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THE WACOM - TELEGRAPH: TUESDAY MORMTMG, AUGUST 28, 1894,
A DAY'S DOINGS IN
GEORGIA TOWNS
A Batch of Newsy Item* Furnished by
the Hustling Correspondent*
of the Telegraph. ,
A BASKET PICNIC NEAR CECIL
A R«|ro , i RpIdermU FMweinrad IIjr » 3M
Callbor Pistol IIaII—a ToWpliono
Prom TjrboofoCfiatlanooga*
Other RUt« f'oulp.
Cecil, Auk. 27.—Saturday teas a big
day ui the County Line coloretl cJiurcli.
It iru* uoi n preaching and an exhibi
tion, but a basket plua.o which gathered
the negro population of two counties
there. <J[ course It wound up in a
shouting scrape. John Parker acted as
target, and lum u oM bait surely bid uu-
der Ids slroulder blade as an evidence
of marksmanship. 1
Yesterday meriting a ludicrous shoot
ing scrape occurred here hi Cecil.
While John Uoiuitrco was assisting
llob HlalTimt to Insert Ills heel Into a
new pair of shoes, Levi Drown uttuuipt-
ed to lift John's pistol from Ins hip
pocket by the iimzslc. The piste) tired
unit Uie ball culcrod Brown's abdouteu,
when Stafford uud Rountree took to
their heels, nor stopjied uutil secure In
u douse swamp.
ben Island cotton picking has com
menced, and with steady work the crop
will he marketed iu good coadltfou, II
summer clouds und sunslnno prevail
for awhile, longer.
This county Is pnslunlug some prlzo
vegetables. Mr. IVlIllam V. JIutills
pulled u beet of the bleed turu.p va
riety whleh weigh id nine ami u half
putt ails. Mr. .1. A. Mathis has raised
u tomato whleh wisglnd tweiily-iiiao
ounces. Mr. Hardy V. Rountree raised
a watermelon of the Ureon Victoria va
riety which weighed sixty-four puumls.
FROM TYItUE TO TENNESSEE.
Georgia Soou to lie Covered Uy u Long
Distance Telephone.
Dolton, Aug. 27.—(Slice,nl.)—Utjorgla
Is soon to Isi eonneetid hy a long dis
tance telephone, and the people of Sa
vannah can talk to those in Clmttnnoo-
ga over the wire.
IteUnhlo information lias been re
ceived licre that the East Tennessee
llell Teleptiouo Oompaiiy will extend
their line to nalton at once. Tills line
will'ultimately meet the lino from At
lanta, uud when the Hue from Atlanta
to Hnniesvtlle lilts In-on extended to
Snvnnunh, It will give it through Hue
from Clmttnuoogii to the Ueorgiti const.
FOIl SPEAKER PRO TBM.
Frlemla of linn. Jim IMOtmnn of Troup
Bring Him Out.
Lxarnngr, Aug. 27.—(Hpectsl.)—The
friends of Hon. Jim I'lutman hero are
anxious that ha make the race for
speaker pro' lem. of She house of rep-
resent*lives, and It Is highly probable
thus he will oonsent to enter the race.
In alie event that lie does he will
make an active, und his friends believe,
a successful race. In their opinion,
there Is no young man In Ueorgts more
worthy of ths honor than this gifted
sun of Troup.
mo roruusT orators.
AVllt Speak In Sam Jones’ Tabernacle
at Cartersvlllo Tomorrow,
OnrtersvIHo. Aug. 27.—(Speelnl.)—Tho
Populist rally hem tomorrow promises
to tie nn iimiHunlly large one. It will
bo bold tn the Sam Jones tabernacle,
uud a big crowd Is expected.
Tito groat guns of Uto l'opullst party
—Judgo J. K. Itlues, lion. Thomas E.
Whis.hi, Dr. tV. 12. Felton and Hon.
Ben horn Wright—will bo present nud
speak.
FIRE AT HEPHZtDAH.
Large Ilarn on Mrs. F. (H. Rhodes'
Place Destroyed—The Isms,
llephslbah, A us. 27.—(Special.)—Th*
large barn of Sir*. F. H. Rnodem about
three mllei cast of this village, was do
stroyed by tiro Monday nlglu. The ori
gin of the lire Is unknown.
There was a lance quantity of forago
stored In the tiara. *H of whleh was ft
total loss, amounting to severs) hun
dred dollars. Tho Insurance !» smalt
Protracted services tn the Methodist
church wilt be oontuwied this evening.
WHO 13 THE DEFAfft/TERT
A Dalton Preacher Stir* Up a Sensa
tion In That Place.
. Dalton, Aug. 27.—(Spectsl.)—Row M.
A. Matthews. In his seme n on the
"Cruelty of Debt" here last night, stor-
tled the large <inuroeg.vflon hy stutlng
that there was an employe hero lit Dal
ton who was 31.M0 short In hi- accounts.
Diligent Inquiry has railed to discover
Iho unfortunate -one. Tho city la rifo
with specsibithin.
ALEX UlM-IaUR TO LECTURE.
He Will Appear In Gridin on Thursday
Evening Mist
Griffin. ASM. IT.—t8o,wUL)-Mr. Alex
W. Beeler of Atlanta will deliver hi*
lent a re on the ''Georgia Darkey" In this
place on Thursday evening.
Ths lootnre will be delivered under
the auspice* of ths T«H( Men’s Chris
tian Association, of whlvli Mr.-. C Ji
Staley Is aeeretary, nnd a large attend
ance is expected.
KKXrXl
to the- hand of s Hocveoq
Si' re you * fivluis of
, li,-roor and dire.l. Ti.-ro
i tim*or nm-sili foe
i— id many dls-sia*
Sfi-rsn-rly n-.nnl.it aa to-
Joumtl,* vltnout i-olttng.
The Triumph of
[ Conservative Surgery
‘I^Uuwruted by the
RUPTURE ;; r n ,'™ ToS:
•mile vurvO Without tbf kmfi* ■ml without
P*ln. Clunuiy, i-tixiiiut ini*tp out l** thrown
**yl They never ottro but uulurv ln-
reti.tiipt i.iti, bt t a: *rtiInil> 'it n»i«t U*-atii.
TUMORS OvatUii. fibraU <I*trrlno> snd
. ,n * u > **thrn», lie now mnoved
PILE TliiSoRsV
.TWV,
. . — 1 and other uibxwiMW «>f
fWttMOTWf cured with-
STONE n V* SS «o tnsttcr how
erni#v»WOTf/ CHWith, ut <mt*,»*.
STRICTURE iv m Vvtvi ry ithn !#wl! ’ u
F^P^niphlrC t^flBwSLw*
ho. tea Item \\
COTTON MILLS
IN THE SOUTH
Reason* Why Cotton Machinery Should
Be Placed on the Free
List
REPRESENTATIVE KYLE’S BILL
Th* nbafacl* lo th* U«v«lppment of thm
homliern Milling InUrnt Polly
Bet Forth By o Bonlliern
Mill Owner.
iWhsblngton, Aug. 27.—Bine* the in
troduction last Thursday of Represent
ative John C. Kyle’s bill to place ma
chinery used In ths manufacture of
ewMoti cat Uto (res list, there 1ms been
considerable comment thereon In the
legislative circle. The prime mover tn
this matter Is Mr. A. E. Randle, one of
MtasUsippl's moat energetic and patri-
utto business men. Th* ftMowIng Ir.rer-,
eating letter of Mr. Randle'* to the
N»ty York BoutMern Exohunge Is fully
•xplansiory,' a careful perusal of Which
must convince every loyal Houuaerner
that this ie the most Important legls-
hstlen asked for the benefit of the
Booth since the civil war.
Mr. George will champion the bill
In .Uie serrate, and ft Is needles# to say
It will be em'huskMtlcitlly supported by
th* *ntlr* BouUiern delegations In con
gress;
“Washington, D. C., Aug. 20.—Mr.
R. Wsyn* Wilson, Secretary and Man
ager Southern Exdivinge Association,
23 Park Row, Room 12, New York-
Dear Sir: I am ready to do all in my
power to assist In the development of
Uhe unlimited resources of the South. I
urn much Interested In this question,
and probably few have taken greater
Interest In the master than I.
"When Hon. Abram B Hewitt was
mayor of New York - 1 went there to
see him, hoping to learn from him
how we could turn Shb tide of immigra
tion Bousih, and through fits kindness I
mot Mr. J-ackson, -the superHVtendemmf
lM»t»e Garden, and after several con
versations wH)h Superintendent Jnck-
son. waa informed that the average im
migrant believed Mississippi to he In
South America, I was thoroughly con
vinced, tf proper stops were taken, the
tide of Immigration could be turned
South, und tihe waele phases could be
built up. and not only benefit the
South, best also the Immigrants who
might bo fortunate enough to locate tn
that wait ion, If organised as the thrifty
and energetic Western people, who
turn their waste plains Into beautiful
farms and prosperous towns.
"In 1S30 1 bought an abandoned cot
ton factory In .Minslslppl, which wu*
built tn anticipation the building of
a railroad, but the railroad facilities
being delayed the plant wu* abandoned,
us transportation was too expensive by
mules twelve miles. I bought, the en
tire plunt, consisting of 1,000 ncres of
land, a lurge brick factory budding und
seventeen house*, since which time o
railroad ha* been completed running
near the property. I at once gat some
Southern nnd Northern capitalists Inter
ested with mo nnd formed a company.
Wo bonded the factory nnd expected to
place rhea* bonds In exchange for cot
ton machinery, -whleh would not only
bo the first mo-tgnge oo the plant, but
u mortgage on tha machinery which wna
bought by It. I went oil through New
England Hying to get some of the cot
ton manufacturers there Interested tn
this plant. I visited Massachusetts,
Mains nnd several bther of the machin
ery manufacturing states, amt 1 was
told that If our factory was In Now
England they would take stock, but
that they had no faith In the South
and would not let a dollar's worth of
tiudr m i. liiiu-ry go unless they got
cash for. It. I argued with them that
wo had alt the advantages In the South
for the manufacture of cotton nnd that
NVn England bud man', l-'nr ln-t in.-..,
w* had cotton *t our mill doom, fuel
almost as near, labor plentiful und wil
ling to work cloven hours a day. Instead
of eight, ns In New England, exempt
flbra taxation and a market In every di
rection, north, east, south and west,
from the factory; nnd that New Eng
land's advantages were that sho was to
depend langely upon Canadian-French
help for her mills: water courees freeso
In the winter; plant nnd capital subject
to taxation: handrails of miles away
from cotton: but stall I could not get
I hem lulcreated, t came away thor
oughly convinced that Now England
hail n "cinch" on both capital and cot
ton machinery manufacturing, that they
knew when they had a good thing nnd
would not allow any new competitors
tn the field If they oould help It, and as
they control the manufacturing of cot
ton machinery, thev try to keep It In
New Eng Kami by not encouraging cot
ton factories in the South.
"On* of the ju'irK* they wanted to
make wits that the South didn’t have
skilled kihor. This la an old cry, .and
n-ny one who g.ma through those mam
moth cotton factors* of New Eng.
land will be con vine til chut It Is no
longer Bkft.it ktiMr that monuficturrs
cotton, hut you might call It vdiutu.il
machinery.’ Cotton manufacturing has
been revolnUsilxed in fete yenra. For
merly man had a macftlno to help him;
in other, words, a machine aided man
In the ‘manufacture of coiMn, but now
man aids tbs? nuchlne. I hove been In
room* of enormous site tn fapjortre.
1 from th* amount of notew’^nih
done unit the ecbrmous spuce covered,
you would think Were would be hun-
ditits of operatore who had neglected
their work and machinery was running
ivitd. Instmd of that this machinery
i\us Industriously doing It* duty, and
only one or two men in the vast room
to keep them In proper working enter.
TVn-tvfor*. I say It is no hanger skilled
labor, bm educated machinery.
"I had Ml* pliMsur* of meeting th*
great auttotlrian. Edward Atkinson.tn
MM, who argued wish me that oot-
i -n could not be successfullv mamifiic-
tuml In the 8ourh. bug when t gave a
Met of the taetoeW's tlul nvsv paving
large dividends located tn the cotton
fieklu. be anal tiley were exception, to
the rule, and mound up by e.lytng «iat
ClAtnn could not be manufactured
where a nickel wa* the smaller coin,
and to prove It sold that he would ven
ture the predX'tlan 1 would not get jay
New England eapiulisls to invest in
the South. When I left New Hngtaod
1 thoroughly agreed wTrh him tn this
latter ara’temcnt. but tn the former,
that cotton c.<uid not be tusseaafully
nunuhsetumt In the South. I did not
agree.
-I then »*w that th* «n!r chano* to
start a factory was to gat English ma
chinery. no I opened up correspondence
with sum English parties, ant was very
much encouraged at th* prospect of get-
tine n factory started with KVellah ma
ck laery by exchanging my bonds for IL
Hot the tariff under the McKinley taw
put a atop to this, because there was a
duty of U per rent, on cotton machinery
1 became more convinced than aver that
§•0000
JUHAIN’S
FOR SILKS
Just opened pep yesterday’s express 15 pieces
high grade Black Dress Silks that Mr. Julian
bought under value and we are going to make a
noise on them this week. /
?15.00, $18.00 and $22.00 per suit for these
elegant Dress Silks that can’t be matched in any
market under 25 per cent, more than our prices.
COLORED SILKS—Every new shade;
exquisite combinations of colorings and they
have all been marked exceedingly low. If you
want the latest in Silks and Drees Goods call at
New England had things her own way In
tho manufacturing of Southern cotton.
“I then at once turned my attention 10
■ome of* our Southern congressmen with
a view to get cotton machinery on the
free Hot. Every Southern member who
waa approached on the oubjcct was hear,
tily in favor of granting the South this
concession, whereby to develop her won
derful wealth by manufacturing tnc cotton
at home. The Weatem member*, although
Indifferent upon the aubject, were willing
to give the South a ahow. We appealed
to tome of tho members of the finance
committee of the senate who had charge
of the tariff bill. They stated that if the
treasury department would recommend It
they would put cotton machinery on the
free list. It vo happened. I am Informed,
that the largest manufacturer of cotton
machinery In New England married a
Kentucky lady belonging to one of the
most Influentltlal Kentucky families. The
result waa that Kentucky’s Influence m
the treasury department settled the fate
of the great Industrial future of the South
by withholding a recommendation placing
cotton machinery on the free list, a
measure we should have justly received
at the hands of this 'ongreas. Today the
present tariff bill bears the prohibitory
tariff tax of 35 per cent, ad valorem on
cotton machinery. Tills tax leaves New
England still the master of the situa
tion.
••What would have been the result If
cotton machinery had been put on the
free list? When wo take Into considera
tion that the South Is Che greatest cotton
producing country on earth, and that out
of a total of about X.000.0U0 cotton spin
dles in the world the South has about 2,-
000,000, while Fall River, a little town In
Massachusetts with a population of 75,000,
has about as many spindles as nil the
Southern ataten put together, we should
look to the causes producing this dispar
ity. This investigation will develop the
fact that protected cotton machinery Is
largely responsible for these conditions.
•The result of such free machinery
would huvo been factories at nearly every
cs>m roads in the South. The enormous
wealth and the enlarged population re
quired to manufacture the Southern cot
ton heretofore and now shipped to Eng
land, coupled with tho fabulous amount
Invested In New England now engaged in
the manufacture of our Southern staple,
which should be transferred to tho South,
would moke this the most prosperous sec
tion of the country.
"I have no fault to And with New Eng
land, but admire her Industry and thrift,
they arc the most Industrious people in
the world; they make everything pay. Let
a etranger locking for work go into any
of these New England manufacturing
towns, the first, thing tho iperchnnt asks
la how many children he has old enough
to work In the mill; If only one, they are
Indifferent about hla trade; If two, they be
come sMUVertMit interested in the-’stran
ger; if four, they are very anxloue tor hla
trade, and if he lias half a down children
old enough to work In a factory, he la a
capitalist, and every strategy la reported
to in order to get his custom. Therefore,
1 repeat, I admire New England, and 1
hope she will now become more liberal
to the South and held to build up her
waste places by developing her resources,
remembering In dolnfc so, she helps to
ennee a common union. Yours very truly,
••A. E. Randle.”
1\HB SUPERIORITY
Of Hood’s Sarsnparlll.a la due to tho
tremendous amount of brain work nnd
constant care used In Its preporatlon.
Try one bottle and you will bo con
vinced of Its superiority. It purities
tho blood which, tho source of health,
eorai dyspepsia, overcomes sick head
aches and biliousness. It Is just tho
medicine for you.
Hood's Pills arc purely vegetable,
carefully prepared from tho best In
gredients.
In the World*
UNDINE.
Crushed flllddllpgt Flour*
The only Flour of Its kind, and the best of
anyklml. H I. mail, hya rooret pro-
cesi known to but lvro pereons.
$100,000 has been offered for tk* Knowledge
We have letters from nearly 1.000
mervliauts stating that DniUue Is the
host Hour they ever 1uuh1U.i1. It !|» m<
ter ground. Manufactured hy the
Noel Mill Company, EstlU .Springs,
Term.
.CENT A
ADVKRTISEIMKNTB UNDER THIS
HEADING. FIFTEEN WORDS OR
M-tuE. TAKEN AT ONE CENT A
WORD EACH INSERTION. NO ADt
TAKEN FOR LESS THAN 15 CTS.
WANTED.
WANTED TO RENT—A furnished room
near business aectfcm. Do net oali Ad-
dresn by mall. VI. A. R.” No. C» Plum
street.
\VANTED-Py brother nnd Meter, two
connecting rooots—good location. State
terms, a. 1. B., care Telegraph.
WANTED TO RENT—A large, nice room,
furnished or unfurnished, with gas; on
Hill, by gentleman. References given.
Address ”H. H.,” care Telegraph.
WANTED—Board for man,'^wlfe and
two email children, along electric line,
pretty well out. Addreea P„ Tele
graph office.
WANTED—Those who desire big bar-
ga'i.s In clothing, hate *nd gontn’ fur-
ntshli.g goods to call at ReUdaig 3. J.
J. Cobb, analgnee.
IWANTED—You to see the 1894 Densmore
model typewriter on exhibition at F.
R. Pomeroy's. J. E. Minter. tele
phone 283.
<FOR RENT.
FOR RENT—October 1. dwelling No.
316 Washington avenue; No. 621 Col
lege street; No. 631 Georgia avenue.
Apply to H. V. Washington.
FOR RENT—House No. 205 New etreet
and 1128 College street. A. V. Toole.
FOR RENT—Two small houses on New
street, near Orange and car line. W.
B. Birch, or Walker & Wise.
FOR RENT—October first, seven-room
house, 858 Orange. Gas and water; 120
per monch; nice place on cor line. Ap
ply to W. B. Birch.
FOR RENT—Offices and gentlemen's
sleeping rooms. Apply at Macon Sav
ings Bank.
FOR RENT—The Grannies place, 020
Oak street, possession October 1. In
quire bn premises.
FOR RENT—October 1, the two-story
residence fronting Tattnall square,
corner Oglethorpe and Tattnall
streets. Apply Daly’s Exchange. Col
lege street.
TO RENT—From October, my house on
High street. Has ten rooms and two
In hack yard; gas and water fixtures,
etc. Will rent It all or only lower
story. No. 117. Apply to Holmes
Johnson, ait coal yard, or to J. W.
• Hinton, Lamar street, Vlneville.
FOR RENT—Sttore recently occupied by
Wood & Bond, three stories and base
ment, 35x175 feel. Best business loca
tion on Cherry street. Apply to W.
G. Solomon.
FOR RENT—Three desirable rooms,
with all modern covenlencee, over
store of W. E. lilU & Co., on Second
street. Sultablo for physician or den
tist. For further Information apply
at Willingham’* Warehouse.
FOR RENT—Five-room house, 607 Georgia
avenue. Foisesslon at once. Jacob
Hlrsch, 610 Fourth street.
FOR RENT—The elegant two-#tory
brick residence. 636 Orange street,
containing nine rooms and three bath
rooms and all modern conveniences.
The house has recently been com
pletely overhauled. Accessible to all
street car lines. For further particu
lars apply R. S. Collins & Co.
TEN DOLLARS a month will rent store
un Vlneville Branch In the city. Pos
session at once. Jacob Hlrsch.
FOR SALE.
FOR 8ALE—Seven-room residence, No.
Sf»2 Cherry street, close In and conven
ient Lot 70x210. Easy terms. Geo. W.
Duncan & Co.
FOR BALiE—3iy cottage in Vlneville;
house just oompleted; nice location;
will take cost, op l am going away.
A. .V. Troutman.
FOR SALE—OKI papers, for wrapping
purposes, etc.. 35 cents per hundred.
Telegraph office.
MISCELLANEOUS.
FOR the brat Goshen, Jersey and coun
try butter, sco Keen Grocery Company.
LINDEN BAKING POWDER always
gives aatSefleotkm. Retail* 20c. lb.
7FRESH cutfory today. Keen Grocery
Company. •
NEW GOODS—All kinds, new packed
craned good a now being received;
our buyer now in New York soliciting
ohcAccsi. of cveo’thirig tn fancy gro
ceries. John C. Holmes & Co.
FAT DUCKS and chickens. Keen Gro
cery company this morning.
LINDEN BAKING POWDER always
gives satisfaction. Your grocer sells IL
FRESH Tennessee butter, small cans,
16 cents pound. Keen Grocery Compa
ny. Telephone, 176.
TELEPHONE 363. J. H. Roush ic Son.
and ptlce your order for coal. Bret
coal on ch* market 3160 a ton.
REMEMBER before buying your grocer
ies to call on Keen Grocery Company,
They will save you money on everything
you buy.
OLD PAPERS for wrapping, 25 cents
per hundred at the Telegraph office.
A CAR LOAD of flour and bran Just re
ceived by Keen Grocery Company, which
they will eell cheep. Give them a call.
Cl Poplar street.
TURPIN’S BAKING POWDER t« the
best made. Have you triad ;t?
SEE KEEN GROCERY COMPANY 'or
beet green Rio, Mocha and Java coffee*.
Telephone. 116.
AT COST—Clothing. Hats, Underwear.
J. J. Cobb, Aasignee of W. A. Reddicg.
PRICES TALK!
25 pieces silk and wool mixed dress goods, regular 35 C (g
quality to go at 25 cents.
25 pieces plain and plaid woolen dress goods, regular 50c
quality at 35 cents.
75 pieces “Covert Cloths,” a beautiful all wool dress good,
richly worth 65c to go at 50 cents.
100 pieces all wool, silk mixed fancy dress goods, re»ula r
$1 quality at 65*tmd 75 cents.
Moreen for petticoats, something new; ask to see it.
Waterproof serges—navy and black; ask to see them.
A few pieces of challies, zephyr ginghams, creponeltes
sateens, etc. in light colors; must be closed out at once regard-
less of cost. See them on center counter; our loss your g a i n .
The best made, best fitting, most durable Unlamulered
Shirts in the city at 60c, 76c and $1.
Odd lots Summer Underwear to be closed out cheap this
week. Ask to see them. See us for bargains.
Burden, Smith & Co.
WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE
OPENS SEPTEMBER 19.
The faculty will bo the same as It
was last session mainly. Our aim to
keep the Institution abreast of the pro
gressive spirit and methods of the ad
vanced educational movements of this
age. While laboring for tho thorough
Intellectual training of bur young wo
men. we shall also seek to give them
those finer graces and chirms that
come from* Music. Art nnd Elocution.
The old Wesleyan with its unrivaled
prestige Is without n peer in this
Southern country, nnd parents and
guardians send from distant states
that their daughters or wards may be
able to say they were educated at the
woslbyun. The moral for the Macon
people points itself. You cannot afford
not to give your daughters these bene
fits, when She brings them to your
doors.
Mrs. J. B. Cobb is lady principal
For terms, eftc., address
REV.E.H.ROWE,
PRESIDENT.
(Former principal Semiary for Young
Ladles. Virginia.)
HOLLINS INSTITUTE
IJOTETOUHT SPRINGS, VIRGINIA.
For YnuneI.[u1le,.Thfl!»r,«t and moot Mt,n,W8l,
MaiDred In VircinU. Kc!.ctio couiw. in Anriril
.no Modern l.iiiixilnorn. i.tler.tiirr.lcienrc»,
VIn. 1C. Art and elocution. »loff.ee™ »nd totcho™.
Situ,ted in v.llerot v. , nw ItasU Monntnln
Miner.! W.t.rs. S«labnou, ctinuto, Wi
tMuion djwiifl Sept. Iff IHO. For lllao. Cet.locuo .ddroa
CI1AS. I.. C'OCKKi Bn*t., llolllun, Vs
tn Rst a million of ctrculnrn
cIhm Mes.morlst, Hypnotist.
| Mind Reader end Clnlrroysnt. u largo
book only lOo. Addro,, at once.
C. 11. ROWAN. Mtlwaukoe, Wla.
NOTICE.—SALE OF THE MACON
AND NORTHERN RAILROAD.
Under and by virtue of a final de
cree rendered on the 30th day of July,
ISM. hy the United Statee droult court
for the weatern division of the southern
district of Georgia, in the ease of the
Mercantile Trust Company of New
York and other complainants against
the Macon and Northern Railroad Com
pany and other defendants, we will
sell before the United States court
house door In the city of Macon, Geor
gia, on the second day of October, 1S94,
between the legal hours of sale, all of
the following described property:
First. Tho railroad of the said de
fendant, the Macon and Northern Rail
road Company, which extends from the
depot In the city of Macon. Georgia,
to Its Junction with the Northeastern
railroad at Athens. Geotgla. a distance
of about one hundred and seven miles,
together with all Its railways, ways,
and right of way. side tracks, turnouts,
dspot grounds, easements and other
kinds nnd appurtenances belonging to
said railroad company, which are set
out In said decree.
Second. All structures, depots, am-
tlon and section houses, engine houses,
car houses, machine shops and other
buildings, with tools now In use and
equipments now in hands of the receiver
Four passenger coodhea. two combina
tion mall, baggngo and express care,
sixty box oars, twenty-two flat oars,
two caboose cars, Litres shanty cars,
three passenger engines, one a witch
and two freight engines, together with
all other property, equipments and
franchises belonging to said defendant,
Bind whloh are fully set forth In decree
referred to. Also, all supplies and
ocher property In tho hands of the re
ceiver of said company. Also fifteen
hundred shares of The capital stock of
the Georgia Midland Railroad Compa-'
ny If the pat* value of 3100 per share.
Third. In the sale of said property,
no bid for a sum less than one million
and seventy thousand (31,070,000) dollars
will be received, nor from any bidder
who shall not place Into the hands of
the special commissioners at the time
of making the bid the sum of 330,000
In money or certified Check, and from
time to time thereafter such further
portions of The purchase price shall be
paid In cash as the court may direct
to meet expenses of the suit, etc. That
the bidder depositing a&ld 330,000. and
whose bid is not the highest, shall have
such deposit returned to him • without
deduction. In the even the bid accepted
by the commissioners Is not confirmed
by the court, such bidder Shull hive
such deposit returned to htpi without
deduction unless said property Is resold
•t The expense of such bidder nnd be
cause of his fault.
Fourth. The balance of the purchase
price may be either paid In cash or in
the bonds and over-due coupons of said
Macon and Northern Railroad Compa
ny which are secured by the mortgage
upon which the decree of foreclosure
Is based. Such bonds and coupons be
ing received at such price and value as
the purchaser would be entitled to re
ceive ss Ms prorata share tn the distri
bution of said fund.
Flftn. The sale to be made subject
to all claims pending against said com
pany or Which are filed three months
thereafter, and all debts against the
receiver, which claim* or debts the
court may decree to have priority over
the mortgage foreclosed by said de
cree. the purchaser will be required lo
assume payment of asme. The sale to
be reported to the court for confirma
tion. and when confirmed the speed
commissioners will nuke title to the
purchaser In accordance with said fi
erce. For further details at sold sale
reference Is made to said decree.
ALEXANDER PROUDFIT
JAMES N. TALLEY, '
Special Commissioners.
C MAGNIFICENT
O— JJ
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