The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, August 10, 1888, Image 3

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An tHPportaiit weeks Announcement while at business. 1 Aikiut six attacked ago. with excruciating ftfiS'fflVCS «»■ suddenly 2?$g&3S3SS?. .. Quints (Q two or three double days their my natural were swollen to almost driven from After suffer¬ site, er* nnd sleep was me. the most excruciating and various pain other for remedies, a week, i.Tmr liniments who sympathized with helpless S friend my CO ”\Vhy n , yo“ 8 Swift’s Specific tion ’t get and If doea and use it I will guarantee a cure, It B .he medicine secured shall tho cost 8. you S. S., nothing.” and after I at once first day, had quiet night using It the a I and Sneflttea. refreshing sleep. In a week felt greatly in three weeks I could sit up and walk about the room, and after using six Lotties I was out and able to go to business, since then I have been regularly at my post of duty, and stand on uiy feet from nine to ton hour* v day, the and plain am entirely anti simple free from facta fumy These and are I will cheerfully all case, r answer ai inq— inquiries relative thereto, . _______In either In person i or by mail. Tiiouas SUkkilmk, 11 W. 18th street, New York City. Nesnvnxi, Task.—I have warded ofr a se¬ vere Hi t sek of rheumatism by a timely resort •nSwtrt's relief Specific. Is sought In all this cases medicine where a per¬ manent institutional corn- mendsltsetf ids itself for Ior a “ constitutional treatment treatment that thoroughly the syat system. eradicates the seeds of ills- ease from Rev. W. P. Hamihon, D. D. Sew Yota, 51 7tu Awe.—A fter spending *300 to he relieved of Blood Poison without auv benefit, a few bottles of Swift’s Specific worked a perfect cure. C. POBTxn. Vienna, ha, Oa—M GU.-My y little little had had girl, glri aged sir, and bov. aged ged four four years, years, i scrofula In tho worst aggravated day shape. they They were puny anil sickly. To aro healthy and ro¬ bust. all the re: silt of talcing Ig S. s. S. ! S. JOE T. COUAKR. Lapy Lak*. SPMTEn Co.. Fla.—Y our S. 8. 8. has has "^he proved a wonderful success in my case, wouiil cancer hurried on my face, face, no no doubt. doubt^ have soon me to my grave, do think It Is wonderful, B. H. Byrd, and has no equal. Postmaster. Atlanta, Waco, Oa.: Texas, May 9,1888. 8. Gentlemen-Knowing S. Co., that appreciate testimonials, take you pleasure voluntary of we lady in stating that one our customers has- regained her health by the use of four large bottles of luvalidfor your great several reniedv, after having been an debility, years, llcrtrouble iwifi extFPD)6 caused by a disease pe¬ culiar to her sex, Wilus & Co., Druggists. Three book* mailed £reo on application. All druggists sell 8. S. S. Tiik Swift Specific Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta Ga. Mew Yorkj'ISG broad way. binary’s Advertisements. / i K!ii\ .KY’S OFFICE, Spamun j Coun- ‘ } (iEOiiaiA, May 26th, 1888.—Mrs. ty. Miti Urn V. DuniftU, administratrix of Katie Uurnnll, lias applied to me for letters of Die- uiission on the estate of Katie Darnali, late of - aid cunity, dccased. J.c( all persons concern rd show cause be f.nv the Court in Griffin, of Ordinary of said Monday county hi in} nff.ee on the first in Scni mlier, 1888, by ten o’clock, n. ra., why s.p-Ii letters should not be granted, f.jr, E. W. HAMM OND , Ordinary. / 7 A KDINARY’S OFFICE, Spai.ding Cou.v V iy, Geobqia, May 26th, 1888,—Mrs. Martha A. Darnali, ex,c .; i ix of Thos. M. Darnali, has applied to me for letters of die mission from the executorship of said estate. I.et all persons concerned show cans© be¬ fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in September, 1883, by ten o’clock, a. m , why u>h letters should not bo granted. $6.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary, / vj ORDINARY’S OFFICE.— SpaldingCoun- la B. tv, Geoboia, Augns’ 3, 1888.—Mrs. Lei Lamar, Guardian of Arch M. and James Nall makes application to me for leave to sell one undivided half interest, in house and lot belonging to lier wards for distribu¬ tion . I.et all persons eoneerv.d show cause be¬ fore tlie court of Ordinary at my office in Griffin on the first Monday in September by ten o'clock a. m., why such application should not be granted. *S.00. E. \V. MAMMON I), Ordinary. Executors’ Sale. GEORGIA- Spaj.ding County. By virtue of an order granted us by the Cou Court of Ordinary tlie highest we will bidder,at sell before Griffin, the t house, to Georgia; of September in said county, on the first the Tues¬ legal day next, and between three hours of sale, eighteen quarters (18%) shares of the capital stock of the Sa¬ vannah, Griffin and North Alabama Railroad Company. Sale for distribution among leg¬ atees. Terms of sale E. cash. W. BECK, Ang. ag.6 6th, 1888. J. H. MITCHELL. {3. t'O Executors W. D. Alexander. Rule Nisi. B. (I Kinard <& Son ]■ j vs. j 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 16th day of Oct. 1887. I..1. Ward & J. W. Ward, conveyed to the said B. <11 Kinard & Son a certain tract of ■ami, towit; fifty acres of landlying in Akins District of Spalding county, Ga., bounded as follows: North by lands of Bill Wise, East by Jno. Ward, South by Barney Maddox and West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬ curing the payment of a promissory nofb made by the said I. J. Ward & 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 ($50.96), which note is now due and unpaid. It is ordered that the said I. J. Ward it J. W. Ward do pay into this Court, by the first day of the next term the principal, interest and costs, due on said note or show cause, if any they have to the contrary, or that in default thereof foreclosure be granted to the said B. C. Kinard <fc Son of said Mortgage, and the equity of redemption of tlie said I. J Ward A J. W. Ward therein be forever bar- • id and that service of tffis rule be perfected ■a i aid I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward according io mw by publication in tlie Griffin News, by service upon I. J. Ward & J. W. Waid of a copy three months prior to the next term of this court. JAMES S. BOYNTON, C. Judge S. C. F. Frank Fiynt and Dismuke & Collens, Peti- t. oners Alt’s. J true copy from the Minutes of ihisCcn Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk 8. C. S C. , <: inlm ENGINES, ALL FIRST CLASS, AND A NO. 1 ! Price and Quality Guaranteed. , both Also, the celebrated 111 0-MAS HARROW, in Wood and Iron- cheap. .HP A few Buggies on hand will be sold tsepl G. A. CUNNINGHAM. ICE BOUND. By W CLARK RUSSELL, Author of "The lVreek of (he, Grosrcnor. Jacks Courtship,” ' r 3fy ffalcli lie- low, " 1 The Lutlu Mttud " Etc. CHAPTER XXII. a change comeh over the frenchman. Tassnril was dogged and scowling. Such was his temper that had I been a small or weak man, or a person likely to prove sub¬ missive, he would have given a loose rein to his foul tongue and may he handled me very roughly. But my demeanor was cold and resolved, and not of a hind to improve ids courage. I leveled a deliberate, semi-con¬ temptuous gaze at his own fiery stare, and puzzled him, too, 1 believe, a good deal by my cool reserve. He muttered «Idle wo ate, drinking plentifully of wine and garnishing his draughts with oaths and to spare; and then, after falling silent and remaining so for the space of twenty minutes, during which 1 lighted my pipe and sat with my feet close to the furnace, listening with eager oars to the sounds of the ice and the dull crying of the wind, he exclaimed sulk¬ ily: our scheme is a failure. The schooner is fixed. What's to be done now:” “I don't know that my scheme is a fail¬ ure,” said I. “What did you suppose—that the blast would blow the ice, with tlie schooner on it, into the ocean clear of the island? If the icc i; so shaken as to enable the swell to detach it, my scheme will have accomplished all I proposed.” “Iff he cried, scornfully and passionately; “if will not deliver us and save the treasure. . I tell you the schooner is fixed—as fixed as the damned in everlasting tire. Be it so!” he cried, clenching Ills fist. “But you must meddle no more! The Boca del Dragon is mine—mine, d'ye see, now (hat they’re all dead and gone but mo”—smiting his bosom— “and if over sin' is to float, let nature or tlio devil launch her; no more explosions, with the risks your failure has made her and mo run 1” His voice sank; lie looked at me in silence, aud then, with a wild grin of anger, he ex¬ claimed: “What made you awake me? I was at peace—neither cold, hungry nor hope¬ less! Wh it demon forced you to bring mo to this— to bring mo back to this:” “Mr. Ta. surd,” said I, coldly, “I don't r.sk your pension for my experiment; I meant well, and to my mind it is no failure yet. But for disturbing your repose I do sincerely beg your forgiveness, and solemnly promise you, if you will return to tho state in which I found you, that I will not repeat tho of¬ fense.” He eyed me from top to toe in silence, filled and lighted his hideous pipe, and smoked with his back turned upon me. Had there been another warm place in the schooner 1 should have retired to it, and left this surly aud scandalous savage to the en¬ joyment of his own company. After sitting a long while sullenly smok¬ ing in silence, he fetched his mattress and some covers, lay down upon it, and fell fast asleep. 1 admired and envied this display of confidence in me, mu i heartily wished myself as safe in his liands as he was in mine. Tho afternoon passed. I was on deck a half dozen times, but never witnessed the least alteration in the ice. My spirits sank very low. I sat before the furnace extremely dejected, while tho Frenchman snored on liis mattress. I could no longer flatter myself that tho ex¬ plosions had made the impression 1 had ex¬ pected on the ice, and my mind was utterly at a loss. How to deliver myself from this horrible situation I could not imagine. The sole ray of hope that gleamed upon me broke out of the belief that this island was going north, and that when we had come to the height of the summer in these seas, the wasting of the coast or tlie dislocation of tho northern mass would release us. Yet this was but poor comfort too; it threatened a terrible long spell of waiting, with perhaps disappointment in tho end, and months of enforced association with a wretch with whom I should have to live in fear of my life. When I was getting supper Tassard awoke, quitted his mattress and came to his bench. “Has anything happened while f slept!” said he. “Nothing,” I answered. “The icc shows no signs of giving?” ha asked. “I sec none," said I. “Well,” cried he, with a sarcastic sneer, “have you any more fine schemes!” “’Tis your turn now,” I replied. “Try your hand. If you fail I promise you I shali not be disappointed.” “But you English sailors,” said he, wag¬ ging iiis head and regarding me with a great deal of wildness in ids eye, “speak of your¬ selves as tlie finest seamen in tho world. Justify the maritime reputation of your nation by showing me haw we aro to escape with the schooner from the ice.” “Mr. Tassard,” said I. approaching him and looking him full in the face, “I would advise you to sweeten your temper and change your tone. I have borne myself very moderately toward you, submitted to your insults with patience, and have done you some kindness. I am not afraid of you. On the contrary, 1 look upon you as a swagger¬ ing bully and hoary villain. Do you under¬ stand me? I am a desperate man in a des¬ perate situation. But if I don’t fear death, depend upon it I don't fear you; and I take God to witness that, if you do not use mo with the civility I have tha’right to expect, I will kill you!” My temper had given way; I meant every word 1 spoke, and my air and sincerity rendered my speech very formidable. I ap¬ proached him by another stride; lie started up, as I thought, to seize me, but in reality to recoil, and this he did so effectually as to tumble over his bench, and down he fell, striking his bald bead so bard that he lay for several minutes motionless ,7pi / Av Mtj temper hod given wap. I stood over him till he chose to sit erect, which he presently did, rubbing his poll and looking at me with an air of mingled be¬ wilderment and fear. “This is scurvy usage to give a shipmate in distress,” said he. “’Od's life, man! I had tbnwGit there was some sense of humor in MMftt — you. Your hand. air. Rodney—i toei oazear I helped him to rise, and he then sat down in a somowhat rickety manner, rubbing hi* oyes. It might have been fancy, it might have been the illusion of the furnace light combined with tho venerable appearance his long hair and naked pate gave him, but me- thought in those few minutes ho had grown to look twenty years older. . “Never concern yourself about my hurnor, Mr. Tassard,” said I, preserving my deter¬ mined air and coming close to him again. “How is it to stand between us? I leave the choice to you. If you will treat me civilly you’ll not find me wanting in every disposition to render our miserable state tol erable; but if you insult me, use me inju¬ riously, and act the pirate over me, who am an honest man, by God, Sir. Tassard, I will kill you!” Ho stooped away from me and raised his hand in a posture as if to fend me off, and cried, in a whining maimer: “I lost my head —this gunpowder business hath boon a hel¬ lish disappointment—look you, Mr. Rodney. Come! \Vo will drink a can to our future amity!” I answered coldly that I wanted no more wins, and bade him bowaro of me; that lie had gone far enough; that our hideous con¬ dition had filled my soul with desperation and misery, and that I would not have my life on this frozen schooner made more abom¬ inable than it was by his swagger, lies and insults; aud I added, in a loud voice and in a menacing manner, that death had no terrors for me, and that I would dispatch him with as little fear as I should meet my doom, whatever shape it took. I marched on deck, not a little astounded by tlie cowardice of tho old rascal, and very well pleased with the marked Impression my bearing and language had produced on him. Not that I supposed for a moment that my bold comportment would save me from his knife or his pistol when he should think proper to make away with me. No. All I reckoned upon was cowing him into a civiler posture of mind, and checking his agressions and insolence. I stayed but a minute or two on deck. Such was the cold that I do not know I had ever felt it more biting and bittaa * 1 returned below and sat ffotvn. The Frenchman asked me no questions. He had iiis can in tho oven and his death's head in his great hand, and puffed out clouds of smoke of the color of his beard, and indeed in the candle and fire light looked like a figure of old Time, with his long nose and bald head. I addressed one or two civil re¬ marks to him, which he answered in a sub¬ dued manner, discovering no resentment whatever that 1 could trace in his eyes or the expression of his countenance; and being wishful to show that I bore no malice I talked of pirates aud their usages, and asked if the Boca del 1 Iragon fought under tho red or black flag. “Why, the black flag, certainly,” said he; “but if we met with resistance it was our custom to haul it down arid hoist the red flag, to let our opponents know we should give no quarter.” “\yhere is your flag locker?” said I. “In n y berth,” he answered. “I should like to see the black flag,” I ex¬ claimed; “’tis the one piece of bunting, I be¬ lieve, I have never viewed;” “I’ll fetch it,” said he, and taking the lan¬ tern went aft very quietly, but with a cer¬ tain stagger in his walk, which I should have put down to the wine if it was not that his behavior was free from oil symptoms of inebriation. The change in him surprised me, but not so greatly as you might suppose; indeed, it excited my suspicions rather than my wonder. Fear worked in him unques¬ tionably; but what I seemed to see best was some malignant design which he hoped to conceal by an air of conciliation and a quality of respectful bon liomie. He came back with a flag in his hand, and we spread it between us; it was black, with a yellow skull grinning in the middle; over tliis an hour glass, and beneath across bones. “What consternation has this signal caused and does still cause!” said I, surveying it, while a hundred fancies of the barbarous scenes it had flown over, the miserable cries for mercy that had swept up past it to tho ear of God, crowded into my mind. “I think,* Mr. Tassard,” said I, “that our first step, should we ever find ourselves afloat in this ship, must be to commit this and all other flags of a like kind on board to the deep. There is evidence in this piece of drapery to hang an angel!” He let fall his end of the flag, and sat down suddenly. “Yes,” he answered, sending a curious roll¬ ing glance around tho cook room, and at the same time bringing his hand to tho back of his head, “this is evidence to dangle even an honester man than you, sir. All flags but the ensign vve resolve to sail under must go— all flags, and all tho wearing apparel, and— and—hut”—here he muttered a curse—“we are fixed; there is to be no sailing.” He shook his head and covered his eyes. His manner was strange, and the stranger for his quietude. I said to him, “Are you ill.” If he heard he did not heed me, but fell a- muttering and crying to himself. And now I did certainly remark a quality in his voice that was new to my ear; it was not, as he had said, a labor or thickness of utterance, but a dryness and parchedness of old age, with many breaks from high to low notes, and a lean noise of dribbling threading every word. He sweated and talked and muttered —but this was from sheer terror; be did not swoon, but sat with a stoop, often pressing his brows and gazing about him like one whoso senses aro all abroad. “Gracious mother of all angels!” he ex¬ claimed, crossing himself several times, but with a feeble, most agitated hand, and speak¬ ing in French and English, and sometimes interjecting an invocation in Italian or Spanish, though I give you what he said in my own tongue—“surely 1 am dying. Oh Lord, how frightful to die! Oh holy Virgin, be merciful to me! I shall go to hell. Oh Jesu, I am past forgiveness! For the love of heaven, Mr. Rodney, somo brandy! Oh, that some saint would interpose for me! Only a few years longer—grant me a few years longer—I beseech for that time that I may repent!” and he extended one quivering hand for the brandy (of which a draught stood melted in the oven), and made the sign of the cross upon his breast with the other, while he continued to whine out in his cracked pipes the wildest appeals for mercy, saying a vast deal that I durst not venture to set jlown, so plentiful and awful were his clamors for time that he might repent, though he never lapsed into blasphemy, but on the contrary discovered an agony of religious horror. I was much astonished and puzzled by this illness that had come upon him; for, though he talked of darkness and faintness and of dying, he continued to sit up on his bench and to take pulls at the can of brandy I had handed to him. It might be, indeed, that a sudden faintness bad terrified him nearly out of his senses with a prospect of approaching death; but that would not account for the peculiar note and appearance of ago that had entered his figure, face and voice. Then an extraordinary fancy occurred to me: Had the whole weight of the unhappy wretch's years suddenly descended upon him! Or, if not wholly arrived, might not these indi¬ cations in him mark the first stage of a gradually increasing pressure? The heat, the vivaeitv. the fierceness..spirit* and temper of the life 1 baa Uuea instrumental m restoring to him probably illustrated his character as it waa eight and forty years since; they bad flourished artificially from the moment of his awakening down to the present hour, but now the lull of Time was upon this man, whoa • was above; 100. Ho might lie de- cayin ' wasting, even as he sat there, into sue!: : iteLieotual condition and physical asp i he would possess and submit to had hoc ■ without a break into bis present agcl 0 “Oh Lord, hole frightful to die!' I was fascinated by the mystery of his vi¬ tality, mul breathlessly watched him, as if I expected to witness some harlequin change in his face, and mark the transformation of his polished brow into the lean austerity of wrinkles. His voice sank into a mere whis¬ per at last, and thc-n, ceasing to speak alto¬ gether, ho dropped his chin on to his bosom, and began to swing from side to side, catch¬ ing himself from falling with several para¬ lytic starts, but without lifting his head or opening his eyes, that I could see, and mani¬ festing every symptom of extreme drowsi¬ ness. I got up and laid my hand on iiis shoulder, on which lie turned his face and viewed* mo with one eye closed, the other scarce open. “How are you feeling now?” said I. “Sleepy—very sleepy,” he answered. “I'll put your mattress into your ham¬ mock,” said 1, “and the best thing you can do is to go and turn in property and get a long night's rest, and to morrow morning you'll feel yourself as hearty as ever.” Ho mumbled some answer, which I inter¬ preted to signify “Very well;” so I shoul¬ dered his mattress and slung a lantern in his cabin, and then returned to help him to lied. He sat reeling on the bench, his chin on his breast, catching himself up as before with little sharp, terrified recoveries, and I was forced to put my hand on him ugain to make him understand I had come back. He then made as if to rise, but trembled so violently that he sank down again with n groan, and I was obliged to put my whole strength to the lifting of him to get him on to his legs. He leaned heavily upon me, breathing hard, stooping very much and trembling. When we got to his cabin I jiereeived that lie would never lie able to climb into his hammock, nor hail I the ilower to hoist a man of Iiis bulk so high. To end the perplexity, I cut the ham¬ mock down and laid it on the deck, and cov¬ ering him with a heap of clothes, unslung the lantern, wished him good night, closed the door and returned to the furnace ITO PE CONTINUED.' New Advertisements. Dl UUIHO IWC REVOLVERS. Eend stamp for price list to JOHNSTON * SON, Pittsburgh, Penn. A v R o E u consumptive Indigestion ithouC delay. f Cm It has cured many of the worst oAhch and lathe the beet best reined remedy j for ail affections if the throat and lunfifs, and diaeasta arising from strujagOin*? impure blood and exhaustion. The fertile and sick, against disease, and slowly drifting to the grave, will in many eases recover their health by Iho timely use of Parker** Ginger Tonic, but delay is dan¬ gerous. Take it in time. It fa invaluable for all pains and disorders of stomach and boweia. 60c. at Druggists. EXHAUSTED VITALITY rpHE F great SCIENCE Medical OF "Work LIFE, of the the age on Manhood, Nervous and Physical Debility, Prematuro ' Decline, Errors of Youth, and tlie untold miseries consequent thereon, 800 pages 8vo, 125 proscriptions for all diseases.. Cloth, full gilt, only $1.00, by* mall, seated. Illustrative sample free to all young amt middle-aged men. Send now. The Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded to tlie author by the Na¬ tional Medical Association. Address P. 0. box 1895, Boston, Mass., or Dr. W. H. PABKER, grad¬ uate of Harvard Medical CoUege, 25 years’ practice In Boston, who may be consulted confldqptlally. Specialty. Diseases of Man. Office No. 4 Bulflnch st. ,.tr. ' XvTZ— IHHW . . - PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM • < p.n-1 beautifies the hair. ri'cmoixS a luxuriant growth. Never Fails to Restore Gray Hair to its Youthful Color. CurcsacrJi) •gaud kaii- falling HINDERCORNS. U. A. CUNNINGHAM, !h GRIFFIN, : : : GEORGIA, Has Been Appointed Land Agent foi Spalding County, by the Georgia Bureau of Immigration, and all the parties sale by having placing land their for sale property can expedite, hr his m hands. Full particulars in regard to the most nable lands in this county can lx; obtai by addressing him as above. A full lis houses and lands and lots of all descriptio mill HOUSE BARBER SHOP COLDMbUB, - GEORGIA, .TOE McGHEE, Prop’i -)o(-- The beat place in Columbus to get a bath or dean Share. Give ns a call when in tk city JOE McGHEE in, is at or,tin* Hue Newspaper in Philadelphia Adver . iReiOM. _____ Using Agency of Messrs our auUmrtaed agents ■ -- Plump Foofl and Utile l*by Rosy b*vr IBM. Babies h*» *‘Hjd it not !**n for <mr jmnrt Bit* bwn u»iosr it tor tta* month*, and a plump, healthy, rosy -cheeked b»by."— Jfr«. tMU* Lay-fit,, *■«(«•», hut. Sleep All Night, *rllh Happy little All Day Food. SIM 8 •’ We tried other food*, but, finding none to agree our jrlsl »< uewl your IatUR.*! dSB began at one* to giUa flo*h, sad improved to 1 Sm can lie. Bleeping twelve hoists st I ■ - * Sum.rt. SI,, L i, ti.,1 Cutting Teeth Easily ' I .settled Food «*u excellent food for teething ebfldmi. taaAa, Sfy baby i« using it. sad is entting her tenth this hot wiatbsr without any trouble,” - It r». Jftniw O, Onswt, X». Saved from Cholera Infantum "Ourbsby had Cholera Infsntum, soil until .retried 1-scUteJ Food, we could Und nothing tostsy Mils •tomseb. 11 ri taim l j our Food without say trouble, and won rocover*t."-Jfr«. t. W. Loft*. Wtm Uamttrn,. »>* THE RESULT OF USING fJ LACTATED FOOD. Most NocBtsmiwi sun Ecokoshcsl or Foons. 1 f*~A valuable jemphl.-t on “The Nutrition of 150 Meala for an Infant for Si. infants and invsitdii," fuvalidu,” free free on on abdication. ; Vt, « Neatly propM"!. At Druggists—3i cts.. Isicls., $1 Well*. Hicuauwos t Co., II arUngton. WHIPS, WAGONS, BUGGIES. AND IIAPNESS —H- - Studebaker Wagon < While Hickory Wagon !| Jackson G. Smith Wagon I Jackson G. Smith Buggy I old Ar.d Buggies the COLUMBUS Specialty.' BUGGY nt the Lowest Prices possible. Repairs ss | a W. H. SPENCE, "2 ftugmtwfim Oor. Hill * Taylor 8treeta, GRIFFIN, GA' Shipment Finest Teas, CRACKERS, ALL SORTS, 15c. lb. HAMS. BONELESS SHOULDERS, ETC. FINEST FLOUR ON THE MARKET. McFarland, Boyles k Cos. Dip ® MANPV? N™ C, ■ f 5,000 LION AGENTS voters with WANTED the only at official ouoe <o lives supply of TEN Mile. • • CLEVELAND AND THURMAN By Hon. W. U. Heni.fl; ; also, Life of Mrs. Ci.evclami; exquisite stocl portraits. Voters .? Car'ridgo best Box, Reform nnd Tradn! rrada nd Tolley, <Sc., complete. Agents report Immense sncetM. BROH, F«t -~ Philadelphia, work, apply quick make $!J00 to $500 a mouth. Outfit :!5c. HUBBAKD Pa. 'mg NO MORE EYE-GLASSES Mo m re MITCHELL’S EYE-SALVE A Certain, Safe and Effective Remedy for Sore, Weak and InSamed Eyes Producing Long- RlgbtednnN*. Mod llr>l«ri«K r!i« Might of u tho Old. Cures Tear rops, Granulation, Slye, Tumors, ES AND Red Eyes, .Matted QUICK Eye Easli PRODUCING RE¬ LIEF AND PERMANENTCURE Also, equally efficacious when usedinoth er maladies, such as l lcer-. Piles, Fever Sores, Tu mors. Salt Rheum, Borns, or wherever inflammation exists, MITCHELL’S SALVE old may be used to advantage, 25eents. bv all Druggists at A GREAT YEAR fn tho history of the United States ts now upon us. Every person o f intelligence desire* to keep pace with the course ol Its events. There is no better way to do so than to subscribe for The Macon Telegraph. Its news facilities are unsurpassed fullest by aiff Associ¬ paper in the South. In addition to the ated Press dispatches, it has from special all correspond¬ Important ence by wire and letter points in Georgia and session the netgnborlng of Congress States. Wash¬ ington During will the be present the most important and most in¬ teresting news centre in the country. The Washington Correspondence ol the Telegraph is the very best that can be had. Us regnlar correspondent furnishes the latest facial news and gossip in full Hon. dispatches. Amos J. Cummings, Frequent letters from New York, O. member of Congress from Frank Carpenter, and W. writers A. Croffut, tho three capital, of the best dis¬ known newspaper at cuss the iivest and most important issues Of the day Tin Telegraph is Democratic Tariff Reform a pain . It is thoroughly Cleveland in and line the with Democratic the policy of ) sldent the par tv In tho coining national campsdgn Telegraph will not only giro allthe news, but will discuss all public issue* front the stand¬ point of genuine Democratic faith. Subscribe at once. tSaily, one year, ..... 87 OO fbaily, six months, .... 4 OO Daily, three months, • • ■ * 2 OO Daily, one month, .... .75 Weekly, one year, - . . . - I 00 Terms; Cash In advance. Address TUI TELEGRAPH, Masev. Geoboia. __ 'I I MACON. GEORGIA. -lot- X 17*1 1 FTY-FIFTH ANNUAL SESSION opw- September ‘26th and doses June YHih Elegant’y furnish' d class rooms aud m new cottages for students. Cent • located. Good board at reasona¬ ble rate For catalogues and other information ap¬ ply to REV. J. A. BATTLE, ju!yl2w4 President. OEM Rule Nisi. Duncan, Martin <k Perdue j W. T. EL Taylor. | State of Georgia, Spalding County. In the Superior Court, February Term, 1888 . It being represented to the Court by the pe¬ tition Deed of of Duncan, Mortgage, Martin & tho Perdue that by dated 12th day o January,1887, Duncan, Martin W.T. A Perdue H.Taylor conveyed to said “a certain parcel of land containing thirty (30) acre* being part of lot No. 115 in tho 4th District of Spalding Jack county, Ga., bounded on the East by 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 dollars,’’ for the purpose of securing the payment of a promts sory.notemade the said Duncan, by Martin the said W.;T. Perdue, H.Taylorto due & on the 1st day of Oct.,1887, for the snm of One Hundred and Forty Eight and 50 -100 Dollars, principal, interest and attorneys feej, which amount is now due and unpaid. It is ordered that the said W.T. H.Taylor do pay into this Court, by the first day of the next term the principal, interest ana costs, due on said note and mortgage or show cause if any he has to the contrary, or that in de¬ fault thereof foreclosure be granted to the said Duncan, Martin & Verdue of said Mort¬ gage. and the equity of redemption of the said W. T.IITaylor therein be forever barred, and that service of this rule be perfected on said W. T. H. Taylor according to law. JAMES Judge 8. BOYNTON, S.C. F. C. Beck A Cleveland, Petitionere Att’ys. I certify that tho roregoingia a true copy from the Minutes of this Court this Febnta. ry Term, 1883. i. M. Thomas, feb35oamiic Clerk S.C. 8. C. MAH WANTS BDT LITTLE Here below, but he Wants that little mighty quick. A f or a big one is promptly filled by «4* vertising in^the?,Daily | or,’ Weekly ;NEWS, T - ADVERTISERS ;an learn the exact cos* of an) proposed )ine :v. advertising in America^ papers by addressing Geo P. Rowell & Co., N^sspsper AdvsJtisinj Bureau, lO Gpn’ *■ New 'Yjrk. ftetia lO-.te .or 100-.”»ao SA N St PiLL! 4«*. l't»l!jUeM»ll*,*«**