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DAILY ENQUIRER - SUN • COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 25, 188(5.
(ColmiiksGiquircr-fim.
ESTABLISHED IN 1828. 58 YEARS OLD.
Daily, Weekly and Sunday.
Tho ENQUIRER-SUN Is isRiiart every day, ex
Mpt Monday. The Weekly is issued on Monday.
The Daily (Including Sunday) is delivered by
carriers in the city or mailed, postage free, to sub
aclibers for 75c. per month, $2.00 for three
months, $4.00 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
81.00 a year.
The Weekly islssuod on Monday, and 1s mailed
subscribers, postage free, at $1.10 a year.
Transient advertisements will he taken for the
Dally at |1 per square of 10 lines nr less for the
first insertion, and 50 cents for each subsequent
Insertion, and for tho Weekly at ft for each in
sertion.
All communications intended to promote the
private ends or interests of corporations, societies
or Individuals will be charged as advertisements.
Special contracts oiado for advertising by the
year. Obituaries will be charged for at customary
rates.
None but solid metal cuts used.
All communications should be addressed to the
EirqoiTtna-SuN.
TIIK TMOnilir TO-DAY.
All, Christ, that it were possible
For one short hour to see
The souls \ve loved, that they might tell
UH
What and where they ho.
CilltlSI Ml IS KVKItYIVIIKItE.
Christmas is everywhere to-day, and
on the land and on the ocean, in
Jerusalem and Madagascar, and North and
Soul h America. The boys are having it
on 1 lie plains, where many a camp-fire
sends upward with its smoke the smell
of roasting buffalo, an incense odorous
and rich, If not pious. The lookout on
the mainmast, as he straddles his yard
and clings to the rigging, may not lie
having it at this precise moment; but
there is plenty of seasonable prog, with
something hot to wash it down, waiting
him below. Even in the mines, which
have closed for all time upon lost
humanity, there is a moment’s relenting;
and t though the sunshine of nature is
never to come again, a few rays from the
light of God’s sunshine creep in to whis
per a Christmas promise of God’s
mercy in the world to come. So, not
alone the well-to-do, the comfort
able, and the rich, whose migrations lie
between the blue bed and the brown, and
who foot it and feast it royally at home,
be that a palace or a cottage—but the
wanderers and the heroes of Christen
dom, who scale tho rocky heights that
guard our golden shores, or dig deep into
the silver caverns of tho Sierras, who
stand sentinel upon tho borders of civili
zation, where savage beasts and still
moro savage men constitute their only
visiting acquaintance, or who, upon the
lonely bridge of the swift-going steamer,
pace through the long watches of the
night— ‘
“Where the Northern ocean in vast whirls,
Boils round the nuked, melancholy isles
Of furthest Thule; and the Atlantic surge
Pours in among tho snowy Hebrides.”
All, all know and feel that this is Christ
mas, and unconsciously ask God’s double
blessing for the loved ones, whether they
be safe at home or far, far away.
“AND ON KAUTI1 PKAOK.”
The angels who announced tho
birth of Christ proclaimed in the
Bamc breath peace on earth to men of
good will. No man can properly cele
brate the return of that day, therefore,
who does not celebrate it in the spirit de
clared by the angels. It is tho birthday
of tlie Prince of Peace, and none can ap
proach tlic place where the young child
yet lies save he bring peace oilerings in
his hands.
Tlie day should he devoted in large
part to a clearing up of old scores of ill
will and had feeling in the family and in
the community. Hub out and start
anew. Don’t carry last year’s wrongs and
resentments into next year. They
have rankled long enough, and to
cherish them yields but further pain.
Forgive your enemies and forget your in
juries. You cannot forgive tho wrong
doer and cherish the wrong that lie lias
done. Perhaps you are tlie wrong-doer,
though this is not likely to appear so to |
you. Let Christ he born anew in your
hearts on this His birthday.
The harder it is to make up your mind
to a reconciliation tlie more necessary it
is that you should effect it promptly and
thoroughly. A root of bitterness that
has taken such a hold in your spirit
ought to be plucked up at any cost
of pride and pain. This is a day of
peace, and you can claim no certain or
large part in it unless you make vonr
peace with all men, with yourself and
•with God.
“non bless tis evert o v e.”
" Little lamb, who made you?’’
If the world owed nothing to Jesus of
Nazareth, except the Christmas of the
Christian year, lie who yet died upon the
cross to save it would still remain its
greatest creditor.
No other civilization possesses such a
day. Out of all the systems and all the
ages it stands unmatched in spiritual
beauty, unequaled in domestic and per
sonal charm, unrivaled as a good influ
ence. It would seem that if there were
•bj wisdom in the skepticism which in-
I sists upon applying logical tests to all
I things, this mysterious force, subtle, pure,
and universal, carrying the sweet and
| gracious teaching and tlie gentle life of
the Lamb of God into thedarkest corners
of tlie human heart, and setting at
naught tlie obduracies alike of
character and exuet mathematics,
would put it upon another
tack and start a new train of doubts,
chiofcst of which should be some distrust
of Itself, and its amazing, blind submis
sion to the doctrine that nothing is that
cannot lie demonstrated.
Alas for the vanity of mortal reason!
Who is there this day, so steeped in
science or so hardened by vice, that,
hearing tho church bells and seeing the
faces of the children, can turn away
without some touch of feeling he cannot
explain, some tear of self-pity lie would
fain conceal but cannot repress; and who,
as lie looks this night into the sky, and
beholds the same star shining there that
shone over Hethluhom, and amid the
silence and tho darkness, questions the
soul within him, does not wish that lie
could hope, if lie does not seek to be
lieve.
II is a cheap and mean profanation to
ascribe the potency of tho one season of
“peace on earth, good will to man,”
which Christinas has given to our kind,
to social and natural causes merely. Its
history refutes such theorizing; but, even
if it did not, there is that in the radiant
anil all-embracing glow both of the re
ligious observances and (lie merry
making, which takes it out of the cate
gory of holidays and lifts it high above
the lovcl of the earthly-horn. It is as if,
in the dead of winter, God had put His
mantle about the world, to warm for a
little the coldness of its heart and to hide
for a little its wickedness, out of love for
His son, Christ Jesus, our Lord!
Of tho days of tho year it is the most
picturesque. Nor tlie sweetest day of
summer, for all its wealth of green and
gold ; nor of autumn, with its bronzed
antiquities and leafy splendor, can meet
our Christmas, face to face, and not recoil
before those dear, clour eyes, and ruddy
cheeks and laughing lips; and no matter
how homely clad, so clad at home ; any
more, indeed, than a beautiful tree can
hold comparison with a beautiful woman.
It is tlie Christmas of the Christian
ages, and of all Christian men and wo
men dwelling in our minds to-day and
singing in our hearts, us it has been told
in story and echoed in song, time
out of mind; the Christmas of
Spencer and Chaucer, of Shakespeare
and Milton; the Christmas of Goldsmith
and Irving; tlie Christmas of Thackeray
and Dickens; the Christmas that cheered
the heart of Washington at Valley Forge
when all was dark around and brought
upon its wings tlie message that the
Campbells were coming to the besieged
of Lucknow; the Christinas that opened
the stony heart of Scrooge; that set a
cricket chirping upon the hearth of half
tlie universe and gave a divine resonance
to the lips of tlie crippled child, as, for
getful of the crutches, they exultantly
cried out to tho world, “God bless us,
every one.” Esto perpetual
II. W. II. II0ULLY.
D W. D. Dually is making arrangements to
establish a weekly newspaper at Arcadia, Man
atee county, to be named the Arcadian.
We are glad to learn that when tide
I journalistic infant is born, it will find a
ready-made name waiting for it. As a
rule, Boully’s babies are born faster than
lie can name them. Few men have done
more for journalism than D. \V. D. Bold
ly. Newspapers spring up in his tracks
and blossom and bloom and bulge like
poppies in a clover patch. When it
comes to establishing a newspaper he
can do it more times without lotting ids
feet touch tlie ground than any man in tho
thirty-nine stales, with Utah thrown in
to make things look sociable.
D. IV. D. Boully is a good man, an
unselfish man, sowing where lie does not
reap, and pouring warm pap down
tlie goozles of other journalists without
ever saying “turkey” to himself or In
timating from personal motives that ii is
a “long time between drinks.” Tlie coun
try could ill spare 1) (and the rest of it)
Boully. When lie gets a new paper so it
ean stand alone, and worry through the
night without a wot nurse, he goes out
and gets some other editor to adopt it. It
is getting too old fo r him. While he likes
to own a newspaper as well as anybody
and better than most people, lie won’t
have one after the now wears oil - , and
after tho excitement created by the
appearance of the lirst issue lias died out.
After four or five issues of the paper have
come out, the tiling becomes monotonous
and grates on his nerves. After about
the sixth issue lias made its appearance
D. IV. D-, (tlie other links were missent
and will arrive by express) grows im
patient, says chesnuts! once or twice, and
soon tlie place and the paper which knew
him, know him no.more forever.
D. IV. D. I>. has set out weekly papers
in rows like cactus plants clear across the
American continent. It lias become a
habit with him which ho can’t shake off.
IIc has been known to disrobe for a Turk
ish hath, and then forget his original in
tention and try to start a weekly paper.
He is an elegant man and peo
ple are fond of his company.
But if you ask him home to dinner with
you, and excuse yourself and step out of
the parlor a moment, he will have a
weekly paper started under the piano
before you can get back. At one hotel
where he stopped he filled the back yard
so full of incipient weekly newspapers,
when they were not watching him, that
they had to tear down a board fence in
order to get them out.
We couldn’t do without Boully. Others
are blessed by his plants and ventures,
and he still goes about doing the world
good. A man in whose wake newspapers
grow ought to keep going. The world
can’t afford for him to stop and stagnate.
The Floridians need not congratulate
themselves on having captured Mr. D.
W. D. B. (and so forth) as a citizen. Ho
is merely sight-seeing in the land of
flowers, and while he may occasionally
stop long enough to kill u mosquito or
start a weekly paper, his home is not
there. Hu is a cosmopolitan; and the
world to whom ho belongs loves him
and is proud of him.
UEURUIA NKCt'HITiEH.
Cnrrerli'il tty Join, tllnckiieir, Coinu ■
tills, <»«.
STOCK AND BOND BROKER.
RAILROAD BONDS.
American, Preston and Lumpkin lfit
mortgage 7s .....100 ,@101
Atlantic and Gulf 7s 117 118
Augusta and Knoxville 7 per cent 114 116
Augusta. Uiliion ami Sanuer.sville 7
percent 1st mortgage lot 100
Central eon mortgage 7s 115 UC
Columbus and Rome 1st tis, endorsed
Central It. it 101 loo
Columbus and Western 1st mortgage
6s, endorsed by Central It. It 1C5 @1C6
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta 1st
mortgage 114 @115
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta 4s
2d mortgage 110 @112
Gaincxvile, Jell'erson and (Southern
1st mortgage guaranteed 118 119
Gainesville, Jell'erson and Buulhorn
2.1 mortgage lit 112
Georgia Railroad tis 108 @109
Mobile and Girard 2d mortgage en
dorsed by Central Railroad 108 @109
Montgomery and EulauJu 1st mort
gage Os and Centra Railroad 108 @109
Ocean .Steams..ip 6 per cent, guaran
teed by O. it. It 105 100
Savannah, Piorida and Western <i per
cent 104 108
Soutli Georgia and Florida 1st, en
dorsed by stale of Georgia, 7 per
edit 118 @119
South Georgia and Florida 2d, 7 per
cent Ill @115
Western It. It. Alabama 1st mortgage,
endorsed by Central Railroad 107 @119
Western Alabama 2d mortgage, en
dorsed 110 @111
RAILROAD STOCKS.
Atlanta and West Point 104 @106
Atlanta ami West Point 6 per cent.
scrip 105 @106
Augusta and Savannah 7 per cent 1:- 0 @131
Central common 120 @121
Central railroad (1 per cent, scrip 102 @103
Georgia 10 percent 190 @192
Mobile and Uirard 1 1 d per cent, guar
anteed by Central it. K 24 @ 25
Southwestern 7 per cent, guaranteed.,128 @129
CITY BONDS.
Atlanta 0s 105 @107
Atlanta 7s 112 @118
Augusta 7s 109 @112
Augusta 0s 103 @105
Columbus 7s 112 @113
Columbus 5s 101 @103
LaGrange7s 100 @101
Macon 6s 110 @111
Savannah 5s 102 @103
STATE BONDS.
Georgia 4’^tja 106 @107
Georgia 0s 103 @104>j
Georgia 7s, 1896 120 @122
Georgia 7s, 1890 Ill @112
FACTORY STOCKS.
Eagle and Pheuix 09 @100
Muscogee 06 @ b7
Georgia Home Insurance Company 135 @140
BANK STOCKS.
.Chattahoochee National 10 per cent...176 @200
Merchants' & Mechanics’ 10 per cent..124 @125
MISCELLANEOUS.
Confederate Coupon Bonds 1 @ 2
FOR SALE.
(2000 Atlanta 8 per cent, due 1902.
25 Shares Eagle and Phenix Factory Stock
Amoricus, Preston and Lumpkin Ruilroad 1st
mortgage 7 per cent Bonds, duo 1006, at par and
interest.
10 Shares Merchants and Mechanics’ Bank
Stock.
( 000 Columbus lee Co. Stock. Profits laHt
year over expenses 12 per cent.
WANTED.
City of Columbus 5 per cent. Bonds.
Set- me before you buy or sell. 1 cun always dc
as well, and often several points better, than auj
one else. JOHN MI.ACK1KAR.
BILIOUSNESS
Is an affection of the Liver, and can be
thoroughly cured by that Grand
Regulator of the Liver and
Biliary Organs.
j MANUFACTURED BY
J. H. ZE1LIN & CO., - Philadelphia, Pa.
I wa afflicted for several years with dis
ordered liver, which resulted in a severe
attack of jaundice. I had as good medical
attendance as our section affords, who
failed utterly to restore me to the enjoy
ment of my former Rood health. I then
tried the favorite prescription of one of
tho most renowned physicians of Louis
ville, Ivy., hut to no purpose; whereupon
I was induced to try SIMMONS LIVER
REGULATOR. 1 found immediate bene
fit from its use. and it ultimately restored
me to the full enjoyment of health.
A. II. SHIRLEY,
Richmond, Ky.
HEADACHE
l*r«oocilH from a Torpid Liver and Im-
pnritionot ihr Stomach. It run he
invariably enroll by taking
Let all who suffer remember that
SICK AM) SERIOUS HEADACHES
Can he prevented by taking a dose as soon ns
their symptoms indicate the coming
of an attack.
eod se&w top col nrm (4)
noWsran
'1 111. School is tho boat
m America. Thu most
l ructloal cour.-e iu-
Mruction anil Uie most
eminent faculty. En
•lnrsci! by bufinest
homes. For circular!
ami specimens ot Pea
nianahip, uihlre-s
UCBGiN J. GOLESWTH
Pilnclpt
FIREWORKS.
rpiIE FOLLOWING ORDINANCES ARE
1 published for the in form at'on of the public:
The setting off of any sky rockets. Roman can
dles, large tire crackers, torpedoes or balloons at
any place within the corporate limits of the city,
except north of Franklin and south of Thomas
streets, is hereby prohibited during the Christ
mas h Midays under penalty of lino or imprison
ment, at the discretion of the mayor; and the po
lice are specially instmeted to enforce this pro
hibition.
Besides the prohibition of in me fire crackers,
torpedoes, etc., in certain portions of the city, the
CLEVELAND’S
SUPERIOR Mil POWDER
DOES NOT CONTAIN
AMMONIA,
OR ALUM.
Cleveland’s Superior Baking Powder, manufactured by Cleveland
Brothers, Albany, N. Y., is absolutely pure and wholesome. It is
made only oi strictly pure Grape Cream of Tartar, Bicarbonate of
Soda, and a small portion of wheat flour, and does not contain
Ammonia, Alum, Lime, or any adulteration whatever.
Tlie Cream of Tartar is refined by a new process which frees if
entirely from lime and every impurity, and is obtained in the pure
crystals and ground in their own factory; the Bicarbonate of Soda is
prepared expressly for them; and to ensure uniform and absolute
purity of their baking powder all the ingredients arc subjected to
searching chemical analyses and none used unless proved to be
perfectly pure.
In confirmation of the above the able and reliable chemists of the
New York Produce Exchange report as follows:
“We are analyzing all the Cream of Tartar used in the manu
facture of Cleveland’s Superior Baking Powder, and we hereby
certify that it is practically chemically pure—testing as high as
99.95 per cent, and not less than 99.50 per cent.
“From a hygienic point of view vve regard Cleveland’s Superior
Baking Powder as the ideal baking powder, composed as it is of
pure Grape Cream of Tartar and pure Bicarbonate of Soda.
“ STILLWELL & GLADDING,
“Chem.'sts to the N. Y. Produce Exchange.”
New York, Nov. 25, 1884.
Plush Boxes, Mirrors,
Dressing Cases and
Canes will be sold to
day at cost.
O. C. JOHNSON.
ESTES &z CO
1107 ZBZRXD-AID STREET,
DEPOT FOR
Shovel Plows, Watt's Cast and Chilled Plows,
Scovil Hoes, best brands of Axes, Trace Chains, Nails, Iron,
Shovels and Spades, Wagon and Buggy Timbers.
Glass,
Putty,
Imported Cuttlery,
Strictly Pure White Lead.
American Cuttlery,
Linseed Oils,
Sash,
Razors,
Varnish,
Blinds
, Scissors,
Spirits Turpentine,
Doors,
Carvers,
AGENTS FOR HAZARD’S KENT
UGKY RIFLE POWDER.
Shot, Shells, Wads, Caps, Carpenters’ Supplies and General
Hardware.
Mr. A. R. WILKERSON is with us, and will be pleased to meet his friends and
former patrons. declf) d4m
Cotton Seed Meal.
The best Fertilizer and the richest and most nourishing Food fo
Stock. For sale by
M. T. Bergan, D. R. Bize,
T. M. Foley, M. Simons.
d«ol( 43m
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
Mr. J. H. Hamilton’s Store, corner of First
avenue and Fourteenth street, the most desirable
ator.: piop. rty for su e in tins city, lieuts are
paying .0 per cent, ou price asked.
iiiuOO The valuable cornci lot east of Georgia
Home building and corner of.First avenue
and Eleventh streets, on which there is a
store paying WOO per year rent, and room
lor < wo more large stores and brick
enough to bulk' them. , . .
2250. Two ‘1 acre lots on lower Broad street.
The corner lot is'vacant. The othtr lot
has a new live-room House.
950 % acre Jot corner ot hirst avenue ana
Fifth afreet. Cheapest land in the city.
2200 Jii acre lot, with six new tenant houses, oa
north Fourth avenue. The rent of this
property pays 14 percent.
1200 One four-room house and four new two-
room houses in Girard that rentier $20 per
month, and room for three more houses.
3700 Mr. T. H. Moore’s house, south ol court
house.
2600 Dr. Soli toy’s house on Second avenue,
west side, between Fifteenth and Six
teenth street 1 - 1 . Tlie size oi tlie lot is A of
an acre. „ , ...
3 l /j acres of' land east ot the park, with
five new three-room houses
Mr. O. 0. Bullock’s house, next door south
2500
3200
1700.
of girls’ public school,
acre lot v ith new five-room house on
Rose Hill on easy terms
A number of vacant lots on Rose Hill, Prices
ranging from $15 to $200, on term* to suit tho pur-
chaser. WANTED.
From 70 to 100 feet I'ront on Broad street, bo-
tween Tenth and Thirteenth streets. Purchaser
will pay a fair price. Apply to
W. S. GREEN, Real Estate Agt.
Third door west of Post Otlice.
NOTICE.
r pHE partnership of R. B. PRATHER & CO. is
dissolved by the withdrawal of R. B. Prather.
Tiio Boot and Shoo business will be continued at
the same place in my own name. 1 shall keep on
liiiml a full stock of well selected goods at as low
prices as any oilier h use in the city. Thanking
lie public fora liberal patronage in tho past, I
,t' i the same foi the future.
Mr. Will I). Woinmack, the prompt and oblige
113 .desman, will continue with me and will bo
pleased to serve his friends,
deoil 2w JAMES E. DEATON.
Stockholders’ Meeting.
Office of The Georgia Home Insurance Co.,
Columbus, Ga., December 19, 1880.
Annual Meeting of the Stockholders ol
this Company will be held at their office on
Thursday, January 20th, 1887, at 11 o’clock a. in.
YVM. C. COART, Sec’y.
decl9,21 23&janl9,20 _
SEALED PROPOSALS.
Sealed proposals will be received at the office
of F. M. Brooks, clerk of the Board of County
C mmiss.oners, until Saturday, the first day of
January 1887, lor the following specific purpose*
For medical attention to the county poor. Fur
nishing medicines to the county poor. Burial of
the poor, Furnishing coffins for burial of poor.
Doing the wood ai d blacksmith work for county,
ami doing the county priming.
The Commissioners reserve the right to reject
any or all bids.
By order of the Board of Commissioners.
This December 4ta, 1888.
F. M. BROOKS,
d eel td Clerk Com ’rs Court.
SKIN AND SCALP
Cleansed, Purified and Beautifed
by the Cuticura Remedies.
For cleansing the Skin and Scalp of Disfiguring
Humors, for allaying Itching, Burning and In-
Humiliation, for curing the first symptoms of Eo-
zema, Psoriasis, Milk Crust, Scald Head, Scrofula
and other inherited Skin and Blood Diseases,
Cuticura, the great Skin cure, and Cuticura Soap,
an exquisite Skin Beautifier, exte nally, and Cu-
ticura Resolvent, tho new Blood Purifier, inter
nally, are infallible.
A C'OMPLKTE CURE.
I have suffered all my life with skin diseases of
different kinds, amt have never found permanent
relief until, by the advice of a lady friend, I used
your Cuticura Remedies. I gave them a thorough
trial, using 3ix bottles of the Cuticura Resolvent,
two boxes of Cuticura and seven cakes of Cuticu
ra Soap, and the result was just what I had boon
told it would be—a complete cure.
BELLE WADE,
• Richmond, Va.
Reference. G. W. Latimer. Druggist,
800 W. Marshal St, Richmond. Va.
BAI/r RHEUM CURED.
I was troubled with Salt Rheum for a number
of years so that the skin entirely came off one or
my hands from the finger tips to the wrist. I
tried remedies and doctors’ prescriptions to no
purpose until I commenced taking Cuticura Rem
edies, and now I am entirely curt d.
E. T. PARKER,
379 Northampton St., Boston, Mass.
ITCHING, SCALY, PIMPLY.
For the last year I have had a species of itching
scaly and pimply humors on my face, to which I
have applied a great many methods of treatment
without success, and which was speedily and en
tirely cured by Cuticura.
Mrs. ISAAC PHEDPS, Ravenna, O.
NO MEDICINE LIKE THEM.
We have sold your Cuticura Remdies for the
slat six years, and no medicines on our shelve*
give better satisfaction.
C. F. ATHERTON, Druggist,
Albany, N. Y,
Cuticura Remedies are sold everywhere. Price
Cuticura. so cents; Resolvent, $1.00; Soap. ?5 cents.
Prepared by the Potter Drug and Chemical Co-
Boston, Mass. Send for ‘‘How to Cure Skin Dis
eases.”
[TP»^ rimples, Skin Blemishes, and
AJk.JjBi.by Humors, cured by Cuticu
ra Soap.
I ACHE ALL OVER.
Neuralgic, Sciatic, Sudden, Sharp and
I Nervous Pains, Strains and Weakness
“ relieved in one minute by the Cuticu
ra Anti-Pain Plaster. New and Per
fect. At all druggi sts, 25 cents; five for
— 8l. Potter Di ug and Chemical Com
pany, Boston.
GEORGIA, MUSROGEE COUNTY:
Whereas, C. A Redd, administrator of the es
tate of Mrs. Mary 8 Park, represents to the courl
in his petition duty filed, that he has fUlly ad
ministered Marv S. Park’s estate.
This is, therefore, to cite all persons concerned
heirs and creditors, to show cause, if any thei
can, why said administrator should not be dis
charged from his administration and receive lefc
ters of dismission on the first Monday in Februa
ry. 1886.
Witness my official signature this 30th day ol
October. 1886. F. M. BROOKS,
ooan nnw.tm Ordinary.
GEORGIA, MUSCOGEE COUNTY:
Whereas, Mis. Leo. E. Swift applies for letter!
of administration on the estate of George P,
Swift, jr., late ol said county, r eceased.
These are, therefore to cite all and singular,
tne kindred, and creditors of said deceased, to
show cause, if any they have, wit! in the time
prescribed by law. why said letters should not be
Brant* d to sai-l applicant.
Witness my official signature this Decembei
4th 1886. F. M. BROOKS.
_doc4 oawiw Ordinary.
GEORGIA,''MUSCOGEE COUNTY : "
Whereas, Michael Sullivan makes application
_ etters 01 administration on the estate ol
Katharine Sullivan, late of said county, de
ceased.
These are, therefore, to cite all persons interest-
ed kindred one creditors, to show cause, if any
the> have, within the tim* prescribed by law.
why letters 01 ad ministration should not be erant-
* d to said applicant
«n Wi , t o ll ? S8 my oiBcial signature this Decembei
4tb W8B. F. M. BROOKS,
dec t oawlw Ordinary.
GEORGIA MUSCOGEE COUNTY: ’
Whereas, R. E Parish implies fori* iters of ad-
ministration on the estate of James B. Slade. late
01 said county, deceased.
Y^hese are therefore, to cite All ami singular,
kindred and creditor.’-, of said deceased, to show
2w e, ii*? ny the r y can.within the time prescribed,
r'y letters of administrati n. us aforesaid.
8 kould not be granted to said anpliennt.
.Witness my official signature tils Decembei
F. M. BROOKS,
dec4 oaw4w Ordinary.
roofing
and Illustrateu catalogue oi
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