Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-current, December 11, 1891, Image 6

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V THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECOK DER FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1891. A Great Opportunity! f N consequence of my con templated removal to the two large and elegant stores recently vacated by the Bee hive and Americus Grocery Company. I will, during the ^$oming week and until remov al, make an The Cruj Ball. Street peddlers hare a new catch penny derice on their trucks that , is qoite an amusing thing for old *o well as young folks. They call it the “crazy ball," and it is well named. For ten cents yon can bay one of these things and see the laws of gravity defied. It looks like an ordinary wooden ball, about the rise of a tennis ball, hut yon can't rpn it in a straight line to Save yon. Of course the secret of the thing's queer actions lie in the fact that it is loaded on one side. This makes every move ment of the baU eccentric. It will roll np hill of its own accord, and it will re fuse to roll down hllL If you try to roll it from yon it will perhaps start out all right, and then tnrn around and roll back, or maybe it will go off sidewise and describe a wobbly circle around yon. All its movements are jerky and spasmodic. Give it to a kitten to play with and the chances are that the kitten will go mad, while a baby will cry with vexation over its eccentricities. A grown person who is not np In spherical geom etry will assure yon that it is wonderfnL It Is not. ft is only some sharp fellow’s way of gathering in the dimes. Never theless, ere long the city wiU be flooded with these “crazy balls."—New York Set aid. in the prices of all goods. Now is the time to buy your suits, either for Men, Youths • or Children, as we will show you prices never before seen • in Americus. Our great sale of is now in progress, and we hope to close out the entire stock by January ist, if lo\)j prices ort good goods consti- * tute any attraction. We have had an immense trade the past week in Over coats, but in consequence of new arrivals in this deparment, we are still prepared to offer you a stock that cannot be equaled in variety, and at prices that you will be sure to find agreeable to the times. . We have some special at tractions in tvs MJtEJ 9 We want to close out a big lot of these before removal,and will offer at prices that will be sure to move them rabidly. Bring on the boys and fix them up. It is predicted that we are to have an unusually severe winter, so I give you good advice: Take care of the boys’ comfort and save big doctor’s bills. “An ounce of prevention is worth about a ton of cure. Remember we are closing out several lines of An Artlat’s Mansion. Sir Frederick Leighton, Bart., P. B. A., is at present enjoying himself in the beantlfnl town of Perngis, the air of which is most invigorating. Electric light is being laid in the president's cl?! house, in Holland Park road. The splen did eastern hall, paved with tiles from Damascus, with the fountains and coaches of exquisite workmanship, will now be lit by the electric light. So will. the drawing room, with its fine speci mens of Corot’s paintings representing the seasons, and the handsome dining room. The large stndio, with its price less treasures, will be properly illumi nated. The fountain at one time had no rail ing. One evening after one of Sir Fred erick Leighton's epicurean feasts, the hall not being snffldently lit, several of the academicians stepped into the fonn tain and got thoroughly wet; a popular painter had to borrow a pair of the president's trousers, mnch to the amuse ment of his brethren of the brash, as the garments did not fit him; bnt the strong electric light will pat an end' to any more of these uncomfortable adven tures.—London Star. Lippincott’s 1 QQO Magazine. loy ^- TwentY-Fifth Annual Prospectus. A quarter of a century ha. elapsed since Lipptncntt'i Magazine was first presented to the reading public By adding new an* orig inal features it has kept In advance of the times and now occupies a unique position among msgaslnes. It wa« the oist to abati don serial atorie*. and he publishing a com- E lete novel in each number, the magasine as no 'derfntlv Increased Its popularity. This popular feature will be continued, and leading American and Engllah authors have paper life, entitled “The Paesmg of Major Kilgore,” by Young E. Allison, late manag ing editor of the Louisville Courier-Jot rnai. Tills number will fitly Inaugurate the Jt nr- nalbt a series, which will consist ofa num ber of contributions from prominent n*ws- paptr men who will tell their personal expe riences, and give glimpses of the editorial sanctums and Inn^r workings of vaiious i -ading newspapers, throtghout the conn- ryk Ati!* sight into the lives of newspaper men at work and at play will be gtven, and the methods of getting out the great dal U«s will be Illustrate t. ▲ series of articles on athletics, will also be commenced In the Jnn- u ry number, the Initial a-‘»Je be-ox on© on ‘♦Boxing,’* by Daniel L. I* wson. The arti cles will be rrepared b. “Xpert* lit such sportspnd exercises as r tpg fencing base ball, crlckett, walking. >■ •• 1 *nmlng, archery, tennis, foot bait* rielsailing, golf, la croue, polo, etc., as we* it • articles on ph.vs Icai training and lo-door exercise. New tal ent will be heartily eicooraged as hereto fore, and writers from every section of the country, will be represented tn the pages of Upplncott’s during 1862. A scries of articles dealing with reminiscences of men famous In oor political history, and giving hitherto unpublished correspondence, will form a feature Among such articles may he men t!on*!0»“!”moo*lft—— — tjonrd, “Personal Recollections of Abiaham Lincoln, Ardrew Johnson, John C. Cal houn,** etc., the Clay-R-ndolph Correspond ence and Duel, Poclal Lite In Philadelphia during the A< ministration of John Adams, *10. . Mrs M. E W. Sherwood will contribute a series of papers entitled Collections and Rec ollections. Tbeee will Include reminiscences o many famous people in “society,** also recollections of the Brook Farm Community and other Interesting data. Leading actors have been engaged to contribute articles upon the modern stage, and an Initial paper by E. B. Willard, the English actor, will be f ubllsbed In an ear y forthcoming nmnber t woulo be Impossible to mention In detail the wealth of material that bss been secured for 1882, la the share of short stones, essays, sketches, poems, etc., by well-known writers. Bend your subscription now. 25 cents single number. f&OO per year. Upplncott’s Magazine, Philadelphia. dec4-dlt-Wlm SAM ROUTE. Local and Through Schedule in Effect Not. 22, 1891. r-— -Read Down.— TfcX ““ Mixed. Daily Ex. Hunday. and will give you prices never before seen in Americus. The above notice on all busv mess and no buncombe. Give me a call and you will be con vinced. Thanking you tor your very liberal patronage during the Fall and Winter season, and soliciting a continuance of the of the same, I am, as ever, A Dust 8torm la Simla. A carious phenomenon occurred in Simla recently on two anccekeive nights. This was nothing less than a dost storm in the midst of a downpour of rain, or rather, to speak more correctly, a shower of mud. A column of dost seems to have been carried rp into the higher at mosphere from the plains and to have been canght and forced down by the heavy rain. In the morning, as a result, all the plants and flowers in Simla were {ottnd to hate received a thick ooatlng of mnd. There could be no doubt that the mnd had been rained down, for it was freely sprinkled on plants away from the hillside and at a great height from the ground. Moreover a deposit of mnd was found in the rain gauges in various parts of the station. It i* a common thing to see the atmosphere in the hills during the hot season thick with dost from the plains, carried aloft by a strong wind. But the conjunction of rain and dost is an accident of which, it la stated, there is no previous record. —Exchange. Th. Smallest, 8nak«.. J. C. Conch,’ who lives a mild south of Fox Postoffice, has brought ns what if probably the smallest snake ever cap tured in Ray county. It was canght about two week* ago by; his stepson, Theodore Jackson, and it of the black- snake specie*. It ie only three inch** in length, and at the thickest part of its body is only three-sixteenth* of an inch in circumference. It is a perfectly form ed reptile, bnt with an extra large bead. Mr. Jackson accidentally killed it by ■pilling a few drops of petroleum on it. This snake could not teach school or plow corn like some of bis kinsmen found in Colonel Jim Denton’s neighbor hood, bnt Mr. Jackson is just as proud of his find as tbe colonel ever was over any of his discoveries.—Richmond (Mo.) Conservator. A'Child Killed by a PI*. While “playing funeral” in Kiota, Kan., Johnny Denner, aged six, met a strange fate. He and his eight-year-old sister had dog a bole and Johnny sat in it. When she had covered him with earth np to the neck, an old sow drove her off and then attacked the little boy. Several times the animal rank her teeth in the lad'* bead, and when friends came to bis rescue they found him dead.—Ex change. . Neglect of m Bara. The fact that Louis Kossuth is now a poor, blind old man, who is dragging ont a miserable existence, embittered by ■beer want and heartless neglect, is not complimentary to an age of hero wor shipers wblcfy will spend fortnnes upon gorgeous monuments to the dead and grudge a ernst to the livin.--,—Boston Globe. - - : It i* given ont that SO,783 accounts, claims and cases, involving the ram of flft,881,062 were settled daring the last fiscal year by the United States govern ment-* targe increase of Work with no increase of force as compared with the preceding fiscal year. _ A pair of very economical lovers, fa Lot Angelos, Cal., hit upon a plan to cheat Uncle Sam of his postage, Th* young man hired a box at the postoffice and gave his sweethearts duplicate key. The recent losses by (Ire in the cargo of ships carrying cotton has shown that cotton seed oil, when held in the cotton on the outside of the bale, rapidly oxi dizes and generates spontaneous combus- tion. THE SUN Has Secured During 1892 : W. O. Howells, H. Elder Haggard George Meredith, Norman Lockyer, Andrew Lang, Conan Doyle, Bt. George Mlvart, .Mark Twain, Budyard Kipling. J. Chandler Harris. R. Louis Btevenson, WUlism Black, W. Clark Bussell, Mary B. Wilkins, Franoes Hodgson Burnett. And many other distinguished Writer, The Sunday Sun Is the GreatestSnnday Newspaper in the World. Price Be. a copy. . By Mall t2 a year. Address THE SUN, New Pork. dec 8-deodSw-wlmo QUERIFF'B SALE. O GEORGIA—Scut in Cobsty. WIU be sold before the court house door In the city of Americas, Sumttr county. Ga., on the first Tuesday in January, ISM, be tween the legal hours of aale, tbs following described property, to-witi Twenty (»#) or twenty-live (25) bushels of corn, more or lacs, two (3) bales of cotton marked J, with private marks K. B. P, num bers end weights as follows: No. 282 weight Ml; No. 288, weight MS; stored In the alliance warehouse In the city of Americus. Also 1,000 sulks of sugar esne, more or less. Levied on and to be sold as iba property of P.ank Price by virtue of a distress warrant issued L.B. FORREST, Sheriff. S HERIFF'S HALE. GEORGIA—Bcxtcb Cobsty Will be sold before the court boose door In the city of Americus, Sumter county, on tb# Brat Tuesday In January, 1802. between the Irani hour, of rale, tb, following descrlb- *'V?ve I (5) ptowstooki, two(2) Boy Dixie plow stock,, two it) borrows, five (5) tingle-trees, ons (I) Dow Law cotton planter, four («) tots plow rear, one (I) pitchfork three (8) need ing hoes, tblriy-su (til plow boes and •crapes, two (2) sets wagon goer, ons (11 wagon ard four (4) br dies. All rev led on and to ba sold »the property of J. M. Bats, by virtue ofa mortgage # fa Issued from tbo So S Court of snmter county In favor of Stapleton vs. the said J. M. Bass. >V. 1.I88L J.T.SUWMERH, ! ■ Deputy Sheriff. IHERIFF’S *M taLi _ Sum>lCoBXTt ' Will be sold before tbe court boose door In the city of Ametirua, Sumter county, Geor gia. between tbe legal boon of aale. on tb* lint Tuesday In Janoary, 102. tbo following described property, to wit: One open buggy, paint, d black, side bar and Brewster tp Ing. Levl-d on and to be sold am the property of Math-w and Willis Fews s: Property pointed ont by J. O, 1 lur. This till day of Bovraioer^lMBI. Deputy Sheriff. S HERIFF’S BALE. geo roi A—Sturm coettrv . Will be sold before the court hone# door, ItttLeoity of Amerlcns, Snmter coonty, Ga., between tbe legal hours of sate, on the Bn Tuesday In January, 18*1, I he following described property, to-wilt One slngieopennuggy, end springs, painted black; also one dan soirell mere, named Kitty. Levied on and In be sold as tb* prop erty of Wm. A. Wilson, by virtue of a county eonrt a fh., leaned from the county .court of Snmter, In rarer or D.G.Arere vs. the said Wm. A. Wilson. This November 12.1801. J, B* LAMaE, Deputy Sheriff.. 340 4 07 4 28 S5S 6 07 6 15 « 27 635 0 47 No. 4 Paaungr Sunday Only 6 00 5 12 5 23 ft 2ft 5 82 5 87 5 43 5 50 5 02 fS.18. MallaKx Dally. ffiTo. Paw’ng’r Daily. 8 40 am 8 00 F 9 00 007 F 9 13 9 16 9 28 9 82 F 9 40 10 00 3 45 pm 355 F 4 06 4 13 F 4 18 4 24 4 35 4 40 F 4 53 507 7 ooam 7 00 802 § 18 838 8 02 9 04* m 8 80pm 4 19 4 53 460 507 6 21 5 80pm ilTib 10 20 10 20 10 84 10 46 10 05 11 00 11 18 11 25 11 33 11 45 11 06 12 10 • 0 18 028 6 33 6 42 6 53 603 6 15 6 25 6 30 6 39 C 60 7 02 7 10 * 12 89 pm 5 30 pm 7 28 pm 1 17 am 6 10 830 12 30 pm 12 46 12 54 1 04 1 10 1 23 1 20 1 42 1 51 1 57 F 2 05 pm 8 00 “ 7 80 pm 745 7 55 8 06 8 10 823 8 27 8 40 • 48 8 08 F 9 oo pm 6 00a m NO. 2. Mall. Dally. 6 40 sui 0 59 6 25 6 35 F 700 7 18 F 722 7 80 F 7 40 7 011 F 7 03 F HU)F HU5 8 10 F 8 *7 F 8 20 F 8 Siam WESTERN DIVISION. STATIONS. » — XU No. 1. Mali. Daily. UD W- ~sir" Fass'ng’r Sunday only No. 7. Mixed. Dally Ex. Bandar. Lv....Omaha Arr Untor. ... . Leutaii . . Loorala Junction.. Irvin ... Lumpkin . ... Randall Richland Fonder Frevtou. Jaaninga."...’. Merited....•• Flams...... Balter New Fotnt Littlejohn Ar.... Americas.. .Lv. 8 60 pm 8 27 r 8 14 7 00 F 740 7 27 F 720 7 10 F 6 50 6 OOF 6 46 F • 40 F • 80 • S0F • 28F • 20F e 19 p m 11 85 am 11 10 I9 60 10 40 1010 10 02 0 03 945 9 34 925 920 • 10 9 10 903 8 67 • 56 • 45 am 12 40 pm 12 00 11 80 11 16 10 85 10 05 u 841 • 20 820 8 12 806 782 786 7i6mm EASTERN DIVISION. STATIONS. ....Lv Americas Ajr..... .....Gatewood Huntington Parkers Leslie DeSoto Cobb. Johnson 4 .Coney Cordele. ....l#v Albany At.... Fhilemma. ... Oakfield Warwick .Taylors Wilkerson’a ....Ar Cordele Lv.... Penia. Williford ......Seville # • • • 4 Fitts ROObelle Goodman Abbeville .Copeland. Kline. Horton Oswald Ar Helen*...., Lv ....Lv ...Helena Ar..... ....Ar Brunswick. LV..... .... Ar Jacksonville Lv ...Verbena Glenwood .... - Mount Vernon.... H legs ton Vidalia. .Ar Savannah.. Pa&e’ng’r Pally. 10 20 a i 10 08 F 10 02 0 OOF 900 0 47 986 10 26 10 13 10 00 a m 842 888 8 20 8 OO 708 780 722 7 08 8 00 am SI 00 pm 6 30 pm F—Flag Station. 640 623 6 13 600 000 042 0 87 0 28 0 IS 7 40 pm Dally. 6 00pm 6 40 F 088 0 82 F 5 25 028 0 JO 0 00 F 4 03 4 37 8 oOp m 7 14* 7 02 046 6 26 6 12 6 00 pm 425 4 15 4 10 4 02 8 49 3 40 327 8 14 3 10 3 00 2 49 285 223 1 48 1 87 1 28 ] 19 1 02 12 00 F 12 42 12 06 pm 6 00 pm E. S. GOODMAN, Oen’l Pass. Agt Richmond & Danville Railroad Co. OPERATING THe CENTRAL RAILROAD OF GEORGIA. SOUTHWESTERN DIVISION. Correoti Schedule,;Ko. l, in Effect Sept, 0, 1891 SAVANNAH St WESTERN DIVI8ION Schedule Nd. 22, taking effbet July Mb, Ull. No. 8,1 Between Savannah and Birmingham No. e, Dally. vie America., Dally. * 7 40pm Leave Savannah Arrive SuOara 185am .... Lyons 300 am 7 80 am • ..Amerlcns, 700pm 8 40am Buena vista, 525 pm 1010 am Arrive ..Columbus,.... Leave 7 OOp m Blrmlneham.... NO. 8 I No. 6 Daily. 1 Daily. kassengcttPasi Mall EAST BOUND. No. 6 fM„ No. 7 Dally Paeeeuger 3:87a m 515 •• • » * 1000 “ 108pm *«“ 4<5 “ 785 " 650*“ Lv. Americas Ar Ar. Fort Valley Lv. " Macon “ •• Atlanta. • “ “ Augusta “ *• Savannah “ 103pm 88v 710 " 610p m USOp m 41 “ 8 25 “ 410 “ 900am 840 “ Paseenger UfolTHT 4 42 mm 785am No. 5 FlSf'Jtol 410 « 720 “ WEST BOUND. Lv. Amariena Ar. Ar. Bmltbvllla “ ” Eufanla “ " Montgomery Lv. No. 6 Dally Feet Mall ~rarpm 1310 “ 1105 am 955 a m No. 6 Dally Paeaenget 8ft a m ion pm 750pm 1 sir No. 5 Dally TO FLORIDA. ~2sr 11» p i m ii«o am S99am 7 stem 980am !^“ SM “ 540 • **“’ Sm?thsflte A “' » Brnntwlck “ “ Jaoksonvtlle “ ltepm 1201pm 1110 a m 880am 837 a m 106 “ 210 “ • 60p m 785 680 For further information relative to tlekau.schadnlaa, but route, ete. etc., apply to A. T. MAXWELL, Agent, America., Ga. SOL HAAS, Traffic Manager. JAB. L. TAYLOR, Gan. Pea*. Ant., S. H. HARDWICK. Asa’I Gen’l Pam. Agt. Atlanta, Ga. W. H. GREEN, Gent Manager. K. V. MeBEE, Gen’l Supt H. Will be sold before the court Iioum door. In tbe el>y of Americus, Humtar county, ou the Oral (Tureday In January, IM8, be- tween tbe legal hours of sal*, th* folfowlqr S'lMSS.'sS by virtue or one mortgage 0, fa l.sneo from gss’SFMsf.Ma J&suw. November Deputy Bhariff. A PPLICATtON A LEAVE TO SELL. G s.OROIA—BoiiTnn Cooxtv. . . Wbtraaa. Peony Lowery and Lae Lowery, executors of tbe estate of Richard Lewnry/le- 10 jUpStlfTe&'eSSd. SfiffiyiSSSPft creditors, to sbpw cause on or before the December term of tb* Conn of Ordf said county, to be bald on tbadratl in January, next. why > aald patltlon official signature, B, Ordinary. Read oor Christinas advertisement. D. WATTS, * * Wholesale and Retail Groceries Has come to the front again, and can be found on the corner. Watts Building, .With an elegant line of fresh Groceries*®* Confectioneries, which he will sell at rock bottom prices. Country merchants will find it to their interest to call and see him when Deeding anything in his line. Whiskies brandies and plenty of Jngs in the rear, which will be shipped to any part of the United States and Georgia. OHEKIFF’S SALE. * J™ be sou Tuesday In Jaonary. 1802, the following dll scribe - property to-«lti * ue {•V 11 * follow. itawajas -. B. Pickett, »n0w>ld by hlmfoBurtai Mat hews the numbers of whlen ss demrlbed In nl« deed lo them bring In error,^ and th« numbers not being *cc,lately known, but known satheisnd farmery own d for J. S’ Pickett, and sold to Burke A Mathewn nnrt being described by the folluwlng boundarlu to-wTti Bounded on the north* by landw Bob Pickett and J. B Brooks, on the w£t hv tbe line of Stewart eonnt.. Finy StO off of portion ft said track bring V StawFt county, bounded on tbe north by lsnd«ofT % the reuth by tends known ss the J. W.Ab**lplace, and lands known ss the Glenn old p!ae*, and br Biauchter eraak and on the osstby lands of C. ayiwiftSi Tom Hlghnote. Raid lands being in a body and containing eight 'hundred, slxtv-stsbt and tBree;foarll.. gfe Sd^%oS%18£’ lying in toe thlrty-oecoud (82) district or Wobsier co nty. Levied on as tbe property of Dan Davis and Geo B. Thornton tositafv one superior court fl. fa, iuuo<4 from the in. Bortov court of Webster county* In favor of c ; Williams, administrator of the estate v »PK Bu, ? te V, ^ ht Dan Davis and Geo* E.Thornton* Tenant in po*sesvlon notified 4n writing. This December 2,18D1. QHERIFP'S SALE. o. Q RORGI A—W BB8TXR County, 4 wm be sold b fore the court house door, in the town of Prsston, Webster e mnty, Ga., be tween Lbe usual hours of sale, on the flm »V^l?rS:wi?P’ the follo '' ln «' 1 - Undivided one-half Internt Id the follow. In* deaeribed property, to-witi A eei tain traetor paroel oflands which waa formerly nwnedby J. B. Pickett, tnd sold by him to fork, A M.thews, the numbers to which, as desertfod In tiladocdtothem bclngln error and the nnmbsrs net being accurately known bnt known as hr lands formerly owned bv the said James B Plrk*tt7enS sold to Burko A Mathews, bnt being d,. scribed by the following boundaries, to-wlt: Bounded on the north by lauds of Bob Pickett and J. B, Brook.; on t “west by“S line of Stewart eounly, (flftv (SO) acres off of a portion of aald tract hefng In Stewart aa the Glenn old piaoa and by Slaughter creek, and on tbe eaat by lands of C. U. Pear- son and Tom Hlghnote. Bald lands bring and lying In a body containing In all right hundred. alxty-cUht and thret-loartht Mathews to satisfy one county eonrt d ft, Is. tusd from the county cnnrtof Snmter In fsror of D. B. Harrell, plaintiff; and L. N. Hudson, transferee, vs. tbe said W. H. Mathews, Ten ants In pometslon notified In terms of the law. Thla Novembers, -8M. DAN DAVIS, Sheriff. S HERIFF’S BALE.' GEORGIA—Webster Coukti. Will be sold, before the court bouse d<-or jn^Prcton, on tb. first Tuesday In January, Lou oflands number, one hundred and ninety (1M). on. hundred andalxty-tbm (188), north ball of lot of land, number one- nundred and alxty-two (182), lot of tend num ber one bunond and tblrty-on* (181). and lot oMard number one hundred and dfty-nln. (159), also fifty aerta off of tbe aoutbwest cor ner of lot of land number one bunred and stxty-twn (182), containing In all nine hun- drea.elicty.one and one.fourth (9811.) ncret, moie or law, all lying and bring In the twenty-fifth (25th) dlitriot of Webeter county. Levied on as the property of I. A. Whaley by virtu* ofa superior eonrt fl fa. from Web- •ter superior eonrt, in fovor of C. and U. Cooper va. «ald I. A. Whaley. Property pointed ont by plaintiffs. Tenants In posies- slon notified In terms ortbe law, Ibis Sep tember 2. 1889. DAN DAV.B, Sheriff. Will ba sold before tb* court boos* door In the city of Preston, Weoster county, Ga, on thofirst Tuesday in January, 1892, between tbe legal boura of sale, the following do- scribed property, io-wlti West hair of lot of land number seventy-tin (79), In the eighteenth Glib' district of Web ster eonnty. Ga.. Joined on the eonth and emit by land, of J R. Stapleton, and on the we»t bv lands of Loul. Clark. Levied on by virtue nr a superior Court fl. fa. at tbe lands of J. J. Peel, In favor ol E. Taylor va. R. H. Moral, principal, P**# ggjgf- AGMJNfSTRAWRJSA^n Couimr: Agreeable to an order from Iho Honorsble ary* 1892, the fOllowlnf dosor aadsv 1 iriboa ] Lot of Uod nambvr < ae hundred and forty* of lot of land number onabundredaad.forty- three (M*VoobMIbj ■ ora hundred, one and I • half (SttK) ao raa, mpra m lem. AU lying and being In the twauty-fifth cath). dislrlcl ofWabjtereonnt^GeoralteMdiMhjprra. ,.r& Soif*suSjUtto a*ioJn f and tridow’s dowar. JJEJII&IA*. Admlnls’ralor. A P T^S H OF DISMISSION. SSSSt'^m Srfh.Oro.u^'.-Conrttofo held on the flrat Monday In MreehllK, why said petition should pot ba grsntsd ss P Gfven'under ray band ond offldol olfB*- tore, thl. 8d dayot^orinforUM.^^^ BeptlSdAw SEND HIM YOUR ORDERS. A WELL fiPESSED MAN Pojo moot porSoulor attention to tbs *tjlo and quality of bis fiot*«ear, knowing that however iMty is his Kouorsl wearing appojet a pUr of bod sho*« utterly nullifies iu ARTHUR RYLANDER, At BYLANDER’ CORNER, entries in stock a lino of Mcn'a, Lsdie'a an.l Children’* SHOES, unequaled in Southwest Georgia. Tk« Laltlt Stocks to ttt CircbraM DUNLAP NATS. Umbrellas and Walking Canes. A Complete Shoe Repairing Shop Up-stairs. Application^ .tios. GEORGIA—WeMTa* Cooxty. Whereas, E. Aven having filed bl> sp* igsjrSSff asiSwrwss ^hSearatherefore to etfoandatogdfo “ MTJ.J.“ on^r'Wtk* Janoary term of the eourt of Otdfouy o S'j^TOlTwMd’^SSnW 0.1. W day of December, 1*'^ qosBY , Ordinary. APPLICATION.^ R^D Americus and Smith v lllero»datH“iii^ City. All pereone are notified tnatraw^ road Will, on the Bret MoudayjlnJ»J"f, next.be finally ranted Jf none» jib, jhuwn fo.h. contrary. wit clerk ConntyCommli«lon€re_ PUBLIC SCHOOL NOTICE. GEORGIA—8ciit»* Couirrv. I hereby give notice that Saturn December 19. ISO, h»« ilVl’lc.iiM ^ tbe general eiammatlonofail ePPh"" t ,e teacher'. Iloenw. All thow who eW- ^ teach public school in this county b*J* ^ yo L'reluCnrel7r._ofthl.opportunliy.““ one will be allowed to Wrh «lt , !® '“ c tl> ) All applicant, will Pleaae °Ji,"d5 jVJb. i JKk«n-.trretrohool ( bun^^e.