The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, July 15, 1888, Image 3

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ft4J4-3.a S. 3;S. An Important Announcement About six weeks attacked ago. while at business. I w«a suddenly and with hands. excruciating pains attack in my that teet, knees took bed Immediately, So severe the I my and in two or three days my joints were swollen to almost double their natural nine, and sleep was driven from me. Alter suffer log the most excruciating various pain for a week, using liniments and other remedies, a condition, friend who said sympathised to with my helpless me: •• Why don’t you get Swift's Specific and use it. I will guarantee a core, and If It does not the medicine shall coat you nothing.” I at once secured the 8. S. 8., and after walk penenuea. about in the mree wecxs and i count sit up ana room, after using six bottles I was out and able to go to business. Since then I have been regularly at my post of duty, and stand on my feet from nine to ten hours a day, and am entirely free from pain. These are the plain and simple facts inquiries (n my case, relative and I will cheerfully either in answer all by mall. thereto, Thomas Maekili.ii, person or 11 W. 18th street, New York City. Nashville, Tisk.—I have warded off a se¬ vere at tack of rheumatism In all by a timely resort to Swift's Specific. this cases where a per¬ manent relief Is sought constitutional medicine com¬ mends Itself for a treatment that from thoroughly eradicates the seeds of ills euso the evsteuc Rev. W. P. HaREISOK, D. D. New Yobk, 51 7th Ave.—A fter spending 1200 to be relieved of Blood Poison without any benefit, «i u f«tv few h/ittlMV bottles ftf of ftwift'8 Swift's Speci!*'' Speclflc worked a perfect cure. ~ C. “--- POBTKB. VlKXKA, O.I.- foi. My Uttle had_scrofula girl, aged six, and the boy, , aged aged fin r ted years, _ shape. They In W'*ri st nggrav were puny slid sickly. ull the '1 o ait day of they takings. are healthy 8.8. and ro- L,..at, ru T. Collier. Joe Lady Lake, Sumter Co., Fla.-Y our 8. 8. 8. lias proved a wonderful success in my case. The cancer on my face, no doubt, I would have soon hurried me to my grave. do think it is wonderful, and has no equal. B. H. Byrd, Postmaster. Waco, Texas, May 9,1888. f). Gentlemen—Knowing 8. Co., Atlanta, Ga.: that appreciate take you pleasure voluntary testimonials, we lady has In stating that one of our customers regained her health by the use of four having large bottles of nvulidfor your great several remedy, after Hertrouble years. All druggists sell S. S. s. Srscmc The Drawer Swift 8, Atlanta Co., Ga Mew York, 7M Broadway. Ordir.aryV Advertisements. / \ I,’PI V A flY’d OFFICE, Spalding Coun- V ■ >t (Ikoroia, June 27, 1888.—E. \\\ lu . I., nti'l John II Mitchell as executors of tti la-i. will of Wm D. Alexander, dec’d,have n.a f yippli an.l til ion three-fourth 'o me for leaveto sell tic Ben shares of the fapitdl Stock of the Savannah, Griffin a i ' ill: AlabimuRR. Co. for distribution ni.i.inif'i the heir3 of deceased. ; eta I persons concerned show cause before tl> court of Ordinary of said county by ten o'r ock a. in., on the first Monday in August i.rxt, in Griffin, Ga., why such petition should no be granted. W. HAM TONIl, 81.00 K. Ordinary. / V/ ,111)1 VARY’S Georgia, OFFICE, June 2!)tb, Spalding 18S8.—B. Loin- A. ty, Ogletree. executor of the last will and testa oation rnent of for L.P.Ogletree, leave sell dec’d, hundred lias made.appl- to ene and fifty acres of land more or less belonging to the estate of deceased for the payment of debts and for distribution. Said land being in Union district dlstrlc and bounded on the North by Francis Andr irews, east and south by John A. Elder and west by W. J. Elder. Let all persons concerned show cause before the Court of Ordinary at my office in Griffin on the first Monday in August next by should ten o’clock granted. a. ui., why such application not be $6 00 E YV. HAMMOND, Ordinaiy. a v HDINARY’S OFFICE, Spaldinj Coun- Martha \ 7 ty, Georgia, May 20th, 1888.—Mrs. A, Darnall, administratrix of Katie Darnall, lias applied to me for letters of Dis¬ mission on the ostate of Katie Darnall, late of said county, decascd. Let all persons ooncerurd show cause be fore the Court of Ordinary of sai l county at my office in Griffin, on t e first Monday in September, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. in., why such letters should not be granted. $0,15 E. YV. HAMMOND, Ordinary. I'kKDINARY’S Gkobgia, OFFICE, May 26th, Spalding 1888,—Mrs. Coun- V/ ty, Martha A. Darnall, exeeatrix of Thus, M. Darnall, has applied to me for letters of dis mission from the executorship of said estate. Let all persons concerned show cause be¬ fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in September, letters 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m , why u;h should not ba granted. $6.15 E. YV. HAMMOND, Ordinary, /"VUDINARY’S OFFICE, Spai.ding Cou.y- Vj ty, Gkokgia, July 2nd, 1888.—N. M. Collens as administrator on estate of YVm. J. Woodward deceased, has applied to me for leave to sell three hundred and three and throe-fourth acres of land belonging to said estate for the pu.pose of paying the debts due by said estate and for the* purpose of dis tribution to-wit: the same being lot No. 22 and the West half of lot No. ten tlO) lying in Cabins district in said county. Let all persons concerned show cause be fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, in at my office 1888, in Griffin, on o’clock, the first Monday August, should by ten a. m., why luch petti 1 ,ion not be granted. $6,00. E. YV. HAMMOND, Ordinary. Rule Nisi. B. 0. Kinard & Son ) vs. I. J. Ward A J. \V. Ward. ) State Superior of Georgia, Court, Spalding February County. Term, 1888. In the It being represented to the Court by the petition of B. C. Kinard & Son that by Deed of I..J, Mortgage, Ward* dated the 16th day of Oct. 18S7. J. W. YVard conveyed to the said B. C. Kinard & Son a certain tract of land, towit; fifty acres of land lying in Akins District of Spalding county,Ga., bounded as follows: North by lands of Bill Wise, East by Jno. YVard, South by Barney Maddox and West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬ curing the payment of a promissory note the made said by B. the C. said Kinard I. J. & Ward Son <k due J. W. Ward the 15th to on day Dollars of November 1887, for the sum of Fifty and Ninety-six cents ($50.!Hi), w hich note is now due and unpaid. 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 be granted to the said B. C. Kinard & Son of said Mortgage, and the equity of redemption of the said I. J Ward <& J. W. Ward therein be forever bar- • cd. End that service of this rule be perfected -aid I. J. Ward & J. W. YVard according iv mw by publication in the Griffin News, «r by service upon I. 3 . Ward & J. W. Ward of a copy three months prior to the next term of this court. JAMES 13. BOYNTON, Frank Flynt and Dismukfe Judge & Collens, S. C. F. C. Peti- t oners Alt’s. t true copy from the Minutes of thisCou Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk S. C. S C. 1 uam4ni IIPHIIP Uad’TOblMrHfclt tteaoredet Home wife JEWS OF MIXED BLOOD. Changes of the Original Stock—Tribes of Pseudo Jews. Since M. Renan, some three or four years ago, expressed his doubts as to the purity of the Jewish race, the hitherto received opinion on that subject has been somewhat shaken. The question, though tifically unscientifically raised, can only be scien¬ settled; but we may point out, as a matter of popular interest, that even if the main body of the Hebrew people has preserved an untainted lineage, which is very likely, it has at any rate acquired a considerable fringe of indubitably spurious elements. This fringe is com¬ posed partly of pseudo Jews and partly of crypto Jews, the former being mainly descendants of Gentile proselytes openly professing Judaism, and the latter con¬ sisting of more or less sophisticated de¬ scendants of Jews outwardly conforming to the dominant religions of the countries in which they live, but secretly oliscrving their ancestral faith. Tlieso two divisions of what may be termed the borderland between the Jeu*sli and the Gentile worlds have again smaller borderlands or fringes of their own through which they merge into one another. As tin-owing light on the spasms of proselytism with which, in opposition to their traditional practice, the Hebrews have occasionally been seized, these pseudo Jews are of considerable interest to the student of religious history. Tho largest community of them are the Fal- ashas of Abyssinia, numbering, it is said, between 200,000 and a quarter of a million souls. Although they pretend to bo descended from King Solomon and tho Queen of Sheba, ethnologists have failed to discover among them any traces of a Hebrew type. That originally they were strangers in the land is, however, shown by their name, which means “im¬ migrants.” Besides the Falaahas, there are several tribes in Africa professing Judaism, or claiming descent from Jews, who, in so far as their ethnological type is a matter of doubt, must also be regarded as be¬ longing to the fringe of Jewry. Among the Beni-Mzab, on the frontiers of Al¬ geria and Tunis, are several pseudo Jew¬ ish clans, and all over the Sahara the Daggatoun boast of a Hebrew ancestry while professing Mohammedanism. A Moorish Jew, who wrote an account of tho latter people, explains their name to mean “Jews who have changed their faith,” a doubtful piece of philology which has, however, its historical value. In Madagascar and on the Loango coast are two further small contingents- of pseudo Jews, the “Zafy Ibrahim” or “Progeny of Abraham,” and the “Ma- vamba,” or “Judeos.” The former do not differ in their physical type from their neighbors, and their Hebrew tradi¬ tions and observances are, perhaps, only a remote vibration of the Judeo-Arabio influence. Tho Loango “Judeos” are a superior kind of negroes, alleged to be descended from survivors of the 2,000 Jewish children who, in 1493, were tom from their parents by Don Joao H, of Portugal, and transported to St. Thomas. Asia is full of varying degrees of the fringe of Jowry, if the traditions of somo scores of peoples and tribes are to be trusted. The whole continent has proved a happy hunting ground for the amiable enthusiasts whoso game Is the Lost Tribes, Of actual pseudo Jews, as we have defined them, there are, however, only a couple of specimens—the black Jews of Cochin and Malabar and the Jews of the interior of China. Both pro¬ fess fairly orthodox forms of Judaism, and both assert that they are of pure Jewish descent; but the investigations of competent observers have shown the for¬ mer to be of Hindoo race, while the little wo know of the latter seems to in¬ dicate that they are Mongols, with a Blight admixture of Hebrew blood. Of the Chinese Jews we have no very precise or reliable accounts. They are said to bo of a very strong Mongolian type. On the other hand, the records prove them to have been at least in con¬ tact with pure Jews; and it is probable that they are a cross between these Jews and native proselytes. Crosses of this de¬ scription are usually infertile—a fact that goes far to prove tho purity of tho main body of the Hebrew race—and the so called Chinese Jews present all the un¬ fruitful characteristics of hybrids. In this respect they resemble tho two great bodies of pseudo Jews which are to be found in Europe, the Karaites of South Russia and tho Sephardim of England and Holland. Historically the Karaites are even more interesting than the Falashas. They are a remnant of the Finnish king¬ dom of tho Khozars, which was con¬ verted to Judaism in the Eighth century, and which for a time disputed the sover¬ eignty of the east with the emperors of Byzantium. That the Sephardim of England and Holland are not pure Jews is a statement which may cause somo surprise. While, however, the Sephardim of Italy and tho east are mostly descendants of tho un¬ doubtedly pure Spanish Jews expelled from the peninsula in 14D2, the bulk of those in western Europe are tho offspring of Marranos, or crypto Jews, who out¬ wardly conformed to Christianity in order to escape tho edict of expulsion, and who, to liide their religious identity more effectually, gave up their racial dis¬ tinctiveness. There is scarcely a Marrano family which cannot be proved to have received some infusion of Gentile blood; and it is a singular fact that in England at least, while the Ashkenazim, or cen¬ tral European Jews, show an exceptional fecundity the Sephardim are gradually dying out.—St. James’ Gazette. Prettiest Sight in Mexico. Tlio prettiest sight hi Mexico is the Pasco de la Reforma, stretching, tree- lined on either side, from the statue of Carlos IV to the castle of Cliapultepec, when, of a morning, scores of riders, many of them in picturesque Mexican costume, dot the long roadway, the trap¬ pings of the horses flashing in the sun¬ light and the mettlesome steeds giving animation to the scene. Many rich Mex¬ icans use .saddles, costing $500, silver mounted and inlaid beautifully. Hats with gold braid, costing $100 and more, ure frequently worn, and the tight fitting black trousers with silver buckles up the outer seams, anil the short charro jacket, make up a riding costume unique in beauty and elegance.—Cor. Boston Her¬ ald. YV«t Point Cadets' “Skin Board." Up in his office the major of infantry who commands the battalion-of cadets is with tho arduous duties of lib posi¬ tion. Hanging in the lower liallway that leads to his office b a huge frame filled with closely written sheets of paper. Thb is the delinquency list, or in cadet slang, the “skin board.” Approaching it we read: “Anderson—Wearing cap in quarter* at police inspection. “Armstrong—Odor of tobacco smoko in quarters at inspection by officers of tho day. “Billingsgate—Using profano expres¬ sion 0:15 a. m. “Same—Absent from room at a. m. inspection. light “Brooks—Slow extingubhing at taps,” and so on throughout the long list. On Friday punishments fitting their respective offenses will bo awarded the delinquents. Academic regulations are very 6trict, being the combined result of the experi¬ ences of a long line of superintendents, and any cadet who could and would go through hb whole four years’ course with¬ out breaking any of them should, at its close, be graduated straight through the pearly gates and receive a golden harp instead of a diploma. He, during hb four years’ course, would have carefully refrained from the use of stimulants, bad language and tobacco in any form; would have attended divine service at least once a week; would have lived with liis comrades in a spirit of brotherly love; would have kept lib shoes bright-, hb collar spotless, and would have been promptly on liand|for every one of hb manifold duties. Such is the ideal cadet, and the regulations ure intended to make the real ones approach as near to him as possible. But, alasl they are all sons of Adam, and tho “skin list” is tho unfor¬ tunate result.—Lieut. E. W. Lewis in Inter Ocean. « Fast Travel on tlie Ocean. It gives a confirmed landsman a cold chill when lie reads that the Etruria ran through fogs at a rate almost equaling an express train. Is thb kind of thing safe? That b the question. The opinions of those who ought to know are almost unanimously in favor of getting out of a fog just as quickly as possible, and there seems to be no question but the driving through a fog at a high rate of speed is the best thing to do under the circum¬ stances. The only vessels lost during resent ^ears have been lost while either stand¬ ing still or going slowly. If the Oregon had been going faster she would not have been struck. Still the same may be said if she had been going very much slower. The City of Brussels was stand¬ ing still in a fog when she was run down. In many respects a fast steamer has great advantages over a slow one. Sho can keep in tho position she wants to in a storm, and in many cases she can avoid a storm altogether or outrun it or get on the outer edges of it. A steamer going at a high rate of speed will answer her helm much better than a slower boat. When a steamer slows down the roar of escaping steam renders it impossible to hear anything except the roar. When sho b going at full speed everything is as quiet as it is possible to be, and the whistle of an approaching steamer can be heard and to a certain extent located. If a steamer takes two days instead of three days to get through a fog bank it is evident that the percentage of danger b lessened just that much. So in spite of what the papers have been saying of the recklessness of run¬ ning a big ship through a fog at good speed, it seems to be the safest thing to do.—Detroit Free Press. Flowers In Popular Lore. It is a remarkable fact that flowers have usually been regarded as beneficent in popular lore. While animals aro fre¬ quently diabolical, flowers are seldom ac¬ credited with any malign influences. Their connection with religion has ever been an intimate one, and their beautify¬ ing use in the important ceremonies of life—at marriage, death and burial—have always endeared them to every one, so that their mbsion has always been a soft¬ ening and humanizing one. Many of tho humblest flowers and most neglected weeds have been regarded as sacred at some time or another. Tliis fact of the good will held towards flowers in popular loro is partially shown by the beneficent names applied to them, as heart’s ease, traveler’s joy, shepherd’s needle, honesty, etc. There are, how¬ ever, somo exceptions to thb beneficent character. In Silesia it b said that flowers should not be laid on a sick per¬ son’s bed. In Westphalia, no child should bo decked with flowers until it b a year old, as it would dio soon, and the flowers wither. German peasants say flowers should not bo laid on tho mouth of a corpse, lest it bite them and become a Nachzehrer, or sort of vampire. In England, to dream of white flowers means death, and the same is indicated by the sudden blooming of a white rose bush. Any one who throws a rose into an open grave will waste away.—F. S. Bassett in Globe-Democrat. Iu a Morocco Bakcshop. In going through the city to the Jews' quarters I stopped at an Arab bakeshop, where I saw a pleasant looking chap, hoping I should get an invitation to visit hb establishment, but as it did not come, I invited myself and walked in. The wheat b ground by hand between two flat stones, and sometimes when a mother b grinding she will amuse and utilize her child by seating liim on the top stone, giving him a ride and increasing the milling power at the same time. Tho Moorish oven i3 a big mud room perhaps twenty feet square by six high, and the loaves, shaped something like an apoplectic mince pie. are ranged on both sides of this room, a fire of palm branches and bamboo then being built on the floor between tho rows of bread. Tlib fire b fed constantly by a boy standing at the entrance with an arrangement something like a Tremont Temple contribution box, oifrwhich he places the fuel for the near¬ est fires, but the farthest he feeds by tak¬ ing an armful of stuff, rushing into the oven and throwing it upon tho heap. The bread from thb < practice and fried lias a Moor, min¬ gled taste of smoke healthy and which b perhaps more strengthening than agreeable to the un¬ cultivated taste.—Morocco Cor. Boston Transcript. THE SKY AND THE WOOD. There I* a rainbow In the sky. Upon the arch where tom pea u trod. Tires written by the hand on high. It is the autograph of God. The trees their crowns of foliage toss; Where monarch* fell In Uiundqf showers, Spring drapes their forms In mourning moss, And writes their epitaphs In flowers. -George W. Bungay In American Magazine New Style of Picture Fit:- ■ «. The new picture frame- ■ I oak or chestnut sliaded by the nibbing in of umber from very light at the inside to very dark at the outer edge are the latest fed in their line. They ere especially ef¬ fective when used around a ti . -J print of a shade nearly matching the inner edge of the frame. It is predk led, liow- ever, that they will soon become too com¬ mon and go out of fashion. Somo deal¬ ers in New York won’t put such frames on picturer sold by them at all, claiming that the style violates artistic taste. At one dealer’s a still more striking frame b having a run of popularity. It b of broad oak with real bars half an inch thick, colored to look liko iron set across it from side to side. Imitation hinges on one side and a very real looking padlock on tho other increases tho resemblance to the barred door of a cage. With a pict¬ ure of tho head of a lion or other beast behind it, the effect b very startling, if not strictly artbtic.—New York Sun. The Metaphysical Novel. “In the hands of men entirely great,” tho metaphysical novel is great, indeed; but what b to be the outcome of a reck¬ less handling of subjects of a metaphys¬ ical or semi-spiritual, semi-scientific char¬ acter, by authors who have no other qualification and fervid than a vivid imagination language? If “it takes a clever man to be a fool,” it certainly takes a clever and learned man to write a respectable novel, in which second sight, hypnotism, magnetism or spirit¬ ualism takes a leading part. But the list of such books increases alarmingly, considering who tho authors are.—Pitts¬ burg Bulletin. How Florida Was Built. Among the agencies which have helped to build up tho peninsula of Flor¬ ida, according to Mr. A. II. Curtiss, are certain trees, like the mangrove and cy¬ press, which grow on land moro or less under water. Like the coral builders, they have worked slowly, but in thou¬ sands of centuries the change wrought would be great. It is altogether prob¬ able that the thousands of tree covered “islands" in the Everglades and Big Cy¬ press were once mangrove thickets, and that the present mangrove islands will in time be added to tho mainland.—Ar- kansaw Traveler. MaJ. Andre’s Fatal Vasa. A relic of the revolution has lately been found in Washington. It is the original document given to pass Maj. Andre through tho American lines when Benedict Arnold had resolved to betray West Point into tlio hands of the Britbh. Tbo pass b signed by Arnold as major general, and is countersigned by Gen. Gage. The possessor is a direct descend¬ ant of Paulding, one of the scouts who arrested Andre when ho attempted to pass the picket under the name of An¬ derson.—Chicago Herald. Ploughing the Waves. A storm at sea means inevitable sea-sick nes3 for occeas travelers. The vibration of a steamer’s screw, even, is a sore trial to any but the itrongcst stomach. “Splicing the main baace,” as theimbitionof a glass is joe ularly termed by sailors, is a pooa substitute for the swallowing of that incomparable tranquillizer of sea-sick stomachs, Hostet ter’s Stomach Bitters, which no commercial traveler, tourist or inAalid should be with¬ out in “crossing the briny,” or mrking a te¬ dious land journey. No unmedicated stimu¬ lant of commerce is comparable for efficacy to the great inuigorant. Emigrants to the pronounce it a reliable preventive of malari¬ al infection, as well as other complaints to which hardship, impure water ana miasma- tainted vapors give rise. It rendeas brackish water drinkable and harmless, and is a fine remedy for disoeders of tiie stomach and bowels, and for kidney troubles and rheuma¬ tism. New Advertisements. Peck's Patent Improved Cushioned Ear Drums PERFECTLY RESTORE THE HEARING, whether deafness is caused by colds, fevers or injuries to the natural drums, Always in position, hut invisible to others and com fortable to wear. Music, conversrtion, even whispers heard distinctly. YVc refer to those using them YYri’e to F. HI8COX, 841) Broadway, cor. BIG MONEY!! Million voters with the on;y official Lives of CLEVELAND and TUDRMAN by Hon. W. U. Hknsel, also Life of Mrs. Cleveland, Cartridge exquisite steel portraits. Voters’ Bor, Free Trade Policy, complete. 134)00 Agents at work report immense success. For best work, best terms, apply quick and make $200 to $500 a month. Outfit 35e. HUBBAkD BROS., Philadelphia, Pa. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Cleanse* and beautifies the |uUr. Promotes & luxuriant growth. Grey Never Fails to Restore Heir to its Youthful Color. Cures sea! p diseases end kair falling’ HINDERCORf’S. EXHAUSTED VITALITY ri'HE SCIENCE OF LIFE, the -* great Medical Work of the age on Manhood, Nervous and! Physical Debility, Premature 1 Decline, Errors of Youth, and the untold miseries consequent thereon, 800 pages 8vo, 125 prescriptions for all diseases., by* Cloth, full gilt, only *1.00, tnaff. sealed. Illustrativ e sample free to all young and middle-aged men. Send now. The Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the Na¬ tional Medical Association. Address P. O. box 1*95, Boston, Mass., or Dr. W. H. PARKER, grad¬ uate of Harvard Medical College, 25 years' practice In Boston, who may be consulted confldSBtlally. Specialty. Diseases of Man. Office No. 4 Bulflncb ft. A Summer Medicine Summer’* heat debilitate* both nerve* and body, and Head ftche, Slqeplessneaa, Herrons Prostration, and tn^ali- played-out* sensation prove that Paws’* Celery Confound should bo used now. This mediciao reatorea health to Nerves, Kidneys, Over, and Bowels, and imparts Ufa and energy to tho heat prostrated system. Vacation* or no va¬ cation?, Pains’* Celssy Compound is the medisine for this season. It Is a scientific combination of die best tonics, and those who use it. begin the hot summer day* with dear heads, strong nerves, and general good health. Pawn’s Czlebt Compound is sold by all druggists, $1 a bottle. Six for $5. WELLS, RICHARDSON & 00., Prop’*, Burlington Vti And HotWeal herlnvigorator PIANOS on G A NS CASH. OR ON TIME. AT DEANE’S ART GALLERY WHIPS, WAGONS, BUGGIES- AND IIAPNKSS --)o(— - Studebakor Wagon! White -Hickory Wagon I Jackson G. Smith Wagon! Jackson G. Smith Buggy! AmJ the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. Repairs on old Buggies a Specialty. W. H. SPENCE, aug28difcw6m Cor. Hill A Taylor Street*. GRIFF1N, UA: _ WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED ! A fresh lot of preserve*, Jellies, Apples, Oranges,! Panamas, Cocoanuts, AND IN FACT EVERYTHING A H0USKEEPPER WILL NEED: NO YORE EYE-GLASSES Wea More MITCHELL’S EYE-SALVE A Certain,Safe and Effective Remedy for Sore, Weak and Inflamed Eyes Producing Laag-UghUdasli. of and Restoring the Night u the Old. Cares Tear rops, Granulation, Stye, Tumors, ES ANDPRODCCINO Red Eyes, Matted QUICK Eye RE¬ Lash LIEF AND PERMANKNTCURE Also, equally efficacious when usedlnoth er maladies, such a* Ulcers, Fever Sores, Tn mors. Salt Rheum, Burns, Piles, or wherever inflammation exists, MITCHELL’S SALVE may be used to advantage, old bv alt Druggists at 25eents. A GREAT YEAR in the history of the United States Is now upon us. Every the person of intelligencw desires to keep pace with course of Its event*. There is no better way to do so than to subscribe for The Macon Telegraph. Its the news South. facilities In addition are unsurpassed to the fullest by any Associ¬ paper in special correspond¬ ated Press dispatches, it has ence by wire and letter from all Important points m Georgia and the neighboring States, During the present session of Congress Wash¬ ington will be the most important and most In¬ teresting news centre In the country. The Washington Correspondence of the Telegraph is the very best that can be had. Its regular correspondent furnishes the latest news and gossip In full dispatches. Cummings, Frequent special letters from lion. Amos J. known newspaper writers at mo capital, of dis¬ the cuss the livest and most Important issues Yho Telegraph Is a Democratic Tariff Reform paper. It is thoroughly Cleveland In line with Democratic the policy of I resident and the pari • In the coming national campaign tho Teh aph will not only give all the news, but will liscuss all public Issue* from the stand- poii ol genuine Dcmovatic faith, (subscribe at c.: ce. (gaily, one year, - * • - • 87 00 6*11}', six months, .... 4 00 Daily, three months, • • * • 2 oo Daily, one month, .... .75 Weekly, one year, • ■ - - * 1 OO Terms: Cash in advance. Address THE TXXEGBAPH, ILuai. Georgia. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. All persons indebted to the estate of Mary I,. Butter, late of 8pa!diog County, Georgia, deceased, arc hereby notified to call on the undersigned aud make settlement of such in dehtediicss at once; and all persons having demands against said estate are notified to present their claims properly proven. J. YV. BUTLER, AdminL’ ntor. may7wfi.—$3.70. 60 A thy-; YEARS IN USE.£ i«n gays, a sovereign remedy for worms. Vermifuge Having used the practice original for “B. A. Fahnestock’’ I have in my many years, no is toft Hesitancy rtltoiU in recommending and efficitnt in it as all a remedy where which , cases a Vermifuge is seeded. , Thos. H. Handy, M. D., Cambridge, Md. Observe particulajly that the initials arc Jm, A. iu* avoiding imitations. Rule Nisi. Duncan,Marlin A Perdue ) W. T. H. Taylor, \ of Georgia. 8i>alding County. In the Superior Court, February Term, Court by 1888. the it being Duncan, represented Martin to the A Perdue that pe¬ by of of Mortgagee dated tho 18ih day o W.T. H,.Taylor oonveyedtosaid Martin A, Perdue “a certain parcel land containing No, U5 thirty in the (80) 4th acre* District being of of lot county, Ga., the bounded South by on P. the Chata- East Jack Crawley, on North by P. to Starr, West by some my own lands, said load, thirty scree, be¬ worth three hundred payment dollars,” tor the of securing the of a promia aory.note made by tbe said W./T. H.Taylorto due said Duncan, Martin A Perdue, on the 1st day of Oct. ,1887, for Uie sum of One Hundred and Forty Eight ana 60 -100 fees, Dollars, which interest and attorneys is now due and unpaid. It ia ordered that the said yV.T. H. Taylor pay into the this pxincipal, Court, by interest the'first and day of costs, the term on said note and mortgage or show cause any thereof he has to foreclosure the contrary, bo granted or that in to the de¬ fault Perdue -aid Duncan, Martin & of said Mort¬ gage. and the equity of redemption of the said W. T.IITaylor therein be foreyer barred, and that service II. Taylor of this according rule be perfected law. on said W. T. to JAMES S. BOYNTON, C, F. C. Judge Att’ys. Beck & Cleveland, Petitioners I certify that the foregoing Court, Is this a troe Februa¬ copy from the Minutes of this ry *feb25oam4m Term, 1888. W*. M. Tho*A9, S, C. Clerk 8. C HAN WANTS BUT LITTLE Here below, but he Wants tha* little mighty quick. A a big one is promptly filled by ad¬ vertising In the Daily or Weekly NEWSL ADVERTISERS can learn the exact cos’ of any nroposed hne o: advertising in America: pnoers by addressing V : i\ Rowell Co., . *,:*• , New York. , Sc*. t* ‘ >«* 1 -|»lei*r'