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DAILY ENlflTHEH *Rl\\ ; (’OU'Mlil’S (JKOIKIIA. WKDXKSDAY MOHXIXd, MAY *>C. Issfi.
the double-pay plan.
[.,• 1.nullity til' ltd 1ml Al i I i 1 a r>
OHirrrs Senimr nn the t'hii Md.
cated, notwithstanding the open murmurs
ol disaffection on tho part of the ex-soonts.
It is suppo-vd that the contraband muni- I
tior.s of unr had been edict: tod graduullv I
by tile scouts during tlu ir terms of sew ice.
NOT (IF.IKi'MIMO'k hand.
A DISASTROUS FIRE.
1-tU.I
1-0 ul
Washington. May *23.—'There is quit** n
number of retired ollicers of the army and
n i\ v who are serving the government in a
civil capacity, and are drawing pay for
services in addition to lliepfpy tney
reecivc as ollicers of the naval or military
. ,tiiblishmeiit. It has always been a dis
puted question whether t his is permissible
under the section of the revised statutes
wiiieh prohibits the drawing of
(wo salaries from the government.
Ill, 1 army and navy influence, how -
.N.r, has thus far secured such
•i construction of the law by the account -
in" ollicers of the treasury that the r- tiivd
a fleers were allowed toeoniimu* miden-
Infge their hold upon the civil branch >1
l ‘i u ? s ,.rviee. Since the clennu latie admin
istratioii began manning the government,
stros have been taken to test the legality
this practice. 1’hu ease of Gram's
ly-pipl, (.ien. Badeuu. lias bet a made ;i test
lM . and is now bending the action of tin
The offl
depredations:
the vieinit v (
vMinniilterl
said, was cut
lia
trv
stated that tho recent
In .'ides of the line in
fill ns were undoubtedly
•sio d,. TUG belief. h‘e
•d bv every o tiecr oi the
•my in position to form an intelligent
pinion, Gcrouimo and lm immediate fol-
overs are far from the line in the sevuVe
•stnesses of the Sierra Madros. Cion. Mlh .s
i deployed his forces so as to guard
ry exposed point and every mountain
lias been con.vrud into a sign i’sta-
a. By this nn anti 1 p.e passage of any
id of bo:-tiles will be immediately nig-
led l.o tlu del.lehiuont, which tins tue
t chance to intercept them. Tho conn-
is full of soldier.-. ()ne eanuot go t'wn-
niles in a l.v directn n w it Lout run*''-'!;
! June and .J,11\....
I .fiily and Anfurt
■+■ I AuiVust and Sepl(
Itur I ».I II ii•!.1 ml riimisiiIt-l itnlliirK lliirlh of r ivtclvr s /•!-'; U
I’rtiliiTl, ■-..(•Ml. j ai'.pt'i'.'mlwr ''V A i*.." .1 ''rjilll
— I Tend, -s >»f Melivcricg jur today's clearing no
W'VSAV. Miwr.v Tie most ,U- h:,k> ■" ""' ' -kPl on l.nlcs of old ,tu, !;,•!. I
. • cue • ■ ,-c that ever .i.dicd Wausau v : hr'-ea lo-»la> luelutle s.JOO halos »d
iirokc out in an idle mill owned bv l>. (J. * VI 1 !!.. ..
... I'mures: Mav delivery. .. t-i t | sellers; Mav
* Ul,K b ; d the hup .iwrsli v\\ part ol the -, M d June. , j m.i sellers; June and .Julv, ft t-a-id 1
city, yesterday ulternoon. I he wind Was 1 eMeri; ,j ltl vand Aea.rusi, r» r>-Cld sellers Align t
blowing u gale, n id the lire stuin found | and September. ft on id sellei
mi: old n!•;iiiai>le.
< '(>1,1 *Mlit V G \. Mil\ 12, JSSfl.
( \X and;,Her May 12 law;, the local rates of
■ f in L-mI i n i»i« • diiiHaliooclif, . I 11111 and Apo-
juiietlun \> itii tlu* '11»i, 1 u*r m Buinicr'a yard
and swept south ui.d west. ilri\ing directly
! o tlie A h iidler B’ ew ui i V Iambi r compa
ny mill ami li.mb r y.mi. Supirhuman
• iron • were m u', by rue bremen and vol-
i. ,i, in si.iv the conil.igration.
but without as ail, and in thirty
minuter, naif t mile of lum
ber w as in ii tines. The pumping
engines oi'tlie wr.'.erworlc, were out of re-
nair, and the w it. r so.in f.iih il, Tlu* lire
nli, i
P-0 1.1
•J tMcl Imvi
One her and N,e
■iViwmber and !)e/.vmh-,.
, ,• , 'iil'i-r, r , ti- Iid value. !-'u'.u,v ;
M «y dclnerv, ft I (lid sellers; A
. d sellers : .Jam and duly.
<lv and August, .j lad l buyers;
i Ai .1. A Aaild bio et*s; Scpt«*ml;
'• .-i Id till vers: October and N«r
Now in »ei and Decen In r.
i•ptciiiber, ft (Mild value. Kutiirc
A SoutiiciP^cd Yn'iKco and Con-
fedovit,' Soidier TelU Wdiat
Hl Knows About It.
. ii; i, as r<>ii<>u
•Hon per Dale
i M her Ireiuld in piop it ion.
Apalachicola, $(>:00.
in- in po poriion.
ti: \m i:it xai \i>
a
IMctd.
Mil t«» the 1.
rail-
i lie
1 loo nil nf M
Xkw Yokk, May
testaiit Kpiseopal set*
I end,
41.1 house and
as ! ist night
tml. and t :ic
. i • iph
<oP.dated net rc
15. ,ai i ; e,
otton ijitiet; sale-
V 'I le ,\e c-.liinil.u- for Apaliu huola via Hnin-
. i !i>e , \c, \ T! r<|)AY nvining at m o’clock, re-
amiua \ in It.dul riil^e.
Aho\a -'-hi dale will he run. river, etc., permit-
•cat interest "in this ease, ns it involves
iui itas long been considered abuse ol’ad-
A lice 1L
sirationby republican authorities, and
.kcly to re sult in reducing the cm - dument
the Vavot\.d artnyaiid navy classes sonu-
what. Tlie teeunieal question involved is
whether the pay given a retired ollieer by
law is a salary or a pension. # The law urn-
idoved the word pay, bill the ollicers con-
brae it jus meaning pension. Among those
ppi.^t interested in the outcome of.t Ids liti■
• ation islieit. Dan Sickus, who is on the
rolls is a retired genera! ollieer, and was in
pie civil service sonic years as minister to
Alad •id. The court of claims lias merged
i (Hunter suit against Hadeau for 'r-b.nnn.
tnc amount he lias been paid as an army
odiecr since he accepted the position of
consul at London, and the decision is
expected to cover both cases. Should
tbc result be favorable to the government .
similar suit will doubtless be instituted
against General Sickles for a much larger
sum. A more serious result still threatens
these retired officers, however. The gov-
t: .miciit’s counsel has set up tlie defense to
i he Baileau suit that hy accepting employ
ment in the civil service a retired officer
forfeits his commission, and thus ceases to
mi officer. General Sickles lias been
A. L
diati
milv of tlu
Tlu
lompameu tile
of white r<
casket and a
wreaths. Thei
While the prueessiu
the choir
ere read in-d.w
elm rcii over the remains of Air
‘lulieion who was kille*: cn • ln.r.s-
: while riding in t.'entral p"\':.
rices were conducted hy Rev. Wm.
• 1 Washington. 'Pin* inma-
1 'ce -icd asseml ileiini
nk K. JTuidleton ami
muius to \ le- church,
erings were a vvreat h
tlu head, another
U the f.iot of the
between the two
•re no pall-bearms,
moved up Ihe aisle
•n;g ••Thy Will he Done." The
casket was made ol solid walnut, eovi d
with black cloth and had six le-avy silver
bandits. Tile •
Pendleton's u.
and 'it* ith. Am
rotary ol'Stal • Bayard, Pendleton
Walter Schenck. ikxkar Selu nek, Mrs:. P.
P. Potter, Krastus Coming, IVter Marie,
Camilla Marie, Gen. New ton,.J. rf. Lawson.
Stanley Matthews, Mrs. Noah limit
Schenek, iOlliotl Pendleton, F. lv. i J emlie-
ton, lMaj. Howard, J. S. Barton Key. 'foe
boily was taken to Woodlawn cemetery
for temporary interment, but the Jiu.ii in
terment will be in the old family’s lot in
the Cincinnati cemetery.
-I0,0i)i). r
fbv lumlv
id the date
use p
bir.h
ltd
I IK
;,isellkd
r:\de on
Putnus I
TI
anxiously wateidng the course of tlie liti-
,atiou this vveelf.
He has also been a con
spicuous ligure oil the lioor of tlie house,!
receiving much attention from members. ,
i. ;*
.1!
A PATENT OFFICE CURIOSITY.
Hu 1 History of a Trlvpliom* .Modol ami tlio IhvimM-
ur*s IM*srri|ilion of It.
Washington. May 23.—The Tribune !
man writes: “The patent office is the re-j
ccptaele of curious things sometimes. The i
other day my attention was drawn to a j
petition tiled’’with the register of wills by
Henry C. Strong for letters of administra
tion of the estate of one Lancelot H. Eve
rett, supposed to be dead. 'The petitioner j
slated that Everett left New Orleans in |
1SU7 to go to England. Since his depart- i
tire he has not been heard from, and it is
supposed he perished in a shipwreck.
Everett, it appears, filed certain models
in the patent office on June 27,
1866. Strong considers himself his
heir, lie fears, or rather claims, that the
models are exposed to view and in danger,
and are liable to become the means of de
priving the United States of most impor
tant evidence in the pending telephone suit
against the Bell people. He therefore
prays that, in order to preserve and per
petuate the testimony, the models be
placed in his custody, subject to the orders
of the officers of the United States. I was
curious to know what these ‘most impor
tant’ models might be, and hunted up the
specifications under which letters patent
had been granted to Lancelot Hope Everett.
I is his application lie states himself vvhnt he
claims for his invention. I quote t he exact
language, for nothing else would do Air.
Everett justice: 'Two phonographic
loemanauas mounted by acouglottic bat
teries—names implying machines which
generate intelligent sounds, while they
communicate to the spiritual sense of hear
ing through the nervous papilla? of the in
dex finger and thumb tips, and through
the acoustic trumpet of the external car,
being the natural parts of the body which
have direct relationship therewith, so that
persons who are deaf and dumb and
blind—arising from either physical defects
or from length of distances—may hear and
hold converse together by means of these
locnianaucLs and copper wires attached
thereto’ ”
Philadelphia, May 25.- It is announced j
here to-night that Keely, the inventor, to- .
day gave a .successful exhibition of his mo- I
tor. The Times to-morrow will contain a
lengthy article on the subject, in which it
states {hat ev ery experiment undertaken
was successful and that a wonderful exhibi
tion of the vibrating power of tlie motor
was given. The exhibition is said to nave
been given in the presence ol' twenty-fire '
capitalists and scientists, and, though j
many at first djelared the motor a fraud, |
they were all convinced of its sujeess be- |
fore the exhibition was over.
MRS. PENDLETON.
riluite to Her finally and Ammiiilishincts.
and Kxainplus of Her Kind Tart.
A l iiUii Wilier Spout.
Lynchbl'RG, Va., May 25.—A special to
the Daily Advance from Abingdon. Va., I
says: Yesterday evening at 5 o’clock a I
water snout struck the residence of David
Whittaker, on Gasper creek, this county,
destroying the dwelling and tobacco barn |
and drowning Miss Jennie Mangle, who
Had just stepped in out of the rain. Whit
taker had Ins jawbone broken by faffing
timbers. Two horses and three mules were
drowned. The body of the young lady i
was found half a mile below the house
to-day.
Tiiunuled Out of Prison.
Mattoon, III., May 25.—The Coles
county jail at Charleston, has again proved
itself insufficient to hold prisoners. Last
night two ear thieves—the only criminals
left after the adjournment of court—made
their escape by tunneling their way out.
New wire cages were being put in position
to take the place of the insecure jail vaults.
The prisoners were just iu time. They
have not been recaptured.
SIrikrs in Hood Humor.
Punxbutawny, May 25.— Nn trouble lias
occurred at the coal mines where about
fifty foreigners are working. Bixty-five
policemen armed with Winchester rifles
are guarding the miues, but no outbreak is
expected as tin* strikers are not armed and
seem to be in a good humor, although they
are determined to hold out. The compa
ny threaten eviction if the strike is not
soon done.
K) assure mm that the cigar is not
an.irelist’s bomb or a so
and he imwcly begins ;
he. swallows sever, oiguts oft.be smoke,
and tears dim his youthful eyes as he fran
tically tries to bring i no smoke our of his
ears; but he doesn’t falter ,ret. t hough In?
wonders what is going to happen next as
he return*'to the work he Inis hims-uf laid
out. It i.s iauron iu Hie programme that
the work luy.s him out, but ’wring ,i li11L•
shiver or two then* has been no symptom
of such a disaster yet.
No small hoy in his guileless unwisdom
ever begins ins first cigar without pre
viously lading in a.i inexhaustible store of
matches. Phis enables him to scorn
asking another boy for a light; it also
enables him to get uppropi lately sick. As
lie returns to his cigar now lie notices that
the smoke lias ccaacd curling from the
lighted end. ami finds afltr due iuvesligi-
tion, that it lias really gone out. iio
lights it, but the taste seems to have
changed and grows bitter, and he begins to
doubt the expediency of prosecuting his
study any farther. Then another little boy
passes along, tugging valiantly at anotte r
cigar, and lie begins to tak< fresh hope.
Mo has grave doubts hy this time of the
sanity of the men who insist that smoking
is a pleasure, but isn’t quite prepared for
tlie revolution t hat soon begins. Then
there is a heaviness about the region of his
stomach which he does not understand; he
hears the rumble of distant thunder; the
birds cease their singing; the sky turns
green; the gross seems blue, and a look of
unutterable anguish settles upon his fact'.
If he be destined for future greatness his
immortal soul stays down.
The life of the small boy is filled with ex
citing incidents, but there is no day so big
as that on which he smokes his first cigar.
In time.he has his first affair of the heart;
then he graduates from senool, and later
on gets married, and still later dies. But
none of these events affect him unite as the
first cigar. As he grows older the memory
of that event seems to linger by him, and
though recollections of other events fade,
this at least lie carries to the end. And
when in alter years his own small boy
conies home reeking with the odor of had
tobacco, and that same look of anguish on
his faee, it is with the consciousness of con
viction that lie assures the boy’s mother of
the futility of cholera antidotes, and ad
vises the hoy to go and lie down.
u ill .mi in,. :,t SIII.'. n* i:n n a named in
"'•I ni,' 111ii11-n« u si,.,,ui ill r date of
i"i* In 11< . ■ ■;is'■ s nlior it has
i Ian Ii"u »\li. iv no j>» r«on is
■II.I.V v\ , < i. "j-eia. Mu-uoucc nn
V- Aim ursitfc, «V<\ III .Mm
unty—
.Muscogee
i • i)UI a • N ’‘oil • . m: < nun May n-rin, IM)6.
,o Mu- i mi'-i hy (hr |ntiti(.ii of
I T i . .n. i 1‘niiii nil i! I>\ i In nolc- and
;au.‘ il« - L Pint on th- h :nH ilsi.v of May,
•u. ari'iii <l;i'• ' In w and year
Ui •* l-N Hu imI.im: |.romPcd by
ml Tv
^ A Mi l l. 1'1'NhAI'.
Ul-liHKib D2-100 j
100..
lie
’otto
: nii<l I
nor.:
ceipts 107, gloss i' 7; s.dvs 00;
.'xporiK to coniimuit uu.
U:.v 2*1. Cotton steady; niiilillhigs '
•ivijd.-, 170. grans 170; ssilcs uni; slock ,
ti» (heat Untuin ou.
Msiyift. ( <>it jii nominal: mi Idlings i
•ecuj)ts 00, gross 3f>0;“ sales . to '
lock 20,5)80; exports to Great Britain i
Bos row Airy 2"i. — Cotton <, ii iet; middlings
ma i. ]its ;{(), gross 132ft; sales on: slock
>110; exports to Great Britain 00.
ciiia, May 25.- Cotton dull; mitl-
•; net receipts .57, f.,A)‘jS 57; sales o0;
>, exports to Great Britain 00.
ti, Akiv 25.- Colton quiel; middlings
iet receipts lift, gross 115; sales 7ft;
Mi
Idling-
■s 1000; stock I TJ.TuO;
, i o coiiliueni M02.
( olte
mirk
j u iet;
gross 2511.
al Britain
Mo mil B, May 25Cot to i
5 ; ic: yet receipts 253, gross
23,067.
‘180;
stock
C'MAItl.l
iiAiViA, May 25.
middlings 8‘.jC.
Ootton qaiet; mid-
gross Id; sales
cat Britain no.
ation receipts '.'t> bales.
1'i‘Ovisions.
(Tnc vno, May 25. Flour steady. .Mess pork,
DAILY COTfUX srAXfi.ULNX.
C’olcmnc.s, ( 1a., May 25, 1886
OOTTo.S MILKS—SIKH T.
Northern and Kasu rn demand cotton bill
Savannah \$ otf; Ik-nk checking on New
id on Sava
ork
New York, May 23.--A writer in the
Trihuiie of to-day says: “Mrs. Pendleton,
the wife of ex-Sena tor Pendleton, of Ohio,
who met with a tragic death in Central
park on Thursday, was considered one of
the most beautiful women of the Buckeye !
state, as well as one of the most accom
plished, witty and entertaining. Mrs.
Richard Nevins, Mrs. Kate Chase Sprague i
and Mrs. Pendleton were often associated j
together in public mention for their great 1
beauty and mental endowments. They
were all Ohio women. It is related of Mrs. |
IVndleton that at one of the receptions of I
a newly inaugurated governor of her state
‘•he discovered a young staff officer whose 1
‘houlder straps, made by a country
tailor, 1 uid h(.in placed lengthwise on his
•mu’lders, instead of crosswise. His novel
appearance was exciting ridicule and
laughter, when Mrs. Pendleton, to whom
t lie young man had just been introduced.
t'>ok him by thcarmand propos* d a proinc-
bacle. With great tm t she vvitiulrew him
I’*’"in tlu* throng ami t iien told him quietly i
af his oddity in dr ss. 1 le slmt out of aside
d‘|'»r ami in twenty minuins was l a -k again ,
with iiis shoulders properly decorated,
c hen she smih d her approval, and taking
Ids arm made the round of th< Boor with
I • r prote'vc. When In iol<l nn- of this < ir-
( tunstancc. some va arsago. it was with an
I'oisonoiis l'jir'niijis.
Wauzkka, Wis., May 25.— Friday while
Martin Foust’s two children were playing
in the garden where their father was at 1
work plowing, they picked up and ate
some wild parsnips from tlie effects of
which they died—the boy within one hour
and a half, and the girl two hours and a
half after. They were aged respectively
six and nine years.
over the counter *>, premium
at par.
rollon.
Market to-day dull; inferior 0; ordinary 5c:
good ordinary. low middling K ! „o; middling
rt' 4 c; good middling sEc.
ndeasy—cash and dune $3 .»(). July .>'( 57U
I u h wz 1 ''.,. Lord very quiet— cash and June
1 $;> .87' ." *» JO. Siiorl rib side., Sti-ad.v- cash Sfft 2V .
I e* 5 3t»: Boxed ineai.s steady- dry sailed sbi in-
' dors i*i 2bi 14 36, nIiuU clear rib sides? > 76m 6 30.
i s i ignr easier-slab dan I A (;‘,c.
j At. Louis, May 2ft. Flour, market unchanged
kinjiv $.1 U) 20, eboiue fLSi) - 3 .»•), patent
.*;■> 10 do 40. Provisions quiet and steady. Mess
pork Inin lard firm ^5 1*7 1 .<<• 5 75 ; bulk
meats firm, boxed Jots steady loinr dear sides
$5 ift. short rib sides35 J*-. sh.ort dear sides $.5 50:
j bacon firm - long clear sides 00, slu»rt rib sides
I $6 Oh, short de.tr sides£6' .
! Lovjhv jll.':, May 25. ITovisionsSleady; Bacon, 1
I 'lea r rib $5 2.5, sides |6 15 shoulders .fifth; bulk
lear rib sales $5 50, clear sides *5 75, I
^ 31 i‘2‘ ., ; pork, men?. :?1i» ftt); sugar-
mirio
de
l‘I’S.
Dr. I,(mis' find) lake ( remnted.
Nf.w York, May 25.—Dr. Dio Lewis,
who died yesterday, left instructions that
his body should he cremated.
To-day.
By Southwestern railroad t)
By Mobile and Guard railroad 0
By Columbus and wc lern road .. 0
By Columbus and Rome railroad.. 0
By the river o
By vvagoni b
To Pate.
•argoes, pn
Louisian', i.
steady Lor
PolVee steady Iti,
c in fair deinaml-
<»od 3 >» I • .c Suga
pen kettle, good
•>las-,es sieHd.v Lquisi
•ime l(^ strictly prime 82c, prime 20 '22c; Lou
' ilia centrifugals, prime to strictly prime 18"
Totals .
()
85), 602
To Date
The firsl Bminted House.
St. Paul (iloiic.
“Washington had for a long time the
best haunted house iu tnis country,” ex
claimed a traveling resilient of that oily,
“it was in the early days considered qiriic
an « legant place, and was occupied hy the
families of the first nn n in the land. The
occupants soon )»c,;an to talk about Hie
peculiar noi.->es will -J: were heard during
the night in the ft*o:d hhmu on tiie third
floor. Nothing w.c heard in Hie davtitm .
•Hy 27
.st. Loris, May 2ft.
7,,. 2 red. cash 76
i'fil and ,"y- >V2i
• cni.ftv (Id and c;is
lav 25. Wheat active but wen!
'.,(', June 71 7-16" 7ft .Vila?, July 7
u cash '(.ft 1 .. -i :{ r » ! ,c, June 35'..'-/
r. oats opened easy but rl„*
and May 28c, June '27 7-1', 27
Wb-
. M: i
(•chial. luartv. lioncsl, vvlioli-soulcd
Sa.m iui,. ap! W’tiy, every man, woman
and child from tin “Great smoky'’ to the
Gulf, attd !Vo:n 1 1 e T dtilJe'hec to the \t*
'.antic. \\ ill su.il' !».u k a r. cognil'on to the
pleasant counlciiaMec w e picture.
l’.orn in < 'oiti.cel icut, while yi t a young
mini, in I.SiVl. lie cau.e soiitf. and located in
this 'talc, first m Jd./t \nl|, \. and remov
ing from l here ^!iort!“ ;ftenvard to .\> u r-
iciis, wl'.crc he t\r«l dev» loped 11is ciqiacity
lor a commi ivial life. After none years
residence here he associated h.msclf i;i
business wit h P. 11. Oliver, nt Albany,
building a hiruv store. \t XBunyli. Mas
lllllbrtmi.de enough L, lose jii.-- »\ife by a
stroke of lightning, and rhorliy after rc-
I trued to his fir.-t love. Anwrieiis, where
‘ he outbreak of t he ci . il w:tr found him.
He enlisted, serving lirwi in t lie company ol
his n lati\c. (*a},l. j. B. Brniilmin, ol font
panv B of t he
MACON VOLlWTKKKrt.
and afterward in tlie cavalry under Major
It. Ci. Lncki It. The « lose of ti e War found
Mr. Dunlap siranded in Macon, lull* his in
domitable eiu rgv ((ion recuperated his for
tunes, and the firm of Dunlap Sr T T shcr,
fancy goods dealers, was well and widely
known until they Imrned out. After this,
for a short time, he was in business at
Home, front w here he entered into that for
which In* was intended hy nature a sales
man. In this capacity he has been con
nected constantly with some of tlie best
and
i-U'rtT WIDELY KNOWN
of the (•astern ntam.ifatturing houses. In
1ST I If removed with his family D» Ailanta,
and has I•»•( n a resident <>f i his city since.
Meeting him on tlu street during the
week, the reporter was gre« ted with a
hearty handshake and earnest:
“How are you, my lad !"
“PieMy well, Sam; lu#w ar«! you?”
“Sound as a dollar, my hoy; although ii
1 had met you fen days ago I could not
Irivi said as much.”
“Why, how was lhal been sick?”
“Well, von must know that for the past
ten years \ have bet n suffering with kidney
disease, K'hielt every now and again would
grow had and give me serious trouble.
About two inonl I is ago I began to have one
of my bad spells, and for the past eight
Weeks i have been suffering some or most
of the
*TORTDUES OK DANTE’S INFERNO.’
“I have tried all I he physicians a i id nu-di-
eim s that I could hear or read of. and their
11.ime, as you know, is legion, but until a
\\'ci k situ e 1 lie disease has In Id undisputed
s\*"i V. It is not a plen-.ant thing, my boy,
to know t hat a disease which some of t he
111<*s• noted |»hvsiciaits ol the eoiintrv have
i»jomn:need as t In- most fatal to humanity,
11*• ( :i iii".' 1 gag'- upon y. iit vital 1 *. I tell you.
It s* rl o’ t ikes the good burnt r out of a
t he plaint ill
ilUr the dale
! I.ik 11»‘ -eight
with interest
nuuini. and if
1 i<i n• *1 • as nut p.ud at ii'.nnrily, ten pur cent
I ab.r.nv's IV rs for tin collection then of. for
I viiin ncei\(.d; and l»y tlie other of said promi*
| ■'••in noies the (U icmlant promised to pay to the
j pi.iim ill', or hearer, thirty-six months alter the
| din thereof. ! i.'liit.ii ll'mdnd and l.iuhty-
| A.’ii I >n! !ars and f\n ntj -'wo* t nts, v ilii inn-rest
11o• ii date ai eijdii pci *•( nt per annum, and if
•>.: ;• i note w m*j not paid at maturity, ten percent
att'-rm \ s fee- for t lie coBeot ion then of. ior value
ivn IVM'; and Unit liter,vanb. on the day and
: .4i 4for- ‘.ni !. > In dcl'endani. tin 1m tti r (o ( tire
tup paxment ol ;t;«i notes ( veented and deliver-
i e.I io t be plaint ill'In. r deed of inortiriipi'. '‘. hereby
Uu sai I ii< ii n i.mt m.<ru*mjed to the plaintiff all
that tract oi parcel of land situated on tlu- west
| ftan of Bioail -treet in the “ity <*f'( oh.inlms, nnd
.al ■
, bci
nho
v-five
Brotui street nnd running back the
lull depth ol >'iiid lot, and known us part of lot
: liiunla.r sixt., tiv. with all (lie improvements
i 'hereon, upon wliuli L situated Store Mouse
number one hundred and fort v-three ; and it fnr-
! lari' aPpearim, tbal said notes remain unpaid ;
It B. lln leioiv, tiidored that tin said detendant
I |>-i> into ( ourt on oi belon 1 tin fust day of the
! \l term then if. the principal, interest, attor-
,e v*s fees and costs due (*n said notes, or show
i cause i o l be eon11 ary, if any sin; can ; and t hat cn
i Uu fa cm e el t hi del'eildani So to do. the equity
ui'i\d<'option in and to sai.I moituape premises
' I,.- I'np'va-r thereafter burred and fop closed.
Ami it is ini f In*i‘ ordered that this rule be pub-
• I - Ued in tin-('olumbiis Lsan i iu:n-.Sr n , a puhlio
1 li'i/ette printed aim i»ubli.-lied in said city and
count v, once a mouth for four months previous to
'he nod n rm oft his ('ourt. orservd on the de
li mlant or In r special a^ent or attorney, at least
i iln e mouths prcMou.- Iu the in xt term of this
('...nt. J. T. WfLfJS,
l . .1. TMORNTnN. JudueC. C. C.
Plaint ill's Attorney.
I A true extract IVoin the minutes of Muscogee
I Superior < ftairt, May I
And
Five Cold and Two Siilvor Medals,
1 awarded in IS*<5 at the Exposhtions ot
New Orleans and Louisville, and the In*
! ventious Jftxposilion of London.
The superiority of Coraline over horn
or whalebone has now been demonstrated
by over live years’ experience, it is more
durable, more pliable, more comfortably
and nrr-r hrfakn.
Avoid cheap imitations ninde of varioul
kinds of cord. None arc. genuine unles
“Du. WArnkp.’s C/’ohalink” is priute
OU i ULu le ,|| Steel covet.
lit
ni vstt
Be
FOR SALS: BY ALL LCA3IN6 MIRCHAHTS.
WARNER BROTHERS,
353 Bro'dwciy, New York Citt
lliOtlt t K-L’ll I i.vi 11
"o.mtahle imis
de.ul of tlie i
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i.HvIft§ 1 ?"4(4F■
I*, mill i*,
tli.-.t
nt. <1
ilitjily I;
HUH it In
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:-ts
ALU F’lHST-CLASS
Si£i#!E|Hliy«iE[;]]ifli)fSaIe
THE BORDER MASSACRES.
!*flint l.A-’M'ot:I•. Vrc lb |..,.!silm for i
.
.'ft Up
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