Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, September 08, 1886, Image 3

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■wmwwM.j BwBBBBBa w DAILY ENQUIRER - SUN. COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 8, U86 News from the Three States Told in Brief Paragraphs. A Koetor Driven tn Insnnlty by the Knrtli<iuiik<>, A Strike on tin- Mobile mill West Alubnnm Hull* roml-KIght Hmiclretl Witnesses In o m . (use. 1’olttlcH III the Stntes. “CHUMPS” Who Gather in the Ducats at the Expense of Suffering Humanity. L Georgia. Hon. J. E. F. Matthews has been no mi- nated for the legislature in Upson county. Rome received her first bale of new cot> ton on Monday. Tuesday night caused one of the walls of the police headquarters to crack. Dr. J. C. Olmstead, of Atlanta, has been appointed surgeon of the Georgia railroad The earthquake that shook Atlanta It. is said that the farmers of southwest Georgia have resolved to pay only thirty cents per hundred to cotton pickers. Captain Barnwell made the first ship ment of new rice from the Altnmaha river country on Sunday last. The St. Nicholas carried up 600 bushels. In Newton county there are live candi dates for sheriff: Steve Davis, H. B. An derson, W. B. Griffin, James H. Richards and Ransom Hodge. The nomination comes off on September 26. There were three fires Monday morning within an hour in the eastern part of Savannah, and a disastrous conflagration was only prevented by the hard work of the five department, ns a strong wind was blowing. J. H. MeUarty was Monday appointed solicitor oi the county court of Douglass county, vice W. T. Roberts, resigned. R. C. Jordan was appointed solicitor of the county of Pulaski. In the primary election held on Friday, Hon. R. F. Watts was nominated to repre sent Stewart county in the next legisla ture. His ooponents were Col. James A. Fort and Rev. W. D. Joiner. Dr. D. Munroe Buchan, n practicing physician near Dubois, was Monday ad judged a lunatic by the ordinary, and ordered to the asylum at Milledgeville. Dr. Buchan has been in a state of mental aberration since the earthquake. John Newton, a iourteen-year-old white boy, was locked up at police headquarters in Atlanta Monday night, on the charge of being insane. About a week ago he was found near a circus tent, acting and talking in such a way as to show that he was insane upon the subject of religion. He was confined at police headquarters all night, and in the morning his mother lock charge of him. Monday night he became so violent that he had to be turned over to the police for safe keeping. Greenville has declar'd quarantine against Biloxi. Gen. Thos. N. Fowler died at Mobile on Monday from the effects of two car buncles on his neck. Eight hundred witness suhpwnp.s have been issued in the Norris vs. Shell contest suit at Greenville tor the circuit clerkship, ; to commence in the probate court to-day. It is thought that the case will consume about three weeks time. On Saturday last one J. A. Morgan, a traveling painter who has been at Talla dega for some time, mysteriously disap peared, and since has not been heard of. He was known to have a large amount of ! money in his room and it is feared that there has been foul play somewhere. Jason G. Jones was tried at Abbeville Friday for the killing of Mr. Pete Thomas in 1882. He was defended by Hon. W. C. Oates, and Hon. A. H. Thomas assisted Solicitor Lee in the prosecution. The jury went out Friday night, and in an hour re turned a verdict which placed Jones in the penitentiary for one year. He had been out on bond, but is now in the custody of the sheriff. Superintendent Palmer has made the following appointments to Peabody schol arships to the Nashville Normal College: Miss Pauline Reese, Auburn; Miss Lena L. Meadars, Lafayette; Mr. C. L. Garrison, j Chulafinnee; Miss Fina Whitson, Eclectic; j Mr. W. T. Freeman, Troy; Miss Janie L. Greene, Birmingham; Miss Bessie M. Haley, Jasper; Miss J. Carrie Beard, Orr- i ville; Miss Annie Jones, Dale county, and | F. E. Christopher, of Choctaw county. These scholarships entitle the holders to tuition and board free. to be paid out of the Peabody education fund. The Mobile correspondent of the Mont - gomery Advertiser savs: The work on the ' main line of the Mobile and West Alabama road began this morning, and was made more remarkable by a strike among the colored laborers. These men were origi nally hired at ¥1 a day. but the wages were voluntarily raised to ¥1.25, at which rate large gangs worked for two weeks. Now, when the main line work is entered upon, they demand |2. With hundreds of idle negroes desiring to work at a dollar and even less, it was the worst thing the gang could do. for the whole lot was at once discharged and another gang put in its place. The latter is working under the guard of a number of deputy sheriffs around with rifles, while the discharged hands declare they will force them to stop. What will be I he out come, it is impossible at this hour to state. The force of deputy sheriffs will be in- creased to-morrow, if necessary, ana if this proves ineffective, the company will begin work at the other end of the line in Wash ington coulitv. This will deprive some five hundred Mobile negroes of work. Florida. Wiley Sheppard, of Columbia county, has lost all his meat hogs this year from cholera. The post office department will estab lish an office at Columbia City, in Colum bia county. Messrs. Hinckley & Fuller have per fected arrangements for a lino of steamers between Tampo and Mobile. David Sibley, of Apalachicola, was hit- ten on the foot by a scorpion a few .days since, and he is mute indisposed there - from. The saw' mill belonging to Thorne & Coombs, of Welaka, was totally destroyed by fire Friday morning. No one can ten how the fire originated. After daily and nightly meeting for six weeks the Methodist revival at. Sanford has closed. Thirty-eight joined the Methodist church and six other churches. Just before the shock of the earthquake occurred on Tuesday evening the cows at Garrett Vanzant’s place, near Lake City, became very restless in their pens, making strange noises, moaning, lowing, At Madison the countv convention nominated for the senate Hon. C. • Stevens, and for the assembly Messrs. J. J. Walker, M. H. Warring and G. B. Havens. Resolutions endorsing the demo cratic platform were passed. Saturday night Bryant Merely, a mulatto living near Live Oak, was shot at that plaoe while tryine to enter the house t J. H. T. Bynum. The bullet, a pistol hull, entered near the heart, and the last repo heard was that Mosely would die. While some cattle were being taken aboard the steamer Smith, at Bristol, \\ » Florida, Monday morning, a colored dec k hand, Willis Hartman, familiarly known among his colaborers as Buckshot, was chased over the boat guards by a co.v an drowned. The officers of the steamer re port that he never rose afteT sinking .e- neuth the water. Tlie Glaring Gall r.vlilhitcil !>,y 1‘1'Olcssloiiitl B ranilN. — I The country is flooded wit! ■ s.ps medicine men, and in a few cases, u .eavy capital is all ihe> have to sustain their prestige. Numerous cleverly concocted certificates are forced upon t he unsuspecting, purporting to have "snatched from the grave" some poor victim of blood poison, or other disease, when to our knowledge, the identi- ! cal persons luy groaning in agony while the pub lic were reading of tlieir remarkable recovery. Another serious olfense is the publication of i erroneous statements concerning various drugs, such as are daily prescribed by our best phy sicians, declaring them to be deadly poison. Iodide of potash, which seems to receive their greatest condemnation, when prescribed by phy sicians, and in the proper combination with cer- tuin compounds, is not only harmless, but forms one o the most powerful antagonists to blood poison known to the medical world. B. B. B ■ Botanic Blood Balm > contains iodide of potash ThiH company holds hundreds of genuiue certifi cates from persons who have been cured of vari ous diseases arising from an impure state of the blood by the use of B. B. B. The question now is, if iodide of potash is such a terrible enemy to health, why is it that the Blood Balm Co. have ni!«le within three years the most gigantic sales and cures ever before made on American soil ? A GENEROUS PROPOSITION. •AVe arc credibly informed that the Blood Balm , Co., Atlanta. Ga., proposes to cure any of the fol- , lowing complaints for one-third the money and ! in one-half the time required by any known remedy on earth. The diseases embrace all :orms of Scrofula and Scrofulous Uhcrs and Tumors, all ! stages of lib od Poison, Rheumatism, Catarrh, Skin Diseases and Humors, Kidney Affections, chronic female complaints. Eczema, etc. Send to I them for a book tilled with the most wonderful cases on record, mailed free to any address. ! WONDERFUL ULCERS. _ , Atlanta, Ga., June r>, 3886. ' In 1878 there came on my hund wlmt was thought to be a carbuncle, which ran its course ! several months, broke and finally healed. The next spring knots, orknoefes, came on my arms, • which were thought to be rheumatic, and 1 took gallons ot medicine from the best physicians in Cuthbert, Ga., where I then resided. About this time my lell limb below the knee i commenced swelling at a fearful rate, and finally came to a head and broke. Both urms were sore, and f could hardly bear my weight standing, and 1 hardly know how I managed to live through it i ail. About this time we moved from Cuthbert : to Atlanta I began to despair of ever getting well; the sore on my litnb was a regular eating ulcer, now about three inches in length, two | inches in width, seeming to be down to the bone , and discharging about a cupful of pus < mutter 1 per day, my arms still running, my sleep dis- i turbed, ami I sometimes thought 1 would lose my | 1 reason. A friend recommended B. b. B. I commenced ! its use. and 1 saw an improvement from the very I first. I have now taken • or “ bottles, and my arms are entirely well, and flu large ulcer on my 1 limb has healed. 1 now feel like a new person, | tln.nks to such a noble remedy. B. B. B. Mrs. Fannie Hall. 100 West Baker Street, Atlanta, Ga. j A l!ook of Wmulors. Free. All who desire full information about the cause andcureof Blood Poisons,Scrofula and Scrofulous Swellings, Ulcers, Sores, Rheumatism, Kidney Complaints, Cutarrh, etc., can secure by mail, free, a copy of our 32-page Illustrated Book of Wonders, filled with the most wonderful and startling proof ever before known. Address BLOOD BALM CO, d2taw se&w too col nrm Columbus, Ga., August 1, 1880. O N and after this date Passenger Trains wi run us follows. Tains r doilv; t daily e? cept Sunday. ’I he standard time bv which tl r - Trains run i.*, the same ns Columbus city time. COLUMBUS % Iron Work Leave Columbus Arrive Macon,.., “ Atlanta. “ • Montgomery “ Knfuiln “ Albany Milieu “ Augusta " Savannah .12 00 ml-llUS pm 1 ;ts p m +.7 .T> a m • |” : 9 35 p mi* 1 35 p in •i * 7 2.1pm * 11 10 p m’ • 2 15 p m ; 3 00 a nv * 1 13 p m . - H 15 n m ‘ 3 15 p ni .i* 6 6f> a m I 07 pm OOMPA1TY, Columbus, Passengers for Hylvania, SunderviUe, Wrights- villo, Milledgeville and Katonton, Thonmstou, Carrollton Perry, F6rt Gaines, Talbott on, Buena Vista, B ukely and Clayton should take 11 45 p m train. Leave Macon “ Atlanta “ Montgomery “ Eufaula “ Albany “ Milk if Augusta Snv n:\h_. . 1 10 00 a m * 7 15 j) m .1* 6 00 a ni:* 3 10pm . 1 [* 7 10 a m . * 10 55 a m .i* 5 40 a 12 00 m .(* 11 00 p II! > 12 00 ill * 010am s' :0 p ni'* 8 to a m 2 2) pm * 2 13 a in Georgia. FOUNDERS kE MACHINISTS -DEALERS |IN- D/VLnll VU.. Atlanta, Ga. CLINCMAN’S rOBAGCO REMEDIES THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO 01HTMEKT . . mo-t vff ^ - yvr; pki phca- *| ION on the m-irKet lor A Sl iii; < l 1(1) for fu lling lU.-h. Has never lolled to give prompt relief. Will .-me A mil Ulcers. Absce b s, 1-i tiiia Tetter S: It Idu uni Bniher’s Itch. Kitik- w■ »rn»—. Pimples. Seres and Bulls. Prirt* .jOcle. THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO CAKE wrriir.’s own iMwiiajY.nin'- nil Wounds Cuts. Bruises. .Sprains. Erynpeln* Boils, Carlmnckfb. Bone Felon*-. 1 h evs b(.ies. S« re F.ji-h, Sore Throat.Bunions U'orns. AYurugi'i Iihuunrithm, . Rheumatic Gout Colds, ^— L ‘ lk I»eer, Snake mid Dog Bites In fact Allays all loud Irritat^ TH ECU NGMANTOBACCO P L ASTER INf 'KI'.lMllNTS compounded with the purest Tobacco Flour, and is rperinll.v recommended for Group Weed or Cake ot the Brbhut, and iorthni chins of irritant or inflammatory inuladies Aches and Pains where, from too delicate ft state of the system, the patient is unable to bear the stronger application of the Tobacco Cake For Headache or other Aches and Pains, it is invaluable. Price 15 els. Ask your druggist fur these remedies, or write to the CLINGMAN TOBACCO CUBE CO. DURHAM, N. C. U. S. A. Arrive Columbus Sleeping Cars on all night trains between Co lumbus and Macon, Macon and Savannah, Ma con and Atlanta. Savannah and Macon, and Sa vannah and Atlanta. Tickets for all point* and Sleeping Car Berths on sole- at Depot Ticket Office G. A. WHITISH DAT), Gen’l Puss. Agent. ('. W. MEYFR, Ticket Agent. gugl tf t > hi.?K \. At a.. May 8th, 18PB. ( sN’ ami after Sunday, M;i • fitli. 188,', t lie trains 1 “ on thir road will be run us follows; \«». S. Leave Columbus 854am Arrive Opelika lu 20 a in No. *2. Leave Opelik a .10 40 a m Arrive Columbus n 55 a in No. :i. Leave Columbus 2 28 p rn Arrive Opelika i 58 p in No. I. Leave Opelika.... 5 05pm Arrive Columbus 6 31 p m So. 5, Leave Columbus 7 30 a m Arrive Opelika ... 9 43 a ni Arrive Good water 6 02 p m No. «. Leave Goodwuter « 00 a m Arrive Opelika 10 16am Arrive Columbus 1 09 p m No. 7. Leave Columbus 1 45 p m Arrive Opelika 3 38 p m No. H. Leave Opelika 4 13 p ra Arrive Columbus 5 54 p m The night trains are discontinued for the preo* ent. A. FLEW ELLEN, dtf General Manager ■i'ijii't mniE railway co. Office General Manager. * CoLUMntjs, Ga.. July 18th. 1886 1 f vN and afterSundav. July 18.1886, the schedule • / of Mail Train will be as follows: No. 1—Going North Daily. Leave Columbus 3 00 p m Arrive at Chipley 5 01 p id Arrive at. Greenville 6 07 p m No. 2—Coming South Daily. Leave Greenville 7 00am Arrive at Chipley 8 02 am Arrive at Columbus 10 11 a m No. 3—Freight und Accommodation—North. Leave Columbus 7 oo a m Arrive at Chipley 9 32 a ra Arrive at Greenville 11 10 a m No. 4—Freight and Accommodation—South. Leave Greenville 3 55 p m Arrive at Chipley 4 so p in Arrive at Columbus 7 07 p m W. L. CLARK. Gen’l Manager. T. C/S. HOWARD. Gen’l Ticket Agent. feb24 diy Printing, Book-Binding Paper Boxes OF EVERY DESCRIPTION AT LOWEST PRICES. 4 LARGE STOCK of all kinds of PAPER, in- ;\ eluding Letter, Packet and Note Heads, B0 Heads, statements, always on hand. Also Ei- velc»pes. Cards. Ac., printed at short notice Paper Boxes of any size or description not kep in stock niflde at snori notice. tiioft. off.nrnt\ tf 42 Randolph Street, opposite Post OfHce. Hollins Institute, ■vii^a-insriA.. Limo, Shinglos, rirossod and Malchixl Coiling and Flooring and oilier Lumber. Specially made of Dress ing Lumber for oilier parties. /“VURE Biliousnsss: Sick Hondr.che lnf<wrSai»rj \G) 0ns doso relieve: [inrKis!.'.. They e.i'B «io; provont Cldlls Fovcr, Sour Stomach ffas Brsaih, Cloar iho Skm. To:’’ I he N vos, anil <j‘ .1,0 .■* Vigor ,o the system. nnaoiONli IIKV.V Trv them' once and you will never bo without thorn Prico, 26 cents por boltlo. Sold by Cruppisls •■'no. Medicine Dealers gener.ill,. Som on receipt u. price In stamps postpnld. ,o any address, ... F. SMITH dfc CO., Manufacturers and Sole Props.. ST. LOUIS, M(h THE FAMOUS BRAND OF AGENTS FOR Royal Pumps, Judson Governors, Eberman Feeders, Standard Injectors, Hancock Inspirators and BROWN COTTON GINS. MANUFACTURERS OF Stratton’s Improved Absorption Ice Machines, Saw Mills, Pumps, Hollow Ware, Syrup Kettles, I, Ml AND THE CELEBRATED Golden's Improved Iron Screw Cotton Press. OLD MILL PURE OLD RYE Thin whbky wa^inlroilix ed originally in tho y«‘iw 1H52, and Ih f.onsrniitly making new friends, ltu tin* product of Hit* most approved process of dintilv atinn, from •■arefully selected grain, being held uni formly in warehouse until fully matured uy age, ie justly celebrated for its purity, delicacy of flavor ami uniform quality. For Male, and orders solicited by the agent, T. M, FOI.EY, Opera Hhiihc, Cor lUtli Street and lat Avenue, C’olumbuH, Ga*-. SEA FOAM ALL FIRST-CLASS StoreleBpers hbw keep it for Safe: This cut is an illustration of u tiold«n'N Improved Iron Hereur Cotton Pretm/* erected In the most substantial and convenient manner. It is »imple in construction, and so well illustrated by the cut, that scarcely a word is needed by way of explanation. Being simply an Iron Nrrew and IVn# substituted for wood, the wood work of its construction, and the manner of operating it, are substar sfantially the same as in the old style of wooden plantation screw, but the timbers required are not so heavy or long. Most planters of experience prefer the wooden screw to any of the more modern Cotton Presses in use, but the difficulty and uncertainty of controlling labor and mechanical skill in the season of the year most convenient to the planter for their erec tion, usually renders it a matter of economy, as well as necessity, with him, to buy some kind oi Press that requires but little mechanical skill to put it in operation. ^doldeii’H Nerew,” 1h a sort of compromise between the old style of wooden screw and the modem Cotton Press, combining the principal advantages of the former with the convenience and economy of the latter. It can he operated with greater facility than the wooden screw, and the rapidity of its performance, like tlia t of the wooden screw, or any other press, depends upon its management—as on the old style screws some planters would pack ten bales, and others thirty or thirty-five bales per day. Any ordinary mechanic who can make a good plantation gate, or common plow stock, can do the wood work. Within the last eleven years we have made and sold * great many of these screws, and have yet to hear of the first one that has not given entire satisfaction. We furnish all the Iron Work for these Screws, of which we make two sizes, and fully warranted. WESTERN RAILROAD Of MU, The First-('.lass Direct I’oiih* Id nil KiisbTii (iitius—308 Miles; Sliorlcr Id New York Ilian via bDiii sville. TO PARENTS. Many hairing powders are v^v pomicioiri to health, u:nl while every one regards ftls own, he should also have a care for the ones—the little children. SKA rOAUI contains none of the had qualities of hnk.vig:r iwnvd'TN soda or saleratus. It. contains tot. hurtful Ingredient—no alum or ammonia. All Chonriststfvho have analyzed Rea Fonn - commend it. Housekeepers wliD have used i.* will li.ive no other. Cooks, whose l>e»t effort*- have failed with other powders, are jnbiln/j- o\ «»r! «*a Foam. Saves time, saves /«/>or,Kawr . M It i positively tinequalod. Absolutely puiY' Used bv Hie lending hotels and restaurant'f lu New York city mid throughout the country. For talo by all first class grocers. ^ GANTZ, -TOyICS ,( CO., T1U Dvinie St., T». IM. RICE, For is ye’it* of 37 Court Place, now at *!A!:±K ( "rMville,l cri -"ifoio ajjS“*s£xuSli V- Df EL. fiS. , , T & p.ii'jiui.torrlAoa who Impotoncy - t ,.,ii • ,’ !••,i ■* in youL.. •■emit la <i:a u ,., , ,1.1 i > lu- • * niaof o. v, . ■ : 1.1 • • i. ; ■ (oifh mh Hi.., • . I . , ID . . • -f SiRlit, lJ.-lr.-lii. MiHinr/.rhf , SYJP tilJu IS ! ’ Go'/iorrho^, l"*claln ,1 l- II. 1 . nil c Mirl U l» lu • :.o be uei riV-ii. Close connection made with Piedmont Air Line, Only 37 hours and 20 minutes from Montgomery P from New York to Montgomery. July 18, 1886. Atlantic Coast [.in No. 53 and <.'ir.cinnati Southern, only 36 hours and If) minutes No. 55 QULD MEBAL, PARIS, 181 BAKER’S Warranted absolutely pul Cocoa, from which the excess Oil has been removed. IthafGAn tin'C8 the strength of Cocoa nfixe with Btarch, Arrowroot or Buga and is therefore far moreeconon »i leal, cotsting less than one cent ■i. It is delicious, nourishin, ngthening, eueily d lfW tec and a .'mirabiy adapted fortnva. Is as well as for persons in healtt Sold by tiroceri everywhere % -T*. Dornliester. Mass young laities, is fineli equipped. Languages. . Literature, Seif nee, .Music, Art, are taught uiuler 1 1 high standards by gentlemen and ladies of broad culture and elevated character. It employs over i twenty-five officers and teachers, and commands I “ the further advantage of salubrious mountain Arrive climate, mineral waters, charming scenery. Leave From year to year its accommodations are fully ] Arrivi occupied. ** The Forty-koukth annual session will open on .* the 15th of September. For further information apply at Hollins P. O., Virginia. ., CHAR. H. COCKE, jy6 2tawtsepl5 Business Agent. 1C FOR RENT. Greensboro Marion Selma ! Montgomery I Montgomery - 30 p ni Cowles 1 10 53 p m Chehaw D 20 r*ni Notasulga I U 47 pm Loachnpoka t 1203 (jpelika. H 20 a m 9 18 a m| 9 3 it n m 9 53 a m 10 0-1 a m J2 22 a m 10 17 a ni 12 10am 1030am 7 45 a in 10 35 a m 1 50 p in 2 15 p 111 3 01 p m 4 00 p ill 5 35 p ill 8 05 p ill 11 I i in : Cel u ni bus ; ; West Point j 1 37 i LaGrange ! 2 14 i HomeSchool ATIIKNN. GEOKtllA, Madams S Sosnowski, l^s^ociate Principals. Miss C. Sosnowski, J ... . , r■ iHE Scholastic year re-opens on Wednesday, I September 22d, 1886. Best educational ad- vantages offered to young ladies. For eircular of information apply to the above. jyb dtsep22 EDUCATSs BUSINESS l in;- School is the best ni America. The most i radical course of in struction and the most .eminent faculty. Bn- fdorsfd by business booses. For circulars and specimens of Pen* uutDtihip. address MOBG.-.FJ. goldsmith, Principal j The Dessau Dwelling. Rose Hill. ' The Dessau Store, Rose Hill. , New Five-Room Dwelling. Rose Hill. I The Newman Dwelling, Rose Hill; six rooms, kitchen and stable. j The Pavilion, Rose Hill, only Pleasure Resort j about Columbus. 1 The Jordan Brick Dwelling, North Jackson St. Interior Handsomely Finished. Plumbing for Gas a ul Water. Bath rooms and Closets. I Mr. George Glenn's New Two-story Dwelling, ! North Jackson St. Six looms, Bath Room, Closita, j Hot and Cold Water and Gas. j The Harrison Dwelling tyid Farm, Beallwood. j Store north of Epping House, Broad St. 8 54 a in i 11 17 a mj 11 50 a m 12 54 p m: Atlanta 6 no am 2 26pm i;i the Piedmont Air Line to New York and East. | (-Atlanta I 7 40am| ; Charlotte ! 6 25 pi Curofi Guaranteed in all Caset under taken. „ , ( ■/Miu.'Citious |H!(Monr>ll7 or by letter free «a<l Cbai/.-j i. us«ui»blo Hint lorreapoudence btriclly cuLlia«uU<iu PRIVATE COUNSELOR or 200 put to uuf luldronfi, arourelj •enlod, lbr<hjrb Richmond .... Washington. Baltimore ... Philadelphia. New York Iiiutii V*ala«M South Bound 'Trains, 7 00 a m 3 37 ]> 8 no i 9 35 a 111, 2 40 p m| 8 40 p rn 6 20 f on frniii 53. MonlKora r.v *s» Washing^ •' No. 50 ) No. 62 j” No. i iit Iioii t No. 12 I tiiiiiigr No. 64 ~ L. II. CHAPPELL, Broker. I!«il Estate and Insurance Afreet dtf FOR SALE, r | 'HE VERY DESIRABLE FIVE' (5) ROOM | residence* of W. A. Iledd on Jackson street. One-half U ; acre. Termsmoet liberal. Apply at once to HOULE REDD, btpldlui Broker. Leave Atlanta L< ave Columbus Opelika “ Auburn “ Loachapoka.. “ Notasulga “ Chehaw “ Cowles Arrive Montgomery.. Leave Montgomery.. Arrive Selma Leave Selma Arrive Marion Greensboro. . 1 15 pin, 11 30 pm 2 28 p in j fl 08 | 5 21 | 5 35 i 5 46 i 4 30 a 1 45 a 5 00 a 5 13 a 5 32 a 5 52 a 7 00 a Akr lo SI ire vc* p( Leave Vicksburg... i Arrive Monroe Shreveport ii) 8 45 a in 8 20am i 12 30 pm 10 50 urn 1 05 p m 10 55 p m . 3 lip np 12 20 pm 4 44 p m 1 10 p ni • I 6 00 p m 2 05 p in 7 09 p m 11 15 p m 11 30 p m 4 22 a m 6 50 a m 7 20 a iu advertisers: Can learn the exact cost, of any proposed line of advertising in American Papers by addressing: Geo. P. Powell A Co. t , NowfHpnper Advertising Bureau.. lO Spruce St., New York. Send lOots for lOO-oaae Pamphle*' © has taken the lead It? lion, MURPHY BROSL .. . Paris, T«*.- O has won the lavor oft the public and now rank. - among the leading liradford, Pfc‘ ■ Sold by Dru^gisU. Price #1.00. N Sun- Trains 50, 51. 52 and 3.1 daily. Train* 1,2, il and 12 daily except Sunday. Train H only. Truio* 50 and 61 connect at <ftiehaw with Tui kepet* Railroad. 3 rains 52 and 53 Pullman Palace Buffet Car between Nov urlcans and W’ashingtou without E.unye, C1IAK. H. CROMWELL. CECIL GAB CHIT, Gouerc.1 Manager. General Passenger Agent EW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY 0F MUSIC Boston, Mass,. THE LARCEST and BEST EQUIPPED fnt&i - WORLD — luO Instructors, 2UU.» Students last year. Thor- ough Instruction in Vocal and Instrumental Music, Planoan«f. Oman Tuning, Fine Arts, Orutory, Literature, French, Ger- man and Itiilian Languages, English Branches, Gymnastic®, etc. Tuition, $.71.. $‘J0; board and room with Steam Hrataiw Eloetric Light, 945to %7.'.per term. Fall Term begins Sey • ' t'-mb-ry, For Illustrated Calendar, with fVill Information*, •Idress, E. TOCFJEE. Dir., Franklin Sq., BOSTON, Mftfc.. | eo my2od2m weuvvCt