Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, June 01, 1886, Image 5

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DAILY ENQI'lllEK • SIW-: ntHLMlll'S GEORGIA, Tl'LSPAV MORNING. .Il’NE L l^'L CHARLESTONS ENTERPRISES. 1 hi* lrin‘ Inwardm-M oftlii* still- of the (Ml Mill. Charleston, May 28.—The property of tho Charleston oil mill compnny was s.jl.i at auction yesterday for 620.100, whieb Rids the career of that concern. The mill was started in 1881 with a capital stock of s.uk),000 for the purpose of manufacturing Cotton seed oil. For several years it had a prosperous business, but the rapid lu cre .we in tlie number of similar establish- i,u nts in the south aud the rise in the price of cotton seed caused losses, and in Jan uary last the company went to protest. The suie was made under an assignment for the benefit of the creditors, and the proceeds will pay less than 30 per cent, ol the indebtedness, which aggregates 806.CKH). Tin mill was I/lirebased hy a Mr. A. Cl. Klaek, of New York, representing a New York syndicate of capitalists who will turn their attention to the business of controlling the cotton seed oil manufacture in the south. They Imd purchased a large tract of land here some time before the present company had become embarrassed, and had announced their intention to erect u cotton seed oil mill. It is said that they will own a con trolling interest in most of the oil mills south and west, and will by that means be able to control the production and price of oil and the other material produced by these mills. THE NEW TERMINAL FACILITIES. A new departure in the terminal facilities of C harleston is announced to-day. The New York and Charleston warehouse and steam navigation company, composed of New York capitalists, have executed a mortgage to the Central Trust company, of New York, to secure an issue of 1*1,600,000 li per cent, bonds, the object being to se cure additional terminal facilities for the South Carolina railway company, of which the navigation company is an olf shoot. The company has a splendid water front on Cooper river, with magnificent ware houses, wharves, etc., and owns a controll ing interest in the New York and Charles ton and the Florida steamship lines, which comprise the four steamships, City of Co lumbia nnd City of Atlanta, ply ing between here and New York, and the Palatka and Monti- cello, running to Florida. The tendency of the trade centre of the city is toward the northern limits, and the object of the navi gation company is to move uptown, to bring the railway to the water and to build additional wharves and warehouses. The city council is disposed to object to the railway running through the streets, but the railway company at the last session of the general assembly secured the passage of an act giving them authority to run their track through the city, and is dis posed to disregard the city’s objections. The council at its last meeting, however, decided to fight the matter in the courts, and the police have been instructed to prevent any attempt to lay a track through the streets. The tight promises to be an interesiiiig and exciting one, with the chances of winning in favor of the railway company. QUEER IDEAS OF AN OLD HERO. N.mr of the AloilcIs Snl,mittctl for the Lutiuun Monument. New York Times. Hartford, Conn.. May 26.—The com mission on the Israel Putnam monument, to be erected in Brooklyn, Conn., at a cost of §10,000, will meet at the state capital on Monday to examine the twenty-five models aud drawings which were not fully looked over at the first meeting last Monday owing to tile absence of two members. The com mission refuses to give the public any in formation regarding the character of the designs beyond the announcement that some of them provide for statues, others for monumental works, and two or three for equestrian _ figures. Hut there ure re ports that, while some of the artists and architects have displayed creditable works, some of the statues and figures arc remark able pieces of invention which excite the most astounding sensation. The trouble in the whole matter is that, as to any idea of the face and figure of Put- j n.iiii, there is nothing to go by except tra dition. The familiar face of t he man, as if has been represented in one painting, made | from a description furnished many years ago by a person who had seen him and I now long since dead, represents him as ot : coarse features, and knowledge of his hub- j its, which has been handed down in the community where he lived, warrants too belief that he was a very rough person, ; not at all particular as to style in any di- I lection, yet possessing just these rugged, I persistent characteristics which gave prom- j inence to men in the trying period of the I revolution. Notwithstanding the popular and probably correct opinion oft ho gen- j oral appearance of Put mini, a statute has 1 been put in Bushnell park, in this city, ! which gives him the clean cut facial out- j lines ol u fascinating cavalier and puts him in the bodily form of an Adonis. Any art I portraiture like this placed in Brooklyn would startle the bones in the old village j cemetery where he lies buried. But apparently without any knowledge of the existing figure, or even of the wood cuts of the man as they appeared in his- j torical collections of the last generation, ! which conform very closely to the paint- I ing referred to, some of the designers who I have sent models to the commission “have proceeded entirely upon the broadest kind of idealism, and if the world is ever per mitted to see tliese curiosities in art they will be at once classed umong the wonders of an ingenious age. There is said to be one statue in the collection which embel lishes the frontispiece of the old hero with i corkscrew-shaped curls on each side of his ! forehead, aud anot her disposal of the figure gives to the whole design a striking resem- j blanee to a commonly seen advertising cut ; of a half Indian, half Quaker apostle of ] patent medicine. Another model is des- I cribed as having evidently been made from a photograph of the jack of clubs. Btili another, and this equestrian places | Putnam on an animal whose head and tail, like church spires, point upward, and the appearance of which recalls Con sul General Waller’s stump speech oratory several years ago, when he predicted a glorious party triumph and compared it to a buck emerging trom the woods “with his antlers and his tail in the air shouting victory.” But these are the exceptions in the collection, and being so afford the only excuse for any reference to them, as all the rest are considered by the com mission too good to be seen or described. Possibly, however, after a choice lias been made eitheir from the design submitted or from a combination of several of them the whole collection will be thrown open to public inspection. tin- speaker of the house, respectively,from dilierent political parties, the secretaries of war and the navy; two army and two navy officers appointed by the president; nine citizens also so appointed, with the con sent of the senate, and salaried. There is to lie .a salaried treasurer appointed by the president and confirmed by the senate, while senators and representatives whose terms of office may expire are to continue to receive their pay as members of con gress until their successors: on the board are appointed. This hoard is to put into actual operation any plans they may choose for the forts, floating batteries, torpedoes, guns, ammu nition. boats, vessels, and any kind and class of devices and appliances for making war by land or sea. ft may use the present government workshops or erect oli ers, or contract with private companies, provided these are formed under ouv laws, with the majority of our citizens as directors, and with citizens holding the majority of stock, it may also carry on any sort "of experi ments and tests, hold its proceedings a s, - cret. swear its members to secrecy and puiiis’i other pens us b,v a line nut exceed ing >10,000, or imprisonment up to two years, tor unlawfully revolting their .se crets cr maliciously seeking to induce any body to reveal them. Finally, the ooard is to continue in exis tence three years, making annual reports through tin, president to congress, divid ing its work into two groups, one for the army and the other for the navy, an officer being detailed tor each by the secretary of war and navy department respectively.' it appoints and pays its own officers and em ployes, and need not disclose to the treasu ry the purpose of its drafts, and in disputes with tin* treasury ns to the sufficiency of vouchers or the legality of expenditures tlie president of United States in to be tl.< arbiter, it may also suggest recommenda tions to the president ns to the use of money previously appropriated for forts, ship-;, guns, or munitions and unexpended al the time this act takes effect; and these recommendations shall have the force of law. Taken as a whole, this bold and compre hensive measure doubtless excites much more disfavor than approval among those who have carefully studied it. Its great merit is in rising to a full appreciation of the important subject with which it is con cerned, demanding for it as liberal appro priations as are sought for increases of pen sions, arrears of pensions and equalizations of bounties. But in the view of many per sons it lodges too absolute a power for the disposition of an enormous sum in the hands of individuals, expressly relieved from the control of congress, except so far as that control might be resumed on re ceiving the annual reports. Furthermore, its methods read like those of war time instead of a time of peace, and I he extra provisions for seeretiveness seem to belong rather to European needs than to ours. Again, many of Hie persons thus selected to constitute the board, however imposing as figureheads, would be practi cally without knowledge or experience in these peculiar duties, and besides would have a full round of entirely different of ficial duties to perform. They would either lend the influence of their names to a few competent specialists, or lie a drag on the proceedings. Then the amount of the work dumped on the board is excessive. It can better be divided under different acts, ships constituting a different matter from forts, and so on. The truth is that we have had enough boards and commissions of inquiry and experiment. The recommendations of half a dozen of the most recent of them are practically the same, and what is now wanted is prompt, thorough and intelli gent, well-guarded and decisive and liberal action by congress on these specific rec ommendations, modified as wise debate may suggest. PROPERTIES OF VEGETABLES. Stum. Points Hint May In- or May ,\dI la- Ynhm- 1,1c. Good Housekeeping. There is no reason why every house keeper and cook should not have a knowl edge of the clieinislry of cooking and of the healthl'iiliiess of different, articles of food. At this particular season of the year nature bountifully supplies us with much that is cooling in the way of vegetables, which arc not only delicious articles of food, biit are really health-preserving, for often a slight indisposition of children or elder persons can be readily cured by the free use of these culinary remedies. Spinach has a direct effect upon com plaints of tlie kidneys: tlie common dan delion, used as greens, is excellent for tiie same trouble; asparagus purities the blood: celery acts admirably on the nervous sys tem, and is a cure for rheumatism and neu ralgia; tomatoes act upon the liver; beets and turnips are excellent appetizers, let tuce and cucumbers are cooling in their effects upon the system; beans are a very nutritious and strengthening vegetable, while onions, garlic, leeks, chives anu shallots, all of which are similar, possess medical virtues of a marked character stimulating the circu latory system, and the con sequent increase of the saliva and the gas tric juice promoting digestion. Red onions are ail excellent diuretic, and the white ones are recommended to be eaten raw us a remedy for insomnia. They arc tonic and nutritious. A soup made from onions is regarded by the French as an excellent restorative in debility of tile digestive organs. We might go through the entire lot aud find each vegetable possessing its special mission of cure, and it will be plain to every housekeeper that a vegetable diet should tie partly adopted at this period of the year, and will prove of great advantage to the health of the family. With vegetables, as with every thing else, much depends upon the cook ing and tnc care and preparation before hand. Washing in several waters is ab solutely necessary to prepare nearly all kinds of green vegetables for tlie table, and great care must be given examining spinach, lettuce, greens and cauliflower, as often very minute insects arc lurking in or under the leaves of these, it will be found a good plan to wash them in weak salt and water, after which they should lie put in ice water for a few min utes to prevent their becoming tough and wilted. SOUTHERN PIG IRON. I’ll iln >1.-1 |ihia I n pi 1 it I Sr.'kliiu liili-stHiiTit hi AIiiIiiiiiih. Plnaulelplii i Record. The Thomas iron company, a Pennsyl vania corporation, is interested in a large amount ol valuable iron-on laud in Ala bama, in the vicinity of Birmingham. Samuel Thomas.the senior member ol' this firm, is also largely interested in iron-ore lands in the same section, and Ue, Rob ert li. Sayre and other prominent Phil adelphia ' capitalists have formed a company, of which Mr. Thomas is the head, to thoroughly develop these lands and evert thereon a plant which, '.lid produce the he.,! grades of pig iron. There will he two furnaces erected hy the eoniuanv. one of which is to lie commenced A FREAK OF NATURE. \n u,.Ill-, inti li (irntlriiun lli-l'in* u Midi nl I la--. I iicimi.i \ si.11 nines. at an , lin. s. tl at; irlv da the riptions on first p; v- lcement of the work 1 . i d il is thought 'aln i an, ut am ! liiriuiee will in first is Hiiishet the com,> inv The work commenced The total ill Invest in Alabama i-.i >1,6id.i'nil. A gentleman well acquainted with the causes leading to thi-. investment states that if it proves as i.iroiitabie as is i xpeeled other eompanivs will'.go into the sunn sec tion, taking as A.r.eii ,i pita i as the Thomas company proposes to i ivesi. It is claimed 11ml pig iron can be made in Alabama at $5 per ton eheapei tlu.:i in .... Lehigh Valley, a. d evt n after paying rln. eu.-i . T Lrunspo'r- taliou to the north tnc iron e.m he put down §2 60 per toil cheaper limn by anj northern producer. F,v.m at this il is st it, d licit the nig iron ir-nli of Penusyl- v.iii'c. often .•nioarras-iAi by nil oiiei of southern pig iron al a Itgur ao -enls lower then tin In mi n.a.li iron >,I! -i-cdat. The starting up of such largo pig-iron furnaces in lhe south, with the very best iron must era of tlie country at their head, which will lie able to produce at so much lower figures than in this state, where the raw materials are limited long distam.es and the rates of I'reignt are high, is not regarded with much favor by those manu facturers of pig iron in Peiiiisyhania w nose plants arc not favorably located. They state that the production must to a great extent find its way north and force out of the market considerable of tlie home production. The projectors of the new Alabama furnaces, however, state that the alarm is groundless, as the demands of tlie south and southwest for iron in 1687 will be such as to absorb the production of all the iron that is made in Alabama. They report that railroads, bridges and other {enterprises, many of them of a very extensive character, arc in contemplation for 1867,and that the amount of iron which will be absorbed by these will he enormous. A number of Philadel phia and New York capitalists will leave lieie next mouth for Alabama to examine the situation for locating iron establish ments, aud to study the advantages this field has over other to iron producers. TTl.-TT Pittsbubg, May 31. — The Pittsburg, Oakland and East Liberty -street railway cars were tied up this morning, on account of the failure ol the company to make out the eight-hour schedule us promised. Traf fic on the line has been entirely suspended. A strike from the same cause is also looked for on the Wylie avenue line. No trouble is expected. A Ih'imty Miirslml IciliiMl. Nashville, Tenn., May 31.—W. H. Giger shot and instantly killed Deputy United States Marshal J. W. Higgins at Carthage. Tenn. An old lend was the cause of the killing. The M iirlil in Ihimrcr. Chic-age Mail. It is only a matter of a few years, at the present rate of exhaustion through Liu. gas wells iu Pennsylvania and elsewhere, until the earth will begin to lose itsshape- and bulge in here and there. The result 'will bo terrible earthquakes, followed by floods, hurricanes, and cyclones. There, is no cause- tor immediate alarm, yet we- should not disguise from our readers th • fuel that we are in danger. Louisville, Kv., May GO.- A wonderful freak of nature, in the person of Luther L. Bloati, of Marengo, Crawford county, Inti., was presented yesterday to the students at the Hospital College i f Medicine, on East Uin-stnut street. Mr. SJoaii is 24 years of age. hut is only thirty-one inches tall, and weighs eighty-two pounds. His deformity lies entirely in he legs and feet, which together are not more than four inches long. Tlit feet lire only partially developed, and are turned hack wards ami downwards, cm npeiliiig him to ivaik on wlint is usually tin- upper .portion of the pedal extremities, in tr initial language the deformity is known as .alipe-e varTi.s. Tim upper portion o! Mr. Biotin s body is perfectly doAi loped, with the ex ception of I.is fingers, winch have only! one joint each. He is the sod of W. IT. 3 -ife:i. n farmer! mar Marengo, and .s tin t uk-t of eiain I children. Three of fuese children were deformed in exactly tlie same way. lie- -idi s 1 .i11 hca, two cuuigiilers, Junn.it: and I l-'Jia, tlie firmer of wiioin is dead, were thus .ihlirc iateil and. >.ti rigY,' m ,lded by | nature. The parents ire noth healthy, j and nave no reasons to assign for the freak, i Lin her was brought to this city at tlie 1 instauee of Dr. J. T. WuuUn-ra, \\ uo is a i personal friend to Mr. Bioan,atld Professor Latruble, who is now lecturing to his classes on the subject of “freaksof nature. 1 ' | Mr. Sloan will be introduc'd to lin- im-it' showman, Barnum, to-day, with the hope j of gelling an engagement. Mr, Sloan has grown a h a y stac-iie, and is n bright-looking young man. lie is w.-ll re.id, and last year graduated at the j Marengo High school. In tlie winter! time In- is a great trapper and ininicr. lie shoots on horseback generally, md says tlnd he is a dead shot. Short and small as I he is, it is an easy matter for him to mount a liorue. This he does by climbing up the | leg and catching hold of the mane. Usually Mr. Sloan walks with tin- aid ot j small crutches, but he is aide to get along j without their aid. He usually wears a sort ' of short waist dress and moccuasins of ids | own make. Tile students find him an en-I terlaiuing as Weil as interesting piece of humanity. Tlir I! lllsli,i-> .if llni'k Ri-i i. “Early in the fourteenth century,” said Mr. Gus Nunning, “a good king, with a gn it In-ad, reigned over Bavaria. Being a monarch of liberal education, he of course knew wlmt young men’s fancy lightly turned to ill the spring; but he saw tlie fathers nnd grandfathers and uncles of tlie young men yearned for something stronger and more exhilarating than mere love. Therefore he set- tlie royal brewer to work one New Year's day concocting a beer that would knock an honest Bavarian away into BellvvartzlmrgBonderliausen,and not half try. The man of hops took kindly to tiie task, and when Easter Monday came in- had ready a score of hogsheads of dark sweet beer. The royal major domo filled a beautiful silver growler that held about a quart and presented it to liis majesty to sample. The monarch drank the flagon, set it down, frowned and said the beer was too sweet and had ".o fire in it. ' J Before the royal ax swinger could puniMi the brewer by trimming oil' 11is head tie- new finer began to get m its tine work and | have fun with the king. He whooped i three new and startling whoopsmerformed j a beautiful song uitdMar.oe'on the throne, and wound up by clasping the 'brewer In his heart and calling him brother. When tin: king was winding wet towels around his head the first morning, some. ona.asked him what the beer should be caned. “Bim- ilii /ilkloin !” he exclaimed, “we will call it bock beer, for merry, come up, my head feels as if it had cross'countered a streetcar barn he goat.” “Ever since those good old days hock beer has been broached every Easier Mon day.” The young map was asked why tin brew was so much stronger. “Because it had more hops and malt. That is all t he secret-. It is a tradition among beer drink- era that hock should be dark. That is ail nonsense. It can be light in color and vet strong enough to suit anybody.- -St. Joseph Gdzetto.. Corrected liy .liilin Hlm-li mar. In In in. Inis. (in. STOCK AND BOND BROKER RAILROAD BONDS. Americas, Preston unit Lumpkin IM mm",nuge Ts.. Of IDO Atlantic aii.t iiulf7« Id < 1Z0 i enlrid cun mortgage 7- lii '117 I ‘ohuuhiis anil Ron,,- 1st if, l ulor-tA Central It. It . in;) m IDs i'olumtilis amt Wi-steie. .-1 'lortgaire its, endorsee! hy (‘.’litral R. 11 ID,) fa 106 : ’liarlolia, (Joiuaibi.i anil Ansu-ta l.t murtinige. A Southernized Yankee Who Hah Eight Poinds and a Half of Ai 01 Fie*H. 'olunibla •i *>;:>««• INiiln Utilvo 'Tati: ::dmi Georgia Ts, 13<»0 M IS( KLLANLUl’S .oniederate Coupon Bond- FOR SAl.l'.. *2 shares Eagle ami Pin n.\. Hi shines Mu^eoge** Factory 'stock. • it. 3<»: 10 shares Merchants’ ami Media stock, paying 10 percent, fur past ten years. WANTED. Georgia 7 ner cent, gold bonds, due 1890. I can i-t s, li, ■ 11.. Western railroad second mortp bonds, due 181)0. Will City of Columbus 5s See me before you buy or m. II. ^.an ahv ;';‘X per cent RUNNING OF TRAINS. Arrival mill Departure of All Traill* al < oIiiiiiImi* 4 an > iau l»a**ei»u«‘rs- In DllVrt .Hay 2. ARRIVALS. (•ni.l'MH'S AND HO MR RAILWAY. Mail train from Greenville 10:11 a. in. Accommodation from Greenville 6:49 p. m SOUTItWKSTKltN RAH HOAD. Mail train from Macon 2:25 p. m. Accommodation from Macon 2:13 a. m COLUMRl K.'AND WK^TKHS RAILWAY. Mail train from Montgomery 11:55 a. m Mail train from Atlanta 6:31 p. m. MOniLK AND (5 IRA HD RAILROAD. Mail train from Troy and lLifhnla 9:55 a. m. Accommodation from Troy, Enfaula and Montgomery 2:02 p. m Accommodation from I’nion ^prinKs.. 11:15 p.m DEPAKTiTRLS. COLUMBUS AND ROMK HAILWAY. Mail train for Greenville 2:29 p.m Accommodation for Greenville. 7:uu a. iu SOUTHWI-MTKHN RAILROAD. Mail train for Macon 12:00 in Accommodation foi Macon 11;L'l’p. m. COLUMBUS AND Wli-TLUN RAILWAY. Mail train for Atlanta 8:M a. n». Mail train for Montgomery 2:28 p. m MOB ILK AND GI HARD HAILL’OAD. Mail train for i'roy 2:30 p. m Accommodation for Troy and Eufauht 1:55 a. m \ecomi nidation for l ninn .spring., ami Montgomery 5:50 p. u III v#*-11I Tin* rliists THE NATIONAL DEFENSE BOARD. ilif.Nfu Project for Suppljimr Forts, (inns mill Ships for tlu* Protection of Our Counts a ml Fron tiers, Washington, May 2S.—The most novel iuid striking of the* measures introduced into congress for providing coast defenses l-s the senate biil to put the whole subject into the hands oft tarty-seven persons, with appropriation of >>100.000,000, or so much thereof as may be required, for the next liscal year. The board thus to be intrusted with the expenditure of this great sum is to consist ot the president of tlie senate; the speaker ot the house; two members, not of tlie same political party, from each of the n nance, army and navy commit- inittees, of the senate, and the ways nnd means, appropriations, army and navy committees of the house; two other sena tors and two other representatives, ap pointed by the president of the senate and li ini vii Ail j Chcago, III., May 31.—Al meeting with closed doors was held at tlie socialists* I headquarters last night. Dr. Ernest Schmidt, Abermyer and others were pre- ■ sent and a plan for defraying the expenses 1 incidental to the trial of Spies, Scwarband j Fielden, was adopted. A weekly per oapi- : ta assessment was levied on the different “groups,” Dr. Schmidt being made banker with power to make all disbursements, i After discussing the advisability of calling | on Robert ingersoll to aid the defense, and I arriving at no conclusion, the meeting ad journed. The adherents will be notified ' of the levy to-day. ha 1 it to 15 J Chicago. May 31.—The Journal’s Clin- | ton, Iowa, special says: The Midland , passenger train, running from Anaiuosa tnis morning, ran into three young Ger- mans who had been to a dance at Goose : lake last night, ami had become drunk I and laid on the track to sleep. They were | farm hands recently arrived from the old ; country. One died soon after. Another will die. The third is slightly bruised. (Mir I t Washington Republican. j “Our men-of-war arc slow travelers,” re marks a New York newspaper. This is tiie result of a shrewd design, not of acci dent or incapacity to build fast ships, it was the intention of our government that these vessels should never run from the enemy. Bv-and-by, when the the cost in money amt suffering comes to be reckoned up. the sober, second thought of tiie working millions will doubtless reach the conclu sion ttiat striking and boycotting in the country that pays tnc biggest Mages in the world are the poorest in vestments of time and energy iliac can possibly be made.-- Buffalo Courier. Mr. IlnKfiMt! I.Mrnimr. At intervals we hear from the distant hills spasmodic disturbances in the throats of democratic, roosters, to the eff ect that the republicans of Ohio have been guilty of revolutionary proceedings. — Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. 1 In* Sunny Soulh. Betting men announce that the turf has gone to the bow-wows in this section of* the United States. They pronounce the .south the only portion of the country worth living in.—New Y’ork Journal. Ilf* 1 ' Not I.ill* to Sim* 11. The day when either house of congress passes Senator Saulsbury’s bill disqualify ing senators and representatives from be ing candidates for president will be a gol den day in American history; but it is safe to assume that Senator Saulsbury will never see it.- Philadelphia Inquirer! Dc-lir-lii.lnvi*. If the use of your tooth-brush is painful, heal your mouth with Delectalave. For sale by all druggists. Hum* Hull. If I had a dog and he went to look at a game of base ball Sunday and ever got back into my yard I’d lili him full of shot, and if he went Wednesday I’d give him 100 lashes, ltev. Samuel Jones. Wumii rtiiI (Hits. \V. D. Hoyt A Co., Wholesale and Ue- ' tail Druggists of Rome, Ga., say: We have been selling Dr. King’s N-*w Discovery, Electric Bitters and Bueklen’s Arnica I Salve for two year.*. Have never handled I remedies that sell as well, or give such 1 universal satisfaction. There have been j some wonderful cures effected by these | medicines in t li is city. Several cases of ' pronounced Consumption have been en- | tirely cured by the use of a few bottles of Dr King’s New Discovery, taken in con nection wit.ii Electric Bitters. We guaran tee them 'ilways. Sold ny Brannon Ar Carson. cod&w Turrilorial l*ol>mimy. ! Nt.w York Tune*. ! As a territory, Utah is subject tothena- I tioiial government, its laws and its oltierrs. I It would be folly for the nation, after con fessing its inability to suppress polygamy in Utah by national law, lo transform the ! territory into a .‘■•tale with the expectation ! that a constitutional ann-ndim nt would , supply a complete remedy for the evils i which the Jaws have failed to suppress. Oli l Hod slio SullVrcil. This lady had been married thirteen year.*, and during at least o.*e-half of that, lime iiad been a sufferer from the effects of Leucorr/nea or Whites and its many at tendants. She was m .oh reduced in strength and flesh, being unable to take any active exercise. Simmons’ Iron Cor dial was at last given a careful trial, and an ' improvement was noted from the start. I She is now a perfectly healthy woman, and owes her restoration to this remedy. | Sold by John P. Turner & Bro.. Colum bus, Ga. cod&w M ARK UTS i\Y Tl. I.IA-HA 1*11. Financial. London, May 31. -4 j». in.—Consols 102 3-16. money lu2‘ i, account . Colton. Livkhrool, May 31. Noon.—Cotton good. imchuiiKOil iat< s‘; middling tq/land.* 5'.*d oilcans 5 3-tOd; sales 12,000 hales -for -pecu lation and export 20«'0 holes. ItuceipiB 25.000 bales 2-1,700 American. Futures opoimd steady, at the following quo tation:; : 5- 6-lrJ 1-0 J id 5 5-61 d 6- 61 id 5 7 Old 0-61 " 5 7-0Id 3-0|d 7- 0 Id for to-day’> G'-aring 1060 May and June Jui.v ami August August and Sep Lem her.. Septcmb'-i and October sepeteniher. Tenders of deliv. hales of new docket ami 300 bales of old docket. i'rovhioiiHi (JilK’Auo, May 31. Flour steady. Mesa pork easier and 7b. * JOc lower --cash 35, dune H 17b, fuH 25, .1 iiI\ 12* ,"8 55. Lard sternly caMi and June $5 87b.- 5 ftn, duly 5 92 1 ./r 5 07',.. Short rib sides steady < ash ^5 20. Boxed meats dull dry salted shoiilders 25^ 4 30, short clear rib si«les $5 00to 5 05. Sugar unchanged standard A Jibe. St. Louis, May 31.—Flour, maiket quiet family fn0io 3 20, choice $3 ho 1.3 On, patent $5 I0(n5 40. Provisions (piiet and generally weak. Mcsb pork about steady $8 75(«0 00: lard weak at f r > 65«'5 75; hulk meats -boxed lots unchanged long clear sides $5 30, short rib sides$5 45, short clear sides >5 55: bacon - long clear sides $5 H5/.# 5 1*0, short rib skies $5 92'./«5 05. short clear sides |6 10«)6 12 b,. Louisvii.i.ii, May 31. -Provisions steady: Uacon, clear rib *5 25, sides *0 15. shouhhws f J 50; hulk meats, clear rib sides $5 50, clear sides $5 75, shoulders £4 12b.; pork, mess $10 00; sugar- cured hams $0 50ie 10 00; lard, choice *7 75. New Orlkans. May 31. Coffee dull—Itioin cargdes, prime 7"/ 10b,c. Jiiceduil arid nominal - f.ouisirtrma, ordinary to good Sugar nominal Ixmisiaim open kettle, cIuum* 7 centrifugals, choice white 6b,c, off white 6 " 6‘..e. Molasses steady -Louisianmi open kettle prime to -trictly prinn; 32c, pr *'* me f< r c • cm plimi of personally , ami '■•tliiiL' apart a homestead' of i\: iv andihe same will Ik* passed on at my oflke on .1 uik 1th, nt 10 o’efoelc a. m. Witness mv otlk'ial signaJit/e, this* M«v 17th. 188*5. ' F. M. f.Rl •( »K .**. niylH oa\v2t ordinary. cF.oitGiA. mi set >g]•;]•: coiinty. Whereas. Mary i.. Hogan. a«lmi:t ; *tr .trix of the 1 si tie of Orplva Iba.jn. tleeeaseil. mnk's appli cation tor lenvo to sell all the real es1 site ludongniR to said de ’I IlCM ■refr-re t<* cite all pel il any they lmve, \ ■ hoidd lit.' he granted to said ajipiie Witness my Ii.iimI and official - May Utli, 13h«. *' ** myJioaw O.v „.ji*ture this F. M. HitOUKS, my. ;i;e county. John T. Ku GF.GimiA. Ml'S( To all whom it may cone naiigh of said state having plied l»» me as the largest creditor of .John It. brown for permanent letters of admini.-l ration on the estate of John It. Brown. Lite «f said county,deceased. This is to cite al! and -iiigular f he heirs and creditors of Join, R. Brown to he and appear ..f my office at the Jinn* term of tiie court of ordinary of said county and slum cause, if any they can, why permanent !< tier- of admin istration should not he granted to John T. Kava- I nugh on .John It. Brown's estate. Witness mv official signature this May *.!h. lshii. F. M. Hitt m IKK. myt.oawtw O rd i n a ry. Among the Northern Lakeit In<pi!rt rt'Kf nfid efijoyffient.and nun ri tn»nn*cr; of tlie liojited t.*nn completely rejuvei nred. I iu*h r CurriiiK season hriegs i*> < H’.on oiiiovmh-,\V>iiin<*slni. IL* ver Iliuii,Front< nacj)kol>*»jl. Miiinetonki.,\\ !ii'e Ihm olitnined. A 1 :«t of Hummer homcH v, pm .1 . .* • Infornmtlon nertalnlng thereto Ih liemg «1:1r 1 h Iliet.'IUeAGO.MlIAV ALKKK.Y ST.PaUL ItAlJ.WA Y.: • upon application by lette tin -1 -i 1 i.nit-1111 >t‘r of 111 i !i-i In -c 1 art i-th \i hiut.-i, 1 >a.. i- 11 “cn- li, !-in :i —t.iitficrncrbv i. 11 ni in the jum- ii-c, 1I year- ii'jo, nl 1111 early inre he timifl hi.i utteniioii to aft. Jlci.-bv iintui-c nil ui-iist, aid liis yen iv 01 -'inly nnd tuition in ea.-teni eities have ili-\c|o|.oil him ini' > one of the foiv- 111"-! voqii“ ilei'oi'aloiv . .1'}ii< time. Boinu vi-af',isjo he mini south to ilveofute tlie inli-rloi ii|'l!n-< iiliivl. of the Ilnitctiiatc ('oiii'ei'tioii, nl Alluiitu, and, 1 iLi 11the |iL-o|'le and ciiniute, di-tennineil to lomte .-outIi of .Mii.-oii ninl Dixon's lino. Since tlu-n lie l a- I joined bv his liiTitlu-iv, K. mid (ii-nfuo, and eluirelics and line lu e>]ii!“-in < * vi * ry I'fincijuil city of tlie -until atte-t t heir ability, enel'Ltv and ell- 11 - r j i r i se. ".My system," said Mi. Sheridan duriint ii fere nl i iiiveivution, "hud lioun for some time OKAt'U'.M.I.Y RCNNINO liOIVN, “J \vas not sick, in a “em ral sense of the nerd, 'ait n.v [ijiysieal strelltftii was fei-liiiLT the severe .train I had liet-n for years puttilur noon it in the active mon- 7:i! ,‘aiior iH'i'essary in tlie pitivtiit or' my avoi-atiiin. While ] have nut what is. termed a delicate constitution. I am by no mean- a robust fellow, and have what mielit lie called tlie‘Now England mold,’ physically. For some time past i had i-een lindng \igiif, when my attention was i-ailed to 1 lnmi'entt's Uhclimat ie ('are as a tAnie and strenifthenci" of the sys tem. 1 lietran itsin“ it about four weeks into and since that time have gained i Yht- and a half pounds in weight. My blood is as pit re as spring water and my entire system revitalized. I have no hesitancy in saving that it is the best general tonie upon the market to-day." JfDl.E THOMAS 1T1.LIM, now in liis three score and ten years, and ■ -in* of the most prominent men inGeor- “ia. burn and raised near Union Spritnrs, Ala., win-re lie amassed qliiti- a lovtune by strict integrity and lionesiy, and in inter yiars i-inineeteil with tin- wholesale ■ I ri iu house of I’omherton, J’u.'Ium .v Uo., of Atlanta, t ia.. and now a elli/.en ol tliiit city, said it low days ago in t/ie pri-.-euee ol'a reporter: "My wife laid in en for many years it eon.-lalil .-illl’erei iioin r’neumalistij. Her ji•:111- wen swollen and ili-loi led, grout knots hud formcil upon her inilnl. .-lie nmliI only with great difficulty and pain maniu't' to walk, and was a eon-tmit -ut- ti-rer from Ibis dreadful disease. We tried everything wi niiild read or hoar • •I, ti'n 1 funk ad .ice of eminent praeti- iiomTS uilhoiil any I'eiielil in the way of ; ermalienl reliel'. i was induced to try 1111nnii nlt s lilieumalie l ure a sinirt time A I I III It'oll I II All I.' '.VI l- AI rn ii) all patent ini-diejnes and nostnim- and eon-'iiiereil In-r '-a.,, incurable. "The i lli-cl was magical; the pains have en: irely vanishi *1: the swelling uinl dis tort inn of In-r joints ha- disajipeavei I, and the iii-ea-e has been, 1 verily ih■:it• vu. erai:ieiltcd fioin her sysleni. Sue is-till usiu“ the medieine us a precautionary measure, and In-r general good health is being re.-lured by it. I ran holm.-tly and l'i-iii Ii—ly reeiiinmenil 1 luniiieutt's iilieu- matie Uure us the best medieine for rheu matism ami tin- i >|i ii nl it, n >n the market.” For .-ale by wholesale and retail drug gists everywhere. I’riee, 6l a bottlo. Bend lo ii-or vour druggist for treat isl and history oft lie White Tiger. .1. M, 11umiii'iitt w Uo.. pn.iprietnrs, Atlanta, i,a. iel.lw W. S. GREEN, Ru j al Estate Agt. nm sai.i*:. low ii - Broad .street with ue active 21 ‘^o, off' quality ke anti meal $18 5u*a$19 00 per long ton. | Nev* York, May 31.-Cotton ^eecl oil—22 for crude. 29■» 30 lor refined. „ .tpj)lied i»f the saiif Terseh:truer * N hereby g'ven to all per- ii:.* guuriliuiiship ol the said rii:led will he \e-ud In the eu.ii’t, or 'nine other fit aud the pubib iition of this cita- r.nr weeks, unless valid ob- to hi- appointment, uj L awl ami offiei.il signature* this F. M. BROOKS. Ordinary.