Newspaper Page Text
DAILY ENQUIRER - SUN : COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING JUNE 12,
ranim a
Mon. Henry R. Harris a Candidate in the
fourth District.
|1r 1« la IT., llancla or in'. trlrn.N who II III
I'res. 114m Claims fnr itr.KIt’i'll.in—llifN. V IV.
Harris, of Carroll, Snairrslo.1 In 1lo Sano- Coil-
norlo.a Other I'ollllrnl Ne«t hi »Ilf Slat. .
The congressional cnnijmign begins to
move up n little, and there is another
liiehinond in the Held. As will be seen by
tlu article republished from tile Meriweth
er Vindicator, Hon. Henry K. Harris is in
till' hands of his friends, and ilia claims
will be pressed before the convention.
There hies been no public announcement
made by Colonel Harris, but lie lias writ-
ten a number of letters to friends in the
district asking them to watch after his in
terest. As Colonel Revlll is considered
ns being in Colonel Harris’ confi
dence, the article in tlie Vindicator may
tH' taken as authority that Harris is in the
race arid will contest for the nomination.
Hon. Thomas AV. Grimes and Hon. Alva
lb freeman are both making an active
canvaso of the district, and. wo are glad to
note, in a still hunt way There is no
necessity for any attempt to stir the people
up ujwin this question, as, like the guberna
torial race, it is one that partakes very
largely of a personal preference. Mr.
Grimes is now visiting some of the lower
counties, and in a day or two will go to the
northern part. Mr. Freeman him made a
trip to several of the counties south of the
mountain, but gave Muscogee the go by.
His announced that Troup county will
have at least one candidate in the field—
Col. J. H. Fannin- and that perhaps one
or two others arc waiting to see where the
lightning will strike, lion. S. AV. Harris,
ofCamill, is also mentioned fuvorably as
a good man to represent the district.
ray hit tfell with those who heard him. I
hardly know how to say this county will
ro. f believe that Reese, at this writing,
— — 1. R. n.
uas some the advantage. Should Col
Vlubet enter the ruce, of course he would
•nrry Putnam county.
The executive committee of (he second
ongresaional district are requested to meet
it .Albany, at noon on Thursday, June 17th,
10 lake fnlo consideration the time and
dace for holding a convention to nomi-
mte a candidate to represent that district
in the next congress.
A Southemized Yankee Central, Southwestern, Montgomery & Eufaula
tVho Has Eight Pounds and a Half of
Alien Flesh.
OOUVEIF^AIISnilES.
All Trains on this system arc|run by Central or 90 Meridian time.
I'nllll
Trnop's t'amllilsle.
LaUkanuk, June 10.—Our townsman,
(.'clone! J. H. Fannin, announces himself
ns a candidate for congress. He is capable
and popular. Tills district is mixed as to
poliUcs and candidates. It is believed that,
Col. Harris will probably I hi pressed by
friends, though he has not said he is a can
didate- The question really seems to be
< irinies or Freeman.
HARRIS FOR CONGRESS.
In Mir Us ail, of IIP Friends, Who Will lb
Meriwether Vindicator.
It has been frequently asserted by friends
of op,rosing candidates that Hon. Henry
H. Harris, present representative in con
gress from this district, would not he in
the race for congress this year. These as
sertions have thus far gone uucontradicted,
although friends of Colonel Harris in every
county in the district have been urging
him to allow the use of his name. ItecenUy
these friends, and they are numerous and
decided, have come to the Hettled deter
mination of placing Mr. Harris before the
democracy of the district for re-nomina
tion. They claim Hint lie is better equip
ped than ever for the responsible duties of
congressman and can better serve the dis
trict than he has ever done. He has now
eight years’ experience as a representative, I
nnd his friends will press him again for re-
election.
Col. Harris is at Washington, and from
the early day set for holding the conven
tion it seems next to Impossible for Col.
JIurris to do any canvassing. He is em
phatically in the hands of his friends.
Tile members of the executive committee
expressly disclaim any intention of fixing
the time of holding the convention in the
interest of any candidate, but it is evident
Hon. AAA M. Hawks has announced hlin-
.>■11' a candidate for 1 he state senate from
Sumter county. He tins been senator for
i wo terms.
Tin democratic executive committee of
i taker county lias decided to hold a pri
mary ,'lection for di legates to the guber
natorial convention
As there seems to i*e no one authorized
to call the democratic party together in
■Jconoe county, it ha been deemed advisa
ble to invite the people to meet in the
courthouse at AViitkinsvllle on Saturday,
June 17th. at 11! o'clock, to select delegates
to the stilt ■ and congressional conventions,
or appoint such a day the meeting may see
proper.
A primary election Is 1 held at each of
the election precincts in Terrell county on
•Saturday, the 2Bth day of June, for the
purpose of obtaining the sentiment of the
people ns to who they desire for governor
nnd representative, the voters voting di
rectly for the candidates.
THE ERUPTION OF ETNA.
that the short time allowed will greatly
■(fort
embarrass Col. Harris in any effort he
might make to make a canvass. The con
vention is called a month earlier than ever
before known in the district. Congress
will likely hold longer than usual. Before
that body adjourns the delegates to the
convention ma.v have been chosen from
every county in the district. Ho it will be
seen that the early day tor holding
the convention docs inure largely to
the disadvantage of Colonel Harris.
Though unintentional on the part of the
committee, his opponents could not have
arranged any plan that would have hurt
Col. Harris worse- than the fixing of the
convention on the 130th of July. In less
than four weeks all the delegates will have
been chosen. The friends of Col. Hurris
have, os yet, made no attempts at organi
zation, thinking there would be time after
congress adjourned to meet Col. Harris
and consult with him in regard to his can
didacy. At lids late day his friends must
he active or it will be still asserted that
Col. Harris Is not in the field and thus
delegates will be chosen in the interest ex
clusively of tin- other aspirants.
AVo make the aiiovc announcement by
authority and at the request of tho friend's
of Col. Harris They desire that his ser
vices may In- secured for the fiftieth con
gress and desire that ail may know of his
candidacy so that concert of action may lie
Secured for the short time allowed.
The present eruption has come rather
fortunately for the Etna guides, says the
Iiondon Standard. Their season Is a short
one, for In spring the mountain is still cov
ered with snow, and In winter is 3o difficult
of asccnl, that they usually refuse to under
take the task of escorting the foolhardy
tourist. At any time the climb is a stiff
one, and even on the finest summer day
the wind which blows on the summit is
cold onough to make the warmest cloth
ing far from unacceptable. In every
resjieet, however, the ascent is a more
profitable task than the like feat on
Vesuvius. It is pleasant to ride or
to tramp through tho luxuriant
verdure which clothes the lowor slopes of
the mountain. First come the vineyards,
then in the “boscosa” the zone of oaks
and chestnuts. Above these grow beeches
and birches, or, on the northern side of
the mountains, dense forests of the pine
which the Hlcilians know as “zappinu,’’
while at 7000 feet woods entirely cease,
though lierlierries, Junipers, violets and
several ilowors peculiar to this waterless,
oft-changing soil attract the eye as you
toil over sharp lava or crumbling ashes.
The desolation is what most strikes the
traveler. It Is the “regione deserta.” The
climber seems to have loft behind every
thing that reminds him of the centuries
which have vanished since Virgil sung how
“horrlflcls Juxta /Etna, rulnis.” The deso
lation is awful. Not a living thing can be
seen, for even the -Etna groundsel ceases
Siam after the Casa Inglese is passed. The
wolves and wild iwani of the lower reaches
of the mountains shun this region: even
the harts ami rabbits avoid 1U As late as
the sixteenth century almost Impenetrable
forests stretched from tho summit down
to the valley of the Oantara ; and Cardinal
Ik-mlio, writing about that period, is loud
in his praise of the splendid planes which
grew in such volcanic soil. Those have,
however, disappeared. and in I860
the dense Boseui della Cerrilla and
di IJnguagloesa on tho northeast side
suffered severely from (he eruption of that
year. There is something majestic about
Etna. Trees we can have elsewhere, but
black, lonely wastes, like those around the
crater, are only to be seen In regions
harassed, as this has been, by constant
eruption of burning materials and molten
rock. The ashes are a dazzling whiteness,
and though in winter tho snow and ice lie
thick, the fire and the gases seething
through the i*orolls soil are ever contend
ing for the mastery. The view from the
summit of Etna is indescribably grand.
The sunrise is mo^nifloent, and when once
bathed In the Italian daylight, the scene is !
entrancing. The mountain, with its circuit
of 180 miles, is the one prominent feature
in the Sicilian landscape, and from its lofty
summit, 10,867 feet, a radius of 150 miles,
comprising an area larger than Ireland,
can he scanned. All Sicily is spread before
the eye as if it were u map. On the south j
is Malta, on the north the Faro of Messina. ;
the Neptunian mountains and the Lapari ;
islands, while toward the west there is
little difficulty in making out the Pizzo of
I’osloone, and Cammarata, and the Aega-
dian isles, which is as blue ns the greet
shadow of Etna is purple.
This goiitloimin. the senior member i-f
riu> firm of Slieri'lnn Bros., fresco artists
nul rieenriiUirs, of Atlanta, Gil., is u gen
uine yankee by birth, hut a southerner ljv
I'hoiee and adoption. Burn in the puri
tan city of Providence, K. 1..M1 years ago,
at nil early age he turned liis attention to
art. He is by nature an artist, ami his
rears of study and tuition in eastern cities
have developed him into one of tin- fore
most young decorators of his time. Some
years ago he came south to deeorute tin 1
Interior of the Church of the I maculate
t'< inception, at Atlanta, and, liking the
people and climate, determined to locate
south of Mason and Dixon’s line. Since
then he has been joined by his brothers,
F. K. and George, and churches and fine
dwellings in every principal city of the
south attest their ability,energy and en
terprise.
“My system,” said Mr. Sheridan during
a recent conversation, “had been for some
time
OKAIll’A I.l.V lU NNI.NO DOWN.
“I was not sick, in a general sense of
the word, hut my physical strength was
feeling the severe strain I had been for
years putting upon it in the active men
tal lalsir necessary in the pursuit of my
avocation. While 1 have not u hat is
termed a delicate constitution, I am by
no means a robust fellow, and have what
might in 1 called the ‘New England mold,’
physically. For some time past I had
been losing vigor, when my attention
was called to Hunnicutt’s Rheumatic Cure
as a tonic and strengthener of the sys
tem. I U gun using it ulxmt four weeks
ago and since that time have gained eight
and a half pounds in weight. My blood
is as pure as spring water and my entire
system revitalized. I have no hesitancy
in saying ihat it is the bi-st general tonic
111miii tlie market to-day.”
and after Sunday. May 9th, 1H86, Pass
»nger Trains on these Roads will run as follows:
#^-READ DOWN.
2HF-RKAD UP.
No. 15* ; No. 53*
No. 51* iiah A
Atinntn IMvInIimi.
No. 52*
No. 54* j No. 16*
Acc. Pass g'r.
Pass'g'r.
Pass’g’r.
Pas.s'g r. Acc.
5 40 p in'. 8 20 p m
8 40 a m Lv
SAVANNAH
Ar
4 07 p m
6 00 a in | 8 05 a m
7 25 pm 9 56 pin
10 25 a ni• Ar
. ...Oliver...
Lv
2 85 }) m
1 14 ft in fi 22 ft iu
8 15 pm 1103pm
11 10 ft m Ar
. Milieu...
l.v
1 80 p m
8 10 a ni' 5 00 a m
1 11 15 p ru
12 00 m Lv...
... Milieu....
1 13 p m
3 00 a m ...
No. 1* 2.33am
3 27 p mlAr
. ...Gordon,..
Ar
10 19 a m
1135pm No. 2*
PnssV'r. 3 20 am
4 20 pm Ar
MACON...
Lv
9 40 a m
10 50 pm Pass’g'r.
• 45 a in 3 35 ji ni
5 40 p m Lv
MACON...
Ar
9 30 0 m
10 40 a in 7 00 a m
. ; 25 ji ni 5 18 u ui,
7 19 p m Ar
Ba rues vi lie.
Lv
8 G? a m
9 03 p ru 1 5 20 p m
: l 25 ft rn 5 18 a m
7 19 p m Lv
Bamcsville.
Av
s 02 ft m
9 03 pn\' 5 20pm
i 2 00 m 5 53 ft. m
7 56 p m, Ar.
.. Griffin ...
Ar
.7 31 ft in
S:!9pm, 4 ,|0 |> m
1 .35 p m 7 32 a m
9 36 p m Ar
•ATLANTA .
Lv
6 00 a m
6 .50 p ill 3 10 p ill
No, IV*
No. 17* 4 Cilrnl
Railroad
- AiikiinIii
No. 18*
No. 20* ,
Pns«V’r.
1 ass’g r.
lira ncti.
Pass’g'r.
Pnss’g r. j
3 10 ft in
1 30 p m'Lv
. . .Milieu...,
Ar
11 45 ft ill
1 00 a nil
6 15 a in
3 15 p m Ar
.. .Augusta....
Lv
9 30 a in
0 30 a m'
No. 26r .M »«l»<f.
Kfttouteii
No. 25f
Acc. |
ltranclx.
Ace.
j
J
2K p m Lv.,
M f\n. »n
1
4 Q0 pm Lv
Gordon...
Ar
8 10 a m
5 45 p m Ar
Milledgevill
\r
6 30 a 111
7 10 p m Ar
...Eaton ton.
Lv
5 15 a m
No. 35+•
No. 33*
No. 34+
No. 36f T
1 Pa,ss g’r.
Pass g’r. I |emmi
i onuty Hnilroml.
Pass’g’r.
Pass’g'r. j
.•■•■! h 30 p il.
11 30 a m Lv
.Barnesville.
Ar
7 50 n in
4 31 p m
1 6 36 pm!
12 35 p m, Ar
.Tliomuston.
Lv
6 50 ft m
3 80 p m;
No. 2+ •
- - - - - -
Pass’g’r. Sit van nnh
. 44. A A. A.
Ui«llron<l.
i
^ .
12 30 p ni Lv
... Griffin
.... Ar
9 10 a m
|
3 15 p in i Ar..
.. Ncwnan ...
Ar
6 58 a m
5 10 p m Ar
.Carrollton...
Lv
5 30 a in i
i
No. 51*
No. 1* N. W. and
A K.
Kail way—
No. 2* |
No. 52*
Pass’g'r.
Poss’g r.
Tfaln Islnc*
Pass’g'r.
Pa^s’g’r. j
2 2M ii m
3 50 a m
1 A0 a m
I B0 a m
fi 22 a m
il 22 a m
S 00 a m
II .50 a in: J,v.
10 59 a m Ar..
1 02 p m Ar.
2 52 p m Ar..
3 58 p ni 1 Ar..
■I 01 p mi Lv.
5 41 p m Ar .
5 41 p m'Lv.
7 23 p mlAr..
MACON
Furt Valley
Sinithville
Cuthbert
Eufaula
Eufnula
. .Union Springs. .
... Union Springs...
.MONTGOMERY
...Ar 6 15 p m .
• Ari 4 01 p ill!.. |.
..Ari 1 24 p ill 1 l 01 a m;.
..Ar; 11 59 a ml 11 34 p in
.. l.v I 10 5.5am 10 33 pm
. A r 10 50 a in 10 88 p mi.
..l.v| 9 18 a m 9 04 p ml
Ar 9 18 a m 9 04 p m .
. Lv 7 40 a ill 7 30 p m .
No. 25*
PosB’g’r.
No. 53* j No. S‘
Pass’g'r. Pass’g'r.
No. 4*
8. W. U. K.- Albnuy Mur. | Pnsa'g'r.
No. 51* j
Paas’g’r.
7 10 p ml Lv.
8 17 p m 1 Ar
8 17 p ml Lv
10 11 p ml Ar
10 11 p m'Lv
1 .57 a m 11 10 p m: Ar .
MACON..
..Fort Valley.,
..Fort Valley.
.. Sinithville..
Smithville ..
.. ALBANY ..
9 40 a m
8 34 a 111;
8 14 a in . I
6 26 a m I
6 26 a m 2 28 a m; 1 00 p m
5 40 a Hi 1 35 a m | 12 00 in
Pass’g'r, ] 8. W. K. It. -IVrr.y Ilrnncli.
No. 221
Pass’g’r.
■ Fort Valley..
Perry
..Ar 3 45 pm
.Lv! 3 00 p in-
Blakely Extcn- No. 26t
«l«n. ; Pass’g'r.
1 45 p m I.\
8 1.5 p m, Lv.
8 .53 p in Ar .
.Sinithville.
.. ..Albany...
.....Blakely...,
..Ar I 00 p i
..Ar 12 00 i
..Lv. 8 00 a i
No. 27t H. W. B. H.-Eorl Galn.-s No. 28+
Pass’g’r. Hriiucli. | Pass’g’r.
3 05 p m | Lv...
4 28 p m|Ar...
What They Sot.
An inhabitant of London consumes in a
year thirty-two times as much fish as an
inhabitant of Berlin, and though the stores
of the North sea are open to tho German
metropolis, Paris with her 2,000,000 inhabi
tants consumes more fish than the whole
of Germany with a population of F47.000,-
000. Berlin requires yearly 1625 million
rounds of food, including 100 million
pounds of fresh meat, 3 million pounds of
birds of all sorts, 2J million pounds of
•HUGH THOMAS IT!.I.CM,
now in liis throe score and ten years, and
one of the most prominent men in Geor
gia, 1 kirn and rinsed near I’nion Springs,
Ala., where lie amassed quite a fortune
by strict integrity and honesty, and in
later veal's connected with the wholesale
drug house of Pemberton, Vallum it Co.,
of Atlanta, Ga., and now a citizen of that
city, said a few days ago in the presence
of a reporter:
“My wife had been for many years a
constant sufferer from rheumatism'. Her
joints were swollen and distorted, great
knots hud formed upon tier hand. She
could only with great difficulty and pain
manage to walk, and was a constant suf
ferer from this dreadful disease. We
tried everything wu could read or hear
of, and tisik advice of eminent practi
tioners without any benefit in the way of
permanent relief. I was induced to try
Hunnicutt’s Rheumatic Cure a short time
No. 29+ I — ■. aot
Pass’g'r. Kut'aulHand t'laytuu Utillroml. P&ss’g’r.
1 45 p 111 Lv.
6 011 p in Ar..
. no. i9:
| Acc. 1
No. 5* !
Puss’g'r.
8. H . U. U.—ColiinihtiN Main No. 6*
LId<». j Pass’g’r.
i No. 181
j Acc. ,
! 7 15 p m I
1 9 45 p m 1
! 2 43 p m
10 00 a m
11 09 a m 1
2 25 p m
Lv MACON Ar 438pm!
Ar Fort Valley Ar 3 20 p m'
Ar Columbus Lv 12 00 ni
7 35 a m 1
5 12 a m 1
11 45 p m
Trains marked thus * run daily. ’ Trains marked thus f run daily except Sunday. Trains
marked J run daily except Saturday.
Elegant Local Sleeping Cars on night Trains as ftillowa: Between Savannah and Augusta trains
Nos. 50 and 54; between Savannah and Macon, trains Nos. 53 and 54; between Savannah and Atlan
ta, trains Nos. 53 and 54.
Pullman Buffett Cars between Cincinnati anil Jacksonville, and through Sitting Car between
Chattanooga and Jacksonville via Atlanta, Albany and Waycross. Through Palace Sleeping Car
between Montgomery and Waycross.
Tickets for all points and Sleeping Car Berths on sale at Union Depot Ticket Office 30 minutes
prior to leaving time of all trains.
WILLIAM ROGERS, Gen’l Snpt., Savannah. T. D. KLINE, Supt. S. W. R. R„ Macon,
w. F. SHEI.LMAN, Traffic Manager, Savannah. G. A. WHITEHEAD, Gen.I Pass. Agent
W, L. CLARK, Agent, Columbus, Ga.
WESTERN RAILROAD OF ALABAMA,
The First-Class Direct Route to all Eastern Cities—308 Miles
Shorter to New York than via Louisville.
game, 77 million litres of milk, 80 million
pounds <
HON. SAMPS. W. HARRIS.
i I Hitili'lHh- frnni t stroll.
Our correspondent, “Occasional,” whom,
by tlie way, we would like to hear from
of hutter, 8 million pounds of
cheese, 19 million pounds of eggs, 51 mil
lion pounds of fruit, 3 million pounds of
oranges, 31 million pounds of fresh fish, 7
million pounds of smoked fish, and 8 mil
lion pounds of pickled fish.
often,-r, suggests that it is about time for
Carroll to put forward one of her own cits
io ns for congress, and names Hon. 8. W,
Harris in that connection. We have heard i
a numlier of citizens mention favorably tlie
propriety of presenting the name of this I
distinguished citizen and upright judge, to |
tlie congressional convention, lie was n
true and gallant officer of the confederate
army, lie is an able lawyer. And !
while his election to congress might not
be considered as adding to the laurels he
■i well won ami worthily worn, it
The Ituinlrliur Mln<1.
“J’a,” said Bobby, sleepily, “can I ask
you one more question if it taint
foolish ?”
“Ya as, one more."
“How much older is a ripe old age than
a green old age Life.
A I/niiUT; (1 1 HAD 141ST FA ITU
in till patent medicines and nostrums and
considered Iter case incurable.
"The effect was magi,'til; the )*iins have
entirely vanished; the swelling and dis
tortion of her joints has disajqieiireil. and
Hu: disease has Usui. 1 verily believe,
eradicated from iier system. Site is still
using ftiii medicine as u precautionary
measure, and her general good health is
being rtsdored by it. 1 can honestlv and
fearlessly recommend Htmnicutt’s fihiMi-
matic Cure as the best medicine, for rheu
matism and the blood ujxm the market.”
For stile by wholesale and retail drug
gists everywhere. Price. $1 a bottle.
Send to us or your druggist for treatise
and history of the White Tiger. J. M.
Hunnicutt A Co., proprietors. Atlanta,
Ga. je-Ulw
R H. GORDON, i Superior (Nlurt. May term, 1884.
Tillman, accompunied by the notes and
mortgage deed, that on tho ftmrth day of May,
Eighteen Hundred and Eighty-three. the defend
ant made and delivered to the plaintiff her two
promissory nous, bearing date the day and year
has j
Would be such a testimonial of apprecia
tion on the part of the iHsiple its must be
most grateful to any patriot heart. So far
as we are- informed, he has not himself
given tin slightest intimation on the sub
ject Me thoroughly understands and ap-
prccinUsH tin- dignity of his present itigh
position, and ii is Unsure sealed.
— - ; . — We know
by tln-ir repeated declunitions that if]
Carroll desires to put in nomination i
one of her own citizens neither 1
Mr. Freeman nor Colonel Grimes will ask |
the county for its votes in the first instance.
From our knowledge of the character of
Hon Henry it. Uarris, who in also under
stood to ix- in the field, we cannot doubt I
that he would take a like honorable view
in the premises. It will be conceded hv
nil that it is right and proper for Carroll,
without disparagement of others, to stand
b\ her own until circumstances, if such
should arise iu the convention, make it
necessary to choose between others.
i.ongriwsUmul hid rirts.
.1 delegates were selected in I
nor
Congre
Banks county Thursday and were instruct
ed to us*.- every honeBt means to secure the
renomination of the present incumbent, 1
Hon. H. u. Turner.
An Futonton special of the 1()th says: I
the Hon. llr. II. H. Carlton addressed a|
huge number of voters in the* court room at 1
thM place yesterday in liis own behalf He
i? 1 , 1" glowing terms of his opponent,
Hoi v Seaborn Uecso, and what he had to 1
oik of saul promiaaory notes to pay to the plain'—
or hearer, twenty-four months after t>ie date
thereof, Eiarhte<*n Hundred and KiKhty-eiffht
Dollars anil Twcaity-two Cents, with in Unrest
fnjm date at eight per ceut pat annum, and if
said uote not paid at maturity, ten per cent
attorney’s fees for the collection thereof, for
value received; and by the other of said promi-
sory notes the defendant promised to jmy to the
plaintiff, or U*arvr, thirty-six months after the
date thereof, Eighteen Hundred and Eighty-
cix'ht Dollars and Twenty-two Cents, with interest
from date at eiifht ^ter cent per annum. iUid if
said note was not paid at maturity, ten per cent
attorney’a fees for tin* colleetion tnenof, for value
received; and that aftATU’artls. on the day tmd
year aforesaid, tin defendant, the letter to securo
the payment of said notes. extcut<yl and deliver-
e»i to thi plaintiff her deed of rnort«a*re, whereby
the said defenvlant iuort*,uvKed to the plaintiff all
that tract or parcel of land situated <.n the west
sale of Broun street in tin- city of Columbus, and
in said ceiunty and state, beinx alHntt twenty-fivo
f»N t in front on Broad street and running b;u k the
full depth ol' said lot, and known its part of lot
number sixty-live, with all the improvements
thereon, upon which is situaUsl Store House
number one hundred and forty-three ; and it fur
ther appearing that said notes remain unpaid :
It is, therefore, ordered that the said defendant
pay into Court on or before the first day of the
next term thereof, the principal, interest, attor
ney’s fees and costs due on said notes, or show
cause to the contrary, if any she can ; and that on
the failure of the defendant so to do. the equity
of redemption in and to said mortgage premises
lx* forever thereafter barred nnd foreclosed.
And it is further ordered that this rule in* pub
lished in the Columbus Enopirek-Spn, a public
gazette prints and published in said city aud
county, once a mouth for four months previous to
tho next term of this Court, or served on the de
fendant or her six-cial agent or attorney, at least
three months previous to the next term of this
Court J.T. WILLIS,
C. J. THORNTON. Judge C. 6. C.
DlaintifTs Attorney.
A true extract from the minutes of Muscogee
Superior Court, May term, 1886.
GEO. Y. POND,
my20 oamtm Clerk 9. C. M. C. Ga.
Close connectiou made with Piedmont Air Line, Atlantao Coast Line, and Cincinnati Southern.
Only 37 hours arid 20 minutes from Montgomery to New York, and only 3d hours and 10 minutes
from New York to Montgomery.
Leave Akron
“ Greensboro...
Marion
“ Selma
Arrive Montgomery.
Leave Montgomery.
Arrive Cowles.
•• Cliehaw.
“ Notusulga..
“ Loachapoka.
“ Auburn
Opelika.
West Point .
LaGrange .
Newnan
Atlanta
8 30
9 32
11 03
3 30
6 15
1211
1 10
1 37
1 52
2 05
2 21
2 n
3 37
t 13
5 3-1
ni,.
’ 15 a m
5 10
8 10
8 30 a ill
9 27 a m
9 47 a m
9 59 a ni
10 10 a in
10 23 a m
10 41 a ni
11 26 a m
11 54 a m
12 59 a ni
2 25 p m
Via the Piedmont Air Line to No
Izoave Atlanta
Arrive Charlotte
Richmond
•• Washington
Baltimore
“ Philadelphia
“ New York
York and East.
ft Htrnse
W ITnOrT TABBED BUILDINO PA PER nnd«r
the weatherboardiu* and fl'Nirg. Warm In wl»-
ter, cool in •munur. ABSOLUTE PREVEMTIVa
HgaiuRt vermin of every Wild. nearly notiiing—
only about ninety ccnta a room. Aek dealern for iteif
writ* . CHARLES H. CORNER, Manufacturer. •
• n 1.0P18VILLK, aa.
I*nl I in tan Palace Cars on Trrifln 53, Moutgomery
South Bound iS^ains. j
8 40 a m, 4 00 pm ,
6 10 p m j 5 00 am,
7 00 a m 4 07 p m
8 00 am! 9 20 pml
9 35 a m, 11 39 p m!
2 40 p m ; 3 30 a m
3 40 p m | 6 30 a m I
to IViiMhiiigton Without Change
No. 50 | No. 52 | No. 4
No
Special Deposit Vault
Arrive
Leave
Arrive
I**uve
Arrive
Atlanta ' 1 15 pm 11
Columbus i 2 20 pm ....
Opelika | 5 05 pm;
Auburn • 5 17pm
IxHvcbapoka | 5 30pm
NoUtsuIga 5 41pm
Chehaw , 5 57 p m
Cowles , 6 14pm
Montgomery 7 15pm
Montgomery ’ 6 15 p m
Selma j 10 I j
Selma
Marion !
Greensboro •
i in
4 45 f
5 00 a in .
5 13am.
5 32am .
5 52 i
00 a m
Akr
8 50 a m
12 10 p m|
2 40 p iii
5 03 p m
6 28 p m .
*idan
Vicksburg .
ShrevejHirt
‘30 p r
1 130 pi
i. 50 Pullman Palace Buffet Car attached Atlanta to Ne
51 connect at Chehaw withTuskegeo Railroad.
. GABBETT,
Genera 1 Manager.
Orleans without change. Trai
CHAS. H. C’ROMWELI
General Passenger
rubpr^n i is
i M <Ht elk."”: 1 ' I LI— 3a
(Crab Orchard Water
A RetutHly for «!1 Dtsei
iRkach an
DjapepHiu,
of the Liver, Kid-
Positive Security Airainst Fire ami iluri. r l;ir>.
_ MeU. ileauudia.
('onNtliMftliou. one to tw6 tcft-'Poonfuis
0 and Sfrcts. No genuine salts sold In bulk...
SIMON N. JONES, Manager. LonU^Ul«s Ky. 7
PROFr.SNIOXAI. CARnil.
T J. D. DANFORTH
1 »L h5 SiS, I f?K.-?»^- n .
Office
i'ourth avenue, south Cattaolfb chureh
j yR GEO. MrELHANEY,
1 ’ Resident Dentist.
Room No. 2, 62“ Broad'“in
Wittlch & Klnuei's. "P stain
O R. C. T. OSBURN. J UV, ' V
Dentist,
(Successor to Dr. J. M. m US(ii .
Office next door to Rankin Ho, M ...
t ranee as Riddle s gallery. e
\l r F. TIGNER.
' V •... Dentist,
•nth street iformerly Handoli t. ...
i7-ly
u. K. THOMAS, JH. ,, t
I 'HOMAS .t CHANDLER,
I Attornev.s-ftUI.aw
' 118 Broad Street. Columbus
TRUSTEE’S SALE,
Property of the Cplumbus Mn u
facturing Company.
«»2kk|>le(<> .»ia«l Fully 4 ott, )u
Faelory, Togo!tier uiHt \r„rly
mu .kf the I inoMt Wnler IN» n< .* r ,
Hie f'haffalioocliee liivN'r. Jnst ai»« v «
flu* 4ity «>( foluiiiliiis.
sJTATE OF GEORGIA, MUSCOGEE COTNTY
V By vlr ? ue o/ ' the Power vested in us under the
terms and conditions of a certain deed of
executed to the undersigned, J. Rhodes Brown*
and A. Illges, trustees, by the Columbus Maim
facturing Company, of Muscogee countv, sutenf
Georgia, dated March 1. 1884, wherebv the said
corpomtion conveyed to us all of the property
real and personal, hereinafter described, in trust
to secure the payment of its certain issue of
bonds and the interest coupons thereof as in said
trust deed specified and enumerated (all of which
appears duly of record in Mortgage Died Boob
“A. folios 367 to 373, March 5, 1884, in the ( Jerk’s
office of Superior Court. Muscogee county. Geor
gia, and in Record Deeds, volume O O, pages 8i
to 88 inclusive, March 22, 1884, office of the Pro
bate Court in the county of Lee, state of Via-
bama, and in conformity with the directions and
terms prescribed in the resolutions passed by the
holders of said bonds on April 24, 1886, under the
authority conferred by said deed of trust.)
We will sell in the city of Columbus, Muscogee
county, Georgia, on the 3d day of August, is86
between the legal hours of sale, in front of the
auction house of F. M. Knowles & Co., on the
northwest corner of Brood street and Tenth
■ formerly Crawford street), (being the usual place
for sheriffs sales ip said city of Columbus at
public outcry, to the highest bidder, for cash, the
following described property of the Columbus
Manufacturing Company, to-wit.: All those lots
and parcels of land situated, lying and being as
follows: Fractional section number twenty-six
(26) and the north half of fractional section num
ber thirty-five (35). both in fractional township
number eighteen (18), range number thirty i30),
in formerly Russell, now Lee county, state of
in formerly Russell, now I^ee county, state of
Alabama. Also the following lots of lands lying
and being in the eighth (8th; district of Muscogee
county, state of Georgia, known as lots numbers
eighty-six (861 and eighty-seven (87) and the west
half of lot number seventy-four (74) and fractions
numbered ninety-one (91) and ninety-two 102),
and Island number three (3) in Chattahoochee
river and a small enclosure situated east of the
residence formerly occupied by J. It. Clapp, used
> a residence and grazing lot, containing sever
Vll ■ ‘ ' ‘
more or less. All of said lauds last de
scribed lying and being in the county of Musco
gee and state of Georgia, and, together with said
lands in Lee county, Alabama, containing eight
hundred and thirty «830> acres more or less.
Also, all of the said Columbus Manufacturing
Company's buildings on said land in Muscogee
county, Georgia, operated as a Cotton Factory,
and with all of the improvements in any manner
appendant and appurtenant thereto, inclusive, of
the cards, spindles, looms, ]
machinery and
lures of every kind whatsoever contained in said
buildings; also, all and singular the other im
provements on Jill of the lands aforementioned
and described; also, the entire water power owned
and controlled by said Columbus Manufacturing
Company on and in said Chattahoochee riverj
together with all and singular the rights and
franchises by tlie said Columbus Manufacturing
Company held and possessed therein under the
laws of Georgia.
The plant of said cotton factory consists at
present of 4344 spindles, 149 looms and other suit
able machinery, all in good condition and pro
ducing good work. Present capacity 7500 yards a
day or heavy sheetings and shirtings, three yards
toft he pound.
The operatives’ houses and improvements gen
erally in exoellent • condition, labor abundant,
lands elevated and location of property unsur
passed for health, convenience and economical
production—free from the burden of municipal
taxes paid by all the other Columbus mills, yet
within three miles of the city of Columbus and
three-quarters of a mile of Columbus and Roms
railroad The water power is the finest iu tbe
south, controlling and embracing the whole bed
of the Chattahoochee river for the distance of
about one mile along the lands of said company,
said lands extending along its banks upon the
Georgia and Alabama sides of the river. Only a
small portion of the water power is required and
utilized in running the present mill, aud the nat
ural falls in the river render but a simple inex
pensive darn of logs and plank necessary. This
magnificent water power is easily controlled, and
has ft fall of 12 1 ^ 'fortv-two and a half) feet within
A* (three-quarters) or a mile. With a compara
tively small expenditure upon a new dam 125,000
(one hundred and twenty-five thousand) spindles,
with looms in proportion, can be driven by thit
water power. Capital for the erection of addi
tional mills aud utilization of the immense
f>ower now wasted is all that is needed to make
this property the site of a prosperous and popu
lous manufacturing village. The personal inspec
tion of capitalists is invited. Full and satisfac
tory details will be furnished upon application.
J. RHODES BROWNE,
A. ILLGES,
ap‘27-d3m Trustees.
03^DI3ST^2STCE
Amending Tux Ordinance.
BE IT ORDAINED. That the tax ordinance of
tho city for the year 1888 be amended by adding to
section 3 the words:
Produce, provision or merchandise brokers who
sell to others than registered merchants, or who
have goods shipped or confined to themselves be
fore tj\e same shall have been actually sold to
merchants, shall be classed an merchants, anil
and pay in addition to the special tax now re
quired of such brokers a tax of Ut of 1 per cent
oil all goods sold by them which were so shipped
or consigned, report of such sales to be madi.
quarterly, under oath, to the clerk of council.
Itinerant traders are hereby defined to be such
jus have no place of business fitted up for the sale
of merchandise, but who, having or not having an
office, have their goods stored in warehouses,
depots, cellars or other places used only lor
storage of goods, and who canvass for the salt' or
such goods juuong merchants or other persons.
And snail pay a special tax of $100. mid also 1 ot
one per cent uj>on all sales made by them -report,
to be made quarterly under oath to the clerk ol
council. .
Produce broken; who may order goods on tneir
own account for speculation shall be deerneu
itinerant traders and nay tax as such. Produce,
provision or merchandise brokers and itinerant
traders shall each pay the special tux required or
them before offering to transact any business, aim
in default of such advance payment shall be no
ble to a fine of * r > for each day’s default.
Be it further ordained, That peddlers of. any
and all kinds of merchandise, books, medicines
Ac., on the streets, who have no place of business
in (ne city, shall pay fciOfl, and no license shall oe
issued for less than $300. ,. „ , r
IU it further ordained. That any Portions ol
the tax ordinance heretofore adopted, -
with the above, are hereby repealed-
Adopted in council, .June 2d, 1886.
CLIFF B. GRIMES, Mayoi
M. M. MOORE, Clerk Council.
jet Jt
for Unit at Per Amu
R. M.MULFORD. Cashier,
my 14 dim
© has taken the lead
Iliri 3
given
the sal*
reruedL .... „ „
Uniusi universal •Mislac-
lien,
MURPHY PROS,
TOO LATE TO HOLD!
The Chance of a Lifetime—A Golden Opportunity
To Got a Stylish Suit at Bottom Fimiru.-
Paris, for
Gl>as%von the favor c£
the public and now rank*
among the leading
does, of the oildora.
A. L. SMITH.
Bradford, p|,
gold by Druggists,
GS-. EL THOMAS,
O Xj O T TEL T IE 3A
Has just received a large stock of first-class CLOTHING that was shipped in March
about the time of tiie freshet. For THE CASH these heautifi
be sold at an extremely low figure^
these goods at so low a price.
beautiful and stylish goods will
The lateness of spring is the reason for offering
: jsssi^mummsssssaesa
Administrator’s Sale,
by virtue of an order from the Court of Ordin 1-
ry of Muscogee county. Georgia, will be sold 1
the fiNt Tuesday in July next, on the comer ot
Broad and Tenth streets, m the city of L-oluu n^.
between the legal hours of sale, to the
bidder, the following described property,
One hundred jind sixty-five jwu-es of land, mere . r
less, lying east of the city of Columbus and Lnoun
and described :es part, of lots 93, 9o and
Coweta Reserve* of said county. Sold aa the prep
erty Of H. E. Thornton. ^ ^ THORNTON.
jy-5 oaw iw Administrator^
GEORGIA, MUSCOGEE COUNTY. . ,
Whereas. Caroline O. \\ Ilhams, admim-tr.
•f Wm. L- 'Vini^iece^.makesaPPlKf'>«“
of Win. L. Williams, rieceasea, ;,7
f,»r leave to sell the fbllowinB real estate belong
ing to said deceased, to-wit: Fart of lot No.. .
the Northern Liberties immediately north oltne
city of Columbus, Ga having a front on Jackson
street of 120 feet and 87 feet 10 Inches on
” This!"therefore, to cite all persons concerned
to show cause, if any they have, at the pre rer
time and place, why leave to sell said pruptny
should not be granted to said applicant.
a tnuitiirp thl? Jun
ffiould not be granted to sain upyiu;*^. . . a3fi
fc^ yofflcial F!T» h M 8 J , u S^ 36 -