The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, November 25, 1887, Image 6

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i)I'raia an- Aamabi'i. Newnan, Ga., Friday, Nov. 1887. THE ART OF FLAVORING. WILD GEES;-: IN DAKOTA. Despite tne very best attention be- Tw'kUfc Women** Afternoon Drive. | stowed upon the baby, it will grow . The afternoon drive is, after all, a part sick and troublesome by reason of colic, A™l~ of wild Blnfc-A 81,1.11. u lMfoB of die Turkish women diarrhoea, teething etc. Bo not fail, . *•-- „ e in the outer world, but not o( <? use Ur. Bull s Baby Syrup. them to ex:imine licv were, therc- be umv Chemical Solution* Which Are Sold Under the Name of Essences. Preparatory to giving recipes for cor dials or liqueurs, it would lie well to re cord some sort of protest against the use of certain artificial chemical flavorings, which are sold under the name of essen ces as often as not, without being any thing like so harmless or so pure. In the nqxirt of th« juries to the great exhibition of 1851, we find the following remarks, l hat are sufficiently interesting to be quoted at length: *‘Several of the per- i jr e ese. fumes, or rather essences, exhibited are o f a particular interest, and deserve our especial notice.. We allude to a series of artificial organic compounds posse.-sing qualities which permit of their substitu tion for natural volatile oils and essences, of them are substances belonging to the group of compound ethers. There are several artificial essences of this kind. Neither the time nor the quantity of material at the command of the reporters permitted till these products. T fore, obliged to confine themselves to a notice of the following; pear oil is a spirituous solution of ace- late of oxide of amyl. The latter may obtained with facility and to an} :nt bj di-tilling equal parts of con centrated sulphuric acid and lusol oil (the residue obtained by the rectification of potato or grain spirit) with two parts of acetate of potash. It is remarkable that the ether itself does not possess a very pleasant odor, and that its striking resemblance to that of pear does not be come apparent until properly diluted with spirit. Artificial pear oil is now prepared in large quantities in England. It is chiefly employed in the manufacture „f the lozenges called pear drops, of which the exhibition presents some speci mens, so that the flavor in its applied state may be tested side by side with the perfume. Apple oil consists mainly of valeria nate of oxide of amyl. It is obtained as n secondary product in the preparation of valerianic ucid. by the distillation of f U s e l oil with bichromate of potash and sulphuric acid. The distillate has to lie shaken up ^vith a dilute potash solution in order to remove the valerianic acid, when the ether floats on the top, and may i>e removed with a pipette. Pineapple oil is contributed by most of the e:. !iibdtors of artificial essences. The specimen analyzed was found to consist almost exclusively of butyrate of oxide of ethy. It is easily obtained by boiling butyric acid (obtained from sugar by fermentation with putrid cheese) with strong spirit and a small quantity of con centrated sulphuric acid. It resembles the acetate of oxide of amyl in not pre senting the characteristic agreeable fruity flavor in a pure state; it requires to be considerably diluted before the odor ap pear. . The oil is largely manufactured in England, and is employed in the pre paration called “pineapple ale." Dr. Hassall says in his “Food: Its Aduheration:" “Another essence exten- sively u >.d for flavoring sweetmeats and Confectionery is ratilia, essential oil of almonds, essence of peach kernels or hvdridc of benzoyl. It is obtained by distilling bitter almond cake with water, and it contains from six to twelve per cent, of prussic or hydroganic acid, but is most variable in its strength. As small a quantity as twenty drops lias been known to occasion death.” There is another compound of prussic acid, called “almond flavor.” It contains about one drachm of essential oil to seven drachms of spirit, but its strength varies very much. Many fatal cases have re sulted from the use of this flavoring sub stance. liaspberry flavoring for sugar confec tionery is made entirely of currant jelly and orris root; “but,” adds Dr. Has sall, “organic chemistry has in these days reached such a pitch that the odoi and flavor of almost any fruit is capable of being imitated. We have recently re ceived samples of the following artificial fruit essences: Essence of apples, pears, quince, pineapples, raspberries, straw berries, cherries, peach .kernels, rum, gin. cognac, maraschino, hops, vanilla, parsley, celery and curry powder,” and tacitly confesses that he has found no harm in either.—Theodore F. Garrett in Practical Confectioner. Delight a Sportuman'* Eye*. For the information and, perhaps, ben efit of sportsmen. I will give a faint de scription of what we are daily witnessing of the grand armies of the strong winged birds whose name heads this letter. Of the variety known further south as wild geese, the “honkers,” as they are called, from their peculiar cry when on the wing, we see large numbers. A great many of them nest and breed about the small lakes in our neighborhood, and people often take the eggs and hatch them under do mestic birds, either geese or hens. Be sides these there are the brant, a smaller, gray goose. ah<I the beautiful snowy Of these last there seems to be no limit to numbers. The air is almost con stantly filled with their notes, and one can scarcely look up at the sky— which is wonderfully wide from these highlands— without seeing flocks of these magnifi cent birds wheeling across it in one direc tion or another. No mathematics yet invented could enumerate the hosts that have so far appeared. Instantaneous photography is the only method by which worn * anv truthful representation can be given of their hosts, We rode out the other day to the lake (Wamnuska, sometimes called Stump lake). The day was one of the mellow, golden, bracing, thoroughly enjoyah’^ days that October sometimes brings eveJ) to pour dwellers amid the mists and damps of the east, but to U g she is lavish of such treasures during her entire reign. All the day and kne days before—one can not tell for now long—flocks of geese, in countless numbers, were sailing overhead in ranks and clusters of ranks, some dark arid some snowy white, with black tipped wings. They are congregat ing about onr beautiful lake, proba bly making preliminary arrangements for their southern flight. The whole blue vault, which showed no cloud, was lined in every direction by ranks of snowv birds. The afternoon sun shone full upon their brilliant plumage, tinging it a full golden color, than which no bird of paradise could tie more dazzling, and the vast numbers on wing of shining gold liued hosts, made one of the finest sights that one can behold. I never be fore saw anything to equal it. When we came in full view of the lake, where there are several miles of water in sight, there was another remarkable surprise for us. If the canopy above was full of flying birds, the surface of that long stretch of it, except in fancy. Observe that ele gant turnout! It is a pretty brougham Price 25 cents. 11 is within the reach of all for 25 cents; we mean Laxador, the golden The horses are, for what I know, from specific for dyspepsia, indigestion and the steppes of Russia or the rolling jaundice. At all druggists. prairies of Hungary. They are neat, — ■ long tailed, spirited animals. Two fe males appear and are carefully helped by the slave into the vehicle. The coach man does not get a glimpse of the ladies. They are handy with their sunshades. THOMPSON BROS. NEWNAN, GA. -:o:- Ccgai Hoticcs. FINE AND CHEAP FURNITURE Notice to Debtors and Creditors GEORGIA-Coweta County: iuev ate nomijr All creditors of the < s' ate of Martha Wal- [ The brown Sfltin cushions tneir * floD f decense<l,are hereby notified to render in -AT PRICES— THAT CANNOT BE BEAT IN THE STATE. forms; the mirror is brightened. They are ready for their confectioner}* and their outing. Their lips are of carnation; their faces are of a rich creamy delicacy and not much hid from the gaze of the passengers. Whether on the Gezireh ; drive at Cairo, on the the Row. in London, in the Park at New York, or on the way to the Waters” of Europe, these fair ones are not disposed to be too much concealed from the world. Only fill the wardrobes of tv^ harem are ever They are LoO heavy. They are only for display. They are presents from the h-^j 0 f the house, and be stowed w, rh ,yvpnt ceremony. As in all their demands to the nndersgned, according , to law;—and all persons indebted to said es tate are required to make immediate pay ment. This October 2t«h. IW. printers fee $3,e0. DANIEL SW I NT. Adm’r of Martha Walden, dee/J. Antique Oak, and y a few of the ricii ferments which e wardrobes of t' harem are ever Notice to Debtors and Creditors. Bois at Paris, or ; GEORGIA—Coweta county: All persons ha' ingdemands against the es- Sweet 1 fate of Regina W. Brnnde.'iburg, late of said county, deceased, arc hereby notified to ren der in their demands to the undersigned, ac cording to law; and all persons iml- bted to said estate are required to make immediate payment. This October nth. 18*7. DANIEL SW1NT, Printer’s fee $3 00 Adn'imi-trator. s.OO, the Ir ,r!t great ceremony. ■roms, so in even the seraglio, the v <sitors, whom the master of the house does not see unveiled, drive him from the penetralia of his home to seek a refuge in the Salemlik. The porter never allows ingress without some testimonial. This requires the countersign of the black aga, who keeps the key to the cage. But why cal! it a cage? Nothing can be more delightful, especially in warm summer weather, than a konak on the hills or a palace on the shores of the straits. At midday the inmates take their siesta. There is a lullaby in the laughing ripple of the current almost at their feet. There is an occasional measured plash j of passing boats; the regular rattle of ' the oar locks; the murmuring of music j in other chambers, besides a drowsiness and a lack of garish light, which reminds one most of the Cave of Sleep in Spen ser’s “Faery Queen.”—S. S. Cox’s “Diversions of a Diplomat in Turkey.” Letters nf Dismission. GEORGIA—Coweta County : P. S Whatley, administrator of the estate of C. G. Harr s, late of said county, deceased, having applied to the Court >1 Oriinarv ol said county for letters ol dismission inun hi- said trust, ail persons cone- rood are required to show cause n said Court by the first Mon day in January next, if any they can. wh> said application should not he granted. This October 6, 1887. W. H. PERSONS, Printer’s fee $5.00. Ordinary. Letters of Dismission. G EORGIA—Ci > w eta C< >u nt y : Mrs. M. B. K. Arnold, administratrix of the estate of W. P. Arnold, bite ot said eounty. deceased, having applied to the Court of Or dinary of said county for letters of dismissi. from requL U first Monday in December next, if any they can, whv said application should not be grant ed. This September 1, 1W. \V. H. PERSONS, Ordinary. Printers’ fee ?5>0. am ri uuwm a t i ! i »* ■ a n her sanl trust, all persons concerned are tired to show cause in sain Court by the | I3jcr stock of Chamber suits in Walnut, I Cherry, and Imitation suites. I French Eh-esser Suites (ten pieces), from $22.60 to $ 125.1 Plush Parlor Suits, $35.00 ;tud upwaid. 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, THOMPSON BROS., NEWNAN, GA. nisfht or To Keep Pipes Sweet. “Yes, but my pipe gets so strong,” “That's no reason why you should smoke cigarettes.” “But, doctor, I Can’t afford to smoke cigars," urged the young man, whose family physician was lecturing him for glistening water was a hundred times indulging in the cigarette habit. The Darmstadt Madonna. Hans Holbein’s Madonna, painted about 1526 for Mayor Meyer, of Basel, is well known in art circles. The pictures at Darmstadt and Dresden were considered the best, and the latter has generally been pronounced the original done by the artist's own hands. The Darmstadt pict ure had been touched up and a thick coating of color and varnish was upon it. The grand duke of Hesse now commis sioned Alois Hauser, the conservator of the Munich galleries, to restore his pict ure. It has just been cleared of the un seemly covering which had keen hiding its beauties for more than a century, and there is no longer a doubt that the Darm stadt picture is the original and that of Dresden a splendid cony. The Darm stadt picture, after its restoration, is said to be something astonishing in the brill iancy of its colors and the beauty and softness of its lines. It will lie exhibited at Dresden by the side of the copy and afterward at Berlin.—Chicago Herald. more so. Along the further shore and j far out from land there were thousands j of geese floating, so close together that ; one saw no glimmer of water between them. Midway between the snores islands o. ; geese floated, but appeared, to observers on the high banks, like still, inanimate earth, covered with a fresh fall of snow. Sportsmen were crouching here and there behind clumps of bushes, and every now and then a rifle shot echoed along the woodland; but what were a few sports men among such multitudes of birds? My neighbor, the postmaster, brought in a half a dozen geese, the result of two or three odd half hours’ sport. Another neighbor took twelve the same day. One man shot fourteen within thirty minutes. The flesh of these birds is excellent, and in this climate can lie kept a long time. A party of sportsmen are here now from Florida, and will spend a week or more. Two gentlemen from Boston spent a week here shooting, and bagged a large num ber of ducks and several geese. They left for home some weeks ago. Had they remained two weeks their sport would, perhaps, have been more satisfac tory, as the larger birds are far more numerous at tins time than a month earlier. As it was, however, these Boston men were so well pleased with their trip, and with the opportunities for good shooting, that they left their canoe here for next year’s use.—Harrisburg (Dak.) Letter. There is no need of that, either.” “I don’t see how you make that out,” replied the j outh. “You can smoke a pipe that never gets strong.” “Yes, but I don’t like Turkish pipes. They are cumbersome, and the long stem is always in the way.” “I don’t mean that kind of a pipe. I mean a meerschaum.” “Meerschaum? Why, I have had a dozen, and they always get strong.” “There is where you are mistaken. A meerschaum pipe that is properly smoked never gets strong, but the stem does. Change the stem once or twice in an evening. Use waxel-root stems. They keep sweet longer than any other wood in the world.” “That’s all right about the stem, but how do you keep the bowls from getting strong?” “By properly coloring them. Use a button in the bottom of the bowl. That will prevent the pipe from being burnt. Then take care not to smoke fast enough to overheat the pipe. The porous mate rial will absorb the nicotine, and the longer it is smoked the sweeter it is. Try it once, and if you don’t prefer it to a cigarette I'll pay for the pipe.”—New York Mail and Express. Letters of Dismission. GEORGIA—Coweta Couniy: J. B. Sims, guardian of T. C. Banks, having applied to the Court of < q uinary of said coun to for letters of dismission from his said trust, all persons concerned are required to show cause in said Court by the first Monday in De cember next, if any they can, why s od appli cation should not be granted. This Novem ber 4th, 1887. \V. H. PERSONS, Printer’s fee, $3.00, Ordinary. • i To Wliom it May Concern. GEORGIA-Coweta County: The estate of Eddis Lester, tale of said coun ty, deceased, being unrepresented and not iikeiy to be represented: all persons concern ed are required to show cause in the Court of Ordinary of said county on the first Monday in December next, why such administration should not be vested in the County Adminis trator. This November <th, 18*7 W. H. PERSONS, Ordinary. Prs. fee. £8.00. and ex-ollieio Clerk C. O. Administrator’s Sale. GEORGIA-Coweta County: By virtue of an order of the Court of Ordi nary of said county, I will sell for cash, tolhe highest and best bidder, before the Court house door in the town of Newnan, on ttie first Tuesday in December next, between the legal hours of sale, the following described property, to-wit: The southeast coi ner of lot or land No. 128, in the Fourth district of Coweta county, which is h triangular shape, and cut off by tie. Columbus road - hounded on the east by /. Wor ham, on the south by I. Gibson, containing in all 17 acres, morn or less, and known as the Walden land. Sold asthe prop erty of Martha Walden, deceased This No- vember29th, 1887. DANIEL SW INT, Adm’r of Mart ha Walden. de"’d. Gray Matter of the Brain. “Many jokes are made about the gray matter of the brain,” said Dr. Hammond, ‘ ‘but I will say right here that I have a great respect for the gray matter of the brain. There is no higher organism than that. It is the grandest organ in man, and were I ever to worship anything it would be a portion of the gray matter of the brain. It is well for us to know that the emotions cause more unhappiness and crime than any other function of the brain. Human beings are governed by their emotions, and it is well that they should be. though it is the emotions that wear away the brain, and not honest in tellectual work. Very few people suffer from intellectual work, and if my mem ory serves me I do not recollect ever having a mathematician for a patient. “It is not intellectual work that causes nervous dyspepsia, but the emotions, such as anxiety, fear, sorrow and love. I consider that eight hours are sufficient for a man to use his brain, because if ho | exceeds that time he becomes nervous j and fretful, and an exhausted brain is an j irritable brain. You may not L ei the j evil effects of the stress of brain work at j the time, but you will sooner or later, j when it will be too late. The men that i work at night with their brains are the j ones that expose themselves to danger j and death, which will surely come unless the great strain on the mind is light ened.*’ Bismarck and Gothic German. Prince Bismarck is still as obstinate as ever in his refusal to read any German book or document not written in the or dinary Gothic characters, and so far every effort has failed to convince him that the introduction of Latin characters into schools and oiiices would be a^great saving of both time and eyesight. Since, however, it has recently been pointed out and historically proved by Professor Cohn that the Gothic letters are nothing but an ornamental form of the old Latin used by the monks in the Middle Ages, the chancellor will perhaps desist from his efforts to keep intact this “unlucky present of the Middle Ages,” as a Ger man scholar calls the present mode of writing in Germany, which can now no longer be supported for patriotic reasons. The greet painter, Albrecht Duever, agi tated for the return to the more simple and mathematical form of writing as long back as 1525; France, Italy, and Spain, who for a period adopted Gothic wnrvcg. have long ago gone back to simple Laim characters, and Germany, in this matter !>v no means agreeing with her great leader, will be only too glad to follow suit.—Pall Mali Gazette. HUNNiCUTT & BELLINGRATH, 36 AND 38 PEACHTREE STREET, ATLANTA, GA. DEALERS IN ktoves, Heating Stoves, Hall Stoves, Parlor Stoves, Office Stoves, Cooking Stoves for everybody, Ranges, Furnaces, Marbelized Iron and Slate Mantels, Mahogony, Walnut, Cherry, Oak and Ash ■ Mantels, Tile Hearth. Tile . Facings and Vestibule Tile, Plain ^ . Grates, Enameled, Nickel and Brass Trim- A med Grates. Just received, a beautiful line ol Brass Fenders, Andirons, Fire Sets, Coal Vases, Coal . . Ilods and Tin Toilet Sets, that in quantity, quality and designs cannot be sur- passed in the city, Gas Fixtures, Chandeliers and Pendants, Plumbers, and Steam Fitters, Supplies, Water Closets, Bath Tubs, Pumps, Rubber nose, Brass Goods, Steam Cocks and Gauges, Tin Plate, Block and Galvanized Sheet Iron, Wrought Iron Pipe for steam, gas and water. Practical Plumbers, Steam Heaters and Gas Fitters, Architectural Galvanized Iron Workers and Tin Roofers. Agts. for Knowles’Steam Pumps, Dunning’s Boilers, Morris & Tasker’s Wrought Iron Pipe for steam, gas aiul water, Climax Gas Machines. g^f^Plans and specifications furnished on appl'cation. Call and examine our stock or write lor pricelist and circular. You will ceive prompt attention and bottom prices. re- HUNN ICUTT & BELLINGRATH. Administrator’s Sale. G EORGI A—Cow eta 1 ‘obxty : Agreeal.ly to an order of tlio Court of Ordi nary "f said county, will he sold ,-t auction.) he'or:- the court house door 01 said county, ) within tiie legal hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in December next, the following property, to-wit: The one hundred and sixty- wii acres of land, more or h-ss, 01 of of Ian : number one hundred and eleven, in the orig inal Eighth district, (present Cedar Creek dis- 1 iiet.). of s-'id coun y, of which John Morgan died posses-ed,—exoent sixty acres in the ,ortinvest corner of said tract, assigned to the PRODUCE AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, :51st. 1887. E. W. MORGAN, Printer’s fee, £4 00. Administrator. MICKELBERRY & McCLENDON, WHOLESALE GROCERS, Administrator’s Sale. ( ; EORGI A—Co W ETA l 'ODXTY : Bv virtue oi an order from the honorable Court of Ordinary of Coweta county, Georgia, wid he sold la-fore the court house door in Newnan, on the first Tuesday in December next, between the legal hours of sale, to the highest and best bidder, the following de scribed property, to wit: One hundred, and one and a quarter acres or land, more or less, being part of lot number two hundred and seventy-nine. in originally First, now Haralson district. Sold as the pro perty of Regina >V Brandenburg, late of said county, deceased, for the benefit of the heirs and creditors. Terms cash. This November 1st, 18S7. DASHED SAVIN'!'. Printer’s fee. £4.90. Administrator. Libel Tor Divorce. G E O RGI A—Co W ET A Co U NT Y: John T. Ferrell j In Coweta Superior Martha D.‘ Ferrell. S Courr ’ MarCh Tern ” 18S ” It appearing to the Court by the return ot the Sheriff in the above stated case that the defendant does not reside in 'aid county, and it. further appearing that she does not. res un- in this State: it is therefore ordered by the Court that service he perfected on ilieu T-;ni- unt by the publication of this or 1 r «>n -■ month for four months be - ore il- ■ next term ■ >f this Court in Tiif. Hkrat.d and Aiivek- •risKii. a newsp per published in Coweta eounty, Georgia. LUTITER M. FARMER, Granted: Petition- r*s Attorney s. V.'. Harris, J. S. C. C. C. NO. 15 SOUTH BROAD ST., ATLANTA, GA. Hay, Oats, Corn. Meal, Bran, Stock Feed, Onions, Feathers, Cabbage, Irish Potatoes Dressed and Live Poultry, Meat, Hour, Lard, N. O. Syrup, Dried Beef, Cheese, FRUITS AND ALL KINDS OF PROVISIONS AND COUNTRY PRODUCE. Consignments solicited. Quick sales and prompt remittances. Good, dry, rat-proof stor age. Excellent facilities for the care of perishable goods. Judge Tolleson Kirby, Traveling Salesman. Refekexces: Gate City National Bank, and merchants and hankers of Atlanta generally. NEWNAN MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS. To Marry a Japanese Girl. Lieut. Foulke of the United States navy, now on duty in Japanese waters, is shortly to marry a Japanese girl at Nagasaki. The young lady taught Lieut. Foulke the language of the country, and during his prolonged stay oh shore duty in Korea the two kept up a correspon dence, she writing in English, which she had lioon taught by her foreign lover. There is more romance, too, about a dan gerous illness through which she once nursed him. She is spoken of as a wom an of great intelligence, beauty and fas cination, and a strong and admirable character. Lieut. Foulke will bring hu wife home with him, where ho has been ordered to stand his examination for pro motion in the service.—Boston Transcript. Those who are troubled with sleepless ness should, if strong enough to <10 so, take a long walk in Li:e evening. Riding ffi the opsu fcir aLo proinoleo sleep, The Face of linssia. The face cf Eussia is like Wisconsin, less the lakes and beautiful streams; northern Michigan, without rite largest pine trees, and New Mexico, with the ab sence of warmth. The pineries are stunted, the fields covered with wheat— in harvest during August—and the vil lages are of small wooden buildings, cov ered with straw. Nowhc-re is there ar chitecture. taste or cleanliness displayed. The advancement of the country may be illustrated in the statement that though Russia is one of the greatest in wheat pro ducing, the cereal is sewn broadcast, har vested with the sickle, threshed with the Aral, and three-fourths of the work is done by the women. ’Hie forests are in fested with wolves and other wild ani mals; the fields, when not covered with wheat, are carpeted with Jean-Marie, with a yellow rattle and a plume of blue leaves at the top. Mushrooms and all the fungi of a cold climate are seen, and one's bewilderment increases as the slow train goes further and further into tin empire.—New York Sun. The Fate cf World: . The earth, says Flamanon. .v.as born: it will die. It will die when vi: :.! elements have been spent, or • R th-i extinction of the sun, in v ’ its existence is suspended. I: by the shock of a celestial be might meet in its path, hut 1 • i the world is the mi st improl.:. ! cf ad it may die. we say, by the How absorp tion of its elements. In truth, ic . • p li able that the water and the air : :e Lla.ht- ishing. The ocean, like the : appears to have been much 1 e .: I i- I erable than at present. The - ru t of the | earth is penetrated by the waters, which ! combine chemically with the rocks. It ! is almost certain that the interior temper- | ature of the globe at ten kilometers (about six miles) of depth reaches the boiling ' point and impedes a further descent of j the waters; but the absorption will con- i tinue with the cooling of the globe. The j oxygen, nitrogen and carbonic amd. which ! compose our atmosphere, appear to suffer likewise a slow absorption.—Arkansan Traveler. A true extre.i-t from the minutes or S-njerior Gourt. Sep’i-miier l'-rin. 1-87 DANIEL >tVIN'! CLric s uneriu: Co wet; Executor’s Sale. 1 ’ow! rA County; if an or-.i-'-r from t! !; ry of Cow t :i com A fi-si Tuesday : sal hours of -• lour in riie city of X . tl ins : n the UNth <i's w K i ^ A ■a .u il MONUMENTS, TOMBS AND HEADSTONES* TABLETS, CURBING, ETC. flS^NSPEUIAL DESIGNS, AND ESTIMATES FOR ANY DESIRED :i 1 ro:i !!mv : On -nnt: •oi'-cr 1 ry til* tnate, tli WORK, FURNISHED ON APPLICATION. N s—* K ^ £L -‘A 1ST i N AN AP pi A iUiavjI \Y. B Berry, on ;ie v f-w iy - ■ I id ('nmpnny, anil running except two acres of land on • -t Roint n a point the south Ruhr; -Mirth - 1 side ot the house lot and next to tl*-- iznruen. 1.. qneathed to - tnrtis Woodley by p.-tr-r (Hv--n. cb-ceased; ami s-d-1 two aer - wi'i be sold, at the same timi . ii n< ct ss y to j he Jeliis of the estate of said I’< ten wen. '■AY., « , tract of land being the sum-on which Owen, - ■ .Said .;•! for benefit id creditor.- an ! '1 ••■ ni.-i- asli. This >'<.v..-n:hi-r is IW. ('. \. EOI.ToN. Executor ol Peter Gwen. Printer’s fee, : an orchard and all necessary ourinoldings. A 1 store-house on the premises not included in ; the sale. Sold as the prop, rty ol Jani-s Bus sed. deceased. Terms case. 1 his November : 1st. 1887. C- v* l‘l s.S T hljj ’ J. I*. RUSSELL, | Printer’s fee, f4.45 Administrators. Pete la ml V os. Administrators’ G EORGI A—Coweta Cor - Sale. Two Fine Chargors. Air. Bumpus—I saw you taking a horseback ride this morning. Your own horse? Mr. Vunipus—No; only a livery hack. “He looked like a very fine charger.” “So I thought until I paid the bill. Then the owner c the stab!;- cast liim in the shade.”—lia-rpci & Bazar. Bv v irtue of ■ a -rd Court of Ordinary oft will be soiti l«.lore Sfwii.iii. on f! next. '• tween l-d a- : Place. fiom tk“ honorable iwetacounty, Georgia, the cour:-house door in first T’u—Vy in JHvetnb-r • legal hours of sale, to Libel for Divorce. GEO RGIA—COWKTA ('oCSTY: Scott Price j in Coweta Superior Court, . , . vs ;> - t September Term, 18s7. Sylvia Price. > * ' it, appearing lothe Court Jy the return of : the Sheriff in the above -rat ! ease th; t the I defendant does not rc-C'e in sa-d county, and ! •: further appearing that she does not reside ! in the stu'.-:* 11 is therefore order, il by the Court that set vice is perfected on the defend ant I'vlli publication of this order once a mouth for four months before the next term of sh s Court iii'fitK Herald and Apvki:- tis.k::, a newspaper published in Coweta and best bidder, the following do- i comity, Georgia. P. V. SMITH. Bv Court: Pefstiont-rn Attorr-e. Harris, J. S. C. C. C. j The uliice contain re >r less, lying in ■ r • - ,-:d ( ,, -aly.ami botind- Summer T Co Uns and J. west by G. <>. Scroggin. _aod S-room dwelling, S. W A true extract from the minutes of Co Superior Court, September Term, I-- '? - September 13th. 1887. DAN LEI. sv» if- i. Clerk 'superior Court. Administrator’s Sale. GEORGIA—Cowkta County : By virtue of an order from the honorable Court of Ordinary ot Coweta county, Geo gia, I will sell before the court-house door tn the city of Newnan, within the legal hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in December next, the following descrioed lands belonging to the es tate of J. M. s. Smith, deceased to-wit : Twelve and t wo thirds (ls-Cj acres, more or less, of the south a-t corner of lot number two hundred and two _’02), and eleven (11) acres, more nr less, of the nort tieast corner of lot number two hundred and fifteen ly ing in the original Second, now Grantviile district, Coweta county, Georgia, said lands adjoining and bounded as follows: On the north by widow’s dower, on the ea-t. by lands of D L Puckett, on the south by lands of B. i. O’Keiiy, and on the west by lands of R. M. Word. At:tie same time and place will be sold the ! estate or remainder interest in tlie dower of the widow, containing twentv-one and one- thi-d 21';, acres of lot number two hundred j and ’ ivo , and lying north of above tracts. Ail sold forthe benefit of the heirs and cr-u- j iters. Terr.is cash. This November 1st , 1887. it. J. LASSETTEK. S. Smith, dec’d. Adminis^fator of J. M. : 1‘rinter’s fee, s7.u0.