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DAILY ENQUIRER • SUN: COLUMBUS. GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY ■!>, 1*86.
CoMni9(£nquittr-$uti.
ESTABLISHED IN 1828. 58 YEARS OLL-.
Daily, Weekly and Sunday
The ENQUIRER-SUN is issued every day, ex
cept Monday. The Weekly is issued on Monday.
The Daily iincluding Sunday) is delivered by
carriers in the c ity or mailed, postage IVee, to sub
scribers for 7.V. per month, #*2.00 for three
months, #1.00 for six months, or #7.00 a yeur.
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, ami 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 or less for the
first insertion, and 50 cents for each subsequent
insertion, and for the Weekly at #1 for each in
sertion.
All communications intended to promote the
private end* or interests of corporations, societies
or individuals will be charged as advertisements.
Special contracts^ made for advertising hy the
year. Obituaries will he charged for at customary
lutes.
None but solid metal cuts used.
An communications should be addressed to the
proprietor of the ENqriRKU-Sr.v.
Senator Brows i> 'lii' 1 tin* thanks nf
llu 1 pcnplo ill this srctinli I'm- llir able
niimilt'i' in wliirli In* |>r<tlicii'in
Invest by defealin^ I lie Hiiieliilineiit tn .
thi‘ river nntl Imrbnr liill, ii-iatniim the
(i|>|>r"j»riiitii>n for tin* ('hattaliooc’liee. |
Senator Brown it- enerj'etie in looking
after the welfare of his eoii^liltieney.
Thekk is a voihil' war yoinu r on in i
R Avail CMllity, Ky„ and il has lieeii ;i|>- I
propriatelv sujfL'esleil that the best way j
to settle it would be to fem e in the coun
ty, let. all those who have no hankering!
to be warriors escape, ami allow those re
maining to fight if out on any line they
chin ist>.
Wu have never regarded the Times-
Star as exactly authority on church news,
though it makes the statement that
“among tlit* good features (’ineinnati has
more churches in proportion to her popu
lation than any other city in America,
there being one house of worship to
ever** pJdO people.” This seems so in
credulous that some may hesitate to ac
cept if.
Tin. past four days oft lie week have left
behind them a record of legitimate,
healthy progress toward permanent pros
perity for the* entire country. At the be
ginning of July activity in merchandise j
movements is not expected, but the dis- J
tingnishing features of trade ami produe- j
tion may none tin* less display a weak
ness or strength of the influences that
govern daily operations and values.
MIL III VIS is NOT l)K.41).
Mr. K. 15. llayes, do facto ex-president,
lias recently made a speech in Toledo,
hence we are reminded Hint, though lost
to memory, he is not dead. According
to report of his speech lie was partic
ularly severe upon President Cleveland
for his pension vetoes. “The president's
action,” he said, “was contrary to every
tradition of the country, and one which
would meet no approve! from the patri
otic and just.” This Ohio fraud stands
among the most prominent demagogues
of this country, and silence would be
come him most and best lit bis
past record, i 1 is mock sympathy for
soldiers will not mitigate his conduct in
bestowing rewards upon the gang wlm
rnmo south to secure fraudulent returns
in order to swindle Samuel J. Tilden out j
of the office to which lie had been elected. |
lie is a beautiful specimen to come for-j
ward and denounce President I'lovolund
for bis disapproval of unjust and fraud
ulent bills that have been pushed j
through congress at niubt sessions by :
claim agents. It may lie in harmony I
with the character of I laves, but the do-|
imnciation has no foundation in justice i
or honest v.
CTB
omnipotent, "peace, he still." ! rection here." The religion of Jesi s
liven while humbled and hampered hy I Christ and the purging of the grave im v
hi- fetters of flesh, his soul continually | cleanse her .or the association 01 t! e
reached alter the light and the spirit.-j next world; but here there is neitlu .
I luit peopled it. He has found them and ! balm nor physician 'n Hileud to restor
joined them now
In whnt planet. In wlmt Htar,
Hearns thy peaceful soul afar?
In wlmt gar lens of delight
Rest thy weary feet to-night?”
Bill in spite of Ids intensely poetic na
ture. Paul Havne was, in the roundest,
completes! sense, a mail. He was not a
poet whom the muse lmd emasculated,
lie never look advantage of an enemy,
nor turned his hack on a friend. He never
conducted an enterprise that did not su -
eeed, ami lie never settled a debt for less
titan one hundred cents on the dollar.
It might almost be said of him as it was
of the prince of (irange, that “when he
died the iitlle children cried in the
street-.” They ought to write on his
tombstone, "He fought the light and
kept tlie faith,"
The deatii of such men as Paul llayne
ument in favor of a future
the lost health of the soul. When
woman is once fallen she is enroll
among that class of which Lady Macbeth ;
is the superlative type. Henceforth she I
is a breathing picture of moral death.
Wesleyan Female Institute,
STATJNTON, VA.
Sh - --
is the b,
pn istrnc
1 lull we
journey
A KKITHLM AN IJOYKIiNOIt I.UPOSSllll.K.
"After all there may be a chance for the repu’ -
Means to elect a governor in Georgia this yea , j
Gordon, it appears morally certain, will get f e j
Bourbon nomination. The feeling aroused I v
the canvass between him and .Major Bacon is .-o
bitter, however, that if Gordon is nominated a
j Bacon man will run on an independent ticket,
j The most conspicuous member of the party in
1 the state, aside from Bacon, is Dr. Felton, and I
1 he, it is believed, will be put up against Gordon
I if that gentleman is the choice of the regular c : - |
j vention. Cleveland received 94,564 votes in t' e j
j state in 1KH! and Blaine 17.1503. Should the dem- j
I ocrats put two nominees in the Held, therefore, j
! the republicans will have some incentive to select j
| a strong candidate and make an energet c cl -
1 vass.” Globe-Democrat,
I Tin* statements made by our purlisau '
It N w lioji tln*y have loft ua | republican cotemporary an* as imul) in •
Opens September 2‘2d, 1886. Otw of the First Schools for Young
Lawks tn the Union. All Dep a intents thorough. Buildings elegant,
steam heat. Gas light. Situation weautiful. Climate splendid. Pupils
from nineteen states. All im jortunt advantages in one greatly reduced
charge. Board, Wash mg, Light-. English, Latin, French, German,
Music, for Scholastic year, from Scuumher to dine, S'itlO, No Extras.
For Catalogue v* rite to
Rev. WM. a. HARK IS. D. IX. Pre ident.
j>7eod2m Staunton, Virginia.
People’s Line
STEAMERS!
The Steamer Milton H. Smith
Will leave Columbus every Saturday at s a m for
liainbrldge and Apalachicola. Leave Apalachi
cola Monday ot 2 p 111 for Bainbrldge and Colum.
mis. Connect with evening trains at Chuttj.
lioochee Sundays going down and Tuesdays
coming up, river, fog, &e., permitting. The local
rates of freight and passage to alt points on the
Chattahoochee and Apaluchleola rivers will lie
as follows :
Flour per barrel 10 cents
Cotton per bale 26 cents
Other freights in proportion.
Rates and schedule subject to change without
notice.
Pas,-age from Columbus to Apalachicola .{a ou.
Other points in proportion. Throug h tickets sold
by tins line to Savannah, Jacksonville and all
points tn East Florida.
Shippers will please have their freight at boat
by S:00 u ni on day of leaving, ns none will be re
ceived after that hour.
Boat reserves the rigid of not landing at any
point when considered dangerous by the pilot.
Boat will not stop at any point not named in
the published list of landings furnished ship
pers for lhSli.
Our responsibility for freight censes alter il tins
oeen disonarged at a landing when no person is
there to receive it. T. H. .MOORE.
Agent, Columbus, Gtt.
C. I). OWENS,
Trafic -Manager, Savanuan, fin. if
. i n to realize that death is a
ill ertlmn a ehanuti; and wo
have an intuition independent of revela
tion \i liich assures ns that they still live
and love,and move in some country whore
noon lias eoinjiierod night, where azure
i-les loom up from seas of silver, where
every hosoni is peaceful, every eye is tear
less, and every lace, is radiant with an iu-
ward and irrepressible joy.
With all his triumphs, Paul Ilayne’s
heart was not here. He was an humble
Christian, over whom heaven bent so
low that he had reached up and put his
treasures there. Amid our tears we can
rejoice that he has inherited a wedding
garment of white and a part in the first
resurrection.
im il, nm u.
At last Paul llayne is gum-. Heath did
not conquer him. It crowned him with
amaranth and immortality. Il is hard
lo realize, but it is only too true, that the
princely singer has passed beyond the
veil, and his harp bungs mute and tune
less mi the willow - of time.
A sketch of his life will he found else
where. With that we need not deal.
Audit would seem almost irreverent I >
enter upon even a favorable criticism of
ids poetry, w Idle hi- death is \ ct so new .
The critics of posterity will
write him down among the noblest
of the new school of hards. But it is not
among the critics or the great ones that
iu> will l>e ho-a remembered and best
understood, iii the heart where sorrow
has entered on its mission of mildew, in
the soul that has been whipped
tune and stained of sin, and v
reaching and pleading after pc;
children crying in t'lie night with no lan
guage hut a cry, in such hearts and in
soul.- Paul Havne and
'Ve-liko threnodies of -ong
their warmest wob
.' their longest stay. 1 n a
beautitul sense lie may lie said to have
lived behind rather than ahead of his
age. In the hey day of the cavaliers, he
would have been better known, hut not
I>etter loved, than lie was among us. His
was a peaceful life in all respects, save
one. In him the ideal and the gross, or
more correctly, the spiritual and the
practical, were ever at war. But it was a
war of the elements, not of anger; and it
is gratifying to know that the voice
whose music was like oil on rocking (fa!-
lilee, has at last quieted the
tempest in him with its sweet hut
of for-
'. hieh is
ice like
such
his
will havt
ci ane and n
THAT MUItllKU IX UHUROll.
The recent murder of John Steedlv,
near Midway, S. 0., by Miss Kmma
Connolly, is one of the most remarkable
homicides on record in any age or coun
try. The deliberation, the place, and the
circumstances all combine to throw
around the entire event a black ring of
blood and horror. Steedlv boasted that
he had betrayed Miss Connolly, and had
been eoivhided hy her brother and a
friend. He doubtless deemed himself
personally safe after this disgrace. But he
was inconsiderate enough to reiterate
the statement in print. On July -It 1 i
Steedlv attended church at Hunter’s
chapel, near Midway. Soon after taking
his seat Miss Connolly entered and took
a seat directly behind him. She
then drew a revolver, and placing it to
the hack of her victim’s head, fired. His
brains sputtered the pew and tlie floor of
tlie sacred edifice. Women screamed
and fainted and tlie congregation dis
persed in con fusion.
The fact that this deed was done hy a
“young lady,” together with the sur
rounding circumstances, has attracted to
it more than the usual interest; and it
does not require the philosophy that can
hear voices in the stones to extract from
it those lessons which are not hut should
lie prized above the morbid interest the
event awakens.
A man who will betray the secret con
fidence of a woman who lias been his co
partner in guilt may not he more of a
criminal, hut lie is less of a man. Stolen
waters are sweet, but there is honor even
among thieves. In this case it was not
the secret sin,lint the boastful and treach
erous betrayal of it that cost Steedlv his
life.
This tragedy also verifies anew a fact
which is as old as the race of man, and
whose only novelty is found in the vari
ous incidents which illustrate it—the fact
that crimes against society, like crimes
against tlie statutes, are only hidden to
lie revealed. The inspired w riter knew
this when he said in his message to the
age.-. "Be sure your sin will find you
ollt."
Kven the critical student of human
nature, w bet her he he humanitarian or
misanthropist, might pause and study
this tragedy with profit. This young
woman must have been su
premely desperate to thus cul
minate her harvest of the whirlwind.
>lu was im doubt tender and tearful
like other women. She went in good
society. Bloodshed wits foreign to every
instinct of her nature. What transformed
a weak girl into a fiend'.’ What nerved
her to leap into this acme of diabolism
The sei ret is plain and it ought to lie a
warning toothers. She prized her repu
tation above her character. Her reputa
tion she ('sibilated a bin e position, liberty,
and even life itself. Without character
she was content to live. Without
reputation 'he became maddened and
craziB cast away her last hope for the
future and tlie fruitions of life. But
what is the moral of Miss Connelly’s ca
reer which is now closed, unless one can
have a career behind prison hill's? It is
'his. that a fallen woman is worse than a
tallen man. A female thief, a female de-
hauehe, or a female desperado is im
measurably worse than a male in the
same predicament. A man may fall and
rise and retrieve. But a woman goes
down to dishonor like Lucifer went to
the pit—bv a returnless route. When
a woman once turns her hack upon God
and virtue, she reserves nothing; and for
her there is nothing reserved, save "tlu*
blackness of darkness forever.” When a
woman's honor has been buried, there is
no man. nor no angel, strong enough to
roll away the stone from tlu*
sepulchre. Above it must
be written the awful epitaph, “Xo resur-
error as its name is misleading in poli
tics. To start with, there will not he two
democratic nominees in tlie field, even if
Ur. Felton is put up against (ion. Gordon.
If, ns the Globe-Democrat assumes, the
republicans select a candidate there is no
reason w hy they should not center upon
Ur. Felton, as lie lias publicly announced
that he will not support (ten. Gordon.
Kilt, presmning that there are two dem-
cratie candidates, or half a dozen if it
suits better, there would then he no ,
chance to elect a republican governor, in
this state. The figures used above show !
that tlie democratic majority is 1
In order to secure an election the candi
date must secure a majority of the entire
vote cast. In article 5 section 1 of 1 lie
constitution of Georgia this language ap- '
pears :
“Par. V. The members of each branch of the
general assembly shall convene in the repre
sentative hall, and the president of the senate
and the speaker of the house of representatives >
shall open and publish the returns in the pres- I
ence and under tlie direction of the general as- 1
sembly; and the person having a majoiity of tlie j
whole number of votes shill! be declared duly j
elected govei nor of this state; hut, if no person j
shall have such a majority, therefrom the two I
persons having the highest number of votes, who j
shall lie in life, and shall not decline an election
at the fine appointed for the general assembly lo
elect, the general assembly shall, immediately,
elect a governor viva voee; and in all cases of
eleetion of a governor by the general assembly a
majoi ity of the members present shall be neces
sary to a choice."
It will thus be seen that the framers of
the constitution have very prudently
provided against the imposition of a gov
ernor who is not selected by a majority I
of the voters of the state, and at the
same time throws a mantle of safety over
tlie democrats while they engage in their
little family disturbances. The Globe-
Democrat need not congratulate itself
that we are soon to have a republican
governor in Georgia. Notwithstanding
this fact, every democrat ought to cheer
fully abide the nomiirtition of the state
convention and give a rousing majority
in the (letober election.
sssssssssssss
S P o r Fifty Years the great Remedy for S
S Blood Poison and Skin Diseases. S
S For 50 It never S
Years. iRl Fails! _
s — Hriiriw/H — s
Interesting Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases
Q mailed free to all who apply. It should be
carefully read by everybody. Address
g THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. g
SSSSSSSSSSSSS
Reduction in Gas Piping and Fixtures.
11J" E HAVE decided to push the Gas business in Columbus, and in order to do so have reduced
tt the price of Gas Pipe and Fixtures. Now is tlie time to put pipes in your dwelling or store
cheaper than ever before. Call and see our styles of Fixtures.
GEORGIA STEAM AND GAS PIPE COMPANY,
Telephone 99. 13 Twelfth Street.
1886 —THIRTEENTH—1888
CINCINNATI
IITUTTSTEIAL
EXPOSITION
OPENS SEPT. 1st.
CLOSES OCT. 9th.
display,THE FIRST OF TI
TIIK KFPKEHENTATIVE EXHIBITION OF
INDUSTRY AND AKT,
Manufactures-Art-Inventions-Products,
OPEN TO THE WORLD.
®j0"The honorable* record attained by these Ex
positions since 1870, under the auspices of the
Chamber of Commerce, Board of Trade and Ohio
Mechanics' Institute, will be fully maintained.
NO COMPETITIVE AWARDS.
All Articles will be entered for Exhibition only.
ADMISSION, 25 CENTS.
('heap Excursion Kales - consult jour railroad ageol.
• full particular?, address
L. H. McCAMMON. Secretary.
They Stand at the Head !
THE BEST SHOES FOR LADIES' WEAR
-ARE MADE BY
And now District Attorney Corkhil! has fol
lowed Uuiteau into the shadowy land. Time,
the tomb-builder, appears to have a weakness
for notable names.
Thk great Academy of Music in Denver has
been burned. The only large theatre left there
is Tabor’s opera house, owned by him of night
shirt notoriety.
Tine female base ballists declare they will play
a sure enough game in Atlanta in a few days, and
have so announced. We’ll wager our bank ac
count against the gate receipts, that unless they’ll
put the ticket seller under bond, and then tie a
ship anchor to one of h«s legs, that Atlanta gets
gulled again. Atlanta is not only too honest but
too innocent. The Gate City is the paradise of
frauds.
“Dr. Alfred R. Wallace, the English scientist,
who is coming to this country to lecture next fall,
is a fellow of the Linmean, Zoological, Entomo
logical, Anthropological and Royal Geographical
Societies, of London ; gold medalist of the Royal
Society, of London, and cf the Sociote de Geogra
phic, of Paris.”
He needs but one more title to make him
happy, and he must have it. Dub him with the
honorary title of a Georgia colonel.
“ Thk sun-spot cycle was noticed by the elder
Herschel, and several have observed, or imagined
they did. a connection between this eleven-year
cycle and a corresponding cycle of commercial ac
tivity and depression.” The coincidence is inter
esting-hut it seems as if, from this long depres
sion, we must have got pretty near the end of the
cycle. Time for the sun, if not the leopard, to
change his spots.
Thk Pall Mall Gazette publishes statistics cal
culated to discourage the vegetarian propagan
dists. It states that at the Colonies exhibition re
cently no fewer than 80,294 persons passed the
turnstiles -a multitude exceeding great, which
consumed 50,000 rolls, 5000 loaves of bread and
fifty tons, or 112,000 pounds, of meat, That is to
say, each man, woman and child at the Colonies
that day disposed of nearly one pound aud u-halt
J. C. BENNETT
The beet Ladies’ OP-
ERA SLIPPERS
brought to Columbus are
made by them The?
can onh be had at my
store I cau fit any foot
& BARNARD.
NO LADY SHOULD
PITY SHOES UN
TI SHE EXAM-
I ES MI STOCK.
Of I
eat.
Du. Kvkkktt. of Washington, who has passed
several years in Alaska, is to make an extended
trip into the inteiior, in search of copper deposits.
He has found weapons and vessels of unsmelted
copper among the Indians, indicating metal of
great purity.
Thk democracy are not an ideally happy family.
— [Salem Register.] O. but they know how to say
grace round the family table! You let 'em alone
- they're having more anil more cause for
thankfulness, and are getting real jolly.
The most interesting inmate of the Ohio peni
tentiary is a Mrs. Victor, who poisoned her
brother in Cleveland, in 1868. Her sentence to
capital punishment was commuted by Governor
Hayes to life imprisonment. She has already
been in eighteen years; and she is fifty-nine
years old.
The Louisima legislature has thrown out a
bill proposing a dog tax. The people have sub
mitted to many things, but they draw aline at
the “yeller purp.”
If congressmen don't do anything else, they
certainly earn their bread by the sweat of their
brows this warm weather.
Ex-President Arthur now drives along the
New London beach looking as though he meant
to live for years.
I am Sole Agent for these Goods in Columbus.
W:MZ. MEYER.
THE BOSS PRESS
Is Without a Rival.
TNI LIDDELL VARIABLE FEED SAW MILL
Is fhe very best Saw Mill in the market. It took tlie only
medal of the tirsl class at the New Orleans Exposition.
For the above, mid for all other machinery, address,
FORBES LI DDELL&CO.,
Montgomery, Ala.||;
N. B.—Our stock of Wrought. Iron, Pipe, Fittings and
Machinery is the largest in Ibis part of the country.
ieldwBm
B. F. COLEMAN, Jr.,
UNDERTAKER AND DEALER IN
Patent Metalic CasKets, Wood Cases & Caskets,
READ WHAT THEY SAY!
Will bp Sold to tin* Firxt lately or («<*«•
tlemon llmt Calls Till* Woy,
-FOR—
$2250 and $1800. Two vacant lots on First avenue.
1600. Six room House, out-liouse and kitchen,
First avenue.
6000. Corner Sixth avenue and Eighth street, 4
acre lot, Store House, Wagon Yard, and
out-houses
1600. Quarter acre lot, 4 room House, up town,
Second avenue.
luieiicii, well ui kuu
works. First avenue.
Six Houses and Lots 150 yards from lower
bridge, in Girard. Will sell separate.
House with acre lot in Girard.
One acre lot and four Houses in Girard.
One House and Lot in Chipley.
Two 2 room Houses in city.
I have some fine suburban property which I
will sell cheap.
Also several small Farms and some large Farms
Will either sell or exchange for city property.
FOR KENT.
Several Houses from $4 to $20 per month.
Come and see and ask questions. We cannot
trade unless we come face to face.
JT. G. REEDY,
Real Estate Agent, No.io 12th St.
Hollins Institute,
THIS Institute, for the higher education of
young ladies, is finely equipped. Languages,
Literature, Science, Music, Art, are taught under
high standards by gentlemen and ladies of broad
culture and elevated character. It employs over
twenty-five officers and teachers, and commands
the further advantage of salubrious mountain
climate, mineral waters, charming scenery,
from year to year its accommodations are fully
occupied.
.The Forty-fourth annual session will open on
the loth of September. For further information
apply at Hollins P. ()., Virginia.
. „ ^ . CHAS. H. COCKE,
jyh 2tawtsepl5 Business Agent.
Children’s (Jloss White Cases and Caskeb
White Metalic, Caskets. Burial Holies, all
up. Personal attention given all orders
four doors wesl of Thos. Hilbert's Pritiling
, Children’s Gloss
prices from $1.50
Twelfth Sired.
Office.
Tlllt ONLY per.
Mifk 1 r.valiiiinb* in Olid-Fit A 1 ?
» ot*( bins,Ol A U ll ll(K A and all dinor^
,. l»ri*dlgonti»d food for l>yNpt>i>tI<-M, ConMiimp-
’ *• < *)iiviiie«ci>nt», Ac-, Perfect nutrient in all
wasimj diseases. Requires no cooking. Keep- In
nil cllnmtes. Sold ivory where. Our hook “The
•tiiL’V Infants," MAILED FKF.K.
JOLliiLlv* hOUDALti «k (JO., liuslou, jxImha.
jyB tu th sat 6m
HomeSchooli MUSC0GEE sheriff sale
A'I'll HNS. KEOIUHA.
Associate Principals.
' IMIE Scholastic year re-opens on Wednesday,
I .September 22u, 1886. Best educational ad
vantages offered 10 young ladies.
For circular of information apply to the above.
jy8 <itsep22
K.V F. K. U now los «v
-.. Br
Bookcases, Tables, Office
litiilF^Tjfl Chairs,Letter Presses,
Fine Cabinets, &c.
-M TYLER DESK CO.
N. Fourth wt., St. Louis
arud Lu t'ur 40 Mu Caution 1 *
"CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH."
The Original and Only Genuine.
Safi* an-i always Rowareof worth lean ‘.tnltatliUt
fndiHPODsable to LADIES. Ai*k tour Drugiriat tci
“ChloheMtor a EngRali" an i tak>- no other, or iuclo»e 4e
■taint s)jt° ui. for particulars in letter by return mall
NAME PAPER, t'hlcheatec Chemical Co..
iolS WmiUu.i Njuarc, PhlUda., Pa
StldbyJtrufjihtii ove^wherr. .?m tj,- '‘Thick*;-
'ku k *4«*•
the fiuiow i:ig personal propert
Printing Freest**. Type, (’bus, Ruh v
Stouts. (';> s» > Smini- Paper Fix tint a i
Furnifur- . i:i< mhing Safi -.mi all otlu*
contained in tin i'U.v (ifCohmilius, known as the
Columbus Daily Times, and used in ‘the business
of said paper, aiul the printing and circulation
i tluivot. tlu propert y of Thomas K. Wynne, Wal-
i Ur S. DeWolf and John 8. Stewart, who ivsidein
I Muscogee county, Georgia, and John H. Martin,
| who resides in Floyd county, Georgia, Partners,
i using the firm name of Wynne, DeWolf As Co
All of said property levied on as the property of
, Wynne, DeWolf & Co., to satisfy a mortgage ti fa
in my hands in favor of Thomas K. Nuckolls vs.
\\ ynne, DeW olf & Co. Said property will be sold
as situated and can be seen at the Store House on
the south side of Pith street, where said property
I is situated m store house known as the Times
, office. J. G.BURRCB,
' ty» oawlw Sheriff.
JO-
— Send lor price
and Illustrated c uiaiogue •*
I.C0INNATI <0.; CORRUGATING CO
my9 deod&weow6m 1
GEORGIA. MUSCOGEE COUNTY
nt(d FH as tnn nry H , E PI-in*. sruardian for S. H
ailt oti i! ,' i ",“‘kes application for leave t
This Tu, lljr belonging to said ward.
tnslVo.i.lal c fi- re ' Ui clte , a11 Persons conceme
prescribed 118 by *£? «j»
cant. PrOPertyShOUld not be Kral ‘ted lo said appl
Witness my official signature this June 4tl
“oawhv F - M. B ROOKS,