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nammii tSS
Imparities la U<*a4 produce disease*.
Dodliy amt wcatat health depend upon a
healthy condition of the blood. The blood,
particularly la iKo spring and during die hot
summer months, becomes clogged with Im¬
purities, which i olsou It end generate <Us>
rase. A termless blood purifier, without a
particle of nihit-fri poison In It, i*eb as mer¬
cury or potash, Is necessary to' remove these
Impurities aud to restore the healthy tone ot
tuluti auJ body. The Iwst purifier and tonto
known to the world Is Swift's Specific (B.S.S.P
In regard to Its wonderful purifying and
tunic powers we give a few testimonials at
follows:
Hr. Wm. A. Slebold, with Oee.P. Rowell *
Co, 19 SprueeGt reel. Mew York, writes March
glli, UK: “ 1 fhel it my duty, for the beaellt
ef others who may be affiietett ae I was, to
strife you this letter, which you can use as
my testimony In soy way you choose. A will
W any inquiry from others in relation
I Hots herewith stated. In PsbruaVy
.iWPdfWrodgfna* palnand tneoBvenleac*
gumboils. aU over my neck; I could not turn
suy tiMt without acute pala nnd my Mood
was th poor condition. After trying aU the
uuut remedies la such esses, and finding an
relief, by the perfusion of Mr. J. W. Fears,
Manager of y*u» Maw York (mat, I used one
bottle S. 8. 8, and I Improved rapidly and
vary soon t was entirely relieved ot my
“ Job'* Comforter*." Haw not» sign of my
sflUotion can b# ace*. I feet sweat and Cheer
fuL s. s. a lsa fine tonlo m *»▼*$•«*.«&
cate. I aleep soundly and my gypgMMgftMd-
Dr. J. N. Cheney, a weU-hhdJM Y*^ MMMW t m
writes from EltavUle. Oeorrt» n ar i
In convalesce*! tavw cases with <h* |e(Yr S *
suits. It will, in my judgment, preOtafgum-
luer dysentery, If on* win takg a few bottle*
In the spring, thus preparing th* boWtls for
the strain* of summer." ”• a
Mrs. Scott Liston, 111 Zan* street (Isthhd), •
Wheeling, Weal Virginia, write*: "HaUUf
used S. 8. S. for the blood, I can safely say
that!* Wood beats anything ha# I h*»« used to cleanse
the u«d »*kA* kiting outttf a per¬
son."
Mr. X. 8. Manila, Winston, V. 0« witttoi <
" 1 use it every spring. It always buSd* fee
eoubllog up, giving me to appetite Stand the and long, dlgestien, trying, and ’
me ener-
s sting hot summer days. Ob using 1; 1 sooa
Uuptu* sti ong of body and easy of mind.'*
TrpefireAwed and feta 1ff*e*s>fi>tl*d
{fM|^ fA f , ,
g W fPO trs ctr t d Co- Btawerl, At*ast*.fla.
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
AARPP'- l t YRY’S OFFICE, Spalding Codm-
tv Georgia, June 27, 1888.—E. W.
fleck and John H. Mitchell as executors of
the last application wilt of Win. D. Alexander, dec’d,have
marie to me for leave to Bell
eighteen and thu>e-fourth of shares of
ilie Capital Stock the Savannah, Griffin
and North Alabama KR, Co. for distribution
imongst the heirs of deceased.
Let nil persons concerned show cause before
the court of Ordinary of said county by ten
eVlock a. m., on the first Monday in August
next, In granted. Griffin, Ga., why such petition should
not be
*3.00 E, W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/ ORDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Loon-
V/ tt, Georgia, June 20th, 1888.—B. A.
Oglctree, L.P. executor of the last will and testa
meut of Ogle tree, dec’d, has made appl-
cation for leave to sell ene hundred and fifty
acres of land more or less belonging to the
estate of deoeased for the paymenfof debts
and for distribution. Said land being in
Union district and bounded on thq.North by
Francis Andrews, east and south by John J.
KjdeY, I.at and all west by W. concerned J. Elder. show
persons cause
before the Court of Ordinary at my office in
Griffin on the first Monday in Angust next
bv ten o’clock a. nr., why such application
should not be granted.
$« 00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
-■■*-
/ sRDINARY’S OFFICE, Spaldinj Cocn-
\.r Martha ty, Georgia, May 26th, 1888.—Mrs,
A. Darnall, administratrix of Katie
Dm-nall, mission has applied to me Katie for letters of Dis¬
said on the ostate of Darnall, late
of county, decased.
Lot all persons con cere rd show cause be
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county
September, at my office in Griffin, on t e first Monday in
1888, by ten o’clock, a. rn why
such letters should not be granted.
$6,15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
AKWNARY’8 OFFICE, Spai-dino Codn-
Martha \7 rx, Georgia, May 26th, 1888,—Mrs.
Darnall, A. Darnall, executrix of Thos. M.
has applied to me for letters of dis
minion from the executorship of said estate.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at
September, my office in Griffin, 1888, on the first Monday in
by ten o’clock, a. in., why
uah letters should not l»a granted.
$0 15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
/ORDINARY’S \J Georgia, OFFICE, July 2nd, Spalding 1888.—N. Coun- M.
Collens tt,
as administrator on estate of Wm. J.
Woodward leave to sell deceased, three hundred has applied and three to me and for
three-fonrth 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
tribBtion to-wit: tkesame being lot No. 22
and the West half of lot No. ten (10) lying
bt Cibins district in said county.
Let all persons concerned snow cause be
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county,
at my office in Griffin, on the first Monday
In August, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why
inch petti’ion should not be granted.
««00. E. W- HAMMOND, Ordinary.
Rule Nisi.
B. 0. Kinard A Son ,
L J. Ward A J. W. Ward. )
State of Georgia, Spalding County. In the
Superior Court, February Term, 1888.
It being represented to the Court by the
petition of B. C. Kinard A Son that by Deed
•f Mortgage, dated the 16th day of Oct. 1887.
LJ. Ward A J. W. Ward conveyed to the
said B. C. Kinard A Son a certain tract of
land, District towit; fifty acres of land lying in Akins
follows: of Spalding county, Ga., bounded as
Jno. Ward, North by lands of Bill Wise, East and by
South by Barney Maddox
West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬
made curing by the payment of a promissory note
the said I. J. Ward A J. W. Ward to
the said B. C. Kinard & Hon due on the 15th
•ay Dollars of November 1887, for the sum of Fifty
'.Hi t and Ninety-six cents ($50.96), which
note Is now due and unpaid.
I A'JtJ ordered thatthe said I. J. Ward A J.
. or that in
wanted to the
’ ■ ' "*'•* w w • n« n dru inertia dc luiovti d»i •
fe * sfi. *nd that service of this rule be perfected
j-u uhid L J. Ward A J. W. Ward according
w taw by service by publication in the Griffin Nnws,
« upon I. J, Ward A J. W. Ward
form w a copy three months *prior to the next
of this court.
. JAMES'S. BOYNTON,
I Frank Dismuke'A^Collensf Judge S. C. F. C.
toners Flynt Att’a. and Peti-
■e-
1 true copy from the Minutes of thisCou
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk ». C. 8 C.
C* * *y.^»
ICE BOUND.
By W. CLARK RUSSELL,
Author of “ The Wreck of the Grosvenor ,*
• "Jack s Courtship ” “My Watch He-
lo’c ” ‘ The Lady Maud ” Etc.
CHAPTER I.
% WM ittORM. Ht
*
*t- Jf-
*
HE Laughing Mary was
safe©’ jlii “ rm light “6‘ a vessel ship, that as sailors stands
upon the water,
having discharged her
cargo at Callao, from
which port wc were pro¬
ceeding in ballast to
Cape Town, South
Africa, there to call for
jjf orders. Our run to
t'i within a few parallels
of the latitude of the
Horn had been extreme¬
ly pleasant; the prover¬
i) bial mildness of the
Pacific ocean was in the mellow sweetness of
the .wind and in the gentle undulations of the
silver-laeed swell; but scarce had wo passed
the height of 49 degs. when the weather grew
sullen and dark, a heavy bank of clouds of a
livid hue rose in the northeast, and the wind
came and went in small gusts, the gusts vent¬
ing themselves in dreary moans, insomuch
that our oldest hands confessed they had
never beard blasts more portentous.
The gale came on with some lightning and
several claps of thunder and heavy rain.
Though it was but 2 o'clock in the afternoon,
the air was so dusky that the men had to feel
for the ropes; and when the first of the tem¬
pest stormed down upon us, the appearance
of the sea was uncommonly terrible, being
swept and mangled into boiling froth in the
northeast quarter, while all about us and in
the southwest it lay in a sort of swollen hud¬
dle of shadows, glooming into the darkness
of the sky without offering tho smallest
glimpse of the horizon.
In a few minutes the hurricane struck us.
We had bared the brig down to tho close
reefed maintopsail; yet, though wo were
dead before the outfly, its first blow rent the
fragment of sail as if It were formed of
smoke, and in an instant it disappeared, flash¬
ing over the bows, like a scattering of torn
paper, leaving nothing but the bolt ropes be¬
hind. The bursting of the topsail was like
tho explosion of a large cannon. In a breath
the brig was smothered with froth torn up in
huge clouds, and hurled over and ahead of
her in vast quivering bodies that filled the
wind with a dismal twilight of their own, in
which nothing was visible but their terrific
speeding. Through these slinging, soft, and
singing masses of spume drove the rain in
horizontal steel like lines, which gleamed in
the lightning stroke, as though indeed they
were barbed weapons of bright metal, darted
by armies of invisible spirits raving out their
war cries as thoy chased us.
The storm mado a loud thunder in the sky,
and this tremendous utterance dominated
without subduing the many screaming, hiss¬
ing, shrieking and hooting noises raised in
the rigging and about the decks, and tho
wild, seething, weltering sound of the sea,
maddened by the gale and struggling in its
enormous passion under the first choking and
iron grip of the hurricane’s hand.
But though the first rage of the storm was
terrible enough, its fierceness did not come
to its height till about 1 o’clock in the middle
watch. Long beforo then the sea had grown
mountainous, and the danco of our egg shell
of a brig upon it was sickening and affright-
ing.
No man could show himself on deck and
preserve his life. Between the rails it was
wayst high, and this water, converted by the
motions of the brig into a wild torrent, had
its volume jierpetually maintained by ton
loads of sea, falling in dull and pounding
crashes over the bows on to the forecastle.
There was nothing to be done but secure the
helm and await the issue below, for if we
were to be drowned it would make a more
easy foundering to go down dry and warm
in the cabin, than to perish half frozen and
already nearly strangled by the bitter cold
and flooded tempest on deck.
There was Capt. Rosy; there was myself,
by name Paul Rodney, mate of tlio brig, and
there were the remaining seven of a crew,
including the carpenter. We sat in the
cabin, one of us from time to time clawing
his way up the ladder to peer through the
companion, and we looked at one another
with the melancholy of malefactors waiting
to be called from their cells for the last jaunt
to Tyburn. continued
Thus it till daybreak, when
something of ita midnight fury went out of
the gale. The carpenter made shift to sound
tho well, and to our great satisfaction found
hut little water, only as much as we had a
right to suppose she would take in above.
By noon the wind had weakened yet, but the
■sa still ran very heavily, and the sky was
■acommonly thick clouds;'.and with piles of dusky, yel-
lawisb,.hurrying though we
could fairly reckon upon our position, the
atmosphere was so nipping it was difficult to
persuade ourselves that Cape Horn was not
close aboard.
Wo could uow work the puntps, and a
Short spell freed tho brig. We got up a new
maintopsail and bent it, and setting the
reefed foresail put the vessel before the wind,
and away she ran, chased by the swollen
seas. Thus wo continued till by dead reck¬
oning we calculated that we were about
thirty leagues south Of the 87*degs. parallel of the
Horn, and' In longitude west. We
then boarded our larboard tacks aud brought
the brig as close to the wind as it was proper
to lay her for a progress that should not be
wholly leeway; but four hours after we had
handled the braces the gale, that had not
veered two peints since it first came on to
blow, stormed up again into its first fury,
jtnd the morning of the 1st of Jul 3 r , A. D.
1801, found the Laughing Mary passionately
laboring in the midst of an enraged Cape
Horn sea, her jibboom and foretopgalluut-
mast gone, her ballast shifted, so that her
posture, even in a calm, would have exhibited
her with her starboard channels under and
her decks swept by enormdrfs 1 'surges, which,
fetching her larboard bilgts dreadful blows,
thundered in mighty green masses over her.
CHAPTER IL
THE ICEBERG.
The loss of the spars I have named was no
great matter, nor were we to be intimidated
by sueh weather as was to be expected off
Capo Horn.
But there was an inveteracy in the gate
which had driven us down to this part that
bore heavily upon our spirits. It was impoe
slble to trim the ballast. We dared not veer
so as to bring the tiOp on the other tack.
With helm lashed and yards pointed to the
tmuiing wind, thus we lay, tfru» we drifted, steadily
with the send of each giant surge
farther and deeper into the icy regions of tbs
southwest, helpless, foreboding, disconsolate.
It was the night of the fourth day of the
month. The crew were forward it;.the fore*
castle, and I knew not if any man was on
deck saving myself.
I stood ht the companion as in a sentry
box, with my eyes just above the cover.
Nothing was to be seen but sheets of ghostly
white water, sweeping up the blackness on
the vessels le^ «r breaking and boiling to
windward.
After a long and eager look round Into the
obscurity, sem(lucent with froth, I went
below for a mouthful of spirits and a bite ot
supper, the hour being eight bells in the
second dog watch, as we say—that fc, eight
o’cloek in the evening. The captain and car¬
penter were in the cabiu. Upon-tho swing
tray over the table were a piece of corned
beef, somo biscuit, and a bottle of holluuds.
“We’re in an ugly part of the globe,’’
says Capt. Rosy. “When bad sailors die
th. y’re sent here, I reckon. The worst nau¬
tical sinner can't bo hove to long off tho Horn
without coming out of it with a purged soul.
He must start afresh to deserve further pun¬
ishment.”
“Well, here's a breeze that can’t go on
blowing much longer,” cries tho carpenter.
“The place it comes from must give out soon,
onless a uow trade wind’s got fixed into a
whole gale for this hero ocean."
“What southing do you allow our drift
will be giving us, captain?” I asked, munch¬
ing a piece of beef.
“All of four mile an hour,” be answered. “If
this goes on I shall look to make some discov- ;
eries. The antarctic circle won’t be far off
presently, and -since you’re a scholar, Rod¬
ney, I’ll leave you to describe what’s inside
of it—though boil me if I don’t have tho
naming of tho tallest land; for, d’ye see, I’ve
a mind to be known after I’m tkiad, and
there's nothing like your signature on a
mountain to bo remembered by.?’ ■
At this instant we were startled by a wild
and fearful shout on deck. It sounded high
above the sweeping and seething of the wind
and the hissing of the lashed waters, and it
penetrated the plunks with a note that gave
it an inexpressible character of anguish.
“A man washed overboard!” bawled the
carpenter, springing to his feet.
“No!” cried 1, for my younger and shrewder
ear hud caught a note in the cry that per¬
suaded mo it was not os the carpenter said;
and in an instant the three of us jumped up
the ladder and gained the deck.
The moment I was in tho gale the same
affrighted cry rang down along the wind
from some man forward: “For God’s sake,
tumble up lieforo we are upon it!”
“What do you see?” I roared, sending my
voice, trumpet fashion, through my hands;
for as to my own and tho sight of Capt. Rosy
and tho carpenter, why, it was like being
struck blind to come on a sudden out of tin
lighted cabin into the black night.
Any reply that might have been attempted
was choked out by tho dive of the brig's
head into the sea, which furiously flooded
her forecastle, and came washing aft like
milk in the darkness, till it was up to our
knees.
“See there .'"suddenly roared tho carpenter.
“Where, man—where?” bawled the captain.
But in this brief time my sight had grown
used to tho night, and I saw the object-before
tho carpenter could answer. It lay on our
lee beam, but how far off no man could have
told in that black thickness. It stood against
the darkness and hung out a dim complexion
of light, or rather of pallidness, that was not
light—not to be described by the pen. If
was like a small hill of snow, and looked os
snow does, or the foam of the sea in darkness,
and it came and went with our soaring and
sinking.
“Ice!” I shouted to the captain.
“I see it,” he answered. “We must drive
her clear at all risks.”
There was no need to call the men. To the
set-out! cry that had been raised by one
among-ttiem, who had come out of the fore¬
cast! e and seen the berg, they had tumbled
up os sailo-.-s will when thoy jump for their
lives; and now they came staggering, splash¬
ing, crawling aft to us, for the lamp in the
cabin made a sheen in tho companion hatch,
and they could see us as we stood there.
“Men, 1 ’ cried Capt. Rosy, “yonder’s a
gravestone for our carcasses if wo are not
lively! Cast the helm adrift!” (we steered
by a tiller). “Two hands stand by it For¬
ward, somo of ye, and loose tho forestaysail,
and show tho head of it!”
-The fellows hung in the wind. I could not
wonder. Tho bowsprit had been sprung when
the jibboom watf wrenched from tho cap by
the fall of the topgatlantmait; it still had
to bear the weight of the heavy spritsail
yard, and the drag of the staysail might
carry the Spar overboard with the men upon
it. Yet it was our best-chance; tho one sail
most speedily released and hoisted—the ono
that would pay the brig’s head off quickest,
and the only fragment that promised to stand.
“Jump!” roared the captain, in a passion
of hurry. “Great thunder! tis close aboard 1
You’ll leavo me no sea room for veering if
you delay an instant."
“Follow rrfo who will!” I cried out; “and
others stand by ready to hoist away.”
Thus speaking—for thero seemed to my
mind a surer promise of death in hesitation
at this supremo moment, than in twenty
such risks as laying out on the bowsprit sig¬
nified—I made for the lee of the weather
bulwarks and blindly liauled myself forwurd
by sueh pins and gear as canto to my hands.
A man ni!.;ht spend his life on tho ocean and
never have to deal with such a passage as
this-.
I got on to the bawrpril, r.K>u'y stifled by
tho showering of the seas, hnldJag an open
knifo Is:tween my teeth, halt dazed by the
prodigious motion of the light brig, which at
this extreme end of her was to bo felt to the
full height of its extravagance. At every
plunge I expected to be buried, and every
moment 1 was prepared to be torn from my
hold.
Commending myself to God, for I was now
to let go with my hands, I pulled the knife
from my teeth, and, feeling for the gaskets
or lines which bound the sail to the spar, I
cut and hacked as fast as I could ply my
arms. In a flash the gale, whipping into a.
liberated fold of the canvas, blew the whole
sail out; the bowsprit reeled and quivered
under me; I danced off it with incredible
dispatch, shouting to the mfen to hoist away.
The head of the staysail mounted in thunder,
and the slatting of its folds and the thrashing
of its sheet was like the rattling of heavy-
field pieces whisked at full gallop over a
stony road.
“High enough!” I bawled, guessing enough
was shown, for I could not see, “Get a drag
upon the sheet, lads, and then aft with you
for your lives!”
Scarce had I let forth my breath in this
cry when I heard the blast as of a gun, and
knew by that the sail was gone; an instant
after wash came ft mountainous sea sheer
over the weather bulwark* fair Betwixt the
fore and main rigging? but happily ^standing
near the fore shrewd* S wwt holding on with
both hands to tbe toi-Hi haljrards while call¬
ing to tbenuaj *» of being under the nil,
which broke the Wow the sea, and holding
on too, no mischief befel me—only that for
m il)— ii—
- '
V , 1 horrible
twenty seconds stood in a
fhry and smother of frothing water, hearing faculty
nothing, seeing nothing, with every
in me no numbed and dulled by the wet, cold,
end horror of our situation, that I know not
whether iu that space of time I was in tho
least degree sensible of what had happened
or what might befall.
The water leaving the deck, 1 rallied,
though half drowned, and staggered aft, and
found the helm deserted, nor could 1 Roe any
sign* of inv companions, I r i to tho
tUter, a. id putting my wholey vi , ...id foreo
to R, drove it up to windw;r.i .. - secured it
a turn of its own ruttp; for it* or no ice—
and for the moment I was so blinded by tho
wet that I could not see the berg— my mad¬
ness now was to get the brig before the sea
and out of the trough, advised t ..-very in¬
in me that such another su. ::s that
which had rolled over her must t. td her' to
the bottom in less time than it would take a
man to cry “Oh God!”
A figure came out of tho blackness on tho
lee side of the deck.
“Who is that?” said he. It was Capt. Rosy.
I answered.
“What, Rodney!—alive?” cried he. “I
think I have boon struck insensible.”
Two more figures came crawling aft; then
two more. They were the carpenter and
three seamen.
I cried out, “Who was at the helm when
that sea was shipped?”
A man answered, “Me, Thomas Jobling.”
“Where’s your mate?” I asked; and it
seemed to me that I was the only man who
had his senses full just then.
“He was washed forward along with me,”
he replied.
Now a fifth man joined us; but before I
could question him as to the others, tho cap¬
tain, with a scream like an epileptic’s cry,
shrieked, “It’s all ever with us! We are
upon itt”
I looked and perceived the iceberg to be
within a musket shot, whence it was door
that it had been closer to us when first
sighted than the blackness of the night would
suffer ns to distinguish. In a time like this
at sea events throng so fast they come in a
heap, and even if the intelligence were not
confounded byjho uproar and peril—if, in¬
deed,^ were as placid ns in any time of per¬
fect security—it could not possibly take note
of eae-tenth that happens.
I confess that, for my part, 1 was very
nearly paralyzed by the nearness of tho ice¬
berg, and by the cry of the captain, and by
tho perception that there was nothing to be
done. That which I best recollect is the ap¬
pearance of the mass of ice lying solidly, like
a little island, upon tho seas which roared in
creaming waters about it-
All other features were swallowed up in
the agouy of the time. One monstrous swing
the brig gave, like to some doomed creature’s
last delirious struggle; the bowsprit caught
tho ico and snapped with the noise of a great
tree crackling in fire. I could hear the masts
breaking overhead—the crash and blows of
spars and yards torn down aud striking the
hull; above all, the grating of the vessel, that
was now bead on to the sea and swept by the
billows, broadside on, along the sharp and
murderous projections. Two monster seas
tumbled over the bows, floated me off my
legs, and dashed me against the tiller; to
which I clung. I beard uo cries. I regained
my feet, clinging with a death grip to the
tiller, and, seeing no one near me, tried to
holloa, to know if any man were living, but
could not make my voice sound.
^2 /
Clinging with a death grip to the tiller.
The fearful grating noise ceased on a sud¬
den, and the faintness of the berg loomed
upon the starboard bow. IVe had been
hurled elear of it and * ere to leeward; but
what was our condition? I tried to shout
again, but to no purpose, and was iu the act
of quitting the tiller to go forward, when I
was struck over the brows by something
from aloft—a block, as I believe—and fell
senseless unon the deck.
pro ,ii coxnNOtD.i
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age on Manhood, Nervou* and(
Physical Debility, Prematura'
Decline, Errors of Youth, i
the untold miseriesconseqa
thereon, 806 pages Svo,
j.reAcrlpOooa for aU <
Cloth, foil gBt, only *L08,1 _
mall.aaalart. Illustrated sample baa to *U young
and mMdlaacad mao. Send now. The Gold and
Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by th* Na-
ttsual Medical Association. Address K O . box
OH, Boston, Mass., or Dr. W. K. PASK ER , grad-
uats of Harvard Medical College, 25 y sars’ practice
lit - wltfi may Kg UOfiBfllted
ImMtr.nmmof Wsn. omcrlta.tltuMnchri.
- -
DaR's Triplets. r
dlatety, as "LEStod 'Tum l
that that they Vtod lathe haMat. BA
thw. well, and !* better than medicine when their ate rick. mother Three of May: baby Sa, bora t to Uu* j
KtdruggUU. Cablnat photo, of these triplet* aont ftee to the any yns.
Address WELLS. RICHARDSON U CO.. Burlington. Vt.
PIANOS f
OJWANS t
CASH, OR ON TIME, AT .
DEANE’S ART GALLERY,
'
WHIPS, WAGONS; BUGCIES-
AND HAPNKSS
—M- - -
Studebaker Wagon j White Hickory Wagon I
Jackson G. Smith Wagon!
Jackson G. Smith Buggy T
And the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Price* possible. Repair* *»
old Buggies a Specialty.
W. II. SPENCE,
aug2Sd£w6m Cor. Hill A Taylor Streets, GRIFF! N, GA?
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED I
A fresh lot of preserves.
Jellies, Apples,
> Oranges.fBanar.nas,
Cocoanuts,
AND IN FACT EVERYTHING A HOUSKEEPPER WILL NEED:
NO IVORE EYE-GLASSES
Wea
sr,\*
Mo re Eyes
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A Certain, 8afe and Effective Remedy for
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■*r«tlucinr Kaay - Sl(ht*daail«. of
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Red Eyes,
ES AND PRODUCING Q JICK RE¬
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mors. Salt Rheum, Burns, Piles, or wherever
inflammation exists, MITCHELL’S SALVE
may be used to advantage,
old bv all Druggists at 25cents.
A GREAT YEAR
In the history of the United States is now upon keep
us. Every person of Intelligence desire* to
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THE TZXEOBAFH,
Moanr. Gzosgia
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
All persons indebted to the estate of Mary
L. Butler, late of Spalding County, Georgia, the
deceased, arc hereby notified to call on
undersigned ai d make settlement of ouch in
debtedness at once; and all persons having
demands against said estate are notified to
present their claims BUTLER, properly Administrator. proven.
J. W.
may7w6.—$3.70.
WhencU.-ire unnatural "pick their in their nose, appetite, grind their they teeth,
oru restic-ss, *«
Vermifuge it has saved be given many them t child Jjfeeprdisg from death to diieo atd
may prese rve your sweet child from an e tflyfraw
RnleNisl.
Duncan, Martin A Perdue 1
W. T. EL Taylor. f
State of Georgia, Spalding County. In the
■ Superior It Court, February Term, 1888.
tition being represented to the Court by the p«-
Deed of of Duncan, Mortgage, Martin dated & tho Perdue 18th that day by
o
January,1887,W.T.H.Taylor Duncan, Martin & Perdu* “a conveyed.to certain parcel said
of land containing thirty (30) acres being
part Spalding of lot No, 115 in the 4th District of
by Jack Crawiev, county, Ga., the bounded on P. the East
on South by Chain-
leas, North by P. L. Starr, West by tome
of my own lands, said land, thirty acrai, be¬
ing worth three hundred dollars,” oif fox the
purpose of securing the payment a promts
sory.note made by the said W.;T. H.Taylor to
the said Duncan, Martin & Perdue, due on
the 1st day of Oct..1887, for the sum of On*
Hundred and Forty Eight and 50 -100 Dollars,
principal, Interest ana attorneys fees, which
amount is now due and unpaid.
It "1 is ordered that the Wtid i W.T. H. Tailor
— - . . _ _—_... coa t s.
i and morteatro or show cause
i' any he has to the contrary, or that in de¬
fault thereof foreclosure be granted to the
said Duncan, Martin & Perdue of saidMort¬
gage, and the equity of redemption of the
said W. T.IITaylor therein be. forvm barred,
mmm ' perfected on
Judge 8. C. F. C.
Beck & Cleveland, Petitioners Att’ys.
feb25oam4m Clerk JMjJT’c.
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