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No Kercsry,
m
Or any other Mineral Poison.
Bl „ l3 Nature’s Remedy, made •xelu.lvely
fr«m Ro‘>*» ond IIcrfcs -
i,' It is perfectly Harmless.
It is the only remedy known to the world
§| tb4t ) tM ever yet Cured contaffioue LI.ad
potion in ait iti tiny a.
_|r I it cures Mercurial Rheumatism. Cancer,
jerofula, and other blood diseases heretofore
IP k considered Incurable. Impure blood. It cures It any Is disease
caused from now pre-
> scribed by thousands of the best physicians
IB the United States, as a tonic. We append
ft ,he statement usod itiijifl of S, S a S.S. S few: S. on. nn pfttiQjiti) convaloBC-
m .. f * k.wa
g 5 t^uii ev " “j.
11‘snd to-day he is a fat and robmjtbo^. D
Ricnaosb, V.
three bottles ol
blood poison.
Formerly ot Sussex Co., V*. ~
££& it matters rsr&ssssg not what the name may be."
We have a book Riving a history of this
Tver wonderful remedy, and Its cures, from all
the world, which will convince you that
»ll we say is true, ond which wc will moil
free on application. No family should be
without it. we have another on Contagious
Blood Poison; sent on same terms. .
Write ns • history of yonr case, and oar
nbvslclan will advise with you by letter. In
strictest confidence. We will not deceive
you knowingly.
Par sale by all druggists.
Tan Swnsr Drawer Srccinp S, Atlanta, Co., do.
J -
Hew York, 75« Broadway. HUAI
London. Sag., 86 (now
Grtfir-ry’s Advertisements.
l / viiltr aRY’8 OFFICE, Spai.dinq 1888,—E. Coon- W.
/ n (iiioRGiA, Jane 27,
an I John H. Mitchell as executors of
it, lust w ill of Wm. D. Alexander, dec’d,have
inn i! application to me for leave to sell
riy Null and three-fourth shares of
II,„ Capital Stock of the Savannah, Griffin
j, i V.u th Alabama RR. Co. for distribution
sp.oii.ifst the heirs of deceased.
I et u‘l persons ooncerned show cause before
tin court of Ordinary first of said county by ten
~o'r oek a, m., on the Monday in August
next, in granted. Griffin, Ga., why such petition should
not be
13.00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
Y* / iRDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Ooun-
tv, Georgia, Jnne 211th, 1888.—B. A.
Oglctree. executor of the last will and testa
meat of L.P. Ogletree, dee’d, has made appl- fifty
cation for leave to sell ene hundred and
seres of land more or less belonging to the
estate of deceased for the paymenf of debts
and ___3 / for distribution. Ji.i »« a» n.: Said j land i ... .i being in
I’nion 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.
$0 00 E. \V. Ha.MMOND, Ordimuy.
\) 1 ORDINARY'S OFFICE, Sp.ldins Coun-
tt, Georgia, May 26th, 1888.—Mrs.
Martha Darnall, A. Darnall, administratrix of Katie Dis¬
has applied to me for letters of
mission on the estate of Katie Darnall, late
of said county, decased.
Let all persons concernrd 6 lio\v cause be
fore the Court of Ordinary oi said county
at tuy office in Griffin, on t ■ c first Monday in
September, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why
such letters should W. HAMMOND, not be granted. Ordinary.
$ 6 ,If, E.
I U VKDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Coun-
Martha tt, Geobgia, Durnall, May execotrix 20th, of 1888,— Thos. Mrs.
A. M.
Darnall, has applied to me for letters of die
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, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why'
neh letters should not ba granted.
$6.15 E. \V. HA MM ON it, Ordinary,
rf r \Rl)INARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Coux-
Tv, Georgia, July 2nd, 1888.—N. M.
Collens as administrator oti 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
eatate for the pn .pose of paying the debts
due by said estate and for the purpose of dis
tribntion 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 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
luch petti’,ion should not he granted.
««00. E. W- IIAMMOND, Ordinary.
Rule Nisi.
B. (1. Kinard & Son 1
vs. f
I. J. Ward & 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 15. C. Kinard & Son that by Deed
#f Mortgage, dated the 10th day of Oct. 1887.
I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward conveyed to the
•aid B. C. Kinard A 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
W est by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬
curing made the payment of a promissory note
by the said I. J, Ward J. W. Ward to
the said B. C. Kinard & Son due on the 15th
day 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
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 1 .
w Ward & J. W. Ward therein be forever bar-
• «l, and that service of this rule be perfected
•a uud I. J. Ward A J. W. Ward according
tu M* by by publication in the Griffin News,
»• service upon I. J. Ward <fc J. W. Ward
t»f a copy three months prior to the next
term of this court.
JAMES S. BOYNTON, ¥. V.
„ Judge 8 . C.
r rank Flynt and Dismuke A Collens, Peti-
f uners Att’s.
* true copy from the Minnies of ibisCou
Wu, M. Thomas, Clerk 8 . C. S C.
j oaintna
l BKMHtred wanker with
st homo
ICE BOUND.
Ey W. CLARK BUSSELL,
Author a j ’■ 1 in'. It reck of (he Grosvenor. 11
“.Inch x Courtship.” “My Watch Be¬
low " ‘ The Liuiy Maucl ” Etc.
At'this tabic, seated upon short, quaintly
wrought benches, and immediately facing
each other, wero two men. They were in-
Faciny each other, were two men.
comparably more life like than the frozen
figures. The one whoso back was upon tho
hatchway ladder, being the man whoso faco
I had stroked, sat upright in tho posture of a
perspn about to start up, both bands upon
tho rim of tho tablo and bis countenance
raised as if, in a sudden terror and agony of
death, bo had darted a look to God. So* in¬
imitably expressive of life was bis attitude
that, though I know him to be a frozen body,
as perished as if he had died with Adam or
Noah, I was sensible of a breathless wonder
in mo that the affrighted start with which he
seemed to be rising from the table was not
continued—that, in short, he did not spring
to his feet with the cry that you seemed to
hear in his posture.
The other figure lay over tho table wild his
face buried in his arms. He wore no cov< r-
ing to his bead, which was bald, yet bis hair
on either ride was plentiful and lay upon bis
arras, and l::s beard Buffing up about his
buried face gave him an uncommon, shaggy
appearance. The other had on n round fur
cap, with lappets for tho ears. II is body was
muffled in a thick ash colored i out: his hair
was also abundant, curling long and black
down his back; his cheeks were smooth,
manifestly through nature rather than tho
razor, and the ends of a small black mustache
were twisted up to his eyes. These wero the
only occupants of the cabin, which their
presence rendered terribly ghastly and
strange.
The interior was extremely plain; the bulk¬
heads of a mahogany color, the decks bare,
and nothing in the form of an ornament sav¬
ing a silver crucifix hanging by a nail to the
trunk of the mainmast, and a cage, with n
11° frozen bird of gorgeous plumage, suspended
the bulkhead near the hatch. A small
lantern rtf of an on rtlil old nnffnrn pattern dangled /lurtrrlnst firat* over the tiua
table, and I noticed that it contained two or
three inches of candle. Abaft the hatchway
was a door on the starboard side, which I
opened, and found a narrow, dark passage. I
could not pierce it with my eye beyond a few
-feet; but perceiving within this range the out-
lino of a little door, I concluded that here
wero the berths iu which the master and bis
mates slept. There was nothing to be done
in the dark, and I bitterly lamented that I
had left my tinder box and flint in the boat;
for then I could liave lighted the candle in
the lantern.
“Perhaps," thought I, “one of those figures
may have a tinder box upon him.”
Custom was now somewhat, hardening mo;
moreover, I was spurred on by a mortal anx¬
iety to discover if there was any kind of
food to be met with in the vessel. So I
stopped up to the figure whose face I had
touched, and felt in his pockets; but neither
on him nor on the other did I find what I
wanted, though I was not a little astonished
to discover in the pickets of the occupants of
so small and humble a ship as this schooner a
fine gold watch, as rich as the one I had
brought away from the man on tho rocks,
and more’elegant in shape, n gold snuffbox
set with diamonds, several rings of beauty
and value lying loose in the breeches picket
of the man whose face was hidden, a handful
of Spanish pieces in gold, handkerchiefs of
fine silk, and other articles, as if indeed
these fellows hud been overhauling a jiareel
of booty, and then carelessly returned the
contents to their pockets.
But what I needed was tho means of ob¬
taining a light; so, after casting about, I
thought I would search the body on deck,
and went to it, and to my great satisfaction
discovered what I wanted in tiie first pocket
I dipped my hand into, though I had to rip
open the mouth of it away from the snow
with tho hail er.
I returned to tho cabin ami lighted the
candle, and carried the lantern into the black
passage or corridor. There were four small
doors, belonging to ns many berths. I
opened the first, and entered a compartment
that smelled so intolerably stale and fusty
that I had to come into the passage again
and fetch u few breaths to humor my nose
to the odor. As in the cabin,-however, so
here I found this noxiousness of air was net
caused by putrefaction or any tainting quali¬
ties of a vegetable or animal kind, but by
the deadness of the pent up air itself, us tho
foulness of bilge water is owing to its being
imprisoned from air in the bottom of the
hold.
I held up the lantern anff looked about me,
A glance or two satisfied me that I was in a
room that had been appropriated by the
steward and his mates. A number of dark
objects, which on inspection I found to be
hams, were stowed snugly away in battens
under the ceiling or upper deck; a cask half
full of flour stood in a corner; near it lay a
large coarse sack in which was a quantity of
biscuit, a piece of which I bit and -found it
(is hard as flint and tasteless, but not in the
least degree moldy. There were four shelves
running athwartships full of glass, knives
and forks, dishes and so forth, some of the
glass very choice and elegant, and many of
the dishes and plates also very fine, fit for
the greatest nobleman's table. Under tho
lower shelf, on the deck, lay a sack of what
I believed to be black stones until, after turn¬
ing one or two of them about, it came upon
me that they were or had been, I should say,
potatoes, with particulars
Not to tease you too many
under this head, let me briefly say that in
this larder, or steward’s room, I found among
other things several cbeeeee, a quantity of
candles, a great earthenware pot full ot
peas, several pounds of tobacco, about thirty
lemons, along with two small casks and
three or four jars, manifestly of spirits, but
of what kind I could not tell. I took a stout
sharp knife from one of the shelves, and
pulling down one of the hams tried to cut it,
but I might as well have striven to slice a
piece of marble, I attempted next to cut a
cheese, but this was frozen as hard as tho
ham. The lemons, candles and tobacco had
tin 1 same Astenic>»l»v» 'Ytolltw ***.*.’
ana nothing ytekkxt to the touch but the
flour. I laid hold of one of the jars, and
thought to pull the stopper out, but it was
frozen hard in the hole it fitted, and I was
five minutes hammering it loose. When it
was out I inserted a steel— wed for the sharp¬
ening of knives—and found the contents solid
ieo; nor was theta the faintest smell to tell
me what the spirit or wine wife.
Never before did plenty offer itself in so
mocking a shape. It was the very irony of
abundance—substantial ghoetlincra and a
Barmecide’s feast to my aching stomach.
But there was biscuit, not unconquerable
by teeth used to the fare of a sea life, and
picking up a whole one I sat me down on tbo
edge of a cask and fell a-munching. One re¬
flection, however, comforted me—namely,
that this petrifaction by freezing had kept
thv victuals sweet, I was sure there was
little that might not be thawed into relish-
able and nourishing food and drink by a
good fire. The sight ot these stares took such
a weight off my mind that no felon reprieved
from death could feel more"elated than I.
My forebodings hod come to naught in this
regard, and here for the moment my grate¬
ful S; irits were content to stop.
CHAPTER XL
i make further discoveries.
So long as I moved about and worked I
did not feel the cold, but it I stood or bat a
couple of minutes I felt tho nip ot it in my
very marrow. Yet, fierce as the cold was
hero, it was impossible it could be compara¬
ble with the rigors of the parts in which this
uckooner had originally got locked up in tho
ice. No doubt if I died on deck my body
would bo frozen as stiff os the figure on the
rocks; but, though it was very conceivablo
that I might perish of cold in the cabin by
sitting still, I was sure the temperature be¬
low bad not the severity to stonify me to the
granite of the men at the table.
Still, though a greater degree of cold-
cold as killing as if the world had fallen sun¬
less—did unquestionably exist in those lati¬
tudes, whence this ieo with the schooner in
its hug had floated, it was so bitterly bleak
in this interior that : twas scarce imaginable
it could bo colder elsewhere; ami as I rose
from the cask, shuddering to tho heart with
tho frosty, motionless atmosphere, my mind
naturally went to tho consideration of a tiro
by which 1 might sit and toast myself.
I put a bunch of caudles in my pocket—
they were os hard as a parcel of marlino
spikes—and took the lantern into the passage
and inspected the next room. Here was a
cot hung up by hooks, and a large black chest
stood in cleats upon the deck; some clothes
dangled from pins in tho bulkhead, and upon
a kind of tray fixed upon short legs and
serving as a shelf were a miscellaneous
bundle of boots, laced waistcoats, three
corner hats, a couple of swords, three or four
pistols, and other objects not very readily
distinguishable by tho candle, light. There
was a port--which 1 tried to cqtuu, but found
it so haixl frozen I should need a handspike
to start it. There were three cabins besides
this—the last cabin, that is, the one in the
stem, being the biggest of the lot. Each had
its cot, and each also had its own sjiecial
muddle and litter of boxes, clothes, firearms,
swords and tho like.
Indeed, by this time I was beginning to
see how it was. The suspicion that the
watches and jewelry I bad discovered on
tfce bodies of tho men had e::ci:;il was now
confirmed, and I was satisfied that this
schooner had been a pirate or buccn.-ieeri of
what nationality I could not yet divine—
methought Spanish from the costume of ffie
first figure I had encountered; and I was also
convinced, by the brief glance 1 directed at
the things in the cabin, particularly tho wear¬
ing apparel, and the make and appearance
of tho firearms, that she must have been in
this position for upward of fifty years.
The thought awed me greatly—twenty
years before I was born those two men were
sitting dead in the cabin! Ho on deck was
keeping his blind and silent lookout; he on
the rocks, with his hands locked upon his
knees, sat sunk in blank and frozen contem¬
plation !
Every cabin had its port, and there wero
ports in tho vesmd’s side opjiosite; but on re¬
flection I considered that tho cabin would bo
the warmer for their remaining closed, and
so I came away and entered the great cabin
afresh, bent cm exploring tho forward part.
I must tell you that the mainmast, pierc¬
ing the upper deck, came down close against
the bulkhead that formed the forward wall
of tho cabin, and on approaching this parti¬
tion, the daylight being broad enough now
that the hatch lay open on top, I remarked a
sliding door on the larboard side of the mast.
I put my shoulder to it and very easily ran
it along its grooves, and then found myself
in tho way of a direct communication with
all the foro portion of thq schooner. The ar¬
rangement indeed was so odd that I sus¬
pected a piratical device in this uncommon
method of opening out at will the whole
range of deck. The air hero was as rile as
in tbo cabins, and I had to wait a bit.
On entering I discovered a little compart¬
ment with racks on either hand filled with
small arms. I afterward countedllSmuskets,
blunderbusses and fusils, all of an antique
kind, while the sides of the vessel were hung
with pistols great and little, boarding pikes,
cutlasses, hangers and other sorts of sword.
This armory was a sight to set me walking
very cautiously, for it was not likely that
powder should be wanting in a ship thus
equipped; and where was it stowed?
There was another sliding door in the for¬
ward partition; it stood open, and I passed
through it into what I immediately saw was
the cook house. I turned tho lantern about
and discovered every convenience for dress¬
ing food. Tho furnaces were of brick and
the ovep was a great one—great, I mean, for
the size of the vessel. There were pots, pans
and kettles in plenty, a dresser with drawers,
dishes of tin and earthenware, a Dutch clock
—in short, such an equipment of kitchen fur¬
as you would not expect to find in the
galley of an Indiaman built to carry two or
three hundred passengers. About half a
chaldron,of small coal lay heaped in a wooden
angular fence fitted to the ship’s side, for the
sight of which I thanked God. 1 held the
lantern to tho furnace, and observed a
crooked chimney rising to the deck and pass¬
ing through it. The mouth or head of it was
no doubt covered by the snow, for I had not
noticed any such object in the survey I had
taken of tho vessel above. Strange, I thought,
that those men should have frozen to death
with the material in the ship for keeping a
fire going. But then my whole discovery I
regarded as one of those secrete of the deep,
which defy the utmost imagination and ex¬
perience of man to explain them. Enough
that here was a schooner which laid been in¬
terred in a sepulcher of ice, as I might ra¬
conclude, for near half a century;
there were dead men in her, who looked
to have been frozen to death; that she was
stored with miscellaneous booty;
she was powerfully armed for a craft of
size, and had manifestly gone crowded
men. All this was plain, and I say it
was enough for me.
Before I could make a fire tho chimney
must be cleared. Among the furniture in the
arms room were a number of spade beaded
spears—the spade as wide aarthe length of a
man's thumb and about a foot long, mounted
light, thin wood. Armed with one of
these weapons, I passed into the cabin to pro¬
on deck.
I speedily spied the chimney, yhich showed
fife
a bbua Of urirusovuteofo *.«« ue.«, tutu maun
short work of the snow that was frozen in it,
os nothing could have been fitter to cut ice
with than the spade shaped weapon I carried
This done, I returned to the cook room, and
with a butcher'd ax that hung against the
bulkb ad I knockc 1 away one of the boards
that confined the coal, split it into small
piectw and in u short t ime hail kindled a good
fire. When I was thoroughly warm and com¬
forted I took the lantern and went aft :o tho
steward's room and br ,ught 11 ic cheese,
a ham, some biscuit au 1 one ... > jars of
spirits, all of which 1 car.....the cook
room and placed the whole ot them in the
oveu. I was extremely hungry and thirsty,
and the warmth and cheerfulness of tho fire
net me yearning for a hot meal. But how was
I to make me a bowl without fros! . ater? I
went on deck and scratched up t. no snow,
but the salt in it gave it a sickly t~£te,*and I
was not only certain it would spoil and make
disgusting whatever I mixed it with or
cooked in it, but it stood as a drink to dis¬
order my stomach and bring on an illness.
Ho, thought I to myself, there must lxi
fresh water about—casks enough in the
bold, I dare say; but the hold was not to
be entered ami explored without labor and
difficulty, and I was weary and famished,
and In no temper for hard work.
In all shills it is the custom to carry one or
more casks called scuttlebutts on deck, into
which fresh water is pumped for the use of
the crew. I stepped along, looking earnestly
at the several shapes of gums, coils of rigging,
hatchways, and tho like, upon which the
snow lay thick and solid, but perceived noth¬
ing that answered to the sliape of a cask. At
last I came to the well in the head, passed the
forecastle deck, and, on looking down, spied,
among other shapes, three bulged and bulky
forms. I seemed by instinct to know that
these were tiie scuttlebutts, and went for the
chopper, with which I returned and got into
this hollow, that was four or five feet deep.
The snow had tho hardness of iron; it took
me a quarte r of an hour of severe labor to
raako sure of the character of tho bulky thing
I wrought at, and then it proved to bo a
cask. Whatever might be its contents it was
not empty, but I was pretty nigh spent by
the time 1 lmd knocked off the iron bands
and boi'-'-i out staves enough to enable me to
get at t'.ic frown hotly within. There were
three-quartern of a cask full. It was spark¬
ling cl ar ioo, and, chipping off a piece and
sucking it, I found it to be very sweet fresh
water. Thu; was my labor rewarded.
I cut off as much as, when dissolved, would
mako a couple of gallons, and returned to the
cook room.
The fire burned brightly, and its ruddy
glow was sweet as human companionship. I
put the ice into a saucepan and set it upon
the fire, and then pulling the cheese and ham
out of the oven found them warm and
thawed. On smelling at the month of the
jar, I discovered its contents to lie brandy.
Only about an inch deep of it was melted,
i po ured this into a pannikin and took a sup,
andn-fitter drop of - spirits' 1 never swallowed
in ail my life; its elegant perfume proved it
amazingly choice and old. I fetched a lemon
and some sugar, and speedily prepared a
small smoking bowl of punch. The ham cut
readily; I fried a couple of stout rashers, and
fell to the heartiest and most delicious repast
I ever sat down to. At any time there is
something fragrant and appetizing in the
smell of fried ham; conceive, then, the relish
that tho appetite of p starved, half frozen,
shipwrecked man would find in it! The
cheeke was extremely good, and was as sound
as if it had been made a week ago. Indeed,
the preservative virtues of 4 I 1 C cold struck
me with astonishment. Here was I making
a fine meal off stares which, in all probability,
had lain in this ship fifty years, and they ate
as choicely os like food of a similar quality
ashore. Possibly some of these days science
may devise a means for keeping the stores of
a ship frozen, which would be as great a
blessing as could befall the mariner, and a
sure remedy for tiie scurvy; for then as much
fresh meat might lie carried as salt, besides
other articles of a perishable kind.
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Administratrix’ Sale.
By virtue of an order granted by the Court
of Ordinary of Spalding county I will sell at
public outcry to the highest bidder, before
the court bouse door in Griffin, on the first
Tuesday in August next, during the legal
hours of sale, the following described prop¬
erty, to-wit-
Lot of laud number one hundred and sixty
five (165) in the Second District of Pike
County, W. Georgia, P. Hemphill adjoining and lands Mack of and Abner John
Moore, Isaac N.
Barrow, belonging to the estate of
Hair, late of Spalding County, deceased, and
containing two hundred and two and one
half (2Q2JO acres, more or less. Terms cash.
MRS. SALLiE P. HAIR,
Administratrlx of IsaaeN. Hair, dee d.
* 6 . 00 .
ri- m ■ -
Mrs. Dart’s Triplets.
• taM
them“weltr»od”'4 that tbey »re now so brtte7than“medtetae weH” Loetated Food when is the they beat aieEck Food tarj
At druggists. Cabinet photo, of these RICHARDSON triplet# seat free * to the CO., mother Burlington, of any baby Vt. bant this ]rtK
Address WELLS,
ESTEY PIANOS !
ORGANS !
CASH, OH ON TIME, AT
DEANE’S ART GALLERY
WAGONS, BUGGIES
AND HAFNKSS
—w- -
Wagon White Hickory Wagon I
Jackson G. Smith Wagon !
Jackson G. Smith Buggy!
Ar.d the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. Repair*
Buggies a Specialty.
W. H. SPENCE,
au^ 28 d(tw 6 ni Oof* Hill «fc Taylor Strcfita, GRIFFIN, GA
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED I
A fresh lot of preserves,
Jellies, Apples,
Oranges,fBanar.nas,
Cocoanuts,
AND IN FACT EVERYTHING A H0USKEEPPER WILL NEED:
NO YORE EYE-GLASSES
Wea
R 8
re Eyes
MITCHELL’S
EYE-SALVE
A Certain, Safe and Effective Remedy for
Weak and Inflamed Eyes
Producing Motoring Long - aightednetla. of
and the bight
u the Old.
Tear rops, Granulation, Stye,
Tumors, Red Eyes. Matted Eye Lasn
ES AND PRODUCING PERMANENTCURE QUICK RE¬
LIEF AND
Also, equally efficacious when usedinotli
maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever Sores, Tu
Salt Rheum, Burns, Piles, or wherever
exists, MITCHELL’S SALVE
be used to advantage,
o Id bv all Druggists at 25cents.
A GREAT YEAR
the history of th© United States is now npon
Every person of intelligence desires to keep
with the course of its cventg. There is no
way to do so than to subscribe for
This Macon Telegraph.
new# fftcilittei *re nn#urp**sed by any paper
the South. In addition to tho fullest Associ¬
Press dispatche#. letter it ha# special all correspond¬ Important
by wire and from
in Georgia and session the neighboring of Congress States. Wash¬
During the present and mostln-
will be the most Important The
news centre in the country.
Correspondence of the Telegraph is
very best that can be had.
Us regular correspondent furnishes the latest
and gossip In full dispatches. Cummiugs, Frequent
letters lrom Hon. Amos J.
of Congress trom New York, Frank G.
and W. A. Croffut, three of the best
newspaper writers at the capital, dis¬
the 11 vest and most important issues of the
%e Telegraph is a Democratic Tariff the Reform policy
-v resident r. It is thoroughly Cleveland in and line the with Democratic
1
In the coming national campaign but the
ft *' -aph will not only give all the news, stand-
;iscuss all public Issues fromths
A/ini of genuine Democratic faith. Subscribe
once.
one year, .... - *7 OO
six months, .... 4 OO
three months, - . - . a OO
one month, .... .7.7
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Teim*: Cash In advance. Address
THB TKLEGBAPH,
Uaosv, Georgia
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
All persons iiidebtcd to Ihe estate of Mary
Butler, lai<- <>f Spa'ding County, Georgia,
are hereby notified to call on the
and make settlement of such in
at once; and all persons having
against said estate are notified to
their claims properly proven.
J. W. BUTLER, Administrator.
mayTwS.—$3,701
r J
.
MEASURES. grind
children pick their nose, their teeth,
restless, unnatural with in their Worms, appetite, they aw
likely troubled prompt roea*
should be taken and B. A. Fahnestock#
be given them according to direo
it has saved many a child from death ate
preserve vernrsweet Oiild from a«! early grav*
IMS P*E§R; | I at W on the me Newspaper in Philadelphia Advez
M. ___rtuin# AMR VCR * A SON, SON Agency w:Ui.-vised ot MewrJ
W. ■ A our a«eou
Rule Nisi.
r-i
A Perdue |
W. T. H* Taylor. j
of Georgia, Spalding County. In th#
It Superior represented Court, February Term, Coart by 1888. the
being to the p*.
of Duncan....... Martin A Perdu# that by
of Mor rtgage, dated the oonvey#d.to 12 th day said $
Co As uat J y AW * | VI # JL • «A< A O/ IV/ A UVU
Martin A Perdu# “a certain parcel
land containing thirty (80) acre# Distriot being
of lot No. 115 in tut e 4th ot
county, Ga.. bounded on — the ----- East
Jack Crawlev, on ihe South West by P. Cham-
North by P. L. Starr, by some
my own lauds, said land, thirty acre#, th# be¬
worth three hundred dollars,” for
of securing the payment W..T. of H.Taylorto a promt#
by the satd Perdue, due
said Duncan, Martin A ou
1 st day of Oct.,1887, for the #um of One
and Forty Eight and 80-100 Dollars,
Interest and attorneys fete, which
is now du 6 and saiaW/T. unpaid. Mi
It is ordered Info this that Court, the by the first j
p*y <
term the principal. Interest «
on said note and mortgage or 1
any he has to the contrary, or t
thereof foreclosure be gran
Duncan, Martin.& Perdue ot i
W.T.HTaylor and the equity therein of redempt be forever barred,
tlmt W. T. service H. Taylor of tills according rule be perfected to law. on
JAMES S. BOYNTON, F. C.
Judges. C.
Beck A Cleveland, Petitioners Att’ys.
I certify that the foregoing is » tree copy
the Minutes of this Court, this Febrna -
' Term, Term, 1888. Wm. M. S. Thomas, C. 8 C.
fcb’JikOi ainim Clerk .
MAN WANTS BUT LITTLE
below, but he Want* that tittki
mighty quick. A
I
a big one is promf»Uy< fitted by ad¬
vertising in the Daily ( or’ JZ
Weekly NEWS,;
ADVERTISERS
:<m learn the exact cost
A any proposed line oi
k]\ ertismgin American
payers by addressing
-C :0 P. Rowell & Co.,
wapaoer Advertising Buy##**,
.O r prv i# at, New Verk.
ItVilH. . t»e lOO^PSm#
. A & t L a LLS!
XnfrMtfc
r. «MI
V. rm