Newspaper Page Text
*
An Important Announcement
£3SM3EH3g ^eittnck th»tl took xoy bed Immediately,
•nd ISnllen Id two or three days their nil Joints were
to almost double natural sire,
1^7 »nd sleep was driven from me. pain Alter suiter-
the most excruciating and various other lor remedies, a week,
U|Tnir Uftfend using Untments iminieuw who^mpathlsed wb-U »auvui with vv **vl (CtllCUlCBi helpless
a trienil my
nj don’t you get Swift's Specific and
uselt. I will guarantee a cure, and It It does
rr.'.he “ io( the medicine secured shall the cost S, you S. S„ nothing.” and after
| | at *t once ODCO STCUixiu first day, me had w. ». quiet iajsvs night niter and
using ,slnx It It the the In week a I felt greatly
refreshing sleep. three weeks a I could sit and
henelUteu. In after using up
walk about tfta room, and six
bottles I wa* out and able to go to business,
since then I have stand been regularly feet from at my post
nt duty, and on my nine to
tsn hour* v day, and am entirely free from
fuLin liTriiycssc, These are the plain and simple facts
and I will cheerfully answer all
™“ finiulrics relative thereto, either In person or
U - U W. lSth^treotfN*e WYurt! City.
SisnvuJ.*, Tan*.—I have warded off a se¬
vere uttaefc of rheumatism by a timely resort
m swift’s relief Specific. is sought- In all this cases medicine where a per¬
manent com¬
mends Itself for a constitutional treatment
•hat thoroughly eradicates the seeds of dls-
•““'““'esffk p.tao,, D.D.
n-kw York, 51 7tu A vr.—A fter spending
*200 Jay to be relieved of Blood Poison without
benefit, a few bottles of Swift’s Specific
work* 1 a perfect cure. C. Peanut.
Visual, Ga.—M y little girl, aged six, and
toy Zfjr'tt aged four years, bad scrofula In the
‘de aggravated shape. They were puny d
»”«- S &1 ‘ r °-
bust, all in T. COLLIIB.
JOS
Linv Like, Sumter Co., Fla.—Y our 8. 8.
8 has proved a wonderful success In my
case The cancer hurried on my face, to no doubt, I
would have soon me my grave.
do think It Is wonderful, and hasi no equal.
• Waco, Ga.: Texas, May 9, 1888.
g S. Co., Atlanta, Knowing that appreciate
Gentlemen— testimonials, take you
voluntary of we lady pleasure has In
stating that one health our the customers four large
regained her by remedy, use after of having
bottles of your for great several
been an Invalid debility, years. Her trouble
was extreme caused by a disease pe-
cuilar to her sex. w ir.us A Co., Druggists.
Three book* mailed free on application.
Ail druggists sell 8. 8. s.
The Swiet Srvcmc Co.,
Drawer 8, Atlanta Ga.
Hew York, 756 Broadway.
Qrdirr.ry’s Advertisements.
. i KiH n ARY’S OFFICE, SpaLDiHi Coun-
V / it, Oeobgia, May 20th, 1888.—Mrs.
Martha V. Darnall, administratrix of Katie
Darnall, has applied to me for letters of Dis¬
mission on the ostate of Katie Darnall, iate
of (-aid county, decased.
Let all persons concerurd show cause be
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county
ui my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
Scul.-niber, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. mwhy
such letters shonld not be granted.
■tti.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
1/ / xltDINARY’S OFFICE, Spaldinq Codn
ty, Georgia, May -Oth, 1888,—Mrs.
Martha A. Durnall, executrix of Tlios. M.
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
iny office in Griffin, on the first In
September, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., why
u:h letters should W. Hamming, not IN^Nj bo grunted. Ordinary,
$6.15 E.
/ ARDINARY’S OFFICE.— Spaldiso Coun-
ty, Geoboia, Augus’ 3, 1888. —Mrs. Lei
la B. Lamar, Guardian of Arch M. and James
Null 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 coneer-d show eanse be¬
fore the court of Ordinary at my office in
Griffin on the first Monday in September by
ten o’clock a. m., why such application
shonld not bo granted. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
$’1.00. E.
Executors’ Sale.
GEORGIA.- Spalding County .
By virtue of an order granted us by the
Cyurt of Ordinary we will sell before the
Court 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 throe 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 cash. Aug. 0th, 1888,
E. W. BECK.
J. 11. MITCHELL,
to.tO Executors'Y. u. Alexander.
Rule Nisi.
It. (!. Kinard & Sou f
vs. [ )
I. J. Ward tc J. W, Ward.
State ofUeorgia, Spalding County. In the
Superior Court, February Term, 1888.
It being represented to the Court by the
petition of B. C. Kinard <fc Son that by Deed
of Mortgage, dated the 10th day of Oct. 1887.
I. .1, Ward & J. W. Ward conveyed to the of
said B. C, Ktnnrd & Son a certain tract
land, towit; fifty acres of laud lying bounded in Akins
District of Spalding county, Ga., Wise, as
follows: North by landsof Bill East by
•I no. Ward, South by Barney Mactdox and
West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬
curing the payment of Ward a promissory J. W. Ward note to
made by tbe said I. J. &
the said B. C. Kinard & Son due on the 15th
day of November 1887, for the sum of Fifty
Dollars and Ninety-six cents ($50.%), which
note is now due thatthesaid and unpaid. J. Ward&J,
It is ordered I.
W, Ward do pay into this Court, by the first
day of the next term said the principal, show interest
and costs, due on note or cause,
if any they have to the contrary, or that in
default thereof foreclosure be said granted Mortgage, to the
said B. C. Kinard it Son of
And the equity of redemption of the said 1.
i Ward&J. W. Ward therein be forever har-
»-:d and that service of this rule be perfected
■ •a . aid I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward aooording News,
... iaw by publication in the Griffin
><!■ by service npon I. 3 . Ward & J. W. Ward
A a copy three months prior to the next
term of this court.
JAMES S. BCYNTON,
Judge S. C. F. C.
Frank Fiynt and Dismuke & CoIIens, Peti-
Loners Att’s.
i true copy from the Minutes of thisCou
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk 8. C. S C.
,«i mitn
ENGINES,
Gins, Feelers § Centers.
ALL FIRST CLASS,
AND A NO. 1 !
Price and Quality Guaranteed,
ilso, the celebrated 1IIOMAS HARROW,
both in Wood and Iron
A few Buggies on hand will be sold
cheap.
G. A. CUNNINGHAM.
leapt
ICE BOUND.
By W. CLARK RC83ELL,
Author \°S o ‘‘The Wreck of the Orosvenor,’
‘Jacks Courtship ” “.!/,/ Hatch lie-
low," “The Lady Maud Etc.
CHAPTER XXIV.
THE FRENCHMAN DIES.
However, if I expected my Frenchman
to sit very long silent, ho soon undeceived
me by beginning to complain in his tremu¬
lous, aged voice of his weakness and aching
limbs.
“"Lis the ten-iblo cold that has affected
me, said he, while his head nodded nerv¬
ously. ’ I feel the rheumatism in every
bone. There i ■ no weakness like the rheu¬
matic, I have heard, end ’tis true, ’tis true!
It may lay me along—yes, by tic Virgin, ’tis
rheumatism—what else?” Here ho was inter¬
rupted ended by a long (it of couglii::. . ai:d when
it was lw turned to address 1.10 again,
but looked at the bulkhead on my right, as if
his vision could not fix me. “But ray capers
are not over," he cried, setting up his rick¬
ety, sliriil throat; “no, no! Vive lamour!
Vive la joie! The sun is coming; the sun is
tho fountain of life; uy, mon brave, there
are some shakes in these stout legs yet!’’ He
shook his head with a fine air of cunning
and knowingness, grinning very oddly; and
then falling grave with a startling sudden¬
ness, lie liegan to dribble out a piratical love
story he had once before favored mo with,
describing the charms of the woman with a
horrid leer, his head nodding with the nerv¬
ous affection of age all tho time, while ho
looked blindly in my direction—a hideous
and yet pitiful object!
I could not say that his mind was gone,
but he talked with many breaks for breath,
and not very coherently’, as though the office
of liis tongue was performed by hal.it rather
than memory, . Hat lie often went far
astray. And bnk.u i into sentea'c.. ih.it had
no i. i. r. . -•to u !i .. hud gone U tore, t 1 on h
on t . ■ i : : ringed to c. be. t whet i;.-
in. i ... . .v..e : at e ho had in.; po».\ r .-iiine h
of \ v ;,ie i.i .v ! .. Ji
light • ■ • • »in. and t ..... . i.e
could not know I was present—more particu¬
larly 11*1 he could not hear me; yet lie persisted
in his poor babble, which was a liehavior in
him that, more than even tho matter of his
speech, persuaded me of his imts-cility.
lie made no reference to our situation,
and in solemn truth I beliovo Ids memory
retained no more than a few odus and ends
of the evil story of liis liIT—likebit-s of tar-
nished laeo and a rusty’ button or two lying
in the bottom of a dark chest that has long
been emptied of the dollies it once held.
But my condition made such heavy de¬
mands upon my thoughts that I had very
much less attention to.givoto this surprising
phenomenon of senility than its uncommon
merits deserved. It lias puzzled every mem¬
ber of the faculty that I have mentioned it
to, the supposition being that, given the ease
of suspended animation, there is no waste,
and the person would quit his stupor with
the same powers and aspect as he possessed
when lie entered it, though it lasted a thou¬
sand years. But granting there is no waste,
Time is always present, waiting to settle ac¬
counts when the sleeper lifts his head. There
may be an artificial interval, during which
the victim might show as my pirate did—but
the poised load of years is severed on a sud¬
den by the scythe and becomes superincum¬
bent, and with the weight conies the trans¬
formation; and this theory’, as the only eye
witness of the marvelous tiling, I will hold
and maintain while I have breath in my body
to support it!
I left him gabbling to himself—sometimes
grinning as if greatly diverted, sometimes
lifting a trembling hand to help his ghostly
recital by an equally ghostly dumb show—
and went on deck, satisfied that he was too
weak to get to the fire and meddle with it,
but sufficiently invigorated by his long
night’s rest to sit up without tumbling off
the bench.
This time I carried with me an old per¬
spective glass I had noticed in the chest in
my cabin—the chest in which were the nauti¬
cal instruments, charts and papers—and
leveled it along the coast of tho island; but
it was a poor glass, and I found I could man¬
age nearly as well with tho naked eye.
There was no change of any kind, only
that there was a sensible diminution in tho
blowing of the wind, and a corresponding
decrease in tho height of the seas. The ice
stretched in a considerable lied on either
hand the ship and ahead of her; the water
frothed freely over it, and there was a great
jangling and flashing of broken pieces, but
the hull was no longer heavily hit by them.
I got into the main chains to view the
body of the vessel, and noticed with satisfac¬
tion that the constant pouring of the sea had
thinned down the frozen snow to the depth
of at least a foot. This encouraged me to
hope that the restless tides would sap to her
keel at least and put her into a posture to be
easily launched by the blow of a surgo upon
her bows—that is if fortune continued to
keep her head on.
To determine the hour and our position, I
fetched a quadrant from my cabin, and was
happily just in time to eateh the sun crossing
the meridian. My watch was half an hour
fast, so I had been out of Iny reckoning to
tho extent of thirty minutes over since I had
been cast away. I made our latitude to be
64 degs. 28 mins, south, and the computation
was perhaps uear enough.
This business ended, I went to the cook
house to prepare dinner, and the first object
I saw Yvas Tassard flat upon his face near the
door that opened into the cabin. He groaned
when I picked him up—which I managed
without much exertion of strength, for so
much had ho shrunk that I dare say more
than half his weight lay in his clothes—and
set him upon his bench with his back to the
dresser. I put my mouth to his ear and
roared, “Are you hurt!” His head nodded
as if he understood me, but I question if be
did. He was the completes! picture of old
age that you could imagine. I fetched a
couple of spears from the. arms room, and,
cutting them to his height, put one in_each
hand, that he might keep himself propped;
and while my own dinner was broiling I
made him a mess of broth, with which I fed
him, for now that he had the sticks he would
not let go of them. But in any case I doubt
if his trembling hand could have lifted tho
spoon to his lips without capsizing the con¬
tents down his beard.
With some small idea of rallying the old
villain, I mixed him a very stiff bumper of
brandy, which he supped down out of my
hand with the utmost avidity. The draught
soon worked m him, and bo began to move
his head about, seeking me in his blind way,,
and then cried, in his broken notes, ”1 have
lost the use of my legs, and cannot walk.
Mother of God, what shall I do! Oh, holy
St. Antonio, what is to become of me!”
I guessed from this that, impelled by habit
or some small spur of reason, he had risen to
go on deck, and had fallen. He went on va¬
poring pitifully, gaziug with sufficient stead¬
fastness to let me understand that his vision
received something of my outline, though he
would fix his eyes either to the left or right
of me, as though he was not able to see if lie
looked straight; and this, and his mournful
cackle, and his nodding head, lowed form,
crooned hands and diminished face, made
hiiil os dtoirosSISi ana meianenoiy a picture
of Time as over mortal man viewed. He
broke off in his rambling to ask for more
brandy, taking it for granted that I was still
in the cook room, for I never spoke; and I
filled a can for him, and as before held it to
his mouth, which he opened wide—a piece of
behavior which went to show that some of
his wits still hung loose upon him. This
was a strong dose, and, co-operating with the
other, soon seized hold on his head, and pres¬
ently he began to langh to himself and talk,
and even broke into a stave or two—some
French song, Yvbicb lie delivered in a voice
like the squeaking of a rat, alternating with
the growling of a terrier.
I guess his stumbling upon this old French
catch (which I took it to lie from swing him
feebly flourish one of his sticks, as if inviting
a chorus) put him upon speaking his own
tongue altogether; for though be continued
to chatter with all tho volubility his breath
would permit during the whole time I sat
eating, not one word of English did bespeak,
and not one word, therefore, did I under¬
stand. Seeing how it must be with him pres¬
ently, I brought his mattress and rugs from
his < :.bin, and had scarce laid them down
when he let fall ono of his sticks and dropped
over. I grasped him, and, partly lifting,
partly hauling, got him on his back and
covered him up. It ha few minutes ho was
asleep. f
I trust I shall not lie deemed inhuman if I
confess that I heartily wished his end would
come. If he went on living ho promised to
bo an intolerable burden to me, being quite
helpless. Besides, lie was much too old for
this world, in which a man who reaches the
age of 90 is pointed to as a sort of wonder.
Nothing worth recording happened that
day. The wind slackened, aud the ice trav¬
eled so slow that nt sundown I could not dis¬
cover that we had made more than a quarter
of a mile of progress to the north since noon,
though we had settled by half as much again
that distance westward.
I had not closed my eyes on tho previous
night, and was tired out when the evening
arrived; and ns no good could come of my
keeping a watch, for tho simple reason that
it was nor in my power to avert anything
that mi happen, I tur.tiled some further
coveriag.ovi ;• tie Frenchman, who had lain
on the ileel: all the afternoon, sometimes
dozing, sometimes waking and talking tc
himself, and appearing on the whole very
easy and comfortable, and went to my cabin".
I slept sound the whole night through, and
on waking went on dock before going to tho
cook house and lighting the furnace (as yvos
my custom) so impatient was I to observe our
state, and to hear such news as the ocean
had for me. It was after 8—a very curious
day, somewhat darksome, and a dead calm,
with a large, long swell out of the southeast.
The sky was full of clouds, with a stooping
appearance in the hang of them that re¬
minded you of the belly of a hammock;
they’ were of a sallow brown, very uncom¬
mon ; some of them round about sipped the
sea line, and their shadows, obliterating
those parte of the cincture ivliieh they over¬
hung, broke the continuity of tho horizon as
though there were valleys in tho ocean there.
A good part of our tied of ice was gone—at
least a fourth of it : but the sctTooner still lay
as strongly fixed as before. I had come to
deck half expecting to find her afloat
from the regular manner of her heaving, and
Yvas bitterly disappointed to discover her
rooted as strongly as ever in the ice, though
tho irritution softened when 1 noticed liow
the lied had diminished. The mass, with the
ship upon it, rose and sank, with the slug¬
gish, squatting motion of a water logged ves¬
sel. It was an odd sensation to my legs after
their long rest from such exercise. Tbe heav¬
ing satisfied me that the base of the IxmI did
not go deep, but at the same time it was all
too solid for me, I could not doubt; for, had
the sheet been as thin as I had hoped it, it
must have given under the weight of the
schooner and released her.
I went below and got about lighting the
fire. The Frenchman lay very quiet, under
as many clothes as would fill a half dozen of
sacks. It was bitterly cold—sharper in tho
cook house than I had ever remembered it;
and I could uot conceive why this should be,
until I recollected that I hail forgotten to
close the companion hatch before going to
bed. I prepared some broth for my com¬
panion, and dressed some ham for myself,
and ate my breakfast, supposing he would
meanwhile aw’ake. But after sitting some
time and observing tliat ho did not stir, a
suspicion flashed into my mind; I kneeled
down, and, clearing his face, listened. Ho
did not breathe. 1 brought the lantern to
him; but his countenance had been so changed
by his unparalleled emergence from a state of
middle life into extreme old' age—he was
puckered, hollowed, gaunt, his features
distorted by the great weight of his
that I Yvas n< * to know him dead by merely
viewing him. I threw the clothes off him,
listened at his mouth breathlessly, felt
hands, which were ice cold. Dead
thought I. Great Father,’tis thy will!
I rose very slowly and stood surveying
silent figure with an emotion that owed
inspiration partly to the several miracles
vitality I had beheld in him during our
ciation, and to a bitter feeling of
that swelled up in me.
Dead indeed.' thought I.
Yes, I had feared and detested this
but his quick transformation and silent,
exit affected me, and I looked down
him sadly. Yet, to be perfectly candid
you, I recollect that, th"ugh it occurred
me to test if life was out of him bv
him close to tbe fire and chafing him
giving him brandy, I would not stir. No,
would not have moved a finger to
him, even though I should have been able
do so by merely putting him to the
He was dead, and there was an end;
without further ado I carried him into
forecastle and threw a hammock over
and left him to lie there till there
come clear water to the ship to serve him
a grave.
EfO 3E CONTINUED/
Cats Versus Rabbit-.
Cats are found to bo tho Lest
nators of rabbits iu New Zealand.
do great havoc among the young
and in some sections scarcely a
was to be seen.
SONG.
■ i
Oh. come but not o’ei troLlet. roods.
Where beast* of burden trudge with w-ii
Or erajrelde herb* arvsnowrrri wltb lust.
Or oot n-i l ball ehow etain and rust,
Wbrv I 'lng botnes* whitel? fails
And he growth on garden walls—
, uui that way
OI ms! hut in euro quiet pa.-*
|5j by bush, through tangled [T'vv
Thi cJtgh woodland «r»} % Where n ■ . . ’.« beard
But leaves astir or twittering i ■ .
Where sunlight slfta, wbetv > i - drip.
Where honey wet* the trave.n » -
Oh. come that way ’
"Q. IL 8.” In Chicago Journal.
Mud Hath* of Ui Vig,:«
When it comes to genuine res Las
Vegas can show up some | etty tall
stories. Most of the cures aro effected
by tho mud baths, which are a novel
featnro. The patient is plastered over
from head to foot with extremely hot
mud, made by mixing prairie loam with
the hot mineral water. The nose, mouth,
eyes and ears are left uncovered, tie is
then placed in a tub of the mud and left
there half an hour, after which his dirty
coating is scraped off. A shower bath of
the hot water follows, then a plunge in a
tank of it; after which comes the mas¬
sage of a professional; half an hour’s
siesta—tho patient, sleeping, wrapped in
a sheet, in a room tho temperature of
which is about 93 degs.—and after this
another rubbing. If rheumatism sur¬
vives this treatment lODg the patient’s
only hopo for relief lies in suicide.—At¬
lanta Constitution.
Known by Their Oddltlca.
If you have ever visited an asylum for
the deaf and dumb you have noticed that
the patients at once name all visitors by
some facial peculiarity. If there be a slight
contortion or a peculiarity of mo¬
tion it is instantly caught by the crowd,
represented henceforth in sign language, and so you
are designated by them.
Their names are much like those given
by Indians to children—“The Man with
One Eye Glass,” “The Man Who Lias a
Mole Under Ilia Eye," “The Man Who
Squits. " They know you by your dif¬
ferences. We are working on tho same
plan when we describe our great men
and leaders. Wo know thorn by their
oddities. Grant is, in history, the man
who smoked and who kept silence. A
man with no dcsignative points will
never bo accepted as a leader.—M. Mau¬
rice, M. D.
Mongolian Beauty In American Dreu.
A Chinese lady in approved modern
fashionable dress attracted a great deal
of interested attention in Broadway the
other morning. To any one overtaking
her the figure was that of a medium
sized girl dressed with exceptional ele¬
gance and taste. She wore a silk dress
of a dainty green tint cut and slashed
and trimmed after tho latest Parisian
ideas, and a heavy black beaded passe¬
menterie capo over Iter shapely shoulder
gvtvo her a wqpderful unquestionably appearance d!im waist. of neatnes9 Her
to
coiffure was stylish and becoming, and
she wore a chip straw hat of the latest
shape and of a delicate gray color, elab¬
orately and effectively trimmed.—New
York World.
New Advertisements.
GUNS price REVOLVERS, list to JOHNSTON lend stamp & SON, for
Pittsburgh, x’enn.
\ R ol CONSUMPTIVE
lias cured many of the worst cases unci ren
for all affections the throat and 1 iijs, and diseases
arising from impure blood blood and exhaustion. Tbe feeble
find sick, stru$rgrling against disease, and slowly drifting
to the grave, will in many cases recover their health by
imely use or Parker's in time. Ginger It Invaluable Tonic, but for delay all is dan-
>u9. Take it is pains
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
THE SCIENCE OF LIFE, the
a great Medical Work of the
ngc on Manhood, Nervoua andf
Physical Debility, Premature 1
Decline, Errors of Youth, and
the untold miseries consequent
thereon, 300 pages 8vo, 125
prescriptions for all diseases..
Cloth, full gilt, only $1.00, by*
mail, sealed. Illustrative sample free to all young
and middle aged men. Send now. The Gold and
Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the Na¬
tional Medical Association. Address P. O. box
1S95, Boston, Mass., or Dr. W. H. PARKER, grad
aateol Harvard Medical College, 25years'pracUco
In Boston, who may be consulted confldqptlally.
Specialty. Diseases of Man. Office No. 4 Bulflneh St.
CANKER’S
KAiR BALSAM
Cl'dunscti aud beautifies the hair.
Promotes ft luxuriant Restore growth. G«*ay
Never Fails to CoJor.
Hair to its Ycufhful
CurtFscalp diseases aid i hair falling
r»flc. at lYniggIgtsu__
HINDERCORNS.
The safest, surest and best cuie e f-'r for Corns, Corns, Bunions, I Never fail* Ac.
Stop* AM pnfn. Ensures comfort to tho fret feet, Xt
to cure. 15 cents at l/ruggi -ts. liiscox 16C<jZ & N.
G. A. CUNNINGHAM,
GRIFFIN, : : : GEORGIA,
Has Been Appointed Land Agent foi
fpalding County,
by the Georgia Bureau of Immigration, and
all parties having land their for sale property can expedite his
the sale by placing in
hands. the most
Full par’iculars in regard to be obtai
uable lands in this county can
by addressing him as above. A full lis
houses and lands and lots of al! deseriptio
1A1KIIIIOII BARBER SHOP
COLUMBUS, - GEORGIA,
JOE McGHEE, Prop'i
-)o(-
The best place in Columbus to get a batfc
or clean Shave. Give us a call wben in th
Pity JOE McGHEE
f, Mm Wm
r ^ ______
OMPOUND
THE CELEBRATED NERVE TONIC. ■Mm
A Word to the Nervous -
A healthy boy has as many as you, but he doesn’t know it. That is
the difference between "sick" and "well.”
Why don’t you cure yourself? It is easy. Don’t wait. Paine’s
life Celery Compound Thousands will do it. have. Pay your Why druggist you? a dollar, and enjoy ||
once more. not
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Proprietors, Burlington, Vt.
WHIPS, WAGONS, BUGGIES
ANl) IIAUY MS . \
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Ar.d the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. Repairs on
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A GREAT YEAR
Xu the bistort of the United State* desire* ts now upon keep
us. Every person of intelligence to
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THE TELEGRAPH,
IIasm. Georgia.
MERCER UNIVERSITY,
MACON. GEORGIA.
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17VFTY-FIFTH ANNUAL SESSION open,
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OH sasssssa sseaKgfe
—E. M-WW1AEY.M-D. WUttotoU Bti
tSJsi
Rule Nisi.
Duncan,Martin & Perdue J
W. T. H* Taylor. ) 'JM
..
State of Georgia, Spalding County. In the
Superior Court, February Term. 1888.
11 being represented to the Court by the pe¬
tition Deed of of Doncan, Mortgage, Martin dated it Perdue lath that day by
the o
January,1887, Duncan, Martin W.T. H.Taylor conveyed to sold
<k Perdue “a certain parcel
of land containing thirty (30) acres being
part of lot No. H5 in the 4th DDtrlot erf
Spalding Jack Craw county, Ga., bounded on the East
by lev, on the South by P. Cha
less, North by P. L, Starr, West by some
of my own lands, said land, thirty acres, be¬
ing worth of three hundred dollars,’* for tho
purpose securing the payment of a promts
sory note made by the said W..T. H.Taylorto
the tlie said Duncan, Oct. Martin & Perdue, due on
1st day of ,1887, for the rotnof One
Hundred and Forty Eight and 50-100 Dollars,
principal, is interest tfue and attorneys fees, which
amount now and unpaid.
It is ordered that the said W.T. H.Taylor
dop:«y into this Court, by the first clay of the
next due term said the principal, and mortgage interest show and costs,
on note or cause
l' any he boa to the contrary, or that is de-
said fauit_ Duncan, thereof Martin foreclosure ...........n & Perdue be grantedto of said Mort¬ th*
gage, said and T.lIToylor the equity therein of redemption be forever barred, of tho
W.
and said that \V. T. service H ice Taylor of or this this according rule rule be be perfected to law. on
.
JAMES 8. BOYNTON,
Judge 8. C. F. C.
Beck 3 l Cleveland, Petitioners Alt’ys.
feb-ooarntre Clerk 8. C. 8. C.
MAN WANTS BUT LITTLE;
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