Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, July 09, 1886, Image 3

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DAILY ENQUIRER - SUN, COLniEUS. GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 0, 1880. New9 from the Three States Told in Brief Paragraphs. Kiurlnwr Hoixiin ('nishciWiy Curs—Dentil of Or. A. .1. Fimoni—llcnlmrltls In » Jiill—A l.lttte <*lrl II urn oil In Ilrutii—Infuntlclilr in fiinmk— lirnurnl l*li I II|>k After .Indue II emlersmi's IIIUcIhI Sr»l|>. (leoruln. Mrs. R. T. Dempsey, a youug and esti mable lady of Rome, has just died, leaving a husband and little babe. Work has been commenced on the cot ton seed mills in Conyers. The brick are being put on the ground and the side track fs being graded. The company hope to be ready for operation by September 1 The Americus Republican says: In a cer tain town not a thousand miles from this city a Miss Mary Goodenough recently de clined to marry a Mr. Henry Toogood. We presume she declined because she was good enough anyway, and afraid that if i she became too good she might die young, : Sensible woman! 1 111 Macon, Monday morning, 6th inst., at 7 o'clock, at the union depot,Tope Hogan, an engineer on the Georgia railroad, think ing the train had stooped, stepped from the car, but slipped, the cars passing over a portion of his body, crushing one arm and a leg into jelly. He is in a very pre carious condition. Americus Republican : Dr. A. J. Fasom, an old and well known gentleman of Schley county, died at his residence, Friday morning, July 2d, at 4 o’clock, of pneuiuo- < nia. He was about 78 years old, but quite active and energetic for one of his age. He leaves many friends and relatives to mourn his loss. In Sumpter county, on Monday, the wife of Elisha Hollis, Colored, dropped dead on the place of Mr. ,1. C. Haney, near Friend ship. She was sitting in a chair at the time, anti without warning, tumbled over on tlie floor dead. It is supposed that she died of heart disease. Judge McKay has suspended until Au gust 10th the sentences of about fifty prisoners now confined in the jail of Ful ton county and convicted in the United States courts. The suspension was ordered on account of the spread of meningeiis in the jail. The general council of Atlanta, on Mon day night, adopted the best prohibition ordinance yet proposed. Tt punishes by fine and imprisonment any man found on the streets of the city in' an intoxicated condition. That makes each man respon sible ior his own conduct, without depriv ing others of their rights, H. M. Bland, of Emanuel county, has a curiosity in the shape of a worm! It has eight horns on top of its head about an inch long. The worm is about six or seven inches long, of a greenish color, with black horns half an inch long all over the body. Its head is shaned somewhat like that of a rhinoceros. It .ias eight legs about an inch long. It was found on a persimmon tree. In Jones county Monday the 11-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs'. J. W. Stripling was working about the wash place where her mother had a fire and was washing. Suddenly the girl went too near the five, her dress caught, and in an instant her body was enveloped in flames. The mother seemed too paralyzed to render much as sistance, and stood and watched the fire consume her child. After her clothing was extinguished, Dr. \V. C. Gibson, of Macon, was sent for and hurried out there, only to find the girl a corpse. Several days since the children of Samuel Ivey, living near C’amnk. while playing around an old well, had their at- tention attracted to a strange looking ob ject in the water below. Not being able to den lie what it was, they called a negro man to the spot, who secured a rope and hauled the object to the top. when the startling discovery was made that it was a new-born, well developed female child. It had evidently been in the well several days, as it was badly decomposed. Who put the child in the well, and whether it was alive when put there, are questions which the citizens of the neighborhood are trying hard to sol ce. Will Rylander was arraigned before the mayor’s court at Buena Vista, charged with assault with intent to murder Charles Park, colored. The negro was bound ov er to the superior court in the sum of ?75, which he gave and was released. Mr. Bar tow Williams came upon the two negroes Monday afternoon, and Will had Charles down, with one hand on the victim’s throat, and the other had bis knife drawn, swearing he would kill him. Charles had the wrist of his assalant’s hand which con tained the knife grasped tightly in both of his own and prevented the desperate man from cutting his throat, but lie succeeded in cutting Charles slightly in the breast. Mr. Williams made the negroes get up and caused them to separate, and no doubt saved Charles’ life, as liis antagonist was clicking him severely, and he could not have resisted much longer. Atlanta proclaims to the world Hint the prohibition law is in force there, when really and truly it is a mistake. It is true the bar-rooms are closed, but there are three or four wholesale liquor houses, with licenses extending as far as October, and these “vested rights” give them the right to sell by the quart, and they are doing so briskly and abundantly. It is not a fair test of the prohibition law by any means, and cannot be so regarded, as long us the wholesale houses, with open doors, are selling whiskey by the quart. These men will reap a harvest of dollars, and drunken ness will still prevail to a large extent. < >f course it is a great step towards prohibi tion, to have sixty-five bar-rooms closed, but the trade is only transferred to the wholesale fellows, who are feeling good over tlreir immense sales. Marietta Journal: General Win. Phillips, of our town, will be an applicant for state commissioner of agriculture. If any man deserves the position it is General Phillips. He has worked for the advancement oft lie agricultural interests of the state as in other man lias. He has been foremost in every good work and enterprise. He lead the movement that culminated in making Cobb the banner agricultural county, car rying off the $500 gold premium for the best county display at the Macon state fair. He has organized agricultural clubs in every district in this county, and ha* aided in doing the same in other counties lit- is now engaged in agrieuNural pursuits and is thoroughly acquainted with the farming interests and needs of the state, and being thus deserving the state could not place one more competent in charge of this important trust. Augusta Chronicle : Never before in tlie history of Augusta have there been so many buildings in course of construction at this season of the year ns there are at present. Besides innumerable small dwell ing houses and stores there is first the Contes Mills, a large yarn tactnry, being constructed on the first level of the canal, just opposite the basin. The factory, when completed, will he a three-story brick building, 25S feet long by 7fi feet wide. It will be completed and running by <fctn'icr 1st. Then there is the tobacco factory which is being erected by Rufu: Caitcr .V Co., just in the limits of Summerville, or the extension of Ellis street. Tile factory will be a substantial three-story brick building, 110 feet long by (>0 feet wide. Plug and smoking tobacco will be manu factured, and tHe mill will employ <:c. hundred hands. Also, one of the largest and most important is the ma: iiivtli com press being erected by Messrs. Doughty & Foster, This building is sit.ualed dwc'-tlv opposite the Central railroad freight depot, and occupies the entire square bounded by \\ asliington, Twiggs, Watkins and Walker streets. The press is one of tlie largest In the south, in tact beidg the largest Taylor press ever manufactured. This will' la- completed by September 1. Next comes an enormous building to be used ns a store house, which is being added to the Georgia Chemical Works. This build ing is 30 feet high and 430 feet long by 70 feet broad. and will be completed in a short time. Then there is the new Exchange building on the corner of Reynolds and Jackson streets an elegant i three-story brick structur- ' t i an orna mental front and side, an li, ion of thirty ; rooms to the Adkins house, on Ellis street: 1 the old Chronicle building, which is being remodeled and a new ornamental front | being put to it, which will be occupied by , Lexius Henson and fitted up os an elegant restaurant; Colclough’s new store, a hand- AVI) Duffy’s Raw Beef Formula For »YSPKI'NI A AM) IVIlKimillX. on lower Broad and on Telfair; the new Oliver Charitable building, a handsome brick structure with iron front, on McIn tosh street next to the post office, and many other buildings of both brick and wood. AIiiImiimh. Alabama now has three state tickets in the field—republican, democratic and pro hibition. Last week Mr. Mack Brown and Mrs. Patsy Howard were married in Shelby comity. Each one was 75 years old. There will he a meeting of the executive committee of the Shelby county bar asso ciation at Calera, on Thursday, the 8th of July. Business of importance will he trans acted, and each member is requested to be in attendance. I’liere was a religious meeting of eonsid- erablc interest at the Pottersvillc camp grounds last Saturday. On Sunday a very- large congregation was disappointed in the non-appearance of the minister, who was prevented by sickness in his family. The Alabama Pt-ohi itiouist says : Mr. Seay's lnith is much stronger than Peter's was, or he could never stand on that plat form. Peter stood on water. Mr. Seay stands on thin air. We wanted to put him on a water platform, but the dem ljon - oerats could not stand it. G. B. West, the Birmingham correspon dent of the Manufacturers Record, says: "With freights more favorable, the ’ move ment of iron to the west and northwest is better. Eastern demand shows continuous though moderate improvement. Iron quo tations are unchanged from last week’s re port.” We clip the following from the Troy Messenger: Mr. Eli Bashinsky, now in New York for treat-men for catarrh,writes his brother that the surgical operation necessary to his recovery has been success- folly and safely performed. His friends are relieved of anxiety and rejoice with aim. Mr. E. J. VanHoose left Troy Wednesday morning for New York city, whence he will sail on the 15th inst. for C'erro De Pasco, Peru, where he has employment as assayer and chemist with a gold and silve. mining company. We wish him a pleasant voyage and ail success in the far away land. At a picnic of colored people near Mossy Grove last Saturday the customary alter cation resulted in several pistol shots, a few clubbings and lunch warlike display. Antony McLane shot at \\[est McLure four times and succeeded in putting two balls into his coat—no blood shed. The courts will examine the matter. Mobile Register: Much interest is being manifested in Sunday’s excursion of Fire Company No. ti to Biloxi and the Camp Ground. There are a great number of Mobilians anxious to hear Sam Jones preach, and this promises to be the best opportuity they will have offered them for a long time to come. No doubt there will be a big crow d to go down on the excur sion. The, Mobile Register soys: Quite a breeze was created in the city court yester day morning, by a misunderstanding which occurred between Mr. Thomas W. Miller, plaintiff, and Mr. R. H. Clarke, de fendant's attorney, in a certain insurance ease. A remark was made by Mr. Miller concerning a witness for the defense, which Mr. Clarke interpreted ns reflecting upon himself, and which he resented. There seemed to be danger of a personal encounter, whe n several parties interfered, among them two brothers of Mr. Miller, and an attorney, all desirous of preventing a disturbance. The offenders against the dignity of the court were fined f50 apiece by the judge. Florida. Gainesville reports that watermelons Were never so plentiful and cheap. John McKinlay, whose demise had beer, looked for during tlie last few weeks, died iron, nervous exhaustion about midnight on June 28 at Pensacola. He was the old est. printer and journalist in the state. The Peiisaeolian turns its rules in honor of his memory. Some time has elapsed since the two lire engines arrived in Eustis, and though the proper preliminary steps were taken to secure an organized department, yet there seems to be nothing further done. Suitable buildings have been prepared for housing the engines. Captain Peake has the contract for re building Churboiik-r's corner, on Inten- dencia and Tarragona streets, Pensacola. Tne building will be a duplicate of the one destroyed. Captain Peake lost $3900 worth of property by tlie fire and had only insurance, while his entire stock of tools, save a two-foot rub . was burned. . 1 u.fcjwrauu mWMBW 1340 Moohe St., Philadelphia, Pa. Gentlemen—I have suffered with dys pepsia and indigestion for eight or ten years, and have tried patent medicines I with results wholly unsatisfactory. 1 find | your whisky a most excellent remedy and invaluable to those suffering from dyspep sia. D. W. MORGAN. 345 Park Avence Cincinnati. Ohio. | Dear Sirs t have hint dyspeiisin for 14 or 13 , years;, and your Duffy's Pure Malt Whisky has cured me entirely. It cures where all others I fail. 1 am thankful to you for it; have recom- I mended it, ami m.v friends are using it. j Ivins. EVELINE TARLTON. 929 Va.,Ave„ S. W, Washington, D. C\ I have improved rapidly since taking your Duffy's Pure Malt Whisky and Haw Beef For mula. 1 was a sufferer from indigestion and severe pain? in my chest and hack, and now they have almost entirely disappeared. My family are also taking both and have derived much benefit. 1 have gained li pounds in four weeks, it does nut seem possible, hut it is all owing to Duffy's Pure Malt Wh.sky. There is nothin;: to equal it. A. D. DI GANNK, Photographer. Ref.dsville, Wis,. June 5,1880. Dear Sirs—I am happy to vay that your Raw Beef Formula is oi the greatest value :is a cure for dyspepsia. I have been troubled with indigestion for about four years,and after using one bottle of >uur Duffy's Pure Malt Whisky, with the otucr ingredients liaiind, I feel much better. J. E. MEANY. East Orange, ,1. Dear Sirs 1 have iwd Duffy's Pure Malt Whi-ky and K w Beef Formula for disordered stomach, and have found them to be all you claim. 1 :ctl .-o much better that after taking a few dos^s I am not now taking anything. 1 have recommended them toothers, who have improved. ^ s. ,\i. LONO, Real Estate and Insurance Agent. i THE DUFFY MALT WHISKY CO.. Baltimore. Md 1*7 'The Duffy's Raw Beef Formula -utioned above is a special household application of the 1 metlirinnl virtues and purity of Duffy’s Pure Malt Whisky, and is intended to more specifically meet the requirements of those suffering from i Consumption. Dyspepsia, Indigestion. General Debility and all Wasting Diseases. In addition to the tonic effect of our whisky, it furnishes nn- , equaled blood-forming material, whereby the weight and strength me increased, A printed copy of this fovnutia. which consists principally . of raw beef and our Duffv's Pure .Malt Whisky, ! will be mailed to any address, under the Seal of the Company, upon receipt of a two-cent stamp. Or the preparation itself, in liquid form, as put up by us by a special process, me.king it the most 1 palatable and efficacious beef preparation ever j., ...... I-.,. ..n n- f ... <x■vi' tir < AIMT VI. PRIZE 875.000.-tt* Ticket*only 85. Share* in ]>r«|ioi‘lioi. Louisiana State Lottery Comp'y 1 "TTt Jo hereby certify that we supervise the nr- ; rangement .for all the Monthly and Quarterly : Drawings of The Louisiana State Lottery Com- I puny, and in person manage and control the I Drawings themselves, and that the same are con ducted with honesty, fairness, and in good faith toward all parties, and we authorise the Company to use this certificate, with facsimiles of our siy j natures attached, to its advci tisements." Font tier* We the undersigned Banks and Bankers wit pay all Prizes drawn in The Louisiana State Lot (cries which may be presented (tt out counters. .1. 11. OULEMIIV. Ini. Xnt'l Hank ,1. W. li I Utlt i:r II. PreN. Male Nat'I B*k i A. BALDWI N. Pros. N. O. Nul l Rank i Incorporated in 1S6S for 25 years by the Legisla ture for Educational and Charitable purposes- j with a capital of $1.000.000—to which a reserve I fund of over $550,000 lias since been added. * By an overwhelming popular vote its franchise I was made a part of the present .Mate Coustitu j tion, adopted December 2d. A. D. 1879. [ The only Lottery ever voted on and endorsed bj. I the people of any State, IT NEVER SCALES OR POSTPONES, i IN Grand Single .Number Draa iiiif* ' fake place Monllil.y. and the Extraordinary | Drawings regularly every three months, instead I of semi-annually as heretofore, beginning March. ! 1886. A SPLENDID OFPOIITI XITY TO WIN A F(IRTUNE. SEVENTH GRAND DRAW- 1 IXG. CLASS ii. IN THE ACADEMY OF MUSIC. NEW ORLEANS. TUESDAY, July 13th, 1 I886-I»4fli Monthly Drawing. CAPITAL I’VCIKi: 875.000. ! 100.000 Ticket* at Five Dollar** F.ncti Fractions in Fifths in |»ro|>ortioii. LIST OF PRIZES. i 1 CAPITAL PRIZE $75,000 1 do do 25.000 1 do do 10.000 2 PRIZES OF $6000 12.000 5 do 2 (t00 10.000 10 do 1000 10.000 20 do 500 10.000 100 do 200 20,000 , 300 do 100 30.000 500 do 50 25,000 1000 do 25 25.000 APPROXIMATE >N PRIZES. 9 Approximation Prizes of $750 6.75( 9 Approximation Prize?* »*f 50<> 4.500 9 Appv L.imation Prizes of 250 2.250 1967 Prizes, amounting to $265,500 Application for rates to clubs should be much only to the Cffice of the Company in N < 1 t cleans For further information write cleail.v, Riving fall address. l tfS l \ I. ’% fDM>*. Express Money Grdc vs. « i Now York Ex’hange in ordi nan- letter. Currency by Express it our ex pop.*«.• addressed .11. t. it tl'i'IIIN. \ v \* Orleans. 3.a. Or II. A. It A F 1*111 V. Washington. I*. ('. Make I*. «*. Money Ortlois j»n.vn»» ami a«l«lress Ken isterctl I.otters lo NF.W ORLI.i 5S N \ TION Al. HtNIi )el6 wed seVw |w New Orleans. Fa Crab Orchard WATER. Most (.i th< »lm*.TSt*v \ :ii<T. Miliy' lu oikmil are origin .ill; f.’im'od by >■ dis rdennl i’oij lit jo» of tin* LIVER. F-.r ill complaints of tics kind such tis Torpidity of the Liver, Biliousne-t-. Nervous Dyspepsia. Indigna tion. Ir egularity of the Bu.wls. C' inFtipation. Flatu lency Eructations m;l Burning of the St'.ni.uh (sometimes cnlDd Hear*bum) Miasma, Malaria, Bloody Flux. Chills lino Foot Broakhnne Fever. Exmusti-m be lore or it’tor Fever-*, Clironio Diar rhoea. Loss of Appetite Headache. Foul Broatb Irregularities incidental to FVimleh R-aring-down mm hr’s mmw is invaluable- It I notii panacea for nlldi-ensos but all diseases nf th* LIVER, vull y_V rijgi STOMACH laid ROWELS It changes tile coin;.1“xion from a waxy, yellow tinge, to a rtiddv. healthy color, ft entirely removes low. gloomy spirits. I*, is one of the BEST AL TERATIVES and '-Lb IFIERS OF THE BLOOD, and is A VaLUAo.F r ONIC. ST ADI CEP'S AUf? ANTI I Fox c ala by all Druggists Price si.00 pu bottle the I.IV1CH. the kidnkvs. the stomach. THIS HQ5VEL8 T l'dSITIVt: Cl'HE Full 4 3 DYSPEPSIA. ^ Constipation. < Sick Headache, w -(»ne to two teaspoonfuls. No Sealed puck aces at )"c. nn> genuine Salts »old in bulk. Crab Orchard Water Co., Prop'r*. S. N. JONES. Manager. Lr.ni-.vrde. Ky pfBiggerg HUCKLEBEKtY QlABSpA dysentery SL CHILDREN TEETHING At KIRVEN’S Summer Silks 25 cents; Pongee Silks 25’cenfs; Foulard Silks 40 cents; Printed Nun’s Veilings 15 cents; All Wool Buntings 15 cents; Linen Lawns 10 cents; „ Linen Drills for Punts 121 cents; Linen Crash (it cents; Gottonades for Hoys' Wear 8 cents; jMunillu Checks, new and desirable,"!21 cents White Linen de India 5 cents; While Plaid Linens 10 cents ; • A\ liite Plaid*Lineu de India 121 cents; White Linen Lawns 12, 15 and 20 cents. Good Bargains in Silk Umbrellas! PIIOFKNSIOX A l< FA RDM. I \K. GEO. McELHANEY, 1 " Resident DentiRt. Room No. 2,62' .^ Broad street, up stairs, ovei Wittlch & Kinsel’s. jalft-ly n Ti. (.', T. OSBURN, Dentist, iSuccessor to Dr. J. M. Mason.) Office next door to Rankin House. Same en trance ns Riddle's gallery. oc4-ly \\ r F. TIGNEIt, ?? • Dentist. 35 1 y Twelfth street iformerly Randolph street.) TRUSTEE’S SALE, Property of the Columbus Manu facturing Company, roniplofe mid Fully K<)iiip|>ed Folios Factory. Togrilier with Nearly m Rile of the Fluent Water Power the iTiattalioochee Hi ver, .liiMt Above the Fity of I'ttliiiiilMiM. By virtue of the power vested in us under tht j terms and conditions of a certain deed of trust ; executed to the unriersignefb .1. Rhodes Browne and A. Illgcs. trustees, by the Columbus Manu facturing Company, of Muscogee county, state of i-Georgia, dat.M March 1, 1884, whereby the said J corporation c >n\eyed to us all of the property, real and peisonul, hereinafter described, in trust, to secure the payment of its certain issue ot bonds and the interest coupons thereof as in said trust deed speeilled and enumerated all of which ' appears duly of record in Mortgage Deed Book “A." folios 367 to 373, March 5, ISHt, in the Clerk'* 1 office of Superior Court. Muscogee county, Geor- l gia. and in Record Deeds, volume O O. pages 8) | to 88 inclusive, .March 22, 188-1, office ol the* Pro- 1 bate Court in tlu» county of Lee, state of AJ»- | bnma, and in conformity with tlie directions and j term- prescribed in the resolutions passed by the ' holders of said bonds on April 21, 1886, under the ' authority conferred by said deed of trust.) ! We will sell in the city of Columbus, Muscogee county, Georgia, on the 3*1 day of August, 1886, between the legal hours of sale, in front of the 1 auction house of F. M. Knowles & Co., on the northwest corner of Broad street and Tenth , iformerly Crawford street), ibeing the usual place for shentPs sales in said city of Columbus) at 1 public outcry, to the highest bidder, for cash, the following described property of the Columbus Manufacturing Company, to-wit.: All those lots and parcels of land situated, lying and being as i follows; Fractional section number twenty-six *i 1261 and the north half of fractional section num- 1 her thirty-live <35), both in fractional township number eighteen . 18<, range number thirty (30), ’ in formerly Russell, now Lee county, state of ' Alabama. Also the following lois of lands lying ; ami being in the eighth (8th) district of Muscogee county, state of Georgia, known as lots numbers eighty-six • HO• and eighty-seven (87) and tlie west ; half of lot number seventy-four (74) and fractions numbered ninety-one -flit and ninety-two (92), and Island number three (3: in Chattahoochee river and a small enclosure situated east of the j residence formerly occupied by J. R. Clapp, used ! as a residence and grazing lot, containing seven 71 acres more or less. All of said lands last cle- i scribed lying and bein^ in the county of Musco gee and state of Georgia, and, together with said hinds in Lee county. Alabama, containing eight hundred and thirty <830’ acres more or less. Also, all of the said Columbus Manufacturing Company’s buildings on said land in Muscogee county. Georgia, operated as a Cotton Factory, and with all of the improvements in any manner appendant and appurtenant thereto, inclusive,o v the cards, spindles, looms, machinery and fix tures of every kind whatsoever contained in said buildings; also, all and singular the other im provements on all of the lands aforementioned and described; also, t he eiit i re water power owned and controlled by said Columbus Manufacturing Company on and in said Chattahoochee river, together with all and singular the rights ana franchises by the said Columbus Manufacturing Company held and possessed therein under the laws of (leorgia. The plant of said cotton factory consists at present of 4344 spindles, 149 looms and other suit able machinery, all in good condition and pro ducing good work. Present capacity 7500 yards « day of ncavy sheetings and shirtings, three yards toft he pound. Tlie operatives’ houses and improvements gen erally in excellent condition, labor abundant, lands elevated and location of property unsur passed for health, convenience and economical production free from the burden of municipal taxes paid by all the other Columbus mills, yet within three miles of the city of Columbus and three-quarters of a mile of Columbus and Rome railroad The water power is the finest in the south, controlling and embracing the whole bed of tlie Chattahoochee rivet for the distance of about one mile along the lands of said company, said lands extending along its banks upon the Geor.' ft ••*>,! Alabama side* of the river. Only a smalf portion of the watei power is required and utilized in running the present mill, and the nat ural bills in the river render but a simp., iuojt pensive dam of logs and plank necessary. TMi- magnificent water power is easily controlled*Mio has a fall of42L. - forty-two and a half) feet vithin three-quarters of a mile. With a compare i tively small expenditure upon a new dam 125.00£ one hundred and twenty-five thousand, spindles, with looms in proportion, can be driven by tbit i water power. Capita) for the erection of addi tional mills and utilization of the immense , f power now wasted is all that is needed to makt. this property the site of v. prosperous and popu I lous manufacturing village. The personal inspec- ; tion of capitalists is invited. Full and sat infant* We n’ccivi* new hid- daily, thus k< and cuni|lii'ta. iy r nur stuck fi'csl J. A. KIRVEN & CO The Brown Cotton Grin Go. ROANOKE COLLEGE, IN THEVIRGINIA MOUNTAINS CLASSICAL and S-*k-:uilit « ...u-rs •'u Al-o, Rum’ih sn and Preparatory <oup-e-. attention lo Fiu’i-L. Frma B . .)<! « U t in. Instruction thorough at..I pi.am.d. I. (Mia voiiniR-. < .o liter u v *nci, ' it B F\p ; mi* C. F- STAPiCEft, Proprietor, IdQ fe ” *• 1 Lr» • •<. nr. NEW LONDON, CONN. Manufacturers of the “‘>1-1 Il«*lial»K*’ > Brown Cotton Gin-. Feeders urnl Coil- All the very latest improvements: Ini- pr<*ve'i r«»li patent whipper, two brash belts, extra sfomr Lru.-li. cast steel bearing’- inipr'»ve«l Feeder. enlai-g' 1 ’ .uist pros' omlenser. .ii)<>;,simpfeb' .^n-f rtii'ti« ru durable lig a t. . . :i'i p: "lUci-5 tii'-t ci s Suuip'.c*. DEi,i\ i:i: i:d rinir.pi KRi KdiT nt utiy iiect—able point. Jscud for full description uttd price list. ap27-d3m J. RHODES A. ILLGE8, SdPTLIISrO O-OOZDS1 Spring Fashion Plates, GOODS! Suits Made to Order, CLOTHING! CILOTGTITTCG! ( tOME and give us ymu order. Do not wait tiL you aie pressed by the season, and then want a suit made in a hurry. We arc prepared, how ever. to get up suit- at very short notice. If you want a suit quick, give us your order. If you want it mi it in thirty days, give us your order. If you want a .-nit in sixty days, give us your ordei G. J. PEACOCK, THE smeust SVUIVEL PLOW. THE BEST SWIVEL PLOW IN USE. Equally good en Pool land. No farmer Should iic with.,m oi,,*. m iu! for free llhm- trnted Ciitnloune mnl A linnnnc, SYRACUSE CHILLED PLOW CO. SYFfACUSE. NEW VOHK ;<)X Wot IKS. Ai Cil.