The Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1881-1889, August 21, 1888, Image 3

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gWI pi >s SPECIFIC 1 * entirely a regetoble preparation eon- Man'nit no Ifc/etUT, Potash, A.-enlo, or othe» poisonous aubetanotfa. iWlFT'S SPECIFIC Hai carrti hundred* of case* of Eplthelio _ 3 or cancer of tha Skin, thousands of case* of Ecsenia, DIood Humors and Slcln Diseases, hundred* of thousands of case* of Serof ola. lilood Poison and Blood Taint. SWIFT’S SPECIFIC Has relieved thousand* of cases of Mereu- rtal Poisoning, Rheumatism and Stiffness of Iho Joints. Sect m”flU perfect am ^rfev-tiyweli. Yours truly. I beHevelt will a cure. Doc. P. Howard, 111 Wert Sixth St. CoLtrustA, S. C., July Ga.—Gentlemen T, 18^-Tho Swift Sneolflc Oo., Atlanta, muscular rheumatism : I vras a * arwt sufferer from i oaarfl T MWlId DPt RA tlftmi A.T 1 #»T 1 1 ffl. Dhvilclan. I toot over a dosen well botl_____ tout S. 8. S., and now I am a* as I ever was In my life. I am sure your medicine cured me. and I would recommend It to any one suffering from any blood disease. Youri truiv, F- Bvonm A Conductor C. G.a. R. The disease 1 I the skfl mediately, well. and In She a few weeks she was ap¬ looklng parently lady, with tie is trace now of a the hearty affliction flne- left. Yours Wholesale very truly, Druggist, Austin J. B. Bears, Avenue. Treatise on Blood an 4 Skin Diseases mailed free. The Swift Specific Co., Drawer 8, Atlanta, Qa.; New York, 730 Broadway. GrtHrary’s Advert sements. 0 I ’l -AUY’S OFFICE, Spaldinj Cou.v- y, v, Georgia, May 2<>th, 1888.—-Mrs. Hartli i A. Darnall, administratrix of Katie iterant !, lias applied to of me Katie for letters Darnall, of Dis¬ late mission onttie estate of said county, decimal. Let all persons coneerurd sliow eause be f,.ru the Court of Ordinary of said county a; m) office in Gridin, on the first Monday why in M ot mtier, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., ei.'fi h tiers shoo Id HAMMOND, not be granted. Ordinary. $8,1.) K. W. / YKDINARY’S OFF! "E, Spalding Coun V7 n, Georgia, May 26th, 1888,—Mrs. Thos. M. Martha A. Durauil, executrix of Darnall, has applied to me for letters of dis mission from the osectitorship of said estate. Let all persons concerned show cause be¬ fore the Court of Ordinnry of said county, at my office in Griffin, on the lirat Monday why in September, 1888, by ten o’clock, a. m., neh letters should not bo granted. $6.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary, / yilUNARY’S OFFICE.—SpaloinoC ot n- V/ tt/Georgia, Augus' 3, 1888.—Mrs. Lei la B. Lamar, Guardian of Arch M.and James Nail makes application to me for leave to sell one undivided half interest in house and lot belonging to her wards for distribu¬ tion . coueered be¬ Let ati persons show eanse fore the court of Ordinary at my office in Griffin on the first Monday in September by ten o’elock a. in,, why such application should not he ci anted. $■1.00. E. \Y. HAMMOVP, Culinary. Executors’ Sale. GEORGIA- Spalding Countv. By virtue of an order granted us by the C-mi t of Ordinary wo will sell before tlie Con t house, to the highest bidder, at Griffin Georgia; in said county, on ttie first Tues¬ day of September next, between the legal hours of sale, eighteen and three quarters (18%) shares of the capita! stock of the Sa¬ vannah, Gridin and North Alabama Railroad Company. Sale for distribution among leg¬ atees. Terms of sale cash. Aug. Oth, 1888. E. W. BECK, J. 11. MITCIIELL. LUO Executor.- \V. D. Alexander. Rule Nisi. B. 0. Kinard & Son j vs. ) >- 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. J. Ward & J. IV. Ward conveyed tract to the of said B, C. Kinard <fc Son a certain 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'by the payment of a promissory Ward note the Raid I. J, Ward dt J. W. to the said B. C. Kinard & Son due on the 15th Jay Dollars of November 1887, for the sum of Fifty and Ninety-six cents ($50.%), which note is now due and unpaid. It is ordered that the said I. J. Ward & J. W, Ward do pay into this Court, by the first day of the next term the principal, interest and costs, due on said note or show cause, if any they have to tiie contrary, or that in default thereof foreclosure be granted to tiie said B. C. Kinard it Son of said Mortgage, and the equity of redemption of the said 1. i . Ward ,V J, W. Ward therein be forever bar- • *.d, and that service of this rule be perfected ■u i,aid I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward according •u uw by publication in the Griffin News, vr by service upon I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward ■>f a copy three months prior to the next terra of this court. JAMES S. BOYNTON, Judge S. C. F. 0. Frank Fiynt and Dismuke & Collens, Peti- t oners Att’s. t true copy from the Minutes of tliisCcu Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk S. 0. S C. narnfui ENGINES, ALL FIRST CLASS, AND A NO.1! Price and Quality Guaranteed. both Also, the celebrated THOMAS H ARROW, in Wood and Iron 13?” A few Buggies on hand will be sold cheap. G. A. CUNNINGHAM. '$ ■*> r-urv. oji ffle ai Geo, Rowe ■ Co’- ’vso apog .....u. ICE BOUND. Ly W CLAUSE RUSSELL, Au.ltoi ' J 1 '(<’ I! Tec A’ of lilt CVcntt'ciiOf" * : '■'Jacks Courtship,” “My lla/ch lie■ l<iw ‘ The ljidy Mu ad ” h'te. 'CONTINUED. i tire.' UK.ro boatmen arrived, giving us the company of live of them. Boon there was a hearty sound of frying and a smell of good things upon the air. Pitt put plates and glosses upon the cabin table, two great bowls of punch were brewed, and in a little time we had all fallen to. I whispered Wilkinson, who sat next me: “These boatmen know nothing of our business; I snail have to take Mr. Mason apart and arrange with him. These fellows may not be fit for our service. Let no hint escape yon.” “Right, sir,” said" he. This I said to disarm his suspicions should he see mo talking alone with Mr. Mason. JTe entertained us with an account of his excur¬ sion to London, and then, partly to appeaso the profound curiosity of the boatmen and partly to save time when I should come to confer with my relative, I gave them the stoi-y of my shipwreck, and told how I had met with the schooner and how I had man¬ aged to escape with her. “And now, Mason,” said I, “while our friends here empty these bowls, como you with me to the cook room.” And with that we quitted the cabin. “D’ye mean to tell me, Paul,” was the first question my relative asked, “that this vessel was on the ice eight-and-forty years?” “Yes,” I replied. “Surely you dream;” “I think not.” “What we have been eating and drinking, is that forty-eight years old, too?” “Ay, and older.” “Well, such a thing shall make me credu¬ lous enough to duck old women for witches. But what brand;, w'aat brandy! Never had spirit such a bouquet. Every pint is worth its weight in guineas to a rich man. To think of Deal boatmen and niggers swilling such nectar!” “Mason,” said I, speaking low, “give me now your attention. In the run of this schooner arc ton chests loaded with money, bars of silver and gold, and jewelry. This vessel was a pirate, and her people valued their booty at £90,000 to £100,000.” His jaw fell. Ho stared as if ho knew not whether i t was ho or I that was mad. “Here is evidcnco that I speak the truth,’’ said I. “A iittlo sample only—but look at it!"’ And I put the pirate captain’s watch into bis hand. He eyed it as though ho discredited the in¬ telligence of his sight, turned it about and returned it to me with a faint “Heaven pre¬ serve me.” Then said ho, still faintly: “You found some of the pirates alive?’ “No.” “Who told ypu that the people of the ves¬ sel valued their plunder at that amount?” I answered by giving him the story of the recovery of the Frenchman. He listened with a gaze of consternation. I saw how it was; ho believed my sufferings had affected my reason. There was only ono way to settle his mind; I took a lantern, and asked him to follow me. As we ’passed through the cabin I whispered to Wilkinson that I meant to show my relative the lading below, and bade him keep the Deal men about him. I had the keys of the chests in my jiocket; lifting the after hatch, we entered the lazaretto, and Mason gazed about him with astonishment. But I was in too great a hurry to return to suffer him to idly stand and stare. I opened the second hatch and descended into the run, and crawling to the jewel chest opened it, removed a few of the small arms, and bade him look for himself. “Incredible! incredible!” he cried. “Isit possible! is it possible! Well, to be sure!” And for some moments ho could find no more to say, so amazed and confounded was he. I quickly showed him the gold and silver ingots, and then returned the fire arms and locked the chests. “These,” said I, emphatically’, pointing to the eases, “have been my difficulty; not the lading, though thero is value there too. My crew knew nothing of these chests—of their value, I mean; they believe them cases of small arms. How am I to get them ashore? If I tell the truth, they will bo seized as piratical plunder. If I {equivocate, I may tumble into a pit of difficulties. I durst not carry them to the Thames—tho river swarms with thieves and custom house people. I am terrified to linger here, lest I be boarded and the booty discovered. Thero is but one plan, I think; we must hire some Deal smug¬ glers to run these chests and the cargo for as. Tho boat now alongside might serve, and I don’t doubt the men are to be had at their own price.” My relative had regained his wits, which the sight of tho treasure had temporarily scattered, and surveyed me thoughtfully while I spoke, and then said, “Let us return to the fire; I think I have a better scheme than yours.” The men still sat around the table talking. Some liquor yet lay in one of the bowls, and the fellows were happy enough. I smiled at Wilkinson as I passed, that he might suppose our inspection below very satisfactory, and I saw him look meaningly and pleasantly at Washington Cromwell, who sat with a laced hat on his head. “Paul,” said Mason, sitting down and fold¬ ing his arms, “your smuggling plan will not do. It would be the height of madness to trust those chests to the risks of running and to the honesty of the rogues engaged in that business." ** “What is to be done?’ “Tell me your lading,” said he. 1 gave it to him as accurately as I could. “Why,” he exclaimed, “a single boat would take a long time to discharge ye; observe the perils—several boats would mean a large number of men; they would eat you up; they would demand so much you would have nothing left. And suppose they opened the chests! No, your scheme is worthless.” “What’s to do, then, in God’s name?’ “I’ll toll you!” he exclaimed, smiling with the complacency of a man who is master of a gn at fancy. “I shall sail to Dover at once. ’Tis now a quarter past 4. Give me twelve hours to make Dover; I shall post straight to London and bo there by early morning. Now, Paul, attend you to this. Today is Wednes¬ day; by to-morrow night you must contrive to bring j our ship to an anchor off Barking LeveL” “The Thames!'' I cried. Ho nodded. I looked at him anxiously, He leaned to me, putting his hand on my leg. “I own a lighter,” said he. “She will he alongside of you at dusk. I have people of my own whom I can trust. The lighter will empty your hold and convey the lading to a ship chartered by me, arrived from the Black sea on Sunday and lying in the pool The stuff can be sold from that ship aq it is- “But the chests— the chests, Mason!” “They shall be lowered Into another boat and taken ashore and put into a wagon that will be in waiting—I in it—and driven to my home.” I clapped him on the shoulder in a trans¬ port. schemed, indeed!” I cried. “But “Nobly from the customs have we nothing to fear people?’ “No, not low down the river and at dark, You bring up for convenience, d’ye see? Mind it is dark when you anchor. A lighter and boat shall be awaiting yon. It is down tiie river, yon know, that all the lumpers drop with the lighters they go adrift in from ships’ sides. There’s more safety in smuggling over Thames mud than on this coagt shingle. One thought more: You say that Wilkinson be lieves the chests hold small arms?” “Yes.” “Then account to him for sending the chaste away separately by saying that I have found a purchaser, aud that they are going to him direct. You have your cue—you see all!” “All.” “Let me hurry, then, Paul. That brandy should fetch you half a guinea a pint. You are hi luck’s way, Paul. See that you bring your ship along safely. Till to-morrow night!” He claspod and wrung my hand, and ran into the cabin. “Now, lads, off with us!” he cried. “Off to Dover! Put mo ashore there smartly, and you shall find your account. Off now—time presses!” Five minutes afterward the boat was gone. When fortune falls in love with a man she makes him a bounteous mistress. Every¬ thing fell out as I could have desired. We got our anchor at 5, and by daybreak were off Hastings, jogging quietly along toward London river, the weather conveniently ob¬ scure, the wind south, and forty hours before us to do thovTiif.rf. I ekactly explained my relative’s scheme to Wilkinson and the others, who declared themselves perfectly satifled, Wilkinson adding that though he had not objected to tho Deal smuggling project he throughout considered the risk too heavy to adventure. I told them that Mr. Mason believed he could immediately find a pur¬ chaser for the small arms, in which case they would have to be sent privately ashore; and to give a proper color to this ruse I made them pack away all the remaining weapons in the arms room and carry them to tho run, ready to be taken with the other chests. Once fairly round the Forelands, half my anxieties fell from me. There was no longer the French cruiser or privateer to be feared; and however wonderingty the people of my own country's vessels might store at the un¬ common figure of my schooner, they could find no excuse to board us. Besides, as I have said, I was greatly helped by the weather, which, continuing hazy, though happily never so thick as to oblige me to stop, delivered me to the sight only of such vessels as passed close, and offered me only as a mere smudge to tho shore. We arrived off Barking Level at 7 o’clock on the Thursday evening, and dropped an¬ chor close to a lighter that lay thero with a large boat hanging by her. It was tlien very dark. The first person to come on board was Mason. He was followed by several men, ono of whom he introduced to me os his head clerk, who he said would see to the unload¬ ing of the schooner and to the transshipment of the goods to the ship in the Pool. Ho in¬ formed me that there was a covered vpn waiting on shore; and telling Wilkinson that the small arms had been disposed of, and that Mr. Mason would band over the pro¬ ceeds on our calling at bis office, I went with a party of my relative’s men into the run, and presently had the whole of the chests in the boat Mason went with her. Then, as she disappeared in tho darkness, but not till then, did I draw the first easy breath I had fetched since the hour of the col-, lision of the Laughing Mary with the iceberg. A sob shook me; I had gone through much; many wonderful things had happened to me; I had been delivered from such perils that the mere recollection of them will stir my hair, though it is years since; pay first duty! knew, and I discharged it by withdrawing Jo iqy cabin, and kneeling with humble and grate¬ ful heart before the throne of that being to whom I owed everything. POSTSCRIPT. Hero concludes the remarkable narrative of Mr. Paul Rodney. It is to be wished that he had found the patience to tell us a little more. The circumstance of his dying in 1823 worth $31,000 leads me to suspect that his associate, TasS«^ J ; gI 3 »*Iy Inm-assufiiiiikat exaggerated the value of the treasure. he lived very quietly, and that the lady ho married, who bore him two children, both of whom died young, was of a nun-like sim¬ plicity of character, and loved show and ex¬ travagance as little as her husband. Hence there is no reason to suppose that he squan¬ dered any portion of the fortune that bad in the roost extraordinary manner ever heard of fallen into his hands. I have ascertained that he very substantially discharged the great obligation that his relative Mason laid him under, and that his three men received £1,000 apiece. It is possible, then, that the pirates were themselves deceived; that what they had taken to be gold or silver ingots were not all so; or it might be that the case of jewelry was less valuable than the admir- ring and astonished eyes of a plain sailor, who admits that he hod never before seen such a sight, figured it. Be this, however, as it may, it is nevertheless certain, as proved by Mr. Rodney’s last will and testament, that he did uncommonly well out of his adventure on the ice. Whatever may be thought of his story of the Frenchman’s restoration to life, in other directions Mr. Rodney’s accuracy seems un¬ impeachable. It is quite conceivable that a stoutly built vessel, locked up in the ice and thickly glazed, should continue in an excel¬ lent state of preservation for years. The confession of his superstitious fears exhibits honesty and candor. It is related that a Capt. Warren, master of an English merchant ship, found a derelict in August, 1775, that had long been ice F.ourstl, with her cabins filled with the bodies of the frozen crew, “His own sailors, however, would not suffer him to search the vessel thoroughly, through superstition, and wished to leave her imme¬ diately.” A pity they did not try their hands at thawing one of the poor fellows; the result might have kept Mr. Rodney’s strange ex¬ perience in countenance! Accounts of vast- bodies of ice, such as Mr, Rodney fell in with, will be found in the “South Atlantic Directory.” For instance: “Sir James C. Ross crossed Weddel’s track in lflt. 65 degs. S., and where be had found an open sea Ross found an Ice pack of an im¬ passable character, along w hich be sailed for 160 miles; and again, when only 1 deg. be¬ yond the track of Cook, who had no occasion to enter the pack, Ross was navigating among it for fifty-six flays. “But these appear insignificant when com¬ pared with a body of ice reputed to have been passed by t wenty-one ships during the months of December, 1854, and January, February, March and April, 1855, floating in the South Atlantic, from lat, 44 degs. S., long. 28 dees. Its W., to lat. 40 degs. S., long. 20 degs. W. elevation in no case exceeded 300 feet. The first account of it was received from the Great Britain, which, in December, 1854, was reported to have steamed fifty mi lee along the outer side of the longer shank. One ship was lost upon it; others embaj’ed.” TBit END. The vanilla bean is the costliest bean on earth. It flourishes in Mexico, chiefly in Papantla and Misantlo. It grows wild, and is gathered and marketed by tha natives. TWt MOOD THE CZAR the FMMtslon of Absolute Power Load* to a Special Mental Disease. IV 'Tuincoy, in his wonderful study of the 7 Ceosara, the paper in which Ilia !*>■• suggestive narrative and hiscon- tr ~-t the resources of language are pt [*i by seen at their l est, is, so to speak, dri.cn wonder at the wild -ittftiineaa of his subjects to suggr ? - .i all the Cmsars ot the Julian W.i were mail. Caligula may have been, though his symptoms, those as recorded by Suetonius, are rather of delirium tremens; but the theory which makes of the grand though sinister statesman, Tiberius, w i gave the Roman monarchy its final imp; annut of disordered mind in the ordinary medi¬ cal sense, will not readily bo accepted as correct. He was no more mad tlian Philip II, whose private life was much of tke same kind. It would, as we read history, be far truer to say tliat power, when really ab¬ solute, so absolute that the volition is executive and the necessity for self restraint is unfelt, produces of itself a special sanity, because mental disease, which is not in¬ it would disappear with the power, but has at intervals, like the passion of children, many of its external symptoms and effects. Nero, the artist amperor, who was always seeking th# impossible, and wliom the early Cliris- tians believed to be- tho r entable incarna¬ tion of evil, may be said undoubtedly to have suffered from it; so did one or two of the Italian tyrants of the Rennaissance; snd so, in our judgment, though it is a disputable point, did Ivan the Terrible. Power of that sort, though it does not al¬ ways injure the mind—for several of the Caesars and some of the emperors of Delhi were men of splendid sanity and judgement—when predisposed it happens to fall to a man by drink, by inherited tendency or or by special solitariness of nature, undoubtedly weakens the re¬ straining force of the will and strength¬ ens impulse until many of his act# resemble closely the acts of madmen. Half the great sovereigns of Asia, if their private lives were accurately known, would be seen to have liad their charac¬ ters, so to speak, poisoned by power, as directly as if they had been poisoned with one of the drugs which temporarily dis¬ turb reason. Drink, wild and continuous drunken¬ ness with bad brandy, was tho predis¬ posing cause in Peter the Great, and, it is believed, in Theebaw, and probably in the Emperor Baber, who, wise by day¬ light, would in the moonlight occupy himself in jumping from battlement to battlement of his ]<alace, eighty feet from the ground. In Czar Paul the predis¬ posing cause was probably an insane ten¬ dency, though that is not quite proved; andon Alexander III it is a solitariness almost beyond example. There is not a man in the world more deeply to be pitied than the present emperor of Russia, The loneliness of kings, a kmelines natu¬ rally resulting from their plaoe, which hardly admits of friendship and does not admit of equality, is always terrible, and is frequently felt by themselves so severely that they break through all restraints of prudence and moral law in order to bs rid of it.-—The Spectator. m New Adverthements. £lJh]Q UUliO REVOLVERS, tend stamp for Pittsburgh, price list to JOHNSTON & SON, Penn. Ml CONSUMPTIVE Ha 1 fa?ci_ . !&• wor*t cjuks and lathe bertremedy ___________ for all affi f the throe! end lungs, end diseases arising from impure blood *»4 exhaustion. The feeble and sick, strugffUfig against disease, and slowly drifting to the grrawe, will in many cases recover their health by the tli gerous. ami disorders of »tomac EXHAUSTED VITALITY M'ira I senates of life, the great Hedlcal Work o t the age on Manhood, Herron* and I Physical Debility, Premature Decline, Error* of Youth, and the untold miseries consequent thereon, 505 pages Svo, 125 prescription* for all disease*,. Cloth, full gilt, only #1.08, by* mall, sealed. Illustrative sample free to all young and mlddiaagcil men. Send now. The Gold and Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the Mo¬ tional Medical Association. Address P. O. box 1SS5, Poston, Mas*., or Dr. W. B. PARKER, grad note of Harvard Medical College, 28 year*' practice In Boston, who may be consulted confld«itlaUy. Socetalti.Dtw._-L5 of Man. Office No. tBnldnchst. G. A. CUNNINGHAM, GRIFFIN,: : : GEORGIA, Has Been Appointed Land Agent foi Spalding Counly, by the Georgia Bureau of Immigration, and all the parties sale by having placing land their for sale property can expedite in hie hands. uable Full lands par*fculars in regard to the be most obtai in this county can full li by addHMsing him ae above. A # houses and lands and lots ef all deacrlpti PARKER'S GINGER TONIC n-e power o»or diwaoe unknown so odw-raoediM. Weak Longa Hheumatwm, Feraele OompUint*. aadwrwel* and tbs discresslna iusof the stomach, Uver, Kidney* would thousands lUaeiy to uteofFsaxsa’s tOsgrav* *bo rssovsr * Tama - H*cwx~a(^Su'wuUsinKrset,5. . at Drew T. PARKER’S BALSAM] HAIR Ctsaaaas S^^^Voil* and beenOfssthehaW Wertegvfersy te sanasssFRiBM HINDERCORN8. afeJi FOR OLD PEOPLE! In old people the ne uoui s y ste m is wcakspsd, snd that murt be str en g then ed. One of the most prominent medical writer* at the day, in gttakky of the prers- , y-w lence of tbeumatic troubles mtcmg the agedyasys s ** The +J2A various pains, rhetuaeticar other, which old A o psojjis people rtmrm !■ oftca of, ^ which ..... ^ complain and materially disturb their comfort, result from ' »disordered <! nerrrr.” There it is in am* shell —the medicine iedid»e fat foe fiJd okl people people »u*be must he a a nerve nerve tonic. tonic. Old people are beset with constipation, flata- ocy, drowsiness, diarrhoea, indigestion, rites- ~ r tnatism, origin, neuralgia. Paine’s These Celery diseases ataposaA, me o t w*vous f that great nerve tonic, is almost a specific in these disorders, en, and and by its regulating influence oo the ^ liver, - bowels, end kidneys, remove* Old es people the disorders find it stimulating peculiar to old age. to the vital powers, productive of appetite, and a promoter of digestion. Sold bydnigfisu. fi.oo. Six for # 5 . 00 . S«ad for ti#ht-pa#e paper, with many tadiaoeiols from nervous, , t detailtawd, " and aged people, who UeesTaias's Crtery Co*pound. WELLS. RICHARDSON & CO., Burlington, Vt. WHIPS, WAGONS, BUGGIES AND IIAPNK 8 S —w- ' Studebaker Wagon i -White Hickory Wagon I Jackson G. Smith Wagon I Jackson G. Smith Buggy I ■ Arid the COLUMBUS BUGGY at the Lowest Price* possible. Repair* « old Buggies a Specialty. W. H. SPENCE, aug284Aw6m Oor. Hill A Taylor Straeta, GRIFFIN, GA’ Shipment Finest Teas, CRACKERS, ALL SORTS, 15c. lb. HAMS, BONELESS SHOULDERS. ETC. FINEST FLOUR ON THE MARKET. BIG M O N El Y I I 5,000 AG f NTS WANTED at ono* to sappy TEN MIL- CLEVELAND AND fiBRMAN NO MORE EYE-GLASSES Mo re MITCHELL’S EYE-SALVE A Certain, Safe and ESerti ve Remedy for Sore, Weak and Inflamed Eyes Producing •ad Restoring I-«*g th* - lighted*****, light of u th* Old. Care* Tumors, Tear Red rops, Granulation, Matted Eye Lath Stye, ES AND PRODUCING Eyes, Q J1CK RE¬ LIEF AND PERMANENTCUBE Also, equally efficacious when used in oth er maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever Sores, Tu mors, Salt Rheum, Borns, riles, or wherever inflammation exists, MITCHELL’S SALVE may be used to advantage, old bv all Druggists at 1 25cents. A GREAT YEAR in the history of the United States is now upon tu. Every person of Intelligence desire* There to 1* keep pace with th* course than ol tta event*. subscribe lor no better way to do ao to The Macon Telegraph. Its new* facilities addition are nnaurpnaed to th# fullest by any Assocl- paper In the South. In tagton will be the moat importent and most In¬ teresting news centre la the country. The Washington Correspondence had. ot the Telegraph is the very best that can be the latest Its regular correspondent furnishes new* and gossip In lull d’^patchea J. Cummings, Frequeat Rectal letters from Hon. Amos member of Congress troa New York, of Frank the tost U. Carpenter, and W. Writer# A. Croffht, at th* three capital, dis¬ known newapaper important Issue* ot the cuss the liveat and most <J *T fie Democratic Tariff Reform Telegraph 1# a line with the policy of pet-, r. resident It U thoroughly CleveUad In and the Democratic i campaign tbs pan/. Tel In the coming notonly national give all the but graph will new#, stand¬ will discus# all public l**uea irom the point ef genuine Democratic faith. Subscribe afionce. Woily, *s* year, •7 OO Molly, six month*, a oo Dally, three month*, % oo Daily, oae month, .75 Weekly, one year, 1 OO Terms-. Gash In advance. Address THX TJXXGKAPB, Money. Gxoaoix MACON, GEORGIA. - Jo}- TTilFTY-FIFTH ANNUAL SESSION o; * X September 26th and claees June and 28th Kltgm.tij- famished claos rooms uvat, new cottages for student*. Ceut V.ly located. Good board at reasona¬ ble rated. For catalogues and other information ap¬ ply Jnlyl2w4 to REV. J. A. BATTLE, President RuleJVisi. Duncan,Martin A Perdue) W.T.H* Taylor. I State S uperior ot Georgia, Court, Spalding February County. Term. 1888. In Hr tition It being of Duncan, represented Martin to the A Court Perdue by that the pe¬ Deed of Mortgage, dated the X85h day by oonveyedjoeaid o January,1887, Duncan, Martin W.T. A Perdue BLTaylor “* certain parcel ot part land of lot containing No, 115 thirty in the (SOI 4th acres Distriot Ming M by Spalding Jack Crawler, county, Ga., the bounded South by oo F. the Chern¬ East on ies*, North by F. L. Starr, West by soma of my own lands, said land, thirty aceea, be¬ ing worth of securing three hundred payment dollar*,” of for premia the purpose the a sory,not# made by the said W. k T. H .Taylorto the said Duncan, Martin A Perdue, doe on the lstdayof Oct.,1887, for the earn of One Hundred and Forty Eight and 60-W0 Dolton, amount is now due and un It is ordered that the said W.T. W.l H. Taylor dopay into this Court, by Interest the first and day dev «the next term the principal. cost*. _____ due on said note and mortgage or show coos* V any he has to the contrary, or that in de¬ fault said Dunoon, thereof Martin foreclosure A Perdue be granted ot sold to Mort¬ the gage, and the equity of redemption of the said W. T.HTaylor therein be forever barred, said and that W. T. service H. ray) of title according rule be petfeeted on or to UW. JAMES 8. BOYNTON, 8. C. F. O. Beck A Cleveland, Petitioner# Judge Att'ye. I certify that the foregoing Is a tree copy from ora Term, Term the the 1888. Minutes of thia Wu Court, M. this Teokos, Febans, ry ■ feb35oamim Clerk . B.C. 8. C. MAN WANTS BUT LITTLE Here below, but hi Wonts that little mighty quick. A um WANT I or a big ono if promptly 4IM by «4* vertising in?he3Daihr3| or^ * - ‘.Weekly ?NEWS, ADVERTISERS :an learn the exact cos? of any proposed line o’ advertising in Americai: papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., Newspaper Advavtiaing Burvau, to Sprua* m.. H*W Y*fk land lOoto so* lOO -A sq *