor Charter.
GEORGIA, \
Spalding County, j
To the e Superior Su’ Court of said county:
W^ petition of M. L. Bates, R. H. B. it. Blakely, J.
Bates, T. P. Bell, Drake and
the name of
“The Griffin Oil Mill.”
The capital stock of smd company will be
(120,000) twenty thousand dollars with the
privilege of increasing thousand the dollars, gameto divided ($100,000) into
one hundred
shares of (f 100) one hundred dollars each.
The business of said company not to com¬
mence until paid 15 per cent, of the capital stock
has been in.
The officers of said company shall consist
of five directors to be chosen annually by the
stockholders: from said directors there shall
be elected a President, Tice President, Secre¬
tary and Treasurer.
The objects of,said corporation shall be to
erect and operate a cotton seed oil mill and
an oil refinery;-the ; -the said said manufacturing manufacturing of of soaps desire
into such forms d as as company may
and the Belli' of the same, and to do each
sonai property HRP is , Mi to the
as necessary success¬
ful carrying ontaaid manufacturing enterpris¬
es. To take botes, deeds, mortgages and
other securities for goods and property sold as
they To see proper. and besued. plead and benitpleaded
sue
and have a common seal.
ed aa^ required 1 them under th
the full term of
twenty years with the righl of renewal, with
fuB power to Cary on snch '‘i®*
said and to exercise all powers nec fe
successfully contemplated contemplated accomplish by such such the objects
titioners by corporation. corporation. And pe¬
will ever pray, etc,
M. L. BATES,
B. R. BLAKELY.
W. A. BATES,
B. T. H. P. BELL, DRAKE,
.
J. F. NICHOLS.
GEORGIA-I-Spalding County,
1 seal of said Court
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
Mills, capital
ten shares :stock of Central RR,
Company amonir nountmgtofour npai of Georgia, hundred one inter- dol-
due by some Cor Company, ior distribution.
the /Let all persons 1 coneerne med show cause before
Court of Ordinary of said county, at my
office in Griffin, on the first Monday in May,
1889, should by ten he o’clock a. m., why such leave
not E, granted.
$3.00. W. HAMMOND. Ordinary.
/ VRDINARY’S OFFICE-S ING CoUN-
V/ tv, Georgia, April 3rd, 3 To John
J. Jordan, executor of P. P. . Smith, Smith, deceased deceased;
The heirs of deceased have applied to me to
cite of Ordinary you and your coexecutor before settlement the court
of this executors. county, for a
of yonr accounts ns
_ You Are therefore notified to
ment as in default the Court will proceed in
your absence to make such settlement.
$3.00. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
POSTPONED
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA— Sr adding Counti.
By virtue of an order from the court of Or-
pary of Cobb county, Georgia, will be gold on
the Court first Tuesday door in in Spalding May. 1889, County, be .'are Gcor- the
house
gia, lot lying between in the the city legal of fate Griffin hours, and a State certain cf
Georgia, plan of said Rrown elty of and Griffin diatlneuishel lot number in four the
as
(4) taining in ing square half half number twenty-nine less. i29), 1
one one acre acre more more or or ices, Said
acre to be divided into three lots of equal
size. Two lots rutminj ning north and south
street, the he remaining cne-third
Sj Iteuse on corner of
lor.oi. raota as pa.mi uicvavaveoissia tieuv
Taylor, of deceased, bpirs, Term* far payment of debts al d
benefit Nov. one-half cash, balance
interest f Hyalite from date 1st, of 1a89, sale. with eight rer Cent,
ANDREW 3. ROGERS,
Administrator o(Betty Taylor,
$§32, Cash
bofibred to the person who shall rend n die
.largest number of yearly subscribe*a to vho
Ladies’Home \raod July t-t, 1 Jouiml
WajM&RiCU. -?U, at 00 cun to
,fe- iffi.'WO'Pna* Wit A*(I
> foobeekt;
n j ..11 f.«-
al, if desired, irittvod of
of dollars can to mode
era, Ac. Address
CURTIS PUBLISHING CO.
PHILADELPHIA, PA,
i
FAMED FOR TWENTY Y[
For Integrity of its Ora
Prompt Payments
Attested a* follow*:
“We do hereby certify that we am
tery Company, and in person mas
and authorise in good the faith Company toward all na^' thU^- 1
to use
our counters:
Grand : Monthly s Or
At the Academy of Musie, New L
Tuesday May 14, 1889, m
Capital Prize, «;*00,Or
100,000 Tickets at Ttrenty Dollars | 1
Halves $10; Quarters $5; Tenths-fjJ;
tieths $1, 9a
UST OP PHIZES.
1 Phize op $300,000 is............
1 Prize op 100,000 is............ j*
1 Prize op 50,000 is
1 Prize op 25,000 is
2 Prizes op 10,000 are...
5 Prizes op 5,900 are...
25 Prizes or 1,000 are...
100 Prizes op 500 are...
200 Prizes op 300 are...
500 Prizes op 200 are.......
approximation prizes. 2
100 Prizes of $500 are..................
100 do. 300 are.......
100 do. 200 are..................
TERMINAL PRIZES. vn jaSM ;
99 Prizes of $100 are..................
do. 100 are.......
3,184 $||
Note— Tickets drawing Capital F
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«* OBISAB* HXTUHA1 BAX]
New Orleans, i*
■JSWK
May Sheriff’s Sales.,
the WSSIMSS Court House, in the city of Griffis, BpMJ
lug County, Georgia, the foUawi#g
ing ing one County, hundred Georgia, acres.said bound land
north hy land of C. S. Westmorela:
land «fW, J. Ellis, south by the t
Griffin A North Alabama Railroad, and west
land of W. J. Ellis. Levied on ft I
Court satisfy in one favor fl fa issued Frank from W. balding Stanley
of vs,
E. Ellis, administratrix of W. J. Ellis, 4
ly ed. notified, Mary E. E1U», tenant inpoeaeesitWj
Also, at t he same time and place, will to*
weet Griffin, half of lot No. 82, about two mihefi
of bounded north by Mt. 7&o#
and land of Geo. C. Stewart, on the eM
Mrs. McDowell and D, H. doh*»ou, johuSoii
south by by lands road of Mrs. It, C. the J
west a running from
road to the Allen Thomas plow, conli
nnalhnUrteed acres. Levied on and «
JustitoCoortfl fa issued from 1065th oil
ty in favor
Geo. D. Johnson, tohnson, L^ L. C.. C., and turned
legally me, Robert notified. Skinner, tenant *in
sold, Also, at the same rime and place, t 1
one undivided oRe-third intereet
i house and lot known na the Wright 80
' place fronting on Solomon street,
wrest Scandrett, hy William south Bishop by place, alley and east
an
Solomon street, in East Griffin,
one-half acre more or lhss; and «...
ed one-third interest in one tract of a
North Griffin, containing throe or foW
bon tided east by what i»know* as **i
Johnson place, north by an alley, sol
an alley and west by a new street, to
in
Sont]
less, I
Isaac Malone, ______________, Henry Prnden » and - 8
erandsonthby Strozier. Levied
hue of two.Tust,K»Court fl fa»i«favoi
ing and county, turned Levy to made by Ten* J. C..
over me.
•WSfirK time and
sold one undivided % interest ' »*Jj
and lot in the city of Griffin, S^lltey, known
B tr^t, Waited A
s *
the lands «(Mrs. MoUie R. Thqmp.
Levied on and soldas thepropertyof fey «
- - - Mrs.*
unfacturin
SSE 2 SW- s