Newspaper Page Text
Inherits*
Diseases.
ssaarssxsa^ia: fateful ami ovurwhalmliig. Ko fact of
lib)*, pr««ua»t with awful
nature U mar* mean
lDg than th* fact of th* lnhcritanc* of
m , f .. It meet* the physician on hi* daily
round*, paralyalu* hl * or* and fllUas him
with dieinay. Th* Uyaad of th* ancient
Qmeke picture* th* Furl** a* pureuln*
fatalll** from generatl
reuderius them desolate,
nly th*lr work of terror Hid I
«r* not now clothed In th» garb of *up*nti.
Hon, but appear In th* more Intelligible but
no tree awful form of hereditary disease.
Modem Klenc*. which ha* Illuminated *o
many dark corner* of aaturo, he* *b*d a
new tight on the ominous word* of tho
gerlptum*. "Th* tin* of th* father* (hall b*
Tidied upon the children unto the third and
I instance* of hereditary
ad. Fifty pel 1 dMtr&Hfar Cede, of eaeee of
. that fearful of faml-
He*, of cancer and ecrofula, run In famUlee
through Inheritance. Iniaulty 1* hereditary
m a marked degree, but, fortunately, tike
nuay other befcilftiry dftvuei, tend* to
wear ltielf out, the etoek becoming extinct.
A dMInguUbed eelentiet truly say*: "Mo
ergan or texture of the body 1* exempt from
the chanco of being the subject of hereditary
dleeau.” Probably more chronie dlae a e e* .
which permanently modify the structure
M d function* of th* body, are mdr* oy Idea
liable to be Inherited. The Important and
far-reaching practical deduction* from such
fact*—affecting ** powerfully th* happO****
•f iadirlduai* and famlUa* and th* ooUaetlr'*
welfare of th* natloa-nr* ebrtou* to refle*-
ting mind*, and th* beat mean* for prevent¬
ing or curing the** d hu a te* I* a lubjact of
lutenm lutcroal to ell. Fortunately nature
ha* attMted^a* prodded a remedy, which experience
hai lnfalllbl*, end the remedy 1*
the world turnout Swift'* Specific, a pur*
vegetable compound—nature'* antidote for
all blood polaona. To th* afflicted It 1* a
bicesing of lueetlmabl* value. An latareev
lug treatise oa * Blood and Skin Dlaeaee* *
■ill b* ma'led frea by addremlng
Tiff Swift Sractnc Co.,
Drawer l Atlanta. Ota
Ordinary's Advertisements.
U . a ){Hi N iRY’S OFFICE, ShstniNJ Coun-
n, Gbohuia, May 26th, 1888.—Mrs.
Martha V. Oaraall, administratrix of Kutie
Far null, has applied to me for letters of Dig-
misriou on the estate of Katie Daruall, late
of said county, debased.
Let ail persons ooneernrd show cause be
ford the Court of Ordinary of said county
ai my off.ee in Gridin, on tbe first Monday in
September, should 1888, by ten be o’olock, a. m., why
tneh letters not granted.
Sri,15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/AKOINARY’S U OFFICE, Spai.di.vo Cou.v
TT t Geoboia, May 20th, 1888,—Mrs. M.
Martha A. Damajl, applied executrix of Tbos.
Darnall, has to me for letters of dis ,
mission from the executorship of said estate.
Ut all persons concerned show cause be-
. fore the Court Griffin, of Ordinary of said county, at
ray office in on the first Monday in
September, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why
och letters should not ba granted.
$6.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
/ORDINARY’S OFFICE. —Spaldiso Coun-
KJ tt, Geokoia, Augus' Arch 3, 1888.—Mrs. and James Lei
la B. Lamar, Guardian of M.
Nall makes application to me for leave to
sell one undivided lmlf interest in house
and lot belonging to her wards fer distribu¬
tion.
, Let all persons coucered show canse be-
foie the court of Ordinary at my office in
Griffin on the first Monday in September application by
ten o’elock a, m., why such
should fl.OO. not be E. granted. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
Administratrix* Sale.
By virtce of an order granted by
of Ordinary of to Spalding the Wr*'—‘ county 1-4
public the court outory house door !i(
Tuesday in August next, i
heurs of sale, tbe following
ertj, to-wit-
Lot of land number on
fire (165) in the Sccon
County, Georgia, adjoinin
Moore, W. P. Hemphills!
Barrow, belonging Spalding to the Court i
Hair, late of hundred and
containing (2C2J^) two I
half acres, more or F
MRS. Isase-Jf. 8AI4 „,
Administratrix of
|C.OO.
Rule Nifri.
B. n. Kinard A Sou j
vs. ) >
I. J. Ward k J. W, Ward.
State ofGeorgia, Spalding County. In the
Superior Court, February Term, 1888.
It being represented to the Coart by the
said B. C. Kinard k Bon a certain tract of
land, towit; fifty acres of laud lying in Akins
f District ollowi: of North Rpelding by lands county, of BiirWiee, Gm,bounded Jtest by as
Jno. Ward, South by Barney Mandox and
West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬
curing made bv the payment said I. J. of Ward a promissory & l. W. Ward note to
the
the said B. C. Kinard & Bon dae on the 15th
day Dollars of November and Ninety-six 1887, cents for the ((50.96), sum of which Fifty
note It is now due that and the unpaid. said I. J. Ward & l.
ie ordered
W, Ward do psty qtto thtt Court, by the first
day and of easts, the ttfdcftetiii Safe sail? the principal, show interest
on note or canse,
if any they have tothe 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 L
J. Ward & J. w. Ward therein he forever bar-
. vd, Bald and I. that J. Ward service k of this W. rule Ward be according perfected
•u J.
•o it* by publication in the Griffim Nbwb.
w by service upon I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward
of a copy three months prior to the next
term of this court.
JAMES 8. BOYNTON,
Judge 8. C. F. C.
f rank Flynt and Dismuke k Collens, Peti¬
tioner* Att’s.
* true copy from tbe Minutes of tbisCou
Wu. If. Thomas, Clerk 8- C. 8 C,
(uainiju
816 Million MONEY I! 2 ’S^SSSU Lives of
voters with the oniy official
CLEVELAND and THURMAN
hr Hok. W. D. Hbksxl, also Life of Mrs.
Cartridge Cleveland, Bor, exquisite Free Trade steel portraits. Policy, complete. Voters’
*00 Agents at work report Immense success.
For beet work, beat terms, apply quick and
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HUBBARD BRG8.. Philadelphia, Pa.
ICE WUND.
By W. CLARK RU’S3KLL,
Author of “The Wreck of Hut Orosvenor'
“Jack's Courtship," “My Watch lie
low," 1 The Lady Maud ” Ktc.
CHAPTER XX.
A MEBRY EVENING.
By tho time wo Lad reached the bottom of
the hollow, Tassard was blowing like a
bellows with tho uncommon exertion; and,'
■wearing that ho felt tho cold penetrating his
bones, and that he should be stui»efied again
if ho did not mind, lie climbed into tho ship
and disappeared. I loved him so little that
secretly I very heartily wished that nature
would make away with him— I mean that
something it would be impossible in me to
lay to my conscience should befall him—as
becoming comatose again, and so lying like
one dead. Assuredly in such a case it was
not this hand that would have wasted a drop
of brandy in returning an evil, white li vered,
hectoring old rascal to a life that smelled
foully with him and tiie like of him.
I entered the ship, and found Tassard roast¬
ing himself in the eook house.
“I have been surveying the ice,” said I,
drawing to the furnace, “and have very little
doubt that if we wisely bestow the powder in
great quantities wo shall succeed in dislocat¬
ing the bed on which wo are lying."
“Good!” ho cried.
“But after." said I.
“What!”
“As much of this bed as may lie dislodged
will not be deep; icebergs, as of course you
know, capsize in consequence of their becom¬
ing top heavy by the wasting of the bulk that
is submerged. This block will make but a
small berg should wo liberate it, and 1 very
much fear that the weight of this schooner
will overset it the instant wo r.re launched ”
“Body of Moses!” ho cried, angrily, knit¬
ting his brows, whereby ho stretched the scar
to half its usual width, “wluit's to lie done,
then <”
“She is a full ship,” said I, “and weighty.
If the liberated ice lie thin she may sit up ou
it and keep it under. We have a right to
hojie in that direction, perhaps. Yet there
is another consideration. She may leak like
a sieve I”
“Wliyf" ho exclaimed. “She too!: the ice
smoothly; she has not been strained; she was
as tight as a bottle before she stranded; the
coating of ice will have cherished her; and a
stout ship like this docs not suffer from six
months of lying up!"
Sir mouths, thought I.
“Well, it may bo as you sav; but if she
leaks, it will not be in our four arms to keep
her free.”
He exclaimed, hotly, “Mr. Rodney, if we
are to escape we must venture something.
To stay here means death in the end. Iam
persuaded that this ice is joined with Some
vast main body far south, aud that it does
not move. What is there, then, to wait for?
There is promise in your gunpowder proposal.
If she capsizes, then the devil will get his
own.” And with a savage flourish of the
pannikin he put it to his lips and drained it.
His sullen determination that we should
stand or fall by ray scheme was not very use¬
ful to me. I had looked for some shrewdness
in him, some capacity of originating and
weighing ideas; but I found he could do little
more than curse and swagger and ply his
can, in which he found most of his anecdotes
and recollections and not a little of his cour¬
age. I pulled out my watch, as I must call
it, and observed that it was hard upon l
o’clock.
“’Ti8 lucky,” said he, eying tho watch
greedily and coming to it away from tbe
great subject of our deliverance, as though the
right of the fine gold thing with its jeweled
letter extinguished every other thought in
kiifi, “that you removed that watch from
Mendoza. But he will have carried other
good things to the bottom with him, I fear.”
“His flask and tobacco box I took’ away,”
said I. “He had nothing of consequence be¬
sides.”
“They must go into the common chest,”
cried be; “ ’tis share and share, you know.”
“Ay,” said I, “but what I found on Men¬
doza is mine by the highest right under
heaven. If I had not taken the things they
would now be at tho bottom of the sea.”
“What of that?” cried he, savagely. “If
we had not plundered the galleon she might
have been wrecked and taken all she had
down with her. Yet should such a consider¬
ation hinder a fair division as between us—
between you, who had nothing to do with
tho pillage, and me, who risked my life in it!”
I Baid, “Very well; be it as you say.” ap¬
pearin ing to consent, for there was something
tiftily absurd in an altercation about a few
i’ worth of booty in the face of our
loly and most perilous position,though
]y enabled me to send a deeper glance
“"“d of this man than I had yet been
re, but made me understand a
i to* Qhj bloody and furious quarrels
,v “*Di and again arisen among
rtfi the brink of eternity, to
whom A cup Of"drink _ or the sight of a ship
had been more precious than the contents of
the Bank of England.
I set about getting the dinner.
“While you are at that work,” cried he,
starting up, ‘Til overhaul the pockets of the
bodies on deck;” and picking up a chopper
away he went, and I heard him cursing in
hjs native tongue as he stumbled to the com¬
panion ladder through the darkness in the
cabin. credence. There
His rapacity was treasure beyond hold, he
was an inmfiense in the yet
could not leave the pockets of the two poor
wretches on deck alone. I did not envy him
his task; the frozen figures would bear a
deal of hammering, and besides he hail to
work itt the oold. Ah, though I, with a
groan,; I should have left him to make one
of them!
I had finished my dinner by* the time bo
arrived. He produced the watch I had taken
from and returned to the mate's pocket when
I had searched him for a tinder box . also a
gold snuffbox »t with diamonds and a few
Spanish pieces in gold. On seeing these
things I remembered that I had found some
rings and money in Tassard's pockets while
overhauling him for means to obtain fire,
but I held my peace.
“Should not we have been imbeciles to
»eriflce these beauties?” he cried, viewing
the watch and snuffbox with a rapturous
grin, hard to at, I expect?"
“They were answered, come pocketing them and
“No,” he of beef the “I
turning to a piece in oven. little
knocked «fway thf» ice, and after a
wrenching got at the pockets. But poor
Trentanove! d’ye know, his nose came away
with the mask of ice! He is no longer lovely
to the right!” He broke into a guffaw, then
stuffed his mouth full, and talked in the in¬
tervals of chewing. “There was nothing
worth taking on Barros. They are both
overboard.”
"Overboard!" I cried.
“Why, yes,” said he. “They are no good
on deck. I stood them against th-- rail, then
tipped them over.”
This was an illustration of his strength I
did not much relish.
“I doubt if I could have lifted Barros,"
said L
“Not yon!” be exclaimed, running his eye
over me. “A dead Dutchman would have
the weight of a fairy alongside Barros .”
“Weil, Mr. lassans, S*m i, - ancc you are
so strong you will bo very useful to our
scheme! There is much to be done.''
“Give mo a sketch of ycvir pk. --. that I
may understand you," ho exclaimed, con¬
tinuing to eat very heartily.
“First of all,” said I, “wo sliall have to
break tho powder barrels out of the magazine
and hoist them on deck. There are tackles,
I suppose ?”
“You should be able to find what you want
among the boatswain's stores in the run," he
replied.
“There are some,splits wide enough to re¬
ceive a whole barrel of powder,” said I. “I
counted four suefi yawns all happily lying ia
a line athwart the ico past the bows. I pro¬
pose to rink these barrels twenty feet deep,
where they must bang from a piece of spar
across tbe aperture.”
He nodded.
“Have yon any slow matches aboard ?"
“Plenty among tho gunner’s stores," ho re¬
plied.
“There are but you and me,” said I;
•‘these operations will take time. Wo must
mind not to be blown up by one barrel while
we arc suspending another. Wo shall
have to lower the barrels with their matches
on fire, and they must bo timed to bum an
hour.”
“Ay, certainly—at least an hour,' he ex¬
claimed. “Two hours would lie better.”
“Well, that must depend upon the num¬
ber of parcels of matches we meet with.
There will be a good many mines to spring,
and one must not explode before another.
’Tis the united force of the several blasts
which we must reckon on. The contents of
at least four more barrels of powder we
must distribute among the other chinks and
splits in such parcels ns they will lie able to
receive.”
“And then!”
“And then,” said I, “wo must await the
Vxploaion, and trust to the mercy of heave#
to help us.”
He made a hideous face, as if this was a
sort of talk to nauseate him, and said: “Do
you propose tlmt wo should remain on board,
or watch tho effects from a distance?”
“Why, remain ou board, of course,” 1 an¬
swered. “Suppose tho mines liberated tho
ice on which tho schooner lies and it floated
away, what Should we, watching at a dis¬
tance, do?”
“True,” cried lie, “but it is cursed perilous.
The explosion might blow the ship up.”
“No, it will not do that. We shall lie bad
engineers if we bring such a thing about.
The danger will bo—providing the schooner
is released—in her capsizing, as I have licfore
pointed out.”
“Enough!” cried he, charging his panni¬
kin for the third time. “We must chance her
capsizing."
“If I hud a crew at my back,” said I, “I
would carry an anchor and cable to the shoul¬
der of the cliff at the end-of the slope to hold
the ship if she swam. 1 would also put a
quantity of provisions on the ice along with
materials for making us shelter and the whole
of the stock of coal, so that we could go <in
supporting life here if the schooner cap¬
sized. ”
“Then,” said he, “you would remain ashore
during the explosion?”
“Most certainly. But as all those prepara¬
,
tions would mean a degree of labor imprac¬
ticable by us two men, I am for the bold ven¬
ture—prepare and fire the mines, return to
the ship, and leave the rest to Providence.”
He made another ugly face, and indulged
himself in a piece of profanity that was in¬
expressibly disgusting and mean in the mouth
of a man who was used to cross himself when
alarmed and swear by the saints. But per¬
haps he knew, even better than I, how little
he had to expect from Providence. He filled
his pipe, exclaiming that when o had smoked
it out we should fall to vjork. „
Now that I had settled a plan, I was eager
to put it into practice—hot and wild, indeed,
with the impatience and hope of the cast¬
away animated with the dream of recovering
his liberty and preserving his life; and I was
the more anxious to set about the business at
once, on account of the weather being fair
and still; for if it came on to blow a stormy
wind again we should be forced, as before,
under hatches. But I had to wait for the
Frenchman to empty his pipe. Ho was so
complete a sensualist that I believe nothing
short of terror could have forced him to
shorten the period of a pleasure by a second
of time. He went on puffing so deliberately,
with such leisurely eqjoyment of the flavor
of the smoke, that I expected to see him fall
asleep; and, my patience becoming exhausted,
I jumped up, but by this time his bowl held
nothing but black ashes.
“Now,” cried he, “to work.”
And lie rose with a prodigious yawn and
seized the lantern. Our first business was to
hunt among the boatswain’s stores in the run
for tackles to hoist the powder barrels up
with. There was a good collection, as might
have been expected in a pirate, whose com¬
merce lay in slinging goods from other ships’
holds into her own; but the ropes were
frozen as hard as iron, to remedy which wo
carried an armful to the cook house, and left
the tackles to lie and soften. We also con¬
veyed to the cook house a quantity of ratline
stuff—a thin rope, used for the making of
steps in the shroud ladders; this being a line
that would exactly serve to suspend the
smaller parcels of powder in the splits. Be¬
fore touching the powder ban-els wo put a
lighted candle into the bull’s eye lamp over
the door, and removed the lantern to a safe
distance. Tassard was perfectly well ac¬
quainted with the contents of this store¬
room, and on my asking for the matches put
his hand on one of several bags of them.
They varied in length, some being six inches
and somo making a big coil. There was
nothmg for it but to samplo and test them,
and this I told Tassard could lie done that
evening. The main hatch was just forward
of the gunroom bulkhead; seized a hand¬
spike each and went to work to pry the cover
open. It was desperate tough labor—as bad
as trying to open an oyster with a soft blade.
The Frenchman broke out into many strange
old-fashioned oaths in his own tongue, imag¬
ining the hatch to be frozen; but though I
don’t doubt the frost had something to do
with it, its obstinacy was mainly owing to
time, that had soldered it, so to speak, with
the stubbornness that eight and forty years
will communicate to a fixture which ice has
cherished and kept sound.
We got the hatch open at last—be pleased
to know that I am speaking of the hatch in
the lower deck, for there was another imme¬
diately over it on the upper or main deek—
and returning to the powder room, rolled the
barrels forward ready - for slinging and hoist¬
ing away when we should have rigged a
tackle aloft. We had not done much, but
what we had done had eaten far into the
afternoon.
“I am tired and hungry and thirsty,” said
the Frenchman. “Let us knock off. We
have made good progress. No use opening
the main deck hatch to-night; the vessel is
cold enough when hermetically corked.”
“Very well,” said I, bringing my watch to
the lantern and observing tho time to be
sundown; so, carefully extinguishing the
candle in the bull’s eye lamp, we took each of
us a bag of matches and went to the cook
room
fro je coxnxcED.
Ia a gallon of sea water there are 1,899
grains of salt, besides some magnesia,
iodine and bromine
,
i€- .*♦« -
Plump and Rosy Babies
"Had it not tifen for L*ct*t*d Food cm* littlebrinr ranrib»T« died. She b**b**a arias it foe thm
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9 |
W. T. H Taylor.
State of Georgia, Spalding County. Term, 1888. In the
Superior Court, February Court by the
It being represented to the pe¬
tition of Duncan, Martin k Perdue that by
Deed of Mortgage, dated the 18th day o
January,1887, W.T. H.Taylor conveyed.to said
Duncan, Martin k Perdue “a oertaiu parcel
of land containing thirty (30) acres Dlstriot being
part of lot No, 115 in the 4th of
Spalding county, Ga., bounded on the East
by Jack Crawler, on the South by P. Cham-
less, North by P. L, Starr, West by some
of my own lands, said land, dollars,’’ thirty acres, be¬ the
ing worth three hundred for
purpose of securing the payment of a prom is
sory note made by the said W. Perdue, k T. H.Taylor to
the said Dunoan, Martin & due on
the 1st day of Oct.,1887, for the sum of One
Hundred and Forty Eight and 50-100 fees, Dollars, which
principal, is Interest due ana and attorneys unpaid.
amount now
do It It is is ordered ordered this that that Court, the the said said the W.T. W.T. first day H.Taylor H.Taylor of the
pay Into by
next term the note principal, interest sad ooets.
due on said and mortgage or show cause
if any he has to tbe contrary, or that in de¬
fault said Duncan, thereof Martin foreclosure & Perdue be granted of said to Mart, the
gage, said W. and T.HTaylor the equity therein of redemption be forever barred, of tbe
and that service H. Taylor of this according rule be perfected on
said W. T. to law.
JAMES 8. BOYNTON, F. C.
k Cleveland, Judge 8. Att’ys. C.
Beck Petitioners
I certify that the foregoing is a true copy
from Term, the 1888. Minutes of this Wm Court, M. this Thomas, Februa^
ry feb35oam4m Clerk . 8,C. 8. C.
HAN WANTS BUT LITTLE
Here below, but he Wants tha' little
mighty quick. A
or a big one is promptly titled by
vertising in'the^Oaily I or
'.Weekly NEWS.
d*£***fcti
ADVERTISERS
:an learn the exact co ‘
if nn\ nroposed o
a ! vc*rtisi iig i n Americr..
./ipci'w hy address!*.^
Dee. P. Rowell & Co.,
: a.» arUairVi Surt.u,
10 r|>r»- t Navy Y«rk.
Vc..v. ((> .J- 10O-Atog# Pmi .phi*'
\ys?m
Him k I
SCHEDULE*
Effect Sunday, May 27,1888.
noTmT pabsengeb—north!
« Oobunbas,.............. RMUa*
MoUnia,.....................10.fl «••*.#«**--------------
*»
WlUUlMcm’*,...............11 .w a m
jnough........
NO. W. PA88ENGKR—80DTH
McDonough, ................RI5p
Griffin,..... ‘‘‘fL«pm :USSS sifln™ ■*
Concord,. Wtttlsmson's,...
Warm Woodbury,...................5.16 Spring*..............5.88 p (a
Columbus,..................1.16p* pm
Nti, .li passeng Eft— north!
—----------------- v
r i oiunibu*.......... 4.45 pm
nvv Warm Spring................6.30 p to
Woodbury,........... 9.41 p in
Moleuu............... 6.5fl pm
Xml........................6.07 p A
Willtamaob's................7 Concord.....................7.07 pm
37 p m
Griffin......................7.40 p n
Griffin......................7,00 pm
I.n.'lla.....................p McDonough................8.40pm m
NO. 00. PASSENGER—ROUra.
McDonough............. Luells.......................7.48 .7.90 e m
a m
Griffin......................8.15 n m
Williamson's,................8 Griffin.......................8.35 43 * m
a m
Neal,.........................9.11 Conoord,....................9.011»
a m
Moleaa,......................S.16 Woodbury,................ 9.27 n m
a m
Warn Springs.......... .9.48 a m
Columbus,.................11.90 a m
HT All p asseng er trains see daily looted
Sundays. M. R, GRAY, Bopt.
C. W. Geu’l CHKARS, Pass,
Agt; Columbus,Ga.
New Advertisements.
ml stamp for
ON A BON,
Penn.
\ R E CON SUM PT! */r
o u
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
rpHS A SCIENCE OF n^i LIFE, th*
gro*t ¥*dlc*l Work oi U*
age on Kouhood, Harvon* sad 4
Physical Debility,
Decline, Error* of Youth, and
the untold ml*erte*aon**qa*M m*MMM
thereon, 800
proscription* for *D <
Cloth, fUUfftH, only ly tut |L0^ !. . '
Hall, Mated, liloatratir* saeqpt* fro**o*«T«**ff
and mlddl*-*c*d men. (tend now. The Oold and
Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the Mb-
Monal Medical Amo et a rt on. AddWlff P. 0. bow
OU. Boston, M***.. or Dr. W. H. PjJUUB,CMd-
nateof Harvard M*dlo*lC*U«g*.»ya*«F|rSiaiter
In Boston, who may be consul tod confldunUaOy.
Specialty. Disease* of Man. Office Ko. 4 ButflnchM.
you may know Worms are sapping at their
and unless prompt measures are taken, YliffB spam*
finally andseTtoJ^S*® de ath wi ll follow. B. A*
lf^lfhMrto
Notice to Debtor* and Creditor*.
All persons indebted tothe estate at if erf
Butler, late of Spalding notified County, call Georgia, the
eeeosed, nderslgned are and hereby make settlement to of such on in
and all persona notified bavin# to
emonds their against claims said properly as tote an
r esent proven.
J. W. BUTLER, Administrator.
may7wfl.—$8,701
PAikli'fl •£k *m
HAIR BALSAM
HINDER
Th# sUsSL *nn*t and tori earo
NOTICE
To Executor*, Adminlitraters, Guar¬
dians and Tratees*
Notice 1 h hereby given to all axaentore, a
ministrators, guardians and. trustees, to
make their annual return# between now and
the first Monday in July. Griffin. 1838, at 10 o'clock
a. m., at my office In Ordinary.
E. W. HAMMOND,
May 81,1888.
J. P. NICHOLS, i<>
AO KMT THS
Northwestern Mutual Life In¬
surance Company,
Of Milwaukee, Mis. Tbe most reliable la
uranee Company in America, aag28dly
Butcher’s Fly Killer!
CERTAIN DEATH.
No hunting with powder and gun a
squirrels, only to to stapify them. No
enng death on the death an the stfckin
i ter. Flies seek tt, drink sad are.
KILLED OUTRIGHT
humanely, so quickly they esanot get away.
Use It freely. Prevent reproduction, ask seenr la
serene ptsce and quiet. Always
DUTCHXR’8.
Vmt Isis Ivsiyahw*.
july'dAwlm