Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, September 22, 1886, Image 3

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DAILY ENQUIRER - SUN, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA. WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 22, 1S86. New* from the Three State* Told in Brief Paragraphs. A Boom With Foor Children Burnod-Boported Europe of home ot the Aporhe Indian* >,., r De- rotor—Hlfhnoy Robber, Near Birmingham. News Items from Florida. Georrlo. J. G. Garner, a hack driver for Col. H. P. Farrow, of Porter Springs, shot at Mr. R. W. Taylor, proprietor oT the Arlington Hotel at Gainesville, at 8 o’clock Monday, using a 38-calibre revolver. Mr. Taylor had ejeoted Garner from the front room of - the hotel, and was returning to the office when Garner shot. The ball went between Taylor’s legs into a column of the arcade, then glanced, going into the washboard and on into the dinifig room. Garner left at one© on fast time for parts unknown. J. A. Nelson and G. W. Plymate are members of the Christian church at Aus tell, and were returning home from preach ing on Sunday when a dispute arose be tween them about a store account that Plymate owed a merchant, in which the lie, etc., were given. Plymate drew his knife and stabbed Nelson twice. One cut in the armi laying it open to the bone. The other, and the one likely to prove fa tal, was through the lungs. Mrs. Louis McNeili, of Baker county, held John Williams while her husband shot him. R. M. Groves, the convicted ordinary of Habersham county, will have to serve out his term of penal servitude. The supreme court refuses to aid him. Mr. G. L. Powell, at Seney, took mor phine to allay an intense pain caused from neuralgia. He got too much of the drug, and lay in a stupor for nearly two days, his family and friends being ‘seized with extreme anticipations regarding his re covery and working assiduously to pull him through. Their efforts have been successful. Mr. Cicero Jenkins, of Birmingham, Ala., was in Gainesville the latter part of last week and carried off about forty ne groes to work on a new railroad running into Birmingham. Mr. B. W. Bateman, of Byron, after having vainly wrestled with five successive biennial democratic county conventions tor nomination to the legisiatnre, has an nounced himself an independent candi date for the lower house. A house with four children was burned to the ground on A. A. Neal’s plantation in Wilkes county Wednesday. The house was the home of Anthony Fortson, his wife and four children, the oldest about nine years old and the youngest two. While the negroes were all'at church the house burned down and the children with it. R. J. Bevill’s barn near Valdosta was burned a day or two ago. He lost 210 bushels of corn and 6000 pounds of fodder. The house caught during the afternoon, and Mr. Bevill is unable to account for the fire except upon the theory of an in cendiary, ana he does not know of an ene my in the world. At Valdosta Tuesday Joseph Hall’s wife was seriously if not fatally burned. She is subject to fits, and while she was standing in her house, lamp in hand, she was stricken down, the failing lamp igniting her clothes, and before the fire could be put out she was terribly burned. This is the third time she has been burned in this way. Alaliunin. William Thomas, the noted black bur glar, recently convicted on five warrants at the police court at Selma, turns out to be an escaped convict from the saw mills of Milner, Caldwell & Flowers. He was there working out three convictions for burglarv, the sentence of time being until 1891. Mr. G. A. Orum, of Bullock county, owns a cow that gives four gallons and a half of milk daily, from which are made two pounds of butter. At this rate he will get over 700 pounds of butter per vear, which at twenty-five cents per pound is worth over $175. The cow is half Jersey. Mrs. Andrew Cameron, of Notasulga.had the misfortune a few days ago of falling and breaking one of her limbs, and she died from the injuries received. Roy Stokes, youngest son of Capt. J. W. Stokes, of Abbeville, was very badly bit ten on the arm and breast a few days ago. It is thought that the dog was mad; it was killed. The ten-year-old son of Mr. Joe White- head, of Henry county, got hold of a quart bottle of whisky the other day and drank nearly all of it. and hasn’t been conscious since. He is not expected to recover. Mrs. Turner, while returning from a visit to relatives in Dale county, happened to the misfortune of being" thrown from the buggy, when seventeen miles from home, and getting her left arm broken just below the shoulder. The ginnery of Mr. Evan Lee, about six miles north of Troy, was destroyed by fire lost Wednesday night. The gin uouse con tained about thirteen bales of unginned cotton, about three of which belonged to Mr. J. C. Walden and the remainder to Mr. Lee and his tenants. The fire oc curred about 10 o’clock at night, and is supposed to have been tiie work of an in cendiary. An Athens correspondent writes the Montgomery Advertiser: Report has it that some of the Indians escaped from the train at the junction two miles this side of Decatur as the train stopped to switch from the Louisville and Nashville track to the Memphis and Charleston track. Strange noises and traces have been heard and seen by Mr. Luke Matthews living down the river near Lucas ferry, eight miles below Decatur. Ml'. George Malone, of Quid Nunc, says there is something mighty curious in the wind and he thought it was'a bear or so prowling around the station. The other night I saw a man with a basket, evidently of Indian make and material, and no one lias any idea other than it was left by the Indians. One or two horses have been missing recently ana should they attempt to make their way back west no doubt they Will be well mounted before they start. The dogs made queer noises for two nights past in Slough beat, and some camp hunters state positively that something stole a dog ne- fonging to Bob Sowell out of their camp down on thi island about 2 o clock at night. One of the most desperate things ever done in the highwaymen’s line was trated just before midnight Saturday night, about a mile out of Birmingham, on Wil liam Kirtland, a butcher, and his son, twenty years old, who were on their vaj home in a buggy. The father bad done good day and night’s business at the mar Set house, and had $150 with him, and the son had .*10. They were passing through Ware’s grove, when a pistol was fired from the side of the road, and the ball flit the elder man in the back of the htnrt. Both jumped from the buggy just in time to be knocked down by three * ,e g ' who came running out of the shndo and who proceeded to relieve them® their money. Kirtland, sr., resisted got another pistol wound in the h • One of the negroes got him down > e he gave up. The police finding out Flem Shay and Anthony Brant ft out late Saturday night on one of me Aftef seeing the prisoners he could not say whether they were the right men or not. Florida. A fish packing establishment is to be started atTitusvflle to ship fish to northern points. The artesian well at Daytona is .said to flow one-third more since the earthquake than it did previously. Gen. Wm. Miller has been nominated for the state senate by the democracy of Washington and Holmes counties. Hia nomination was unanimous. A custom house inspector captured twelve dozen bottles of brandy on the Whitney last Monday at Tampa. Tho bottles were neatly pocked in barrels of fruit. r Beauregard Summers was arrested in Hillsborough county last week for a mur der committed near Citra a year ago. His accomplice, one Calsar, was lynched at the time. About six miles from Lake City, on the line of the Savannah, Florida and Western railway, is an abundance of lime rock from which an excellent quality of lime has been made. Apalachicola’s sponge receipts for the summer amounted to only about $6000—not a fourth what it usually is during the sum mer season. The high and constant winds account for this falling off. The engine house, engine and seven bales of cotton on Tom Connell’s place, a few miles north of Monticello, was de stroyed by fire last week. There was no insurance on the property and it is a severe loss. The cotton, with the exception of one bale, belonged to neighbors of Mr. Connell. MOST PERFECT MADE Prepared with strict regard to Purity, Strength, anr UealtbfulncsB. Dr. Price’s Baking Powder contain* no Amuionia,L.ime.Alum or Phosphates. Dr.Price'i Extracts, Vanilla, Lemon, etc., flavor deliciously. Pft/CC RAK/NQ POWDER CO. Ch/caco. ahd Sr. Lows. Fk < RADFI ELD’S FEMALE REGULATOR Most happily meets the demand of the ape for woman’s peculiar afflictions. It is a remedy for WOMAN.ONLY, and for one special class of her diseases. It is a specific for certain diseased con ditions of the womb, and so controls the Menstrual organs as to retaliate aU derangements and irregularities of her Monthly Sickness. The proprietors claim for this remedy no other medi- cal property. It is strictly a Vegetal)le Corn pound, the studied prescription of a learned phy sician whose specialty was Female Diseases, and whose fame became enviable because of his success in the treatment and cure of female com plaints. .Sutrermgwoiuan.it will relieve you of nearly all complaints peculiar to your sex. For sale by druggists. Write for book, “Mes sage to Woman,” mailed free. Bradfjeld Requlatoh Co., Atlanta, Ga. eod&w nrm (3) PEKtiYMMU. PILLS ‘CM tC‘.iSl L ft’3 ENGLISH The Ot » and only (c imine. «*(.* nr. 1 ai*uv.4 Rfll.t 1 *' • l ; •> t»rv of <v*rtli le** iRiltntl* v. £11 r S . t w ( ■ ;»urJW-uggUt Jr. Kft'drtEVap?./ • • • • w.wiV'!* 15 SALARY AND EXPENSES PAID ' ame which preferred • Miimifncturersfii . . luciuuati, O. ZIMMERMAN FRUIT EVAPORATORS The best in Aim-rleu. Great H artful in* for 30 days tt'From the u -fc »/ H»n. .>••>.* Siikhman of' Ohio : ivf ,. thorough!\ ' our nirv bin- n« a linker at woll ar a llrver ar-l it works f .-nutlfullv. CKCKI.IA S. SIIKRMANY Address j£lin merman Machine Co.* Ciuciunatl. Ohio.l.’.S.A. e!4i Electric Belt Free To introduce it and obtain agents we Mill for tho no::t sixty days give away, free of charge, in each count\ in the U. 8. a limited number of our IliTiimn Electro (Sitlvnnic Suspensory Holts, Price a positive ami unfailing q»re lor Nervom Debility. Varicocele. Emissions, Impotency kr. HJooiuxi Reward paid if every Belt wo manufacture docs not generate - Henuineelectricciirrent. Address«tonce ELKC'L HJC BELT AGENCY. P. O. Box 1/8 Brookl'-i> V v '700toS2500; v yKA ‘ c,ear working for i 1 all expense, Agents preferred who can u Vii-li Vlivir own horses ami give ihcn » tin.'- ■ il.o business. SDi.ro inomonts irm;. Do |.n llt.i lj n ,l,,ve(l ul -,i. A few voouiiol.-s In town- moI i llh s. ,’ .'OH.N'Ku.N' &. CO., 1013 Mnln St., Ilior lmii. . aua2 wto GEORGIA, MUSCOGEE COUNTY. Whereas Alexander toles, administrator ol K. W. Williams, deceased, represents to the conn in his petition, duly hied, that he has fully administered U. W. Williams’ estate. This is therefore, to cite all persons con corne l’ heirs and creditors, to show cause, if any they ("in whv said administrator should not .be disch ii'ircd from his administration and rcccivi letters of dismission on the first Monday m De cember, 1886. F M BROOKS. Ordinary. September 4th,JUM. oawsni GEORGIA. MUSCOGEE COUNTY. Whereas. George Y. Pond, guardian for Ora A. Burton, having applied to the court of ordinary ot said county for a discharge from hts guardian- SI t\iU i^therefore/t'oeite all persons concerned to show cause wiiy the said George Y. Pond should not he dismissed from Ins guardianship ot Ora A Burton, and receive letters of dismission. Given under my official signature this ; Sertero- b ^p' 6 oaw4w F ' M BB 0&. ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. 1 'NDF.lt and by virtue or an order of the Court l (if Or.tin iry of Muscog. e coun.y. ' *)• snlrl in front of the store of I*. M. Known" a Co ’corner of Broad and Tenth streets, m the city of e'e ,mints, (la on Hie first Tut- ’ay n < -- rmier next h. tweeii tli legal Ol -.lie. tqthe highest hi'iiler for cash, at public outcry, sixty- V. ,1 and Oiie half 67 acres ot land, more or d gaud being in t!u south-., cut corner of ,,umbel -- and uortliv. it comer ot lot nun - BfrmTngham“and J Pratt’'.Mines street cam ; V/.’ btripling" I decea^d. to the neighborhood of the assault, an t e ^ tbe purP ose of paying debte and distriG Ui m m T !tTm’rde bonh. non of j6hn tripling dec’d. . ' sen"oaw4w MERCER UNIVERSITY, IMZ^COHSr, Q--A-. THE FALL TERM of this institution will open on the last Wednesday (29th) of September next. The chairs of Latin and Greek have been con solidated into the chair of Ancient Languages, to which Prof* Wm. G. Manly, a distinguished graduate of the University of Virginia, has been elected. The Theological department, presided over by Rev. James G. Ryals, D. D., and the Law depart ment, with Hon. Clifford Anderson as the chair man of its faculty, offer special inducements to students in these departments. Of the Preparatory department, designed to prepare boys for the University classes, Mr. Emerson H. George, an alumnus of the Unlver sity, has been elected as principal, to succeed Prof. T. E. Ryals. Postgraduate courses of study for the degrees of A. M. and Ph. D., open to the graduates of all male colleges, have been established by the authority ot the board of trustees. For catalogues an other information, address JNO. J. BRANTLY, jyl3 2tawtd Secretary of Faculty. BALL’S '■J V / l r*ie ONLY C ORSFT munu tha / in purclia*cr after three v i-:bfrtly r.THF/rcTOR' . every respect, nni i j»r < e rrbmded by ,nj in A Variety of at^ ! es an lpnc« c:-’’—trr co v-j Llspeaard St., New York <xt0 Pt? I.V'-wm ft Chicago, W4 Crab Orchard WATER. I the uveh. THE KIDNEYS. . Ithe STOMACH. fl-HE BOWELS. A POSITIVE CURE FOR 3 DYSPEPSIA. m Constipation. >C Sick Headache. W Dose :-0no to two teaipoonfuls. Gt-nuino Cn*B Okciixbu bxi.Ta in sealed packages at 10c. and iio. No genuine Salts sold iu bulk. Crab' Orchard Water Co., Prop’r*. S. 14. JONES, Manager, t-ouli»lll.,JLy 1 .,8.63 13 B sir* rg * a. I :2 s SMITH’S and jailed them, kirtland was hurt velouslv little. He went to town t • ; i doctor and to testify before the m*- - BDlousnnss: Rick Kpcdache Inrourhosir? \G) One rluso relieves Mauruigla. They cure *”•» prevent Chills Fever. Sour Stor. ach - • t 1re?.th. Cl. ar the Skin, To <e tho Npry, an? -i»e vigor to the system. J>oso: ONG l.ilA L fry them oner anc you will never be without th*'. ^rbe, 25 coni? per hothe. Sold byDru'j-v / •»1orJicinc Doa!-3r5 generulh*. U price in stamps, postpaid, to any addict-', •j• i\ s?ri i’ii & go., Manufacturers and Ooi? ron-L. ST. LOUIS, .V. . Catherine^E. Jones ) Libr l for Divorce. Order James W. Jones. ) to P e|, fect Service. I T appearing to the Cour* by the return of the 1 Sheriff that the defendant cannot be found in the county of Muscogee, and it further appearing that said defendant does not reside in the state of Georgia; It is ordered by the Court that service he per fected on said defendant by publishing this or der twice a month for two months before the November term. t.-66, of thi-* court, in the Colum bus Enquirkk-Sun. a publie-guzette of this state. June 7, lrtrtfi. J. T. WILLIS, THOS. W. GRIMES, Judge 8. C. O. C. Attorney for Libellant. A true extract from the minutes of Muscogee Superior Court at its May term, liw;. on June 7th. 1886. GEO. Y. POND, augit 2tam2ra Clerk S. C. M. 0.. Ga. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. GEOIUHA- MUSCOGEE COUNTY : V LL persons having claims against the estate of.Mi's. Jane Reed, late of said county, de ceased, are requested to present them to me, duly authenticated, within the time prescribed by law; and all persons indebted to said estate will make immediate payment to me. E. S. McEACHERN, September 6,1886. Administrator. sep7 oaw hv Notice to Debtors and Creditors. riEOROIA-MUSCOGEE COUNTY: All par- tii s having claims against John D. Stripling, late ofsai.l comity, deceased, arc hereby notified to present the s-me, duly authenticated, lo me within the time prescribed by law’, and all parties iudtbo d in N-,'d .I'.hn Stripling are required to make lminediatc payment to me. It. A. M'FARLAN, hur8 oaw fiw \dministraOrt. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. GEORGIA—MUSCOGEE COUNTV': ALL persons having demands against the estate of Lucius Andei*son, deceased, an; hereby notified to render in their demands to the under signed, according to law, and ml persons indebted to said estate are required to make immediate payment. GEO, Y. POND, Administrator Estate Lucius Anderson, September 8, 1886. Deceased. sep81aw-6w urAXTKII— A WOMAN OF SENSE, KNKR- \\ GY and respectability for our business in her locality. Salary about X5<> per month. Per manent position. References exchanged. E. J. JOHNSON, Manager, Itt Barclay St., New York. sep7 tulw A FREE SAMPLE To introduce the great household remedy, GOK DON S KING OF PAIN, into every family, 1 will send a sample free to any one sending ad dress. Address E. G. RICHARDS, sole proprie- or. Toledo. Ohio w umeowlv UNIVERSITY OB' GEORGIA P. H. MULL, I). D., LI.. I)„ Cliaiiiirtlor. rpHE 86th Session of Departments at Atin n.- 1 will begin Wednesday, oth of October itext. Full cowses of study in Li-ttcrs and Scu-uc"■; seecial courses in Engim«-iing. Agriculture. Physics and Chemistry. TUITION I KIJ.. l ot catalogue^ and information address the Chun cellor at Athens. Law School opens at»the -.h:'.- time. For information address P 'or. ' . - Dudley Trio.MA'i, at Athens, Ga. Lamar < Seo*y Board of Trustees. Athens, Ga. Aug.. C'• sepi d&wlm RETURNED, THE A U A -ITT Car Load Lots Ouf Buyer Has Excelled all Previous Efforts In liis purchases. Experience makes us proficient. All are invited to cell and inspect our Novelties in Dress Goods. J. A. KIRVEN & CO. I) Idi J\J iM rm CENTRAL, PEOPLE’S AND MERCHANT (I PLANT US’ Flour per barrel Cotton Seed Meal per ton Quano per ton OF STEAMERS! Columbus, Ga., August T, 1888. O N and after August 7, 1886, the local rates of fVeiKht ou the Chattahoochee, Flint and Ape.. iochicola rivers will be as follows: *5 Other fVeight in proportion. Passage from Columbus to Apalachicola, ffctK. Other points in proportion. SCHEDULE*. Steamer NAIAD leaves Columbus Tuesdays aft H a ni for Bainbridge and Apalachicola. Steamer AMOS HAYS leaves Columbus Thnrs»* days at 8 a m for Bainbridge and Apalachicola^ Steamer MILTON H. SMITH, with narge Tide,, leaves Columbus Saturdays at 8 a m for Bainbridge and Apalachicola. Above schedule will he run, river, etc., permit ting. Schedules subject to change without no tice. Shippers will please have their fVeight at boa* by 8 a. m. on day of leaving, as none will be re ceived after that hour. Boat reserves the right of not landing at any? point when considered dangerous by the pilot. Boat will not stop at any point not named i*w list of landings furnished shippers under date off May 15, 1886. Our responsibility for freight ceases after it ba» been discharged at a landing where i there to receive it. j no person im SAM’L J. WHITESIDE, Pres’t Central Line. T. II. MOORE, Agent People’s Line,. T. D. HUFF, dtf Agent Merchants & Planters' Line-, DR. RICE, For 15 years at 37 Court Place, now at LonMtff A rrsulnrlr educated and legally qualified physician end 10*’ most «ucoA*«ful t ns his pracilrio will P ro ™- cfgMtf br&BBHRk. Sperinatorrlioa and Impotoncy^ h tlic result ofHolf-abuso in youth, Bexunl «xo«noa tn mow turer yanrg, or other ottuww, and producing some of the rof- InwitiB effects: Nci vousnes*. HumUial KmlHslon*. (night eniiD- by dream*). Dimoeaa of Wight, Defective Memory, Phy- *|cal Decay, Plin|ilMon Face. A version to Society of Femulw.. Confu tiou of Ideas, l.oia of Sexual Power, &c„ rendering: marriage Ininroiier or unhappy, aro thoroughly nmJ perma- neatly cureJ. RYPHIL IS P° lU ^' c,,wd V" 1 llr. lv- enulicBtcr from the system; GoilOi rhen. GLEET. Stricture, Orchitis, ITcrnia, (or UupturoL* Ml"anifStiier private diseases quickly cured. It is Boir-ovident that apliy sicinu who pays specialattentlooi to a oertalu class of dir*- — ““■* * ally, acquires great ski and treating thousand* 1 ysicians knowing this fact often, ... o. When it l.* fncotiveaient to- visit tho city Tor treatment, medicines enn bo seut privately, •ud mi rely by mail or express uny where. Cures Guaranteed in all Coiei' or hy Iriwr fro, anil IhtIioA. Chutes reaKoualile and correspondence strictly couliusaUU*. ARE FAST FILLING UP TIIEIR STORE Every Variety of Fall and Winter Goods KNOWN TO THE DRY GOODS TRADE. Every day solid cases are pouring in, and from this lime on, they are ready to supply the wants of every customer, at prices to meet the pockets of every one, from the red penny to the gold dollar. The present low price of cotton will 110I interfere with their setting. They mean to make prices equal at any rate. Received This Week: While and Red Plain Flannels at 15c., 20c., 25c., 30c., 35c.. 40c. and 50c. and up. Red Twill Flannel at 20c., 25c., 30c., 35c., 45c. and 50c. Gray and Navy Blue Twills at 25c., 35c., 40c., 50c. Opera Blankets I Blankets I Comforts I Comforts I Buggy Blankets, Camp Blankets, Bed Blankets—10-4. 11-4. 12-4. Bed Blankets at $1.25, and any price you may call for, up lo $10.00. TABLE LINEN, NAPKINS, TOWELS. Blanchard, Booth & Huff Are sure to stand at the head on these goods. If reports cur rent l)e true, there will lie a great many new beginners in house-keeping this fall, which means an unusual demand for these goods. Their buyers have been advised to note this fact, and pay special attention lo the selection of them. Their slock of LADIES’ SHAWLS is complete and the largest they ever bought. Breakfast Shawls, all sizes, at 25c. to $1.75; Simple and Double Shawls at $1.25 to $10.00—ALL WOOL. DRESS GOODS! DRESS GOODS! DRESS GOODS! To say that RLANCHARH, BOOTH & HUFF’S is headquarters for Dress Goods is simply to reiterate a truth awarded to them ever since their beginning. Dress Goods is their stronghold. Never did any establishment in this city enjoy a more enviable reputation for carrying Handsome Dress Goods and Handsome Trimmings than theirs. Everybody in Columbus, and adjacent thereto, who hns ever bought Dress Goods of them, will endorse the above statement. They intend to sustain their reputation by keeping buyers in the market who thoroughly understand their business. Their stock has partly been received ; the balance will follow early this week. The stock already in consists of Novelties in WOOL FABRICS; Imported FRENCH and ENGLISH SUITINGS, in FIGURES AND STRIPES; PLAIN and STRIPED VELVET, SILKS, SURAHS, nil ADA MIRES, GKOS GRAINS, Etc., Etc. HOSIERY I HOSIERY I HOSIERY! Their Stock of HOSIERY is about all in. You can find anything you wish in Men’s, Boys’, Ladies’ and Misses’ HOSIERY, from the lowest price to the highest. lull led TOIt< IIO\S I IM.I \(». ami INSERTING TO HATCH u lleaulifiil I.iuc of I It esc l.iWKN .1 ml Received ! New Goods Come Every Day. Wc Show Them With Pleasure. BLANCHARD, BDOTH & HOFF PRIVATE COUNSELOR Of 300 pages, sent to any address, aeourely ■enlod, for thirty (M) cents. Should be read by al‘ Ofdo«) hours from 6 A. M. to 0 P- M. LA GRANGE, GA. A THOROUGH, non-sectarian School of LRp- erature, Art, Vocal and Instrumental Musi* and normal methods. , . , Ample, well ventilated buildings, situated ov College Hill. Not one dollar expended for sickness last year. Full corps of experienced teachers iu every deiv partment. All expenses for hoard and literature, P«r_ annum $20uf' Above with music and use of iustruraent 26& Art, literature mid board Term begins September‘15th. For catalogue ad (In. kk RUFUS W. SMITH. Pres’t. Refers to G. Ounby Jordan, Dr. Seth N. Jordan, Philip Bowers, and other pupils throughout the sou tli. aug8 bo tu th tf 1 hrdiiiaiK'e I'roliiliitiiH Cattle from Ilinming at Large fpoii the Streets. U 1 E IT ORDAINED, That from and after Ooc lober 1st, 1886, no cattle shall he permitted at | night in any of Die streets or parks of the city, j and from October 1 lo April 1 snail be permitted I neither day or night, except while being' driven through the same; and any entile found so running at large shall be im- 1 p jimdcd by the chief of police, who shall adver- . rise an«I sell the same after giving three days ‘ I notice of time and place thereof, and unless the I owner shall within that time redeem the same by paying 50 cents for each head of cattle, with • 25 cents per day for feeding. When sold the net proceeds shall no turned over to the city tre«z%— nrer for account of owner. He ii further ordained, That nothing in this ordinance shall be construed to prevent the grazing of cattle upon any of the commons of the?, city. Adopted in Council August 4th, 1886. CLIFF R. GRIMES, Mayor. M. M. MOORE, Clerk Council. augB se t seplO d2w ADVERTISERS Can learn the exact cost of any proposed line of advertising in Adlrican. Papers hy addressing- Geo. P. Rowell & Co.* Newspaper Advertising Bureau, IO Spruce St., New York. Send lOcts for 1 OO-paae Pamphleb Mobile & Girard R. R. Co, o N and after this date Trains will run as follows COLUMHUH, GA., September 19, 1886. WEST BOUND TRAINS. No. 1. Pass’ger. No. 3. Accom. No. 5. Accom. I^eave Columbus Union Depot “ Columbus Broad Street Depot 2 30 j) m 2 46 p 111 10 25 p m 10 35 p m 1 15 a m 2 00 a m 6 05 a m 5 15 a m 9 05 a 111 9 55 a m 11 50 a m 10 50 a m Leave Union Springs 6 46 p m 8 30 p m 7 23 p ill 10 33 p 111 “ Montgomery, M. & E. It. R “ Eufaula, M.«E. R. R ‘ 4 «i a m EAST BOUND TRAINS. No. 2. Pasfc’ger. No. 4. Accom. No. 6. Accom. Leave Montgomery, M. & E K. It U Eufaula, M. & E. It. R 7 35 a III 9 10 a 111 9 25 a III 7 29 a m 1245 pm 3 30 p m 4 01 p m 6 40 p m 7 15 p m 10 49 p m iooani 5 49 a 111 6 29 a m 7 29 a ni 10 19 a m Leave Union S ii ■ - I Arrive Montgomery, M. & E. R It 1 “ Columbus ^ —- -LA-lSR-ANSE.G&r,.^ Trains Nos. 1 and 2 (Mail) daily. Nos. 3 and 4 (Macon and Montgomery Through Freight and ! Accommodation) daily except Sunday. No. 5 and 6 1 Way Freight and Accommodation) ciaily ex- ceptcept Sunday. Nos. 9 and 10 (Passenger; Sundays only. 1 W. L. CLARK, Sup’t. D. E. WILLIAMS, G. P. A. , The College ot Letters, Music and Art. Sixteeiu professors and teachers; five in music, with the:’ Misses Cox, directors, Misses Reichenan anefi Records, both graduates of Leipsic, and Mists Deaderick, a thoroughly trainea vocalist; full! apparatus with mounted telescope. For cata- ogues address I. F. COX, Pres’t. Jy 11 d&w2in HomeSchoo! ATHENS, GEORGIA. M^GSosnws™^ 1 ’ i Associate Principals. 'I HE Scholastic year re-opens on Wednesday. I September 22a, 1886. Best educational ad« vantages offered to young ladies. For circular of information apply t< the above.. jy8 dtsep22 •IMANDOAH VALID ACADEMY, ~ >YIN( HKSTKU, VA. Prepares ior University; College, Army, Navy or Business, j-’end for catalogue. ( ■ I.. C. M. A. t3uv. of Va.) I.L. ft jy!8 d2taw2m