Newspaper Page Text
LEGERDEMAIN.
•bur Anim till
r mmI tutor.
_ Mrs. Gratebar And* their
lltlren—Philip, who is twelve;-
and Clara, *Hve—were
nner table waiting tor
WUUUtVU- 4 I
waits
» in
. ■ Borrowing a five oent
his' father, Philip held it
to
from
his right hand and said
’ou see this nickelt"
George and Clara wore
for they knew that
>ut to do something
"Now,” said Philip, still
. the five cent piece, “yon
:e" this napkin and place it
lik'o this, and you
»Mm awtowMi so L.vusiy mat tt hm
r.llcu lata Dl.reputo.
Knighthood' confers no political
privilege and" it is not hereditary,
and consequently it seems to have
heoome an admitted principle that
anybody and everybody has a prana
fade claim to it In the last twenty
years' many more than a thousand
knights have been dnbbed, and the
last batch of persons to receive the
* accolade and the right of pre-
Sir" to their names consisted
of professional musicians of
by no means a high class, among
of
It is more
trlbutor called
United States
the fact that
itunof
iorities to
ay com
panies were carrying letters, under
an arrangement with her majesty's
] lostoffico, outside the mail bags, and
lhat this was a grand convenience to
many of her majesty’s subjects.
the nickel
’ the nickel is there, for you can
is shape of it through the nap-
Tben I roll the napkin up
htly around tho nickel, like this.”
them the music master formerly at
ldhall,
Philip suddenly gathered up
or the napkin, which had
the corners
been draped nroun-
s uplifted hand,
and began to bundle it into a com-
Mr. and Mrs. Gratebar
saw that with the first quick move
ment he let the five cent piece slide
along the palm of his hand and up
Ids coat sleeve, "aud then,” said
Philip, ns ho rolled the big wad in
bis hands like a ball, “I blow ou it
twice like this, poh! polj I and I blow
the nickol right away, though you
. . __ ...
can’t boo it go. Now you take the
napkin and-shako (tout, and you'll
«oe that the nickel isn't thore.”
Gcorgo, with a sobor face, took the
napkin and shook it out, and lo, the
flvo cent piece wus gone,
“Now," sajd Philip, “with becom
ing gravity, ’'‘wo will find that nickel
in tho back of your neck."
.Lowering his arm Philip lot tho
five cent piece drop Into his hnnd.
Then ho rested Ids hand for a
moment upon tho back of Ocorgo's
neck and nn instant later ho was
holding lieforo him the coin,
Philip now turned to Clam, nnd
with the five cent .piece and three
napkin rings ho proceeded to sc*
forth toiler tho mysteries of thtmblo-
rig. “Now watch tiro nickel closoly,”
- he said, "and follow it with your
eye, and seo if you can toil when I
W>] "
op Bhufiling the rings in which ono
the uiekul is.” Thou, partly covering
the rings with ono hand, with th-
otlier ho shifted thorn about while
George and Clara looked on intently.
“Now which ring do you think tho
nickel is in?" said Philip, and Clara,
who had followod it in all its devious
wanderings anil who was perfectly
certain that sho know, laid ono small’
finger upon Philip’s hand ovor the
ring in which sho thought it was and
arid, "This one." And Philip lifted
Ws hand, and, would you boliovo it?
five oent piece wasn't there I
i George nnd Clara shouted with
!ul amazement, and Mr. and
i,'Gratebar looked on amused and
“Now," said Philip, “I’ll show you
aamething different." Holding tho
live cent pleco in front of him he
arid:
“Now, you Bee tho nickol"
At that momont the dessert was
brought in and Philp put the five
cent piece in his pockot. When he
bad finished his meal he went away
without again reforring to the Bub
ject of sleight of hand. Mr. Grate-
bar soomed to bo a little surprised a'
Philip’s omission to return the five
Cent piece, but Mrs. Gratebar said
ahothought
that all children wore
gf;
more or less inclined to ho forget-
il.—New York'Sun.
On* Way to Ftml a Doily,
We are told that in tho search for
tte body of tho boy drowned at
Eton college, now of the Gull
the leader of the queen’s private
hand and an organist at Windsor I
Against these gentlemen personal
ly we have nothing whatever to say.
In every moral and social quality we
haVe no doubt they are all that can
be desired, and that so far their ad
mission into the order to which they
now belong was perfectly justified.
But that bandmasters, organists and
teachers of music are proper persons
to be knighted cati hardly be tpain-
tained on the assumption that
knighthood is to continue to be re
garded as the appropriate reward of
public services in whatever capacity
they may bo rendered. More espe
cially Ib this obvious in relation to
the art with which they themselves
are connected, for assuredly if
knighthood is a sufficient recogni
tion of the eminence of Sir Arthur
Sullivan and Sir Charles Halle it is
infinitely more than u sufficient rec
ognition of the eminence of Mr. Par
ratt, Dr. Bornby und Mr. Cusins.
It is true that siiifcple knighthood,
ns distinguished from knight corn-
mundersliip of the Hath, St. Michael,
and St. George and the Star of India,
to say nothing of the Garror, the
Thistle and St. Patrick, is npt nnd
can scarcely lie expected to be held
In any great veneration. Custom
has mndo it imperative on the sover
eign to confer it on a number of
persons whose social status is alto
gather different from that of those
wlioure admitted to the royal or
ders. But however promiscuously
enjoyed, the honor, such as it is, is
invariably shured by the judges of
tho land nnd the law officers of the
crowu. and even city sheriffs and
provincial mayors have some reason
to complain when its value is still
further dejireciatod. No doubt the
disreputo of knighthood is no new
thing. Heralds are accustomed to
date tho commencement from tho
reign of James 1, who created 800
knights in six wooks, and that of his
son, Charles I, who knighted among
others Sir Jeffrey Hudson, the
queen's dwarf. But it reached a cli
max under Georgo IV, who discov
ered in the mere threat of adminis
tering the royal accolado an effectual
protection against tho presentation
of unwelcome addresses, and under
William IV, who knighted every
body who would allow l.im to do so
•matters in this respect wore not
much mended.
Iu the earlier years otMho queen's
reign. Uowevor, when the counsels
of the lamented princo consort were
in tho ascendant, knighthood was
very sparingly conferred, nnd its po
sition as a social distinction was pro
portionately raised. But it is not
too much to sny that of into it has
been distributed with so little cir
cumspection that it has become al
most valueless for the purpose for
which it is supposed and ought to
exist.—London World.
Springfield Saturday tho searchers
adopted a plan proposed by one of
opted
the party, which was to tie up a loaf
of rye bread in tho lost one's Bhirt
and set it adrift in the water above
the place where tho ]ad was drowned,
tho theory being that the loaf would
first until in the vicinity of the body.
The plan was tried and a hundred or
«nare people, says our informant,
watched tho package float down the
stream until at a certain point it be
gan circling around, nnd their eyes
watched it intently for five minutes
«lr more, when suddenly it sank out
«jf sight. And now comes the inter
esting purtof the experiment—the
body was afterward found within a
tbw feet of the spot.—Sleepy Eye
Dispatch.
Tli® Liberty Cap.
When the Romans manumitted a
riavo his head was adorned with a
•mall red cloth cup. As soon as
this was done ho was known
a libertinus. or freodmnn, and his
name wus registered among others of
•thecity's “tribes.” In the year 263,
when Saturnius invaded the capital,
>he hoisted a cap on tho point of his
.spear, to indicate that nil slaves who
.rallied around this standard should
the tree. This was tho origin of the
■liberty cap still used in art as a sym
flboL—fit Louis Republic.
Unkind If Hot Rude.
The -old gentleman was doing his
tast to lie entertaining to Algernon,
when his daughter remarked, “Ex
cuse me, pupa, but Algy and 1 are
convinced that harmony would be
promoted by the alieence of third
;>• party, interference." — Washington
Nun® Too Poor.
j-y- '-'Vk&sn, you do not sny whether you
!fke iny pie or not.”
“ft isn't necessary. Maud. Pie,
d or bad. iB still always pie, and
H hasting the Tapir.
In the wilder parts of South
America you can hag a deer or wild
hog almost any day if you set wisely
about it, but months may pass with
out even the Bight of a tapir, though
you may be in their haunts continu
ally. You see plenty of- unmistak
able three toed tracks and now and
again you may hoar tapirs moving
in the forest—not leaping through
openings between the vines and
bronchos ns a deer does, nor pushing
the brush aside like a jaguar, but
crushing their way by sheer strength
with a great crackling of twigs.
It is almost useless to follow tracks
or sounds; clumsy as the animals ap
pear, they can race through 'the un
derbrush faster than a dog can fol
low, and they are so keen of sight
and scent and so prone to conceal,
ment that oven the most experienced
hunter rarely catches Bight of one in
the daytime, unless by accidont. The
best plan is to lie in writ for them
os the lithe and crafty jaguar does,
by their drinking nnd wallowing
places, and this must be dono at night.
I may as well add here that tapii-E
are common all over tropical South
and Control America, except the
thickly settlod regions nnd the
Pacific coast. Naturalists distinguish
several species, differing mainly in
size and the structure of the bones,
but they ore much alike. All go
singly, or in 1 Kinds generally of two
or three, nnd feed on fruits und
leaves.—St. Nicholas.
—The weddings which, some months
ago, rumor said would happen this fall,
have nearly all taken place, all ol
which goes to show Unit where there';
a great deal of smoke there, must be
sort of n blaze.
The British railway companies have
in this way tot
been carrying letters
two or three years, and what was
originally an experiment is today a
demonstrated success. The number
of letters so carried in one year in
Great Britain was 145,000 and in Ire
land 12,000.
We are indebted to Mr. Henry L.
Goodwin, of East Hartford, whose
alert interest in postal reforms dur
ing the past forty odd years has been
of substantial service to the whole
American people, for a copy of the
agreement between her majesty’s
postmaster general and the seventy-
five British railway, tramway and
steamship companies that ore thus
co-operating with the department.
Each company agrees to receive at
any of its passenger stations and for
ward any letter bearing a postage
stamp or stamps of the value of one
penny, not exceeding one ounce In* 1
weight and not containing a watch,
jewelry or coin of the realm. For
this servieo the company is author
ized to collect two pence from the
sender of tho letter, and this is the
sole compensation it gets.
Any subject of her majesty can
post a letter and have it delivered
into the hands of his fellow subject
to whom it is addressed, if living
within two miles of the postofflee, by
the payment of additional postage at
tho rate of three ponce for cuch mile
or fraction of u mile. If thodistnnen
exceeds two miles und there is no
public conveyance available in both
directions, “the actual cost at a spe
cial/conveyance must ho in ad
dition.” It is this service which the
department desires to extend so ns to
cover tlie letters sent outside tho
mail bags.
How great a convenience tho
chance to send letters iu this new
British fashion would often bo to cit
izens of this glorious republic hardly
needs pointing out. At present Homy
of our passenger trains have-railway
postofflees attached to them, and tho
sender of a letter can post it on tho
train personally. Tho railroad men
are not allowed to do it for'Kim. In
the cities there are mail boxes at tho
railway stations, hut in the Country
towns these are conspicuously ab
sent.'-
A great many passengor trains,how
oorry closed mails. If there- were
slits in the mail bagB for this inser
tion of letters, and if the baggage
master in charge were allowed for a
reasonable feo to pop tho lottors of
belated citizens into them, a great
deal of time would bn saved and a
great deal of inconvenience nnd an
noyance avoided.—Hartford Cournnt.
stiwh,.' ,
Ad Dm month U cherry ripe.
Lewi It bests roar new ityle pleura.
This «M Alierrytypel
There’s s blueh scroet the dimples
Thet burrows In the cheeks:
fora on them clumps o' ringlet*
Two llttlsemsll esn peeks:
That brooch thet Jloes her ueokgesr
Is what they used to wear*
A big sold frame thot sprawled around
A lock o'—soma one's hair.
Twss took 'fore we was married,
Thet there—your maw and ue.
An times I study on it,
Why, 't fuses me Iu see
Thet fifty year ain't teched her
A llckl She’s Jest the rums
She was when Sudie Scrlntena
Took Boone C. Cords' name.
The hair Is mebby whiter
'An it Was tn forty-one,
But her cheeks Is Jest as pinky.
An her smiles ain't slacked up none.
1 reckon—love—or somethin
Yerlumlnates her face.
Like the crlmaoui velvet Main
Warms up the plcter vase.
'81 say, thesegyaidbua'd portraits.
They make me sort uh tired,
A-ftrlunln forf upon yell
Like their very lips waa wired!
Give me the old digorrylype,
Whar the face steals on your sight
Like a dream that cornea by nighttime.
When yer supper's actlu right.
—Eva W. McGlassou In Harper's Weekly.
Democrats in the HoilsOj
the balance of power.
-smsBin'i'mi
Be Deye For Them It as That Cleve
land Una Hern Elected—
With the Bence.
Special Telegram to the Hsati.n.
Atlanta, Nov, 22.—The old cry
whloh was raised among the Negroes
after Cleveland’s election In 1888, has
been brought to the front agnln.
The Negro ministers of this city
met to-day, nnd decided to urge every
Negro In the State to save up money
and get ready to go to Africa. They
declare that since Cleveland’s election
the’ r last hope for civil rightB lias fled,
and their preachers, at least, have de
cided that Africa would be a butter
country for them than here.
The same cry was raised on the oc
casion of Democratic success 111 1884,
but now, as then will probably go up
in smoke.
Salntlnf tho Lightning.
In Quito, according to Mr. Wliym-
per, it is customary when a visitor
takes off his hat on entering a room
to beg him to put it on again, and in
the absence of permission leave is
generally requested.
This custom is due to apprehension
that cold will be taken if the head is
uncovered. In Quito there are no
stoves, fireplaces nor chimneys.
The same persons, on going out of
doors, take off their hats to flashes
'of lightning, no matter if rain is fall
ing, and when the streets are busy
and lightning is abundant a gro
tesque effect is produced by these
salutations, which seem to be re
garded as a duty by all well behaved
persons, and are performed as punc
tiliously as the homage paid to relig
ious processions.—Youth’s Compan
ion.
Welding Tube® of Bras®*
The welding and spinning of brass
and other metals by what is known
os the Bevington process lias been
indorsed by the Franklin institute of
Philadelphia, to tho extent of grant
ing one of the three medals issued by
the society during the last thirty
years. This method consists, brief
ly, in the welding of the metals by
forcing them into rapidly revolving
dies, where they are softened by fric
tional heat and muted end to end, os
in ordinary welding, or forced into
one homogeneous mass, as Bolid as if
cast into one piece.
Brass and copper may thus he
welded, which has heretofore been
considered impossible. In this man
ner tubes of all kinds and of any
length or thickness can bo readily
formed, and the ends of short tubes
be as neatly joined us if they hud
been made in one piece.—New York
Sun.
A Miner's Brave Deed.
A thousand feet below ground at
Gympie I was told a tale which
deepens one's belief in tho soundness
pf human nature in this selfish age,
which shows us that the heroic is as
lively In the world os ever it was.
John Bradshaw and William Gil
bert were ascending a shaft after
having lighted the dynamite fuses.-
Some distance up Gilbert fell off the
bucket. Ijiadshaw immediately sig
naled to have the engine reversed,
was lowered to the bottom and with
drew the burning fuses in the nick
of time to save his comrade from cer
tain death.,
i John Bradshaw, I am glad to say.
received a silver medal from' the
Royal Humane socioty for his noble
act.—"Queensland in 1888."
Teasel® Lost at Bee.
More than 1,000 vessels, aggregat
ing 050,000 tons, are lost annually,
this being between 8 and 4 per cent,
of the world’s total shipping. Of
tho total tonnage lost only 12 per
cent, is in steel vessels, against 41
per cent, iu iron and 47 in wood,—
Ohio State Journal. i '
Taper of One K»ml.
Glanders—It is said that paper can
be used effectively in keeping a per
son warm.
Gnzley—That is very true. I re
member a thirty day promissory note
of rnino onco kept me in a perspira
tion for a mouth.—Exchange.
When a Norseman Laugh*.
Certainly a slow mind' is slow.
You may often seo a Norseman sud
denly burst out luugliiug. It is at a
joke that lie heard a few days ago,
the point of which he has just seized.
—Cor. London Truth.
'
—The fashionable woman nii.-mdom
tin- (railing milking skirt with rttluc-
iunoi\ for its graceful, sloping folds
hold a genuine fascination for Iter.
Oh, Whnt • Curb.
Will you heed the warning? The
signal perhaps of the sure approach of
that more terrible disease eonsump-
tion. Ask yourselves if you can af
ford for the sake of saving BOo, to run
the risk nnd (lo nothing for it. W.
know from experience that Shiloh's
Cure will cure your rough. It never
falls. This explains why more than
pi million bottles were sold the past
• ear. It relieves eroitp and whooping
cough at once. Mothers, do riot be
without it For lame back, side or
itjest use Shiloh’s l'orous Plasters
.-Sold by U. J. Lqtnar & Sons. (4)-
A Diplomatic Appointment.
Apropos of tho “Reminiscences of
Lord Augustus Loftus,' 1 a curious ep
isode in his* rapid rise in the diplo
matic service bos not as yet been re
lated. The cipher from the foreign
office announcing his promotion to
his first important post ran, "You
have been appointed to”— And
there the message provokingly
ceased. Reference was immediately
made to headquarters, and no one
was more amazed than was Lord Au
gustus to learn in due course that the
blank stood for Vienna, and that at
one bound he had been promoted to
he embassador (tt that important
post.—Manchester (England) Times.
Bbe Hud » Novel Remedy.
The six girls were chums and met
yesterday uftemoon at tho house of
a friend. Things went on smoothly
enough for half an hour, when sud
denly Miss Laura, an artful spitfire
of eighteen, jumped up, clapped her
hands and begun hopping about the
room ou one foot.
“Well!" said the maiden aunt.
"Well I” ejaculated the girls.
“Well I" broke in mamma.
“Well!" said grandma.
But Miss Laura said not a word
and kept on hopping.
“Miss Laura," said thostrong mind
ed aunt, "I am positively shocked!"
“So am 1," said Laura, whooping
it up.
“She is hysterical!" broke in mam
ma beginning to sob.
“Feels like ’lectricity," shrieked
Laura making the tenth circuit.
• Site u- suffering with hysteria 1"
rejoined the aunt, making a move
toward the door.
"Not—ut—all," said Laura be
tween bops
"What is it then, dear?" responded
the frightened mother.
“Well, for the land's sake, speak I”
broke in the girls, some of them in
tears.
“I—will—toll—you?” said tho girl,
hopping like mad.
"Yes. dear!"
"My — foot — is — asleep 1" — New
GEOBQIA—DoroHIBTT COONTT—
Will ho Hold before tho Court Homo door, In
•aid county, wlthlu tho .legal lionra of nnlo.,on
tho first TuomIhv In lb-comber next, tho /ol.
lowing property, to-witt Lots ot land 842, mie.
tionnl lot Nn.fil8.in tho tlisl district of Dougin-.®
comity. Levied nn ns the property of tho estate
ot Mathew lli itison, deceased, n-.dlsnno Brin,
son nnd J.ll.ll>ins<in,iiud sold lo satisfy a mort
gage 11 hi Iruin Dougherty Suporlor Court In
favor ol Arthur P. Hotelier, administrator on
the estate ot S. hrlnson, deceased, v*. Charles |
Wessolowskv, administrator on the estate of
Mathew Itnnson,deeoasod. Tenants In potoci-
•ion notified. 1
Also, at the same time and place the folliiwlog
personal property, tu-wlt: Opt- traction englno
nnd holler and fixtures, named PcerloM Gelxer
Manufacturing Company mnku, nnd snw mill
nnd.mnchincrv complete. Levied on-an the
property of .lohn Shlvor, Shock shiver, G. Ifti
Green nnd_ Marshnll Shiver to satisfy n tl m J
from' DougVel-ty gtipetlof Court Id favor'of
W. Sullivan, Jr. and Mrs. M. P. Wilder, admln-
tstrntm-s of the cstute of 11, P. Wilder, deccnseii,'
vs. John Shiver, Shock Shlvor, G. M. Gfcen and
Marshall Shiver. P. G. EDWAIIDS,
Sheriff.
York Herald.
A Crushed Ideal.
His keen. Unfailing humor, guided
by his most sensitive and delicate
sympathy, made his rare hours of
reminisconco golden ones to his lis
teners Who lias told, as ho, the
story of Thackeray's first meeting
with Chnrlotto Bronte? The tiny,
intense creature had idealized Thack
eray. personally unknown to her,
with a passion of idealization. “Be
hold, a lion, coineth up out of the
north I" she quoted, under her breath,
ns Thackeray entered the drawing
room. Somo one repeated it to him.
"and
The Skill of Adirondack Guide®*
The woodcraft of the Adirondack
guides is peculiarly astonishing to
those unskilled in such matters when
displayed in all that pertains to open
air cooking. A guide will disappear
into a thicket and come back three
minutes later supplied with two or
three crotched saplings. With these,
an ax and a deer knife, his only in
struments, he will in five minutes
more rig up a frame to suspend the
kettle over the fire. While the ket
tle is boiling he will toast a great
stock of bread or broil a spring
chicken, and before these have cooled
he will have brewed his coffee.
Whatever he does is well done, und
with a celerity and apparent ease
that make it seem mere play.—Pitts
burg Press.
A Demonstration.
Little Girl (looking over advertis
ing page)—Mamma, why do all these
boarding houses object to children?
Fond Mamma—I'm sure I don’t
know. Go see what the baby is yell
ing about, and tell Johnny to stop
throwing things at people in the
street, and make George and Kate
stop fighting, and teU\Dick if he
doesn't stop banging that Chinese
gong so hard I’ll take it away from
liim.—London Public Opinion.
—“My pa’s awful timid about tire.”
"Is be?” “Sure: why, lie put Clmlly
ililiiplesteiu out lust night just be
espse he was sparking.”
Wk have a speedy and positive cure
for catarrh, diphtheria, ranker month
and headache, in Shiloh’s C«tarrl
Remedy. A nasal injector free with
earl: 'brittle. I'se it if yuu desire health
und sweet brentti. Price o0*\ Sold by
11. J. Lamar A Sons. <fl) t
“Oh, Lord!” said Thackeray,
I'm nothing but a poor devil of an
Englishman, ravenous for my din-
uer!”
At dinner Miss Bronto was placed
opposite Thackeray by her own re
quest.
‘And I had,” said ho, “the
miserable humiliation of seeing her
ideal of me disappearing down my
own throat, as everything went into
my mouth and nothing came out of
it, until at last, as I took my fifth
potato, she leaned across with clasped
- - ' in I
hands and tears in her eyes, and
breathed imploringly: “Oh, Mr.
Thackeray! Don’t I”—Boston Tran
script.
TIIE ONLY ONE EVER PRINTED,
Can Yau Find the Wordf
There is a 3-inch display advertise
ment in this paper, this week, which
has no two words alike except one
word. The same is true of each new
one appearing each week, from the
Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house
places a “Crescent” on everything they
make and publish. Look for if, send
them the name of the word, and they
will return you book.
CITATION,
GEOHGIA--Doi-d hkktv County.
To All Whom It May (.Uncorn: Wm. 8. Ileal
having. In proper farm, Hppljw tome for.Let-
tors of Administration on tho estnto of Msrjr
lli-iil, Into ot sold county, demised, notice Is
hereby given thnt this application will bo honnl
nt my ofiloc ou the first Monduy In Decombft-
next.
Given tinder my hnnd nnd nfitelul elgnntufe
this ntst dny ot October, 181)2.
SAM’L W. SMITH,
Or'dy P, 0. Go.
CITATION.
GEORGIA—Douoiibrty County.
To Whom it May Concern:
Georgo Washington lias filed Ills application
for exemption of ,pors' unity nnd setting apart
und valuation of homestead, ntul I wilt pass
upon tho same on the 18th dny of Nov. II
10 o’-’“ ’ “
[/clock ii
8AM W. SMITH,
Ordinary D.Co., Qi
COMNII9lllONEllM> 8 A LIS FOR PAI
TITION.
GEORGIA—Douoiikkty County.
By vlrturo of orders granted hy tho Superior
Court of said countv nt October Term, 1808, on
ttic petitions for partition of Morris Mayer, et.
ill- V8, II. L. Long, executor et. al. and Mrs. M.
M. Wight ct. nl., vs. II. L. Long, executor, ct. «L
we will sell for cash, to the highest bidder, lie.
foi e the Court House door in said couuljvconi-
i ifchu!
r lots
mcnciug at 11 o'clock, standard time, on
first Tuesdny in December, 1892, all of city
Nos. 25 and 27, on Flint street, Albany, Go* the
same lieing ono-fonrth of nn acre onch; said lots
will ho divided nnd sold in eight parcel® of
2UJ4 loot each, more or less, fronting on Wash*
ington street in said city* and running hook'to
tho west lino of snid lots, 105 foot ipp,re or lew.
This property is known as the originril ‘♦fcanliy
Bottom,” find is n fine location for businesm-U
rapidly enhancing in value, and ono of the best
chances for investment In Southwest Georgln.
October 27th, 1892. F. ti. Edwards,
.John Mock,
Wm. Lookktt,
Commissioner*.
CITATION.
GEORGIA—Dougherty county, i
To Whom It Muy Concern: II. L. Long, q:
cutor of r-urnh A. Brinson, deceased, has, in due 1
form, applied to the undersigned for leave to
sell tho l.inds belonging to the estate of said
deceased, und said application will bo heard on
the first Monday in December next—5th day of
December, 1892. This Nov. 7tl», 1892.
SAM w. smit;
Ordinary Dougherty County, Georj
LITTLE
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