About Columbus daily enquirer. (Columbus, Ga.) 1874-1877 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1877)
DAILY ENQUIRER-SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY MORNING. JUNE 20. —:j_- 1 r-—•»*!'"if.' • ^li ' .L " 1877. Unit# guquirer. rol.lINRlTN. QA.I WEDNESDAY JUNE 20, 1877. LARGEST CITY CIRCULATION| AND MORE TRAIT TWICE THE LARGEST AGGREGATE CIRCULATION! Kit. Dx. Stuabt Robinson, a delegate of tl>e Bonthcrn Church to the General Presbyterian Oonnoil, at Edinboro, wiled in etwmabtp Bolivia, from New York last Batnntay. Tbs Charleston Nev» and Courier baa reoeived in eight years over $18,000 for State printing, and saya during that time its total income ww considerably over $000,000. The Washington Star says the sliver “nuisance" has become so great in that city that many banka refuse to reoeiv# it on deposit from their oustomaea. We wish they would pass some of it down this way. An express train in Russia, oarrying $4,500,000, not only failed the other day to reach its destination, but has altogeth. er disappeared, without leaving the slight est traces affording a olue as to what has become of it. On Drr, that there are forty applicants for the United Htataa Marahalship of Geor gia, now waiting in Washington for that appointment. Lager and free lunohw suffer. A proposition to throw dioe for the position, if made, was not aoospted. Mb. Kobebt W. Oodbn, of Warren oonuty, Kentnoky, left by will $110,000 to be devoted to educational purposes, The trustees met last weak at Bowling Green, and determined to establish "Og den College'' at that point. Only about $4,000 will be expended the tint year. The ooilege will oommeboe its first session in September. The ooilege property is yet to be bought or leased. Three is a pair of brothers Oheeryble in Chesterfield County, Va, They are twins and baobelors, and have lived In the Bkinquarter neighborhood for 70 years. One oannot be distinguished from the other in appearance. When brother James asks a question, brother John re peats it; and when brother John takes g swallow of “old rye" James takes another. They are honest and well meaning, and plain and frugal in their habits. All the sons of the Osar are grand dukes, and euob daughter a grand duoh- ess. The children of the present Empe ror, who is Alexander II., are Grand Duke Alexander, heir apparent, born February 20, 1846; Grand Duke Vladimir, born April 10, 1847; Grand Doha Alexis, born January 2, 1860; Grand Duoheas Marie, born Ootobi r 6, 1868 (married to tbe Duke of Edinburgh); Grand Duka Ber- giua, born April 20, 1867; Grand Duke Paul, born Beptembar 21, 1860. All of these dates are old style Russian, twelve days earlier than our calahdar. The brothers and sisters of the present Empe ror have the same titles. EitranoB William Homobs Mb. Wash xuknk.—The Herald correspondent at Berlin telegraphs that Emperor Williain, of Germany, hearing a report that Mr. Waahburne had resigned as United States Minister to France, has Ordered tbe paint ing of a life size portrait of himself for the purpose of presenting it to the Minister in recognition of the distinguished ser vices he rendered to Germany during the Franoo-Garman war. Mr. Waahburne, it will lie remembered, represented the lO' tereats of German subjects daring period, and baa ever ainoo been held in grateful remembranee in Germany. Be fore proceeding to America Mr. Wash burns is expected to visit Berlin on his return from Carlsbad. Tax Washington Ktpubtiean, in an ad itorial whioh it is said was juapipwd by the President, olaima that all United States bonds issued prior to 1878 are pay able in gold aud silver, and that those issued sinoe that date are payable only in gold. It further states that there is to be a change of policy in relation to the de orease in the public debt, whioh baa here tofore been paramount to all other inter ests. The decrease is to be stopped and a reduction of taxation follow. It is fur ther intimated that a system of internal improvements will be inaugurated whioh it is believed will bring about a degree of prosperity that will ameliorate the pres ent stagnation. THE CONDITION OF OUR FACTORY OPERATIVES. Immediately after the late war, when our shops and mills had been burned and our city desolated, in addition to our own people left without employment, hun dreds of poor from the country were add ed to our population. At that time the condition of many worthy people was truly pitaiHe, and called npon>U gener ous minded oitisene for aid and enbstan- tial help. Thanks to the energy of onr people and the pnblie spirit and foreeigbt of a few men of brains, onr mllle and fonndriee sprung again into existenoe and gave these men and women, hungry for work, home* and labor with adequate pay. For etaven years the con dition of this class of onr oitzene has steadily improved, and to day, In baalth, eomfortablo homes, fair wages, personal appearance and real merit, onr operatives are tbe peers of any in the United States. Onr climate, mild and ganial, la a grant advantage to them in tbe consequent saving of foel. The wages paid here are as large or larger for the eervioe rendered then any point in tbe world. Onr mllle, more liberal then those of the East and England, whioh pay (hair help monthly, pay all oaah once avary two weeks. As all honest labor la, so are onr people, prond even if poor, and whila they are anxious to work and wish reasonable compensation for it, they rightly disdain chad ties, feeling ha is alone above obligation' who renders ser- vloe for the reward reoeived. Tbe eplendid village ereoted just over the river, by tbe Etgle Ic Pbenix Compa ny, and whleh la oooupied by its operas tlvea wltb no ebarge tor rent, beyond a nominal anm aaaaasad as tbo pay of those employed to attend to the sanitary condi tions of tbe houses, baa been tbe nnoleue of an increasing town. Aaalsted by the generona aid, in lands and money, made by this corporation, these people own two oburcbes, and are building on lend donated by this oompaoy a masonio lodge and eobool. Tbe pastor occupies one of the corporation dwellings. Aided by the pnblio schools of Georgia and Alabama, tbe growing generation will have all tbe rndimeuta of a common school ednoalion. Tbe women, whose Improved condition is always a sure index of prosperity and brighter civilization, equal In testa and appearanoe, those who nuke loader pretensions and never do half tbe honest labor. No one who has seen these villegera at Iheir annual pioniea, oan remember them except at neat, tidy aud contented—hap pier beeanie, unlike so many of the worn* eu of our land, they earn their own liv ing. Enoooraged and aided by tbe public aobools, tbe increasing demand for skilled help and appreciating the ben aflls offered by savipgs bauks, our mill operatives ara fast learning tbe road to independence, and aelf-relianoe, and are having a will of their own. Mn. Fbahom Fomtainb.— This gentle men bee been sleeted member of the Constitutional Convention. Commissary Moses, ha of the aeoeaslon speeches and Knight of tbe Bread Tray olaima all tbe credit. In thie attempt be eertainly pays poor compliment to fir. Fontaine’s ahiHty and popularity. Mr. F. is gentlemen. He bea done hie duty aa bay, and aa a man, before, daring, end after tbe war. He ia loved by his friends respected by the people, and nous more so than tbe Editors of tbe Enquixxx-Sun. Via preferred another candidate, but we have never spoken of Mr. F. exoept as good Dsmoorat and an advocate of a Con vention. The Knight of tbe Bread Tray ia welaome to all tbs capital he endeavor ed to make ont of the raoe. Death or Jddoe J. M. Clabbb.—This gentleman died yesterday. His home was in Americas. He was ones Judge of the Patents Oirenit, end a cousin of Judge J. F. Clarke,of Onthbart,who,during tbe war, presided ova* the same oirouit. Both, we believe, were niphcwoof the lamented Judge M. J. Wellborn. Judge J. T. Clarke studied let? ia this oity in the office of hiaunole. Tub New York Graphic publishes n let ter from its Washington correspondent in whioh he reiterates bis statement that the postponement of the extra session of Congress was chiefly dne to tbe discovery of a oonsfireoy between tbe desperate Democrats and discontented Republioana to introdnoo e resolution questioning Hayes’ title end offering that of Tildes for tbe Presidency. He refers to tbe speeches of Tilden end others at the Man hattan Club reception, and to an artioie in tbe Boston Journal as supporting bis dla- patoh, and saya that bad Congress met in Jane, e determined effort would have been made to have the Senate and House endorse the resolution, and while it would not have passed, the threat would un doubtedly have been made use of. Iatt’7 rr a Violation ox tub Civil Rights Bill ?—The telegrams tell us yes terday bow the millionaire banker, Selig- man, of New York, one of the syndicate to plaoe the United Btatca loan, wee re fused admittance to the Grand Union Hotel, at Saratoga, bees use he was an Isrealite. Thie hotel ia the largest Saratoga and. owned by Judge Hilton, ■uooeasor to A. T. Stewart A Co. Tha Judge makes a distinction, saying Hebrews will be admitted to tha hotel, bat Jew* will not. We cannot aee the difference. If a oolored man is refused admittance to a Southern hotel, a howl ia raised ail over the North, and a suit commenced. Now this ie a dear violation of the Civil Rights bill, as It is a clear case of discrimination on aooouut of raoe. Tbe partita are mil- bonairee and oan afford a trial. The Gaoaoia CoxvximoH.—All bnt six of the oonnties in Georgia have been heard from, and of these, come have gone for it. The majority will be in the neighborhood of 10,000, as it already amounts to nearly 0,000. Among the very bed men In the State are among the delegatee sleeted. We give the list in this paper. Tbe Convention will consist of 104 members and meet in the Capitol at Atlanta on the second Wednesday in July, the Uth. Thb Atlanta Conetitution, as usual misrepresents. The Enquirkh-Sdn did not ask ex-Commiasary Moees to resign but suggested that aa a large number of tax-peyere and intelligent men alleged he did not represent tbe oounty, the beat test of his popularity wonld be to resigu aud leave tbe people to deoide the question ; and farther, that tbe raoe wonld cost the ooEcty nothing. 8tamlbx Matthews Answers About Ohio.—A Washington special to the Bat tlmore Sun says Stanley Matthews is "very much exercised over the oorning Ohio election, as he would be extremely delighted lo aeenre a full term of aix years in the Senale in addition to the brief period for whiob he has been elect ed. He realizes that the ehenoea of a Republican Legislature ere somewhat un certain, and he wants all the help whioh he oan obtain from thie quarter. Tbe rela tions which subsist between Mr.Metthews and Secretary Sherman are not of tbe Damon and Pythias style, aud the two therefore have had very little to esy to each other. It ie snspeoled, indeed, by the friends of Mr. Matthews that Beeratary Sherman it at pres ent in a wavering mood ae to whether he will remain in the Cabinet and that oirenmetanoe* with him are suoh that in oaee of the eteotion of a Re publican Legislature he may oonolnde to try to get baok to the Senate himself, Thie be oould do and still remain in the Oabinet till March, 1878. Be thie ai it may, it is understood that Mr. Matthews is very much troubled over the fluenoiel policy of Seoretary Sherman, or rather over the allegations be to what that poliey ia. Tbe greenback and silver advocate papers ell over Ohio, of both Repnblioen end Demooretie parties, ere easeiling Mr. Bbermen every day for his management of the flDenote. A friend of Mr. Met thews states that he bee told the Preeb dent that if Mr. Sherman’s polioy is per stated in tt will lose the State of Ohio to the Republicans by twenty thousand jority. A Letter by Postmaster Ueneral Iter- A special agent of the Postoffice De partment reoautly appointed from sSontb' era State by Postmaster General Key baring been assigned to duty whioh he finds quite arduous and sometimes disc greetble, baa written a letter to the De partment, in which bo complaint of the work to whioh he ta assigned. He speaks in reference to hie appointment to 'his own State, where he oonld be most nsefot to the Administration and help his party frienda in bnilding up an Administration party. He also, In a letter to the chief special agent, expressed hie earnest desire tbst the matter shod I be brongbt to the pereonal attention of the Postmaster Gen eral, believing that he would sustain this view of the case. Jndge Key replied in the following letter: Pont office Depabtment, Washington, June in.—Mr. , Special Agent-*■ Dear Sir: Mr. Parker, Chief of Bpeeial Agents of this department, baa handed me t lat ter of yonre, written to him, dated 10th instant. Yon certainly labor under a se rious misapprehension In tbs belief that it was my understanding that yon were to serve in your State only. I should not deserve the position I hold wore I to,make that or a similar understanding. Speoial agents of tbe depredation branch of eer- vioe are ehsrged with the important duty of detecting thlevee and raaoals. A stran ger ia more likely to suooeed in thie duty than one who ie well known. Heooe our agents must often be sent where they are unknown, end must go and be ready to go anywhere and everywhere me the exi- genoiea of the eervioe may demand. They must often leave the highway* of travel end go into the mountain* end territories, and along horseback and stage lineB, trav eling night and day, in rain, sun shine and storm, to detect and er rest offenders. Not nnfraqnently do onr igcnla not sleep one hour in twenty-fonr. ion ere alike mistaken in other matters. Yon are not appointed to organize and build up an Administration party in your Slate or elsewhere. You were appointed to do the work of tbe Post-offloa Deport' inent. You serve your party best by do ing that work, and I shall take great ploasnrein removing an agent and re ducing the force when I disoover that be bee time to attend to party organizations and party discipline. We muat have no greeter force then is neoesssry to do' tbs post-offlse work. I osn not and wilt not givs special privilege* to any agent. If I give yon specific territory I must so for every other agent. I might as wall disband tbe fofoe aa do this. Every agent must bs a worker. He mast not only be ready, bnt willing to go any where, in all aorta of weather, on horse back or foot, if need bo, to do whatever work ia needed. Like a soldier, be must obey orders, without complaint or objeo' tion, or oritioism. Truly, D. M. Kbi, Postmaster General. Nbernsum's sliver Currency Order. Tbs following order was issued on Saturday : Tbeahubt Diu-abtmsnt, Sane 16. —To A. M. Wyman, Treasurer of tbe United States—Sin It appears from tbe reports of tbe Treasurer of tbe United States, tbe Comptroller of tbe Currency and the Chief of tbe Bureau of Engraving > and Printing, dated tbe 9th ioat., that the amount of fractional currency lost and destroyed, and whioh therefore cannot be presented for redemption, is $8,089,618,-' CO. The Attorney-General, in bis opin ion of this date, a oopy of whioh ia hare with enclosed, bol ls that in ascertaining tbe amount of fractional currency out standing within the meaning of the third section of tbe joint resolution of July 22, 1876, there should be deduoted from lbs amount ot snub ourrenoy issued and not redeemed tbe amount lost and destroyed. The issued and not redeemed May 111, 1877, wsa $21,206,980.83, and' ieduotiug tbe amount lost and destroyed, as above stated, will leave $18,123,416.83, the eiuonut of fractional ourrenoy whiob according to the opinion 6f the Attorney General, was then outstanding. You Ire, therefore, directed to issue aeoording to lew, from time to time, an amount of sil ver coin, whiob, including the amount is sued sinoe the dato of the resumption not of Jan. 14,1875, and tha amount of frac tional currency outstanding thus ssoe tained, as will equal fifty million dolls! Very respsotfully, John Shbbman, Secretary. TBXMcmoui growth or TUB LAOIS bbbb ntmmrxr—tacts ram dbinkbbs. From tbe Hartford TtaM.j It ta only ubont thirty years since leger beer earns into use in the United States: Tbs first brewery was aetubliabed in Phil- addpblx U4846. Two years later F. and M. Schaefer introduced tha business in Naw York; It is now on* of tha most important Industries in tha etty. Thera are thirty-ceres lager beer breweries in the oity and suburbs, and they tarn ont over a million barrels iu the oourae of the year. The beer made by Georgs Ebret 1a considered tbe best; at all events, there inn OTA demand for it that for any other. Ebret sold 132,000 barrels in 1870; Rep- pert ranka next aa ah extfenilVe manufac turer, hia produet tbe -same year being 74,OOOberrelp. , TbcRphacfcn, who intro duced tbe bualneaa, cold 46,000 barrels. It ta bardly necessary to say that all the lager beer brewers are Germans. Some have beoome very rieh, and only a few bare failed in the bttslnese. Tbe oapital inverted la it ta very large. Eh rot’s capi tal is about $1,000,000. Whan be started, eleven yearn ego, h* had to borrow money to carry him over tbe flret few months. Buppert has over $760,006 in his brew eries, horses, wagons, cte. He started in 1867. Another brewer who started iu the same year retired bn a fortune a few years ago, and bia partner oontinnea the busi ness on a capital of $400,000. Altogether tbe money invested ,in tbe brewing of leger beer in and anrand New York ta probably not leas than $8,000,000. Tbs man employed in the business earn from $68 to $75 per month, and have all the beer they want to drink. Their boars are long, averaging fifteen' out of the twenty-roar. An employe* who doesn’t drink mors than twenty glasses a day ie considered economical. Many go np to fifty or sixty, and there eye some who boost of oapaolty for one bnodred. Rup- lert'e men drank 800' barrels last year at be expense of the firm., * Nearly all tbe beer manufactured now-a-deys ta doctored—that is, drags are need to color it and tone it np. The buAtbe’sa of anpplying drags to the beer mad bes beoome quite large. The brewers admit tbe nee of .drags, bat maintain i that the beer i* Improved by them rather than injured. The different kinds of beer are so wall known that any steady imbiber osn tell at n sip whose beer he ia drinking —whether it is Ehret'a, Rapport’s Dod ger's, Olaussen's or some other. Some ot (he brewers use croton water, paying an immense tax for it yearly, and others l*t water from artesian wells. One firm i*s a well of thie kind that yields over 200,000 gallons daily. Memphis oan’t'pey its debts ht per, and proposes to settle at fifty can (a on the dollar. The bonds to be leaned on this basis will ran thirty years, and draw 6 per oant. interest. A Medlelae or Many Use* A modiolus which remedial dyspepsia, liver complaint, oonetipatloc, debility, intermittent or remittent fevers, urinary and uterine trou. bles, depurates the blood, eonnteracti a ten donoy to rheumatism and gent, and relieves nervousness, may be trmly eatd to have many uses. Suoh an article ta Hostetler's Hitters, one of the most reliable alteratives er a dlsor ilerly to a well ordered state ofkhe system ever prepared or (old. It has been over a quarter oi - 'v before the — ill DOWN THEY 410. PAILUna or A MAN WITH NIGHT BUNPXXD THOUSAND DOLLARS INCOME. New York Correspondent of the Bolton Jour nal.] One of our heaviest real estate men has been under the harrow for some months. To-day he has abandoned tbe fight, and given up everything to bia creditor^. He was a very Bucceaeful ootton broker. All the money he made be put into real estate His revenues were very large. His in come was eight hundred thousand dollars year. One building, Dir Trinity Ohurob, yielded him a rental of ninety: thousand dollara per annum. Everything be lonohed turned to gold. He was load ed down with ootton. Oue day a msr chant banded him a check rt thie* ban. dred thousand dollars to oanoel a oontraot. He took it. Within ten days ootton surged up and he made a fortnne. He owned an elegant house on Fifth avenue. He crowded it with paintings, statuary, and works of art Not oonteut with this, he was induced by s speculator lo take bold of a railroad. He bought houds at sixty Boon after they went down to forty, and the gentleman bought all be oould lay bis bands on. He took tbe road. He pro. posed to ran it. He found it unfinished. He equipped it; spent three hundred thousand dollars in looomotivea and roll ing stock. Ruin oame to him aa it oomea lo every one who dabbles in onUide matters. Tbe panio completed bis demoralization. His fine New York property was mortgaged for more than it worth. To-day be baa ceased to straggle. Few men will be warned and few men wiser for all this. Here is a man who a few month* ego had a royal inoome of eight hundred thonaand dollars a year. He wanted to make It a million. To-day he ta hopelessly a bankrupt. A woman will take the smallest drawer in e bureau for her own private use, and will peek away in bright bita of boxes, ot ell ebadee and aixee, dainty fragmenta of ribbon, and scrape of lace, foamy rnffiee, velvet tbinga for the neck, bandies of old love letters, pieoee of jewelry, handker chiefs, fane, things that no man knows tbe name of, all aorta of freah looking bright little traps that yon oouldn’t cata logue in a oolnnin, and any hour of the day or night eh* oan go to that drawer and pick np any artioie eh* went* without disturbing anything else. Whereas a man having the biggest, deepest and widest drawer aaeignea to him, will ehaok into it three cooks, a oollar box, an old necktie, two handkerchiefs, a pipe, and a pair of auependcrs, and to eav* hia aool he can't shot that drawer without leaving more ends of thing* sticking ont than thor* ara things in it. NiUMumu. VEGETINE. For Billon, Renitteiit ail Inter- „. wbst ta more enmoMBly termed Fever and A rue, wltb pain In tbe loins and through tbe bMb, ana Indsssrlbeble chilly eeneation down the spine, an Irresistible disposition to yawn, pstn In tbs syce, wblch ta ineressed by moving them, a bins tinge In tbe skin, and great 11,1- lessneas and debility, VsosTiaa Ie a safe and positive remedy. It ta compounded exclu sively from the juices of carefully selected barks and herbs, and so strongly eonoentrated that It Is one of the greatest cleansers of the blood that 1s or ean be put together. VsazTiaz does not stop with breaking Oh Hie and Fever, bnt It eztends Its wonderful Influ ence Into every.-port of tbe human system, and entirely eradlettee every taint of disease. Vbqbtihb doss hot set as s powerful cathar tic, or debilitate tbe bowels and eau-e the pa mpny emlnant professors of the beating art, and its merits have received rapes tad recogni tions In the oolumni of leading Amorloan and foreign journals. It ta highly as Mamed in sv- ery part of this oouatry, and Is extensively used In:South America, Mexleo, the British posaes- -14ns and ,the West Indies. If Its Increase in ublic favor In the past Is to be regarded as a elleble criterion of Its gain In popularity In oping years, It has Indeed a eplendid future root of disease ■tores the tlon, regulates tha bowefa, and assists Na ture In performing all the dntlee that devolve upon her. Thousands of Invalids are suffering to-day from the effects of powerful purgative nos trums, frightful quantities of quinine, and poison doses of arsenic, neither ot whleh ev er have or aver aonld reach tha true omasa of their complaint. VEGETINE work! In the human avvtem In .perfect harmo ny with nature's laws, and while It Is pleas ant to the taste, genial to the stomach, and mild In Its lofluenoe on th3 bowels. It ia abso lute In Its motion on dlseace, and Is not a vile, nauseous Bitters, puricing the invalid Into a false hope that they are being oured. Vico 11 Tink Is a purely Vegetable Medicine, compounded upon solentlAo principles. It Is endorsed by the best physlolans where Its vir tues have been tested, la recommended only where mediolne is needed, and li not a mixture of cheap whiskey sold under the cloak Bitters. Gfvaa Health, Strength and Appetite. My dauKhter has reoeived great benefit from the use of Vkubtinb. Her decllnlmr health was a source oi great anxiety to all of h>r friends. A few bottles of Vkostirk restored ealth, strength and appetite. N. H TILDEN, Insurance and Real Eitate Agent, No. 4V Sears Building, Boston, Mass. VEGETINE. Polloe Testimony. Boston, Nor. 18,1878. II. R. Steven t, Esq merits ofVxoBTimb. My wife has used It for nj . _ gl to my children under almost every olroum- stance attending a large family, and always with marked benefit. 1 have taken It myaelf with suoh great benefit that I oannot find words to express my unqualified appreciation ~'its goodness. While pertormiug my duties as a Polloe finer In the city, It has been my lot to fall in th a great deal of tioknese 1 unhesitating* ly recommend Vkuktink, and I never knew ol a case where It did not prove all that was claimed for It, Particularly In oases ot debili tated or Impoverished state of the blood, Its effects are really wonderful; aud, for all com* E lnlots arising from an Impure state of the lood, It appears to work like a oharui; and I do not believe thara are any olrcutnstanoes un VKOHTiirscan be used with injurl ous results; and It will alwaysjaflbrd me pleas * re to give an' * know about VEGETINE - PREPARED BY H. R. STEVENS, BOSTON, MASS, Vegetine is Sold by 'All Druggists. f)u!3 wedAsaigwl AMUSEMENTS. SPRINGER’S OPERA HOUSE . TO-NIGHT. Thie WALLACES 60| Uente. WARM SPRINGS, GEORGIA | * T HIS E8TABLI8HMEMT l« now open to the Publle for the eeaoon. RATES OF BOARD: r day a oo 1 week iooo 1 manta...., sooo Jhildieu aader U year* and oolored ear half pries. •W HACKS to meet morning and evening Trains on North fc South Railroad. aw Olosr connection ta mode at Geneva, S. W. R. K., with the 11:18 A. ai?traln by W. H. Marlin’, Haeke, whioh arrive atthsBprlnga to early tea. J. L. MU8TAIN, mj28 tf Proprietor. City Light Guards’ GRAND FESTIVAL IN Court House Square, JULY act, 3d and 4th. July gd, at 7:80 r.and oontlnue antll M.; re-open Tuesday at 7:30 r. and con tinue until 13 o’elook a. M.| will again open at * o’clock a. n. Wednesday, July 4th, and con tinue open until It e’elook at night. THE MILITARY EXERCISES Will constat or Dree, Farads, Guard Mounting and Turning Out of the Guard. A large Platrorm, 30x4<>, for danoing. Booth, for sale or loe Cream, Lemonade, Ae., ko. A Boo , A Booth for exhibition ot Natural and Un natural OurloaUlea. A Stage will be prepared for exhibition,. The best Mualoal Talent In the elty have kind ly eonienied to aeetat. INSTRUMENTAL AND VOCAL MUSIC, SOLOS, DUETTS, QUARTETTS, AND CkTMXd OhoruMea COMIC, SERIOUS and SENTIMENTAL SONGS. The oeeaslon will ha enjoyable, and all art Invited to attend and aid this Company In their effort, lo rale* a tund to pay off their datum A detail of polios will b* upon the ground to preserve order—beside, a military guard will be constantly on duty to aid — ■uppreastag any disorder. «- TICKETS for Adattaiicn to the grounds 10 oent, eaeh evening, to he had at the Gate oi flrom members of the Company daring the day Wedaeeday, July 4th, aoohargefer admission will be made,jata ta DENTISTRY. DR. J. M. MASON, D. D. 8 CfBos Over Rnguliur-Staie Orto*. COLUMBUS, 8A., C UKES Diseased Gum, and other dictates of the Mouth; caroa Abscessed Testa; Inserts Artificial Teeth: fill* Teeth with Gold, at cheaper malarial It dnelrad. All work at roeinaabta prise, mad gnaw Mad. MS dlyhwam •solely purifying tha blood, re- I liver and kidneys to healthy tnlatee tha bowel,, and didst,: HAVE REMOVED MY STOCK To No. 158—under Rankin House, Until my Stores are completed. Being desirous of re* duoing the Stock, I shall offer SPECIAL BARGAINS DIME TEE NEXT THIRTY DAYS! nplt eodSm JAS. A. LEWIS. AT COST! AT COST! :0: — We will sell our entire stock of • SPBINa AND SUMMER DRES© GOODS AT AND BELOW COST FOR CASH. BOOTS AND 8HOE8. FINE SHOES! LADIES’ AND MISSES’ NEWPORTS, Plain and with Buckles. Sandals i Slippers In New and Tatty Stylet. BURTS’ Fine Button Boots CUNTS’ Brown Cletb-Tos Dittoi Oifords THE HANDSOMEST SHOE OUT. -t- Alao a full Una of SPRING WORK In all the Popular Styles, ALL AT REDUCED PRICES. A Heavy Stock of Brogans Plew Shoes, and Sta ple Goods, FOR WHOLESALE TRADE r For anything you want In the Shoe and Leather Line, call at THE OLD SHOE STORE No. 73 Broad Street, (Sift, af IBs Dtp Bet.) WELLS A CURTIS. WHITE SULPHUR STRINGS, Meriwether Oounty, Georgia. This Favorite SUMMER RESORT 1, Now Upon for the KeoepUon of Quail, Kverylfclag far ahe camr.irt Uueala will be Trended by Ike Proprietor. BATES OF BOARD: Par day I •• week 1 “ month 8 Children and Servante halt price. JAS. W. RYAN, iuioim Proprietor, CARRIAGES, &S& DRY COOD8. Now is the Time to As we are determined to dispdae of them. ■w Prices on all other Coods guaranteed. BLANCHARD A HILL. my4 dfcwtf THE PLACE TO BUY IS AT- J. ALBERT KIRVEN’S. STANDARD PRINTS 6 CENTS! Printed Lawns, I9ic; Victoria Lawns, 14c; Dress Coods, B, 8 and lOc; Summer Silks, BO to 80c; Coodkid Cloves,25c to SOc; Good Hose, 8c; Good Hem’ed Handk’fs, Do; Beautiful Silk Scarfs, 20@2So Silk Handkerchiefs, 25o; Parasols, 15c to 88; IO-4 8hsetlng, 20o; Cood Linen Napkins, 5c; Great bargains in Towels—A Cood Damask Towel, 20e. Large stock of Zephyr Wools, Perforated Card Board, Perforated Mottoes, Ac., for Fancy Work. In abort, If you want anything usually kept in a FIRST-CLASS DRYGOODS STORE at the Lowoat Figuroa, oall and get my Prioee before you buy. **"No trouble to show Coods. J. ALBERT KIKVEN. N. B.—Ladies’ and Children’s Shoes a Specialty. eoti coufcwiy ,* MILLINERY. SPRING MILLINERY GOODS ! FRESH ARRIVAL OF NOVELTIES KBS. COLVIN & MISS DONNELLY HAVE NOW IN STORE ONE OF THE Larjtst Hi of Miner; Goods Ever Bromht to Colgate! Coneietlng in pert of Hate; Bonnete, Rlbbont, Licet, Toilet Artlolee of every description, Pareecle, Fans, Kid Gloves, and A >8 G|tEAT VARIETY OF FANCY GOODS! NOTICE. thi’ 1 -AdaMI ■ UChventlon of the Stockholder, of the MOBILE B GI- KABD RAILROAD will be held at the Depot In Girard, Alabama, qn Wednesday, July 4th, at 10 o’olook a. x., when an eleotton for Presi dent and elx Director* will take place. Stockholders, with their families, will be pueed free to Uolumbui from the Xd to the 4th Inoluelve, and returned any day until the 7th lnaluiive, after which day passage will be charged. Certificate, of,took must be exhibited to the Conductor by the Stockholder* ae evidence o their being entitled to pas, free with their fam llles; and a proxy most exhibit certificate ol stock and power of attorney; otherwise fare will be required In both cnees. By order of J. M. FKAZEB, ju’l daw Id Secretary. Central Line of Boats. J. H. SANDERS, IRON AND BRASS FOUNDRY. The Georgia Iron Works, {FORMERLY J. C. PORTER), MANrxrrjLonmBii —OF— Cane Hills, Spp Evaporators TTNT1L FUKTHEB NO- TiOE the Central Line Steamboat, will run a, follows: STEAMER WYLLY, W. A. hj, Captaii, SATURDAYS, 10 A M, to Apalaehteolo,Flo. 49* For farther information call on O. E. HOCHSTRASSER, _ j«n2_tf Agent. E, N. FRESHMAN & BROS., Advertising Agents, 186 W. Fourth 8t. f CINCINNATI, O., Are aathorised to receive advertisements for this paper. Estimates furnished free upon ap plication . 4®* Send two Btemps for our Advertiser's Manual. GRAND CENTRAL HOTEL, Hot Springs, Ark. FIBST-CI.ASS Ilf EVERY BE8PECT This House has Bath-Rooms under same roof, supplied from the Hot Springs. M D. BALLENTINE, mhUTdOm Proprietor. Warm and White Sulphur SPRINGS. P ASSENGERS going to the Worm and Whit* Sutpliar sprint convenient and pleaeant Inge will find it more Via lie Nortli & Soil! Railroad, WAGONS, AgrlegllBtal Implements, de., Mode and repaired at the lowest UA8H prises, on Wynn's Hill, near the elty, ty enoft-eodfcwly W. M. AMOS £QQ luv Kscli to AfftHiU. Oo4>«)aStaple. 10.Oft .teuiliaunlaU received.Term* i!her«|.l*ar* lllculsr* ire*. J .Worth A Co.Bt.J*ouU,Ho FOB BENT. rpHE Deal ruble Realdenoe, A. No. 331 Ninth Broad • treet,eon tabling eight rooms, all ntceuary oat-bulldlng,,: and good w«Uo< water. I The above rctldenc* ta convenient.. to the buelneee part of the city, and In an 7 ex- eel lent neighborhood. „ Atao, the Store Hoae* No. 34 (north aide)' Randolph street, euitobl* (or Grocery Store, . . ... and la good location. Oan be had on easy Ae arrangement, hare been made to bar* term*. I HAUKS meet every morning Apply at THIS OFFICE, J anil evening’, train. oetl3dfcwtf J WMi RE00 Jr<j jyJO BILE A GIRARD R. R. STOCK, * jut 3m ' nmpn. Southern A AUantio Ttl. Co. Stook, Confederate Bondt end Stook, WANTED BY JOHN BLACKMAN, D0v8;*76tf| Broker. ANHOOD RESTORES*. davimSIT* ON* cdAw C RBTADORO’S 1 *^? DYE . Is the BAfest and the best, la InsUnUneoas in iU notion. And it produces the most nstural shades of hlnck or I hrown. does uot stain the skin, end !• easily applied. It } ii B standard preparation, and a favorite u|xm every j well-apifiuUd toilutfor Inly or yentleman. For sale ljr all Drnp*Uta au<l Hair Dressers. JOSEPH ftgy.3<y, 0 *. pro » rl * ,0f ’ -• Toby Newman’s Ice House mOBY KEEPS “UOOL” and dctlrce cvery- X body to do llkcwtse; and to eld In doing tide he will keep always on hand at all hooxb, LAKE ICE, tho best that I, knowa. dr All order, Bom abroad promptly filled. iny3S-Ui