The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, July 27, 1888, Image 3

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No Mercury 1 , lie Potash, Or any other Mineral Poison. It la Nature’* lieine.!r, tuaile exclusively from Boot* and Herbs. It la perfectly Harmless. • It la tha only remrtly known to the world U»t haa ever yet Curtd oontagioua Wood jbljou in alt Iff itagta. It cure* Mercurial HheuiuaUsm, Cancer, Scrofula, and other blood dlseaaea heretofore considered Incurable. It cures any disease caused from Impure blood. It Is now pre- icrlbed.by thousands of tha best physicians in the Bolted States, as a tonic. We append the statement of a few: ■■I have usedS. 8.8. on patients convalesc¬ ing from fever and from measles with the ***** results. J. N. CHrn^T,^. D..^, BnEnns, Ga.-Wlllle White was afflicted with scrofula seven years. fat »gd I prescribed ohusUm S. 8. #., and to-day he Is a r fr ^ Itarebfffi blood poison. crtSwtft’i It acts much 8p«^i batter fo*Je«>^a* than pot- y Mh or any other a Formerly of Sussex Co.. Va. I &xs&sS&&3£S& Aric. writes: Httriug some Knowledge m We have a book giving a history of this wonderful remedy, and Its cures, from all over the world, which will convince you that all we sav Is true, and which wo will mall free on application. another No family Contagious should be without It. We have on Blood Poison, sent on tame terms. §CriCIFB* knowingly, CVIUMU you for sale by all druggists. Tbs Swrrr Srscrric Atlanta, Co., Drawer 8, Oa. • Leaden, New Tork, 75S Broadway, toowHUl a Sag, W j Ordinary’# Advertisements. /\I1DT 1/ V A RY’S OFFICE, June 37, Spalding Cotjn- iv Oeoboia, John H. Mitchell 1888.—E. W. H i k nod as executors of tit lust will of Wm. D. Alexander, dec’d,have made application and three-fourth to me for leave shares to sell tigi-tceu of lbe Capital Stock of the Savannah, Griffin - u id North Alabama RR. Co. for distribution amongst the heirs of deceased. Let a;l persons concerned show cause before Hie court of Ordinary of said county by ten oVock a. m., on the first Monday in August next, in Griffin, Ga., why such petition should not $3.00 be granted. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. / \IiDIN’ARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Ooujj- v / tv, Georgia, June 29tb, 1888.—B. A. Ogletree. L.P.Ogletree, executor of the last will and testa went of dec’d, has made appl- cation of for land leave to sell ene hundred belonging and to fifty the acres more or less estate of deceased for the payraenf of debts and for distribution. Said land being in Union district and bounded on the North by Francis Andrews, east and south by John J. Klder 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 ten o’clock a. m., why such application should not be granted. $6 00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. I v RDINARY’S OFFICE, Spaldins Cocn- \/ tt, Georgia, Darnall, May 26th, 1888.—Mrs. Martha A. administratrix of Katie Durnall, has applied tome for letters of Dis¬ mission on the ostate of Katio Darnall, late of said county, decased. Let ail persons eoncernrd show cause be fore tlie Court of Ordinary of said oocnty at my office in Griffin, on t e first Monday in September, letters should 1888, by ten o’clock, a. in., why such not be granted. $6,15 E. W. IIAMMONI), Ordinary. / VKDINARY’S OFFICE, Spaldino Coun- Martha tt, Georgia, Darnall, May 20th, 1888,—Mrs. A. executrix of Tiios. 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 tlie first Monday in September, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. in., why ooh letters should not bo granted. $6.15 E. W. HAMMOMj, Ordinary, /ARDI NARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Coun- KJ ty, Georgia, July 2nd, 1888.—N. M. Collens as administrator on estate of Wm. J. Woodward deceased, has applied to me for leave to sell three hundred and three and three-fourth acres of land belonging to said ettatc 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 . la Cabins district in said county'. 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 August, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why lueh petti’.ion should not be granted. f®00. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. Rule Nisi. B. 0. Kinard & Son ) YR. V I. J. Ward &J.W. Ward. ) State of Georgia, Spalding County. In the Superior Court, February Term, 1SS8. It being represented to the Court by the petition of B. C. Kinard & Son that by Deed •f Mortgage, dated the 16th day of Oct. 1887. L.T. Ward it J. W. Ward conveyed to the said B. C. Kinard <fc Son a certain tract of land, District towit; fifty acres of land lying in Akins of Spalding county, Ga., bounded as follows: North by lands of Bill Wise, East by Jno. Ward, South by Barney Maddox and West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬ curing the payment of a promissory note made bv the said I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward to the said B. C. Kinard & Bon due on the 15th day Dollars of November 1887, for the sum of Fifty and Ninety-six cents ($50.06), which note is now due and unpaid. It is ordered that tlie said I. J. Ward & J, W, Ward do pay Into this Court, by the first day of the next term the principal, interest *ud costs, due on said note or show cause, U 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. W ard & J. W. Ward therein be forever bar- **U, and that service of this rule be perfected '*« “kid l J. Ward & J. W. Ward according •“ n« by by publication in the Griffin News, w service upon L J. Ward & J. W. Ward of a oopy three months prior to the next t*m of this court. JAMES Judge’S. S. BOYNTON, C. F. C. Frank Flynt and Dismuke <fe Collens, Peti¬ tioners Alt’s. ■t true copy from the Minutes of tbisCou Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk 5. C. 8 C. I oaurtra ICE BOUND. l’.y X/ CLARK RE'S-ELL, Author >■/ " The. I free/; of ih - Groxvtmor ' “Joel. ( ovr/s/iip” -M,, |Vnteh Be- lo,r ’ ■ The Lady Mou it ” CHAPTER IX I LOSE MV BOAT. I lingered, I dare say, above twenty min utes contemplating this singular crystal foa sil of a ship, and considering whether I should go down to her and ransack her for whatever might answer my turn. But she looked so darkly secret under her white garb, and there was something so terriblo in the aspect of tho motionless, snow clad sentinel who leaned upon tho rail, that my heart failed me, and concluding to have nothing to do with tho ghostly sparkling fabric, I fell again to my downward march and looked toward my boat; that is to say, I looked toward tho part of the ice where the little haven [in which she lay had been, and I found both boat and haven gone! I rubbed my eyes and stared again. Tush, thought I, I am deceived by tho ice. I glanced at tho slope behind to keep me to my bearings, and once more sought the haven; but tho rock that had tormed it was gone, tho blue swell rolled brimming past the line of shore there, and my eye following the swing of a fold I saw the boat about three cables' length distant out upon the water, swimming steadily away into the south, and showing and disappearing with the heave. I uttered a cry of anguish; I clasped my hands and lifted them to God, and looked up to him. I was for kicking off my boots and plunging into the water—bnt, mad as I was, I was not so mad as that; and mad 1 should have been to attempt it, for I could not swim twenty strokes; and had I been tho stoutest swimmer that ever breasted the salt spray, cold must speedily put an end to my mis¬ ery. The horror that this whit© and frightful of desolation had at the beginning filled me with, was renewed with such violence I saw that my boat was lost, and I was be a prisoner on the death haunted waste, I fell down in a sort of awoon, like cue stunned; and had any person co;nc and seen me he would have thou ;ht as dead as tho body on the hill, or iho that kept its dismal lookout from the of the schooner. My senses presently returning, I got up, the rock upon which I stood being level, fell to pacing it, with my hands locked be¬ me, my head sunk, lost in thought. By this time the boat was out of sight. I and looked, but she was gone. Then my good angel to my help, and put courage into me. “After all,” thought I, I dread ? Death !—it can but come to It is . not long ago that Capt. Rosy to me: ‘A man can die but once. He’ll perish tho quicker for contemplating his with a stout heart.’ lie that so spoke is The worst is over for him. Were ho babe resting upon his mother’s breast he not sleep more soundly, bo more ten¬ lulled, nor be freer from such anguish now afflicts me, who clings to life as if this I cried, looking around me, “were a of warmth and beauty. I must be a ask God for courage to meet whatever betide, and stoutly endure what cannot evaded.” My mind went to the schooner, yet I felt extraordinary recoil within me when I of seeking an asylum in her. I had flguro of her before my fancy, viewed the of the man on her deck, and the idea of her dark interior, and seeking in a faerie that time and frost and had wrought into a black mystery, was to me. It roust be done, nevertheless, thought I; I certainly perish from exposure if I linger besides, how do I know but that I may some means of escaping from that Assuredly there was plenty of material her for the building of a boat, if I could with tools. Or, possibly, I might find a under hatches, for it was common for of her class and in her time to stow pinnaces in the hold, and when the for using them arose to hoist them and tow them astern. These reflections heartened me, and I turned my upon the clamorous ocean and started ascend the slope once more. I helped myself along with the oar, and arrived at the brink of tho slope, in hollow lay the ship as in a cup. The made a noisy howling in her rigging; tho tackling was frozen so iron hard that a rope stirred, and tho vane at tho mast¬ was as motionless as any of the adjacent or pillars of ice. My heart was dis¬ again by tho figure of a man. Ho was dreadful than the other because of the to which the frozen snow upon his head, and L:n had swelled him; and tho rise'of his face was particularly start¬ as if ho wore in tho very act of running gazo softly upward. That ho should havo in that easy leaning posture was strange; I supposed, and no doubt rightly, ho had been seized with a sudden faint¬ and had leaned upon the rail aud so ex¬ The cold would quickly make him aiul likewise preserve him, and thus he have Ijouu leaning, contemplating the of the dill's, for 3 ’ears and years! A wild and dreadful thing for one in my to light on, and l» forced to think My heart, as I havo said, sank in me again tho sight of him, and fear, and awe, and so worked upon my spirits tiiat I irresolute, and would have gone back there been any place to return to. I up after a little, and, gripping the 1 started on the dmce/it. The denth was not great, nor tiio ihdivity bat the surface was formed of block* ieo, like the collections of big stones you encounter on tho sides of moun¬ near the base: and I had again und to fetch a compass so ns to gain a block down which to drop, till I was to the vessel, and here the snow had and frozen into a smooth face. The ship lay with a list or inclination to I had come down to her on'her side. She hail small chahnels with plates; but her list on my side hove somewhat high, beyond my reach, and perceived that to get aboard I must seek an on the larboard hand. This was not to arrive at; indeed, I had but to walk her under her bows. She was so coated hal'd snow I could see nothing of her aud was therefore unable to guess at condition of the hull. She had something the look of the barcolongos of half a cen¬ ago—that Is, half a century ago from date of my adventure; but that which, in truth, a man would havo taken her to was a vessel formed of snow, sparred and with glasslike, frosted ice—theartistio of ffie genius or spirit of this white melancholy scene, who, to complete the illusion, had fashioned the figure of to stand on deck with ■ human face into an idle, eternal contempla¬ I climbed without difficulty into the fore- tho snow being so hard that my feet hands made not the least impression on and somewhat warily—feeling the govern¬ of n neculiar awe. mounting into a sort ot (error, indeed—stood awhile peering the rail of the bulwarks; then entered ship. 1 ran my did eyes swiftly here and for indeed I not know what might or leap into view. Let it be that I was a sailor, with the feelings of my calling in me, and though I not know that I actually believed iu and apparitions and specters, yet I felt if I did—particularly upon the deck of silent ship, rendered spirit like by the of ico in which she lay, and by the long (as I could not doubt) during which she thus rested. Hence, when I slipped off bulwark on to tho deck and viewed ghastly, whitq, lonely scene, I felt for moment as if this strange discov ry of was not to be exhausted of its wonders terrors by tho mere existence of the other words, that I must expect something the supernatural to enter into this icy cher, aud lie prepared for Nights more velous and terrifying than frozen corpses. Presently, getting tha better of my pertur bation, I walked aft, and stepping on to poop deck, fell to an examination of tho panion or covering of the after hatch, as I have elsewhere said, was covered CHAPTER X. ANOTHER startling discovery. This hatch formed tho entrance to cabin, and'there was no other rood to it I could see. If I wanted to uso it I must scrape away the snow; but unhappily I left my knife in the boat, and was any instrument that would servo me to with. I thought of breaking tho beer that was in my pocket and scratching with piece of the glass; but before doingjhis occurred to mo to search the body on starboard side. I approached him os if he were alive murderously fierce, and I own I did not to touch him. He resembled the figure of giant molded in snow. In life he must been six feet and a half tall. The snow bloated him, and though he leaned he stood high as I, who was of a tolerable stature. snow was on bis beard and mustache and his hair; but these features were merged an t compacted into the snow on bis coat, and his cap came low and was covered with snow too, he, with tho little fragment of nance that remained—the flesh whereof had tho color and toughness of the skin of a that has been well beaten—submitted as ter¬ riblo an object as mortal sight ever rested on. I say I did not like to touch him, one reason was I feared he would and though I know not why I should have dreaded this, yet the apprehension of it so worked in mo that for some time it held idly staring at him. But I could not enter the cabin without first scraping the snow from the companion door; and tho cold, after I had stood a few moments inactive, was so bitter as to set rao craving for shelter. So I put my hand the body, and discovered it, as I might have foreseen, frozen to tho hardness of steel. His coat—if I may call that a coat which resem¬ bled a robe of snow—fell to within a few inches of the deck. Steadying the body with one hand, I heartily tweaked tho coat with the other, hoping thus to rupture the ice upon it—in doing which I slipped and fell on my back, and in falling gave a convulsive kick, which, striking the feet of the figure, dis¬ lodged them from their frozen hold of the deck, and down it fell with a mighty bang alongside of me, and with a loud crackling noise liko the rending of a sheet of silk. I was not hurt, and sprang to my feet with tho alacrity of fright, and looking at the body saw that it had managed by its fall much better than my hands could have compassed; for the snow shroud was cracked and crum¬ bled, slabs of it had broken away, the cloth of the coat visible; and what best pleased me was the sight of the end of a hanger, forking out from tho skirt of the coat. Yet to come at it so as to draw tho blade from its scabbard required an intolerable ex¬ of strength. The clothes on his were indeed like a suit of mail. I never could have believed that frost served cloth At last I managed to pull the coat clear of tho hilt of. the hanger; tho blade was but after I had tugged a bit it slipped and I found it a* good piece of. steel. The corpse was habited in jack boots, a of coarse, thick cloth lined with flannel; under this a kind of blouse or doublet of red cloth, confined by a belt with leathern loops pistols. His apparel gave me no clew to age he belonged to; it was no better, in¬ than a sort of masquerading attire—as the fashions of more than one coun¬ try, and perhaps of more than one age, had to the habiting of him. He looked a burly, immense creature, as he lay upon the deck in the same bent attitude in which he had stood at the rail; and so dreadful was his face, with a singular diabolical expression leering malice, caused by the lids of his eyes being half closed, that having taken one peep I had no mind to repeat it, though I was ten minutes wrestling with' his cloak and hanger before I had the weapon fair in my hand. I walked to the companion, and fell to scraping the snow away from it. ’Twas at mortar between bricks. But I worked hard, and presently, with the the hanger, felt the crevice ’twixt the the jamb, after which it was not long be¬ I had carved the door out of its plate and snow. I toiled on, and having cleared the door of snow that bound it, I pried it apart with hanger and then dragged at it; but the on the deck would not let it open far, as there was room for mo to I did not stop to scnqie the obstruc¬ away. A flight of steps sank into the darkness of the interior, and & cold, strange smell with something of a dry carthiness and a mingling of leather and timber. I fell back a pace to let as much of this exhale as would before I ventured into an mosphere that had been hermetically by the ice in that cabin since the hour this little door was last closed. was active in me again, and, when I into tho blackness at the bottom of the I felt as might a schoolboy on the of a haunted room in which he is to be up as a punishment. I put my foot on the ladder and very slowly indeed. On reaching the bottom I remained ing close against the ladder, striving to into what manner of place I was arrived. The glare of the whiteness of the decks rocks hung upon my ej-es like a kind blindness charged with fires of several colors, and I could not obtain the faintest glimpse any part of this interior outside the sphere tho little square of hazy light which lay deck at the foot of the steps. The indeed, was so deep that I was no more than a-narrow well, bulkheads, and that the cabin was beyond, led to by a door in the bulkhead. To test this conjecture I extended my ariw a groping posture and stepped a pace for¬ feeling to right and left, till, having five or six paces from the ladder, my touched something cold, end feeling I passed my hand down what I instantly by the projection Of the nose and the of hair on the upper lip, to be a face. A little reflection might have prepared me this, but I had not reflected, at least in direction, and therefore not pre¬ pared; aau me uorrttne mrw ot nun macs chill contact went iu an agony through my nerves, and I burst into a violent perspiration I backed away with all my hair astir, and then shot up the ladder as if tlie devil had been behind mo; and when I reached the dock I trembled so violently that I had to lean against the companion lest my knees should give way. The companion door was small, aud being scarce more than ajar, I was not sin prised that only a very faint light c •!.« 1 by it. ft the top were ran*. • 1 I ; not l should bo able to get u vie . ... cabin- enough to show me where tho Windows or port holes were. 8o I went to work with the hanger again, insensibly obtaining a little stock of courage from the mere bran¬ dishing of it. In half an hour 11 ’ chipped and cut away the ice round tho ■ npan ion, and then found it to be one of thi old fash¬ ioned clumsy hatch covers, formerly used in certain kinds of Dutch ships— nn'xcly, a box with a shoulder shaped lid. This lid, though heavy and fitting with a tongue, I managed to unship, on which the full square of the hatch lay ojien to the sky. The light gave me heart. Once more I de¬ scended. After a few moments tho bewil¬ dering dazzle of the snow faded off my sight, and I could see very distinctly. Tho cabin was a small room. The forward part lay in shadow, but I could distinguish the outline of tho mainmast amidships of the bulkhead there. In tho center of this cabin was a small square table, supported by iron pins, that pierced through stanchions iu such a manner that tho table could at will lie raised to tho ceiling, and there loft for the convenience of space. ITO 3K CONTINUED.) Ills Shells In Mindanao. We got a promising view from our window into a yard below, where a dozen pairs of immense bivalve shells (Tridacna gigas) lay in the sun. A careful meas¬ urement of the largest pair showed three feet and five inches in length and two feet five inches across tlie valves. They must have weighed toward 200 pounds each, or 400 {rounds for a single shell. We found a single valve made a good load for two men. The Spanish naval officers, who seem, like other seafaring people, to be given to telling large yams, tell of one off the south coast of Mindanao which has long been noted for Its great size, and that the officers of the steam frigate Salamanca once planned to take it home as a present to Queen Isabella. They steamed down tlie coast until they found tho shell, dropped their strongest hawser around it and put on all the steam, but after somo time found that instead of raising tlie shell the steamer was gradually sinking, being drawn under by the immense weight. So they cut the hawser and left tho shell in its bed, where they declaro it may yet beseem The-smaller species aro found Id the mud at low tide. Their toothed valves lie gaping apart, and must be trapa ready set for any inquisito monkey who may pas3 their way. The larger ones there are found in deeper water, and are stories of divers after pearl oys¬ ters being caught in their immense jaws and held to their death.—American Nat¬ uralist. New Advertisements. Peck’s Patent Improved Cushioned Ear Orums PERFECTLY RESTORE THE HEARING, whether deafness is caused by colds, fevers or in injuries to the natural drums, Always fortable position, but invisible to others and com whispers to beard wear. Music, conversrtion, eveD distinctly. We refer to those using them. Write to F. HISCOX, 849 Broadway, cor. BIG MONEY!! KfST. Million voters with the oiqy official Lives of CLEVELAND and THURMAN by Hon. W. U. Hensel, also Life of Mr*. Cleveland, Cartridge exquisite steel portraits. Voters’ Bor, Free Trade Poliey, complete. 3000 Agents at work report immense success. For best work, best terms, apply quick and make $200 to $500 a month. Outfit 3.5c. HUBBAKD BROS., Philadelphia, Pa. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Cteansoa and beautifies the hair. Promotes a luxuriant fcrowtb. Never Fails to ftostoro Gray Hair to its Youthful Color. Curcsacal p digram# and kair Call log HINDERCORNS. Th« safest, wrest and best cure (orCornu, Bnnform, £ 0 , to Stops all pAin. 1ft cents Ensure* l>rugtfi8ts. comfort io tho Itiscox feet & Never Co N. fails K wro. at n EXHAUSTED VITALITY rrHE SCIENCE OF LIFE, the * great Hedlcul Work o< the age gu Manhood, Nervous and! Physical Debility, Premature 1 Decline, Error* of Youth, and the untold miseries consequent thereon, 800 pages 8vo» IK prescriptions for all diseases.. Cloth, fuU gilt, only $1.09, by' mall, sealed. Illustrative 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 1895, Boston, Mass., or Dr. W. H. PARKER, grad¬ uate of Harvard Medical College, ZS years’ practice in Boston, who may be consulted confidentially. Specialty. Diseases of Man. Office No. *Bulfincb ft. Administratrix’ Sale. * —— By virtue of an order granted by the Court of public Ordinary outcry of Spalding county I will sell at to the highest bidder, before Tuesday the court iu honse door in Griffin, on tlie first of sale, August next, during described the legal hours the following prop¬ erty, to-wit- Lot of land number one hundred and rixty five (165> in the Second District of Pike County, Moore, W. Georgia, P. Hemphill adjoining and lands Mack of and Abner John Hair, Barrow, late belonging of Spalding to the County, estate deceased, of Itaac and N. containing two hundred and two and one half (3C2)£) acres, more or less. Terms cash, MRS. SALLiE P. HAIR. Administratrix of IsaacN. Hair, dee’d. f0,00. HUM HOUR fra SHOP COLUMBUS, - GEORGIA, JOE McGIIEE, Prop’i - )o( -- The best place in Columbus to get a bath or clean Share. Give us a call when in th city. JOE McGHES I Nc n Fb,, *r aJv ^ ■?tai^Axm£y*lT I, st me authorized Messrs our ajrssM -Sf yf Mrs. Dart’s Triplets. Address WELLS. RICHARDSON & CO.. Burlington, Vt. SB* ESTEY ) PIANOS ! J ORGANS J i yr CASH, OR ON TIME, AT DEANE’S ART GALLERY WHIPS, WAGONS, BUGGIES AND HAP NESS -W- Studebaker Wagon i White Hickory Wagon I Jackson G. Smith Wagon I Jackson G. Smith Buggy I Arid the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. Repairs «i> old Buggies a Specialty. W. H. SPENCE, aug2Sd<fcw6m Cor. Hill A Taylor Streets, GRIFFIN, GA' ..... ..... WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED! A fresh lot of preserves, fellies, Apples, Oranges,! Banannas, Cocoanuts, AND IN FACT EVERYTHING A HOUSKEEPPER WILL NEED: HO FORE EYE-GLASSES Wea Mo re MITCHELL’S EYE-SALVE A Certain, Safe and Effective Remedy for Sore, Weak and inflamed Eyes Producing X,ong-tHgbt«dnoS«. Of und llr.torinir th« Might w tho Old. Cures Tear rops, Granulation, Stye, Tumors, lied Eyes, Matted Eye Lash ES LIEF AN D PRODUCING PERMANENTCURE QUICK RE¬ AND Also, equally efficacious when used in ot h er maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever Sores, Tu more. Salt Rheum, Burns. Piles, or wherever inflammation exists, MITCHELL’S SALVE may be bv used to advantage, 25centa. o id all Druggists at A GREAT YEAR In the history of the United State* 1* now upon us. Every person of intelligence desires to Is keep pace with the course of its events. There no better way to do so than to subscribe for The Macon Telegraph. Its news facilities are unsurpassed the fullest by any Associ¬ paper in the South. In addition to correspond¬ ated Press dispatches, It haa from special all Important ence by wire and letter points in Georgia and the neighboring of Congress States. Wash¬ During the present session 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 regnlar correspondent furnishes the ... latest rows and gossip in full dispatches. J. Cummings, Frequent feeci&I letters oi from Hon. Amos *iember Congress trom New York, Frank G. Carpenter, and W. A. Croffut, three of the best known newspaper writers at the capital, dis¬ cuss the Uvest and most important issues of the The Telegraph thoroughly is a Democratic Tariff the Reform policy paper. It is In line with oi ! resident Cleveland and the Democratic par; Iu the coming national campaign the Teh aph will not only give all the news, but wiii Jiseuss all public issues from tbe stand- poit.t of genuine Democratic faith. Subscribe si once. ♦aily, ene year, • • - • “ - *7 O® Daily, six months, .... 4 OO Daily, three months, • • - - 2 OO Daily, one month, .... .75 Weekly, one year, . - - • - 1 OO Term*: Cash in advance. Address THE TELEGRAPH, ILuax. Georgia Notice to Debtors and Creditors. Ail persons indebted to the estate of Mary L. But.er, late of Spalding County, Georgia, deceased, an- hereby notifiedto call on the undersigned aud make settlement of such in debteduess at once; and all persons notified having demands against said estate are to present their claims properly proven, J. W. BUTLER, AdtrinHt etor. m ay7 wfi.—$3.70 J fill ip their ^ When cb'hiren pick their in their nose, appetite, grind they teeth, are restless, unnatural aie quite likely troubled with Worms, prompt men* ores should be taken and B,A.FahnesteekS tions Vermifuge it has saved be given many them child according from death to direo an* a may preserve your sweet child from so early WBiW graw H S WftWI i W Mi i mmftl i' i i 1 iiMH ih i ’ hW il H WI HW i H il UB i W THIS PAPER Rule Nisi. Duncan, Martin & Perdue j W. T. BL Taylor. j State of Georgia, Spalding County. In tbe tition of Deed of Mortgage, dated the 18th day 6 January,1887,w.T.H.Taylor Duncan, Martin Jt Perdue “a convcyed,to certain parcel said of land containing thirty (30) acres being part of lot No. 1X5 in tho 4th District of Spalding by Jack Crawley, county, Ga., the bounded South by on P. the Coat on Cham¬ icus, North by P. L, Starr, West by some of ing my worth own lands, three hundred said land, dollar*,” thirty acres, for the he* purpose of securing the paymentof a promts Bory.note made by the said W.\T. H.Taylorto the said day Duncan, Martin APerduh, the due on the wm sdiuuj 1st of ui Oct.,1887, wvv.tswii for tvt sum bums of vi One VHU Hundred and Forty Eight and 60-100 Dollar*, principal, Interest and and attorney# fee#, which amount is now due On; It is ordered that the saidriV.T do pay into this Court, by the first next next term term • the the principal, principal, * Ir interest ana oosts. gsgi . fault said Duncan, thereof foreclosure Perdue be’gi of anted satdMort- to the Martin & gage, Bald and T.HTaylor the equity ot redemption forever barred, of the W. therein be and that service of this rule be perfected on said W. T. H. Taylor according to law. JAMBS Judge 8. BOYNTON, 9. C. V. C. Beck & Cleveland, Petitioners Att’y*. feb25oamlm Clerk 8.C.8.C. HAH WANTS BUT LITTLE Here below, but be WMts that littfu mighty quick. A Uffiil or a big one is promptly filled by vertising in the Daily orj Weekly NEWS, ADVERTISERS :an learn the exact cost of any proposed line ol advertising in American papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., Newspaper Advertising Bursau, > lO Spruas as., NSW Y*A hand lOotB. for lOO-Paga P M B pfila# ■AJNSY PILLSI