The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, December 09, 1887, Image 2

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($hc Jerald and ^dcerlisa Newnan, Ga., Friday, Dec. 9, 1887. WHEN SUNSTROKE IS IMMINENT. And What to Ho When It Occurs—Its Symptoms and Treatment. When, during the heated term, one who has beetiexposed to the sun’s heated rays begins to suffer from headache, gid diness, nausea and disturbance of sight, accompanied with sudden and great prostration of the physical forces, sun stroke is probably imminent. If such a one will lake time by the forelock and immediately retire to a cool place, making use of some simple restora tives, such as aromatic ammonia, etc., he may be spared further trouble; but if he persists with his business he will doubtless soon become very ill, which ill ness usually bikes the form of heat ex haustion, heat apoplexy or genuine sun stroke, the thermic fever of some writers. Those who are exhausted by the heat have a cool, moist skin, a rapid, weak pulse and respiration movement and the pupil is dilated. In fact these symptoms are those of collapse. These patients will probably recover promptly, an event which may be hastened by the use a Jonid.and restorative treatment. \ Those who suffer from heat apoplexy frequently become unconscious at the outset. The heart and breathing appa- paratus is not markedly disturbed and t lie pupil may Ik- normal, but the un- •oonsciousness deepens and the case runs on to a fatal termination. An artery has been broken in the brain and the poured out blood pressing on the nerve centers brings alxiut the fatal event. A treat ment calculated to draw the blood from the brain to the extremities—hot foot baths, bleeding, etc., promises to be the most useful in such cases. The thermic fever patient is uncon scious and convulsed and his body tem perature may be 10S or 110 degs. Fahren heit—that is, 10 degs. above normal. The skin of this patient feels as though it would burn your hand when laid /Chereon. In this case the thorough and prompt application of cold is needed, lice to the head and cold water to the body ; generally will be in order. Medical ad vice shoxld be promptly bad in either of the two cases last referred to. Com plete recovery from sunstroke is rare, I he brain being permanently crippled in many cases. Residence in a cold cli mate affords some Jiope for such patients. —Philadelphia Times. The Many Uses of Paper. This is the age of paper, and an exhi bition of paper objects and manufactures would fittingly commemorate the bi centenary of the first paper mill in this country next year, to lie held at Phila delphia, the birthplace of the trade. Paper is the receptacle and disseminator of science, the products of art and litera ture, the great means of keeping indus tries and commerce thriving. It barrels our Hour, wraps our goods, enters into articles of personal wear and household use, and when we die sometimes forms our coffins. It rolls beneath our railway cars and forms our buggy tops. We eat off it, drink from it, wear it on our heads, necks, bosoms and feet, carry it in our pockets in lieu of handkerchiefs, and tile our houses, line our carpets with it, pack «p our goods in paper boxes and divert our leisure moments with pajjer cards. We make 500,000 tons yearly, import largely, and yet, like Oliver Twist, ask for more. Rags, wood pulp, straw, old rope, the bark, of the cotton plant, and even the membranes in the in terior of silkworm cocoons, yield it.— Western Manufacturer. 'True Simmers and Tlieir Imitations. Manners may be either a revealer of a ■concealer of the true mental or moral condition of a man. When adopted as a veil to hide what is there, however in genious the artifice, the beauty and grace of truly fine manners cannot be reached. There will always be an indescribable something to dim their luster and cast •suspicion on their verity. The bland •courtesy which covers up dislike or in difference cannot command absolute trust; the gracious condescension which 5s often adopted to bide a mild contempt generally betrays it in the end. The finest manners are those which express, frankly and unconsciously, the actual presence of fine qualities, in their most delicate shades. Ali mere imitations of j them, where they do not exist: all artifi- j eial airs and graces for the sake of ap- ! pearances are mere mannerisms, which soon become transparent and disclose what they are intended to hide.—Phila delphia Ledger. J . Dividing tlic Ocean. The suggestion of Capt. Bartlett, chief of the Uilited States hydrographic office, that an international convention be ■called for the purpose of assigning differ ent portions of the ocean to each niari- ( time nation, will probably be favorably j considered by congress. It is believed j that this would prevent casualties at sea ! by ships running into floating derelicts. | Capt. Bartlett says in his report: ‘-Each j nation would patrol its own portion of j the ocean for the purpose of towing in or j destroying all obstacles. Frequent re- j ports are received of ships running into | these derelicts, and the number lost from j ibis cause may be considerable. If ship- j masters felt that every attempt was being made by civilized governments to clear j the ocean of these dangel's, their anxie- ; ties, which are sufficiently great from purely natural causes, would be mate rially relieved. ”—Boston Budget. A New Disinfectant. Experiments are believed to show that jptol, or orthopenot-sulphate, is des- ied to take the place of carbolic acid as disinfectant- and antiseptic. It is a rupy, brown fluid of aromatic odor, d soluble in alcohol, glycerine and iter, and is not irritating in as strong 10 per cent, solutions. As an auti stic it is said to equal carbolic acid, file possessing also the advantage of ?asanter odor, more solubility, etc,— licago Herald. Cldiui’s Rule'of the Rond. [n China the rule of the road is to keep the left, but the coolie bearers can’t be iglit to mind it, and there are fre- eut collisions, in which the women y r iers in the jinriehshas or sedan chain ? badly hurt.—$Tew York Sun. HOW TO LEARN TO SWIM. Boy« and Girls who Want to Woo th« Warn Should Carefully Read Thl*. Books are full of elaborate directions ^ ou 7 import trade, the question of how _ i A - j -- .L. „ gold is shipped to Europe becomes a Shipping Gold tm Europe. When one recalls the millions upon millions of dollars in gold that annually 6eek Europe to provide for the necessities for learning to swim, and in the large cities there are schools where the art can be acquired at all seasons of the year, but it is safe to say that any child having or dinary courage can safely be taught or can teach himself to swim by the follow ing simple method: Find a place where the water deepens gradually, as an ordinary beach. Often in a small stream there are jkxiLs nowhere too deep for safety. Procure a band or ’ belt to go around the bust under the ; arms, with small bands over the shoul- ; den* to keep it from slipping down. To j this lielt attach a safety line of such ; length that the learner cannot go into the | water deeper than the waist. The first thing to lie done is to learn to ! duck without minding it. Hold your breath and put your head under water several times whenever you bathe. You may probably strangle a bit at first, but the ducking will become less and less disagreeable until the disinclination to go under water nearly or quite disappears. Of course the bother need not make a martyr of himself by spending his whole time in the practice of ducking. I?3 may splash about as much as he likes. Some acquire the necessary indifference to lieing under water almost at once. Whon it is acquired let the bather select a place where the water is just deep . enough for him to sit upon the bottom with head and shoulders out of water. Then let him take a full breath, distend ing the lungs, and, placing his arms by his sides, lie down on his back on the bottom. If unsuccessful, partially expel the air. from the lungs and try again. After having found out by actual experi ment how easy it is to lie down on your back under water, go out to the full length of your rope and. holding your breath, pull yourself in toward the shore, hand over hand, not letting your feet touch bottom on any account until your breath gives out or you run-aground. No matter whether you go under water or not. no matter whether you keep your self right side up or not, go right on hauling yourself toward the shore, hand over hand, till you reach shoal water. When you can run yourself ashore with ease and certainty you will prob ably have discovered that most of the passagu is made at or near the surface of the water, and possibly you will have learned after a fashion to keep your bal ance and pull yourself ashore with your nose above water. When you can do this, you can breathe through ypur nose during the passage, and as soon as you can breathe comfortably while hauling yourself ashore you are ready for the next step, namely, try to pull yourself ashore using one hand for the rope and paddling with the other hand. This is not a very easy thing to do, and in all probability before you can accomplish it you will find yourself paddling with both hands and kicking with both feet—that is to say. swimming. As soon as you find that you can keep yourself right side up, and your eyes and nose above water, you have learned the great secret, and swimming with the most approved arid scientific stroke will follow, accord ing to your opportunities and ambition. These hints are intended to meet the most difficult.case possible, namely, that of a boy who is obliged to depend alto gether upon his own resources. If he has some one to help and advise, so much the L iter. Ho will probably learn to swim the quicker, but he must haul him self ashore or the object of the lesson will be lost. These directions are based upon the well established fact that no one can be a confident swimmer who is disconcerted at finding himself unexpectedly under water. Therefore the first thing to lie learned is to catch the breath instinctively under any and all circumstances the in stant you find yourself going under water. Strangulation occurs in consequence of drawing water with the breath into the air passages, and even partial strangula tion is unpleasant. The first tiling, then, for the would be swimmer to learn is to instinctively keep water out of the wind pipe. Tills can best be done by frequent voluntary duckings. In the rough swimming school of boy hood forcible duckings, often to the verge of cruel tv and danger, are frequent inci dents, and any preliminary practice will be an excellent breaking in for what most l>oys are likely to encounter. The succeed in curious and interesting one. The Bank of America is the largest single shipper of gold abroad. Shipments are made in stout kegs, very like the ordinary beer keg. Every one contains $50,000 in coin or in bar gold. The latter is the favorite for these, sliipments, since the govern ment has permitted the sub-treasury to exchange liar for gold coin, as coin in $1,000,000 shipment is liable to a loss by abrasion of from eight to twenty ounces, or from $128 to $820: and the bars only lose- about three-fourths of that amount. Where coin is sent double eagles are pre ferred. They are put in stout canvas bags, each bag containing 125 double eagliis, or $5,000, and ten bags fill each keg. About the only pracaution taken against tampering with kegs is a treat ment of the keg ends, technically known as “red taping.” Four holes are bored at equal intervals in the projecting rim of the staves above the bead. Red tape is run through these, crossing on the keg's head, the ends meeting at the cen ter, where they are sealed to the head by the hardest of wax and stamped with the consignor’s name. The average insur ance is about $1,500 per $1,000,000. Then there is an expense of $2 a keg for packing and cartage aboard sliip, or $200 for the same sum; and the inevitable loss by abrasion, whatever it may prove to be. There are great Wall street firms shipping from $25,000,000 to $40,000,000 annually. Some of these have for years insured themselves, and assert that the saving has been sufficient to replace a loss of $1,000,000. These are large figures. But this has become a country of large figures and affairs.—Edgar L. Wake- man in Globe-Democrat. Mothers, you can relieve your baby of its discomfort without administering opium, that deadly drug, bv using onlv Dr. Bull’s Baby Syrup. Ccgat Notices. Letters of Dismission. GEORGIA—Coweta County: P. S Whatley, administrator of the estate of C. G. Harr s, late of said count v. deceased, having applied to the Court i f Otdinary i.f said county for letters oi dismission from his said trust, all persons cone rned are required to show cause n said Court by the first Mon day in January next, if any" they can, whv said application should not he granted. This October 6. 1887. \V. H. PERSONS, Printer’s fee $5.00. Ordinary. THOMPSON BROS. NEWNAN, GA. FINE AND CHEAP FURNITURE —AT PRICES— THAT CANNOT BE BEAT IN THE STATE. Letters of Administration. GEORGIA—Coweta County: Mike Powell having applied to the Court, j ■>f Ordinary of said, county for permanent let- : tors of administration on the estate of Lula Redwing, late of said county, deceased, all persons concerned are required to show cause in said Court hy the first Monday in January next, if any they can, why said application should not be granted. This I). cember2.1887. „ . AV. H. PERSONS, Printers’ fee $3.00. Ordinary. Executor’s Sale. • GEORGIA—Coweta County: * Under and by virtue of an order from the ) ■ 'ourt of O dinary of Coweta county, I, as the xecutor of the last will and ‘otanient of j William W. Stegall, deceased, will sell, for cash, on the first Tuesday in January, l&SS, within the legal hours ot sale, before the court-house door of said county, in the city of N wnan. one six per cent bond ot the At- anta and West Point Railroad Company for two hundred dollars, due on the first day of j *uly, 1891. Sold as the property of said de-j ceased, and for a division. This November i 22,1887. JOSEPH E. DENT, Executor William W. Stegall. ; Printer's fee, $3.65. The Russian Language. Russian, it is true, is an Indo-Euro pean language, yet its analogies with other members of the same great family of speech are so obliterated, where not altogether lost, as to make the student's path a veritable terra incognita—an un il luminated tract in which almost every inch of ground has to be won by a special effort of the intellect rather than by any brightness of philological memory or de pendence upon Grimm’s famous law of consonantal interchange. It cannot be denied that many foreign words have crept into Russian. But this does not alter the character of the language, which remains, in spite of a sprinkling of foreign elements, wholly rounded off in itself. No less troublesome, on the other hand, is the formation of Russian as a spoken tongue. Credited, somewhat loosely, with possessing all the sounds heard in other Indo-European languages, it has vowels and consonants that are rarely, even after years of practice, cor rectly enunciated by foreigners. The soft “1,” a peculiar l^juid sound; the letter “shell,” expressed with a single character; the final “t” and “n”—these are all difficulties of a formidable charac ter, ;md need mastering at as early a stage in the student’s progress as possi ble. Having regard to its inflections alone, ono might call Russian an ancient tongue resuscitated for the use of a people of modern times. Every word in the sentence must fit in, so to speak, with every other; verbs must be in agreement —visible as well as implied—with their nominatives, adjectives with their nouns, and nouns with almost every part of speech. The Russian noun has three de clensions, each containing three sets of forms, and no fewer than seven cases. Tlie verb is more formidable still.—New York Mail and'Express. Administrator’s Sale. GEORGIA—Coweta County: On the first Tuesday in January, 18SS, I, as the administrator on the estate ot Richmond Sewell, deceased, will sell before the court house door in the city of Newnan, county of I’oweta, Georgia, between the legal hours of sa'e, the following lands belonging to said estate, to-wit: Seventy-five acres ofl of the north side of lot of land number 231, in the original Filth but.commonly called the Cedar Creek district of said county. Terms of sale, one-half cash, balance on November 1, 1888, with interest at the rate of eight per cent Bond for titles given. This December 1,1887. DANIEL SWINT, Printer’s fee. $3.72. Administrator. 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. Mat 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 Lo\v, for cash or on the installment plan. Metallic and Wooden Coffins ready at all times, night or day. THOMPSON BROS., NEWNAN, GA. HUNNICUTT & BELLINGRATH, ;6 AND 38 PEACHTREE STREET, ATLANTA, GA. DEALERS IN Stoves, Heating Stoves, Hall Stoves, Parlor Stoves. Office Stoves, Cooking Stoves for everybody, Ranges, Furnaces, Marbelized Iron and Slate Mantels, Manogony, Walnut. Printer’s fee, $4.70. Administrator. Turner'll Sloppy Manner. Turner’s abruptness of speech is still remembered at Farnley. A genuine love of ail runs through the Fawkes family, and one of the daughters, anxious for his criticism, ventured one day timidly to lay before him a water color drawing of her own. His only comment was, ‘-Put it in a jug of water.” Her momentary chagrin was great, but on turning the advice over in her mind she became per suaded that in that one pregnant sentence Turner had revealed one of his secrets. He certainly worked in what may be called a “sloppy” manner. Only once did he relax his usual se- steps arc intended to j cretiveness, and let Mr. Fawkes see him Administrator’s Sale. GEORGIA—Coweta County: By virtue of an order from the honorable Court of Ordinary of Coweta county, Georgia, will be sold fce'ore the court-house door in Newnan, on the first Tuesday in January next, between the legal hours of sale, to the j highest and best bidder, the following de- ; scribed property, to-wit: One hundred and one and a .quartor acres of land, more or less, being the east half of lot No two hundred and ninety-nine, in originally First, now Haralson district. Sold as the pro perty of Regina W Brandenburg, late of said . county, deceased, for the benefit of the heirs ( berry, Oak and Asll and creditors. Terms cash. This December Mantels, Tile Hearth, Tile 1st, iss7. Daniel swint, | Facings and Vestibule Tile, Plain Grates, Enameled, Nickel and Brass Trim med Grates. Just received, a beautiful line of Brass Fenders. Andirons, Fire Sets. Goal Vases, Coal By virtue of an order of the Court of Ordi- j Hods 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 Hose, 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 Boil era, Morris & Tasker’s Wrought Iron Pipe for steam, gas and . water. Climax Gas 33^"Plans and specifications furnished on application. Call and examine our stock or write for price list and circular. You will re ceive prompt attention and bottom prices. Administrator’s Sale. GEORGIA—Coweta County: nary of said county, I will sell for cash, to the highest, and best bidder, before the Court house door in the town of Newnan, on the first Tuesday in January next, between the legal hours of sale, the following described property, to-wit: The southeast corner of lot of land No. 123, in the Fourtii district of Coweta county, which is a triangular shape, and cut oil' by the Columbus road—bounded on the east by Z. Wor ham, on the south by J. C. Gibson, containing in ail i7 acres, mwre or less, and known as the Walden land. Sold as the prop erty of Martha Walden, deceased This De cember 1st, 1887. DAN I EL SWINT. Adm’r of Martha Walden, ilec’d. Administrator’s Sale. GEORGIA—Coweta County: By virtue of an order from the honorable Court of Ordinary of Coweta county, Georgia, will be sold, before the court-house door in | city of Newnan. between the legal hours of sale, cm the first Tuesday in January, 1888, j the following described lands belonging I to the estate of Adam Summer, late of said county, deceased, to-wit: One hundred acres of land, more or less, bounded on the north by Joseph Yinis, on the east.by H. A. Urquhart and R. T. Collins, on the south by lands of James Russell, and on I he west by 8. L. What ley, in the Second dis trict of said county;—with the exception of two acres which were deeded to White Oak Grove church, and one acre belonging to Jo seph Amis, and one-half acre set aside for cemetery purposes. On the land is one good five-room house, with necessary outbuild ings; about eighteen acres in original woods; t wo-horse farm in cultivation. Terms of sale, cash. This November 24, 1887. W. H. SUMMER. Printer’s fee, $5.55. Administrator: Machines HUNNTCUTT & BELLINGRATH. teavli the beginner by experiencing liis body is really lighter tlufn water will float with a trifling amount of aid from ah - in the lungs and from mechani cal assistance with the hands and feet. Once learned this lesson is never for gotten. and after a little practice in diving and swimming under water the novice will find himself gaining a degree of con fidence that is indispensible for satisfac tory swimming. The foregoing is intended for girls and women as well as for boys and men. Women are usually, for obvious reasons, a little reluctant to wet their hair. They often learn to swim easily and gracefully without knowing how to hold the breath. It follows, of course, that when they find themselves doused suddenly into the water from an overturned boat, or other wise plunged unexpectedly beneath the surface, they become partly strangled, lose all presence of mind and are not bet ter off than if they could not swim a stroke. Let it then be borne in mind by all swimmers that the best way to learn how to swim is first to learn how to sink. —Charles ledger Norton in New York Mail and Express. that at work. At breakfast one morning the and 1 conversation turned upon war ships, and j Mr. Fawkes, banding a small bit of paper to Turner, said: “Show me the size of a • man of war on that.” The idea tickled j Turner. He took his host to his room, j and in his presence and before the end of , the morning produced the highly finished, I marvelous water color now hanging in | the saloon at Farnley, called “The First j Rate taking in Stores.” The same ship is repeated three times at different angles and different distances, with every de tail accurate and clear. It was a wonder- ■ ful feat of memory and of speed, but the j method of working was no less remark able. The paper was soaked, blistered, daubed, rubbed, scratched with the thumb nail (kept hideously long for the purpose), until at length beauty and order broke from chaos.—Magazine of Aid. Administrators’ Sale. GEORGIA—Coweta County: By virtue of an order of the Court of Ordi- i nary of Coweta county, will be sold before the : court-house door in the city of Newnan, on i the first Tuesday in January, 1SS8, between 1 the losral hours of stile, the following described ! property, to-wit: Four hundred acres of land, consisting, of j lot. of land number (14) fourteen, in the Sev-I entli district of Coweta county, containing I two hundred and two and one-half acres, out j of which (133) one hundred and thirty-three , acres, being the eastern portion of said lot, | have been set aside to Rosa Ann Kelly as I dower, leaving sixty-seven acres, being the; western part of said lot, for sale; and also the ! remainder interest in said dower will be old ; at the same time and place. Also, two hun- • dred and two and one-halfaeres in the same ; district, being parts of two lots—one hundred j and one and one-fourth acres, lying east and j broadside of lot number fourteen, and one j hundred and one and one-fourth aerps lying ; west and broadside of’.ot number fourteen;— j all in the Seventh district of Coweta county, j Hold as the property of Harrison Kelly, de- I ceased, for distribution among the heirs and creditors of deceased. Terms cash. This No ! vember 25th, 1887. EDGAR KELLY. ! OSCAR KELLY, an IMPORTANT CLUB OFFER "C t? , '.■plfl v SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE fives its readers literature of lasting' inter- -est and value, it is fully and beautifully ©ei illustrated and has already g*ained a more than national circulation exceeding* 123.000 copies monthly. r* ^ ♦'V ./c ^ «*• [•PRICE 25 CENTS'A NUMBER- $S>.°° A YEAR^ SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS with Messrs. Charles 5cribner£ Sons the Publishers enable us t° offer .SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE with the THE HERALD AND ADVERTISER At the low combination rate of $3 90 for both. Send your order now. Subscrip tii ms may begin at any time. Postage free. Printer’s fee. $0.95. Administrators. The Republic of Venezuela. The United States of Venezuela is a re public, modeled after the Swiss confeder ation, with occasional hints from our own. There are seven states, with a federal congress composed of two houses, a federal council chosen by the senate from their own number, and a president, who holds office for two years. State legislatures have only one chamber, from which a state council is chosen by the members. Voting is supposed to be com pulsory, males becoming voters at 18 years, and eligible to office at 31. State governors are selected by the council from their own number, but residence is not required to qualify for candidacy. Each senator and representative has a “sup. h thought, exceed the other drugs in re- lante or substitute elected with him, of frequency of prescription; fur- who acts for his principal when absent thus avoiding waste of time.—Dr. W, F. Hutchinson in American Magazine. i What Doctors Prescribe. The subscribers to The Chemist and Druggist, London, having been asked to send to the editor 10.000 prescriptions, a I digest of the answers received shows : that spirits of chloroform, sal volatile, I glycerine, and sirup of orange peel take j high places as drugs most frequently pre scribed—to these being also added bro mide of potassium, which ranks second only to chloroform. yVine of ipecacuanha, ; sulphate of quinine, bicarbonate of soda, j carbonate of ammonia, liquor ammonia, | acetatis, potassii bicarbonatis. and 6piritus etlierin nitrosi are the other members pf the group of twelve drugs most frequently ordered. Several ot i these minister to the disorder of the respiratory tract, and the time of the j year may have some influence on their : use. This kind of information cannot, ! however, be regarded as representative. J Thus, if the statistics of some hospitals and dispensaries were taken, bicarbonate j bf sods, rhubarb, and gentian would, it ] prescription ther, spirit Of chloroform and sirup of orange peel are mainly used as adjuncts i .—Chicago Tribune. I Sheriff's Sales for January. GEORGIA—Coweta County: Will be sold before the court-house door in Newnan, said county, within the legal hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in January, 1888, the following described property, to-wit: Five hundred bundles fodder more or less. 85 bushels corn more or less. 5 bushels peas more or less, 135 bushels cot ton seed more or less, S hog's, and one-half interest in 3 bales of cotton. Levied on as the property of E. W. Hubbard to satisfy two executions issued from the City Court ot Newnan, one in favor of Chesapeake Guano Company for use of J. H. Dent, and one in favor ot J. \V. Bowers vs. said Hubbard, and one mortgage fi. fa. issued from the City Court of Newnan in favor of Eliza C. Bevis versus said Hubbard. This December 1,1887. $3.78 Also, at the same time and place, a certain tract or parcel of laud lying and being in the Second district of Coweta county, being the south half of lot number 81 in said district, containing one hundred one and a quarter acres, more or less; aud certain tracts or par cels of land lying and being in the original First now Second district of said county, known in the plan of said district as lots num ber 47 and 56—being fitly acres, more or less, in the southeast corner of lot number 47, and seventy acres, more or less, of lot number 56, being the wesi part ot said lot—except that parcel granted to Simeon H ughes & Co., start ing at the southwest corner of Robert Moore’s lot, running west one hundred yards, and thence south to the original line. Levied on as the property of Henry A. North to satisfy a n. fa. issued from the Superior Court bf Cow eta county in favor of Hugh Buchanan vs. said H. A. North. This December 1,1887. $5.94 Also, at the same time and place, that tract or lot of land D ing and lieing in the original Fifth now Hurricane district, and known as lot number 64 in the plan of said district, con taining two hundred two and one-half acres, more or less. Levied on as the property of Joseph W. Clarke to satisfy two rt. fas. issued from Coweta County Court—one in favor of Jones A Bowers, and one in favor of Patapseo Guano Company for use of Jones A Bowers versus Joseph W. Clarke. This December 1, 1887. GEO. H. CARMICAL, $3.45. Sheriff. MICKELBERRY & McCLENDON, WHOLESALE GROCERS, PRODUCE AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS. NO. 15 SOUTH BROAD ST., ATLANTA, GA. Hay, Oats, Corn, Meal, Bran, Stock Feed, Onions, Feathers, Cabbage, Irish Potatoes Dressed and Live Poultry*, Meat, Flour. Lard, N. O. Syrup, Dried Beef, Cheesj FRUITS AND ALL KINDS OF PROVISIONS AND COUNTRY PRODUcI Consignments solicited. Quick sales and prompt remittances. Good, dry. rat-proof Jtl age. Excellent facilities for the care of perishable goods. Judge Tolleson Kirby, Traveling Salesman. References*: Gate City National Bank, and merchants and bankers of Alla generally. M c CLENDON & CO., PRINTERS, STATIONERS AND BIND] NEWNAN, Gi