Columbus daily enquirer. (Columbus, Ga.) 1874-1877, September 08, 1874, Image 1

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u Qalumbu# * ' nqtifef. VOL. XVI. COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1874. NO. 210 TBBM8 or THM I DAILY, WEEKLY, AND SUNDAY ■nrqvmaxi. Twelve mouthe, in ulnon $8 00 Mi month*. “ 4 00 Three montha, “ 2 00 One month, “ 75o. fftxuT Exquiuu, one yeer 2 00 Sdssat EtiQtmm, one year 2 SO StnrDAr end Wiuli Enquuib to gether, one year it 00 A«vtrttolH Bate*. Sqnn. I Week, Dally, l 50 I 00 & IS 00 17 00 20 00 22 50 25 00 • 1 year TheaWr' ia with the privilege of a change every tlnae montha. Foi yearly oarda a liberal dta- cooat will he made. The Weekly ratea will Invariably 1* one-third of the Dally Whew an advertlaemnnt ia changed more than oneeta'throe month* th<* advertiser will le charg ed Mitti the coat of composition. Foreign advur- at par aa do thoae at home. OEOBOIA HEWS. terwariis, iu the iSInte Nominating Con- volition, voted to modify approval of the bill, so ns to satisfy the white K ad teals of North Alabaiui. —Thu Montgoniey Xnr* says that the rich copper mines discovered home time OFFICIAL BANISHMENT. FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. ARMY Hl'.ADqU.' TKM « TltANSFEUKFD TO ST. September 7.—The ofti- ago iu llandolph county, and of which c ; u i or( j Qr continuing the bauishmeut of somely, us wo are informed. The compa ny employ some sixty-five wagons to transport it to the railroad. The profit is said to be from thirty to forty dollnrs on the ton, and that one hand can dig a ton a day. —The Democrats of Barbour county made the following nominations on Thurs day: For Judge of Probate, Wiley E. Jones; for Sheriff, Frank Har'; for Cir cuit Clerk, John C. McNab; for Treasur er, R. A. Solomon; for Tax Collector, T. R. Sylvester; for Tax Assessor, Brock Stewart; for County Commbwioners. Abi- jah Reeder, John 0. McRae, F. M. Corda- mon and B. B. Comer; for the Legisla ture, J. E. Crews, J. S. Espy uud Win ston Andrews; for Coroner, Thoo. Pruden, and for Judge of the Enfaula City Court, Alpheus Baker. TELEURAPniC XOTEN be Democrats of Bartow county re-nominated Hons. Thomas Baker Thomas Tumlin for the Legislature. Obediah Warner, Esq., and William , Revill, editor of the Vindicator, have nominated for the Legislature in fiwether county. i new engine has been put into the n Factorv, and after a brief stoppage ow the change to be made, it started I on Thursday, having now 250 horse wo or three cases of diptheria are d in Rome, and the Courier learns have been eight or ten cases at all, Alabama, most of whioh proved —The “dead house” attached to the Georgia Infirmary at Savannah was con sumed by fire on Friday night. A corpse in the house at the time of the fire was removed. —The Thomaston Herald thinks that Upson county has made two-thirds of a erop of cotton and enough corn for home use. We have our doubts about the quan tity of corn. —The Thomaston Herald of Saturday says: “Mr. Frank Gilbert killed a snake, a short lime since, near the Warm Springs, . that contained thirty-five small snakes fiom six to twelve inches in length each.” —The prospectus of a new paper, of “fret circulation” in S ivannab, has been iMOOd. It is to be called the Savannah £•*», and is to be published by Wm. Ran- ki% late of the New* office. man named Joh n Sharpton was Bitted to jail in Douglas county, last k, for outraging the person of an old au named Teal, after drawing his land threatening to cut her throat. -—The Meriwether Vindicator mentions iverely condemns the conduct of a Of roughs or drunkards who fired a er of shots into the house of Iahatn li colored, about a week ago. Their ) are uukuown. Dahlonega Signal of the 5th i the presence in its town of Hon. L. Banning, of Columbus, and hat ho is looking after the mining rty of the estate of Col. Beuborn —The eruption of Mount .Etna ha ceased. —Runway, the manager of the Brooklyn, N. Y., theatre, is dead. —Base ball—Philadelphia vs. Chicago —score 25 to 5 in favor of Philadelphia. —Lynchburg, Va., paid a revenue tax of over $2,500,001) to the government for tobacoo lost year. . —The Portugese Minister of the Inte rior has issued a notice that the Arabian ports on the Red Sea are infected with plagues. —During a riot iu New York Saturday night, between the employees of a foun dry and of a brewery, some half a dozen persons were seriously injured. —An inch of snow foil at Green River, N. Y., last Wednesday after a heavy storm. Green River promises to be white during a long winter. —The aggregate length of telegraph lines in the vurious nations of the woild is three hundred slid fifty-seven thousand miles—and of wires, one million forty-two thousand. —An ambitious Washington negro who assumed the name of Beverly Tucker, has been adjudged a lunatic. The elegant gentleman and master journalist, to whom the nume belongs, is supple of muscle, nerve uud final* fibre. —Protests from Columbia, S. C., At lanta, Ga., Montgomery and Mobile, Ala., and various points iu Mississippi and Louisiana, have boon seut to President Grant against employing Baited State troops in the So nth, and declaring the local authorities can control any disturb nee that may occur. seat of government to St. Louis, is as fol lows : “Washington, J). (7.,Sept. 5, 1874. “General Order No. 4. “1. Pursuant to the provisions of Gen eral Orders No. 108, War Department, Adjutant General's office, Sept, fid, 1874, the Headquarters of the Army will be established at St. Louis, Mo., on tko 15th day of October, 1874, and all communi cations and reports to these headquarters, heretofore required, will be addressed accordingly. “2. The following officers will be trans ferred from Washington to St. Louis; Colonel W. D. Whipple, Aid-de-Camp and Assistant Adjutant Generul; Colonel C. McCoy, Aid-de-Camp; Colonel J. C. Oudonveid, Aid-de-Camp; Colonel J. E. Tousted, Aid-de-Camp; Colonel J. M. Ba- A id-de-Camp. Colonel O. M. Poe, U. S. Eugiueers, Aid-de-Camp, will re main iu Washington, and all maps, re ports of reconnoiasance and explauation sont him there will be completed and transmitted to army headquarters. “8. Col. W. D. Whipple will, about the first of Oct-iber, cause the records, libra ry, and furniture of the present office to bo carefully packed and marked, and tarned over to the Quartermaster’s De partment for transportation to tlio m headquarters. “4. The clerks and orderlies, seven number, now employed at the Headquar ters of the Army, will at the same time be transferred to St. Louis. “By command of General Sherman. [Signed] “John M. Bacon, “A. D. C., and Actiug Ass’t Adj’t Gen. NO MENTION OK A REPUBLIC— REPUBLICAN SUCCESSES— MINISTERS. Madrid, September 7—The creden tials of the uewly-ftppointed Spanish Am bassadors make no mention of a Uepuh- harles R. Johnson, a Republican of I, who had been named as the prob- Radical candidate for Congress in Ifth District, declines to run. He that he cannot endorse the Civil i bill, but is “none the less a Re the Savannah Neioe says Hon. Rufus •ter is prominently spoken of as a date for Mayor of that city. Also, [Major C. W. Anderson was elected Fednesday night Lieutenant Colonel \ Regiment of Georgia Volunteers, Ford, resigned. he Talbotton Standard says: There f% slight scrimmage about four miles country on the Bellevue road, yes- tay. It occurred while the road was jg worked, and hoes were used freely. I arm was broken, a skull fracturod nother head reoeived a pretty bad BiUloonlnv In Pennsylvania Philadelphia, September 6.—i Saturday afternoon, iu the presence of 20,000 per sons, Professor Donaldson rnude another very successful asceution from the grounds of Barnum’s hippodrome, the balloon taking a northeasterly direction. Donaldson was accompanied by six ladies, ono being Mrs. Clara Wirnley, of this city, a niece of Professor Wise, and the Misses Costeneira, Taylor, Grady, Walsh and Wilson, attached to the hippodrome. The party expected to laud nnd return in time for that evening's performances. Donaldson’s balloon lauded safely with a party of ladies near Manyunk Sunday Allentown, Pa., September 7.—Prof. Donaldson re-ascended in bis balloon “Barnnm” this morning with Mr. Em- mans, of the Morning Herald, ond Robt. Kramer. The balloon received a fresh supply of gas here, and took a southeast course towards Philadelphia. Cuthbert Appeal reports fine ill over Randolph county last week, ys they came just in time to save , potato and sugar cane crops from stmotion, but too late to do much > cotton. It says that the growing i crop of Randolph will not exceed \ last year. ft* learn from the Maoon Telegraph IMI on Friday Mr. William Brunson, a wq&mt of Perry, Houston county, was H. Houser, jr., who had been doridac (or him. lirmiaon bad discharg ed Hearer, and the; had some dispute in their reUleinent. Afterwards the; met on the eUUvalk, and Houser shot Brunson in the moath, inflicting a painful wound, but one not believed to be dangerous. Houser fled, bat was urrestod. ALABAMA MEWL —Hon. J. MoC. Wiley agneunoes him self an “independent” candidate for Judge of the Eighth Judicial Cirouit of Alabama. —Whitebnik. Madison county, Ala., has a Democratic Club compose 1 of colored men. Federal troops will uo doubt be sent there. —They wore expecting Federal troops in Montgomery on Sunday. They oould be pat to a very good use as guards of the ootton and oorn fields at night. —Oapt. Gentry, a Federal officer, ia'in Montgomery to inquire into the manner of tha distribution of “de pervishuus” filched from the sufferers by the overflow. —Rav. Z. D. Cottrell, of Chattooga, Ga., has baen elected to the Presidency of the Calhoun College, Jacksonville, Ala., and will aleo have charge of the Jacksonville Fatttla Academy, at the same place. —'Tbe Mayor of Birmingham was flood by tha acting Mayor, for a slight violation •f one of the city ordinances. He paid the ftna like a little man, without a mur- NPAIN. lie. TUB WEATHER. Department ok Wak, [ Wahuinuton, September 7, 1874. > j Probabilities.—Over the South Atlantic and Eastern Gulf States slight changes in barometer, easterly winds, cloudy or partly cloudy weather, stationary temper ature and light raiua ou the coast. SHIP HEWN. RAILROADS. NOTICE. mmi ... «T“ agliagM mcs «■ JOB PRINTING. OILIIEBT’S PRINTING 'OFFICE ABOUT PRFAIDEMT GRANT. TROOPS NOT TO BE USED UNTIL ABSOLUTE LY NECESSARY—HE DECLARES HIMSELF A CANDIDATE FOR THE THIRD TERM. New York. September 7.—President Grant is reported as saying that there is no intentiou on bis part to use Federal troops in any of the Southern States, unless their services aro absolutely neces sary to preserve tbe public peace. A Herald correspondent from tbe White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, says authoritatively that President Grant, during a recent visit there? informed Col. Swann, a wealthy citizen, that he was a candidate for a third term. At a recent District Convention Swann referred to a third term iu a political speech at a subsequent canons. Swann, speaking with authority, said unequivocally that General Grant was a candidate for a third term. General Dominquez has arrived at Puy- oendena,after defeating the Carliats under Zaballos. The Republicans suffered heav- ilyyand the tower is crowded with wouud- ed. iTie Carlists were attaoked while re treating from Puycendens, and lost sev enty-five killed and wounded. It is stated the Carlists aro blockading Pampelnna. CREDENTIALS PRESENTED. Brussels, September 6.—The Hpauish Minister to Belgium has presented hia credentials. GERMANY. CATHOLIC CONFEBENCE. Freiburg, September 6.—The Congress of Old Catholics met iu this city to-day— Dr. Scliallze presiding. One hundred and thirty delegates attended the opening ses sion. The United Statos was represented by Chaunoey Langdon. The President announced that l)r. Dol- linger has summoned a conference of evangelical and Anglican clergy at Bonn, on the 14th lust. SEVERE FIRF. AT WEIENOKN. Berlin, September 7.—Half tbe town of Weiengen is burned. Loss three mil lion dollars. Seven hundred families are houseless. FRANCE. VICTOR HUGO PREDICTS ANOTHER FRANCO- GERMAN WAR. Paris, September 7.—Victor Hugo has written a letter declining au invitation to tbe Peace Congress at Geneva. He says peaoe cannot be established until another war has been fought between France and Germauy. He poiuts to tbe existence of a deep and undying hatred between the two countries, nnd declares there will be a duel between the principles of n Mon archy and the Republic. New Yore, Sept. 7.—Arrived—Clyde. Arrived out—State of Georgia and An glia. Savannah, Sept. 7.—Arrived—Herman Livingston. JJNTILthe 15th ofPoptem . 1874. ( :t, parties of samo day, will l*o pnasod tho MARKETS. BY TELEGRAPH TO ENQUIRER. Money and Ntork Markets. London, September 7.—Erie 82. London, September 7.—Street a quarter below bank rate. Paris, September 7.—Routes Gif. 85c. New York, Sept. 7.—Money 2 percent similar part on going u 2:35 |». M., and returning o part'd round trip tor il'iy « ndor tWo will b* K. A. FLEW ELLEN, Receiver. Western Railroad of Alabama. -'44- U- ru \ltf H0URS T0 NSW YORK State bonds quiet and nominal. Stocks dull and lower. NINE HOURS FASTEST TIME! MARIO ARRESTED IN VENICE. London, Sept. 7.—Mario, tho famous tenor, has boon arrested at Venice for violation of the press law. His residence has been searched, and he has been taken to Turio for examination. WESTERN RAILROAD OF ALABAMA, Oolumuub, UA,, .July t»th, 1574. TRAINS LEAVE COLUMBUS DAILY r Montgomery aud Selma, New York, September 7.—Money easy. Sterling heavy at G. Gold very dull ut 109$al09}. State bonds quiet aud nomi nal. Provision Markets. New York, September 7.—Flour quiet and steady. Wheat quiet and unchanged. Com a shade firmer. Pork quiet $22 G2J. Lard quiet; steam 14 9-16al4§. Livkbpool, September 7.—Baoon 84s. i B At , anta and Richmond Air-Line. tip. fur lung clear bn-anore; 3d. fur UUUI . 0TTB S;36 .. short clear middles. DunvUlo 3:27 p. m. Richmond 11:05 p. m. Ar- Liverpool, Septeiubor 7.—Breadstuffn rlvo at WsRiiiugton 4:30 a. in-, at Bulllnv firm. Corn 84s. t Mnntg’y, nt Selma, - 11:04 t FOR ATLANTA AND N tsW YORK Ida. m. Arrive Opelika at 12:20 p. m. BOOK BINDERY. H AVING EXTENSIVELY HE FUR- nlnhed my offloe, In anticipation of tha baalneM season which la now opening, with new mate rial, I am tetter prepared than ever to do every description of work desired by Merchants, Corporations, Societies, Railroads, Steamboats. And the Public Generally. I NEW YOnK 6:16 Boundary Line Survey—Hostile In dian*—Mi Illary Movement*. New York, September 7.—A Bismarck, Dakotah, dispatch mentions tho arrival there of the military escort of the North ern Boundary Survey between the United States and British Columbia. The Com mission has completed its survey, and is on its way home. The returned escort report all the re gion of the upper Missouri river as swarm ing with wav parties of Crow and Sioux Indians, and near Camp Crook, a few days ago, they killed three wood choppers, one of whom they burned at tbe stake. A Fort Sill dispatch, of the 29th ult., states that Gen. Davidson arrived there the day previous, and will got away again on the 8tb of September. One Yllllau Leu* In the Service— Whltelcy and Crew Kicked Oul. Washington, Sept. 7.—Col. Wliiteley of tho secret service aud his crew have re signed, and the papors in their case re ferred to the Attorney General. This Wliiteley is he who put the Colum bus, Ga., prisoners in the box, and the witnesses iu sweat boxes. It will be remembered that several gen- tlemeu of Columbus were taken from their homes by this detective aud subject ed to indignities while charged with tbe murder, iu a negro baudy house, of a person whose name the toporter is glad to forget. [Joe Brown ought not to forget him, ns the U. S. Government paid him $10,0(H) to prosecute the tons aud relatives of former friends, and he undertook the case and prosecuted with tho meanno s of a secession reuegade.—News Editor ] Rom* Boy Nuppoaed Found. Philadelphia, September 7.—The fol lowing is a copy of a telegram received at the Mayor’s office this morning from Jas. H. Hoyt, Sheriff of Orange county, New York: “There is a child here whioh I believe is the lost Cbarley Rom<*. I have bad his likeness taken and sent te Christian K. Ross by letter yesterday.” LATER. It is not him. The Goshen, Oruugo county, photograph is not like him. Birmingham Iron Age is in- nt Gov. David P. Lewis has not ed the Republican nomination nor, and that there is some atber he will or not. licals of Madison county, last linated Wm. Counoil, oolored, il and E. R. Bliss, white, for the e. Counoil ia the negro who le demand for the Civil Rights A schools and all, in the “Equal Convention of hia party, bat nf- Scarclty or Water In Philadelphia. Philadelphia, September 7.—No rain has fallen in this vicinity since the severe storm of August 9th, and the drouth has caused a scarcity of water in the Schul- kill, and the Chief Engineer of the Wator Deparguent has issued circulars request ing economy on tho part of citizens in the use of water. The fount&ius have been stopped, and licouses for water carts to sprinkle the streets have boon revoked. No fire-plug bas been opened, unless in the case of lire. THE IXDUSTN. THE WAY THEY ARE ENABLED TO FIGHT. New York, Sept. 7.—A letter from the Red Cloud Indian agency says some three or four thousand Indians who have boon marauding all the summer, and who are now afraid to return to their own reserva tion, have located there with professions of peace, etc. They are fed by the agent, who, in doing so, is obliged to cut the ra tions short of tho Red Cloud band, who have honorably lived up to their treaty all the summer by remaining quietly on thair reservation. True Situation In Louisiana. Shreveport, La., September 7. message was sent to President Grant, last night, signed by leading merchants, bank ers aud professional men of this city, de nying that any resident of this parish participated in the recont murders in this section, claiming that uo spirit of law lessness exists in this parish thnt cannot bo controlled by the local authorities; claiming that the condition of affairs here has beeu misrepresented abroad, and ask ing that a commission of fair-minded men be appointed by tho President to visit the State aud asoertaiu (lie truth. AUSTRIAN POLAR EXP EDI TION—AMER1 EXPEDITION. London, Sept. 7.—Further details of tho Austriau Polar Expedition have been receivod. After abandoning their ships, tho party travoted for seven months in sledges, anil two winters were passed ou the ico. The highest point reached was in latitude 80. A large tract of land was discovered to the northward of Nova Zemhla. The expedition arrived at War- doe iu a Russian boat. Only ono death occurred during the entire voyage. Tho expedition from tho United Htates to observe the transit of Venus, arrived at Cape Town on the 5th of August. THE NEW OCEAN CABLE. The steamship Great Eastern, 5th noon, via London 7th, sixteen huudred and ninety-six nautical miles of cable have beeu paid out. September Gth, 5 a. u.: We aro close to Kelley’s, and we are go ing to buoy, and hope to make a final splice to-day. The cable is iu perfect condition. AS EX-UNITED STATES CONSUL CHARGED WITH RASCALITY. Paris, September 7.—-Charles Perkins, formerly United States Consul at Lisbon, and his wife were before tho Correctional Tribunal of the Seino 'Saturday, on the charge of obtaining 89,000 francs under false pretenses. It is charged that Per kins ohtaiued money by allegations that he had a concession for a cable betweeu Spain and England, and that ho was nego tiating a loun lor Dou Carlos, and that he was engaged iu other monied transac tions. Judgment in the case will be given to-morrow. On ton n lit I Anniversary at l*hlla< delphla. Philadelphia, Sept. 7.—Old Carpen ter’s Hall, standing back from Chestnut street above Third, was gaily decorated on Saturday in honor of tho centennial anniversary meetings of the first Conti noutal Congress in (hut building. Appro priato ceremonies took place, tbe main feature of which was an oration by Henry Armit Brown. Thu ball was illuminated at night. Preoideut Grunt declined to cotuo on accouut of business. Among tbo audience were many distin guished persons; conspicuous among thorn was Hon. Henry Wilson, Vico President of the United States. Four of the oldest members of the Carpenter's Company, which now has but 87 names on its cords, were seated near the reading desk. These were Moses Lancaster, 92 years of age, who became a member iu 1811 ; John M. Ogden, 84 years of ago, who became a member in 181G ; D. H. Flickwir, 7G years of age, who became a tuoinber in 1824 James A. Campbell, 70 years of age, who becarno a member iu 1882. The hull was filled very rapidly after tho doors were opened, and tho small court yard about tbe building, und the alloy, were packed with throngs of people, who gathered reverently about the sacred edifice. Baltimore, September 7.—Flour dull; Howard Street aud Western superfine $4 u4.75. Wheat firm. Corn quiet; white Southern 95a97, yellow 85. Oats stronger; Southern 57aGO. Mess Pork $8]. Shoul ders at 10al0^. Hums dull ami heavy. Coffee entirely nominal Whiskey firm at ftl.OG. Sugar firmer at lOjJal 1. Louisville, September 7.—Flour dull and lower; Supertiuo $4, Extra $4.25, Extra Family a No. 1 $5.75, Fancy $0.50. Corn dull aud lower; white 74, mixed 70. Pork quiet and unchanged. Bueoii active and higher; shoulders 104, clear rib Ujj, clear 15. Lard IGj. Whiskey 99. St. Louis, September 7.—Flour quiet and unchanged. Corn firm and iuaoiive; 72»72] for No. 2. mixed. Whiskey $1. Pork firm $24. Bacou higher ; shoulders 104 cash, 10-f buyers iu sight; clear rib 14Jal4j{; clenr sides 15ul5]. Lard unchanged, 15$ for refined. Cincinnati, September 7. —Flour quiet aud unchanged. Corn firm at 7Ga78. Pork steady at $28 50. Lard steady; sum mer 14. Bacon firm aud scarce; sales of sides at 14£al5. Whiskey active and higher at $1. Cotton Market*. Moopi! By Kennesaw Route. . Lyuctiliu I’liil.tilitliiliiii 1:3(1 |>. Hleojilng i'ii rs run tncu Attain a n» TRAINS) ARRIVE AT COl.UMilUt from Atlanta ami Now York, Ticket* lur tml« ut Union IMmungur Dopol. R. A. RA00N. . OH AS l*. ISA 1.1 Montgomery & Eufaula R. R. Change of Schedule, Taking Effect Sunday, June 21, 1874. SHRL'TOi Li! ? * -Cot- FIREN. MARYLAND FIRE OF $145,000. Baltimore, September 7.—A dispatch states that on Saturday afternoon, tbo greater portion of the business section of Frostburg, Allagheny county, Maryland, was destroyed by fire. Total loss about $145,000, aud the principal losers are Beall & Kerch, $85,000 on stock uud building; Marx Wioet, $45,0(H) ou stock aud building; tho Franklin Hotel, $15,- 000, and Portner’s Hall, $15,000. Total insurance $75,000. WOOD FIRES IN NEW JERSEY—CRANBERRY DESTRUCTION. Elwood, N. J., September 7.—Fires in the woods destroyed some teu thousand acres iu the couutios of Atlantic aud Bur lington, several cranberry meadows, and a few dwelling houses, and a saw mill. Tho tire is still raging. Tho mail stage was delayed twenty hours on Friday, be tween Elwood and Pleasant Mills, on ac count of the fire along tbe roud. Egg Haubor, Pa., September 7.—Tbe pines aro ou fire all around here. Several thousand acres are already destroyed, and tho fires aro still raging. The luuds aro not of much value. Near Hammontowu, fires are also raging, and fifteen or twenty thousand acres are already ruvagod, in cluding several cranberry bogs and much valuable timber. Many buildings were saved only by the hard work of the neigh bors. Liverpool, September 7—Noon, ton steady; uplands 8; Orleans 8j. Sales 12,000 bales, including 2,000 for speculation and export. 2p. m.—Hales basisof middliuguplands, nothing below good ordinary, deliverable in September, 7 18- 1G. Sales on basis of middliug uplands, nothing below low middlings, deliverable in September and October, 7£. 5:80 p. m.—Hales of shipmouts of now crop on a basis of middling uplands, nothing below good ordinary, 7^; nothing below low middlings, H. New York, Sept. 7.—Cotton steady; sales 1,518 balos; uplands 1 Gjc; Orleans 171c. Futures opened easier: September 15 ll-lGal5ij: October 15-J&15 5-1G; Novem ber 15 ja 15 9-82. New York, Sept. 7.—Futures closed steady; salos of 1G,5(H) baluH, as follows : September 15 11-1G; October 15 15- 1G; November 15jal5 9-82; December 15 5 1G al5 11-82; January 15 15-82; February 15 28-82; Murch 15 81-82alG; April 1G]. Cotton steady; sales 1,918 bales at lGja l7 }o. ; net receipts 0 Baltimore, Sept. 7.—Quiet ; middlings 1GJ; sales 151—spinners 40. Charleston, Sept. 7.—Dull; middlings 15jj[; net receipts 221; sales 75. Norfolk, Sept. 7.—Steady ; low mid dlings 15; net receipts G7. Augusta, Hopt. 7.—Quiet; ni ddling 15; net receipts 61; sales 98. Mobile, Sept. 7.—Weik; middlings 15j{, low middlings 14;j, good ordinary bT; net receipts 592; sales 100; stock 4851. Philadelphia, September 7 .—Quiet; receipts 119. Memphis, September 7.—Quiet nnd nominally unchanged; low middlings 15£; receipts 406; shipments 199. Savannah, Sept. 7.—Quiet; middling 154, low middlings 15, good ordinary 14; net receipts 791; sales 71. Galveston, Sept. 7.—Dull; middlings 16, low middlings 15, good ordinary 14 ; net receipts 594; sales d). Nf.w Orleans, September 7 .—Quiet; middlings 1 G’ g l ; net receipts 885; sales 1(H); stock 15,155. Boston, Sept. 7 —Quiet 17j; sales 250 ; stock 8(M)0. Wilmington, Septeinb * middlings 15£; low • uldlin ordinary 18; net receipts 2- IN MASSACHUSETTS* Springfield, September 7.—Dickinson & Fairfield's paper mill, at Hollyboke, caught tiro last night from spontaneous combustion in the rag room. Yegro Hunff for Rape. Louisville, September G.—Lewis Oates, the negro who was in Nioholasville jail for raping Mibb Btrauge, was hanged to day by the people. MAIL TRAIN-DAILY. . Clin k.Uya tutioochno Km Mitli Hpriu^ri with Mubihi A Oil Eiifnuta I2:4‘> A a Arrivn nt Mutils<'U)ur.v 7:16 a * ictiiix nt Union with Mobile A Olrnnl •ml lor Cohimbuu, mid ut Alontgoiuorv with UivorgiiiK. ! tl II. DUNHAM. Stiji’l Aft axainlnatlonof Prluai and Stock I* ask ed, Kuaranteelng Good and Reliable Work manship, with Promptneas. Georgia and Alabama Lagal Blank* Railroad Reoalpt Book* For the different Roads, of various ulses, al ways ou hand, and also made to order nt short notice. In fact, the establishment Is oomplete, and facilities ample todoevery deaortptlou of work, from a Visiting Card to a Postor, and from a Receipt Hook to a Royal Ledger, or * large Quarto Volume. IN THE DEPARTMENT Ut' BOOK BINDING, Many additions have been made during the past season, and It Is now very oompUte, aud work In that ltneeannot be surpassed for ttnlati and durability. Having; an Immense quantity and large as sortment of Type, seven Presses run by Steatu Power, and one oi the most extensive stooks o! Paper, Hill end Latter Heads, Cards, Tags, fco, ever brought to Columbus, no dtlay can ooour, or s.it Is faction fall to lie given, both In Prloe and Quality of Work. NOTICE. rV ^MTIi? 'W ! VV Vlf • Omen Moiulk A Girgih Raiuioaii, l C'olutiibun, April 15, 1S74. / kN AND AFTER APRIL 10T1I, tho PuMHetigur f Train on thin Road will run iih tollowa : Leave Coin min; Columbu* 10:30 a. m W. I, OLaRK, Hup' COLLECES. Wesleyan Female College. MACON, CEOROIA. The Thirty-Seventh Annual Session Bogins Oct. Oth, 1874. rpHK Faculty 1« *ull, corn-1 ting of a Pros! X dent nnd four Profe.-sorH amply urs ateil l»y Hovoml iadieu of itt'go experience and well kim ability Tho ratea of clrculnra rontalning tali Imf rmution addrcHH tho President, < • (J W. SMI augis toct& Seen GEORGIA Pio Nono College, Macon, Ca. middlings 7.—Steady; ph 14|j good By ELLIS & HARRISON. (IRG.-H, I) II.. Bishop of ! giiillciM.t Collnjm will opon of shidentH on TUESDAY, II Is CONDUCTND l»Y uidiul by Lay Profoiuortf, of tho Ut. Kr.v. W. II. Hemeinber the plaoe, OLD AUN AND THEN OEHCE, (Opposite New Postoffloe Uutldlng) Randolph Street, Umlmsakis*, Ua. My Country Friends and Petrous will | lease remember the above, and send their orders to THOM. GILBERT, Columbus, (ia LOTTERY. and Last Concert Fifth IN AID OV THU Public Library of Kentucky. DAY FIXED AND A FULL DRAWING ASSURED Monday, 30th November, 1874 LAST CHANCE FOR An Easy Fortune! A pout pom ii ut of the Fifth Concert of the Public Library of Kcutucky lias breu hj goncrnLy niitlcipiti d, mid is so maul rally for tho lot* rest of all c oncerned, that It uiutt moot the approval of Thi< day ia now ahaolutuly flxod, utnl there will be iio variation trout tho programm* i •I. A HUlUcieiil li u in Ia • r of tickets lutd hi on huvo enabled U1 to have had a largo draw tin- 3lat of July, but a abort |>oat| oiioinont The Fifth Gift Concert IH "'HE LAST WHICH WILL EVER HE GIVEN UNDER Tit 18 CHARTER AND l(Y TIIK PitKS KNT MANAGEMENT. That it wi I positivo'y and iiiikjiiIvocally hike -i city pr ’nrlookioi IIO Colley Jy»l d* Ki v. C. I*. GABOURY, D avidson con lege. Next Session will begin Sept. 21, IH74. ID althy location. Moral muiosphuro. Ktnct die- I) LA It 14, Jh24 d*w3m] /« Executor’s Sale of Valuable City aud Country Real Estate. A okfkauly to an order from the Honoiu'de Onurt of Ordinary ol Mus- co.ee eounty, will be mild ut 11 o’clock on the FlrsITnssdny In November Next, In front of Ellis fit Harris tn’s Auction Room, the following oeslraol- real estate, bulonglng to the estate of Titos. Ragland, decease I: City lot No. 200. with tine brick dwelling and all necetsa'y out-houses, comer Oglethorpe and Bridge rtreots. South part of city lot No. 201, w th dwel lng und out-nouses, ou Ogl-ihorpo street, adjoining above property. House and lot on east side Oglethorpe street, next north of George Venable, occupied by Mrs. AUeu. The Enquirer Office Building and Lot, ou Randolph street, being part of cl.y lot No. 173. Hoase and lot In Wym.ton, lately oco iiiled ! Plantation and Stock for by Thos. Ragland, with lo acre* land attached. Rolft Lot No. —, In Coweta reserve, south ot o d OalO. Macon nad, about 3^ miles from the city, con- >,. antatiov /with ou with Wood. Wood ! ir It* per cord. Orders filled pro i application to the .21 tf MUSCOGEE aMANUF’NO ( r Miles from the dtyof Columbus, the Parties wishing to invest In real estate will J containing 820 acres productive land, we 1 lut- flnd It to t*ielr Interest to attend t-ij sale, us . proved. Good Water, Orchard, ko., &c., A te property is desirable and eligibly located. bargain wilt bo given. Apply on tbo pretui- A E. RAGLAND, Executor. Columbus, Ga., Sept 1, 1874. sop 2-dlwtdAwtd 1(. II. GUN BY, or K. M.GUNUY, Columbus. Ga. dfodBtfliwVt Monday, 3Oth November, that the music will U thetant the country ..fluids, 20,000 Cash Gifts $2,500,000! <- distributed by let muoug ticket holdeta List of Gifts. ONE GRAND CASH GIFT 4260,000 ONE GRAND CASH GIFT 100,000 ONE GRAND CASH GIFT 76000 ONE GRAND CASH GIFT 60,000 ONE GRAND CASH G1TT 26,01- 6 CASH GIFTS 100,000 each 100,000 10 CASH GIFTS 14,000 each 140,000 16 CASH GIFTS 10,000 each 160,000 20 CASH GIFTS 6,00o each 100,000 26 CASH GIFTS 30 CASH GIFTS 60 CASH GIFTS 4.000 each loo.ooo 3.000 each oo,ooo 2.000 each loo.ooo 1.000 each 100 ooo 600 each 12o,ooo 100 each 60,000 60 each 060,000 GRAND TOTAL20,000GIFTS, ALL CASH EL 600,000 PRICE OF TICHETM. Whole Tickets 00 00 Halve* 25 00 Tenth, nr each Coupon & yo 11 lYbulo 'tickets lor f,u0 00 'HYi Tickets for 1,U00 00 l’erious wishing to Invest, should irder prompt ly, oitlier of tbe noma Office, i— • * - , cub* rot tbe noma Office, or our Local Agents. Liberal commissions will be allowed to taiisleo tory agents. Circulars rontaluiug full particulars luruisfuQ ou application. THO. E. BHANLETTi:, Agent and Manager, Public Library tiuildiug, Louisville, Ky. For tickets and Information, apply to Capt. C. A. Klink, Agt. Columbus, (i a. . aug7 il2taw*wtd