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FARM AND GARDEN.
EXPERIENCES AND OBSERVATIONS
FROM MANY SECTIONS.
A Florida Farmer Expresses Hluiself OB
the Subject of Poultry Houses aud De¬
scribes One Which Ho Claims Possesses
Many merits.
A Floridian, whose idea_of a fowl house
is a building that will glvo protection to
to 1 ho birds from weather and animals,
and .seclusion to hens while laying, de¬
scribes his plan in Florida Farmer. He
thinks it a mistaken idea that a lien house
must be constructed large enough for a
man to enter. The house he describes
can, he claims, be built cheaper, gives ail
needful accommodation, does not require
half the labor in cleaning and is capable
of being more thoroughly cleaned than
ordinary that houses, besides other advantages
are obvious
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FIG. 1—FOWL HOUSE, GROUND FLAN.
A is a plan of the house, showing three
sills, a, a, a, of 4x2 lumber, placed on
edge, aud resting on nine blocks fifteen
incites high. On these sills tho flooring is
laid (inch floor boards, i;o joist-necessary);
b, b, are tho nests.
FIG. 2—FOWL HOUSE, END VIEW.
B is a section; b, b, are the nests; f is a
small sliding door for fowls to enter; c, c,
aro rafters, a pair at each end and in the
middle, these are of 3x1 lumber; d is tho
ridge pole, 4x1; e, e, are the roosts, and
the crossed lines represent wiro netting,
which should be used to inclose upper part
of ends, the lower part, behind nests, be¬
ing made as a flap to hang for easy access
to nests.
Now take some thin lumber, say 2jx},
and make skeleton framings. Cover them
with sacking or other stout material, and
paint well insido and out. Hang them
From tho top as shown by the dotted
lines g g. Cut out a few squares, six
inches each way, and fill in with wire
netting for ventilation. A shutter the
shape of the end of house would bo ser¬
viceable to put up on the windy sido on
cold nights. It will be seen that the above
can be practically turned inside out; the
roof can bo thrown open pn lotting the
fowls out, and while they aro breakfast¬
ing tho floor can be cleaned. Then the
house should and be closed, excepting the in
small doer, the hens can go
and be nearly In the dark while laying,
which is just what they like. This
house will accommodate fifty fowls,
and the under part forms a dry
place for then* in wet weather. It may
bo urged that they will not They have will sufficient have
air. This is not so.
about the same cubic space per head as
two persons in an ordinary stateroom of a
steamboat and very much more ventila¬
tion. By this contrivance the minimum
of labor is attained, all the droppings aro
freo of sand, aud the house can bo re-
mdVed at will. The floor need not even
bo nailed if cut down tho middle, so as to
bo in four feet three inch lengths. An
open flooring of slats can be used. The
blocks might then be dispensed with, the
houso resting on tho ground, which
should bo hollowed so as to let tho entail drop¬
pings removal fall through. of the house This frequently, would not
the
every time it was swept, but say once a
week.
A house on this long, principle, three feet but six smaller, inches
say wide, eight feet three high for about
and feet
twenty fowls, would do well to placo un¬
der trees in a grove, as it could be; ro-
wood aud the edges rounded let off. s6ckets They
should not be nailed, bat into
so as to be readily removed. The nests
should also move easily. An occasional
dressing of kerosene and some tobacco
dust sprinkled in the nests will keep the
place from mites. The correspondent who
described the above has found pine straw
the next best material to wheat straw for
making nests. He does not approve of
show.
Cut Worms.
Cut worms aro worse in sandy than in
stiff clay land. They aro especially fond
of young beets, cucumbers and melons,
but ahnost any tender young vegetable of
attracts them. No practicable means
amine young crops in the morning, and
whenever you observe that some of the
plants little have recently been about cut, the remove plants, a
of the soil from
and probably the depredator will be found
The Cabbage Boot Worm.
The cabbage root worm, which attacks
the roots of cabbages and cauliflowers,
may, according to Professor Cook, of Midi
Igan, be circumvented with bisulphide of
carbon. A small hole is made in ilia
earth near tho mainrootof the plant. 0:10
half a teaspoonful of the liquid poured earth in
and the whole filled in atoonce with
which is pressed down with the foot
Inherited
Diseases.
to the realm of disease the facts of In.
horltonce arc most numerous and are dull/
accumulating. Here, alas, they become ter*
rible, fateful and overwhelming. No fact of
nature is. more pregnant with awful mean¬
ing than tha fact of the inheritance of
disease. It meets tho phystetan oa his daily
rounds, paralysing his art and filling him
with dismay. The- legend of the ancient
Greeks pictures the Furies as panning
families from generation to generation,
rendering jhom desolate. The Furies still
ply their work of terror and death, but they
are not now clothed in the garb of supersti¬
tion, but appear la 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
new light on the ominous words of the
Scriptures. “The sins of the fathers shall be
visited upon the oidldron untothc 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
I many other hereditary diseases, tends to
wear Itself out, the Muck .becoming extinct.
A d:rtln;Ttii-h<>[) f K-utist truly says: “No
organ or texture or the laxly Is exempt from
the chance of being the subject of hereditary
dtscaju^' Probably more chronio diseases,
which p *r moutly modify the structure
and functions of the body, are more or less
liable to bo Inherited. Thu Important and
far reaching practical deductions from such
facts—affecting so powerfully the happiness
of individuals and families and the collect! re
welfare of the nation—are obvious to reflec¬
ting minds, and the best means for prevent¬
ing or curing these diseases is a subject of
intense ir.terost to all. Fortunately nature
has provided a remedy, which experience
Has attested as infallible, and the remedy is
the world-famous Swift’s Specific, a pore
regetabio compound—nature's antidote for
all blood poisons. To the afflicted It Is a
blessing of inestimable value. An interest¬
ing treatise ua “Blood and Skin Diseases ”
will be mu'led free by addressing
Tag Swift Spxcific Co.,
Drawer 4 Atlanta, Ga.
Gidirrry's Af'vert semen's.
/ \ RDI\ A BY’8 OFFICE, 27, Spaldikq Coux-
\ f tv (ironfliA, -Tone 1888.—E. \V.
It. i k mm] John II Mitchell as executors of
tit" taste will of Win. D. Alexander, dec’d.have
ino.ie : ppM atiori to me for leave to sell
• eighteen and three fourth shares of
the Capitol Stock of the Savannah. Griffin
and North Alabtma KR. Co. for distribution
naionafxt the heirs of deceased.
1 et a'l persons concerned show cause before
the court of Ordinary of said county by ten
«V ock n. m.,on the first Mondav in August
in xt, in Griffin, Ga,,why such petition should
no be granted. W. IIAVMOND,
$3.00 JS. Ordinary.
I U YRDINAKY’S OFFICE, Spalding Ooun-
tv, Gsobgia, June 29th, 1888.— B. A.
Oglotree. executor of the last will and testa
ment of L.P. Ogle tree, dec’d, has made appl-
cation for leave to sell eue hundred and fifty
acres of land more or less belonging to the
estate of deceased for the pay men! of debts
and for distribution. Said land being in
Union district and bounded on the North by
Francis Andrews, east and sooth by John J.
Elder and west by W. J. Elder.
Let all pevsons 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. ui., why such application
should not be granted.
$8 00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordimuy.
/ vRDINARY’S OFFICE, Spaldins Coun-
Martha V/ tx, Geosgia, Darnall, administratrix May 20th. 1888.—Mrs. of Katie
A.
Darnall, has applied to me Katie for letters of Dis¬
mission on the estate of Darnall, late
of said county, deeased.
Let all persons concernrd show cause be
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county
at my office in Griffin, on t' e first Monday in
such September, letters shonld 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why
not be granted.
$6,Ifi E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
fYRDINARY’S U Geobgia, OFFICE, May 26th, Spalding 1888,—Mrs. Coun-
Martha tx, Darnall, M.
A. executrix of Thos.
Darnall, has applied eiecntorship to me for letters of dis
mission from the 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, ih letters should J88S, by ten o’clock, a. in , why
u $6.15 E. W. HAMMONl), not bo jrrautcl.
Ordinary,
ORDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Coun-
V/ tt, Georgia, July 2nd, 1888.—N. "M.
Collens as administrator on estate of Wm. J.
Woodward deceased, has applied to me for
leave to sell three hundred and three and
three-fourth seres of land belonging to said
estate for the pu.pose of paying the debts
due by said estate and for the purpose of dis
tiibntion to-wit: the same being lot No. 22
and the West half of lot No. ten 110) lying
in Cabins district in said connty.
Let all persons concerned show cause be
fore the Court of Ordinary of said connty,
at in my August, office 1888, in Griffin, on o’clock,-a. the first Monday
such should by ten btf m,, why
petti*,ion HAMMOND, not granted.
16.00. E. W- Ordinary.
Rule Nisi.
B. 0. Kinard & Son
vs,
L J. Ward & J. W, Ward.
State of Georgia, Spalding February County. Term, 1888. In the
Superior Court,
It being represented to the Court by the
petition of B. C. Kinard & Son that by Deed
of Mortgage, dated the Ward 16th conveyed day of Oct. 1887,
i. J. Ward A J. W. to the
said B. C. Kinard & Son a certain tract of
land, District towit: fifty acres county,Ga.,bounded of land lying in Akins
follows: of North Spalding by lands of Bill Wise, East by as
Jno. Ward, South by Barney Maadox and
West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬
curing the payment of a promissory note
made t>y the said L J. Ward & J. W. Ward to
the said B. C. Kinard & Son due on the 15th
day of November 1887, for the sum of Fifty
Dollars and Ninety-six cents ($50.96), which
note It is ordered now due that and the unpaid. said I. J. Ward &
te J.
W, Ward do pay Into this Court, by the first
day and of the next term said the principal, show interest
costs, due on note or cause,
if any they have to the contrary, or that in
default thereof foreclosure he granted to the
said B. C. Kinard & Son of said Mortgage,
and the equity of redemption ol the said I.
J. Ward A J > W, Ward therein be forever bar-
»cd, and that service of this rule be perfected
ua u&id L J. Ward & J. W. Ward according
w by publication in the Griffin News,
or by service upon I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward
of a copy three months prior to the next
term of this court.
JAMES 8. BOYNTON,
Fiynt and Dismuke Judge & 8. C, F. Peti¬ C.
Frank Collens,
tioners Att’s.
i true copy from the Minutes of thisOou
Wn. M. Thomas, Clerk 8. C. S C.
p oamtm
1 mu
CROSS BREEDING SHEEP.
TUc Advisability of Crossing Flue Wool
Ewes with Coarse Wool Rams.
In reply to the query: *Ts It profitable
for the average farmer to cross flue wool
ewes with course or middle wool ramat”
Mr. made Henry the following Lee, among other sheep statements,
at a breeders'
meeting depend in Lapeer county, Mich.:
Wo on three sources for the
profits from sheep, viz., wool, mutton and
increase. > The grade of sheep-that affords
the largest to be profit tho with desirable. the least expense
appears most
To consider wool first. There has been
of late a large demand for combing and
medium wools at larger prices. The only
way wc can grow this wool is by a cross
between the line and coarser breeds, the
object being to increase the size of car¬
cass and the length of staple. What cross
are we to make? Will It be on fine ewes
and a Leicester or Southdown ram? Mr.
Lee, Judging from hia own experience,
says no; that the cross first named is an
poor one, and on the second
nain “d one is shortening the staple of
wool with too much dryness. He thinks
the safest cross to make is with a first
class Oxforddown, Hampshircdown or
Shropsbiredown. His experience with a
first class of grade ewes and a Shropshire
ram has been productive of desirable re¬
sults, such as increased size of carcass,
length In of staple and number of increase.
* regard to mutton, Mr. Lee said
mutton has become on important factor
in the moat consumption, so there is
a Ho large demand for mutton at high prices.
made, in this connection, a statement
of what he thought it would be safe to
reckon and compend the product in dol¬
lars and cents between 180 medium grade
ewes and their lambs and 100 fine grade
ewes and their lambs, with a balance of
$139 in favor of the medium,grades. Increase '
On the subject of Mr. Leo
cited his own experience, which, with fine
wool rams, waa a loss of 50 per cent, of
lambs for quite a number of years. Last
year shire he crossed and raised fifty ewes forty-five with lambs, a Shrop¬
ram, a
loss of only 10 per cent.
A Portable Swill Darrel.
The sketch here given of a portable
swill barrel was recently described in
Ohio Farmer and affords a convenient con¬
trivance that many readers may be glad
to copy. *
The correspondent who made the orig r
inal of the model here shown, and who
has successfully used it for some time,
says: “I took two wheels from an old
com cultivator and procured a linseed
barrel. I prefer this kind, as it is
thoroughly tho soaked with oil, and burnt
oil out of It, but not enough to draw
it out of the wood. I have found it more
lasting and durablo, besidtes, the sun ap¬
pears jo have less effect on it tlian any
other kind I ever tried. I sawed about
-eighths inch diameter, ageons
of an in
bolted to the middle of the bilge, on op¬
posite sides at a point to balance it, and
swung tho barrel to the frame between
the wheels. These gudgeons fiofi, are forged
out surface, of a heavy piece of with a broad
port for the so as weight to give of strength barrel of and slop. sup¬
a
“I took a 1$ inch axle of an old spring
then wa_ horizonta
in front of
just sufficient room so the barrel can be
tilted back to be emptied by means of a
leather loop at A, in front, at the top
The barrel swings or is carried 9 inches
from the ground to pass over obstruc¬
tions, and in case of mud, the wheels do
not sink so deep but that the barrel will
pass over clear. The gudgeons rest at
the bend at a point (e) m sockets or slots
9 inches above the center of the wheel, as
the wheels are not high enough to swing
the barrel far enough away from the
ground without this extra perpendicular
bend of the axle. Have a light, flat iron
rod at (f bolted f) with on two the small side projection bolts each of axle
and let let' on sido,
l it come to a point at B, through
wnich tho handle is placed for propelling
it. There is a leg or iron at C, welded in
PORTABLE SWILL BARREL,
the center of the forward projection of
the axle in front of barrel to hold up the
frame and mako it more convenient. D
D are buckets hung on each end of a
wooden lath, 1x2 inches, notched, and
wired on the iron frame with light wire.
Now pull np to the swill tank, fill and
hang and on the buckets as shown in figure,
it is ready to be distributed to the
hungry and the porkers lab labor of feeding in their respective lessened lots,
is four-
fold.
“I believe a more simple one can be con¬
structed by taking tha highest, spring
wagon or buggy wheels and having the
spindles or the ends of the old axle
spoken the of fastened directly to tho bilge
of barrel in the manner before do-
connect ipie o
cross piece can the forward ends,
bolted to the axle with small bolts. The
gudgeons with are four bolted on bolts. the bilge ” of the
Darrel small
• Hero and There.
the. Pigs in and the the orchard are provided best both for
pigs orchard, there
is.fair pasturage.
Mr. Dunbar, after an experience of
thirty years with w*U?fe4- the J plum, - Hen finds that it
requires to be - - . manure and -
manure from tho hog pen are as good as
anjr. As it requires clean cultivation, not
doing well in grass, a hen yard sectus to
be just the place for it. Besides, the
hens are tho best protection against the
curculia
P. M. Augar, of the Maine Pomological
soeiety, believes in thorough cultivation
for the strawberry. He would subsdll to
the depth of twenty inches, and apply
twenty-five cords of stable manure to the
acre.
water.
Do not cut the lawn too frequently
when the weather is dry.
vines Do with not neglect brash, to nothing support the tomato
if else
The first, last and always necessary
item in poultnr raising is good er.ro, and
no one should undertake the bnvinees
who has not time to give this
PEACE.
Wind* and wild waves la bmdtcag huge comm*
tion
®end. dark with tempest, o’er tho Atlantic bream;
While underneath, few fathoms deep in ocean.
Us peace and n*t
Storm* in midair, the rack before themswi-ep»BC
Burry and him, like furies hato possessed:
While over all white cloudlets pure are Bleeping
In peace And rest.
Heart, O wild heart! why fa tho rt. tn world
raging
Flit'st thou thus midd ay, par, .. e rod jo**,
When all *0 near above, belo.. i_.j. uuuging.
Are heaven ami rest*
~C. W. Wikis it. Youth'* Companion.
Abuse ef the Brain.
All feeling, every act of the ill, eveiy
time the eye or ear or any oti t sense is
exercised and all the operation^ of ail tits
organs of the body—every movement of
a limb, every Word that is spoken, is due
to the action of the brain. It therefore
stands in the place of a machine, but in¬
stead of deriving its force from foreign
material used as fuel it consumes its own
substance, which during sleep is replaced
by new matter left there by the blood,
which lias taken it from the food ab¬
sorbed into the system.
The person who works his brain day
and night consumes his brain substance
at a greater rate than it is formed, his ex¬
penditures are greater than his receipts,
his income is not sufficient, but his capw
tel is encroached upon. With every
action of which the brain is capable an
increased amount of blood flows into tbo
organ, and if it is kept inordinately at
work the blood vessels become perma¬
nently distended, they lose their elasticity.
They are like an India nibbdr band that
is placed around a largo bundle of papers
and left there for several months. When
the papers aro removed the band does not
contract to its original dimensions.—Will¬
iam A. Hammond in New York Mail and
Express.
The Opening of the Campaign.
To open the campaign with any -hopes of
speedy before it success, has attack the enemy, malari",
a chance to entrench. An ob¬
stinate foe 'twillprove if you don’t go right
at it. If you are prudent, too, you will have
fortified, upon the first intimation of its pres
ence in yonr neighborhood. Hostetter’s
Stomach Bitters is the medicinal Ammunition
that you require. Every form of malarial
fever yields to this fine preventive and reme
dy. For constipation, fiver complaint, dys¬
pepsia, nervousness and kidney trouble it is
no less effective. Residents of malarial lo:
oalitics, for the and persons solourning in or bound
great West, should select this njedi-
cine as means of defence against the fre¬
quent disitations of miasma. Those in deli¬
cate health, the aged ar.d the enfeebled,
should in every instance resort to this gig;
nal invigorant. Uuse it for weak nerves.
Dr. Moffett's TEETHINA (Teething Powders)
Bowels. Allays Irritation , Aids Dipestlon, Regulates the
Easy ami Strengthens Costs the 25 Cents. Child.makes Teething
only Teeth in a cure*
Eruption? the and trouulcsof Soros, and Children nothing equals it for
summer of any age. It
it zofc unit mire. Try it and you will never be
w!rbont TEETKINA as long as there are child-
ren in the House. Ask your Hruggitt.
New Advertisements.
Peck's Patent Improved Cushioned
Ear Drums
PERFECTLY RESTORE THE HEARING,
whether deafness is caused by colds, fevers
or in injuries to the natural drums, Always
fortable position, but invisible to others and com
to wear. Music, conversrtion, even
whispers them. heard Write distinctly. F. Wo refer to those
using Broadway, to HI8COX, 849
cor.
Rift UIVJ MflNFY IYIvMiLI I i I ■ 5(100 at once A « to enta supply Wanted Ten
Million voters with the on[y official Lives of
CLEVELAND and THURMAN
by IIon. W. U. Henrel, also Life of Mrs.
Cartridge Cleveland, exquisite steel portraits. Voters’
Bor. Free Trade Policy, complete.
3000 Agente at work report immense success.
For beat work, best terms, apply quick and
make $200 to $500 a month. Outfit 35c.
HUBBARD BROS., Philadelphia, Pa.
PA RKER^ ""!
HAIR BALSAM
ClssLUsea jukI beautlfteti the hair.
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Fail* to Restore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Cojor.
Cure* sculp dixojvsvF fu i<i kair falling
60c. at PraggirtB.
_
HINDER CORNS.
The safest, surent and best cure for Corns, Bunions, &o*
to Stops all pain. Ensures Druggists. comfort to tho fort. & Sever falls K
cure. 16 cents ‘ a at u i tiscox Co.„ N.
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
fFHE SCIENCE OF LIFE, the
-*• great Medical Work of the
age ou Manhood, Nervous and]
Physical Debility, Premature '
Decline, Errors of Youth, and
the untoldmiseriesconsequent
thereon, 800 pages 8vo, 125
prescriptions for all diseases..
Cloth, full gflt, only *1.08, by"
mall, scaled. Illustrative sample free to all young
and middle-aged men. Send now. The Gold and
Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by tho Na¬
tional Medical Association. Address P. O. box
1S95, Boston, Mass., or Dr. W. H. PARKER, grad¬
uate of Harvard Medical College, 25 years’practice
in Boston, who may be consulted oonfideptiaUy.
Specialty. Diseases of Man. Office Ho. 4 Bulflnchst.
A GREAT YEAR
in the history of the United States is now upon
us. Every person of intelligence desires to keep
pace with the course of lta events. There is no
better way to do so than to subscribe for
T«l? M \CON TELEGRAPH,
Its news facilities are unsurpawed the ,, fullest by any Associ¬ paper
in the South. In addition to speeial correspond¬
ated Press dispatches, it has important!
ence by wire and letter from all
points in Georgia and the neighboring States.
Curing will the he present the most session important of Congress and most Wash¬ in-
ington resting centre in theconntry. Jlio
te news Correspondence of the Telegraph is
Washington that be had.
the very best correspondent can furnishes the latest .
Its regular ui foil disnatches. Frequent
of President Cleveland and the Demociaoe
■Telegraph
■ lcnoe -
*aily, one year, - - - • ’ • *
Aaily, six months, - • • • *
Daily, three months, • - '
Deity, owe month, - ...
Weekly, one ..........
Tenon Cteh fo advance. Address
THE TKLKGRAJPH,
lfA«nr. OEoaoiA.
it s*v*d my Chua'* ua».
-WbMtwyaWatMfitem, orttaopd
tee doctor
Otter Fetid*. She Me Hat t«>.
til ate nearly died. I bad three FOR IMF AMTS UtWHUM* *™ w**W" m m*m*
doctor*. Who *eld the trouble
wm Mliwtlun, and ordered THE PHYSICIAN'S FAVORITE,
tee food changed to Lactotad
Food. It antxl my child'* life,
■nd I owe you many Uiaaka 8ABi£S CRT FOR IT. aro* of tee i
for invaluable, it I regard and Huperior your Food to all a* IMTAim RELISH IT. UbaaMtofltel*
other artificial food for beteee. v.a.P>co«acy.X.tu
Mr* A J. Bemnxu>, Three Stzwa. He. 10a, *I.OO. 8t JoaasM Foundling harm
Indiana Placo.' Bouton, Mus,
U
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., BURLINGTON, Vt\
roTrv Co If ]pianos /
I ) ORGANS !
CASflr-OR ON TIME, AT
iJJ&iyiA O iLKJL uiujJuMl
WHIPS, WAGONS, BUGGIES-
AND HAFNESS
—w- -
Studebaker Wagon I White Hickory Wagon I
Jackson G. Smith Wagon I
Jackson G. Smith Buggy I
And the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. ” Repair* an
old Buggies a Specialty. ' ;
W. H. SPENCE, GRIFFIN,
nug28dAw6m Uor. Hill A Taylor Btroeta, QAl
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED I
A fresh lot of preserves.
Jellies, Apples,
Oranges,IBanannaa,
. Cocoanuts,
AND IN FACT EVERYTHING A H0USKEEPPER WILL NEED:
State of Georgia Bonds.
FOUR AND ONE-HALF PER CENT.
ExacuTivfe Officb, Atlanta, Ga.,J une 1st,
1888.—Under the authority of an act approv
ed September 5th, 1887, authorizing the Gov
ernor and Treasurer to issue bonds of the
State to an amount, not to exceed nineteen
hundred thousand dollars, with which to pay
off that portion of the public debt maturing
January reeoeived 1st, at the 1889, office sealed of proposals Treasurer will be
the of
Georgia, for np to million 13 o’clock nine tn„ hundred on July 6tb
next, one thona
and dollars of four and one-half herein per cent,
coupon bonds (maturing as set forth)
to be delivered October 1st, 1888.
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
January hundred 1,1898.
One thousand dollars to it 11 hire
January 1, 1899,
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
January hundred 1, 1900.
One thousand dollors to mature
January 1, 1901.
One huudred thousand dollars to mature
January hundred 1,1902,
One thousand dollars to mature
January One hundred 1, 1903
thousand dollars to mature.
January One hundred 1, 1904. thousand
dollars to mature
January 1, 1905.
One hundred thonsand dollars to mature
January hundred 1, 1900.
One thousand dollars to mature
January 1, 1907.
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
January l, 1908. •
One huudred thousand dollars to mature
January 1, 1909. *
One hundred thousand dollars to mature
January One hundred 1, 1910. thousand
dollars to mature
January One hundred 1,1911. thousand dollars
to mature
January hundred 1, 1912. thousand
One dollars to mature
January 1. 1913.
One hundred thonsand dollars to mature
January One 1, 1914. thousand
liundre 1 dollars to mature
January One hundred 1,1915. thonsand dollars to mature
January The bondff 1,1916, in denomination of
te be one
thousand dollars, with semi-annual coupons
due on the 1st day of January and July of
each T, year respectively. and payable
e principal interest in the
city f New York, at such place as the Gov¬
ern. r may elect, and at the office of the Tress
urer of the State, in the city of Atlanta, Gcor
gia. Bids be accompanied by certified
must cheeks—certificate
cheek or of deposits ol
some solvent bank or bankers, or bonds o
the State of Georgia for five per cent, of th
amount of such bid, Baid cheeks or certillca
of deposit being made payable to the Tre
nrer of Georgia. opened by tho Governor and
Bids will be
Treasurer and declared by the sixteenth of
Jniy next, the State of said reserving bids. the right to
reject any or all
The State will isssue registered named bonds, bonds in
lieu of any of 1 he above as
provided in «r. : i act, at any time on demand
of the owner thereof.
Copies of the act of the General Assembly
authorising this issue of bonds will be fur
nished on applidation to the Treasurer.
JOHN B. GORDON, Governor.
june6-2aw-4*r R U. HARDEMAN, Treasurer.
Notice to Debtor* and Creditors.
All t-erscM indebted SpelffingOoanty, to the estate Georgia, of Mary
L. Bum r, late of notified
deceased, are hereby to coll on the
undersigned and make settlement of such in
debtedness at once; and all persons notified having
demands against claims said properly estate are to
present their proven.
J. W. BUTLER, Administrator.
may7we.-d3.70.
Rule Nisi.
Duncan,Martin A Perdue
W. T. H*. Taylor.
State of Georgia, % County. Ia the
It Superior being Court, r*bi _____ tb lfie j Term, Courf! by 1888. tee
tltion Dane represent * 1*___Al— o, pe. 4.—
of i an. Martin a. .reruns tftat ojr
of land taining thirty (80) parcel being
com acres
part of lot No. 115 in ffie 4th District of
Spalding vounty, oounty, Ga., bounded on the Rest
by Jack Crawler, on the Sooth by V. Chan¬
less, North by F. L. Starr, Weat by some
of my own Unde, lands, said said land, land, thirty thirty seres, seres, th# th# be¬ be-
ing worth three three hundred hundred dollars,” dollars,” tot for
purpose of securing the payment of f
sory,note made byf
the thelstdayof said Dunoan, noan, Oct.,1887, Martin Martin for <fcPerdue, A Perdue, the one One on
sum of
Hundred and Forty Eight and 50-100 Dollars,
principal, interest and attorn fees, which
amount is now due and
due on said note andmartglfle dr show cause
tf any he has to the contrary, or that in de¬
fault said Duncan, thereof Martin foreclosure & Perdue be granted of said to Mort¬ tha
gage, and the equity of redemption Of the
said W. T.HTaylor therein be forever barred,
and that service H. of this according rule be perfected on
said W. T. Taylor to law.
JAMES 8. BOYNTON, S. C. P. C.
Beck A Cleveland, Petitioners Judge Att’y*.
I certify that the foregoing Is a true
from the Minutes of this Court, this Ed
ry Term, J888. Wm. M.TxoMAi
feb25oam4m Clerk 8. C.
MAN WANTS BUT ®jr. LITTLE -A: cfv ^
■ '4 el •w ■ ri t’ '
Here below, but he Want* that little
mighty qutefc. A
LITTLE MRpmS.1
er a big one tt promptly filled by ai-
vertMng
Weekly
ADVERTISERS
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papers by addressing
Geo. P. Rowell & Co.,
Newspaper Advertising ^Durwau,
IO Spn-.-ie 3*., New Ysik.
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