The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, July 31, 1888, Image 3

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i*. : No Mercury, Ko Potash, Or any other Mineral Poison. It Is Nature's Itemedr. man* •xcluslrelj- from Roots and Herbs. It Js perfectly Harmless. It Is the only remedy known to the world that has erer yet Cured contagious Blood IX)non in all its stages. It cures Mercurial Rheumatism, Cancer, Scrofula, and other blood diseases heretofore considered Incurable. It cures any disease caused from Impure blood. It Is now pre¬ scribed by thousands bf the best physicians In the United States, as a tonic. We append the statement of a few: ■*» •'I have used 8. 8. S. on patients conTalese- tna from fever and from measles wlth the best results. J. * C “g&&iV» ESSSSft Bremen, Oa.-WUlle White was afflicted KVfsS? » blood poison. It ecu much better than pot¬ ash or any other A Formerly of Sussex Co., Va.™ Dr. K. J. Haul the wen^wndruggiat jg : 8?SS^®£g - be. coses, It matters n6t what the name may 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 say is true, and which we will mall free on application. No family should be without It. Wa have another osrContagious Blood Poison, sent on same terms. Write ns a a history T "----*------- of your ease, and our o physician will--- rill advlle with you not by letter, ___f, decel deceive In strictest confidence, nfldence. We will you knowingly. For sale by all druggists. The swot srxcnqc Co., 0a. New Drawer 73* S, Broadway.. Atlanta, 4 . London, York, Kng, 35 Snow Bill, f Crdirary'e Advertisements. , \ KDIWRY’S OFFICE, 27, Spalding 1888.—E. Coun- W. 1 r i t <r BORGIA, June t k uni John H. Mitchell as executors of in Inst will of Wm. D. Alexander, dec’d,have u:;t v itpplicntion and three-fourth to me for leave shares to sell of i,o teen (i.c Capita) Stock of the Savannah. Griffin a. i X .rth Alabama KR. Co. for distribation iMifst the heirs of deceased, l ,et u 1 persons concerned show cause before th«- court of Ordinary the first of said county August by ten u’c ock a. m., on Monday in next, hfijrranted. in Griffin, Ga., why such petition should not B $3 £. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. / A iHDINARY’S OFFICE. Spalding t oe N- / tv, Georgia, June bJiftli, 1888.— B. A. Ogle-tree, executor of the last will and testa ment of L.P. Ogletree, 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 p&ymenf 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. Elder and west by W. J. Elder. I.et all persons concerned show cause before the Court of Ordinary at my office in Griffin on the first .Monday in August next by should len o’clock granted. a. m., why such application not he $6 00 E IV. Il'.MMOND, Ordinary. I ) \ KMNARY’S OFFICE, Spaldins Coun- \ ty, Georgia, May 20th, 1888.—Mrs. Katie Martha A, Darnall, administratrix of Darnall, has applied tome for letters of Dis¬ mission on the estate of Katie Darnall, late of raid county, decased. Let all persons conoernrd show cause be fore the Court of Ordinary o! said Monday county in m my office in Griffin, on the first September, 1888, by len o’clock, a. m., why such letters should HAMMOND, not be granted. $tf,I!i E. tV. Ordinary. U /ARDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Coun ty, Georgia, May 26th, -11-88,—Mrs. M. Martha A."Darnall, exeeatrix of Thus. 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 Oourtof Griffin, Ordinary of said Monday county, at in ray office in on the first September, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. in , why nch letters should not bo granted. $6.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary, /ORDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Coun- V-/ Ty, Georgia, July 2nd, 1888.—N. M. Collcns 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 estate for the pu.pose of paying the debts due by said estate and for the purpose of dis and tribution the West to-wit; halfoflotNo. the same beinglot (10) No. lying 22 ten 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 be granted. tm>. E. w. HAMMOND, Ordinary. Rule Nisi. B. 0. Kiuard & Son vs. j L 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 B. C. Kinard <fc Son that by Deed of Mortgage, dated the 16th day of Oct. 1887. I. J. Ward&J. W. Ward conveyed to the said B. C. Kinard & Son a certain tract of Jsnd, towit; fifty acres of land lying in Akins District of Spalding county,Ga.,bounded as follows; North by lands of Bill Wise, East by .Tno. Ward, South by Barney Maddox and West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬ curing made the payment of a promissory note the by the said I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward to said B. C. Kinard & Bon due on the 15th day Dollars of November 18S7, for tlie sum of Fifty note is and Ninety-six due and cent* ($50.96), which It is ordered now. unpaid. I. J. Ward & J. W, that the said Ward do pay into this Court, by the first day snd of the next term the principal, interest costs, due on said note or show cause, if any they have to the contrary, or that in default thereof foreclosure be granted to the said B. C. Kinard & Son of said Mortgage, and the equity of redemption of the said I. *1 Ward & J . W. Ward therein be forever bar- »-al, and that service of this rule be perfected *•« u«ld I. J. Ward ft J. W. Ward according »o i*w by by publication in the Guikfin News, wf »* service upon I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward a copy three months prior to the next term of this court, JAME8 S. BOYNTON, C. F. C. _ Judge B. Frank Flynt and Dismuke ft Collens, Peti- t oners Att’s. ‘ true copy from the Minutes of thisCou Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk 8. C. 8 C. j uamtm 1: mmmmm) mMmmmmi ICE BOUND. Ey W. CLARK RUSSELL, Author of “The Wreck of Ike Grosvenor r “Jocks Courtship,” “My Watch lie- ’ low.” 1 The Lady Maud ” Mo CHAPTER XIII. I EXPLORE THE HOLD AND FORECASTLE. It was pi tell dark when I awoke, and I conceived it must bo the middle of the night; but, to my astonishment, on lighting the lantern and looking utthe watch, which I hail taken the precaution to w ind up over night, I saw it wanted but twenty minutes to eight o’clock, so that 1 had passed through eleven hours of solid sleep. However, it was only needful to recollect, where I was arxl to cast a glanco at the closed door anil port, to understand why it was dark. I had slept fairly warn, and awoke with no sensation of cramp; but the keen air had caused the steam of my breath to freeze upon my mouth in such a manner that, when feeling the jtiokv inconvenience I put my finger to it. it f, jl like ti let I.- mask; and I likewise felt tk > pain of co'd j i my face to such an extent that had I been blistered fhere, my cheeks, r,ao and brow could not have smarted more. This resolved mo henceforward to wrap up my head and face beforo going to rest. I opened the door and passed out, and de¬ served an amazing difference between the temperature of the air in which I hail been sleeping and that of the atmosphere in the passage—a happy discovery, for it served to assure me that, if I was careful to lie under plenty of coverings and to keep tho outer air excluded, the heat of my body would raise the temperature of the little cabin; nor, pro¬ viding tho compartment was ventilated throughout the day, was there anything to be feared from the vitiation of the air by my own breathing. My first business was to light the lire and set my breakfast to thaw, and boil me a ket¬ tle of water; and while this was preparing I went on deck to view the weather and to re¬ volve in my mind the routine of the day. On opening the door of the companion hatch I was nearly blinded by the glorious brilliance of the sunshine on tho snow; after the black¬ ness of the cabin it was liko looking nt. the sun himself, and I had to stand a full three minutes with my hand upon my eyes before I could accustom my sight to the dazzling glare. It was fine weather again; tho sky over the glass like masts of the schooner was a clear, dark blue, with a few light clouds blowing over it from the southward. The wind had shifted at last; but, pure as tho heavens were, the breeze w as piping briskly with the weight and song of a small gale, and its fangs of frost, even in the compara¬ tive quiet of the sheltered deck, bit with a fierceness that had not been observable yes¬ terday. Tho moment I had the body of tho vessel in my sight I perceived that she had changed her position since my last view of her. Her bows were more raised, and she lay over far¬ ther by the depth of a plank. I stared ear¬ nestly at the rocky slopes on either hand, but could not have sworn their figuration was changed. An eager hope shot into my mind, but it quickly faded into an emotion of ap¬ prehension. It was conceivable, indeed, that on a sudden some early day I might find the schooner liberated and afloat, and this was the first inspiriting flush; but then came the fear that the disruption and volcanic throes of the ice might crush her—a fear rational enough when I saw the height she lay alxn-e the sea, and how by pressure those slopes which formed her cradle might lie jammed and welded together. The change of her posture then fell upon me with a kind of shock, and determined me, when I hail broken my fast, to search her hold for a boat or for materials for constructing some ark by which I might float out to sea, should the ice grow menacing and force me from the schooner. I made a plentiful meal, feeling the need of abundance of food in such a teni])erature as this, and heartily grateful that there was no need why I should stint myself. While I ate my mind was so busy with considerations of the change in the ship’s posture during the night, that it ended in de termining me to take a survey of her from tho outside, and then climb the cliffs and look around before I fell to any other work. Arming myself with a boarding pike to serve as a pole, I dropped into the fore chains and thence stepped on to the ice, aud very slowly and carefully walked round tho schooner, examining her closely and boring into the snow upon her side with my pike wherever I suspected a hole or indent. I could find nothing wrong with her in this way, though what a thaw might reveal I could not know. Her rudder hung frozen upon its pintles, aud looked as it should. Some little distance abaft her rudder, where the hollow or chasm sloped to the sea, was a great split three or four feet wide; this had certainly happened in tho night, and I must have slept as sound as the dead not to hear tho noise of it. Such a rent as this sufficed to account for tho sub¬ sidence of tbe after part of the schooner and her farther inclination to larboard. Indeed, the hollow was now coming to resemble tho “ways” on which ships are launched, and you would have conceived by the appear¬ ance of it that if it shoukfcslope a little more yet, off would slide the schooner for tho sea; aud in the l ight posture, too—that is, stern on. But I prayed-frith all my might and main for anything but this. It would have been very well had the hollow gone in a gen¬ tle declivity to the wash of tho sea—to tho water itself, in short; but it terminated at the edge of a cliff, not very high, indeed, but high enough to warrant the prompt founder¬ ing of any vessel that should launch herself off it. Happily the keel was too solidly frozen into the ice to render a passage of this description possible; and the conclusion I ar¬ rived at, after careful inspection, was that tho sole chance that could offer for the de¬ livery of the vessel to her proper element lay in the cracking up and disruption of the lied on which she lay. Batisfied as to the state of the ice and the posture of the schooner, viewed from with¬ out ’ sent a slow and piercing gaze along th; oca- i line, and then returned to tho ship. The strong wind, the dance of the sea, the grandeur of the great tract of whiteness, vitalized by the flying of violet cloud shad¬ ows along it, had fortified my spirits, and being free (for a while) of all superstitious dread, I determined to begin by exploring the forecastle and ascertaining if more bodies were in the schooner than those two in the cabin and the giant form on deck. I threw some coal on the fire, and placed an ox tongue along with the cheese and a lump of tbe frozen wine in a pannikin into tho oven (for I had a mind to taste the vessel's stores, and thought the tongue would make an agree¬ able change), and then, putting a candle into the lantern, walked very bravely to the fore¬ castle and entered it. I was prepared for the scene of confusion, but I must say it staggered me afresh with something of the force of the first impression. Sailors' chests lay open in all directions, and their contents covered the decks. There was the clearest evidence here that the majority of the crew had quitted the vessel in a vio¬ lent hurry, turning out their boxes to cram their money and jewelry into their pockets, aud heedlessly flinging down their own and tbe clothes which had fallen to their share. This 1 haa every rig in to Mippcwo train the character of the muddle on the floor; for, P*w*tog the light over a part of it, I v, finessed a great variety of sfiiiiv of a kind which cer tainly no sailor iu «qy ag., ever went to sea with—not so fine, perhaps, as thht which lay in the cabins, but very good, nevertheless, particularly tho linen. In many places, glittering among the clothes, were gold and silver coins, a few sil¬ ver ornaments, such as buckles, and watches —things not mussed by tho pirates in the transport of their flight. In kicking a coat aside I discovered a couple of silver cruci¬ fixes bound together, and close by were a silver goblet and tho hilt of a sword broken short off for the sake of the metal it was made of. Nothing ruder than this interior is im¬ aginable. The men mast have been mighty put to it for room. There was a window in tin- head, but the snow veiled it. May be the rogues messed together aft, and only used this forecastie to lie in. Right under the hatch, where the light was strongest, was a dead rat. I stopped to pick it up, meaning to fling it on to the deck, but its tail broke off at tho rump like a pipe stem. Close against the after bulkhead that sep- ar.it J tho forecastle from the cook room was a little hatch. There was a quantity of wearing apparel upon it, and I should have missed it bus for catching sight of some three inches of the dark line the cover made in tho deck. On clearing away the clothes I perceived a ring similar to that iu tho laza¬ retto batch! and if rose to my first drag uud left m.) the hold yawning black bel nv, 1 peered down, and observed a stout stanchion traversed by iron pins for the hands and feet. Tho atmosphere was nasty, and to give it time to clear I went to tho cook house and warmed myself before the fire. Tho fresh air Wowing down the forecastle hatch speedily sweetened tho hold. I lowered tho lantern and followed, and found myself on top of some rum or spirit casks, which on my hitting them Attorned me a solid note. There was a fore I>eak forward in the bows, and the- cask; went stowed to tho bulkhead of it. The top of this bulkhead wa,s ppon four foot from the upper dock, and on holding the lantern over and putting ray Lead through I saw a quantity of coals. If the forepeak went as low us the vessel's floor then I caleu.- late.1 there would not be less than fifteen tons of coal in it. This was a noble discovery to fall upon, and it made mo foci so happy that I do not know that the assurance of my being immediately rescued from this island could have given a lighter pulse to my heart. The candle yielded a very small light, and it was difficult to see above a yard or so ahead or around. I turned my face aft, and crawled over the casks and came to under the main hatch, where lay coils of hawser, buckets, blocks and the like; but there was no pinnace, though here she had been stowed, os a sailor would have promptly seen. A lit¬ tle way beyond, under the great cabin, was the pmvikr magazine, a small bulkheaded compartment with a little door, atop of which was a small bull's eye lamp. I peered warily enough, you will suppose, into this place; and made out twelve barrels of pow¬ der. 1 heartily wished them overboard; and yet, after pi I, they were not very much mors dangerous than tbe wine snd spirits in thfe lazaretto and forehold. The run remained to be explored—the after- part, I mean, under tho lazaretto deck to tho rudder post—but I had seen enough; crawling about that black interior was cold, lonesome, melancholy work, and it was rendered i>e- csdiarly arduous, by the obligation of caution ‘exposed, by my having to bear a light amid • freight mainly formed of explosives and combustible matter. I had found plenty of coal, and that sufficed. So I returned by the «me road I had entered, and sliding to tho rolkhead door to keep the cold of the fore- \stle out of the cook room, 1 stirred the fire 'ito a blaze and sat down before it to think. fro 3E CONTINUED." Bow Ostrich Egji Are Batched. The ostrich egg is very delicate and will not keep its vitality more than thirty days. Now, as the laying lasts a ooupls of months, it is evident that half of it be¬ comes worthless for sitring and can serve no purpose except as curiosities in bazars. It is, therefore, tho business of man to provide against this improvident character of nature and utilize what is wasted by that force. No occasion to go Into detail about incubators; the princi¬ ple is well known. Practically they are padded boxes, each holding fifteen to twenty which eggs have and its heated by hot readily water, can temperature under control The eggs are taken away as Each laid, one always being left in the nest one is numbered and dated, and a list made out with its weight and de¬ scription of the parents. They are kept in a dry room till the necessary number is obtained, when they are placed in the box and the heat is applied. The tem¬ perature is- 40 end degs. centigrade eighteen at first, 39 degs. at the of days, ana then 86.5 degs. to tho finish. During the whole process each egg must be turned upside down every day at a regu¬ lar time. This is absolutely necessary. About the fifteenth day the eggs are examined to see which are impregnated and which not This is done with a box containing a lamp and a Reflector, in front of which is an opening which fits an egg supported on tho outside by a little shelf. If tho egg is clear it will not hatch; if opaque, except at tho larger end, where the air chamber is, it goes back to the incubator. Sometimes tbe egg is rotten, in which case the gas formed within forces the liquid through the shell and turns it yellow. After forty days the greatest atteijlion must be paid day and nigh* to listen to the noise of the chick. On the forty-third day shell a. small hole should be made in the near the air chamber, which has already been marked with a pencil Next day this hole is enlarged so as better to notice any movement inside. When this is seen tbe shell must be broken, the mem¬ brane tom away and the chick freed, taking care to use the greatest delicacy in every movement. The chick is wrapped up and kept warm for twenty- four hours, when it has a very small lot of finely cnopped greenstuff with a few bread crumba On the third day it gets a little milk; on the sixth a little grain with the vegetables Year and Round. a little water to drink.—All the Petroleum Deposits of Pern. Behind Tumbez are the petroleum d posits of Peru, which have been kriuwn to the natives ever since the times of the Incas, but they were ignorant of the character or value of the oiL A Yankee by the name of down Istrlrin, from sell western New York, went there to kero¬ sene, and recognized in the material which the Indiana used for lubricating and coloring purposes the same article he was peddling. depodtg, Attempts which have been made to utilize the ana very extensive, but bo far they have not been successful in producing agreeable.—-Wm. a burning fluid that is either safe or Eieroy Curtis in American Afagazfcie. Trageilj of Ui* Pot boo l had been to a picnic luncitcon with some friends in a glade near the lovely valley of Kujiar. We walked back, having our dandis (light palanquin) car¬ ried behind us; and when dusk began to fall we put the dogs which had accom¬ panied us into the dandia, knowing it wa* side. no longer safe for them to run by our At length one fcidv became tired and called for her i It was brought and set down f-n l i to enter. As it touched the ground the little dog jumped in out to welcome his mistress; but a moment his pretty gambols were cut short. Like a flash a great creature ■prang into the road, and sn. -ping up poor little Prim, vanished with iho rapid¬ ity of thought down the steep hillside. We felt thunderstruck, and stood foi some moments in horrified silence, gazing down into tho bushes where the gliding form had disappeared; but nothing was to be seen or heard. The elastic tread of the leopard left no sign or track, and sc noiselessly had it passed that we could not tell whether it had slipped at once to the bottom of tho ravine or whether it was then lying only a few feet below us hiddea in the brushwood. Tho latter we imagined to he the case from the sud¬ den silence that fell upon the other dogs, which, instead of whimpering Jas before and rebelling against their imprisonment, now cowered, mute and terrified, in the cushions of the several dandis. Poor Prim must have been killed by tho first clutch of the cruel claws, for he nevei uttered a single cry. We hurried home, grieving much over his dreadful fate, and the gentlemen of the party immedi¬ ately returned to the spot with their rifle* and beaters, but nothing was then to be seen of the leopard.- Chambers’ Journal WHo Are tne jLucuy vines.- After all, what is luck? Sho is the handmaiden of every man at one time or another, and in one form or another. She is ever by one’s side, ready to give a helping hand. The blind do not see her; the timid or irresolute decline to take her outstretched hand. Tho unlucky man is the man who forgets to strike when the iron is hot. The lucky man is tbe one who takes advantage of proffered fortune. Circumstances, it is to be confessed, throw more of sucli proffers in the way of one than another. But if one will fol¬ low the footprints of the lucky men of the world it will bo found that at the points where they seized fortune at the flood there are tracks which show that there were many faltering and hesitating ones near by, any one of whom had with¬ in his reach the same opportunities as the fortunate one had.—Chicago Times. New Advertisements. Peck’s Patent Improved Cushioned Ear Drums PERFECTLY RESTORE THE HEARING, whether deafness is caused by t-oids, fevers or injuries to tlio natural drums. Always in position, bnt invisible to others and com fortable to wear. Music, conversrtion, even whispers heard distinctly. We ref or to those using them. Write to F. HISCOX, 849 Broadway, cor. BIG MONEY! I Million voters with the onjy official Lives of CLEVELAND aid THDRHAN by Hon. W. D. Hensel, also Life of Mrs. ■Cartridge Cleveland, Bor, exquisite Free Trade steel portraits. Policy, Voters’ complete. 3000 Agents at work report immense success. For best work, best terms, apply quick and- make $200 to $500 a month . Outfit 35c. HUBBAKD BRGS., Philadelphia, Pa. PACKER'S HAIR BALSAM Jlmnnos and Ixfentiftes the hair. Promotes a luxuriant growth. Never Failt io Restore Gray Hair to its Youthful Cojor. Cures* cal p disuasesand hair follin* PQc. at Druggists. HINDERCORNS. to cure. 15 cunU at DrujirMs Hiscox & Co. N. K EXHAUSTED VITALITY fl’HE I SCIENCE OF LIFE, the great Medical Work of the nge on Manhood, Nervous an<l( Physical Debility, Premature ' Decline, Errors of Youth, and the untold it: Iserles consequent thereott, S00 pages 8ro, 125 prescriptions for idi-diseases., by* Cloth, tult gin, i i.li- $1.69, mall, sealed. Illustrative sample free to all young anil middle aged men. Send now. The Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the N»- tlonal Medical Association. Address P. 0. box 1893, Boston, Mass., or Dr. W. H. PARKER, grad- uateof Harvard Medical College, 25 years’practice In Huston, who may be consulted confidentially, Sueclaltv. Diseases of Man. Office No. 4 Bulflnch St. 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 house door in Griffin, on the first Tuesday in Angust next, during the legal hours of sale, the following described prop¬ erty, to-wit- Lot of land number onahuujred and sixty live (185) in the Second District of Pike County, Georgia, adjoining lands of Abner Moore, W. V. Hemphill and Mack and John Barrow, belonging to the estate of Iiaac N. Hair, late of t-palding County, de< eased, aud containing two hundred and two and one half (202V£) acres, SIRS. more or less. Terms cash. SALLlE P. HAIR, Administratrix of DaacN. Hair, dec’d. $ 6 . 00 . Wj consumptive un9*iek, aririn* ... .. to the pm, . Psrker-. _____ ( the timely Tithe am of » In gerous. time. . .mi Ouorder* of stonmeh and bowels. CHILDRENsnlRRITMlE, then yon may know Worms are sapping at their life and unless prompt measures are taken, spasms and finally death w:!l follow. B. A. Fanne* stock’s 'Vermifuge never fall* the to -ore. Try and see for yourself, it has stood test- WARM WAV£S Are rolling in. You can’t escape lasted ikm ; fr* yoo cm «*»{* step. 1«* nights, loss of appetite, and «#Uag Hist remit fret* drain, ins ing the the nervous nervous force force hr by muscular muscular or /-^Vmental exertion in mnt- tner's torrid days. The use of Peine’s Celery Compound, that great nervetooic, will atone* strengthen the nervous i, end fortify R against the attacks of preparation is a medi scientific benefit combination body and brain,* of It the beet titles, giving testing to cue* and has brought new life and health tolfiousands whose weakened nerves were tb cause of their many ills. It le e-qiecially valuable at this season, when feeble persons ore m liable to sunstroke, a disuse which is nearly always fetal. Paine's Celery Jmoves pound, by restoring perfect health, almost entirely re , the liability to this dread disease. If you feel the el of summer’s heat, you can’t delay another day before gaining the. vitality only obtained use of this great medicine. Sold by Druggists, fl.00. Send tor eight-page paper, with many testimonials. V.’CLLS, RICHARDSON A CO. BURLINGTON, VT. ) PIANOS 1 7 ) on®AN )8 ) t 1 CASH, OR ON TIME, AT ARTGALLEEYr DEANE’S lifts, bugciis AND HAPNKSS v --)o{- - Studebaker Wagon 1 While Hickory Wagon l| Jackson G. Smith Wagon I :m Jackson G. Smith Buggy I Ar.d the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Pricer possible. Repairs ee j old Buggies a Specialty. SPENCE, W. H. ft uir28dAw6m Oor. Hill * Tayter Streets, GRIFFIN, 0A ----.f.T.'TVoi .irr.y W 'rtvrt* ,.. ■HH WE HAVE JUST RECEDED I A fresh lot of preserves, Jellies, Apples, Oranges,|Banar«nas, Cocoanuts, AND IN FACT EVERYTHING A HOUSKEEPPER WILL NEED: NO WORE EYE-GLASSES Wea Mo re ,’Td MITCHELL’S EYE-SALVE A Certain, Safe and Effective Remedy for Sore, Weak and Inflamed Eyes Prsil urinr Loag the - UghtcSieto, Mlfrht ef unit ltfutorlngr u the Old. Cures Tear rops, Granulation, Lash Stye, Tumors, Red Eyes. Matted Eve ES AND PRODUCING QUICK RE¬ LIEF AND I’E H M ANENTCU RE Also, equally efficacious when used in oth er maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever Sores, Tu mors. Salt Rheum, Burns, Piles, or wherever inUaramatiou exists, MITCHELL’S SALVE may be used to advantage, o Id bv all Druggists at 25cents. A GREAT YEAR in tbe history of the Unit# States is sow upon us. Every person of intelligence desire* to keep pace with the course of it* event*. There i« no oetter way to do *o than to Bubacrihe tor The Macon Telegraph. IU news facilities addition are unsurpawed to the fullest by any Associ¬ paper in the South. In special correspond¬ ated Press dispatcher It haa Important ence by wire and letter from all point* in Georgia and the neighboring State*. During the prc«ent *e**lon of Congre** Wash¬ ington will be the most important and most In¬ teresting news centre in tha country. The Washington Correspondence of the Telegraph i* th u/regnUr ronwr^ndmMurnUhes the latest news and gossip in full dispatches. Cummings, Frequent fecial letter* from Hon. Amoe J. member of Congre** trom New York, Frank G. Carpenter, and W. A. Croffut, three of the best known newspaper writers at the capital, dis¬ cuss the 11 vest and most important issue* of the Vhe Telegraph it is a Democratic line with Tariff the Reform policy pai -r. is thoroughly Cleveland in and the Democrauc of I 1 resident national campaign the par-. In the coming only all the new*, but Tel raph win not public issues give from tha stand¬ wili discuss all faith. Subscribe point of genuine Democratic Mcace. one year, • • * - * *7 0 <s foaily, six month*, .... 4 OO Doily, three month*, - • • .ZOO Daily, one month, .... .75 Weekly, one year, • • • • * 1 OO Term*: Cash la advance. Address TIOC TXZJCGRAPH, Maour. Gaowsis. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. All persons TnJebted'tothe estate Georgia, of Mary L. Butler, lab- of Spalding County, coll the deceased, arc hereby notified to on undersigned and make settlement of such in debtedneg* at once; and all persons having demands against said eetate are notified to present their claims properly Adirtnist.-at.ir. proven. J, W. BUTLER, maj7wt.—$3.70* Vtwrmlf*** tavtd b« given them child according from swtksd to dii*5 tion* it has many a joc.our B ggggas anthorlaed area* Buie Nisi. Duncan,Martin Ac Perdue 1 j W. T. HL Taylor. State of Georgia. Spalding riding Cosmty. County. Ie the Superior Court, February ibrnaxy Term, Term,— 1188. It being represented d to to tlfe the Court Court t by tbe pe¬ tition of Duncan, Martin dated A theWtedey Perdue that by January,1887, Deed of Mortgage W.T.H.Tayior eouveyed.towdd o Duncan, Martin A Perdue “a (30) certain parcel Irttag of land of lot containing No. fl5 thirty in the 4th acres DUtrkfiul part Spalding county, Ga., bounded on the Inrt by Jock Crawler, on the Bourii by P. Cham- less, North by P. L. Starr, West by some of my own lands, said loud, thirty acres, be¬ ing worth three hundred dollars,” tor Urn purpose of securing the said payment W.;T. of H.Teylorto a prasnis sory,note made by the due the said Duncan, Martin APerdue, thesum ofOue on the 1st day of Oct.,lW!7, for Hondred and Forty Eight and 5O-W0 Dollars, which principal, interest and attorneys toes, amount is now due and o.-- lA - It is ordered that the s* do pay into this principal,** Court, b| next term the due on said note and mo: if any he has to tbe eon---^ fault thereof foreetosnre bn said Duncan, MartinA Perdu gage, and the equity of red.— w —. .. - -- said W. T.HTaylor therein be forever perfected barred, and that service tea-BSSSSk of this rule be on .aid W. T. H. Judge VC. F. C. Beck A Cleveland, Pebtlonere Att’ye. I certify that the ro re going tea trnecopy from the Minutes of this Court, this Februa; ry feb25oatn4m Terra, 1888. Wm. Clerk M-Tnonsa,^ — 8, Tuonan, C. S.C. "TlTf MAN WANTS BUT LITTLE Here below, but he Want* that little mighty guide. A m ) or a big one 1* promptf/ flHetl by e4- vertising In the Daily ; or,‘ Weekly NEWS, ADVERTISERS :an learn the exact cost if any proposed fine o; advertising in American papers by addressing C -!eo P. Rowell & Co., i ,v,naii*r A»ir*rt»ei»G Bureau. :o f (in’ * A, H*w Y*rk. lOO-Page “ ii”!* HSY PILLS