Newspaper Page Text
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0OUSLA8 GLE8SWER, Editor * 1’rop’r
•AJJkT.fln Adr»ne.)F.r Annum......•».©«»
mUT, On* You ................ 1.00
GrlSa, ee»rgla, Jnne 17,1888.
OOcial Paper of Spalding Co.
Official Paper of the City of Griffin
Advnrtleing Bate*.
DAILY—One dollar per square tor the
•ret and. fifty oenta for each eob-
teqnent o*.e. Ten lines or leea to be oonnt-
id if a Mtuiro. 10 line
SPECIAL NOTICES oenta nnder per this
> or each insertion. No Insertion
bead tor lees than 50 cents. All insertion#
for less than one dollar most be paid for in
•debnoe. rates will be made with parties
liberal their advertisements
Wishing to sontinne
longer than oift week.
WEEKLY—Same rate* as for the Dailv.
At Chicago.
They are gathering in Chicago
And preparing for the strife,
Like the tongue of the virago
They will freely use the knife,
They will slash the empty pocket
And.shoot the Jonded guns.
And with hot shot will sock it
To many favorite sons.
Pike county should seek tbo same
happy adjustment of its political af¬
fairs that is now being consummated
in Spalding. With two members ol
the legislature to elect, let a con¬
servative and able man be selected
from each ot the two iactions, and
let the two candidates declare that
they will do nothing to change the
existing general loeal option law.
ft would be very easy to name two
mcA who should be acceptable to the
masses of the people.
Mi. Cleveland can well afford to
be a little superstitious about the
name Daniel. Daniel Lockwood
baa heretofore placed him m nomina¬
tion for every office he has held.
Daniel Manning managed bis cam¬
paign, and was a strong member of a
strang cabinet* Daniel Lamont is
hn invaloable private secretary.
Now Daniel Dougherty has renomi¬
nated him. The word Daniel sig¬
nifies ‘‘judgment of God/’ and very
appropriate it is.
All tbo news from Chicago indi
cates that Judge Gresham is to be
sacrificed by the.Republicans because
he.is supported by the best elements
of the party, just ns General Bristow
was in 187C. The great mistake
Judge Gresham’s friends made was
in allowing several republican newepa
pers, which Lave openly objected to
the imposition of taxes for the sake
of piling up money in the Treasury,
or,of spending it lavishly in ways not
at all necessary, to openly support
his candidacy. This is about the
most serious crime that can be com
mitted in the eyes of the Blaine men
and only Judge Gresham's defeat
can wipe out the stain.
HARPER ASD PL'IK.
There seems to be little doubt that
Harper’s Weekly and Puck will be
with us again this year as they were
in 1884. The wholo tone of the last
issue of each favors this conclusion.
Moreover, each has expressed itself
(Puck especially) so heartily in favor
of the present administration of
Cleveland that it would amount to
almost a moral impossibility to
change—though it is true that there
is no telling what a half reformed
Republican may do, The only ap¬
parent prospect of either the Weekly
or Puck supporting the Republican
ticket is in case Gresham should be
the Chicago nominee. But this is
not probable; and even then there
would be another insurmountable
difficulty in the way, and that is that
both publications are even more thor
oughly committed to tariff reform
than to the administration of Cleve¬
land—and the Republican platform
is obliged to be protectionist or
nothing.
The aid of these illustrated papers
proved very valuable in 1884 and
will be equally so in 1888. The
power of the picture in politics is
well known to the Demociats, against
whom it has almost always heretofore
been used with signal effect. Puck’s
pictures are the more powerful and
artistic and are greatly helped by the
attractive coloring. Like its editc- ■
rials, the illustrations of the Weekly
are paler and leas pronounced in
character. Puck is plain and out¬
spoken; almost it is persuaded to be
a Democrat. The Harper utteran¬
ces have the usual uncertain gait
of the Mugwump, who does not
know where to step and is afraid to
gut his foot down flat for fear of
spoiling his English gaiters. Each
has its field and the aid of each will
be gladly received: the vote of a
kid-gloved “gentleman in politics”
counts just as much os that of an
honest Democratic citizen.
It would not surprise us to see
Wattorson’s prophecy fulfilled—that
three New England States, five or six
Western States and two States on the
Pacific slope would caBt their elector
al votes for the present occupant of
the White House. The reason for
the belief that is in us comes from a
knowledge that a large portion of the
manufacturers of tbis State, who
bavo in the past acted with the Re
publicans party, are not satisfied
with the pretended efforts of the late
Legislature for their relief; and what
is true in this State is true in other
States, whose industries are forced
into unnatural competitions with con
vict lal or and whose toilers are bur
deued with a war tax on their earns
ings.—|Newburg(N. Y.) Press.
Well Planned Work.
Chicago Herald.
The Democratic party has a happy
faculty of uniting the new and the
old. In 1884 Hendricks, a represen
tativo of the old* Democracy, was
placed in nomination with Cleveland
that the cry might be ‘‘Reform and
Revenge.’’ This year Allen G. Thur
man is drafted, and with amazing
alacrity the veteran takes his place
beside Lis party's chosen leader,
That there is strength in the combi
nation was demonstrated four yearB
ago. Tbo new and the old, the
young and the aged, are rarely found
in perfect harmony in this world, but
it must be admitted that for Demo
cratic purpose the plan works admir
ably.
Emperor William’s Widow.
A general, who was sent as a special
envoy to tho funeral of Emperor Will¬
iam, has written to his government that
he was wonderstruck at the manner in
which her royal and imperial majesty
the Empress Augusta held on to her post.
The military spirit, he said, extends it¬
self at Berlin even to tho court ladies,
and braces up among them those who in
other countries would reckon themselves
invalids. The empress has the petrified
rigidity of features of all the august and
illustrious personages w ho, grooving old
with Emperor William, have survived
him. She received in a darkened room,
and woro tho German widow’s cap and
double veil, the front part of which was
thrown back. The arms of her chair
project a little forward, and mechanism are arranged
by means of an ingenious to
rise to the level of her armpits when
when she stands, and thus hold her up.
She stood supported in this way when
rReiving the ambassadors, special en¬
voys and princes who attended the fu¬
neral. The latter were legion. Every
German reigning house, mediatized or
other, sent a deputation of its scions.—
The Argonaut.
Lareeit Los* In the War.
The official casualty lists of the Con¬
federate forces are not so trustworthy as
those of the Union side because they have
not had careful revision since the war
closed, but tho tables now accessible
show that the northern aim was equally
true, and that the northern nerve wa3
equally steady. The Twenty-sixthNorth
Carolina — Pettigrew’s brigade, Heth’s
division—lost at Gettysburg 86 killed and
502 wounded; total, 588, not including
the missing, of whom there were about
120. In one company, 84 strong, every
man and oflicer was hit; and the orderly
sergeant who made out the list did it
with a bullet through each leg. This is
by far the largest regimental loss on each
side during the war.—W. F. Fox in The
Century.
Vigor and Vitality.
Are quickly given to every part of the body
by Hook's Sarsay&rilia. That tired feeling
is entirely overcome. The blood is purified,
enriched, and vitalized, and carries health
instead of disease to every organ. The stem
noli is toned and strengthened, the appetite
restored. The kidneys and liver are roused
and invigorated. The brain is refreshed, the
mind made clear and ready for work. Try
it. (b)
Dr. Moffett's TEETHINA (Teething Powders)
Ailivs Irritation Aids Digestion, Hegrolatrsthe
Bowels. Strengthens the Child, niakvs Teething
l.s>t and Cost* only 25 Cents. Teethina cure.
Eruption. m d Sores, and nothing enuals It for
thesumuier troabiesofChlldren o/any age* It
is safe and sn re. Try It and you will never be
without TKETUIN A as long as there are child¬
ren la the House. Ask your Druggist
Advice to Mothers.
M.a Winslow’s Soothing Strip
for children teething, is the prescription
of one of the best female nurses and
physicians in the United States, and
has been used for forty years with never
failing success by millions During of mothers
for their children. the process
of teething its value is incalculable.
It relieves the child from pam. cotes dys
entery and diarrhoea, griping in the
bowels, and wind colic. By giving
health to the child and rests the mother.
Price 25 cents a bottle, augeod&wly
Were all w ise enough to heed thla advice in
season, a world of suffering would be avoided.
The best mo...' • In which to take Hood!
Sarsaparilla, the . eat blood purifier, are
Maroh April May
At no otic r season Is the body so much Sa¬
uced of, or so susceptible to the benefit to be
derived from Hood’s Sarsaparilla, as now.
Tlie impoverished condition ot the blood, the
weakening effects of the long, cold winter, the
lost appetite, and that tired feeling, all make
a good spring medicine absolutely necessary.
Try Hood’s Sarsaparilla and yon will be con¬
vinced that it is the ideal spring medicine.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists, fil; six for gs. Prepared only
by U. L HOOD A CO.. A|w»‘ ’ caries, Lowell, Hus.
100 Dor . ne Dollar
u NPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION!
Over a Million Distributed
Louisiana ’o Lottery Company
Incorporate!, ' o Legislature in 1868, and for
Educational an. suitable purposes,
its franchise maut .i part of the present
State Constitution, in 1879, by ank over¬
whelming popular vote.
Its GRAND EXTRAORDINARY DRAW¬
INGS take plaee'Semi-Annnally, (Juue and
December), and its GRAND SINGLE NUM¬
BER DRAWINGS take place on each of the
the other ten months in the year, and are all
drawn in public, at the Academy of Music,
New Orleans, La.
“We do hereby certify that we supervise the
arrangements for ail the monthly and Quar¬
terly Drawings of The Louisiana State Lot
tery Company, and in person manage and cob
troi the Drawings themselves, ana that the
ame are conducted with honesty, fairness, a.-’d
and in good faith toward all parties, this cerlifica.* wt
authorize the Company to use
with fac-similesof onrsignatuies attached in
its advertisements.”
n>nimi»l«orri.
We the undersigned Banks and Banker*
will pay all Prizes drawn in The Louisian*
State Lotteries which may be presented si
our counters:
It. 3f.W tI.nfil.EY.Pm. M.a.Jfat’1 B.
P. U!UI'X. PimSiii«*X»«I Bit.
A. BAillWIJI.PrH, S. O.Sat'l Bank
6'AHLHUin. Pr*», I nlon VIBsah
Grand : Monthly ; Drawing
111 the Academy of Mnsic, New Orleans,
Tuesday, July 10,18S8,
CAPITAL PRIZE, $300,000.
100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars each
Halves *10; Quarters $5; Tenths 42: Twen¬
tieths $1.
list OV TOIZE3-
1 Pbize cf $800,000 is .......... $300,000 100,000
1 Prize of 100,000 is..........
1 Pbize of 50.000 is.......... 50,000
1 Prize or 25,000 is.......... 25,000
2 Prizes of 10.000 are......... 20,000
5 Prizes or 5,000 are......... 25,000
25 Prizes of i.000 are......... 50,00o 25,000
100 Prizes of 500 are .........
200 Prizes of 300 are......... GO,COO
500 Prizes of 200 are ......... 100,000
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
100 Prizes of $500 are...........
100 do. 3U0 arc*...........
100 do. 200 are........... . 20,000
TEHM1N1L PEIZES.
999 do. 100 are...........
999 do. 100 arc........... 99,909
3,134 Prizes of amounting to —
Note.— Tickets drawing Capital Prizes
are not entitled to terminal Prizes.
For Club Rrates, or any further informa
tion apply to the undersigned. Your hand¬
writing must be distinct and Signature plain.
More rapid return mafl delivery will be as-
surred by enclosing 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 Orisons La
or M.*A. DAUPHIN, Washington,D. C.
Address Registered Letters tc
HEW OIILGAHN XATOXAL IUSH
New Orleans, La,
REMEMBER
suit Early, who are la charge ef Ike
drawings, is a gnasntee of absolute fairness
and integrity, that the chances are ail equal,
and that no one can possibly divine what
numbers will draw a Prize.
REMEMBER that the payment, of all
Prizes is GUARANTEED BY FOUR NATIO
NAL BANKS of New Orleans, and the
Tickets are signed bj the President of an In
stitution whose chartered rights are recog
nized in the highest Courts; therefore
beware of auy imitations or anonymou
schemes.
July Special BailiffsSale
till BE SOLD BEFORE THE COURT
VY House door, in Spalding County, Geor¬
gia, on the first Tuesday in July next, be¬
tween the legal hours of sale, one fifteen bay hands mare
mule a boat nine Levied years old,
high, named Ida. on by virtue of a
mortgage fifa from Spalding Couuty Court
in favor of Connell & Hudson and against
Naomi C.'V igaers. Levied as the property
of said N. C. Wiggers, to satisfy said inort-
gagafifa. This June 4th, 1888
,T. II. MOORE, Special Bailiff,
fUk00. Spalding County Court.
~l£ is i - ! La Ct i
..lift- • U » 1 . Sf,« fall to i
t. * ”«~
Midland Half BB
SCHEDULE.
Effect Sunday, May 27,1888.
NO. 51. PASSENGER—NORTH.
Columbus,................. 8.25 a m
Warm Springs..............10.06 a n:
a m
Molena,.....................10.38 Neal,........................10.43 a tn
am
Concord,....................10.53 Williamson's,...............11.12 a m
a m
Griffin.....................11.35 Griffin,.....................11-30 a m
am
Lnella,.....................11.59 gk...............12.15 a m
McDonoa p m
NO. 52. PASSENGER-SOUTH.
Lnella,.......................3.22 McDonough,................3.15 pm
p m
Griffin,......................3.57 p m
Wiffiamson-ai!.'.*”.'4.28 p S
Neal,.........................4.58 Concord,.....................4.48pm
p m
Molena,......................5.94 Woodbury,...................5.16 pin
Springs..............5.89pm pm
Leave Warm
Columbus,..............-.;..7.16pm
NO. 53. PASSENGER—NORTH.
Leave Coiambus,.................4.45 Springs...............620 p m
Leave Warm p m
Leave Woodbury...................6.41 Molena......................6.52 p m
Leave p m
Leave Neal.................. 6.57 p m
Leave Williamson’s................7 Conoord,................7.07pm 27
Leave pm
Arrive Griffin......................7.45 p m
Leave Griffin......................7.55 p m
Leave Lnella.......................8.21 p m
Arrive McDonough................8.40 p m
NO. 50. PASSENGER—SOUTH.
Leave McDonough.................7.30am Luella.......................7.48
Leave a m
Arrive Griffin......................8.15 a m
Leave Williamson’s.................842am Griffin,......................8.25 a in
Leave
Leave Neal,.........................9.11 Conoord,....................9.01 a m
Leave a m
Leave Molena,......................9.16 Woodbury,..................9.27 a »
Leave a m
Leave Warm ColumbuB,.................11.20 Springs...............9.48 a m
Arrive a m
EfT" All passenger trains are daily inelud-
feig Sundays. M. E. GRAY, Supt.
C. W. CHEARS,
Gen’l Pass. Agt; Columbus, Ga.
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
LEAK’S collecting and protective AGENCr.
S. C. LEAK,
ATTORNEY AT LaW,
Office, 313* Hill Street.
GRIFFIN, - - - - GEORGIA.
Prompt attention given to clerical work,
general law business and collection of claims.
inay9d<kw8m
D. L. PARMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
WOODBURY, : : GEORGIA.
Prompt attention given to all business.
Will practice in all the Courts, and when¬
ever business calls.
Collections a specialty. aprfidly
DR. JOHN L. STAPLETON,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
GRIFFIN, : : : : GEORGIA,
Office—Front Room, np Stairs, News Build
ing. Residence, at W. H. Baker place given on
Poplar street. Prompt attention jan21d&w0m to
calls, day or night.
HENRY C. PEEPLE S,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
HAMPTON, GEORGIA.
Practices in ail the State and Federal
Courts. octOd&wly
JNO. J. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
Office, 31 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J. II
White’s Clothing Store. mar22d*Jfcwly
v. DISMUXE. N. M. OOLUNS
DISMUKE Ac COLLINS,
LAWYERS,
GBIFFIN, GA.
Office,first room in Agricultural Building
Dp-Stairs. marl-ddrwtf
ITHOS. R. MILLS,
TTOBNBI AT LAW,
GRIFFIN, GA. Federal
Will practice in the Stale aBd
Courts. Office, over George A Hartnett’s
corner. nov2-tf.
osD.srevVtzt . Roar. x. oaxiui.
STEWART & DANIEL,
attorneys at law,
Over Gdorge & Hartnett’s, Griffin, Ga.
Will practice in the State and Federa
courts. ianl.
C. S. WRIGHT,
WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER
GRIFFIN, 6A.
Hill Street, Up Stairs overJ. H. White!
Jr., & Co.’s.
JT. P. NICHOLS,
AGENT THE
Northwestern Mutual Life In¬
surance Company,
Of Milwaukee, Wis. The most reliable In
u ranee Company in America, aug28dly
HOTEL CURTIS,
SRIFFIN, GEORGIA,
Under New Management.
A. G. DANIEL, Prop’r.
Porters meet all trains. feb!5dly
By gfvlag toneto and itrenrthenlnr the.Cter-
Ineay.tenyand INDIAN bonding op the genoral health,
W15I5D
correct, all irregalarltle. and annoying trouble*
from which soman, ladle, suffer. It gives the
weak, debilitated woman he.lth aud strength.ajid
make, cheerful the despondent, deurrsse.1 in
•plrit*. INDIAN In chanireof WEED. life no lads Safe should be with¬
out It is ansi Unfailing.
Ask your Druggist.
E. R. HiI1 Anthony, Gs Griffin, and M, F, Swint,
’ -
HEADQUARTERS OF
%
a «
AND
PROTECTIVE - AGENCY
GRIFFIN. : : GA.
TO CREDITORS:
This agency is established to collect debla
and afford protection in giving credit, and
is a safeguard from
THOSE WHO CONTRACT DEBTS AND
CAN BUT WILL NOT PAY.
jgjTOur business becomes easier as wc pro
eeed with the work and we expect to push
forward with energy until we become a great
tactor of benevolence in our country.
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 Jin our hands for collec*
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 book will be:
REPORT OF LEAK’S COLLECTING
AND PROTECTIVE AGENCY
OF THE STATE OF GEORGIA,
fSiTThe same shall be furnished to our
patrons. We cannot expect, however, to go
along without our maligners and blackmail¬
ers. It makes no difference how grand a
motive an enterprise may have, there is
class of people teat will endeavor to tear
down—but it will ever be the object of the
officers or attorneys of this agency through¬
out the State to push and carve the name of
this
COLLECTING - AND - PROTECTIVE
AGENCY
over the smouldering ashes of its tradueers
Yonft Very Truly,
Leak Collecting and Protective Agency
S.’G. LEAK, Manager.
Correspond only with manager at head¬
quarters .
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERNWe take
pleasure in saying that we have known Mr.
Leak for a number of years. He is of good
family, sober, industrious, upright, honora¬
ble, a man of integrity and deserves success
in his new field of labor.
J. D. STEWART, M. C,
J. I, HALL, Ex-Judge,
K. T. DANIEL, Lawyer,
M. 3. DANIEL, M. D.,
T. C. McLAU RIN, Merc fin n t.
ST liEllsls
Irat Agent;,
GRIFFIN, : CEORCIA.
-;oJ-
Strongest Companies,
Lowes" Hates,
Prompt Settlements.
RMKimM SHOP
COLUMbi ■ GEORGIA,
.TOPI Met.Ii * TC, Prop’i
--jO(--
The best place in Columbus to get a bafih
or clean Shave. Gir.- ns n < all when in th
city. JOE McGHEE
Tax Receiver’s Notice
FOR lfcs- 8.
I will be at the forthepnrposeof different precincts receiving on the
dates mentioned
State and County Tax for 18S8 :
At Sunny Side, Tuesday, A pril 3rd, May 1st
and June oth
At Union, Wednesdday, ApriHth, May 2tod
and June 6th.
At Mt. Zion, Thursday, April 5th, May 3rd
and June 7th.
At Line Creek, Friday, April 6th. May 4th
and June 8th.
At Cabin, Tuesday, April 10th, May 8th
and Jnne l‘2th.
At Akin, Wednesday, April lltb, May 9th
and Jnne 13th.
At Griffin every Saturday until the books
are closed on July 1st. Office at Brick Ware
house. R. A. HARDEE, T. R., S C.
mar25-3m
MAN WANTS BDT LITTLE
Here below, but he Wants that little
mighty quick. A
LITTLE WANT,
or a big one is promptly filled by ad¬
vertising in the Daily or
Weekly NEWS.
f xyjuu* g u i. 4 - a^jlt uhjal
PROMPT MEASURES.
When children pick their nose, grind their teeth,
are restless, unnatural in their appetite, they are
quite likely troubled with Worms, prompt meas¬
ures should be taken and B.A,Falineiteek’a
tions Vermifuge it has saved be given them child according from death to direc¬ and
many child a from
~ay pr e serv e yoursweet an earb
Rule Nisi,
surviving qscj-es.. partner of J | G^orguf Spalding ( Unt „
A- C. Schaefer A Co. >
ilSfSKSf s -
April In the year of our Lord Eighteen n,°
dred a firm and composed Seventy-two of A. A. C. C. Schaefer SehSe/er a n?’ rS®
Y. Barker, made and delivered ,"fid and wS?
ter T. Miller a certain mortp
the sum of Six Thousand L w
knowledged to be cue the «■:,* ac
which said mortgage deed "d H-.uitr
sechre bea. \,i V JSJ
1st, rxw-iiiSrssterasa 1872, to the payment
property, lyiDg being to-wit: in the That 3d tractor District pare*] of!.!:
or of orizinan.
and Monroe, then and Pike, distinguished now Spaldins- theS
known J&rty-aeven in P K
said district ah Noe. eigfet (47i
ty-nine(79), (51), each Beventy- containing Two (78), Hnadred and
and One-half (30^ &erei? and
> acres; also.
No. five (75) Seventy-seven acres in the northwest (77); also, corn4r of rim 1^
in southeast part of lot No. Fiftv ei»J
acres Forty
(U). all in same Nine district, Hundred containing ia th*
uzl egate less, and Thirty fiy«
O 'h i acres, more or in the entire track
bounded north by land then known as Jno
G. Lindsay’s land and others, east by land
then known as land of Dr. Pritchard and
ethers, south by Buck Creek, and west by
land of Squire Massett and others, sein*
premises conveyed by Philip E. McDaniel *
said defendants February 4th, 1868. as describ
ed in foregoing petition; conditioned that if
said firm of A. C. Schaefer & Co. (of which
A. G. Schaefer is now serving partner)
should pay off and discharge said debt of
Six Thousand Dollars according to its tenor
and effect, that then said Deed of Mortcau* *
should be void. *
And it further appearing that said debt rs
mains unpaid; It is therefore Ordered, that
said A. C. Schaefer, surviving partner as
aforesaid, pay into this Court by the first
day of the next term thereof, the principal
interest and cost due on said Mortgage, or
show' cause to the contrary-, if there be any-
and surviving that on failure of aforesaid, said A. C. Schaefer’
equity of redemption partner as and so to do, the
in to said mort-
gaged premises be forever thereafter barred
and foreclosed.
And it is further Ordered, That this Rule
be published in the Gunns Nxws once a
month for four months, or a copy there
of served on the said A. O. Schaefer, surriv-
ing partner as aforesaid, or his special agent
or attorney, at least three months before the
next term of tbis February Court,
By the Court, 8th, 1888.
JAME8 8. BOYNTON,
Hammond, Judge 8. C. F. O.
Hall A Petitioners Attorneys.
I, W. M. Bpalding-County, Thomas, Clerk Georgia, of the Superior
Court of do her*,
by certify the above to be a true extract
from the minutes of said Court at February
l’erm, 1888. W. M. Thomas,
feb9oam4m Clerk 8. C. 8.
Rule Nisi.
Duncan,Martin Perdue j
vs. j >
W.T.H. Taylor.
State of Georgia, Spalding County. In the
Superior Court, February Term, Cffurt 1888.
It being represented to the by the pe¬
Deed tition of of Duncan, Mortgage, Martin & Perdue that by
dated the 13th day o
J angary,1887, W.T. H.Taylor conveyed to said
Duncan, Martin & Perdue “a certain parcel
of land containing thirty (30) acres being
part of lot No, 115 in the 4th District of
Spalding Jack Crawley, county, Ga., bounded on the East
by on the South by P. Cha».
less, North by P. L. 8tarr, West by 6ome
of my own lands, said lt> wt thirty acres, be¬
ing worth three hundred dollars,” for th*
purpose of securing the payment of a promii
sory.note made by the said W.jT. H.Taylorto
the said Duncan, Martin & Perdue, due on
the 1st day of Oct.,1887, for the sum of One
Hundred and Forty Eight and 50-100 Dollars,
principal, interest and attorneys fees, which
amount is now due and unpaid.
It is ordered that the said vV. T. H. Taylor
do pay into this Court, by theifirst day of the
next due term said the principal, and interest and costs,
od note mortgage or show cause
if any he has to the contrary, or that in de¬
fault thereof foreclosure be granted to the
said Dun can,. Mar tin ,fc Perdue of said Mort.
gage, and the equity of redemption of the
and said that W. T.HTaylor therein be forever barred,
service of this rule be perfected on
said W. T. H. Taylor according to law.
JAMES 8. BOYNTON,
Judge 3. C. F. C.
Beck <fc Cleveland, Petitioners Att’ys.
I certify that the foregoing is a true copy
from the Minutes of this Court, this Fcbrna-
ry Term, 1888. Wm |M. Thomas,
feb25oam4m Clerk 8.C. 8. C
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
All persons indebted to the estate of Mary
L. Botler, late of Spalding County, Georgia,
deceased, are hereby notified to call on the
undersigned debtedue8s and make settlement of such having in
at once; and all persons
demands against said estate are notified to
present their claims properly proven.
J. W. BUTLER, Administrator.
may7wfi.—$3.70.
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