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Inherited
Diseacas.
In the realm of dUeu* the tact* of In¬
heritance are moat numerous and are dally
accumulating. Here, slot, they become ter¬
rible, fateful nml overwhelming. So fact of
nature la more pregnant with awful mean¬
ing than the fact of the Inheritance of
disease. It moots the physician on hie dally
rounds, paralysing his art and filling him
j with dismay, The legend of the ancient
, Oreeks pictures the Furies as pursuing
families from generation to generation,
rendering them desolate. The Furies still
. ply their work of terror and death, but thgy
; are not now clothed In tho garb of supersti¬
tion, but appear In the more Intelligible but
• no less awful form of hereditary disease.
Modern science, which has Illuminated so
many dark corners of nature, has shed a
now light on the ominous words of the
i Scriptures, “ The sins of the fathers shall be
visited upon the children unto the third and
fourth generation." Instances of hereditary
disease abound. Fifty per cent, of cases of
consumption, that fearful destroyer of fami¬
lies, of cancer and scrofula, run In families
through Inheritance. Insanity Is hereditary
In a marked degree, but, fortunately, like
many other hereditary diseases, tend* to
wear ttwtf outytt-e MoOk becoming extinct.
A d'.stiagulshcd scientist truly says: “So
organ or texture of the body Is exempt from
the chance of being tho subject of hereditary
disease.” Probably more chronic diseases,
which permanently modify the structure
and functions of the body, are more or less
liable to be inherited. The Important and
far-reaching practical deductions from such
facts—affecting so powerfully the happiness
of Individuals and families and the collective
welfare of the nation—are obvious to reflec¬
ting mind , and the best means for prevent¬
ing or curing these diseases It a subject of
Intense Interest to alL Fortunately nature
bes provided a remedy, which experience
lies attested as infallible, and the remedy Is
the world-famous Swift** Specific, • pure
vegetable compound—nature's antidote for
all blood poisons. To the afflicted It la •
blessing of inestimable value. An interest-
tug treatise on "Blood end Skin Diseases’*
will be raa'led free by addressing
Tua Swift Smcpno Co.,
Drawer A Atlanta, dm
CiiiiriT.ry’s Advertisements.
/ \KDl\ UIY’8 OFFICE, June 27, Spalding 1888.—E. Codn- W.
V/ tv (Jbohgia,
Hti k nii J John H. Mitchell as executors of
ih < Ian will of Wm. D. Alexander, dec’d,have
made application to me for leave to sell
eighteen and three-fourth shares of
the Capital Stock of the Savannah, Griffin
and North Alabama RR. Co. for distribution
Amongst the heirs of deceased.
I .et a ! l persons concerned show oausc before
t lie. ock court of Ordinary the first of said Monday county August by ten
i,V a. m-,on in
in xt, in-Griffin, Ua., why such petition should
i.o' he granted,
c3.00 K. W. IIAMilOND, Ordinary.
/ V i RPI NARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Coun-
/ ty, Gkoroia, June 29Ui, 1888.—B. A.
Ogletree. L.P. executor Ogletree, of the dee’d, last will made and testa
ment of has appl-
cation for land leave to sell ene hundred and fifty the
acres of more or less belonging to
estate of deceased for the paymeufof debts
and for distribution. Said land being in
Union district and bounded on the -North by
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
bv ten o’clock a. mwhy such application
should not be granted.
*6 00 E. W. H AMMOND, Ordinaiy.
£ V/ V RDINARY’S Georgia, OTTTOE. May 26th, SpaLDIN 1888.—Mrs. i CouN-
Martha tt, Katie
A, Darnall, administratrix of
mission Darnell, has applied to me for letters Darnall, of Dis¬
on the estate of Katie late
of said county, decased.
Let all persons concernrd show cause be
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county
at my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
such September, letters should 1888, by ten he o’clock, a. m., why
*6,15 W. HAMMOND, not granted.
E. Ordinary.
/ORDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Coun-
V/ n Geobgia, May 26th, 1888.—Mrs.
Martha A. Darnall, executrix of Thos. M.
mission Darnall, from has applied the executorship to me for letters of dis
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, ueh should 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why
letters not bo granted.
*6.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
/ORDINARY’S Georgia, OFFICE, July 2nd, Spalding 1888.—N. Coun- M.
Collens tt, Wm.
Woodward as administrator on estate of J.
leave deceased, hundred has applied to me for
to sell three and three and
three-fourth aores of land belonging to said
;he debts
ose of dis
and the West . . half . of lot No. eingiot ten (10) No. lying 23
in Cabins district in said county.
Let all persons concerned show cause be
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county,
in at my August, office 1888, in Griffin, on the first Monday why
»uch lion should by ten not o’clock, a. m.,
*6j00. petti HAMMOND, he granted.
E. W- Ordinary.
Rule Nisi.
B. 0. Kin&rd & Son 1
vs. ) {■
I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward.
State ofUeorgia, Spalding County. In the
Superior Court, February Term, 1888.
It being represented to the Court by the
petition of B. C. Kinard & Son that by Deed
of Mortgage, dated the 16th 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, towit; fifty acres of land Ga., lying in Akins
District of Spalding county. bounded as
follows: North by lands of Bill Wise, East by
Juo. Ward, South by Barney Maadox and
West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬
made curing by the payment said I. J. of Ward a promissory J. W. Ward note to
the A
the said B. C. Kinard & Son due on the 15th
day Dollars of November Ninety-six 1887, for the sum of Fifty
and cents (*50.96), which
note is now due and unpaid.
It is ordered thatthe said I. J. Ward & J.
W, Ward do pay Into fills Court, by the first
day of the next term the principal, interest
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 the
said B. C. Kinard & Son of sold Mortgage,
and the equity of redemption of the said L
J. Ward & J, W. Ward therein be forever bar-
* cd, and that service of this rule be perfected
y>u i-nid I J. Ward A J. W. Ward according
law by by publication I. J. in Ward the Griffin & J. W. News, Ward
mi- service upon
of a oopy three months prior to the next
term of this oonrt.
, JAMES Judge 8, BOYNTON, F. C.
Frank _ - S. C.
tioners Fiynt Alt's. and Dismuke A Collens, Peti¬
x line cc-jj fum iLe Mlr-ntescf (1 faCcn
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk 8. C. S C.
prAoamim
SS&SE3GBg£
TRAINING IN CITY SCHOOLS,
Mechanics Taught to Boys—Sewing and
Cooking tor Cirla— Lecture*.
Manual training in the public schools
has gained a foothold and aroused an in*
tercet that seems almost incredible in the
short space of time that has elapsed since
it was introduced in New York. The
first trial was made in February, and In
four m o nths fourteen different schools—
the primary, girls’ or boys’ departments,
in the same building or same district,
counted as separate schools—were work¬
industrial ing out the principles established for this
work. The idea originated in
Russia, and some of the features of it
came-from the kindergarten methods of
Germany. The oommTtitee who first took
up this new feature of education studied
well the work as it was carried on in
technical schools in this and other cities.
They have striven to leave out all the
weak points aa they were discovered and
produce a system that was superior if
possible to any other in exlstenoe.
Whether they have accomplished this
remains to be seen. They are free to
admit that they are still far from having
a complete knowledge themselves, and
experience is teaching them important
things every* day. The schools are nearly
all private where manual training fa
taught outside of New York, but as the
benefits derived are felt it will undoubt¬
edly come into tho common possession of
ail tiie institutions of learning. One
great fear entertained has been that in
establishing it, time would have to be
taken from other studies. Anything so
unsatisfactory Instead has not been the result
studies, of helps impeding progress in other
it them by changing the
order of training for the better in every
department. Drawing is the funda¬
mental the study in industrial training; it is
corner stone of the entire structure
of-manual work as taught in the common
schools. It enters largely into the boys’
department of carpentry, and the girls'
classes of sewing and cooking.
draw The straight girls, if they lines, do not know how to
will hardly be able
to sew straight seams, or make proper
hems, and in cooking will not be able to
know the value of measurement. Draw¬
ing lies already been taught for some
yrars, so the three new features added
in the .schools ore. the workshop for boys
and sewing and cooking departments for
girls, and there is promotion in these
just as in all tiie other studies.
Naturally a great variety 9t tools and
materials ure needed, and even now the
supplies are not all furnished. The list
for the cooking class is as complete as for
a family setting up housekeeping. The
great difficulty is in finding the proper
teachers for this sort of training. Of
course, it is easy enough to procure a
show igo<
seamstress to how to work in the these
departments, but the thing is different to find
some one who can teach these
branches—a carpenter, for instance, who
not only knows how t*«iw a board, but
can explain the of reason for sawing it, tell
what kind wood he is using, and
where it comes from, besides many other
practical points connected with it
And so in each of the other depart¬
ments. But means will undoubtedly be
found to meet each want as time goes on.
The children take a great interest in
manual training, and this is a great in¬
centive to teachers. The girls are allowed
to have a small repast made of the things
that they have cooked or helped to cook,
and this increases their interest in the
performance inspired to a vast degree. Then,
too, they are to try experiments
at home, which is, of course, exactly
■what fa deaired by tho founders of the
work.
The principal of one of the best public
schools for girls has made reading ‘aloud
a feature of her school—not elocution,
but reading in a simple and Intelligent
manner. She herself as a reward of
merit reads to the girls once a week on
Friday afternoons—not Sunday school
stories or set pieces from school books,
but standard works. In that way she
hopes to interest which the little scholars in literature,
a study to time is given in
the public schools.
It has been felt for some time that the
teachers where this new manual has been
adopted ought to have some training,
too. They were assembled by the board
of education in the hall of the building
belonging to this body to hear a lecture
on the subject, A second meeting was
presided over by Dr. Paul Hoffman, the
assistant superintendent, who has the
manual training in charge. That gentle¬
man has been a physician, an Arctio ex¬
plorer, and fa pronounced a man of
genius—the right confidence man in the right place.
Ho gained the of the teachers
at once by his earnestness in stating that
he knew something more about the sub¬
ject than they did, but not much. He
was thoroughly and interested in it, and
would work day night if, need be, in
order to gain knowledge on the subject.
On them as well as himself depended
the success of the work. He thought the
way to teach manual training was to be¬
gin demonstrate in the most primitive manner and
everything in the most
practical way- He wished a child to
“know” that a cube was a cube, not “be¬
lieve” that it was because he was told so.
In teaching, the sense of feeling could be
called largely into play, and the child
must be taught how to see, not what to
see. He must feel of a cube, its edges
and its points, and find out why it was a
cube.
“Children,” he 6aid, “are great imi¬
tators and believe what you tell them. If
you take a block of wood in your hand
and say, ‘Do will you Bee this TTes,’ lump of iron?’
each child answer when it fa
as plain as possible that the lump of Iron
is a block of wood.”
We would have the children taught to
draw with a free hand,, not painfully method and
carefully by measurement. Tho
of teacinng, writing apd shading the let¬
ters has caused the children to use the
middle finger in such a strained way
that in many instances it has been found
to be left longer than the middle finger on
the hand. The eyes of school chil¬
dren are also being injured by the way His
they hold their books or their dates.
desire was that the scholars should be¬
come men and women, strong bodily and
pBysicaliy, before anything else, and he
believed that this teaching would aid
thorn in that.—New York Pres.
Girls are trained to agriculture farms receiving in Den¬
mark, the owners of
them as pupils.
BROKER ANO CHINAMAN,
lean al Mongolian Financier* In Sna
rnuM-iwo~A Shrewd Trick.
The Chinese have a well established
To reputation observe in California for shrewdness.
the Mongolian in the act of
counting shekels a goodly {file of Americas
after a hard driven bargain is to
see the pig tailed stranger ho his most in¬
spired moments of commercial keenness.
Any day oh Montgomery street in
brokers* offices, or where gold dust is
bought, one can see the file financial
acutenest of the Asiatic colonist displayed
to advantage, An agreement on the
price of the gold dust at the rate of ex¬
change is not easily reached. The Mon¬
golian is cautious to a degree, and it is
when he thinks that he Baa secured all
that is coming to him that' he doses ne-
gotiatlons mrnm Then commences the im¬
portant task of examining the lucre.
A white trader generally takes up his
handfuls of twenty dollar pieces or silver
dollars and carelessly tosses them into his
pockets or a convenient sachel with the
most cursory examination. Not so the
suspicious colonist from Cathay Every
from piece fa closely hand scrutinized and passed
one to another. The edges are
scanned and the color of the gold noted,
until the whole pile has been observed
closely Tins is only the preliminary in¬
spection The gold fa fair to the eye, but
the doubts of a well conceived scheme to
defraud him have not yet been quieted in
the Asiatic trader’s breast His ear has
to be satisfied, and he begins to jingle the
pieces one after the other on the counter
till every coin has announced it* true
character. The result to all probability
is that some pieces have been found that
shows signs of wear or fall to ring with
'the clear metallic sound so characteristic
of the incomparable twenty dollar pieces
fresh from the mint A wrangle with
the broker ensues, and the less perfect
coins liave to be exchanged for more
faultless ones. These substitutes have
also to be counted and jingled, and when
the cautious Mongolian carries his shadow
outside the threshold of the broker’s shop
he fa morally certain that be has avoided
deception by the exercise of what he re¬
gards as ordinary business sagacity.
The broker on his side, if to the habit
of dealing much with Chinese, is unusu¬
ally cautious and the alert If the money be
pissing broker from through Chinaman the to formula. tom, the
He goes same
takes no coins on trust as it were, but
scores them all, for experience has shown
him that the proverb of afl being fair to
love and war lias been extended by the
disciples of Confucius tor money matters.
The scrutiny which the careful broker
bestows on the coin fa only excelled by
the attention ho gives his Mongolian cus¬
tomers, whose lightness of finger he has
learned to regard with apprehension.
Shoplifting fa a fine art to Chinatown,
and sleight of hand performers are abun¬
dant Almost anything, from a diamond
ring to an anchor, that they lay their
hands on, disappears with magio promp¬
titude. It fa a fine study to watch a
cautious Hebraio broker, who has been
bitten a few times, as he doles out the
shekels to a suspicious looking Mongolian
financier. Every movement of the Celes¬
tial’s long and deft fingers is watched,
and a restraining band put upon his
claws every time they wander too close
to his ample blouse with a load of half
dollars. It is only when the final stage
of the barter has been readied, and the
“wherewith” has been shoved across the
counter and all is safe, that the broker’s
countenance assumes its normal quietude.
It fa considered so much the correct
tiling to China to overreach another to a
monetary transaction that no sensible
man will accept money by lamplight, and
will only take his coin in the broad day¬
light after an exhaustive inspection by
eye, ear and teeth. The best Chinese
financiers rely on their teeth to deter¬
mine the genuineness of a gold or silver
piece of money. tiie After banging a sus¬
walk, pected coin on unable counter or the side¬
if ho be to decide whether
it is good or bad, the Chinese finander and
paces the metal between his teeth
leaves the verdict to molars and palate.
Brokers who do an extensive business
with Chinese tell some curious stories
tiie cunning of their Asiatic customers.
A down town broker exchanged
money for two Chinese one day not long
since and to the transaction saw that he
had lost two ten dollar pieces. The Mon¬
golians protested violently that they had
not taken the money, and when searched
readily turned their pockets inside out.
Their hats, shoes, and every corner
their several coats were examined,
the money could not be found and
broker finally let them go, though
ially certain they had robbed him.
ing the afternoon he was pondering
the affair when an American friend
had had considerable experience with
Chinese in Shanghai dropped to.
broker described his loss and .
how he had cunningly examined
,shoes and hats of the suspected
ans. The friend from Shanghai
“The chances are,” said he,
money fa stuck under your
That’s an old trick in China.”
On looking under the
edge of the heavy oounter the
coins were found stuck to the wood
some strong Mongolian rubbed glue. One
the rascals had on the soft
'while parleying with the broker, and
other fellow, seizing a favorable
tunity, had stuck the money under
ledge, knowing that the instant it
missed they would be seized and
The Shanghai man have explained confederate the
“Those fellows a
has been here before,” said he, “and
be around soon to hook those $10
while he fa giving you a fill about
ing to sell gold dust or something.
wait and see. ” *
The money was left sticking to
oounter, so that when the
came in be might be caught red
and railroaded to the county jail
, Every one to the office, which is
pied by several persona besides the
ker, set himself to retch the tifief,
the unexpected result was that the
vanished without any arrest. When
broker returned after a hasty flight
the street for a cup of coffee, he
that the money was gone and no trace
the robber toft The well grounded
lief of the detectives fa that some one
the half dozen Chinese who the dropped
Juriog the afternoon wa» carried off
ate of the thieves and
plunder ( unobserved-—San
• hionute.
■ -
THE MAJORITY.
Bov Hurt taoyoii, they of tbepaBM face*.
Beyond oar power to beckon their return I
How 1* it trtUi tht
How ihatl ww ktarm
Tbeirsoteraa seeratl How.
By any earnest seeking, the true way
the knowtag to wOot t
In what hi«l> day.
Or in what somber shadow* of tbs night.
They are fofferer hidden Awn our eight?
Wo question rataly. Yet tt eo*'***' — / *«•*■,
When they hare spoken the ■>» ; , ^1-hy.
It somehow bajf the pain of .-asea.
That in the sky.
In tho vnet eoUtude* of stem ana apaeea.
And that whan w* to death’s
So sadly stiffed m this life of
Death of a War Hers*.
When the Duke T>f ' Wellington
fighting to Spain there were two
which had always drawn the same
and had been side by ride to many
ties. At last one was toiled and
other, on having his food brought to
as usual, refused to eat, but turned
head round to look for his old friend
All neighed many times as if to call
the care tiiat was bestowed on
was in vain. There were other
near him, but he would not notice
and be soon afterward died, not
once tasted food since his former
panion > was killed.—Our Dumb
The Opening of the Campaign.
To open the campaign with with any any hopes
speedy success, attack the e rateeneJ,’. enemy.
before it has a chance to
stinate foe ’twill prove If yon don’t go
_____4,-upon If you are prudent, urns'* too, you wifi
the first ir, of Its
ence in yonr neighborhood _
Stomach Bitters is the medicinal
that yon require. Every form of
no'less effective. Residents i*y of malarial
calities, and persons should soloumlng select in this or
for the great West,
cine as means of defenoe against the
quent d fait at ions of miasma. Those in
cate should health, in every the instance aged and resort the to this
nal invigorant. Uuse it for weak nerves.
Dr. Mofltil's TEETHim (Ttettli;
Alley* Irritation. AidsDIj
Kasy and Htreugtl
____
krnptt«n* *nti8<ire«, rouble* ot s»<l Children nothing. of *qna
the Manner l any aft*
iltif/iuniisurt. Try Hand >•« will never
win. H. t TKKTHIN A at ions »• there ere
ren 1* me tioiue. Ask youx I>rug:g:>L
Peck’s Patent Improved
Ear Drums
PERFECTLY RESTORE THE
whether deafness is oaosed by colds,
or injuries position, to the natural drums.
in bat invisible to others and
fortable to wear. Music, oonverartion,
whispers them. heard Write distinctly. F. We HISOOX, refer to
using to
Broadway, cor.
BIG MONEY! l
Million voters with the oniy official Lives
CLEVELAND and
by Hox. W. U. Huron., also Life of
Cleveland, Cartridge Bor, exqnfaite Free Trade steel portraits. Policy,
8000 Agents at work report immense
For best work, best terms, apply quick
make f 300.to *500 a month. Outfit35c.
HUBBARD ERGS., Philadelphia, Pa.
HAIR BALSAM
CU*nae* end beautifies the
f Hair to tto Y.rthtol fetor,
nwyw fffrtwij - itiiwnmnd
■HINDER
«*MtoeA<MM*taBdbe*t|
sat Praams-
EXHAUSTED VIT
rrHE SCIENCE OF LIFE, the
- K-eat Medical Work of the
age on Manhood, Herrons
Physical Debility,
Decline, Error* of Youth,
the uutold mtserieacoaseqnant
thereon, 800 page*
prescriptions for all
Cloth, fuU gilt, only SLOA
_
moll, seated. Illustrative sample free to
and middle-aged non. Send now. The Ooid
Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the
tional Medical < Arsootation. ASSie e s P. O.
M95. Boston, Koe*.,o» Dr. W. H. PARKER,
uated Harvard Medical College, 25
in Boston, who me y be consulted
Specialty. Diseases of Man.
A GREAT YEAR
better way to do so than to subscribe fee
The Macon Telegraph.
Its news fa
in the Soul
ated Frees
ones by
ptfinlsut the
Daring will be the most _____________ topqrtsni and
togton
!li.*sg>ecgsa C e£aint
rert^In*th* national
________. el genuine ira faith.
point afl
once.
•ally, «n* year, - 91
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Daily, o«ei
Weekly, one year, ....
TbrwtCarit to advance. Address
\ R E
o u
YTTANTED. W - LIVE AGENTS. -
Geo. A. Sanborn, and Secretary Sick Benefit
Mutual, Life, Buffalo, Accident N. Y.
sociation,
L’j.
..‘«V *■
■ dX
effect is
m
brief description of them
/
CMM
Compound. Price $ijux Sold hgr
wells, tit CO.. Proprietor*.
■
m
MANE’S ART GALLERY
WHIPS, i WA
AND NESS
Sludebaker Wagon! White Hickory Wagon I
Jackson G. Smith Wagon!
Jackson G. Smith Buggy!
And the COLUMBUS BUGGY it tho Lowest Price* possible. Repairs on
old Buggies a Specialty.
w. H. SPENCE,
Wf lt|!fE JUST RECEIVED!
A fresh let of preserves,
leiyiWly fellies
Oranges,IBanannas,
Cocoanuts.
ANO IN FACT EVERYTHING A H0USKEEPPER WILL NEED:
McFarland Bayles & Ea’s.
.... .......... l .!t 1 ,IBI!lilLi l 2 -L l ; i l.! ! li l SlR!i S !Siil ! li 2 L 2 L SB ! ! IL l M i
..
State ot Georgia Bonds J
FOUR AND ONE-HALF PER CENT.
State to re amount, not to exceed nineteen
hundred thousand dollars, with febtfeatarlni
off tfet portion or fee e pub! jmbiic *
Gworgta, U.. to 18 o'clock
next, tor up million nine to., hundred on July thons 6tb
one
uud dollars of four and ona-half per cent.
Jtwwy One hundred 1.1808. thousand dollars to mature
•
annary 1 1889
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
January One hundred t, 1900.
thousand dollora to mature
January One huudred 1,1901.
thousand dollars to mature
January Ona hundred 1,1902, thousand
dollars to mature
January Ona hundred 1, 1900. >* ram MflMff
thousand dollars to mature
January One hundred l, 1904. thousand dollars to mature
January Ona hundred 1, 1906. thousand dollars to mature
January Ona hundred 1,1906. thousand
dollars to mature
Janaary 1,1907
One hundred undred thousand dollars to mature
January 'One hundred 1,1906. thousand
dollars to mature
January hundred 1, 1909.
Ona thousand dollars to mature
January <-One hundred 1,1910, dollars
thousand to mature
January One hundred 1,1911. thousand dollars
to mature
Jamuury 1,1919. thousand
dollars to mature
I an nary L1913.
Ona hundred 1 thousand dollars to mature
January Oaahundrel 1,1914. thousand dollars
to mature
January Ona hstndred 1, 1915. thousand dollars
to mature
January The bonds 1,1916, to be* in denomination of
ona
thoisoud dollars, with semi-annual coupons
dm cm the respectively. 1st day of Jafluary and July of
ear I year
1 e principal sod Interest payable in the
ait) of New York, and at such place aarihe tho Treas Gov-
era or may elect, State, in the at the city office of Atlanta, at Geor
urer of the
gia. Bids must be accompanied by certified
check or check*—certificate of deposits of
same solvent bank or for bankers, five or bonds of of
tha State of Georgia par cant, tiie
amountof of dopoeit being such bid, mode said payable checks or certifies Tre
to tho
urer of Georgia.
Treasurer Bids will and be opened declared by by tha tha Governor sixteenth red
of
July next, tiie State raaerving tha right to
reject any or all of said brie.
lieu The State will the tissue registered named bonds in
of ray of above brads, as
provided to **id act. at any time on demand
of the owner thereof.
Coplea of tha eat ef the General Assembly
authorising this issue of bonds will be fur
ntohed on spnlidatira to the Treasurer.
U. HARDEMAN, JOHN E. GORDON, Treasurer. Governor.
R
Juo*6-2*w-4w
_
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
All 1 er«. ns indebted to the estate of Mary
L. Bate, r, >*t« of Spalding notified County, to call Georgia, the
undersigned daeaaaed, are and hereby make settlement at such on to
debtedness at onoa; and all persona notified having
demands against said asteieare to
present their claims BUTLER, property proven.
J. W. Aomtofatrator.
may7wfi.-S3.70.
■m il lSM eBgHBgBB!HBMSBtoi
Nisi.
Duneae,Martin A Padua
W. T. U, Taylor.
State of
iSF’**** t **0
Deed sSSSf of Mortgage, i tegseress dated the 18ih day
ss
of land containing thirty *“
part of lot No. IIS in the
oi my own tanas, huu U
tog worth of securing three hundrt
purpose too
soryjiot# made tor tea aa
the the said 1st day Duncan, of Oct, ~ “
Hundred and Forty .
principal, amount la interest duo a
now
It is ordered t
do pay into this
next dne term said thop;
on note
V any ha has to
fault thereof '
said W.T.H. Taylor
Beck A Cleveland, Petittooere JndffSll
Att’ya.
from I certify the Minutes that the of roregotag thfa Conit, la this a tree Februa¬ copy
ry Term, 1888. WbuJ?. . -Tmnaik TmokJlS,
febSSoamim Clerk 8,0. fi. c.
MAH WAMIS BUT LITTLE
Here below, but Iw Want, ttat HtU,
mighty quick. A
minim,
vertrstog
ADVERTISERS
*:an learn the exact cos!
of any proposed line ol
advertising in America!*
papers by addressing
Geo. P. Rowell & Co.,
newspaper Advertising Bureau,
IO Spn*M A, New York.
Ve.-fe 11*' J- 'O' lOO-iteae f»mr h te
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