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No Potash,
Or any other Mineral Poison.
It U Nature’s Remedy, mado exclusively
from Roots and Herbs.
It Is perfectly Harmless.
It Is the only remedy known to the world
that has ever yet Cured contagious Blood
/bison In all Ms itages.
It cures Mercurial Rheumatism, Cancer,
Scrofula, and other blood diseases heretofore
considered Incurable. It cures any disease
caused from Impure Wood. It Is now pre¬
scribed by thousands of the best physicians
In the United States, as a tonic. Wo append
the statement of a few:
" I have used S. B. 8. on patients convalesc¬
ing: from fever and from measles with the
best results. J, N. ©husky, M. D., da.”
EllaviUe,
BaftHKS, Oa.—Wllllo White was afflicted
with scrofula seven he years, fat J prescribed busjtjh S. 8.
S», and to day U a ro ojr. ^
RicHMost), Va., Dec. 15, 1685.—I have taken
three blood bottles poison. of Swift’s It aeW Specific much better foRsecomlary than pot¬
ash or auy other remedy B, F. WIXFIKLD, I have ever M. used. D.,
Formerly of Sussex Co., V*.
Da. E. J. Ifujt, the well-known drugslst
recommend It as the what remedy---- the r ----— be.”
eases, It matters not name may
We have a hook giving a history of this
wonderful remedy, and its cures, from all
over the world, which will convince you that
all we say M true, and which wo will mail
free on application. No family should be
without It. We have another on Contagious
mood Poison, tent on same terms. ..
you knowingly.
For sale by all druggists.
Tax Swin Srxcmc S, Atlanta, Co., Os.
Drawer ,
i
Ordir^ry’s Advertisements.
/ABD!NARY’S t f OFFICE, Spalding 1888.—E. Codn- W.
tv fxKOBQiA, Jane 27,
H, ok uud John H. Mitchell as executors of
Hi. last will of Wm. D. Alexander, dec’d.have
made application to me for leave to Bell
aigirtoen and three-fourth shares of
the Capital Stock of the Savannah, Griffin
ami North Alabama RR. Co. for distribution
amongst the heirs of deceased.
Let ail persons concerned show cause before
the court of Ordinary of said county by ten
o’c ock a. m., on the first Monday in August should
next, in Griffin, Ga., why such petition
no’be granted. E.W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
$8.00
/ ORDINARY’S OFFICE, Spaldiko Coun-
V / tt, Geohoia, June 29tb, 1888.—B. A.
Ogletree. executor of the last will and testa
meut of L.P. Ogletree, dec’d, has made appl-
cation for leave to sell ene hundred belonging and to fifty the
acres of land more or less
•state of deceased for the psymenfof debts
and for distribution. Said land being in
Union district and bounded on the North by
Francis Andrews, cast and south by John J.
Elder and west by W. J. Elder. .
Let all persons concerned show cause
before the Court of Ordinary at my office in
Griffin on the first Monday in August next
by ten o’clock a. m., why such application
should not be granted
$6 00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinaay.
i U ORDINARY’S OFFICE, Spaldini Coun-
tt, A. Georgia, Darnall, administratrix May 26th, 1888.—Mrs. of Katie
Martha
Darnall, has applied to me for letters of Dis¬
mission on the estate of Katie Darnall, late
of said oounty, deoased.
Let all persons concernrd slioir cause be
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county
at my office in Griffin, on t‘ c first Monday in
September, 1888, by ten o’eiock, a. m., why
such letters should not 1 be be granted. grant*
$6,15 ’ E. W. HA MMOND, Ordinary.
/ \J ORDINARY’S OFFICE, 26th, Spalding 1888,—Mrs. Coun-
Martha TT, A. Georgia, Darnall, May execotrix of Thos. M.
Darnall, has applied to me for letters of dis
mission from the executorship of said estate.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at
my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
September, J888, by ten o’eloek, a. in., why
u;h letters should W. HAMMOND, not bo granted. Ordinary,
$6.15 E.
July Sheriff’s Sales.
\»/ILL VV BE SOLD ON THE FIRST TOES
d*yinJuly sale, before next, the between door of the the Court legal
hoars of
Hcuse, in the city of Griffin, described Spatdlng Coun¬
ty, Georgia, the following proper¬
ty, te-witt
Part of lot of land number 125, in 3d dis
srict of originally being Henry now southeast Spalding coun¬ of
ty, the same in the oorner
said lot, boanded ou the south by McIntosh
road, on the east by lot of land now occu
pied by Henry Gaihouse, on Stapleton’s, the north by
privite road leading to J. L. on
lhe west 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 ft fa issued James from Beatty Spald-
ng Superior Court in favor of
vs. Wm. Keller. legally Y. notified. L. Hughes, tenant in
possession, R. S. CONNELL, Sheriff.
$6 00.
Rule Nisi.
B. 0, Kinard ft Son
I. J. Ward & J. W, Ward, j
State of Georgia, Spalding County. In the
Superior Court, February Term, 1888.
It being represented to the Court by the
petition of B. C. Kinard ft Son that by
of Mortgage, dated the 16th day of Oct. 1887.
L J. Ward * J. W. Ward conveyed to the
said B. C. Kinard ft Son a certain tract of
wuu. ?, a,u. South by Barney ......
West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬
made curing the payment said J. Ward of a promissory J. W. Ward to
said dj the I. <&
the B. 6. Kinard & Bon due on the
day Of Sovejnb6FT887, Ninety-six for the ($50-96), sum of which Fifty
Dollars and cents
note is now due and Unpaid.
It is ordered that the said I. J. Ward & J.
W. Ward de pay into this Court, by the
day of the next term the principal,
and costs, due on said note or show cause,
if any they have to the contrary, or that in
default thereof foreclosure be granted to
•aid B. C. Kinard & Bon of said
and the equity of redemption of the said
j Ward* J. W. Ward therein be forever
■ed, and that service of this rule be
iu oaid L J. Ward & J. W. Ward
•V taw by publication in the Griffin W.
«r Dy service upon L J. Ward & J.
Of a copy three months prior to the
term of this court.
JAMES Judge S. BOYNTON, 8. F.
C. C.
Frank Flynt Att’s. and Diamuke ft Collens,
tioners
A. true copy fro m the Minutes of
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk S. C. 8 C.
Van Deckenann’s
By M. THEE D,
'CONTINUED.)
get”— “Bolfevwme,’' I began, “I shall never for-
“Not a word about it,” he said, “as you
value my friendship. The time may com*
when I shall myself reopen the subject
though let it, I I beg think.not— I think not. Until then
of you, drop.”
I am afraid I took to my work that day a
very divided attention., I did not regret mv
candor, discussing though there were moments—when for I
was ample, in my special mutton chop, not' ex¬
unaccompanied my own by good tankard snug corner, of
* stout-
in “which I felt more courageous, if not more
skeptical. visitant, might G ranted the not existence in time of become a'ghostly
one ac¬
customed to it? What positive harm could
anything these of faint the hind do one? But across
even efforts at reasoning came
the vision of the wifo and children scared
that, into sickness in or something I had worse, and I felt
any case, acted for the best.
I found my host even more cheerful and
He loquacious ordered than was his wont that evening.
the old Dutchman, who com¬
bined with other duties those of butlor, to
off, bring while up some he hospitably champagne and tossed it
with ivfreedom which surprised pressed it upon It
me, me.
was this, I imagined, which led him to talk,
in a bragging and boastful tone not habitual
to him, of the wealth which had rewarded
the labor of his earlier years, and of sundry
past achievements of industry and applica¬
tion of which he had never before mado men¬
tion. The more he drank the faster ho
talked, and I was not surprised when his
self laudation took another and more of¬
fensive form, and he began to enlarge upon
his own strength of mmd and purpose as
opposed of those to with the wljom weakness he and mental deficiency
came in contact. It
would have been the easiest thing in tho
world to pick a quarrel with him, but I was
sincerely another grateful to him for one thing, and
for I was satisfied he had taken more
than was good for him. I was not sorry,
however, when as 10 o’clock struck—the
solitary game of cribbage, for which the
had Jong left monologue time, to which bo had treated me
ously—he suggested coming that to I an should end simultane¬
and mako long night of it. retire early
a
“You look as if you had not slept for a
week,” he added conjplimentarily, ‘‘and my
pipe than is good enough company for me—better
most You’ll find everything ready for
you I heard upstairs.” and
like top, soundly, obeyed, indeed, and that night I slept
a so that when tho
old servant came to call me in the morning
I was only awakened to tho fact of his
presence myself. by an agitated appeal to mo to
arouse The scared expression of the
man’s face, and the concern and trepidation
to which it bore evidence, effectually re¬
called my scattered senses, and I sprang up
in bed eagerly demanding what was amiss.
“The master,” ho gasped out; “wbat has
come to the master? He is not in his room—
he has not slept in it. He is nowhere in tho
house—nowhere about the place. VYhat can
have come to him?”
His wife was close at his heels, echoing the
inquiry and with perturbed a look in her face not less
anxious than his own, but in
which there mingled a strange suspicious¬
ness, which even in the shock of the an¬
nouncement which had just been made to
me I could not but mark and resent. “How
in heaven’s name should I know?” I de¬
manded angrily. “How long is it since you
missed him, and where have you looked for
him? He was having a pipe in the dining
room when I came up last night.
You must have seen him later than that. He
went round with you last thing, I suppose,
as he did the night before—as I understand
him ho always did?”
“Not always. If he gets any sleep In the
daytime usual worth speaking of, he won’t go up
at his time. He’ll go round by himself
than later on, but I do my duty by the house
and night. by I him just the the same. I did it last
saw to doors and shutters as
usual, andj put up the chain and bolted and
barred the hall door—I could not have slept
in my bed else—and this morning I found the
chain down and the bolts drawn. Lisa hero
would have had me go straight to the police
to set them to find him, but I thought there
might night might have been something in his talk last
put us on the track. I’ve been
with him those forty years and I’ve never
seen him as I saw him last night. He is not
used to strangers, and he is too old to change
his ways. He was wandering about yester¬
day, and talking to himself—-Lisa heard him,
and if any harm has come to him its the
worry and excitement will have done it,” the
old man wound up viciously. police,
“Before I went to the I would send
to your master’s other house,” I said
quietly. There had come back upon
my mind as I listened to him very
vividly tho half veiled taunts and
jeers night to before, which and, I had been subjected the
with tho recollection of
that, them, wrathful there flashed upon it the possibility fail¬
and disappointed at my
ure, he had resolved to face the mystery,
whatever it might be, himself. I was not
prepared, however, for the effect of the sug¬
gestion it,were, upon transfixed, the old exchanging couple. They look stood, full as of
a
terror and apprehension.
“The other house 1” they murmured. “Gone
to tho other house!”
The woman was the first to recover herself.
“I don’t believe you, master! You’re trying
to knows frighten better us. than Don’t that listen Mynheer to him, Jan. He
Andrew has
gone “It there, and so do we.”
is there I shall go to look for him, at
any rate,” I replied. “As to you, you can
please yourselves, and so long clothes.” as you leave mo to
turn out get into my
I made no Jong business of my toilet, being,
as may be supposed, anything but easy or
happy in my mind. Rather to my surprise, af¬
ter the tone she had adopted to me upstairs, I
found Lisa waiting lielow to insist upon my
swallowing some hot coffee before I left the
house, the and Cedars. to tell mo that Jan had preceded
me to
ask “I was hasty just but now,” sho said, “and I
your pardon, I would sooner have
found the master dead in his bed than that
ho should be where you say he is. Better
dead in his right mind—a thousand times
better—Ulan alive with us here, out of it;
and out of it he will ha’ been before ever be
went to the old house. You don’t know—
those there’s that nobody have knows but but us they three—there don’t are
seen, under¬
stand. I tell you I would sooner I nover saw
him with again—though him—than God knows how it would
be us without that he should
be found so.”
It was with this comforting assurance that
I set forth. There was no time for thought;
did what was let required the of me was action, and I I
not grass grow under my feet.
met the old Dutchman just outside the gate
at the Cedars. Nothing had been seen or
heard of Mr. Vau Deckermann there. He
had been satisfied it would be so, but as for
IP &..... — , *
“I am satisfied not satisfied yet,” I llavo I said. “I shall
not be until lieen over the
house. You can come back with me or not,
as you like.”
He did come back with me, though that he
thought his opinion me headstrong, shared if the not Minchins, more, and that
was What Dy was
evident possessed enough. I do know, strange but intuition
-me not what had
been at first no more than an idea had grown
into a conviction. I felt sure I should find
my host in the room 1 had myself did occupied
the previous night. In vain they try to
persuade me that even had Mr. Van Decker-
inann been insane enough to Jet himself into
the could house at midnight have inmidwinter, mode without his en¬
try not been arous¬
ing them. I was bent upon taking my own
way, and they had no altemaitive but to fol¬
low me.
At the door of tho room I paused and list¬
ened. I could hear nothing, and I was about
to open it—when, as I laid my hand upon it,
I was arrested by the sound of a low, pro¬
longed laugh proceeding from within. It
was succeeued by a sharp cry behind me, and
an exclamation in his native tongue, full of
piteotisness and horror, from Jan. If ha
could, the nnor old fellow would have held
itUi oaf'it, bum an. i kin penoaveu so tar to
shrink from what lay la-lore mo at last, and
I turned the handle without wore ado and
went in.
The arrangement of the furniture had been
undisturbed since my lirief occupntion of the
room—with one exception; the old arm chair
lay literally upon its back, its dingy danvvsli
ters. covering while hanging little about distance it in from rags and seated tat¬
at a :t,
on the ground, smoothing out some crumpled
pieces of paper, and chattering and chuckling
to himself as he did so, in a manner that
made my blood creep as I listened to him,
was the object of my search. Ho looked up
as we went in, but he did apt cease from hfe
occupation, and for some seconds the silence
was unbroken, save by himself. My com¬
panions stood huddled together at the door,
too much appalled to speak, and I was myself
in little better case. By way of attracting
bis attention I drew the curtain from across
the further window and let tho light full in
upon him. He blinked and shifted his seat
somewhat, ns if to escape it, but he took uo
further notice. “Mr. Van Deckerinaun,” 1
said. “Don’t you know it is past breakfast
time and you are keeping me waiting?”
But the words couvcyed no meaning to
him, no more meaning to him than lifs own
wordless, “It incoherent jabbering Jan did to us.
is nogood, master,” said in a broken
voice. “He’ll have nothing more to say to
any one in this world. Ho has come at the
troth after all these years, and he has got bfs
death blow with it. Where did he find them,
think you f”
He had dropped on his knees by the side of
his master, and bo now held up for my in¬
spection what I now perceived to lie a bank
now. Van Deckermaim still engaged in his
monotonous fondling its occupation fi-Hows, took of smoothing out and tho
no notice of
action. The noto wus yellow with age, and
involuntarily, the I ns myself tho strange experiences the of
curred night had spent turned in room re¬
to chair my mind, I my attention
Upon tho which had met with such un¬
gentle usage.
He had dropped on his knee* by lhe side of
his master.
It was even more mutilated than it ap¬
peared at flint sight; the double webbing, of
partly u bieh hacked the seat with was composed, knife, having been
had the rifling a pen of this partly torn
pository apart, nor been strange re¬
doubt to the so complete which as to leave had any
as purpose to it been
turned.
As I turned away from-it, sickened-at a
discovery the which showed me only too plainly,
connection between my own narrative
to the unhappy being before me and the fate
which had overtaken him, the woman Min
chin broke into tears and lamentations.
“If I had only left it where it was! If I
had let things take their chance! If I had
only seen the end of it!” considerable
It was not without difficulty
we got my poor friend home, and the verdict
pronounced whom lost upon time him in by calling the medical men,
favorable we no than I in, was His not
more had sustained What anticipated. they had little
reason
doubt would prove to be a fatal shock, and
the sadden violent derangement of the ner¬
vous system threatened his life. The genuine
pity well and for them distress and of for the their old master, servants and bpoke while
he lay, as he did lie, for many days between
life and death, there sprang up between them
and myself a certain mutual respect and con¬
fidence.
It was from Lisa I heard as much ns there
was to tell in tha way of explanation of what
I had myself seen, and of the catastrophe
which Had befallen Van he Deckermann.
According I had been to the her, previous had been confronted,
as parition of his father, and night, had by the ap¬
arrived thus
SSSSSSSEsas** the object nearest to his heart.
It appeared that in telling qs—my wifo
and myself—the story of his early life, h ic had
fact of his cousin’s death,
but in the terrible circumstances accompany¬
anguish ing it; there of which had lain the overpowering
wo had been per¬
mitted a glimpse. Old Van Deckermann,
growing more and more miserly and suspici¬
ous of all around him as the years wont on,
had at last, after emptying by the house of
ever* servant it oontained a succession of
similar charges, accused his niece of the
theft Of a large sum of money, and had posi¬
tively have ghne been the length, in insanity, what wou! t appear
to an access of of giving
her into custody. The evidence was insuf¬
ficient, but the disappearance of the money
was proved beyond a doubt, and the fact
that she had only the day before her arrest
posted a letter to Andrew Van Deckermann
at the Cape theory seemed to give a certain coloring
to the advanced by his father that
the half. vobbery Had the had truth been committed to the on his man’s be¬
as young
position at how been known, untenable it must have been seen
once was the argument,
but his cousin in her strangely isolated life
had made no confidences, and the jioor thing
bad not the strength of mind to wait for that
redress of wrong which time must inevitably
have brought her. Whether open op closed
to possible her, within that her should uncle’s doors it was im¬
she enter again, and
she found a refuge from her unmerited shume
and sorrow where so many had found it be¬
fore her, and hare found it since—in tho
river!
The old man never recovered the shock of
her death, though he persist 1 re the end in
lus belief in her guilt, and he died miserably
only Itrng time two days before his son’s return. For a
past he hod become strange in his
ways, and had turned night into day, wan¬
dering scarcely about the bouse at all hours, so that it
it was after his surprising death, the that, left to itself as
was by the place should liavo
dome master had spoken. uncanny reputation of which its
Of one thing i was left in no doubt, al¬
though that I the never had it from his own iijw. uud
its was himself superstitious horror with which
that owner horror dominated, regarded the house; but
proved, by was as the event
a still stronger influence. That
his father’s uneasy’spirit haunted the scene
of his cruelty and injustice he was fully i»?r
suaded, and he had confide^ to Lisa more
than once his further conviction that by
some the charge means brought yet—natural against or supernatural—
the px.r creature
who had fallen a victim to a wou.uJ 1x3
cleared up, He had employed me u.. his tool,
and, found, hopeless of my following up tho clow I
had had worked himself up to tho re¬
quired what pitch and gone, heaven only knows in
state of mind, to surely as streugo an
encounter as ever man contemplated,
What be saw can only be matter of sur¬
faculties mise; he lived for a year or more, ail hi®
restored to him, but minus auy
memory, and quite tractable and gentle.
hiding My own place belief of is that tfaemissing notes, the
which I have no moral doubt
was discovered to him that night, must have
been secreted there by the elder V.va JJreker-
mann numbulism, himself, under tCc udhu .. <v 0 f tom-
bulist I have though that he w.i• r- am-
no evidence t.. Ail I
know is that the Luce I saw was uk-kwi-mi one.
At Mr. Van Deckcr«u.:.u'-
found that by « trill, tea.!.- tn-*ciLs be¬
fore his fatal visit to K, U- .,.hed
tha Cedare. with other hi..;., Ui : r.ro-
— ■■■ S5!
er-y, fo me. *o ,.ia.* -„ t, t-om-i, ns
supernatural the catastrophe history!.;. i . ■ to an end record, with
of U»n l'_e
but the terms oa irhe a w<», u-,t tome were
happily houses, UMOQlMLCiomu, and |un « of small
given up to the most prereaic c stocks-
tkms, occupies tho site of it,.-.
HjW to Cure a Headache.
The other night, about midnight,
cer Mercer, of Allegheny, notW 1 a wo¬
man go into the middle of M ..h
and dig a bole with n L.nvuet
placed an object The in the officer hole unearthed and
covered it up.
object and found a small hand
with writing on it which he could
decipher, Taking it to the
house, she explained that the w firing
the Ghcst,” glass was: “Father, it Son charm und
and that was a to
away an ailment In her head. It was
Swiss custom, and she wanted to
the mirror buried for three days.
was allowed to reinter it.
Commercial
A Slippery Elm Oath.
“I swear by those tall elms in
park,” lie commenced, but she
rupted “Swear him. said
not by them,” she Im¬
ploringly.
“Why nott"
• 'Because those trees are slippery elms,
she said.—Merchant Traveler.
The Stops of an Orange.
#
With such important functions as the
arc of course productive of serious
disturbance- When it relaxes He
and distributee activity, bile gets into
blood and tinges takes skin and white oo
eyes stipated, with the yellow, tongue the coasted, bowels the becomes breath sour. con¬
Then come headaches, vertigo and
tion of the»organ, accomplished with pain
in de. its Shall vicinity or under the right sholder bla¬
blue pill be the remepy
No, for mercury in any form is pernicious.
What then? Experience indicates Ilostetter’s
Stoifiach Bitters as the true remedy tor in¬
activity of the liver. It not onU relaxes the
bowels without pain but has a direct stimu¬
lating eflect upon the hepatic gland Itsels,
the scat and origan of the trouble. All malar¬
ial complaint Involves disoreer of the liver,
and of these the Bittcre is the most popular
curative. It also conquers dyspepsia, ner¬
vousness,rhumatism and kidney troubl cs.
New Advertisements.
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July Special Bailiff’s
'117 ILL BE SOLD BEFORE THE
Tv House door, in Spalding County,
gia, on the first Tuesday in July next,
tween the legal hours of sale, one bay
mule about nine years old, fifteen
high, mortgage named fifa Ida, Levied Spalding on County by virtue of
from
in favor of Connell ft Hudson and
Naomi C. Wigs ere. Levied as the
of said N. C. Wiggers, to satisfy said
gagafifa. This June 4th, 1888.
J. H. MOORE, Spalding Special County Bailiff,
$8.00. Court.
W igffe WjAlt
DYSPEPSIA
mod Liver Diseases, Rheumatism, Dyi- Price (1.09. Sold bf Dnsgglii.
”pepsin, and all affection* of tha Kidney*. WELLS, RICHARDSON ft CO. Prop’t
i 1
„ . .
ESFEY PIANOS ORGANS ! !
CASH, OR ON TIME, AT
DEANE’S ART GALLERY ■
• i
WHIPS, WAGONS, 61
AND HAP NESS
—M- 13
-
Studebaker Wagon I White Hickory Wagon!
Jackson G. Smith Wagon !
Jackson G. Smith Buggy I
And the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. Repairs
old Buggies a Specialty.
W. H. SPENCE, 1
28dAw6a Cor. Hill ft Taylor Streets, GRIFFIN, GA ^
au K
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED I
A fresh lot of preserves,
Jellies, Apples,
Oranges,IBanariitas,
Cocoanuts,
AND IN FACT EVERYTHING A HQUSKEEPPER WILL NEED:
State of Georgia Bonds. 1
FOUR AND ONE-HALF PER CENT.
Exbcotivx Officr, Atlanta, G a., June 1st,
1S88.—Under the authority of an act approv
ed September 5th, 1887, authorizing the Gov
ernor and Treasurer to issue bond* of the
State to an amount, not to exceed nineteen
hundred thousand dollars, with which to pay
January off that portion 1st, 1880, of sealed the public debt maturing
reeceived at the office of proposals the Treasurer will be of
Georgia,up next, for to 12 o’clock m., on July 6tb
one million nine hnndred thona
and dollars of fonr and one-half per cent.
One hnndred thousand dollars to mature
January One hundred 1,1898.
hu ihousand dollars to mature
January One hundred 1, 1899,
thousand dollars to mature
January One hnndred 1, 1900.
thousand dollors to mature
January One 1,1901.
huudred thousand dollars to mature
January One hundred 1,1902,
thousand dollars to mature
January One 1, 1903. y ..sw j.-. —
hnndred thousand dollars to mature
January One 1, 1904.
hundred thousand dollars to mature
January 1, 1905,
One hnndred thonaand dollars to mature
January One hundred 1, 1906.
thousand dollars to mature
January One hundred 1, 1907.
thousand dollars to mature
January 1,1908.
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
January One hundred 1, 1909. thousand dollars
to mature
January One hundred 1, 1910.
thousand dollars to mature
January One hundred 1,1911. thousand dollars
to mature
Jantlary One hundred 1,1912. thousand dollars to mature
January L 1913.
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
January One 1,1914. 1 thousand dollars
hund re to mature
January One hundred 1,1915. thousand dollars to mature
January The bonds 1,1916, of
to be in denomination one
thousand dollars, with semi-annual coupons
due on the 1st day of January and July of
each T: year respectively, and
« principal interest in place'as payable in the
city tl New York, at such the Gov
eroi.r may elect, and at the office of the Treas
urer of the State, in the city of Atlanta, Geor
gia. Bids mnst be accompanied by certified
check or cheeks—certificate of deposits of
seme solvent bank or bonkers, or bonds of
the State of Georgia for five per cent, of the
amount of such bid, said checks or certifies
of deposit being made payable to the Tre
urer of Georgia.
Bids will be opened by tha Governor and
Treasurer and declared by the sixteenth of
Jalynext, the all State of said reserving bids. the right to
reject The any or registered bonds ia
State will isssue
lien of any of the above named bonds, as
provided in said act, at any time on demand
of the owner thereof.
Copies of thq act of the General Assembly fur
authorizing nished appiidation this issue to of the bonds Treasurer. will be
on
JOHN B. GORDON, Governor.
R. U. HARDEMAN, Treasurer.
junefi-2aw-4w
Notice to Debtor* and Creditors.
Ail jersc ns indebted to the estate of Mary
L. But., r, late of Spalding County, Georgia,
Knle Nlsl -
ft Perdue )
W. T. H* Taylor. J If 31
of Georgia, 8paldiug County. In the
Superior Court, February Term, 1888.
It being represented to the Court by the p
of Duncan, Martin ft Perdue that 1—...... I
of Mortgage, dated the conveyed,* 13th day o
Duncan, land Martin ft Perdae thirty “a certain acme*
lot containing No. 115 in the (30> 4th District
Spalding county, Ga., bounded tapTCT on the East :
by i*.’ °L. Starr*We*? ..c— by^aome i
the 1st day of Oct:,1887, for the sn» of One
Hundred and Forty Eight and 50-1.00 fthTTSiS Dollar*,
principal, principal, interest interest and am attorneys *
amount is now due and on; unpaid,
said W.I
due said note e principal, and mortgage in teres
on or show cause
if auy he has to the contrary, or that in de¬
fault thereof foreclosure be granted to the
said Duncan, Martin ft Perdue of Mold Mort¬
gage, said W. and T.IITaylor the equity therein of redemption be forever barred, of the
skid and that W. T. service H. Taylor of this rule be perfected to on
JAMES according BOYNTON, lav.
S.
• JodgeS. C. F. C.
Beck ft Cleveland, Petitioners Att’ys.
feb25oam4ic Clerk EL C. 8. C.
HAM WARTS BOT LITTLE
Here below, but he Wants that iittt*
mighty quick. A
LITTLE WAN!,
or a big ene it promptly filled ty ad¬
vertising In the Daily er
Weekly NEWS,
ADVERTISERS
:nn learn the exact cos'
of an) proposed Kne o;
ad ver tismg in America!.
papers by addressing
Geo P. Rowell & Co.,