Newspaper Page Text
TERMS OF
baily and Weekly Enquirer
Alfred It. Calhoun,
PROPRIETOR.
lelvo months, in advance...
f months, “
teo months, 44
) month, *
Lkly Enquirer, one year..
2 00
75o.
ASHINGTON.
Colttmbtt
YOL. XY.
COLUMBUS, GA., SATURDAY. DECEMBER 20, 1S73.
NO. 301.
Mn^kbkioxai. puocEEiusras.
.MoruiUK S€»»»iOll.
gpVashinoton, December 11).—In the
i ^M^uso a sub-coiumitteo of two was au-
Korized to proceed to New Orleans to
' Me testimony in the Dnrell matter.
The supplemental civil rights bill was
taken up for discussion, with the agree-
OMnt that the vote shall be taken on the
jond day after the recess.
[in the Senate, Fenton, from the Com-
ittee on Finanoe, reported unfavorably
the resolutions of the Legislature of
>rt.h Carolina in relation to the tax on
Rton. Laid on the table.
The Committee on Elections this morn-
instructed its Chairmau to introduce
resolution iu the House dismissing them
>m further consideration of the election
^ntest from the Fourth Georgia District
rBethune against Harris. This will leave
^e House to decido the contest without
ly recommendation.
?he contestant of Mr. Raphaels, was
^niod further time to take testimony.
IiATKHT FROM THE CAPITAF-PO-
SITION OF WILLIAMS.
CONGRESSIONAL PKOCKEDIXGS
ashinoton, December 11). — Con
firmed—Hunt, for marshal of the South
ern District of Florida. Williams, Bard
•ad liugko8 must wait till the holidays.
There is no doubt of Hughes, or Bard's
confirmation, but Williams' in shaky.
The Virginius will bo brought here,
Where her right to carry the American
flag will bo investigated.
_ A circular has been issued by the Secre
tary of the Treasury, that holders may
, exchange registered or coupon bonds of
*58 for now 5 per conls. par for par.
Mr. ltawls, of Georgia, is allowed to
renew some testimony which was burned.
Beyond this all testimony in the Georgia
casos is closed.
• Gen. McMillan, Mr. Ogdon, and Gov
Bard leavo for home. Messrs. Marr, Jan
nin and Billings remain here to watch
Louisiana affairs. Herschel V. Johnson
left for home to-day.
Senate:
The House bill, authorizing the contin
uance of distillery warehouses aftor a
' change of management, and the bill au
thorizing the printing of sundry docu
ments, passed.
The resolution for a recess from to-day
to Monday, January 5th, passed, 32 to 2
‘The discussion of this resolution dovel
oped the ideas of the Senators regarding
the repeal of the bankrupt law, which, in
the maiu wero adverse.
Morton submitted a resolution
Which was laid on the ta
ble, instructing the Committee on
the Judioiary that iu any bill they may
report in regard to the bankrupt law,
•Whether for its repeal or amendments
: iberoto, such repeal or such amendments
in relation to the acts, causes, or condi
tions, by virturo of which any person may
be thrown into involuntary bankruptcy,
•ball be made retroactive,and to date baok
id take effect at a period not later than
io 1st of December, 1873.
Butler, of Massachusetts, from the Ju-
iciary Committee, olfered a resolution
ithorizing that committee to send a sub-
>mmittee of two to New Orloans to take
istimocy iu the matter of the impeach-
lent of Judge Durel), with power to senu
>r persons and papers. Ho explained
lat among the charges against Judge
)urell, there were charges of misapplica-
lon of funds and misproceedings in bank-
iptcy that would require all the bank-
ipt records to bo brought to Washington
It much expense, and it was to save that
iponse and consumption of time, that it
proposed to send a sub-committee to New
►rleaus. The resolution was olfered in
le sense of true economy. The resolu
tion was adopted.
Aftor considerable colloquy, it was
Sf 'bgreed that the discusssion should go on
•11 day on fifteen minutes speeches ; and
On the first and second days after the re
assembling of the Mouse, the previous
piestiou to bo considered operative at
A o'clock on the second day.
Butler, of Massachusetts, opened the
lebate on the supplementary bill. He
lid that tho bill gave no right which
Ivery man did not now possess, except
rhere there was hostile State legislation.
?ke bill simply proposed to give to whom-
iver this right was taken away a means of
werridiDg that hostile Stute legislation,
ind to punish the man who takes that
right away from him.* That was the
thole of it, and who could argue against
lat V
Desultory debate followed till adjourn
ment.
A .Movement to I'nite tile N'ortli-
wcnI an«l Smith on TrtuiN|>or>
tat ion.
™ A call is boing unanimously signod by
membors of Congress, headed by Repre
sentative MoNulta, of Illinois, and Repre
sentative Harris, of Yirgiuia, looking to
• union of tho members of the Northwest
id the South for tho purpose of uniting
iese sections on tho question of cheap
transportation from tho West to tho At
lantic seaboard. A meeting will be held
In tho hull of the House of Reprosonta-
i the first Tuesday after the recess.
FOOT PADS IN MISSOURI.
A FARMER MURDERED AND
ROBBED.
Three of the Robbers I'aptarcd and
Hu lift.
St. Louis,”December 10.—A special
dispatch to tho Democrat from Sedalia,
says that information was received there
yesterday that a farmer living near Cam
bridge sold a lot of hogs in that town
Wednesday, receiving therefor about one
thousand dollars,and that while returning
homo he was overtaken by five men, head
ed by a notorious desperado named Tom
Stanton, who shot and killed him and
robbed the body. Shortly after the trag
edy a goctloman living near by discover
ed the body on tho road, and hearing an
aDgry altercation iu an adjacent thicket,
ho comprehended the situation, and at
onco quietly raised a party of his neigh
bors and capturod three of the murderers
and hung them to a tree, and then started
in pursuit of the two others, but at last
accounts it was not known whethor they
had been captured.
THE WEATHER.
Depabtment of War, )
Washington, Deo. ID, 1873. j
Probabilities.—For the Southern States
increasing pressure, with lower tempera
ture and partly cloudy weather, tho pre
vailing winds in the last named districts
continuing from the north and west. For
the canal regions of New York, Pennsyl
vania, Virginia and Ohio, decidedly lower
temperature during Saturday.
MARINE INTELLIGENCE.
ARKITAI.S AND DEPARTURES.
New York, December 19.-
Old Dominion.
GENERAL NEW*.
By Tele*rApia io tho Enquirer.
—Senator Gordon left Washington last
night for Atlanta
—Wright A Tillinghast, dry goods mer
chants in Now York, attribute their fail
ure to Sprague.
—A telegram from London announces
the loss at sea of tho bark Sultan, with
twelve persons,
—Intelligence of a heavy earthquake in
Boar Lake Valley is reported from Salt
Lake City.
—The Virginius left Tortugas at mid
night, on tho 18th, in tow of the U. S.
steamship Ossipee.
—A fire in the naval office of the New
York Custom-house, yesterday, destroyed
papers which will inconvenience shippers.
—Advices received yesterday from Mad
rid report tho continuance of the bom
bardment of Cartagena, and a tremendous
magazine explosion within its walls.
—-The Virginius survivors were deliv
ered on board tho Juniata, at Santiago de
Cuba, on tho 18th, which will carry tkem
to New York
—The trial of Harry Genet, at New
York, was concluded yesterday afternoon,
with a verdict of guilty. The sentence
was deferred till Monday.
—A prize fight for $500, on Long Is
land, yesterday morning, between Jim
Turner, of New Orleans, and Eddy Mc-
Duff, resulted in a victory for Turnor.
—Orders were received yesterday from
Washington to stop ull extra work at the
Charlostown (Mass.) Navy Yard. The
work of fitting out the Brooklyn will pro
ceed, but as the emergency is over, a
number of employees have been dis
charged. Tho Franklin is expected to
sail Monday.
PRESSINGS.
—One rat-hole in a Duluth elevator dis
charged GOO bushels of wheat.
Alexander St. Clair Van Andley plies
the shovel on a Virginia railroad.
The lovers of stale broad are recom
mended to try that found at Pompeii
about 1,800 years old.
A typographical error in an Alabama
paper relates to the “thief clerkship” in
one of the government departments.
The fact that Miss T. Deuni sung
very nice song is established by an an
nouncement to that effect in nu Indiana
paper,
An obituary notice in a wostorn pa
per contained the touching intelligence
that tho deceased “accumulated a little
money and ten children."
—Appropos of the new Episcopalian
sect, “They pay tithe of mint, anise, and
Cummin, but neglect the weightier mat
ters of tho law."— World.
—A Boston court has decided that if
woman lends money to her husband she
cannot get it back. The decision will not
bo new to many wives.
—Ex-Mayor Pierce of Boston, signal
ized his departure for Washington to take
his seat iu Congress by presenting his
salary us Mayor to tho Boston public li
brary.
—A Danbury woman, hearing that
former neighbor, who had once tried to
injure her, had been seen in New Haven
inquired, with burning eyes aud cheeks,
“Wliat did she have on ?”
—We are told that “Pope Pius IX. has
buried over one hundred cardinals.” Un
less lie confines his business exclusively
to tho burying of cardinals he must be the
most extensive undertaker in Europe,
—Mr. Dawes is u member of Grant
own party, and yet ho sputters it right
out that Grant’s salary aud perquisites
amount to $100,000 a year. If this is
true, we ought to have a much better
President than we’ve got, or he ought to
take his pay io hound pups at a thousand
dollars a piece.
—Tho new Mayor of Liverpool has
more money than ho knows what to do
with, and announces that ho intends to
spend $150,000 of it in establishing an art
gallery for the city. It strikes us that if
he would spend the same amount, or even
ouo-luilf of it, iu establishing a bread and
meat gallery for the poor, ho would be
doing a much better business.
—The lute John Stewart Mill was a pre
cocious youth, lie begau Groek when
three years of ago, road a good deal of
Pluto at seven, aud begau to write what
ho called a “Constitutional History of
Rome" by tho time ho was uino yoarR old
Ho hogan logic at twelve, and went
through a completo course of political
economy at thirteen, and ho was a con
stant writer for tho Westminster Review
at eighteen.
—A Milwaukee man who was about to
leave for Chicago, rocoutly, and whose
wife came with him to tho train to see
him off, attempted to kiss her good-by
without taking his cigar from his mouth.
—Ueoruo Augustus Snltt has published j The effort was a fniluro, and the uufortu-
“The Story °f the Count of Chambord.' , nato man leaped from tho cars, pursued
“l’he London Telegraph, bolievinu that the i by an infuriated woman with a bat In her
Pretender was certain to be King, es- baud e patch of ashea on her cheek, aud
pomced bis cause, and Mala beyau a mem- « fi™* Jeal of!tiro m her eye. He got a
Dir of him in the paper. Things have livelier neud-ott than he bargained for.
MARKETS.
akeu a turn and a book coming out now
has a sheepish look. It is not so long
Nearly all the rivers in Pennsylvania
and Ohio have suddenly swolen. In
Bgo aud yet it is as if a decade had pass- Pennsylvania tho Monongahola and the
•d sinco it could bo said, as Kala says, Alleghany are very high, and much dam-
‘•Franco waits for the coming of the po-! age bus boon done, especially at Pitteburg.
leutate lo whom 1 have dedicated this lu Ohio the Hooking, Seiota, Ohio and
took. I both of tho Hiatus are very full.
BY TELEGRAPH TO ENQUIRER.
London, December 19.—Erie 30 J.
New fives i)lj.
Liverpool, Doc. 19.—r. m.—Cotton
easier and u fraction lower; uplands 8^;
Orleans 8§a8}; sales 12,000—for specula
tion and export 2,000. Arrivals 1-lGcheap-
Sales for the week 90,000; exports 12,-
000; speculation 0,000; stook 450,000,
American 77,000; receipts 00,000, Ameri
can 30,000; octual exports 11,000.
Uplands, nothing below good ordinary,
shipped January and February S\.
Stock afloat 355,000, Americun 225,000.
Bales include 7,000 American.
New York, Decomber 19.—Stocks very
feverish and lower. Gold ll£. Money,
no loans; 7 bid. Exchange—long 8$,
short 9}. Governments dull aud off.
State bonds quiet and nominal.
Cotton weak ; sales 993 : uplauds 1G|,
Orleans 10$.
Futures opened as follows: December
I U-32al5§ ; January 15.V ; February 15
G-lGalO ; March 10 9-32a’lG 5-10 ; April
10$al0 11-10.
Flour dull and heavy. Wheat quiet aud
drooping. Corn steady. Pork firm.
Lard heavy, steam 8$.
Louisville. Dec. 19.—Flour active und
firm, family extra $6a6 75. Corn steady
at 50a55 for new shelled in bulk. Pro
visions quiet aud firm. Pork nominally.
Lard—steam rendered at 8i, leaf 9.Val0.
Whiskey firm.
St. Louis, Decomber 19.—Flour in
good demand at full prices. Corn unset
tied and dull; new mixed 52a54, in ele
vator. Whiskey firm at 95. Pork quiet
at $14 50. Bacon firm, with only a lim
ited jobbing demand. Lard nominal at
some holding at 8{.
Cincinnati, Dec. 19.—Flour, improved
demand aud firm at unchanged prices.
Corn dull—new oar 54, old ear and
shelled 58. Pork quiet at $15a$15.25.
Lard steady; 85 askod for steam, bid;
kettle 8k. Bacon firm, small sales of
shouldors at 7, clear rib 7}a8. Whiskey
quiet and weak; sales early at 94; offered
at 93 at close.
New York, Dec. 19.—Money active, 7
bid. Exchange heavy and lower, at 8}o.
Gold 10£all. Governments dull and
lower. Nothing doing in State bonds.
New York, December 19.—Cotton dull;
1186 bales sold at lO^alO^c.
Freights to Liverpool firm—cotton
7-10a A
Cotton dull ; not recoipts 1120, gross
4330 bales.
Futures closed steady ; sales 0000 bales
as follows : December 15^a5-10 ; January
15 13-32a7-16 ; February 15 29-32al5-lG ;
March 10 9-16a5-10 ; April 10 21-32sl6
11-10.
Liverpool, Doc. 19, p. m.—Cotton to
arrive cheapor; Bales of Orleans, nothing
below low middlings, deliverable in Jan
uary, 9^d.: do., do., delivery iu February,
8kA.
Yarns and fabrics at Manchester dull.
Savannah, Dec. 19.—Cotton easy ;
middlings 15J; net receipts 7210; exports
to Great Britain 8339; exports coastwise
1573; exports to Continent 3084 ; sales
1530; stock 114,912.
Weekly net reeeipts 37,622; exports to
Great Britain 18,187, to Continent 7583,
coastwise 0200; sales 13,254.
Boston, Dec. 19.—Cotton dull and
lower; middlings IGA; not roceipts 193;
gross 306; sales 500; stock 0000.
Weekly net receipts 779; gross 7471; ex
ports to Great Britain 531; sales 1800.
Baltimore, Dec. 19.—gotton dull and
nominal; middlings li>A; low middlings
14$; strict good ordinary 14{; not receipts
577; gross 715; exports coastwise 350;
sales 725—last evening 210, spinners 400;
stock 10,490.
Weekly net receipts 758, gross 4940;
exports coastwise 2177; sales 3950.
New Orleans, Dec. 19.—Cotton—activo
decline; middlings 10|; low middlings 15£;
strict good ordinary 14^; net receipts 17,-
214; gross 18,751: exports to Continent 3,-
990; coastwiso 1,409; sales 4,000; last
ovening 4,04)0; stock 219,704.
Weekly not roceipts 08,240; gross 75,-
832; exports to Great Britain 20,744; to
Continent 10,720; to France 4,030; coast
wise 5,010; sales 43,250.
Montgomery, Doc. 19.—Cotton quiet;
middlings l4-jal4L
Weekly receipts 1,980; shipments 1,-
810; stock, 1872, 12,035; 1873, 9,408.
Wilmington, December 19.—Cotton
held at higher prices but nominal; mid
dlings 14fj net receipts 373; export#
coastwise 202; sales 9: stock 3809.
Weekly net recoipts 2302; exports coast
wise 878; sales 250.
Charleston, December 19.—Cotton
easy; middlings 15|; low middlings 15;
strict good ordinary 141; net receipts 4,-
030; grosR 4133; exports coastwise 100;
sales 1,000; stock 58,492.
Weekly net receipts 22,300; gross 22,-
948; exports to Great Britain 9298; coast
wise 0512; sales 11,000.
Mobile, December 19.—Cotton quiet
but steady; middlings 151; low middlings
14}; strict good ordinary 14: net receipts
4719; exports to Great Britain 2300;
coastwise 1808; sales 2000; stock 48,557.
Weekly net receipts 19,444; exports to
Great Britain 5811: coastwise 7902; sales
9400.
Philadelphia, December 19.—Cotton
dull; middlings lflj; low middlings 15Aa
15}; strict good ordinary 15J; not receipts
370; gross 12,699.
Weekly net receipts 1934; gross 5947.
Providence, December 19.—Weekly not
receipts 401 bales : sales 0000 ; stock
3000.
Augusta, December 19. — Demand good;
middlings 14} ; roceipts 2158 bales ; sales
2059—to spinners 201 : stock 1872—3810
bales, 1873—19,185 bales.
Weekly net receipts 12,098 bales; ship
ments 10,658 ; sales 11,443—to spinners
Galveston, Dec. 19.—Cotton dull and
drooping; demand limited; good ordinary
14^; ordinary 12}; not roceipts 440; ex
ports to Great Britaiu 1,700; coastwise
210; sales 1,200; stock 77,199.
Weekly net receipts 19,975; exports to
Great Britain 3,494; coastwiso3,700; sales
8,000.
Norfolk, Deo. 19.—Cotton easy ; low
middlings 14J; net receipts 2483; exports
coastwise 2750; sales 720; stock 14,124.
Weekly not receipts 19,304 ; exports to
Great Britaiu 1400, coastwise 13,494; sales
3315.
Selma, Dec. 19.—Cotton firm and hold
higher ; middlings 14 j : weekly receipts
2812; shipments 2710; stock—1872, 0847;
1873, 7030.
Macon, Dec. 19.—Cotton quiet and
firm; low middlings 14} ; weekly receipts
4391 ; shipments 4471 ; sales 4895 ; stock
—1872, 12,450; 1873, 11,212.
Memphis, Dec. 18.—Cotton dull and
eeaay; low middlings 14}; net receipts
4010; shipments 3350; stock, 1872, 36,004;
1873, 53,309.
Weokly net receipts 25,575; shipments
17,650.
Nashville, Dec. 19.—Cotton quiet;
low middlings 13}.
Weekly net receipts 5892; shipments
5072; stock, 1872, 0128, 1873, 5012.
City Point, Deo. 19.—Weekly net re
ceipts 1124.
Comparative Colton Statement.
New York, Dec. 19, 1873.
Restaurants.
HARRIS COUNTY HK8TAIIRANT,
No. 82 Broad Street.
TIi* hest of Foreign ainf Domestic Liquors and
Cigars. Meals at all hours.
ilocl'J J. J. llLAKKLY, Prop'r.
Barber Shops.
KU. TERRY, Barber,
Crawford St., uudur Rankin House, Columbus, (la
duel 8
Cotton Factories.
MUSCOGEE MANUFACTURING CO.
Manufacturers of
8HKKT1NQ9, SHIRTINGS,
YARN, ROPE, Ac.
COLUMBUS, GA.
O. P. SWIFT, Prouldeiit.
W. A. SWIFT, Secretary A Treasurer. octlll ly.
Livery and Sale Stables.
ROBERT THOMPSON,
.I very, Sale aud Exchange Stable*,
Oolkthorpe, North ov RANb01.ru Sts.,
oct:»0 Columbus, Ga.
Not receipts at all U. S. ports
during tho week 200,139
Same week last year 116,268
Total receipts to date, sinco 1st
September 1,547,993
Same date laRt year 1,521,560
Exports for tho week 97,676
Corresponding week last year... 75,615
Total exports to date 704,941
Same dute last year 743,089
Stock at all U. S. ports during
the week 637,010
Last year 525,785
Stock at all interior towns 115,812
Last year 336,000
American afloat for Great Bri
tain 225,000
Last year 111,000
—Mr. Seth Adams, of printing-press
fame who died iu Boston a few days since,
left an estate valued at $1,701,000, and
provided in his will for the establishment
within fifteen miles of that city of a home
or hospital for the treatment and accom
modation of persons afflicted with hypo
ohoudria, from which disease he had suf
fered for years.
—Rev. Father Duggan, whoso doclara
tions of opostacy from tho Catholic faith
caused such a sensation in San Francisco,
and who advertised a lecture making an
exposure of Catholicism, and failed to
appear, is snid to have written an humble
and abject letter to Archbishop Alemauey
acknowledging his faults and sin, and
praying to be tuken back into the church.
—A Washington correspondent states
thatThos. Bocock, of Virginia, and John
H. Reagan, of Texas, whose political dis
abilities wore removed by Congross last
week, will be candidates in their reaped
tivo States for tho United States Senate.
The new Legislature of Virginia, as well
as that of Texas, has a Democratic ma
jority on joint ballot. Bocock is anxious
to succeed Senator Lewis, whoso term ox-
piros in 1875, and Roagan wants to
ceod Flanagan, who goes out tho sarao
time. Tho election for Senator takes
place in both Stotes this winter. Of
course there are other aspirants among
the Democracy, but none quite as promi
nent as the gentlemen named.
—A correspondent of tho Nation, writ
ing from London, offers what is probably
the true explanation of Mr. Mill's passion
ate adoration of bis wife, lie Hays: “To
me this illusion of a singularly pure heart
seems tho very Nemesis of faith. Mr.
Mill was never a dogmatic unbeliever iu
creeds and doctrines which he had never
been taught. But ho had tho tender and
reverential yearuiugs which malto men re
ligious, aud which religion satisfies. His
whole heart wont out to the one woman
he had over loved. Ho found in her that
divination of his own thoughts, that true
womanly insight, which I10 mistook for
genius. Ho was dazzled by tho reflection
of his own rays; and when his wife un
consciously repeated what she had board
from bis lips a few hours or days before
he fancied tho adopted offspring was her
own. His imagination, reacting on itself,
mistook for a voice. Tho ocho was hors,
tho voice was his own.
—Tho correspondent of tho Boston
Pont from Washington shrewdly analizes
the presout House of Representatives as
follows : “In tho present IIouso of Rep
resentatives three are Radical Republi
cans, a Liberal Republican, (Banning, of
Cincinnati,) three Independent Republi
cans, (Smith, of North Carolina ; Hawloy,
of Conncticut, and Woolford, of New
York, ) who do not feel bound to support
measures simply because thoy happen to
be party measures; credit mobilier and
anti-credit mobilier Republicans, regular
Democrats, Holman and Cox Democrats,
land-grab and anti-land-grab men, salary
aud anti-salary grabbers, national canal
schemers and their opponents, protection
ists, free-traders, contractiouists, expan
sionists, national bankers and anti-nation-
bankers, and a dozen other elements, in
cluding those in favor and against civil
rights laws; a few heavy weight and a
great many light weight Congressmen,
omitting any allusion to the good and bad
men, or religious believers and unbe
lievers.’’
A. G A MM EE,
Livery and Bale (Stable*,
Ouletuoipe St., Columuub, Ga.
Particular attention given to Fording tuul Sale
of Stock.
Horses and Mule* hoarded in Malden by the
onth or day. oct29
Doctors.
HR. J. A. UR4IUHART,
: C. Moffett's Drug Store, Broad street,
idenco on St. Clair, betweeu Broad and
Front Sts., Columbus, Ga.
HR. UOLZEY.
Residence corner of St. Clair and Oglethorpe ,
HR. J.
Ellin A Harr
first door to left.
COOK,
Commission House,
Dentists.
W. T. POOL,
Dentist,
101 Broad St., Columbu
W. J. FOGLE,
Hentlnt,
sep. r »] Georgia Home Building, Coin
Lawyers.
L. T. DOWNING,
Attorney and Solicitor.
U. S. Com'r and Register in lhiukriiptc). Ottice
liov2'J] over Brooks' Drug Store, Columbus, Ga.
PEAHOHY A BRANNON,
Attorney* at Law.
e over J. Ennis A Co. a Store, Broad
vlH]
West Side.
K. J. MOM EM,
Attorney and €onu*ellor at Law,
Georgia Homo Iusuiauce Coin puny building, Her
oct7 lyj ond story.
I.OI LS F. GAKKAKO,
Attorney and t on nisei lor at law.
Office No. 07 Broad Htiaot, ColumbtiN, Go. Wll
practice iu the Statu and Federal Courta. Speciu
attention givou to Commercial Law and runes i.
Bankruptcy. sep4
PHAN. II. WTLLIAMN,
Attorney at Law, C'olumhuM, Go.
Will practice iu any Court.
Office over Aceo A Murdoch’* store, [novlti
Grocers.
han'l R. hike,
h-uler in Family Groceries, on Brym
tween Oglethorpe A Jackson sti
No charge for drayage.
street, bo
i0 * dec7
J. II. HAMILTON,
Wholesale aud Retail Grocer,
1 A Oglethorpe i
job printing:.
THE ENQUIRER
JOB OFFICE
IS COMPLETE
IN ALL ITS DEPARTMENTS,
Having recently been Refurn!*lied
with a large assortment
of the Finest
Hew Type, Borders, Cimtna,
NEW PRESSES
OF THE LATENT AND MONT
APPROVED PATTERN*.
RAILROADS.
Change of Schedule.
Office Mobiee i Uirabd Railroid, i
Colntubu*, Ga., Dec. '1, ls7:*. j
N AND AFT Kit DKC. 3D, WKDNR8DAV
PaBionger Train will run ua follows :
s Columbus daily, Sundays excepted, 3:00 p. 1
™ at Troy, “ - A 1 8:62 p . *
Arrive at Columbus, 10-33 a!
Ticket Office at Broad street Shed will ho open
Fit RIGHT AND ACCOMMODATION
oavo Columbus Mondays, Wednesday,
and Fridays at .... 5.30 A
Arrive at Troy, • ... 4.05 i»’
eavo Troy on Tuesdays, Thursdays ami
Saturdays at - - - 4:00 a
Arrive at Columbus, - - . 2:25 1*
:3 eudOt XV. L. CLARK, Sup’
O
Western Railroad of
Alabama.
53:] HOURS TO NEW YORK
New York and New Orleans Mail Lino.
Palace Sleeping Care Run Through from
Opolika to Lynchburg.
VVK8TKRN RAILROAD OF A LABA.1M,
Columbus, Ga„ November Kith, 1873.
TRAINS LKAVKCOLUMBUS DAILY
For Atlanta, - - - 10:10 A. w.
Arrive at Atlanta, 5:40 p. m .
For Montgomery, - - 5;00 p. m.
FnrSoima, - - 9:30 p. n.
Arrive at Montg’y, 10:40 r. m., 6:20 a m.
FOR NEW YORK, DAILY,
(Time 03 hours and 40 minutes.)
LKAVK COLUMBUS 2:40 a. in. ARRIVE at
Opelika 12:27 p. in., at Atlanta 6:40 p. iu.,
at Washington 7.20 a. m., Now York 4:20 p. m ,
via IMiihulolphin and Baltimore.
Sleeping Curs Bun Through from
Opollkn to LyurlilHii'K.
TRAINS ARRIVE AT COLUMBUS DAILY
Atlanta, - - ■ 9:10 p. m.
i Mo
ory r
3:5(1
The 5:00 p. m. Western Mail train runs dally,
connecting with trains tor New Orleans, Mobil--
Louisville, Ky., and St. Louis, ut Montgomery, ami
for Vicksburg at Selma. On this truiu sleeping
cars are run through from Opelika to New Or
Georgia It. R.
TTie 9.30 t*. m. does not run Sunday. No delay at
Opelika by any train.
Tickets for sulo at Union Passenger Depot.
CIIA8. P. BALL, General Sup’t.
II. A. BACON, Agent. [»ov2l tt
IttllAM COOPER,
leer and Dealer iu Country Pi
next to “Enquirer” Offlen.
Fresh Meats.
J. T. COOK,
Fre*la Meat* of All Kind*,
» Stalls Nos. 16 and 17
Ratss, Hides, etc.
JOHN MEUAFFEY,
Dealer In Rags, Hide*, Beeswax
mid nil kind* Of Junk.
Corner Uridue and Oolktiiorpe ^
■ep5 Columht:
Druggists.
Rags, Rags
J WILL PAY TIIE HIGHEST CASH PRICK
100,000 lbs. Cotton Rags!
delivered at tho Railroad Depots and Wharf in
Columlms. Parties will And it to their interest to
communicate with mu before shipping elsewhere.
Dry Hides
Purchased, for which tho highest market pi ice
will he paid.
JOHN MEHAFFE1,
COLUMBUS, GEO.
SMITH, VOGEL & HOPKINS,
Dry Goods
Commission Merchants
No. Ii(> N. Alain SI.
SI. Louis.
Walter M. Smith,
miuw li. Hopkc
uyl7 wly
HR. J. L. CHENEY A MON,
Druggists and Preacriptionistn.
I large assortment of Huist’s Garden Seeds.
CrtMNKY’a Covan tiraur.
Crawford Street, under ltankln House.
doc!8
C. H. PALMER, Druggist,
Near Rrond Ml. Hepot.
AT* Physicians’ Prescription* made a specialty.
dec 17j Night bull te lett of door.
.1. I. GRIFFIN, 100 Broad Mt.
Present*,
nl and Uaselul, Jil
de. 17
JOHN L. JORDAN,
Druggist,
Two doors below Geo. W. Brown’s,
Broad .Street, Columbus, Gu.
JST" Night Bell right of south door. sopS
FOSTER S. CHAPMAN,
Drugglnt,
Randolph, .ant of Broad Street,
Columbui
Ga
A. M. IIKANNON,
Wear Side, Broad Strkkt, Columbus, Ga.,
WholenAlo and Retail Healer li
Drugs and Medicine*,
Toilet Article* and Perfumery.
•''I 11 -
D 1
Dental Notice.
PIIKLPS has removed his office to hi*
idem* on 8t. Clair street, in rear nl
terlaii Church. oct2
EPPING’S BUCHU
Notice to all Purch&ssrs of this Excellent
Compound Extract of Buchn.
S KND YOUR OilURIte TO L. PIKBC'K A CO.,
Columbui, Ga., and you will get tbs Genuine,
Original Extract. There IS NO OUT81DK
AGKNCIKS—K1TI1KK BPHOIAL OR UKNKRAL.
I am Individually Sole Proprietor.
L. PIERCE.
March 5th, 1873. It
CARD AND PAPER STOCK
M 1.4KGK. NEW AND THE BUST.
We are prepared tu Print all CImeob of
JOB WORK
In the Neatest Style ol' the Art,
At New York Prices.
Business Cards,
BIH Heads.
Letter Heads,
Circulars,
Hand Bills,
Posters,
Books and Pamphlets,
Legal Blanks, etc., etc.
We will Duplicate Bills
of New York, or any other
city.
Programmes, Bills of Faro.
POSTAL CARDS
u»- Ulll OW.\ I.FNKtV, llt'.TTKK
THAN thom: ptr«'hamt:i> AT
tiit: KDUI’I.AK otfuks. a spe
cialty.
Order* froiu the country solicited.
Work Ki'sranteeil, Gtv* u* a coll.
REAL ESTATE ACENTS.
ELLIS & HARRISON,
Real Estate Agents
AND AUCTIONEERS,
W ILL ATTHND PROMPTLY TO TIIK SALK,
RUNT AND l'URCHASK of RLA L ESTATK
iu tho City and country, and will advertise the
same (at private Hale) FRKF OK CHARGE, iiuIohm
Hi" I’rop'-rty in
For Exchange.
Twenty Valuable Unimproved Building Lotrt iu
tho city of Omaha, and sixty-Hix lotH in Platts-
mouth, Nebraska. A portion or tho whole will hu
exchanged for a Southern Plantation in Georgia
or Alabama, on very roaHonahlo tonne. [sopli
Valuable Plantation at Auc
tion.
WILL BE SOLD AT ADMINISTRATOR S SALK.
hoochee m
lug 1,149 t
balance hoi
able, on the L’lni
r, Hix miles below Coliimbun, coutal;
res, about one-hnlf in cultivation, tl
rily timbered. Msplo
For Sal©.
VALUABLE CITY PROPERTY, situutud iu the
hiMiueHH centre of tho city. Will soli at a great
bargain, or to uii uccoptabln party an undivided
iutoioht. The property rau he made to pay a largo
A HOUSE AM) LOT, with 20 acres land hUhcIi-
sd, 3 miles from tho city, in a good neighborhood,
and convenient to a good Hchool, churches, Ac.
A DESIRABLE HOUSE AND LOT, with tun
acres ground, in Llnwood, oue mile from S. W. R.
R. depot; a very comfortable and desirable home.
HOUSE with five good rooms, within 200 yards
of Southwestern Railroad depot, unu-hall acre
ground.
For Rent.
ONE DWELLING with three rooms, ^ a
ground, on McIntosh street, near tho F
Grounds. Good water, etc. supl
A STORK HOUSE in the valley of Talbot com
at a cross-road, three miles of tho Clmlyb.
Springs. A very desirable location for a I
Goods and Grocery business. aepl
With a genteel family in a desirable part of
city, TWO LARGE ROOMS, with the use of I
nished parlor, kitchen and stable. Rent very r
b-,nable loan acceptable tenant.
FERTILIZERS.
Guano Notice to
Planters.
AGENCY OF PACIFIC GUAM
Columbus, Ga., Oct.
rpilK attention of my customers i<
1. 1h:::.
called t
JLURI.K PACIFIC OUANC
III (16; cents per th for Low Middlings.
Cotton will bo by me muf
ull my Agents in aeoordanee with
«‘ontru«‘t until iimturity of ob-
ligntlonw, after w liich date this prh .
il«*go will cease.
Those owing less than a bale will ship the h.ih-
to Columbus, Ga . ami the balance will he roturiie I
"l am now ready to
Deliver Soluble Pacilic Guano
for Another Season
4*" Eagle and Pheuix money taken at par.
W. H. YOUNG,
A’gt PacificCuano Comp’y,
No. 12 Brotttl Street.
I am now delivering my well kuowu
“Rust aud Smut Proof”
Seed Oats,
I.. ...U. ..nntflnln.. - r . l, U s||elS Midi. ^
W. 11. Y.
D i: N > ISON* s
IU TENT SHIPPING TAGS
OVER TWO Ill'.NDKKD MILLIONS
!i«r* l *en sold within the past K* years,
tvnhi ut .nplaint «»t l->ss by Tag he-
11 1W 'mm; d-taclied. l/ioy are unti e
reliable /hr marking Cotton liulott than
Tag in use. All Express Companies mu
p> where,