Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, August 21, 1886, Image 2

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    GAILY KKgun EH - SUN : COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING AUGUST 21, 18S8.
His Eloquent Plea in the North Cjrolir
Conference.
(tkiimhrni Old Net Mirr fi r II ■ Mntilinml Will'll
ll.'.lolncl the t'lnm'li >li'il i.i Opi nvine pitrtlv
hinl Kid-mIik In llie ( inintri \ii Mini « mi Hull-
.in.l Ilraili Hill mi.
Ifiiicigh Cor. New Vorl: World.
'['lie Afrienn Methodist Koiscopat eliurch
on thin neighborhood lie In i u much dh
turiled by a question which uvors mot\
of polities than religion. At tho confer
cnee whioh was in session he.t November,
when the death ol Vice President Hen-
cirii ks was nhnoum i d Hev. Andrew .J.
Chambers offered resolutions of respect to
the dead man’s memory, which brought a
ntorm of reproaches about his head. In
spite of the fact that he was charged with
hieing a democrat, however, the church at
Wilmington, to which he was appointed,
received him with open arms, although
its ipimibers are republicans. Before Air.
Chambers received this appointment it
had been decided to hold the next confer
ence in Wilmington, but as soon as the
appointment was announced a circular
was published declaring that the confer
ence would not meet Chambers. His
church members, however, stuck to their
pastor, and as a compromise the confer
ence will meet in New Berne.
The special session at which this de-
vision was arrived at was called by Bishop
Turner, of Atlanta, in the following circu
lar :
“You are hereby notified that for several
reasons—too numerous to mention at pres
ent, yet extraordinary in their character
ami hearing I have resolved to assemble
the North Carolina conference for two
slays, in Raleigh, N. C., August 4, at 3
•o’clock p. in. You are directed to be pres
ent at the time above designated, and
should you know of any other member
who may not receive a like notice, you are
authorized to order him to be present. 1
shall (hen and there present the reasons
For calling this extra session. This is only
an.extra session,' remember, and not the
regular session, which meets in Novem
ber.”
The meeting was well attended, and the
«xcitcment was great. A number of
Speeches were made against Chambers, to
which lie replied as follows :
“J did not surrender my manhood when
I joined the church, nor did l adjure an
interest in my country’s affairs when I
assumed the obligations of a minister. I
have never been a politician in the pulpit,
neither have I obtruded my views upon
unwilling auditors. And whether I have
or bai e not is not the question. The con
ference must decide whether or not 1 have
infringed tlie decalogue, or contravened
the discipline of the church. If 1 have,
summon mo to the bar; if I have not, touch
me nl your peril, i offered resolutions of
respect to the memory of Vice President
Hendricks last November. There were no
eulogistic sentences therein. He was re
ferred to as the nation’s dead ; and vet the
personal integrity of the man would have
warranted favorable mention. Had Gen.
2/Ogaii been in Vice President Hendricks’
P lace and death should have claimed him.
would have offered similar resolutions, I
for I recognize and honor that feature of |
our democracy that conducts governmental
affairs by a party agency, J do not think a
•citizen either a villain or an outlaw because ,
his conception of public duty is opposite to i
mine. Furthermore, there is not a state or j
federal official in the land that I do not !
honor. If the worthy chief executive of
this nation Blioulil pass away, or should
the governor of North Carolina, no unen
viable iegateo of an intolerant age, should
stand between their honored dust and my
sense of duty.
“I fear we are too often misled. Breth
ren have been induced to regard the men
in authority ns enemies because they were
•of opposite polities, and that the law is
partial in party men’s hands; that it is not j
ftikz! same law unto all the inhabitants of
the some land, but is rather an instrument
of u party to crush its antagonists, when ;
the truth is t tie law is the same and its pur
poses the same. It is the same guardian I
of virtue and Nemesis of vice, whoever
may apply it. There was some little ex- 1
<'usc for a colored dread of democratic as- I
cendeucy previous to the inauguration of :
our present president; hut since that au
spicious event every excuse has gone. I
Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness
ureas sacred to-day—nay, more sacred—i
they have a firmer hold upon the public |
conscience than at any previous period in j
our history; because public sentiment, the
only recognized law of mankind, sustains
the right, while force of every form van
ishes away.
“I will not turn an envenomed tongue j
on the white men of the south, nor do I
think the real friends of my race would !
■sanction such a policy. Had we striven
half as hard to win the good will of our
neighbors, albeit they were ex-slave own- 1
ors, as we did to win the good will of
strangers, the whole phase of affairs among 1
ns would be brighter than it is; and in spite ,
of all mistakes there is no section of our
land in which we are so welcome. In no
place are we more trusted than in south
ern homes. Every industrial station is the
legitimate prize of ambition. Tax levies .
for learning filter through southern fingers 1
like crystal dew-drops. In want the same
fingers feed us. In time of trouble they 1
befriend us. Ill sickness they minister
unto us. In old age they comfort us, and :
.in death they bury us. Oh! that justice
may be done by Christian ministers to n
mercilessly maligned people.
“Every race has its roughs. We have
complained because the misdeeds of one
colored man was charged to the whole
colored race. How unjust! Yet we hold
millions answurable for the crimes of the i
few. Some men say 1 shall not preach be
cause of my politics. 1 hope they will j
allow mo to live on the earth and breathe!
t lie air of heaven. 1 assert here and now ,
and forever the proud prerogative of au I
American. Othello's occupation of whip- !
per in is gone. 1 toil the colored men of
ill. •• ’ >n that the nation can get on bet-
tei'u a. .out it; tliiil wc arc under as many
obligations to thi governmant as the gov
ernment is to us; that the world has no!
use for, and no time to bother with a man
■with a grievance; that the mountain
will not conic to Mohammed; that
impracticable egotists have no place
in a land of active, busy, plucky
men who can scarcely find time in which
to die; that self-reliance is the first cle
ment in manhood; that the colored man
or woman in the south who has not one
■white man or white woman whom he
would trust as far as any mortal on earth is
in jail*, that liberty of conscience is the
freeman s heritage: that lo proscribe a man
on account ot polities is to play checkers !
with tlie devil; that a church for bald- 1
headed men and a corner in heaven for
fools is as rational as a church for colored
republicans. 1 would tell them that to
mourn a grievance past and gone is the i
next way to draw new mischiefs on.’ That j
tlie granite possibilities tower about them,
but the mullet of the will and the ehisi 1 of :
industry they alone can use. That all the
nations wait to honor the first negro phi- 1
losopher, scientist or scholar; Hint all the
world w ill sound pieans to the universe
with Milton’s pen and Dante's diction, as
it already does to Douglass, that majestic .
tonguer of wondrous deeds.
“I go further, and say we cannot hate !
and reach heaven; that wind is not wis
dom, nor are bellows brains; that a dirt- !
covered diamond is a diamond still; that
God never made lovelier ladies than the
white ladies of magnolia land, and that a
more generous soul does not heat, nor a
truer heart does not throb, than the one
locked in the bosom of a son of a revolu
tionary sire—cavalier, confederate, or citi-
■ 'Ti though we call him. The time will
omc when Grunt, who led the armies of
.in victorious north, will be companioned
vith Tilden, whose nod would have
dump'd the nation in blood.
•'L'aiicasian is tin-soul of our civilization
ind the pri sent pilot of human destiny.
Ml our race are not saints, nor all others
dimers. Washington and Jefferson will
.0 honored by the next generation of col
iVed men. in the homes of majestic
Blaine mid heroic Logan I have been
"can 1 as a man. and in tho house of tho
.nighty Randall and the hotel of the mag-
aiiiee it Carlish as a t itizen. I demand no
more from my own nice than i received
from the great leaders of the other race.
Tin , rit of the great man falters not in
holiest fight, lull liilcon-like, sweeps amid i
:lie aggregated gv • idem - of a thousand j
generations, mid when from earth il is at !
last set fc . i' will revisit old haunts with '
summer'i. dews, ki • the relvet lips of the
blushing n s. . oust : in irous glances into j
I lie midnight sens, fl.v with the beams from
l lie stars in cheer tlie ion. traveler o’er tile !
wide world’s way, and lead budding genius |
to the fields ol rarefied achievements. |
'You cannot bridle the soul. You cannot
conquer the will. You cannot make mo
hate a man, for man's my brother still.’ ” J
Chambers has a line presence and is a I
graceful and forceful speaker. He is from
Now Jersey, but lias taken part in demo
cratic campaigns in the vest. The result
of the trial, if trial it can be called, resulted
in a complete victory for Chambers, who
was favored by Bishop 'Turner. The latter
had appointed him. Bishop Turner said
to the World correspondent this afternoon
that Chambers’ vindication was triumph
ant, and that he commends his work. Tlie
bishop himself, up to a few years ago, was
an enthusiastic politician in the republican
r.nks. He says that when the civil rights
bill passed he ceased to lie a republican
politician, for thenceforward lie was ofthe
opinion that the negro must standalone
and carve put ids own destiny. The cler
gymen who were attempting to make
headway against Chambers are discom
fited.
FEMALE EMPLOYES.
Tliri'i 1 Million lVmnfii WorkIniz an Salaries in
This Country.
Mr. H. P. Mitchell, one of the best in
formed men on labor statistics in St.
Louis, lias been devoting considerable time
the last few weeks to tlie question of
female employment. In conversation with
a St. Louis Republican reporter lie said:
“The number of womep engaged in
other than household occupation in the
I'nited States is probably much larger than
is generally supposed, both from natural
increase of population and tlie con
tinued crowding of tlie great army still
seeking employment into new channels,
not before appropriated by women,
may well create a desire to be better
informed in regard to their numbers and
the conditions under which they perform
their dally tasks. The national bureau of
education and labor have recognized this,
and are preparing to make an exhaustive
investigation of this subject during the en
suing year. A careful estimate places tlie
total number of women thus employed on
July 1, 1880, at 3,000,000, and of these 600,-
000 are agricultural laborers, mainly in tlie
cotton fields of the south: 010,000 are em
ployed in manufactories of various kinds,
while 530,000 in the laundries of our coun
try insist that the ‘Cliiiie.se must go;' 280,-
000 are milliners, and 200,0(X) find employ
ment ns dressmakers; 00,000 earn their
bread in the tailor shops, and OIK),000 ure
saleswomen, teachers, telegraph operators,
type writers, bookkeepers, type setters
and nurses, and many other occupations
find small numbers a livelihood. There
are in round numbers 2500 female physi
cians in tlie United States. Tlie condi
tions under which these 3,000,000 perform
their labor are exceedingly varied, for
while many employers pay due regard to
their health and comfort many others give
heed to notlii ng but tlie profit to be made,
and ulthough some classes of female labor
Bradfields
An infallible specific for
nl! the fliscii-cs pi filliiir to
women such m painful or
Niipprtsv' ri Menstruation,
Falling-d’the Womb, Leu-
corrlni*i» or Whites, etc.
I- emaSe
( II.WGK OF Mi l:.
If taken (luring this crit
ical | - riod, great suffering
<;;•! :langur can be entirely
avoided.
Regulator
Send for book containing valuable information
'or women. It will be mailed free to applicants.
ItiiADi'iLLi) Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga.
eod&w met rd mt (1)
CLINCSWWS
tobacco
ii. i nwiai .«mkku ’anua tap—wm—
1 REMEDIES
TO MEXICO
ON TO MEXICO!
Culling tlie Cause!i
THE CL1RGMAN TOBACCO OINTMENT
i’mi*: host riniriivi; pirnwra
tion oil tho market for Piles. A SURF (TKK
‘ cLiiiir Pile*. H«:. m* VTJhiled to give
i and Boils. Ur
THE CUKQMAN TGBACCQ CAKE
NVmtli’S OWN ItlvVM OY, Cures >il]
Wound*'. Out -:. Binises, Sprains, Erysipelas, Ii ils,
C irl.un. li - H"iu* I-VIgiis. Ulcers. Sores. Sore Eyes,
S -reThroat Bunions.C uiis. Neuralgia.Rheiinmtisin,
THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO PLASTER
J’lcpairil according lo llu* iiiok! scientific
principles, of die IM ItBST SHUATIVK
iNtiltl.'IMB.STs, compounded with the purest
Tobacco Flour, and is specially recommended for
Croup.Weod or Cake of tho Breast, and for that cluss
of irritant or intlaninmtory maladies, Aches and
Pains where, from too delicate a state of the system,
tin* patient is unable to bear tlie stronger application
of the Tobacco Cake. For Hoadache or other Aches
and Pains, it is invaluable. Price 15 ctN.
Ask your druggist for these remedies, or write to the
CLINGMAN TOBACCO CURE CO.
DURHAM, N. C.. U. S. A.
igh
are honorable exceptions, the majority are
shamefully treated and miserably paid,
and it is to he hoped that a thorough ven
tilation of the subject by the bureau will
result in benefitting the working women
of our land, for surely the opportunity is ;
there.”
Simmons’ Iron Cordial sends red blood !
tn the cheeks of the sickly one and j
strength to the muscles, by giving ail ap- j
petite, aiding digestion and building up |
the system. All sickly women who need |
a never-failing Female Regulator will be |
delighted with its prompt action.
eod&w
Kxjh'Iims of (nulling.
Customer ito waiter): “You don’t charge
50 cents for canned lobster, do you?”
Waiter: “Y’es, salt, dat’s de price.”
Customer: “But I can get them fresh at
this season for less than that.”
Waiter: “I don't know how ’tis, sah; I
s'pose it costs something to can ’em.”—
New York Times.
Ely’s Cream Balm was recommended to
mo by my druggist as a preventative to
hav fever. Have been using it ns directed
since the 9th of August, and have found it
a specific for that much dreaded and loath
some disease. For ten years or more I
have been a great sufferer each year, from
August Dth till frost, and have tried many
alleged remedies for its cure, but Ely’s
Cream Balm is the only preventative I
have ever found. Hay fever sufferers
ought to know of its elHcaoy.
F. B. Ainsworth,
Of F. B. Ainsworth & Co., publishers, In
dianapolis, Ind. eod&w
All I'u pirn unit Krrniul,
A young man who had kindly consented
to stop at a dry goods store for his sister
said to the young woman behind the coun
ter. and he said it very mildly:
“Have you any corsets?”
“Yes, sir,” replied the unmoved young
woman, “what size do you wear?”—New
York Times.
Advice to Mothers.—Mrs. Winslow’s
Soothing Syrup should always he used
when children arc cutting teeth. It re- |
licvcs the little sufferer at once; it produces i
natural, quiet sleep by relieving the child
from pain, and the little cherub awakes as
“bright as a button.” It is very pleasant |
to taste. It soothes the child, softens the ,
gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regu
lates the bowels and is the best known
remedy for diarrhma, whether arising
from teething or other causes. Twenty-
live cents a bottle. jel7 d&wly
Tlie (jiu'i'ii Bows In I lie People.
New York Herald.
Neither Lord Salisbury nor nil tlie con
servatives of England can stay the rising
tide of popular ideas. “ I am the Queen
of England,” the sovereign is reported as
saying indignantly to Gladstone when her
signature was required. “Audi,” replied!
Gladstone, “ am the people of England.”
The signature was given, though reluc
tantly.
Saved II is I,He,
Mr. T>. I. Wilcoxson, of Horse Cave. Ky., I
says he was, for many years, badly afflicted j
with I’hthisie, also Diabetes; the pnins i
were almost unendurable and would some- |
times almost throw him into convulsions.
He tried Electric Bitters and got relief
from first bottle and after taking six hot- l
ties, was entirely cured, and had gained in j
flesh eighteen pounds. Says he positively I
belibves he would have died, had it not j
been for the relief afforded by Electric Bit
ters. Sold at 50c. a bottle by Brannon it
Carson. < eod&w
Too Fresh to Keep.
A western paper says that fresh men
ore needed in the cabinet. As if there could
be fresher men than Bayard and Garland.
N u i
(T'lIS MAN BUYS AT GRAY’S.)
Why, GRAY, at the TRADE PALACE,
CUTTING THE PRICES OF DRY GOODS, OF COURSE.
All ivcT!iits oi'cltTCtf lo Gray's to buy all Ilieir Shirts, Hose and material for uniforms
ole., before their early depariure. Tlie excitement of war wiili Mexico nothing to the
war Gray is warring again.-•I high priced credit houses. To anus! To annul They come,
Huy roitir—-the Mr.victuut!-—to the Trade Palace to get some of the leg mgains before all are
gone.
The following will be some of the prices the Trade Palace will name tin's week to quiet the troublesome waters :
200 Pieces C.'( )L< )REI > LAW NS at 3 cents; selling elsewhere nt 5 and Gj cents.
300 Large BED SPREADS reduced from >1 26 to 75 cents.
50 Pieces LI"PIN'.-1 PI i H PI ACK CASHMERE at 25 cents; they are considered cheap at 45 cents.
6 Cases good STANDARD PRINTS, fast colors, at 4jc ; 90 Dozen Gents’ Full Regular 40c HALF HOSE reduced to 25 cts
25 Dozen Ladies’ Full Regular IP >SE reduced to 20c ; 100 Dozen Misses’ RIBBED HOSE reduced to 3 cents.
25 Pieces ORIENTAL La CEB reduced from 22.Jc to 10c a yard.
Another shipniujtt r< wived of our celebrated 05c Unlaundried SIIIRT, reduced from .«! 00.
Keep on reading. The following is worthy of note :
46 Inch BLACK TORTKR-Si! I'LL CLOTH reduced from 85c to 371c.
44 Inch BLACK VALOSS CLOTH reduced from 05c to 65c.
•12 Inch SILK WARP HENRIETTA CLOTH reduced from fl 50 to 921c.
10 Inch BLACK ALL WOOL FLANNEL reduced from 65c to 42*c.
40 Tilt h IIASt’TEL MEIIIDOX BEIGE reduced from SI 76 to #1 16.
The old raying. “See Venice and die.” All we got to say is, see Gray’s 25c BLACK CASHMERE and live. Abo see our 40o
COLORED WORSTED DRESS GOODS at 12Ac and live. ♦
( ; .rny's gient lookout, “Sell cheap, sell a heap.’
Columbus. Savannah. Augusta and New York.
ON TOP LIV,E HOUSE.
C. P. Gray & Co., Trade Palace,
opposite FwA.nsricinsr ppottspp
Largest business connections South—
CAPITAL PRIZE, - $150,000.
“We do hereby certify that we supervise the ar
rangement fot till the Monthly and Quarterly
Drawings of The Louisiana State Lottery Com-
puny, and in person manage and control thi
Drawings themselves, and that the same are cow
ducted with honesty, fairness, and in good faith
toward all parties, and wc authorize the Company
to use this certificate x with facsimiles of our sip
natures attached, to its advertisements.”
4'oniiat i*Mion<trM
We the undersigned Bank* and Bankers wid
pay all Prizes drawn i?i The Louisiana State Lot
teries which may be presented at our counters.
J. II. OUIzKSRY. I»re*. Lu. Xal l Hunk.
J. W. KIMUtE ril.Pres. State Xafl Wit
A. RAM)WL\, Pres. X. O. X«n Maul*
U
PROFESSIONAL FA 111>S.
D r. c. t. osburn,
Dentist,
(Successor to Dr. J. M. Mason.)
Office next door to Rankin House. Same en
trance as Riddle’s gallery. oc4-ly
W F. TIGNER,
• Dentist,
35% Twelfth street (formerly Randolph street.
e7-ly
GEORGIA, MUSCOGEE COUNTY:
Whereas, Thos. J Granberry makes application
for the guardianship of the property of Isabel
Ferguson, a minor child of Charles and Sarah
Ferguson, under fourteen years of age.
These are, therefore, to cite all persons inter
ested to show cause, if any they have, within the
time prescribed by law, why said letters should
not be granted to said applicant.
Witness my official signature this August 7th,
188fi. F. M. BROOKS,
aug7 oaw4w Ordinary.
Most of the diseases which ulllict mankind are origin
ally caused hv « disordered condition of tho LIVER.
For all coup of this kind, such as Torpidity of
the Liver, Biliousness, Nervous Dyspepsia, Indiges
tion, Irregularity of tho Bowels, Constipation. Flatu
lency, Eructations and Burning of the Stomach
(sometimes called Heartburn). Miasma, Malaria,
Bloody Flux, Chills anc Fever, Breakbone Fever.
Exhaustion before or after Fever-. Chronic Diar-
rhewa. Loss of Appetite, Headache, Foul Breath,
Irregularities incident il to Females. Bearing-down
STflOIGER’S ftUBANTII
. is Invaluable. It is not a panacea for all diseases,
but •/'JIOEff all dices tea of the LIVER,
will VvaE STOWIACH and BOWELS-
It ckungoB the complexion from a waxy, yellow
tingo, to a ruddy, healthy color. It entirely removes
low, gloomy spirits. It, is one of tho BEST AL“
TERATIVES and MJt.lFIERS OF THE
BLOOD, and \s A VALUASLF ^ONIC.
STADIGEF'S AUR ANTI I
For solo by all Druggists. Price $ 1.00 per bottle
C. F. STADICER, Proprietor,
140 SO. FRONT ST., Philadelphia, Pa.
SMITH'S
.rvURE Biliousness: Sick Headache inFourhours.
i6) One dose relieves Neuralgia. They cure and
prevent Chills Fever. Sour Stomach BaJ
Breath. Clear the Skin, Tone the Nerves, and tji-
Life Vigor to the system. l>ose: 0>. t: BUA
Try them once and you will never be without Ih -
ice, 25 cents per bottle. Sold by Drugg
- ' **- " l r ‘
5PRECEDESTE1) ATTRACTION !
Over llalf a ilillioi! Distributed
Louisiana State Lottery Comp , y
Incorporated in 1868 for 25 years by the Legisla
ture for Educational and Charitable purposes- !
with a capital of $1.000,000—to- which a reserv«
fund of over $550,000 lias since been added.
By an overwhelming popular vote its franchise
was made a part of the present State Constitu
tion, adopted December 2d. A. 1). 1879.
Its Grand Single number Pniwiiigc
will take place monthly. 11 never scales or post
pones. Look at the following distribution:
KKHii Grand Monthly
AND THE
EXTRAORDINARY HIARTERLV DRAWING
In the Academy of Music. New Orleans,
Tuesday. September 14,1880.
Under the personal supervision and manage
ment of
Gen. G. T. BEAUREGARD, of Louisiana, &
Gen. JUBAL A. EARLY, of Virginia.
Capital Prize, $150,000.
^“Notice- Tickets are Ten hollars only. Halves.
$;>. Fifths, #2. Tenths, $1.
LIST Ol-' PHIZES.
1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF $150,000 $150,000
1 GRAND PRIZE OF 50,000 50.000
• 1 GRAND PRIZE OF !20,000 20,000
2 LARGE PRIZES OF 10,000 20,000
4 LARGE PRIZES OF 5,000 20,000
20 PRIZES OF 1,000 20,000
50 PRIZES OF 500 25,000
100 PRIZES OF 300 30,000
200 PRIZES OF 200 40,000
600 PRIZES OF 100 60,000
1,000 PRIZES OF 50 50,000
APPOXIMATION PRIZES.
100 Approximation Prizes of $200 $20,000
100 “ “ 100 10,000
100 " “ 75 7,500
2,279 Prizes, amounting to $522,500
Application for rates to clubs should be made
only to tlie Office of the Company in New Orleans.
For further information write clearly, giving
full address. POSTAL NOTES. Express
Money Orders, or New York Exchange in ordi
nary letter. Currency by Express iat our ex
pense> addressed Nl. A. 5) VI P8IIN.
New Orleans, l.u.
Or Nl. A. IIAI I’IIIN.
Washington. S>.
i Make I*. O. Money Orders payable
! and address llegistered Letters to
1 NEWOKI E VN8 * YTIONAL HANK.
wed se&wSw New Orleans. La
Prl .
•Vlodicine Dealers generally. Sent on recc
price in stamps, postpaid, to any address,
o, F. SMITH & CO.,
Manufacturers and Solo Prep %ST. LOUIS, IWO
FOR RENT.
rpHF. STORE HOUSE No. 1117 Broad Street,
I next to Wittich & Kint*eUs corner. This
Store i> being remodeled with jingle pane plate
glass windows; ha< all modern improvements.
Also Office and Sleeping Room in Garrard
Building. . , ,
Also, Residence 111 Wynn ton with 25 acres of
land ait Ached, known as < iurrard place.
Also, the place in Uinnwood known asthe Wiley
Jones place, with *> acres of laud attached. This
last named place will be put in repairs for a good
tenant. Apply to
uugn 1 'n LOUIS F. GARRARD,
and Whiskey Hab
it n cured at homo with
out pain Book of
qtef;! -• 7 !
1C
$50 REWARD
rill b- pa'd »
taZ'r ' : *. • H • • ’ ■'•o ' ' ■ a I
Li. V v ; •». r Jhilcr* MON AII i’ll drain
'-''il ry'r':
NEWARK MACHINE CD.
Columbus, OMut
GEORGIA, MUSCOGEE COUNTY.
Whereas, Robert A. McFarlan, administrator
de bonis non, with the will annexed, of John D
Stripling, makes application ior leave to sell al
the real estate belonging to said deceased.
This is, therefore, to cite all persons interested
to show cause, if any they have, within the time
prescribed by law, why leave to sell
said property should not be granted to said appli
cant.
Witness my official signature this 5th day o
August, 1886. F. M. BROOKS,
aug5 oaw4w Ordinary.
GEORGIA, MUSCOGEE COUNTY.
Whereas. E. L. Bard well, executor of the estate
of Sarah S. Banlwell, late of said county, de
ceased, represents to the court in his petition,
duly filed, that he has fully administered said
Sarah S. Bardwell’sestate;
This is,.therefore, to cite all persons concerned,
heirs and creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said executor should not be discharged
from big executorship and receive letters of dis
mission on the first Monday in October, 1886.
Witness my official signature this July 3d, 1886.
jy3 onwsni F. M. BROOKS, Ordinary.
GEORGIA. MUSCOGEE COUNTY.
Whereas, William McGovern, Executor of Jonn
McCarty, represents to the Court in his petition,
duly filed, that he has fully administered John
McCarty’s Estate.
This is. therefore, to cite all persons concerned,
heirs and creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said administrator should not be dis
charged from his executorship and receive let
ters of dismission on the first Monday in Sep
tember, 1886.
if iaw.un F. M. BROOKS. Ordinar.
GEORGIA, MUSCOGEE COUNTY:
Whereas, E. S. McEachern makes application
for permanent letters of administration, with the
will annexed, of Jane Reed, late of said county,
deceased.
These are, therefore, to cite all persons con
cerned, kindred and creditors, to show cause, if
any they have, within the time prescribed bylaw,
why said letters should not be granted to said ap
plicant.
Witness my hand and official signature this
5tli day of August, 1886. F. M. BROOKS,
aug5 oaw4w Ordinary.
GEORGIA, MUSCOGEE COUNTY.
Whereas, Alexander Howard, executor of
Evalina Gaines, makes application for leave to
sell all the real estate belonging to said deceased.
This is, therefore, to cite all persons interested
to show cause, if any they have, within the time
prescribed by law, why leave to sell said property
should not be granted to said applicant.
Witness my official signature this August 6th,
1886. F. M. BROOKS,
aug6 oaw4w rdinary
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
All parties navmg claims against .uome j ones,
late of said county, deceased, are hereby notified
to present the same, duly authenticated, to me,
within the time prescribed by law; and all par
ties indebted to said Mollie Jones, are required to
make immediate payment to me.
Auguife 5, 1886. GEO. Y. POND,
Au5 Oow6w Administrator
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(Copy.) Chicago, AprilBlst, 1896.
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EXECUTOR’S SALE.
A GREEABLY to an order from the Court of
xx Ordinary of Muscogee county, Georgia, will
he sold on the first Tuesday in Septembe-next.
all the personal property belonging to the es
Hamson Aud le wa x d™ N d. ANDREw8i
DUES oawiw SMOtttOC.