Newspaper Page Text
The Only Remedy
ton
Contagious Biootl Poison.
r! fi , - [ ] H |{ * ■' l i Hi -•■* -* t fi*i!‘ ! .....I ‘ >■ I
v ";; ' ‘i ,i i.y mo in* ibysioUiu l*ut , »n<! ii hm-i
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’•' oii-.t reUi-f. : I’.iiallv trimt Um swift
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tj ‘,:;.,:; ei . a.i »<»«.£ «*««* <•««<» *»»
li 'JL*KKKT. editor an<l vr, .; or « *
it;
fur v®w» fioraa five *-• w year*
. i With I - -.i-', *■’•• tt* to
f.V-iell Si -erased i l llm •-•■'- -v 1 ,r la wy ' ' paper u “ i ': ior:.*>rval «»Viu*
5.' <». •*. would it
?'*,*»»» ™ i roncloUa,! I fry a to nt
any em-:.cy in tin- itu •>...-. I
. ; *!l usliiK i! according to ..Ircctkms
Swle«oc'.s4 L„. result. I am must mxhM -:.y
r {eel notv win UUe o aiw“9. a youtif
t l,e ease fZtB&®s®Sttz
U «', : 7 IVoi lil. Ill North Avenue, Chicago,
nailer ilnteot June 12, HAT. writes: ‘I deem
It mv duty to 1 hank excellent M'ifto uv-dlctnc. r (ho earn loon- I re-
..elved from vour
Equation of I I used use-1 his o» six six „, bnnhsa botttos which he of of said his hla stuff staff was
ksuie .Mire StoraT'iWmf cure. cure. ,v(.rso ; 1 o time. At lest 1 hot
, —.... .
! -id 1(1 despaired that t int of a cure. medteinehad I met a
J.ured friend ...■end \vi;o win) t 1 . me me your tiie druggist
id in. I worn to Rome Here,
i -. iu and d • lull'h-d your medicine.
-lantlv suid mnt'v- lee bo'tles, and I am
-. 1 .,feetSy cured. 1 write this for the
, f -iitfereu., to prevent their being
....iii ,'i false benefit representation*. derived from I thank
vuu 1 f the your
lie. dieli i
!‘r. J.
Has ta ruling extensive eootagfc practice,
iii l.u *he inevitable,
• • who kuivv almost
!.,;:, is liuaneniiy ua:.a-*'*a» discovery of B. S. meicury 8
uel'-ome your . us a
i oil * 1 > huiifltnity. The medlcnl profession,
, a ,,vs wavv of proprietary medicines, la
, -if-y glow Iv. and iu some cases blood secretly,
, . u«o of 8 . s. s. bi cases of dis-
• •! course a medicine that- cures
J , ’. . in.: iii.- -ils.n-.li-!■." worst < rm must purify tha
- .1 ,if i-\ ■ rv yktn Diseases mailed
■>. utlaci-n Ihn-d in- I
r Vug Sven, r Si KCIrn.' t *>.,
iirawerS, Atlanta, Ga.
vuix. • h ..... w ,a*wmr,wiBuiy:w»icngasKnvsontr
No . Afhfsriisoments.
(..A ft * X ! A \ 0 : U Sample Tueatment Ilf rDITC tt
. lli Wo mail enotiffb to
oiliB. s. Ii.U'OBBTtCK ><: t.’«., T7S
i!r ■ ! - . XcM.ur'f, N, J.
V MONTH ant! BOARD for B Britrht
Yoiifi- Vie a or Ladies in each coun¬
ty. V, W. ZSIOI.ER d - ca, I'liila-
Jidphiu, l‘a
ilEi’SlEOMlM
TURBINE
•\|]
1/0'','3
‘ . W ILLf.S I RATED and RE CiUPTlVE
ft : AL'V.iUE MEN r FREE.
_Addreh- YORK, 1’A.
‘FaRKER ’8
HAIR BALSAM
CV ^ns-n r<'A bc^wtiftes the hair.
i’x oi:ictt.w -1 iunt growth. G»*ay
No/er Fiiif? .Restore
| Hair foii^Ycufhfu! Color.
Cures pea!p < 1 i*< -a «osanci hair fallingf
50c. at I\ | -!.i,r c , l.-fs.
The safest. hind! suro?t V.«. v.opnns. r 'ores. Bunions &e.
n.'.u . fv u-t
itoos all pain. Bns.sr. .j cf>iafcat :o Jl; • i« *'r- Jicvcraito
.© cure. 15 cents at Bnifr” ! * 3. j liscoz & Co.» N. y»
OMG rnmrr
EXTRACT of MEAT
iNVALI ABLK FOR DYSPEPSIA
UsKilic likiiii.
liMim M la.
Alsu for tiuvoi injr Soups, Saucc.i and Made
>i<he;.
CENUINE only with Baron Liebig's
SIGNATURE in BLUE INK across
label
old 'by all Storekeeper.-*, Oi'oosr- and
.huijf Uts.
1EMORY
-tWIAK ES-
SUCCESS
It IkH ly unlike arntirial ny.trin .
tn.v bonk lrarncil in out* rrading,
'la.-Ri-b of iONT at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit
i'00 at Philadelphia, large lasses of Colum¬
bia Law students, at Yale, Wellesley, Universi Ober.
tin, Cnive sity of DcnnMichigan E-idorsedby Rich
'y, <rd Chautauqua, Hrf Ac., Ac. Hons. W. W.
i to.'i. the Scientist, As-
or, Jud th P. Benjamin, Judge (iibso'> Dr.
drown, E. H. Cook, Principal N, Y perfect {state
Normal College, Ac. The system is
iy taught by correspondence. Prospectus
>-t yam: from PROF. LOISKTTE,
337 Fifth Aye., New York.
- S3s-Al:ok:li: Tsjetalil* itedUise pvt up ia
all liquid diseases fora ever discovered.
:i cures arising from bUkutsbcss
i id > d impurities. A safe, sure, and gentle
x:-;u-. cleansing the system tlinriuielOv.
'. i-l.l style is slightly bitter. The New is
i -a--; i t > thet.-t.*te, anti the best tneificine in
r! f.i)- ejiiblrcn. Price 1^1.00
T.-irnwr >> r»i;i <; <•«.. x, y.citv
MAH WANTS BUT LITTLE
Here below, but he Wanis 1 ha littfe
mighty quick. A
LITTLE WANT,
or a big one is promptly filled by ad¬
vertising in the Daily or
Weekly NEWS.
IMPRESSIONS OF NASSAU,
Ait lshnul of l a*njtitttf r Not Iir
\\Y:iy j !i»* I.nzy i nimbi taut*.
Nassau fs ore of the Mjiaitesi of tim
Dahariuv id.inds, covering a length of
twenty mile’, by an average of five miles
in wuith. The city is built, facing the
north, upon UK- -! »;k* of a rulge, running
wu>st to ea f. ai„i nearly 100 feet at it*
highest. Tlii- wiil ia thin, the island con¬
sisting of an okl coral re<-f. elevated grml-
tiftlly troiu the ocean, and during that
jK-riol subjeciod to the action of tho
pocketed. waves, leaving it honeycombed and
This roek is compact, of sand
made troin disintegrated corals, yellow¬
ish creamy in color and soft in texture,
bo that it is quarried hv sawing and chis¬
eling, lieeilining considerably harder by
exposure. Tim surface of the rock is
covered with loo-” (tieces, excts.ulingly
irregular iri form. Over this is a very
Uttlo soil.
Tho streets are graded through this
natural rock, with natural gutters and
walks. The streets at right angles to the
water front cross the ridge generally
through deep cuts in the natural rock in
order to lessen the grade. The dwellings
of the better sort are square or oblong
square, seldom more than two stories
high, with low ceilings and low pyra-
midical roofs. These houses are always
surrounded on at least twa sides with
broad verandas, closed in with slats to
keep out the light. For this reason the
houses appear larger than they are.
Dormer windows abound. The house
colors are stone, light yellow, cream; the
blinds are brown or green. High stone
walls, with broken glass bottles cemented
into the ridges, inclose tho houses and
gardens; ornamented openwork gate¬
ways afford a glimpse within.
The cocoanut, the royal tho palmetto
and the silver leaf palms abound. The
giant Cuba, or silk cotton tree, oleanders
of large size, enormous amaryllids, with
the many species of the citrus family,
hang up their yellow fruit against the
sun. The russet japodilla just coming into
fullness add a special charm to its back¬
ground of dark green waxy leaves. The
vegetation seems rather sub-tropical than
thoroughly tropical. This results not
from want of heat, may be, but need of
soil.
The city of Nassau is extremely pict¬
uresque with the quaint narrow streets,
white, deep gutters cut from living rook,
large dwellings, with tha lower or street
story, for warehouse or shop, the outside
stairways and balconies? Every building
has some special individuality aliout it
which adds much to the sum total of the
charm one finds in quietly roaming round
tlie streets.
Here it la literally always afternoon.
No one works. Ask a question and ii
will be answered the day after to-mor¬
row. The few shops open about break¬
fast time, and are then shut up during
that meal, and breakfast time is not
early. 1 went into a wholesale store at
noon time. The one clerk was fast
asleep in his chair, and I left him undis¬
turbed. The blacks, seemingly twenty
to one of the whites, sit lounging, gab¬
bling, chaffing, talking loud and laugh¬
ing, but I have not seen one at work.
The English majesty of law is thor¬
oughly respected here. The principal
crimes—profanity, jawing and slander—
are among the colored races, and they
enjoy defending themselves at law.
Shops close at 5 p. m. Saturday is a
half holiday and Sunday a Puritanical
one.
Back of Nassau proper, over the ridge
and down on to lower levels swarm the
colored people. Their small garden
pieces are walled in with the loose pieces
of coral rock. Their cabins are small,
with one or may be two rooms, of rock
or coral, palmetto thatched. The gar¬
dens are bare, honeycombed coral rock,
where with a crowbar the banana, the
cocoanut or maize is planted. They are
unkempt, unthrifty, dirty; but every¬
where kind mother nature covers the
garden walls with lichens and the con¬
volvulus. and the great lobed leaves of
the bread fruit, tho alumna and the
palms give to the eye an ever varying,
an ever entirely satisfying picture.
These cabins of the colored people four
inheritance from Spanish cruelty) liter¬
ally swarm with children. The tra-
' ditional stair of from five to twelve little
pickaninnies is found in every cabin.
“Massa, gib me copper for bread!” They
arc inveterate beggars. They say they
can't get work, or if they do get any but
little is paid twenty-five to fifty cents a
day. The truth is, there is no desire,
)>erhaps no incentive, to work, no ambi¬
tion to satisfy. Hunger is easily satisfied
by fruit, sweet potato, yams and fish.
But little fruit is exported, and that from
the outlying islands, not from here.
Sponge fishing is the one industry w hich
here is active.
For the climate. I would judge we had
in the United States no spot equal to this
for unending summer. For i>eople ad¬
vanced in life who desire to avoid our
winters, for tired brain workers, for
cases of low vitality, for the beginning of
throat and lung troubles, I should say
Nassau is the place.—Fred 8teams in
Detroit Free Press.
Self Mass.age for Dyspepsia.
This treatment requires much perse¬
verance and practice, otherwise it may
to some extent prove a failure; but re¬
newed vigor will always be in propor¬
tion to the practice. Be not discourag* -d.
First thing in the morning and last thing
at night rub the abdomen down the left
side and up the right in a round circle,
also nib down the breast; now pace
across the room once or twice, and then
6nap the lower limbs, like a whip lash,
for exercise. Now twist the lower limbs,
first on one side, then on tiie other, awl
rock up on the toes. Now for the lungs
and abdomen; first, take in a half breath,
then exhale all the air posable, then fill
the lungs to their full capacity, walk
across the room and back, at the same
time throwing the arms back. Now in a
half breath send out every particle of air
till vou sec the abdomen working like a
bellows, and you will soon become a deep
breather. For more extended practice
in deep breathing the morning iiefore
rising is a good time, provided tlcre is
full ventilation and that the air inside is
as pure and fresh tluit *si the outside.
Before a good fire wash the hands and
face, wet the back of the nook, arms and
lower limbs nightly, and rub dow n with
n coar •> towel, ibis is sufficient for a
begin a r. but entirely inadequate for the
old. chronic dyspeptic.—J. N. Semple in
Herald < i Health.
.Nnft't DomMtlc Spy Hyrtn— I
l found that the aaeaect wav t«* keep
Persian servants or employes in order
was to encourage the spy system and
listen to informers among them. A»
they are quarre’s'Wne and jealous, after
acting on tins principle many of my difli-
culties were lesnened. bo great is Un¬
feeling which sometime- exists in a TV.
gian menage among the serve r' =*. t .1 1
have known of n. wi nan to down
leeches under her h i hritig
complaint of having In k on the
head and grievously hurl hv a fell •>
The charge secim d . i«*-.:t to !j*
substantiated and the all*-el * • «-n«l*-i-
pUtiislied, when the jiulg". a • f th
character of the Persian don. i* r* *1
an examination. It was th > .ercd
that the IiKknI streaming <1 ■ Tl, face
of the moaning woman iv.-n c.imswl by
leeches actuaUy puncturing In i t*unplt*s
at that very lime. Tin* *.c«- was vii—
miswxl. S. G. W. Benjamin’.* fitter.
A Drunken Man** Memurj.
1 remember a Cambridge man who.
though not given to drinking, and now
**a solier man among his sons, ’’ was more
tlian once overtaken by liquor during the
time when he had yet to learn his brain's
exceptionally limited power of resisting
the action of intoxicants. This man
would not only l>e unable to recall what
had happened during tho time when he
was intoxi' used, hut a number of pre¬
ceding events which had taken place
while he was still perfectly sober, iiis
friends would tell him of things which
hail hapiiencd a full hour before ho was
“overtaken” (as the quaint expr* don
lias its, which had altogether i asset! from
his remembrance. Ho lu&i to say- that
bis recollection was clear up to a certain
point, Ixwond wliich everything sis-meil
“veiled.”—Knowledge.
An Introduction in Mexico.
When two jieople are introduced in
Mexico, ii l-.tli are women, they ex¬
change a 1 i :!11 t-aihraco and palmndita or
little pat on the hack; where one * r loth
are men. u ham! .shake is in order. And
beside (lie formula, “Let me present,”
etc., of the officiating party-, each of
tie'sc introduced gives bis name and his
addtv-vvith the formal, **Your obedient
sw **-.Vt y our order .” or tome
such •:* • <•: ;. d phrase. By those who
have il'.’ei i i from not hearing the name
of a sli mumbled or slurred over
by Iii- int;*' -oncer, this custom will 1 o
tsoe i i ban I. • merits.—Lor, -San Fran¬
cisco < in-,, uVle,
’*(•<* < -;i»r*-f*: • r : u.
All kiudsof India sweetmeats i r<» tnudo
of hrov.-u Mi; ir. many of them molded
into v ariou , sIurkv < i led- and U«sK
Tub- e.Ve it!;:'.* . •d with honey,
ami tvi.-.; I imo f- Th* u
there are !• d e! ad *......i but-
ter. Th: ; :.d
Ulelt i l 1 I .1* ■ ■. ) . ■ hv tho
high . ' I v
t! .* ef
< lirildrcii
Often l ied roine *: fa * "'lle'lt’u lid to e to
avert approaching e r, or t i vw
co'ir, headache, i k uui * lion,
uysviitery and th- «< u.ptaicl . dent to
childhood . Let 1li<* children tak * Kimtnone
Liver Regulator an i k.-ep w. !. Il h> purely
vegetable, not unph.i ant to the tistoand
saVtotaKe aioncor in t"uneethin willi other
m jdicitie.
“Jtorf.ii os itv r.S’* flier,,
Hears out rats, mice, roaches, tints
cd-bugs, beetles, inseets, fekunks, chipmunks, jack
abb its, sparrows, gophers,
roths, moles. 15c. At ilruggisls.
“ROLlln ON « ihtNS.o Quick
-k for Weils’ “Hough on Corns.”
tiie f, complete cure. Corns.warts,bunions.
5c. Druggists. K. 8. Weils, Jersey City.
“RoTCh ON IT! II.”
“Kough on Itch’’ cures skin humors,
frosted eruptions, feet, ring chilblains, worm, tetter, itch, salt ivy poison, rlictun,
barber’s itch. 50c. E. fLTVell.?, Jersey City.
“ROrOIlllN 1 \T \RKII”
Corrects offensive odors at once. Com¬
plete euro of worst diphtheria, chronic cases; unequal- ihroat,
|d as gargle f .r :-orn
foul bm.tltCatariiiul throat mice. .:ou.. JOc
Advice ti IV.olhers.
M i. Win dow’s Ho mod Hvec
for chiklrcu (*•* Iking, is the prcscriptio '
of one of ’ho b -t female nurses an i
physicians in !i Uin’ed Htatcs, an l
has been u- . >i r 1 1 v y*. i h with neve
failing snee ss by millions of *n othor
for tbeir cl ilihi Durii the process
of teethii • its v •-in- m inc tieulablo.
It r Ic-vo - Ih- cl . li fri t;- },U 1 U. tom s dys
entery aid -i . ,-t\,a i, giipi* g in the
bowels, an •• c-.lic I’.v giving
health loth »,iu-l r> st- the moth r.
Price 25 cents, a bottle. 1 r*. hvvvlv
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
All person? in Uhted to the-e-t;,o fS V*’
Maugham, late of hpa notified <li*-g« **t:«t .Gearz n,
deceased, are herein to «--dl on die
undersigned and luakc ?etti- men*, el u.*ii in
debtedness at once; and all per o- I,".vuia
demand* again?t"said are notitinl to
present their eh ini* properly proven.
-J. J. MAN’I.HAM, Ad i ini-tml' /
aprfwtj
A GREAT YEAR
lu the historv of the Cnitol -" to*. 1 ? now nj-.n
us. Every person of intelligence desto« to keep
pace with tne coarse o( its event*, there i« no
better vt uy to do so than to subscribe for
Tiie Macon Telegraph.
IU news faeiii % are uxurarp«APe*l h*
.
in the South, In addition to the fa
ated PressdispaV-hes. it haa social ail i*np <rr« t '*nt
»*nf« by w ire and letter from ( ' ‘
points in (leori ia and the neighbor»ug J • 1?< > ,
Dnrlng the prescut * g • (
lugum will be the most Important and i •»
tf resting news centre in the eon:.‘; * *
Washington O»rre«pondenee of the T* f
the very that can be haul.
Its regular correspondent furnl*.; it .
y#\vn arut gossip in fnll dispatches. J * r q-v
ial letters from Hon. Ai. o«
member of Congres* tre 1 N* w York, l le
C arpenter, and W. A. ^’roHut, 1 \
known newh^aper writers at the capital./*.•»
cusa Use livest and most important iMues ot tu
da the v. Democratic Tariff E< !•
TGovraph ft n r- •■
pajrf-r. ft is tlioroughiy in line with the po**y )
of President Clsvelaad and the Democrati
party In the coming national campaign t:
Telegraph iciegrapn will win not nut. onl.v - - give ad ■ the y, new*. • t
- the 1
will discus? ail pub ic issues from -ta;
)x>int of gemiiBo Deuioctatic u
»..oace.
one year, * - - * * * f
-
Oaily, six bmibUk, .... -to
Dally, three months, - - • ’ 3
Daliy, one month, - - 1 *' f
Weekly, one year, • • - * •
Term*; Cash In advance. Ad lraaa
TULfc XtLEtlEAl'll
U*o*e Gtotwn
VF.HY OUGHT circumstances.
I:;'.«»!.f U Titey llavn l^etl to (ir»v«
:**})».'rtauit Ihum.
1 > s t ') lira, when Leopold van
1-' ii « ; to collect facts for hia
hi ■ • o - polar accident occurred in
I-*- > vii. A bridge gave way one
morfe ; ; ■' tome |»>rents were «wejrt
•ovr; ii :iu- current beueath. Van
lli. : ’ w,., absent at the time, on
hi ‘ r • inquired into the details of the
cam ;i> ;< v. ‘‘1 -sw the bridge fall.”
Mi’1 •••'•'’ <•;’ t,ie neighbors. ”A heavy
waj.i had ... j a .J over it and weak¬
en d j: i wo women were on it when it
fed. :n ■ -T i> r mi a white horse.’* "I
san it tab.' i *e!ared another; ‘‘but the
v.-nin 1 . ■ ’ - l over H two hour? pre-
viou -. ’I to. t iiassengena were children,
andtliei... i wns a civilian on a black
horse.' ■ • ow," argued Von Kanko. l, if
it i * i '«• in learn ths truth aliout
an :•*■■ which ha piqued at broad
nooiiuu. ■ (wemy-fiiur hours ago, how
can ' < • • any fact to lie certain which
is '!iic.. i d ;u the darkness of ten een-
tii' v i'o this trivial incident, which
to in. ■ > ; ms would have Isunc no
tei.Mii.. ,i a- much of his caution and
ill!)': ' : • ,y.
A i m i .icnt-;' consideration will
coir, e e l i hat some of the most
roni: • x x in history haxo liingul
njx>!i ■ .-! ; l iii iimstanceH. A glass
of win*- (. m stance, changed the I lis¬
ten i ! ■ for nearly twenty years.
Louis Niilippe, king of the French, had
a-son. tug Duke of Orleans, and heir to
the throne, who always drank only a
certain number of glasses of w ine, lie-
cause even one more made him tipsy.
On a memorable morning he forgot to
count the number of his glasses, and
took one more than usual. When enter¬
ing bis carriage he stumbled, frightened
the horses, and causing them to run. In
attempting to leap from the carriage his
bead struck the pavement, and he swii
died. That glass of wine overthrew the
Orleans rule, confiscatM their property
of £20,000,000, and sent the whole fam¬
ily into exile.
If Mr. Grenville had not carried, in
17G5, his memorable resolution as to the
expediency of charging stamp duties on
the plantations of America, the western
world might still have been under Brit-,
fell rule. In connection with this mat¬
ter. there is another plight, albeit re¬
mark aide, circumstance, which may be
told iu Thackeray 'h own words. '‘It
was si rati.: .” says he, •‘that, in a savage
fore.-t of Pennsylvania, a young Virgin- waken
iain i.ie r should tire a shot, and
up a war v.-i i -!i «as to last for sixty
years, which was to cover his own country
and pass into Europe, to cost France her
American colonies, to sever ours from us
and create the great western republic; to
rage over tho old world when extin¬
guished iu tho new; and of ail the myr¬
iads engaged in the vast contest, to leave
th<> prize * t the greatest, fame with him
who struck the first blow.”
If the nose of Cleopatra had been
shorter, says Pascal, the condition of the
world would have been different. His
meaning is, that it Cleopatra had had a
nose short to deformity she would hava
failed to attract Antony, who would not
have been drawn into the conduct which
culminated in tiie loss of the buttle of
Actium, whk<A loss made way fur the
close of the Roman republic iu the inau¬
guration of the Homan empire.
Dyspepsia lias been the cause of many
momentuous crisis. A leg of mutton is
said to have controlled the tide of Leip-
sic’s battle; and the consequences of tho
indigestion of a certain duchess are pro¬
verbial.
The great failure of the potato crop in
Ireland cannot Ik* called a slight circum¬
stance, yet it was comparatively slight
compared with the momentous changes
which ii brought about; for the repenl of
the corn laws was hastened by the potato
famine. As Lord Beaconsfieid has ob¬
served: ••This mysterious but universal
sickness of a single root changed the his¬
tory of tho world."
Many men have l»een drawn to their
destiny by the most trivial occurrences.
Fcnimorc t'ooper lxcamo a novelist
through hi* wife’s challenge. One even¬
ing, while reading a novel, lie threw it
down, saying: ”1 believe 1 could write a
better book my self. ••Let rnc seo you
doit,” said his wife, with a smile. In a
few dais he hail written several chapters
of ‘•Precaution." w hich, when finished,
he publish'd at his own expense. The
novel attract • ! little attention; but it
gave t'oo|iev an inkling of his capacity
for storv writing, and the "Spy.’’ his
next novel, appealed so strongly to the
patriotic sympathies of his countrymen
that it Uvmum* a great success. Haw¬
thorne. was induced to write the |
“Scarlet Letter ” bv a remark <-f his |
wife.
If Cowley had not found tin; • Faery
Queen” in his mother’s parlor it is just
possible that he would never have licen a
poet. Giotto, one of the early Florentine
painters, might have remained a rude
shepherd lov if a sheep drawn by him
upon a s'-'.‘S' had not attracted the notice
of Cim hue. Opie might have perished
m ol*i u ii v it he liad net looked over the
slioule*T of his co: :u ., *Jat<*s. i
while Ii ■ was drawing .. betterly. Hail i
his fi-i id mid companion escaped the
thumh rs;. .: ni - :it F.rfurt, Luther might
have be. a .i lawyer. — Chauihr ts’ .Pair
n:d.
• Tl»;«n They I **<1 to Ik*.
1 )■ ”.e m- isuretl a great many Houi.ui , ;
cotliiis. : ! my average shows that tin* ,
Homan <>-;l I not liave greatly exe<eded
five feet '.ve in<-lies. 1 ii taking measure¬
ments <>f . icient armor, I find that the
English ariatoeraey liave decidedly in-
croased i i average lieight within 500
years.
1 ineamire'i twenty-live mummies in
tiie British muReum as nearly as I couid
through the eases, making estimate fur
wrappif;.;. and I found the averare height
of mob. sixty-one inches, fum.-d' fittr- !
-
five iiH-le-.
The mummy of the celeb ated Cleo¬
patra m asures about fifty-four inches,
about the Ivight of the present European of
girl of 1 The most ancient mummy I
an Egyptian king yet discovered meas¬
ured tiftv-tv,-{. inches.—Nature. :
. ,
A Tnuttp's Xodcst
Farmer's Daughter—I suppose you
want my father to take you in for the
season?
Tramp—No, mi**,; if you will kindly
sew a sliirt onto this button. ;hat’s ail I
; ask —Hisrpor ? Bazar.
WEAK *££VKM
m •fv«4i]
IIH 55 RHEUMATItM
clery ss««ar«!
KIOMEY COI
J»*r> anrOwK.
tt«* li < J Witt fcJdury* to i
eor*ti«- RulfcN psuer. <—
tontes. it _
kvtecy f<*uj-ftiot*.
@|>ound DYSPEPSIA
CONSTIPATION
tujxK*** C«jj an Ook*oc*» la out * eatkar
f* be. It la
few*#* ti
iwa.
xL Ncrvout Proatrce.on, Necvout K iidacha, »* ky imtaM iklMi.
* I n _ ~ L,‘« I ,, (it — . ft tt t, ’ —. *, a * i* a,, t0 iam *> b ^kP-.O- ck f*ha I Of IE •
and kh-um,U.rntot>r.- ** rfcx ** °®’ ^ OrumtiM*
p«p«ia, soil a’.l afTcctioai cf tha Ktioiyt. WELLSf RICHARDSON tk CO* Pfop‘j
ttU&UXGT0X TT
Ms!.
I; * Ktrialu *v f‘ ii f
vs,
J . U’. rd i. -1 r.rd, 1
Stale . f iii* a .la. .-*• ■!.!:!.u • .mnly In tl.c
Sopcrior ro*»rt. F.-t mart Term 1‘W
Ii i.' icrr 11 j ; v* < at* - ■ ■ • - * * i
I etili.it. *if 11 <’ Kin.t- ? * •’* ’. lb : : fi.i .1
of Mo ! rni'f*, d i ed tin I'llUiia*. *n - ' ■
, 1 . \V \\ aid .V l. -!. Maid < *•« ’ > . ' u.
said B. C Kmaid a Sob »» * •■■■.: en i .
tiind, to «it: Fifty non* of bu d -,iu .1
Akin? DRlriii, !■ i id'Liur c u ly, i.’a .
bound.*»l North l.y tbe taii L •** 1 i'l " -*.
Kastl.y.Ino War’.l, Houtli l*> Burn.) file V.i
dox and West iiy /x*d Uardncr, ‘<*r * ur
pose of * onring tWpairncnt J \Y *>f Ward .1 promis," A I .1
rv m, to made bv the »nid i
Ward to the -nid I! .Kinani ,v l*oti d*w> on
lilt* I St it-y of jN.iv. mbi r.l ss 7. for the sum rf
l ifn Dofhus (jfSUJKl) and Ninety-six Cei-.ts
vvlii* it note is n w du * nrui unpaid.
It i» ordered that the cu'd.l. W Wnrd.V I
.). Wan! do pay Into this Court, by tiie lira!
day- of next term the principal, interest and
anil costs, due on -aid note or *how egaar, if
any tin y h *. to tho ronlrnrjr, or that in <h-
fault thereof foreclosure *4 be raid granted Mortgage, to the I
said U. < ’ Kinurd A Son
an 1 the <.put.; of redemption of I be raid .) W i
Ward A I. .1 Ward theirin be forever Irtrred, ‘
ami that serviel) of this Ward rule l»e j.eifeitod publication on
said J W. Ward A f. -I. try
in the (inirt iM Nkwh or service upon thwn
l.y the 1 : erit 1 "f said county three mouth?
hefor tiie »u xt term of thUcourt
JAMES S. BOYNTON, F.
Judge H. C. C.
Frank F'ynt and Diamuke Ac Coikns, i’eti-
Uoners Att’s
A lrui‘ copy from the Minuter of thi< Court,
' M. TuoMAS, I’lerk.
rioamlm Am.
Rule Nisi.
II ' Ii *1 ;rd ,V Foil (
1. .1. Ward A .1, W. Waul. )
Stan of Georgia, Spalding County. In tho
Superior Court, February Term, 1*3*.
it. being represented to the Court by the
petition of B.«’. Kinurd A Sou that by Deed
of Mortgage, dated the filth day of (let. 1(11*7,
-aid I. ,j. li. Ward V Kinurd A J. W. A Ward Son conveyed certain tract to the of
.1
hind, low it: fifty in re* of land lying in Akins
titoimt of Spading county, tin. bounded us*
Mil,tt : North by hinds of Bill W tie, Kart by
Jno. Ward, South by Barney Maadox and
W ■ !! j Zed Gardner, for the purpose of re-
entii ;’i.e pnyment of ft j r> mi-sory note
mad • by tire said i.,1. War*l *V J. W, Ward to
the -aid 15. C jvinard Son due on the 15th
d . of November l >i ' l 7, for the min of Fifty
I>,: and Ninety-? 1 ! cents (thO'.Hi), which
not* rnivv due and unpaid. said I. J. Ward A J.
i ,s or.lr red tl.at tiie
W, W,, ril do pay into this C ourt, by the first
day of tho next" term the principal, interest
and eo-t?, due on snid note or show eanse,
if any they have to tiro contrary, or that in
default thereof for, e osure bo granted *-o the
.laid B. ('. Kinard A Son of said of Mortgage, said i.
and the 1 quity of rcrieniptioa the
.1. Ward W .1 W. Ward therein be forever liar-
rtd, and that service cf tbi? rule lx* perfected
on id 1 I Ward A .1. W. Ward according
to law by pahiieatfon in the Gisirrm Nows,
or by service upon I. J W ard At J. 55. Ward
of a c ipy three montiis pr.or to the next
term of this court. BOYNTON,
,IAMBS a
Judges. O. F, C,
Frank F >i;t and Iti-muke A ( aliens, J’eti-
tinner? Att’o.
At rnc copy from the Minute? of this Court.
Wm. M. i riOMys, Clerk S. ( . H. C.
am loam tin
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
, v RDiNAUY'S OFFlt K, Sf»LiuxJ CofN-
* / (inonoiA, April 2d, 1888.—J. -I.
Maugb; ;n. :h , driiinirttrnt<,r on estate of S,
V\ Mnirgl,mi, il, house 1 eased, and lm? lot, applied and fourteen to me
f.,i tenv to -ell a
acre-of tu d, wore or lc?R, on extension of
Sixth stieet and iidjoiiung lands off. R.
Mil'-, Mr?. Kincaid and others, known as the
late residence of 8 . W Mnngharn, deceased,
for distribution arid to pay debts of the estate
\ I j r r-' n- concerned are cited to apjrenr
at ti Court “i riidirrary of said eounly, with
in the time required by law, to show 1 an?.' if
any there l<e «hy swell application should
not be granted.
E W HAMMOND. Ordinary.
/ ' ARDINARY'B t OFFICE, Spxi.nixa lr»5,—I. Corx-
tt, Ukohoia, April 2d, J.
Munglinm a? administrator on estate of J <’.
Maugham, dm eased, ha? app led to me for
leave to -el. a house and lot containing two
sen - in. ieor h-?*, in the c.ty of Griffin, situ¬
ated on Broadway street bounded, east by
Mat berry Scott, south by an alley and west
i,y « running from Broadway to 80 I 0 -
m - - l belonging to said «-?tatefor the
pu: c* of distributioo-
• r-:,n? conc erned are • ited to appear
• 1 : i Court of Ordinary of said county with
iu t.me required by law application to -how -hould cause
if: . there be why such
not granted.
K. W. H AM MOND, Ordinary.
0 .'iri.V.Ui Vs f/FFJC E. PPAUuna ( ocar-
tv Gcoroia, March kl. 1888.—M. O.
Bov* doin, ‘diuitiistiator of R. K. Foster,
o’ i ;, d to me tor let ter* of I)timission
;o e-titta of IL K Foster, late of said
dy, deceased.
t ril; persons concerned show cause t>e-
1 . r.rt of Or oiK'y of said county, at
(iriltin. 011 tie first Monday in
V a m., why such
; c „■ r .- ted.
; . L C II AMM'»NN'D, Ordinary.
MSGEOBE KILLLE
1st; li. 1 age in Austin, Ter. t
Nn . '.-:*tin, Texas, i- . •
He j > iswi" tha ■ >• *
failed nre, over 50o person- iu au<i
nrotn •* arc now csingit. Kend f°r
circular <■; . .» treatment slio*Jig sworn
statements and testimonial - 1 of cures made.
Adres*
ill- ill:
Rulf’i XIhI.
Di.iir is. Mar in ,v !'. r i.re (
W. 11! T. 1 )lor. \
it.' ftf (ir. Court, rjU, SpsMi#f (’"iiiilj term, In the
lit- , r February I8W.
I* being rri'reM-tite Martin i to the riwrl Perdu* by tbepe. by
In: 1 sen, A that
I • • d of Mortgage da:nl the llf*h day o
•iu Dnrii ,.,r;.l' ii. Atari '.,\VM Il.Tnylor conveyr eertniu dtonoW
b A Ve'dus “a parrel
pari it land containing Ho. thirls lie (Id acres beiug
.-f tot 11-. in UU Distrtii Of
Spate*, las county, ti#, tom 11 dad outlie Bom
l.y Jack North 1 raw by lev, I* on L. tire ftouth West by P. by Ckiffl
1> .*•*, Marr, sotue
ut m> ow n lai d?, said land, thirty seres, til* be¬
ing wort*! three hundred theiwnmeutaif dollar*,” for
pur;wise of securing a promt?
on > note made by *ho *»td W. T. M.T*yWto
(he . aid Duoc .u, -Martin <fc Perdue, th* of do* One Of)
tiie 1-tdny uf Oct., 1887, for sum K)0
Hundred and Forty Fight and 50 Dollar*,
principal, interest and attorney* fee*, which
amount is now due- and unpaid.
It is ordered that the said W’.T H,T**lor
do p«y into this Court, by interest the first «l*y cost*. of the
next term th* principal, and
due on said note and mortgage or show cause
if any he has to tho contrary, granted or that In the de-
fault thereof foreclosure be to
said Duncan, Martin A Ferdoe of said Mort¬
gage, said W. and T.HTaylor the equity therein of redemption lie fore barred, of tl>#
ter
and Hint W. service H of this rule tie perfected law, on
said T. lay.or jamEh according to
«. boynton,
Judge %V ¥. C.
Beck A Cleveland, l’ctiUonera Att'ya.
I certify that the toregoing is i true copy
fron. the Minute? Minute? of this : Court, Court, this Ffcbrua-
ry ’ Term. 1888. Wm I "L Tnowaa, A,(L 8 C,
fe(»25oam4rn
Rule
WBUwT. Wilier.
AdoIplim<€ surviving Schaefer, of I Hpaldtng ( »unty
partner A J
A. C. Schaefer Co. Georgia,
Pre-cut, the Honorable Janie? 8 Boynton,
Judge of said Court.
It appearing to the Court by the petition
of Walter T. Miller tliut on Ih- : rat day of
April in the year of our L< W ...igbteeai Hnn
dred und Seventy two A v' ."iclmefer A Co..
u fir lu cumptamd of A. C. Schaefer and Gee.
Y. Barker, made and delivered to »aid Wal ¬
ter T. Millet n « rtain mortgage la which
the (urn of Six 1 houisod i-o.tir? wa* ar
knowledged to Iki «.uh the said' plaintiff,
»liich said mortgage deed bear* dal* April
1st, IK72, to secure the payment of said
amount due, whereby they folowing conveyed described to said
waiter T. Miller the
property, to wit: That tnretor parcel of land
tying or being in the 3d District of originally
Monroe, then Bike, dtitisguielied now Spalding in the County, plan of
and known and
said district (7U), a* Seventy-eight Nos. Forty-seven (T8». (47), and Sevan Fifty
ty nine
one (St), each containing Two Hundred and
Two and Uni-half acres; also, Sevan-
tl v« (75) acre? iu the northwest comer ef lot
No. Seventy-seven 1 77): also. Fifty (50)
at res ia southeast part of lot So. Forty eight
(48), nil in same district, rontaiemg in the
aggregate Nine Hundred snd Tlilrty-dre
l'.i.l5) u. res, more or less, in the entire tract,
bounded north by t*nd then known *s Jno.
(}. Lindsay's land land and of other*, Dr. Pritehatd eaet bp land and
then known ss
others, south by AiaseeU Buck Creek, *nd others, weat being by
land of Squire and
premise? conveyed by Philip K. Melhmdel to
*:iid defendants rebrustry 4tn, 1808, ss deserih
cd in foregoing petition; conditioned that if
said firm of A, C. Schaefer Ac Co. (ot which
A. C. Schaefer in now snrviog partner)
should pay off and discharge said debt of
Six and Thcmmud effect, Dollars then *aid according Deed of to Mortgage it* toner
that,
-hould 1 m: void.
And it further appearing that said debt re
main? unpaid; it i? therefore Ordered, that
said A. C. Schaefer, surviving partner a?
«fon -aid, pay into this Court by the first
day of the next term thereof, th>- principal,
interest and cost due on *aid Mortgage, or
show ciu.seto the contrary, if there be *t»y;
and that on failure of said A. C. Schaefer,
surviving partner as aforesaid, *0 to do, the
equity of redemption it) and to **ld mort-
gaged premise? 5>e forever thereafter tarred
and foreelosed.
Audit is further Ordered, That this Rule
(m- published in the Whim* N*w* once a
month for four months, or a copj there
"f served on the said A. C. Schaefer, surviv¬
ing partner as aforesaid, or his special agent the
or attorney, at least three month? Iiefore
next term of ti ti Court,
By the 1 urt, February JAMES 8th, BOYNTOh, 188b,
8.
Judge B. C, F. (J.
HhII A H tmnnond, Petitioner? Attorneys
I, AY. M. Thomas, Clerk of the Superior
Court of Spalding County, Georgia, do here¬
to certify the atiove to be a tree extract
from the niLute* of stud Court M. at f February
term, 1888. AT. now AH,
fehuoaindm Clerk 8. C. S. C.
May Sheriff's Sales.
\\7 1LL BE SOLD ON THE FIRST TUES
VV duy ii. AL»y next, be,seen the i*-
g.il hour? of de, l>efore the loor ot th*
( oiirt House, the city of Gri.Bn, described Spalding
County, 1 !eo a, the folJow'ng
proper!), to-*’-!:
T w 1 nty aci • of land iu the 1 iMMh district
G. M of !>pa ng County, hounded east by
public rand nning from Holtonville to
Fat - ttcviUe. ith and west by load* ot 8.
K. Do rough id north by the Goodman
piace and hiasch irtcrvenieg. Levied OB
and sold by virtue of a -Justice Court fi f* ti
*ued from the Justice Court of the lUBth dis
trb t O. M. of Hpalding County in Cole, favor of
N. B. DreWry. a* agent for Andrew V».
H. H. Dorough. turned Levy mode by G. H- Son
-on. L C., ai.d over to me. Tenant
in 1 - i'.n legally notified. ^ij tu.
Also, at the seme time and place, will be
-old one five horse nower Wood, Tabor A
A!---ena'me. one fifty saw Massey gin, and owe
A'.oiAA inkle power press and the shifting Levied
belting connected therewith.
on aud sold hy virtue of one fi fa is
«U'd from Spalding Countv Court in favor
of A. A C loud v». J. II. Lewi*, Hen: of SpaWiag ~
County. ;<r,d AV, B. Lewi*, of
R. S CONNELL, Sheriff
lACiSY PILLS!
PcffwftJr Mfe **& •V*y*»r*stA