Columbus daily enquirer. (Columbus, Ga.) 1874-1877, December 06, 1874, Image 2

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Jfendngjjjttffgfogg. pmbub. BUXDAT. DECEUBEB C, 1874. COLUMBUfc> SUNDAY ENQUIRER: SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 6, 1874. AXOTHtB SXTBA. Advertiser* should b«M in mind Umi on tho 82nd of February, 1875, I propona lo too*, for free distribution, in extrn adi- tion of FIFTY thodsakp conns of tho fimr- dat Eimjotiiie—sn eight page raven ty-two colomnpnper. Bend in your "ads” be* (ore all the spaoe is taken. A. R. Oiuomi, Proprietor. iiromsTTo* UBaaitma. After the 1st of January, 1876, a meant net of Oongrees make# it inonmbaot on srsry publisher to prepay the postage on all pApNhtent from his ofllee. We bam beam carrying many subscribers on ae- OOnntbf the hard times, but it will be seen that we cannot send our paper on credit and at the same time, pay the pnatags. We therefore hope all onr eub- aoribers will sgtyp up before this month expiree. The postage on the Daily will be thirty cents a quarter, and on the BbnDAT and Weekly twenty cents a year each. Tbis anm will be charged all mail anbaoribers in addition to the regular aubacription. Hereafter we will ham no olnb rates; first, because we cannot afford it and make a good paper—and eeoond, because we are paying largely for travel ing and local agonts. We hope to estab lish a local agent near or at every poet- offioe in Georgia and Alabama. Wa have ever kept the pledgee made to cur pat rons, and in view of the steadily Increas ing patronage, we propose to add largely to the attractions of the Hunday Eequibeb. Wa oannot do this and retain it as a regu lar daily. The Sundays of all dailies in the land are separate. Therefore, after the first of the coming year, we will issue a paper on Monday as the regular Daily Ehuuibeb. We are forced to do this in justioe to our large speoial Hunday liftL The Daily will be after Jan. 1st, 1876, ten dollars per annum. Those wish ing the Sunday in addition will be charg ed two dollars extra, or twelve dollars for the three hundred and sixty-five papers. This will still leave the Ettqtgnxn a cheap paper. We propose to make it worth its price. Those taking the Dai ly and wishing to oontinue the Sunday, will please notify us by postal eaed or in person before the end of the month that we may arrange our lists. Our great aim is to build up in the course of time a great Southern Weekly, and the Hobday Enquiher is the one se lected for that pnrpose. Under no cir cumstances while it retains its present sise and power can we admit more than tan oolunma of advertising, leaving twen ty-two columns of roading matter. The advertising will be separate and apart from the Daily and Weeely, and will be charged for at one-third the Weekly rate of the former. While we intend keeping up the high standard of the regular Daily and Weekly, we propose to bend every effort and spend every dollar that osn be spared on the Hunday ENquineB, and we propose, before ten years expire, should we live, to give it a good circulation in every State of the Union. 0. J. D. Stewart, Democrat, was elected Mayor of Griffin on Thursday. The vote stood—Stewart 4(»fi, G. J. Drake 276. •ra coNiuu hum. The studaat of bWory, who Nads to ba informed of the past, that ha may get las. aooa for the present, most notice the year ly extending influence and intelligence of the people, the producers, the men who earn their breed by the sweat of their brow. Them was a time whan the s.viU issd world believed In the one man power, at least they submitted to it, and tbe life and freedom of the masers warn subject to the will, whim, or enprloe of a tyran- ioal autocrat, and this In the Christian sen. The control of the autocrat gradual ly fall into the hands of the churchmen, and at lest, even the tyrants submitted to the dictates of the head of the Obureh, emanating from Roma, as of old, hot Em perors dictated to the world. But the world rolled on, bseama older; for we am tbe true aueients—measured by yean, them am the oiden times. Thom to whioh we refer wars a younger people, living in an earlier day. Here is the point, how ever. The Church originated the cru sades, and at ones the Crosier gave place to the sword, and the individual.Knights, the barons of the feudal ages, beoame the rulers and dietatom of the world, acknowl edging but a slim and doubtful allegiance to some shadowy oentral sovereign. Time rolled on, and the clouds and darkness of the Middle Agee were dissolved before the linked lights of Religion and Bcience. Science, however, was still weak, and Re ligion, like symbolic Hope, looked beyond the temporal present and directed thegaae of her adherents to her empire in the great hereafter. Then flashed upon the world the sun of law, and from tbe chaos of the darker day, the tangle of ediot cus tom and whimsical statute were evolved, by the jurists who oontrotled kings, the oodes of law baaed on the Mosaic and Le vitin system. These codes oontrol civil ised men even unto thie day. The law yer! assumed a power in State affairs, whioh they never relinquished; but from their make a matter raoo sprang to seise the reins of power, end to oontrol for e time the world—the statesmen—the men who dioteted the words of kings end shaped the polioy of empires. Characters like him spoken of in Ihoee marvellous poems "Tbe Lost Tales of Miletus. ” Sc sliest wa* he that am deemed him wise. Aad Ki had grows so amt, "the thrusa was lust wlthle the subjects shadow. But tbe day of the professional statesman crate, soldiers, lawyers, professional etatoa. 1 uhd great monopolies is pas), and tbe um of the new power—Ibe workingmen's —it dawning, and tbe press leads tbe nrey. c. Thu offioial reports show that there was a decrease of the national dobt during the month of November to the amount of $128,427. Hon. Banning U. Moore, long a Repre- eentative in the Legislature from Lincoln oounty before the war, died in Thomae county on the .Kith ult., aged <17, B. B. H. Vanci, President of the Board of Aldermen, has become Mayor of New Tork, by the death of Mayor Hsvemeyer. Mr. Vance's term will last only about thirty days. A tTEOIAL from 8t. Petersburg to the New York Herald reports tbe illness of tbe Oxer of Ruasia, and adds that there 1* a rumor afloat that ho hae become inaene. The Cxar is Mi years of age, end has reigned ainoo Mareh 1866. The heir ap parent to tho throne is Czarewitoh Alex ander, now 29 years of age. He married a daughter of the King of Denmark. Jambs Allkn, colored, was killed in Savannah on Thursday by bia wife Mary Allen, with a pair of Bmell scissors. Allen bed knocked his wife down end wee beating her mother, whom the wife stab bed him in the breast with tbe scissors, making a very small wound, bat one whiob caused his death in about three hours. A Washington correspondent leys: "Decidedly the finest turnouts in the oity ere those of President Grant and Post master General Jewell. The former con sists of four blooded bay horses, whioh arc generally drivon to a laudaulet, tbe har ness being silver mounted, end their ap. pesrsnoe on the street always attreota con siderable attention, from tbe feet that they ere always driven in fine masterly style, and ate so beautifully matched. The turnoul of Postmaster General Jew ell ie generally considered by oonnoie- sears to be tbe finest in tho oity. He drives in his laudeau two megnifloent blocks that can make their mile easily in- aids of 2:60, end their alyls of action si- ways makes them noticeable." A oobbespondln r of the New York Uer- aid, writing from Hcranton, Pa., makes s startling report of the state of lawlessness prevailing there. Uo says an ormsd or- ‘ gonixation of murderers end intimidatora exists, and that uo man who denounces th« m or stands in their way is safe. He publishes a uumbor of letters sent by them to citizens, warning the reoeipients to leave, or to "prepare to meet their God. These letters are rudely illustrated by fig ures of coffins, cross bones, skulls, hearts pieroed by daggers, Ac.—fac simile* of which ere printed by tbe Herald. In short, this correspondent reports just such e state of things aeluatly existing in the mining regions of Pennsylvania as politi. col agitators falsely charge upon portions of the South. Tbe only difference is, be sella them "Mollis Maguires” instead of Ku-Klux. Gov. Hartranft is taking no affective or energetio steps to punish the rioters, nor has he made any cell on the President for troops. The Enforcement or Kn-Klux law ia particularly applicable to their cose, but uo one seems to think ft applying it. The general impression st Paris is tnat tbe message ot President MacMihon made no change tho lH) u Uo4l ,jtu*lion. The LegUnuaYa are firm in their refueel to vote tbe ooattiiatmnal bula -rT. masting of the Deft Centre on reaterdav rejected the propoaitkm that an imiee. dial* diMtunioD bill be moved in Um An- * ‘j, nod resolved to uwait tbe iniUt- W oould not lest. The tomb of Bolence, fed by tbe brains of her martyr ohitiiren, grad ually rase from a flioker into a steady and undying flame, that again linked with Re ligion ; the letter to light np the fnture, the former to illnnie the present. Then dawned tbe day of great discoveries end mighty inventieoe on the world, and tho invention of the printing press wee com pleted in time to bereld to the wondering the mystery of the atari. Steam then bored its tireless arm, end the obelned lightning stood obedient, like the Hetoury of old, lo speed winged through apace with the massages of modern demigods. At ones rose the day of greet corporations. They ruled empires in Anurias end India, and monopolies controlled war II In Ohln*. Corporations had their delegatee in Ibe legislative halls of Ur* world, sod their iufluenes end wealth mode nations end rsler* their servants. The day of these corporations is not yst post, but Ihstr Influence le waning end a new power power hitherto passive, save In indi vidual exertion—ia coming to tip surface to sesame charge ot the elements erected by their hands end brain. This power is rising from the ranks of the people, sturdy, trained end nnaelflah, with oorded arm end manly brow, end nnflinohing eye— the controlling power of tbe near present is the worker, the meohenie—tbe people. The apprentice of yesterday is the median I o of to-day— he will be the ruler of to-morrow. Tbe workingmen ore now in the oonneile of kings, end their voles is potent in form ing the future ot empires. They ait in the highest offiees of republics, and they oontrel the legislation of the Western world. Their oelllng Is s battle cry for laboring millions^ and their strong hands ore the commissions of this modern order of nobility. It la they who whiten tbe see with oommaree laden crafts. They who make the path for the lighteiug for beneath the waves. They who span con tinents end pieroe mountains to build road ways for ths giant steeds of steam. They who dive Into the blaek mine*, as divers plunge into the sss, to return with the jewels of melel and ore which they place In fnrnace and mill erected like al tera to the genius of Labor. They who raise the mill end ourb the waters, end weave the fleeoy staple Into the products that era yet to enriob thie southland. Thank God the workingman abroad end st homo, North and South, ia to-day the ruler of the world. But there is another working power we have not named that represents this mighty isfloeooe, end throwing off partisan shackles, strides like the pioneer in the working army’s advance, to dear the way end light up the derkneae—it ie the prietlng press. In its construction the arts combine, end to feed it eeienoe, in ell department*, ie laid under tribute. Lightning end steam are its hand-met. mechanical skill and eeholsrly training are its servants. It visits the cot of the poor, and wears the some smile of weloome it eooords to the rloh. It bettlea against prejudice, end from the advance ehonta beck oheering words to the ermy straggling after. It ie the matter spirit of onr modern meehsnlet. It ie the ter ror of tyrants, and the friend of the op pressed ; but more then ell, it wurka night end day to render an equivalent for its separate pittances. Thackeray understood this triumph of modern mechanism, as he showa ia Fendennis.” "They were passing through the strand as they talked, and by a newspaper office which was all lighted up end bright. Re porters were ooniing out of the place, or rushing ap to it in cabs; there were lamps burning ia the editors' rooms, end above, where the compositors were at work, the windows were in t blase of gee." “Look at that, Pen,” Warrington said. ■Thera she le—the great engine—she never sleeps. Bhe hoe her ambassadors in every quarter of the world; her car riers upon every road. liar offioers march along with armies, sod her envoys walk into HUteeiuene' cabinets. They ore ubi quitous. " And thie mechanical power records its sots and registers with mate strength its oppositions and straggles. It never tins, end it never forgets. It may wait for yeers for ths opportunity, sad then strik ing without passion,end continue on,with its opponents nadir foot, while it calmly records s death, s marriage, the rise of an asspUo, tha fall ot stocks, or tho obliteration of a PERIODICALS. It ia always a pleasure to reoslve the periodicals weekly, end monthly, foreign und domestic that give us the news of tho world's progress in art, eoieuoe, religion end government. Picking up tbe msgs- tlDea and weeklies In the order found on our table, but an order that does net indi- oete onr preference—for it ia herd to ehoosa when ell mo so good. Wo lay hands on “The Galaxy” for Deoember. It is the Amerioan Blackwood, or Blackwood is ths American Galaxy, ws can't say whieh. One thing is certain, Sheldon A Go., of New York, deserve erodit for their sterling megexine. As unassuming in exterior as Blackwood, its contents are vastly more able, general and interesting. Tbe bast writeis of flotton contribute to its pagvs, and the foremost essayists and poets make it the vehicle of tkeit thong Ills. Its soien- tide miscellany is clone worth ten limes the subscription, four dollars s year, while it* "nebnlm” and “current litera ture” ere ever delightful and Interest ing. "Scribner's Monthly” for Deoember oontalns the concluding paper of King's "Great Honth.” Mr. King has shown re markable ability in these ertielee, end the srllet who accompanied him has ebly sup plemented the text. He is the only men who has done justioe to the South with hie pencil. Scribner A Go. deserve oredit end our support for tbeir enter prise. While tbe papers of the South have hod a peonlier Interest to onr people, Scribner's has been e thoroughly eoemo- politan msgizipe, s vehicle for tbe best products of ths world's contributors. Its success shows bow it is appreciated, end a few years mors and it will be without e rival in its line. We wish all onr people oonld see tbe advaotaga ot taking e half dosen good magazines into their families. As s speculation they would pay. "Lippinoott's Magitlne."—We feel deeply interested in this periodical. The day of its first issue we aimed lo get the first copy from the press, and from that day in Philadelphia to this in Georgia, we have never missed a number. It hss grown to be e friend, s cultured genial one. There ie no megexine at home or abroad that excels it in meohanioal excel lence or artistio merit. Its literary exoelleno* is superior, and while it his the staid conservatism of its Quaker owners, end conservative city, it keeps np with the world's thought in every department. It is for sale, like the other megfiines, at ell the bookstores. Terms, four dollars per ennam. Lippin oott A Go., Philadelphia. “Blackwood.'’—This sterling periodical, that has made so many men famous, ia re-printed in this coanlry by the Leonard Boot! Publishing Company. We ere^led to weleome It to onr list of exchanges, and in the fnture will notlee it fully. "Home end School,” John P. Morton A Go., Lonieville. Thie jonrnal should be sustained particularly in the Bonth, os it is devoted to Ike interests of popular education. It* oontenta are always well written end appropriate. It should be in the hands of ell interested in the educa tion of oar youth. "Tbe Americen Farmer,” published by Sands ft Sou, Baltimore, is an authority on agricultural matters. The "Rural Carolinian’'ie too well known to need oolument. W* wish it deserved success. “The Southern Cultivator,” publinhed st Atheus, Georgia, commends itself to our farmers. We wont say planters, for we want ell men to be farmers. • Moore's Rural New Yorker' ie one of tbe oldest and beat agricultural papers, end one of the moat weloome visttora where it ia known. The Golden Age," “New York Msr- oury,” “Irish World," "Christian Union,” "Saturday Night,” and all the great Northern Dailies, come regularly !o hand. We ere indebted to Lodden ft Bates, of Savannah, for the "Southern Musical Journal," end ooples of the latest music. There is no more enterprising house South. The Georgia Mueioal Eoleotic,” pub lished by Guilford, Wood A Go., Atlanta, should be patronized by every lovor of musio South. Its terms are ooly $1 per annum. port of Ibe operations of that periodical. 'Total reoeipiH $17,490.62; circulation H ,'88), Hgsinkt 12,000 the year previous; indebtedness $12,046.20; ineresae in in. debtedness $909. The pries of the Ad- fueate will be inoreaaed to $2 60, wbicb, alter p tying postage, will make it bat little over $2. The trnsteee of Wealeyan Female Col lege submitted e report, showing one hun dred and fifty pupils in attendance, of which fifty-five ere boarders. ‘The trat teen pay glowing bat deserved enlogiams to President Bass end Prof. W. P. Cook, end condemn the habit of sending girls out of tbe State to be eduaeted. Tbe report of tho President of Emory College wee also submitted. One hundred end five young men ere in tbe college course; forty seven in ths academical; and thirteen studying for the ministry. Three new college building have base completed end the fourth will be reedy by January, 8E6RO SMITH ADD THE OWNHITTKE. After Gov. Smith had addressed tbe negro convention in Atlanta, ths other day, end informed them that they could buy good land* cheeper in Georgia than in Missiasippi, the convention appointed a committee to wait on him and ask where the lauds oould be found. We oopy from tbe Herald's report the most significant of the Governor's remarks daring the interview; ‘Well, then,” said .the Governor, "I aey to yon that the lends can be bought all i — ... . ...... over Southwest Georgia end iu Middle Georgia for less then those Mbsiaaippi lends your speaker told you ebon). He said that the lends he went* yon to settle on osn be bought for $8 en sore. Now, I wsh offered, the other day, by Hoe. Wm. E Smith, a plantation of 1 6(8) aerea for $6,(88), or bar than $4 an tore, anil it ia aa good a piece of land as there i* in the Htale. The pablio sales of land allow that it average* not aa much oa$6 an aare. Yon can get land by tha thoasaud aerea all through that section, for less than those Misaiseippi lends. And more than this, you knew it before yon oame here; end yunr people knew it. The truth ib, you don't want to hay lend. This con vention was not called for that purpose ; uor for the purpose of emigration, cither. It is e political convention. It is called for the pnrpose of recounting wrongs that do not exist, and asking for relief for grievances that are not pnt upon yon.” “Bnt Governor,” responded one of the Committee, "we desire to protest against the Ka-klux outrages, which we hear ex ist throughout the State.” "You hear what is absolutely false, if you heir any Ku-klnx storied. Men who talk to yon about these things tell yon falsehoods merely to inflame you against the white people—juat as that poor, in sensible man, (Jobn A. Wimpey,) who followed me in e speech yesterday, told you that I was the cane* of there not be ing but one ballot-box in tha county at the lust eleotlon. He knew I had noth ing in the world to do with it. But about these Ku-klnx stories, I de sire to apeak plainly, and I want you to tell wbat I say to ygn. It has been iny doty as Governor of Georgia to carefully watch those things, end to jealously guard the liberties of all my people, and I say to you solemnly and aswnredly to-dsy.that there bos not Men a Kn-klax outrage in this State since I became Governor. You have never been Ka-kinxed, neither of yon. No! nor neither of yon ever sew s man Kn-klnxed. No I the whole outcry ia raised 'simply by designing men to inflame lie pec your simpfe’ people. I tall you, aa the Governor of Georgia, that there aro no Ku-klux outrages attempted or permitted in this State; and you know that I tell you the truth.” “Whet do yon advise ns to do, Gov ernor 7” “I advise, yon to go home and go to Work. Quit holding the foolish conven tions, and get dowu to honest, hard work. You oan't make an honest living by bang ing around conventions, and making false apeeobea to your simple and credulous brothers. TbiB convention bos dune your race great harm. I suppose you have a thousand colored people hanging around it and attending it Most of them aro hardly able to bay their bread, and yet hero they have lust three days making silly speeches You people Ihiuk you osu livo without work. That’s where yon are mistakeu. Now, my advice to you is, to go home end be quiet, honest, hard-work ing oitizena, and let me proleot you. I'll guarantee every laborer in the State, white or blaok, ell the protection that the richest man gets.” “Well, sir, we must now return to the Convention and make onr report.” “Well, go and tell the Convention what I have told yon. If yon people desire to go West, why I say to yon ‘go.’ But one tniug I shall insist on. You leaders who get up these movements must go too. The leaders art the ones we want to get rid of. The honest negro farmer, who is satisfied and happy if God sends him the early and tbe later rain, we want to stay with ns. The noisy, unscrupulous leaders we want to get rid of." The Committee retired and went to the Convention. When ealled upon for tbeir repott, Wimbisb, the chairman, rase and reported: "1 By Telegraph lo Klouieia.] DOM BATH). —The President and Speaker Blaine baggied yesterday afternoon. —Two boys and a girl were drowned, while venlnring on the iee, in Rochester, N. Y., yesterday. —The Poet Master General forbids let ter oorriere to solioit gifts by New Year's addresses or otherwise. -King Kelexens end eaite, left Sen Franeisoo yesterday morning, in a special Palace Cor for Weehington. —The explosion of the pnenmetio tube which the men were sinking et Fell River yesterduy, killed three end fatally injured one. —Mm. Bailie Reid ban been re-elected engroHNiug clerk of the Arkansas House of liepreHentativefl, which is a handsome acknowledgment of woman's writee. ■The Grand Jury of Savannah found trne bill# against owners of property oo- copied by gambler* and alao indicted sev eral gam I tiers. —All the public building*, and many other bnildiugs in Now York, have flige at half mast in honor of Mayor Havemey- er, whose funeral took place yesterday afternoon. —Tho price offered by tbe Louisiana Jockey Club for the beat drilled and best appearing conimandery at New Orleans was u wauled to Bt. Lonis Commandery No. 1. —Teunie 0. Glaffln and Mrs. Wood boll were arrested in New York yesterdsy morning at the instance of Mrs. Freeman ou the charge that their ball was not np iu a suit Rho had against them. It being shown their bail had been duly furnished, the charge was dismissed. —The Supreme Court, to general terms decided that the grand jnry which indict ed Harrington and others for the safe burglary was illega 1 , and quashed tbe in- diotment*. This decision, it ia under stood, relieves Harrington and those indi cated with him from further trouble. FOR F* IUX. •Application of Von Arnim’s counsel for postponement of trial is refused. —Sir Arthor Gardon has been appoint ed by the EngliHh Government Governor of the Fiji Islands. —Bnenos Ayres sdvioes my Gen. Metre has surrendered unconditionally to the Government, and peace prevails. —A telcgtain to the London Standard from Madrid says thirty arrests have been made in connection with the reoent mu tiny. —The ship supposed to be the Pontiac from Sunderland for Bombay, has been burned at seo, and twenty-six of her crew perish ed. —Fresh case* of small pox are reported at the Liverpool Work House among the steerage passengers of tbe steamer Ab botsford. —The EngliHh Foreign Offioe has a dis patch from Aden, dated November 28tb, stating Dr. Livingstone’s journals have reached Zanzibar in safe hands. —The house iu whiob the lute Professor Agassiz w as born, at Motier, in Switzer land, bus had a memorial tablet plaocd upon its front. —It is reported that the deputies from AlHace and Lorraine were so incensed at Bismarck’s Rpeecli of the UOth nit, that they threatened to withdraw from the Reich-tag und quit Berlin, bnt their friends remonstrated with and induced them to stay. —The Daily JVeica correspondent in Berlin telegraphs the debate iu theReioh< stag continued till a late hour, amid scenes of great excitement. The evening papers issued editions, a sign of uuusual enterprise, giving reports of the proceed- iugH down to tho adjournment. —Captain General Oonoba has issued a circular, which is published in the official Gazette. It is addressed to tbe Governors and Lieutenant Governors on the Island of Cuba, and enjoins on them the utmost vigilance in seeing that the agentn of the Government promptly arrest all who indi vidually or Collectively originate or dis seminate false news, calculated to produce distrust and alarm, and thereby affect the price of gold. —A Havana letter states that Puerto Principe advices of the 24th ult. my that great Buffering there is feared the coming winter, as the troops have not been paid for four months. The same letter states that at the village of Ban Geromnio, cap tured recently by the Jusnrgents, the gar rison of a hundred and fifty men, after a severe fight, capitulating with a loss of 60 killed and a large number wounded, in cluding Maj. Branos, commanding tbe Spaniards. The Insurgents, under Gon zales, captured lf»0 rifles, 2/1,000 cartridg es and a quantity of clothing. The In surgent loss is two killed and 15 wonnded. Alabama Legislature. Friday, 4fA.—Both Houses were en gaged all day on oonteatod eleotion oases, ending in the unseating of sitting Repnb- can members, and the Mating of the Dem ocratic claimants. The Senate toek op the Martin and Mil ler eonteet, from the Oonecnh District, just where an arbitrary ruling of Lieuten ant Governor McKiustry left it two years ago. At that time a vote waa taken on a motion to substitute for the majority re port,* report favorable to Miller, Rep., and it waa carried by the vote of a Democrat, who so voted in order that tie might move a reconsideration. He moved the recon sideration, and MoKinatry not ouly ruled it out of order, but refused to entertain an appeal from hia decision, and announc ed that the vote substituting one report for the other was * vote deciding the con test in favor of Miller, the contesting lie- publican. The Senate to day overruled this ruling of MoKin«try, aud the effect is to restore Mr. Martin to his Mat. The vote stood 19 to 8. One or two Republi cans must have voted with the Democrats. The Houm terminated the Barbour oounty contest by giving the eeata to the throe Democrats sleeted by the returns— Messrs. Crews, Andrews and Espy. The vote stood 64 to 29. All the Democrats, and Henan. Bliss, Boiemao, Cockrell and Reid, Republicans, voted for the admis sion of the Democratic claimants. a*— the Right Centre, and tha Govarn-1 laWUtgeat rwmhmdos wUi soon be the J^aseeteni of world. The day of ***>_ Tho Governor says we oan get the land he alluded to in Southwest Georgia and in Middle Georgia.'* This we considered about the fairest interpretation of so sensible a lecture we had ever heard. But then perhaps Wim- biah had a bad memory. GERMANY. MARKETS. BY TKLKUSArU TO KMffiRIRKR. Masey ami Slack Markets. London, Dsc. 6 —Erls 14%. Nkw Youk, Deoember 6. —Stocks estiva. Money 2% per cent. Gold 111%. Kxekaage dull. Governments dull, but ateedy. State bonds steady. HAVE STATE MEET. Nsw Yoke, Deoember ft.—Loans lnoreasa $3,876,000; specie decrease 2,000,000; least tan reserve decrease t'otioa Markets. LivanrooL, December fi. — Ifooe — Get ton doll and unchanged; upland* 7%; Orleans •%; ■ale* 12.0 c bales, Including 2,000 for specula tion aud export: to arrive easier. Sales on a basis of middling uplands! nothing below good ordinary, shipped la J0M*ry *Rd February, 7 0 16. Sales on a basis or middling uplands, aothtag below low middlings, shipped lo Dumber aad Hales on basts or mid ling uplands, nothing below l.w middlings, deliverable In Deoember and January, 7 7 *6. Sales ont*i below low mir and March, 7%. 2 jo r. m.—ur sales to-day 6,800 balsa wars American. Sales on basis or middling uplands, nothing below good ordinary, shipped In November ana December, 7%. New York, Decomber ft —Cotton quiet; sales 1,211 bales; uplands 14%; Orleans lft. New Yobk, Dooember ft.—Uotton—Futures opened dull, as follows: January 1412-160%: February 16%; March 16%00-ie; April lft^O Nkw Yoee, Deoember 6—Cotton quiet and declining; sales 1,260 bales, at 14%$16e; net receipts 316 bales. Futures closed steady; sales 16,700, as fol lows: Deo mber 14 17-82; January 14 13160 27-82; February 16 6 32: March 16%01T-3J; April ‘ me 16%; *— 16 26 82013-16; May U M2; June!**; July 16 21 32. Mobile, Dooember 6—Cotton easier: mid dlings 140%; low middlings 12%0%; good or dinary 13%0%; net receipts 8,8W; sales l,ftQ0. New Orleans, December 4.—Cotton quiet and unohanited; middlings 14%; net receipts 12,408; exports to Franoe 3,0*7; sales S,ft00; Neck 164,486. Havannaii. December ft.—Cotton irregular; ikldllngs J4 116; net receipts 4,630; exports to continent 4,002; sales 1,621. Boston, Deo. ft.—Cotton dull end easier: middlings 15; low mlcdllngs 14%; good ordin ary 14; net reoeipts 164; sales 408. Provision Markets* 10TH ACADEMIC YEAR. The School Is In one of the rlohest and most charm ug agricultural oenntles In Ameriea. In the heart of the famous Blue Grass ooantry! In Sumner oounty, Tenu., a lovely vallay lying between a range of the t: umber land Mountains and Cumberland rivar, In a beautiful little eit] Liverpool, Deoember 6.—Cora Ms. 6(1.0388. Chicago, Decomber ft.—Flour quiet and weak Corn quiet and unchanged. Fork dull, lower at $10 76 Lard steady 13%. Whiskey steady at 01. 78 7 Cincinnati, Deoember 6—Flour dull and unchanged. Corn Armor, but higher, ear 71072; suelled 78074. Pork dull at $20 *0. Lard dull Louisville, December 6.—Klour unchanged. Corn 74076. Pork unohsnged. Baooh—none City Tax Sales. Street, at corner of Freer, IlUee It Oo , In the City of Uotambul, tho following deierltwd lots, with Improvements thereon, situated in tela elty, and levied on to Battery sundry 11 fee for tales duo said oity or Uolumbu. for the yeer 1874: South half of lot No 438, on wost side of For* Baxter; amount of tax*3134 Part of lot No 160 on west Bide of Oalathorp* street, levied on os the property of W H Blake ly, amount of tax *31 3ft Lot No 31ft oo oorner of Franklin and Ogle thorpe streets, levied on as the property of the estate ot ill Barringer; amount of tax pM lft O Andrews & oo, on east side of Hr oat street, levied on ns tho property of Jno D Oerter; amount of tax *ft88 Lot No 380 on oorner of Fulton and Jackson street., levl—1 on a. tbe property of FM Brooks trustee tor Fannto O Dlckmsoo end ohlldren; amount of tux *37 36 ling fo w by t urerly occupied as a posi H Skinner, oorner ot Kandolph and Oglethorpe s*e> ts, levied on as the property of Mrs M 8 Do Oretfearled; amount ot tax *14116 Beet half of lot No 340, corner of Early and Jackson streets, levied on aa the ALABAMA. LkOIHI.VnYU WRONO BIOHTED—HOW BFXNCkU W.«8 XLkCTKD SBNXTOB—TI1E HTATB CHANGE AND MA80MB. Marais Distils M. K. Dsehrsets Thie body i* iu eeuaiun tt Certersvilie, vitk * pretty full a tirade!) oe. Biabop Wightnwn praaidua. Biahop Pierce la also in uttondanc*. On Thun- day the Cooferrac* voted on on amend ment ot the Ditaipliu* respecting tbe tue of intoxicating liquor*. Tbe proposition woe to utrike out the sentence, "Dmuk- enuern ur drinking apiritnona liquors, union iu oo*** of oecaoaily," and to inaert, "Making,buying,*oUing,or uaiugra u bev- •rage, intoxicating liquon.” 'ibe vote wa* at flrut a tie— 06 to (Mi. Scvirai mam- bar* who bud not voted thereupon had ta*ir huu ottlWd, aad ta* rot* taut ■tood—JM* 69, nay* 68. Thu oUrgj voted—yea 67, uty 63; the luity, yea 12, nay IS. Wu eopy tan following notice of report. mode tram tan eorraepoudane* of tao At lanta CmsHtu&m: e. J. W. Burk* ft Oo., of ta* Ssetbre Christian Adtoeats, made U ra- HOT DEBATE Of THE UtlOHBTAO. Berlin, December 6.—In the oouolu- aion of Biamarck’s apeaob, alluding to Kuluian, who confeaaed he attempted the miuution iu tbe interest of hie oburcb, addressing UltramonUnee, he said: “You may tbruut Kalman away; be neverthe less belongs to you.” [Here the House bant into cheers, whiob were loud and long continued. As this applause sub sided, otiea of “pfni" (T) were beard from the Ultramontane banahee. The Presi dent deol.red these exclamations unpar liamentary.] Bismarck oontinned: “I have no right to oensare such exolama, lions. ‘Pfni’ in on expression of disgust and contempt. I, myself, am not a strang er to these feelings, but hope I am tuo polite to so express them,” Wendherat, Ultramontane, roes and said, that in bia speech from tbe balcony in Kisaengen, after Kalman’s attempt, Biamarok gave the signal for the attack of the Centre. It was wrong to inoitte one party against another. They were drift ing, without that, towards war. Biamarok replied to the accusation. He pointed to the oontinned incitement in the Ultramontane press, and to tbe eveots whioh led to the attempt of Kulmau on Lie life, und added, "were I lo believe half of what the Ultramontane papers say against me, who knows what I should do?" Leaker declared Wradhant'e remarks about inciting to war, unworthy of a rep reeentative of ta* people. The President celled Looker to order. Jackson streets, levied on as the property of Chas Wise, trustee Tor Mrs Theo Ewtnir;*tnount of tax $61 26 ^ North half of lot No 237 on weit side of .Tack- son street, levied on as the property of J F Iver son, trustee for J H Daniel's ohlldren; amount of tax $62 60 South two-thirds of lot No 878 on east side or Troup street, levied on as the .property or W N Haw as; amount of tax $l»8 North half of lot No 86, on east side of Front stroet, levied on as the property of J L Howell; amount of tax 461 60 South half of lot No 86, on oorner of Front and Baldwin streets, levied on os the property W F Giane; amount of tax $47 2ft North halt of lot No G23, levied on as ths proper ty if Geo Uoodu, aotoimt of tux $IU .6 Lot No 315, on co*t sido of Jackson street, levied on mb the property * ■*’ - • $649 One-fourth interoat iu watur lots Noe 20 W>37; levied on an the property ol D A J J Grant; amount of tax $15 75 Kast half of lot No 320, Front streets, levied on Kadme; amount of tax $45 25 North half of lot 483, situated oa «sat side of Troup street, levied on as the property of Jason Lewis; amount of tax £tG North half of lot No 342, situated on the corner or Bryan au«j Juckson streets, levied on as the property of owner unknown; amount of tax $T5 50 North pait of lot No 287, being about one-sixth acre, sitmited on the east fide of Jackson street, levied on at tho properly of Ned tftrong; amount of kX$ll 35 North holf of lot No 145, t ituated on ths west side of Orflctliori* street, levi d on as the property of ftlrs Lnsiin Bkiuner; amount of tux $G7 26 North part of lot No 184, sitaatid on the west tide of Oglethorpe street, levl-d on as the property of Matthew Turner; amount of tax $13 25 Part of lot No 1<9, Situxtod on tt * eont side of Broad struct,north of an 1 adjoining marble yard of II TME WEATHER. Montoomeuy, Deoember 5.—Tbe State Senate has ousted Miller, Republican,and seated Martin, Democrat. As this affair is of national importance, the following review of the facts is given: On tbe or ganization of tbe Attorney General’s Com promise Legislature, in January of 1873, a quorum of the Court Room of Republican Representatives was seated in the House. In the Senate tbe Republicans wanted one Senator to make s quorum, and entered into a contest for Martin’a seat. Tho matter was referred to the commit tee who reported that counting all the votes Martin (Dem.) was elected by 2GD majority, and that counting only the legal votes, he was elected by 205 majority; but by arbitrary rulings Lt.-Gov. McKin- stry seated Miller snd ousted Martin with out allowing tbe Senate to vote whether he should be seated or not. The Demo- rabi fearing that, if they did not submit, tho Republicans would again witndraw and set np a new oourt room legislature snd seaure Federal recognition, contented themselves with seeing that the journals stated the facts as they occurred,and with a formal protest entered st large therein. It was this seating of Miller which gave Spencer his sole claim to the seat he occupies in the U. 8. Senate. After the last election the Senator hold ing over, Martin, petitioned for hie eemt. The petition was referred to a committee, which reported the foregoing faets, and recommended that the Senate resume proceedings at the point where they had been broken off by MeKintry'e arbitrary ruliug, snd proceed with what was in fact S suspended contest. This was agreed to, snd Martin waa deolsred entitled to his seat. The Ktato Grange has adjourned. The Grand Lodge F. and A. M. assem bles here Monday. McCauley,Uvie I uua$ tho property of Jan B Winter, t t Httu ot Br* Jos F Winder; amount of tax $21 21 South half of lot No 2U9,on Went fide of Jackson stroet, levied od u« the property of Mrs SCI Spivey; Propoi $3125 North hat' of lot No 204, on West side ef Ogle thorpe street, levied oa m the pr <perty of Jro B Wright, adminietrstor of Walter Wright; asioant of tax $lil 25 North half of lot No 481, on west side of Mela- to$h street, levi d on as tho property of D % Ward; amount ot tux $85 2ft North half of lot 501, on oast sideofTr-up street, levied on aa the property et Mrs L 6 Wright; t tol 2 amount of East sido of lot No 408, on corner ot Forsyth and Baldwin atnots, levied on aa the property of Mra L T Woodruff; amount of tax $89 f» North half of lot No 353. on weat sida of Troup atre« t, levied on aa tho pruporty of W H Johnson; W'a mu vu ton, Dec. 5.—DrobabiliUc*.— For the Bonth Atlantic snd Gulf States, generally cloudy weather, with rain, N. N. E. winds, slowly falling barometer snd rising temperature east of tlie Mis sissippi, snd lower temperature, with rising barometer, west of the Mississippi. —A deputation of the Roman Osdholic ladies from England have arrived iuKan- Hter. They oome to congratulate Weal Phslisn Count eases, who were reoently fined for s seditious address to the Bishop of Psderborn, sympathizing with him in his imprisonment for his resistance to the eooifstiatlcal lows. CONFECTIONERIES. NEW ARRIVAL P&0FUM0 & HOFFMANN Have jast received a aaw lot of All Kind* of BA8KET8! to be told cheap. Alto, a targe qaaattty of Ftney Candy, Raisins. Nuts, fco., whieh w« offer to the trade at sedated prtee Joel Arrived: 125 boxes Fire Crackers, at $33 25 Parti"* may aottlo any of the above before day of ealo, by paying mounts mentioned together with cost of advertising M. W. MURPUY, Marshal, December Cth, 1874. oswti CITY HOTEL, CEMTUALLT LOCATED. Troy, Alabama. R. H. PARK, Prop'r. deo7 sily Household Furniture. -r^OOTOR H. BIH KENT HAL, b«l*( .boot,, Cheap and Kitchen Furniture. Call on him at once at Mrs. Adams' brick house, Troup street, Columbus, Go. PURE COD LIVER OIL Fresh and pure as they ever used, oa draft, at one-half the usual prioe. Sewing Machine Oil for lets than half the raal price. Neat*foot Oil, clear and limpid, for medicinal purposes. Kerosene Oil by the barrel, at the very bot tom prioe. dec* 2w' A. M. BRANNON. Papers Lost. -RELIEVING that tha late MerthoU J. I) Wellborn deposited with oome (Head some title deeds and other papers appertaining to his efltate, I hereby request any oae who no* or knows of any such papers to commanloate with me at once. For tte urodaetloa to me of the original title papers to his Oolurabas prop erty, 1 hereby offer a reward of Fifty itollnrs. Ad <re.-s JOHN T. CLARKE, Temporary Administrator, deeft dim Cathbert, Oa. LMTOF LETTER*. The foH)wing is a lift of letters romolalnff IS the Poetofltoo et Oolambas, Georgia, De oember ftth, 1674: Adkins mlM J Hleks P X .lien M, o Ho|an lackmaa mra J Jones l. sag? . ass# Uttar 11 IHSMMloft Lta«« A U u.rtar M Lran M T Ohri.t(*n mlM M A Mkth.ws J H Ool.iuan mra A Dart. Y D.nt.1 H, o Donkin I) Edmond* B W Flllaon J M Frank L Friar mra J OnrdlMrW Olpunn A McOlatr mtu 8 Mltnh.ll W J MtUh.ll tnlax N Nobl. Dr W E OakftmnMH Obrlm ran V FMIUM.no B Ramil WL Smith Rnr E nitry J Ol.nn A OrlOn 0, * Mall S, e UNMAILABLE LETT BBS. Barnnumra w V.Urllkt, Alt, Camming! mlax E, DoaglMTlM, Taxna. t 'aagbm.n R M-okaalurlU*, 3. tt Harm mtu S, nftjpoiitotlto*. Hardin mri J L, LaOranga, a*. Bakeitraw Wm, Bohan AtU, La. Ragland F A, Opatlkx, AU. W. H. JOHNSON, P. M. NEOPHOCEN HULK & FEMALE COLLEGE, GALLATIN, TENN. (On the Douisville and Noah villa Railroad, and •uu uuuiueriaua river, m a oeauumi little city ot vines and fl >wars, containing 8,600 inhabi tants distinguished fur laUUlgonee and refine- inent, hospitality and generosity. This plain wot selected after canvassing the advootecee Inducements offered at all the moat noted 16 MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY, a number of whom have the hlgheet national refutation, boih as Uaohers sod authors, and roLUtal ^ will be increased to 2ft the nest Aoodemlo year THE 6 SCHOOLS OF THE COLLEGE COURSE 1 School of Hnmsnltlef. “ Ancient Languages. “ Mftthamutlni Mathematics. Philosophy. History and Moral Solenee. DEPARTMENTS. 1* Preparatory School. 2. Normal School. 8 Musio School. 6. School of Modern Languages. 6. Agricultural School. 7. Commercial SchooL 8. Law School. Tho next term will bogln on the 1st of Febru ary. 1876 New students are requested to eater early In January. BOARD, TUITION, FUEL, WASHING, AC., ONE TERM, $81 0$. 20,000 catalogues for gratuitous distribution. Students oan attend Baptist, Methodist, Chris tian, Presbyttrlen or uathollo churches. Students rooelved at any degree of advance ment aud at any time. any time. 7 STERN FACTS. L It Is the eheapest College of Ilka grade la the world. 2. In four specialties It ehallaagea eompetl* tlon. A It exsmpliffae that on Institution may fce vary good and vary cheap, though oontrory to tbadogma of some. 6. It educates males and lamaloe, whieh Is natural aud right, now so decided by experts but long ago by common sense. $. No expence will be spared to procure teach ers of the flnest talent in Earopo or Amotion. L R U truly a national Institute, and the youths of all sections nr • solicited to come and form friendships that will so greatly tend to make us In truth a united people, ana perpetu ate our liberties. The HOME COLLEGE for the NORTH and SOUTH. Sectional prejudices must be destroyed, or true national patriotism will cease to exist. There Is no way so effective as to bring together the noblest youths from ALL sections, end have at heart the making or them dq voted .frlsnds in oollege days. PATRIOTS AND PHILANTHROPISTS 20 01.000 Scholarships and 1,000 0100 Schlar.hlps to be dlspo*ed ot. 100 00J copies or ti e next illustrated annual ttnlogue, containing M pages aaoh, will be Is- ltd, 86 pages of which are offered to the pub- o as an advertising medium. For nutalirsmu address " " ' J NO. X. WALTON, Prmldti dee$-wU LIONEL C. LETT, JB., A tear aary and Oeuuieller at Law. Commissioner or Deeds N. Y. und other States. Offioe over Georgia Homo Insuraneo Oo. Special attention given to collection*. decs J. J. A W. R. WOOD H AVK opened . FAMILY AND FANCY GROCERY STORE at 77 Bn>»d St;, wuu Uliolcb anil Select Good. Batter anl Em' - ipoelalty. Canned Good!, all kladi t Froiervoa and J< IU.!, Frulti, Fortlga and DomMtle. PtoklM, iMorted; Crukiri, a Mleet Maortnaat. Soodl.it R.Ulna, Oaadieo la Hncketi, Tubi, Tin ware, Broom! aad Bm- keU. Wo keep everything In th* HoaMkMp- ing line. Wo mpoeilolljr Invito the public to giro uc a cell and taamlaa oar good! and prloei, tccond door below Well! fc Oortla. All good! delivered. deeft Im BY ELLIS & HARRISON. City Residence at Auction. ,N TUESDAY, 8th Deoember, 11 o'clock, Q we will Mil in' iront of our oaotkm room! OUSE and LOT west sido of Jackson street, lately occupied by Nathan Crown. House In good repair, with good out-bulldlngs, Ac.; rents for $160 per annum. doc6 2t Administrators’ Sale. f'l EORGIA — MUSCOGEE OOUNTY.— \7 Agreeably to an ordar from tha Honora ble, the Oourt ot Ordinary of mid ooaatr, will bo told oa ThurMny, the ITth December, oath. S maller, th. penoa.1 property belonging to ie aatato or Jobn B. Dollar, doonaaodT to3nt s Horror, Mot.., O.uli. Hog., Corn, Fodder, terming Iinplemcuii, W.goDi, Buggioa, Aa.. Ac., D F. DOZIER, H w. dozier! Admlntitrotori notate John B. Dollar, deeft dm For Sale Cheap. QK Jknrk veet flooring, oO.liUVi xi,ooo footuix, MM> Cleat6x6, $$,000 feet Hurd Lumber. Gum, Poplar, Oak WW AA4(U AIUUI l.at, \ nod Hiokory. Apply io D. P. DOZIER, deeft Sw with John MoOoogh A Urn For Rent. FINE PLANTATION, with lhrm-i A FINE PLANTATION, with fitrm-ftra lag utoatlla, itock.cora and I odder, SW for tb. year 1176. X For furthoMorormatloa, enquire at tho tiara N. L. RBDD. Notice. TTIHE Retail Prieto of Dry Good! kmr E X boaa ro.MtabUohod'oTYhM axUUd’bul members and other merchants will ggjygje nottoi themsekvMa 1 By tue Chamber of Commerce. JNO. F. IVERSON. _ Secretary A TroaeV. detf it TEAS. C. B. MIMS, umureua*, bc .wb oruaaway, new j«ra, um at the store or J. B. Johnson A Oo. a foil line or samples of above goods, where orders will be thankfolly received. Prices low. Tonus liberal. dee! $t W. W. SHARPE ft OO., Publifih*rfl’ Agents No. IS Park Bow, Now York, Aro utk.rlud ta Vomlwoot tar Art- T.rtl.lag )■ aar paptr. ayu.lt Fine Imparltl T»«, $i.2$ p«r pound Extra Choioft " 1.50 •• FlnaV.H. “ 1.00 “ Moyan* V. H. To, Extra, $1.10 pr lb. Flntftt Gaapowdftr T*a, 1.7$ " Fin* Hy(on Taa, 1.00 41 “ Oolong “ .00 * Oh ol oral Oolong Ton, 1.00 * ROB’T 8. CRANE, d«* (Ml ftltmj THOMAS 4 PRESCOTT £ BE NOW*RECEIVING THEIR Stock for Fall and WIntar aflftitui Call and a*, th.lr ' * tJ EXCELLENT Business Suits I Elegant Dress Clothing! All at Moot Lowftr than Evtr. Oolambai, Go., S«pt. lft, 1874. , L. P. AENCHBACHER, Tailor and Cutter. ) LL ORDERS WILL BE ATTRNDk’I) L (A « th ftlOOffttAM !«.) <H.«4^ A L— vapi/sino njuu OCi A l’ JnL to with neatness aud dispatch. N. B.—No work delivered until paid for •$■0*11 at my rooms over Pease A Nor man’f Book Store, Broad street. or ' *e|i23 3nji GROCERIES. AST INDIA MftNIOOA, ' AM.rn.y and Eagle brand of Milk, JellloiinkllrarioUti, Dundee Marmalade, Hone Kodlab (grated), ' LloMg'o Kxtraot of Bm. Quota Olivoa, Brandy Peaehai aad Oharrici, WkaatOrlta, Oat Mini, Rye Flour, Flaklci, Chow-Chow, Lined, Alt kind! of (loaned Good!, Buckwheat, Mince Mint, Florida Syrup and Orangu at wholenlo. Imported and Dommtlo Llqaori, Wlnei of France, Spain and America, jc!t anonivno bt H. F. ABELL A CO. AU gooda delivered* SO bbls. Florida Syrup, 10,000 Florida Oranges, Booclnd each week by H. F. ABELL A CO. {JtaWjWed4uujtf RESTAURANTS. THE Abbor. H, QEOBQE W. LIPS HAS COM- mtavwu .raraBOR ’ stand as a Saloon and Ke«- JflpgPV.** 11 prepared to fttrnlsh Meals,. Ohotoe Liquors and Cigars, and customers may wlU the best the market affords. oets-tf Reich’s Restaurant No. I IU Uroad 8t., H ^6J a| lb«cnopened, and tcnow pmom to lay tafbrt lti guoati and p.trona , BILL OF FAR* IQUAXi TO Ji Found only at fint dan Hotel, and Haiti rant. In tha largiit eltlei ot the Union. Prompt attention and Nononable rat Open at all hoari. ootl 3u fS* A- J. BOLAND, Proprleto Eagle Drug Store. Horn* Mad* Fertilizers! MONEY SAVED! MONEY MADE.* W E propose to keep foil stocks of, and the best articles or ffulpbatt Ammonia, Nitrate Soda, M 4 Muriate Potssho Bone Dust, Land Plsiter, South Carolina Phosphates, Ac., AH or which wc will sell ct the lowskt prices f< DIL *, O. HOOD will b* withai, who hM had praatleal oxporlinoe In tbe* article!, ,w who oan gtoo valuable Information with re*ow no>3ftoodAw M. D. HOOD fc OL Advertised for City Taxes. XpKEOUTlONS for City Taxoi for 1874 b«- JJJ lag bee a Issued, levy will be made tills week and property advertised la Sunday monj- log’s Enquirer, 6th Inatant, for sale on l« Tuesday In January, pursuant to poiltlw° r ' _ lecdaTin ders of bounelL M DcllnquanU may save costs ofadvertiilng iff Strayed or Stolen, E KOM mjr plaoo, Norcmbcr Mlh.lta UT4 n largo Borrol Maro «u!«,fWR •ft filtaon kind, high, larzc hesd 'orombor 34lh,i ... Mare Mule high, largo bed and limbo, with Mar mark on rigktt aoooldir. ,, I will MJ t reward of twenty-lire dollar* wr tan mum Any Inlbrmation thinkfully '• rav—i, ft 6k- J. J. WARE-. Spectacles and Eye Glasses. w WOULD Invite thorn la noM or SI’EOT*- -JK3R, aatlronowitock jalt received from <me of tb, wMmtod and MtwUlle maker*. Thcv « » wUkonl dnkft anparior to any ever ‘ tah market, tkough tho prloei »» ll0<1 *“* 1 ' t. H. BRAMHALI-. WaTonnaxan awn Jawn-aa, TB tf) ft Bread at. Colombo!, Q*- JLUxwixm, On- Aarata on lai -f May, ’74, *5ft».73#-33 0L1CIE8 WHITTEN ON ALL KIN'g TJOLlt — , r or laranblo Preporty again»t rare. Dlvldoad No. It, 4ftper cent on prr" urns, now roody lor delivery and paynicm- B. B. MURDOCH, Iusurunce Agjw* Ho. US Broad Stre^. SIGHT DRAFTS ON ENGLAND, “ Ireland, “ Scotland. J “ Germany, M Italy. “ Austria, «* Swims?' Fcrsalcby luerlaud, n. h. *pr^' Apply at (Mafttahaookra Natlotul 8ANS 80UCI Bar, Rpstanrant i Ten Pin Alley. ’ WINES, LIttUOBS A ( IGAKS. Meals served at all hours, at reasonable price?, and t rivet# room* when desired. THE TEN PIN ALLEY is the best ever oonstruotod In Columbus. Mr. JAS. FOHAN Furniture! Furniture.' • Carpets, Carpets! OilelotbB! Window Shades, Curtain GoodB, AC., Ac., Ac,, TAo XenHt aad Cholcr.t Atylce 1 tewnt (kink Prloo# I ATOtlB Furniture ft Carpet Warehouse. S3 end 8B Breed St. novm MEV * WARMER -