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YOL. XVII.
COLUMBUS, GEORGIA. TUESDAY MORNING. JUNE 15. 1875
NO 138
DAILY, WEEKLY, AND SUNDAY
ENQUIRER-SUN.
W. L. Salisbury, O. A. Klink
SALISBURY & KLINE,
PROPRIETORS.
This Is the only paper la Colnmlmt that
receives th* Associated Press dispatches.
From the first or January last tho post
age on papers must he paid by the pul>-
JiBher. This will be ten cents a month lor
dallies and five cents a quarter for each weekly,
our subscribers will see the necessity for pay.
n# op promptly, in all those In arrears will be
dropped on tho first of January. We are evor
willing to aoeommodate our friends, but It will
t>e impossible to send out papers not paid for
in advance.
The following will be the subscription terms
for the Enquirer for the year 1876:
• WHEN MAILED,
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age paid e 9 HO per annum.
Bunday, with postage paid.... 2 70 “ “
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Sunday and Weekly, with
postagopald 3 40 “ “
SERVED IN CITY AND SUHURBS.
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No Sundays served separately.
onrion box.
Daily $ 8 00 per annum
Sunday 2 50 “ 11
Weekly 2 00 « “
Weekly and Sunday 3 00 «• “
ADVERTI8RR8, TAKE NOTICE!
liberal Discount for Time Advertising.
Kates will ho reduced from this date for all
Advertlsoinonts exceeding In time one month.
Merchants and others will do well to take
ad vantage of the Summer rates, and In this
.manner prepare for Full trade.
Advertlaftnif Kates.
Square
1 Weok Daily, $ H 00
1 Square 1 year 42 00
The above in with tho privilege of a change
every three months. Foi yearly cards a liberal die.
TREAftITRE TROVE.
week ill Weekly or Sunday will bo tbe
Daily.
ory other day In Dally the rate
will bo
k the rate'will be one-half Daily
reading columns
.rgeci.
will be one-third
one-third less than tho Daily
For twt
rates.
For advertisements in local
60 ii
Tho Weekly or Suuduy
of the Daily.
Wheu an advertisement is changed more than
once iu three months the advertiser will be chnrg-
ied with tho cost of composition. Foreign adver
tisers must pav as do those at hems.
Excitement in tbe Dry Hoods Market.
The New York Bulletin nays that the
excitement in the print market was inten
sified on Saturday by the action of Messrs.
H. B. Claflin A Go., in establishing the
following jobbing rates for their large
purchase of Garner’s productions: Gar
ners fancies and sidebands, 6$ cents; do.
shirtiugs, G£ cents; do. pinks and robes,
7jt cents; do. purpieB, 7 cents; do. solids,
ii} oentH, and distingnes, 15$ cents; do.
mournings and shepherd checks, G.} cents;
Atnoskesg fancy and sideband, G cents;
do. robes, G£ cents; do. purples, G o^nts;
Cayadutta printed shades, 6 cents; Warn-
sntta fancies 5$ cents; do. robes, 5$centH.
The above quotations are for package
and piece lots, and the terms are ten days
net; or, if sixty days, time is taken, £ cent
per yard will be charged. There was n
.continuous rush of buyers throughout the
•day, and tho sales effected were very
heavy in the aggregate amount, as well
Uiey might bo at suoh unparalleled low
prices. Of course the above goods had a
•disturbing iniluenoe upon the rest of the
market, and at regular prices the sales of
light priuts wore almost nominal. As the
day progressed several of tbe Broadway
jobbars wheeled into line and offered Gar
ner’s prints at the same price quoted by
Claflin, but of course they hfid much
smaller lots to offer.
A tilgantle Icicle.
There is no record of such ice fields as
have been sliding past our shores this
season. The sealing captains report the
ice in many instances twenty feet in
thickness, and hard as floating masses of
granite. Had the season been a stormy
one this ice would have played sad havoe
among onr fleet. From the 8th of Jan
uary, wheu the ice flrBt appeared here,
till the 11th of May it was never out of
•.sight—a hugo river of ice slowly floating
past. Ships that came through it reported
.it to be two hnndred miles in breadth.
Its length is unknown, bat in all proba
bilities it extended from Baffin’s Bay to
the Gulf Stream, a distance of 1,500 or
2!,000 miles. The intense cold of this
winter Reems to have converted tho whole
durface of the Rea along Greenland into
ice fields, mid no sooner was borne away
ou the bosom of the Arctic current thau
another one wus formed. One would sup
pose lhat suoh no erroneous ice delivery
would temporarily lower the temperature
of the Gulf Stream itself and give us a
cold summer. Eveu at this date vast
quantities of ice are passing south, though
not in sight. The first two outward bouud
mail steamers from Liverpool were unable
to enter the port of St. Louis owing to
the ioe, and had to run on to Halifax;
and the same is true of the two first
homeward bound steamers. The third
* outward bound mail steamer, by which
this letter should be conveyed, is overdue,
aud may also have passed us by. The
“oldest inhabitant” remembers no such
season as this.—From a late Newfound
land Letter.
—Ben Hill, of Georgia, made an able
speech at Milledgevilto tbe other day, iu
which he claimed that the South had
been goaded into her infidelity to the
Union by what Rho believed to be the
North’s infidelity to the constitution;
that not a lino exists to show the South
faithless to the Union under the coustitu
tion. That now, slavery beiug dead, it
remains to rebuild all our greatness upon
the solid corner stones of the Union and
the cous'itution. The North, strong in
physical power, defies the Union as a fact;
the South seeks the ark of her political
safety in tbe Union as a principle. We
should avert death by either division or
empire. Our politioul life hangs upon a
constitutional government and a constitu
tional union. Let the North covenant
that our Union shall be constitutional
and I he South will oononr with all its
hearts that onr Union shall bo eternal.
This, says wise Ben Hill, of Goorgin, is
tbe easy open door (o utter reconciliation,
perfect peace, and measureless prosperity,
-tf. Y. World. J
A ROMANCE OF HAMPTON ROADS.
Norfolk, Va., June 11.— Gapt. Brown,
of the schooner “J. C.” arrived here to
day having iu charge the iron eJno of the
United States man-of-war Cumberland,
which was run into and sunk in Hamp
ton Roads bgathe Confederate ram Vir
ginia iu 18152. Divers have been at work
on the wreck teu years, having in view the
reoovery of the safe. The luoky man had
only been at tbe wreck forty-eight hours,
when he found the safe buried in three feet
of mud. The water at the place is seven
ty-eight feet deep. By the explosion of a
torpedo the safe was crooked, and it was
hoisted ou deck. A few pieces of gold
ooiu dropped oat. It is generally be
lieved the safe contains between sixty
and one hundred thousan4 dellurs gold.
Tbe safe and treasure belong to Uhptain
Brown and O. E. Moitby, of this city,and
Herbert Smith, of Detroit, Michigan.
While Captain Brown was searching the
wreck he oame across a petrifie 1 human
body in perfect state. The Captain sup
poses the body to be that of oue of the
offioors, aud intends to return and get it.
Horace Greeley and General Brack*
ftnudie.
The editor of the Baltimorean says that
an incident of General Breokiubridge's
later life, never bofore published, was re
lated to him a few weeks since by Hon.
Heister Clymer, a leaning Democratic
politician aud member of Congress from
Pennsylvania. Mr. Clymer said :
Tbe last time 1 saw General Breckin
ridge was a few years since. We were
sojourning at the Clareudou Hotel, New
York, a favorito resort for prominent
members of the Democratic party. 1
had been reading the morning papers,
and as General B. entered the breakfast
room 1 remarked: “Well, General, 1
see you were down yesterday to see Mr.
Horace Greeley, at the Tribane office.”
His response was instant and full of emo
tion: “Yes, sir,” said he, “I went down
to see Mr. Greeley, and never have I
made a visit that afforded me more geu-
uino pleasure, for never was a visitor
more cordially received. After the
late nnfortuuato war between the North
ern aud Southern sections of the
United States, yon know I was com
pelled to flee for ruy safety. While in
Paris, cheerless, friendless, homeless,
and without a country, I received a letter
from Horace Greeley. It was filled with
the most tender expressions of regard
and sympathy, and urged me to return
to my home. ‘Come back,’ he wrote, ‘go
to your own beloved Kentuoky ; aid in
restoring the shattered fortunes of the
South nud your country, and I will be re
sponsible for your safety and assure your
immunity from molestation or arrest.’
Now, I Bubmit to you, Mr. Clymer, could
I have done otherwise than eall upon
Horace G eeley, or shall I ever cease to
respect aud cherish him.”
Brain of Man and Apes*
Prof. Owen is quoted as saying, before
the Anthropological Society of London,
that as the brain of man is more complex
in its organization than the brain of in
ferior animals, it is more subject to inju
ry, and more liable to experience the
want of perfeot development; that in
stances of idiocy occur among all races of
mankind, aud' that extreme smallness
of the Bkull indicates want of
intellect approaching to idiocy.—
Alluding to the attempts that
have been made to find a link of connec
tion between man and apes, he remarked
that it was possible that an idiot with an
imperfectly developed brain might wander
into some cave, and there die, and in two
or three hnndred years his bones might
be covered with mad, or be imbedded in
stalagmite, and when discovered, such a
skull might bo adduced as affording the
looked for link connecting mau with the
inferior animals. He expresses the opin
ion that the difierenco iu question is al
together too wide to bo bridged over by
tho skull of any creature yet discovered.
—The Augusta Comtitutionaliet of the
llthinst., in chronicling the death of
Gen. Duff Greou, says: A stormy and
eventful life ended yesterday in the death
of Gen. Duff Green. He won a national
reputation iu tho lifetime of Gen. Jack-
son, having edited a Washington paper
during the eventful days of 1882. He
must have been all of ninety, and when
death overtook him he was liviug at the
peaceful town of Dalton, iu tho mountains
of Northern Georgia. Nearly every
one of the celebrated men with
whom he walked half a century ago,
has long sinoo gone down to tho gruve.
It is impossible to think of this great ed
itor’s life without calling up many epochs
in the history of the country, and lie
must have looked back upou his footsteps
with memories of sadness. Like the
compeers of fifty years ago, he was a
hero—a mau of unflinching nerve—of
honor—and of boldness which now seeins
to us rashness. After tho lapso of so
many years he at last has gone to join
Jackson, Clay, Crawford, Webster and
Calhoun, and he, like them, left his im
press upon the history of the nation to
wliioh he belonged.
Indian Logic.—Spotted Tail says that
when he first heard of Jesus Christ he
pould not see bow the whito man could
have killed him, but that when be came
to know what a rascal the white mau is,
especially in his treatment of the Indians,
it no longer seemed strange that he
should have killed oven the son of the
Great Spirit. There is a plain, unadorned
levelness about tbo head of Spotted Tail
that ought to enkindle iu the bosom of
his venerable mother-in-law an emotion
of something very nearly akin to pride.—
Courier-Journal.
—TheTist of candidates for admission
to the West Point military academy this
years includes the uames of James B.
Erwin and .lames Lockett, of Georgia;
Guy R. Beardslee, Wm. English, Walter
A. Thurston, Waltor S. Standifer and
Marion D. Sailold, of Alabama.
Tlio Grasshoppers.
Omaha, June 14.—Immense clouds of
grasshoppers made their appearance, fly
ing northward, over this place about 11
o’clock to-day, but none havo alighted.
They have appeared in immense swarms
at Platsmouth, Neb., and are destroying
everything before them. They are mov
ing North.
Train ‘©IT Track.
New York, Jnne 14.—The express tra’n
which left Boston at* 3 o’clock Saturday
ran off the track. Vioe President Wilson
was uninjured; Blaine was hurt io the
side; Miss Anna Louise Carey, opera
singer, had her right shoulder bruised,
None were killed.
THE TEKAN*MEXICAN BORDER.
CORUNA A HORSS THIEF —FIGHT WITH TOR
MEXICANS.
#kLVE8Tox, June 13.—Speoial dispatch
from Brownsville to the News, says Gen
eral Steele and Maj. Dwyer have gone to
Rio Grande City. Capt. McNeely and
part of his company are below, watching
for tho raiders now on this side. Mex
icans report the crossing of fifty beeves
below here Wednesday. Sergeant Hall
went to Bagdad to see the beeves Gen.
Cortina is shipping to Cnba. Many
of them have American brands. A
large pile of hides with Aiuerioan
breads await shipment, and mm as
sisting in shipmeut say the beeves were
stolen from Texas. About one hundred
thousaud pounds of dried beef ready for
shipment is undoubtedly Aiuericau, as
Mexicans don’t raise beef enough to sup
ply their own market. Sergeant Hall was
closely watched, and Rncoeeded in taking
note of only about twenty brands. Above
here cattle stealing is terrible. Oxen are
driven off almost daily. It is reported
that Gen. Cortina’s resignation has been
accepted. Tho supreme government is
determined to remove hint from the
frontier, but he does not intend to go.
Report sayH that Gon. Steele gave or
ders to rangers not to cross the Rio
Grande, on account of the exasperated
feeling of Mexicans and danger that they
would lay waste tho country between the
Nueces and Rio Grande before a force
could bo sent to check them. The war
feeliug is strong on the Mexican side.
AFTER 'IHE CATTLE THIEVES.
Brownhnille, June 13.—Intelligence
was received here yesterday morning that
Capt. McNeely, of tbe State troops, with
a few of his men, pursued, and after a
forced march of twenty-five miles over
took a band of twelvo cattle tbieves,
about twelve miles bolow this place.
They showed fight, and in the engage
ment which ensued, tho whole of the
baud of raiders were killed. Capt. Mo-
Neoly lost ouo man killed. He recap
tured 250 head of stolen cattle.
THE VI€KNBURg7
A SURVIVOR TELLS THE STORY OF THR
DOOMED SHIP.
St. John’s, N. F., Jnne 13.—Parker
Greenwood made the following statement
On tbe night of May 31st, we got in
scattered ice, and were steaming slow,
expecting to get through, when the ioe
■truck tho Vicksburg’s quarter, knooking
a hole and breaking tbe propeller. The
ioe afterwards knocked a bole near her
bunkers. At six a. m., June 1st, we
fonnd tbe vessel sinking fast. We
got the boats out. The first
boat, with four men, was soon
swamped alongside. Our seoond boat,
with twelve men, got stove, bat we stop
ped the leak with a blanket. A quarter
of an honr afterwards the vessel sank.
We tried to save the men floating on the
spars and hoy, bat conld not get near
them for the sea and ice. We saw one
boat with twenty men, and another with
the first officer and six men. Afterwards
saw her bottnm up with tho first offioer
and three men on her bottom. Tho cap
tain told ns we wero 120 miles from St.
John’s, and to stoor to the west. We saw
the oaptain on the bridge a moment bo
fore the steamer sunk.
FURTHER PARTICULARS.
St. John's, N. F., June 14.—The seal
ing ste&mes Commodore has also gone
in search of the missing Vicksburg
boats.
The survivors of the Vicksburg disaster
who reached here Saturday were brought
in by the American schooner Burnham.
They report that six boats were lowered
from the Vicksburg. Two of them cap
sized alongside; one capsized two hours
after leaving the vessel, aud one, their
own, was picked up.
One of the two boats unaccounted for
was no doubt that containing five men
who arrived at New York. The Captain
and officers are suid to have bebavod
well, but the soamou acted badly. The
captain and women went down with the
vessel.
Washington Mentions.
Washington, June 14.—John 8. Harris,
is appointed Attorney General of Missis
sippi.
The Eighth regiment of cavAlry,for the
past four years on duty in Now Mexico, is
ordered to relieve the Ninth regiment in
Texas. The lattor is ordered to New
Mexico.
Piorropout has gone to New York to bo.
absont a week.
BUNKER 1111*1* CENTER 311A I*.
DEPARTURE OF THR MARYLAND NATIONAL
GUARDS, RICHMOND (VA.) KNIGHTS
TNMFLAR, AMD THR NORFOLK
(VA.) LIGHT ARTILLERY BLURS
FOB BOSTON.
Baltimore, June 14.— 1 Tho Fifth Mary
land National Guards left here this morn
ing for Boston, to attend the Bunker Hill
oentenniol.
Richmond, June 14.—Richmond Com-
mandery No. 2, Knights Templar, left at
3 o’clock p. m., via the York river and
Baltimore route for Boston, to participate
in the Bunker Hill Centennial Celebra
tion. The visiting Knights number sixty,
but will be joined by others on the route,
and expect to number seventy-five upon
their arrival at Boston. Tho Uommandery
is in charge of Eminent Commander Wil
liam E. Tanner. • They will be the guests
of Demolay Uommandery of Boston.
They will bo absent about ten days.
Norfolk, Jnne 14.—The Norfolk Light
Artillery Blues left for Bostou this after
noon on the steamer Wm. Lawrence.
They wero escorted to the steamer by the
battalion of U. 8. marines, headed by the
naval band, aud by the City Guard. The
flags of tlio shipping in port were dis
played, and a number of steamers ac
companied the Lawrence to Hampton
Roads. As the Lawrence swung out from
the wharf they wore saluted by the U. 8.
reoieving ship N "? Hampshire, which
was returned by the Blues amidst the
wildest enthusiasm. 8alutes wero ex
changed with Gen. Barry, at Fort Mon
roe. A number of distinguished goutlo-
mon accompany the Blues, among
whom are Gen. Fitzhngh Leo; Col. Wal
ter Taylor, who was Adjutant General on
Gen. R. E. Leo’s staff; M. Glennon, of
tbe Virginia, and others.
MOB LAW IN MARYLAND.
Another Yeaael Wrecked.
Halifax, Juno 13.—The steamer Virgo,
from Hulifax for 8t John’s, N. F., went
ashore Friday night on the south sido of
St. Pierce Islands and will probably be
total loss. Tbo passongors, crew and
Bavod mails were safely landed. The ves
sel was valued at $75,000, and formerly
plied between New York and Savannah,
LATER.
St. John’s, Jnne 14.—Tho steamer
Virgo is a total loss.
ircntrnctlie Fire.
Omaha, June 14.—A dispatch from
Fort Russell, Wyoming, says one of tho
four-hundrod-tou hay piles was discovered
to bo ou lire early this morning. While
tho command was at that fire, the com
missary Htore-hoiiso was also discovered
burning, but tho latter was extinguished
with but slight damage. Tho hay will
prove a total loss. One of the cavalry
stabloa was also burned.
Water Famine In New York.
New York, June 14.—There is a water
A NEGRO TAKEN FROM JAIL AND HUNG.
Annapolis, Md., Jnne 14.—A mob,
composed principally of residents of
Anne Arundel county, in which the recent
outrage upon Miss Jackson was commit
ted, by a negro named Simmons, came
into this city at a very early hour this
morning, and, proceeding to the jail, de
manded tho keys from tho jailor, with
the view of taking Simmons out and exe
cuting him. The jailor was searohed,
and the keys having beeu found, a large
number of tho visitors wont to tho cell
of the negro, and, finding him chained,
dragged him away without releasing him
from hie irons. Taking him a short dis
tance from the city, near the railroad
track, they hung him to a tree, wher^he
■till bangs.
A large number of citizens and others
hsve visited the place to-day to view his
remains. The mob warf well provided
with pick-axes, crow-bars and other in
struments for gaining admission to the
jail, bad they met with a forcible resis
tance. The negro did not say a word
when lie was taken away. Some of the
lynchers proposed taking another negro,
who is in jail awaiting trial for rape on
a colored woman, bnt others demurred,
and the mob wan satisfied with taking
8immons. A coroner’s inqueRt will be
held upon the remains to-day. Many of
the lynchers wero painted black and
some wore masks.
A NEGRO FIEND.
nR OUTRAGES A XOUNG MARRIED LADY IN
NEW YORK.
Syracuse, June 14.— Saturday, at La-
Fayette, in Ondaga county, a negro
named Wiu. Henry Mason outraged
young married whito womau of the high
est respectability, the wife of Newton O.
Hoyt, of that place. He threatened her
life if she revealed his net, but she made
the fact known to her husband, who caused
Mason’s arrest. Great popular excite
ment followed, and the negro was near be
ing lynched wliilo being conveyed to tbe
ponitentiury, where ho is now securely
lodged.
Rljraterlona Murder In Clnclnnnti
Cincinnati, Juno 14.—Tom McGohan,
a notorious dosperado, ruado famous by
the tragic end of his counsel, Hon. O. L.
Vallandigham, who lost his life in
plaining sotno points in' tho triul of
MoGehan for tho tuurdor of a man named
Meyers, was assassinated iu his saloon at
Hamilton, last night. From appear
ances of tho room slid position
of the body, the supposition
(hat some one entered jibe saloon,
called for a drink, and while McGohan
waft serviog the customer he was shot by
some one through a window, as a patio of
glass in the window was shattered in
fragments. Although shot with several
bullets iu the right templo and side of the
face, MoGehan had strength enough to
get his revoleer to defend himself; but
fell dead on reaching the end of tho conn-
ter. No duo to the murderer.
Claflin A Co.
New York, Jnno 11.—In tho United
States Circuit Court, criminal branch,
to-day, ruembors of firms of Claflin A Co.
aud Field, Morris, Fenner A Co., to
gether with Col. Robert Dosanges and
Charles L. Lawrence, were arrnigned to
plead to tho indictments found aguinst
them by tho Grand Jury for complicity
in tho silk smuggling frauds. All plead
ed “not guilty,” with tho exception of
Lawrence, whoso counsel asked for time,
which was granted.
The Alabama Editors*
Alexandria Bay, N. Y., June 14.—The
Alabama editorial excursionists are still
here. They will go on a picnic excur-
LO17 IRIAN A.
POUR INDICTMENTS AGAINST STATE AUDITOR
CLINTON.
New Orleans, Jane 14.—The Grand
Jury this morning presented four indict
ments against State Auditor Charles Clin
ton—two for misdemeanor in olios, aud
one for extortion uuder oolor of offloe,
and one for embezzling $20,000 of State
funds. Bail has been fixed at $23,500.
The auditor was served with a capias
and paroled by the sheriff until 3 p. m.
Heavy Frost.
Washington, June 14.—There was a
heavy frost in New York and Pennsylva
nia last night.
New York, June 14.— Dispatohes from
Maine, New Hampshire and other States
report considerable damage from the
frost.
The damage was quite severe in New
Jersey.
Arrival af Ike America* Team*
Queenstown, Jnne 14.—The steamship
City of Cheater, from New York, with
the American Rifle Team on board, ar
rived here to-day at noon.
Directors Appointed*
Atlanta, Ga., June 14.—The Govern
or to-day appointed a board of three
directors for the Macon A Brunswick
Railroad. '
THE WEATHER.
probabilities.
Washington, June 14.—For South At
lantic and Gulf States, falling Arometer
southerly winds, dear and partly oloudy
weather.
TE LEG R A PII IcTn OTER•
—Dr. Lewis P. Rogers died at Louis
ville.
—Count Von Arnirn is seriously ill at
Berlin.
— Four erews for the regatta have ar
rived at Saratoga, and are practising.
—St. Domiuioi’s new Catholic church,
in Washington, whs dedicated Sunday by
a largo number of priests.
—A fire in the Brilliant Oil Works, Al
legheny Valley, Pa., burned 40,000 bar
rels of oil. Loss $150,000.
—Yesterday witnessed the trial of the
new steam fire engine and inaugurated
tho trip of the street cars iu Chattanooga.
—Joseph Gardner, a wealthy merchant
of Boston, was found dead in tbe woods,
with a revolver. It is supposed he sui
cided.
—Athletics 12, Washingtons 2—at Phil
adelphia. Boston* 24, Chteanos T—at
Chicago. Philadelphian 18, Louisville
Eagles 5—at Louisville.
THE HOWE SEWING MACHINE.
First Invented and Latest Improved.
AGENT8 WANTED
In all unoooupied territory. Good and reliable men will
be dealt with very liberally.
Addreea
THE HOWE MACHINE COMPANY,
• Atlanta, Georgia.
Hotel.
CMTtU 1IOTK1,,
140 Md 149 Broad Ml*, Columbus, Us.
Mrs. S. E. Woldhidgb,
ap21 Proprietress.
Lawyers.
UOHEL C. LE V If, IK.,
Attorney nud Counsellor ut law.
Uonratlnionsr of Deeds N. Y. and other Staton,
otflto over Georgia Itome Insurance Oo.
Speoial attention given to collections.
deot
jo*)
8AMUKL H. HATCHER,
Attorney at Law*
Office over Witticli A KI mini’s
A. A. HOSIER,
Attorney nud Counsellor ut law,
Practices Iu State and Federal Courts Jo Georgia
JaO
Mass II. Blandvood. Louis F. Uahrako.
MLANDFORD A GARRARD,
Attorneys unit Counsellors ut law,
Office No. 07 Broad street, over Wlttich k Uiu-
eel's Jewelry Store.
Will praetlce In the State and Federal Court*.
Fill pn
sep4
L. T. DOWNING,
Attorney uud Solicitor.
U. 8. Gom'r aud Register iu liaukruptoy. Ofllc
nov20| over Brooks’ Drug Store, Columbus, In.
B. J. MOMEM,
Attorney uud Counsellor ut law
Cotton Factories.
Hheetlngi, Shirtings, nnd Sewing d
Knitting Thread.
Garde Wool and Qrlnds Wheats nd Corn-
Office Iu roar of Witticli 4 Klneol’*, Randolph it.
J»1S eil.OMLTON, Pre.lil.nt.,
nilM'OUEE MANDI-AirrilHINM
M»r ufacturors or
8UKKTING8 “HUtTINGB,
YARN, ROPE, A*.
COMJMRUH, GA.
G. P. RWIKf, President.
W. A. SWIFT, Secretary Treasurer. octal ly.
Doctors.
DR. N. H. LAW.
Offloe corner Broad and Randolph streets, Burras
building.
KMidence on Forsyth, three doors below Bt. Glair.
Boot and Shoemakers
Grocers.
OAK'L K. HIRE,
Dealer lu Family Groceries, ou Hryau i
tween Oglethorpe A Jackson Hirer
Up* Wo charge for drayage.
J. H. HAMILTON,
Wkeleeule uud Retull Grocer,
MARKETS.
UT TELEGRAPH TO ENRUIRKR.
Money uud Ntoek Mnrkets.
London, June 14— Noon.—Erie 14*4.
Paris, June 14.—Rentes 04f auu 86c.
New Yobk, Juuo 14.—Money easier at 1U0
2 por cunt Sterling exehango quiet at 8. Gold
dull ut U6%@110^. Governments dull but
steady. State quiet and nominal.
(Tettow Murk eta.
Liverpool, June 14.—Noon.—Ootton itoad-
ior, middling uplands 7 9-lOd; middling Or
leans 7%d; sales 12,ooo; lor speculation and ex
port 2,Out).
Selin on a basis middling uplands, nothing
bolow low ntHdlln* ', deliverable In July and
August, 7 7 lOJ.
2r m.—Sales on basis of middling uplands,
nothing below Ijw middlings, deliverable In
August and September, 7 9-lttd
Hales on a basis of middling uplands,
nothing bolow good ordinary, deliverable In
August aud September, 7%d.
Hales on a bash
nothing below low t
* * nml August, 7J_
patents of new crop basis middling up
lands, nothing below low middlings, 7%d.
Liverpool, Jane 14—3:9) r. u.—Ut sales
to-day 0,700 were American.
•Liverpool, June 14.—Neworop basis intd-
d.ituuplunds, nothing below low middling*,
New York, June 14.—Futures closet! steady;
sale* 2 ,000, as follows : Juuo 16 6-18016 11-32;
July 15 11-3201%; August lr. 163201%;
toinbor 16 6-10016 11-32; October 161-32; N<_
ber 14 16-10;; December 14 29 32014
16-16; January 16 l ie, February 163-1001614
March 16%Ol6 13-32;; April 16 9-10016 iw-32
May 16%016 13-10.
Oottou steady; sales 1,481 bales St 16V40
15, 7 4o; net receipts 4,727.
Boston, June 14 —Cotton dull; middlings
16%f; nut receipts 84; sales74; stock 14,997.
New Orleans, Juno 14 —Uotton quiet; mid-
lings 16e; low tnlddlii— ' - - -
13%o; net receipts 4:
Havannah, June 12. — (Jottou nominal
middlings 16c; net recolpts 376; sales 76.
Charleston, June 14.—Gotton dull; mid
dlings 16*4<;; net receipts 290.
Mom lx, Juno 14— Gotten nominal; Slid-
dlings 14Uc; net reeel|i - *
Britain 2,004; sales 60
Provlslou Markets.
New York, June 14.— Guffoo quiet and stea.
dy, 11 io quoted at 10}4O19%go!d,cargoes; lb*4
019)4 gold, job lots. Huger dull and unchang
ed, 8%08% lor Mr to good refining; 8% for
prime; roll lied dull and unchanged. Molasses,
foreign grades dull and nominal. Btoe quiet
and uu'hanged. Pork lower; new
lower; prime steam 1311-10. Whlsi
at 61 20.
Baltimore, June 14.—Coffee quiet and
firm; ordinary to prime Rio, cargoes, 10018%.
Whiskey dull at 41 20. Sugar firmer.
Chicago, June 14 — Flo- r In fair demand and
advanced; superfine »3 8603 60. Uurn buoyant
nnd settled aud higher; No 2 mixed, 6ho, re
jected 00*40. Pork dull and unsettled at $19.
Lard dull and unsettled, 613 16. Whiskey
61 17.
Cincinnati, Juno 14.—Flour doll and un
changed; 66 4006 60. Corn ate&dy at 72074c.
Pork lower at 419 60 Lard lower but In fair
demand; summer 12^01winter 13*^46
13)40. Bacon dull: shoulders 9*4o, dear
Watchmakers.
O. H. LKUU1N,
Watchmaker*
186 Breed street, Columbus, Go.
as and docks repaired lu the beet man
ner end warranted. jail
Tin and Coppersmiths.
WM. FEE,
Wwrksr in Tim, Bkeet Iron, Capper.
Orders from ebroed promptly attended to.
M No. i71. Broad Street.
Dentist*.
W. V. T1UMDK S
Dctttiet,
Opposite Strapper’s buildlug, Randolph St.
8pecl ial attention given to the inaertiuu of Arti
ficial Teeth, as well m to Operative Dentistry
feb22 dew
COLL MB I! M DENTAL R1HIMN,
W.T. Pool, Prop’r,
Georgia Home Building, Columbus Georgia.
as—ap
Tailors.
<1. A. KGBHNE,
Merchant Tailor and Cutter.
A foil stock of French and KuglUb Broadcloths
Cassimeres aud Ventings.
eprlO No. 134 IIroad Street
Painters.
WM. SNOW* JK.* A CO.*
Uoune and Sign Painter**
Old Oglethorpe comer, (Just north of postoflice)
Columbus, Georgia,
Will contract for Houho and Sign Painting at
AAHonabla price*, and * -*•
Hotel
OPELIKA DIRECTORY.
Doctors.
OK. JAB. V. WAHNOCK,
Surgeon nnd Physician.
Office at Hiaugliter’* Drug Htore, Railroad street.
Hotels.
When y
A dii
dec2H
ADAMN HOLME.
ko to Opelika, bo sure to atop at the
lloUNu, opposite Passenger Depot.
LAWYERS.
HINES DOZIER,
Attorney at Law,
HAMILTON. «A.,
HKNKI SKI.I.MAN.
Cutting* Cleaning and Repairing
Done lu tbe best style.
ep>24) Corner Crawford and Front Ht
Dress-Making.
Ml Bit M. A. HOLLINUN WORTH,
Dresn-Maklng,Cutting and itting. Torniat hetq
Ueeideuce aud shop in ilrowuovtlie.
Plano Tuning, &c.
E. W. BLAU,
Repairer and Tuner of Pinnoes, Organ*
Accordeon*. 8igu Painting nlao done.
Older, may he be left at J. W. Pease A Nor
DE6RAFF& TAYLOR,
Manufacturers and Dealars n
Furniture, Bedding,
LAMBREQUINS. &C..
Nos. 87 and 89 Bowery,
.. ia quiet
r ii9 90. Lard
Iskay steady,
famiue Id tlio lower part of tbo city. All * sioti among tbe Tliounaml Iabtnds to-day
tke luaiBH are Btoppod, Tbe croton en- and attend a bop at tbo Tbouland Inlands
gineerti aro looking into tbe matter. House this evening.
13)4e. liacon dull; shoulders 9%c, dear rib
sides 12*4c, clear sides 12U0 Whiskey quiet,
hold at 4116, but 00 sales.
8t. Louis, June 14.—Flour quiet and weak,
with litllodoiug. 1 oru; No. 2 mixed 07o. Pork
lower to sell, offered at $13 76019 69. Whiskey
nominal, 61 18. Bacon firm, with only limited
job demand. Lard nominal.
Loitibvillb, June 14 —Flour quiet and un
changed; extra 44 60, fine family extra 66 600
6 00. Corn firm. 72($7- r >c. Provisions quiet and
firm. Pork 620 00020 26. Bacon, sbouldars
0Y ( c, clear rib sides 12*4012%c, clear sides 180
13!^C. hard; tierce 16*401&*4>, keg 1&%fci>16%0.
Whiskey 61 16. Bagging steady, 13^0140.
RanIu, etc.
New York, June 14.—Turpentine dull at
82%o. Uosln dull ut 41 7601 Ho fur strulueri,
Freight*.
New York, June 14.—Freights steady; oot-
ton steam 6-10.
MHIP NK WM.
New York, June 14.— Arrlvod : Auglela,
Erin, Manhattan.
Arrived out: Ohio, Thuringia.
Arrived out: Canada, Indiana, Germania,
Bay to Ladles or Gents. Patent
foveitiBs. Addras* U. U. Briar h
Do., Atlanta, Ga,
Cun and Locksmiths.
PHILIP EIFLEK*
Gun aud Lock.witli, Crawford struct, tirx
Johnson's curlier, Columbus, Ga.
WILLIAM BOHOBElt, ~
Gun and Locksmith and doaler in tliiniiinu
teriais. East of Htrapper’s (Joiiiculiot
Fresh Meats.
J. W. PATRICK*
Stalls No. 16 and IK* Market House.
luality,
J. T. COOK,
Freak Meals of All Kinds,
eepS Mails Nos. 16 and 17.
Barber Shops.
ED. TEKSY, Barber,
Crawford Bt., under Hank in Bouse, Columbus, (lu.
Builders and Architects.
J. G. CHALMEKN,
Hohbb Carpenter mud Bull dor.
Jobbing doue at short uotlco.
Plans and specifications furnished lor ull styles
of buildiugs
Broad Street, next to G. W. Itrowu’s,
J*9 Columbus, G*.
Livery and Sale Stables.
ROBERT THOMPSON,
Livery* Male and Exelmnge Nlalilo
OoLiruonri, Noetu or Hanuolfh 8tb..
ectSO Columbus, (iu
Tobacco, Clears, Ac.
MAIER DORN.
If you want to oujoy a good smoko, go to bis
66 OURI8TIE, and
ISOS'mid 1S3 Healer. Street,
Itraneh Store—Ho. HI Earth Avenue,
rjun-tfj
CRANDALL & CO.,
NO. 689 THIRD AVENUE,
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
Patent Baby Carriages,
V elooipedosJ'Propollors
Spring and
Hobby Horses
Doll Carriages, Wagons,
Carts and Sleig hs
MpGunstantiy on hand, a lur^oelock to suit
tbe trade, |al7-tf