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Any book learnnl In one reading.
fusses of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit
ISOJ at r’liilfidelplita, large lasses of Coiutu-
b> 1 * “ml'-uts, at Yule, Wellesley, Ober-
tiu, t uve si’y of Penrn, Michigan Universi
*y, Chautauqua, Ac., etc. Endorsed by Rich
ird Proctn ilia Scientist, Hons. W. W. As-
or. Judah P. Benjamin, Judge Gibson. Dr.
tiro*ri, E, U. Cook, Principal N, Y. State
Ao iim. College, in. The system is perfect
y taught by correspondence. Prospectus
.•s»I ruts front PROF. LOISETTE,
937 Fifth Ave., New York.
ADVICE TO DYSPEPTICS.
CONTENTS: The nature of Dyspepsia.
}» causes. Its preuention. Its cure Some
experience qf an actual sugorer. Liver com¬
plaint a twin disorder ot diapepsiu. llabitu-
li constipation a rc-eult of dyspepsia. Dys¬
pepsia mistaken for co. Miption. Good living
at a means for the cure of dyspepsia. What
fo d may be taken. Vi hat food must be
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JAMES P. SMITH, 45 Park Place, N. Y.
MASON & HAMLIN
IliciaMiyK ftnAlilA The ‘■•«Nnet organ
UI<UmiWl was Introduced in its
present foim by Ma-
$22 TO $900 son ik Ilaudin in 1861.
Other makers followed in the maniifaoture of
these instruments, but the Mason ,V. llambn
Organs have alwas maintained tluir suprem
scy as the best in the world.
Mason *fc Hamlin offer, demoustaatlon of
the the unequalled excellence all the of World’s their organs, Exhibi
fact that at great
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they have invariably taken the liighes hon
orif Illustrated catalogues free.
PIANOS.: Mason & Hamlin do not
hesitate to make the ex-
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erandATprigiit their pianos, that
ihe fir* SQpt-rior to all others. They recognize
high excellence achieved by other lead¬
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solely duced to by the them remarkable in the improvement 1882, and intro¬
year now
know iTBisoKii,” a aa the ‘'Mason .t Hamlin Piano
by the vse of which Is secured
the greatest possible purity and retineinent
of tone, together with greatly increased ca¬
pacity for standing in tune, and other import¬
ant advantages,
A circular, containing testimonials from
three hundred purchasers, musicians, and
tuners, sent, together with desersptivo cata¬
logue, pianos to any and applicant. sold for
Organs cash or- easy
{■ayipents; also rented.
Mason & Hamlin Organ & Piano Co.
BOSTON. NEW YORK. CHICAGO.
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
(THE 8CIENCE OK LIFE, the
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la Boston, who may lie consulted confldofitlally.
Specialty, Diseases of Man. Office No. 4 Bulflncb St.
Practical Hints tainingsolid iffSSTSi facts
4 to n Builders, ., * ss.sjf.”."
lAliiilidg should know before letting his eon
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,
wT wants but little
Here below, but he Wants tha little
mighty quick. A
1
5
* * big one is promptly filled by ad-
Vertifing in the Daily or
NEWS.
cOt-t-rywnNG THE HOUN09.
Chat About Fox Hunting In Knglaxit
Whm lu lJefcndcrs Say.
Tin- first week in November is thv
hunting starting point, ami it continueo
all through the winter until March with¬
out stop, chock, imp* aliment or interrup-
tion, sate hy one inexorable enemy,
enemy is a gentleman popularly
known ns Jack Frost. No weather. l>o
u wind, fog, bail, sleet or rain, will hin¬
der hunting. Indeed a wet day i» not
otherwise limn propitious. -A* south¬
erly wind and a cloudy skv bespeak u
hul,tin :v morning,” slugs the old song,
811,1 110 “!!••'» (or woman who hunts)
would dream of staying away from a
meet because it is raining or •-looks like
It. It i i a curious thing that following
the hounds siiotild offer ruch induce¬
ments to get a wetting without min 1
mg it. At other times the aver-
ag hunting 1, English lady or gentlemen of
going proclivities is as much against
out in the rain as they are
then in favor of it, or rather indifferent
to it. Except when hunting is on the
tapis they certainly -‘know enough to go
in when it rains. Generally a wet day
keeps every one indoors, huddled about
the fire, peering out of the windows,
watching for “enough blue in the sky to
make a sailor a pair of trousers;” wan¬
dering aimlessly from room to room;
sitting gossiping in the smoking room, or
knocking the balls about at pool or
pyramids in the billiard room. The
ladies get no end of crochet and crewel
work done, and work off a vast stock of
long neglected correspondence and un¬
answered letters. Foreigners are wont
to laugh at the inevitable umbrella which
to their eyes every Englishman carries
rolled tightly up in his hand, ready for
ant’ shower or down j>our that may come
up unawares. There are no people in
the world so afraid of getting wet; but
if rain doesn’t put a stopper on hunting,
frost doe:;.
There is no hunting, there can be no
hunting, when there is frost: And for
two reasons: First, the ground would-be
too hard for the horses’ hoofs, and jump¬
ing very dangerous; second, there is no
scent, and without scent the hounds
wouldn't know where the fox had gone.
A long spell of frost is therefore a disas¬
trous condition of tilings for fox hunters.
Days and weeks go by, sometimes, wait¬
ing for a thaw, or in hopes that “thi 3
beastly weather would break up, don’t
you know.” Last winter was u particu¬
larly hard one, in more than one respect,
on hunting. One frost and lasted for quite six
weeks or more, you should have
heard the fellows growl and stamp. The
horses did nothing but stand in their
stalls and loose boxes eating their heads
off. Thus far this year the weather has
kept right, and on off days and in the
mornings the roads are full of blanketed
and hooded nags exercising with their
grooms.
I have said that about 30,000 people
hunt regularly in England. I dare say
some people will differ with mo at first
glance. But I wish to lay stress on the
word regularly. Off and on, as occasion
offers, business and occupation permits,
or good fortune enables, there are thou¬
sands of others who hunt. But they only
hunt when they can. They don’t neces¬
sarily keep they* hunters. They hunt what¬
ever nags may possess, from car¬
riage horses to ponies. Home jieople hire
a horse now and then, others get their
friends or relatives to give them a mount,
say half a dozen times in the season, and
army officers, on occasion, may so utilize
their chargers. But such irregular pro¬
ceedings can not be dignified by the term
“hunting,” or considered so, when hunt¬
ing as a regular systematic custom is
under discussion. Uid hunting depend
upmi such people, I am afraid it would
very soon fall into disuse. Yet, I ven¬
ture to say, and I think most men who
know anything about it will agree with
me, if you want to hear hunting talked
up, descanted upon, praised, upheld and
defended, you’ll find it among these
spasmodic sportsmen.
To judge of hunting, and determine
whether its observance as an annual cus¬
tom is beneficial or in jurious, one must
weigh all the pros and cons worth con¬
sidering. Judged by the principle of the
greatest good to the greatest number, it
must fall to the ground. It affords a cer¬
tain kind of sport; there is a vast amount
of exhilarating excitement in a good run
across country, if you are well mounted,
and there is much that is pleasant in the
social character of a meet. You are
thrown in almost daily contact with your
neighbors; riding across country is said
to give a man nerve, though, for my
part. 1 belir vo otic must possess the nerve
to begin with—and you get to know
jx-oplo Setter and find healthful out their good
and bad points. It is a exer-
ci.- -. • 'Everybody likes it, my dear boy, ”
tin- old squires will tell you, as they
smack their port after dinner: “we like
it. the horses like it, the hounds like it;
yes. and egad, 1 believe the fox likes it.
too.” In thi; country, there are some
men, in high places, who discounten¬
ance hunting. They are few, it is true,
but they are of too high a rank and posi-
tion to attempt to ostracise them. The
last Earl of Ashburnham was one, and
the present Lord Ashburton is another.
The'after. I believe, will not permit
1 Git:; : b’tui-et tqron or hunt over
proper, v. He is cordially disliked, of
course. But. he is too great a man
have- any one show him openly what,
were lie a poor man, would compel
to l ave- England,—London Letter
The Argonaut.
Ileated by fbemlcal foot Warmers.
1 once brought a good deal of
upon mvsolf by asserting in these col¬
umns that I travt led on an English
heated by chemical foot warmers. \\
these things got cold you shook ’em
and they gave out heat again. I
got any one to believe this story, and
it was true. I have found out since
tho chemical used was rtvmc sort of
affair, and I understand that the fact
that this compound of soda will give out
heat has caused itvto be used as an
for running street cars. I believe
they are going to use the soil:* motor
a Chicago street car line. I don't
whether any of the soda foot
are used in England now or not.
couldn’t find any on the little
when I was there last winter,
urged by my unlielieving friends to do
for the sake r u my own reputation
veracity.—Luke Sharp in Detroit
Press.
.VOW A DIME IS COINED.
Interesting Process That t l'ulifts
Know* Little About.
There are many things to lu- soon at
the United States mint on Fifth street.
It is not generally known that this is the
largest institution of the kind in the
world; yet it is a fact, and in its facilities
for the rapid and perfect coinage of
money the Han Francisco mint is con¬
ceded to be much hU|>erior to the Royal
mint of London, which is generally sup¬
posed to l»o the largest and most com¬
plete mint on earth.
A reporter called the other day, and
through the courtesy of Coiner James M.
Gorham was permitted to witness the
manner in which dollars and dimes are
turAed out by the bushel.
Just at present there is a lively demand
all over the country for silver dimes, and
hundreds of thousands of dollars of them
are being shipped to New York, Chicago,
Cincinnati, Ht. Louis and other eastern
cit es. Two of the money presses are,
and have been for some time, running
exclusively on this coin. The demand is
so great that these machines are not even
stopped on Sundays, and will be run on
that day.
The process of dime making is an in¬
teresting one. The silver bullion is first
melted and run into two-pound bars.
These in turn are run through immense
rollers and flattened out to the thickness
of the coin. These silver strips are then
passed through a machine which cuts
them into the projiei- size for the presses,
the strips first having been treated with
a kind of tallow to prevent their being
scratched in their passage through the
cutters. The silver pieces are then put
into the feeders of the printing presses,
and are fed to the die by automatic ma¬
chinery at the rate of 100 per minute,
48,000 dimes being turned out in a reg¬
ular working day of eight hours. As the
smooth pieces are passed between tho
pdnderous printing dies they receive the
lettered and figured impression in a man¬
ner similar to that of a paper pressed
upon a form of type; at tho same time
the piece is expanded in a slight degree,
and the small corrugations are put into
itsriin. The machine drops the com
pleted coin into a receiver, and it is
ready for the counter’s hands.
The instrument used by the counter is
not a complicated machine by any means,
aa one might suppose. It is a simple
copper covered tray, having raised ridges
running across its surface at a distance
apart the exact width of a dime. From
the receiver tho money is dumped on (o
this board or tray, and as it is shaken
rapidly by the counter the pieces settle
down into tho spaces between the ridges.
All these spaces being filled, the surplus
coin is brushed back into the receiver,
and the counter has exactly 1,250 silver
dimes, or $125, on this tray, which num¬
ber is required to fill the spaces. Tho
tray is then emptied ifito boxes, and the
money is ready for shipment.
The dime does not pass through the
weigher’s hands, as does the coin of a
larger denomination. One and one-half
grains is allowed for variation or “toler¬
ance” in all silver coins from $1 down,
and the deviation from the standard in
the cart 1 of the ten cent pieces is so tri¬
fling that the trouble and expense of
weighing coins of this denomination i$
dispensed with.—San Francisco Chron¬
icle.
lleverages of Venezuela.
The beverages mostly in use in the
cities are French wine or imported Ger¬
man and American bottle beer. Owing
to the heavy import duties imposed upon
every article, beer is very expensive. I
paid sometimes for a small bottle of Mil¬
waukee lager, Y’ienna Dreher or “Cum-
batsheer” (Kulmbacher) six to eight
reals, equal to as many dimes. The.
lower class are very fond of aguardiente,
manufactured from sugar cane; carrato,
or hervido, a sort of fire water, manufac¬
tured from Indian corn or guarapo; but
these strong drinks are usually taken in
email rarely'seen quantities, and intoxicated persons
are in Venezuela. Fruit
waters and Naranjada are also drunk a
good deal, but the most popular drink
with many intfttduced is “aqua de papelon,” which
■was first to my knowledge on
the coffee hacienda of the Austrian con¬
sul. He might tell a curious tale of its
after effects, but I trust in his discretion.
“Aqua de papelon” is simply water,
sweetened with native sugar. In order
to promote the making of pure whits
6Ugar the importation of this article into
Venezuela is entirely forbidden, and the
sugar in general use i3 called papelon,
being the pnxiuet of cane, containing all
the syrup or molasses.—E. De Ilesse
Wartegg in New York Sun.
, The Moor on a Hondo lop.
As I was making my toilet one morn¬
ing I chanced to see a Moor mount to the
flat roof of the opposite house. Placing
himself in a quiet comer, shielded by the
higher wall of an adjoining building, he
turned toward the morning sun—or,
rather, toward the holy Mecca—crossed
his arms upon his breast and reverently
bowed his head. After a moment or
two he knelt down and touched his fore¬
head to the floor three times. He then
gat back upon his heels for a few min¬
utes, as if in meditation, then repeated
his prostrations, and rising crossed hi.-
arms again over his breast and remained
gome time in this reverential attitude.
Finally ho prostrated himself a third
time, ar.d with that finished his morning
devotions and disappeared. Truly, he
went upon the house top to pray.—Bos¬
ton Transcript.
Jap»nc*« Sacred Nuts.
A quantity of Japanese sacred nuts,
the first ever brought to this country. ha3
lately been received at a Broadway fruit
6tore. They are called sacred from the
fact that they are used in certain forma
of Japanese worship. The nuts aro
placed on the altar and ignited. give They
burn with a bluish flame and off a
peculiar odor. They are rich in oil, and
the fumes are supposed to rise as incense
to the gods. They grow under water,
have a leaf like a pond lily, and aro
shaped like a steer’s head, with two pro¬
jecting horns. This resemblance is so
great that it is difficult to believe that
they are not carved. In the raw state
they are hard and tasteless, but when
cooked they have the flavor of boiled
chestnuts. They retain their qualities
ten or fifteen years, and are fit for food
when even twenty years okl.—Now York
Mail and Express.
‘ , ,«■'»£ T0IHC
ms
rr-wlkuta, *. a (Uvnftiwa* aim*
Nerve Twites mtem. caring
ine’s quins Servo*) Servo** the WeAknem. ncrvoi. ”Vjiertv, sin p
j tmatm Ae
AM ALTERATIVE. *
It the (iriTouptit biooa purifying the poMmuiut Sint enriching humors M.
and to ovemumUif.- thine disease*
exulting htood. from Import or tattiorrr-
uhed
A LAXATIVE.
Ar-tingmildiTbut habitual nunly.m the bow* *
it pnsnoteiarcgotarhabit cuius ewmiLpatiue, and
(amount! iMmitrtb.
as* the Mcsssch. and ant* dU<-»t>..ii j
A DIURETIC.
In lu composition the laid and m.t-i
active diuivtioeof the Materia Mut!
effective arc combined rwBwdis* srienttfCAily for Mus with of < HL ih i
•
kidney*. It Mil h* HnM on to ini
;utek relief and »j*i-dy <-urv
For The NERVOUS t!aD4w4* of U«*tiRKmUJ* turn W*I r>-. -t
from permni h*v« tbU cjivolor cthyi*
r> H*«rlcftl»l« beaMotit. HsmkI f«*r c, •
The DEBILITATED tuH }LUttcul*i*
Friei Si CD fioM fry Dr#<*nit
The AGED WELLS. RICHARDSON A CO " .
Rule Nisi.
15. C. Kinard ,V Hon
J. W. Ward & I. J. Ward. \
State Superior of Georgia, February Spalding Term, ( ounty 1888. In the
court,
It being represented to the Com t by the
petition of B C. Kinard ,fc S m tt. it by Deed
of Mortgage, daledtbc Wthday of Oct. 1
J.W. Ward A 1. J. Ward conveyed to the
aaidB.C. K.nard & Son a certain tract
land, ton it: Fifty acres of land, situated in
Akins District, Spalding county, Gu„ Wise. and
bounded North bV the lands of Pill
East by.T„o Ward, South by barney Mad.
dOI and West hy Zed Gardner, for the . ur
pose of securing the |hi) im-nt of a promiaso J.
ry V?nrd note made by the said J. W. Ward^V 1
to the said B. C. Kinard ,V Sonfftie ou
the 1st day of November, 18.87. for the sum of
Fifty Dollars ($5",i»6) and N inert-six Cents,
which note is now due and unpaid.
It i. ordered tleitthe said J W Ward A 1
J.Ward do payInto this Court, hy the first
day »* of next term the principal, intere-t and
ti.ev have to the contrary, that in de .*
any or
fault I’ . „ I t thereof f i /.ro/vf foreclosure f,vr.oi)AC(Vro I he granted to til the 1
said B.C. Kinard A Son of said Mortgage, \V
and the i ijiuty of redemption of the said -I
Ward it i. -I. Ward theirtn !>e forever barred,
and that service of this rule be perfected publication on
said j W. Ward A I. J. Ward by
in the Griffin News or service upon them
by the bherifi of said county three months
beforo the next term of thiscourt
JAMES S. BOYNTON.
JudgeS. C. K. C.
Frank Flynt and Dismuke & Cullens, Peti¬
tioners Att’s
A true cony from the Minutes of this Court.
a4oam4m Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk.
Rule Nisi.
B. O. Kinard Son I
vs
I. J. Ward A J.W. Ward, t
State of Georgia, Spalding County. In the
Superior Court, February Term, 1888.
It being represented to the Court by the
petition of 1). C. Kinard &■ 8on that by Deed
of Mortgage, dated the tOth day of Oct. 138,.
[. J, WardifcJ. W. Ward conveyed tract to the of
said B. C Kinard & Son a certain
land, toivit: fifty acres of land lying in Akins
District of Spalding county, Ga. bounded as
followsc North by lundsof Bill Wise, East by
Jno. Ward, South by Barney Maddox and
West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬
curing the payment of a rd promissory J. W. Ward note to
made by the said I. J. W A
the said B. C Kinard & bon due on the 15th
day of November 1887, for the sum of Fifty
Dollars and Ninety-six cents ($50 ‘.Hi), which
note is now due and unpaid. said I. J. Ward <fc J.
It is ordered that the
W. Ward do pay into this Court, by the first
day of the next term the principal, show interest
and costs, due on said note or cause,
if any they have to the contrary, or that in
default thereof foreclosure be granted <o the
said B. C. Kinard of A redemption Son of said of the Mortgage, said I.
and Ward the equity J W. Ward therein be forever bar¬
J. iV be perfected
red, and that service cf this rnle
ou said I J. Ward & J. W. Ward according News,
to law by publication in the Gkifvin
or by service upon I. J Ward .‘c J. W. VV ard
of a copy three months prior to the next
term of this court.
JAMES S- BOYNTON,
Judge S. C. F. C.
Frank F ynt and Dismuke A Colletts. Peti¬
tioners Att’s.
A true copy from the Minutes of this Court.
Wm. M. Thom is, Clerk 8. C. H. C.
aprloarn iin
Ordinary's Advertisements.
o RDINARY’S K OFFICE, Spaliunj Coi n-
tv, Georgia, April 2d, 1888.—J. J.
Maugham, as niminigtrator on estate of 8.
VV. Manghain, dtceased,’ and lias applied and fourteen to me
for leave to sell u house lot,
acres of ta d, more or less, on extension
Hixth street mid adjoining lands ofT. It.
Mills, Mra. Kincaid and others, known as the
late residence of 8. VV. Maugham, deceased,
for distribution nud to pay debts of the estate
All person* concerned are cited to appear
at the Court oi Oidinaryof said county, with
in the time required by law, to shot* cause if
any there tie «hv sueli application should
not be grand- ’.
E, tV, U.VMMON'D. Ordinary.
\J /"VRDINARY'S OFFICE, 8pai.dim.Coux-
tv, Geoboia, April 2d, 1*88.—J. J.
Maugham as administrator ou estate of J C.
Maugham, deceased, house and hasnpp lot containing led to me for
leave to sell a Iwo
acres more ork-ss, in the city of Griffin, situ
ated on Broadway street bounded, east by-
May berry Hcott. south by an alley and west
by an alley running from Broadway to Solo¬
mon street belonging to said estate for Ihe
purpose of distribution.
All persons concerned arc cited to apoear
at the Court of Ordinary of said county with
in the there lime required by law to -Sow cmt*c
if any he w hy such applii .ition should
not be 'granted.
K. VV. HAMMOND. Ordinary.
itDINAKY’.S OFFICE. Kpai imno Cous-
Bowdoin, ad ministrator of R K Foster,
has applied to :ne for letters of Di*mis.-ion
on the estate of R. K. Foster, l-*t> <> f ■ J
county, deceased.
I^et all persons concerned -h - v . U-
fore the Court of Ordinary of said < < unty, at
my office in t ;ifEn, on the first Monday in
June, 1888, b. ten o'clock, a. in., why such
lette s should not be graateu.
TO. 15. E. W. HAM MON ND, Ordinary.
SUMMER TERM
Begins April 16. Ends June 23,1888
New classcsl and private instruction in
Voi e, Piano, Violin, anil all Orchestral In¬
struments, Piano and Crga* Tuning, Orato¬
ry, English Branches, French, German and
Itailian Languages, Draw ing. Painting, Mod
eliiig and portraiture. Tuilinn, $5 to
per term. Lectures on Music, Art, Liters
ture, etc., by eminent special tists, and Gener
al Classes, Recitals, etc., free to all regular
students. Boa-d and room in the New Home
$5.00 Address to $7 50 per week. New Calendar free.
NSW U91ATN CO.TSCRVATOm
E.TOUBJEE, msr?1<Mtwlm Dir., Franklin Sq Boston.
Rule Nisi.
Duncan,Mai In ,tt i’t rdue .
v*.
W. T. II. Taylor. »
Slatirof Georgia, Spalding r .only In
Superior Court, February Term, hi IS- W 8
■ » hem* reprinted ty Hm Court ti. i-
'' . U »>““«•»*>. '>
j Led °Y »t " MortW > »’.;d I be 1 b ■ “ •
January,18-..M . I It luy.-re tn
, Dnni i.arbn .V 1 erdm- rrrwt parect
; an, .thirty a . b-imr
! ” f 1 ; u "' contaialiig »<•«•*
! £ ar »of lot No 1 m tie it . l>“ r.< t of
Raiding county, Ga . bound, d on the East
'Y ■ ra« toy, on the South, by P. Chau.
1"*. North ,a,uh by P 'tti'l I. Starr land. thirtj \\rM la ewme
! of '"> ovvn ' acres, be-
ing worth three hundred dollars," for the
i ! purpose of securing the payment T. of »l.T a mtIo* premia
U >
,e ^ ! -tda> l ' d ' lf !,T “'.A. f/n!!
: Hundred and tort) Light and 60-100 Dollars, ii.
I frinctpal, interest and attorney* fees, which
«w«ovu.t Is now due and nnpa-d.
■ ajsta.'sssrsiffo. It is ordered that tho said W.T. li.Taylor
next term the principal, Interest and .u, cost*. of the
due on said note and mortgage or show cause
if any he has to the contrary, O' that in de-
fault thereof foreclosure lie granted to the
said Duncan, Martin <k Perdue of said Mort¬
gage, and the equity of redemption of the
said W.TJITaylor therein be forever barred,
and that -ervh-c H of this rule la) perfected law. on
said W. T. Tav or according to
JAMES H. BilYNTON,
Judge 8. C. F C.
Beck A Cleveland, Petitioners Att’ys.
I certify that the tore-going Is a true copy
from the Minutes of this Court, this Februa¬
ry Term. 1888. Wm |M. Thom**,
febt-’Soamtm Clerk H, C. 8. C.
Rule Nisi.
Wilier 1 ’ 'ii, , Mortgage, Ac.
versus February term, 1888.
Adolj.liuf^C surviving Schaefer, cf superior Spalding Court County of
Schaefer partner <fc Co. J | Georgia.
A. C.
Present, the Honorable James S. Boynton,
Judge of said Court.
It appearing to the Court by the petition
of Waller T. Miller that on the first day of
Ap*il in the Seventy-two year of our Jxird Eighteen A Hun
died and A. C. Schaefer Co.,
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 ac
knowledgcd to be one the said dale plaintiff,
•a hich said mortgage deed hears April
1st, 1872, to secure the payment conveyed of said
amount due, whereby they to said
waiter T. Miller the fo lowing described
property,to-* it: That tractor parcel of land
ly ing or heiug it the 8d District of originally
Monroe, tliert Pike, now Hpalding County,
and known and distinguished in the plan of
said district as Nos, Forty-seven (47), Seven
ty nine (51), (79), each Seventy-eigbt containing Two (78), Hundred and Fifty- and
one
Two and One-half (202).;) acres; also, Seven-
five (75) acres in the northwest corner Fifty of lot
No. Seventy-seven (77); also, (50;
acres in southeast part of lot No. Forty eight
(48), all in same district, containing in tho
aggregate (tK-ih) Nino Hundred and Thirty-five
acres, more or less, iti the entire tract,
bounded north by land then known us Jno.
G. Lindsay's land and others, cast by land
then known as land of Dr. Pritchard and
others, south by Buck Creek, and west by
land of Squire Massett and others, being
premises conveyed hy Philip E. McDaniel to
said defendants rebruary 4th, 1808. as describ
said ed in foregoing petition: Schaefer conditioned Co. (of that which if
firm of A, C. A
A. C. Schaefer is now serving partner)
should pay off Dollars and discharge said debt of
.Six Thcm-and according to its tenor
and effect, that then -.aid Deed of Mortgage
should be void.
And it further It appearing that Ordered, said debt re
mains unpaid; is therefore that
said A. C. Schaefer, surviving partner as
aforesaid, pay into this Court by the first
day of tlio and next term due thereof, Mortgage, tie- principal,
imereti show to cost the on said if there be or
cause contrary, Schaefer, any;
and that on failure of said A. C.
surviving partner as aforesaid, so to do, the
equity of redemption In and to said mort
gagis* premises Ire forever thereafter burred
and foreclosed.
And it is further Ordered, That this Rule
tie month published for four in the month*, Ukikfin News once there a
or a copy
of served on the said A. C. Schaefer, surviv
ing partner as aforesaid, or his special agent
or attorney, at 'east three months before the
next term of t! is Court,
By the *. nut, February 8th, BOYNTON, 1888.
JAMES H.
Judge H. C. F. O.
Kai! A iliiiiituond, Petitioners Attorney *.
I, VV. M. Thomas, Clerk of the Superior
Court of Hpalding < ounty, Georgia, do here¬
by certify tho above to 1 m; a true extract
from the uiitiiitcs of said Court at February
i'ei > . -- VV. M flOKik
f. ' 'toiitn lm Clerk 8. C H. C.
Lay Sheriffs Sales.
\\' ) li.L ILL BE lsE BOLD 80 LD ON ON THE THE FIRST FIRST TUE TUE8
; vv day in May next, lK- .*een the !e-
gal hours of sale, t»efore the toor of the
j j Court County, House, Georgia, in the the city following of Griffin, described Spaldiifg
; property, to-wit:
Two nty acres of land in the 1159th district
G. M of Hpalding County, bounded east by
public road running from iloUonviJle to
Fayetteville, south and west by lands of 8.
R Borough and north by the Goodm in
pl.-o-e : • 4 itrarch i' tervening. Levied on
a , * J »>y virtue of a Justice Court fi fa Is
.uc-ifrom ih -ti; Court of the 1158th dis
tri< t G. M. o. . palding County in favor of
N. B. Drt-wry. a*agent for Andrew Cole, v*.
H. K. Dorough. Levy made by G. H. Ban
son, L C.. and turned over to me. Tenaht
in i — ion the legally notified. - < <•.
A' <i, at same time and place, win tie
sold one five hor*e sower Wood, Tal - <*
VauU Mos- engine, one fifty saw Ma‘->-c< k
ink! - power pres, and the
beltii._ »> o-cted therev.8. < a. .. u
on a. ' Id by virtue ol one u t- is
suedfi. i 8i aiding ( ounty Court *n favor
of A. A. Clt-.d vs. J. II. I-a-wis, of Spalding
County, and VV. B. Lew is, of HenryCoun-
ty $300.
R. S. CONNELL, Sheriff S C.
M )C vi ? i- 2 I.
Tm rs .y (M.f-■ : J SvvcrfffU ‘a
Jb
t*. U IU«I F.v » . LkihirUai*, ;*•.
CAPITAL PRIZE, $150,000.
‘ VO. ImlJ crtlfvUMt we wwrriN u*
TK.:. S eVKSViffi;
L. <hd In person manage and cm
terv t D rawings Mmnmeire*, and that Um
trot tint oodnetoii with honesty, fairness,
same are v ‘U h.ward all parties, t « w*
a.id In good fa. -any to nae this certls«a»*
rmthorti* fne-aintiilesof (he Com, algrmtni m attackedIr
with po>
We the all undsrsigned Prize* drawn Hank* in The and Louisian* Banks**
a .11 pay
stale jUttttrie* which may let pre f ntsd «t
our con liters:
H. lIHUHslUI’r*.. U-Xall K.
I*. LtUIX. >*ir.»ulrV*tlNk.
a. II ll.niriV,PrM. X.U.Aaii rnmmh
< « HI Ktlll V. I*r». raiaa TIBasli
u PRECCDENTED ATTRACTION!
if- H ■ u Million Distributed
u.nUiana Strlc lottery Compati
! u< of [.orated Educational hj ltavs for 25 years by the I> I
«'.atm• for and ChuritatlopcJ
o- 1 *. •>—with fund ii capital of of <550,000 t l.OOO.UOO—tt ha* sinceb*»t Wkkf
.. r e*i t vc over
audi'd.
By an overwhelming made popoUr vote It* fraa
hisc was a part of the present Stef
Constitution adopted December fid, A. t>„!$3
The only Lottery ever of voted on and ei
lorstd by the people but State
Jt never scales or postpones.
It* t,ra»l S*»h»r Ontslai
lake place monthly,and the Grand Quarterly
Drawing*, regularly every and three December), month;
(March, June, September
ASPLlOfDID OPPORTUNITY TO WIN J
FORTUNE. FIFTH GRAND DRA»-
ino, Class E, ft* th* Academt or Memo N*w
Obleahr, TUESDAY, Drawing. MAY 8, If#*,
‘Jltitii Monthly
Capital Pri/.o, #1150,000
p*f NOTICE.—Ticket* are Ten Dollars only
Halve*, $5. Fifths, $2. Tenths, fl*
l»t or rawaa.
l Cxirrxi. Fbizx or $t50,00<i.. .f #1», 0®
1 Ghaxo Frizk or 60,000. . 50,00®
1 Gbahd Ebizx or 20,WM' ... ffijtoe 20,000
3 Larue Friees or 10,001). .
4 Large Prizk* o* r noo ... »
20 1’bizss or 1 '50..,.
,'jO " 0. .. 25£B®
100 < * 1, , 0 0 40.000 30.000
200 ■ L . . «
500 •• 0 .... 50,00®
approximation i mast ,
100 Approximation Prizes of 1300.. .$30,000 «ap
100 “ “ 201)...
loo Terminal “ “ too... (o.eoo OO®
1,000 “ 50.... 50,
2,17tt Prizes, amounting to..........1535,000
Applie.ilon for rates to eiub* should bS
made only U> the office of the Company in
New Orleans.
For further information wrlti eiearir, fftvi
ing full address. PORT ' I. M)TE8, Expresi
Money Orders, or New Yuri: Exchange Id
ordinary letter. ’ tressed Currency by Express (at
our ex pens*; M. A DAUPHIN,
New Orleans La
or M. A. DA CPU IN, Washington, D.C.
Address Registered Letter* tc
NEW »ATONAL BAX*
New Orleans, La.
REMEMBER jFjTaV. t™.7.,’J
• ad Kuril. akftarn la (bars* *r iki
drawings, is a gunantee of stisolnte fairfien
and integrity, that the chances are all eqtia.'(
and that no one enn possibly divine whs*,
numbers will draw a Prixi. -
REMEMBER that the payment of oil
Prizes is GUARANTEED BY FOUR NATlO
NAD BANKS of New Orleans, and the
Tickets -ire signed by the President of an lu
fituticn whose chartered rights are rceog
nizd in tho highest Courts; therefore
beware of,any imitations cr anonymeu
o hemes.
Application for Charier
‘ GEORGIA,
r
Spaliiijio CocirtT. t
To theFuperlorCourt of *aid county:
Yonr petitioners, A. G. VanDyke, John
Southerland, H M Wa’vmau, t Rudolph Get¬
ter, Virgil L Hnghes, Taylor, James D. Hasted, Lu¬
ther Stanley, A . Hugo W. Hamw lkn*
mid VV. Warder, pray that they and such oth
er person* a* may hereafter U: associated
w itii them, may l>c by order of said court eon
stitu’ed a body corporate »ith the privilege*
and for the purposes berinafter set fourth,
tc- wit:
First, The name of said corporation shall
“The 31 Eddie Georgia Hhip-
pers Union,^
its place of business at Griffin, or some other
point in said county; its capital etook Two
thousand Dollar*, with th< privilege of in
creasing the same without further order of
said court, ilsllarg; to a sum not exceeding twenty
thousand and the period of such
corporate existence shall be twenty years,
with the privilege of renewal in terms of the
statute.
rcooiid. It shall be the business and pur¬
pose of said corporation to buy, market and
coft.'-rve fruit* and other farm products; to
purchase and sell supplies for its members
and otner*; to purchase and sell fertilizer*
and to manipulate To and ingredient* such for machinery such pur¬
pose. own run aa
shall be necessary to carry on their businrs*.
auu to have such other privileges, not Incon
-istent wi ll the laws shall ofUeorgiaor further contrary advance
to public policy,as the and
the purposes o organization. hare
Third, Th« y -hall the right to bor
row money nr: 1 pledge the faith of the exceed cor
Duration to a xteut of liability not
ing fifty ““ ; -r < t of bond* its capital other stock, evidences and to
this end may at. or
of debt.
Fourth, Ti . shall have the seal, right to to sue
and be sued, i ise a common pa*
such by-laws t inconsistent with law or
public'polit y r.nd -s may be advisable of the for body, th#
government management
which by-law- may fix the number and
names of its officer* their duties and obliga
lion- and also the privileges of the stock
holders.
Fifth. 8u' h corporation shall have the
right to ow n and dispose of such property
both real and personal and mixed, as may
Ic necessary or expedient to carry on it*
bii-incv* or protect its interests from loss.
Sixth, Such other privileges and immun
lies a* t-hall be necessary to properly carry
*n said business, your pettioccr* nr«y for.
JNO. J. HURT,
Attorney for Petitioners.□ for
I certify that the foregoisg application
charter is"a true extract from the minutes
Bpaiding Superior Coort. VVitm-es my offi¬
cial signature this April liih, L'8».
Ww. M. Thomxs, (lerk S . C. F. C-