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An Important Announcement
mmmm .ml in two or three day* my Joints were
.•Allen lud to almost driven double from their me. natural After suffer size,
sleep was excruciating pain for
me the most other a week,
!,.Tne friend liniments who sympathized and various with remedies, helpless
» my
^Why^on’^Jf t, WUy I I will will UOIl guarantee I * J u 0 ™'^et u Bt** a Bwlft's cure, “ and Specific “P'-e*«iv if It does nuu and
it ,
ie medlcl
. .. once *«
using It th© first •
Cnefitted. about In the three room, weeks and I could after sit using up and six
walk I out and able to go to business.
tattles Knee was
then I have been regularly at my post
ri rf U ty, and stand on my feet from nine to
tea Judn hour* " day, the and plain am entirely and simple free from facts
KTmV These and are I will cheerfully all
ini case, answer
ulrles relative thereto, Thomas either In person or
hv »y >““*• matt. Maskii-lic,
n j St j, atreet, New York City.
KasHVIiae, Txsx.—I have warded off a so-
mend*itself thoroughly for eradicates a constitutional the seeds treatment of tils-
that from the
ease p HabmS01Ii D D
»tw York, 51 7th Ave.—A fter spending
»S Inv 00 to be relieved of Blood Poison without
benefit, a few bottles of Swift’s Specific
winked a perfect cure. C. Porter.
virsMA, OA.-My little had girl, scrofula aged sir, and
hnv aged ilTCd four lU'ir years, UOU BUI Vi MAE* JU in the lli V
ndr’st Icklv. aggravated aggravated To-day shape. they are They healthy were and puny ro-
,11 the result of taking ¥o: S. S. S.
E T. COLUEIt.
Laoy Lake, Sumter Co., Fla.—Y our S. 8.
s. has proved a wonderful success In my
The cancer on my face, no doubt,
would have soon hurried me to my grave. I
du think Ills 'vohUerfu., B a„d ha^o«
D
AnanU, Waco, Oa.: Texas, May 9,1888.
I. S. Co.. _
stating that one health oi by our the taay customers four has
regained her use if large
been an Invalid debility, for several caused year's. Hertrouble disease
was extreme * Co., by a Druggists. po-
cuitur to her sex. Wirxts
All Three book* mailed free on application.
druggists sell S. 8. S.
The Swift Specific Co.,
Drawer 8, Atlanta Gu.
New York, Tie Broadway.
Ordirrry's Advert semen's.
• > i.iii . \KY’S OFFICE, Si’alihnj Cou.y-
\ t ORO.tou, May 26th, 1888.—Mrs.
Martlm V. Darnall. administratrix of Katie
lluniall, iias applied to me Katie for letters Darnall, of Dis¬
mission on the estate of late
of -aid county, decascd.
Let all persons concerr.rd show cause be
fo e the Court of Ordinary of said eocnty
si my oflt.ee in Griffin, on the first Monday in
S ul nilier, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. ni , why
sm h letters should not be granted.
$ti.t.-, E. YV. HA M MO XD , Ordinary.
/ \J \ It DIN ARY’8 OFFICE, Spalding Coun
tt, Gbobgu, May '.tith, 1888, — Mrs.
Martha A. Darnall, executrix of Thos. M.
Darnall, has applied to me for letters of dis
mission from the eiecntorship of said estate.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of first said Monday county, at
niy dffice in Griffin, on the in
September, n«h should 1888, by ten be o’clock, granted. a. in., why
letters not
|6.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
/ \RDINARY’S OFFICE. -Spalding Coun-
V/ ty, Geoboia, Guardian Augns' Arch 3, 1888.—Mrs. M.and Lei
la B. Lamar, of James
Nall makes application to me for leave to
sell one undivided half interest in house
and lot belonging to her wards for distribu¬
tion .
Let all persons ameer.d show cause be¬
fore the court of Ordinary at my office in
Griffin on the first Monday in September by
ten o’elock a. m., why such application
should not be gran ted.
$7.00. E. W. HAMMONI),Ordinary.
Executors’ Sale.
GEORGIA- Spalding County.
By virtue of an order granted ns by the
Ciurt of Ordinary we will aeli before the
Con t house, to the highest bidder, at Griffin,
Georgia; in said county, on the first Tues¬
day of September next, between the legal
hours of sale, eighteen and three quarters
(18?i) shares of the capital stock of Railroad the Sa¬
vannah, Griffin and North Alabama
Company. Sale for distribution among leg¬
atees. Terms of sale cash. Aug, 6th, 1888.
R. W. BE n K,
J. II. MITCHELL.
$3.(0 Executors'V. 1 . Alexander.
Rule Nisi.
B. (!. Kiuard & Son
vs.
I. J. Ward At J. TV, Ward,
State of Georgia, Spalding. County. In In the
Superior Court, February Term, 188S.
It being represented to the Court, by the
petition of B. C. Kinard &, Son that by Deed
of Mortgage, dated the 16th day of Ooi. 1887,
I. J. Ward <fc J. W. Ward conveyed to the
said B. C. Kinard & Son a certain tract of
land, towit; fifty acres of land lying 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 made the payment of a promissory Ward note
by the said I. J, Ward <fc J. W. to
the said B. C. Kinard & Son due on the 15th
day Dollars of November 1887, for the sum of Fifty
note is and Ninety-six and cents ($50.96), which
now due unpaid.
It is ordered that the said I. J. Ward & 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^ny default they thereof have to the contrary, or that the in
said B. C. foreclosure be granted Mortgage, to
Kinard A Son of said
and the equity of redemption of the said I.
J. Ward <fc J, W. Ward therein be forever bar-
>vd, and that service of this rule be perfected
•u .aid I. J. Ward A J. W. Ward according
•u uw by publication in the Gkxi-fin News,
«r by service upon I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward
of a copy three months prior to the next
term of this court.
JAMES S. BOYNTON, 0.
Frank Judge S. C. F.
Flynt and Bismuke & Collens, Peti¬
tioners Att’s.
a true copy from the Minutes of thisCcu
Wm. M. Thomis, Clerk 8. C. S C.
i *: mini
ENGINES,
~
>
*
o
ALL FIRST CLASS,
AND a NO. 1 !
Price and Quality Guaranteed.
. both Also, the celebrated 1IIOMAS HARROW,
in Wood and Iron-
JST" A few' Buggies on hand will be sold
tsepi G. A. CUNNINGHAM.
'
there still ran a miauling strong mi, ge. ana
the breeze was such as, in sailors’ language,
you would have shown your topgallautsails
to. I could now take measure of our situa¬
tion, and was not a little' astonish and de¬
lighted to oliservo the island to tie at least u
mile distant from us, and the northeast end
lying very plain, the ocean showing lieyond
it, though in the southwest the ice died out
upon the sea line. That we had been set
away from the main by some current was
very certain. There was a westerly ten¬
dency in nil the berg* which broke from the
island, the small ones mov ing more quickly
than tho large; for the sea in the mirth and
west was dotted with at least fifty of theso
white masses, great and little. On the other
hand, the wind and seas were answerable foi
tlie progress we had made to tho north.
The wall of ice, as 1 call it. that had stool
over against the larboard bow, was gone,
and the seas tumbled, with mm it heaviness
of froth and much noise, over the ice. past
the bows, and washed past I it.- heads on
either side in froth, rising a i : as tho
channels. I noticed a great • . iiy of
broken ice sinking and tin . tt the dark
green curls of the billows, and i.i ; Mocks
would be hurled on to the •!., >m • !,,■ 1 au d
then be swept off, some! hues 1 in ; tho
bilge such a thump as seemed to swing a bel¬
low through her frame. It was only at in¬
tervals, however, that water fell upon tho
decks, for the ice brlft.c the beat of the mod¬
erating surge, and forced it to expend its
weight in spume, which there was not
strength of v. .ad enough to raise and heave.
Since the vessel continued to lie head to sea,
my passionate hope was that these repeated
washings of the waves would in time loosen
the ieo about her keel, in which ease it would
not need much of a billow, smiting
lier full bows fair, to slide her clean
down and off her lied, and so launch
her. There were many clouds in tho
heavens, but tlie blue was very pure between.
The morning brightening with the rising of
the sun, 1 directed an earnest gaze along tho
horizon, but there was nothing to seo but ice.
Some of the liergs, however, and more par¬
ticularly the distant one, stole out of the blue
atmosphere to the sunshine with so complete
•l rcochihhuieo to tho lifting canvas of ships
that 1 would catch myself staring fixedly, my
heart beating fast. But there was no de¬
jection in these disappointments; the ecstasy
that (idl'd moon beholding tho terrible island
—the hideous frozen prison, whose crystal
bars I had again and again believed were
never to be broken—now lying at a distanco
with its nortmirn capo imperceptibly open¬
ing to our subtle movement, was so violent
that I could not have found my voice for the
tears in niv heart.
This. then, was the result of my scheme; it
was no failure, as Tussard had said; as ho
owed his life to me, so now did he owe me
his liberty. Nay, my transports were so
great that 1 would itot suffer myself to feel
an instant's anxiety touching the condition
of tho schooner—I mean whether she would
leak or prove sound when she floated—and
how we two men were to manage to navigate
so large a cruft, that was still as much spell¬
bound aloft in her frozen canvas and tackle
as ever she had been m tlie sepulcher in which
I discovered her.
I went below, and put the provisions wo
needed for breakfast into tho oven, aud
entered Tassai-d’s cabin. On bringing the
lantern to his face as lie lay under half a
score of coats upon the deck, 1 perceived that
lie was awake, mid my heart being full I
cried out cheerily, “Good news! good news!
—tho gunpowder did its work! Tho ieo is
ruptured, and we are afloat, Mr. Tassard—
afloat, and progressing north!”
He looked at me vacantly, and giving his
head a shake, exclaimed, “How- can I crawl
from this moundI My strength is gone."
If I was amazed that tho joyful intelligence
I had delivered produced no other response
than this querulous inquiry, I was far more
astonished by the s6und of his voice. It was
the most cracked and venerable pipe that
ever tickled the throat of old age—a min¬
gling of wailing falsettos and of hollow, gasp¬
ing growls, the whole very weak. I threw
the clothes off him, and said, “Do you wish
to rise? I will bring you your breakfast here
if you wish.”
iCE BOUND.
Ey V/ CLARK RUSSELL.
Author of ’■The Wreck of the ’
'•.Jocks Courtship." "My Watch lie
low." • The Lady Jtfnuil " l ie
CHAPTER XXI11.
TIIE ICE BUBALS away.
It was not yet 8 o'clock. I was restless in
my mind, under a great surprise, and was
not sleepy. 1 filled a pipe, made me n littlo
pannikin of punch, and sat down before the
fire to think. If ever 1 had suspected the
accuracy of my conjecture that the French¬
man's sudden astonishing in'di*jiositioii was
the effect of his extreme age coming upon
him and breaking down the artificial vitality
with which ho had bristled into life under
my hands, I must have found fifty signs to
set my misgivings at rest in his drowsiness,
nodding, lwwed form, weakness, his tottering
and trembling, and other features of his
latest behavior.,. If I was light, then 1 had
reason to be thankful to Almighty (toil for
this unparalleled and most happy dispensa¬
tion; for navy I should have nothing to fear
from the old rogue’s vindictiveness and hor¬
rid greed.
Thus I sat for an hour ‘smoking and wet¬
ting my lips with the punch, v. lid ■ the tiro
burned low, so exulting in the thought of my
escape from the treacherous villain l had re¬
covered from the grave, and in the feeling
that I might now be able to go to rest, to
move hero and there, to act as 1 pleased
without being haunted and terrified by tho
shadow of Lis foul intent, that 1 liardiy gavo
my mind fora moment to the situation of
the schooner nor to the barren consequences
of my fine scheme of mines.
Tlie wind blew strong. I could hoar tho
humming of it in every liber of the vessel.
The bed oil which h" rested trembled to tho
blows of the seas upon the rocks. From
time to time, in the midst of my musing, I
started to the sharp claps of parted ice. Still
feeling sleepless I threw a few coals oa tho
fire, arid, catching sight of tho pirate Hag,
opened it on the deck as wide as the space
would permit, and sat down to contemplate
the hideous insignia embroidered unit. .My
mind filled with a hundred fancies as my
gaze went from the skull on the black field
to the death’s head pipe that had fallen from
the grasp of Tu&sard and lay on the deck;
and I was sitting lost in a deep dream like
contemplation, when i was startled and
shocked into instantaneous activity by a
blast of noise, louder than any thunder i lap
that, ever I hoard, ringing and booming
through the schooner. This was followed by
a second and then a third, at intervals dur¬
ing which you might have counted ten, and
1 became sensible of a strange, sickening
motion, which lasted about twenty or thirty
moments, such as might be experienced by
one swiftly descending in a balloon, or in
falling from a height while pent up in a
coach.
For a little while the schooner heeled over
so violently that tho benches and all tilings
movable in tho cook room slid as far ns they
could go, and I heard a great clatter and
commotion among the freight in the hold.
She then came upright again, and simultane¬
ously with this avast mass of water tum¬
bled on to the deck and washed over my
head, and then fell another and then an¬
other, all in such a way as to make me know
that tho ice had broken and slipped tho
schooner cdose to the ocean, where she lay ex¬
posed to its surges—but not free of tho ieo,
for she did not toss or roll.
I seized the lantern and sprang to the
cabin, where I hung it up, and mounted tho
companion steps. But as I put my hand to
the door to thrust it open a sea broke over
the side and filled the decks, bubbling and
thundering past the companion batch in such
a way as to advise me that 1 need but open
the door to drown the cabin. I waited, my
heart beating very hard, mad to see what
had happened, but not daring to trust myself
on deck lest I should tie immediately swept
into the sea.
Half an hour must have passed, during
which time the decks were incessantly swept
by the seas, insomuch that J never once
durst open the door, even to look out. But
nothing having happened to increase my
consternation in this half hour, though the
movement in the schooner was that of a very
ponderous and majestical rolling and heav¬
ing, showing her bed to be afloat, I-began to
find my spirits, and to listen and wait with
some buddings of hope and confidence. At
tho expiration of this time the seas began to
fall less heavily and regularly on to the deck,
and presently I could only hear them break¬
ing forward, but without a quarter of their
former weight, and nothing worse came aft
than large, brisk showers of spray.
I armed myself with additional clothing
tor the encounter of the wet, cold and wind,
and then pushed open the door and stepped
forth. The sky was dark with rolling clouds,
but tho ice put its own light into the air, and
I could see as plain as if the first of the dawn
bad broken. It was as I had supposed; the
mass of tho valley in which the schooner had
boon sepulchred for eight and forty years
had come away from the main, and lay float¬
ing within a cable’s length of the coast. A
stranger, more wonderful picture human eye
never beheld. The island shore ran a rum-
part of faintness along the darkness to where
it died out in liquid [upon dust to bed right and left.
The schooner sat a of ice that
showed a surface of about half c*i acre; her
stern was close to the sea, and about six feet
above it. On her Larboard quarter the slope
or shoulder of the acclivity had been broken
by the rupture, and you looked over the side
into the clear sea beyond the limit of the ice
there; but abreast of the foreshrouds the ice
rose in a kind of wall, a great splinter it
looked of what was before a small broad
browed hill, and the wind or the sea luving
caused the body on which the schooner lay to
veer, this wall stood as a shield betwixt the
vessel anil the surges, and was now receiving
those blows which had heretofore struck
her starboad side amidships and filled her
decks.
The wind blew from the southwest, but tho
trend of tho island coast was northeast; and
as the mass of ice I was upon, in parting
from the main, had floated to a cable’s
length from the cliffs there was not much
danger, while the wind and sea held, of tho
berg (if I may so term it) being thrown upon
the island. That the ieo under the schooner
was moving, and if so at what rate, it was
too dark to enable me to know by observing
the marks on the coast. There was to be no
sleep for me that night, and, knowing this, I
stepped below and built up a good fire, and
then went w ith the lantern to see how Tas-
sard did, and to give him the news; but he
was iu so deep a sleep that after pulling him
a little without awakening him I let him lie,
nothing but the sound of his breathing per¬
suading me that he had not Lapsed into his
old frozen state again. longest I
Of all long nights this was the
ever passed through. I did truly believe
that the day was never to break again over
the ocean.
AU Right I kept the fire going, and on sev¬
eral occasions visited the Frenchman, but
found him motionless in sleep. and
At last the day broke, I went on dock
found the dawn brightening into morning.
The wind had fallen, and with it the sea; but
More Text uml Tower rictnWB.
The illustration* of a magazine form
one of the largest items of tlie expense of
its production; the elimination of this
expense would enable the proprietors
either ( diminish the price of subscrip¬
tions, *o augment the payments to
auth r Loth; and either would lie a
ber io literature. Again, under the
pn .( system, a large portion of the
art- s are written mainly ton rve as a
vehicle for the illustration". ut tho
illustrations, they would . -a* worth
printing; illustrations, consequently, it ihcre were no
the articles would not he
written, and their place would be sup¬
plied by articles that were worth print¬
ing—another gain to literati: , ami a
gnin Ixith in quality and space. Indeed,
a well illustrated article is r< y seldom
read at all. The purchaser of tho maga¬
zine looks at tho pictures, and perhaps
examines so much of the text as may en¬
able him to form some idea of what tho
picture represents; ho says to himself
that he will read the article some other
day. and before that day comes tho next
issue of the magazine has appeared, and
the same thing is repeated. Were there
no pictures, there would lie an end of
this.—Julian Hawthorne in Belford’s
Magazine.
Blague of Hats in China.
A plague of rats is reported in a recent
number of The Pekin Gazette, which re¬
calls the German legend of the rats of
Ilamelin. Certain jiostal routes have had
to 1)0 changed in Outer Mongolia on ac¬
count of the honeycombing of the whole
country by myriads of rats, who have
burrowed and eaten up the pasturage so
extensively that the supply of food for
camels and horses is greatly diminished,
and the burrows are dangerous to all
mounted travelers and couriers. Tho
prize offered by the Australian government
for a-riddance of tho rabbits which infest
that country may afford a suggestion to
the authorities in China to offer induce¬
ments which M. Pasteur or some un¬
known Whittington may find advan¬
tageous enough to undertake tho Iask of
ridding the country of these vermin.
China and the Chinese have been afflicted
enough of late, what with earthquakes,
floods, restricted immigration, etc.—•
Domoresl’s Monthly.
A Marvel in Steel.
There arc 150,000 miles of railway in
the United States; 300,000 miles of rails
—in length enough to make twelve steel
girdles for the earth’s circumference.
This enormous length of rail is wonder¬
ful—we do not really grasp its signifi¬
cance. Rut tlie rail itself, the little sec¬
tion of steel, is an engineering feat. Tho
change of its form from the curious and
clumsy iron pear head of thirty years
ago to the present refined section of steel
is a scientific development. It has now a
beam whose every dimension and curve
and angle are exactly suited to the tre¬
mendous work it has to do. The loads it
carries are enormous, tho blows it re¬
ceives are heavy and constant, but it car¬
ries the loads and bears the blows and
does its duty. The locomotive and the
modern passenger and freight cars are
great achievements, and so is the little
rail which carries them all.—John Bo¬
gart in Scribner's Mu:. zinc.
Ho looked at me, but made no answer. I
bawled again, and observed, by the dim lan¬
tern light, that ho watched my lips with an
air of attention; and while I waited for ’ jt
reply he said, “I don’t hoar you.”
Anxious to ascertain to what extent his
hearing was impaired, I kneeled on the deck,
and, putting my lips to his ear, said, not very
loud, “Will you come to tho cook house?”
which he did not hear; and then louder,
“Will you come to the cook house?” which hi
did not hear either. I believed him stone deaf
till, on roaring with all the power of my
lungs, he answered, “Yes.”
I took him by the hands and hauled him
gently on to his feet, and bad to continue
holding him, or ho must have fallen. Time
was beginning with him when he had gone to
bed, and the remorseless old soldier had com¬
pletely finished his work while his victim
slept. I viewed tlie Frenchman while I
grasped his hands, and there stood before mo
a shrunk, tottering, deaf, bowed, feeble old
man. What %vas yesterday a polished head
was now a shriveled pate—as though the
very skull had shrunk and left tho skin to rip¬
ple into wrinkles, and sit loose and puckered.
His hands trembled excessively. But his
lower jaw was held in its place by his teeth;
and this perpetuated in the aged, dwindled
countenance something of the likeness of the
fierce and sinister visage that had confronted
me yesterday. 1 was thunderstruck by tho
alteration, and, stood overwhelmed with awe,
confusion and alarm. Then, re-collecting my
spirits, I supported the miserable relic to the
fire, putting his bench to the dresser, that be
might have a back to lean against.
lie could scarce feed himself—indeed, ho
could hardly hold his chin ni. his breast. Ho
had gone to bed a man, as 1 might tako it,
of 56, and during the night the angel of Time
had visited him, and there he sat 103 years of
age!
He looked it. Ha, thought I, I was dread¬
ing your treachery yesterday; there is noth¬
ing more to fear. Besides tliat he was nearly
stone deaf, ho could hardly see: aud I was
sure, if he should be able to move at all, ho
could not stir a ieg without the help of sticks.
I was going to roar out to him that we were
adrift, but he looked so imbecile that I
thought—to what purpose? If there be aught
of memory in him, let him sit and ehew the
cud thereof. He cannot last long—the cold
must soon stop lus heart. And with that I
went on eating my breakfast in silence, but
greatly affected by this astonishing mark of
the hand of Providence, and under a very
heavy and constant sense of awe: for the like
of such a transformation X am sure had never
before encountered mortal eyes, and it was
terrifying to be alone with it.
(to :>k continued.
Honey Plant*.
All flowers, whether wild or cultivated,
are visited by the industrious bee for
honey, and it is not easy to say from
what species it derives tho most of Its
sweets. Orchards in full bloom are me¬
lodious with their ham, and later on the
fields of buckwheat are extraordinarily honey
attractive, so much so, indeed, that
made principally from this plant is readily
distinguished from that made earlier from
fruit blossoms, white clover, etc., which
is more highly esteemed on account of its
finer color and quality.
New Advertisements.
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to the grave, will In many cases recover their health by
the timely use of Parker's Ginger Tonic, but delay is dan¬
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aud disorders of stomach and bowels. 60 c. at Druggists*
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Has Been Appointed Land Agent foi
Spalding County,
by the Georgia Bureau of Immigration, and
all parties sale by having placing land their for sale property can expedite his
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-)o(--
The best place in Columbus to get a batto
or clean &bav®. Give us a call when in th
city JOE McGHEE
Plump and littlor»bv Rosy masthsv« (Lot Babies
“Mi l It not lx*n for I.vUUst Food tmr 6*br.”— MaMr l■'Pi Sba bs» torn n*ia* It L-rlteso
month* Slot I, a pillow, hoiithy. Mrr. » Ms* > >■ '
Sleep All Night, with Happy Httk All Lactatad Day riot Sbo
Wo tdo-l oUmt text*. Imt. finding none to sgTv-c our girl *v ow'd yenr
*t I 'lieu to Filu drab, sad improv.vt in bositli. Tootsy sit. tt ** bmritt. liioli. soil Iwsrt j? as an}' child
can l». steering twelve boars »t » stretch, uut wsktug ur Inching ‘ very morning:**— Vs*. A Trtttt, WH
SvmwcA St.. TVj.sfc*, Omt .
Cutting Teeth Easily
“ {.octal d Food »* an excellent for*! for u*thlo* children. Hru»d, loath*, Mr baby IP*. U u»in* it, and i* cutting tun \mb
thi* hot weather without an) trouble.**JV imim O.
Saved from Cholera Infantum
"Oitrtokby Ua-1 Cholera lnfsntnm, and until we trim! Lsctstrtl F<xnJ,wecooM find nothing to stay cn <#
stomach- It retained your Food without ari} trouble, and «oou rocorerwL "-Mn. A.Wm M *tu- < «
THE RESULT OF U8INC I
LACTATED FOOD.
Most Votnattano *sn IVokomk mi. of Forma IT A valuable luvaii.W j am) hi, t ,<n " I be Nutrtthm ot
150 Moals for an Infant for SI. Wiau, lufsuU RiCHAanwis and fi e mi tikdleatton. Vt >
Lastly i>iYi*red. At UrugftUta-dfi eta.. toct» *1 k Co.. Iturucgton.
WHIPS, WAGONS, BUGGIES
AND HARNESS
><-
Sludebaker Wagon t White Hickory Wagon !j
Jackson G. Smith Wagon!
Jackson G. Smith Buggy I
Ar.d the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. Repairs on
old Buggies a Specialty."
W. H. SPENCE,
nugQBd&wftm C’or, Hill A Tftylor Street*, GRIFFIN, GJl*
Shipment Finest Teas,
CRACKERS, ALL SORTS, 15c. lb.
HAMS. BONELESS SHOULDERS. ETC. FINEST
FLOUR ON THE MARKET.
McFarM, Styles & Co's.
BIG MONEY! ! 5,000 AGENTS WANTED at ouce to supply TEN MIL-
LION voters with the only'otllvial live* or
CLEVELAND AND THURMAN
By Hon. W. C. Hkxi.el; also, I.tfe of Mtts. Ci.zvei.ani>: exqnlfiita steel portraits. Voters
Ciir ritlgo Box, Reform Trad.) Policy, Ac., complete. com; Ai.ini - report immense sure***. For
best work, apply quick and make to if500 a month. Outfit :|.V. ft l’DBA RD BUGS,
Philadelphia, Pa.
NO MORE EYE-GLASSES
Mo re
MITCHELL’S
EYE-SALVE
A Certain, Safe and Effective Remedy for
Sore, Weak and Inflamed Eyes
Pradurlug soil lt.>t«rlnji Long-Klghtedni-Na. Might of
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u tho Old.
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Tnniors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye Lash
E3 AND PRODUCING QUICK RE¬
LIEF A N DPEHMANENTCLR K
Also, equally efficacious when used in oth
er maladies,such as Ulcers, Fever Sores, Tu
mors. Salt Rheum, Barns. Piles, or wherever
inflammation exists, MITCHELL’S SALVE
may tic used to advantage,
old bv all Druggists at 25eents.
A GREAT YEAR
fn the history of the United States is now upon
us. Every person of Intelligence desires to keep
pare with the course of its events. There Is no
better way to do so than to subscribe for
The Macon Telegraph.
IU news South. facilities In addition are unsurpassed to the fullest by any Associ¬ paper
In the special correspond
ated Press dispatches, it haa
ence by wire and letter from all important
tereKtlDK S&SSS ccntro in the country. The i
news Telegraph is
Washington Correspondence o! the
the very best that can be had.
JIB regular correspondent furnishes the t latest ,
news and gossip in full dispatches. Frequent
ial letters from lion. Amos J. Cummings,
member of Congress trom New York, Frank <>.
kno'wn newspaper writers at the Issues capital, of dis¬ tho
cuss the livest and most Important
da Tl v. Democratic Tariff Reform
Telegraph thoroughly is a In line with the policy
pa lx It is
of J sident Cleveland and the Democratic
part In the coming national campaign the
Tele-; raph will not only give all the news, hut
will discus* all public issue* from the stand¬
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at once.
Paily, sne year, .... - *7 00
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Weekly, one year...... 1 00
Term*: C«h In advance. Addrc**
THE TELEGRAPH,
itxOSX. GEORG U.
MERGER UNIVERSITY,
MACON, GEORGIA.
---Jot--
T7». : TY FIFTH ANNUAL SKSBiON on*
Jj September dffih and class closes June and 2*ib
Elegant ! v famished rooms n<
new cuU-utos for stndents.
Cent !y located. Good board at reasona¬
ble rates
For cat do _ues and other information ap¬
ply to REV. J. A. BATTLE.
ju!yl2w4 President.
Rule Nisi.
Duncan,Martin & Perdue l
vs. >
W. T. H. Taylor. )
State of Georgia, Court, Spalding County. In thfi
Superior February Term, 1888.
It being represented to the Court by the pe¬
tition of Duncan, Martin At, l’erdue that by
Deed of Mortgage, dated the 18th day o
January,1887,\V.T. II.Taylor conveyed to said
Duncan, Martin At Perdue “a certain jinrccl
of land of lot containing No. 115 thirty in tho (.’SO) 4th acres District being of
Spalding part Ga.,
county, bounded on the Kant
by Jnck Crawler, on tho South by P, Cham-
less, North by P. L. Starr, West by some
of my own lands, said land, thirty acres, Vic¬
ing worth three hundred dollars,” for the
purpose of securing the payment of a promts
sory,note mud* hytlic said W..T, H.Taylorto
the said Duncan, .Martin At Perdue, due on
the 1st day of Oct.,1887, for the sum of On®
Hundred and Forty Eight and 50-100 Dollar*,
principal, interest and attorneys fees, which
amonnt 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 th*
next term tlie principal, interest and costs.
due on said note and mortgage, or show cans®
1.* any ho haa to the contrary, or that in de¬
fault thereof foreclosure be granted to th®
said Duncan, Martin At Perdue of said Mort¬
gage, and tho equity of redemption of th®
said W, T.llTaylor therein lie forever barred,
and that service of this rule lie perfected on
said W. T. U. Taylor according to law.
JAMES 8. BOYNTON, C.
Judge S. F. C.
Beck A, Cleveland, Petitioners Att’ys.
I certify that the roregoing is a true copy
from the Minutes of this Court, this Februa
ry Term, 1888. Wm.M. Thomas,
febiiioamlic Clerk 8, C. 8. C.
MAN wants but little
Here below, but he Wants that little
mighty quick. A
LITTLE WANT,
or a big one is promptly filled by ad*
vertising in"the;|Daily J or)
Weekly ;NEWS,
ADVERTISERS
:an learn the exact cost
of any proposed Jine oi
advertising in America!-
papers by addressing
Geo. P. Rowell & Co.,
Newspaper Advertising Bureau,
tO Gprude Jt, New Y«rk.
iSsiid lOcte ior lOO-Paa® Psuiwphte*
^ r PILLS!
I Mile fer*«k Mvr»JHf*elaA Vi;
«t!f ,r ? '*-«*?/ .« i » **!4Aa4«1 1
4#, V) ,'JvD* b ftp rili* fm-*