The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, August 01, 1888, Image 3

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No Msreury, ' No Or any other Mineral Poison. It Is Nature’s Bemad)-, made exclusively from Roots and Herbs. It Is perfectly Harmless. It is the only remedy known to the w<.rld that has ever yet Cur<d ao ntauiour Blood j\>lson in all ilt stai/m. It cures Mercurial Rheumatism, Cancer, Scrofula, and other blood diseases heretofore considered Incurable. It cure* any disease caused from Impure blood. It is now pre¬ scribed by thousands of the best physicians In the United States, as a tonic. We append the statement of a few; * <• I have used 8. S. S. on patients convalese- .... from fever and from measles with the U-.t results. J.N.CB.msv^M.U^ ,, uni ,ev. Ga.—Willie White was afflicted with scrofula seven years. I prescribed S. S. S„ and to day ho Is a fat tfgggft D three'bottles JfHsrift’s much better than pot¬ blood poison. It acts ash or any other remedy I have ever used, f * Formerly fi. y. WlKFIlLP, o£ Sussex if. Co>i D., Vx» 1 .aWsfela^N^hv^'^^M Irk writes: “ Having tome knowledge as to what S. 8. 8. is composed remedy of for I all can skin safely dis¬ recommend It as the be.” eases, It matters not what the name may Wo 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 wo will mail free on application. No family should be without It. Wa have another ou Contagious Blood Poison, sent on same terms. Write us «J7e^ra*?'.e«.r?in a history of your case, and our phys____.. lclan will _— - - We will not decelva strictest confidence, ofldenoe. you knowingly. For sale by all druggists. Th» Swift Sncmc Co., Ga. Drawer 3, Atlanta, 4 • London, New York, Eng, 75* 85 Broadway. Snow Itll L ] Ordinary’s Advertisements. i * , KI>TN UiY’B OFFICE, Spalding 1888. —E. Cotjn- W. t tv Georgia, June ”7, It . h a id John II. Mitcliell as executors of th las will of Wiu. D. Alexander, leave dec’d,have ina e application to me for to i-.jflibeu and Uiree-fonrth shares II,o Capital Stock of the Savannah, Griffin a .I North AlabamaRR. Co.for distribution a ipuifi't the heirs of deceased. I ,et a 1 persons concerned show cause the court of Ordinary first of said Monday county by ten oY ot k a. m.,on the in m xt, in Griffin, Ga., why such petition should not #3.00 be granted. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. E. / \RDIMARY’S OFFICE, SpaldinoOoi n- > J ty, Georgia, Juno 20th, 1888.—11. A. Ogletree. executor of the last will and testa ment of L. P. Ogletree, dee’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 payment 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. Let aU persons concerned show cause before the Court of Ordinary at my ofilce in Griffin on the first Monday in August next by ten o’clock a. m., why such application should not be granted. f« 00 E. W. H AMMOND, Ordinary, \J / ORDINARY’S OFFICE, May Spadthn 1888.—Mrs. j Coun- tt, Georgia, 20th, Martha A, Darnall, administratrix of Katie Davnall, has applied to me Katie for letters Durnall, of Dis¬ mission on the estate of late of said county, decased. Let all persons concerr.nl show cause be fore the Court of Ordinary of sai.l county at my office in Griffin, on the th at Monday in September, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. in., such letters should not be granted. $6,15 Ii. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary. JAKDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Coun Tt, Georgia, May 28th, 1888,—Mrs. Martha A. Darnall, executrix of Thos. M. Darnall, has applied to me for letters of mission from the executorship of said estate. Let all persons concerned show cause be¬ fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, ray office in Griffin, on the first Monday in September, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m , why uch letters should not b.> granted. $8.15 E. W. HAMMO.ad, Ordinary, ORDINARY’S V/ Georgia, OFFICE, July 2nd, Spalding 1888.—N. Coon- M. Collens ty, as administrator on estate of Win. Woodward deceased, has applied to me leave to sell three hundred and three and three-fourth acres of land belonging to estate for the pu.pose of paying tlie due by said estate and for the purpose of dis tribution to-wit: the same being lot No. and the West half of lot No. ton f 10) in Cabins district in said county. Let all persons concerned show cause fore the Court of Orainary of said county, at my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in August, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. in., why »uch petti‘.ion should not be granted. *8*>». E. VV- HAMMOND, Ordinary. Rule Nisi. B 0. Kinard & Son ) vs. f I. J. Ward & J, W, Ward. ) State of Georgia, Spalding County. In the Superior Court, February Term, isss. It being represented to the Court by petition of B. C. Kinard & Son that by of Mortgage, dated the 18th day of Oct. I. J. WaruA J. W. Ward conveyed to saidB.C. Kinard A Son a certain tract land, District towit; fifty acres of land lying in Of Spalding county, Ga., bounded follows: North by lands of Bill Wise, East Jno. Ward, South by Barney Maadox West by Zed Gardner, for tlie purpose of made curing the payment of n promissory Ward by the said I. J. Ward & J. W. the said B. C. Kinard & Son due on the day Dollars of November 1887, for tlie sum of note is and Ninety-six due and unpaid. cents ($50.66), now It is ordered that the said I. J. Ward A W\ Ward do pay into this Court, by the day of the next term the principal, ana costa, due on said note or show cause, if any they have to the contrary, or that default thereof foreclosure be granted to said B. C. Kinard A Son of said and the equity of redemption of the said J Ward & J. W. Ward therein be forever led. and that service of this rule be -aid I. J. Ward A J. W. Ward »u uy by publication in the Griffin •f *v by service upon I. J. Ward A J. W. term a copy three months prior to the of this court. JAMES S. BOYNTON, Judge 8. O. F. C. Frank „ Flynt and Dismuke A Collens, t. oners Att’s. x true copy from the Minntcsof W». M. Thomas, Clerk 8. C, S C. I oam4m IH |djjSX3»| and WhUkeyKaR ICE BOUND By /W CLARK HU S SELL, Author of ‘ The II reel: of the Ccoscchot ’ “.loci, i ('mertship" “Mi / Watch Be¬ low" • The Ladij Maud " Etc. CHAPTER XIV. ' an ::;;traordinary occurrence. While I snt smoking my pipe it entered my head to presently turn those two silent gentle¬ men in the cabin out of it. It was a tayt from which 1 slr.au!:, but it must be done. To lie candid, 1 dreaded the effects of their dismal companionship on my spirits. Rut how was I to dispose of them! I meditated this matter while I smoked. First I thought 1 would drag them to the fissure or rent in tlv ice just beyond the stern of the schooner and tumble them into it. But oven then they would still be with me. so to sjieak—I mean they would I " neighbors, though out of sight; and my eagerness was t i pel, them away from this island altogether, he a was only to be done by easting them into i he sea. 1 settled my scheme thus: First, 1 we... to ban! tie figures as best I could ..n io tie deck: thou, there being three, to g , them over th side, and afterward, by dogro -. to tran-po"* tlie four of them to some steep, v. hence they would slide of them* Ives into the ocean. Yet so much did 1 dread the undertaking, and abhor the thought of llr- tedious time I foresaw it would occupy me, that I caunot imagine any other sort of painful and distressing work that would not have seemed actually agreeable as eonipured with this. My pipe being smoked out, I stepped inti the cabin, and ascending the ladder threw off the companion cover and opened the doors, and then went to the man that had his back to tho steps—but my courage failed me; lie was so life like, there was so wild and fierce an earnestness in the expression of his face, so inimitable a picture of horror in his starting posture, that my hands fell to my side and I could not lay hold of him. 1 will not stop to analyze my fear or ask why, since I knew that this man was dead, he should have terrified me as surely no living man could: I can only repeat that the pr. pectof touching him, and laying him rp: ;i the deck and then dragging him up the la-; der, was indescribably fearful to me, mil J turned away shaking as if I hod the ague. But it had to lie done, nevertheless; and after a great deal of reasoning and self-re¬ proach l seized him on a sudden, and kicking ii way tho bench let him fall to the deck. He was frozen as hard as stone and fell like stone, and 1 looked ffo see him break, as a statue might that falls lumpishly. His arms remaining raised put him into an attitude of entreaty to me to leave him in peace; but I had somewhat mastered myself, and tlie hurry and tumult of my spirits were a kind of hot temper; so catching him by the collui I dragged him to the foot of the companion steps, and then, with infinite lalw and n number of sickening pauses, hauled him up th" ladder to the deck. I let him lie, and returned weary and out of breath. He had been a very fine man in life—of beauty, too, as was to be seen in the shape of his features and the particular ele¬ gance of his chin, despite the distortion of his last unspeakable dismay; and with his clothes I guessed his weight came hard upon MO pounds—no mean burden to haul up a ladder. I went to the cook house for a dram and to rest myself, and then came back to the cabin and looked at the other man. His posture has been already described. He made a very burly figure in iiis coat, and if his weight did not exceed the other’s it was not likely to be less. Nothing of his head was visible but the baldness on the top and the growth of hair that ringed it, and the fluffing up of his beard about liis arms, in which his face was sunk. I touched his beard with a shuddering finger, and noted that the frost hail made every hair of it as stiff as wire. It would not do to stand idly contemplating him, for already there was slowly creeping into me a dread of seeing his face; so I took hold of bim and swayed him from the table, and be fell upon the deck sideways, preserving his posture, so that, his face remained hidden. I dragged him a little way, but lie was so heavy and his attitude rendered him as a burden so surprisingly cumbrous, that I was sure I could never of my own strength haul bim up the ladder. Yet neither was it tolerable that he should be there. Then, thought I, if I was to put him before tho fire, ho might presently thaw into some sort of suppleness, sol so prove not harder than tho other to get on deck I liked the idea, and without more ado dragged him la¬ bor! >us!y into the cook room and laid him eloso to the furnace, throwing in a little pile of coal to make the fire roar i] w irr ssstr: UiOijji’J him laboriously into ilito the the cook room. I then went on deck, and easily enough, the deck being slippery, got my first mau to where the huge fellow was that had sentineled the vessel when I first looked down upon her; but when I viewed the slopes, broken into rocks, which I, though unburdened, had found hard enough to ascend, I was perfectly cer¬ tain I should never lie able to transport the bodies to the top of the cliffs, I must either let them fall into tho groat split astern of the ship, or lower them over the side* and leave the hollow in which the schooner lay to lie their tomb. It was mighty comforting on returning to the cabin to find it vacant, to be freed from the scare of t lie sight of the two silent figures. I drew raj" breath more easily and stopped to glance around. It was the barest cabin I was ever in—uncarpeted, with no other seats than the little benches. I looked at the cru¬ cifix. and guessed from the sight of it that, whateVer might be tlie vessel’s nation, she Itad not been sailed by Eng l is h m a n. I peeped into poor Polly's cage—if a parrot it was— and the sight of the rich plumage carried my imagination to skies of brass, to the myste¬ rious green solitude of tropic forests, to islands fringed with silver surf, in whose sunny flashing sported nude girls of fault, less forms, showiug their teeth of pearl in nienw laughter, winding amorously with the blue billow, auu lining tac aromatic breeze with the melody of their language of the sun. Ha! thought I, sailors see some changes in their time; and with a hearty sigh I stopped into the cook room. I started, stopped, and fell back a pace with a cry. When I had put the figure be¬ fore the fire he was in the same posture in which he had sat at the table—that is, lean¬ ing forward with his face hid in bis arms; I bad laid him on his side, with his face to the furnace, and in that attitude you would have supposed him a man sound asleep with his arms over his face to shield it from the heat. But now, to my unspeakable astonishment, he lay on his back, with his arms sunk to his side, and resting on the deck, ami his face upturned. I stared at him from the door as if he was the fiend himself. I could scarcely credit my senses; and my consternation was so great that I cannot conceive of any man ever hav¬ ing labored under a greater fright. [I faintly ejaculated “Good God!” several times, and could hardly prevent my legs from running away with me. You see, it was certain that ho must have moved of his own accord to get upon his back. I was prepared for the fire to thaw him into limberness, and hail I found him straightened somewhat I should not have been surprised. But there was no power in fire to stretch him to his full length and turn him over ou his back. What living or ghostly hand had done this thing* Did spirits walk this schooner after all! Hail I missed of something moro terrible than any number of dead men in searching the vessel! I had made a great fire, and its light was strong, and there was also tho light of the lantern; but the furnace flames played very lively, completely overmastering tho steady illumination of the candle, and the man’s fig¬ ure was all a-twitch with moving shadows, and a hundred fantastic shades seemed to steal out of the side and bulkheads and disap¬ pear upon my terrified gaze. Then, thought I, suppose after all that man should be alive, the vitality in him set flowing by the heat! I minded myself of my own simile of tho rurrent checked by frost, yet retaining unim¬ paired the principle of motion; and, getting uiy agitation under some small control. I ap¬ proached the body on tiptoe and held tho lan¬ tern to its face. He looked a man of 80 years of age; his beard was gray and very long, and lay upon his breast like a cloud of smoke. His eyes wore closed; the brows shaggy, and the dark scar of a sword wound ran across his fore¬ head from the corner of the left eye to the top of the right brow. His nose was long and hooked; but the repose in his countenance, backed by the vague character of the light in which I inspected him, left his face almost expressionless. I was too much alarmed to put my ear to his mouth to mark if ho breathed, if indeed the noise of the burning fire would have permitted me to distinguish his respiration. I drew back from him, aud put down the lantern and watched him. Presently his left leg, that was slightly bent toward the furnace, stretched itself out to its full length, and my ear caught a faint sound, as of a weak and melancholy sigh. Gracious heaven, thought I, he is alive! and with less of terror than of profound awe, now that I saw there was nothing of a ghostly or preternatural character in this business, I approached and bent over Him. His eyes were still shut, and I could not hear that he breathed; there was not the faintest motion of respiration in his breast nor stir in tho hail', that was now soft, about his mouth. Yet, so far as the light would suffer mo to judge, there was a complexion in his face such as could only come with (lowing blood, however languid its circulation; and putting this and the sigh and the movement of tho leg together, I felt convinced that the man was alive, and forthwith fell to work, very full of awe and amazement, to be sure, to help nature, that was struggling in him. My first step was to beat some brandy, and whilo this was doing I pulled open bis coat and freed his neck, fetching a coat from the cabin to serve as a pillow for liis head. I next removed his boots and laid bare his feet (which were incased in no less than four pairs of thick woolen stockings, so that I thought when I came to the third pair I should find his legs made of stockings), and after bathing his feet in hot water, of which thero was a kettleful. 1 nibbed them with hot brandy as hard as I could chafe. I then dealt with his hands in the like manner, having once been shipmate with a seaman who told me he had seen a sailor brought to by severe rubbing of his extremities after he had lieen carried below supposed to lie frozen to death, and continued this exercise till I*bould rub no longer. Next I opened bis lips, and finding he wanted some of his front teeth, I very’ easily poured a dram of brandy into liis mouth. Th ugh I preserved my astonish¬ ment all th while, I soon discovered myself working with enthusiasm, with a most pas¬ sionate longing indeed to recover the man, not only because it pleased me to think of my being an instrument under God of calling a human being, so to speak, out of his grave, but because I yearned for a companion—some one to address, to lighten the hideous solitude of my condition, and to assist me in planning our deliverance. I built up a great fire, and with much trouble, for he was very heavy, disposed him in such a manner before it that the heat was reflected all over the front of him from his bead to his feet. I likewise continued to chafe his extremities, remitting this work only to rest; and finding that the brandy had stolen down bis throat, I poured another dram in, and then another, till I think he had swallowed a pint/ This went on for an hour, during which time he never exhibited the least signs of life; but on a sudden ho sighed deep; a tremor ran through him; he sighed again, and partly raised his right hand, which fell to the deck with a blow; his lips twitched, and a small convulsion of hi - face compelled the features into the sim; , m of a grin that instantly faded: then he fetched a suc¬ cession of sighs, and opened his eyes full upon me. I was warm enough with iny work; but when I observed him looking at me I turned of a death like cold, and felt the dew of an intolerable emotion wet in the palms of my hands. Thero was no speculation in liis stare at first—his eyes lay as coldly upon me as those of a fish; but as life quickened in him so his understanding awoke; he slightly knit¬ ted his brows, and very slowly rolled his gaze off me to the furnace, and so over as much of the cook room as was before him. Ho then- started as if to sit up, but fell back with a slight groan and looked at me again. “What is this?” said be. in French, in a very hollow, feeble voice. I knew enough of his language to enable me to know he spoke French, but that wa 3 all. I could not s{ieak a syllable of that tongue. “Yotfll be feeling better presently; you mast not expect your strength to come in a minute,” said I, taking my chance of his un¬ derstanding me, and speaking that he might not think me a ghost, for I doubt not I was as white as one—since., to be plain, the roero talking to a figure that I had got to consider as shcerly dead as anybody in a grave yard, was alarming enough; and then, again, there was the sound of my own voice, which I had not exerted in speech for ages, as it seemed to me. He faintly nodded his bead, by which I perceived he understood me, and said very faintly fn English, but with a true French accent. “This is a hard bed, sir.” “PH coeeditv mend that.” sftfd I, and at once tctem-.l a mattress rrtim tlie caoitt nets mine; this I placed beside him, and dragged him on to it, he very weakly assisting. I then brought clothes and rugs to cover him with, and made him a high pillow; and as he lay close to the furnace he could not have lieen i.augger hail he had a wife to tuck him up in his own bed. 1 was 'try much excited; my former ter¬ rors hud vanished, but my awe continued great; for I felt as if I bad wrought a mir¬ acle, ami 1 trembled as a man v 'ihl who surveys some prodigy of his cnvi .lion. It was yet to lie loaraed Inn. ho had liet'ii in tills condition; but 1 was jierfcctly sure he bad formed one of the schooner's peo¬ ple; and as I had guessed her to have lieen here upward of fifty years, the notion of that man having lain torpid for half - century held me under a perpetual spell <■■ astouish- ment; but there was no more In ror in me nor fright. He followed mo about with his eyes, but did not offer to speak; jierhftps ho could not. I put a lump of ice into the kettle, and when tlie water boiled made him a pint of steaming brandy punch, which I held to his lifts in a pannikin, while I supported his hack Avith my knee; lie supped it slowly aud fiainfully, but with unmistakable relish, and fetched a sigh of contentment as lie lay Viack, But he would need something more sustaining than brandy and water; and as I guessed bis stomach, after so prodigious a fast, would lie too weak to support such solids as beef or pork or bacon, I mused a little, turning over in my mind the contents of the larder (as I call it), all which time lie eyed mo with bewilder¬ ment growing in his face; and I then thought I could not do better than manufacture him a broth of oatmeal, wine, bruised biscuit and a piece of tongue minced very small. This did not take me long in doing—-the tongue being near tho furnace, and soft enough for the knife, and there was nothing to melt but tho wine. When the broth was ready I kneeled as before and fed him. He ate greedily, and when the broth was gone looked as if he would have been glad for more. “Now, sir,” says I, “sleep if you can’’— with which ho turned his head, and in a few minutes was sound asleep, breathing regu¬ larly and deeply-. Pro je con ri sued Burgeons in Disguise. Tbo municipal authorities think the crossings aro so unsafe in Paris that an English paper says they have employed surgeons disguised as policemen for the purpose of helping the timid people across boule¬ the perilous parts of tho streets and vards and to be at hand in case of acci¬ dents.^—New York Sun. Marshal Lebcouf was a soldier to the end. Ilis lust words were "Let my regiment march past. I want to sco my artillerymen, every soldier of litem." Chastity enables the soui to Breaths pure air in tlie foulest places.—Joubcrt. New Advertisements. Peck’s Patent Improved Cushioned Ear Drums PERFECTLY RESTORE THE HEARING, whether deafness is caused by colds, fevers or in position, injuries to tlie natural drums. Always but invisible to others and com fortable to wear. Music, conversrtion, even whispers heard distinctly. F. We H1SCOX, refer to those 84« using them. IVrite to Broadway, eor. BIG MONEY! I SJ Million voters with the on;y official Lives of CLEVELAND and THURMAN by Hon. W. U. Henskl, also Life of Mrs. Cleveland, exquisite steel portraits. Voters’ 3000 Cartridge Agents Bor, work Free Trade Policy, complete. at report immense success. For liest work, best terms, rnontii. apply quick and make $200 to $500 a Outfit 35c. HUBBARD BRG8., Philadelphia, Pa. “ RffRHPm HAIR BALSAM Promotes Changes an<J luxuriant bcautlflw the hair, Fails a Restore growth. Grey Never to Hair to its Youthful CoJor. ‘Cures scaip diseases sjiU hair f&iiinpi HINDERCORNS. Sto|« The all safest, pafn. sorest Ensures ond l>est comfort core for tho Corns, tret. Bunions, Never fails Ao. to % to cure. 18 cents at Druggists. Huxsox A Co., N. EXHAUSTED VITALITY rjMIE SCIENCE OF LIFE, the I creat Medical Work of the age ouManhood, Nervous andl physical Debility, Premature' Decline, Errors of Youth, and theantoldmiseriesooageaueBt thereon. SOU pa^es Bvo, 135 prescrtptlous for all diseases, by" j Cloth, full silt, only SIAM, mall, scaled. Illustrative sample free toad 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 1S95, Ronton, Mass., or Dr. W. IL PARKEK, grad¬ uate of Harvard Medical College, 35 years’ practice In Boston, who may be consul ted confldepttally. Sncclalty. Diseases of Man. Office No, t Bulfincb 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, the before the court house door in Griffin, on first Tuesday in August next, during the legal hours of sale, the following described prop¬ erty, to-wit- Lot of land number one hundred and sixty five (185) in the Second District of Pike County, Georgia, adjoining lands of Abner Moore, W. P. Hemphill and Mack and John Barrow, belonging to the estate of I c.ac N. Hair, late of Spalding County, deceaseu, and contaihiag two hundred and two and one half (‘M3U j acres, more or less. Terms cash. IdRS. 8ALL1E I’. HAIR, Administratrix of Isaac N. Hair, deo’d. $ 6 . 00 . CONSUMPTIVE Have. , Indigestion! U«« Men ____ and lunga, and d laeaaas for aU _—... ______ hnpmn Tt the throat and exhaustion. The feeble arising from -ora ■hmgkw blood atovly drifting ,-jid Oak, mr« ogatnat direaae. and their te the grave, see. will In many caaee recover health by i he thmijrnm T tue of Porker’. Ginger Tonic, bat delay hi don- . lefoinvataabie for all poina frvrouo. T*X* tt la Ume. 60c. and diJOrdvrmot nomoeh and md howela. at Druggteta. FeverUh, CHILDRENtffiRAITABLE, sometimes craving food and eating r»-< restlessly venously, in again refusing wholesome diet, tossing then sleep,moaning know Worms and grinding sapping the teeth, their life and you unless may are taken, at and finally death prompt wilt follow. measures B. are A. Fahne. spasms stock’s Vermifuge newer tells to core. Try aad see for yourself, it has stood the test WARM WAVES Are rolling in. You can’t escape tk*u; but you can escape the sleep¬ less nights, loss of appetite, and languid feeling that result from drain¬ ing the nervous force by muscular or jef*^sinenul exertion in sums* mer’s torrid days. The use of {Mine’s Celery Compound, that great nerve tonic, will at one* strengthen the nervous system, and fortify it against tlie attacks of summer debility. Tfci# preparation is a medi clne—nei * drink. Il»* scientific combination Of the best tonics, giving lasting lienefit to body and brain, D cures »U nervous disease*, and has brought new life and health to tho usa nd s whose weakened nerves were the cause of their many ills. It is etqieci&lly valuable at this season, when feeble persons are so liable to sumtrnie, a disease which ia nearly always fatal. Paine’s Celery Compound, by restoring perfect health, almost entirely re moves the liability to this dread disease. If you feel the effects of summer's heat, you can’t afford to delay another day before gaining the vitality only obtained by the use of this great medicine. Sold by Druggist*, fi. 00. Six for fS.00. Send for eight-page paper, with ineny tesUmouUJs. v/. CLLS, RICHARDSON & CO. BURLINGTON, ) PIANOS ! MMit ) O MO ANS ! CASH, OR ON TIME. AT DEANE’S ART GALLERY. WHIPS, WAGONS, BUGCIES AND HAFYKSS —M- - Studebaker Wagon 1 White Hickory Wagon Ij Jackson G. Smith Wagon! Jackson G. Smith Buggy I Ar.d the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. Repairs old Buggies a Specialty. W. II. SPENCE, aug28difcw6m Cor. Hill <ft Taylor Streets, GRIFFIN, GA' WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED 1 A fresh lot of preserves, fellies, Apples, Oranges,|Banar.nas, Cocoanuts, AND IN FACT EVERYTHING A HOUSKEEPPER WILL NEED: NO FORE EYE-GLASSES Wea Mo re TTd MITCHELL’S EYE-SALVE A Certain, Safe and Effective Remedy for Sore, Weak and Inflamed Eyes Producing Restoring Loag-Mgbt.dv«R«. the Sight of and u tho Old. Cures Tear rops, Granulation, Lash Stye, Tumors, Red Eves. Matted Eye E8 AND PRODUCING QUICK RE¬ LIEF AND PERMANENTCURE Also, equally efficacious when used In oth er maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever Sores, To mors. Salt Rheum, Burns, Piles, or wherever inflammation exists, MITCHELL’S SALVE may be used to advantage, o id bv all Druggists at 25cents. A GREAT YEAR in the history of the United States is now upon keep ti«. Every person of Intelligence desires to pace with tne course of its events. There is no tetter way to do so then to subscribe lot Thk Macon Telegraph. Its news facilities are unsurpassed the fullest by sny Associ¬ paper iu the South. In addition to special correspond- ated Press dispatches, it hss enee by wire and letter from all Important points in Georgia and the neighboring States. During the present session of Congress Wash¬ ington will be the most important and mosUn- terestlng news centre In the country. The Washington Correspondence of the Telegraph is the very best that eon be hod. the , latest its regular correspondent furnishes taanr. in full A Unat/ihftR- FreouBnt tArpenter" snd ”w. A. CrofTut, three of the be«i known newspaper lives! writers Important at the Issues capital, of dis¬ the cuss the and most /he Telegraph Is a Democratic with Tariff the Reform policy pan. r. It is thoroughly in line of I resident Cleveland and the Democratic pari In the coming national campaign the Te)< nph will not on!/ give all tbs news. bu. will iiscuss all pablio Issues from ths stand- poii. i of genuine Democratic faith. Subscribe «*e:.ce. baity, ene year, • • • • -•7 0* lb fitly, six months, • • • . f OO Daily, three months, - • » • S OO Daily, one month, .... .7fl Weekly, one year, . . - » • 1 00 Terms: Cash la adranee. Address THK TELEGRAPH, M amt. G totoi x Notice to Debtors and Creditors. All pi-rsons indebted of Spalding to the County, estate Georgia, of Mary I,. Butter, late deceased, arc hereby notified to call on the undersigned aud make settlement of such in debtednesset once; and all persons baring demands against said estate are notified to present their claims properly proven. J. W. BUTLER, Adtriniit.-ator. may7w8.—$3.70- Arc restless, unnatural in their appetite* they am quite likely tr wh^s d^w^t^ Wormj.^pro mpt^meaw VernaUnge be given them accord.ng to dirro lions ant It fcaftaaTtd many a child frCm death ani IDlfl Rule Nisi. Duncan,Martin A Perdue | W. T. H- Taylor. j State of Georgia. Spalding County In tho Superior lor represented Court, court, February February the Term, Term, Court by ibw. the It betn ig to no- tition of Duncan, Martin &. Perdue that by day o k _____,----— Perdue “a certain parcel _ ______,______ of land containing thirty (SOJ acres Ming of part of lot No, 115 in tne 4th District Spalding oounty, Ga., bounded on the East by Jaok Crawler, on the South by P. Cham- less, North by P. L. Starr, West by some of my own lands, said land, thirty acres, be¬ ing worth three hundred dollare,” for Um purpose of made securing by the the said payment W.;T. of H.Taylorto a promts sory.note said Duncan, Martin A Perdue, duo the <m the 1st day of Oct.,1887, for the sum of One Hundred and Forty Eight end UO-100 Dollars, which principal, interest ana attorney * fern, amount Is now du6 and unpaid. W. T.'H. Taylor It is ordered that the said tbs dopey into this Court, by the In* Aw Of next term the principal, in tense! -end ooets. due on said note and mortgage i.' any he has to the contrary, d _ de- fault thereof foreeloVU to tho said Duncan, Martin A -Mort- gage, said and T.HTaylor the equity therein of redwnpttOtSOf be JonsrOT hatred. the W. and that service of this ruU said W. T. H. Taylor acoort . ok. JAMES 6.----. 3.C, F. C. Judge Att'ye. Beck & Cleveland, Petitioners I certify that the foregoing Conk, Is a truei copy from the Minutee of this thie Taouue, Fobraaj ry Term, 1888. Wat. M. fcb2T>oam4m Clerk 8, C. 8. C. MAN WANTS BDT LITTLE t ■* v * * . - •. g. rff...,.-, Here below, but he Want* that little mighty quick. A . . . or a big one i» promptly filled by Ad¬ vertising in th^ ftailyior; rWeekly NEWS, ADVERTISERS Dan learn the exact cos* of any proposed line o> advertising in America* * papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., S« v,p»p*r Adraftisin-3 bur*au, lO rpc •< New Yaurfc. U'-.u*. <'-»>■ lOO-itanje Penngibl* 1 AGSY S-MLJ-SI Ptrftttir e-fc s* 1 •h r *r» I