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Inherited
1 Diseases.
In the realm of disease tho facts of ln-
*er(ta«^ are moat numerous and are dally
•ocumulattns. Hero, alas, they becorao ter-
“ ' t lble fateful and overwhelming. Ko fact of
n4tu rc b more pn-ffiiaut with awful mean-
lag Ilian the fact of tlio Inheritance of
ilsea.se. I'- moots tho physician on his daily
rounds, paralysing his art and ailing him
with dismay. The legend of tho ancient
deceits pictures the Furies as pursuing
families from generation to generation,
rendering them dcsolato. The Furies still
t i),,ir work of terror and death, but they
arc not uowclolhed 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 comers of nature, has shed a
tew light on the ominous words of tho
Scriptures, “The sins of the fathers shall bo
visited upon the children unto the third and
fourth generation." Instances of hereditary
aUta- 0 abound. Fifty per rent, of cases of
consumption, that fearful destroyer of fami¬
9 lies, of e inrer anil scrofula, run lu families
through Inheritance. Insanity Is hereditary
* in a marked decree, but, fortunately, liko
many oti.er hereditary diseases, toads to
if wcar itself <' 1 : 1 , the stuck becoming cxtluet.
A distinguished scientist truly says: “No
r organ or texture of the body is exempt from
5 the chance of being the subject of hereditary
disease.” Probably more chronic diseases,
whteh perm mcntly modify tho structure
and functions of the body, are more or less
liable to ho inherited. Tho Important aud
far reaching practical deductions from such
facts—affecting so powerfully the happiness
of Individuals and families and the collective
welfare of the natlon-are obvious tS reflec¬
ting minds, and tho best means for prevent¬
ing or erring these diseases Is a subject of
Intense Interest to all. Fortunately nature
has provided a remedy, which experience
has attested as Infallible, and tho remedy is
the world famous Swift’s Specific, a pure
vegetable compound—nature’s antidote for
1,11 blood poisons. To the afflicted it Is a
IPi-sAn; of Inestimable value. An Interest¬
ing treatise ou “ill >od and Skin Diseases”
still be ma'icd freo l>y addressing
Tub Swot Specific Co.,
Drawer 3. Atlanta, Qa.,
Crciii: :y's Advert semciits.
i ) t i;Di v iliV’S OFFICE, SPai/itiNJ Govs-
V ,i lieoitoiA, May 20tri, 1888. — Mrs.
J ar.mil, arllia t. Otirtittll administratrix of Katie
I bus applied tome for letters of Dis¬
mission on the estate of Katie Darnull, late
of • aid county, decased. —
l i t all persons concernrd show cause be
f.ur tlie Court of Ordinary of said county
si my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
Not miter, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m.,why
sm li letters should not be granted.
to,If. 15. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/ \KDINARY’S Oi'i'J 11, Spalding Codx
V./ it, A. Geoboia, Darnall, May executrix 20th, of 1888,—Mrs. Thos. M.
Martha
lkirualt, has applied to me for letters of dis
mission front the executor.-hip of said estate.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at
my otlice in Gridin, on the first Monday in
September, urh 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m , why
letters should not bo granted.
$0.15 E. \V. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
r.'V/ /•ytDINARY’S OFFICE.—Spalding Cot;x-
tv, Geoboia, Angus' 3, 1S8S.—Airs. Lei
la B. Lamar, Guardian of Arch M.and James
■ Nall makes application to ma for leave to
sell one undivided half interest, in house
and lot belonging to her wards for distribu¬
tion.
Let all persons cotieerul show cause be-
| Griffin fore the court the first of Ordinary Monday in at September iny office by in
on
ten o’elock a. m., why such application
should not he ’E. granted. HAMMO .D,Ordinary.
$3.00. YV.
Executors’ Sale.
GEORGIA- Si’ai. nixo County.
By virtue of an order granted us by'the
C turt of Ordinary we will sell before the
Ccui t house, to the highest bidder, at Griffin, Tues¬
Georgia; in said county, on the first
day of September next, and between three the quarters legal
hours of sale, eighteen of Sa¬
(18%) shares of the capital stock the
vannah, Griffin and North A Jabama Railroad
Company. Sale for distribution among 1888. leg¬
ate* Terms of sale cash. Aug. ffth,
E. W. BECK,
J. H. MITCHELL,
LUO Executors \Y. D. Alexander.
Rule Nisi.
B. (!. ltinard & Son )
vs. >
I. J. Ward A J. W, Ward. )
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 & Son that by Deed
of Mortgage, dated the lCth day of Oct. 1887.
I. J. Ward&J. W. Ward conveyed to the
said I!. C. Kinard & Son a certain tract of
land, towit; fifty acres of land lying in Akins
District of Spahliug county, Ga., bounded as
follows: North by lands of Bill Wise, East by
Jno. Ward, South by Barney Maddox and
West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬
made curing the payment of a promissory W. Ward note to
by the said I. J. Ward & J.
the said B. C. Kinard & Son due on tho 15th
day Dollars of November 1887, for the sum of Fifty
note is and Ninety-six unpaid. cents ($30.%), which
now due and
It is ordered that the said I. J. Ward & J,
W, Ward do pay into this 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 bo granted to the
said B. C. Kinard & Son of said Mortgage,
ind the equity of redemption of the said I.
J Ward & j. W. Ward therein be forever bar-
■ -it. aid and I that service of this rule Ward be according perfected
j ■ J. Ward & J. W.
.otiwhy publication in the Griffin News,
i'f oy service upon I. J. Ward it J. W. Ward
.vf term a copy three, months prior to the next
of this court.
JAMES S. BCYNTON,
Judge S. C. F, C.
Frank Fiynt and Dismuke <fc Collens, Peti-
t uners Att’s.
j true copy from the Minutes of tliisCcu
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk S. C. S C.
I oamfin
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PARKEfi STGINGER TONIC
® tamuaam wgta j&nwcv*. am
fc ™«UC Lunpm. over du»ea.*e nuknown ,__Complaints, the
17 hcnm.itom I)'<»na1n l ana
l/rer, Kidneys aiul Bowel*
t> thoffrav© vJno would recover Toma
y the timely upaocpAiiKKiis Gv&ocn bnac
William h to \h* aRed. Hit. SOc. at
Strwt,
ICE BOUND.
By W. CLARK RUSSELL,
Author "f ike It reel; of the Grosvenor
‘Jacl: x Courtship.” “My H atch Be¬
low,’ ‘ 1 he Lady Maud ” Etc.
l noi’o was neituer tea nor coffee in too snip.
I so pined tor these soothing drinks that I
would have given all the wine in tho vessel
for a few pounds of cither one of them—a
senseless, ungracious yearning, indeed, in tho
face of the plenty that was aboard 1 But it
was tho plenty, perhaps, that provoked it.
There was chocolate, which the Frenchman
pot toil and drank with hearty enjoyment; he ’
also devoured handfuls of succades, which
he would wash down with wine. These
things made me sick, and for drink I was
forced upon the spirits and wine, the latter
of which was so generous that it promised to
combine with the enforced laziness of my
life under hatches to make mo fat; so that I
fin of opinion, had lie waited for tfio-Jce to
release us, I should have become so corpulent
as to prove a burden to myself.
I mention this hero that you mav find an
excuse i:i it for tho only act of folly in the
way of drinking that I can lay to my ac¬
count while I was in this pirate; for I must
tell you that, on returning to the furnace,
we, to refresh us after our labor, made a
bowl of punch, of which I drank so plenti¬
fully that I began to feel myself very merry.
1 forgot all about tho matches and my resolu¬
tion to test them that night. The French¬
man, enjoying my condition, continued to
pledge mo till his little eyes danced in his
bead. Luckily for me, being at bottom of a
very jolly disposition, drink never served me
worse than to develop that quality in mo.
No man could ever say that 1 was quarrel-
some in my cups. My progress was marked
by stupid smiles, terminating in unmeaning
laughter. The Frenchman sang a ballad
about love and Picardy, and the like, and I
gave him “Hearts of Oak,” the sentiments of
which song kept him shrugging his shoulders
anti drunkenly looking contempt.
By this time I was extremely excited and
extraordinarily merry, and losing hold of my
judgment began to indulge in sundry pleas
anti-ins concerning his nation and country-
men—asking, with many explosionsof laugh¬
ter, how if was that they continued at Uw
trouble of building ships for us to use agains t
tin m, and if he did not think the ‘ flower els
louse” a neater symbol for people who put
Ki-.n'V into their soup and restricted their ab¬
lations to their faces than tho tricolor, !>eing
too muddled to consider that l.c wv.-.ignor¬
ant of that flag: and, in short, i was so
offensive, in spite of ray ridiculous merri¬
ment, that his savage nature broke out. He
assailed the English with every injurious
term his drunken condition suffered him to
recollect, and starting up, with his little eyes
wildly rolling, he clapped his hand to his
side, as if feeling for a sword, and, calling
me by a very ugly French word, bade ine
come on and he would show me the differ¬
ence between a Frenchman and a beast of an
Englishman.
I laughed at him with all niv might, which
so enraged him that, swaying to right and
left, lie advanced as if to fall upon me. I
started to my feet, and tumbled over tho
bench I had jumped from and lay sprawling;
the bench oversetting close to him, he
Kicked against it and fell too, fetching the
dec k a very hard blow. He groaned heavily,
ami muttered that he was killed. I tried to
rise, but nty legs gave way, and then the
fumes of the punch overpowered me, for I
recollect no more.
When 1 awoke it was pitch dark. My
hands, legs and feet seemed formed of ico,
my head of burning brass. 1 thought I was
in my cot, and felt with my hands till I
touched Tassard’s bald head, which so terri¬
fied me that I uttered a loud cry and sprang
erect. Then recollection returned, and I
heartily cursed myself for my folly and
wickedness. Good God! thought I, that I
should be so mad as to drown my senses
when never was any wretch in such need of
all his reason as I!
'The boatswain’s tinder box was in my
pocket; I groped, found a candle, and lighted
it. It was 3:30 in the morning Tassanl lay
on bis back, snoring hideously, his legs over¬
hanging tho capsized bench. 1 pulled and
hauled at him; but ho was too drunk to
awake, and that he might not freeze to
death, I fetched a pile of clothes out of his
cabin and covered him up, and put his head
on a coat.
My head ached horribly, but not worse
than my heart. I went to my cabin ami got
into my hammock, but my head was so hot
and ached so furiously, and I was so vexed
with myself besides, that I could not sleep.
The schooner was deathly still; there was not
apparently the faintest murmur of air to
awaken an echo in her; nothing spoke but
the near and distant cracking of the ice. It
was miserable work lying in the cabin sleep¬
less and reproaching myself, and-as my burn¬
ing head robbed the cold of its formidable-
ujss, 1 resolved to go on deck and take a
brisk turn or two.
The exercise improved my spirits; I stepped
tho length of the little raised deck briskly,
my thoughts very busy. On a sudden the
ic3 split on the starboard hand with a noise
louder than the explosion of a twenty-four
pounder. Tho schooner swayed to a level
keel with so sharp a rise that I lost my bal¬
ance aud staggered. I recovered myself,
trembling and greatly agitated by the noise
and the movement coming together without
the least hint having beeiL given me, and,
grasping a backstay, waited, not knowing
what was to happen next. Unless it be tho
heave of an earthquake, I can imagine no
motion capable of giving one such a swoon¬
ing, nauseating, terrifying sensation as the
rending of ice under a fixed ship. In a few
moments there were several sharp cracks, all
on the starboard side, like the snapping of
musketry, and 1 felt the schooner very
slightly heave; but this might have been a
deception of the senses, for though 1 set a
star against the masthead and watched it
there was no movement. I looked over the
side and observed that thesplit I had notie.d
on the face of the cliff had by this new rupt¬
ure been extended transversely right across
the schooner's starboard bow, the thither
side being several feet higher than on this.
It was plain that the bed on which the ves¬
sel rested had dropped so as to bring her up¬
right, and 1 was convinced by this circum¬
stance alone that if I used good judgment in
disposing of the powder the weight of tho
mass would complete its own dislocation.
Tho shock did my bead good; I went below
and got into my cot, and after tossing for
half an hour or so fell asleep. I awoke at
8 aud went to the cook house, where I found
Tassard preparing the breakfast and a great
fire burning. I hardly knew what reception
he would givo me, and was therefore not a
little agreeably surprised by his thanking
mo for covering him up.
“You have a stronger head than mine,”
said ho; “the punch used you well. You
made me laugh, though. You were very
diverting. 1 ’
“Ay, much too diverting to please myself,”
said I: and 1 sounded him cautiously to re¬
mark what his memory carried of my in¬
sults. but found that he recollected nothing
more than that Z danced with rigor and sang
well.
' I said nothing about my contrition, my
going on deck, and the like, contenting my¬
self with asking if he had heard the explosion
'in
in the night.
“No,” cried he, staring and looking eagerly.
“Well, the)*,” said I, “there has happened a
mighty crack in the ice, and I do soberly be¬
lieve that with the blessing of God we shall
be able by blasts of powder to free the block
on which the schooner re-ts.”
“Good!” cried he; “come, let us hurry with
this meal. How is the weather.'”
“Quiet. I lietieve. I have not lieeu on deck
since tb.e explosion aroused me early this
morning.”
While wc ate he. said, “Suppose we get tlio
schooner afloat, w hat do you propose f
“Why,” I answered, “if she prove tight
and seaworthy, what but carry her home;”
“What! you and I aloneT
“No,” said I, “certainly not; wc must
make shift to sail her to the nearest ijort, and
ship a crew.”
Ho looked at me attentively an.l said:
u Wbat do you mean by home/"
“England,” said I.
He shrugged his shoulders, and exclaimed
in French: “ Ti» natural;” then proceeding
in English: “Pray,” said he, showing his
fangs, “do not you know that tho Boca del
Dragon is a pirate/ Do you want to bo
hanged, that you propose to carry her to a
port to ship men?”
“I have no fear of that,” said I; “after all
these years she'll be as clean forgotten as if
she had never had existence.”
“Look ye here, Mr. Rodney,” cried he, in
a passion, “let's have no more of this snivel¬
ing nonseuse about years. You may be as
mad as you please on that point, but it slni’n't
hang me. It needs more than a few months
to make men forget a craft that has cai ried
on such traffic as our hold represents. You’ll
not find me venturing myself nor the schooner
into any of your ports for men. No, no, luy
friend. I am in no stupor now, you know;
and I’ve slept the punch off also, d’ye see?
What! betray our treasure, and lie hanged
for our generosity*”
He made me an ironical bow, grinning
with wrath.
“Let's get tho schooner aUoat first,” said I.
“Ay, that's all very well,” he cried; “but
better stop here than dangle in chains. No,
my friend; our plan must be a very different
one from your proposal. I suppose you waut
your share of the booty?” said he, snapping
his fingers.
“I deserve it,” said I, smiling, that I raight
soften his passion.
“And yet you would convey tho most noted
pirate of the age, with plunder in her to tho
value of thousands of doubloons, to a port in
which we should doubtless find ships of war,
a garrison, magistrates, governors, prisons,
and flic whole of the machinery it is our busi¬
ness to give our stern to! Ma foi, Mr. Rod-
ney! surely you arc out in something moro
than your reckoning of time?”
“ What do you propose?” said I.
“Ila!” tie exclaimed, while his little e,yet
twinkled with cunning, “now you speak sen¬
sibly. What do I propose? This, my friend.
We must navigate the schooner to an island
and bury the treasure; then head for the
shipping highways, and obtain help from any
friendly merchantman wc may fall in with.
Homo with us means the Tortugas. There
we shall find the company we need to recover
for us what we shall have hidden. We shall
come by our own then. But to sail with this
treasure on board—without a crew to defend
the vessel—by this hand! the first cruiser
that sighted us would make a clean sweep,
and then ho for the hangman, Mr. Rodney!”
Hoiv much I relished this scheme you will
imagine; but to reason with him would have
been mere madness. I knitted my brows and
seemed to reflect, and then said: “Well,
there is a great deal of plain, good sense in
what you say. I certainly see the wisdom of
your advice in recommending that we should
bury the treasure. Nor must we leave any¬
thing on board to convict the ship of her true
character. ”
His greedy eyes sparkled with self-com¬
placency. He tapped his forehead and cried:
“Trust to this! There is mind behind this
surface. Your plan for releasing the
schooner is great; mine for preserving the
treasure is great too. You are the sailor, I
the strategist; by combining our genius we
shall oppose an inv' ’ t able front to adver¬
sity, and must end u„r days as princes. Your
hand, Paul!”
I laughed and gave him my hand, which
he squeezed with many contortions of face
and figure; but, though I laughed, I don't
know that I ever so much disliked and dis¬
trusted and feared the old leering rogue as at
that moment.
“Come!” cried I, jumping up, “let’s get
about our work.” And with that I pulled
open a bag of matches and„fell to testing
them. They burned well. The fire ate into
them as smoothly as if they had been pre¬
pared the day before. _ They were all of one
thickness. I cut them to equal lengths, and
fired them, and waited, watch in hand; one
was burned out two minutes before the other,
and each length took about ten minutes to
consume. This was good enough to base my
calculations upon.
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G. A. CUNNINGHAM,
GRIFFIN, : :: GEORGIA,
Has Been Appointed Land Agent tot
Spalding County,
by the Georgia Bureau of Immigration, aud
all the parties sale by having; placing land their for sale property can expedite hie
in
hands.
Full particulars in regard to the most
uable lands in this county can be obtai
by addressing him as above. A fulllis
houses and lands and lots ef all descripti o
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
AU persons indebted to the estate of Ma r
L. Butler, late of Spalding County, Georgia
deceased, are hereby notified to call on the
undersigned and make settlement of such in
debtedness at once; and all persons having
demands against said estate are notified to
present their claims properly Administrator. proven.
J. W. BUTLER,
maj’Twfi.—$3.70
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whelming popular vote. - ; ji¬
lts GRAND EXTRAORDINARY DRAW-f
I December), NOS take place Semi-AnnnaUy, GRAND SINGLE (June NUM¬ and
and ila V;. !
BER DRAWINGS take place on each the
the other ten months iu the year, and are at
drawn ,n public, at the Academy of Music
Ni-w Orleans, La.
**We do herr by certify that wesnpervlse the
arrangements for all the monthly and Qnar-
tcrly Drawiugs of The Louisiana StataLot
tery Company, and in person manage and cob ;
trot the Drawings themselves, and that th#
and ante are conducted toward with honesty, parties,« fairnesa 4
in go.nl faith all w#
authorize the Company to use this a i tinea*#
with fft. -Hlmih-sof our.■dgi , itur*"i bedir
its iilvirtiicU’.tnts."
Vy/S/V.
USSSi
<’oi» »■(■•( oner*.
We Urn undersigned Banks and Bankers
will pay all i'rize* drawn in The Louisian*
State Lotteries which may be presented at
our counters:
It. n.n I I.MSI.Kt .Pr«. I.H.Vat l B.
«*. Lmi k. I*re«Sti#«w Nikt'l Bk.
A. 11.4 I.ISWIN.fres.M.O.MaS'l Ba*k
tARl HUH*. I*re«. « ■<«« S IBasIl
Grand : Monthly : Drawing
III the Academy of Music, New Orleans,
Tuesday. September 11, 1888,
CAPITAL PRIZE, $300,00,
100,000 Tickets at Twenty $5; Tenths Dollars each
Halves $10: Quarters ♦’!; Twen¬
tieths #1.
LIST OF VHlZKtl.
1 PatZEOK $300,000 is........ f300,000
IFkizboj? 100,0001s........ 100,000
1 I’ntzs or 00,000 is....... } 50.000
1 Furze of 25.000 Is........ 35.000
3 I’urzES of 10.000 6.000 are....... 30.000 afro
5 PllIZKS OF are.......
25 Pricks of 1.000 are....... 35.000
300 100 Furzes Furzes of 300 500 are....... 60.000 50.00Q
or are.......
500 Frizes of 200 are....... 100,000
APPROXIMATION F. -FS.
1O0 Prizes of $600 are. .. 30,000 50^00
100 do. 800 are.. ..
too do. 300 are. .. 30,00
TEUMlXil
Wirt do. 100 are.. 00,900
999 do. 100 are.. 00,900
3,134 Prizes of amounting to......01,054,800
Note.—T ickets drawing Capital Frizes
are not entitled to terminal Prizes.
Kor'Clnb Urates, or any further infornra
tion apply to the undersigned. Signature Your hand¬
writing must be distinct and plain .
More rapid return mail and delivery Env.Tope will he as-
Rurrcd by enclosing bearing
your full address.
Send POSTAL N, York NOTES, Exchange Express in Ordinary Money
Orders, Currency or w by Express (at expense)
letter. our
addresse d to
M. A. DAUPHIN.
New Orleans La
or M,»A. D A UPH IN, Washington, D. C.
Address Registered Letters tc
jkw oni n tst* saTosai nuia
New Orleans, La.
REMEMBER S5K ESZXSXS
anal Early, h lin «r* In churg# «t Ik#
drawings, and integrity, is a that guaaritee chances of absolute fairness equal,
the are all
and that no one can possibly divine wh*t
numbers will draw a Prize.
REMEMBER that the payment of all
Prizes is GUARANTEED BY FOUR NATIO
NAL BANKS of New Orleans, and the
Tickets -ire si£ntd by the President of an In
stitution whose chartered rights are recog
nized in the highest Courts; therefore
beware of any imitations or anonymou
schemes.
New Advertisements.
ftJIMQ UUliO REVOLVERS, fond stump for
price list to JOHNSTON & SON,
Pittsburgh, Penn.
NSUMPTI\/E
/j a .h cured many u£ to« w
tor all nJfections >f the throafc and lur.fifs, aud dm**?*
fti isingr from impure bio lootl t<ii( and extiauAtton.» The feeble
ml hick, struirpriifti
cvroim. Take it in mne. 1$ is invaluable for au paws
uiid disorder* of *Ujuu*ck and bowtla. 60c. at UniorfJlfc
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
rj-HE SCIENCE OF LIFE, the
* great Aletlical Work ot ^(lie
(ire ou Manhood, Nervou* and!
piiyaical Di iniity, Premature 1
Dodinc, Errors of Youth, and
the untold miseries consequent
tli'-reon, DO pages 8vo, 125
prescript tons for all diseases..
Cloth, full gilt, only by*
mall, sealed, Iltustratlva sample fra* to all young
and middle np d men. Send now. The Oold and
Jewelled Medal uwardeil to the author by the Na¬
tional M' dical Association. Address P. O. box
PM. IVMfton, Mass., or Dr. W. H. PARKEE, grad •
uatc of Harrard Mi*llcal College,S6 years’ praeUoe
In i -t ,n, v. ho may !«.* com>ulted oonfl d i gat U lly .
Sec. ..Jiv.r.o s of JL-m. Ofllce No. 1 Bulflnch*.
h PARKER’S
HAIR LiALSAM
It '. Anna and hcaotlfles tholMlF.
fLi l'roni<)tcM*fsx’.; :iat|froriA Belter* Grey i
Never Fails to
Hair to it. Youthful ulrfailSBI Color.
CaroikUa.' p <J!ste*a-c**rni k«ix £
fiv. At i>r»narfa>U, J
HINDER CORNS,
NOTICE
To Executors, Adminlstralers, Guar¬
dians and Trustees.
Notice is hereby given to all executors, a
minlstrators, guard!ass and trustees, to
make their annual returns between now and
the first .Monday in July, 1888, at 10 o’clock
a.m.,at roy office in Griffin. Ordinary.
E. W. HAMMOND,
May 81,1888.
SB
RuleNIsi.
Duncan, Marlin & Perdue j
iy. T. H. Taylor. \
State of Georgia, Spalding Comity. Term, In the
Superior Court, February 1888.
It being Duncan, represented Martin to the Court Perdue by the pe¬
tition of & that by
Deed of Mortgage, dated the 13*h day o
January,1887, Duncan, Martin W.T. & Perdue II.Taylor “a conveyed, certain to parcel said
of land containing thirty (30) acres being
part of lot No, 115 in the 4th District of
Spalding county, Ga., bounded on the East
by Jack Crawley, on the South by P. Cham-
less, North by P. L, Starr, West by some
of my own lands, said land, thirty acres, be¬
ing worth three hundred dollars,” for tho
purpose of securing Urcpaymentof W..T. H.Taylorto a promts
sorynote made by the said
the said Duncan, Martin & Perdue, due on
the 1st day of Oct.,1887, for the sum of Onq
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 the first day of the
next due term said the principal, and interest show and costs,
on note mortgage or cause
if any he has to the contrary, or that in de¬
fault said Duncan, thereof Martin foreclosure & Perdue be granted of said to Mort¬ the
gage, W. and the equity of redemption of the
said T.HTaylor therein be forever perfected barred,
and that service of this rule be on
said W. T. II. Taylor according to law.
JAMES S. BOYNTON,
Judgo 3. C. F. C.
Beck <fc Cleveland, Petitioners Att’yg.
I certify that the foregoing is a trne copy
from the Minutes of this Court, this Februa
ry Term, 1883. VVsi. M. Thomas,
fcb25oatn4tc Clerk S. C. S. C.
MAN WANTS BUT LITTLE
Here below, but he Wants tha little
mighty quick. ^
LITTLE WANT,
or big one is promptly filled by ad¬
vertising in .the; Daily or
'Weekly NEWS.
muv asssnaHMtaH**.:
\ K USER:
:an learn the exact •_ <
)f ; :* nroposeci 1 -'
mg m Amen
* addres^
o. Rn.vell Sz -
T K»s PAPER H Cl nt» In PhlladriBhla
at rising tue Agency bewspapi-r of Mcssra Adves
___. YCR A A f f ON. Q! authorize*!
N. W« > A A fCK our a geutt