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MaiM
Dismal.
In the re*1m of dlMue th* fnctf of In.
borttauce are moat nutn.rou. and an daily
aceumulutini;. Hare, ala*, they becoroa ter¬
rible, fateful and overwhelming. Ho fact of
nature tJ more pregnant with awful mean¬
ing than the fact of tte inheritance of
dlaeaee. It inert.< fi» ph j»ttton on hi* dally
rounds, paralysing Uu *rt and filling hint
with dismay. The legend of the ancient
Greeks pictures the Yuries as pursuing
families from generation to generation,
rendering them desolate. The Furies still
ply their work of terror end death, but they
are not now elothod la the garb Of supersti¬
tion, but appear In the more Intelligible but
no less awful form of hereditary disease.
Modern science, which has illuminated so
many dark corners of nature, has shed a
new U*ht on. the ominous words Of tte
Scripture*, “The sins of tiu fathom shall be
visited upon tho children unto tb*> third and
fourth generation." Instances of hereditary
dlseasa abound. Fifty per cent, of cases of
consumption, that fearful destroyer of fami¬
lies. of cancer and scrofula, run In families
through inheritance. Insanity le hereditary
In a marked degree, but, fortunately, like
many other hereditary diseases, tends to
wear Itself-out, He stock becoming extinct.
A dhitinguldled t....enlist truly eays: “No
organ or t rat are of the body is exempt from
the efasuco of being the subject fif hereditary
disease." IVobably luoro chronic diseases,
which permanently modify ethe structure
and fiuietiocs of the body, are more or less
liable to lie inherited. The Important and
far-reaching piacUi.il deductions from inch
facts—affeedhg so powerfully the happiness
of individuals and families and the collective
welfare of the nation—are obvious to refloa¬
ting minds, and the best means for prevent¬
ing or curing these diseases Is a subject of
intense Interest to all. Fortunately nature
has provided a remedy, which experience
has attested at Infallible, and the remedy Is
tbe world famous Swift's Specific, a pore
vegetable compound—nature's antidote for
all bipod poisons. To the afflicted It Is a
blessing of inestimable value. An Interest¬
ing treatise oa “Blood and Skin Diseases"
trill bo rnu'led free by a ddre s si ng
fas Swift sneme Co.,
Drawarfl, Atlanta, Oa.
— —«—— TW a yt ia 'llT ii T >|t rH . - n l i e n- tf'V i tVw awd a . i...—— . .. - - -
l-aintry's Advertisements.
/ vRDIN f \RY’S OFFICE, Svaldisq 1888.—E. Coon- W.
\ TT Georgia, June 37,
Bi i k and John II. Mitchell Ah executors of
la-t villof Wm. D. Alexander, for dee'd,have to sell
eighteen uputc lipplication and to me fourth leave shares of
three
Hie Capital Stock of the 8avannab, Griffin
North Alabima RR. Co. for distribution
umongst tiic heirs of deceased.
I .at ini persons concerned show cause before
court of Ordinary of said county by ten
<,V oek a. ni., on the first Mondav in Angnst
in xt, in Griffin, (ia., why such petition should
no >3.00 be granted, E.W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
i xltDINARY’S 'n, OFFICE, Spalding Coun-
\ Georgia, June 39tli, 1888.—B. and testa A.
Ogletree. executor of the last will made appl-
of L.P. Ogletree, dec’d, has and
oacion for leave to sell ene hundred fifty
acres of land more or less belonging to the
Francis Andrews, east and sopth by John
F.lder and west by W. J. Elder.
Lot all persons concerned show cause
before the Court of Ordinary at my office in
Griffin on tbe first Monday in ^August next
ten o’clock granted. a. m., why such application
not be
$6 00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
KJ / ORDINARY’S OFFICE, 8p*ipmj CoUH-
tt, Geohgu, May 20th, 1888.—Mrs.
Martha A. Darnall, administratrix of Katie
Darnall, has applied to me for letters of Dis¬
mission on the ostate of Katie Darnall, late
of said county, dseased.
Let all persons concernrd show cause be
the Court of Ordinary of said conn tv
at my office in Griffin, on the first Monday why in
September, letters should 1888, by ten be o’clock, granted. a. m.,
not
$«,I5 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/YRDINARY’S * OFFICE, Spalding Coun-
Martha V ix, A. Gkoboia, Darnall, May executrix 26th, of 1888,—Mrs. Thos. M.
Darnall, mission from has applied the executorship to me for of letters said estate. of dig
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Oourt of Ordinary of said county, at
my September, office in Griffin, 1888, on the first Monday why in
by ten o’clock, a. m.,
n :h letters should not bo granted.
$6.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
/ORDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding CootT-
V/ tt, Georgia, July 2nd, 1886.—N. M.
Collens as administrator on estate of Wm. J.
Woodward deceased, has applied three to me for
leave to sell three hundred and and
estate for the aores of land of belonging paying the to debts said
by said estate pn.pose and for the of dis
to-wit: the being purpose lot No. 23
same
the West half of lot Ho. ten (10) lying
Cabins district in said county.
Let all persons conoerned show canse be
the Court of Ordinary of said connty,
ray office in Griffin, on the first Monday
August, 1888, should by ten not o’clock, be granted. a. m., why
$6DO. petti'ion E. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
W-
Rule Nisi.
B. C.Klnard&Son } J-
vs. J
J. Ward A J. W, Ward.
of Georgia, Spalding Connty. In the
Superior Court, February Term, 1888.
It being represented to the Coart by the
of B. C. Kinard ldth A Son day that Oot. by Deed 1887.
J. Mortgage, Ward & dated J. W. the Ward conveyed of to the
B. C. Kinard A Son a certain tract of
towit; fifty acres of land lying in Akins
of Spalding county, Ga-bounded as
North by lauds of Bill Wise, East by
Ward, South by Barney Maddox and
by Zed Gardner, for the pnrpoee o| se¬
tbe payment of a promissory note
by the said I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward to
said B. C. Kinard & Son due on the 15th
of November and Ninety-six 1887, cents for the ($50.06), sum of which Fifty
It is is ordered now due and unpaid. said I. J. Ward & J.
that the
Ward do pay into this Court, by the first
of the next term the principal, interest
costs, due on said note or show cause,
any they have to tbe contrary, or that in
default thereof foreclosure be granted to the
said B. C. Kinard & Son of said Mortgage,
the equity of redemption of the said I.
. Ward & J. W. Ward therein beforever bar-
, u ixfid I, j. Ward A J. in W. the Ward Ward Gbotih aoeording according News, B
< i*w by by publication I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward
service upon
copy three months prior to the next
t of of this court.
JAMES S. BOYNTON, C.
Frank F»ynt and Dismuke Judge A Collens, 8. 0. F. Peti-
t.oners Alt’s.
i true copy him tie Minutes cfiLitCtu
i.r^»am4m Wn. M. Thomas, Clerk 8. C. 8 0,
fi;
A Short Chapter on fruit Ladders, with
Rluatrettons Showing Approved
That Aro Easy to Mako and Forfeetty
Sate to Use.
Every farm ladders, should be supplied with two
or more one for short distances
that can be readily carried abend
hand, and one for greater
common ladder with parallel i
not rest well against i
of a tree, hence do not moke convenient
ladders for picking fruit In orchards
LADDERS FOll 'lUK OllCUAilD.
James Fitz, of Keswick, Ya., gii________
advice on the subject of making ladders,
and describes the forms here illustrated.
These will be old to many readers, but
beginners the may If the receive bars timely help from
same. are made to ran
up to a point, the ladder may be thrust
upward remain anywhere firmly in into Its the place. tree and will
A broad
wooden padded hook may be attached to
the be hung upper end, by limb which and this drawn ladder down may
on any
SrinT silffhtlv” so ™^^ that'ttm leers oTCm^t mav rest on the
groum ladders conve
nient forms of step In use. See
Mg. A 1 modification In the cut. the ordinary
of ladder
may paddi ided be hook made the by attaching a similar
to upper mid of one of
the lie bars, b cutting off a foot or so'of the
other bar so as to allow tbe hook to tie
placed Another on a limb convenient See Fig. fruit 2 ladder
i Is
shown in Fig 3.'and d may may ho be constructed cons
of any light, ash, tough poplar sapling efaestnut. timber, such The
as young or
sapling iling should be split at the butt mid
opened to t about two feet. Tho holes for
the rounds rou !n the split part should be
bored rather slanting so that the rounds
when driven in in will will fit; the distance apart
ought from to be which eighteen........... they inches split and should the urn be
ber are
well seasoned. The other short rounds
pegs should be made of stuff three
fourths of an inch by about two laches,
and trimmed, IHB putln carving mortises upward, of or the the spme i the size, ends and to
project tbe pole about represented six inches in on Fig. each 8. side of
as
Horses' Tails.
The docking of horses’ tails is a mere
method of fashion. Just now, in and
about New York cite, one secs banged
tails on all the-saddle horses. There is s
fashion too In some sections of banging
the tails of carriage hones—cutting the
hair irregularly—just beyond the end ef
the bone of the talk Tho tails of some
of the racing horses are out eqtutre hair and
left somewhat longer at to the than
those of carriage horses. The cutting Off
of a portion of the bone of the tall is now
rarely practiced.
Tbe Gladiolus.
The gladiolus is not only one of the
moat beautiful of the summer or tender
bulbs, but few plants are so easily man
aged proportion and none give greater labor and satisfaction in
to tune, money ex
pended. The flowers are of almost every
desirable color.
ground Successive should plantings be avoided, on and the the local¬ same
ity not of the to return bed should to the not be spot changed for so at
as same te
least three years. It is the better plan to
make the ground very r for a desired
■'•rep rep this this year year and and plant plan gladiolus on it
tn& GLADIOLUS.
In Garden and Forest attention is called
to the important fact that a succession of
flowers tan only ba kept flowers up by that repeated
plantings because the one
bulb The will produce are In quickly gardening gone. create#
spring fever a
desire to have everything at the earliest
possible moment, whether seasonable or
not, and early planting of tho gladiolus
brings the flowers in the very hot, dry its
weather of our midsummer, when in
natural habitat It l
season. For perfect flowers a moist a
vow*™ Is neressmy; to that *nd the
Bulbs should be planted from the first to
the'middle of July, and they will then
come into flower about thO first of Octo
ber, when the days are' cool and the even
ing air moist. Any given variety giro coming spikes
Into flower at that time will
of blooms much larger and stronger and
tho colors will be far better than if the
same are a produced in midsummer, A sue-
cession >0 of bloom may be kept up from
July until frost by planting oveiy two
weeks, i, commencing commencing as as soon sc as the ground
U In a suitable condition to work.
In the cut, for which w6 are indebted to
Vick, the well known seedman, at Koch
ester, N. Y., is shown a spike of flowers,
also tho wav in which little bolblets form
tog formes
twelve to
special wairlfci ^ b ,
two to ten year*
When untear te
(two or three-*
sire- With conifers tl
anv season, and. if tt _
winter felled trees should be left lying to
leaf out iu spring, by which most of the
»p is worked out and evaporated
The best method of obtaining proper
seasoning without costly apparatus in
shorter time la to hnnWMO the prepared
timber In water from one to three weeks
to dissolve the fermentable matter uear
the flurtm e This lit best done by run
ulrig water— if such is not at hand, a bath
may be substituted., the water of which
needs frequent change Timber so
treated, like raft timber, will season more
and la known to be more durable
If practicable the application at boiling
water or steam Is an advantage ^ leach
lug but the sap
*J£tt* not welt dried or seasoned ' the
conslato^oliy ih ihm
Good coatings or resinous
substances; which make a smooth coat,
capable -'“iff of being aaL * L -^ uniformly j™“ applied, k -H| not crack. they
“T* cover BPe «7 P***. must - •
drying Go ‘{
sand I or With plaster oil Of turpentine or pittfc, especially and applied If
hot (thus penetrating mors deeply),
answers best. A mixture of three parts
coal tar and one pat* dean, unsalied
until DsSSKK to prevent ibe tar frem drying
it has bad ttiae tofilLth® minute
pores, One barrel of
toaiter will ita Wood tar
servk
Oil paint points are next ia value. Boiled
linseed off <
-**R0t
any other
deum
into
unless-*
formed,
effect b-<
both weakens the
cracks, thus expos!]
meats.
Hi* Correct Grade m Ditching.
tbe
ttt tostrottent eon be
MdSaBteisfiSi says • eerretpoudenf to
A XHTCSmiO LEVEL.
This leveling instrument, according to
the authority given, may he made of a
board five feet, eight Inches long, six
inches wide, and one-half inch Thick,
mad# made the exactly shape five of A, and B. a-haif a pointer feet e long d.
tuning the board on a, a foot Cl D, slotted and bolted
on at At the end A of tbe
board A B is a graduated aro divided
Into spaces ono-slxteenth of an Inch
each. On the pointer e d Is o level
I*. The upper edge of’ the polntei
should be jMirallel with the edge of tbe
bond ABL To use It drive a stake at
the lower end; where tho outlet of tho
ditch is, exactly the same height as tbe
board is at A. Sight the edge A B to tbe
of the are. Then read the number of six¬
teenths from zero to the pointer’s end..
This will rive the fall per rad As tbe
pointer is five and * half feet long a varl
ation of one-sixteenth of an toeh will
equal rod. three-sixteenths Two-sixteenths, of an equal huh in fall
per to one
eighth three-eighths of an inch, of sninch will Indicate rod; and a fall right- of
sixteenths, equal to one-half per inch, will
give one and a half inch fall per rod, and
so on.__
»Tiling* Farmer* Toll One Auotbor.
The best varieties and aperies'*# hackle
berry, be says A. S. in Fuller, of garden New Jersey, where
may blackberries groWn every
and raspberries aro culti¬
vated. Plants found growing on high. (ess
dry labor ground than theme can growing be taken In up low with ground,
and usually witlf k _ a ball of earth about
such their planta. roots. There A huekleten I* u<> rt*k p’antation ;n moving is
v
very much like mi aspmugus bed as to
permanency, for with ordiu&ry either
will last a lifetime.
P. B. Cfandall stated before tho West¬
ern New fork Horticultural society that
grapes, jars picked tines and wilted, four then below buried tho in
stone or feet
surface, will com* out with atoms green
and fruit plump and bright hi the s; '
AL G. H a m m o n d , socretsrf'Of vhb
Horticultural society, reports most ex
lent results from spraying his
with London purple. Be reconum
using wrier a pound and of purple to three
of applies with an ordinary fores
putop.
A. W. Cfaeever claims that grass can be
grown much more economically to rota*
tion with other crops than if the attempt
is made to grow it continuously on the
same land for a long term of years.
“If we do not raiatLcrops of one sort too
always fina ' that will the benefit lut*o-
crops
of the Massachusetts fix-
on the surface spreading of oot tho
xm aa pooible. It Ana not gato
Philip II, whose privato life was much of
tke same kind.
It would, as we read history, really be ab¬ far
truer to ray that power, when-
solute, so absolute that the volition is
executive and the necessity ffcp self
rffttramt ia unieUy pioanoes or xiieir i
special mental disease, which is not in¬
sanity, because it would disappear with
too power, but has at intervale, file* tbe
passion of children, many of ite eXteenal
symptoms and effects. Nero, the artist
unperor, who was alwa;
impossible, and whom
tiaos lielieved to be the
tion of evil, may be raidt
have suffered from it*, so did (mo ot 1
of the Italian tyrant* of tltcKeonrisral
and so, in our
disputable Power of point,
that sort,
ways injure and tbe of
Cfeesars some
Delhi were men of
judgnfcnt—when predisposed it by
man
or by drink, or by special soUtertoees rif
nature, undoubtedly weaken* the re¬
straining force of too will' muff strength*
ens impulse until many ©I'“ r
resemble closely the acta bfi.
Half the
private
would
tera, so to speak, poisoned by power, os
directly as if they bad been poisoned with
(me of the drugs which temporarily dis-
turb reason.
Drink, wild and continuous drunken¬
ness with bad brandy, was the predin-
poring cause in Peter the Great, and, it
is believed, in TMbaw, and- probably in
light, the Emperor would Baber, who. moonlight wise by dsy-
in the occupy
himself in jumping ftotti battlismettt to
rvf ltic lAnlftn a 'fa&t frOTYI
.the ground. In Casr Paul tow predis¬
posing dency, cause though was probably is quite insane provedj ten¬
that not
and in Alexander HI lb# » solitariness
almost beyemd example. There is not •
man in the world more deeply to he
fljen fUfi ^ < tttonri|Tia
The lonelineos ,, of kings, kmehnes -A •
s natu¬
rally resulting from their place, which
hardly admits of friendship and does not
admit of equality^ is themselves always teudble, and
is that frequently they break- fell by through-all restraints so severely of
prudence and moral law in order to b*
rid of tt.—The Spectator.
The Opening of the CamDaigo.
To open the campaign with any hopes of
speedy success, atteek the entrench. enemy, malaria, An
before it haa a chance to ob¬
stinate If foe ’twill prove prudent, if you too, don’t ge will right have
at it. you are you
fortified, upon the first intimation Hoatetferta of its urea
ence Stomach in Bitters your neighborhood. ii the medicinal ammunition
that you require. Every form of malarial
fever vields to this fine preventive and rams
dy. For constipation, liver complaint, dys-
oalities, and person* sotourning in or bound
for the great West, should select this
dne as means of defenoe against the
quent disitations of miasma. Those to 1 ,___
cate health, In the aged and the enfeebled, thla sig¬
should every instanoe resort to
nal lnvigorant. Duae it ter weak nerves.
Or.lMMfsTEEIWUI
Al!*r« Irritation. AldiDj
U toft and tur*. Try It »nA »o* will sever-1 _
with .I-1 TKKTltlJf A x loaf a* there are child¬
ren lu lUe llrace. ilk year Un|(:
New Advertisements.
Peck’s Patent tmpraved Cushions^
Ear Drums
PERFECTLY RERTQMt THE HEARING.
or in position, injuries to the invisible _ ______ and
but to others
fortable te wear, Music, eonversrtion,
whispers them. heard Write distinctly. F. We HI800X, refer to those 849
using to
Broadway, cor.
FIG MONEY! I
Million voters with the onjy official Jatees of
CLEVELAND aid T1 WBI
te How. W. U. Hessel, also Life of Mrs.
Cleveiand, C«4rid»eB<a. exqnUHt« Free Trade rteel portraits Poheyi . complete. Yotera ’
► BROS.,
-
noari MMNmt . ,
m ja m, o*te.w. tori
SpeettMr.i m w w .et mm om**ira;4»Gau*$M.
PSJLX&S !
! ? i* OiWANS ! ■
** CASH, OR ON TIME, AT :
DEANE’S AST ■
•
W HfPra* ’’IRraora*
j| HAPNESS MD
—w- -
StoMMMMIto! White Hickory Wagon t
Jmksen 6. smith Wagon I
* feekson G. Smite Buggy!
• l0 ® u 99*®* ■ apawnny. - .
W* Jl#
sug28d£w6m Ora. HillkTaihii Iterate, Ml I •*>’
________ ...
Wflttf HIST REC 0 PKD i ■3 :
Jellies, Applet,
AND IN FACT EVERYTHiNfi A HOUSKEEPPEN WLl N
Ml, Bute & Ob’s.
n
State of Georgia Bends.
FOUR AND ONE-HALF PER CENT.
Atlanta, Ox., June 1st,
thousand dollar* to
January 1,1890,
d dollors to mature
January Om hundred 1,1901. thousand dollars
1,1908. to
January Oheauirired thousand dollar* to mature
January One hundred 1,1908. thousand dollars mature
to
Ja n uary t, 1904.
January One hundred 1,1905. thousand dollars to mature
Ont uOMrlft 1,W98, UkOftfttuid dolliri to
One hundred thousand dollars to
JuBnarel.1906.
One hundred thousand dollars to
*On**Iundrsd tho u s and dollars to
' dollar* to
_______ _ __________
Tbs bonds to be in * deno ‘ mlnatto n of i
Bale Nisi.
I eeetify toat too foregolag la a, t qe copy
liT W ED! BITLE
Limim -3^gR^-
ADVERTISERS
an learn the exact cos'
of any proposed line o:
advertising m Anwricai.
papers by ahireming
(led P. Rowefrfi^Co.,