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lu the United States, as a tonlo. We append
the statement of a few:
I have used 8. 8. S. on patients eonvalesc-
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and to ' <la, ' h ® U * f *\ wf PakkkbTm. D.
Richmond, Vo., Deo. 15, 1885—1 have taken
three bottles of It Swift’s Specific much better foSaecondary thau pot-
mood poison. act*
or say other -nwd^I have ev.^ tged.
Formerly of Sussex Co., Va.
nit. E J. Hons* the well-known druggist
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writes: " Having some knowledge safely as
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4
Ordii ory’s Advert sements.
l/n d \ I,I it ARY’--* OFFICE, Spai.divo Coon-
(ieonoii, June 37, 1888.—E \V.
Hm k aid John II Mitchell as executors of
[ Hi., le las. application will of VVm. D. to Alexander, for leave dec’d,have to sell
ma me
eighteen and tli ree-fourth ’ shares of
l I the Capital Stock of the Savannah, Griffin
, rid North Alabiuia KB. Co. for distribution
I amongst the heirs of deceased.
I Let a’l persons concerned show cause before
the court of Ordinary first of said Monday county AugilSt by ten
o’c oi k a. in., on the in
next, in Griffin, On., why such petition should
I not be granted. \V. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
1 3.00 E.
/ vlUHNARY’8 OFFICE, Spauhno Loun-
V/ ty, Gbohoia, Jane 29tb, 1888.—B. A.
Oglctree. executor of the lust will and testa
ment of L.P.Ogletree, dec’d, has made appl-
oation for leave to sell ene hundred and fifty
acres of land more or less belonRing to the
estate of deceased for the paymenf of debts
and for distribution, haid land being in
Union district and boundtd on the North by
Francis Andrews, east anil south by John J.
Elder 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
should by ten o’clock granted. a. in ., why such application
not be
$6 00 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/ kKDINARY’S OFFICE, Si'.li.iwj Coln-
Y / ty, Georgia, May 20th, 1888.—Mrs.
Martha A. DnrnRll, administratrix of Katie Dis¬
Darnall, has applied to me for letters of
mission on the ostate of Katie Darnall, late
of said county, decased.
Let all persons conccrnrd show cause be
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county
at my office in (Iritfin, on the first Monday why in
September, 1888, by ten o’clock, granted. a. in.,
such letters should not be
|8,15 E. W. HAMMOND. Ordinary.
/'YKDINARY’S U OFFICE, Spai.dinu Coun
tt, Georgia, May 2tith, 1888,—Mrs. Tlios. M.
Martha A. Darnall, executrix of
Darnall, has applied to me for letters of dis
mission from the executorship of said estate.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said Monday county, at
my office in Griffin, on the first in
September, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m , why
a :h letters should not b;> granted.
$0.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
\J /ARUINARY’8 OFFICE, Spalding Coun-
ty, Georgia, July 2nd, 1888.—N. M.
C’ollens as administrator on estate of Wni. J.
Woodward deceased, has npplied 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
Uibution to-wit: the same being lot No. 22
andtheWcst halfoflotNo. 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 In my office in Griffin, on the first Monday
August, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why
«ueh petti',ion should not be granted.
»t»00. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
Rule Nisi.
B. 0. Kinard & Son .1
YB.
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 B. C. Kinard & Son that by Deed
of Mortgage, dated the 10th day of Oct. 1887,
I. J. Ward&J. W. Ward conveyed to the
laid B. C. Kinard & Son a certain tract of
land, District towit; fifty acres of land lying in Akins
of 8pa)diug county, Ga., bounded as
follows: North by landsof Bill Wise, East by
Jno. Ward, 8outh by Barney Maddox and
West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of
curing the payment of a promissory note
made bv tbo said I. J, Ward <fe J. W. Ward to
the said B. C. Kinard & Son due on the 15th
day Dollars of November 1887, for the sum of Fifty
and Ninety-six cents ($50.90), 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
Jay of the next term the principal, interest
if and costs, due on said note or show cause,
default any they have to the contrary, or that the in
thereof foreclosure be granted to
• -a and that service of this rule be perfected
’* > *id I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward according
m uw by publication in the Griffin Nbws,
oy service upon I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward
■»f a copy three months prior to the next
term of this court.
JAMES 8. BCYNTON,
Frank . Judge 8. C. F. C.
• Fjynt and Dismuke & Collenp, Peti-
oners Att’s.
j true copy from the Minnies of tbisCou
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk 8. C. 8 C.
i omi^m
mm ssasssssst tfculars sen* Mr nmwm
ICE BOUND.
By W. CLARK RU8SELL,
Author of “The Wreck of the Grosvenor,''
“Jacks Courtship," “My H atch He-
loir," ‘ The Lady Maud " AYo.
CHAPTER XV.
THE pirate’s story.
I lighted my pipe and sat smoking, think¬
ing ho would presently awake; but his slum¬
ber was as deep as the stillness I had thawed
him out of had been, and lie lay so motion¬
less that, but for his snoring and harsh breath¬
ing, I should have believed him lapsed into
his former lifelossness.
At 8 o’clock the fire was very low. Na¬
ture was working out her own way with
this Frenchman, and I determined to let him
sleep where he was, and take my chance of
the night.
The gale made a great roaring. The ship’s
stern lay open to the gorge, and but for her
steadiness I might have supposed myself at
Sea. I snugged me down amid the coats and
cloaks in my cot, and, obstinately holding
my eyes closed, ultimately fell asleep.
It was a little after 7 when I awoke.
I lighted tbo lantern, but ui>ou entering the
passage that lead to the cabin I observed by
my own posture that the schooner had not
only heeled more to larboard, but was far¬
ther “down by the stern” to the extent of
several feet. Indeed, the angle of inclina¬
tion was now considerable enough to bring
my shoulder (in the passage) close against the
Starboard side when I stood erect. The noise
of the gale was still in the air, and the I (com¬
ing and boiling of the sea was uncommonly
loud. I walked straight to the cook room,
and, putting the lantern to the Frenchman,
perceived that lie was still in a heavy sleep,
anil that he had lain through the night pre¬
cisely in the attitude in which I had left him.
His face was so muffled that little more than
his long hawk’s bill nose was discernible. It
was freezingly cold, and I made haste to
light the lire. There was still coal enough
in the corner to last for the day, and before
long the furnace was burning cheerfully. I
went to work to make some lirotli und fry
soino Imm, and melt a little block of ruby
colored wine; and while thus occupied, turn¬
ing my head a moment to look at the French¬
man, 1 found him half started up, staring in¬
tently at me.
This sudden confrontinent threw nie into
such confusion that 1 coulil not speak. IIe
moved his head from side to side, taking a
view of the scene, w.vh an expression of the
most inimitable astonishment painted upon
his countenance. He then brought the fiat
of his hand with a dramatic blow to his fore¬
head, the sear on which showed black as ink
to tin- lire glow, anil sat erect.
“Where have I been?” he exclaimed in
French.
“Sir,” said I, speaking with the utmost
difficulty, “I do not understand your lan¬
guage. 1 am English. You speak my tongue.
Will you address me in it?”
“EnglishI” he exclaimed in English, drop¬
ping his head on one side, and peering at me.
with an incredible air of amazement. “How
came you hi re? You are not of our com¬
pany.' Let me see”— Hero he struggled
with recollection, continuing to stare at me
from under his shaggy eyebrows as if I was
some frightful vision.
“I am a shipwrecked British mariner,” said
I, “and have been cast away upon this ice,
where I found your schooner.”
“Ha!” he interrupted, with prodigious
vehemence, “certainly; we aro frozen up—I
remember. Thut sleep should serve my
memory so.” He made as if to rise, but sat
again. “The cold is numbing; it would,
weaken a lion. Give me a hot drink, sir.”
I filled a pannikin with the melted wine,
which lie swallowed thirstily.
“More!” cried he. “I seem to want life."
Again 1 filled the pannikin.
“Good!”, said he, fetching a sigh, as he re¬
turned the vessel; “you aro very obliging,
sir. If you have food there we \gill eat to¬
gether.” his but
I give the substance of speech, not
his delivery of it; nor is it necessary that I
should interpolate my rendering with the
French words he used.
The broth being boiled, I gave him a good
bowl of it along with a plate of bacon and
tongue, some biscuit and a pannikin of hot
brandy and water, all which things I put
upon his knees as he sat upon the mattress;
and to it he fell, making a rare meal. Yet
all the while he ate ho acted like a man be¬
witched, as well ho might, staring at me and
looking round and round him, and then drop¬
ping ids knife to strike his brow, as if by
that kind of blow he would quicken the ac¬
tivity of memory there.
“There is something wrong,” said he, pres¬
ently. “What is it, sir? This is the cook
room. How does it happen that I am lying
here?”
1 told him exactly how it was, adding-that
if it had not been for his posture, which
obliged me to thaw in order to carry him, ha
would now be on deck with the other*, await-
. ing the best funeral I could give him.
“Who are the others'?” asked he.
“1 know not,” said 1. “There were four in
all, counting yourself; onesitsfrozen to death
on the rocks. I met him first, and took hi*
watch from his pocket that I might tell thy
time.”
He took the watch in his hands, and asked
me to bring the lantern close.
“Ha!” cried he “this was Mendoza’s—the
captain’s. I remember; he took It for the
sake of this letter upon it. He lies dead ou
the rocks? We missed him, but did not know
where he had gone.” Then, raising his hand
and impulsively starting upon the mattress,
he cried, while he tapped his forehead, “It
has come back! I have it! Giuseppe Tren-
tanove and I were In the cabin; he had fallen
blind with the glare of the ice—if that "'as
it. We confronted each other. On a sudden
ho screamed out. I had put my face into my
arms and felt myself dying. His cry aroused
me. I 1 Coked up and saw him leaning hack
from the table with his eyes fixed and horror
in his countenance. I was too feeble to speak
—too languid to rise. I watched him a while,
and then the drowsiness stole over mo again,
and my head sank and I remember no more.”
He shuddered, and extended the pannikin
for more liquor. I filled it with two-thirds
of brandy and the rest water, and lie supped
it down as if it had been a thimbleful of wine.
“By the holy cross,” cried be, “but this i*
very wonderful, though! How long have
you been here, sir?”
“Three days.”
“Three days! and I bare been in a stupor
all that time—never moving, never breath-
ing?” longer
“You will have been in a stujwr
than that, I expect,” said I.
“What is this month?” he cried.
“July,” I replied. “Impossible!
“July—July!” he muttered.
Let me see”—be began to count on his fingers
—“we fell in with the ice and got locked in
November. We had six months of it; I recol¬
lect no more. Six months of it, sir; and
suppose the stupor came upon me then, the
month at which my memory stops would be
April. Y'et you call this July—that is to say,
four months of oblivion! Impossible!”
“What was the year in which you fell in
with the ice?” said I.
“The rear?” he exclaimed, in a voice deeu
111
.............
“Ah, to oe surer' cried Re, -*Uiis is (80T;
but to keep my tale in oountenance,” be
went ixi in a satirical, apologetic way, “let
me call the year in which we sailed for the
South s i 1751. What matters forty or
fifty yi to the shipwrecked! Is not ono
day <> open lioat, with no society but the
dev!! .1 memory, aud no hope but the
sit . at the bottom of the sea, an eternity?
Fill Kill that pannikin, my friend. 1 thank
you. To proceed: wo cruised ra - months
in the South sea, and took a :i :r - of shR*.
Ono was a privateer that i.... plundered a
British Indianian in the Southern ocean, anil
had entered the South sea by Now Holland.
This fellow was full of fine clothes, and had
some silver iu her. We took what we
wanted, and let her go with her j rde under
hatches, her yards square, her l Am amid¬
ships, and her cabin on fire. Our maxim is:
‘No witnesses!’ That is the pirate's philos-
1 C
Our maxim is: No witnesses!
ophy. Who gives us quarter unless it be to
hang us? But to continue: we dirl hand-
isemely, but were a long time about it, and
after careening and filling up with water
'twixt San Carlos and Chiloo wo sot sail for
the Antilles. Like your brig, we were blown
south. The weather was ferocious. Gale
after gale thundered down upon us, forcing
us to fly before it. We lost all reckoning of
our position; for days, for weeks, sea and
sky were enveloped in clouds of snow, in the
heart of which drove our frozen schooner.
We were none of us of a nationality fit to en¬
counter these regions; we carried most of us
the curly hair of the sun, the chocolate cheek
of the burning zone, and the ice chained the
crew, crouching like Lascars, below. We
swept past many vast icebergs, which would
leap on a sudden out of the white whirl of
thickness, often so close aboard that the re¬
coil of the surge striking against the mass
would flood our decks. At all moments of
the day and night we were prepared to feel
the shock of the vessel crushing her bows
against one of those stupendous hills. The
cabin resounded w'ith Halves and Aves, with
invocations to the saints, promises, curses,
and litanies. The cold does not make men
of the Spaniards, who are but indifferent sea¬
men in temperate climes, and we were chiefly
Spaniards, with consciences as red as your
English flag.”
He grinned, emptied the pannikin, and
stretched his bands to the fire to warm them-
pro .k continued.'
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Admin istratrix’ Sale.
By virtue of an order granted by ibe Court
of Ordinary of Spalding county i will sell at
public outcry to the highest bidder, before
the court house door in Griffin, “n the 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 (155) in the Second District of Pike
County, Georgia, adjoining landsof Abner
Moore, IV. P. Hempliill anil Mack and John
Barrow, belonging fo the estate of Isaac N.
Hair, late of Spalding County, deceased, and
containing two hundred and two and one
half (2C2W) acres, more or less. Terms cash.
MRS. 8ALL1E P. HAIR.
Administratrix of Isaac N. Hair, dec’d.
$(LOO.
Vol CONSUMPTIVE
■ ruiH AffaHHVH
I for All
load arwir« from rtro«*h** Woo4 an
acaiiut Ji
_______ km* V*ke > K It in in Um*. time. It tewei*, Ms. at DruccM.
end diJOTffrr* of Momach and
with the wonder this question raised in uim;
“the year? Why, man, what year but 1753!”
“Good God!” cried I, jumping to my feet
with terror at a statement I had anticipated,
though it shocked me a* a new anil frightful
revelation. “Do you know what year this is?”
He looked at me without answering.
“It is 1801,” I cried; and as I said this I re¬
coiled a step, fully expecting him to leap up
and exhibit a hundred demonstrations of
horror and consternation; for this, I am per¬
suaded, would have been tty posture had any
man roused me from a slumber and told me
I had been in that oondition for eight and
forty years.
He continued to view me with a very
strange and cunning expression in his eyes,
the coolness of which was inexpressibly sur¬
prising and bewildering, and even mortify¬
ing; then presently, grasping his beard,
looked at it; then put his hands to his face
and looked at them; then pulled out his feet
and looked at them; then very slowly, but
without visible effort, stood up, swaying a
little with an air of weakness, and proceeded
to feel and strike himself all over, swinging
bis arms and using his legs—after which ho
sat down and pulled his clothes over his naked
feet, and, fixing his eyes on mo afresh, said:
“What do you say this year is, sir?”
“Eighteen hundred and one,’’ I replied?
“Bah!” said he, and shook his head very
knowingly. “No matter; you have been
shipwrecked, too! Sir, shipwreck shuffles
dates as a player does cards; and the best of
us will go wrong in famine, loneliness, cold
ami peril. Be of good cheer, my friend; all
will return to you. Sit, sir, that I may hear
your adventures, aud I will relate mine.”
I saw how it was; he supposed me do-
ranged—a mortifying construction to plaeu
upon the language of a man who had restored
him to life; yet a few moments reflection
taught me to see the reasonableness of it, for
unless he thought me crazy he must conclude
I spoke the truth, and it was inconceivable
he should believe that he had lain in a frozen
condition for eight aild forty years.
I. hove no doubt the disorder my mind was
in helped to persuade him that 1 had not the
full possession of my senses. He ran his eye
over my figure and then round the cook
room, and said, “I am impatient to learn
your story, sir.”
“Why, sir,” said I, “my story is summed
up in what I have already told you.” But
that he might not be at a loss—for to be sure,
he had only very newly collected his intel¬
lect—I related my adventures at large. He
drew nearer to the furnace while I talked,
bringing his covering of clothes along with
him, und held out his great hands to toast at
the fire, nil the time observing me .with
scarce a wink of the eye. Arrived at the
end of my tale, I told how only last night I
had dragged his companion on deck, and
how he was to follow but for his posture.
“Ila!” cried he, “you might have caused
my flesh to mortify by laying me close to the
fire. It would have been better to rub me
with snow.”
Ho poked up one foot after the other to
count liisdoes, fearing somqfiad come away
with his stockings, and then said: “Well, and
how long should I have slept had you not
cornel Another week! By 8t. Paul, I might
have died! Have you my stockings, sir?”
I gave them to him, and he pulled them
over his legs and then drew on his boots and
stood up, the coats and wraps tumbling off
him as ho rose.
“I can stand,” says he. “That is good.”
But in attempting to take a step he reeled,
and would have fallen had I not grasped his
arm.
“Patience, my friend, patience!” he mut¬
tered, as if to himself. “I must lie a little
longer, and with that he kneeled and then
lay along the mattress. He breathed heavily
and pointed to the pannikin. I asked him
whether he would have wine or brandy. He
answered “Wine,” so I melted a draught,
which dose, I thought, on top of what he had
already taken, would send him to sleep ; but
instead it quickened his spirits, and with no
lack of life in his voice, he said: “What is the
condition of the vessel?”
I told him that she was still high anil dry,
adding that during the night some sort of
change had happened, which I should pres¬
ently go on deck to remark.
“Think you,” says he, “that there is any
chance of her ever being liberated?”
I answered, “Yes, but not yet; that is, if
the ice in breaking doesn’t destroy her. The
summer season has yet to come, and we ara
progressing north; blit now that you are
with me, it will be a question for us to settle
whether we are to wait for the ice to release
the schooner or endeavor to effect our escape
by other means.”
A curious gleam of cunning satisfaction
shone in his eyes as be looked at me; he then
kept silence for some moments, lost in
thought.
“Pray,” said I, breaking in upon him,
“what ship is this?”
He started, deliberated an instant, and an¬
swered, “The Boca del.Dragon,”
“A Spaniard!”
He nodded.
“She was a pirate'?’’ said I.
"How do you know that?” he cried, with a
sudden fierceness.
“Sir,” said I, “I am a British sailor, who
has used the sea for some years, and knows
the difference between a handspike and a
poop lantern. But what matters? She is a
pirate no longer.”
He let his eyes fall from my face, and gazed
round him with the air of one who cannot
yet persuade his understanding of the reali¬
ties of the scene he moves in.
“Tut!” cried he, presently, addressing him¬
self, “what matters the truth, as you say?
Yes,” said he, “the Boca del Dragon is a
pirate. You have of course rummaged her,
and guessed her character by what you
found?”
“I met with enough to excite my suspi¬
cion," said I. “The ship’s company of a
craft of this kind do not usually go clothed
in lace and rich cloaks, and carry watches of
this kind,” tapping my breast, “in their fobs
and handfuls of gold in their pockets.”
“Unless > said he.
“Unless,” I answered, “their flag is as black
as our prospects.”
“You think them black?” cried he, the
look of resentment that was darkening his
face dying out of it. “The vessel is sound, is
she not?”
I replied that she appeared so, but it would
be impossible to be sure until she floated.
“The stores!”
“They are plentiful.”
“They should be!” he cried; “we have the
liquor and stores of s galleon and two earacks
in our hold, apart from what we originally
laid in for the cruise. Everything will have
been kept sweet by the cold.”
“May I ask your name?” said I,
“Jules Tassard, at your service," said he,
“third in command of the Boca del Dragon,
but good as Mate Trentanove, and good
as Capt. Mendoza, and good as the cabin
boy Fernando Prado—for we pirates are re¬
publicans, sir; we know no social distinctions
save those we order for the convenience of
working ship. Now let me tell you the story
of our disaster. We had come out of the
Spanish Main into the South seas, partly to
escape some British and French cruisers
which were after us and others of our kind,
and partly because luck was against us, and
we could not find our account in those
waters. We sailed in December two years
ago”-
“Making the year?” I interrupted.
Hertsrted. and then grinned arain
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DEANE’S ART GALLERY/ ■m
WHIPS, WAGONS, BUGGIES '
AND HAFNKSS
—w- -
Studebaker Wagon! White Hickory Wagon !|
Jackson G. Smith Wagon I
Jackson G. Smith Buggy I
Ar>d the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowed Price* possible. Repair* <
old Buggies a Specialty.
W. H. SPENCE,
aug28dAw6m Cor. Hill A Taylor Street*, GRIFFIN, OA'
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED I
A fresh lot of preserves,
Jellies, Apples,
Oranges,fBanar.nas,
Cocoanuts,
AND IN FACT EVERYTHING A HOUSKEEPPER WILL NEED:
m
NO WORE EYE-GLASSES
■s Wea
Mo re
MITCHELL’S
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Pradacln* laa* - HighUilaeS*. of
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Tumors, Red Eyes. Malted Eye Lasli
ES AND PRODUCING Q UICK RE¬
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Also, equally efficacious when used in otli
cr maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever Sores, To
mors, Balt Rheum, Burns, Piles, or wherever
inflammation exists, MITCHELL'S SALVE
may be used to advantage, 25ecnts.
old by all Druggists at
A GREAT YEAR
In the history of the United State* is now upon
uh. Every person o! lnteUigenc* desires to keep
pace with the course of its events. There is no
letter way to do so than to subscribe lot
The Macon Telegraph.
Its news faculties are unsurpassed the fullest by any Associ¬ paper
in the South. In addition to correspond¬
ated Press dispatches, it has from special all Important
ence by wire and letter States.
points in Georgia and the neighboring of Congress Wash¬
During will the present session important and most In¬
ington be the centre most in the country. The
teresting news Correspondence of the Telegraph is
Washington the best that be had.
very can .... the latest
Its regular correspondent furnishes
oews and gossip in full dispatches. J. Cummings, Frequent
tfeecial letters from Hon. Amos
member of Congress trom New York, Frank G.
Carpenter, and W. A. Croffut, three of the best
known newspaper writers important at roe issues capital, of dis¬ the
cuss the livest and most
ft /he Telegraph is a Democratic Tariff the Reform policy
paper. It la thoroughly in line with
of (’resident Cleveland and the Democratic
par' v. Iu the coming national campaign the
Tel. -aph will not only give all the news, but
will iiscuss all public lssuea from the stand-
poi.,! of genuine Democratic faith. Subscribe
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Term*: Cash tn advance. Address
THE TELEGRAPH,
HUM*. GEO BO IA
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
All persons imlebted tothe estatc of Mary
L. Butler, late of Spalding County, Georgia,
deceased, arc hereby notified to call on the
undersigned and make settlement of such in
debteduess at once; and all persons having
demands against said estate are notified to
present their claims properly proven.
J. W. BUTLER, Adicinlrt ator.
niaj-7w(L— $3.70 ;
PROMPT MEASURES. grind their
When children pick their in their no*e, appetite, they teeth,
are restlc**, unnatural aw
quite likely troubled with Worm*, A.Fahnestock* prompt mea*
urea should be taken and B.
Vermifuge be given them according to dire©
lions it has saved many a child from death aid
may WIHi'aWWWIliwMIlMWMiVilliBliWWW preserve your *weet child from ilWWiMMiMW an early grmvt
Rule Nisi.
Duncan,Martin & Perdue i
W. T. HLTaylor. j
State of Georgia, Spalding County. In the
Superior Court, February Term, 1888.
it being represented to the Court by the pe-
tition of Duncan, Martin & Perdue that by
Deed of Mortgage, W.T. H.Taylor dated the conyeyed 13tb dey to Mid o
January, Duncan, Martin 1887, A Perdue “a certain parcel
of land containing thirty (80? 4th acres District being of
part of lot No, 115 in the East
Spalding county, Ga., bounded on the
by Jack Crawley, on the South by P. Cham-
less, North by P. L. Starr, Weet by some
of my own lands, said land, dollars,’’ thirty scree, the be¬
ing worth three hundred for
purpose of securing the payment W.^T. of HLTaylor a prom!* to
sory.note made by the said
the said Duncan, Martin A Perdue, the of due On* on
the 1st day of Oct.,1887, for and 50 sum -100 Dollars,
Hundred and Forty Eight fees, which
principal, interest and attorneys unpaid.
amount is now du6 and W.T. H.Taylor
It is ordered that the said
do pay into this Conrt, by the first day of the
next term the principal. Interest and costs,
due on said note and mortgage or ehow cause
i.* auy he has to the contrary, or that in de¬
fault thereof foreclosure be granted to the
said Duncan, Martin & Perdue of said Mort¬
gage. and the equity of redemption of tha
said W. T.UTaylor therein be forerer barred,
and that service of this aooording rule be perfected to on
said W. T. H. Taylor BOYNTON, law,
JAMES 8.
Judge 8, C. V, C#
Beck A Cleveland, Petitioners Att’ys.
I certify that the foregoing is a true copy
from the Minutes of this Court, this Thomas, Februa*
ry Term, 1888. Wm . M. C.
feb25oam4rc Clerk 8, C. 8.
MAN WANTS BUT LITTLE
Here below, but he Wants that little
mighty quick. A
or a big one is promptly filled by ad¬
vertising inlthe* Daily | orj
tWeekly NEWS,
ADVERTISERS
:an learn the exact cost
of any proposed line oi
advertising in American
papers by addressing
Geo. P. Rowell & Co.
Newspaper Advwtisinji Bureau,
lO Spru -a -it-. New Y«k
ke.ui tOofc* *•->»• 100>i»aa*
iaksyVillsi
Te rfwciljr *** «**rt*iar
nnl *
r. HIWi