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Number 1
STOVES and furniture.
k)d Sc Beaumoqt «
SELL STOVES AND FURNITURE.”
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FOR ONE MONTH ONLY
RALYZINGLY LOW PRICES ON
B
iye a bio- stock on hand ; more than we are willing to
brer the season, Here’s a few sample prices. Noth¬
ing like them ever offered before.
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jamous $18,00 solid oak bed room suit, 3 pieces,
century sideboards $12,50.
century wardrobes $10,00.
parlor suit, 6 pieces, $25,00. Dining chairs, $1,00.
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WONDERFUL GAUZE DOOR RANGE
^ropiest 3000 and in most perfect cooking appartus ever man
iu.l i information use in Atlanta. Send for our book, con
‘ c and 1000 testimonials from the best
as m Atlanta. Meats cooked in this range will make a
? Poc fat. No charge for one book. If yon want one
us a line.
F $8,00.
b e ‘ )Uar y w e sell a good number seven stove with 32
-s , ot ware for $8.00. This is only for the Readers of the
Soliu South.
M'rite $8,00.
to us and we will save you money.
u & Beaumont Stove & Furniture Co.
^ au< i 5 7 Whitehall and 70 and 72 Broad Streets,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
OQ L STOVES AND FURNITURE.”
4 4 EQUAL RIGHTS TO ALL AND SPECIAL PRIVILEGES TO NONE.”
Conyers, Georgia, Saturday, Jan., 30,
APPLICATION FOR CHARTER.
STATE OF GEORGIA, -) To the Supe
Rockdale County. nor Court of
Said County.
The petition of Louis Stiasburger, of
New York city, N. Y.; J. D. Goldman,
of St. Louis, Mo.; Henry Wellhouse and
Lotus H'ellhouse, of Atlanta, Georgia,
and Albert Steiner, Atlanta, Georgia,
and H. F. & D. M. Alaaand & Co., of
Conyers, Ga., respectfully show that
they, and their successors, and associ¬
ates, dedre to be incorporated for the
space of twenty years with the right
of renewal at the expiration of said time,
under tie- corporate name and style of
The Union Paper Mill Company, with
the right thousand to extend the same to one hun¬
dred dollars, (Your petition¬
ers further show that ten per cent, of
said capital stock is paid in) with the
right under said corporate name to de
vide the capital stock of said Company
into shares of one hundred dollars each,
with no individual liability except as to
the value of the stock subscribed by each
stock holder, and also to provide for the
ale and transfer of said stock.
That place of business
Manufacturing Cite is at.the Rockdale
Paper Mills on Yellow .river near Con¬
yers, in said county of Rockdale, and
that their chief businsss office is located
in the city of Atlanta, Fulton county,
Georgia, with the right to establish
branch offices and agencies at such other
places or points as may be necessary for
the carrying on of the business of said
organization, with all the corporate pow¬
ers under the constitution and laws of
this state necessary for the purposes of
said corporation their
Your petitions further show that
aims and objects are to purchase and
otherwise procure a location, land and
material, necessary both, water a'l power, or
steam power, or and other ap
perati and effects that may be ncessary
to manufacture book, news, man ilia,
gray wrapping and all other kinds of
paper, also paper bags, boxes, and all
other articles manufactured out of paper
also to purchase all necessary machinery
to manufacture wood pulp, and it anu
facture the same.
That they may manufacture said ar¬
ticles and sell the same, exchange or
otherwise dispose them at any business
point they may establish.
That they may, in that name, contract
and be contracted with, sue and be sued,
answer and be answered unto in any
court of law or equity in this state, have
and use a common seal, buy, in sell, ex¬
change, lease, rent, receive payment
of debts and stock, real and personal
property, ehoses in action and effects of
whatsoever kind, and to dispose of the
same by deed, transfer, or otherwise, for
the purposes aforesaid. To make and
pass,such by-laws, rules and regulations
necessary to the conducting of the busi¬
ness of said company, and to elect or
employ such officers, agents and other
employers as are, or may be necessary
for the management, control, and carry¬
ing on the business of said organization,
and to haye all other powers usual and
necessary for tlie conduct and manage¬
ment of the affairs of said companies
business.
Wherefore, ycur petitioners pay the
court to pass an order eonfering upon all
them their 'associates an l successors
the rights, powers and privileges in this
their petition, and also all powers con
fered upon corporations of a sin ilar
character as may be consistent with the
constitution and laws of the state of
Georgia.
J. R Irwin,
Petitioner’s Attorney.
This Jan. S, 1892.
The above and foregoing is a true
cony of the original petition filed in my
office Jan. 8, 1892.
W. T. Huson,
Clerk S. C.
Uftu- Q. CL
STIIEGTHENS THE NERVOUS
SYSTEM.
And restores that part of the Physical
man that was impaired by abuse in youth.
Cures impoteney in a large number of
cases, and brings back the power which
has been lost by improper conduct in
vouth. and restores mankind to their
original stregnthl and vigor, and cures
all those troublesome nervous affections
that often embarass the practitioner in
his efforts to relieve hysteria in the fe~
rna e, and hypochondria in the male,
wakefulness, want of rest sleeplessness
and irritable and dissatisfied with their
surroundings.
■NOW TAKE-
1\. o. c.
AND BE ceded.
A MISSOURI LYNCHING.
When the 7:30 Missouri Pacific
train arrived here last evening, a mob
of 250 men from Barton county got
off, proceeded to the county jail and
demanded that the sheriff should
turn over to them Helper, the man
who murdered Mrs. Goadly and her
little son in that county last Sunday.
The sheriff made some resistance and
the mob proceeded to knock in the
door with tools they had secured by
breaking into a blacksmith shop near
by. The sheriff having been pre
viously warned that the mob was
coming had secreted the prisoner in
an out house, but the mob soon gain¬
ed admittance and brought tho pris¬
oner forth. They hurried him down
the railroad to Nassau junction where
they expected to board the train and
take their prisoner back to Barton
county, where they intended to burn
him at the stake. About a half hour
after they took the mau, Sheriff Waite
gathered a posse, including company
H, First regiment Missouri National
Guard, and started to overhaul the
mob.
In order to shutoff communication
with this place, the mob in coming to
this point flagged the traiu between
here and Lamar and boarded it. The
mob made no noise or demonstration
while getting the prisoner. Sheriff
Garrette ot Barton county, yes erday
had a talk with Helper in jail and the
prisoner confessed to having murder¬
ed the woman and child, but said he
did not know what he did it for.
The mob took Helper back to La¬
mar and hanged him in the court
house yard on their arrival there.
THEIR POCKETS RAN¬
SACKED .
fll wo very bold men robbed the
express car of tho Missouri Pa*,
cific train which reached here at 3;30
on the 23. The men held up the oc¬
cupants of the car, keeping them cov¬
ered with revolvers while the train
traveled teu miles between Sheldon
and Lunar. Two men, of whom on¬
ly the most meager descriptions are
obtainable, boarded the train at Shel¬
don. In the baggage and express
car \vh Express Messenger Huuck,
Bagge- master Hall and Tl'a .-liiiq
Passenger Agent Charles Barrett. All
were covered aith revolvers and
their pockets ransacked. From Hall
$75 was taken and from the others
small sums of money and some jew¬
elry. Ilauek was forced to g'W the
combination of his safe and this was
also robbed. The amount taken
from the safe was small.
Kansas City, Jan. 23.—The train
which carried the lynchers of Hepler,
was the same on which the car of the
Pacific Express Company was robbod
At Lamar the robbers left the train
and disappeared in the crowd of
lynchers. They were seen by some
trainmen boarding a freight train on
the Memphis road. At Fort Scott
they were met. by a colored policeman
who stopped them, one of them fired
on the officer, killing him instantly.
They again boarded the freight, but
was followed by detectives on a pas
senger train which overtook the
freight. The detectives got aboard
of the freight train and a lively ex¬
change of shots took qlace be;ween
them and the robbers between the
cars. A posse met the traiu at
Pleasanton, and after considerable
firiug one of the bandits was kill d
and tae other badly wounded. The
wounded man said his name was
Charles Myers of Kansas Citj. He
Price per Year, $1.00
refused to give his companion’s name
but he was believed to be S. C. Fran¬
cis, Myers brother-n-Iaw.
HORRIBLE HOLOCUST.
rUm of the most appalling fires in
^the history of Indianapolis oc
curved last Saturday night.
The National Surgical Institute
burned to the ground. The fire be¬
gan at Midnight in the office build¬
ing above. The offices were wards
for the babies and mothers. Smoke
was discovered before midnight is¬
suing from the advertising room of
the building, which immediately ad¬
joins the operating room back of the
office. The origin is claimed to have
been from a spontaneous combustion
of chemicals which had been placed
in some circulars and papers about
the room, and soon were ablaze, and
in fifteen minutes the tho whole lower
floor was enveloped in flames. The
attendants quickly awakened all the
patients and a pandemonium reigned.
Shrieks for help went up as the in¬
mates realized their terrible situation,
and the stoutest hearts were appalled.
The police, firemen and attendants,
all worked diligently in 'perfect ac¬
cord, and many patients were taken
from the upper floors by means of
ladders and carried to a place of safe¬
ty. No attempt was made to save
anything but life. The patients, both
male and female, themselves, under
ordinary circumstances, unable to
barely getabout, assisted nobly in the
rescue. Viewing the halls and on tho
stairways before the fire had commu ¬
nicated to the main building furnish¬
ed a weird scence. The inmates, all
wrapped in bed clothing, crawled and
helped themselves along from one
floor and one landing to another.
Many touching scenes occurred, such
as friends stopping to assist others
more unfortunate. The citizens hur¬
ried in to assist in the work of rescue.
Cots were rudely constructed from
mattresses and the strong-armed po
licem picked up tho unfortunate ones
and carried them across the street to
a new annex but recently purchased
by Rectors Wilson and Allen. An
immense crowd gathered ubou , and
great anxiety was felt, for it seemed
improbable that everybody could
have gotten out of the burning mass
■ . vo, and their feu * n w re justified by
the events Two women jumped out
f a window. One of these were bad¬
ly injured, but another, who was
caught by a man standing in a crowd
escaped serious injury. Two others
threw out their babies which were
e itight Jand saved by the firemen.
One or two men jumped from the
roof and were badly hurt Many of
the rescued people were taken loa
restaurant near by. Soon 500 or 000
prtients were there and the scene was
most pitiful. A majority of the pa¬
tients in the hospital were children
under treatment for deformities or
diseases which rendered them help¬
less. A very large number had bean
more or less burned in additition to
their former misfortunes and had be-*
come separated from their mothers
or nurses, Among these occurred
the most pitiaoh-touching scene.
Griffith's restaurant held the greatest
number of sufferers, hardly possible
to tell how many, owing to the confu¬
sion in the place, totally unadapted
to the use to which it was put in the
emergency, but three or four hun
dred.
More than twenty were burned to
death.
FOR uYSPEPslA
I'sp Hrowa’i* Iron P.iuerii.
physicians recommend U.
Ail <U Mars keep it. Si te per bottle. Ger-in*
hi* ef*de mark aut” «• *•. iars-r rappes.