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(CoUttiibusCiujuircr^im.
ESTABLISHED IN 1828. 58 YEARS OLD.
Daily, Weekly and Sunday.
The ENQUIRER-SUN is Issued every day, ex
eepl Monday. The Weekly is issued on Monday.
The Daily (including Sunday) is delivered by
carriers in the city or mailed,postage free, to sub
scribers for 75c. per month, $2.00 for three
months, $1.00 for six months, or $7.00 a year.
The Sunday is delivered by carrier boys in the
city or mailed to subscribers, postage free, at
•t .00 a year.
The Weekly Is Issued on Monday, and Is mailed
subscribers, postage free, at 81.10 a year.
Transient advertisements will be taken for the
Daily at $1 [KT square of 1(1 lines or less for the
first insertion, and 50 cents for each subsequent
Insertion, and for the Weekly at $1 for eacli in
sertion.
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 ut customary
rateB.
None but solid metal cuts used.
All communications should he addressed to the
Enquiber-Hon.
A danokiu>rs tongue fever 1ms ap
peared in several states. It will put a
stop to much talk about boards of health.
Bi.ack Jack Logan says the country he
saved is on tlie verge of ruin. John’s
badly off. A country that can survive
twenty years of republican rule is booked
to stand for ail time.
Bon Inokiiaom, says prohibition is a
failure. It will lie remembered that Bob
declared the Christain religion to be a
failure. Bob lias boon retained by the
oilier side.
iScpi’Hicss the Indians in Arizona and
the cowboys will break. The difference
between a cowboy and an Indian, when
each is full of red liquor, is the differ
ence between tweedledum and tweedlo-
deo.
A.ndukw Lucas, who claims lo have
been u body servant of Andrew Jackson,
died II io other day at the alleged age of
125 years, in Brantford, Out. Old man
Jackson must have been covered all over
with body servants. The aged Lucas lias
gone to meet the innumerable army of
Washington’s nurses.
Tub Boston Herald says: “The uni
versal tCHti mony of people who have
traveled through the west is that busi
ness is active and confidence strong. The
same evidence comes from the east. The
country is undoubtedly entering upon a
new era of prosperity.” And the Boston
Merabi is about, three-thirds right.
They want to hang a policeman in
Now Orleans for shooting and killing a
Chinaman just for the fun of it. But
the Chinaman’s doatli was clearly caused
by his own carelessness. Wlmt did he
poke his head out of liis laundry window
for when a New Orleans policeman was
in sigh! V It is the old story over again.
The Chinaman didn’t know the police
man was loaded.
DYNAMITE AND DlIVll.TItY.
In speaking of Judge Cary’s legal
axioms on the anarchist crimes, a cotem-
porary takeH the position, and very cor
rectly, that Judgo Gary Is the one judi
cial ollieer in Chicago whose name is
known and honored wherever Christian
civilization is supreme. Without any
wish or effort of his own, it became his
duty to apply tile old principles of law to
the eases of indicted criminals who had
represented and tried to carry out doc
trines in irreconcilable hostility to all
law, h uman and divine, by
methods that included whole
sale murder and destruction of
property. During the entire course of
tho trials of the Chicago anarchists lie-
lore Judge Cary, he was the object of
critical attention on both sides of the At
lantic All bis rulings were carefully
watched and commented on by tbe
newspapers of many countries. lie stood
on the picket line of the struggle bet ween
Christian civilization and tile demonic
doctrines that have terrorized many Eu
ropean rulers and thinkers, and repre
sented American law and civilization,
under peculiarly trying circumstances.
No American judge ever before was put
on such a pinnacle for observation by
tbe whole world.
Judge Cary stood this long ami terri
ble ordeal as few men could have done.
His rulings were models of brevity, clear
ness and common sense. They never de
cided too much. They met all the special
emergencies that came up, each in the
right way. And when the verdict came
that raised American law to such a
height in the esteem of all civilized na
tions, the Chicago judge was recognized
as one of those providential men whose
services in critical eras insure an immor
tality of honorable fame.
And yet Lucy Parsons, the wife of one
of the condemned anarchists, is allowed
to roam over the country and harangue
every crowd that she can get to listen to
her as she boasts that her opinions “will
some day bring her to the gallows.” In
a speech at Cincinnati the other night
(his coarse, vulgar, murderous-hearted
woman was allowed to vilify the judge,
jury and district-attorney, and assert
that $100,000 had been raised to buy a
verdict of guilty, while the “condemned
men did no other wrong than advocate
the rights of mankind.”
The lesson taught by the anarchist in
Chicago should not be so soon forgotten
as to allow this woman to go over the
country expressing such outrageous sen
timents as she did in Chicago and re-
pea tod in Cincinnati.
DAILY ENQUIRER - SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 1*, 1886.
I.AXITT OF TIIK LAW.
j Tho'Chicago anarchists have lieen sen-
! tcnced to death, and December 0th is the
: time set for their execution. In the his-
j tory of the United States there lias not
i been a crime more flagrant and heinous
| than that of which they stand convicted.
I The time of their execution is still nearly
i two months in the future, and the long
time intervening furnishes a striking
instance of the too indulgent spirit in
which our laws are administered. Al
ready predictions are being made that
these anarchists will not hang. Only
yesterday the Atlanta Constitution as
serted that “it is by no means certain
that they will hang,” and as a reason for
it says “a municipal labor ticket has been
announced in Chicago, and the boast is
made that if it receives as many as 25,000
votes, the anarchists will be saved.”
We place no credence in any such idea
as that conveyed in the assertion that it
is not certain the anarchist will hang,
for we do not believe tiiere is the re
motest chance for their escape from the
gallows, but it certainly furnishes food
for reflection upon the tardy execution
of the law. It impairs respect for the
law and removes the dread which should
always exist of swift punishment for ag
gravated or atrocious crime. So long a
time has already elapsed that the
memory of the hideous nature of the
crime committed by the anarchist assas
sins has been very much dulled. That
ought not to be. Quicker execution of
the sentence of the law, especially in
capital cases, is coining to be a very
strong necessity in the administration of
our criminal procedure. And if there is
to be a further appeal of this case, which
is threatened, it is indispensable, for the
sake of tbe law itself and for the safety
of society, that there shall be no delay
beyond what is absolutely essential in
any tribunal to which it can be carried.
The usual easy-going, deliberate tardi
ness in appellate proceedings will be
very censurable in a case like this, upon
which very serious consequences may
depend.
Men who proclaim and practice such
murderous and utterly destructive doc
trines uh these anarchists do—who most
ly come from countries where they know
nothing but crushing despotism on the
one hand and bloody revolt on the other
—must be made to feel that this is a
country ruled by law made by the people
themselves; that all who enter into con
spiracies to overthrow that law, whether
murderous or not, must die the death
prescribed by the law; and that swift ex
ecution shall follow the conviction and
sentence which in our country come from
the just, open, lawful and indulgent trial.
THE OKEAT GEORGIA DAILIES.
Some judgment should be exercised iu printing
news. News is not always lit for publication.
Tlie interests of morality, society and good gov
ernment require the suppression of some things.
The world would be no better or be
come no better if its newspapers should
present only its sunny side. Indeed it
might probably grow worse. What a
good, wicked, interesting world it is!
Nevertheless the above extract from the
Atlanta Constitution was read by us with
a great deal of pleasure. Ueorgia can
boast of a daily press inferior to none in
any state of this great union. I'pun the
Atlantic coast there is tins Savannah
Morning News which is •infe
rior to no newspaper publish
ed in tbe south, its columns are
clean and undeliled, though it gives all
the current news of the day and discusses
subjects in a fearless maimer. The Cen
tral City furnishes the Macon Telegraph,
one of tbe most ably edited papers in
the state, though moat too critical at
times, which gives all the news in a
spicy, readable form, yet any fattier can
atl'ord to read it to .his family at the
breakfast table. On the other extreme
side of the state is the Augusta Chroni
cle, one hundred years of age and a-
good and clean as it is old. The smaller
towns and cities have dailies that bear
favorable comparison with those named
in the larger cities.
And then there is tbe Atlanta Consti
tution. We would by no means exclude
it from the list of clean newspapers. It
is one of the livest and most progressive
papers in the south, and tbe fact of it*
wide circulation and influence makes the
above statement all tbe more a pleasure.
We cannot refrain from saying, how
ever, that there is a tendency with the
Constitution to appeal to the sensibilities
of tbe emotional nature w hivh are fasci
nating and seductive to the vast sensa
tional masses that feed their shallow na
tures on momentary excitement and
dazzling pen pictures of the events of the
day, eager to read all about the latest
murder, and delighted with the latest
sensation and latest romance of the day.
Of all the papers in the state the At
lanta Constitution borders more upon
this idea than any other journal. But
we are not disposed to criticize it harshly,
the difference between the sort of news
it furnishes and that of the other papers
being the difference between its town
and that of the others. One of the func
tions of a daily newspaper is to represent
the world as it is, not as it ought to be.
No truthful and accurate report of an
event of public interest, when both tbe
event and the report come within the
requirements of decent narrative, can
properly be called sensational in any bad
sense. There is quite a difference be
tween the fascination which depends upon
a graphic statement of interesting truths
and the unhealthy sensations stimulated
bv exaggerated or false reports. It is a
wise and good newspaper that marks and
makes the discrimination.
According to the New York World, a staff
correspondent of the Cleveland Leader is writing
letters to that journal from Euiopc. He has
been carefully observing the girls of France.
England and Germany, and he comes to the fol
lowing patriotic conclusion :
Take the American girl all around, she is the
best pr aluct of her sex that the world has yet
produced, and at a woman’s show, composed of
exhibits or all nations, Hhe would take the grand
prize and be easily judged first over all competi
tors.
This is a most satisfactory statement from a
trustworthy source. It is to be hoped that the
men of the highly favored land will rise this full
to a practical comprehension of the blessings
which surround them. Is it right that marriage
should fall Into obnoxious desuetude white the
American girl stands forth as "the best product
of her sex/” Fiance anti Austria are complaining
that matrimony is becoming more and more neg
lected. A tendency to hucIi neglect is beginning
to be felt in this land of liberty. Let it cease.
Let the young men of America allow a just appre
ciation of the women who stand so high above
the women of the old world.
Tjie fact that six editors of Boston have lived
to he 80 years old or more, Major Ben Russell
having died at 83, Joseph F, Buckingham at 81,
William W. Clapp at 82, Nathaniel Greene at 80,
Nathan ITale at 78 and John 3. Sleeper at 80. is
mentioned as indicating that "journalism at the
Hub evidently promotes longevity.” Those who
remember the Boston papers of former years
will readily agree that there was nothing in the
conducting of them that tended to shorten life.
Some of the editors of the present day, in that
quiet old town, likewise seem determined to live
to a ripe old age.'
At a low variety theatre in St. Louis the other
night adrunken and jealous waiter went inlo
the dressing-room, seized his unfaithful wife and
hacked her to death with a knife. This done,
he stabbed himself five times and fell dead be
side bis victim. This in a theatre devoted to
light comedy and beer. What a tragedy to have
placed upon tile stage! The general slaughter
which closes "Hamlet” would have appeared
tame beside this realistic exhibition, and so
Ht- ine is right when lie says that there is no
tragedy so terrible as that which many be seen
in real life, even in the age of civilization.
Marion IIakland is, perhapp, the busiest wo
man in the couutry. She conducts a household
department for a syndicate of fifteen papers, does
the editorial work in Babyhood, is completing a
companioA volume to "Judith,” to be called "In
Old Virginia,” and a household manual entitled
"Home-Making and Housekeeping.”
Ma. LovniiY is a candidate for congress in one
of the Minnesota districts. The fiftieth congress
seems likely to have at least one lovely feature.
J&. O Jk. 23L XX
To all who aro Buffering from the errors and
iwllocrotions of youth, nervous weakness, ourly
decay, lossof manhood, &c., I will send a recipo
tliat will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE. This great
remedy was discovered by a missionary iu South
America. Send a self-addressed envelope to the
Rev. Joseph T. Inman, Station D, New York City.
sepll eod&wly (fol r m)
UNPRECEDENTED
STOOK OIF
Piece Goods
NOW READY
For Fall, 1886.
Clothing Made io Order,
Variely I'ltgmriillclcfl.
Prices K(‘iiM»iial>Ic.
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
GOODS selected now will be made ready foi
delivery at any date desired. Call and favor us
with au order.
G. j. PEACOCK,
nettling: Man ii fact lire r, 1200 «V 1202
Broui Street. C'oliianhiiM Ga.
eodtf
UTOIR, S-AJLiIE.
r to purchase:
The desirable Residence of Mr. O. Bul
lock. on Fourth avenue, next to girls’ pub-
room House on
cho
2400. 1 Acre lot with 11-
lower Broad street.
1700. One nrw five room House on Ninth street,
oust cl*conn house. Rents pay 12 per cent
on price.
1600. Key of Rose Hill. Good stand for Store
and Dwelling House. $500 less than cost
1800. New live room Dwelling and \ acre lot
on Rose Hill, near street car line. Terms
4500.
?asy.
1000.
*hUuda.,>»
U'h*
Catarrh
IEXjUT’S
Undoubtedly Coming
FULL-FLEDGED TO THE SUNNY SOUTH!
The Biggest, Greatest and in all Things the Best Show that
Ever Exhibited in this State.
The Only Big Railroad Circus and Monster Menagerie Coming this year will Positively
Exhibit at
.SStBKSJk OCTOBER 23d.
JOHN. B. DORIS’
Great Inter-Ocean Circus,
Menagerie, Museum, Great Racing Carnival and World’s
Exposition of Novelties,
THE 03STT3 .A. dST 3D OTTXjY SHOW
WHICH EXHIBITS IN THE SOUTHERN CITIES
The same performers, precisely the same Huge Tents, precisely the same Mammoth
Railroad and Lot Equipments.
Added to immensely
at’d shorn of nothing,
it will exhibit precise
ly as it did this sum
mer in.the
GREAT
NEW ENGLAND
STATES.
boston' new
YORK, PHILADEL
PHIA and other Met
ropolitan Cities.
The one and only
show recognized as a
lusting institution,
which pays yearly
visits
TO THE
GLOWING CLIME
OF
KING COTTON.
The only show for
which Southern rail
roads make excur
sions for their patrons
from all points.
with six room House.
■ Acre vacant lot corner of Firstllavenue
and Fifth street—the cheapest vacant iot
on the market.
I have also for sale a number of cheap Houses
in the lower part of the town and in Northern
Liberties, which I will sell on installments if pre-
W. S. GREEN, Real Estate Agt.
Third Door West of Post Office.
eodtf
IEMiyibmlrlu
CHICKSSICR'S L »•<GL1 H
The and Only G*u$iine»
Gfc and iiiwayti Ktiigi > . Ben are of n orthlcMa u
*SEBK& . AIMS JSffiSi £
NAM e"s» * PEG".'" VI,V. kJi'ti'i '.“"‘l”"* 11
«Ste Mudlyuiie^uA
•.oltl bv 1>r
dold in Head,
CATARRH,
HAY FEVER.
IVota Liquid, Snuff or
| Powder. Free from
Y_ gigirm injurious drugs aud
m r Bkw Ba offensive odors.
A particle is applied into each nostril and is
agreeable. Price 60 cents at Druggists
THE SHOW FOR WHICH COURTS ADJOURN,
Factories shut down, schools are dismissed and the first families form fashionable
Circus parties. A show exclusive in all its novelties, requiring A CITY OF SNOW
WHITE CANVAS to hold its multifarious marvels, showing equal patronage with the
GREAT SOUTHERN EXPOSITION.
JiimI Added Three of the Largest. 'Greatest anti Grandest lllcphants In t ap-
tlvity. Larger than the Famous
JUMBO!
Chief, Empress, Queen.
WE CHALLENGE THE WORLD
To produce such a fearless, dashing and valorous Equestrian Sachem as is
James Robinson,
The Only Man Who Rides.
Who wears the Diamond-Studded Champion Belt and Medals of France, Spain, Russia
and his native country, America; is more celebrated than any other living equestrian,
who has just completed the most brilliant tour around the world ever accomplished,
and was received everywhere with an unbounded enthusiam and marked distinction
never before accorded another Artist in the profession.
A TROUPE OF 12 GENUINE BRAWNY TURKS. FRENCH TROUPE BICYCLE
RIDERS. TROUPE OF SIBERIAN ROLLER SKATERS.
The Greatest and Grandest Exhibition ever organized by John B. Doris, and un
doubtedly the most magnificent ever conceived.
OUR G-ZRaA-HSTID STREET ZF^LJEU^IDIE
Will take place at 10 a m. Don’t miss it. Excursions on all railroads. Two perform
ances daily.
Admission 75 cents. Children under 10 years 50 cents.
A few Reserved Opera Chairs 25 cents extra.
ocl4 17 21 wit
Hatcher & Wilkerson
and Commission
Fontaine Warehouse. Columbus, Ga.
WE WILL continue the Warqhou.se and Commission Business in all its branches,
and solicit the patronage of our friends and the public generally. We guarantee strict
attention and prompt returns on all consignments.
BAGGING and TIES always on hand at cash prices.
Storage aud Sale of COTTON a specialty.
Agents for the Latest Improved "LUMMUS COTTON GIN.
HATCHER & WILKERSON.
sep4 2tawl m w2ni
tmrnmuumMnmmrmmmsmsam
registered 50 cts. Circulars free. ELY
Druggists, Owego, N. Y.jBB 4 .aug3 eod&wtf arm
The New York Store
Opened Ihe Season with a House Full of Bargains in all
Classes of
3D lE^UtT GOODS,
And Ihe people are showing their appreciation of this
fact by giving us I heir patronage. Oar sales are doable
what they were for the same time last season. The
Dress Goods Novelties and Trimmings are a special at
traction, and are selling rapidly at the low prices we put
upon them. Our CLOAKS and WRAPS are the admira
tion of all who have seen them.
We have found ii necessary to increase our clerical
force, so ihal in future till can have polite and prompt
attention.
J. E. CARGILL, Agent.
Mobile & Girard R. R. Co.
^ ys and afler this date Traius will run as follows:
COLUMBUS, GA., October 3d, 1886.
WEST BOUND TRAINS.
No. 1.
Pass’ger. i
Columbus Broad Street Depot..
EAST BOUND TRAINS.
Leave Montgomery, M. & E R. R
“ Eufaula, M. & E. R. R
“ Troy v
Arrive Union Springs
Leave Union Sgrings
Arrive Montgomery, M. & E. R R
“ Columbus
2 30pm
2 46 p ill
5 37 p m
6 46 p m
8 SO p m
7 23 p in
10 33 p m
10 25 p m
10 35 p m
1 45 a m
2 00 a m
4 50am
No. 2.
Pass ’ger.
No. 4.
Accom.
7 40 a m
4 25 a m
3 30 p m
4 01 p m
9 10 a m
9 25 a m
6 40 p m
7 15 p m
12 45 p m
10 49 p m
3 45 a m
5 34a m
6 29am
7 29 a m
1019 a m
In Re. "Chattahoochee IFalls Company.” Ap.
plication for Charter.
QTATE OF GEORGIA—MUSCOGEE CO UN-
O TY. To the Superior Court of said county:
The pi tition of .L T. Warnock. L. F. Garrard, a.
J. Bethuue, A. R, Lawton and George M. Clapp,
respectfully shows that the> and their associates
and successors desire to be incorporated and
made a body corporate and politic under the
name of* Chattahoochee Falls Company.”
The object of said corporators, and for which
they ask to be incorporated and empowered to
engage in, is:
The utilization, improvement and operation of
water power on the Chattahoochee river, iu the
County ot Muscogee aud State of Ueorgia, by con
trolling the waters oi salt. Chattahoochee river
with locks, dams and luch other means and de
vices as may be necessary to enablt them to sup
ply water power for manufacturing purposes to
such nulls ana machinery as muy be thereon lo
cated and which may be hereafter purchased and
erected by said corporation, aud to such persons
or corporations as may purchase, lea»e or rent
said water power or any part thereof from it
To construct and mum min all ntcesmry cuna s
chute* Humes, sluices, dams, tramways and other
appliances on, upon and through tne lands-and
property of said corporation for the proper dis
tribution, utilization and preservation of said
waterpower anu which may be found essential
and useful for said purposes.
To utilize and improve all the landsacquired by
said corporation at and contiguous to said water
power upon the east and west bunks of the Chat
tahoochee river, in the States of Ueorgia and Ala
bama, by erecting thereon mills, macimiery. fac
tories and other buildings, and engaging in the
manufacture of cotton wool and all other fibrous
ano textile materials into yarns, cloth, thread,
rope and other fabrics, goods and products of ev
ery kind whatever.
Ginning cotton for toll or seed or other valuable
consideration; manufacturing cotton seed into
such products as can be obtained therefrom;
grinding corn, wheat and other grain and produce
lor tbll or for market and converting the same into
Hour, meal and its other products.
The furnishirg of power and the production and
generating thereby of electricity for light and
heat, for motive power and for such mechanical
and other uses and purposes as it may be adapted
to; und supplying, leasing and selling the same
and erecting and constructii. g in connection
therewith such works, po.es, wires above and un
der ground, and other apparatus, electrical de
vices and stations throughout said Coucty of
Muscogee as may nc necessary to convey, turnish
and supply the same to public aud private con
sumers.
The manufacture of paper in all its forms, aud
of puper, timber, wood and metals into such
utensils, woodeuware, machinery and other
goods as may be produced therefrom; and the con
ducting and carrying on oi the manufacture of
all and every other kind of goods, wares, machine
ry, wood unci metal products, or such oruuenes or
parts thereof as may be found ettential and de
sirable for the profitable employment and im
provement oi the said waterpower and property.
Said corporation to have power and authority to
sell, lease orreut its saicl water power, lands, ma
chinery, facto- ies and buildings, or such parts and
portions thereof as may be e* pedient, to such per
sons or other corporations as it may deem Ht ancl
proper; and to advance from its corporate capital,
funds io such persons or corporations as may oc
cupy its said property; to aid and promote the
carrying on by them of their said manufacturing
business, and to make and execute all necessary
conveyances ancl other instruments, and to enter
into ail proper contracts ana agreements for the
exorcise oi this authority ancl the securing of its
said advunct s.
Also, to have power and authority to lay out
pl. is and building lots upon the lands which may
be hereafter acquired by said corporation in tne
States of Ueorgia and Alabama; to erect buildings
and improvements thereon, aud the said lots, va
cant or improved, and the said buildings, to sell,
rent or It a: e to the operatives of said manufac
turing enterprises, aud to such other persons as
may desire to rent, lease or purchase the same.
THE PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS
of said corporation will be located at the site of
us said mills ancl water power in Muscogee Coun
ty, State of Ueorgia.
ITS CHIEF OFFICE
to be in the City of Columbus, of said County and
State; but it shall have authority in pursuit of its
said business and promotion of its oojects to es
tablish biancli offices at such other points ancl to
exercise its rights and franchises heretofore men
tioned, and lo build factories, make improve
merits, contracts, agreements, investments and
carry on business of the nature ancl character
afore mentioned with regard to its property and
upon the lands and property which may be here
after acquired by said corporation in the State of
Alabama, and at such other places within and
without tne limits of said States of Georgia and
Alabama, as its objects and interests may re
quire.
THE CAPITAL STOCK
UlUU3itlUl UU11UR), ilUJiUUlC 111 1UUX1U.Y UI .
as said corporators may determine, to be divided
into shares of $100 each, of which amount ten per
cent, thereof shall be paid in before said corpo
ration commences to do business; and petitioners
desire said corporation shall have authority to in
crease said capital stock from time to time as it
may deem fit and proper to any sum not exceed
ing one million dollars.
They desire said corporation to have the power
of suing and being sued; to have and to use a
common seal, and to alter, break and change the
same ati will; to make rules and by-laws lor the
management of its business, notin conflict with
the laws of this State and the United States, and
the same to alter, amend and rescind at pleasure;
to receive, lease, rent or purchase and hold such
real estate aud personal property as may be now
or hereafter necessary for its corporate purposes,
for the expansion and advancement ol its objects,
for the securing of debts due ami to become due
to said corporation, and the same to sell, mort
gage and convey at will.
That it have power to effect loans and to issue
bonds in the name of said corporation, without
security or to secure such bonds by mortgage of its
property, real and personal, or of such parts or
portions thereof as may be desirable; and to loan
out its surplus earnings upon mortgage or other
available security.
To elect and appoint such officers, managers,
directors and agent** as it desires; and to provide
such rules and regulations with respect to stock
holders who jefuse to pay up any balance due on
their stock as will compel them to pay upon pen
alty of sale or forfeiture of such stock, and to do
and perform all such acts as are necessary for tne
execution of its powers and to carry out the ob
jects und purposes of this corporation.
the amount of unpaid stock subscribed by such
stockholder.
Wherefore petitioners pray that they, their as
sociates and successors be duly incorporated un
der the name as aforesaid for the term of twenty
years, with the privilege of renewal, with all the
powers herein prayed for, and with such other
powers and privileges as are incident to corpo
rations under the laws of this state, and that af
ter the filing, recording and publishing of this
petition, as provided by law, the Court will pass
an order declaring this application granted.
And petitioners will ever pray, etc.
MoNEILL & LEVY,
L F. GARRARD,
Attorneys for Petitioners.
GEORGIA—MUSCOGEE COUNTY: Filedpu
the Clerk’s office Superior Court of said county on
the 11th day of October, 1886, and recorded this
Pith day of October on page 15, und Records of
Bills and Writs, Muscogee Superior Court, 1885.
GEO. Y. POND,
ocl3 oaw 4w Clerk S. C. M. C. Ga.
C HUE JW
RUDOLPH FINZER’S
STARLIGHT
CAPITAL PRIZE
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\J U 11 U \J V I
At WIinleMalv by
LOUIS BUHLER & Co
i!
COLUMBUS, a-A..
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Trains Nos. 1 and 2 (Mail) daily. Nos. 3 and 4 (Macon and Montgomery Through Freight and
Accommodation) daily except Sunday. No. 6 and 6 (Way Freight and Accommodation) daily ex-
ceptcept Sunday. Nos. 9 and 10 (Passenger) Sundays only.
W. L. CLARK, Sup’t. D E; WILLIAMS, G. P. A.
TAX NOTICE.
Statu anti County Taxes for tbe Tear 1SSC
Are now due, and my books are open for collec
tion of same from and afler Monday. Septem
ber 6th. D. A. ANDREWS,
Tax Collector Muscogee County.
Office : Georgia Home Building.
sep7 eod tdecl
A FREE SAMPLE
ice the great household remed., _
DON’S KING OF PAIN, into every family,
9 ft
G
or. Toledo. Ohio
live Young; 5Ieu
or Ladies in each county.
P. W. ZIEGLER & CO.,
ocllw8t Philadelphia J