Newspaper Page Text
SL * AN6.) TIMES
T no M -v ■ • DBWiUS 1 . THOMAS GILliJfiftT.
Tiros. Gilbert & Co.,
PROPRIETORS.
Terms of Uaiiy and Weekly Sun:
Twelve months, in advance .$8 00
Six uionthf, ** 4 00
Thr.ee months, “ 2 00
Otic months 75c.
Weekly Sun, u .$1 60
n nrr —*1 n ~ ■■ M i .. ---
TL LjELtB APH1C.
NOON OISPATCHES.
THE VI HOT NT US PRISONERS
Reported Extorted Confessions—Destitute
Condition of tue Prisoners.
Key West, Dec. 23. —A special says the
survivors of the Virginias were kept in
ignorance of their fate, and were visited
by bogus priests, who exacted dying con¬
fessions. They thought they were going
to death, and upon the confessions of
these poor wretches, it is said, Attorney
General Williams founded his opinion
that the Virginius had no right to bear
the AmeiErin colors, The poor follows
supposed they were going to the slaughte r
house, but the presence oi’ the •iuniara.
and surrender to her officers led to most
extraordinary emotional demonstrations.
On the arri val of th * Pints at .Santiago,
orders came to the ship from Commander
Brain for the paymaster tu issue an :ut
blanket* and pea-jackets in his l)e
paitmetit to me prisoners, who were
hardly fit to lie seen iu their
r.jgs. I’kis w.>» speedily dune, but us
there was still great destitution or¬
ders c:i me for every man or. board to
give their own blankets and wearing ap
p .rrel iu the good cause, promise being
made that ali would lie replaced. On the I
arrival of the ship at Key West, trie offi- |
.-■n's and men cheerfully complied with
Uiis order, only preferring that it should
bo issued as a request, iu which case they
would have obey.d with just as much
alacrity. Every Heart was touched by the
pitiable condition of the prisoners. The
poor fellows report ihat they were barba¬
rously treated.
They say that when officers from the
Tornado boarded the Virginius, one of
them on hauling down the flag of the
United .States tore it into ribbons and
trampled on it, asserting with an oath,
“This is what I have wanted." The situ
ation in Santiago de Cuba is reported
still very serious A large majority of
a. «***»,>„*y
Cuban cause, but volunteers control every
thing with a high hand. Only
a week ago ° twenty-five ’ c.tiizens 1
'
at . a bantiago .• were arresied, . and , after , a
mock UT ai had been gone through with,
without any evidence being adduced
against them, were told to go noine. On
their way they were brutally waylaid and
killed,only one escaping. He was riddled
with bullets aud dangerously wounded.
Americans are continually in fear for
their lives, and bitterly complain that
nothing Cas peen done to redress their
wrongs. It is not safe for American offi¬
cers to go ashore alone at Santiago.
All aiong the river nue the Spaniards
ar ■ erecting new batteries.
Ine Pouhatlan will leave for Norfolk j ’
tu-mght. , . , „„ The Wyoming ... was inspected. ,
CALIEOllNIA SENATOR.
Sacbamentq, Deo. 23.—Short teiui,
Hayn 44; Shatter 22; Buiglri 15; Phelps
7; there were 7 abaentees.
MARKETS ill tELEORAPII
Cotton Markets.
Liveepool. Dec. 23 — Noon.— Cotton
tends downward; Uplands 8£d; Orleans 8^
@8|d; sales 10,(100, speculation and tx
port 2000; arrivals 1-lSd cheaper; Up
lands nothing below good ordinary, ship
ped November fe l-l(»d; ditto, delivered in j
December and January, fid; ditto, nothing j
below, low middling, shipped November
and December, 8 l-ifid.
Later—Sates include 5,700 American;
Orleans, nothing below good ordinary,
shipped December and January 8 j. good
Later—Uplands, nothing and below January
ordinary, shipped December M.
8; January and February
Columbus Cotton Market.
Our market quiet and unchanged. Be
ceipts heavy and demand light.
The British War in Africa.—T he news
from Ashautee to the 24th ot November
is not by any means encouraging for the
cause of the British expedition against the
native African King. Sir Garnet Wolseley
has recovered fcis health, but the very sen
ous fact that military operations had been
entirely suspended during his illness wa*
made known to him at the first moment
of his convalescence. The progress in
the field since has been slow, and the
army columns of the Queen are being
encumbered and the advance impeded by
the number of the sick. Then there are
difficulties on the seaboard. The authori¬
ties at Madeira have placed obstacles in
the way of the establishment there of a
senatormw for the shelter of English sol¬
diers stricken with fever. This action
apparently inhospitable, may lead to
coin plica t ous between the PoTugees and
the British governments, as it is abso¬
lutely necessary that the fever-parched
and enervated Europeans should be re¬
turned to the influence of the sea breeze,
so far as :t may be practicable to do 80.—
New York herald, llth.
Tuf, Ashantee Kino.—C offiCaicali, the
King of A hunte-H, « ho it is reported is
ueud, was famous from his contentions
with the British. He governed a country
extending several hundred miles north¬
ward from near the equator aud very far
inland from the British territory known
as the Gold Coast, which divides it from
the Atlantic ocean. The Asbantees have
always looked upon the English as inva¬
ders, but were on better terms with the
Dutch, who until 1S72 also owned part ot
the coast. In that year the Dutch trans¬
ferred their territory, including Coffi the port be¬
of Elmina. to the British. King Dutch
came incensed at this; said the
always paid him tribute, aDd that he
must have Eimina in order to have
access to the se.a. “Elmina is mine,’
he declared ; “it is there I eat my salt ;
it is there I drink my rum.” During th*.
present year the Chieftains, it appears,
cried out to the King that they were hum
gry for war, that they would drive the
white man into the sea and make him hide
in the belly of the herring. The King
gratified tlese ardent warriors and declared
war. His troops advanced to Cape Coast
Castle without attacking it, but were re
pulsed at Elmina. Wneu news of the
fighting reached England an expedition
was sent out and disembarked in Uctober.
The King, according to recent accounts,
was holding bis own. and the announce
ment of his death is as unexpected as it is
unexplainable.
Thanks to Hon. A. H. Stephens
pamphlet copies of his speech on the
THE DAILY SUN.
VOL. XIX.
TIMIDITY OH DISHONESTY—
WHICH?
From the N. Y. Tribune.]
The debate m the House on Monday
upon the National Finances brought out
two distinct hnea oi public policy, to a
koine between which, from present ap¬
pearances, Congress and the country are in
limited. Both are offered by the party
power. Mr. Butler of Massachusetts
stands godfather to one. Mr. Dawes of
the same State proposes the other. They
are as opposite as the characters of the
two men. Mr. Dawes, from nis position
at the head of the Ways and Means Com¬
mittee, having tue financial situation or
the Government before him and the duty
to consider the unusual emergency
nroughi to the attention of Congress,
turns it over in his mind as an honest man
involved in pecuniary straits would natu
raiiy consider the way to extricate him- .
soli. Not being entirely free from parti¬
sanship, and being a little timid of grap
phiig the question in such a way as may
possibiy injure the paity, he recommends
and retrenchuient, reducing the estimates,
cutting down expenditures, He
scarcely bathe fears hopes the that effect this wiii be the sufficient, .people
upou
and the reaction upon the party of recom
a;, oding increased taxation. And he is
too honest to advise any other course
than one of these two ; either to reduce
expenditures to income, or to make the
necessary assessments and pay the bills.
Mr. Butier’s counsel m this emergency
is equally eharaetistio. He dues not pro¬
pose to retrench, and he does not propose ;
to pay. “What if we are increasing our
expenditures every year ?” he says. “Bo
too we are increasing in wealth and popu¬
lation. Who’s afraid? Give us more
public buildings, more subsidies, more
Isnd grants, higher salaries, and more
offices. Give us more currency. As for
tins well humbug of specie payments, we talk are
about enough without it, and ail this
maintaining our credit abroad in ,
nonsense. We do not care what the Jew 1
bankers of Europe thick of us. Our na
tioni credit has been a damage to us.”
This is about lire style Mr. Butler. It
makes no difference with him that the
Government puts out its promise to p<.y a
dollar when it has no dollar in esse or in,
posse to pay it with. “Take it up with
another promise,” he says. ik Vve area
growing nation and cannot be expected to
P’U o»r debts. The best currency m the
SJKBS'4? There’s Mr. Dawes ~
a difference between
and Mr. Butler, wide and irreconcilable,
Mr. Dawes sees bankruptcy ahead, and
undertake to avoid it bv retrenchment
an d economy. Mr. Butler, appreciating
the situation with perhaps equal clear-!
ness, but having no conception of hones-.
ty, with the cunning of a shyster adver
fcwing a client in failing circumstance*;.
urges an expansion of credit, extension of
notes, large purchases, and then by arid
l»y, if times doseu’t improve and the conn
try doesn’t grow up to the currency, a
failure will leave a reasonable margin to
begin business on again. Mr. Butler is
entirely consistent. He has avowed his
belief that “the public oonscienc never
revolts at what the public purse profits
by,” and so has no sense of shame the in
counseling dishonesty. He believes
people are naturally dishonest, and upon
that belief his policy is based. He would
not have the hauon be in good credit’
abroad, and it must be adiniited that his
w' >le public life has been directed to tho
end that it shall not be. His policy would isna
tionaiized dishonesty. Where it
end he neither knows nor cares, so it lasts
Ins generation. After him the deluge.
Mr. Dawes, on the other hand, is hem- ,
est hut timid. He knows, of course, that
the crisis cannot be met by retrechment. ;
With this party, that time has passed, and 1 j
But he fears the effect of taxation, so
shrinks from recom in ending tue heroic •
remedy. It is as it now stands a question j
simply between brazen dishonesty and
calculating timidity. There is no man in ■
the dominant party m Congress who has
the courage to come out in a manly way j
and confess that we are running behind :
and must assess ourselves to pay expert
sns. That, is the only honest treatment I
of the question. The fact is notorious,
Nothing can be gained by trying to evade j
or conceal it, and none of tne subterfuges. ;
of politicians will avail to keep the peo
pl« ignorance ot the situation. While
Longrees halts between the timidity' of
retrenchment and the unblushing dishon¬ \
esty of inflation, the situation grows
worse for the country and the debt in
creases. Mr. Dawes is half right. Re¬
trenchment is imperative. Mr. Butler is
all wrong. As a matter of policy the is¬
sue of a greater volume of new notes can¬
not help take ud the old; as a matter of
honesty a second the first. lie imparts no element j
of truth to
HI PEN IN G VoJi DEATH.
No ono, says Von Huuibolt, can fear
death less than I do. neither am I much
attached to life ; but I have never known
the feeling of an anxious longing far
d ath ; aud although it be a nobler one
than that of an absolute weariness of ex¬
istence it is nevertheless blamable. Life
must first, for as long a period as Provi¬
dence wills it, be enjoyed or suffered—in
one word, gone through, and tha^ with a
full submission, without murmuring, la¬
menting, or repining. There is one im¬
portant law of nature which we should
never lose sight of—I mean that of ripen¬
ing for death, Death is not a break in
existence, it is but an intermediate cir¬
cumstance, a transition from one form of
final existence to another. The moment
of maturity for death can not be decided
by any human wisdom or inward feeling ;
and to attempt to do so would be nothing
bette,r than the vain rashness of human
pride. That decision can ouly be made
,y Him who can at once look back
through our whole course ; and both rea
son and duty require that we should leave
he hour to Him, and never rebel against
iis decrees by a single impatient wish. !
The first and most important thing is to
earn to master ourselves and to throw
nurseives with peaceful confidence on
Him who never changes, looking on every
situation, whether pleasant or otherwise,
,8 a source from which our interior exist¬
ence and individual character may draw
ucreasing strength; and hence springs
‘hat entire submission which few attain
to, although all fancy they feel it.
A Russian Javekt.—M inister Jewell, in
recent letter from St. Prtcrshurg. bays :
*phe most powerful man here, after the
j 2mperor. is ‘Tripoli,’ Chief of Police—a
,- uan G f wonderful executive ability, al
.vays at a fire or a parade. Ho is
I i> 18 t behind the Emperor when out, and
; aj> w hc. may come and who may go, and
| v ho shall be tried tor., I think, and per
; s wbo ma y Ue < •• vietrd, He jnst
-nns ths city, and does it to perfection.
He is accountable to nobody but the Em
peror. I send to him to get Americans
; n f scrapes or out of the country, or to
1 an v thing else—all I krow is that it is
| done.' His dispatch to the frontier lets
uivbodv nation" in or out stops them for exam
: He is said to be a very ju
uan , and he certainly is a very active
>no. ”
_______
, Georg’s and Alabama Blank Deeds for
bale 8tr* OmcJL
COLUMBUS, GA, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 24, 1873.
P- J BUSSEY, President a. GUN BY JORDAN
Seo'y & Treae. j
OFFiOE OF THE .
Eagle and Phenix
Manufacturing Company.
Columbus, , (w eorgdia.
|
Paid up Capital, - $1,250,000 i
Tc inculcate the habit of saving on
the part of its Operatives, and to pro
vide a safe and reliable arrangement
for the beneficial accumulation of the
. of artisans and all other
arnirgs
ciasaes, this Company has established,
uni j er
'
SPECIAL CHARTER FROM THE I
STATE OF GEORGIA
-A—
Department
which the following advantages are oi i
to Depositors of either large or | i
p amounts ‘
x.
PEHFEGT SECURITY. The aHHeta of
Company were on 1st
1873...................$1,704,459 43 j
are steadily'increasing.
Reserve fuud i R ............$297,7(16 92
AU ... f W ... “7 property j is B specially sneriallu
, &ct or tue Geneial Asseinoiy
for the protection of Depositors; and in
by the same act, the btockhol- I |
tneir stiareb, f tor me h integ.ftv miegilty ^f or me the ‘
Department and its certificates of j
■
LIBERAL INTEREST. 2. Rate allowed! j
per cent, per annum; Compounded |
tjme8 a ear
^
DLFUNUb nP p mTT o can be withdraw wuUrtrawu n at at am, ami
without notice. Depositors residing J
of the city can draw deposits by
-3h.
BULKS AND REGULATIONS of this
furnished upon application, j
ail desired information given.
S.
BOOKS CERTIFYING DEPOSITS
to depositors,
a.
All accounts oj Depositors will be con
^dered strictly private andconfidential.
DiftECTORS:
jf. J. BUSrjEY,
w. H. YOUNG,
w. E. PAKKA.. 1 OKE, !
ALFRED I. YOUNG, j
Of New Ylork. j
UHARLLS GREEN,
President of the Savannah Bank and Trust
Com pany ®r21 eod&w
Fair Warning.
' elnent8 will b y the credit first of January further, and next. will I
not you
to collect by law.
.
, wer, and in order to induce eettlemeDts i
will pay my customer? on credit bills,
I&C. fVvn iOT 1 iU.IU.UUag VTi r 1 H1 i n cr fnf-pn vyOloGU
u the flrst 0 f January next.
I have Instore and to arrive a full stock of
Groceries and Provisions,
;nd propose to ^esi as low as the lowest, FOK
<JAS*i. Very respectfully, j.
H, HAMILTON.
Columbus,Ga., Deo. 10. 1873. eod&wjal
Hells & Curtis
HAVE THE
Sim City Ruloloers
very popular.
The Self-Adjusting Rubbers,
ery convenient; can be put on and off without
using the ; anda
Waim Slippei-s.
comfortable and cheap.
W» offer bargains in BOOTS, and a
fall une of goods for ail warns at now
bices to cash buyers.
Cfr We do not intend to quit the Shoe
business, and offer our stock at such
prices that the Shoe trade shall not quit
iS.
WELLS A CURTIS,
dc6 fl&w 73 Broad street
Cancers, Wens, Tumors. &c.,
Cured without the Knife.
pHE L remedy as applied consists of a happy
combi's 4 * lion of the mineral and the veget
Me. For the benefit and saristaction of ihe
afflicted wee mfiilently reier to a few persons M.
' 7 ho have been under treatment: Mrs. E.
vi a (one, cancer, Newnan, Ga,; Mr. J. Ga., J
lar tUie, cimcer. M nroe, VV r rtlton councy,
Ir. T. Jones, wen, Whiienburg. Carrtdlcoun
: V, Oa.;Mr. i d. i)eLon«le-, tumor, Newnan,
f>a ; Mrs. M. Giles, uicer and in mouth. Newnan, shall
la. Unarges for board treatment
be eatisfa tury.
Address Drs. LONG & JACKSON.
del7-Glawtcw Newnan, Ga.
j W. DENNIS. J. M. BENNETT.
SOUTHERN STOVE WORKS,
COLUMBUS, GA.
J. W. DENNIS & Co.
y^^lSesftoa'^lSdSSlrtmeat T * rf" “®
<^ ove a. Grates, Fire Dogs, Country
and Stove Hoilow Ware,
ayRr, Guarantee ovr Good* in every rtuptru
Kura Pieces furnished to any .Stove we mai;e.
-. A «p t « a»d 8albs Boo* at
J _ BeHIlOtt & CO.’S,
j an 3 i 2 K«&w 6 m ui Broau Strekt
————————- —
. REMEMBER ! REMEMBER!
j THAT
ppOCI r nut ^ umu | hf.f] VX. X, IIVI LI T| L I U |\/1 Ulnmi A f\| N
ttAVE Jtl a stock of TOYS that will please
every man, women end ehl d.
Call early and be pleased. d«Sl
THE SUN
PRINTINTa
— AMD—
BOOK - BIND1N ti
ESTABLISHMENT t
Columbus, Georgia,
18 OVK OF TUB
COMPLETE AND EXTENSIVE
IN THE SOUTH.
AMD HK1WQ SUPPLIED WITH ALL THE
Styles of Machine¬
ry and Material,
18 WKLL PRKPABBIJ
Execute with Accuracy and Dispatch
FVBBY DESCRIPTION OF
Book & Job Printing
—ASH—
^ j- j^yTr-,-nvrf-. *
*
®"Using Steam Power, running six
the most . improved and ..a t., best ( make _
Presses, wlih constant additions to
our already very large assortment of
Elegant Types, Rules, Borders, and
other material, and skilled workmen
i " i ‘ fM - °“ r
turning a out all descriptions r of work,
expeditiously and neatly, at the Low-;
Cash Prices, are unsurpassed by
an y establishment in the , State. i
|
li*Order« from abroad wilt re- i
the same attention a* If the!
were present to tra.iiaa.ct
hu9lue88t WMd „iU be prompt
l> Jlied. jyn t
X « j M 1 Jv s 1 D 1 I I M 1 H J T l~ D III! V I
I 1 I
Having made large additions I
’
this Department oi' the Sun
Establishment, we are now
Tetter prepared than ever to
orders with the
UTMOST DISPATCH
d •
a at '
t r\»i ;rrt-r r\ CASH a u n RATllS A rrr» »
i
|
!
We have a large stock of
■he best Blank Book Paper,
rid can fill orders for
1
Court Dockets and Records ■
Ledgers, Journals, &c. ; i
■ Well Hfi Hiet (-All tile woik of
very description, at ti e most
reasonable rates and at Rli->rt |
notice
arrSs* Puvfionl 1 « ,J t»cui n ,r attpnt nil i»
. ; <11(1 LO thn IIIC Rinrlinrr OlllUlilj^ /yP (U -Ylll \f n i«* H
,
Lagazmes, Puri t erioail ntlif, <lis lc t Id- l>q.
»ers, (3CC. 0
toooooooooooooooooodoouoooooo.*'
• JOOOOCH lOOOOOO ooooooooooooi o
OUR OOOOOOOOOOOOllO
■ >000000000000
(iOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOoO
'•oooooooooooooo
job-room and Bindery;.
0 )OOOOOU> >0001 >00<> OUOOOOOUUOOOOOOt
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
O lOOOOOOOO ARE NOW SO OOOOOOOOOO
r OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
<1 .OOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
0 >0000000 COMPLETE 000000000
‘ * "
>0000000 000000000
1 >000000000000000 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
>000000000000000 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
0900000000000 THAT OOOOOOOOOOOOfi
I >01 >0000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
0 >000000000000000 000000000000000
O’ >00000 OUR CITIZENS OOOOOOO
0 IOOOOO OOOOOOO
0 loooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
0 JOOOOOOOoOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
0 JOOOOOOOOOOO NEED OOOOOOOOOOOOO
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
o >ooooooot>oooooo oooooooooooooooo
ooooo X ot X orth. 00000
00000 i?o 00000
o >ooooiK)ooooooo ooooooooooooooooo
0900000001)00011000 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
o900000000 FOR EITHER OOOOOOOOOO
oooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooooo
0 .1)000000000000 ooooooooooooooooo
0900000 Style Price. OOOOOOO
IOOOOO or
O
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 00000u.»000(>0000
D.vive your orders with us. *Ve can nil
the bill satisfactorily.
IHOb. GiDBDKT & Co
: TERMS CASH!
^ *
;
r *
: POSITIVELY NO CREDIT!
^ " ............................................
i ....... with the
CT Placards, above insenp
i °°*j°r sffie at the SuR.Orriox:___
Time Books — For Plantations *nd
p. Farms. rmQ FnahlM Enables one one tn to keen keep aoenrst anenrstf
i with thetr and* Printed and
j ac.'ounte
tor sals St the BPS Optics.
W. A. LiTTLJC. B. H.CRAWroUD.
ixylLL attend promptly to all civil business
W entrusted No partnership to their exists care In orliniual any of the
Oourls. in bn
-loess.
Ae^-Offlce over J, Ennis*. holt iKtwlm
W„ A. Farley,
UUSSETA. Chattahoochee Co., Ga,
^ 9 -Special attention given *o collections
Dr. J. H. CARRIGER,
I KfjF.ON A N l> PHYSICIAN.
O FFICE S. E. corner Broad and Randolph
streets, over Crane’s grocery store; Real
dence at Mrs. Teasdale’s. J ackson street, 2d
door below Goetchios’ planing mills. [ocl
Dental Notice.
D It PHELPS has removed his ottlce to his
residence on St. Clair street. In rear of
the Presbyterian Church ocl tf
T. W. BLATZ,
DENTIST.
JL»f« i \FFIOEover Joseph & Bro.’s
s “"i“ r "“
W. F. TICNER,
Dentist.
OPPOSITE STKUPPEK'S
Oolumtousi, Georgia
<Je& ©Oil U
ALEX C. MORTON,
VI TO UAIIY AM) liOl'XSLl.OSl,
0 F BntrM.^
uolumbus, geokgia..
Mr. Morton is engaged in attend lug to claim*
COTTON MANUFACTORIES.
MUSCOGEE MANUFACTURING CO. : [
Jlanufacturerc of
SHEETINGS SHIRTINGS,
YARN, ROPE, COLUMBUS, Sic.
GA
G. P. SWIFT, SWIFT, President.
W. A. Sec’y A Tress____noil ly
Tun EH OF PIANOES, &o.
-llj.uoes, ni W. BLAU, Kepatrer and Tuner of Pla
iueiodeons and Accordeoris. Sign
FiXaN^n-^ks^L^ ““ ?eV'
--------- GROCERIES-----
D j, AN1EL R. 1UZE, Dealer in Family Ogle- Gro
ceiies, on Bryan street, between
morpe an il.fact-.son streets. de7
DRESS-MAKING.
\ { 1SS M A. HOLLINGSWORTH—Dres-
Making, Cutting and Fitting. Terms !
caesp o’ Residence and shop in Bro'ADeville
Iltll l)
FEED STORE.
J J NO. FITZ01BBONS, Wholesale and Uo t
t,n Dealer iu Hay. Oats, Corn, Ba«m,fco.
Otrlethorpe stre et, oppoeite Temperance Hall. |
MATTRESS-MAKING AND UPHOL
STERING.
j I). *c.TUNK.lN, General Upholsterer War- and ;
. Mattrees-maker; Shop, west eU)e
r‘*n r- near Intersection of Oglethorpe and Bridge
etree 88 ]
GROCERIES.
J r h. Hamilton, wholesale and Retail
: kTrtfw8 n .o?*reya»»! ul
60
VALUABLE CITY PROPERTY
hOK SALih.
D
FAv' e* is ou ale l.,t » g Vu kiuteim. emu V
L amt brie pantry, serv mts ruums, aud a J
id'. at an i co i fortable sleeping r< uu detatche.i i
5 m the d welling. A vveii oi g ou w. ter curb
• with Circular brick, i he lot ronl- 100 » et i
l t; Fersyth *nd 160 feet on Kau Uiiph sureet.
i'rlce |L' ouo. Terms cash
AND J.80, iuimedlatel> h
The Hui.'Sfc LOT sou
o< tho above, at present occupies by *A aDlifllt S He- ,
■l(i3 TUGS. Os WOLF > j 1
-
Plantation for Sate !
yt ITU AT Lit m *Caney,’ r Whar
y_") ton count>, Texas, containing ■P
J.*o0 acres of l.tuu, 000 of which are -
1 ared, timbered hu> 1 the remaining Pecan,Beach aoo
U' » vily witn
Ash, hi-is &C of he finest Plantations in the
one 1
Texas—situated about five miles
ir0 v© tt.6 bjftnuf Wharton—‘lonMn^ on f he
or?k rhe cUtero, lands Ao„ Ac. richest and most
ate among tne
p:uductlve in the State ot Texas
Will be sold LUW for cash, or on favorable
H me-terms to proper parties who may be aUe
ut -ol the n +-essary ' labor QUIN Apply HILL, to
No'v<W lino Galveston. Texas.
FOR RENT.
;VH K OiSce now occui.UU the bj II. t :astle- M
X nan, Broker, in G& raia Home
ouilrtina. PoMereion given 1st October,
Ufa, sleeping rooms iu the same BuIIUiuk
*;ix :::: JrV^rr" 1 ’ euillbM fur
Water is furnished In the house, and the
•ms well healed by a turnace throrghout tho
(Jomtort CHA guaranteed. COLEMAN.
Apply u> Over the store ol Abell 6t Co.
tu!2 ti 116 Broad st.
FOR RENT.
lower story o. the nll Jn,; 1m- mrt
e ilutely easto SUN Office. A1 o an
e-.cellent room, suitable ?or an Ottlce or Sleep
li g Room in second story oi same DUlldiDg.
I sUM BLIi!
I si IVIHi’sl t .
j j orsf M!Tnge h r'*.n*five VI m:iet
Ut»m the city, near the road leauiuK to Draw
f• rd, and i? prepared to fill all ca«h order® for
umber promptly.
Forty Thousand Feet of Inch Plank,
>■ iferfei j”; 0 - 1 a V .’' rl )|^ nu'^liK
w h j r
g ;e at reduced price* to clo»e out. Come and
a- t bargain®. Jj2utl
_
* ^ * | { \ | | /fO X
^ m
!
I
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IE
Bagging, Ties,
Bacon, Sait,
Sugars, Coffee,
J &c., AtC., &c
i Alway® hand A LB f full stock of
on a
Plantation and Family Gro¬
ceries and Provisions.
Jnnetion ot Franklin, Warren and Oglethorpe
i streets
COLUMBUS, GEORGIA.
tir ill purchases delivered Free oj Drayage my27 lit
the city and suburbs. *
REMOVAL !
r j HAVE removed my FURNITURE sort
VPHOLSTEKY BUSINESS from Ran
and watt on my easterners and the uublit geu
eraib. I have reduced my prices ior work to
ond wlth tb# 8n d mean bagtoess
oooie and 8. O. LLOYD.
oetf eod
NO. 98.
A. WJTTICH. C. M. KINSEL.
Sc KINSEL
. Practical Watchmakers,
JEWELEBS AND ENGRAVERS,
jNo. 07 Broad St., Columbus, Ga.
f A STERLING
:i£
tern if] SILVER
(MIS, j:- 1
HBW AND
W PLATED
JEW DM, WARE.
ikll of tho Ijatost Manufacturer*.
An entirely new Stock of the best Goods and the latest styles has been re¬
centl y bought in New York and is hereby offered at the LOWEST CASH
PRIC
D I A M ONDS,
OTCTAaES and E ^^f^^ %SJ ' G#,d THIMBLES and Silver
-
Eve-Glasses.
Ud i® s ‘’ a"* Gents’ Chains, Plain and Fancy Gold Rings of Beautiful Workman
ship, and every Variety of Article found in a First-Class Jewelry Store.
STENCIL PLATES of every description cut at short notice.
e l and in high favor with everybody using 9poeke or Eve-Glaaeee.
WATCH, OLOUK and JEWELRY Repairing in nil its branches. HAIR JEWELRY,
•SOCIETY BADGES, DIAMOND SETTING, or any network made to order at reasonable
charges. EACH AVISO PHOMPTLY EXECUTED. sep2J
SECURITY 11 PROMPTNESS!! LIBERALITY I!
THE
Continues to Offer the Public
INDEMNITY against LOSS by FIRE!
Having Paid her Friends
and Patrons since the War
She Wants a Chafiee to Get it Back!
RHOD’cS BROWNE, GEO. W. DILLINGHAM, SAMUEL S. MURDOCH
President. Treasurer, Secretary.
^
BOOTS, SHOES AND HATS!
iFosjE53P:ra: klxuvtGt,
KTo. 104 Broad Street. OolumBus. Ooorsia.
Wliolesrile and ReYail.
] y tnu,rmrayfrleut ' 3andthefmb "° Uat 1 tave JU8treceIvad ‘ Iarge
o f
BOOTS, SHOES AND HATH,
I cun offer extraordin-'ry Inducements to Country Merchants anil smalt Dealers.
a#-G. H. t LF.MING (formerly with K. (J. Hope) and J B. M /HAND are with me, and wii
be pleased to wait on their friends and old customers. se'20 eod&wSm
liifil Uiil lif ilMli
53 3 . 4 Hours to New York.
_o
N. Y. & N. O^Mail Line!
f’riace Steeping Cars Run through
from Opelika to Lynchburg.
Western R. R., of Alabama,
i \X
uowmhos, «a„ Nov. i«, tm
rKAINS LEAVE OOLUMBU8 HAIL
I r Atlanta...........................1 o:40am
a- rivo at Atlanta............... .....6:4f p m
, r Montgomery and-Se/raa.6:00 p ir, 0:fO,p m
\ r j>eat “ .............10:40 p M, b W a m
OR NEW YORK DAILY:
(Time, 63 hours anu 45 minutes )
.eave Columbus, 10:40 a. m ; arrive at < >peH*
at 12:27 P M ; at Atlanta, 6:40 r. m.; at
V 'iKhingtOL. 7:20 a. fit.; at NEW YORK, 4:26
1 w ., via Philadelphia and Baltimore.
7 iCAlNS ARRIVE ATCOLUMB1 S DAILY
1 oiii Atlanta..... .........9:10 P M
Ir oai Montgomery 3:66 a M, 2 30 F M
. he 6:00 p. in. Western Mali train leaves daily,
c meeting a? Montgume y with trains for New
(• leans, Mobile, Louisville, Vicksburg. Ky.,and $t. Louie;
a •! at Sulni/i for On tuU tram
S epiiig care run through from < »pelika to
N >w Orleans.
The 10:60a. m. NEW YORK Express train,
r ns daily, connecting at ATLANTA with
UHorgia Railroad and W. A A. R. R.
The 9:30 p. m. train docs not run Sunday.
No delay at Opelika by any F train Depot
rickets for saie at Union assen^er
CHAS. P. BALL Gen’l Sup.’t.
ti. A. BACON, Aireut. tiu21
>TO VES OXVj urco V HaO
7
NATHAN CROWNS m
(Opposite Su^i Office;
COLUMBUS, CA. V
irOULD respecttuUy Invite . . ll i® ....
V of Ids Wendsand customers to Ms extern
G-.OD S.stc. Also,’TIN WARE at wholesale
*' lla^ubtcturer WORK. ol TIN, SHEET TBON and
OCPPKH
Roofing and Guttering
(j, me promptly and in the best manner
He solicits a call, feeling assured that he can
mi re entire satisfaction
Prloe as low as the lowest. Come and
r , t.ef ep vf>ti hiiv ocl8eo«lRW
ft
.<1
Carriages and Harness
on band, and any style furnished to order.
THE OLD CARRIAGE HOUSE Is V*>*
mTnently 0 } ened,
j OGLETHORPE STREET,
a few doors north ol the Postofflce.
THOS. fc. HIC KS,
octll dsalAwim] Agent
MUSIC BOOKS
BOUND IN ANY * STYLE AT
SUN Qlf iV*
The Jobbing Department
AND
Book-Dindery
OF THE
SUN OFFICE
IS LARUE AND COMPLETE,
Where ail Deacriptiona of Work are
Done at the moat K«emod>
able Kates.
Central Railroad.
m^mm
GBN’L SOFT’S OFFIOE O. K. R. I (
Savammab, November 1,187A
/ yN AND AFTER SUNDAY, 2d instant,
FahSeuger branches Trains on the connections, Georgia Central will
Railroad, Us and ran
as follows:
TRAIN No. I, GOING NORTH AND WEST.
Leave Savannah 8:45 a V
Leave Augusta............ 9:05 A M
Arrive al Augusta........... Milledgeville..... 10:09 4:00 P M
Arrive at P H
Arrive at Eaton ton.......... 11:56 I A
Arrive at Macon............ 6:45 j i
Leave Macon fi*r Columbus. 7:15 t ai
Leave Macon for Eutaula... 9:10 P U
Leave Macon lor Atlanta............. 7:30 P u
Arrive at Columbus . 3:57 A fit
Arrive at Eufaula.. .10:20 a fit
Arrive at Atlanta.. . 1:40 a fit
CUMING SOUTH AN if EAST.
Leave Atlanta.... 1:00 A M
Leave Columbus. 7:40 P M
Leave Eutaula................... 7:i6 P u
Arrive Macon from Atlanta... 6:50 A M
AjjfiVu at Macon troin Colmub-is. v 6.00 a M
Arrtvo at Al.oon from Eutaula .. 6:45 A M
Leave Macon..................... 7:16 a M
Leave augueta................... 9.06 A M
A riven Augusta............... 4 .00 F M
Arrivoai Savannah.............. 6:26 p M
TKAi.N No. 2. GOiNG NORTH AND WEST.
Leave Savannah 7 30 PM
Leave Au gus a.......... 8:05 P M
Arrive at Augusta...... 6.65 a M
Arrive at Macon............ 8:20 a M
Leave Macon lor Columbus. 8:45 a M
Leave Macon lor Eulaula... 8.06 A M
Leave Mhoovi for Atlanta..............9:10 a fit
Arrive at Columbus.... .....1:60 p fit
Arrive at Eutaula...... .....6:40 P fit
Arrive at Atlanta...... ..... 6:48 P fit
COMING SOUTH AND EAST.
Leave A'lanta...... . 7:00 A M
Leave Columbus.... . 2:30 P K
Leave Eulaula.................... . 7:20 a u
1 Arrive at Macon Irom Atlanta.... . 8:40 p at
Ar he at Macoo Irom Columbus. . 7;3U P M
Arrive al Macon from Eufaula.... . 6:10 P at
: Leave Macon . 7:35 P at
Arrive at Milledgeville .10:00 .11.56 P at
Arrive at Eat uton.... P M
Leave Augusta........ . 8:06 P at
Arrive at Augusta ..... . 5:5o a at
Arrive at Savannah... . 7:15 a at
Train No. 3 being a th.ough train on Ike
Central Railroad, stopping ouly at whole sta¬
tions, passengers tor bait stations cannot be
taken on or put off. Passengers lor Milledge
ville and Eatonton will take Train No. 1 from
Snvar.nah and Au.nsta, and Train No. 2 from
g (>n tfae s w K K ., Atlanta and Macon.
^ nton trdiur,m!
“ a *'y. Sundays excepted.^^ ROOEES
no6 <4enprat Sun’t
RANKIN HOUSE,
#■
Columbus, Ga.
J. W. EYAN, Prop’r.
Frank Golden, Clerk.
Ruby Restaurant
Bar and Billiard Saloon,
UNDER THE BANKIN’ HOUSE.
J&27 J. *%•. ItY'.l ll. Pro p’r.
Opera House Bar s Restaurant
' P- I hereby notify /' A
-gsm, generally friends and that the I public*»\ have^gliar I OjJ
, .j 'll Mb r e-open&d (under the Op
House) mv B.r, Restaurant and Ten-Pits
Aliev, and will keep the finest of Liquors and
(nrnl.h the best of Meals (embracing averv
thing ihe market affords) at all hours.
0,-16 6m A. J. BOLAND.
THE RIALTO.
T HAY E opened at No. 24 Broad W
X street, nearly opposite the Ex
, re»» office, a Bar-v om and Restau¬
rant, where I will always keep on