Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, September 28, 1886, Image 4

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DAILY ENQUIRER-SUN: COLUMBUS GEORGIA. TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 28. 1886. (ColumlwsCiiujttira^uu. ESTABLISHED IN 1838. 58 YEARS OLL’. Daily, Weekly and SUndav. The ENQUIRER'S UN 1h iHsueil every rtuy, c* oept Monday. The Weekly In issued on Monday. The Daily (Including Sunday) is delivered by earriere in the city or mailed, postage free, to sub scribers for ific. per month, R'.’.Oil for three months, ,00 for six.months* or $7,00 a year. The .Sunday is delivered by carrier boys in the city or mailed to subscribers, pontage free, at $1.00 a year. The Weekly is issued on Monday, and is mailed to subscribers, postage free, at $1.10 a year. Transient advertisements will be token for the Daily at $1 per square of 10 lines or less for the first insertion, and 50 cents for each subsequent insertion, and for the Weekly at $1 for ouch in- aertion. All communications intended to promote the private ends or interests of corporations* societies or individuals will be charged as advertisements. Special contracts made for advertising by the year. Obituaries will be charged for at customary rates. None but solid metal cuts used. Ail communications should be addressed to the Enqujrhr-Hun. THE CANADIAN CABINET ENRAGED, himself to learn any profession or science An Ontario dispatch makes, the state- ! almost the first thing* taugl/t him are the A New York insurance agent has been lined for doing business without a per mit. High commissions are tempting. 1*. T. Barnum is turning his mind more and more from the “greatest show on earth” to those other and more lasting delights promised to those who faithful ly perform their duties here below. Mr. Barnum is to build a new school house at Bridgeport, which will accommodate 100 children. It will he ready for occu pancy about November 1. Tiik Enquikku-Kcn feels a proper and modest gratification over the fact that one of the most prominent and conserva tive ministers in the state should declare from the pulpit that it was the cleanest and ablest daily in Georgia. Its gratifi cation is enhanced by the consciousness that the Itev. George G. N. Macdonell,the minister in question,is known everywhere as a man who never makes a statement which lie does not conscientiously be lieve. Sknatob Dawes will he a delegate to the Massachusetts republican convention, Imt he had a struggle to get there rather unbecoming a national statesman. Mr. Dawes supported a democrat for the leg islature lust year on grounds of personal friendship, and to punish him for that departure from party faith he was de feated for delegate. One of his friends who was elected declined in his favor and Mr. Dawes then slipped in, although the caucus refused to make his election unanimous. In defense of his recent repudiated in terview with Judge llilton the truthful Eli Perkins says that the interview was made up of hits of conversation with the judge extending over a period of three years. The dilliculty with patchwork interviews of this class is that a man sometimes changes his views and it sur prises him to see in a newspaper of to day a declaration at least three years old. Touching his impugned veracity Eli says: "I write about many queer, strange things which are often denied by the unthinking, hut time generally proves them true.” The Chicago Herald recently devoted some editorial space to the facts concern ing the resent alarming shrinkage in the number of Indians. It has been under stood by the general reader for some “QUACKS." The principal trouble to every begin ner in any trade or profession is his utter time that the Indians were rapidly dying ! want of familiarity with the names and meat that there is little else talked of there in official circles but the manner in which several leading American jour nals have been led into publishing the bogus draft of an imaginary treaty be tween Great Brtain and the United States. It is stated that the matter will shortly come up before the cabinet, and if it iH possible, those correspondents who perpetrated the fraud will be pun ished. The minister of justice states that the publication of false news by a telegraph company or any one else is an indictable offense. Hence the reported Canadian treaty being most probably an entirely bogus affair, there is room for some speculation as to the motives which lc its inventor to waste so much ink, ingenuity and labor in producing it. it is all but in conceivable as a stroke of humor. Pos sibly it was sent forth to sound public opinion in the United States on the question of reciprocity. If so it was suc cessful only to a limited extent. It is a matter, however, which there is no harm in discussing. The prospect is that such a discussion will before very long be called for. ft Ml AHEAD Push, keep pushing, but let all the pushing bo in the right direction. If an acquaintance is about to be overcome of evil push him hack. If your neighbor has started down the retrograde of life in morals, in means or in health, push him back. If he is already struggling up the bill of life, and finds it steep and difficult to climb, then push him upward. The right kind of push means to lift a brother or a neighbor out of trouble—a hoist for yourself out of the rut of de spondency, out of the blues, out of trouble, actual or imaginary. Push ahead. Nobody can he hurt if you push and drive in the right direction. But never take part in pushing any thing down. Push the other way or keep from pushing entirely. Poor hu manity goes down fast enough of its own weight, when once it gets started down the declivity toward misery, vice and poverty. Don’t add to the velocity by any act of yours. Push with all your might, all your heart, all your soul, all the time. Don't stand back because there is trouble ahead; stand up like a man and push forward. Push in the direction of the good, the beautiful and the true. Push in the direction of the beneficial and the prosperous. Push toward success. Push ahead; keep moving. To stand still in this busy world, is to he crushed or shoved aside by the crowd which is rushing forward. The barefooted boy, the ragged girl, all need the push of a kind word, cheerful encouragement and substantial help. The man who pushes others in the right direction gathers to himself strength for his own elevation. So push ahead; keep moving. And push (he city in which you live. There are many ways to do this, and there are many ways in which to be a stumbling block in the way of progress. Talk of your town and tell of its won derful advantages. Where a city enjoys so many advantages as does Columbus it should afford a subject for the most chronic grumbler to find something good to talk about. Don’t pull back, but push. off, lml the amount of money required to satisfy their demands appeared not to be diminishing, and the number of savages reported from the different agencies remained unchanged. But since the democratic administration got down to work there lias been a remark able mortality, of numbers at least. The Indians haven't decreased any in fact. At some agencies there has been a re duction of ”0 per cent., and at others the falling off has been almost as pro nounced. The saving to be effected during the ensuing year from this cause alone will amount to very nearly $2,000,000. Tub New York Times says it is very natural that the president should be anxious to retain the services of Secre tary Manning, even though physical weakness may unfit the secretary for the n eve routine o! his office. It is given out that an arrangement had been devised whereby Mr. Manning, though actually at the treasury,should be“constnu'tively absent,” in order to enable one of his as sistants to sign the papers, which, accord ing to law, must be signed by the secre tary himself when he is present. It is added that Mr. Manning refuses to con sent to this arrangement, and that for that reason it lias fallen through. Wlmt ever the fact may be in regard to this, it remains true that the amount of me chanical work put upon the secretary of the treasury which could be us well done by the cheapest clerk in his department is appalling. The signature of the secretary is required to such an extent as to keep hint busy several hours of every working day, and the signature means nothing whatever. It is a physical impossibility that he should examine all the papers he signs. It is not supposed that lie does so. He must trust to his subordinates in any case, and the law prevents him from facilitating his labors even by using a hand stamp instead of actually writing his name. Congress should lose no time, when it meets, in repealing this exacting and senseless requirement. expressions, which are peculiar to that business. Every science, every art, every avocation has its technicalities. They are necessary in the nature of things. They are usually short cuts for the ex pression of ideas, and also serve to con vey the idea with there clearness and force than could otherwise be done. In this age of rush and push short-cut ex pressions are more than useful—they are essential. l’eople who follow the ordinary and more simple avocations of life often wonder why doctors and lawyers and scientists use so many technical phrases and expressions, instead of words which uro of universal application, and they sometimes think that it is done for dis play, or to speak after the manner of the stump orator, done for bunkum. But while this imputation may, in rare instances, lie just, it does not generally apply. The lawyer and the doctor when talking professionally have learned to express their ideas in words and phrases which are peculiar to their professions, and it is sometimes difficult to explain their exact meaning in other than tech nical language. Doctors are sometimes put upon the witness stand, and it is occasionally amusing to hear the doctor and the ex amining attorney calling alternately for explanations of the technical phrases used each toward the other. The doctor wonders why the lawyer can’t use plain language in propounding his questions, and the lawyer is equally amazed why the doctor can’t answer in language that can be understood by the jury and every body else. The truth is that each is so accustomed to speak in the language peculiar to their profession that they are not conscious at the time that they are expressing their ideas in terms not usually understood. The ox driver has a language that is readily understood by every other ox driver, and even by the beast which nulls his cart, but which would be all Greek to the most erudite man in the land. Ilendfe we find that whenever a man sets technicalities or the peculiar phrases which belong to that business. He is given a dictionary of the profession and required to learn the definitions, and when he is examined is required to give the meaning of the phrases peculiar to the business. There tnay he those who are ready to inquire, what lias all this to do with “quacks?” Simply this: The foreman of the Enquirer-Sun office came into the editorial room and asked a member of the staff for a few more “quacks.” Now just what he wanted was a puzzle to one of the an imated. Every man who has readied the age of 40 has learned that one way to acquire knowledge is modestly to in quire of others who are already posted. .So being informed that the foreman wanted short news paragraphs to fill into the columns, the train of thought then naturally suggested was why such par agraphs are called “quacks.” Almost every word, the name of any thing, has a history. The study of that history is both interesting and profitable. Names are not given arbitrarily, but are suggested by some connection, relation, bearing or resemblance to the thing named. Then why are such para graphs called “quacks?" We find that quack is used to indicate the noise an old gander makes among a flock of geese when he wishes to proclaim his heroic deeds and triumphs in pulling the feath ers out of the neck of a brother gnnder: And, so called, because the noise made by the mouth in pronouncing “quack" is similar in sound to the quack of the gander. We find in Hudibras the expression “To quack of universal cures,” and it may be that lively writer suggested the similarity between the boastful quacks of a victorious gander and the noisy ob- trusivencss with which a patent medi cine vender proclaims the universal vir tues of his nostrums, or, it may be, that Hudibras used the word in a connection which had already been perceived and recognized by the public. And now comes the printer and applies the name of “quack” to the short paragraphs which are sometimes used to break the monotony in the advertising columns in the paper. ________ Collector Jonas, of New Orleans, ex presses himself as heartily in favor of a second term for Mr. Cleveland. He thinks that a president merely fits him self for service during the first-term, and that it is only in the second that the people can secure the full fruition of his intellect and his experience. Collector Jonas thinks that Mrs. Cleveland would not object to a second term. In this Mr. Jonas doubtless expresses the sentiments of all the new collectors and all the new ly appointed postmasters. It may be pernicious activity on his part to say so, but we cannot help admiring his candor. A CARD. To all who aro Buffo ring from the errors and Indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, &c., I will send a recipe that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE. This groat remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Sond a self-addressed envelope to the Rev. Joseph T. Inman, Station D, New York city. sepll eod&wly (fol r m) SPRINGER OPERA HOUSE. fnpHilny frivolling, September 28, POSITIVE APPEARANCE OF E, In his Greatest Success, the Black Flag! Note—When a Convict Escapes from Portland Prison, England, the Authorities Hoist the “Black Flag.” tteiiernl Admission. 75 con Is. Reserved Seats at Chaffin’s, Without Extra Charge. sept24-4t SPRINGER OPERA HOUSE FOR one night only, Till' KSIIAY, NKI’TKMBEK 30. 1330. The Distinguished Tragedian F, C, BUNGS, Having ended his long and successful reign as The SILVER KING. Will produce his celebrated character of IMI-A-IR/G ^ISTTOISTY, (As played by him 215 nights at Booth’s Theatre, New York,) In Shakesperes’ Powerful Tragedy. Entitled CTTJXjITJS OA'-ESAB! (ienernl 4«lnii*sioi cents. Reserved Seats now on Sale at Chaffin’s, Without Extra Charge. sept28-3t TAX NOTICE. State and County Taxes lor the Year lMli Are now due, and my books are open for collec tion oi same from and after Monday, Septem ber 6th. D. A. ANDREWS, Tax Collector Muscogee County. Office : Georgia Home Building . sep7 eod tdecl SHENANDOAH VALLKY ACADEMY, WINCHESTER, VA. Prepares io- University; College, Army, Navy or Business. Send for catalogue. C. L. V. .HINOR, M. A. (Uuv. of Va.) LL. I>. jyJ8 d2taw2m RETURNED, A.2STD THE IIII -I25T- Car Load Lots Our Buyer Has Excelled all Previous Efforts In his purchases. Experience makes us proficient. All are invited to call and inspect our Novelties in Dress Goods. J. A. KIRVEN & CO. SPONTANEOUS COMBUSTION! Bankrupt Stock Just Bought at Forced Gale IN NEW YORK NOW ALL IN. W ANTED—-A WOMAN OF SENSE, ENER GY and respectability for our business in her locality. Salary about 050 per month. Per manent position. References exchanged. E. J. JOHNSON, Manager, 16 Barclay St., New York. sep7 tu4w For the past week our resources were tried to their ut most. Never before in the history of Columbus were such great bargains put before such a well pleased people. The sale is positive, and without limit’or reserve. Before reading our prices we would say, remember, be certain to call and see this new stock during Monday and Tuesday, as you will have first choice before they are all picked over, as we will sell at this season of the year largely to merchants that have spot cash. Still Without a Rival. Note This Price List We Have the Goods. 40 Inch Black Brocade Dfi VERNEY CLOTH, sold by many at $1 00 a yard; our price 25c—warranted all wool, -10 inches wide, 8 Ounce Colored Heavy VAMAST; also Fairburn’s Suitings, worth 25c ; our price 121c. 6 Ounce NORMANDY TWILLS and DIAGONAL SUITINGS, worth 20c; our. price 10 cents. 4 Ounce DACELL and UVILLE DRESS GOODS, worth 15c; our price 7 cents. One case of good WASH POPLINS, worth 10c; price till Wednesday 6c, all shades. Lead on, oli! Sparticus! Remember this for Monday, as all will begone that day: 36 Inch English. Fold Fine Soft CASHMERE, worth 40c; price 15 cents. Lupin’s 40 inch Blue and Crow Black CASHMERE TWILL, 1800 tine, worth 65c; price 25 cents. All our large $1 26 BUTTONS are marked down to 50 cents, all you want. All our best KID CAMBRICS are marked down to 5 cents. All our BRASS PINS are marked down to 2* cents a paper. All our Ladies’ 25c COLLARS are marked down to 121 cents. All our 11-4 BED SPREADS, worthjfl 50, are marked down to 75 cents. All our White and Red 35c FLANNELS, all wool, marked down to 20 cents. All our 75c Barnsley TABLE DAMASK marked down to 50 cents. All our 65c Red DAMASKS marked to 35 cents. Gents’ f2 00 Scarlet UNDERSUITS marked to $1 00 for full suit. Rcan this Price List well. Oh, my! did you ever? Keep a reading: 200 Pieces 4-4 full heavy SEA ISLAND, worth 10c; our price 6ic, same by the bolt. 200 Pieces 4-4 full heavy SEA ISLAND, worth 8c; our price 5c, same by the bolt. 200 Pieces bleached and unbleached CANTON FLANNELS, worth 12Ac; our price will be 7{ cents, heavy. 500 Pieces 4-4 BLEACH1NGS at 4 cents ; also 4-4 Undressed Heavy at 71c. 200 Pieces Best KING PHILIP CAMBRICS at 91 cents. Have you noticed how Gray has knocked the bottom out of Calicoes? Remember the best Fall Prints are priced by us 5 cents; even good Prints can be had at 4 cents. cents. , ^ , — c r ~ See it. All our Blankets, Ladies’ and Gents’ Underwear, Skirts, Linens, Notions, Hosiery, Dress Goods and Shawls now in. Special prices on Silk, viz: 65c, 65c, 75c, fl 00, up to $4 00 a yard. Endless array of fine Silks and Velvets and Courtauld’s Fine Crapes. 500 Pieces of Hamburg Edge and Insertings to be thrown away. that xdzriela-imi. The following was overheard as some high price competitors were in conclave on a Dry Goods box the other night: “What are we going to do since Gray has bought that large bankrupt stock ?” “Well, I had an awful dream the other night about Gray cutting the prices last week, and that dream has caused more sorrrow to the soul of mine than ten thousand earthquakes, or a million bankrupt stocks not handled by Gray.” “No use,” said the other, “trying to match Gray’s prices. It is like the noted Indian chief, Geronimo, trying to catch an ostrich in the Baliarah Desert on the back of a Florida gopher.” Our aim during this sale will be to have our bundles delivered promptly- and show goods with pleasure. Strict attention and politeness Gray’s imperative rule. Remem ber the one that keeps the prices down. Largest Business Connections South, COLUMBUS, SAVANNAH, AUGUSTA, NEW YORK. OHT-TOP-LIVE-HIOTTSE. C. P. GRAY & CO. Opposite Rankin Hotel. 5! Inch Ladies’ Imported MOGULL SUITINGS, worth sfl 25 a yard ; our price 45 t 72 Inch Silesia Face Satin Palm Leaf Damask, worth $2 75 a yard; our price $1. S< UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, P. H. MULL, D. D„ LL. D.. Chancellor. npHE 86th Session of Departments at Athens l will begin Wednesday. 6th of October next. Full courses of study in Letters and Science; special courses in Engineering, Agriculture, Physics and Chemistry. TUITION FREE. For catalogues aud information address the Chan cellor at Athens. Law School opens at the same time. For information address Prop. Geo, Dudley Thomas, at Athens, Ga. Lamar Cobbs Sec’y Board of Trustees, Athens, Ga. Aug., 188* 6ep4 d&wlm GEORGIA. MUSCOGEE COUNTY. Whereas. Alexander Toles, administrator of R. W. Williams, deceased, represents to the court in his petition, duly tiled, that he has fully administered R. W. Williams’ estate. This, is therefore, to cite all persons con cerned, heirs and creditors, to show cause, if any they can. why said administrator should not be discharged from his administration and receive letters of dismission on the first Monday in De cember, 1886. F. M. BROOKS, Ordinary. September 4th, 1886. oaw3m Supreme Court |Of Georgia. CLERK’S OFFICE. Atlanta, Ga., September 14, 1686. I T APPEARS FROM THE DOCKET OF THR 1 Supreme Court of the State of Georgia, for the September Term, 1886, that the order of the cir cuits, w the number of cases from each coun tv and city courts, is as follows: J ATLANTA CIRCUIT. Fulton 32 (1 contir ued),Citv Court of Atlanta 13 (1 continued) STONE MOUNTAIN CIRCUIT. Clayton 3, DeKalb 4 7 EASTERN CIRCUIT. Chatham 17, Effingham 1, Liberty 2, City Court of Savannah 10 3 0 MIDDLE CIRCUIT. Bulloch 1, Einanuel 1, Jefferson 1, Screven 2, Tatnall 1, Washington 10 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 WESTERN CIRCUIT. Clarke 1, Oconee 1, Walton 3, City Court of Clarke county l 9 NORTHEASTERN CIRCUIT. Hall 3, Lumpkin 3, White 1, city Court of Hall county 1 g BLUE RIDGE CIRCUIT. Cherokee 1, Cobb 3, Dawson 1, Forsyth 1. (con tinued;, Milton 2, Pickens 1 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 1, 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 OCMULGEE CIRCUIT. Baldwin 3, Green 1, Jasper 1, Jones 3, Morgan 3, Putnam 1 u 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 PATAULA CIRCUIT. Early 2, Terrell 2 4 SOUTHWESTERN CIRCUIT. Lee 3, Macon 3, Schley 4, Stewart 1, Sumter 5, Webster 2.. 18 ALBANY CIRCUIT. Baker 1, Decatur 8 (2 continued), Dougherty 9, Mitchell 2, Worth 3 23 SOUTHERN CIRCUIT. Brooks 4 4 OCONEE CIRCUIT. Dodge 2 (1 continued), Dooly 2, Laurens 2, Pulaski 2 8 BRUNSWICK CIRCUIT. Appling 1, Charlton 1, Clinch 2, Glynn 3, Ware 3, Wayne 1 11 342 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 send their bills to this office. Z. D. HARRISON, Clerk Supreme Court of Georgia. In Re. The Eagle and Phenix Manufacturing Company. Petition to amend Charter, QTATE OF GEORGIA—MUSCOGEE COUNTY : To the Honorable Superior Court of said doing business in said county, and Its principal office and place of doing business is in Columbus, in said county. That the original charter and act of incorpora tion was granted by the General Aseerabfy of said State by an Act entitled 4 An Act to incorpo rate the Eagle and Phenix Manufacturing Com pany of Columbus. Georgia,” which a<ct was ap proved 10th of March, 1SG6. That said Act of Incorporation did not provide for the election of more than five Directors, nor has there been any change in the laws respecting said corporation. That the corporators named in said Act did or ganize said company, and that the capital stock o said company has been increased to one mill ion two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, all of which has been paid in. That the object of said corporation was the manufacture and sale ol cotton and woolen goods, and said company still carry on such busi ness m said county. That at the last annual meeting of the stock holders of said company it was resolved by said stockholders that application should be made to alter and amend the charter of said company, so as to provide that the stockholders should, at the annual elections, choose nine directors among said stockholders instead of five, as provided by said charter. Wherefore, your petitioner prays that an order may be passed at the next November term of said Court declaring said petition granted, and that the Fourth Section of said Act shall be so altered and amended as that the same shall read as fol lows : Sec. 1V. That there shall be an annual meeting of the stockholders of said corporation at such time and place as the corporation may provide by its by-laws for the purpose of electing nine direct ors. and that the time of holding the first meeting of the directors under the said first election shall be fixed by said directors, or a majority of them, and the said directors chosen at said election, or at the annual election to be afterwards held,shall, as soon as may be alter subsequent elections, chose out of their numberla president,and in case of the death, resignation or removal of the presi dent or any directors, such vacancy or vacancies may be filled for the remainder of the year where in they may .happen by the said remaining direct ors, or a majority of them may appoint a presi dent pro tern., who shall exercise such powers and functions as the by-laws of said corporation may provide. PEABODY, BRANNON & BATTLE. „ Petitioners’ Attorneys. Filed and recorded m the Clerk’s office of the Superior Court of said county thislSthday of Sep tember, 1886. GEO Y, POND, sep2l oaw 4w Clerk S. C. M. C., Ga. _ A. 1 M, COLLEGE. Alabama Polytechnical Institute. r PHE next session of this College will open Sep- x tember 15th. Three courses of education are offered: I. Chemistry and Agriculture. II. Mechanics and Engineering. III. General course, including Latin, French and German. Laboratory Instruction constitutes an impor tant feature and is given in: 1. Chemistry; 2. Physics; 3. Engineering and Surveying; 4, Agriculture J 5. Natural History; 6. Drawing; 7. Mechanic Arts, and 8. Printing and Telegraphy. The Mechanic Art Laboratory will be enlarged and two new departments added. Tuition is free. For catalogues address WM. LisROY BROUN, President, aug31 eodt oclO Auburn; Ala. CHAPPELL’S SCHOOL For Girls and Young Ladies Opens 011 Mvnday, September 27th, 1886, Number of pupils strictly limited. Satisfaction guaranteed to every patron. Terms. $75 a year, payable in installments of $25 in advance. For full particulars address J. HARRIS CHAPPELL, sep!4 eodlm Columbus, Ga. Catherines:. Jones! Libe , for Divorce , 0rder James W. Jones. J Perfect Service. „ . Iocs not reside in the state of Georgia; It is ordered by the Court that service be per fected on said defendant by publishing this or der twice a month for two months before the November term, 1886, of this court, in the Colum bus Enquirer-Sun, a public gazette of this state. June 7,1886. J. T. WILLIS. THOS. W. GRIMES. Judge S. C. 6. C. Attorney for Libellant. A true extract from the minutes of Muscogee Superior Court at its May term, 1886. on June 7th* 1886. GEO. Y. POND, augll 2tam2m Clerk 8. C. M. C.. Ga.