Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, September 17, 1886, Image 5

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DAILY ENQUIRED • SUN: COLUMBUS GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 17, 1886. NEWS FROM ATLANTA. Morlheott Nominated for Mennlor—.liirksoti's IIoiicn in (iorilon, K(<\ ••Special to Enquirer-Sun. ATI.ANTA, September 16.—It has not been given out officially, but it is reliably stated that the petition for the pardon of Major George T. Jackson, of Au gusta, has been withdrawn from before Governor McDaniel. It will probably be reintroduced before General Gordon early in his admin istration, and is withdrawn that it may not be prejudiced by further delay or a pos sible reibsul by Governor McDaniel. The physicians say Major Jackson retains his strength simply upon the hope of a pardon. Sorthciitt .Nominated for Senator. Atlanta, September 16.—The senatorial nominating convention was re-assembled upon the call of President Hutcheson to night, and G. J. Northeutt, of Gobi), was unanimously nominated on the first ballot. Northeutt is a prohibitionist. The Apaches in Atlanta. Atlanta, September 16.—Ten braves and their Apache Indian squaws passed through Atlanta to-day en route for Florida, where they will be imprisoned in the fortress at St. Augustine. Four hundred and sixty men are to follow. They were a hard looking lot and either could not or would not talk English. THE NEGRO S ROMANCE. ! Mercy of his opponents. The latter’s ; triends had battled successfully against the application of the unit, rule, but had fought in vain to prevent the passage of a resolution pledging the legislative dele- ; Kjjtes to vote lor Mr. Gray for the senate. ' With this the ehaneps forMr.Lore tied and I j his withurawal from the field was rend. The letter was brief and Bimply stated I that the step was taken in the interests of peace and harmony. It fell like a wet j : blanket on the Lore delegates, ns hut the single one to whom it was intrusted knew | of its existence. His friends here are greatly chagrined at ; the action, and .hold that the delegate to 1 whom his letter was so carefully entrusted j despaired too quickly. The instructions I of the convention, they bold, amount to , i nothing, and the men nominated in the I Lore district are not bound to abide by j them. With a solid delegation from Sussex Mr. Lore’s election was still possi- ; ! ble. There is no probability of another j candidate entering the field against Mr. i ' Gray and his election is assured beyond | doubt, Itlai'k loin Haile White. Dublin Letter in the Cleveland Leader. The two noted cathedrals of Dublin are built out of whisky and porter. St. Patrick’s ; cathedral, in which Dean Swift and Stella , ave buried, though built in A. D. 1190, was restored in 1860 68 by this big norter man ufacturer at a cost of about #700,000. Guin ugss. the porter maker, was too rich a man to go without a title, so he was made a lord or n baronet. When ho died his j business was so great Hint there was no man in Ireland who could purchase it. It is now run by the family, all the members ] ofwhieli are several times millionaires. ; Porter costs, by the way, about six cents j a bottle here, and good whisky ft a gallon and upward. The tax on whisky Is heavy, j and a good article comes high. The big whisky man who restored Christ’s'church cathedral was llonry Roe, , who spent #500,000 upon it. His family are still in t.ne whisky business, but their money has left them, T am told, and one of the sons gets #3.(00 a year for acting as i manager of t he big business his father built j Poor Old Oliver flalliinirs and Ills Pretty Hnlnlto Wife Whom Albert 1’iirxmis Stole Away. Waco, Texas, September 16.—Mr. M. A. Cooper induced Oliver Gathings, colored, to go to Syvanton’s photograph gallery this morning for his picture and in a few minutes the photographer had turned out a dozen tin-type representations of Oliver’s physiognomy. The face is that of a very good-natured negro. The pictures all go to friends of Mr. Cooper in Chicago. Within a week they will, no doubt, figure as wood-cuts in the columns of the Chicago dailies and Lucy Parsons, wife of the con demned anarchist, Albert Parsons, will look upon the face. If she reads the Chicago papers she will see the face of the husband she deserted in Waco to become the mistress of Albert Parsons. It is said that Parsons married her in Chi cago. Oliver Gathings is a negro—not light colored, either. He has lived in Waco twenty years, and Lucy, the Mrs. Parsons above alluded to, was his first wife. She was a bright, good-iooking mulatto. Her step-father is a negro man now living in East Waco, employed in Mr. J. B. Ba ker’s brick yard. He says her romantic tale told to the Chicago reporters of her mother being an Indian woman and her father a Mexican is false. Her mother, ac cording to her step-father, was a colored woman. Her paternity is not well estab lished, but is commonly ascribed to a son of a white man who owned her mother. • Such things did occur in, the slavery times before the war. Oliver Gathings says Lucy bore him one child, but it is now dead. It was Oliver and not Albert Parsons who first encour aged her to learn to read. Oliver says he bought her books and paid to send her to one of the earliest schools for colored peo ple taught in Waco. He was proud of his handsome wife, and aspired to lift her to as high a place as he could. He soon found out that Albert Parsous was attracting her attention and drawing her away. Once he says he made upnis mind to kill her, but thought better of it. Then the rela tion between Lucy and Parsons was fully developed, and ‘shortly afterwards the couple left Waco. Oliver has remained here a contented, hard-working man, first at one job and then at another around town, and rarely ever out of employment. There is nothing of the “Ostler Joe” in his composition, and if he has any feeling of affection or regret at the loss of his wife, he doesn’t show it. The woman went with Parsons to Chi cago. and as the wife and ally in the an archistic ideas of the socialists has achieved a certain kind of fame that has gone throughout the world. Ail her utterances, and especially her speeches at the anarch istic gatherings, are wired throughout the world as fully and eagerly as though she were a Louise Michel or a petroleus of the Paris commune. It is a queer whirl-gig career, that of Lucy Gathings, or Parsons, and old negroes here who knew her when she was humble Oliver’s contented wife, ntill talk of the pretty mulatto that Albert Parsons stole away, and wonder if she ever thinks of Oliver now. COAST SURVEY COMBATS. Kilkenny Courtesies I'raeliseii In this Brunei) of the Service. Washington, September, 16.—“There’s h—1 down here; send a policeman,” was the somewhat startling message Acting Secretary Fairchild received over the tele phone to-day from the coast, survey. The outbreaks in the coast survey bureau have, however, been so numerous of late that the secretary sent no policeman, doubtless preferring that the combatants' should kill each other off and thus end for all time the personal difficulties that for some months have enlivened that branch of the public service. The encounter in this in stance was between Chief Clerk Colonna and H. Eaton Coleman, an accountant, both of whom are Virginians and men of “honah.” The diflculty was over the pay rolls, which had just been returned with the approval of the treasury department. Colonna refused to allow them, as usual, to go into Coleman’s custody. Coleman then rushed down to get them vi et armis. The two men came together with fists, and the fight soon resolved itself into a Graico- Ronian collar-and-elbow wrestling match. The subordinates managed to separate them before any terrible injuries were in flicted, but at the end of the round the chief clerk’s room looked like the inside of a Charleston house after the earthquake. The telephone message was sent while the battle Avas in progress. This is the third fist fight within six weeks in this bureau. Accounting Clerk Fagiu had a knock down with a fellow clerk named Christie. Later a clerk named Shott knocked out one of his superiors, and the Coleman- Colonna affray is the latest. The whole trouble arises from the fact that there have been two factions in the bureau ever since the exposure of last tall led to the removal of Superintendent Hil- gard. Many parties accused are still in t he employ of the survey and they have sys tematically endeavored to freeze out their accusers. Not one of the witnesses against Hilgard is employed in the bureau at this date. LORE LEAVES THE FIELD. Senator (iray’s Only Kind (lives up the Kola- ware Contest. Wilmington, Del., September 16.—The withdrawal of Congressman Lore from the senatorial contest is the biggest political sensation Delaware lias had tor a long time. It came in the midst ol the bitterest fight the democratic party has ever known, and is the topic of discussion irom one end of the state to the other. Mr. Lore’s retirement from the fight was first made known this afternoon, when it was read in the Kent county democratic convention from a personal letter given bv the congressman to a friendly dele gate, to be used only after the last hope of his election had died away. The result of last Saturday’s delegate election gave the Gray faction control of the county con- —rri— Ur Tom was simply at the Soi’th Lyon, Mich., September 16.— i Early this morning a freight train was : t hrown from the track about half a mile-I from here by a rail having been removed from the track. Fireman Ed Newman was killed, Brakeman; Campbell was fatally hurt, and Engineer Thomas Davis seriously injured. The engine and fifteen cars were completely wrecked. There is no clue to the train wreckers. The people are greatly excited und lynching will undoubtedly follow the capture of the wreckers. Uutm'cli iu r Striker*. Dbtuoit, September 16.—The building strike lock-out is ended. The stonecutters yielded, and went to work Tuesday. The bricklayers went out to support the stone cutters, and the action of the latter caused them to follow suit. The bricklayers ex press great indignation at the stonecutters and builders, and they propose to boycott every building in which non-union labor has been employed. He Writes from (lie Cashier's Haven. St. Louis, September 16.—Superintend ent Baker, of the Western Union Telegraph company,received a letter to-day from E.H. Brown, the defaulting manager, dated Windsor,Ontario. Brown acknowledges his shortage, but does not explain how or why he took the money, nor state its amount. Baker thinks the manager’s bond for $10,- 000 will cover the amount of the misap propriation. Another Strike. Cleveland, O., September 16.—A spe cial from Youngstown says : The conduc tors and brakeincnemployedin New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio and Pittsburg and Lake Eric yards; struck this morning lor an advance or 10 cents per day. The advance was granted and the men returned to work to-night. Cime Continued. Norfolk, \ 7 a,, September 16.—The trial of the Exchange National bank enses in the United States circuit court was contin ued to-day by the joint consent of the pros ecution and defense to the November term of the same court. Cii'Mir Hornin'* I'nnib. . After a long and patient search through ( Navarre one M. Yriazte has found the : burial place of Cresar Borgia. By some j means he located the place in the village j of Vlana. and in the presence ol the judge of the district the street in front of the church in Viann was ripped up and there j the. coffin mid the body was found. It is supposed that in some early restoration of ! the church a by-gone bishop of the diocese, I outraged at finding so bud a man burled j in consecrated ground, had ordered the coffin to be removed; hut it seems strange that no tradition of the circumstances should have lingered at Viann.—Chicago Herald. ii or k I, A It IE i v a i.s. RANKIN HOUSE. Chas. S. Wright, Macon; J. Edel, Richmond; W. I. H. Pitts, Wuvcrly Hall; H. Cowell, Balti more; Qeo. 1C RobbiiiH, Chicago; B. Teat, wife and child, New Orleans; G. A. Beaver, A. C. Chalmers, New York; T. W. Johnson, Peoria; J. H. Downman, Baltimore; R. E. Lindsay, Seale; P. J. Burney, Cla.; The My Aunt Bridget Com pany. CENTRAL HOTEL. • A. T. Jackson, Philadelphia; Mose Long. At lanta; Simon O’Neal, Scute; W. C. Ewing, Colum bus, O.; John Martin, Atlanta; P. 8. Willis, North Carolina; L. P. Hodges, South Carolina; Joe W. Carter, Memphis; Dave Windson, Nashville; Thomas S. Mitchell, Hamilton; S. Hil'sch, Colo rado; P. Margolius, Miss H. Margotius, Charlotte, N. C.; Charles Brockway, Warm Springs; H. W. Barkesdalc, Juniper. HI ARM ETR IIV TF.miltl I'll. T'iiiitnrliil. - Consols— Couldn’t Stand It. Mobile, Ala., Sept. 16.—The Morning Telegram, a daily newspaper started here one month ago by a stock company, made an assignment to-day for the benefit of its creditors, Those New Jersey Anarchists. Commercial Advertiser, It is announced in the World of this morning that a band of anarchists, armed with guns, have been since May in the habit of drilling every Sunday at sunrise upon the banks of the Hackensack river, between Homestead and New Durham. Perhaps it was natural that these beer- guzzling ruffians should follow their news paper organ, the Freiheit, to New Jersey, after Inspector Byrnes had elevated the temperature for the anarchists of this state; but it would become the state across the Hudson to drive the anarchists out or imprison a few of them. All that is neces sary to rout these armed invaders is one ordinary-sized policeman, armed with a long club, and if the officer should be a good runner, he would be able to do con siderable execution in the anarchist ranks. Gov. Abbett promises to have a thousand armed men on the spot in ease the anarch ists create any disturbance. It would be far better to clear them out before the opportunity offered for the creation of a disturbance. Extraordinary Surgical Operation. Paris Letter to the London Daily Telegraph. A novel and dangerous operation has just been performed here by Dr. Polaillon. The patient was a mountebank named Luchon, who, in tile pursuit of his calling, swal lowed a large folk, which stuck fast in his stomach. It was in vain that he tried to get his finger down to the tip of the fork, so he had to leave it there, in the hope that no harm would ensue. In a few days, however, he felt acute pain, particularly when his stomach was without food. Dr. Polaillon was unable to find the position of the fork by means of the ordinary sound ing instrument, so he employed another with which he contrived -to touch the prongs. He then made an incision in the man's abdomen, and extracted the fork. In his report to the academy on the subject Dr. Polaillon enumerates fourteen cases of a similar kind, in seven of which the fork only formed an abscess in the stomach. Poison Oak. Last Sunday, while at Mr. T. F. Hud son’s, the great hay and carp man, who is perhaps better known than any farmer in the state, we noticed that his son, DeWitt, seemed to be skinning off at the hands. Mr. H. called the little fellow to him and showed us how t he skin .even on the palms of his hands, was coming off in flakes and a new skill appearing underneath. He explained that several years ago the child was badly poisoned with poison oak. and every spring he broke out and suffered greatly. He had applied every known remedy to relieve the sufferer, and em ployed physicians to attend him, but with no avail. "In fact,” Mr. Hudson con tinued, “it seemed like to go in sight of a poison oak vine would cause the eruption to break out afresh. After trying every thing else, I read in the Banner-Watch man so much about theri. S. S. Wood med- i icine that I determine to try that also, but ! must confess that I had but little hope in it. But, as you see, its success has been j wonderful. ' It has driven every particle I of the poison from ray child’s system,and is now putting a new skin on him. lie is | thoroughly cured, and the S. S. S. did the S good work. I believe that it will drive i out any kind of poison from the blood, | and its effect on DeWitt proves it. There | are a great many sufferers from poison oak I in the country, and to such I can know ingly recommend this great medicine. It 1 not only effects a certain cure, but seems ! to put fresh life into one.” This is only one of the numerous m- I dorsements of S. S. S. that has reached us, I and we publish it as information to those i who are suffering with poison in their sys tem, it matters not from what source it conies. This discovery in regard to curing the effects of poison oak is of great im portance, as it gives a certain remedy for a most common and aggravating affliction, for which no permanent relief had ever beer, known. The S. S. S. is certainly the king of blood medicine, and is as harmless as it is solvent for the eradication of im pure blood from the system.—Athens Ban ner-Watchman, April 30. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. _ „ . . The Swift Specific Co., Drawer 3, At lanta, Ga. New York, 157 W, 23d St. LoNnoN, September IB. —1 p. money lOObt, account 100 15-16. NEW YORK MONEY MARKET. New Youk,September 10—Noon—Stocks quiet ami steady. Money quiet, 5@G. Exchange—long $4.81 ! * 4 @$4.82, short $4.84 tj. State bonds neglected and dull. Government bonds firm. New York, September 16.—Exchange $4.81*i. Money 4@0 per cent. GovernmontVs dull, strong; new four per cents 126, 1 4; three per cents 120% bid. State bonds dull. SUB-TREASURY BALANCES. Gold in the Sub-Treasury $127,606,000; currency $28,234,000. STOCK MARKET. New York, September 16.—The following were closing quotations of the stock exchange: Ala class A 2 to 5.... 106>4 C & N 66 do class li 5s 107 |N. O. Pac. lsts 75’ a Ga 6’s N. Y. Central 112 Ga 8’s mortgage....?,ll2! j | Norfolk &W’n pre.. 451* N C6’s * ^126 Northern Pacific... 28 : ’* do4’s 99do preferred 61 J '* S S C con Brown 106‘ j Pacific Mail 58'.. Tenn. settlem’t 3s 78* „ Reading 29?/* Virginia 6s 47 1 Rich. & Alleghany 8*2 Virginia consols... 51 Richmond & Dan.. 110 Chesap’ke & Ohio SK Rich & W. P. Ter’l 28 ! 4 Chicago* N. W 1172'4iRock Island 126*4 " ’ *43 St. Paul 97 3274 do preferred 124* H 33% Texas Pacific 14 6- lUnion Pacific 59'* 88,% N. J. Central 57 % 47% Missouri Pacific 112 38 Western Union.... 68% 15%\ *Bid. 'i Asked. do preferred.. Del. * back Erie East Tenn Lake Shore L. & N Memphis & Char.. Mobile & Ohio Cotton. Liverpool, September 16. — Noon.— Colton market firm and in good demand; mid dling uplands 6%d, Orleans 5 5-16d; sales 12,000 bales—for speculation and export 2000 bales. Receipts 11,000 bales—265 American. Futures opened quiet, at the following quo tations : September 5 13-64'a 5 15-G4d September and October 5 8-64'»-5 9-64(1 October and November 5 3-6 l"i 5 4-64d November and December 5 2-64 @5 3-64d December and January 5 t 2-64d January and February 5 ' 2-64 (a 5 3-61 d February and March 5 4-64@6 5-6Id March *md April 5 0-.54d April and Mav d Tenders of ireliveries for to-day’s clearing 00 bales of new docket and 00 bales of old docket. 2p. m.—Futures: September delivery, 0 13-61d sellers; September and October, 5 8-64d sellers; October and November, 5 3~64d sellers; November and December, 5 2-6ld sellers; December and Janury, 5 2-64d sellers; January and February, 5 2-64(1 value; February and March, 5 3-64d buyers: March and April, 5 5-64d buyers; April and May, 5 7-6-ld buyers. Futures dull. Good uplands 5V 2 d, uplands 6*4d, low mid- dings 5d, good ordinary 4 ll-16d, ordinary 4 *4 cl; good Texas middlings 5 r, ud, Texas 5 5-16d. low middling 5*„d, good ordinary 4 13-16d, ordinary 4%d; Orleans 5 5-16d, low middling Orleans 5' d, good ordinary Orleans 4 13-16d, ordinary Orleans 4%d. 4:00 p. M.—September delivery, 5 13-64d sellers; September ana October. 5 8-64a value; October and November, 5 3-64d buyers; November and December, 5 2-64d buyers; December and January, 5 2-64d buyers; January and February, 5 3-64d sellers; February and March, 5 4-64d buyers. March and April, 5 6-64d sellers; April and May, 5 8-64d sellers. Futures closed quiet. New York, September 16.—Cotton steady: sales 417 bales; middling uplands 9 5-16c, Orleans 9%c. Consolidated net receipts 12,083 bales; exports Great Britain 5044, continent 300, France 00; stock 203,600. NEW YORK AND NEW ORLEANS FUTURES. New York, September 16—Net receiutsO, gross 2275. Futures closed very steady: sales 41,100, follows middlings 8* H c: net-receipts 47, gross 47; sales 0; stock 681; exports to Great Brituin 00. .Philadelphia,September 16 -Cotton dull; mid dlings 9%c; net receipts 2, gross 2; sales 00: stock 69i)0; exports to Great Britain 00. Savannah, Ga., September 16.—Cotton firm; middlings 8 :, .jo; net receipts 2605, gross 2605; sales 1750; stock . New Orleans, September 16.—Cotton market firm; middlings at 9%e; net receipts 3380, gross 3430; sales 000 stock 25,330; exports to Great Britain 00, to continent 00. Mobile, September 10. Cotton market nom’l; middlings 8'^cjnet rccoipts364, gross 395; sales 00; stock 3110. Memphis,September!A Cotton firm: middling 8 7 h c: receipts 97; shipments 94; sales 150; stock 3795. Augusta, September 10.—Cotton firm; mid dlings SVc; receipts 286; shipments 00; sales 249; stock Charleston. September 10.—Cotton market steady; middlings b!.|C: net receipts 1300, gross 1309; sales 900; stock 8073; exports to Great Britain 00. Atlanta, September 16.-Cotton receipts 14*2 bales middlings K’ s c. Provision*. Chicago. .September 16. -Flour unchanged; southern winter wheat $115"i-l50. Mess pork closed .is follows - September $10 15, vlctobcr $10 4' j, November $10 80. Lard quiet, steady cash ami September $7 20, October closed at $6 35, November $0 :>7.‘Short rib sides steady cash $7 35. Boxed meal s stood v dry wilted shoulders $0 12! 6 25, short clear sides $7 25@$7 00. St. Louis, September 16.—Flour, market quiet; choice $3 28mi :: 40, family $2 60@2 75. Provisions dull and unsettled. Mess pork very weak —$11 50; lard lower, $0 55m 0 Oft; bulk meats easy loose lots-long clear and short rib sides $7 00, short clear sides $7 90; boxed lots—long clear sides und short rib sides $7 50, short clear sides $7 80; bacon easy -long clear sides $8 12'..., short rib sides $8 15. short clear sides, not quoted; hams $12 25 a$13 50. Cincinnati. September 16. —Flour weaker— fumily $3 25((i.3 50. Pork weuk and lower $10 50. Lard easier $0 90. Bulk meats dull-short rib sides $7 50. Bacon quiet—shoulders $7 25, short rib sides $8 25, short clear sides |8 50. New Orleans, September 10.— Rice firm, fair demand— Louisiauna fair to prime 3* p 4 c. Molasses, steady; Louisiana open kettle —good prime to strictly prime 32c, prime 20c:, fair 17@is, good common 13@llc; centrifugals, firmer—prime to strictly prime 16@20c, fair to good fair 12(a) 13c, common to good common 8(u lie. Louisville, September 16. —Provisions steady, dull: Bacon, shoulders $6 75, clear rib $7 76, clear sides $8 S5'-£. Bulk swats—clear rib sides 7!^(<'j7' v h c, clear sides 7 7 M c; mess pork $11 00. Lard —choice leaf $8 00@8 25; hams, sugar-cured, 13c. U ruin. Chicago, September 16.—Afternoon board, all grains ruled firmer and closed a shade higher, as follows: Wheat- September at 74 13-10c, October 76 3-1 fic, November 77 15-16c, May 85 ’mc; No. 2 spring 74 1 ,Yco71 , :|C. Corn—cash 38'.:j@39c, Septem ber 38’ h c, October 30 7 H c, November 43!.jc, May -45’.jC. Oats -cash 25 ; ; y '’(2.'v* K c, September 25*.",c, October 26 3-16c, November 27!^c, May 31 J H c St. Louis, September 16.— Wheat dull and unsettled -No. 2 red, cash and September 75c, October 75 : j.jY<i*70c, November-e. Corn fhirly ac tive and stronger—No. 2 mixed, cash 36'.,c, Sep tember —<:, October 36 : h ((h36; m c. November 37 ;, b <n. 37*.iC. Oats very dull—No. 2 mixed cash 25?4c, October 25 :, H c. Cincinnati, September 10.—Wheat firm—No. 2 red 77'.jC. Corn quiet-No. 2 mixed 41'yC. Oats dull—No. 2 mixed 27'.|<G-27 l .jc. Louisville, September 10.—Grain easier and lower: Wheat, No. 2 red 7.3c. Corn, No. 2 white 43cc. Oats nominal, new No. 2 mixed 28c. Suifiir unit loll'oe. New Orleans, September 10.—Coffee excited ami higher—Rio, in cargoes, common to prime, Sugar ouiet, steady; open kettle;prime 5/hC, good fair to fully fair 5*V<(5 7-l0c fair 4 '. l c, common to good common 4 1 »(« , 4 r ' H c: ccntrifuals firmer, white 5'/. t (a*5 7 H c, choice yellow clarified 5\;,c, prime yellow clarified 5v»t6c, seconds l 1 ., @.4V 7 c. New York, September 1J. Coffee, spot.fairjRio quiet 11* ,c; No. 7 Rio, September $9 OOw tl 05. I October $9 05, November $8 95(40 2). Sugar firm, quiet—Muscavado 1 9-16, Barbadoes4 ‘.,c. centrifu- ! gal 5* H (n 5lie; fair to good refining 4 11-lBo* 4 13-lGc; I refined quiet, steady—extra C—c, white extra C ' 5 :; 5;.,c, yellow 4 1 ’>» 4 11-lBc off A5 ll-16'.i cut and mould 6* r c; standard A 6 T H c, confec tioners A 6c, cut loaf an i crushed 6 M h c, pow dered O^faC 1 «c. granulated G 1 -^ 6 3-16c, cubes 6* .,««■ 6 5-16c. Chicago, September 16. —Sugar steady -stand ard A 5’V" 5 7 h c - Cincinnati, September 16.—Sugar steady; New Orleans 4;L(«’5!' 2 c. IloMin ami Turpentine. New York, September 16.—Rosin quiet- strained $1 OtKafl 07‘.j. Turpentine firm -36c. Savannah, September 16.—Turpentine steady, 31’lc; sales 0 barrels. Rosin firm—good strained 90c:” sales 00 barrels. Wilmington, September 16.—Turpentine firm: 34c. Rosin quiet —strained 75c; good 80c. Tar firm—$1 35: crude turpentine firm—hard 75c. yellow dip $1 80, virgin $1 80. Charleston, September 16 -Turpentinesteady; 33 : >.,c. Rosin quiet—good strained 85'" 90c. Cotton See<l till. New Orleans, September 16. - Cotton seed products scarce and firm— prime crude o.l delivered 25(q 26c; summer yellow 36(ce37c. Cake and meal, long ton, $19 00w 20 00. New York, September 16. Cotton seed oil, 24(a 26c for crude, 40c for refined. Wool nnii Hide*. New YUrk, September 16. — Hides steady—New Orleans selected, 45 and 00 pounds, OS/w 10c; Texas selected, 50 und 00 pounds, 10'" 10* ,e. New York. September 10.-Wool steady— --domestic fleece 30(«j 38c, Texas 10w 25c. j Whisky. Chicago, September 10.—Whisky dull—$1 16. St. Louis, September 16.—Whisky firm—$1 10. Cincinnati, September 16.—Whisky firm — $1 10. Freights. New York, Sept. 16.—Freights to Liverpool steady—cotton per steamer 9-64 <r3-32d; wheat per steamer 2:,d. hl.OKhU NKCUKITIKN. Corrected Uy John Itlai'knutr. Coinin’ Ihih. tdii. STOCK AND BOND BROKER. RAILROAD BONDS, A in eric us, I *reaton and Lumpkin 1st mortgage 7s Atlantic and Gulf 7s 100 (rf 101 ..1.17 (&119 lvtgage 7s 113 @114 Columbus and Rome 1st 6s, endorsed Central R. R 101 @106 Columbus and Western 1st mortgage Os, endorsed by Central 11. R. 103 @105 Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta 1st mortgage Ill @115 Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta Is 2d mortgage 110 @112 Georgia Railroad 6s 106 @109 Mobile and Girard 2d mortgage en dorsed by Central Railroad 107 @108 Montgomery and Euihuln 1st mort gage Gs ami Centra Rail mud 106 @109 South Georgia :»nd Florida 1st. t*n- 1 by sunt uf Georgia. ent. South ( .118 1 119 110 @111 113*. *@115 ...192 ami Florida id, 7 pei cent Vestern It. U. Alabama 1st inert gag endorsed bv Central Railroad Western Alanunui -d mortgage, e domed RAILROAD STOCKS Atlanta and West Point 101 @103 Atlanta and West Point B per cent. scrip 103 @10-1 Augusta and Savannah 7 per cent 127 @130 Central common 95 @ 90 Central railroad 6 per cent, scrip 102 @ 193 Georgia 11 percent Southwestern 7 percent, guamutci CITY BONDS. Atlanta 0s 105 @107 Atlanta 7s 112 @118 Augusta 7s 109 @112 Augusta 6s 103 @105 Columbus 7s 112 @113 Columbus 5h 100 @102 LaGrange 7h 100 @101 Macon 0s 110 @111 Savannah 5s 102 @103 STATE BONDS. Georgia 107 @108 Georgia 0s 103 @104)4 Georgia 7s, 1890 120 @122 Georgia 7s, 1890 Ill @112 FACTORY STOCKS. Eagle and Phcnix 95 @ 96 Muscogee 96 @ 99 Georgia Home Insurance Company 135 @140 BANK STOCKS. Chattahoochee National 10 per cent... 175 @200 Merchants’ & Mechanics’ 10 per cent.125 @130 MISCELLANEOUS. Confederate Coupon Bonds 1 @ 2 FOR SALE. $5000 Americas, Preston and Lumpkin Rail road 7 per cent Bonds. $2000 Southwestern guaranteed Stock. 15 Shares Southwestern Railroad guaranteed 7 per cent Stock. $25,000 Georgia new 4 1 per cent. 30 year Bonds J State new 6s. ! and Girard Railroad Stock. WANTED. 30 Shares Engle and Phenix Factory Stock. •Georgia Railroad Stock. Merchants and Mechanics’ Bank Stock. Georgia Home Insurance Co. Stock. .See me before you buy or sell. I can always do one else. IN ItliAUi MAH. ! September.. I October j November.. December... January I February.... j .March- April.. j May iJune I July repc ...9 16-100(4 9 17-100 ..9 19-100^4 9 20-100 ..9 22-100 ..9 24-100 ..9 31-100 4 9 32-100 ...9 39-100(4 9 40-100 ..9 47 100" 9 48-100 ..9 5>100(o 9 56-100 ..9 01-100(4.9 0.5-100 ..9 72-100 " 9 73-100 .9 80-100/4 9 81-100 »ii cotton futures, help, still obtained Green & C< say : With some little through foreign advices, the market has bee j fairly well held, and a point or two lost was af- ! terward recovered and the close stood pretty I steady. The actual demand, however, was ex tremely limited, as node-ire to cover or make 1 additional investment prevailed. ‘ New Orleans.September 16—2:35P. M—Futures ! steady; sales 17,200 bales, as follows: , September 8 84-100(4 8 87-100 October 8 81-100(4 8 8V RUNNING OF TRAINS. Arrival ami Ui‘|mrtnr<> of All Tralm at t'olunihiiM Lurrying PavneiigcrN- In Effect July In. Innh ARRIVALS. COLUMBUS AND ROME RAILWAY. Mail train from Greenville 10:11 a. m. Accommodation from Greenville 7:07 p. m, SOUTHWESTERN RAILROAD. Mail train from Macon 2:25 p. m. Accommodation from Macon 2:43 a. m COLUMBUS AND WESTERN RAILWAY. Mail train from Montgomery 11:55 a. m Mail train from Atlanta 6:31 p. m MOBILE AND GIRARD RAILROAD. Mail train from Troy and Eufaula 9:55 a. m Accommodation from Troy, Eufaula and Montgomery 2:02 p. m Accommodation from Union Springs...10:48 p. m DEPARTURES. COLUMBUS AND ROME RAILWAY. Mail train for Greenville .3:00 p. m Accommodation for Greenville 7:00 a. n; SOUTH W EST K R N RAILROAD. Mail train for Macon. 12:00 m Accommodation for Macon 11:45 p. in COLUMBUS AND WESTERN RAILWAY. Mail train for Atlanta 8:54 a. m Mail train for Montgomery 2:28 p. m John H. Henderson vs. Green McArthur. Ruh Nisi to foreclose Mortgage. Muy Term. 1886 Superior ('ourt of Muscogee County, Georgia. It appearing to the Court by the Petition of John II. Henderson that on the first day of Seis tember, in the year of Our Lord eighteen hun dred and eighty-two. Green McArthur, of said county, made and delivered to said John II. Hen derson a certain instrument in writing common)} called a promissory note, whereby he promised tc pay to said plaint iff the sum of one hundred and thirty-nine dollars twelve months after date with interest from date at eight per cent. Per annuu' for value received, and that afterwards on tlielsi day of September, l«H2, the better 10 secure tin payment of said instrument executed and deliv ered 1 to said plaintiff his deed and mortgage whereby he conveyed to said plaintiff all that tract or parcel of land situated, lying and beinfi m the County of Muscogee, known and bounder as follows : On the north by the lands of Jninet Huff, on the west by the St. Mary’s road, on tin east by the lands of James Huff*and on the so by the lands of Philip Owens, containing four and one-half acres, more or less, whio mortgage was conditioned that if the said defend ant should pay off and discharge said promissory note according to its tenor ami effect, that the* said deed of mortgage ami said note should bt void. Audit further appearing that said premia sory note remains unpaid, U is therefore ordered that said defendant do pay into this court by the first day oft he next term thereof, tfie principal, interest and cost due on said mortgage and prom issory note, or show cause to the contrnry.it flier* be any, and that on failure of said defendant sc to do, the equity of redemption in and to said mortgaged,premises be forever thereafter barred and foreclosed. And it is further ordered that this Rule he published in the Columbus En- qutREH-SrN once a month for four months, or 0 copy thereof served on the said defendant, or hi* special agent or attorney, at least three month? before the next term of this court. By the Court: TOL. Y. CRAWFORD, Petitioner’s Attorney. J. T. WILLIH, Judge S. C. C. C. A true extract from the minutes of Muscoget Superior Court at its Muy Term. 1886, on the lot) day of May, J886. GEO. Y. POND, jy3oam4in Clerk Used for over 2o years with grout RU'-oe«sby the physicians of Paris, New York nnd London, and superior t > nil others f rtbc 1 r-iupt cun: of aH cast s, recent. ( r of long si.imltng. Amt up only In Glass ll/»tf]e8C"ioaiuiijg » f < pfiilcN e-ch. PRICK 75 CENIS, MAKING I HUM 'JLilL UiEAPLHt CAPal LE3 IN THE MzriiKLf. Prepared by CLIN A: CIL, Paris. CAPSULES Sold Every* where. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. GEORGIA, MUSCOGEE COUNTY. All parties having claims against Mollie Jones, late of suid 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. August 5, 1K86. GEO. Y. POND, Au5 oawow Administrator uai \D. ember.. December.. January February.... March April May June July. 8 79-100(4 8 81-100 8 82-100'•/ 8 88-100 8 90-100"- 8 91-KO 9 01-100(4,9 02-100 9 11-100(4.9 12-100 9 20-100@ 9 23-100 9 31-100'4 « 32-100 9 42-100'4 9 43-100 not quoted Galveston, September 16—Cotton firm ; mid lings 9c; net receipts 4222, gross 4222; sales 837: stock 33,596; exports to continent 00, Great Britain 00. Norfolk, September 16.— Cotton sternly; mid dlings 9c; net receipts 40, gross 40; sales 67; stock 3067; exports to Great Britain 00. Baltimore, September 16.—Cotton quiet: mid dlings 9 1 4c; net receipts 1392, gross 1291; sales 0, spinners 00; stock 4396; exports to Great Briu kin 00, to continent 00. Boston, September 16.—Cotton quiet; middlings 9%@9%c; net receipt* 215, gross 215; sales 0; stock —; exporta to Great Britain 2. Wilmington, September 16.—Cotton steady; i Mail train for Troy 2:30 p. _ Accommodation for Troy and Eufaula . 4:55 a. m I Accommodation for Union Springs and ! Montgomery 6:45 p to ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE. I ' NDKR and by virtue of an order of the Court l of Ordinary <>f Mu.-cogee county. I>u., nil! be I sold, in front of the ‘-tore of F. M. Knowles A: I m., corner of Broad and Tenth streets, in the city of Columbus. Ga., on the first Tuesday in Oc- , tober next, between the legal hours of sale, to the 1 highest bidder for cash, at public outcry, sixty- I seven and one-half (»7 acres of land, more or j lens, lying and being in the southwest corner of 1 lot number 286 and northwest corner of lot mini- ! her 267, in the 17th district of raid county. Sold as the property of John I). Stripling, deceased, for the purpose of paying debts and distribution. Terras cash. R. A. McFARLAN, Adm’rde bonis non of John D. Stripling, dec’d. sep 7 ouw4w GEOROIA, MUSCOGEE COUNTY : Whereas, Katherine E. Deignan,administratrix of Wil’iam Deignan, deceased, represents to the court in her petition duly filed that she has Fully administered William Deignan’s estate. This is, therefore, to cite all persons concerned, heirs and creditors, to show cause, if any they can, why said administratrix should not be dis charged from her administration and receive let ters of dismission on the first Monday In De cember, 1686. F. M. BROOKS, Ordinary. September 4th, 1806. oawlZw TAX NOTICE. State and IWy Tines for the bar 1VSC Are now due, and my books are open for collec tion of same from und alter Monday, Septem ber 6th. D. A. ANDREWS, Tax Collector Muscogee County. Office: Georgia Home Building. sep7 eod tdecl Wm.L.TILLMAN 1 Georgia, Muscogee County— vs. . Mortgage. Ate. In Muscogee R. H. GORDON.) Superior Court. May term, 1886. IT appearing to the Court by the petition of Win. J.. Tillman, accompanied by the notes and mortgage deed, that on the fourth day of May. Eighteen Hundred and Eighty-three, the defend- ant made and delivered to the plaintiff her two promissory notes, bearing date the day and yeai aforesaid, whereby the defendant promised b; .. of said promi or bearer, twenty-four m thereof, Eighteen Humlr Dollars and Twenty-two from date at eight per rt f-aid note \\ as not paid at 1 - to pay to the plaint mtlis rite .. ... latf Eighty-eight it h interest mini, and it the iter t( that tract <1 . side of Broad street deed of mortgage tin in said county and state, being about twenty-five fe( t in front on Broad sire, t and running back tin full depth of said lot. and known as part of lot number sixty-five, with all the improvements thereon, upon which is -diluted Store House number one hundred and forty-three; and it fur tlu-r appearing that said notes remain unpaid; It is, therefore, ordered that the said defendant pay into Court »>n or before the first day of tht next term thereof, tin principal, interest, attor ney's fees and costs due on said notes, or show cause to the contrary, if any she can ; and that ot the failure of the defendant so to do, the equity of redemption in and to said mortgage premise* he forever thereafter barred and foreclosed. And it is further ordered that this rule be pub lished in the Columbus Enol ihkr-Sun, a public gazette printed and published in said city and county, once a month for four months previous to the next term of this Court, or served on the de fendant or her special agent or attorney, at least three months previous to the next term of thif Court. J.T. WILLIS, C. J. THORNTON, Judge C. C. C. Plaintiff’s Attorney. A true extract from the minutes of Muscogee Superior Court, May term, 1866. GEO. Y. POND, mnW m+m&m B n %m rx Supreme Court of Georgia. CLERK’8 OFFICE, Atlanta, Ga., .September 14,1886. IT APPEARS FROM THE DOCKET OF THE I Supreme Court of the State of Georgia, for the Sent era her Term, bs*6, that the order of the cir cuits, w.ih the number ol cases from each county and from the city courts, is os follows : ATLANTA CIRCUIT. Fulton 32 11 continuedi,( itv Court of Atlanta 13 (1 continued) 45 STONE MOUNTAIN CIRCUIT. Clayton 3, DcKalb 4. 7 EASTERN CIRCUIT. Chatham 17, Effingham 1, Liberty 2, City Court of Savannah 10 30 MIDDLE CIRCUIT. Bulloch 1, Emnmtel 1, Jefferson 1, Screven 2, Tat nail 1, Washington 10 16 AUGUSTA CIRCUIT. Burke 3, Richmond 18, City Court of Rich mond county 2 23 NORTHERN CIRCUIT. Elbert 2, Glasscock 1, Hancock 3, Hart 2, Lin coln 1, Taliaferro 3 12 WESTERN CIRCUIT. Clarke l, Oconcc 1, Walton 3, City Court of Clarke county 1 9 NORTHEASTERN CIRCUIT. Hall 3, Lumpkin 3, White 1, city Court of Hall county 1 8 BLUE RIDGE CIRCUIT. Cherokee 1, Cobb 3, Dawson 1. Forsyth 1, (con tinued), Milton 2, Pickens! 9 CHEROKEE CIRCUIT. Bartow 8 (2 continued), Catoosa 1, Dade 3, Gordon 4, Murray 1 17 ROME CIRCUIT. Chattooga 1, Floyd 8 (2 continued), Haralson 2, Polk 4 15 COWETA CIRCUIT. Carroll 7, Coweta 1. Douglas 4, Fayette 2, Heard 1, Meriwether 2 (2 continued), Troup l, City Court of Carrollton 3, (1 con tinued)........ 21 FLINT CIRCUIT. Butts 2, Henry 3, Monroe 5 (3 continued), Newton 3, Pike 1, Rockdale 3, Spalding 4.. 21 OOMULGEE CIRCUIT. Baldwin 3, Green 1, Jasper 1, Jones 3, Morgan 3, Putnam 1 12 MACON CIRCUIT. Bibb 4, Crawford 2. Houston 2, City Court of Macon 5 13 CHATTAHOOCHEE CIRCUIT. Chattahoochee 4, Muscogee 7, Talbot 2, Tay lor 3 16 PATAU LA CIRCUIT. Early 2, Terrell 2 4 SOUTHWESTERN CIRCUIT. Lee 3, Macon 3, Schley 4, Stewart 1, Sumter 5, Webster 2 18 ALBANY CIRCUIT. Maker 1, Decatur 8 (2 continued), Dougherty 9, Mitchell 2, Worth 3 23 SOUTHERN CIRCUIT. Brooks 4 4 OCONEE CIRCUIT. Dodge 2 il corf tinned), Dooly 2, Laurens 2, Pulaski 2 8 BRUNSWICK CIRCUIT. Appling 1, Charlton 1, Clinch 2, Glynn 3, Ware 3, Wayne 1 U 342 The Macon Telegraph, Columbus Enquirer, Savannah News and Augusta Chronicle are re quested to publish this notice once a week for two weeks, and to semi their bills to this office. Z. D. HARRISON, Cleric Supreme Court of Georgia. STATE OF GEORGIA, EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT. PROCLAMATION. / 1 EOllGlA : By HENRY D. McDANIEL, Governor of said State. Whereah, The General Assembly, at its last session, passed the following Acts, to-wit: “An Act to amend the Constitution of the State of Georgia by striking therefrom paragraph 16, Section 7, Article 3.” See. I. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Georgia.and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, mat the Constitution of this State be amended by striking therefrom paragraph 15 of section seven '7>, article three (3), which reads as follows, to-wit: Paragraph XV.— All special or local bills shall originate in the House of Representatives. The Sneaker of the House of Representatives shall, within five ddya from the organization of the General Assembly, appoint a committee, consisting of one from eacn Congressional District, whose duty it shall be to consider and consolidate all special and local bills on the same subject, and report the same to the House; and no special or local bill shall be read or considered by the House until the same lias been report* d by the committee, unless by a two-third- vote: ml no bill shall he considered or reported to tm- House by said committee, un less tin- same shall have been laid before it with in fi/V . ,.ys utter the organization ot the Gen eral Ar e. iidy, except by a two-thirds vote. Sec. 11. lit it further enacted. That whenever the above proposed amendment to the Constitu tion shall i’ .greed to by two-thirds of the mem bers elect* d to ouch of the two Houses of' the General Assembly, the Governor shall, and he ia hereby uuthori/.cci and instructed to cause said amt mlment to he publish* d in at least, two news papers in each congressional District in this State foi tile period of two months next preceding the time of holding the next general election. See. III. Beit Buther enacted, That the above proposed amendment shall he submitted for rati ticution or rejection to the electors of this State at the next general election to he held after publi cation, as provided for in the second section of this Act, in the several election districts in this State, at which election every person shall be en titled to vote who is entitled to vote for mem bers of the General Assembly. All persons voting at said election in favor of adopting the proposed amendment to the constitution shall write, or have printed on their bid Jots the words, “For ratification of the amendment striking par agraph 15 of section 7, article 3, from the constitu tion;” and all persons opposed to the adoption of the aforesaid proposed amendment shall write, or have printed on their ballots the words, "Against ratification of the amendment striking paragraph 15 of section 7, article 3, from the con stitution.” See. IV. Be it further enacted, That the Gov ernor be, and he is hereby authorized and direct ed to provided for the submission of the amend ment proposed in the first section of this Act to a vote of the people, as required by the Constitu tion of the .State, jjj paragraph J, section 1, of article 13, and by this Act, and if ratified, the Gov ernor shall, when he ascertains such ratification from the Secretary of State, to whom the returns shall be referred in the same manner as in cases of election for members of the General Assembly, to count and ascertain the result, issue his procla mation for the period of thirty days announcing such result and declaring the amendment rati fied. Sec. V. Be it further enacted. That all laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act be, and the same are hereby repealed. Approved September 21, 1885. “An Act to amend the last sentence of Article 7, Section 1, Paragraph 1 of the Constitution of 1877.” Section I. Be it enacted by the General Assem bly of the State of Georgia, That the last sentence of article 7, section 1. paragraph 1 of the ( onsiita- lion of 1«77 be, and the same is hereby amended by adding thereto at the end "fsaid sentence the following word*, “And to make suitable provision for mii ii confederate soldiers as may have been permanently in und in such seivice, 'so that said sentence when *<• . 11.• nded shall read as follows: "To supply the-oldiers who lost a limb or limbs in the imlitarv -i-rvii e of the confederate States with suitable artificial limbs during life, and to iiinki Mjitabh* pro\ dons ft r such confederate sol di* i> a-* mu;. have been permanently injured in .11. And hc it furth the day and I m i deliver* . , whereby 1 mortgaged to the plaintiff al I of land situated on the west 1 (’olunihus, and ig about twenty-five electi pi opl .(1 tlu enacted. That if this <J to by two-thirds of eh of the two Houses, on their journals with hereon: and the Gov- inlment tobepublished s in each congressional jus to the next general hall be submitted to the lection; and the legal nil al election shall h -cribed or printed on their tickets the words, "ratification” or "non-ratification,” us they may choose to vote: and if a majority of the voters quaLitk d to vote for members of the General As- sembJy, voting thereon, shall vote in favor of rati" t.cation, then this amendment shall become a part of said article 7. section 1, paragraph 1 of the constitution of the state, and the Governor shall make proclamation thereof. Sec. HI. Beit further enacted, That all laws and parts of laws militating against the provis ions of this Act be, amt the same are hereby re pealed. Approved October 19, 1885. Now, therefore, 1. Henry D. McDaniel, Gov ernor of said State,do issue this my proclamation, hereby declaring that the foregoing proposed amendments are submitted to the quuhfied voter* of the State, at the general election to be held on Wednesday, October », 1886, for ratification or re jection of said amendments >or either of them) at provided in said Acta respectively. Given under my hand and the seal of the Ex ecutive Department, this 31st day of July, 1886. HENRY D. McDANIEL, Governor. By the Governor, J. W. Warben, Sec. Ex. Dep’t.