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SWIFT’S SPECIFIC
Is entirely a vegetable preparation con¬
taining uo Mercury, Potash, Arsenic, or othe*
poisonous mbstanoes.
SWIFT’S SPECIFIC
Ha* cured hundred# ot ease# o( Epl:hello
ma or Cancer of the Skin, thousands of cases
of Eczema, Blood Humors and Skin Diseases,
and hundreds of thousands of cases of Scrof¬
ula, Mood Poison and Blood Taint.
SWIFT’S SPECIFIC
Has relieved thousands of cases of Mercu¬
rial Poisoning, Rheumatism and Stiffness of
the Joints.
Specific CnaTTiXooOa, Co., Atlanta, ItlantmGia.—Gentlemen: TekXo June 37, 18S8-fiwlft’s
early part of the Oa.—Gentlemen : In In the the
poison appeared present year, a bad case lass of of
blood 8. S. under advice upon me. I began b<
taking S. of another, .——>r, and
I fool^reatly —— —
to taking day the medicine , , .. and Improved. Improved. shall I I am am still
___ML I perfectly perfe< I continue to do
so until _ am tm _________ well. belleveit will
effect a perfect cure, Doc. YOurs P. truly, Howard,
111 West Sixth St.
CoLtrtt*!*, Atlanta, S. C., July Qa.—Gentlemen: 7, 1888—The Swift
Biieolflc Co., from I was
a great sufferer muscular rheumatism
• *------- I could i--------
your 3. S. 8., life. and now I I tm II well as I ever
was In my am sure your medicine
cured me. and I would recommend it to any
one suffering from any blood disease. Yours
truly, Conductor! O. E. rC.&G Hcoitm,
c G. R. - B.
Waco, Texas, of May #, 1898—Gentlemen: The
wife of ono my customers was terribly
afflicted with a loathsome skin disease, that
covered her whole body. She was confined
to her bed for several years by this affliction,
and could not help herself at all. She could
not sleep from a violent Itching-and stinging
ot the skin. The disease baffled the skill of
the physicians finally who treated It. Her husband
began she giving his wife Improve Swift’s Speclflo,
ana commenced to almost Im¬
mediately, well. and In She a few weeks she was ap¬
parently looking lady, with no is trace now of a the hearty affliction fine-
left. Yours Wholesale very truly J. K. Shari,
Druggist, Austin Avenue.
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
free. Thk Swift Specific Co., Drawer 8.
Atlanta, Oa.; New York, 756 Broadway.
Ordir ..ry"s Advert semenls.
* , . \RY’S OFFICE, Si’*Lr>iNJ Cou.v-
' Georgia, May 26th, 1888.—Mrs.
M irth.i A. Darnall, administratrix of Katie
It ir null , has applied to me Katie for letters Darnn.ll, of Dis-
i..i-si>>ii on the estate of late
hi aid county, decascd.
:,.-t ail persons concernrd show’ cause be
f.i .- tliti office Court Griffin, of Ordinary of first said county
hi in, in on the Monday in
m i. t mlier, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. ra., why
vi h let'ers should not be granted,
y) I.l E. W. HAMMOND. Ordinary.
' / f -jliDINARY’S Georgia, OFFD'K. May 26th, Spalding 1888,—Mrs. Coc n
it,
Martha A. Darnall, executrix of Thos. M.
Darnall, has applied to me for letters of dig
mission from the executorship of said estate.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at
my office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
September, >h letters 1888, by ten o’eiock, a. m., why
u should not bo granted.
*6.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
/ J YRDINARY’SOFFICE.- -SpaldingCoun-
la v tv, Georgia, Augus' 3, 1838.—Mrs. Lei
B. Lamar, Guardian of Arch M. and James
Nall makes application to me for leave to
sell one nndiride 1 half interest in house
and lot belonging to her wards for distribu¬
tion .
Let all persons coueervd show canse be¬
fore 1he court of Ordinary Monday at September my office in
Griffin on the first in by
should ten o’eiock a. granted. m., why such application
not be
*3.00. E. tV. HAMMOND,Ordinary.
Executors’ Sale.
GEORGIA- Spalding County.
By virtue of an order granted us by the
Ciuitof Ordinary we will sell before the
(km t house, to the highest bidder, at Griffin,
Georgia; of September in said county, between on the first the Tues¬ legal
day sale, eighteen next, and three quarters
hours of
(18%) shares of the North capital stock of the Sa¬
vannah, Griffin and Alabama Railroad
Company. Terms Sale sale for distribution cash. Aug. among (5th, 1888. leg¬
atees. of
E. W. BECK,
J If MITCHELL,
i.’i.t’O Executors \V. U. Alexander.
Rule Nisi.
li. (!. Kinard & Son 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,
1. J. Ward & J. W. Ward conveyed to the
said 11. 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
•ino. Ward, South by Barney Maddox and
West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬
made curing the payment of a promissory note
the by the said I. J. Ward A J. W. Ward to
said ii. 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 any they have to the eontrary. or that iu
default thereof foreclosure be granted to the
said B. C. Kinard & Son of said Mortgage,
and the equity of redemption of the said I.
J Ward & J. W. Ward therein he forever bar-
* *al, *nd that service of this rule be perfected
■a .aid I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward according
-a law by publication in the Griffin News,
v by service upon I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward
-»f a copy three mouths prior to the next
term of this court.
JAMES S. BOYNTON,
Judge S. C. F. C.
Frank Fiynt and Dismuke & Collens, Peti-
t oners Alt’s.
i true copy from the Minutes cf thisCon
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk 8. C. S C.
" a mini
x ENGINES,
~
i >
;/ all first class,
and a NO. 1 !
Price and Quality Guaranteed.
both Uro, Ui. celebrated 1JIOMAS HARROW,
in Wood and Iron
chf A few Buggies on hand will be sold
tsepl G. A. CUNNINGHAM.
*H IS V'AFiin? me at W
' | , lu •--JftBttifw. x Su.», v. u *r . A.H-. -rtldqi
‘W > .at it IN NkU VOJt*G
ICE BOUND.
By W CLARK RUSSELL,
Author of “The Wreck of the Grosrcnor >’
' Jock s Courtship" “My Watch lie- ’
low, ‘ The Lady Maml ” Etc.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
t STRIKE A BARGAIN with the YANKEE.
The captain put his cup down; the bowl
wa8 empty; I offered to brew another jorum,
but he thanked me anil said no, adding sig¬
nificantly that he would have no more here—
by which he meant that he would brew for
himself in his own ship anou. The drink had
made him cheerful and good natured. He
recommended that we should go on deck and
set about, trans-shipping while the weather
held, for he was an old hand in these seas,
and nover trusted the .-.kies longer than a
quarter of an hour.
“This here list,” says he, “wants remedy¬
ing, and that’ll follow our easin’ of the hold.”
“Yes,” said I, “and I should be mighty
thankful if some of your men would sec all
clear aloft for me, that we might start with
running rigging that’ll travel, capstans
that’ll revolve, and sails that’ll spread ”
“Oh, we’ll manage that for you,” said he.
Dumed if ever I see a worse freeze. M
So saying, he called to Bill, who seemed
the principal man of the boat’s crew, and
gave him some directions, and immediately
afterward all the men entered the boat and
rowed away to the ship.
While they were absent I carried the cap¬
tain into the hold and loft him to overhaul
it. I told him that all the spirits, provisions
and the like were in the hold and lazaretto,
which was true enough—wanting to keep
him out of the run—though, thanks to the
precaution I had taken, I was in no fear even
if he should penetrate so deep aft. Before
be came out flve-and-twenty stout fellows
arrived in four boats from the ship, and
when we went on deck we found them going
the rounds of the vessel, scraping the guns to
get a view of them, peering down the com¬
panion, overhauling the forecastle well, as I
call the hoUow beyond the forecastle, and
staring aloft with their faces full of grinning
wonder. The captain sang out to them,
and they all mustered aft.
“Now, lads,” said he, “there s a big job be¬
fore you—a big job^or Cape Horn, I meau;
and ydu’ll have to slip through It as if you
was grease. When done there’ll be a carouse,
and 1 11 warrant ye all such a sup that the
most romantic among ye’ll never cast an¬
other pining thought in the direction o’ your
mother’s milk,”
Having delivered this preface, he divided
the men into two gangs—one, under the
boatswain, to attend to the rigging, clear the
canvas of the ice, get the pumps and the cap¬
stans to work, and see all ready for getting
sail on the schooner; the other, under the
second mate, to get tackles aloft and break
out the cargo, taking care to trim ship while
so doing.
They fell to their several jobs,wit)i a will.
’Tis the habit of our countrymen to sneer at
he Americans as sailors, affirming that if
ever they win a battle at sea it is by the help
of British renegade*. But this I protest:
after witnessing the smartness of those
Yankee whalemen, I would sooner charge
the English than the Americans with lubber-
liness, came the nautical merits of the two
nations ever before me to decide upon. They
had the hatches open, tackles aloft and men
at work below while the mariners of other
countries would have been standing looking
ou and Some “jawing” upon the course to be
taken. overran the fabric aloft,
clearing, cuttjng away, pounding, making
the ice fly in stofnjs; othere sweated the cap¬
stans till they clanked; Cithers fell tf> the
pumps, working with hammers aud kettles
of boiling water. The wondrous old
schooner was never busier—no, not in the
bey day of her flag, when her guns were
blazing and her people Yelling.
As half-past three in the afternoon the
breeze began to sit in dark curls upon the
water, and there was evidence enough in the
haziness in the west, and in the loom of the
shoulders of vapor in the dark blue obscure
there, to warrant a sackful for this capful
presently.
“I reckon,” says the captain to me, after
looking into the west, “that we’d best knock
off now. There’s snow and wind yonder,
and we’d better see all snug while there’s
time.”
lie called to one of the men to tel! the sec¬
ond mate to come up from below and get the
hatches on, and bringing me to the rail be
pointed to a boat, and asked if that would
did I said yes, and thanked him heartily for
the gift, which was handsome, I must say—
the boat being a very good one. though,
to be sure, be bad got many times its value
out of the schooner; and a party of men were
forthwith told off to get the boat hoisted and
stowed.
The captain then -shook me by Ike hand,
and, calling a farewell to Wilkinson aud the
negroes, scrambled into the chains and
dropped into his boat, very highly satisfied, I
make no doubt, with the business ho had done
that day.
A boat’s crew were left behind to help us
to make sail. But the weather looking some¬
what wild in the west, with the red light of
the sun among the clouds there, and the dark
heave’ of the swell running into a sickly
crimson under the sun, and then flowing out
dusky again, I got them to treble reef the
mainsail and hoist it, and then thanking
them, advised them to be off. We gave them
a cheer when they started, which they re¬
turned, and then, putting Cromwell to the
tiller, I went forward with the others aud
set the topsail anil forestaysail (the spritsail
lying furled), which would be show enough
of canvas till I saw what the weather was
like. 1 kept the topsail aback, waiting for a
boat to arrive with iny chart, and in a few
minutes the boat we had cheered returned
with what I wanted.
Meanwhile they were shortening sail on
the whaler; and, though she was no beauty,
yet I tell you I found her as picturesque as
any ship I had ever beheld as she lay with
her maintopgallantsail clewed up, her top¬
sail yards on the caps, and the heads of men
knottiug the reef points showing black over
the white cloths, her hull floating up out of
the hollow and flinging a wet orange gleam
to the west, a tumble of dreamy foam about
her to her rolling—shadows like the passage
of phantom hands hurrying over her sails to
the swaying of her masts, and the swelling
sea darkling from her into the east.
1 hollowed my hajids, and hailing the cap¬
tain, who was on the quarter deck, asked
him for the time by his chronometer. He
flourished his arm and disappeared, and
presently returning shouted to know if I was
ready. I put the key in my watch and an¬
swered yes, and then he gave me the time.
My watch, though antique, was a uoble
piece of mechanism, and, I have little doubt,
as trustworthy ns his chronometer. But I
was careful to let it lie snug in my hand. I
did not want the negro at the tiller nor the
others to see it. They would wonder that so
fine a jeweled piece as this should be in the
possession of the second mate of a little brig,
and it was my business to manage that they
never should have cause to wonder at any¬
thing in that way.
The dusk of the evening came quick out
Ot tno'east, and the wind (rekttsitea wire a
long cry In. our rigging, as if the eastern
darkness was a foe it was rushing out of the
west to meet, I brought the schooner north-
northeaat by my compass, and watched her
behavior anxiously. The swell was on the
quarter, and the wind and' sea a trifle abaft
the larboard beam; she leaned a little to the
weight of her clothes, but was surprisingly
stiff considering how light she was. Wilkin¬
son and the negro came and stood by my
aide. The sea broke heavily from the weather
bow, and the water roared white under the
lee bends and spread astern in a broad wake
of foam. The whaler did not brace his yards
up till after we had started, and now hung a
pale, faint mass in the windy darkness on tbo
quarter. A tincture of rusty red hovered,
like smoke colored by the furnace that pro¬
duces it, intho west, but the night had drawn
down quick and dark; the washing noise of
the water was sharp, the wind piercingly
cold; each sweep of the schooner’s masts to
windward was followed by a dull roaring of
the blast rushing out of the hollows of the
canvas, and she swung to the seas with wild
yaws, but with regularity sufficient to prove
the strict government of the helm.
But it was being at sea, homeward liound,
tool There was no wish of mine, engendered
by my hideous loneliness ou the ice, by my
abhorred association with the Frenchman,
that I eould not refer to as, down to this mo¬
I ment, gratified. My »yueartoour heart bounded; my spirits
Hfltl this ocean
been the Thames, and yonder dark flowing
hills of water the banks of Erith and the
Gravesend shore.
I turned to the three men. “My lads,” said
T, “you prove yourselves flue bold fellows
by thus volunteering. Do not fear; if Gotl
guides us home—to my home, I mean—you
shall find a handsome account in this busi¬
ness.”
“Six more chaps would have jined had th’
ole man bin willin’,” said Wilkinson. “But
best as it is, master, though she’s a trifle
short handed.”
“Why, yes," said I, “but being fore and
aft, you knowl It isn’t as if we'd got courses
to hand and topsails to reef. ”
“Ay ay, dat's dy troof,” cried Billy Pitt.
I tort o’ dat. Fore an’ aft makes de differ¬
ence. Don’t guess I should hah volunteer
had she been a brig.”
“There are four of us,” said I. “You’re
my chfW mate, Wilkinson. Choose your
watch.”
“I choose Cromwell,” said he; “he was in
my watch aboard the whaler.”
“Very well,” I exclaimed; and this being
settled, aud both negroes declaring them¬
selves good cooks, we arranged that they
should alternately have the dressing of our
victuals; that Wilkinson should have the
cabin next mine, and the negroes the one in
which the Frenchman had slept, one taking
the other’s place as he was relieved.
I asked Wilkinson what he thought of the
schooner. He answered that he was watch¬
ing her.
“There’s nothin’ to find fault with yet,”
said he; “she’s a whale at rolling, sartinly.
I guess she walks, though. I reckon she’s
had enough of the sea, like me, aud's got the
scent o’ the land iu her nose. I guess old
Noah wasn’t far off when her lines was laid.
Mebbe his sons had the building of her.
There’s something scriptural in her cut. How
old’s she, master /”
“Fifty years and more,” said I.
“Dere’s uuffin partickler in flat,” cried
Cromwell. “I knows a wessel ilat am 104
years old, s’elp me as I stand.
“I don’t know how the whaler’s heading,”
said I, “but this schooner’s a canoe if we
aren’t dropping her!”
Indeed she was scareo visible astern—mere
windy flicker, hovering upon the palo flash¬
ings of the foam. It might be perhaps that
the whaler was making a more northerly
course than we, and under very snug canvas,
though ours was snug enough too: hut be this
as it may, I was mightily pleased with the
slipping qualities of the schooner. I never
could have dreamed that so odd and ugly a
figure of a ship would show such heels. But
I think this: we are too prone to view the
handiwork of our sires with contempt. I do not
know but that their ships were as fast as ours.
They made many good passages. They might
have proved themselves fleeter navigators
had they had the sextant and chronometer to
help them along. Fifty years hence, perhaps,
mankind will be laughing at our crudities—
we, by Heaven, who flatter ourselves that tho
art of shipbuilding and navigation will never
be carried higher than the pitch to which we
have raised them!
Cromwell being at the tiller, I told Billy
Pitt to go below aud get supper, Instructing
him what to dress and how much to mix for
a bowl—for, as you know, there was nothing
hut spirits and wine to season our repasts
with. I saw Cromwell grin widely into the
binnacle candle flame when he heard me talk
of ham, tongue, sweetmeats, marmalade, and
the like for supper, together with a can of hot
claret, and knowing sailors’ nature middling
well, I did not doubt that tho fare of the
schooner would bring the three men more
into love with the adventure than even the
reward that was to follow it.
pro 3E continued.'
The Language* of Bird*.
Shall we never master the language!
of beasts, as even the parrot and the star¬
ling will in their own automatic way
master portions -of ours? To a certain
extent mis has been accomplished. A
hunter tries to imitate by his “calls” the
cries of the animals he is luring to their
destruction, and is often successful in an
exact ratio to his skill in this rough ac¬
quaintance with the speech of the lower
animals. Mr. Henderson, an American
“gunner,” has managed to set in the musical cries
of some of the game birds
notation uniform K and finds'tIn.t tin y words are quite as
as are the same spoken
by different persons. They have their
songs of love as well as exclamations of
fear and defiance. The quail has one
set of notes when it is “a proud, happy,
and affectionate father,” and another
when in the autumn he is sounding the
“assembly” In order to tell the scattered
birds of the chosen rendezvous for the
covey. Every other bird has, in like
occasions, manner, language and the clever suitable for different
sportsman can
often easily wile the birds within range.
Some songs, like some human lan¬
guages, are more difficult than others.
The spotted sandpiper’s is much easier
than English that of the yellow leg, while the
snipe is a moody bird, which
speaks only in its unmusical squeak
when it is startled, and springs into
flight. Hence a musician con birds—the readily
write it down. The song
robins, the thrush, the nightingales, and
so forth—have, however, a far more
complicated tongue, and Mr. Cheney,
who has reported some of their melodies,
finds the task by no means simple. Some
of these songs are stereotyped, but on
more than one occasion the songsters
have been noticed to extemporize when
the mood took them. For exam; mple,
the song often varies before and after
rain, in spring and autumn; while one of
the redbreast's songs is to the same tune
as that to which the spinning girls sang
fifty years ago while reeling their yarn.
—T/wtdon Standard.
ROOFS OF CITY HOUSES.
A Physician Recommend* That tbo Haute-
top* Be Turned Into Playground*.
Dr. Oottvomeur if. 8mith has contri¬
buted ’n a recent number of The Medical
Becoi i .n Interesting and suggest!vo
pnp- ■ i he main point of this article is
th:.- » neglecting to mako the roofs of
tin i. .uses places of safety and pleasantly
habitable. New Yorkers nr-* g.-.q best
and most readily a valla Lie ■ jrtimity
open to them of enjoying 11 . ,i sunshine
In moderate weather and fresh and com¬
paratively cool air during the sweltering
beats of summer.
Dr. Smith describes the state f things
which all New Yorkers know vhen ho
speaks ladder of the “dark closet with precipit¬
ous entered leading to the scuiilo, rarely
and ascended except by work¬
men to repair the roof." In a private
dwelling of the smallest size habitually
built on tlu'i island, the roof has an area
as large as that of the yard, immeasur¬
ably better lighted and aired, and intrin¬
sically a far better place as a playground
for children or a resort for adults in
pleasant or in oppressively hot weather.
That ip to say, in the bouses most favor¬
ably circumstanced for light and air, onc-
hjlf tffe city, of the excluding available the breathing streets, space is abso¬ of
lutely wasted. In the more expensive
and extensive dwellings the case is
worse, because the yard is contracted as
the house is extended, until in most cases
it amounts to little more than an air
shaft, and is not available at all as a
place of recreation.
In the tenement houses the case is far
worse. back Nobody who has ever visited tho
yard of one in the more populous
quarters of tho city would ever there¬
after think of it as a playground or a
breathing space or a place of resort for
rest and refreshment. Yet the choice
for these purposes is practically between
this place, one-third the area of tho
house, and tho street, while the house¬
top, three times as large us the yard and
in every respect more eligible, is abso¬
lutely wasted, so far as concerns any pre¬
cautions taken for its use and enjoyment
by the builder, who nevertheless prides
himself upon his economy of room.
It is no wonder that Dr. Smith asks
vdiether ‘ ‘archi toctural ingen uity, coached
by Banitary scienco,” cannot “contrivo
some method of using the thousands of
acres of housetops bo on this island so that
roofs can made additionally useful at
certain seasons by affording outdoor rec¬
reation and protection from invalidism. ”
Really it seem3 as if architectural inge¬
nuity had been exerted in the opposite
direction, for there is no difficulty in tho
way already of achieving this result. New York
is a flat roofed city. All that is
absolutely needed to convert its roofs into
the pleasantest ! parts of the house after
the sun goes down in summer, and while
the sun is up during the spring and au¬
tumn, is perhaps slightly to increase
their structural strength, to cover them
with some material that shall bo practi¬
cable as a pavement, to provide decent
and commodious access to them by con¬
tinuing to the roof the main stairway of
the house, and to provide a parapet that
will obviate any danger of falling by
children or careless person^ The cost of
all this is not worth counting in com-
parlson’to the benefits to be derived from
It.—New York Times.
New Advertisements.
niINQ UUIVO REVOLVERS, tend stamp fir
price list to JOHNSTON A SON,
Pittsburgh, Penn.
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In Huston, who may be consulted confldeptially.
Specialty. Diseases of Man. Office No. i Bulffnch st.
0. A. CUNNINGHAM,
GRIFFIN, : : : GEORGIA,
Has Been Appointed Land Agent foi
Spalding Counly,
by the Georgia Bureau of Immigration, aud
all parties having land for sale can expedite
the sale by placing their properly in his
hands.
Full particulars iu regard to the most
uable lands in this county can tie obtai
by bouses addressing and lands him and as Jots above. af all descripti A full lis
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iiiscox A co., 163 William Street, Y.
WORMS.
tvte» C ; • ildren can’t soffcno^f^u^bes^IeOnKtsble be relieved by so-called worm lozen- para -
gers which only tickle the palate. The time-tried
tested care is t. A. Fahnestock's Vermifuge, As
veins tk. t.'Y. Jon
THE CELEBRATED NERVE TONIC. Sm
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.”
Wlty don’t you cure yourself? It is easy. Don’t wait. Paine’s
Celery Compound will do it. Pay your druggist a dollar, and enjoy
life once more. Thousands have. Why not you?
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Proprietors, Burlington, Vt,
WHIPS J 1 BUGGIES
AND IIAPNKSS
— M- -
■
Studebaker Wagon < While Hickory Wagon!
Jackson G. Smith Wagon!
Jackson G. Smith Buggy 1
Ar.d the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. Repairs on
old Buggies a Specialty.
W. II. SPENCE,
auifJSdAwniii Gor. Hill A Taylor Street*,GRIFFIN, GA?
Shipment Finest Teas, if
CRACKERS, ALL SORTS, 15c. lb.
HAMS. BONELESS SHOULDERS. ETC. FINEST
FLOUR ON THE MARKET.
OI G IVIO N EY ! ! AGENTS WANTED at WN to^uppl^ TEN MIL-
CLEVELAND AND THURMAN
By lion. W. U. IIenlkl; aluo, Ltfe of Mrs. Cleveland; exquisite steel portraits. Voters For
Cartridge Box, Reform and Trade mike 1'oliey, JiSOO Ac., $500 complete. month. Ac. knts Outfit report 35c. immeuM HVBIt.VRD succeej. BROS,
beet Philadelphia, work, apply Pa. ipflck to a
NO YORE EYE-GLASSES
Mo re
MITCHELL’S
EYE-SALVE
A Certain, Safe and Effective Remedy for
Sore, Weak and Inflamed Eyes
Producing; Tong - hlghtcdnch..
anil Jtctorinir th* Sight of.
u tho Old.
Cures Tear rops, Granulation, Stye,
Tumors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye. Lasfi
ES AND PRODUCING QUICK RE-
LIEF AND PERMANENTCUBE
Also, equally efficacious when used in otli
er maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever Sores, Tu
mors. Salt Rheum, Burns, Piles, or wherever
inflammation exists, MITCHELL'S SALVE
may be used to advantage,
old bv all Druggists at 25cents.
A GREAT YEAR
Jn the history of the United States is now upon
us. Erery person of intelligence desires to keep
pace with the course of its erents. There is no
better way to do so than to subscribe for
The Macon Telegraph.
Its news facilities are unsurpassed the fullest by any Associ¬ paper
in the South. In addition to correspond¬
ated Press dispatches, letter it has from special all important
ence by wire and
points in Georgia and the neighboring Congress States. Wash¬
During the present session of
ington will be the most important and most in¬
teresting news centre in the country. The
Washington Correspondence had. of the Telegraph is
the very best that can be
Its regular correspondent furnishes the latest
news and gossip Irom in full dispatches. J. Cummings, Frequent
•pedal letters Hon. Amos
member of Congress trom New York, of Frank best <».
Carpenter, and W. A. Croffut, three *be
known newspaper writers at the issues capital, of dis¬ the
cuss the livest and most important
d Tariff Reform
T: .? Telegraph is a Democratic
pai r. n is thoroughly tu line with the policy
of I : esident Cleveland and the Democratic
part /. Iu the coming national campaign the
Teh ,-raph will not only give all the news, but
will discuss all publio issues from the stand¬
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TIIE TELEGRAPH,
Maobn. Geoooia,
ft V
MACON. GEORGIA.
-- Joj-
T71FTY FIFTH ANNUAL SESSION op
JL September 36th and closes Jane 28tl.
Elegantly furnished class rooms and neat,
new i’I iip'g for students.
Cen: ly located. Good board at reason a
ble rate*.
For catalogues and other information ap¬
ply Julyl2w4 to REV. J. A. BATTLE,
President.
j m PAPER at la nn the me Newspaper in Phliatelsbla Aavtr
It. W.Atr«lt*«01 . IN. tl*!a« Agency autiuttteti ot Mesjara
(ou itmnu
Rule Nisi.
Duncan,Martin & Perdue i
YB. ) >
W. T. H. Taylor.
State of Georgia, Court, Spalding County. Term, 1888. In the
Superior February the Court by
It being represented to the pe¬
tition of Duncan, Martin & Perdue that by
Deed of Mortgage, dated the l?lh day o
January,1887, Martin W.T. A II.Taylor “a conveyed to said
Duncan, Perdue ccrtaiu parcel
of land containing thirty (30) scree being
part of lot No, 115 in the 4th District of
Spalding county, Ga., hounded on the Enat
by Jack Crawley, on the South by P. Cham-
less, North by P. L, Starr, West by some
of my ow n lands, said land, thirty acres, be¬
ing worth three hundred dollars,” for the
purpose of securing the payment of a premia
sory note Duncan, made by Martin the said * W..T. Perdue, H.Taylorto due
the said on
the 1st day and of Oct . ,1887, Eight for and the 50 sum -100 Dollars, of One
Hundred Forty
principal, is intercat due and attorneys unpaid. fees, which
amount now and
It is ordered that the said W. T. H. Taylor
do pay into this Court, by interest the first day of the
next term the principal, anti ooats.
due on said note and mortgage or show cause
l" any he has to the eontrary, or that in de¬
fault thereof foreclosure be granted to the
said Duncan, Martin & Perdue of said Mort¬
gage, said W. and T.HTaylor the equity of redemption be forever barred, of tbe
therein
said and that T. service H. of this rule lie perfected law. on
\V. I’aylor according to
JAMES Judge 8. BOYNTON, S.C. F. C.
Beck A Cleveland, Petitioners Att’ya.
I certify that the foregoing Is a trne copy
from the Minutes of thiaCourt, this Februa
ry Term, 1888. Wh . M. . T Thomas,
febSiioaintic Clerk 8. C . 8. C.
HAN 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;lDaily ,| or;
Weekly JNEWS.
ADVERTISERS
:an learn the exact cos!
of an} proposed line o:
advertising in America!.
papers by addressing
Geo P. Rowell & Co.
tJewspapar Adr#rti*ing Bureau,
lOSpn- ? A, New Y»rk.
v=.»a iW .o» lUO-.‘»3« P»** 9 plxtel
AGSY tHLLSI