Newspaper Page Text
DAILY ENQUIRER-SUN: COLUMBUS GEORGIA. SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 3, 1886,
Cohun|jus(C‘’ijuirfr^im.
ESTABLISHED IN 1828. 58 YEARS OLD.
Daily, Weekly and Sunday.
Tile ENliUIRF.imiTN i» inHUoil every day, ex
«ept Monday. The Weekly lx iaxued on Monday.
The Daily (Including Holiday) Ih delivered by
«arriem in the city or mailed, ikmIakc free, to xub-
•cribere for IV. per month, 91.00 for three
month,, f 4.01! for nix months, or $7.00 a year.
The Sunday Is delivered by 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
Daily at $1 per square of 10 lines nr less for the
first insertion, and .10 cents for each subsequent
insertion, and for the Weekly at $1 for each In
sertion.
All communications intended to promote the
private ends or interests of corporations, societies
or individuals will be charged ns Advertisements.
Special contracts made for advertising by the
gear. Obituaries will be charged tor at customary
rates.
None but solid metal cuts used.:
All communications should be addressed to the
EkrquiRBB-HuN.
Impobtbiih should stop kicking ngainsl
paying their debts. They ought to pay
them. It is a duty they owe to the coun
try.
St. Louis papers are calling attention
to the fact that. an exposition that no-
liody knows anything about is going on
in Chicago.
Tiik candidate for sheriff in a Minne
sota town is 80 years old. He will be a
good one. Old age overtakt-s all in the
course of time, and no criminal could es-
cape. ___________
Thekk is more hank clearing business
done in New York than in any city in
the country.—New York Times. Yes,
several cashier* have cleared for Canada
this season.
Gladstonb has Imt three fingers on
Ids rigid hand, the forefinger being
gone.—London Truth. Well, there's a
bright, side to every misfortune. With
three fingers a man can tell when he
bus enough whisky in a glass.
Mil. Stockton will have a serial story
in the Century for the the entire year;
beginning with the November number.
It is to be entitled “The Hundredth
Man.” He is the chap, doubtless, that
the “ninety and-nine" in the song have
been waiting for.
Edward Soi.omon has been arrested in
London for bigamy. Edward ought not
to lose sight of the fact that times and
customs have undergone a considerable
change since the days when the queen
of Sheba went so far to visit an illustrious
-gentleman bearing his name.
THE REEUHL1CAN PHITOCIACV.
The rights, the liberties and the politi
cal and social welfare of the American
people depend upon the maintenance of
a proper medium and balance between so
cialism on the one hand and the undue
influence of the money power in govern
mental affairs on the other. The ten
dency of the one is to utter confusion,and
that of the oilier is to entrench itself |
about with such strongholds of silver and j
gold Hint it c.in defy and strangle the I
against the purpose of the money power
—secretly cherished and openly mani
fested—to secure control of both the law
making and law-executing departments
of government, then, to that extent,
socialism is right and deserves en
couragement instead of contumely.
No greater danger from any
quarter threatens the liberties of the
people and the stability of this republic
than that which lurks in this purpose of
the few to rule the many. A plutocracy
led to the fall of the republic of Home.
That plutocracy differed from ours only
in the fact that it gathered its wealth di
rectly from the spoils of war, while the
great wealth which is possessed by the
money kings of the nortli has been ac
quired liy the opportunities for specula
tion which attended and followed a civil
war and a depreciated currency.
The substitution of a moneyed
oligarchy for a manhood democracy is a
departure from the principles upon
which our government was based. No
government is strengthened or can long
survive such radical changes from the
original structure. It is the duty of the
people—the people whose freedom was
baptized in the blood of their fathers—to
resist now, and with determination, the
insiduous efforts of the republican pluto
crats.
The northern people poured out blood
like water and scattered treasure to
the winds to destroy what they
were pleased to call the
“southern aristocrats,” but they have
substituted in their stead an element
which endangers the liberty of the white
man—the northern plutocrat. The south
ern aristocrat always stood by the consti
tution and the rights of the people, but
the northern plutocrat would subvert the
constitution and engulf the liberties of
the people in their greed for gain.
TYPHOID FEVEH.
For the Enquirer-Bun.)
“Then marked he, too,
How lizard fed on ant, and snake on him,
And kite on both; and how the flsh hawk
Robbed the ish tiger of that which it had seized;
The shrike chasing the bulbul, which did
Chase the jeweled butterfly, till everywhere
Each slew a slayer and in tnrn was slain;
Life liviag upon death.’’
Germs, too, must live. They are en
dowed with an instinct that impels them
to seek nourishment, as the shark that
feeds on lesser fiRh. Germs are thorns
in the rose of life. Here is about the way
organized life may be placed in order:
Germs, meaning all animal parasites,
mote, worms, reptiles, flsh, birds, beasts,
"man, demon, deva, God.” These
smallest, germs are to our naked eyes the
veriest mockery. Yet they may be
likened to the stars, for they are hid in
the day by the embarrass
ment. of light. Some one has aptly
said that God’s most wondrous creations
arc the small bodies that can only be
seen with the powerful microscopes. The
cause of typhoid fever is an animal or
ganism that lodges and lives in colonies
in t.ie small intestine, and only in cer
tain glands—called after Peyer, Peyer’s
glands—lining this intestine. These germs
find their entrance into man in most
cases through the medium of the water
that is drank. Sometimes they may be
breathed in, and like chloroform or to
bacco smoke enter the system. The
I manhood, while the pallid moon is dying
out, cooling off, and the sun is far behind
Jupiter. The progenitor of the typhTid
microbe was typhus fever, spotted fever,
a disease that decimated many parts of
Europe from the sixteenth to the
eighteenth century. It is somewhat
queer to consider the multiplicity of
names that cumber the word germ. Just
see here what iB used
for that embryonic word: Microbe,
micrococcus, spirillum, spore, bacillus,
bacterium, parasite, pilz, etc. Phrase
ology is a science in itself. There is no
disease that can well be mistaken for
typhoid if a theinometer be used.
Typho-malarial is a subterfuge to hide
behind. He who mistakes typhoid at
first is prone later on to call what at first
was christened malarial, typho-malarial.
Nature has great resources in children,
and most of them recover from typhoid.
Eighty per cent of all typhoid patients
recover. The typhoid germ can live
only a certain time pent up in the
human system, and for this reason the
disease is called self-limiting. Baths
and antepyrin or thallin should be
given in order to keep the tempera
ture from oxidizing the tis
sues and thus turning the elastic fibres
into fat. A typhoid patient is like a ship
in a storm; wo are not to endeavor to
break up the storm, but we, like the true
mariner, must guide the ship through
the storm, Never give veratrum. Judi
cious feeding and nursing are potent fac
tors in the treatment of all fevers. There
may be some better food for fever pa
tients than milk, bnt we do not know it
yet. Meat juices simply stimulate, and
do not nourish. The ideal nurse is the
mother with her amiable watchfulness,
her tender feminine softness, the en
dearing sweetness in her anxiety, the
soft electric stroke of her Hbnd, the
heart distended with goodness; these
make us glow with a sacred flame.
SKINsBLOOD
DUeaaea from Pimples to Ncroftiln
Cnred by Catlcnra.
Hundreds of letters in our possession, copies of
which may be had by return of mail, repeat this
story: —I have been a terrible sufferer tor years
from Diseases of the Skin and Blood; have been
obliged to shun public places by reason of my dis
figuring humors: have had the best physicians;
have spent hundreds of dollars, and got no relief
until I used the Cuticura Remedies, which have
cured me, and left my skin and blood m pure as
a child’s.
Covered With Halt ■henna.
Cuticura Remedies are the greatest medicines
on earth. Had the worst case of Salt Rheum in
this country, My mother hod it twenty years,
and in fact died from it. I believe Cuticura would
have saved her life. My arms, breast and head
were covered for three years, which nothing re
lieved or cnred until I used the Cuticura Resol
vent, internally, and Cuticura and Cuticura Seap,
externally. J. W. ADAMS.
Newark, O.
Hoad, Pace and Hedy Raw.
I commenced to use your Cuticura Remedies
last July. M; head and face and some parts of
my body were almost Taw. My head was covered
with scabs and sores, and my suffering was fear
ful. I hod tried everything I hod heard of in the
East and West. My case was considered a very
bod one. I have now not a particle of Skin Humor
about me and my case Is considered wosderfhl.
Decatur, Mich. MRS. S. E. WHIPPLE.
A Fever Hare Cnred.
I must extend to you the thanks of one of my
customer*, who has been cured by using the Cuff-
cura Remedies, of an old sore, caused by a long
spell of sicknessor fever eight years ago. He was
so bad he was fearful he would have to hove his
leg amputated, but he is happy to nay he is now
entirely well, sound as a dollar. He requests me
to use nis name, which is H. 11. Cason, merchant
of this place. JOHN V. MINOR, Druggist,
Oainsboro, Tenn.
SPECIALTIES
AT TEC IE
To-Morrow
We Will Offer 250 Dozen
Gents' All Linen
HEMSTITCHED
HANDKERCHIEFS,
COLORED BORDERS AND WHITE,
At 15c. Each.
The same Handkerchiefs
are sold in this city at 35
and 40 cents.
iqo DOZEN
Ladies’ All Linen White
-A_T 5 GENTS.
85 Dozen Jerseys, all de
signs, all wool, line quality,
at $1 25 each. Yon can’t
duplicate them in town at
$1 75.
voice of file people—to use the powers and
I'ranchieeH of the government, not for the
promotion of the public weal,
hut for corrupt ami selfish ends. When
those who have groat wealth hold the
highest nfliees, the tendency is to use
the power which is born of money to
perpetuate themselves and their friends
in olilee and to use the opportunities
which otliee gives them to add to their
wealth. Any party which develops a
tendency to put in office men who have
nothing else to recommend them hut
their riches lias become danger
ous to the liberties of the
people, and ought to he
shorn of its political power.
The nomination of the millionaire
Ames by the republicans of Massachu
setts calls renewed attention to the ten
dency of that party in thatdirection. it’s
habit of electing mere money hags or
corporation attorneys to the senate was
long ago fixed, but the influence of the
money power in that organization is
clearly shown by the nominations it has
made for the oiHce of governor in several
states this year. Bodwell in Maine,
Sawyer in New Hampshire, Wetmore
in ltliode Island, Loundsbury in Con
necticut, and now Ames in Massachu
setts, are all rich men, and
were nominated simply because
they are rich, as was Davenport in the
state of New York last year. Not one of
them would have been thought of for
tiie highest office in the gift of the state
but for his money. Some of them have
been charged by their own partisans
with buying their nominations, and
others are notoriously large contributors
to the campaign corruption funds of
their party. They buy the offices not
for public service, hut as a personal dis
tinction, or as affording an opportunity,
as they say, to “protect their interest,”
hut in fact to promote their
selfish and greedy ends at
the sacrifice of the well being
of the many. These candidates repre
sent one of the most dangerous tenden
cies in America to-day—the drift of
political power into the hands of the
moneyed class. The tendency of wealth
during the past twenty-five years lias
been to ally itself with the party in
jiower.
When what is called socialism pro
tests by peaceful and lawful measures
medium in this latter case is then sewer
gas or the dejections from a typhoid fever
patient. This is the pestilence that wulk-
eth in darkness, and is “no lovelier than
mackerel by moonshine.”
That germs fall upon man and pray
upon his vitals is man’s faults. Man de
stroys lions, snakes, bears, tangible ene
mies, yet he is loath to believe the
trifling molecule of a germ worthy his
valor, and he recklessly, ruthlessly swal
lows myriads of them in unwholesome
well water. This is no dictum of any
one man, hut the most conscientious
physicians are unanimously agreed that
practically all typhoid fever comes from
certain specific animalculae in drinking
water. Not ail wells aTe infected, and an
infected well is not impure all the time,
and not every one that drinks
of impure well water catches
the fever. In any epidemic of cholera,
diphtheriajor any disease arising from
animal germs, all diseases from such
germs are more or less contagious—only
a small portion of the population is in
fected. People at one time possess an
immunity, or they may be hardened to
it. We know that wells are subject to
contamination any time, and are, there
fore, never safe. Drink no well water,
for it will sureful he paid a tithe in death.
CiBti-rn water is always and
forever to be recommended. Him
who scoffs at this let investigate.
When I hear the crystal spring spoken
of as the dearest recollection; the old
well lauded for its limpid, cooling, free
and bounteous water—-a feeling arises
within me that the hope and fair expect
ancy of that home will yet hug a linger
ing fever. All the wells in the country,
even on mountains, are liable to infec
tion. In cities and towns the well and
stable are generally, for convenience
sake, placed off in one corner of the lot,
and surface water readily percolates
through, bearing in its lap fatal poison.
Typhoid fever, as it now appears, was
not known until the commencement of
the eighteenth century. Morgagni was
the first to describe it. Germs again,
like the stars, change with time—under
go a revolution, from malignancy to a
benign state.
Proctor says the planets are in various
phases of existence. Jupiter is just pre
paring to put on swaddling clothes and
enter life; our planet is in full vigor of
Cuticura Remedies are sold everywhere. Price :
Cuticura, so cents: Resolvent, $1.00; Soap, 25 cents.
Prepared by the Potter Drug and Chemical Co.,
Boston, Moss. Send for "How to Cure Skin Di
ea«es.”
( 2 I> I T OC Piu plcB, Skin Blemishes, and
\ l IV v lJVY,Baby Humors, cured by Cuticura
soap.
HOW IT ACHES!
Buck Ache, Kidn#y Pains, Hip, Side
and Chest Pains, and all Strains and
Weakness relieved in one minute by
the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster. At
druggist. 25 cents; five for $1.00 Potter
Drug and Chemical Co., Boston.
MOT OF IjETTFRN.
i List of unclaimed letters remaining in the Co
liunbus, Qa., post office for the week ending Oct.
3. If not called for within thirty days will be
sent to the Dead Letter Office:
Ansley J M
Astra miss S
Barlow mrs U
Buraes H
Bentley J C
Baker Idiss J colored
Bowinan miss C
Bruce mrs J
Brit W
Carter miss D colored
Carter H M
Christian miss E
Chisholm Dr Q
Cleveland miss M
Clift miss M
Darby mrs 8 F
Davis J
Dease mrs C
Dent mrs J
Davis mrs F
Edmundson mrs M
Edwards P
Epps P colored
Evan s miss R
Fielding H
Fountain P
Foster mrs P
Freeman N N
Goodwin J H
Gordon miss F B
Gordon EC
Grady J
Greenly miss L
Haynes mrs L
Heart miss M
Harris B D
Harris mrs W
Hearts miss L
Hogan mrs W A
Holder mrs E
Houghs mrs L
Haskins mrs W G
Hoover mrs N A
Huntley A
Houston D
Jackson E
Jenkins rnissC L
Jenkins mrs V
Johnson missC colored
Johnson H W
Jones J L
Jones L
Kelley W
Kemp miss M
King C
Kirksey T W
Lewis Y
Lewis J
Love D W
Love M colored
Lynch mrs R A
McKenney B I
Madox mrs J
Mason mrs A colored
Margart F 8.
Mathews L Q
Miller J
Miles miss L
Miller E
Moore mrs M
Norman R C
Odom W
Ousley mrs A
Owens mrs E R
Patterson E D
Perry mrs A
Phillips mrs K
Porter J
Porter miss J
Price J
Redding L B
Rodman N
Reel mrs J F
Reynolds miss colored
Ransom mis M
Renfroe miss A
Rice mrs I
Robinson mrs L
Ross mi88 8 J
Rodgers J W
Rodgers J
Sadgett M
Scofield mrs I
Koreans miss A
Sewell mrs M
Shearer P A 2
Slaughter W
Smith miss C
Smith S J
Smiley J 8
Spottola rar
Stephens I
Spinkston H
Tell miss P
Tlireatt W
Thompson miss A
Thomas F
Thomas missj
Turner mrs M •
Turner mrs A
Wallace miss E
Wallace I
Walker W
Ward mrs E C
Ware J R
Weaver niraSL
Watson P
Wells W 8
Whiletey C H 2
Whaley miss L A
Williams mrs F
Wilson miss C
Wilson T
Willis miss L
Wraltliess miss L
Willis R L
Wilson mrs M
M
Wynn J D
Young T
Youngblood J
Wiseman mrs
Wright mrs M
Wyiley W
When calling for these letters, please say they
are advertised, giving date. *
TH08. J. WATT, P. M
Sternberg&Loewenherz
LEADERS OF
Low Prices.
LIVELY LETTER LIST.
List of unclaimed letters remaining in Lively
Post Office for the month ending Septemer 30. If
not called for in thirty days will be sent to the
Dead Letter Office:
Allen miss M A
Allen L F
Allen J F
Belle mrs M
Bray mrs Fannie
Brown mrs F
Braswell mrs M
Burton mr M R
Colton mrs Smith
Cole mr John
Chanuel miss E
Daniel mis Jullics
Dorman mrs C 8
Edings miss Anna
Edwards mr B
Finley miss Luis
Gray miss E 2f
Greer mr A W
Gilbert mrs Mary
Jones mrs M 2
Johnson mrs 8
King mr E W
Lewis mrs B col
Martin mr R
Mathews mrs M
Martin mr V 8 2
Morris miss L
Powell mrs M F
Pitts miss F
Price mr J J 2
Pierce mrs I
Pitts mrs Catharine
Pate miss M
Richardson Sam 2
Rugg2 mr J B
Senns mr J F 2
Simmons mr E
Smith Mr M H
'Thorton mr L C
Ward H N
Wilson mr W
Williams Rev T J 2
When calling for these letters please say they
are advertised, giving date.
8. M. INGERSOLL, P. M.
UEORtilA SECURITIES.
Corrected by John Blackmnr, Coins*
bun, 4*u.
STOCK AND BOND BROKER.
RAILROAD BONDS.
Americus, Preston and Lumpkin 1st
mortgage 7s 100 @101
Atlantic and Gulf 7s 117 @119
Central con mortgage 7s 113 @114
Columbus and Rome 1st 8s, endorsed
Central R. R 104 @106
Columbus and Western 1st mortgage
6s, endorsed by Central R. R 103 @105
Charlotte. Columbia and Augusta 1st
mortgage 114 @116
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta 4s
2d mortgage 110 @112
Georgia Railroad 6s 106 @109
Mobile aud Girard 2d mortgage en
dorsed by Central Railroad 106 l a@107
Montgomery and Eufaula 1st mort
gage 6s and Centra Railroad 108 @109
South Georgia and Florida 1st, en
dorsed by state of Georgia, 7 per
cent 118 @119
South Georgia and Florida 2d, 7 per
cent Ill @113
Western R. R. Alabama 1st mortgage,
endorsed by Central Railroad 110 @111
Western Alabama 2d mortgage, en
dorsed Italians
RAILROAD STOCKS.
Atlanta and West Point 101 @108
Atlanta and West Point 6 per cent.
scrip 103 @104
Augusta and Savannah 7 per cent 127 @180
Central common 95 @ 96
Central railroad 6 per cent, scrip 102 @106
Georgia 11 percent 192 @196
Southwestern 7 percent, guaranteed., 125 @128
WILLIAMS & POU,
V ^ --n- , . f .. , -j. •
Successors to J. A. WALKER
Carriages, Buggies, Road Carls, Wagons,
ZETA-^ItTIESS, SADDLERY,
Plow Gear, Lap Robes, Etc.
WE CARRY THE LARGEST STOCK EVER KEPT IN COLUMBUS, and will take great pleas
ure in showing any one through our stock. It costs nothing to look. Call And see those
BEAUTIFUL COLUMBUS BUGGIES,
For which we are Sole Agents.
NOS. 939 k 9411919 MI, NEXT 19 WEBSTER WAREHOUSE.
oc3 se&w6ni
HILL & LAW.
Now is tiie TIME, and This is the PLACE,
TO GET
Low PricesiGreat Bargains
Every Lady who visits our store says our Goods are Beautiful,
and that our Prices cant be matched.
Grand Opening of a most Exquisite Line of New Fall Goods
on Monday. Most Elegant Line of Dress
Trimmings and Ribbons.
Cloaks! Cloaks! Cloaks!
A Beautiful Line of Cloaks, in Boucle and Bourrette, and other New Materials,
In most exquisite designs for Ladies’, Misses’ and Children. We are selling them
rapidly already, so don’t fail to see them this week.
LADIES’ AND CHILDREN'S MERINO UNDERWEAR
At Prices Lower than Ever Before!
X
New Fall Hosiery—Every Novelty of the Season in Hosiery,
Handkerchiefs and Gloves.
Remember Our Motto is that our Prices shall be Lower
than the Lowest.
HILL &c XjJL”W.
A WEEK FOR BARGAINS
AC. CHANCELLOR
TIKE
HA TIER. FURNISHER
And Merchant Tailor
Enjoyed a Large Trade in September, consequently
many lots of Suits, Hats and Pants have been broken. Now
is the time to buy Goods at Half Price.
$20.00 SUITS Now - - - $10.00.
5.00 HATS Now - - - 2.50.
Remember, our Merchant Tailoring is booming,
your measure and get a perfect-fitting suit.
Leave
Auction Sale
Valuable City Lots!
Directly Opposite the Eagle and
Phenix Mills.
vember next, in front of the An .on House
of F. M. KNOWLES & Co., corner of Broad and
Tenth Streets, in the City of Columbus, at It
o’clock a. m., the Valuable Lots fronting the
Eagle Factory Buildings, on Front street, in the
City of Columbus, Georgia, and next adjoining
the Alston Warehouse, and near offices of the
Georgia Midland Railroad, beginning on
east side of Front street, at the North Wall of
the "Alston Warehouse,” running east along
said wall 127 feet 6 inches, thence north 150 feet,
more or less, to the line of the lot occupied by
the Southern Express Company, thence west
along said line, 127 feet 6 inches, to Front street,
thence south along Front street 150 feet, more or
less, to the beginning point. This property, im
mediately fronting the Eagle Factory, is admira
bly adapted as building lots for Dwellings, Stores
or Warehouse purposes; contains now a well-
built, commodious, two story Brick Stable. Titles
perfect. Can be examined, with plot of the
property, at the law office of McNeill & Levy.
Terms of sale -one-third cash od day of purchase,
balance, one, two and three years, equal amounts,
with 7 per cent, interest, secured by the property.
MARY B. HANSERD.
oct3 tu&setw
COMMISSIONERS’ SALE
-foe partition-
Two Valuable Plantations.
/GEORGIA, MUSCOGEE COUNTY-Under and
”by virtue of an order from the Superior Court
of Muscogee County, passed at the May term, 1R8«
thereof, the undersigned Commissioners appoint
ed by said court will # sell in front of the court
house of said county, in the city of Columbus, on
the first Tuesday in November next, between the
legal hours of sale, at public outcry to the highest
bidder, the following described plantation proper-
R EGULAR MEETING to-morrow (Monday)
evening at 8 o’clock. Transient brethren in
good standing are cordially invited to attend.
J. F. WISE, N. G.
F. W. LOUDENBER, Sec’y. mh28sely
consisting of lot No. 266 in the ninth district, also
lots Nos. 288 and 291, two hundred two aDd a half
(202.S) acres each, more or less; also 100 acres of the
north part of lot No. 287 at Jones’ Crossing, also
fractional lots Nos. 289 and 290, eighty-one (81; acres
each, all in the tenth district, also the south half
of lot No. 287 one hundred one and a quarter
(101*4) acr*s more or less; also fractional lots Noe.
257 and 288, ninety (90) acres each, in seventeenth
district; also fractional lot No. 1 in eighteenth
district,sixty-seven and a half <67*2 • acres more or
i less. Said plantation containing in all twelve
I hundred and eighteen and ore-fourth (1218M)
1 acres more or less; (excepting therefrom the
i small plat or enclosure known as the "Jones
family cemetery,” containing ** acre, and the
right of access thereto), bounded on north by
lands of Boyd, Stripling and McFarland,
! west by McFarland. south by Mc
Farland and Cox, east by the
"Carnes place.” Improvements—an 8 room two-
story dwelling house, tenant houses, gin and
screw, stables, well fine water and good fences.
Also, the body of land known as the "Carnes
place,” consisting of lot No. 257, two hundred two
and one-lialf (202*2 > acres; part of lot No. 254 west
of Kendall creek, one hundred five and three-
fourths (105 V acres, more or less; fractional lot
No. 256, eighty-one <81) acres , and all that part of
fractionallot No. 255;’west of Kendall creek and
south of a line running due west from said creek
8 chains and 20 links south of the district line, con
taining eighteen and three-fourtns (18 (0 acres
more or less, said plantation containing in all
four hundred and eight acres, more or less; all in
the tenth district of said county; bounded north
by Boyd’s place, south by Cox, east by Kendall
creek and Jenkins, west by "Jones place.” Im
provements—a commodious one-story dwelling
house, out houses, good fences and well of fine
water.
Terms of sale: One-third cash on day of sale,
balance one and two years ; equal amounts, with
interest 7 per cent, secured by mortgage. Posses
sion of both places given on January 1, 1887. * De
scription of lands from recent survey by Jno. E.
Lamar, county surveyor. Sale for partition.
D. A. ANDREWS, )
J. G. MOON, Comm’rs.
, TOL Y. CRAWFORD .J
oct2d*wtd