Newspaper Page Text
Ofo gerald and ^clrcrtisa
Some Statnes.
There la a gateway under a tenement
house on Forsyth street, near Houston,
that leads into the interior of a block
where there used to be a graveyard.
Five storied houses have taken the place
of the graves and the grass, and an elec
tric light company’s wires are strung over
one side of the block so thickly that the
clothes lines have to he run in other di
rections. In the hollow made by the tene
ments there is a series of buildings that
have grown into one by the, accretions of
years. These buildings are inhabited by
a curious race. There are men of ail
lengths and weights, from four or five
feet to ten and fifteen, and as heavy as a
ton. There are women, too, some white,
clean and well formed, with shapely
limbs, and cloaks and tunics like those of
Mrs. Caesar and other ladies who set the
fashions some years ago. In some rooms
of the main building families and their
animals have been living together in har
mony for months. There are children
with wings like Cupids and dancing girls
whose skirts are always at the same
ancle, Dianas with the same- number of
arrows in their quivers from one week’s
end to another, and Mercurys always
balancing on the same big toe and never
toppling over.
One room with an extra high ceiling is
inhabited by giants. Not a man in the
room is under ten feet, and some of the
women are as tall. They are a muscular
race, and the smaller men who come and
go in the room take great pride in the
swelling muscles, the sturdy Ixmes, the
clenched lists and well poised heads
of the giants. The people who in
habit other rooms in this inner build
ing are not so big, but they are equally
comely. None of these men or women
ever voluntarily stray out of the build
ing and over to the Bowery, that is only
a few' stejw away. At times the men
and women are changed from one build
ing to another, but they do not go of
their own accord. At long intervals they
go from their huge rooms out under the
tenement houses and mto the world,
where the} - perch on various pedestals,
roofs and arches, and see their old home
no more.
Adjoining the large house where these
men and women live from their infancy
up is a smaller building, where they are
made from zinc, copper, Lmaze and other
materials, and in the lofts over the statue
factory are rooms full of drawings and
models, and further up ordinary live men
at work tacking together the legs, chests,
arms, heads and accouterments of these
bronze giants, that are soon to go out in
the world and be perched on high to be
gazed at of men. Thousands of pounds
of copper, brass and zinc go in under the
tenement house every year and come out
fine looking statues and beautiful animals.
The next object that is expected to come
forth is a $7,000 bronze buffalo, who will
sit on the banks of the Missouri at Council
Bluffs and view the river and a railroad.
In one of the rooms is the group of
three figures that the Arion society will
put on its now building up town. II.
Baerer was the sculptor. From his de
signs the molds were made, and the figures
are now almost finished, and stand twice
as high as a tall man. The figures repre
sent Prince Carnival having a good time
with his family. He has a mustache, a
goatee, a cloak and a doublet that does
not hide his shapely legs. No matter how
cold it will be when he is perched near
the roof and the snow freezes on him,
lie will not have any thicker stockings
than when he emerged from the hot sand.
Prince Carnival is made of zinc, and lie.
liis* family and friends are worth about
$4,800. With him goes a zinc valet, a
zinc harp, a zinc harpster, and some
pretty zinc girls, all of whom are to sit
on various parts of the new Arion building.
It takes several months to turn out a
zinc-or bronze man or woman, and about
the same timfe for a horse or angel. The
time varies according to the material and
degree of finish required. There must
be drawings first and then a model.
Molds are made from tho model and the
various parts are then cast. The casts
are polished and fastened together. The
joints are soldered, the tack holes covered
over, and the job is done. Copper costs
least, zinc more and bronze most. A
bronze statue costs more because it is
hardest to make and hardest to put to
gether. The material also costs more, as
the best grades of copper, tin, zinc and
lead must be used. Zinc statues can be
.soldered together, while bronze legs and
arms are tacked on after being fitted into
the body like sections of stovepipe. A
good sized bronze man weighs over a
ton. while a copper man would be a light
weight. lie is malleable and would give
indents where a bronze man would stand
it or crack.
The men who make statues are well
paid. The superintendent of castings is
a well known Frenchman and makes up
ward of $.7,000 a year. He does his
work by contract, and the amount he
makes varies according to his success in
making a good casting the first time. He
has a long training at the business and is
a true artist. The other men are paid
from $25 to $50 a week, the burnishers
and assistants getting less. The men who
put the castings together have to be care
ful to make the joints even and not no
ticeable, but the main success of a statue
rests with the superintendent of the cast
ing. Almost all the workmen are foreign.
The proprietor is a German, the casters
Frenchmen, the designers Germans and
Frenchmen and the molders and fitters
•Germans.—New York Sun.
The Proper Ktsteh Dance.
The Nautch girls arranged themselves
into a half circle, their scarlet costumes
forming a bright crescent terminating at
either end in a mass of spectators, whose
half naked bodies, varying in color from
pale olive to mahogany, were arrayed in
costumes scarcely less showy than the
dancers’. The chaperone tom toms an
appropriate Nautch accompaniment on a
drum with his fingers and four pretty
girls advance from the half circle and,
favoring me with a quartet of killing
smiles and a quartet of coquettish glances
from their bright, dark eyes, they com
mence to dance. An idea seems to pre
vail in Occidental minds tlxat the Indian
Nautch dance is a very naughty thing,
but nothing is further from the truth.
Of course, it can be made naughty, and,
no doubt, often is, but then so can many
another form of innocent amusement.
The proper Nautch daace is a decorous
and artistic performance when properly
danced; the graceful motions and elegant
proportions of the human form, as re
vealed by lithe and graceful dancers, are
to be viewed with an eye purely artistic
and critical as a Venus or other produc
tion of the sculptor’s studio. Only the
British matron would consider a Nautch
dance in any degree indecorous. The
four dancers take the hem of their red
garment between the thumb and finger
of the right hand, spreading its ample
folds into the figure of an open fan by
bringing the outstretched arm almost on
a level to the shoulder. A mantle cf
transparent muslin, fringed with silver
spangles, is worn about the head and
shoulders in the same indescribably grace
ful manner as the mantilla of the Span
ish senorita. Raising a portion of this
aloft in tl.e left hand and keeping the fan
intact with the right, the dancers twirl
around and change position with each
other, their supple figures meanwhile as
suming a variety of graceful motions and
postures from time to time. Now they
imitate the spiral movements of a serpent
climbing around and upward on an im
aginary pole; again they assume a charm
ing posture, their dusky countenances
half hidden in seaming coquetry behind
the muslin mantle, the large red fan
waved gently to and fro, the feet uiimov-
ing, but the undulating motions of the
btxly and the tremor of the limbs sufficing
ro jingle the tiny ankle bells.—India Cor.
Boston Herald.
THOMPSON BROS.
NEWNAN, GA.
-:o:-
FINE AND CHEAP FURNITURE
-AT PRICES—
THAT CANNOT BE BEAT IN THE STATE.
Big stock of Chamber suits in Walnut, Antique Oak, and
Cherry, and Imitation suites.
French Dresser Suites (ten pieces), from $22.60 to $125.00.
Plush Parlor Suits, $35.00 and upward.
Bed Lounges, $9.00 and upward.
Silk Plush Parlor Suits, $50.00.
Good Cane-seat Chairs at $4.50 per set.
Extension Tables, 75 cents per foot.
Hat Racks from 25 cents to $25.00.
Brass trimmed Curtain Poles at 50 cents. . .
Dado Window Shades, on spring fixtures, very low.
Picture Frames on hand and made to order.
SPLENDID PARLOR ORGANS
Low, for cash or on the installment plan.
Metallic and Wooden Coffins ready at all times, night or
day.
THOMPSON BROS.,
NEWNAN, GA.
NORTH’S
CHICKEN CHOLERA CURE!
On tlio Summit of Mount Shasta.
The wind and cold were so severe that
our stay on tho summit was shorter than
one could wish; however, one hour is
about as good as two for a scene to which
weeks could not do justice. Northern
California and part of Oregon lay spread
oat like a great bird’s eye map. To the
southeast, seventy-five miles away, tho
snows of Lassen’s peak seemed quite near,
and far beyond it are visible the white
tops of other peaks in the great Sierra;
while at an equal distance north tho beau
tiful symmetry of Mount Pitt in Oregon
shows white above the Cascades, which
stretch ridge after lidge for leagues be
yond. Beyond the rugged and broken
ranges toward the coast tho air is cloudy,
and we are unable to see tho Pacific. The
dleys at our feet are so smoky that the
lower part of our view is much limited.
The view of Mount Shasta itself is grand
beyond description. West of us, more
than half a mile lower, and two or three
miles distant, is the great- crater of the
mountain. More than half of the great
rim is yet intact—what is left of a huge
bowl a mile in diameter, whose side seems
to have been burst out by its molten con
tents. In other directions, from the sum
mit, great serrated ridges of rock stretch
down into the forest; while between them
over narrowing areas of snow extend for
miles to meet the trees, like guards to
keep the green from infringing on its
white domain. From our great height
the lower part of the snow, steep though
it reallv is, looks nearly level, as do the
wooded slopes and valleys beyond; and a
passing cloud looks in the sunshine like a
white sheet spread on the dark green
carpet of pines.—F. C. Freeman in Over
land Monthly.
FULLER & NORRIS,
1 DEALERS IN J-
STAPLE a n d FANCY GROCERIES,
DRY GOODS, BOOTS, SHOES, ETC,
<J AND GENERAL CATERERS TO THE DRY GOODS AND GROCERY TRADE
We have now in store and are daily receiving our new Fall and Winter Goods,
and we are pleased to announce to our friends and customers that it is the choi
cest and best selected stock that we have ever offered them. The better part of
our stock was bought on such terms as we are assured will give us an advantage
in competing with the prices usually charged for the same class of goods. We
do not say this in a spirit of braggadocio, bub merely to let our friends know that
we are keeping up with the procession, and in order that they may not be be
guiled by the plausible statements and extravagant promises of other dealers no
better equipped than we are. While others are dealing in adjectives and high-
sounding descriptives we are going right along at the same old stand, selling
goods at reduced prices and saving a little money every day.
I11 addition to a full line of GROCERIES, staple and fancy, we have a select
stock of STAPLE DRY GOODS, such as GINGHAMS,* PRINTS, JEANS,
DOMESTICS, etc., which we can sell to suit you. Our stock of LADIES’ and
GENTS’ SHOES is very select and comprises none but the latest styles and best
qualities. We have a complete line of fresh GROCERIES, which is replenished
from time to time with the best that the market affords. Come and see us ; we
can do you good. FREE CITY DELIVERY.
Medical Humor.
Dhe celebrated physician, Ricord, was
; day walking along the boulevard in
[•is, when he met an old gentleman
o was very rich, but who was at the
ae time noted for his extreme stingi-
s. The old man, who was somewhat
a hypoclirondriac, imagined that he
ild get some medical advice from Ric-
[ without paying for it
‘Doctor, I am feeling very poorly.”
‘Where do you suffer most?”
‘In my stomach, doctor.”
< Ali, that’s bad. Please shut your
&. That’s right. Now put out your
gue, so I can examine it closely. ’ ’
rhe invalid did as he was told. After
had waited patiently for aliout ten
autes he opened his eyes, and found
aself surrounded by a crowd, who
.posed that he was crazy. Dr. Ricord,
the. meantime, had disappeared.—
■fSiftfW* ... ■* —~
Charles Sunnier and His Friends.
Sumner was very careful of the feel
ings of liis personal friends, many of
whom disagreed emphatically with him
on political subjects. Some of them were
not of the same party with himself; some
were not of the same wing of the party.
After President Grant ar^liis cabinet be
came estranged from the senator, certain
of his friends failed to follow him.
Among them was the journalist, Maj.
Ben: Perley Poore, who, in his letters
miJ telegrams, took strong ground for
the president and against the senator.
The contest at tne time was exceedingly
hitter, and “Perley’s” dispatches reflected
the degree of acerbity felt by the presi
dent's friends.
Sumner’s friends were inclined to take
issue with the journalist, holding that the
tone of his letters was incompatible with
his personal relations toward the senator,
and brought them to Sumner’s attention.
He would hear just enough of them to
know what was Being spoken of: and
then, if the paper had been handed him.
would throw it into the waste basket, ex
claiming: --I like him too well to read his
letters. He was once asked. "How can
you like him when he speaks of you in
such terms?" and his reply was: "I like
the jierson, not the writer; I do my duty
as I see it; let him do his as he sees it.
Why should we quarrel?”—Arnold
Bulges Johnson in The Cosmopolitan.
M C BRIDE’S
CHINA PALACE!
29 PEACHTREE STREET, ATLANTA, GA.
We import direct from the largest factories of England. France and Ger
many.
We carry a full line of the genuine “H.&Co.” (Haviland & Co.) CHINA, in
White, Gold* Band, and the various decorations.
Carlsbad China Dinner Tea and Bed-Room Sets.
Joseph Rogers’ Ivory-Handled Knives.
• Rogers’ Best Plated Spoons, Forks and Casters.
Lamps, Chandeliers, Hall and Library Lamps.
We buy in large quantities, at lowest net cash prices. We handle only the
best goods and sell at lowest prices.
Merchants will save freight, breakage, delays and hard stock by placing their
orders with us.
SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES!
We give careful attention to all mail orders, and guarantee to fill them at
lowest prices. Do not fail to call 011 us when in our city.
M C BRIDE & CO.
[BEFOHE TAKIXG.j fAFTER TAKING.}
A SURE PREVENTIVE
AND
AN INFALLIBLE SPECIFIC
FOK
CHICKEN CHOLERA!
Has never failed to effect a cure when promptly adminis
tered. Tried and endorsed by hundreds, who willingly testify
to the sovereign virtues of the remedy. It is manufactured in
fluid form and can be administered without difficulty. One
bottle will save $50.00 worth of diseased poultry.
PREPARED BY
THE NORTH CHOLERA CURE CO.,
NEWNAN. GA.,
And sold by all druggists at FIFTY CENTS and ONE
DOLLAR per bottle. Full directions with each package.
AYC0CK MANUFACTURING COMPANY,
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN
DRESSED AND MATCHED FLOORING, CEILING AND ROUGH
LUMBER, LATHS, SHINGLES, ALL KINDS OF MOULDINGS,
SAWED AND TURNED BALUSTERS. BRACKETS,
SASH, DOORS AND BLINDS, ETC.,
My Blinds are wired with patent clincherwire machine, which never breaks loose. Cor
respondence solicited and special prices given on hills for buildings. Write tor prices_ and
discounts on Sash. Doors, Blinds, Ac. 4-52
£egal Zcotices.
Notice to Debtors anti Creditors.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
All creditors of ihe estate of John R. Siins,
deceased, are notified to render in an account
of their demands to the undersigned. All
persons indebted to said estate are required to
make immediate settlement.. S-ptember 9th,
1SS7. BARTOW SIMS,
Printer’s fee $3.00. Administratrix.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
All creditors of tli* estate of John Morgan,
deceased, are notified to render in an account
Of their demands to the undersigned. All
person' indebted to said estate are required to
make immediate settlement. September tlth,
igb7. E. W: MORGAN,
Printer’s fee $3.00. Administrator.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGI A— Cowkta County :
All creditors of the estate of Betsy Camp,
deceased, are notified to render in an account
of their demands to the undersigned. AM
persons indebted to said estate tire required to
make immediate settlement. September 9th,
1887. DANIEL SWINT,
Printer’s fee $3.00. Adininistiamr.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA—Covkta County .
All creditors of the estate of Nelson Thur
man, deceased, are notified to render in an
account of theirdematuls to the undersigned.
All persons indebted to said estate are^ re
quired to make immediate settlement. .Sep
tember 23d, 1887. DANIEL SVY INT,
Printers fee $3.(>0. Administrator.
The Heaver’s Awkward Gait.
Released upon the ground the beavers
make off, with a curious shambling gait,
a compound of shuffle and a waddle,
with a strong tendency to fall forward
upon the nose at every step. On closer
examination the cause of this mi graceful
style of locomotion was found to be two
fold ; first, their hind legs yvere at least
one third longer than their fore legs, the
extra length being in the femur; and
secondly, they were digitigrade in front,
and plantigrade behind, or, as our French
cook, Francois, expressed it: “Ze front
ligue. he go teeptoe, comme de dogue, or
le chat; ze behind ligue. he make walk
flat foot—pied a terre— like ze bair, or ze
man.” If one will try to walk on all
fonts, with the soles of the feet and the
tips of the fingers touching the ground,
he will have a tolerably fair idea of
beaverine locomotion. —H. P. Alford in
Outing.
ANDREW J. MILLER & SON,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA,
FURNITURE % CARPETS!
The largest and most complete stock in the South. We
will make it decidedly to your interest to purchase goods from
us, both as regards securing the latest styles and lowest prices.
Our FURNITURE stock is very complete, embracing ev
erything in that line.
Our CARPET DEPARTMENT is acknowledged to be
the best in the city, and we are sure if our goods and prices
are examined purchasers will not fail to leave their orders with
us.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
All creditors of the (-suite of Elizabeth Wal
den, deceased.are hereby notified to render in
their demands to the undersigned, according
to law;—and all persons indebted to said e--
tate are required to make immeciate pay
ment. This September 29tli, I!tf7. Printer's
fee$3.oO. DANIEL SWINT,
. Adm’r of Elizabeth YY alden. dee’d.
legal hours of sale, the following described
property, to-wit:
The southeast corner of lot of land No. 12S,
in the Fourth district of Coweta county,
which is a triangular shape, and cut ofT by
tlie Columbus rond-bounded on the east b\-
55. Wor-ham, on the south by J. C. Gibson,
containing iu till 17 acres, m«re or Jess, and
known as the YValden laud. Sold as the prop
erty of Elizabeth Walden, deceased. This
September29th, 1387. DANIEL SWINT,
Adm’r of Elizabeth Walden, dec’d.
Road Notice.
GEORGI A—Cowkta County :
G. YV. Smith and others have made applica
tion for a second-class public road, to extend
from Ji. S. Rees’ to the road leading from
Sharpsburg to Palmetto, intersecting said
road at Ellis Snilib’s, running through the
lands of H. S. Iiees, V. B. Ingram, G. P.
Smith and Ellis Smith, a distance of about
one mile, which lias been marked out by the
commissioners and a report made on oatli
by them.
All persons are notified that said new road
will, on and after the first Wednesday in No
vember next, by ttie Commissioners of Roads
and Revenue of said county, be finally grant
ed, if no new cause be shown to the contrary.
This September With, 1887.
JOHN A. HUNTER,
Chairman Board of Commissioners.
Libel for Divorce.
GEORGIA—Coyvkta County:
YVillis Pratt
( Iu Coweta Superior Court,
( March Term, 1887.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGI A—Cowkta County :
All persons having demands against the es
tate of Richmond 'Sewell, late of Uoweta
county, deceased,are hereby notified to render
in their demands to the undersigned, accord
ing to law;—and all persons indebted to said
estate ar>* required to make immediate pay
ment. This September 18th, 1*87.
DANIEL SWINT,
Adm’r of Richmond seweli, deceased.
Printer’s fee $3.00.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA—Coyvkta County:
Mrs. M. B. E. Arnold, administratrix of the
estate of AY'. 1*. Arnold, late of said county,
deceased, having applied to the Court of Or
dinary of said county for letters of dismission
from her sa;d trust, all persons concerned are
required to show eause in said Court by tiie
first Monday in December next, if any they
can, whv said application should not be grant
ed. This September 1, 1887. ,
YV. H. PERSONS, Ordinary.
Printers’ fee $5.30.
Georgia Pratt..
It appearing to the Court by the return of the
sherifi'in t he above stat ed case that the defend
ant does not reside in this county,and it further
appearing that she does not reside in the State;
it is therefore ordered by this Court that ser
vice lie perfecti d on the defendant, by the pub-
licatiiim of this order once a month for four
months before the next term of this Court iu
Tiie IIekald and Advertiser,!! newsoa-
per published in Coweta county. Georgia, and
defendant do app -ar at said term and answer
and defend. YY'ILLCOXON & YV RIGHT,
Petitioner’s Attorneys.
James S. Boynton, Judge Presiding.
I certify that tiie above is a true extract
from the minutes of Coweta Superior Court
at the March adjourned term. 1887. This July
26th, 1887. DANIEL SWINT.
Clerk Superior Court.
I In Coweta Superior
^ Court, Mareli Term, 1887
Libel for Divorce.
GEORGIA—Coyvkta County:
John T. Ferrell
vs.
Martha D. Ferrell.'
It appearing to tiie Court by tiie return of
the Sheriff in the above stated ease that the
deiendant does not reside in said county, and
it further appearing that she does not reside
in this v< tate: .t is therefore ordered by the
Court that service be. perfected on tiie defend
ant by tl’.e publication of this ord-r once u
month for four months be:ore the next term
of this Court in The IIekald and adver
tiser. a newspaper published in Coweta
county, Georgia.
LUTHER M. FARMER,
Granted: Petitioner’s Attorney.
S. YV. IlATiitis, J. S. C. C. C.
Administrator’s Sale.
Our new illustrated Furniture catalogue is just out, and ; georgia-coweta county :
°- I Bv virtue of an order of the Court of Odi-
we will be glad to mail it to any intending buyer
Remember the place: -{ 42 & 44 Peachtree Street. }*
NEWNAN MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS.
McNAMARA & BR0..
-DEALERS IN-
MARBLE AND GRANITE,
MONUMENTS, TOMBS AND HEADSTONES,
TABLETS, CURBING, ETC.
ESPECIAL DESIGNS, AND ESTIMATES FOR ANY DESIRED
WORK, FURNISHED ON APPLICATION.
Canada's populating
7,000,000.
is estimated at
nary of Coweta county, Georgia, I will sell
at the residence of J. D. Camp, iu the Third
District of said county on Thursday, the 6th
day of October next., the following property
belonging to tiie estate of Betsy Camp, de-
C6&S6ll •
Household and kitchen furniture, etc., con
sisting of bedsteads, feather beds, quilts,
sheets, crockery, tinware, etc. Terms cash.
This September 21st, 1887
DANIEL SWINT,
Administrator of Betsy Camp, deceased.
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
By virtue of an order of the Court of Ordi
nary ef said county. I will sell for cash, at the
Court-house door in Newnan, said county,
between the legal hours of sale, on the first
Tnesdav in November next, the house and
lot of Josie O. Clower, in the town of Grant-
ville, said county, lying in the fork of the
road south of and adjoining the residence lot
or R. I. O’Kelly, and known as “the Clower
lot.” This September 30th, 1887.
GEORGE W. CLOWER,
Administrator of Josie O. Clower.
Printer’s fee $3.00.
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA—Cowkta County:
By virtue ot an order of the Court of Ordi
nary of said county. I will sell lor cash, to the
tygbest and best bidder, before the Court
house door in the town of Newnan, on the
first Tuesday in November next, between the
A true extract from the minutes of Coweta
Superior Court, September Term, 1887.
DANIEL SWINT,
Clerk Superior Court.
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA—Coweta County :
Agreeably to an order from the Court
of Ordinary of Coweta county, Geor
gia, will be sold at auction at the Court
house door of said county, on tiie first Tues
day in November. 1887, within the legal hours
of sale, the following described property, to-
wit :
Lot of land number two hundred and twen
ty (220), except the fllty (50) or fifty-five (55)
acres covered by widow’s dower, containing
one hundred and Jjfty t,150) acres, more or lesiT
Also, the one undivided half-interest in all of
lot number two hundred and twenty-ei^ht
(228) except the northwest corner thereof
whereon Is situated an excellent flour and’
grist mill. Also, forty-seven (471 acres off
the east side ot lot number two hnndred and
twenty-one (221), bouuded on the east by said
lot number two hundred and twenty im nn
th e/i?Y th « by Jacobus Petty, on the west and
imrth by Mrs. Bailie Logan-said forty-seven
(47) acres being the seme which P Sewell
deceased, sold to Milton N. Sewell Sr de
ceased Also, thirty-seven (37) acres off the
west side of the east half of lot number two
wbSSSKS
me east, by w. B. Hood, on the north byj.
*?-*M»*IUaudon the
two hundred and twen
ty-nine (-2»,. All lying In the original Eighth,
nfirw ral ' e ** 'be Panther Creek
R^rjpiijf.aa^^couuly. Sold as the property
ofsaidMiltonN.Sewell,Sr.,deceased. Terms
cash. This September 23, 1887.
„ ANDREW J. SEWELL,
Printer’s fee 19.00. Administrator.