Columbus daily enquirer. (Columbus, Ga.) 1874-1877, November 08, 1874, Image 4
COLUMBUS SUNDAY ENQUIRER: SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 8, 1874.
_k have milled her taco,
/ permitte d to flow
J of atomy lace.
I her fen in Its play,
► a lugubrious scope,
t to be waving away
t of tue angel of Hope I
i at the robe of a queen,
' sombre ai • • —
) 1 never 1
Ekrtp thinking the beauty
of coorae, naing a slang of a different
order, but both too often iodnhing in the
nse of words which no dictionary explains.
■tricks Twenty t'eeterles Old.
A correspondent of the Cleveland
Leader, writing from Persia, *ays : “Com
ing ftom Bagdad, which, in a direct line,
is forty-four union distant, three immense
mounds ttppcar in succession, which have
tho appearance of natural hide. But
close examination shows that they ore
composed of bricks, and arc tho remains
of largo Buildings. These are on the oust
side of the Euphrates, and the largost is
about one hundred and fifty foot in
height. They ate supposed to be on an
cient citadel that defended this part of
tho town, the royal palace and « louiple.
How immense must the original buildings
have been, when it is considered tbut
these mounds have been I he s'orohouses
from which, for twenty centuries, bricks
of the finest description have been taken
to build the grout citios of Csosiphou,
Selncia, aud Bagdad ! Fragments of ala
baster vessels and images, fine earthen
ware, marble, and great quantities of en-
amhlfd tiles, the coloring and glaring of
which are still surprisingly fresh, can yet
be found iu these mounds. On the faco
of every brick is stamped, in cuneiform,
the name and title of Nebacbuduezz *r.
They arc all laid face downward, and tho
cement in which they are imbedded is so
bard that they nan only be detached with
tbo greatest difficulty.
•taslvlowc-l, at my
T tokens of tcn.Icr regard,
nf jii wa» f>c.\rco without measure,
^r that goes by tho yard.
ts a curious passion;
1 am -oruly ulr.ild,
phaso of tne fashion
toginniug to fudo>
ire the shadows of grief,
will folbiw ti.o night,
betoken relief
besyrnholed In whl cl
f It woro l-llo to quarrel
don, or aught she may do;
_ nelqdo with amoral
|metaphor—warranted now—
I lisa slot cumo hamleomoly oat,
if patient |g mi feat, they say,
I tae sorrow b mildest, no doubt,
i similar way.
>l-ffMlilM , s “Itevelntlwna.”
writer in the Hornet gives
■rtfioa And comment: “Whou tbo
IfRhode tip bo Huro aud have it made
tight-fitting all round, as ovor-
gr* oeing made so extremely tight
HBt possible space is left for un-
- It is fortunate that there
■ Wow in tho Paris atroots, o:
_ j flearoely able (o step over them.
s'tUs tightening mania will stop I
# In tho meantime ladies pro-
r a curious effect with all their
l so tightly back, and tho trains
lr skirt* hanging over their arms.
Iks front (especially when the
" 1 light colored) tho shapes aro
oly seen—too plainly, uouie-
en the figure is over full. It is
i now, n Iso, for ladies to con
1 cither their perfections or imporfec-
tifjMy and young mothers-to-be loudly
nflAplMil nf ’Madnmo la Mode’s’ tyranny
IftlfatoMtpo of. * Madame la Mode?’ they
Aflff. ‘Way, she could never have boon a
rMfUilble married woman, or she would
Bot teVfl invented this fourreau furour!*
Than Is, however, another roason for this
MMtoibMrvance of fashion for ladies’ mod-
Wt«. h* mode has changed sox. It is
-. HOIOSgir ‘Madame’ but ’Monsieur’ who
?ralM the werdrobo, aud that is no doubt
why these occasional iiiconsiHtencios oc-
Mr. Ho will tell you that ho trios tho
•fleet of his fashions on moulded figures
Of irtoproaobablo beauty aud symmetry,
1 tout pis for thoHo whoso figures are
quails modeled. That iu not his fault,
f he coaid ho would have all worneu
fifnl *cd snns peur before his fush-
IOBA. Bat, as he cannot do that, he in-
Ttofs bis fashions for tbo lovely iu shape
and form, and we cannot hint no him loo
OAVOtwly, however much wo muy pity tho
OMVOWu of tho suffering who complain.
Pittance, ladies ; you have bad your tioio
Whilst crinoline uiul pullings lusted. Thou
well-made ladies used to complain tbnt
all WQiuea looked alike—tbo ill and fairly
r ahapod were equally faultless to tho eye.
BalBow that the classic Grecian reign
baa once more stepped iu lino figures ro
tate*. Obacnu u sou gout. In this fash
ion is fair; for, ever changing, sbo is sure
to plenao all iu tuvns, though not en
PKKFEt'r THROUGH Kdl'tTJtlSIU.
Thoro Is no heart. how. ver free and lightsome,
Hut has l»« bitterness:
N> onrtlily hopes, howovor bright ami blithe-
some,
Hut ring of emptiness
The world Is full of suffering and so: row,
iif nngu sh at.d «lus|mlr;
Its brightest promises arc of to-morrow,
Its inouku Ion o very shore.
Our weary ho»rt«, with -low ..ml sail pulsation,
He .t to the march of yearn ;
Their days are given to toll without cosnavion,
Their gloomy nights to tears.
Romernberlng this—all through
mission,
Perfect through suffering.
Then coase, O toolnh heart, cease thy repln-
1 ng;
Tho Master's hand at-ovo
Is only purifying and refining—
The Alchemist Is Eve.
Thcset oars end thrills of woe, thoso great
afflictions,
Are hut the chastening rod ;
And they t-huil prove the heavenly benedic
tion «,
The mercies of our G.d.
What teemeth now a dark and Urnary vision
Unto our tear-dltnuied eyes
Shall bur#t In glory Into scoiios olyslHn,
A blooming par.<Jlso.
Ihe pD
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
For Tax Collector,
• CAPT. CHARLES A. KMNK an
notices Hltnselt
Uolltctorof Musuog. e Uounty.
Wednesday In January.
DRY ccoos.
l or Tax Collector.
I r-spoctfully announce myself a can-
dtdate for Tax Go.lector of Muscogee
county at the election on tho first Wednesday
In January noxt.
oct 4 to* JACOHO. UUttUUg.
For Tax Collector.
• S. II. GLEGIIOHN announces him
self a candidate for the oiii <e id Tax
Collector of Muaoogeo county. Election lir-t
Wednesday In January next,
octa til
tar
For Tax Collector.
I respectfully announce myself acan-
did Ate for Tax Collector of Muscogoo
county at tho election on tho first Wednesday
In January next.
octutf JOHN A. HUFF.
To the Voters of Muscogee.
I HEREBY ANNOUNCE MYSELF
a Candidate for the office of Tax Re
ceiver of Muscogee Connty, at the election on
the First WoJnesday lu January.
oct8-te T. O. REES.
«-*»!The ladies’ now over garment, which
teBtede of cloth, resembling ah nearly ns
jMMBtblo tho far of Homo uuimal, is called
tha “camel,’’ aud the collar which orna-
BNBts it rejoices in llio unmo of the “dog
oallar." According to tbo latest Baris re-
potto a lady may exercise her own choice
4B the selection of tho animal she wishes
to ftpreseut, and may appear as a roiu-
Itir, as a bear, a northern elk, or, iu fact,
At Any rough skinned animal her taste
BftjSr dictato.
fBOV. B. Stoyle Ghownc, In Amor loan llomoe.]
Viang in Stood NoelHy
We allow ourselves to say of a rich man
that ho h i* got “stamp iof the drunkon
nan that l»o is “tight,” or “boozy; ”of any.
that pieasea us or is satiufuotory
that it in “ntuuniiig :" “awful" in counid-
MW4 a better word tbnn very, and wo are
avfal cold, or but, nr Hick, or jolly, an Ilia
•M. may bo ; it. in tinor to nay “you bot"
i.mi to uuawor a quoatiou by a simple yaa;
«»«ytbiny test annoys us ia “iufarnal,"
or “boastlj i" bank-bills aro “firoonbooka.’’
I heard a lady iu good aooiety say, ro-
Oently, that her dressmaker bad disap
pointed her, aud that iu cuusequouoo she
WM “regularly up a tree wo threaten,
not to huuiiliato or to mortify aiuuu, but
“to take the starch out of himwo rack
op brain to invent elans words for vuri-
W l driuka, aud bring out such names ns
“forty-rod,” ‘'tanglii-fout," “rot-gut,”
“blue ruin" und "Jersey Iiybtuing,''
urorda that would more than puzzlo a for.
•igner; s man is nut ohented, but “done
brown, or “bamboozled railroad oon-
dUOtors do not aieal (in fuot we aro gotling
• Uttle nenaitivo about using Iho word),
^Hlt “knock down i" bank cashiers do not
swindle aud steal, but commit "irregu
larities;" wo hear of n honso being “bur
■lad,” and tbnt two foot-pads “wont
tluough'' a belated traveler ; a fair doate
ii spoken of as a “squoro man,” and
moat wonderful Iusuh fWistff; a sulistau
Uil diuner is apokou of as a “square
meal;” wo hear invitations given, not to
taka * drink, but to “hoist iu some
poison;” anything antiquated or exhausted
fa 1 “played out;" an insignificant excuso is
■aid to bo “too thin," or wtf aro told tbut
it “WiU not wash; '’ wo buy stocks ou .
“margin," or soil them “short," or “bull
the market; or “take n' flyer," or “sooop
in n long line of stocks;’' wo do not stoko
a aura of money, blit "bo our pile;
a oonvivial party «« next mormug find
ourselves “precious seedy;” our railroad
trains “telescope,'" ora “I’uilmau”breaks
a wheel; a party of rowdies “clean out” a
drinking saloon; n big man threatens to
“wipe out" a little one; wo do not outwit
- r — -anf nn.iMmi' hnf him:
or circumvent another, but “euchre" him;
we “take the shjuo out of” a rival, aud
“fix bis flint” for him; a carpenter “runs
op” a elunp house in a week; an investi
gating committee iu Congress “white
washes” the character of some defaulter,
and bo on and so forth in all tho depart
ments of business and trade and social
intercourse we permit ourselvoa to use
words and phrases which aro of no au
thority, of Leu vulgar aud always needless.
It may bo objected to the purist that
the spoken language is of no consequeuco
to long as we write correctly and with ele
gance. But alas! that evil communica
tions corrupt good manners is no more
trns than tha* slangy conversation leads
to dip-shod, slangy writing ; and it often
happens that pome detestable wold of no
authority, and having no right in the lan
guage, slips from conversation into print
Bad usurps a place for itself. Here again
tha modern tmaspaper has much to an-
MW for in the deterioration of language,
ffteog usurps the place of wit, and a cant
BhWM to often made the poor substitute
lor the witty repartee. It fe untrue to
Miff that along to only need by the lew end
tolerate. On the other hand, Ua oae
8tainu> Taki.b Linbn. — Table linen
which has been repeatedly stained with
tea and coff* o finally becomes dingy, end
can t»e made white and clean again by
wetting and laying on the grass in tho
■nn a day or so.
Ceut.mn Cuke ir-.fi a Uattlesnakh Bite
on Hrim n 8tino.—A physician iu Oregon
writes: ‘'Take she yolk <f u good egg,
put in a teacup und stir in ah much salt
as will nmko it thick enough uot to run
off, and spread a plaster und apply to tho
wound. Do this when bitten or stung,
and I will insure your lifo for a sixpence.
I have tried this remedy in a number of
cases, and have never known it to fail.”
Wahiuno Powder. — In Belgium and
Holland, linen is prepared beautifully,
because the washer women use refined
borax iiihteud of soda an a washing pow
der. One large handful of borax is used
to ov»*ry ten gullous of water and tho sav
ing of s up is huid to be oue-hulf. For
laces and cambrics an extra quantity is
used. Borax docs not injure the linon,
and softens tho hardest water. A ten-
spoonful of borax added to an ordinary
kettle of hard water, in which it is al
lowed to boil will effectually softon the
water.
To Bleach Cotton.—A very good way
to bleach cotton is to soak it in butter
milk for a few days. Another way is to
make a good suds, put from one to two
tabluspoonfuls of turpentine into it be
fore putting the clothes iu. Wash as
usual, wringing tho clothes from the boil,
aud drying without riuning. By using
the tahiespoonfiilH of turpentine in the
firbt suds on washing days it will save
half the labor of rnbbing, aud the clothos
will never become yellow, but will remain
a pure while.
Breakfast Rolls. — Take a coffce-
onpful of now milk; two bouton eggs;
half a cup of fresh yeast; u ton'poouful
of salt; a touspoonful of sugar; twotabln-
spoonsful of batter or sweet lard ; stir in
briskly enough sifted flour to make n stiff
batter. They should be mixed in this
way at tea time, und covered up to rise.
Lsto in tho evening when the dongh in
light, mould it out on tho board and put
back iu the pan, and cover ag»lu. Jn the
morning tear off, but do not cut, iu pieces
of sufficient sizs to twist up into rolls,
working it as little us possible ; whon they
puff up, Imke in a quick oven, aud eat
them while hot.
Good Bread. —I knew this ii a trite
subject, but uni no thoroughly i in pressed
with tho row! comfort and rest it gives iu
the household, tbnt l want to say n few
wordN to housekeepers about really whole
some, palatablo bread.
Iu tho tirut place, 1 would like to give
you my method of making light bread:
To ono quart of new milk, add ono tea
cup of good yosst, two tenHpoor.fulH of
salt, and flour enough to mnko a smooth,
thin batter. Bet in a cool pUce to rise
over uight. As oaily nn practicable next
morning, work iu flour ouongh to mako
the dough Htiff and firm. This is a criti-
al point iu bread making. Tho dongli
should be worked until very smooth, and
flour enough worked into it to provout
any sticky feeling. Hot it to riso again.
It should bo ready to make into loaves in
an hour. Make out your loaves, working
the dough thoroughly aud UHiug ns little
flour n.H possible. Lot tho loaves riso,
aud bake in a hot, uot scorching oven.
There is apparently much work abont it,
but wheu wo take iuto consideration tho
length of time a good sized baking lasts,
the worrying, heating and hurrying it
saves at every meal time, aud the happy
feeling it brings to know tho hread-jur is
well tilled, I thiuk it pays. I have found
that a stone jar, securely covered, keeps
bread moist and sweet.
To LLeal Poisons from Ivt —A simple,
yet very effectual remedy can be found in
a solution of coperus water, applied by
imuu>r*iug tho wounded part into it, or
by bandagiug it with cloths dipped iu it,
aud wet as often ns they become dry.
Make the copperas solution by turniug
boiling water upou the green crystals,
and let the water take up oil that it w ill;
thou pour it off from the sediment into a
bowl uud dip tho hands or feet iuto it.
Groat relief will be experienced in even a
few hours, and repeated applications will
never fail to comploto the euro. The
same remedy will apply to poisoning by
oak aud sumac.
Chicken Cholera.—A farmer in Ilab-
erslmm county, Georgia, cures chicken
cholera by souking corn in korosotio oil
and feeding it to his fowls. This very
pungent oil kills the parasites which cause
the disease called cholera.
Cotton Cloth for Hot-Beds.—J. B.
Root, n successful market gardener, states
iu the Fruit Recorder that ho uses cotton
cloth at a cost of oue-eighth that of glass
for more than three-fourths of his hot
beds , and although not so good for the
earliest beds, is preferred for all Inter
ones. It is prepared by making tho
cloth-covers a few inches wider aud louger
than the frame, hemmed and provided
with suiall curtain rings fifteen inchos
apart around tho border, stoutly sowed on;
and by hookiug over nails, the cloth is
after I ^ rawu »ir-tight over the frame. One
quart of linseed oil, ono ounce pulverized
sugar of load, and four ounces of pulver
ized rosin are heated, dissolved and thor
oughly mixed iu nn iron kettle, and one
coat upplied while hot to the upper side
of tho cloth. This renders it tight and
neuily transparent.
A fteflnJtion of ilelffton
Religion means tbo moving of tho
human soul rightly toward* God, toward
aud toward duty. Ho who is
using his whole self according to
the laws of God, is religious. Home
men think thut devotion is religion.
Yoh, devotion iH religion; hut it in
not a>l of religion. Hero is a time
written in six parts; and men aro wrang
ling and quarreling about it. One says
that the harmony is iu the ba «, another
that it is in tho soprauo, another that it
is in tho tenor, and another that it is in
tho alto ; but I say that, it is in nil the
six parts. Each may, in and of itsoly, be
better than nothing ; but it requires the
whole six parts to mako what was meant
by the musical composer. Homo men say
that love is religion. Well, love is, cer
tainly, the highest element of it, bat it
is not that alone. Justice is religion;
tidolity is religion; hopo is religion; faith
is religion; obedience is religion. These
arc nil part and parcel of religion. Reli
gion Ih ns much as tho total of mauliood;
und it takes in every element of it. All
the elements of manhood, in their right
place and action, aro constituent parts of
religion; but. no ono of thorn alone is
religion. It takes tho whole manhood,
imbued and inspired of God, moving
right lmth heavenward and earthward, to
constitute roiigion.
For Tax Collector.
jp'-TjY** Wo aro authorized to announce tho
name of DAVIS A. ANDREWS, Esq.,
ns a candidate for Tax Golloctor ot Musoogee
county, at the etuulng election In January
next. octlo eud.vwtd*
For Tax Receiver.
I announce myself a candidate for
Koeefverot Tax Returns for Muscogee
county. Eloctlon first Wednesday in January
next.
JORDAN L. HOWELL.
fioj/iT doodAwte
For Clerk of Superior Court.
I respcctrully announce myself as a candi
date tor re-election to the olfloe of Olork of Su
perior Court of Muscogoe county. Election
first Wednesday In January next.
BOpSOtd JESSE J. BRADFORD.
For Clerk of Superior Court.
I respcctrully auuounco myself a can-
(Ud&to lor Clerk of Suporlor Court,
soliciting tho Bupportof the public.
oct3 die GEORGE Y. FOND.
For City Sexton.
Wo aro authorized to announce the
natnoof ABRAM ODOM ad a cardl-
da to fur Sexton of tho olty of Columbus, at tho
election on Saturday, the tilth of D- comber
next. octll to*
For Tax Assessor.
—Germany has launched her seveuth
iron-clad and is jubiluut. Iu April she
will launch another. Sbo is also prepar
ing n fleet of twelve ctiirassod corvettes,
of 3,000 tous each, for harbor defense.
Even with these additions her navy is
small compared with that of other Euro
pean powers. England has thirty-eight
iron clads, eighteen of which are turret
ships ; France has twenty-eigbt, and Italy,
Russia, Austrin, aud Turkey, hsve fifteen
each.
Tho Hartford Time* ruvs that New
Eflglatid was formerly exempt from fevor
and ague, but “since the war this trouble
some disorder has existed, nearly every
year, to some extent, along the Connec
ticut coast, between the Connecticut
river und New York, and now it has orept
into the middle region of the State. It
has existed at New Haven for some time,
and during the last mouth it has prevailed
aerionsly at Portland, Middlesex ooanty—
the seat of the freestone quarries.
—Mias Phoebe Cousins was greeted
with more applause than almost any lady
\ who spoke at the Woman's Congress. Be-
MwadoaeU the strata of «*totf, from \ tag a lawyer, it waa supposed that she
fileftevgyiuim to the atreeLbaggar, ea*,\woek4apeak te the petal aedbebrief.
The Buy of Rest.
It is impossible to ostiniato the blessed
effect produced upon n nation's health
arid happiness, when, on the retain of
onch Sunday, millions aro thus set free
from toil; whon tho lodger in closed on
tho desk; whon tho hammer rosls upou
tbo anvil, and tho wheel of tho factory is
silent; whon tho mine sends forth ita
crowds, into tho light and glory of tho
new-born day; and when men can rest
their wearied frames, or tread the groon
earth or hoary mountain and breathe the
fresh air, and look calmly upou tho blue
sky overhead, or listen to tho sounding
stream or beating sea wave, and when the
very dumb oatlle partake of the universal
blessings.
Truth will Live!—Philosophy has
sometime foegotten God; a groat people
never did. The skepticism of the last
century could net uproot Christianity,
hcoutiso it lived iu the hearts of millions.
Do you think that intidelity is spreading ?
Christianity never lived iu tho hearts of
so many millions as at this moment. The
forma under which it is professed may
decay, for they, like all that is tho work
of man’s bonds,are subject to tho vhangea
and cliauces of mortal being; but the
spirit of truth is incorruptible; it may be
developed, illustrated, and applied; it
never can die; it never can decline. No
truth can perish. No truth can pass away.
The flame is undying, though geuorations
disappear. Wherever moral truth lias
started into being, humanity claims aud
guards tho bequest. Each generation
gathers together tho imperishable chil
dren of tho past, and increases them by
new sous of light alike rudiant with im
mortality.
Tint Best Service.—A story i« told of
u great eaptaiu who, after a battle, was
talking over the events of tha day with
his officers. Ho asked them who had
done the best, that day. Some spoko of
otie man who had fought very bravely,
and some of another. “No,” Haid he,
“yon aro all mistaken. The best umu iu
the field to-day wus a soldier who was
just lifting his arm to strike an enemy,
but when ho hoard the trumpet sound a
retreat, checked himself, und dropped his
arm without striking a blow. That per
fect ami ready obedience to his general
is the noblest thing that has been done
to-day.” And nothing pleases God so
much as absolute and unhesitating obedi
ence.
—Patrick Henry left iu his will the
following important passage: “I have
now disposed of all of my property to my
family; thoro is ono thing more I wish I
could give them, and that is the Christian
religion. If thoy had thut, and I had not
given them one shilling, they would bo
rich; nud if they hud uot that, and I had
given them all the world, they would bo
poor.”
—Time ia tho only gift in which God
has stinted us; for Lo never iutrusts us
with ft second moment till he has tnkou
sway the first, and never leaves us certain
of s third.
—Uoavcu is a day without a cloud to
darkou it, and without a night to end it.
—•Carlyle has the reputation of being
better acquainted with all subjects, his,
torie, philosophic, literary and acieuttiic-
thau any living Briton. For years and
years he is reputed to have read on an
average five volumes a day, and to have
skimmed eight or ten more. Reading
has ever been a passion with him, and he
has said that liis idea of lioaven would bo
to ho turned into an iuexhuustnhle libra
ry of new and good books, where he
could browse for all eternity. Ho esti
mates that ho has gloanod the contents of
fully one hundred thousand volumes,
which, when wo consider his voracity,
rapidity, trniued eyes and mind, is not
at all unlikely. Thoro is hardly a curious
and remarkable book in the British Mu
seum that he is not more or les* famil
iar with.
—It is estimated that tho people who
have fallen victims to the famine in Asia
Minor uumber over l"»,0iU). As an evi
dence of the terrible devastation among
tho cattle and flocks, it is stated that in
one village out of more than 1,600 fiboep
nud goats, ju**t ono sheep and ono goat
remain, and of 100 cows two remuin. In
another, from a flock of 1,200 sheep and
goats, eight aro reported; and from
auothcr flock iu the same village, mun*
beriug 800, of which 700 are mohair
god*, the same number, eight, is re
ported.
—A squaw sat down on tho curb in
frout of the postoffice iu Austiu, Nov.,
and uurolliug a bundle of calico, com-
menoed the manufacture of a dross. In
less tbau an hour tho dress was finished .
end putting it on over her old clothes the
squaw pulled out a pin here, a peg there
end nulled a string lu another place, made
one step and, presto! the old clothes lay
in the gutter. Gathering up the rags
just shed, the noble daughter of the
forest cast one look of triumph on the
spectators and skipped gracefully off.
—Somebody who has heard Georee
William Curtis preach, says e splendid
minister was spoiled when he went into
literature end journalism. Perhaps Mr.
Curtis would like to aee the spoil.
nouncoa himself a candidate for Tax
Assessor of Russo!! county, Ala. Election in
8ep22 td
November next.
8.
DRY
ALI
The New
GOODS OF
LANDA.UER.
BKMEMDLB,
The New York Store!
York Store !
ENDLESS VARIETY
AND LOWEST COST!
The New York Store,
The New York Store,
The New York Store.
IN WANT OF DBY GOODS,
GALL UN
S. LANDAUER,
8. LANDAUER.
DON’T FORGET—THE NEW YORE STORE,
82 Broad Street,
82 Broad Street,
82 Broad Street.
Tho New York Store,
The New York Store.
New York Prices,
New York Prices.
OOMU ONE, OOMB ATiTi.
OOalE OJNTE, COME
A NEW ENTERPRISE !
WE HAVE ESTABLISHED
A WHOLESALE DRY GOODS HOUSE,
ENTIRELY SEPARATE FROM OUR RETAIL STORE,
_A_t INTO. 132 Broad Street,
AND ARB PREPARED TO SELL
Dry Goods, Notions, Clothing, Hats, Boots and Shoes
AS LOW AS ANY JOBBING HOUSE IN NEW Y.-RK OU ELSEWHERE
To < onvlnee any merchant that tho abovo statomont Is correct, wo, roj ose to duplicate any
New York Invoices they may bring us.
N. H —Parti *s dostrmi? of buying at retail will find our Retail Houee (No. 164 Broad street)
bui piled with desirable und sca»on«tble good*, which will ho sold at bottom prices.
Wo have employ eJ conq etent and polite Salesmen, wbo will take pleatnre in showing goods.
CAWLEY & LEWIS,
eepgo dfcwly
Oolumtoueu G-n.
MILLINERY.
PICTURE CALLERIES.
TO THOSE WANTING
PICTURES!
BE SURE YOU GO TO
Williams’
Gallery,
(Over Carters' Drug Store)
Columbus, Georgia,
W HERE you onn procure at tho lowest
prices any stylo of Picture desired, from
Card to Life Nlr.o, Plain or Colored, lu Ink,
Water or Oil Colors.
Prof. DUFF1E in with ub, and too tins no
etures from our Gallory aro notod for their
lollsb and artistic excellence tbnt has
defy com; etltlon in prices,
■y and * -
Wo invite
pertor pel
i superior,
unity and
Wo Invite ...
bo Ballstlod in plelures and prices.
novO tf WILLIAMS BROS.
ip
quality and artlstlo styles.
** onll to the Gallery, and you will
BACK AGAIN!
V AN RIPER, having roturnod to Colum
bus for a short t!mo, will bo found at
Ills oh! stand with Mr. MOtJKE, where he
he (densi-d to servo nil his old customers
friends. Come and sco me. Satisfaction guar
anteed, nob tf
Photographic Notice.
H AVING newly filled up tnyGallory
added the latost Improved Apparatus, also
largely In stock, I ntn now prepared to oiler
to tho public Pictures that tor stylo and finish
will be second to none.
VAN RIPER will aid ino in tho Operating
Department, and will guarantee satisfaction to
nil wbo may favor me with patronago.
(hill and oxnmlno specimens and prices, ovor
Millinery and Ilair Goods Emporium.
Mrs. M. R. HOWARD, Randolph Street,
jioctfully c:
Winter Mil
more markets, consisting of
LADIES*, MISSES’ AND CHILDREN’S
Trimmed and Untrimmed Hats and Bonnets,
Ribbons, Laces and Flowers, Feathers, Velvets,
HEAL AND IMITATION HAIR SWITCHES, REAL AND IMITATION JEWELRY.
4Rir 1 defy competition In prices. octl8 tf
TIFF MOOllK.
A Fact Worth Knowing
Stafford’s Spool Cotton,
‘JOO yards, 60 cents per dozon.
Kid Gloves 25c per pair.
All Linon Handk’fs 15c.
Corsets 75 cents.
Furs at half cost.
Cotton Linsey 15c per yard,
Wool Jeans 25c “
Irish Linen from 50c up.
Black Alpaca from 30c up,
J. KYLE & CO.
DRESSMAKINC.
Miss Dempie Smith
W ISHES to Inform her friends and pat<
runs that she has removed from Jacks-«n
to Hroad street, over Mrs. Dessau’s, where she
will keep the most reliable
PERIODICALS OF FASHIONS
and a varloty or
PRETTY PATTERNS
Call and see them. octlfl Sw
Mrs. M. R. Averett, Dressmaker,
YY ISllES to inform hor friends and custom-
that she has removed from Troup street to
tho cornor of llrhlgo aod Broad Sts., fronting
Miss Carrlo Brown’s. nov4 dAwlm
Notice.
School Wanted for 1875
give the highest recommendations. Qual
ified to teach tho EnglDfi Branches, the
Classics, Mathematics and French.
Address
P. O. BOX .
nov5 dStJtwlt Macon, Ga.
For Sale.
LIGHT SPRING WAGON AND
Apply to
M. E. GRAY,
at Western R. U. Depot.
Harnoss In good order, cheap
NOTICE.
E ERSONS HAVING GUNS OR PISTOLS
at my store over due aro hereby notified
t if they fait to call for thorn by November
16th they will be sold to pay expeuse or repair.
I also take this opportunity of Informing the
publte that I dave on band a very fine assort
ment of New Guns, which I am prepared to
•ell at very low price*. 1 have been tn the
trade In Columbus twenty years, and know
exactly what It require. My good* are *e)eeL
ed to emit it, ami naraateed Ao be preetoetj
wkol I npwewttfce lobe
BANKINC AND INSURANCE.
GEORGIA HOME BANK.
Bank of Deposit and Discount.
Exchange Bought and Sold.
Accounts and Correspondence Solicited.
Dxauorona i
J. RHODES BROWNE, Prw’t B’k. L. T. DOWNING, Att’y at Law.
JAS. F. BOZEMAN, Atlanta. JNO. MclLHENNY, ex-Mayor.
N. N. CURTIS, Wells & Curtla. JNO. A. McNEILL, Grocer.
J. R. CLAPP, Clapp’a Faotory. JAMES RANKIN, Capftaliat.
CHARLES WISE.
GEO. W. DILLINGHAM, J. RHODES BROWNE,
°° Ui tf Caoliior. r*ro«iclout.
ABLE, LIBERAL and SUCCESSFUL
FIREMAN’S FUND INSURANCE
COMPANY.
Gold Assets, .... $670,000.00.
Losses Due and Unpaid, None.
Chicago Losses Promptly Paid In Full, - • $529,364.92
Boston 11 “ “ - - 180,903.89
Seekers of Insurance should see that the Company
they patronize is Solvent, Careful and Prompt.
Loose* Vsltljr Adjusted aud Promptly Paid by
G. GUNBY JORDAN, Agent,
<«»*ly] OOXiTTBXBTJS, GA.
New Millinery and Fancy Goods !
Mrs. LEE, 75 Broad Street,
OULl) roBpoctfully inform tbo Ladion that pho hap just roturnod from New York with
. . the largest, prettiest and cheapest *toek ot Millinery aud Fan y Goods over brougf
this market. It consists In part of tbo following goodg, viz :
Ladies’, Misses’ and Children’s Hats, trimn ed and un-
TRIMMKD. BONNETS, FLOWERS, FEATHERS AND LAOES.
Bonnet and Sash Ribbons, Neck Ties, Embr’d Handk’fs,
Berlin and Kid Gloves in every variety.
Ladies 1 Underwear and Corsets, Blaok Crape Colllars and Veils.
Hair Goods and Jet Jewelry a specialty.
ALSO. LADIES’. MISSES’ AND INFANTS’ SAUKS AND HOODS, OTTOMAN
SHAWLS AND SCARFS, BALMORAL AND UOOP-KIRTS, HEADED AND LEATHER
BELTS, ZEPHYR WORSTED, ovory shade, and many other goods which she offers for e*sh
at tho vorv lowest prices.
Columbus, Ga., OctoLor 11th, 1874. tf
D. F. Willcox’s Insurance Agency
71 BROAD STREET.
pri.ji-
X . BANK, and w;th increased facilities for businoss,' and with thunUs ft.
ago in th • past, ho oilers anew his sorvices to Ills friends and tho puldic generally.
Policies carefully written tn old and rulinblo Companies, on alUlasses of lnsurablo
erty, INCLUDING GIN HOUSES AND CONTENTS.
Oifloo open at all hours of tho day.
D. F. WILLCOX.
sep!6 tf
MOST ANY ONE CAN MAKE MONEY, BUT ONLY THE
WISE ONES SAVE IT 1
If you will only Save what you Waste, It would be no
trouble to become Independent.
IRON WORKS AND MACHINERY.
COLUMBUS IRON WORKS CO.,
FOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS.
Columbus, Creoi-gia.
MANUVACTITBKUB OF
STEAM ENGINES AND HOILKItS, CIRCULAR SAW MILLS,
FLOURING AND COTTON M ILL* MACHINERY,
CANE MILLS, VYIUJP KETTLES, HORSE POWERS, PUMPS,
PULLEYS, SHAFTING AND HANGERS.
ALLUMS’, GOLDEN’S, AND OTHER IMPROVED IRON 8JKEW COTTON
PRESSES,
TELLIER’S and MUHL’S PATENT ICE MACHINES.
Arc Agent* for THE ECLIPSE DOUBLE TUU1UNE WATER WHEELS and
ULSOMKTER PUMPS.
T1IKY K1SKP CONSTANTLY ON HAND
HOLLOW WARE. FIRE DOGS, COAL GRATES, GIN GEARING,
STEAM AND WATER PIPE, PIPE FITTINGS, GLOliE CHECK,
SAFETY AND STOP VALVES, GAUGE COCKS, STEAM 4b WATER GAUGES,
und u general n**ortinent «-f Engineer^ami Maehinista’ Supplies.
A CARD.
The Coluinlius Iron Works Company will furnish Plans, Drawings and Estimates
for Cotton and Woolen Mills, and will contract for furnishing and erecting the com
plete Machinery and appliances for same, of the best and most approved patterns;
and upon the most favorable term*. [no;-20 ti
EAGLE & PHENIX SAVINGS HWT
Less than one year old, and has 378 Depositors.
The Legislature of Georgia binds, by (aw, over $3,000,000
for the security of Depositors—$12 in assets for every dol
lar of liabilities.
Deposits of $1.00 and upwards received. Seven per cent
compounded four times a year. Deposits payable on demand.
N. J. BUSSEY, Pres't. G. GUNBY JORDAN, Treas’r.
COTTON WAREHOUSES.
L. M. HUMUS.
a. M. WILLIAMS.
BURRUS & WILLIAMS,
Warehouse & Commission Merchants,
Alabama Warehouse, Columbus, Ga.
Full Stock of Bagging and Ties on band.
the Brown Cotton Gin.
- Mr. W. U. HUGH FI? iu with us as 8calc$*an, ami will ho plcasid to f
We also sell
a hia old frionda.
PRTER PUKBU.
A. ILLGE8.
Fontaine "Wa relionse.
ALLEN, PREER & ILLGES,
Cotton Factors & Commission Merchants
col.'ohb^
OB-UN
IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT.
Having had in our employ an Agent th3t we have discovered to be .Imply
diminutively intlgnifloant and contemptuously unworthy, unreliable, IndO'
lent and dbhona.t fallow, through whom an imprewlon hat baeomo currant
that we are about discontinuing our businaaa in Columbua, wa daalra to nay
that notwithstanding any and all auoh rapresentatlona that may ba or may
have bean madt, wa are datarminad to mako our Machine more prominently
THE HOWE XACHIHE COMPANY.
SAVE YOUR MONEY!
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS.
Ch.ewaola Lime Oo.
H0LSTEAD & CO., General Agents,
Columbus, Greoi-gia.
[IS LIME te prononnood by Eminent Geologists to bo tnado from tho Finest Hock in tho
Southern States. It cannot be equaled in quality or price.
CEMENT AND PLASTERERS’ HAIR
always on hand at lowest prices. Orders flllod promptly.
UOLSTEAII A t'O., General Agents
octo tf Oolumhus, Ga.
HOLSTEAD &
AGRICULTURAL
co.,
DEPOT!!
S3
Is ’Warranted Perfect!
LIGHT DRAFT, SUBSTANTIAL WORKMAN-
SHIP'AND VERY LOW PRICE!
Farming Implements und. Machines!!
SEEDS OF ALL KINDS!
CHEMICALS FOR HOME-MADE FERTILIZERS!
RUST-PROOF OATS, GEORGIA RYE, WHEAT, BARLEY, OLOVERJAND
ORASS SEEDS!!
IfOLSTEAD A CO.
Col umibnn, Li*.
LIQUOR., WINES, etc.
ROSETTE & LAWHON,
Wholesale and Retail Liquor Dealers.
At this Establishment PURE and UNADULTERATED LIQUORS MS sold.
Brandies, Rum, Qin, Wlnaa, Whiaklaa of all qualifiaa, tan different brand.-
ROSETTE &, LAWHQN
ARE AQENT8 FOR THE ORANGE RIFLE POWDER
S«U st Nsw Yort prlMi, bright* adM.
aoriasdfcwaa ROgETTl A LAWUOK