Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, August 03, 1886, Image 8
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DAILY ENQUIRER • SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 4, 1886.
ESTABLISHED IN 1828. 58 YEARS OLD.
Daily, Weekly and Sunday.
The ENQUIRER-SUN Is Issued every day, ex
cept Monday. The Weekly is Issued on Monday
The Dally (including Sunday) Is delivered l<y
carriers in the city or mailed, postage IVce, to auij-
(fcribers for 7*V. per month, $71.(10 for three
months, $1.00 for si* months, or $7.00 a year.
The Sunday Is delivered bv carrier boys In the
city or mailed to subscribers, postage free, at
$1.00 a year.
The Weekly is issued on Monday, and is mailed
to subscribers, postage free, at $1.10 a year.
Transient advertisements will be taken for the
Dally at $1 per square of Id lines or less for the
first Insertion, and 60 cents for each subsequent
Insertion, and for the Weekly at $1 for each in
sertion.
All communications intended to promote the
private endB or interests of corporations, societies
or individuals will be charged as advertisements.
Special contracts made for advertising by the
year. Obituaries will be charged for at customary
rates.
None but solid metal cuts used.
AU communications should be addressed to the
Knouiber-Hun.
A Mississippi young man claims to
liave boon to heaven and returned. lie
iiad better have stayed there. Mississip
pi young men rarely gut two chances like
that.
When congress gels so it can discrimi
nate between the catfish streams of the
Ohio valley or the unnavigablo branches
of some far-away western river and meri
torious streams, which in Georgia would
hardly bo considered a good-sized brand
the Chattahoochee will probably comein
/or ashowing.
An Ohio wiiiow owned a largo gravel
hank which a certain railroad company
was very anxious to secure. Several
propositions yvere made and rejected,
and tlie president finally sent his privatt
secretary down with instructions to oiler
up to $1-1,000. Tito young man returned
sifter a couple of days, and when asked
how the business laid turned out replied
"‘I will accept your offer.” “You?
'‘Exactly. 1 married the widow and own
the honk.”
A dispatch from Dallas, Texas, status
that the young men of that and other
Texas cities are quietly enrolling thorn-
■selves for military duty. Everybody's
voice is for war. The adjutant-general of
the, state is daily in receipt of applica
tions for permission to raise volunteer
•companies. The dispatch says that the
(Jutting and liastires eases are but samples
of hundreds of other similar outrages
committed upon Texans.
Wash i noton City is all excitement
over the pending Mexican war. The
prospect now is more favorable to war
than ever. Mr. Bayard has turned over
the entire correspondence concerning
Cutting to the house, with the intimation
that we liave stood it long enough. The
Mexican prisoners in jail with Cutting
taunt him upon being the citizen of it
cowardly and helpless government. And
he says lie is ashamed to look them in
the face; for wlmt (hey say has I teen tme
solar, if some active step is not taken
at once, this' Cutting case will be used
with telling effect against the democratic
party in the next presidential election.
Tilt: VACANT .Il m.Kslllp,
Weave exceedingly gratified to learn
of the number of good men and good
lawyers who are applying to the presi
dent for the position of judge of the dis-
triot losiuint of the United Status made
vfleunt by the death of .fudge McKay.
From such men as Judge J, T. Sim
mons, of Macon, John I. Hall, of Griffin,
Henry I). Capers, of Cartersville,John
T. Clarke, of Cut Illici t, and W. T. New
man, I’. L. Mynatt, Julius Brown and W.
K. Hammond, of Atlanta, the president
■•\v\i51 be sure to make a good selection, lu
all probability Columbus will also fur
nish an applicant just as good us these.
The posit ion is one of high honor anti
liberal salary, and ought to bo filled by a
first-class man. Everyone of these ap
plicants are deserving, and would dis
charge the duties of the office with credit
to himself and honor to thf state.
say, is but a sample of many thousands
if cases. We meet a man on the stre<
that we used to know, when he wen
with the merry rounders, taking in tie
town till !1h. in., wearing his heaver oi
r In* hack of his head, and setting up tie
iicer for the boys ull round. But oh
imw changed, when we meet him now,
lie wears a meek and sedate frock coal
!lis shoulders droop, He rolls a baby
carriage humbly in front of him and
glances furtively hack at a buxom woman,
who, not deigning to speak, waves htr
parasol to show him the way to go. lie
is married, and that’s his wilt
Are we free horn, fvoliesonu
American citizens coming to this fate
one by one? Is the bottom rail getting
on top? lias it come to this, that a
cross-eyed woman with red hair and
tlie asthma can spit on her hands aim
hump herself, and dance around, and
boss a man to whom the constitution o,
this great republic guarantees life, liberty
and the pursuit of happiness, or any
thing else that he thinks he can catch?
It has conic to that with Mr. Mies, and
nobody knows where the lightning will
strike next. No man knows what wife
will be the next to yank iter husband oft’
the roof and sit on him, and make him
commit suicide.
We men must needs marry, partly to
keep people from talking about us, and
partly to get somebody to support us,
both of which are honoia’de motives.
We would call special attention to the
latter. It lias points about it that recom
mend it to a far-seeing man. Yes, we
must needs marry. But for protection
we should reserve some rights by eon-
tract ; such as sleeping on a roof or any
where tslse when it becomes too warm
for us at home; such as having Saturday
evenings off duty for pleasure ; such as
having the door unlocked and our boots
pulled off for us when we come home at
two in the morning singing:
“Oh,rise up "Willymu Riley,
And come along with uie.”
If a man will make such reservations
us these in entering the marriage con
tract, and then. marry a deaf and dumb
woman half his size, who has a good
temper and can’t make faces, he will find
the yoke of wedlock so light, and he will
he so contented and happy that he will
forget he is married, except once a year,
when his mother-in-law bobs up like a
“jack-in-the-box” to say “Merry Christ
mas!” and deliver her celebrated lecture
on “IIow to Treat a Wife When I’m
Around, You Old Hog.”
••■ascii soldiers and sailors, to authorize
the taxation of 1 m 1- granted to railroad-,
to construct a building for the congre
•ionul library, to authorize the Bultimor
and Ohio railroad to bridge Arthur Ki.
uid to traverse the arsenal and navi,
tsylum grounds at Philadelphia, to ri
luce tlie fee on domestic mono,
■triers for sums not exceedin.
s.i, to legalize the in
orporntion of national trail s
inions and other hills of minor inipoi
tance, including an extraordinary num
oer of private pension hills. A numbe.
of the bills last mentioned were ven
properly vetoed by the president, and a
like fate probably awaits the river aw
harbor bill, if this badly constructed
measure, now that it law emerged-from
the conference committee room, receive
die approval of the house. Other 1 >i 11 .-
■nay perhaps bo acted upon prior to the
date of adjurnment which is now immi
nent.
A survey of the whole session suggests
strongly the reflection that the forty-
ninth congress did not know its own
mind, or if it did, was incapable of carry
ing its purposes into effect. This much
may lie said for it, that it was honest,
and if not prolific of measures to improve
the condition of public affairs, it at leasi
added very little to the number of cum
bersome and useless laws.
THE 1VOIIK OK (O.NOItKSS.
The congress that is now about to be
remembered among the -things that were
has probably worked as hard as any of
its predecessors sinco tlie war. While
tills is true, it lias very little important
legislation of a general character to show
for it. Large expectations were enter
tained for the first congress under a
democratic administration, and that the
eople are somewhat disappointed is
owing more to factions in tlie party who
ave aid to republicans in defeating
democratic measures than the want of
energy upon the part of democratic mem
bers of congress.
When the democrats of the house were
reproached on Monday by a republican
member from Maine (lteed) for its short
enings, Mr. Randall, of Pennsylvania
felt constrained to conic to the rescue
His own words, though they.were used in
THE MEXICAN MUDDLE.
Tlie trouble between the United States
and Mexico begins to look serious. It
will not only require (he release of Cut
ting, but Mexico must surrender her
claim of jurisdiction to punish citizens of
the United States fur acts done within
the United Slates. In this case Mr. Cut-
tihg published in Texas a libel against a
Mexican citizen, and afterwards coining
within the state he was arrested and is
now held n“ a criminal by the Mexican
authorities. There can be no question
about the officers having acted without
discretion or beyond tlieirauthority. It
appears to us that they have kept strictly
within the law. So that it is the law
itself which is to blame and not the
official who has put it in force.
The Mexican people are very proud
and jealous of the rights of their country,
and cannot but be deeply mortified by
any action of their president which
seems to reflect upon the national honor.
Whether they will prefer to take the con
sequences rather than back down from
their position and surrender this claim of
jurisdiction is a question about which we
are in much doubt. If the president is
disposed -to stand up to the law and re
fuses to] surrender the) prisoner, tlie
United States must either back down
from its demand or take him by force.
We have no doubt at all about tlie course
of our own government—we must liave
Cutting or light.
Perhaps when an armed force is sent
across the border and tho’ jail torn down
and the prisoner released our anger will
have abated, and the Mexicans may
have arrived at the sensible conclusion
that they had better take that than
worse. ,
Of course the Mexican government
Dr
RICE'S
CREAM
BtflNGPOWD^
MOST PERFECT MADE
J- 1,0 A "“°°
Might promptly to abandon their absurd
' u ' u> i position, but they do not always do sen
sible things. Either the president will
not have the courage to face the anger of
hi- people, or will himself sustain the
right to enforce the law, is what we ar.-
, , tieipate. In either case trouble will fol-
the telegraphic columns veaterdav, will , , , , . ,
6 * • • ’ | low; but we do not believe that it will
K 'P ( - i ‘ ll '=- result in war. The odds are too great for
"We are all about to return to the people who , °
sent us here, and the recortl of this house will be ' Mexico to go into such a light. Why,
weighed and measured by them, and the election i President Cleveland can raise enough
will show whether the party in control of this | troops in the south alone by a call for
house Is not well entitled to the respect and ap- j volunteers to whip Mexico in less time
proval of the American people. \\ e have re
turned to the public domain millions of acres of
public lands taken by insatiate corporations.
We have entered upon the building of a new
navy. We have passed every act that we have i Four states held prohibition conventions and
been asked to pass having for its purpose the bet- j put t ' uU tickets in the field last week,
tering of the condition oi the laboring people, j The st. Louis Post-Dispatch most truthfully
eScENEiN France w ^
IGathering Grapes for making Creai^ or Tartar
" Or Price’s Cream BamnsBwqeii
ARE YOU GOING TO MISS IT?
Two Weeks Only 1
Dai
TAINS WlTHOOTREGi
We Simply Eclipse Everything. More Ctoods can be had for
$5 from Gray than they can elsewhere sell you for $15.
Note Our Bulletin of Prices for This Week
10,000 Yards COLORED LAWNS at 3c ; 2,300 Yards White Stripe Undressed Goods re
duced to 3Ac.
1.000 Pairs MISSES’ RIBBED STOCKINGS, price reduced to 3c a pair.
1,300 Yards HAMBURG EDGING reduced for this sale to 3c a yard.
4.000 Yards GINGHAMS we will sell during this sale at 5e a yard.
5.000 Yards TRIMMING WHITE LACES we have reduced to 3c a yard.
. than it was done in JS4i>.
I’HI.II II AI
AVe have not in a single instance passed any ; says: -*a director is sometimes a man who needs
bill in fiivorof monopolies. IVe have given the sen- I direction and supervision.”
ate an opportunity to pass an interstate com- ■ qq ie early origin of the habit of forming good
merce bill which only forty men on that side . resolutions is shown in the fact that every time
dared to vote against. The appropriation bills as 1 Eve changed tier dressed she turned over a new
they have passed this house are freer from un- i j ea f.
necessary and suspicious propos tions t.ian j Spencer E. Pratt, of Mobile, lately nominated
any appropriation bills by any congress j f or minister to Persia, was the Alabama commis-
since the war. We have done so .well | aioner to the World’s Exposittyi.
‘•Money is hard to get," has been the cry., AVeil, no use
of paying 40 cents for All Wool Dress Goods elsewhere when
you cuu get them from the Trade Palace at. 12i cents. Ail
our Dress Goods will go during this special sale.
Whoever heurd elsewhere of Double Width WOOL DRESS GOODS at 12jc, before
GRAY made the price? These are not only Summer Goods, but Spring, Autumn,
Fall and Winter Dress Goods.
We have also added for this week—mark it well—a big Center Counter of WOOL
DRESS GOODS. Your choice for 10c a yard. Some cost Gray 40c a yard.
I Wool P.hmlr ImnnfM FRENTGlr \'/4 VAN DRUMS (
Full 44 inch All Wool Black Imported FRENCH AZAXAS DRESS GOODS, price
reduced from 85e to 35c.
Two pieces left of our 50c BLACK CASHMERE ' "price for this sale will be 32.ic.
Three dresses left of our $1-00 BLACK SILK ; price will be. only for this sale 76c.
Three. Embroidered Mull $12 FLOUNCINGS, 4 ; ! yards, will be tor this sale $6 75.
Fifteen Fine $10 PARASOLS will be for this sale 34 65.
Prices Had make so-called competitors sick during sum
mer. But we cannot hold them; the slock must be sold in
two weeks. We received positive instructions from our
senior partner. Read on, read on. How is this !
6,000 Yards KING PHILIP CAMBRIC, for this sale only 91c.
3.500 Yards PACIFIC 4-4 MUSLINS 6c.
2.500 Yards 4-1 BATISTE MUSLIN reduced from 121c to 8c.
100 Thirds Barnsley’s Heavy SATIN DAMASK, worth $1 00, reduced for this sale
only to 65c.
Gray is educating the Pietail Dry Goods Trade of Colum
bus. He is after high price houses with a will. Gray’s
Smilers (no other name will do). Now you have it. Think
of it, remember it and ask to see them.
AltK WE l.OSINii OI K l.lltKKTVl
John C. Mies, a carpenter, of No. IB Jackson
street, tossed about in Ids bed Thursday night
unable to sleepon account of the heat. His wife
would not allow him to go to tho roof as he might
roll off in his sleep, and to make sure ho would
not do so when slio was asleep she looked the
door aud hid the key. A noise awoke her early
in the morning and she found her husband hang
ing from a rope fastened to a nail. She called
for help and also had an ambulance summoned.
The surgeon after receiving several kicks in tlie
abdomen from the would be suicide, assured the
wife that he was uninjured. Mies was taken to j
Essex market and was held for trial.—New York I
Him-
Tli$ (above is but an example of cases j
tliatarO happening everyday. If there
isn’t a revolution soon, the marriage cer
emony will have to be changed so as to
make husbands promise to obey their
wives. Female encroachment tuts en
croached until the women are about to
take this country. And when we are
done wiping tlie face of nature with
Mexico and get tlie dust out of our eyes,
we had just as well settle this other busi
ness. This Mies woman had tier poor
little one-horse power husband reduced
to such submission that she only had to
snap her fingers and whistle when she
wanted turn, and he and the liquse dog
would come dancing up together. At last
she wanted to dictate where tier husband
should sleep. Just think of it. This was
too much, and poor Mies sought refuge
from a cruel wife in suicide. This, we
that we ought to, and I believe will, receive the
confidence of the American people When we
came here there were thousands and thousands
of people idle in the United States, but to-day
there is not. in my judgment a laboring man who
wants to work who can’t secure work. And that
comes in a large degree from the confidence
which this house and a democratic executive
have given to the American people.”
It is unfortunate for Mr. Uamhill, and
for tlie democratic party,, that he could
not refer to the reform of the iniquitous I Noxv this point may
Preparations are
tariff system in his enumeration of tli
work of congress. The tariff demanded
reform, both in its rates and in its ad
ministrative features. Tlie expecta
tions of tlie public are not justified by
Gov. Alger, of Michigan, says he is not a candi
date for rejection and would not have the
United States senatorship if it were offered him
on a silver salver.
The apprehension that Keifer will really get
back into congress continues to be a cause of
unrest to republicans outside of the district in
which the ex-speaker resides.
In accepting Mrs. Cleveland into his church
yesterday, in Washington, Dr. Sunderland pro
claimed her name to be Frank Folsom Cleveland.
ay be said to be settled.
already making to select a
choice assortment of liquors for the republican
con ference, which meets in Chicago in Septem
ber to discuss the prohibition'question.
The Jones family, it is reported, are going to
have a reunion in Maryland. If they wish to
know what a contemptible, degraded and forever
the event?. A contemporary calls at- j lost race of people they are. let them invite
tention to the fact that the presidential j “Bam,” of thatilk.
succession is the only measure of the
first importance that has passed the
ordeal of both houses aud become a law.
Bills to
at
Mr. W. J. Campbell, of Philadelphia, is en
gaged in writing a life of Thomas Jefferson. Mr.
C. has collected a large number of steel engrnv-
.fleet the objects mentioned ! iugs nud ' vood - cut8 oftlie K‘ eat statesman, it is
. . possible there may be something fresh to write
ve were introduced in both houses, ; regarding Jeffere on, but it is sincerely hoped
but some, like tho tariff and silver bills, that he has escaped the Atlanta Constitution's
failed to obtain consideration, while ' artist. We should regret to know that the bones
others passed one house only of ,he laraen,ed Jeffer60 “ " ere niade 10 tur “
to be pigeon-holed m tlie
Other. In addition to the regular . Kx-Gov. AVarmoth, of Louisiana, is visiting
appropriation bills, the two houses have ! die home of his childhood, at Salem, 111. He is
managed to agree upon bills to regulate, ! credit f d witu havin * mo , re ‘ han n,ooo,oooin-
. , . . . , . . | vested m sugar interests, which must be a sweet
as Stated abo\e, the presidential sutyes- ! consolation to him as lie looks across the prairies
sion, to abolish fees exacted, for services j where as a boy he drove cows and stubbed his
to American vessels, and to amend the | *°es.
laws relating to shipping commissioners, j The Constitution's wood-cuts of Gen. Gordon
to tax tile oleomargarine industry, to -and his *• Cabiuet” are rather bilious.—Augusta
restore Fitz John Porter to his place on i Chrsnicle - °“ r ^temporary doesn’t seem to
,. . . . „ i catch on. Gordon is called the‘‘war governor”
tlie army list, to increase the pensions of j and tbe Con8t j tut j 0n , g only giving us a specimen
widows and dependent relatives of de-1 of “confederate times.”
100 Pieces SATIN MULL WHITE PLAIDS, imported goods, at the astonishing
low price of 9c, 10c and 12c. From a big importer going out of business in New York.
Same goods sell elsewhere at 20c, 25c and 30c.
Everybody knows Gray sells large LINEN TOWELS as cheap as other stores; sells
single Napkins. The talk of the city is, what is Gray going to do, as he is selling out.
Do you note the fears of some, less the rolling stone would move up town. Well, we
are going to make some sell cheap while we are at it.
LOST I LOST 11 LOST 111
The old phantom ship goes down, loaded with old charge books and ledgers, and old fogy ideas
and shop-worn goods. Gray’s war .‘hip hit it with one of his needle guns and made them heave to.
The missile fired into her was a large rolling stem*, and the last words heard from the captain were,
"Gray, please don’t move up town.” All the small fish can do is to murmur. In getting up this re
action in business the public will notice we did not get up the big rush to the Trade Palace by
making a run on cheap cotton goods, but hit the trade right with fine Wool and Linen Goods, so as
to prove to all classes of trade we deserve the name of the Regulators of Low Prices. The double
width Black Cashmere on our Bargain Table at 12V£c is Uie same as they sell you elsewhere at 25c.
We claim to match any $1.50 Black Gros Grain Silk in town at $1.00 a yard. We brag on our Ladies’
Black Silk Brilliant Lisle Hose at 50c. And our Balbriggan Hose at 20c cannot be matched in town
for the samg money. Our object is to establish the one price system, not ten prices. So as the pilot
steers clear of the rocks, so will he whose price is bent on success avoid maelstroms of high prices,
which have swept whole generations of master minds from affluence to beggary, from greatness and
grandeur to the oblivion of the grave,
Gray's Indigestible Pulverine. Goods well bought are
half sold.
OUST TOT 3 LIVE ZELOTTSL-
C. P. GRAY & CO.
Trade Palace, opposite' Rankin House. Columbus, Ga. ■
To the Trade and Smokers,
Beware of Base
Imitations
-THB-
on the Market.
GENUINE GRAND REPUBLIC CIGARROS
Have a RED seal on each box and our factory number, 200, printed on it.
NONE GENUINE WITHOUT THIS SEAL
Examine boxes before purchasing, and see that you get the genuine Cigarros.
GrZEO. IF. LIES &c OO-,
Factory 300, 3d District, N. Y.
The genuine are for sale by W. S. Freeman, J. T. Kavanagh, Brannon & Carson, King & Daniel,
Peabody & Faber, T. A. Cantrell, and all first-class retailers.
• . augS tu th satase3m
NT ATE OF GEORGIA,
EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT.
r
PROCLAMATION.
I i EORGIA:
' J By HENRY D. McDANIEL,
Governor of said State.
Whereas, Tbe General Assembly, at its last
session, passed the following Acts, to-ivit;
“An Act to amend the Constitution oftlie State
of Georgia by striking therefrom paragraph 15
Section 7, Article 3.” 1
Sec I. He it enacted by the General Assembly
of the State of Georgia.and it is hereby enacted by
tbe authority of the same, that the Constitution
of this State-be amended by striking therefrom
paragraph 15 of section seven ■ 7 j, article three 131
which reads as tollows. to-ivit: Paragraph XV -
All special or local bills shall originate in the
House of Representatives. The Speaker of the
House of Representatives shall, within five da vs
from the organization of the General Assembly
appoint a committee, consisting of one from each
Congressional District, whose duty it shall be to
consider and consolidate all special and local
bills on the same subject, and report the same to
the House j and no special or local bill shall be
read or considered by the House until the same
has been reported by the committee, unless by a
two thirds vote : and no bill shall be considered
or reported to the House by said committee un
less the same shall have been laid before it with
in fifteen days after the organizaiton 01 the Gen
eral Assembly, except by a tivo-thlrds vote
Sec. IT. Be it further enacted. That whenever
the above proposed amendment to the Constitu
tion shall be agreed to by two-thirds of the mem
bers elected to each oi the two Hoilses of the
General Assembly, the Governor shall, ana he is
hereby authorized and instructed to cause said
amendment to be published in at least two news
papers in each congressional District in this State
for the period of two mont hs next preceding the
time of holding the next general election.
Sec. III. Be it further enacted. That the above
proposed amendment shall be submitted for rati
fication or rejection to the electors of this State at
the next general election to be held after publi
cation. as provided for in the second section of
this Act, 111 the several election districts in this
State, at which election every person shall be en
titled to vote who is entitled to vote for mem
bers of the General Assembly. All persons
voting at said election in favor of adopting the
proposed amendment to the constitution shall
write, or have printed on their ballots the words
■ For ratification oftlie amendment striking par
agraph 18 of section 7, article 3, from the constitu
tion:” and all persons opposed to the adoption of
the aforesaid proposed amendment shall write
or have printed on their ballots the words
“Against ratification of the amendment striking
paragraph 15 of section 7, article 3, from the con
stitution.”
S.c. IV. Be it further enacted, That the Gov-
•nior be, and lie is hereby authorized and direct
ed 11 provided for the submission of the amend
ment proposed in the first section of this Act to a
vote of the people, as required by tbe Constitu
tion oftlie State. in paragraph 1, section 1 of
article 13, and by tiiis Act, and if ratified, the 60, -
ernor shall, when he ascertains such ratification
from tiic Secretary of State, to whom the returns
shall be referred in the same manner as in cases
of election for members of the General Assembly
to count and ascertain the result, issue his procla
mation for the period of thirty clays announcing
such result aud declaring the amendment rati
fied.
See. V. Beit further enacted. That all laws and
parts of laws in conflict with this Act be, and the
same are hereby repealed.
Approved September 24,1885.
“An. Act to amend the last sentence of Article
7, Section 1, Paragiaph 1 of the Constitution of
Section I. Be it enacted by the General Assem
bly oftlie State of Georgia, That the last sentence
of article 7, sec tion 1, paragraph 1 ofthe Constitu
tion ot 1877 be, and the same is hereby amended
by adding thereto at the end of said sentence the
following words, "And to make suitable provision
for such confederate soldiers as may have been
permanently injured in such service,” so thatsaid
sentence when so amended shall read as follows:
To supply the soldiers who lost a limb or limbs
m the military service of the confederate States
with suitable artificial limbs during life, and to
make suitable provisions for such confederate sol
diers as may have been permanently injured in
such service.”
Sec. II. And be it forther enacted, That, if this
amendment shail be agreed to by tivo-thlrds of
the members elected to each of the two Houses,
the same shall be entered on their journals with
the ayes and nays taken thereon; and the Gov
ernor shall cause said amendment to be published
in one or more newspapers in each congressional
district for 2 months previous to the next general
election; and the same shall be submitted to the
people at the next general election; and the legal
voters at said next general election shall have in
scribed or printed on their tickets the words,
ratification” or “non-ratification,” as they may
choose to vote, and if a majority of the voters
qualified to vote for members of the General As
sembly, voting t hereon, shall vote in favor of rati
fication, then this amendment shall become a
part of said article 7, section 1, paragraph 1 of the
constitution ofthe state, and the Governor shall
make proclamation thereof.
See. ill. Be it forther enacted. That all laws
and parts of laws militating against tlie provis
ions of this Act be, and the same are hereby re
pealed.
Approved October 19,1885.
Now. therefore, I, Henry D. McDaniel, Gov
ernor of said State,do issue this my proclamation,
hereby declaring that the foregoing proposed
amendments are submitted to the qualified voters
Ofthe State, at tlie general election to be held on
>V ednesday, October 6, 1888, for ratification or re
jection of said amendments (or either of them ■ as
provided in said Acts respectively.
Given under my hand and tlie seal of the Ex
ecutive Department, this 31st day of July, 1886.
HENRY D. McDANIEL, Governor.
By the Governor,
J. W. Warren, Sec. Ex. Dep’t.
aug3 oaw td
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ACTIVE AGENTS WANTED.
A CTIVE AGENTS WANTED to sell mininff
xl. specialties. Big money in commission or
salary to good workers. Address Hartsfeld Port
able Smelting Furnace and Mining Company.
P. O. Box No. 115, Newport. Ky. jy25 d&wlm
|l| AlAf when bnslnen U dal! and prlc
iff&TR BUY YOUR
Great bargains. Bendfornew F|g|cat> Q (J N 8
li>?iieofWatcboaRlfleeBportlna^jtmlS*and^. —. v
«i. W.CIaflln A €•.. B4-86 Dune It. Xmw Yorfe