Newspaper Page Text
im POURABLE
1 CUBED l
T -Nsvnxr, Ky., Fob. 24.188*.
GristV- - V •. «*U years a*;o a sore devoid
«on »». * tr«m a Qwcer nail scratch.
c . ‘ • rem^iieK, Imt ihe *or«
* it 1 grew worse every year
* ;ri ri . .
1 yuiit) though ! 1 bad a can-
, i commonoed taking
• t i «•:. . yu Untie* entirely cnre*1
j . • v■ j ii.»9ur.i "5th Swlrt’a Soecilic I
s !*•}.;.:» iukI could hardly
. i*< had finiohed the
\f i r l $ourso
j i>. sir<>» * irons and buoyant, and
. _
,; I rOL’anl It as a most
', i.. f i.’ ladies In weak, dell-
(it'.tUil. li Is a i.ou-.'ltoll inedk-iiio
v.,1.* *' 1 ' Vuors n .Mas. speetfiilly, it. W. Wilsox.
. M.ifSo, S. C., April I have 2,1SV?. had
n ,, r ; !• fine,.,, cheek. tWO verity Tt jears yea hud Kradunlly
i physlc-luna
t H-'"* s'elsiiircd „., jrse . The many
1 i i, "... •" Were were unable unable to do
’ i. -t full a year ago I began
w***#'' At At hrat rst it it inflamed iufiamed t* the sore,
in*!* 1 #* vie more virulent than ever; so
Mid jri'<t**h 1 d ,( .h 't. that my family insisted
v *’ *• the medicine. '
•■•Vi ,, M i; ave off on tne meaicme. l 4 two M?r-
f .-: in »• theS.&S. At the end of
e 1 . entirely healed. Think-
. ; ., . .j-e was
&r:,.ws f,: If .1 8 vr tho doctors and other medl-
I! it i Vours tn^v,
clues 1 evor look.
Winston, N. c., April 12, isst.
Cent?en —Two or three years ago a can-
r on me oii 1 my face. It soon grew to bo
C'. large. f It wore on me, and my general
quite Ite very poor. Last September I
u -Tu ;• eo trsc of S. S. S., w hich 1 have con-
iciicerous I'Vcrc'bcbii-' character bo evidence left. or symptom of a
1 ' iii v irking la tlio Held planting
. truly, JuNas XJUtDii
corn.' Yours u.
n,. n .i :n. ti tbr.d a .ore different on my doctor. upper lip
,,.„rs. Keren at-
tempi vial 1 in lii- v.n live i to dollars, heal It. whloli One was gave a “ me eer- a
fJbi ,‘,e cure.'’ food. It About is needles.to t wd. year, say ago that I became it did
no oplo thought I had
„„lt. inf v, as pi a enn-
J. 1 Tic <• Pc rest** a course Ufc* of b«m eighteen a complete bottle,
of ”., S. S. f: healed beautiful-
r e Tho ulcer or cancer pereouiible From
IV 11t leaviier searcel u InetcwUeiit f.ear health,
e been the
i. c purified mr bfexxl thorough-
u , .uvd my appetlto'emt ril, I feel perfected like my
, -i !u a wi a new
,, ...... ii, best Vu^er^, of eil.tluneiglit year ulcer
, ,1... CA
Ky.,Fcb.^5,1S87. ^
T T‘‘ !o';, ioiM Co.,
T. e? . : -e o.'i b’.oorl raidSJtln Diseases mailed
fn j. Tu- SWltfT Sl’EClFlC Co,,
tuavver 3. Atlanta. Ga.
hen Advertisements.
t Tueatment
LA ntTAP^U i nil ifl Sample {Tprc nLL
We mail enough to I
convince ii. S. Ii.untimrc ,v- Co., 773
Bread.st. Newark, N\ J.
$65 Young ty. A MONTH V. W. Men ZEIGLER and or Ladies BOARD <± in CO., for each 3 Bright Phila¬ coun¬
delphia, Pa
IliHii
TURBINE
Niu ILLUSTRATED and DEvCRIPTTYE
CA 1 alouue rent free.
Address YORK, PA.
PACKER’S
HAIR SAILS AM
Cl?an963 aiul 1*.--niiries the hair.
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Fsils to Resfere Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Cur6JBoalp -imdkaii' falling
■'■c. at L-ogylsta._
BtSTtViS.- » Y.’.v/I tee .....HI I
Stops The safest, surest and best euro for tlio Corns. feet. Bunions, Never rada Ae.
all pam. Ensures '■< • rt v>
locuro. l&CentH at 1 . IlTsCOX &Co^M. V»
LIEBIG COMPANY'S
EXTRACT of MEAT
INVALUABLE FOR DYsPEPalA
k licit ii: Iftai.
tot non fef Tu.
Also for flavoring Soups, Sauces and Made
Dhhee.
GENUINE only with Baron Liebig s
SIGNATURE in BLUE INK across
label
Sold by all Storekeepers, Grocers and
Druggists.
MEMORY
-MAKES-
SUCCESS
»» unity unlike ariiflclal ajr.mui*.
Any book learned In one reading;.
• 'lasses of 10*T at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit
1500 at Philadelphia, large lasses of Colum¬
bia Law students, at Yale, Wellesley, Ober-
lin, Univeisity of Penn,, Michigan Universi
:ud ! y, Chautauqua, Proetoa. Ac., Ac. Endorsed Hons. W. by W. Rich
the Scientist, As.
■ or, Judah P. Benjamin, Jndge Gibson, Dr.
Normal Brown, E, H. Cook, Principal N, Y. State
l.v taught College, As. The system Prospectus is perfect
bv correscondence.
JOst free from PROF. LOIBETTE,
237 Fifth Ave., New York.
YINECAR BITTERS
--■7 sea-Al:ck:li: Tsfititis nedRiae pet ap ia
liquid farm ever iisoovered.
it cures ah ili>cisic- ari*ing from biliousness
.1,1 impurities. A safe, sure, and g-ent!,.
j lt cleansing the system thorouelilv
1 ■■ * id style is slightly bitter. The Xeiv 'is
l • a at. to the taste, ait'} the best medicine ia
t! .' a id for children. Price 31 OO
-
MrDO.V^I.n D1.IJO CO.. X. Y. City
MAN WANTS BUT LITTLE
Here below, but he Wants tha 1 little
mighty quick. A
LITTLE WANT,
or a big one is promptly filled by ad¬
vertising in the Daily or
Weekly NEWS.
SIGHTS IN BANGKOK.
* .
..
Graphic Description of What Chicago**
Kx-Mayor Saw in an Oriental City.
oilier Bangkok is entirely different from all
eastern cities I have seen. Else-
where the houses are compacted togethw
so as to cover ua little space as possible,
' and the people massed as m hives. This
city, however, with its 350,000 } >eople,
covers more ground than Canton, with
its 1,000,000. There are but few streets,
but they are quite broad. The canals run
in that ever) tiie direction, Siamese and are so numerous
capital the Venice are proud to call their
of tho cast. Houses
project over these canals, with open bal¬
conies, and both sides of the river for six
or more miles are lined with floating
houses, used not only for residences, but
for business.
People do their shopping in boats, and
while a woman sells to her customer in
open view—for all houses have open
fronts—her lazy husband fishes, sitting
upon a box of goods, and his children
bathe and swim around the house. In
rowing or being rowed about there was
never a moment that I could not see
somewhere a bather; and just at sun¬
down all tho common world seemed am¬
phibious. The papoong is retained on
when in the water, and is then either
exchanged for a dry one or left on to
dry. Rivers and canals are always tilled
by freight boats, forty to sixtv feet long;
by small peddler boats; by canoes of all
sizes, from ten feet, barely holding a
•man, up to 100 or more feet, with fifty or
high more paddlers moving in state* with some
official. I saw one long canoe with
nearly 100 rowers. Each one would dip
his paddle and then lift it on high—a
curious sight thus to see nearly 100 pad¬
dies in air at the same time. There are
quite a large number of small steam
barges in the city. These dart about very
rapidly. In fact, all boats seem to do so,
for the tide runs very swiftly, and boats
going with its current piove in the chan¬
nel, while those going against it stick to
the eddies, This makes the river a very
lively one, especially toward the cool of
the day.
Trees abound throughout the towui,
along the streets, along the canals and
about the houses—many of them of good
forest size. Looking down from a high
pagoda one can scarcely realize oneself in
the heart of a great city. The ordinary
house is almost entirely lost in the mass
of green. Here and there one peeps out,
looking cool and shaded. But the lofty,
snow white pagodas, the tall, steep roofed
temples—roofed in tiles of many colors,
many of them in gilt—the beautiful kiosk
turrets of the palaces, the gilded royal
wat and cenotaph, and the white palaces
themselves, make the city from an emi¬
nence look like a vast royal garden, with
princely palaces and oriental temples
nestled among ornamental tropical trees.
The wat is a sort of monastery, with
its temple and kiosk and lodging bouse
of tire priest within a single inclosure.
There are a great many of these in the
city, and many of them of wonderful
richness. Some of the temples and pa¬
godas are made up entirely of gilt and
glass mosaic, in small pieces inlaid in
cement walls and flashing in the sun¬
light like mountains of gold and dia¬
monds. The royal wat makes the looker
on feel that Aladdin’s lamp is close by,
revealing to him scenes of fairy wonder
rather than scenes of actual reality. It
is within and without—its several temple
buildings and its five or six lofty, round
pointed pagodas—made up of gold and
gems. The gold is of burned gilded pot¬
tery in small squares of an inch, bril¬
liantly glazed; the gems of glass of dif¬
ferent colors and set like rose faced dia¬
monds, sapphires and rubies. Looking
upon the pile of these buildings, covering
several acres, just as the sun goes down,
with a gentle breeze causing the thou¬
sand tiny bells which hang to cornice,
frieze, and projecting point to tinkle, I
almost felt as if I had been carried off by
some flying genie and gently dropped
upon a scene of oriental fable.
Unfortunately all of the temples, pago¬
das and kiosks are of brick, stuccoed
with Portland cement, and the gems and
gold planted into it will last only for a
short time. Many thousands of dollars
are required each year to keep the entire
fabrics of beauty from tumbling into
decay. A change of dynasty will bring
quickly the glory of Siam’s capital into
a heap of debris.—Carter Harrison in
Chicago Mail.
Russia’s Permit to Live.
Every citizen must have a jiernut to
live in the country. These permits are
issued annually upon the payment of a
fee. If he wants to leave the country or
go from one to another he must notify
the police, for that branch of the govern¬
ment must know where each inhabitant
of tho vast empire sleeps every night. In
the provinces the rigid surveilance is re¬
laxed, but at St. Petersburg and Moscow
and other places visited by tourists there
is a constant contact between the sover¬
eign and the subject that is disagreeable
to both. The police grant permission to
go and come readily. There is no inter¬
ference with travel nor with trade. Sub¬
mission! submission! that is all. No oue
’ ticket at railway station
can get a a nor
on * steamboat without showing a permit
to leave; no hotel will entertain a guest
till he shows his passport. One cannot
go anywhere or do anything without the
consent of the authorities, but it is easily
obtained, and costs forty copecks for tiie
stamp that appears on the document—
about fifteen cents.—Cor. Chicago Times.
A SIonkcy*Wlth Yellow Fever,
During the epidemic of yellow fever
that prevailed some time ago in Caracas,
the medical profession had an opportu¬
nity to see, in one of the public houses of
benevolence, a monkey afflicted with
that disease. The principal symptoms
were found to manifest- themselves in a
manner so marked that there remained
not the least doubt on the part of the
physicians who observed them that it
was an undoubted case of yellow fever;
there was injection of the eyes, a certain
state of stupor, sharp thirst, nausea,
elevated temperature and at last prostra¬
tion. anuria and black vomit. For three
days the poor animal remained in this
sad condition, each day growing worse,
until the fourth day. when the ca-o
terminated fatally.—Public Opinion.
Australians, it is reported, bet «i» ag¬
gregate of *100.000.000 a year on Imrse
races. Betting and rabbits are the chief
evds of the country.
Subscribe for the News.
INSTINCTS THAT ARE LOST.
Or U Mm Realty n*lr of All the r»ral.
ties of the Axiinml Kingdom ?
If the doctrine be truqrfhai man is real¬
ly th® heir of all the various sjiecied and
genera of the animal kingdom, it seems
a little hard ujx>n us that, even by way of
exception, we inherit none of tiie most
marvelous instincts of those specie* and
genera, and have to lie content with
those greater but purely human faculties
by which even the most wonderful of the
animal instincts have been somehow ex¬
tinguished. Kir John Lubbock maintains
with a good deal of plausibility that there
are insects, and very likely even higher
animals, which perceive colors of which
we have no glinqise, and hear sounds
which to us are inaudible. Yet we never
hear of a human retina that includes in
its vision those colors depending on vibra¬
tions of the ether which are too slow or
human too rapid for , mr ordinary eyes, nor of a
ear which is entranced with mu¬
sic that to the great majority of our
spe .ea is absolutely inaudible. Again,
we never hear of a human being who
could perform tho feat of which we were
told only tho other day in a bloodhound.
In a dark night it followed up for three
miles the trail of a thief with whom the
bloodhound could never have been in
contact (he had just purloined some rolls
of tan from the tanyard in which the dog
was chained upi, and finally sat down
under the tree in which the man had
taken refuge.
Why, we wonder, are those finer pow¬
ers of discriminating and following the
track of a scent which so many of the
lower animals possess, entirely extin¬
guished in man, if man he the real heir
of all the various genera which show
powers inferior to his own? We see no
trace in animals of that high enjoyment
of the finer scents which make tiie blos¬
soming of the spring flowers so great a
delight to human beings, and yet men
arc entirely destitute of that almost un¬
erring power of tracking the path of an
odor which seems to be one of the princi¬
pal gifts of many quadrupeds and some
birds. It is the same with the power of
a dog or cat to find its way back to a
home to which it is attached, but from
whicli it has iieen taken by a route that it
cannot possibly follow on its return, even
if it had the power of observing that
route, which usually it has not had.
Nothing could be more convenient than
such a power to a lost child. But no one
ever heard of any child who possessed it.
Still more enviable is that instinct pos¬
sessed by so many birds of crossing great
tracts of land and sea without apparently
any landmarks or seamark.* to guide
them, and of reaching a quarter of the
globe which many of them have never
visited before, while those who have
visited it before have not visited it often
enough to learn the way—at least, by any
rule whieh, in like circumstances, would
be of any use to human intelligence. The
migratory birds must certainly be in pos¬
session of either senses or instincts en¬
tirely beyond the range of human imag¬
ination, and yet no one ever heard of tho
survival of such g sense or instinct in any
member of our race. It may lie said, in¬
deed, that men have either inherited or
reproduced the slave making instinct of
some of the military ants, though that
unfortunate and degrading instinct does
not appear to have been inherited by any
of her higher animals which intervene
between the insects and our own race;
but this only enhances the irony of our
destiny, it we do, indeed, in any sense
inherit frwn these insect aristocracies one
of the most disastrous instincts of the
audacious but indolent creatures which
fight so much better than they work. If
we have not inherited the architectural
instincts of bees or beavers, nor the spin¬
ning instincts of spiders, nor the powpr
of the dog to track out its home, it is a
little sad that we should have inherited
the one disastrous instinct of the ant by
which it makes itself dependent on a more
timid and industrious species of its own
race, and thereby loses the power to help
itself.
What is still more curious is that even
where human beings have wholly excep¬
tional and unheard of powers they betray
no traces of the exceptional and unheard
of powers of the races whose vital organi¬
zation wo are said to inherit. The
occasional appearance of very rare math¬
ematical powers, for instance, so far
from being in any sense explicable from
below, looks much more liko inspiration
from above. The calculating boy who
could not even give any account of the
process whereby bo arrived at correct
results which the educated mathematician
took some time to verify, certainly was
not reviving in himself any of the rare
powers of the lower tribes of animals.
Nor do the prodigies in music who show
such marvelous power in infancy recall
to us any instinct of the bird, the only
musical creature except ourselves. Still
less, of course, does great moral genius,
the genius of a Howard or a Clarkson,
suggests any reminiscence of what hap¬
pens in the world of animal life.—
Spectator.
Alcoholic Coma.
In cases of alcoholic poisoning—the
comatose condition of intoxication—tho
promptest recovery of consciousness will
follow the subcutaneous injection of a
mixture of one part of ammonia with
two to six parts of water. Police sur¬
geons who have to deal with cases of un¬
consciousness will find this a convenient
method of determining whether a given
case is due to whisky, compression of the
brain or nervous disorder.—Chicago
News.
Sore Tnroat
is paticulariy favorable to the contraction of
Diptheria. Heed the warning, and and use
Darbys Prophylactic Fluid, lt at once allay*
the intlamation of the throat, subdues the
pain and gives permanent relief. It prompt and
ly and effectually destroys all contagion
dipthe»itic germs. It is a fafegnard against
Diptheria, and should be used on the first
symptoms of sore throat as a gargle
Advice to Mothers.
Mbs. Wixslow’s Soothing Syrup
for children teething, is the prescription and
of one of the best female nurses
physicians in the United States, and
has been used for forty years with never
failing success by millions of mothers
for their children. During incalculable. the process
of teething its value is
It relieves the child from pain, cures dys
entery and diarrhoea, griping in the
bowels, and wind colic. By giving
health to the child. Price 25 cents a
bottle. angeodAwly
___
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4 tom TGMC
the prominent tar
tM and M«wt
ine's quite* the _____ *um«tben* and
Wetta**, nerve** Hysteria, man. curing Sleep-
Serrou*
I—ut *c
4# ALTERATIVE.
ft drive* oat UiepotMaoa* hessenot
the bland purifying and enrich In* it.
and ao overcoming thoei dlaeaae*
rwnU Un«Jfr>m Impure or importn
4 LAXATIVE.
0r ^ Acting teOdt* habitual but wrely on thebo we’.e
it cure* regular eonttipation, habit llatre-nirth and
promote*a the stomach. and aid* dlgret k*n
en*
QMjp'nind 4 DIURETIC. i quick In active ere kidney*. flfocUve tU combined com 'relief diuretic*of remedies potmen It and can sclcn apeedy be the tisk-aily the for relied Materia diecanee best cure with on and Medica to of other nu*t giv tho ■
For The NERVOUS HUMtrv4*af tmtmoatel*h»v»bw®reoei«* ll
tnm wmiiWii'aiiH. mreon* ehoiuv* omd thin ntbedr »i! •
Newt tor circatan «*ri->«
The DEBILITATED fall *«n*n«Ur»
w« »t »o bit h tnnuit
The AGED. WELLS, RICHARDSON A CO. P
BITUnSGTOS. VT
April Sheriffs Sales.
'll/1 LL BE SOLD ON Til E FI U3T TI ES
1* day in April next, between ihe le¬
gal hours of sale, before the Joor of the
Court House, in the city of Griffin, Spalding
County, Gnorgia, the following described
property, The bouse to-wit:
and premises of John Keller,
situated and lying in Africa district of Spald
ing county, Georgia, and bounded on the
eaat by Kmnapert, on the south by McIntosh
road, west by Central RR., also known os the
plac; whereon John Keller resided in Janua¬
ry, 1K88. Levied on and sold by virtue of lien
fi fa issued from Kpalding Superior Court in
favor of P. Newton andP. L. Newton,
administrator of C. F. Newton, vs. John
Keller, Tenant in possession legally notifi¬
ed. (3.00.
sold Also, at the same time and place, will be
twenty acres of land off of land lot No.
HU in tlie third district of originally Henry,
now Spalding county, Georgia, being In a
square and being the land on which Wlliie
Weaver, - colored, now resides; Itounded
south by Hercules Bedeir and west by John
,M. B roveu Levied on as property of defend
ant, to satisfy two Justice Court 11 fas issued
from the 1001st District, G. M., of Spalding
County, one in favor of Fannie II, Woodruff
vs. Mrs. Willie Pritchard and one in favor
of Amelia E. Johnson vs. Willie Pritchard.
Levy made by J. C. Little, L. C . and turned
over to me. Tenant in porsesvion legally
notified. H0.00.
Also, at the same time and place, will be
sold fifteen acres o land off of lot No. 115 in
the lU*38th District G. M. of Spalding Coun¬
lacds ty, Georgia, D. bounded as follows: east by
of 1’. Elder and G. W. Sneed, south
by 'and of G. W. Sneed, west by laud of J. J.
Chambers, and north by land of J. M . Tay¬
lor. Levied on and sold by virtue of a tax
fi fa for State and County tax for year 1887 in
favor of State and County vs. \V. T. H. Tay-
lor, trustee for Martha Taylor. Levy made
by B. C. Head, L. C.,and turnedoverto me
Tenant in possession legally notified. $8.00.
Also, at the same time aud place, will be
sold ten acres of laud off of lot No. 100, off
of the west corner of said lot, in the 1068th
district G. M., of originally Henry, now
Spalding County, Georgia, bounded on tha
east and south by said lot, west by land of
Jas. Akins, and north by land of J. J. Cham¬
bers. Levied on mid sold by virtue of oue
tax ii fa issued bv J. W. Tvavis, T. C„ In fav
or Levy of State aud County vs. James A. Reeves.
made Ly B. C. Head, L. C., and turned
over to me. J. A, Reeves, tenant in posses¬
sion, legally notified. ft)00.
Also, at the same time and place, will l>e
sold ten acres of land, the same being off of
the southeast corner of lot No. 49 of the
1068th district G. M.of originally Henry, now
lovr*- Spalding County, l>y land Georgia, ot C. L. Dupree, bounded south as fol-
cu«t by
land of S, C. Milam, west by laud of E. O.
Kendall, north by said lot. Levied on
sold as the property of J. J. Beasley foi
and County taxes for the year 1887, by virtue
of a tax fi fa issued by J. VV. Travis, T. C'.,
in favor of State and County L. vs. C., J. J. Beasley.
Levy made by B. C, Head, and turned
over to me. J. J. Beasley, tenant in posses¬
sion, legally notified. |iC.00.
R. S. CONNELL, Sheriff 8. C.
Ordinary's Advertisements.
/ \RDINARYS OFFICE. Spaldino Cobh-
\J tv. Gbokuia, March 2d, 1888.—M. O.
Bowdoin, administrator of R. K. Foster,
has applied to me for letters of Dismission
on the estate of R. K. Foster, late of said
county, deceased.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at
my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
June, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. tu., why such
lette's should not be granted.
86.15. E. W. HAMMONND, Ordinary,
/ORDINARY’S V/ Gbohoia, OFFICE, March 2d, 1888.—Willie Cobh-
xjr,
Hill hits appliied to me for letters of
Administration on the estate of William
Hill, late of said county, deceased,
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at
my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
April, 1888, by ten o’clock a. m., why such
letters should not be granted.
*3.00. E. W HAMMOND. Ordinary.
1/ KYRDINAIiV'S OFFICE, Spai.di.vg Coc.v-
ty, Georgia, February 25th, 1888,— J.
W. Butler has applied to me for letters of ad
ministration on the estate of Mary L. Butler,
late of said county, deceased.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county,
my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
April, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. hi., why such
letters should not be grunted.
$300. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/"ORDINARY'S OFFICE, Spalding Cobs-
C/ ty, Georgia, Jan. 9th,
son, of administrator, dismission has applied to me of for Tho*.
ter* from the estate
Lyon, late of said county, deceased.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county,
at my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
April, letter* 1888, by ten o’clock a. m., why such
should not be granted Ordinary.
$6.15. E W. HAMMOND,
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
All persons indectcd to the estate of J.
Boyd, late ot Spalding Counnty, Georgia, de¬
ceased, are hereby notified to cali*>n ti e un¬
dersigned and make settlement of such in¬
debtedness at once; and all jiersons
demands against said estate are notified
present their claims properly proven.
mar~w6 $3.70J ELIZA BOYD, Executrix.
Tax Receiver’s Notice
FOH I8S8.
I will be at the different precincts on the
dates mentioned for the pnrooseof
State and County Tax for 1888
At Sunny Side, Tuesday, April 3rd, May 1st
and June 5th.
At Union, Wednesdday, April4th, May
and June 6th.
At Mt. Zion, Thursday, April 5th, May 3rd
and June 7th.
At Line Creek, Friday, April 6th. May 4th
and June 8th.
At Cabin, Tuesday, April 16th, May 8th
and June I2th.
At Akin, Wednesday, April Hth, May 9th
and June 13th.
At Griffin every Saturday until the books
are closed on July l*t. Office at Brick Ware
house. R A HARDEE, T R , B- C.
tnaUl5-3na
Rule Nisi.
Duncan,Martin «V Perdue ,
va.
W. T. 11 Taylor. 1
State Superior of Georgia, Spuldiug Ci-tiui) In i
Court, February 1*ru>, iv-*-
titton It being of Duncan, represented Martin to I he «t Court Perdu* by r . .
tu -' h>
Deed ot Mortgage, dated the l?*h d«> ••
January,1887,W.T.H.Taylor Duncan, Martin A Perdue convey certain <1 u* rani
“a parcel
of land containing thirty (30i sere* being
part of lot N<*» 115 in the 4th District of
Spalding county, Ga , bounded on the East
by Jack Crawler, on the South by P. Cham
leas. North by P. L, Starr, West by some
of my own land*, said land, thirty acres, be¬
ing worth three hundred dollar*,'' for the
purpose of securing the payment of a promis
sory note made by the eaid W. Perdue, T. H.Taylorto
the said Duncan, Martin <k due on
the 1st day «>f Get., 1887, for the sum of One
Hundred and Foriy Eight and 50 -100 Dollars,
principal, interest and attorneys fees, whieh
amount i*now due and unpaid.
It is ordered that tiie said vV. T. H. Taylor
do pay into this Court, by the'first day otthe
next term tho principal, interest and oo*ts.
due on said note and mortgage or show cause
if any he ha* to the contrary, or that in de¬
fault thereof fom-losure be granted to the
said Duncan,,Martin & Perdue of said Mort¬
gage, and the equity of redemption of the
*aid W. T.HTaylor therein be forever barred,
said and that W. T. service ll Lay of tor this according rule be perfected to law, on
'JAMES 8. BOYNTON,
Jndge S. C. F. C.
Beck & Cleveland, Petitioners Att’ys.
I certify that the foregoing is a true copy
from om the the Minutes of this Court, thla Febroa-
ry ’ Term Term, 1888. Wm Clerk |m. B.C. Thomas, C.
fcb3Soam4ni 8.
Rule Nisi.
Walter T. Miller, i February Mortgage, Term, Ac. 1888.
versus j-
AdolphnsjC.Schaefer, Superior Court of
surviving partner of j j Georgia. Spalding County
A- C. Schaefer St Co.
Present, the said Honorable Jamc* S. Boynton,
Judge of Court.
lt appearing to tho Court by the petition
of Walter T, Miller that on the first day of
April and In the Seventy-two year of our A. Lord C. Schaefer Eighteen A Hun Co.,
dred
a firm composed of A. C. Schaefer and Geo.
Y. Barker, made and delivered to said Wal¬
ter T. Miller a certain mortgage in which
the sum of Six Thousand Dollars was ae
knowledgcd which said to be uiie deed tiie said date plaintiff, April
mortgage bears said
l.t, 1872, to secure the they payment of
amount due, whereby conveyed to said
Walter T. Miller ihe following described
property,to-wit: That tractor parcel of land
lying Monroe, or being in the 3d District Spalding of originally
then Pike, now County,
and said known district and No*. distinguished Forty-seven in the plan of
(79), as Scventy.eight (78), (47), Seven Fifty-
ty-nine Two Hundred and
Two one (51), each containing (302}<) and
and One-half acrea; also, Seven,
No. fl ve (75) Seventy-sevcn acres in the northwest (T7v. also, corner Fifty of lot
lot No. (50)
acres (48), all in southeast district, part or Forty eight
in same containing in the
aggregate Nine Hundred and Thirty-five
(935) acres, more or less, in the entire tract,
bounded north by land theu| known as Jno.
G. Lindsay's land and others, east by land
then known as land of Dr. Pritchard and
others, south by Massett Buck Creek, and others, west by
land of Squire and being
premises conveyed by Philip E. McDaniel to
said defendants February 4th, 1868. as describ
cd In foregoing petition; conditioned that if
said firm of A, C. Schaefe* - * Co. (of which
A. C. Schaefer is now snrving part at r)
slionld pay off and discharge said debt of
Six Thousand Dollars according to it* tenor
and effect, that then said Deed of Mortgage
should be void.
And it further appearing that said debt re
main* unpaid; it is therefore Ordered, that
said A. C. Schaefer, surviving partner as
aforesaid, pay into this Court by the first
day of the next terra thereof, th*- principal,
interest and cost due on said Mortgage, or
show cause to the contrary, if there be any;
and that on failure ef said A. C. Schaefer,
surviving partner iw aforesaid, se to do. the
gaged equity /of premises of redemption be forever In and thereafter to said barred mort¬
- and foreclosed.
And It is further Ordered, That this Rule
be published in the Gkiffim News once a
month for four mouths, or a copy there
of served oti the said A. C. Schaefer, surviv¬
ing partner as aforesaid, or his special agent the
or attorney, at least three months before
next term of this Court,
By the Court, February JAMES 8th, BOYNTOh, 1888.
8.
Judges C. F. C.
Hall A Haroinond, Petitioners Attorney*.
I, W. M. Thomas, Clerk of th* Superior
Court of Spalding County, Georgia, do here¬
by certify the above to be a true extract
from tf-.e minutes of said Court at February
Perm, 1888. W. M Thomas, C. 8. C.
ft !o»m4rn Clerk 8.
NOTICE !
TO LITIGANTS IN COUNTY COURT.
Notice is hereby given that the (quarterly
setsion* of the County Court of Spalding
County will hereafter be held on the fourth
Monday* in June, September, Doeesuber and
March, instead of the third Mondays in said
months a* heretofore held.
The regular Monthly sesssions of said
Court will )u. after be held on the fourth
Monday in each month. The first Court to
be held’ under this notice, at Monthly ses¬
sion, will be on the fourth Mondav in May
next, and the first Court to be held at Quar¬
terly session will be held on the fourth Mon¬
day in June next. The business in said
Coust wii! carried on as heretofore ar * “’<■
Court will continue to sit or the i - »
now fixed by law until tljis ehttug' *•!< 1. „ j
into effert.
By onLrffiT WALTER C. BEERS, C.
uiJOw i Judge 8. C,
PARKER'S GINGER TONIC
Tb* Bob Cure tr.r l*«t3»uEh* Cowte, Weak x^ Lsmi, CaS A*te***, Ifl*a
fKWMiiwi »i * t i <w oinjnr,« n tetwet** 1»
reloBbi* mtkrfiM. witt tewett **•«**
<tr* sowar ©»«r <n»ti* nakaowa *o odw laaiunlna
W«*k Ban**, ni»of KhreaaatMa. fnaala Coaapiattrta, an*
it l rmu n* tbaWon^ch. Ur«T.Xi<l*»r « ».'i Bo*
are CAter Sn*m« baJtliar teomaad. Unotroasa* to Uw j re Boon Tone.
u»* tO*. SO* te Drer
BisaawtHaoad suwaath Wtstam to «bo a**d- * V.
gM. ItKOI * Co., MS terete.
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
DR. JOHN L. STARUrrONp
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
OKI mit, list GEORGIA,
Office—Frond Room, up Staln.Nsw* Balld
ing. Poplar Rwidenee, Prompt at W, H. Baker ptsee cm
street. attention given to
can*, day or oighL JanTldAwfim
HENRY C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
ltaurroa, ououoia.
Practice) In a!) th$ State and Federal
Court*. * octSdJew 1 y
JNO. J. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
OHrmx, oborou.
WT.it*’* Office, 31 Hill Street, Up Stairs, mar22d*trly over J. II.
Clothing Store.
D. DISMBSK. v. y. oot.utr*
DI8MUKE * COLLINS*
LAWYEK8,
oRrrrtK, oa.
Office,first room in Agricultural Building.
,’j) -dnir*. marl-d&wtf
THOS. R. MILLS.
TTORNEY AT LAW,
a aims, cut.
Wilt practice in the 81*te and Federal
Office, over George A Hartnett’s
c truer wnf-tf.
d triWAttr. MOHT. T. DAS ISA
STEWART A DANIEL,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Over practice George A Hartnett’s, Griffii, Federal Ga,
Will in the Bute end i»nl.
^ourta.
C. S. WRIGHT,
WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER
GRIFFIN, GA.
Hill Street, Up Stair* over J. H. White
A Co.’s.
3. I*. NICHOLS,
AGENT Tffl
Northwestern Mutual Life In¬
surance Company,
Of Mtlwankee, Wls. The most reliable Is
uranoe Company In Amerl**- augSfidljr
HOTEL C: ITIS,
8BIFFIN, GEORGIA,
Under New Management
A. 6. DANIEL, Prop'r.
1ST Porters meet all trains. feb iSdl y
SUMMER TERM
Begins April 16, Ends June 23* 1888
Newela*»ee and private instruction In
Piano, Violin, snd all Orchestral In¬
Plano Branches, snd Organ French, Tuning, Orato¬ sod
ry, English Languages, Drawing. Fainting, German Mod
ltaUian
eltng and portraiture. TuRton, IS 4a
per lure, term. Lectures on Musk. Art, Litem
etc., by eminentapeoialtista, and Gener
al Clause*, Recitals, etc., free to sit regular
studenta. Bon'd and room hi the New Horn*,
|5.00 to $7.50 per week. New Calendar free.
NSW CtftilAlurOtllChVAT««Y
E. TOl RJEE, Dir., Franklin Sq- Boston,
mardld&wltn
Boarders, To Aught, be
Bought,
Agent*, Silver or Gold,
Orders, Merchandise Hold.
Servant* or Place, Ueod* to Apt raise.
Musical Lawyer or Tear Casa, Opening To Day*
Popular Preacher*. Jers, Housesor Announce,
Butchers Acres, Bakers.
Cooks, Boats, or
Books, Votes,
To Hire or 1-et,
Offices, Dress skirt or flounce
Basement, A cure for disease,
First Floor, A Handy MosllnChemlae, Valise,
Casement, To Cheese, A
Purchase a Pet,
Horae, Teas.
Monkey Mare, Pe«, Bee#,
or Bear, Or - —, Prone
Bloodhound or BpiU Are
Free from Fits, To Make Known,
To Hire s Hall, Your Store,
Driver or team, Carriage,Dry Hosiery,
An Elegant oods,
AnOpulent Marriage, Ball, Upholstery, Picnics,
PI ay .Concert or
Skate*, Excursion*, Knick-Knacks,
To Plate*, aDiveisiona,
sell to gsy ersatur
Diamonds, Clothes Ready Made,
Pearls, Increase of Trade,
King*, ■ Coal, Coke end Wood
Curl*. • Pictures,
Wash for Features, All Lectures, Kinds of Food
To buy Odd Things,
Cat*, Or sell Odd Thing*, Works on Theology,
Kate.
Mate, World-Wide Publiflity
Plate, Flags,
Bat* Rags,
Pantaloons, Bags, Nags,
Hate,
Resplendert Cravats, Dr ees shirts or collars
Mutton or B*- f. Almighty for Dollars, Rent,
Financial R'-iit f, House
Stocks, Store, Tenement,
Clocks, Cash to be L;nt,
i»cks, Cash to be Spent,
Sock#, Scent,
Portmonia or Box, Tent,
Pig. Sheep or Ox, Roman Cement,
OrEven a B< m— Go—
Then in a Trie-*, Read the Advice,
Take tha Advice Far Beyond Below— Price,
Written Below— Written
ADVERTISE
-IN THE-
Daily News
To Business Men.
TATO LABORED ARGUMENT IS NEEDED
_LN in these daya to convince INTRLL1
Gf NT men that it
Pays Well to Advertise