The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, July 24, 1888, Image 3

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t -r—---------r~ BIFIIiHMOD. Imp ,rl.w* » Wi- UooU produce ttriemm. BtM\f »'*'■*! iBl Uealvfc- depend upon a btalii r eondiltoo of tbs Wood. Th* blood, particularly la Ibespring aDd during the hot summer uwntUs, becomes plugged with Ira- purities, wtk-ii pe«i.:< it ttnd general* dls- t ,.. e A l.:.'tiili'/M Unuf purifier, without • . pnrttcie of iritatrul poison iu It, such as mer. toirj- < r iits'b. u M*cessarj> to rcraor* these l,.,purities and to rector* the hoalthy tone of mla.l uui body. The best purifier And tonic kni»vu iothe world is Swift's'Specific ($.8.8.). lu regard to iu wonderful purifying and tonic powers we glee a few testimonials as follows: Mr. Win. A. Slebold, with Geo. P. Howell * Co., 13 Sprue* Street, New York, writes March . S»tb, 1£8»: “I feel it my duty, for the benefit ef others who may be afillctcil as I was, to write you this letter, which you can use aa my testimony in any way you choose. I will answer any Inquiry from others In relation to the facts herewith stated. In February lest I suffered groat pain and Inconvenience from boils, all over my neck) I could not turn my head without aeuto pain and my blood was iu poor condition. After trying all Ota usual remedies In such cases, and finding no relief, by the persuasion of Hr. J. W. Fears, Manager of your New York Office, I used one bottle 8. 8. B, and I Improved rapidly and very soon I was entirely rclioved of my “ Job's Comforters.” Now not • sign of my affliction can be seen. I feel strong and cheer¬ ful. s. 8. s. lea fine tonlo so as osprwrsnuBiy proved In iqy case. I sleep soundly and my ayappsHUdfOML i Dr. J. N. Cheney, a well-1 writes from IlllavIUe, Oeorgtai "ii*! i a convalescr at fevor cases with • the MM reJ suits. It will. In my judgment. prrAht sum¬ rtbn. 1 mer dysentery. If one will take a few bottle* , in the spring, thus prepaying the bowels for the strains of sumfcer.” »-» j Mrs. Scott Liston, 116 Zane street (Island), , Wheeling, West Virginia, writes: ‘‘Hawing used 8. S. 8. for the blood, I enn safely say that It be*'* anything I have used to cleanse the blood uud make a new being out of a per¬ son.” Mr. M. S. Hamlin, Winston, N. t\, writs*: j “ i use It evory spring. It always build* m* . up, gl'iag me appetite and digestion, and i iutiling me to stand the long, trying, ener- i i ..ting hot summer days. Qn using It I soon Lucerne strong of body and easy of mind,” ! Trtatlseop Stood and fikU Diseases mailed free. T us awtrrfirgcmc Co., Drawer 8, Atlanta,!] a. Ordir ry’s Advertisements. /NROr vRY’S OFFICE, Spalding Couh- V/ n Georgia, June 27, 1888.—E. W. Bee’g ui l John II. Mitchell as executors of th hut will of Wm. D. Alexander, dec’d,have mude application lo me for leave to Bell eighteen and three-fourth shares of the Capital Stock of the 8avannah, Griffin and North Alabama HR. Co. fof distribution amongst the heirs of deceased. Let ail persons concerned show cause before the court of Ordinary of said county by ten o'clock a. m-, on the first Mondav in August next, in Griffin, Ga., why such petition should not be granted. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. 83.00 | / ORDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Coun- \ ty, Georgia, of June the 20th, 1888.—B. and A. Ogletree. executor last will testa meat of L.P.Ogletree, sell dec’d, hundred has made and appl- fifty eition for leave to ene acres of land more or less belonging to the estate of deceased for the paymenf of debts mid for distribution. Said land North being in Union district and bounded on the by Francis Andrews, east and south by John J. Klder and west by W. 'J. Elder. l«t all persons concerned show cause before the Court of Ordinary Monday at my office in Griffin on the first in August next by ten o’clock a. w., why such application should not he granted. MMOND, $6 00 E. W. ! i A Ordinary. i v7 i KDINARY’S OFFICE, May Spaldins Coun- nr, Georgia, 20th, 1888.—Mrs. Martha A. Darnall, administratrix of Katie Dirrnall, has applied to me Katie for letters of Dis¬ mission on the ostate of Darnall, late of said county, decased. Let all persons cohcernrd show cause be fore the Court Griffin, of Ordinary ot ->aid county at my office in on t e first Monday in September, 1888, by ten be o’clock, a. m ., why such letters should not granted. $*5,1.5 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. /YKDINARY’S U OFFICE, Spalding Coun- n, Georgia, May 26th, lt-88, —Mrs. Martha A. Darnall, executrix of Tlios. M. Darnall, has applied to ino 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, neb should 1888, by ten ba o’clock, a. m., why letters not granted. $11.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary, /"ORDINARY’S v7 OFFICE, Spalding Coun- Collens ty, Georgia, July 2nd, 1888.—N. of Wm. M. J. as administrator on estate Woodward deceased, has applied to me for leave to sell three hundred and three and three-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 (10) lying in Cabins 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. WOO. E, W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. Rule Nisi. B. f!. Kinard A - Son j L J. Ward & J. W. Ward, j State of Georgia, Spalding County. Iu the Superior Court, February Term, 1888. It being represented to the Court by the petition of B. C. Kinard & Son that by Deed ef Mortgage, dated the 16th day of Oct. 1887, LJ. Ward* J. \V. Ward conveyed to the •aid B. C. Kinard & Son a certain tract of District land, towit; fifty acres of land lying in Akins follows: of SpaJdiug county.Ga., bounded as Jno. North by lands of Bill Wise, East by nest by Ward, Zed South by Barney Maddox and curing the Gardner, for the purpose of se¬ ttade by the payment said I. J. of Ward a promissory J. W. Ward note the <fc to said B. C. Kinard & Son due on the 15th “*y of November 1887, for the sum of Fifty Dollars and Ninety-six cents ($50.96), which 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 “By of the next term the principal, interest *nd costs, due on said note or show cause, •“JfjH “ *°y they have to the contrary, or that In thereof foreclosure be granted to the Bud the ?• equity Kinard of & redemption Son of said of the Mortgage, said 1. » a *rd & J. W. Ward therein be forever bar- «<4, and that service of this rule be perfected •“““Bid I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward according »o u« by by publication in the Grippin News, - service upon I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward km , * copy three months prior to the next of this court. JAMES 8. BOYNTON, . Frank - Flynt Judge 8. C. F, C. * and Dismuke & Coliens, Peti- oners Att’s. ‘ true copy from the Minutes of thisCcn Wh. M. Thomas, Clerk ». C. 8 C. loamtai ftsiisfyl ICE BOUND. By W CLARK RUSSELL, Author of “The Wreck of the Grosvenotr. r •‘.fuck s Courtship ,” “My Watch Be¬ ta"' ” ‘ The Lady Maud ” Lie. CHAPTER IIL I LOSE MY COMPANIONS. I lay for a long while insensible, and that I should have recovered iny mind instead of dying in that swoon I must over account the greatest wonder of a life that has not been wanting in tbo marvelous. I had no sooner sat up than all that had happened and my present situation instantly came to me. I got upon my legs, and found that I could stand and walk, and that life flowed warm in my veins, for nil that I had been lying mo¬ tionless for an hour or moro, laved by water that would have become ice had it been still. It was intensely dark; tho binnacle lamp burned was extinguished, too dimly nnd the light i:i tho cabin to throw the faintest color upon tho hatchway. One thing L quickly noticed—that the gale had broken and blow no moro than a fresh breeze. Tho sea still ran very high; but, though every surgo con¬ tinued to hurl it* head of snow, and tho heavetis resembled ink from contrast with the passage, as it seemed, close under them of these pallid bodies, there was lcsS spite in its wash, less fury to its blow. Finding that I had the use of my voice, I halloaed as loudly as I could, but no human note responded. Three or four times I shouted, giving some of the jieople their name*—but in vain. Father of mercy! I thought, what has come to pass? Is it possi¬ ble that all my companions have been washed overboard f I stood for some moments as one stunned, and then my manhood—trained to some imr- poso by the usage of the sea, reasserted itself; and may lie I also got some slender comfort from observing tli'uf, dull and heavy as was the motion of the brig, there was yet tho buoyancy of vitality in her manner of ing tho seas, and that after all her case not be so desperate as waa threatened by way in which she had been torn and tated past the iceberg. Feeling as though the very marrow in my bones were frozen, I crawled to the ion ami pulling open the door descended. The lamp in the companion burned faintly. There was a clock fixed to a beam over table; my eyes directly'sought it, and the tiiuc twenty minutes after ten. This nified' that 1 had niuo or ten hour ; of dark¬ ness before me! I took down tiie lamp, trimmed it, went to the lazaretto hatch of tho after of tho cabin. Hero we kept tho store:: the crew. I lifted the hatch and and could hear the water in the hold and rushing with every lift of the brig’s bows; and I could not question, from the volume of water which the sound indicated, that vessel was steadily taking it in, but rapidly. I swallowed half a pannikin of the botlands for the sake of the warmth and life of the draught, and to render myself as water proof us possible—I took from the captain’s cabin a stout cloak and threw it over me, en¬ veloping my head, which I had cased in a warm fur cap, with the hood of it; and thus equipped I lighted a small hand lantern that was used on dark nights for heaving the log —that is, for showing how the sand runs in the glass—and carried it on deck. , I moved with extreme caution, casting the lantern light before me, sometimes starting at a sound that resembled a groan, then stop¬ ping to steady myself during some particu¬ lar wild leap of the hull; until, coming abreast of the main batch, the rays of the lantern struck upon a man’s body, which, on my bringing the flame to his face, proved to be Capt. Rosy. There was a wound over his right brow; and, as if that had not sufficed to slay him, the fall of the mast had in some wonderful manner whipped a rope several times round his body, binding his arms and encircling his throat so tightly that no exe¬ cutioner could have gone moro artistically to work to pinion and choke a man. Under a mass of rigging in the larboard scuppers lay two bodies, os I could just faintly discern. It was impossible to put the lantern closo enough to either one to distin¬ guish his face, nor had I the strength, even if I had possessed the weapons, to extricate them; for they lay under a whole body'of shrouds, ^implicated by a mass of other gear, against which leaned a portion of tbe caboose. I viewed them long enough to satisfy my mind that they were dead, and then with a heart of lead turned away. I crossed to tho starboard side, where deck was comparatively clear, and found tbe body of a seaman named Abraham Wise near the fore hatch. This man hod probably been stunned and drowned by tho sea that filled the deck after 1 had loosed tbe staysail. These were all of our people that I could find; the others, I supposed,’ had been washed by the water, or knocked by the falling spars, overboard. I returned to the quarter deck, and down In the companion way for the of it and to think. No language that I command of could put before you the that possessed me as I sat meditating upon my situation and recalling the faces of the dead. I will not pretend to remember how 1 passed the hours till the dawn came. I rec¬ ollect of frequently stepping below to lift the hatch of the lazaretto, to judge by the sound of the quantity of water in the vessel. That she was filling I knew well, yet not leaking so rapidly but that, had our crew been pre¬ served, we might easily have kept her free, and made shift to rig up jury masts Mid haul us as best we could out at these desolate par¬ allels. There was, however, nothing to be done till the day broke. I had noticed tho jolly boat bottom up near the starboard gang¬ way, and so far as I could make out by throwing the dull lantern light upon her she was sound, but I could not have launched her without seeing what I was doing, and even had I managed this she stood to be swamped and I to be drowned. And, in sober truth, so horrible was the prospect of going adrift in her without preparing tor the adventure with oars, sail, mast, provisions and water- most of which by the lamplight only were not to be come at amid the hideous muddl* of wreckage—that sooner than face it I was perfectly satisfied to take my chance of the hulk sinking with me in her before the sun rose. CHAPTER IV. I QUIT THE WRECK. The east grew pale and gray at last. For a few moments I stood contemplating tbe scene of ruin. It was visible now to it* most trifling detail, The foremast was gone smooth off at the deck ; it lay over the star¬ board bow, and tho topmast floated ahead of the hall, held by the gear. Hasty feet of bulwarks were crushed level/ the pumps had vanished; the caboose wss fowl A com* pleter nautical ruin I had nsTig viewed. One extraordinary stroka X quickly de¬ tected. The jolly boat bad lain stowed to the long boat; it was thus we candid these boats, tho littlo one lying snugly enough to the other. The sea that had flooded our decks hod floated the Jolly boat out of the long boat and swept it bottom up to tbe gangway, where it lay, aa though God* mercy designed it should after ba preserved it had been for mv use: for, not lone floated cut, 'she ong strode toe osrg, use masts C*U, end there lay the long boat crushed Into stares! •- This signal and with surprising intervention filled my heart thankfulness, though my spirits-* sank agate at the sight of my poor drowned shipmate* But, unless I had a mind to Job them, it war. necessary 1 should speedily bestir myself. So, after a minute’s reflection, I whipped out my knife, and cutting a couple of blocks away from tho raffle on deck, I rove a line through them, and so made a tackle, by tho help of which I turned the Jolly boat over; I then with a handspike pried her nose to the gangway, secured a bunch of rope on either ride at her to set asfenders or bufftrs when she should be launched and lying alongside, ran her tnidwsy oat by the tackle, and, attaching a line to a ringbolt in bar bow, shoved her over tbe ride, and she fell with a splash, ship¬ ping scarce a hatful of water. I found her mast and soil— the sail furled to tbo mast; as it was used to lie in her—close against the stump of the mainmast; and though I sought with all the diligence that hurry would permit for her rudder, I. no¬ where saw it; but I met with an oar that had belonged to the other boat, and this with tho mast and sail I dropped into her, the swell lifting her up to my hand when the blue fold swung past. My next business was to victual her. I ran to tbe cabin, but found the lazaretto full of water, and none of the provisions iu it to bo Como at. I thereupon ransacked the cabin, and I found a wholo Dutch cheese, a piece of raw pork, half a ham, eight or ten biscuits, some candles, a tinder bo:, several lemons, a little bag of flour, and thirteen bottles of beer. These things I rolled up in a cloth and placed them in the boat, then took from the captain’s locker four jars of spirits, two of which I emptied that I might ffil them with fresh water. I also took with me from the captain’s cabin a small boat compass. the The hull heavy, sluggish^ to*make sodden haste. movement ot advised me She was now barely lifting to the swell that-came brimming in broad liquid blue brows to her stem. It seemed as though another ton of water would sink her; and if the swell fell over her bows and filled the decks, down she would go. I had a small parcel of guineas in my chest, and was about to fetch this money, when a sort of staggering sensation in the upward slide of the hull gavo me a fright, nnd watching my chance, 1 jumped into the boat and east the line that held her adrift. 1 threw the oar over the stern of the boat to keep her near to the brig, not so much ba- cause I desired to see tho last of her as be¬ cause of the shrinking of my soul within va» from the thought of heading to my loneliness into those prodigious leagues of ocean which lay stretched under tho sky. I had risen to step the boat’s mast, and was standing and grasping it while I directed a slow look round the horizon, in God knows what vain hope of beholding a sail, when, my eye coming to the brig, I observed that she was sinking. Sho went down very slowly; there was a horrible gurgling sound of water rushing into her, and her main deck blew up with a loud clap or blast of noise. I could follow the line of her bulwarks fluctuating and waving in the clear dark blue when sbs was some feet under. A number of whirl¬ pools spun round over her, but tbe slowness of her foundering was solemnly marked by the gradual descent of the ruin of masts and yards which were attached to the hull by their rigging, and which she dragged down with her. On a sudden, when tho last fragment of mast had disappeared, and when the hollows of the whirlpools were flattening to the level surface of the sea, up rosea body, with a sort of leap. It wh theseilor that had lain drowned on the starboard side of the forward deck. Being frozen ktiffhe rose to the posture to which he had expired— that is, with his arms extended— so that, whe nhe jumped to the surface, he came with his hands lifted up to heaven, and thus he stayed a minute, sustained by the eddies, whichalao revolved him. The shock occasioned by this melancholy object was so great it name near to causing me to raroon. He Made when the water ceased to twist him, and 1 was unspenktogly thankful to see him vanish, tar fajs posture had all the horror of a spectral appeal, and such wh the state of my mind that imagina¬ tion might quickly have worked the appari¬ tion, had it lingered, into an instrument for the unsettling ot my reason. I rose from the seat on to which 1 had sunk and loosed the sail, and hauling tho sheet aft put the oar over the stem and brought the little craftY heed to an easterly course. Tbe draught of air wh extremely weak and scarce furnished impulse enough to beat the sail to raise a bubble alongside The wt about fifteen feet long; she Mould, be but • Ush July- lake waters—yet her* wh I in her to tbo heart of a vast ocean, many leagues aouUz aad wect of the stormiest, meet inhospitable point Of land to the world, with distance* before mo almost infinite for such a boat as this to measure ere I oould hcavo a civilised coast or a habitable island into vlewl At the start I had a mind to steer north¬ west and blow, m the wind would suffer. Into the South sea, whore perchance I might meet a whaler or a southaeaman from Now Hot- land; but my heart sank at tho prospect of tbe leagues of water which rolled between me and the islands and the western American seaboard. Indeed, I understood that my only hope of deliverance lay to being picked up; and that, though by heading east Lsbould be dinging to the stormy parte, I was moro likely to meet with a ship hereabouts than by sailing into tbe great desolation of tho north¬ west. The burden of my loneliness weighed down upon me so erusuingly tl»s I cannot but consider ray senses must-have been some¬ what dulled by suffering; tor had they been active to their old aeeastomed height, I am persuaded rav heart must have broken, mi that I should have died of grief. (TO 3* CONTINUED. 1 un«r* to Learn gsn—anmip. The best place In the world to make a man involuntarily learn to Men write who a good band is on a steamboat are careless about the formation of tetters, after an experience as a clerk on board a steamboat, become excellent penme The constant shahing and jar of the boat while under way causes the clerk to steady his nerves and form the letters carefully when he is writing. I have seen men go to a desk on a steamboat and write so badly that it was almost im¬ possible to decipher the tetters. I have seen these same men a few months later write as legibly as the avenge business man oould dcsix*. The swinging of the boat had, of necessity, caused-them to be careful in writing, and in a few months • slovenly hand wh improved to in a beau¬ tiful cUrography.—Pell Thomas Olobe- Detnoerai. The Russian government will permit we subjected. Apothecaries allowed receiving fyrp ala pupils will not be to re¬ ceive males.—Frank Leslie's. omasmsi but aos o'm ntxSdse roads. Where toasts of tended trudge with loada Or wajaMeMrta are showered with dost. Or tot ead bsH show state sad rust, When Uaxlng botnets wbitely falls And earn the growth oo garden «aii»- Ctoroe not that war * Oh, come: but lu sure qulei pass Bf rllL tty bush. lhrrm -h te'izlod gross, TlinMtgh woodland was\ wuervna'i^'i 1* beard ilm lew ssi ii ortwmerlns M» I Where sunlight sifts r ->u **- Dip. VVhers hooey wet a lb* Irarr.. i Oh. come that way *M. H- S ” In Chicago Journal Mad Bath* of Lu Vegiu. When it comes to genuine ■ res Los Vegas can show up some f ..-tty tall Most of the cures arc effected by the mud baths, which are a novel feature. The patient is plastered over from bead to foot with extremely hot mud, made by mixing prairie loam with the hot mineral water. The nose, mouth, eyes and ears are left uncovered. He is then placed in a tub of tbe mud and left there half an hour, after which his dirty coating is scraped off. A shower bath of the hot water follows, then a plunge in n tank of it; after which comes the mas¬ sage of a professional; half an hour's siesta—tho patient, sleeping, wrapped in a sheet, in a room the temperature of which is about 88 degs.—and after this another rubbing. If rheumatism sur¬ vives this treatment tong the patient’s only hope for relief lies in suicide.—At¬ lanta Constitution. Known by Their Oddities. If you have ever visited an asylum for the deaf and dumb you have noticed that the patients at once name all visitors by some peculiarity. If there be a slight facial contortion or a peculiarity of mo¬ tion it ia instantly caught by the crowd, represented in sign language, and so you are henceforth designated by them. Their names are much like those given by Itdians to children—“Tbe Man with One Eye Glass,” “The Man Who Has a Mole Under His Eye,” “The Man Who Squibs.” They know you by your dif¬ ferences. We are working on the same plan when we describe our great men and leaders. We know them by their oddities. Grant is, in history, the man who smoked and who kept silence. A man with no deaignativo points will be accepted as a leader.—M. Mau¬ rice, M. D. Mongolian Beauty In, American Drei*. A Chinese lady in approved modern fashionable dress attracted a great deal of interested attention in Breadway the other morning. To any one overtaking her the figure was that of a medium sized girl dressed with exceptional ele¬ gance and taste. She wore a silk dress of a dainty green tint cut and slashed and trimmed after the latest Parisian ideas, and a heavy black beaded passe¬ menterie cape over her shapely shoulder gave a wonderful appearance of neatness to her unquestionably slim waist. Her coiffure was stylish and becoming, and she wore a chip straw hat of the latest shape and of a delicate gray color, elab¬ orately York and effectively trimmed.—New World. A Protection Against Flies. “Talk about your flytraps and mus- quito nettings,” said a well known flor¬ ist to me last week. “Did you know that the much despised castor oil plant is the best protector in the world against flies, musquitoes and other insects? It's a fact, though. The discovery was made by a French scientist named Rafford, who noticed that the rooms in his house where the plants were growing were en¬ tirely free from these disagreeable insects. Ho discovered that the plants gave out an essential oil or some toxic principle which possessed powerful insecticide qualities. Experiments have been made in this country and the same results ob¬ tained. I don't keep the plants, so you can see I am not looking for an ‘ad.,’ but I give it to you for your own benefit.”— Buffalo News “Man About Town.” Great cities are tombs (hat mark wasted nervous energy in the mad rush for wealth and social preferment.—8. B. Elkins. , s The,rate of mortality among the Indi¬ ans increases about 10 [icr cent, a year. Leprosy Is said :o jo spreading at an alarming r ite in Russia. New Advertisements. Peck’s Patent Improved Cushioned Ear Drums PERFECTLY FE3TORE THE HEARING, whether deafness is caused by colds, fevers or injuries to the natural drums. Always in position, bnt invisible to others and com fortable to wear. Music, conversrtion, even whispers them. heard distinctly. We HISOOX, refer to those using Write to F. 849 Broadway, cor. Million BIG MONEY!! rjrXS'S Lives voters with the only official of CLEVELAND and THURMAN by Hon. W. U. Henhkl, also Life of Mrs. Cleveland, Cartridge Bor. exquisite steel portraits. Voters' Free Trade Policy, complete. 3000 Agents at Work report immense success. For best work, best terms, apply quick and make *200 to *500 a month. Outfit 35c. HUBBARD BROS., Philadelphia, Pa. PARKER^ HAIR BALSAM Ctamw and beantiRo: tins hair. ■ ' to it. Youthful Cater. MlpdtiMUMondluUrtsmiw ERCORN8. EXHAUSTED VITALITY rpBS 1 semes or un,u» great Medical Work of th* age on Kaafcood, ](*r*Mu aadf Physical DobOtty, Preraatare ' Dtcltee, Errors •< Yonth, I the antrid miseries oonsoqa tbereoa, SOS pages 8va, prescription (or aU dlseai Cloth, fall got, only *L 08 , mall, sea l ed, ma s h alt ra sampls Onto Hyena Send row. The Sold and UMHthorbyttoKa- I flilnsi P. O . box ,or Dr. W. H. PAfUtKE. grad- ■ I ji y ; PiAJsros t CASH, OR ON TIME, AT DEANE’S ART GALLERY whips, AND HAFNESS —M- - Studebaker Wagon i White Hickory Wagon I Jackson G. Smith Wagon ! Jackson G. Smith Buggy I And the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Leweet Price* pettibie. Repair* eci old Buggies a Specialty. W. H. SPENCE, aujf28dAw0m Oor. Hill A Taylor 8trHt*,eKJFFlV, GA B 1 ■"*” * .... .......... .. .....J............. -------- WE HAVE JUST REGfRAED I A fresh lot of preserves, jetties, Apple*, Oranges, |Banannas, COCMMitS, AND IN FACT EVERYTHING A H0USKEEPPER WILL NEED: NO ITORE EYE-GLASSES Wea Mo re MITCHELL’8 EYE-SALVE A Certain, Safe and Effective Remedy tor Sore, Weak and Inflamed Ejes Prsdselag Briririag Sssff th* - Hybrids***, light wt asd u Ik* Old. Cures Tumors, Tesr rope, Granulation, Matted Eye Lath Stye, Red Eyes, E8 AND PRODUCING QUICK RE¬ LIEF AND PERMANENTCURE Also, equally efficacious when used to oth er maladies, such as Uloers. FeTer Sores, Tu mors. Salt Rheum, Burns, Piles, or wherever SALVE inflammation exists, MITCHELL’S may be need to advantage, 25cente. old bv all Drnggists at A GREAT YEAR ie history ol th# United States te mow us. Every person of Intelligence of tte event*. desire* Then V better pace with the coarse than to subscribe tor way to do so The Macon Telegraph. Its news facilities addition areunsurpHsediby to tit* fullest say Associ¬ vapet in the South. In special eomsMad- ated Pres# dispatches. U hH ril ence by wire and letter from Important points in Georgia and the nstghltorin* State*. iugton'wUl teresting news be the centre most important to the eount andmosUn- ry., The Washington Correspondence of tba Telegraph te the very best that can be had. the la Its regular correspondent furnishes test hw* and gossip to toll d tepaWh se Pieqaent Carpenter, srassrafja'iaaaasftiS; and w. A. Croffut, three orth* he*t of 1 resident Cleveland^and the douce. Sh'sns.a.’iSssdcwBi •ally, year, - - 91 OO tiaily, elk month*, .... * tot Daily, three months, . • • -OOO Dally, oao month, ...» .10 Weekly, oao year, • • • .100 Terms; Cash te advenes. Address Notice te Debtor* and Creditors. All persons indebted to tbe estate of Mary i. Bntler, late of Spalding notified County, Georgia, tho deceased, are hereby to call a* undersigned and make settlement of SHch in debtedness at once; and all persons notified having demands against said estate are to present their claimsproperly BOTLER, Administrator. proven. J. W. may7w*.—*3.70. Rule Nisi. Dun oan, Martin A Perdue ) W. T. H, vs. Taylor. J J. of j^MSKBsgl tend o _ il5 parted MS^^ijSSg lot No. in I ____ lees, North by P. L. Starr, West iMR**. of lauds, said land, thirty by some ing my worth own acres, be¬ three hundred dollars,” for the purpose of securing the payment of a promis to Hundred l.tdia and Fort? Elimi U» and 50-100 DolUn principal, lees, which amount is now It la r«fl£ do next due on cause V any he hw in de- fault thereof to tbo said Dunean, Martin A Pei IMorti ot tbo __________ barred, ‘on JAMES 8. BOYNTON, Book t Petitioners Judge S. C. F. C. Cleveland, Att’y*. I oertif; y^tth^ roTH^Jg* troecopF from the__ Minutes of this Court, this Fehrua. ry feb25oam4ni Tern, 1888. 1888. Wk.M. Thomas, Thomas, Clerk 8, C. 8. C. MAH mss BUT LITTLE Her. rilMtM riWsnto trit HM, ‘ •• •. ADVERTISERS can learn the exact cos* >f any proposed line o\ advertising in Atnericai; papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowel! & Co., ;<«w*p*p«r AdTsttaito Bur****. lO I vr*- - i». How York. Vc-ti ip-s .o* lUOPsg*