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THE INCURABLE
CURED!
Jlr.nuxsTn.tK, Kr„ Feb. 24.1887.
Ornttemeu— Seven years aye. a gore tlevel-
rI „,i on my no e from a Ameer nail scratch.
1 Iv'i.ulrt * rt' -l a fe"' tcl-i. simple t remedies, Ixit the sore
forV- nut s grew worse every year
v ' n 3' s. Many I thought I had • can-
r O' i- * ' ear t> It o commenced taking
a s s*.,n ' i i wo down bottles entirely cured
W • n 1 began with Swift's Specific I
,,'js try |"i>r health, and could hardly
, p.g sis. I After I had finished the course
,,t s. s ■ 1 w as strong and buoyant, and
I ml s'.. d -1 polite. I regard it as a most
viltiaoiv medicine for ladies in weak, deli:
,-,te Itcullu. It is » household medicine
iv.ili me. Yours respectfully,
lias. K. W. Wilsos.
firii-TiNBi'fCa, S. C„ April 2,1897.
Oentlenicn-For left cheek- twenty It years had I gradually have had
• sore mi my The physicians
been go " ing consulted worse. many unable
whom I had were to do
me »ov rooil I.ast fall a year ago 1 began
using s. i*. S. At first It Inflamed the sore.
arid mocU it l.icame Indref cl. more that virulent family than ever; insisted so
so. off the iny I
! Isted ir in.i.l leave medicine. per-
■ the S.8. S. At the end of two
, 11 ,mil.» Ihe sore ii was entirely of healed. constitution, Think¬
ing that the e' was out my
1 left iift the ---------'ight medicine; but la breaking November.
out
isappearing. again <m 3. I 8. havo s..
an ... faith _____ in S. S. .... 8. It has done
evry fa me moro
good :ood than titan all mi the iu doctors and other nicdl-
ciccs I ever took. Yours truh It!
A. SlIAXDfi.
' Winston, N. C., April 12,13S7.
Oenllrmca—'Two face. or three It years ago a to can¬ lie
cer caine on my soon and grew
quite large. It wore on me, my general
health Was very poor. Last September I
began a course of S. S. 8., which 1 have con
timied lo the present time with the happiest
result. The cancer has entirely disappeared,
there being no evidence or symptom of a
cancerous i *■-----eneral haracter left. My gene health
Is good now, and my I appetite 82 oott otter old, than it
has been in years. am years and
today 1 am working In the Held planting
corn. Y’ours truly, Jonas Liukbach.
Gentlemen—Iliad Seven a sore different on my doctors upper lip
tempted for eight in years. vain to heal It. One at¬
---11 small tempted kvlol vial m fne forgive vain lo dohars, neat it. Which wl * WES gave 3i “ me a
CCr*
to say that it did
quite ine no good. About people taro thought yeihs COTS t ago I had I becamo a can¬
uneasy, I I took took as of of tIghteen Ighteen bottles bottles
cer, cer, and ami result a a course course been t
of S. S. S. The lias a complete
cure. 1 ho ulcer or caucer healed beauilful-
Iv. leaving dnv f have scare. been 1/a in perceptible excellent scar. health, From the
that purified blood thorough-
Specific having my and
li. itlgvstlon. Increased In my appetite weld, I feel perfected like my
a a new
notnan, and, Ircly. best Yours of all, the eight year ulcer
is gone cut -Mas, sincerely, \V. t>. CanWdx.
Trer.ton, Todd Co., Ky., Feb. 25, 1887.
7 realise on Blootl and Skin Diseases mailed
free. Tuu Swift Sukcikic Co.,
Drawer 3. Atlanta. Ga.
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ADRIFT OS ICE.
The seoao of the adventure that I
relate is in North Hudson’s bay, and the
time was late in February, 1879. I
been among tho natives of this region
the great bay—the Iwillik
tho fall liofore getting ready for a
journey to King William’s Land, in
Arctic ocean, which these natives had
said could best lie started in the early
spring, anti I had therefore set the first
week in April as about the time of our
departure.
One of Hie most ifecessary articles of
supply for such a sledge journey was oil
to cook our food, by the native method,
end give us light at night, and the seal
and walrus i-t tho bay were tho sources
on which we depended for this material.
The contemplated ucdgo trip was to bo
an overland one, and until we stood on
the shores of tho Arctic sea, probably a
month or two after starting, no oil pro¬
ducing animal could be met, and we
therefore urged our hired Eskimo to !>e
prompt in getting us a good supply.
Then there came in a superstition of these
eeai and walrus hunters that they cannot
catch these animals or eat their flesh
until the reindeer meat of the fall
hunting season had been disposed
of, and, as our venison supply
it wti.o large this particular autumn,
was well along in January
before the change was made. This was
followed by one of those hyperborean
hurricanes whoso predominating feat A-e
was boreal consistency, and after its three weeks
of blowing was over, and wo were
nearly starved in our ice palaces, we
crawled out six! . hired the situation in
the face that it was hardly two months
until our depr rf i :v, with no oil on hand
and little lilt ' of being able to pur¬
chase any of ihc natives in their depleted
condition. My own natives therefore
went to work with a will to supply tho
deficiency, taking working early and late and
many risks on the treacherous ice
that they otherwise would not have don •.
It was in taking one too many of these
risks that tho material for my story war
furnished me.
kqueesik and Nannook (the Elbow
anti the Polar Bear)were two r faithful
and trustworthy walrus hunters as were
to bo found in the whole Iwiiiik Iribe of
Eskimo, and this saying was no small
compliment iti its line, for the name
Iwillik means walrus eating Eskimo, from
the large number of these animals killed
by this tribe, and which really formed
their chief supply of food. I kqueesik
was in fact over anxious to see that every¬
thing in general and the walrus oil in
particular would be ready for the trip on
time, for though an Iwillik bv adoption
since he was a boy, lie was by birth a
Netschiliuk, a band that lived on the
Polar sea, where we would probably visit,
and he showed a truo patriotic dcsir. to
visit his native land.
By tho 20th or 25th of February it wan
quite evident that Ikqueesik's unusual
energy would be properly rewarded i”
the weather only remained good, but this
be was something in which no reliance could
placed whatever, although my Net-
sehilluk walrus hunter openly avowed
that good weather or bad weather lie was
going to sec that, as far as oil was con¬
cerned, we should have no delay in start¬
ing.
Sure enough, a storm came tearing
down from tho northwest that looked as
if it had come to»stay for a while; and, as
good as his word, I kqueesik, with Nan-
nook and a 14 or 13-year-old brother of
the former—Ahwanak by name—sallied
out in the fierce blast to tackle any wal¬
rus that might be found out enjoying
6uch weather. Although during these
fierce off shore winds, tho walruses gen¬
erally go sailing out to sea on the cakes
of ice that break off from the edge of the
shore ice. our two hunters were lucky in
finding au old one that had found it con¬
venient to stay at home, and as part pay¬
ment for their exposure in such fearful
weather they found it easy to dispatch
the brute by taking advantage of the din
tho wind was making. To cut up his
carcass was but the work of a few mo¬
ments: but, short as it was. it was long
enough for the tide, then rising .rapidly,
to lift tho great field" of shore ice a footer
so more and elevate it clear of the reef,
which so far had acted as a huge brake to
hold it to the land, and with a ripping,
roaring noise, like the close volley of
musketry from a battalion of men < r the
crash of a near thunderbolt cleaving the
air, they heard this field of ice on which
they stood tearing loose from the main
shore, and by the time they reached the
crack, 200 yards away, it had become
so largo that it would have Itecn
a dangerous experiment to attempt to
leap across; for in his perpetually ice
laden waters the Eskimo is a stranger ro
the art of swimming. They stood and
looked at each other for a minute, grin¬
ning a sort of sickly smile that the Cau¬
casian repeats when he chases his silk
beaver down a muddy street on a windy
day in “the presence of a large anil ap¬
preciative audience. ” They were adrift
in one of King Frost's men-of-war w ith¬
out rudder, sail or compass, and, worst
of all, they did not know how long they
had been drafted for. An inspection re¬
vealed tho craft to be about 400 yank
long over all, about 200 yards beam, with
Brmor six to eight feet thick, copying
two guns with a crew of three, and pro¬
visioned for two or three week' with one
walrus weighing nearly a ton. I should
havo added that a sledge and throe or
four dogs were curled up abaft the main
hatch, the former of which might th> foi
fuel and the latter for food in case of r.r
emergency or loo long a praise.
At first the trip was not a very severe
one as long as they could feel the protec¬
tion of the coast, but the further away
they got the higher the waves were swell¬
ing, and in the course of two or three
hours the surf was dashing over toe
weather side and flying in fine spray and
froth across the little cold weather cruis¬
ers and making things uncomfortable
generally. compacted under
There wa3 some snow
the lee of a line of high hummocks that
had once marked the place of the reef
from which the storm had torn the great
floe, and here our three Eskimos busied
themselves in building a comfortable igfoo
or snow house, which would protect
them from the weather, and two smaller
ones were made alongside, one to store dogs
the meat to keep it from the hungry
and the other to protect the dogs them¬
selves. It is very seldom that these peo¬
ple ever build such snow kennels for their
dogs, however cold or stormy the weather,
but now the living snrav freezing on their
zur .-mo t/ir <v«iii ot sometmng to do
distract their attention from their
ous situation, determined them to build
snow house for these animals.
Their war vessel seemed to be of
ram order, and of (lie most
class, too, for it went crashing fore
aft into every other ship of its own
without regard to its size, and the
crow were often regaled with a view of
boreal battle in which missiles of ice,
score of times greater than Krupp
dreamed of. were hurled backward
forward by tho contending floes as
came crashing together.
The snow hut built and
being housed, they had time to
their situation fairly in the face, and
was not a very inviting one. The
of life, it is true, was not as great as
experienced persons might infer from
a situation, and thesegreat ice fields,
as oak. in the depth of an Arctic
very seldom went to pieces, and
they did it was because two greater
would crush them 1*4wo?n them, and
to the surviving fields the men
escai>e. But if the storm continued
they might get so far away that
lighter southern winds would never
them back, or at least before the
was on them and the ice became so
ten that it was likely to go to pieces in
storm from the more motion of tho
and be reduced *to such 6mall cakes
each and all were constantly
so that life would be a3 unsafe as that
a bug on a lot of floating sawdust in
rapid.
Again, their ship might bring into
foreign jxtrt from which, though
they could never return, or only after
long interval; for there was a case
tho Iwillik Eskimo, a man whom
had left that very morning, who,
twenty years before, had Ijoen
away by au ice floe ami landed
weeks later on the southern shore
Southampton Island, and from there
been a long, lonesome year and a
getting from tlie natives of that
land back to his beloved Iwillik,
his friends and relatives had long
given him up as having joined that
Eskimo majority in the land where
fountains spouted pure seal oil and
houses where built of blocks of
reindeer and walrus meat.
Tho only chance of sudden danger
in case the floe should, in some of
collisions with others, split
through their snow house anil drop
in the sea. But such a chance for a vio¬
lent collision was hourly growing
for toward the weather side a long
of other ice cakes torn from tlie
shore ice or blown out of some big
was forming a veritable ice pack—or
long but continuous string of ice cakes
all sizes, from the largest llocs to
smallest pieces, and oftentimes but a
hundred yards wide, but a number
miles in length—and where the
forms nature has built as good a
water to stop the furious waves
breakers of a sea as any ever devised
the art of man. I was once on a
vessel off the mouth of Hudson’s
and in a howling storm that made
impossible for a land crab like
to keep my feet under mo on the deck.
We were tacking up and
in front of an ice pack
to get through, an attempt
would havo been suicide if wo
plunged into the grinding ice. A
was finally found, however, and through
it we sailed, finding ourselves between
two ice packs a half a mile apart, but ex¬
tending for miles in length, and as soon
as we got through the sea was smoothed
dowii to half its dimensions. Getting
through the next ice pack tho water
as still as a river, although a wind was
blowing that sent us plowing along at
twelve knots an hour.
By 2 o’clock p. m. darkness had set in
and they were at their wits’ end to know
what to do for a light, although they had
all the walrus blubber needed from which
to extract tlie oil, but they were without
the semblance of a lamp in which to burn
it. Nannook, however, overcome this
by fashioning one from the inch thick
hide of the walrus, sewing it with seal¬
skin thongs cut from tho dog harness,
while wicking was had by cutting up
Ikqueesik’s woolen tobacco bag, and
matches were plentiful enough among
all my hired natives who smoked
tobacco, and both Nannook and 1k-
queesik stood well toward tho head
on tho fist. In a little while, there¬
fore. a bright enough fire for light was
had, though hardly strong enough to
heat the house to any extent, and they
were sitting on the snow bed discussing
the dismal prospects. For supper they
had raw frozen walrus meat, but tins
was not so bad, as it was often the staple
diet of their meals, and even at home
they could only expect to supplement it
with some hot soup and a piece of steam¬
ing walrus flipper. The principal worry
about their meat supply Mas quantity,
not quality, and the chances of renewing
that supply when the present gave out;
and this latter did not look so generally
bad, as the floating icepacks were known
to contain more seal and walrus than the
solid shore iec, as they had often re¬
marked when huutin., c.t tlie latter.
Should they go off their own little island
6f ice, however, to hunt for an animal
the drifting waters might separate
them from it so that they could
never return, and this proba¬
bility would confine their hunting
tours to a very limited area. So. take
it all in all, however dark and dismal
their outlook seemed, there were many
bright possibilities breaking through
blaek clouds, and after the first depres¬
sion was over they looked at thii.gs in a
far more cheerful light. They went to
sleep early to save their oil, curling upon
the snow bed in their reindeer clothes—a
not unusual circumstance, for they often
stay out at night to hunt, building a
small igloo to sleep in—tlie only change
being to withdraw their arms from their
sleeves and fold them on their bare
breasts, a common practice among these
people when in a chilly, fireless snow
house or taking a nap in their clothes.
It was almost certain that they would
not be missed the first night at the vil¬
lage sufficient to cause alarm, as nightly
absences of hunters are frequent when
watching a seal hole or when success has
Taken them far away.
Here they were, then, sailing liglfted away ir
the dead of night with a ship
that could carry thousands of tons o*
freight, and this, too, in the very midst
of an Arctic winter and despite the as¬
sertions of many newspapers of the At¬
lantic seaboard that, jealous of their
Canadian cousins ana their proposed
Hudson bay route to England, have con¬
stantly asserted that it ia only navigable
for a month or two during very favor¬
able summers. The stormy night wore
out its weary length, and when at 10
o'clock the day began breaking there was
some sign of cessation in the stormy
quarter, but they could hear the outlying
ice jtaek growling like distent thunder,
though their little island of was still
intact and in ccoapr.: b. ocath
water.
To their agreeable surprise the signs
kept on for the better, and some three
hours later—the length of the short day—
saw the storm erase and th< t evening
gave them a breeze from o south
which, coupled with the norti rn current
in the bay, sent them float mg toward
home, tho happiest crew in the Polar
seas. Ijite that night a Polar Ijcar broke
into the ir store igloo, before even tho dogs
were aware of its presence, and they got
out to save their meat. A scuffle ensued
with the dogs, an unsuccessful shot was
fired and bruin went scurrying away with
the dogs in hot pursuit, one of them
never coming back, but whether he was
lost on a cake of ice in the darkness by its
floating of him away, or the bear made a incal
was never known.
All that night tho long southern swells
of the sea broke on tho ice in a pleasant
air that sang of home, and next day, Ini-
fore the night set in they could make out
the tops of tho high hills of North Hud¬
son’s bay in the clear blue distance. That
night their floe struck something, and
the light grinding of tho edges showed
plainly, that many pieces of ice were
keeping them company on the outer edge
of the pack, and as this shortly ceased it
was evident that other incoming ice was
between them and tho sea, and that they
were stranded on the shore ice or not far
from it.
Next morning’s light revealed to them
that they had a mile of “pack” to cross,
which they carefully did, leaving the
walrus to keep house, anti this brought
them on the shore ice some fifteen miles
from homo, and if ever Eskimo dogs
were whipped and pounded this team
certainly home was, and nightfall saw them
giving a description of their peril¬
ous adventures, trying to prove the navi¬
gability of the Hudson's bay route in the
depth of an Arctic winter.—Frederick
Schwatka in New York Mail ami Express.
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Administratrix’!* Bali
By virtu* of an or tier granted by the Court
mgnem manor oetore flw
rt Hoos< in Spalding Couwy,
Georgia, doring on the first Tuesday _____ in February
next, the ■ legal legal boors hours of of tale, tale, the fob
lowing described property U-wit: Jftf
time of hia death, and bounced east brf K
S. Drewry Bowden and and 8. D. Williamson, gooth by i
B. Crowder and Mrs. J. L. Yarbrough, Maynard, west by W.
and north by
O Norton. Terms of sale, ca*h. 8old«ub-
jeet to a mortgage in favor of the Georgia
Lortn and Trust Company.
Thia property having been, on tba bit
Toe ; ,l*y in December, hid off by R Cad
Crowder for I?,800 and he having tailed to
comply with of hia t e terms of sale ai d pay the
amount bid and the Administratrix
having off* red him a deed, the above primer
ty is sold at the risk of aaid K. C. Crowder.
HARRIET 8. CROWDER,
Administratrix ot U. P. ('-■.* tier, de-'d.
*C00.
Administrator bale.
'1 > f . t. older gTauteJ by (lnt’Mlt
1 ' > ; aiding Conuiy, will fee sold
t>> i-gb■-i !'fbh - before this Court bonne
:4 • 'Untj, >« tlie tint Tuesday in
1 If.- r • ’.-.'.thin the legal kourafif sal*,
! pf t«ii} towit One hundred
. ml .me ;e <i it q'wrfcr acres of land more or
• - ,t! 1 lion . is)riel of Spalding County,
being 'be •« it h half of lot of land No. t*5,
b rutid.-d north by S. A. G. fi A, C, Kerlttt,
east the by land* of estate of J . K. Allen and on
<>oiiih arid wi st by Thom * Moore Sold
as the property ot James D„m tt, latoofanid
county, proved, now deoeaied. Property ic well im.
is well watered arid has some good
woodland on it. Terms cash.
N M COLLENS,
fbOo. Administrator.
February Sheriff’s Sales.
\y V 1LL BE SOLD ON THE FI K8T TUEB
Y day in February next, be ween the the le
Court gai houra House, of sale, before of the Griffin, loor Spalding of
in the city
bounty, Georgia, to-wit: the following described
property, lot the of Griffis,
One house uuU in vuty
containing one-fourth of an note, more Or
less, and known as the Thomas lot, bounded %
north by lot of Mrs Fannie Brown, west
Sixth by street, of south Perry by Williams. lot. of Mrs. Sold Thomas, the
cast lot aa
sion fereo, vs. T. A. Warren. Tenant in posse*-
legally notified. &J.W),
Also, at th • same tinr ml pi tee, one s»w
mill carriage, saw from, rirenh r saw, track
and frame, and large • T ana eveiy
piece conn °cted with the wm mill and sold
to be d* livared at 'he the pruttDes where ’he
saw mill is now located, in Line Creek dis¬
trict, at the r. A. Putman saw mi'!. Sold
by virtue of a mortgage, ft fa issued from
Spalding Superior F. Court in favor of W. M.
Blanton vs A. Putman. $3.00,
Also, at the same time and plsco, will “
sold one and one-fourth acres of labd,’ i
or It's*, in the second dlstnct ef Spa,
County. Georgia, by bounded road north by h C. aid
Osborn, ea-t a runt i g nor
south, sooth by a road runu ng enat and west,
and west by Col. W T Trammell, hold aa the
property of Wmren Fuller, to satiafy one ft
fa issued from the Justice Court of the loOlst
district. G. M., in favor of J. C King for tho *
use of Talbott brothers vi. Warren Fuller.
Levy made by G D. Tenant Johnson, L, C , an
turned over to me. in |*
legally Also, notified. time and place, i ___ Wit!
at the same
sold twenty a res of land in the northwest¬
ern corner of lot of land number ten in the
1067th District, G. M.,of Spald ng County,
bou ded north by a road dividing said
land from lot number eleven, on the east by
land of J. D Boyd, »nd south and west by a
part of said lot, blonging to 8. W. Leak.
Levied on and sold as the property of 8. W.
Leak to satisfy one fi fa issued from Cpald-
ing h> perior Court in favor ef Tenantinpnt- Lock wood &
McClintock r.-r* W. Leak.
session legally notified. $6.00.
A1 o. at tho same time and place, will be
sold fifty acres of land, being the east half
of one hundred acre* oil of lot number nine
ty six ku» wit a* part of Chatfleld lot, bound¬
ed ns follows: on the north by Richard Man-
ley, Ransom cast place*, by ae-, gtltweli and and west west tfc Keith, by by iand iand south cf of by Beaton Seaton Jobs
Grantlaud. Levied on and so d as the prop-
erty of R. A . Ellis to tatisfy ono fi fa lesued
from in he County Com t of Spalding County R.
favor of patapsco On*no Co. vs. A.
Ellis. Tenant in ix ‘-session legal v noti
lied. $6.00.
Also, at the same time and dace, win be
sold ten acres of land iu the 1065ih district
U. M., of *paidi g County, bounded on the
north by the Gr.ffin and Mt. Zion r ad, on
tbe west by Mr-. C, J. McDowell, a n don the
south and «-ast by T. W. Flynt, trustee for
»ife Lt vied on and sold a* the property of
T. W. Flynt, trustee, etc , to satisfy two T tax
ti fas in favor ot B ate and County vs. W
Flyut, trustee, etc. Levy made by J, W
Travis, T. U., and turned overtome. Ten
a»tin pofsesaion legally notified. and $8.00. be
/'iso, at tbe same time place, Will
sold ten acres land in the luohrii district
G. M , of bpalding County, bounded «n the
north by the Griffin and Mt. Zion toad, on
the west by Win, Waddell, and on the south
and east sold by land of J. C. of King. J. King, Levied sat¬ on
and as tbe property C. to
isfy one tax fi fa in favor of the made btatc J. and W.
County Travis, T. vs. ,J. U, King. turned Le*y by Tenant
C\, and over to^me.
in posses ion It-j ally notified. $3 00.
Al-o. at the same time and place, will be
sold one boose and lot in the city of Griffin,
containing one half acre more or lets, honbd
ed north south by W E, alley George, and west by hy J. Third Irby
street, Ilea. Levied by an east
on and sold to sutiafy two tax
li fas in favor of -t te a’d County vs. Dick
Thrash.- te vy made by J. W. Travis, T. C%
aud turned over to me. Tenant in possession
legal) notified. 93,00.
Also, a the same time and place, will be
sold one house and lot in the city of Griffin,
containing one acre land more or less, bound
ed north and east by land* of U. N. Lawton’s
estate, south by Nettie Matthews and west
by Hill sticet Levied on and sold as the
property of Dock'1 hrash, to satisfy two tax
fi fas in fare: of State and County vs Dock
Thrash. Levy made by J W Travis,T.
and 1 umed o-.-r to me. Tenant in posses¬
sion legally i - t.lied $3 00.
L 3. CONN ELI, Sheriff B, C.
/"hRDINAJ:. S OFFICE, " psldino Cock-
V/ ty, Geo ..jia, Jan. 9tb, 1888.- W.B Hud
son, admini trator, baa apt lied te me for let
ter* of dismission from the estate of 1 bos.
Lyon, late of said coon'y, • ec*-ased.
Let ail persons concert ed show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of aaid < ounty,
at my office in O ittin, on ihe first Monday in
April, 1888, by ten o'clock a. m., why such
lettr rs should not be granted
$6.15. E W HAMMOND, Ordinary.
Notice to Heirs.
To the heirs of Shatteen C. Mitchell, of
Spalding County, deceased: John H. Mitch¬
ell, e ecutor of the last wlll»nd testament of
Bhatteen C. Mitchell, deceassi, has made ap
plication to have a aelthmcnt made be¬
tween hints* If, as exccu'nr. and tbe heirs of
said deceased Snch setik-meut wil be mad*
before the Court of Ordinary of Monday Spalding
onnty, Georgia, on the first in
March, 1888. Let all persons interested and In
said estate be preea»t at that time repre
sent their claims against W. said HaMMOND, estate.
K.
Janmry l#tb. 1*88-98.70. Ordinary.