The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, June 09, 1888, Image 3

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"T fi- *«•>* e*'% . s.s.s No Mercury, No Potash, Or any other Mineral Poison. Il 1« Nature’s Reiuwljr, made exclusively front Boots and Herbs. It ii perfectly Harmless. It Is the only remedy known to the world that has ever yet Cured oontaglons Blood Poison. In all Us stages. It cures Mercurial Rheumatism, Cancer, Scrofula, and other blood diseases heretofore considered Incurable. It cures any disease canted from Impure blood. It Is now pre¬ scribed by thousands of the best physicians in the United States, as a tonic. We append the statement of a few: “ I have used S. S. S. from on patients convalesc¬ ing from fever and measles with the best results. J. A. Cbssxt, H. D., Kllavllle, Go.” Binrt, Qa.—Willie White was afflicted with scrofula seven years. I prescribed S. S. and to-day he Is a fat and robust boy. C. W. Fa&kik, M. D. KiCBMOXD, Va., Dec. IS, 188S—I have taken three bottles of swift’s It acts Specific much better foMpeoondary than blood poison. remedy I have pot¬ ash or any other ever used. B. F. WiajtkLb, M. D., Formerly of Sussex Co., Va. Da. E. J. Hauc, the well-known druggist and physician, of Nashville, Howard County, Ark., writes: " Havingsome knowledge as to what S. 8. 8. is composed remedy of, for I all can skin safely dis¬ recommend it as the what the be.’’ eases, it matters not name may all we say is true, ai free without on It. application, We have another Contagious on Blood Poison, sent on same terms. Write ns a history ilstory of with your case, and our .*ii n wlu advise you by letter, lu ________i confidence. o ence. Wc will not deceive you knowingly. For stie by all druggists. Thi swnrr Sricctric Co., Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga. , New York, 75« Broadway, d London, Eng., 95 Snow Hill. } New Advertisements. YET A N’T ED. — LIVE AGENTS. — Write I* O' >. A. Sanborn, Secretary Buffalo Mutual, Life, Acoident and Sick Benefit As sociatioa, Buffalo, N. Y. A p E CONSUMPTIVE v o o arising for all affections from impnrs it the blood threat and and"lungs, exhaustion. and The diseases feebla and the sick, struggling will in against disease, and slowly drifting Ui grave, many cases recover their health by the Stalely TAke aae of it Parker’s ia Ginger is Tonic, butdelay is dan¬ gerous. time. It invaluable for oil pains •ad disorders of stomach and bowels. 60c. at Druggists. . ' * •* cos a r •. V 0 ■ 1 i: w' ^ ■”A VERY. Classes of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit 1500 at Philadelphia, students, lar^-e lasses of Colum¬ bia Law at Vale, Wellesley, Ober- lin, University of Penn., Michigan Universi ty, Chautauqua, Ac., <fcc. Endorsed by Rich ird Proctoa. the Scientist, Hons. W. W. As- ‘or, Judah P. Benjam-n, Judge Gibson, Dr. Browu,E.H. College, Cook, Principal Taught N, Y. State Normal Ac. by correspond ence. Prospectus post PROF. fbee from 337 Fifth Ave., LOISETTE, New York. EXHAUSTED VITALITY fl'HE SCIENCE OF LIFE, the f great Medical Work of the age on Manhood, Nervous and 1 Physical Debility, Premature Decline, Errors of Youth, and theuntold miseriesconsequent thereon, 300 pages 8vo, 125 prescriptions tor nil diseases. I Cloth, full gilt, only (1.00, by matt, seated. Illustrative sample free to all young and middle-aged men. Send now. The Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the Na¬ tional Medical Association. Address P. O. box 1S#3, Boston, Mass., or Dr. W. H. PARKER, grad¬ uate of Harvard Medical College, 25 years' practloe In Boston, who may be consulted confidentially. SoeeialtT. Diseases of Man. Office No. 4 Bulfinch it. July Sheriff's Sales. %1’ILL BE SOLD ON THE FIRST TUES II day in July next, between the legaj hours of sale, before the door of the Court Dense, in the city of Griffin, Spalding Coun. ly, ty, Georgia, the following described proper¬ to-wit! Part of lot of land number 125, in 3d dis sriet ty, of originally Henry the now southeast Spalding coun¬ the same being in corner of said lot, bounded on the south by McIntosh pied road, on Henry the east by lot of land now north oocu by Galhouse, L, on Stapleton’s, the by privite road leading to J. on the wesf by the Central RR. right of way, the same containing 67 acres more or less. Levied on and sold as the property of Wm. Keller by virtue of a fi fa issued from Spald¬ ing Wm. Superior Keller. Court in favor Hughes, of James Beatty vs. V. L. tenant in possession, $600. legally notified. CONNELL, Sheriff. R. S. Ordinary’s Advertisements. /"ORDINARY’S VJ OFFICE, Spaldin j Cocn- tt, Georgia, May 20th, 1888.—Mrs. Martha A. Darnall, administratrix of Katie Drenall, mission has applied tome Katie for letters Darnall, of Dis¬ late on the estate of of said county, decased. Let all persons concernrd show cause be¬ fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at September, my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in •uch 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why letters should not be granted. $6,15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. /ORDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Cocn- y tt, Georgia, May 26th, 1888,—Mrs. Darnall, Martha A. Darnall, executrix of Thos. M. has applied to me for letters of dis mission from the ei editorship of said estate. Let all persons concerned show cause be¬ fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at ray September,-1888, office in Griffin, on the first Monday in such by ten o’clock, a. m , why letters should not bo granted. $6.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary, /ORDINARY’S OFFICE. Spalding Coun- Ann ty, Henley Georgia, June 4th, 1888.—Georgia of administration has applied estate to me of Nathan for letters Hen¬ on the ley, let late of said connty, deceased. all persons concerned show cause be fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, in at my office In Griffin, on the first Monday »Hch July, letters 1888, should by ten o'clock, be granted. a. m., why not $8J». E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. mm at la on the file Newspaper la Philadelphia Aaver 'Mag Agency authorized of Xetan , our agent* ' . _ The Treasni*e ol Fraochard. By ROBERT L OUIS S TEVES SOH, CHAPTER i. BY THE DYING MOUNTEBANK They had sent for the doctor from Bourron before 6. About S some villagers came round for the performance, and were told how mat¬ ters stood. It seemed a liberty for a mounte¬ bank .to fall ill like real people, and they made off again in dudgeon. By 10 Mma Tentaillon was gravely alarmed, and had sent down the street for Dr. Desprez. The doctor was at work over his manu¬ scripts in one corner of the little dining room, and hi* wife was asleep over the fire in another, when the messenger arrived. “Sapristi!” said the doctor, “you should have sent for me before. It was a case for hurry.” And he followed the messenger as he was, in hU slippers and skull cap. The inn was not thirty yards nway, but the messenger did not stop there: he went in at one door and out by another into the court, and then led the way by a flight of steps beside the stable to the loft where the mountebank lay sick. If Dr. Desprez were to live 1,000 years he would never forget his arrival in that room, for not only was the scene picturesque, but the moment made a date in his existence. W T o reckon our lives, I hardly know why, from the date of our first sorry appearance in society, as if from a fii*st humiliation, for no actor can come upon the stage with a worse grace. Not to go further back, which would be judged too curious, there are subsequently many moving and decisive accidents ia the lives of all, wliich would make as logical a period as this of birth. And here, for instance, Dr. Desprez, a man past 40, who had made what is called a failure in life, and was moreover married, found himself at a new point of de¬ parture when he o;>ened the door of the loft above Tentaillon’s stable. It was a large place, lighted only by a single candle set upon the floor. The mounte¬ bank lay on his back upon a pallet, a large man, with a quixotic nose inflamed with drinking. Mmc. Tentaillon stooped over hint, applying a hot water and mustard em¬ brocation to his feet; and on a chair close by sat a little fellow of 11 or 12, with his feet dangling. These three were the only occu¬ pants, except the shadows. But the shadows were a company in themselves; the extent of the room exaggerated them to a gigantic size, and from the low position of the candle the light struck upward and produced de¬ formed foreshoitellings. The mountebank’s profile was enlarged upon the wall in carica¬ ture, and it was strange to see his nose shorten and lengthen as the flame was blown about by draughts. As for Mine Tentaillon, her shadow was no more than a gross hump of shoulders, with now and again a hemis¬ phere of head. The chair legs were spindled out as long as stilts, and tiio boy sat perched atop of them,' like a cloud, in the corner of the roof. It was the boy who took the doctor's fancy. He had a great arched skull, the forehead and the hands of a musician, and a pair of haunting eyes. It was not merely that these eyes were large, or steady, or the softest ruddy brown. There was a look in them be¬ sides, which thrilled the doctor, and made him half uneasy. He was sure he had seen such a look before, and yet he could not re¬ member how or where. It was ns if this hoy, who was quite a stranger to him, had the eyes of an old friend or an old enemy. And the bOy would give him no peace; he seemed Tt i cos the Icy who look the doctor's fancy. profoundly indifferent to what was going on, or rather abstracted from it in a superior contemplation, beating gently with his feet against the bars of the chair, and holding his hands folded on his lap. But, for all that, his eyes kept following the doctor about the room with a thoughtful fixity of gaze. Des¬ prez could not tell whether he was fascinat¬ ing the boy, or the boy was fascinating him. .He busied himself over the sick man; lie put questions, ho felt the pulse, ho jested, he grew a little hot and swore; and still, when¬ ever he looked round, there were tho brown eyes waiting for his with the same inquiring, melancholy gaze. At last the doctor hit on tho solution at a leap. He remembered the look now. The little fellow, although he was as straight ns a dart, had the eyes that go usually with a crooked back; ho was not at all deformed, and jet a deformed person seemed to be looking at j’ou from below his brows. Tho doctor drew a long breath, he was so much relieved to find a theory (for ho loved theories) and to explain away his interest. For all that, he dispatched the invalid with unusual haste, and, still kneeling with one knee on the floor, turned a little round and looked the boy over at his leisure. The boy was not in tho least put out, but looked placidly back at tho doctor. “Is this your father?” asked Desprez. “Oh, no,” returned the boy; “my master.” “Are you fond of him?” continued the doctor. “No, sir,” said the boy. Mme. Tentaillon and Desprez exchanged expressive glances. “That is bad, my man,” resumed the latter, with a shade of sternness. “Every one should be fond of the dying, or conceal their sentiments; and your master here is dying. If I have watched a bird a little while stealing my cherries, I have a thought of disappointment when he flies away over my garden wall, and I see him steer for the forest and vanish. How much more a creature such as this, so strong, so astute, so richly * endowod with faculties! When I think that, in a few hours, the speech will bo silenced, the breath extinct, and even the shadow vanished from the wall, I who never saw him, this lady who knew him only as a guest, are touched with some affection.” The boy was silent for a little, and ap¬ peared to be reflecting. “You did not know him," he replied at last. "He w as a bad man. “He is a little i<agan," said the landlady. “For that matter, they are all the same, these mountebanks, tumblers, artists, and what not. They have no interior.” But tho doctor was still scrutinizing the little pagan, his eyebrows knotted nnd up¬ lifted. “What is your name.'” lie asked. “Joan-Marie,” said the 1(1. Desprez leaped upon him with one of bis sudden flushes of excitement, and fe.i his head all over from an otbnolozi -al point of ™ ----- view. “Critic, C’eitfebe said. “Critfc!” cried M iv ientaiilox, who had per hap* oonfou i i d tse wont w.th hvdro- cepbalous. “Boor Lai! j d (husgcruwr “That dejjenih,” returned lue doctor, grimly. And then once more addixvsiug the boy; “And what do you d<. fifir your living, Jean-Marie!” he inquired. “I tumble," was tha answer. “So! Ttmiblc.'" tv.ieated ih-;,Tcz. “Prob¬ ably healthful I tmard the guess. Mine. Tentaillon, that tumbling ia a healthful way of life. And have you never do;vo anything else but tumbler “Before I leunnd that 1 used to steal,” answered Jeon-Marie gravely. “Upon my word!” cried the doctor. “You are a nice little man far your age. Madame, when my qoufrere comes from Bourron, you will communicate my unfavorable opinion. I leave the cose in his hands; bit, of course, on any alarming symptom, above all if there should be a sign of a rally, do not hesitate to knock me up. I am a doctor no longer, I thank God; hut I have 1 h-.ii one. Good night rnadmue. Good sleep to vuu, Jean- Marie.” [TO UK COSTINVED.J .Strength of a Wet Rope. Experiments have proved tliat the ten¬ sile strength of a wet rope is only one- third that of the same rope when dry; and a rope saturated with grease or soap is weaker still, as tho lubricant permits the fibers to slip with greater facility. Hemp rope contracts strongly on being wet, and a dry rope twenty-five feet long will shorten to twenty-four on being wet. —Frank Leslie’s. Weary and Worn. When the tired factory operative,the weary out-door laborers, the overtasked book-keep cr or clerk seeks a medical cceompense for expenditure of bodily force, where shall he find it? Couuld the recorded experience of thousands of workers be voiced, the verdict would be that Ilostetter’s Stomach Bitters renews failing strength, stimulates the jaded menttal powers to fresh activity, and relaxes nndue nervous tension as nothing else does. Digestion, a regular habit of body, appetite and sleep arc promoted by it, and it is an ad miruble anxilliary in the recovery of health by convalescents. A fastidious stomach it not offended by it, and to persons of both sexes in delicate heath who occassionly feel the need of an efficient topic, the whole range of the pharmaeoposir and the cata¬ logue of proprietary medicines does not pres ent a more useful, safer or more decisive one. It is also incomparable for fever and ague, rheumatism and kidney troubles. UNPRECEDENTED U Over Million ATTRACTION! Distributed a CAPITAL PRIZE, $300,000. Louisiana State Lottery Company Educational Incorporated and by Charitable the Legislature in 1868, for purposes, and its franchise made a part of the present State Constitution, in 1879, by ank over¬ whelming popular vote. Eta Grand Mingle A umber DraHlati take place monthly,and the Grand Quarterly Drawings, (March, June, regularly September every three December). months and “We do herebyccrtify that we supervise the arrangements for all the monthly and Qnur. tery terly Company, Drawings of The Louisiana State Lot and in person manage and con trol the Drawings themselves, and that the game are conducted with honesty, fairness, and in good faith toward all parties, i A w« authorize the Company to use this certificate with fac-similesof our signatures attached ir its advertisements.” //Le e j. CammlHUarri, will We the all undersigned Prizes drawn Banks in The and Louisians Bankers State pay Lotteries which may be presented at our counters: II. U.H .l i nvI.KI Prf.. I a.Jat l H. P. LASAIX. ■*>«•• (State Mitt I Hit. A. BALDWlil.Pm. S. O.Mat’l Bank CARL 14 OHM, Free. Union VI Bank Grand : Quarterly : Drawing 111 the Academy of Music, New Orleans, Tuesday, June 12, 1888, Capital J?ri5Ee, #300,000 100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars each Halves $10; Quarters $5; Tenths $3; Twen¬ tieths $1. LIST OF PHIZES. 1 Prize cp $300,000 is.......... $300,000 1 Prize or 100,000 is.......... 100,000 1 Prize of 50.000 is.......... 50,000 1 Prize of 25.000 is.......... 25,000 2 Prizes of 10.000 are......... 30,000 5 Prizes of 5.000 are....... 25.000 25 Prizes of 1.000 are....... ‘25,000 100 Prizes of 500 are....... 50.000 200 Prizes of 300 are....... CO,C00 500 Prizes of 200 are......... 100,000 APPROXIMATION prizes. 100 Prizes of $500 approximating Prizes to $300,000 of $300 Prize are......... 50,(X0 100 approximating to $100,000 Prize are......... 30.000 100 Prizes of $200 approximating to $50,000 Prize are.......... 30.000 terminal phizes 1.000 Prizes Prize ol $100 decided by $300,000 Prizes of are............ decided 100,000 1.000 $100 by $100,000 Prize are............ 100,006 3,136 Prizes of amounting to......$1,055,00( For Club Rrates, or any further Informa tion apply to the undersigned. Your hand¬ writing More rapid must be distinct delivery and Signature plain. return mail will be as- Burred by euclosing and Envelope bearing your full address. Send POSTAL NOTES, Express Money Orders, or New York Exchange in Ordinary letter. Currency by Express (at our expense) addressed to M. A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans La or M.£A. DAUPHIN, Washington,D.C. Address Registered Letters tc VKW OHLIiB X ATONAL BANK New Orleans, La. REMEMBER S:h2E aid Early, who are la charge ot the drawings, is a guaantee of absolute fairness and integrity, that the chances are all equal, and that no one can possibly divine what numbers will draw a Prize. all REMEMBER that the payment of Prizes ia GUARANTEED BY FOUR NATIO NAL BANKS of New Orleans, and the Tickets sre signed by the President of an In stitution whose chartered rights are recog nized in the highest Courts; therefore beware of any imitations cr anonymou schemes. Tins TATm $dwv*i.urlteiTw ( YOCi-rinx? iLLifVr IX ISfcW a*|virtf*i«| VOIt **tf . if Ui V ii 4 Paine's Tery (om|?qund For The NERVOUS The DEBILITATED ESTEY CASH, OR ON TIME, AT DEANE’S ART GALLERY WHIPS, WAGONS, BUGCIES AND HAPNESS —w- - Studebaker Wagon! White Hickory Wagon I Jackson G. Smith Wagon! Jackson G. Smith Buggy I Ar>d the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. Repairs on old Buggies a Specialty. W. H. SPENCE, aug28d*w6m Oor. Hill A Taylor Street*, GRIFFIN, GA WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED ! A fresh lot of preserves. Jellies, Apples, Oranges, Lanui.nas, Cocoanuts, AND IN FACT EVERYTHING A H0USKEEPPER WILL NEED: HEADQUARTERS OF AND PROTECTIVE • AGENCY GRIFFIN, TO CREDITORS: This ageney is established to collect debts and afford protection in giving credit, and is a safeguard from THOSE WHO CONTRACT DEBTS AND CAN BUT WILL NOT PAY. jgfOur business becomes easier as we pro ceed with the work and we expect to push forward with energy until wc become a great lactor of benevolence in oar country. 23?”In the month of January next we shall have a book printed containing the names of those throughout the State of Geor giawhom we have . in our hands for collee- on,notes or accounts against—and against whom a judgment would not be worth any thing, and who can and won't pay. The name of said hojk will be : REPORT OF LEAKS COLLECTING AND PROTECTIVE AGENCY OF THE STATE OF GEORGIA. J5@t"Xl;e same shall he furnished to our patrons. We cannot expect, however, to go along without our maligners and blackmail- eis. It makes no difference how grand a motive an enterprise may have, there is a class of people t .at will endeavor to tear down—but it will ever be the object of the officers or at owys of this agency through¬ out the Stats to push and carve the name of this COLLECTING - AND - PROTECTIVE AGENCY over the smo .idering ashes of its t adtu er-. Yours Very Truly, « Leak Collecting and Protective Agency S. G. LEAK, Manager. Correspond only with manager at head¬ quarters . TO WIJijM IT MAYCONCEKN We take pleaanre Leak in saying that we have known Mr. for a number of years. He i» of good hi*, family, sober, integrity industrious, and upright, deserve bonora s man of eserTes success in his new field of labor. J. D. STEWART, M. C, J.L HALL, Ex-Judge, fi. T. DANIEL, Lawyer, M. J. DANIEL, M. D-, T.C. MoLAURIN,Merchant. mm BURLINGTON. VT PIANOS ! ORGANS ! Tax Receiver’s Notice iron. I will be at the different preoincta on the dates mentioned for the purpose of receiving State and County Tax for 1888 : At Sunny Bide, Tuesday, April 3rd, May 1st and June 5th and At Jnue Union, 6th. Wednesdday, April 4th, May 2nd 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 10th, May 8th and June 12th. and At Jnne Akin, Wednesday, April 11th, May »th 13th. At Griffin every Saturday until tha book* are closed on July X. 1st. Office at Brick War* house. It. HARDEE, T. R., tt- C. mar25-3m THE FINEST BAR IN GRIFFIN ! 24 BILL STREET. IIavin» purchased the stock and fixtures of Jaw. Campbell, wc propose to run the Finest Bar In the city, with the largest and best assortment of all kinds of ffiHes, Lipors and Beer! and also an elegant line of Domestic and Imported Free Cigars. \-if~ Lunch every day during the season. hand XST An experienced mixologist always kinds. on to prepare fancy drinks of all Please give us a call and we will please you. G. H. SCHERER & CO. mayl3d&wlm (is A. CUNNINGHAM, GRIFFIN,: ::GEORGIA, Has Been Appointed Land Agent foi Spalding County, by the Georgia Bureau of Immigration, and all parties having land for sale can expedite the sale hy placing their property tn bis hands. Full particulars in regard to the most val¬ uable lands in this county can be obtained by addressing him as above. A full ll»t o houses and lands and iota of all description ----- 1 advertising in America! NOTICE papers by addressing T ° 6 “‘" C eo P Rowell & Co., - - Notire is hereby given to all executors, a minis trators, guardians and trustees, to moke their annual returns between now aud the first Monday in July. 1888, at 10 o'clock a. m., at my office to Griffin. E W. HAMMOND. Ordinary. May fit, DWt. i man route. Cowry and Core, the (rwbetU*. Nerve Took*. are ib* It N in quleta the nemw sys tem , curing Serr.wi* Wsahasm, Hyfflftte. isunsimt. Mar*” and or-- oo SB&ST' t LAtrmi. Acting mlldlrbu, habitual torsi y on the bowr’.e it euro* cenatipeUon. and l*e»uou* the Womorh, a regular and hat.a ftetreagtn dlgeSTm eat old* 4 DtUftBTtG: In Hat i beet and toon active < »Materia MmIWi rifte______ one terily diMMmcf with other th« or quick UttaMf*. kidney*. relief It It and can < be relied d act tu fiv. ip ee y cm. Hand nxh«*ea< UeH*»uel«l« have boe* mat™*! ■ wheawe Haotbl* tsms&r * ah (all --faaeaflt. twnwaLtn Mead for etoeotara. «<rm« ha. »l M ka V* Snnliu State ot Georgia Bom ■ r.'qs FOUR AND ONE-HALF PER CERT. ed Septets in r Alb, 1887, authorizing tb*uov sraer and Treasurer to bene bond* of tk* State to an amount, not to «xc«*d nineteen hundred thousand dollars, with which to psr 4 off that portion of th* pubik debt mitiili ' January reserved 1st, im, sealed of&efnSSuiSr prirpowte wfiltM at the office Oaotgta, M-xt, for op to 12 o’clock m., on Jwl a«d dollar* one utlMou nin* hundred ot four and on*-half _ irasaasssaster** per .-a*- i! One hundred thousand dollar* to mature January Ou* hundred 1,18VH. thousand dollars January to u store 1,1890, On* hundred thousand dollars to mature January One 1, 1MQ. hundred thousand do)lor* to mature Jatuary One 1,1201. hundred thousand dollar* to January hundred 1,1202, On* thousand dollars to mature January <m* hundred 1, 1800. then.a ad dollars January l, 1204. to i ms iiuiidrsd thousand dollar* to mature Imiu ry I. llX'fi January t in* limulod 1006. thu»*.od dollars* to mature I. One to fid red thousand dollar* to mature Jo uarj 1. Iflu7. i Owe hi.mlre.l thot.ft.md dollars to mature Jnr.u At I, IttK January Oti<>%Mud'<:d limo-and dollars to mature 1, ISOS*. Doc hundred thousand dollar* to mature J nuary I, 1010. One hundred thomwnd dollars to mature Januar; 7 1,1211. On* hundred thousand dollars to mature January One hundred i, 1012. thousand dollar* January to mature 1 1213 Ons hundred thousand do!.or* to mature January 1,1214. On* hundre 1 thousand dollar* to mature January Ons hundred 1,1919. thousand dollars to la January met re The bond* 1,1216, to be in dsnominsttou of os* thousand dollars, with semi annual coupons due oath* tat day of January aud July a t <>rk, such teres place t payable tbu In Gov tbs at as emor of may the sleet, Stute, and the at the office of the Trees nrer in city of Atlanta, (tour gia. Bids must be accompanied by certified check or checks—certificate of deposit* of some solvent bank or bankers, or bonds of tha State ol Georgia for fire per cent, of the amount of ouch bid, said checks or certificate of daposlt of Georgia. being made payable to (he Trees urer Bid* will be opened by tha ‘ lovemor and Treasurer and declared by ■; . ixteenth of Julynext, the State rare' 'he right to reject Btato any or all of said The will tissue > d bonds In lieu of any of the above ». ...cd bonda. as provided dad lure** In said act, - at - uay time on demand ‘ of the owner thereof. authorizing Coplea of the this act of the General Assembly Issue of bonds will b* fur nifthed on applidation to the Treasurer. JOHN B. GORDON, Oov raor. R. U. HARDEMAN, Treasurer. junefl-2*w-4w July Special Bail ill's Sale IITTLL BE SOLD BEFORE THE COURT TV House door, in Spalding County,Geor¬ gia. tween on the first Tuesday in July next, be¬ the legal hours of sale, one bay mare mule ‘ about nine ‘ rears veer* old, old, fifteen hands high, named Ida. Levied Levied on on by virtue of a mortgage fi fa from Spalding County Court In favor of Connell tk Hudson aud against Naomi C. Wlggsrs. Triggers, Levied aa the property mort of said N. C. June to satisfy sek g*ga fi fa. Till* 4th. 1888 J. H. MOORE, Special Bailiff, $3.00. Spalding County Court. Rule Nisi. B. 0. Kinard A Sou ( I. J. Ward*'J. W. Ward, f State of Georgia, Spalding County. In the Superior Court, February Term, 1888. It being represented to the Court by the of petition Mortgage, of B. dated C. Kinard & Son that by Deed the 18th day of Oct. 1887. L J. Ward A J. W. Ward conveyed to the said B. C. Kinard A Son a certain tract of land, towjt; fifty acres of land lying la Akins W est by Zed vi. Gardner, South by for Barney the jbmw?* of «m curing the payment of promissory purpose se¬ a note made or the said I. J. Ward dr J. W. Ward to the said B. C. Kinard & Son due on the tfith day of November 1887, for the sum of Fifty Dollars and Ninety-six cents ($50.28), whies note Is now due end unpaid. It is ordered that the said I. J. Ward AS, W. Ward do pay into thie Court, Ire the first day of the next term the principal, interest end emits, due on said note or show cauae, if any they have to the contrary, or that th default thereof foreclosure be euid granted to toe said B. C. Kinard A Son of Mortgage, J. and the equity of redemption of the said L WardAJ.W. Ward therein be forever bar¬ red, and that J. service of this rule be perfected on said I. Ward A J. W. Ward a c c o r din g to law by publication in the Oareroi Xnura, of or by semes three upon 1. J. Ward A J. W. Ward a copy months prior to toe next term of this oourt. JAMES 8. BCYNTON, Frank Fiyct and Dismuke Judge A Collens, S. C. F. Peti¬ C. tioners Att’s. A true copy from the Minutes of this Court. Wn. M. Tbomos, Clerk 8. C. & C. apr4oam4m NOTICE TO CITY REAL ESTATE OWNERS. The Assessment of Real Estate has been Sim completed and the book*turned over to me. Parties interested are notified to call and « amine the tame and make application for re¬ duction within the next ten days. THO 3. NALL, June 5,’Si. .'•>! Clerk and Treas'r. ;.i-2E ADVERTISERS m :an learn the exact cost )f an) nroposed hne m Newspaper Adrwtloinq Bureau. IO Gpn* * >, New Yark. H v *-< .o' tOO-ohaae ;« 5 LLM CK1K, FA., f/7 forUieaiare. Ttsebre- -t-kno. t-e' tnAuwr!c*. Fiff tr -»to-te» - Awe. ** Xwjion Hd* pajw?.- .