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SIGHTS IN BANGKOK.
Graphic Description of What Chicago’s
Ex-Mayor Saw in an Oriental City.
j other Bangkok ia entirely different from all
eastern cities I have seen. Else¬
where the houses are compacted together
so as to cover as little space aa possible,
j and the people massed oa in hives, Thk
; cit .V, however, with its 350,000 people,
I covers more ground than Canton, with
j its 1,600,000. There uro but few streets,
i they me quite broad. The canals run
I in every direction, and are so numerous
that the Siamese are proud to call their
capital the Venice of the east. 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, bul
for business.
People do their chopping in boats, and
while a woman sells jo her customer in
open view—for ail houses Itave 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 lowed about thero -was
never a moment that I could not see
somewhere a bather; and just at sun¬
down all the common world seemed am¬
phibious. The panoong is retained on
when in the water, and is then either
exchanged dry. for a dry ono or left on to
Rivers and canals are always tilled
by freight boats, forty to sixty 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
mere paddlers moving in state with some
high 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¬
dles in air at the satr.o time. There are
Cjuite barges a in large number of small steam
the city. These dart about very
rhpidly. In fact, all boats seem to do so,
for the tide tuns very swiftly, and boats
going with its current move 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 town,
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 house
of the 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 lookter
on fee) 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 tho thou
sand tiny bells which hang to cornice,
frieze, and projecting point to tinkle, 1
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 permit 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 the 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 i8 no inter¬
ference with travel nor with trade. Sub¬
mission! submission! that is all. No one
, can get a ticket at a railway station nor
j on a 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 the
stamp that appears on the document-
about fifteen cents.—Cor. Chicago Times.
A Monkey with 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 themselves symptoms in
were found to manifest 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 tepiperature and at last prostra¬
tion, anuria and black vomit. lor three
days the poor animal remained in this
sad condition, each day growing the worse,
until the fourth day, when case
terminated fatally.—Public Opinion.
Australians, it i« report,-.!. 'Ft ;u» ag¬
gregate of $ 10 fMT>ri.uOJ a year on horse
races. Dotting and- rabbits are the chief
evils of the country
j l. Itw s MB
Iiwime ipcy,
eft W*- CEORC
:«t-
Stron ffest Companies,
Lowest Rates,
Prompt Settlements.
New Advertisements.
CATARRH B. a. SS5tfi3&S LtrDEimcK A Co., FREE 773
oarincc. Newark, X..I.
I’DNiS PTII/E
,, jsaam gfcff#
Jaiffiwrdurf ^JogTTa^e of it stomach in time. and It & bowels. invaluable 600. at for J>ru£vl4t& all pain*
MEMORY
-MAKES-
SUCCESS
VVUolir ..Ilk. vriitcim ly.-.u, .
An; k.ok lrarnrd ia om reading.
Classes of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit
1 S&J at Philadelphia, students, largo lessee of Colum¬
ns sit/ Penn., at Yale, Wellesley, < tber-
li;., ..a. of Michigan Univerei
‘y, Chantai: _aa, .fee., Ac. E dorsedby Rich
ird Rrocto .. the Scientist, Hons. W. W. As
■or, Jud.il. »*. Benjimin, Judge Gibson, Dr.
dro.vD, ! H. Cook, Principal N, Y. State
Korina. College, Ac. The system is perfect
iy tf.u: hi by correspondence. Prospectus
,WT FKi i from PROF, loisette,
33? Fifth Ave., New York.
advice to dyspeptics.
CONTENTS: The nature of Dyspepsia,
is causes. Its preuention. Its cure. Some
experience of in: actual sugorer. Liver com¬
plaint a twin disorder of dispepsia. Habitu¬
al constipation a reeuit of dyspepsia, I >ys-
pepsia mistaken for co> stiption. Good living
as a means for the cure of dyspepsia. What
fo-d may be taken. V hat food must be
avoided. Mailed free on receipt of stamp.
JOHN H. MoALVIN, Lowell, Mass.
It years City Treasurer and Tax Collector.
J. & J. COLMAN, London, England.
CONCENTRATED
MUSTARD OiL
A. POSITIVE CURE
for Rheomatirm, Neuralgia, Colds and Mus-
eular Pains; outward application. Sold by
obtain ail Druggists from and f); Grocers, ugglstor If Grocer you send cannot to
JAMES your
P. SMITH, *5 Park Place, N. Y.
MASON & HAMLIN
I t flit I t|f| The cabinet organ
8IMKZfi'raX IfFIkCTM" was present introduced form by in Ma- its
Wt
$33 Tv* $000 son A Hamlin in 1861.
Other maker* f dlowed in the manufacture of
these instruments, but the MaSou it Hamlin
Organs have alwas maintained ;li( ir snprem
tit-y as the best in the world-
Mason A Hamlin otter, denscnslaatlon pf
the unequalled excellence of iheir orgms,
the fact that at ail the great World’s Exliibi
tin*. since that of Baris, makers 1807, of all in countries, competi¬
tion with the beet
they have invariably taken the highes hon
e:» Illnstrated catalogues free.
HI IttNI A &l AD IX Mason A Hamlin do not
r I Iflll IflJairaordinury hesitate to make the ex.
claim for
«r*nddcCprlgb« their pianos, that they
ttr* superior to all others. They recognize
the high excellence achieved by other lead¬
ing makers in the art of piano building, but
at ill claim superiority. This they attribute intro,
solely to the remarkable improvement
dueed by them in the yea- 1882, and now
known as the “Mason A Hamlin Piano
Sthixoer,” by the vac of which is secured
the greatest possible purity and refinement
of Ion", together with greatly increased ra¬
pacity for Handing in tune, and other import¬
ant advantages,
A circular, containing testimonials from
three hundred purchasers, musicians, nnd
toners, scut, together with desersptiva cata¬
logue, Pianos to any applicant. Orgafls sold cash
and for or easy
payments; also routed.
Mason & Hamlin Organ & Piano Co.
BOSTON. NEW YORK. CHICAGO.
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
fJ'HK ^ great SCIENCE Medical OF Work LIFE, of the the
age on Manhood, Norvoua
Physical Debility, Premature 1
Decline, Errors of Youth, and
ihe untold miseries consequent
thereon, 800 pages 8vo, 125
prescriptions for all diseases.. by*
Cloth, full gilt, only 81.00,
mall, sealed. illustrative sample free to all young
end middle aged men. Send now. The Oold and
Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the Na¬
tional Medical Association. Address P. O. box
BS5, Boston, Maas., or Dr. W. IL PABKER, grad¬
uate of Harvard Medical College, 25 years* practice
■n hoe ton, who may be consulted oonftdeotlaUy.
Bpeelalty.Dteeaee* cf Kan. Office No. 4 BnJflnck
Practical Hints iffSKSE
to Builders. r,»rK.r„i
trsats. buiididg should know befee letting elegaut hi* con
12 design* of plain and
chapters homes, with plans and estimated cost. cistern, Short
foundation, on the kitchen, chimney*, heai
brickworg, mortar, cellar,
WIT, ventilation, roof, and many item of in¬
terest to builder* Mailed free on receipt of
ten cent* (postalstamps). Address NATION¬
AL SHfcEl' METAL ROOFING CO-, 510
H»t 30th St , New York City.
MAN WANTS BUT LITTLE
Here below, but he Wants tha little
mighty quick. A
LITTLE WANT,
•r i big one is promptly filled by ad¬
vertising in the Daily or
Woskty NEWS,
PS
me mounds. !
It I'm 11 unllag ia EaglnA
V* hat Deftadm Say.
The first week in Novemlx r is the
hunting st irring point, and it continue*
all through the winter until March with¬
out stop, check, impediment or interrup¬
tion, save by one inexorable enemy.
Tint enemy is a gentleman popularly
known as Jack Frost. No weather, be
it wind, fog, hail, sleet or rain, wilt hin¬
der hunting. Indeed a wet day is not
otherwise than propitious. “A south¬
erly wind and a cloudy *ky bespeak a
hunting morning,” sing* the old song,
and no man (or woman who hunts)
would dream of staying away from a
meet because it is raining or “looks Hke
It.” It is a curious thing that following
the hounds should offer such induce¬
ments to get a wetting without mind¬
ing it. At other times the aver¬
age English lady or gentlemen of
hunting proclivities is as much against
goi’ -; out in the rain as they are
tl - ii 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 (ire, 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. Tho
ladies get no end of crochet and crewel
work d“n<-. 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 liis hand, ready for
any show er or down pour that may coma
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 does.
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 things for fox hunters.
Days anti weeks go by, sometimes, wait¬
ing for a thaw, or in hopes that ‘‘this
beastly weather would break up, don’t
you know.” Last winter was a particu¬
larly hard one, in more than one respect,
on limiting. 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 tbeir
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 me at first
glance. But I wish to lay stress on the
word regularly. Off and on, os 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 hunters. They hunt what¬
ever nags they may possess, from car¬
riage horses to ponies. Some people 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 lie dignified by the term
“hunting,” or considered so, when hunt¬
ing as a regular systematic custom is
under discussion. Did hunting depend
upon such jieople, 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. and determine
To judge of hunting,
whether its observance as an annual cus¬
tom is beneficial or injurious, 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 fal I 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, I believe one must possess the nerve
to begin with—and you get to know
people lietter and find out their good
and lad points. It is a healthful exer¬
cise. “Everybody likes it, my dear boy,”
the old squires wall tell you, as they
smack their port after dinner; “we like
it, the horses like it, the hounds like it;
yes. and egad, I believe the fox likes it,
too.” In tiiis 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 OJtracre .kem. The
last Earl of Ashburnham was one, and
the present Lord Ashburton i3 another.
The latter, I believe, will not permit the
hounds to meet upon or hunt over his
property. He is cordially disliked, of
course. But, he ia too great a man to
have any one show him openly what,
were he a poor man, would compel him
to leave England.—London Letter in
The Argonaut.
Heated by Chemical Foot Warmer*.
I once brought a good deal of ridicule
upon myself by asserting in these col¬
umns that I traveled on an English train
heated by chemical foot warmers. When
these things got cold you slwx-k ’em up
and they gave out heat again. I never
got any one to believe this story, and yet
it was true. I have found out since that
the chemical used vu dome sort of soda
affair, and I understand that the fact
that this compound of soda will give out
heat lias caused itxto be used as an engine
for running street cars. I believe that
they are going to use the soda motor on
a Chicago street car line. I don’t know
whether any of the aoda foot warmer)
are used in England now or not. I
couldn't find any on the little island
when I was there last winter, though
urged by my unbelieving friends to do so
for the sake c» my own reputation for
veracity. Luke Sharp in Detroit Free
Press
a uan Tome
(line's AR quiet* teamen, Nervous U ALTER drives the out Ac. Weak»«w, AWE. eerves* the poiaaaoo* Hysteria, system, hasten mrio* Sleep- of
the blood pwlfysn* u>-t enrtt trine K,
•ad m •v«ra*uu>K thus* due***
i®pero or aapover-
A LAXATIVE.
Acting mihUytmt surely on tbabriw*’,*
It cum habitual coowUpattan, ats-1
promote** stomach, regular aadaxi* h*bu usire-ugttt- il%<xt)on
ens the
impound A DIURETIC
In It*composition the h»*t i>, v
active dlun-tic*»>i the Mstcrl* 'iwli .i
are com bleed wu-nttfically for with of other ih.
effective ranedie* etafxMfe*
kidney* It can be relRd on tu giv •
quick relief and speedy cure.
For The NERVOUS HaodnKi*a(t**«teKWial*luvebMiic. who h**» tbi* rwns-dr -1 ml -
(ram ponoo* M forem-ulii-
nauHtMMW rlubkibmttfit. tienj p
The DEBILITATED full particular-
me* I1N Sol* bf Pr««uti
The AGED. WELLS. R1CHAROSON $ CO. P.
BURLINGTON, VT
Rule Nisi.
B. C. Kiu&rd <& Son i
J. W.WardiT.J. Ward.)
State Superior of Georgia, February Spalding Term, County 1888. in the
court,
It being represented to the Court by the
petition of B C. Kinard * 8-n that by Deed
of Mortgage, dated the lflth day of Oct. 1887.
J-VV-W»rd & I. J. Ward conveyed H> the
said B. C. Kmard A Son a certain tract of
land, to-»it: Fifty acn* of land, (situated in
Akin* District, Spalding county, Ga.. and
bounded North by the binds of Bill Wise,
'X'urd to the said B. C. Kinard & Son due on
J&RSIS C „T J rixcintf ’
li b order u d thlt the sa^tJVVWBrd & I
day of next term the principal, interest and
and costs, due on said note or show cause, if
|“I“5L™ P uLw
Ward A 1. J Ward theirin be foreve- barred,
and that service of this rule be perfected publication on
said J. W. Ward & I. J. Ward by
in the GBirriN News or service upon them
by the t-heriff of said county Circe months
beforo the next term of this court boynTon,
James s.
Judges. C. F.O.
Frank Fiynt and Dismtike A Coilcns, Peti¬
tioners Att’s
A true cony from the Minutes of this Court.
a4oam4m Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk.
Rule Nisi.
B. 0. Kinard & Son j
vs
I. J. Ward A J. W, Ward. )
State of Georgin, Spalding County. lu the
Superior Court, February term, 1888.
It being represented to the Court by Ihe
petition of B. C. Kinard A ^on that by Deed
of Mortgage dated the 16th day of Oct. 1887.
said I. J. B. WardAJ. C Kinard W. A Ward Son conveyed certain tract to the of
a
'and, towit; fifty acre* of land lying in AS ins
District Of Spa diug oounty.Ga. bounded a*
follows!: North by lands of Bill Wise, Fast by
Jno. Wa’d, South by Barney Maddox and
West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬
curing the payment I. of a rd promissory J. W. Ward note
made by the said ,J, W <X to
ihe said B. C Kinard A bon due on the 15th
day of November 1887, for the snm of Fifty
Dollars and Ninety-six cents (150 96), which
note is bow due and unpaid.
It is ordered that the said I. J. Ward & J.
W, Ward do pay into this the principal, Court, by the interest flp*t
day of the nex^ due term said show
and costs, on note or cause,
if any they have to the contrary or tha 1 in
default thereof foreclosure bo grunted *o the
said B C. Kinard & Son of said Mortgage,
and the equity of redenipiion of the said I.
J. Ward & J W. Ward therein be forever bar¬
red, and that service cf this rule Ward be perfected ord'u
on said I J Ward &J. W. ac g
to law by publication in the Gkdtin News,
or by service upon I. J Ward A: J. W. Ward
of a copy three months pr.or to ffie next
term of this court
JAMES S. BCYNTON,
J edge 8. C. F. C,
Frank F ynt and Distnuke -t Collens, Peti¬
tioners Att’s.
A true copy from the Minutes of tlii* Court.
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk S. C. 8. C.
apr4oam4m
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
/ L7 vRDINARY’S OFFICE, Sc.nniNi Ow n-
XT, Georgia, April 2d, 1888.—J. J.
Mangham. as • dministrator on estate of 8.
W'. Mangham, dtceased, house lias lot, applied and fourteen to me
for leave to sell a and
acres of ta d, more or less, on extension of
Sixth street and adjoining lands ofT. K.
Mills, Mrs. Kincaid aud others, known as the
late residence of S. W. Mangham, deceased,
for distribution and to pay debts of the estate
AH persons concerned are cited to appear
at the Court oi Oidinary of said county, with
in the time required *ueh by law, application to a bow should if
any there be st--
not be grant E, e.. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
ORDINARY’S * Gkoboia, OFFICE, April 2d, Spalding 1-88.—J. Cotjn- J
/ tk,
Mangham as administrator on estate of J. C.
Mangham, deceased, has app led to me for
leave to sell a house and lot containing two
acre* more orles*, in the e ty of Griffin, situ¬
ated Mayberry on Broadway Scott street bounded, and east by
south by »n al ey wet,'
by an alley running from Broadway to Solo¬
mon street belonging to said estate for the
purpose of distribution.
All persons concerned are cited to apnenr
at the Court of Ordinary of said county with
in'he time reqnircd by luw to show cause
if any there be why such application should
not be granted. W. HAMMOND. Ordinary.
K.
r\RDINAHY'S OFFICE. SrAi.Divo Cons-
\ / tt Guohoia, March 2d. 1888.—M. O
Bowdoin. adruinist a’or of R K Foster,
has applied to me for letters of Dismission
on the estate of R. K. Foster, in' - of -■■ J
county, deeenrcd.
Let all persons concerned show oji.se be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said ci unty, at
my office In Griffin, on tie first Monday in
June, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why such
lette s should not he graatec.
$6,15. E. W. HAMMONND, Ordinary.
SUMMER TERM
Begins April 16. Ends June 23,1888
New classes and private in-truction in
Voi e. Piano, Violin, and all Orchestral lu-
-trument*, Mano and Organ 1 lining. Orato¬
ry, English Branches, French, German and
Itaiiian Languages, Drawing, Painting, M-<d
eltng and portraiture Tuiiion. $5 to Liter# $25
per term. Lecture* on Music, Art, and
tur--, etc., by eminent special tists, Gener
at Clashes, Recital*, etc,, free to ail regular
students Bo* d and room in the New Home
J5.00 to $7 50per week. New Calendar free.
HEW B16UE»COSEEBTATOR1
E. TOURJEE. Dir., Franklin So- Boston.
■aril (bale*
CAPITAL PRIZE, $150,000.
•rrauHTiar
teriy Dr
ten Company, and iti person masogeand tm
troi tfa< Drawings ti,em*elve*, and that Its*
Kims aw eondacted with bwnMy. fainte**.
aiid in good faith toward al) parties, • 4 w*
anttiorir* th, Company to tn*e tbit i vrti&o*.*
with fae*»tinile*of oar signs tain* sUarhedir
A.
CtaalwtMMl.
W'e the undersigned Banka and Bankart
will pa) all 1‘rixe-* drawn in 1 he la>ui*hu*
ritie lxitlerie* which ns«y be presc utu d *1
.ttrcounier*:
*t. n. IV a MIVI.Et .Ure*. I.a.v*t l B,
*•- livil V. I’lr.siRir Hal | M>.
) I'u nw 15,1'rf*.* O.katl •wait
< *«» I *l*. VIBsafc
{ P F ff. ED E N T E0ATT ft ACTION!
■ f’ t Million Dialribnted
- r S*5,!(R Lottery Co»nj»n
i -,t poia!- d In Irt>. for 2ft \ v»r» by the ia(
■v,-,rr wi>», for Educational of aud OtwifiM iiWI
A capita) tri.DOO.i-fxv-ta »b).|
■-i-aerve fund of over f.VjQyUU) baa since bast
hire By aa overwhelsuiug made popular vote ita fras
»as a pai t of the present Btaf
( oiistitMtion adopted December 2d, A. D., ttfit
The only Lottery ever voted on and oi
lornd by the. people oi any State.
It never Seales or postpone*.
Its Esrawd *(«|t* Tinber Onslii
take place monthly,uud the Grand (Jtiartmj
(March, DtAwliigi. June, regularly September every and three December). mo>-thi
AnPLENDID OPFORTtaHTYTOWU*/
FORTUNE. F1FIH GRAND DRAW,
iso, Cl*ss K, in th* Academt ot McaioNtw
t'Ki.EAJts, 216th Monthly TUEhDAY, Drawing. MAY S, 188«,
1‘npttol Prizo, 450,000
JSf NOTIC’E. —Tickata are Ten Dollar* only
Halves, $5. Fifth*. #9. Tenths, *1,
list or mixes
I C*riT*i. t’Kizsor $I30,0»t . IJfif.O*
1 Giiaxd Fauaov nu.oou so.ocft
1 Guard I’utz* or 2t).us, . . 2UJ00
2 i.AKuB I’uizb*) nr Ui.ttOO. 30,00(1
4 I.AUOR I’kizksov .* 0W) ... 2O,00n
20 Ruirs* or k).... 20,000
r-0 " ' .. 25,000
ioo ao.ooo
2<I) “ ... 40,00®
500 . 0 .... ao.<iO#
trntotaututti rauar
100 Approximation Prize* of $300.. ,.$S0,0W
ioo “ “ »*... a'.ooo
ioo “ “ ioo iojy«
1,600 Terminal “ 50..,, 50,00®
2,179 Prizes, amounting to 1535,000
maile Appllc only dion to for the rates office of to the Hub*should Company be iff
New Orleans.
For further information v t lie clearly, gi\i
mg fnl! address. POSTAL NOTES. Express
Money Orders, or New York Exchange is
ordinary Irttcr. I.’.rested Currency by Express (a)
our expensei u M. A. DAUPHIN.
New Orleans La
or M. A. DAl. PHIN.VYssh'ugton, D.C.
Address Registered Letters tc
IIW OULRAII TiTulil BASK
New Orleans, La.
RF MEMBER e;775f;.S
drawings, »<•«! Saily. sbsitrr tv charge mf «h«
is a guaanWM.- of at,solute fairnet*
unit and Integrity, that that the chance* are Si equaif
minis no will one draw can possibly I'riz-. divine whs',
no a
REMEMBER that the payment of all
Prizes isfil AKAN I EED BY FOUR NATIO
NAL BAN KM of New Orleans, and the
I ickets -ire signt i b) the President oi an In
ti tut ion whose chartered rights *re recog
ills'! in the highest Courts; therefore
beware of any imitations cr anonymon
cheat 6*.
Application for Charter
GEORtilA, (
fil’ALDIXO COCKTT. 1
To the v uperior Court of said county:
V ur petitioners, A. G. Vanf'yks. John
Mouther) ‘ind, H M Wav man, Rudolph Get-
b-r, Virgil L. Hughes, Taylor, James D. Hasted, La¬
ther and Stanley, W. Warder, A. Hugo W.Haasclkue
pray that they and such oth
er persons as may hereafter be associated
with them, may be by order of raid court con
siitti ed a bony corporate with the privileges
and for the purposes herinaftrr *st fourth,
to-»it:
First, The name of said corporation shall
be
“The Middle Georgia Ship¬
pers Union,”
it* place in of business at Griffin, or some other
point sail county; its capital stock Two
i hou and Dollars, with the privilege of ia
creasing the same without further order of
said court, to a sum not exceeding ;>ertod twenty
thousand dvllars; and the of such
corporate h existence shall be twenty yesrs,
wi the privilege of renewal in term* of rite
statute.
econd, II shall be the business and pur¬
pose of id corporation to buy, market aud
co .serve fruiis and other farm produ t*; to
purchase slid and seil purchase supplies for sell its ferrilixers members
otuer*; to aud
and to manipulate ingred ente for #uch pur-
po*c. To own and run such machinery a*
•dial! be necessary to carry on their burine**,
ana to have such other privileges, uot inoon
-latent ublic wi h the law» tthmll of ueo further giaor aud contrary advance
to t policy,a* orgao'zation.
the purpose* o the
Third, Tb *' hall have the right to bor¬
row money at pledge the faith of the exceed cor
poration '•■g "o at tteni of liability not
fifty perc- t of its capital stock, and to
thi end t ay uc bond* or other evidences
Of debt.
Fourth, 7 shall have the ri^ht to «ie
arid be *ned.t ;*c a common seal, to pa*
such by-la*#! t inconsistent with law or
public policy a* may tie advisab e for th*
government and management of the body,,
which Eij-low* may fix the number and
j I n,ime* tins, and of It* aLo others the privilege* their duties of and ttie obitga stock
holder*.
Fifth, Such t- -rporstion shall have the
I | r 'toib g t to own and and persona! disfuwo and of mixed, soeh property
real as may
be tt*ci soar) or expedient to carry froffi loss. on it*
>u-» ■•»# or Much pnitect its interests
Sixth. other privileges and imaum
vies as .hail be n-ce«ary to property carry
ju -aid business, your pet?toners r>r»v for.
JNO. J. HUNT,
Attorney for Petitioner*.
I certify that the foregoiag application lor
charter is a true extract from the minutes
Bpaldnjg Superior Coort. Witn.-s* my offi¬
cial signature M". this April ltth, !-»«. 8, C. S. C
Wx. Thomss, Llerk
ISSiPS 1 " •’ vas a. M.WUQL13SY. MJX
SaTcEase <S* WastehaB fit-
Rule Nisi.
' Duncan,Martin a lvnl.u-,
v*.
W, T. II Taylor. !
State of Georgia, Court, Spalding February < < nu’; '
Superior It tk" Term, rlt-> f
being represented to < t
tition of I Duncan, Martin ' A j t • .}
f .^KTh 'i U.i T »C r .-' n ,
i Duncan, Vf ,inI‘’r.nnt Martin A Perdue (t X “a cvitiu ,
f^ vTu- .in,n„
b art ° f ll * So - in . n ,!! , , ?'*}*“ i "! t
j hH^Vrawliv’ . ! V •,
P ur I>ose of securing lh> p.lament.-f.t piomiR
Martu) Ife F J*", due U
! the Mday of Oct..1HS7. for tha sum of One
Hundred and rorty Eight and W-IW> Hollar*.
It is ordered ?,..., that t the r. said “ .'i »V. t T T. II.Taylor u
It ......ST" •>«'"
* anlt Licreo foreclosure be granted to the
said Duncan, Martin A Perdue of said Mort¬
gage, and tho equity of rtddfnptiob of the
said U.T.ilTayloi therein la: forever perfected barred,
and that service of this rule be ou
said \V. T. 11 lav or according to law.
'JAMES S. U tYN'lON,
Judge 8. C. F. C.
Beck <t Cleveland, Petitioners Att’js.
I certify that tho torogolng is a true copy
from the Minutes of this Court, this Februa¬
ry Term. 1888. w m JM. Thomas,
febSfioamtm Clerk ti. C. S. C
Rule Nisi.
WilU v T Miller, I j February Mortgage, Ac. 1888.
versus erm,
Adolphus C Schaefer , y superior Court of
A. C. Schaefer A. Co. ; Georgia.
Present, the Honorable James 8. Moynfon,
J udge of said Court ■
It appearing to the Court by the petition
of Walter T. Miller that on the first day of
April in the year of our Ixird Eighteen Han
dred and Seventy-two A. C. cebaefer A Co ,
a firm composed of A. C. Schaefer and Geo
Y. Barker, made and delivered t,. *aid Wal
ter T. Miller a C'-rtain mortgage In which
the sum of Six Thousand Dollars was ac
kuowledged which said to be uue deed the bears said date plaintiff, April
1st, 1873, mortgage the of said
to seeure payment
amount du , whereby they conveyed to said
waiter T. Miller ihe to lowing described
property, to -a it: That tr-ctor parcel of land
lying or being m the 8d Dislri t of originally
Monroe, then Pike, distinguished now 8,-aiding County,
and known and in the plan of
said district as Nos. Forty-seven (47), Seven Fifty-
ty n ne (79), beventy-cigt Containi t 1 (78). Hundred and
one (5t). each g wo and
Two and One-half (20acres; also, Seven-
five (75) acres in the northwest corner of lot
No. Seventy-seven (77); ul*o, Fifty (50)
acres in southeast part of lot No Forty eight
(4«), all in same district, containing in the
aggregate Nine Hundred and Thirty-fivi
(935) acres, more or less, in the entire tract, Jno.
bounded north by land then known a*
O. Lindsay's land and others, east by land
then known as land oi Dr. Pritcha d and
others, south by Buck Creek, and west by
land of Squire Massett and others, being
premises saiddcfendSnt* conveyed by Philip E 1868. McDaniel asdt-scrib to
rebruary 4lu,
ed in foregoing petition: conditioned (hat if
said firm of A, C. Schaefer A Co. (of which
A. C. Schaefer is now serving partn r)
should pay ofT and discharge said debt of
Six Thousand Dollars a< cm ding to it* tenor
and effect, that then said Deed of Mortgage
should be void.
And it further appearing that said debt re
mains said unpaiu; C. Schaefer, It is therefore surviving Ordered, that
A. partner as
aforesaid, pay into this Court by the first
day of the next term thereof, th principal,
icterert and cost due on said Mortgage, or
show cause to the contrary, if there be any;
and that on failure of said A. C. Schac cr,
surviving partner as aforesaid, so to do, the
equity premises of redemption in and to said barred mort
be forever then after
and foreclosed.
And it is further Ordered, That this Rule
be published in the GitirFiMNywa once there t
month for font months, or a copy
of served on the said A. C. Schaefer, surviv¬
ing partner as aforesaid, or his special agent
or attorney, at least three months before the
next term of t! i. Court,
By the Court, February jam 8th, 1888. 6TO',
1.8 8. Buy
Judge 8. C. F. U.
Hall A Hammond, Petitioners Attorneys.
I, W. M. Thomas, Clerk of the Superior
Courtof Spalding County, Gt orgia, do here¬
by certify .he above to be a true eitrac*
from 'he minutes of ■ i aid< ourt at February
1'errn, T-NS. W. M. t'ftOMit,
ft’8,ain4:n Clerk S. C 8. C,
fs ay Sheriffs Sales.
Yl? W ; i.L BF. SOLD ON THE FI itST TUE8
day in May next, be *een the 1c.
gal hours of sale, t^efore tbo low of the
Court House, in the city of Griffin, Spalding
County, Georgia, the following described
property, to-wit:
Tw enty acre* of land in the 1159th district
G. M . of Spalding County, bounded ea*t by
public road running from ilolkmville to
Fayetteville, R south aud we-t by iand-s Goodman of H.
Dorough and north by the
place and bra> cb i- tervening. Levied on
and sold by virtue of n Justice C«*nrt (1 fa is
sued from th<- J- stii e Court of the 115 th di»
trict G. M. o . paddiug County in f ivor of
N. B. Drewry. aa agent for \ndtew Co'e, vs.
8. K. Doroogb. Levy mad - by G. H 8an
son, L C., and turned over to me. Tenant
in posses ton legally notified. fit < 0
Al-o. at the same time a> d place. - -e
sold or.e five hor-e power Wood, Tabor A
Moss engine, one fifty saw Massey g :
VaiiM inkle powe*-press and thi .
belting and * ineeted therew'i
on v !d by virtue ol one n l *
sued 1> • • ’ aiding > onnty (.'ourt *n favor
of A. A ■ . 1 vs. j H. Lewis, of Spalding
' ly, ounty, anu W. B. Lewi*, of HenryCoun- *800
U. 8 CONNELL,Sheriff 3. C.
?- > " -■■■' r.rcir?
rirf-rily »kTc ' - i >f »(r fall >•
a. 5 ■ « <-r»■ n r*l' - *. P*r''' »*j
4r W lUlK' • iiv & m.- 1 IS*,