Columbus daily enquirer. (Columbus, Ga.) 1874-1877, August 02, 1877, Image 2
DAILY ENQUIRER-SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING. AUGUST 2. 1877. ovuiniiA aA. i THURSDAY AUGUST 2, 1877. LARGEST CfTY CIRCULATION I AND MORE THAN TWICE THE LARGEST AGGREGATE CIRCULATION! New Yobs Oomnranlita wear raffled Alta. Two of the Cincinnati striker* end rioter* were eoloted men. San Faincisoo's hoodlum* hare gone into that hole* again, and the Chinese will here a little rest. If the Pennsylvania mtnea are flooded labor will have to wait *ix month# for em ployment. No paranip* are bnttered by Ton panic in St. Loui* a over. A newapeper reporter advanoed the banka a portion of hia week'* aalary, and eonfl- danoa waa reatorad. The Hna*iana are throwing away a great deal of money where it 1* not ap preciated. Those 18,000 boombs thrown into Kan ooet 1,800,000 rouble*. Pbateb* trnul be oheeper than four dol lar* apiece before the Georgia Convention will nee them for opening the daily see- aion* of the oonatllntionel conventions. Jixnii Jure says one of the advant- agaa of having had a grandmother is the possession of heirloom* in the shape of rare old obina and dalioaie bit* of gits*. Cables report that a general European war is looked npon as among the proba bilities of the honr. It i* farther stated that England is moving ateadily toward* Constantinople. AIPBOIAL from Alexandria says: “The obelisk (Cleopatra's Needle) and the ahip for its oonveyanoo to London Will be launched about the 10th of August if the weather is favorable." “My Cbauoellor is a aoonndrel," said Loui* XV., speaking of Maupron, “but I cannot do without him.” John Sherman is a scoundrel; but oan it be possible that Hayes is unable to do without him f The Btbikebs.—They appear to have subsided except in Pennsylvania where Hartranft'a miners are otusiug trouble. Hartrauft will yet have to send South for ex-Coufederaies to restore order in his State. Bonn, of New Orleans, who is said to ba the ouatodian of the original Stanley Matthews document, and which, It ia al leged, is signed also by John Sherman and Garfield, is at White Bulphur Springs. A sodden draught of hot air is reported to have passed through * ootton field and peaoh orohard, in Western Texas, a few days ago, aoorohtng and killing every I out green thing it touohed for a space of 140 yards wide and 400 yards long, Ih answer to an inquiry it is stated that Fred Grant ia Aid-de-Oamp to the Lieu tenant General of the Army, with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel of Cavalry, by virtu* of an aot of Congress, as in seotion 1097 of the Uevised Statutes. Mias Kate Field says General Grant dosan't know one tune from another, and oan only reoognixe the Star Spangled Banner when he hears the words. He baa, however, beard Hail to the Chief until be has become familiar with it, bnt ha thinks it is Yankee Doodle. THE 1 .•CATION or TilE CAPITAL Among the very minor points which will arise before the Convention will be the q nest ion of the location of the Capi tal of Georgia. In this seotion there is only one voios among intelligent peo ple and that is in opposition to p'acing this matter in the Constitution, and prefer!ng it be left to a vote of the people at the next eleotioo. The majority report wbiob said Atlanta had aoted with perfect fairness baa been snffloiently ridi- enled. It has beoome the theme for laughter npon examination. Atlanta, it ia oleer, has not oomplied with her obli gations and has reaped thousands by the Radical Legislators. Now the people went to have a say-so. The oommitteo stood five to four—five with the Convention to decide the location of the Capital, four want to leave the ques tion to the people as a diitinot and inde pendent issue at the next election when the ooet to the State will be nothing. It le strange to ns how there can be a possi bility of difference. The report of the minority oommitteo is fair and Jnst. There should not he a word of argument about th* matter. The people, the tax-pay. are, never ohose Atlanta for the Capital. They have the right to say whether it ■hall remain there. Certainly if it does, the State must be prepared to spend mil lion* of dollars in ■ very few years for publio buildings. That orazy opera honse will fall before many days. Atlanta's promises abont a fntnre Capitol are not worth the psper they ere written on. Another Counoll oan undo what the pres ent hsd no right to offer. Our members who vote to make Atlanta the Capital with out submitting the issue to the voter* of Georgia will saddle the State with a debt of several millions, and they will forever be held responsible. wht.ee in hakthantt r He is Badly wanted with those GO,000 “meelish" with whioh ho was going to march to Waabington last Spring to sus tain Mr. Hayes, and keep out Mr. Tiiden, He oannot keep order in his own State, and his “maellah” will run at the “bust ing of a oap." Yesterday one of the May ors bad a Jaw broken by the mob. The Mayor retreated and the rbwdies oaptured au engine and ran up and down the line, whistling and snorting in glee,before the valiant cohorts of the boastful Pennsyl vania Governor, and they dared not raise a finger. Hsrtranft after all his bravado about hi* gallant 00,000 has not been able to subdue a single riotous station or mining oamp, and ingloriously has been compelled to call on U. S. troops for aid, and they have been forwarded from all portions of the South to help ont the obivalrona Governor and his brave and willing 00,000, among whom are the heroes of Pittsburg, that ran through the town and eutrenohed tan miles above. Are they not fearful that while the troops are gone the colored people will be more orderly then ever and vote the straight Democratic ticket? They would always have done so had it not been for Hart ranft'a braves. Give ’em flta, Governor. * I You said your GO,000 would olean the Tiiden orowd. Now the law-framers. —— WHEN WII.I. THEY MTHBOIISH THEM WOBKT FIOHTIMO OVEB THE JUDIOIABY—LULL OT THE CAPITAL (1UBSTIOH—THE HEW HOME STEAD PBOVISIOM. Galveston has a strike of negro labor er* on her hands. The joke of it is, the darkies don't know what they etruok for, and demand nothing. They were proba bly pnt op to tt by their Republican friend* for the purpose of formulating an “outrage" story for the New York Times. Th* money veins of eropi, as given by the Agricultural Bureau in ita report for last year, waa in round numbers #585, 400,000 of oorn, #842,000,000 of hay, #204,800,000 of wheat, #272,000,000 of ootton, and #120,500,000 of oats. Pota toes aro down for a value of #05,000,000, tobaeoo #80,000,000, and barley #29,950,- 000. with your grand army foroe one train to run and do not allow the rabble to break the jaws of the mayors who endeavor to ■top a row. Summon your meelish and feed them wall. They are the moat worth. 00,000 that were ever summoned to a bread muster. Oh! if Tiiden had only known what able soldiers Hsrtranft had iu bis command, and bow obeerily and willingly they turn their baoks to the enemy! The question that will long live in the Bounding year* is: Are you a sur vivor of Hartranft's gallant Pennsylvania meelish ? Thb Pittsburg riot wili prove ■ serious baohaet to that city, aa taxation wilt be increased four per oent., and it is reported that the Pennsylvania oompany will not lebnild its shops there, through fear of a repetition of recent deatuotivo work. Tho aeilroad strikers themselvea who have homes iu Pittsburg will be among tbe greatest sufferers. Thb next sale of publio lands, under the aot of Congress passed at the last ses sion to provide for salea in the South west ern States, will take plaoe November 7, at Dardenicllis, Ark., and will embraoa parts of 192 townships. Owing to the imper- feot mauner in which the records have been kept since the war, there hea been an unusual amount of labor to find and dtaeribe the landswhtohthe-UnitedStatee ■till holds in these townships. The wheat crop in this oounlry this year will be more then 828,000,000 bush els. Of this amount not more than 100,- 000,000 bushels will likely be sent abroad. An important oiroumatanoe connected with the abundant yield in this Country is the reduoed production of Southern Russia, resulting from the disturbed con dition of nffeirs in the oountries adjacent to th* Black See. Tho crop there this year will not be more than half of that of former yearn. Six Governors of State* called on the President for Federal sssi.tanoe to pat down domestic insurrection. Three other Governors Issued proclamations com manding the rioters to disperse, and or dered out the militia of their own States to anforo.i the order. The insurrection began at the comparatively inaigaifioaat town of Msiiiutburg and spread until it embraced the territory of ten Bute*. i n . eluded in these were the tour most popu lous State* of Um Onion, New York Pennsylvania, Ohio and Illinois. OHIO BEPUBLICAME. They have met, nominated W. H. West for Governor and adjourned. Their plat' form ia a composite made of ell materials. They approve Mr. Hayes' polioy. They eadorse all the Repnblioan party has done end reaffirm their dovotion to principle, This is riding two horses at onoe, and is oonaistenoy with a vengeanoe, They desire both gold and Blivet as eurrenoy, and' tho remonetization eilvor. They then deliberately go to work to endeavor lo capture the strikers' vote; henoe they advooate a National Bureau of Labor and Boards of Arbitr* tiou, the whole of whioh is very silly and utterly impraotioable. Tbe Democrats promise to whip them splendidly this year. What It Cost.—We pubiiBh to-day some remarks made at the meeting of the strikers at Bt. Louis. They displayed the worst form of oommunism; they were fora division of property. No wonder the citizens arose en masse to put down ■nob a mob. This was represented model labor strike convention. Six bun. dred negroes were prominent among tbe ■trikerz—they went along the wharves cud foroed the steam boatmen to promise exorbitant terms ; bnt they do not appear to have figured at this meeting. The telegrams state that tbe receipts of internal revenue, alone, have fallen off one million dollars ainoe the strike began Somebody will have to pay this. The burning at Pittsburg and the immi losses sustained by the business of the country,and a portion must come from the pockets of the strikers. Who has been benefltted by tbe late fiasco ? In all the eeuaea in whioh Mrs. Myre Olsrk Gaines wee complainant, whioh were tried before and decided by Judge Billings during the last term of the Uni ted States Circuit Court at tbe re- oent amended order of the latter grants appeals from the furnishing of bonds in esses whereby E. Sabeurln, Esq., was master io ohanoery, and tbe value of the property amounts to #8,000, reserving those parties whose property has not been estimated as high as #8,000 the right ■how by affidavit, within ten days, that the property is really worth #5,000, with the right, to oomplainant, to file oounter effldivita within five days thereafter. The offset of this order will be to redace the number of defendant* entitled to appeal, unless th* report of Mr. Sabouriu is con tradicted. ' —This weather baa rained the paper eUls» business, and few are now to be e**o. Good Uneo stands the melting Special Oorreipotdene# of the Enqalrcr-Ssn. Atlanta, Wednesday, August 1. A prominent member of the Conven tion has just told me that the body will, in all probability, be reedy to adjourn by next Saturday night week. I don't see bow be oen be right. Tbe Convention will have to praotie* a great deal more expedition than it baa sines ita meeting if it gets through in that Urns. Indeed, it ia almost impossible that it should, for if you think a moment yon will see that the moat important matters which will be treated have not yet been touched. The hardest logioal fighting, the tongheet brain work, the sharpest, moat ■killfnl wire-pulling and the moat aoeompUshed political strategy is yet to come, and it will take at least three weeks more to play the lit tle game out fully. The parte of the new Constitution already adopted are relative to those matters in whioh nobody feels a very deep interest. The great questions are yet to ba settled. How osn the di verse and antagonistic opinions on the Homestead question be brought to any definite conolnsion in lees then three or fonr days 1 There will be a very wordy battle on the mannerof appointing Judges, wbiob, with tbe preeent gaseous pressure, will go on two days. So we are Bate in predicting a prolongation of the seeaion at least a week beyond the limit fixed for it by an honorable member. I waa pleased to see in yonr issue of Tuesday an editorial on too mueh talk iu the Convention, You have straok upon an idea whioh is beoomlng very oommnn among those who ait and watoh tbe slow progress of the body. There are some of the moat inveterate spendthrift* of the people's money in the body that I have ever seen ; men who call the yeas and nays on tbe most trivial questions when they are clearly lost in a division; men who have forty amend ments to every seotion of every report; men who oan allow nobody to speak with out a dozen or so questions and interrup tions; men who take the floor on every thing end oarry their point ou nothing, in short, men who bring np fre»h to the mind that old Indian ballad whioh declares with peoullsr foroe— “It a mu will talk long enough, If a man will talk long enough, It a man will talk long enoagh, Ha will bora a hold In a stone.” It is pleasant to note an increasing dis position to snub these talking machines and reoently several of them have been “set down on"—quite herd. The Legia. latnre appropriated #25,000 to pay the expenses of the Convention, but its expen ses have already reached that earn and will probably run np to nearly twloe the amount named. The appropriation how ever is no limit to the expense of the body, for, as one of the honorable gen tlemen said the dther day, “The treasury is ours—we are the peoplo—and if we want our own money we'll take it." I never knew what a grand thing it was to be a delegate ia this Convention until I heard a dozen young politicians who are agitating its prooeedinga, declare iu strains worthy of the thought: “We are the people, the sovereign people, there is no power over ns.” Weil, it’s the truth, only there’s no use of talking about it so muob. the capital question has of a sudden lulled wonderfully. It blazed into auoh a sudden and strong enthusiasm that it seems to have been destroyed by its own ardor, and the Convention is going more steadily at work to make a good Constitution, and is talking less about wbera the Legislature shall take its oooktalls. I am still of the opinion that this matter will not be mixed up with the Constitution, but will be sub. milted as a separate issue to tbe people. There oan be no possible objeotion to suoh a settlement of it. Put either At lants or MiUedgeville in the Constitution end ell yon oan tell is that it is the choioe of a majority of a hundred and ninety- four men. The only way for the people to reverse the decision of thiB small num ber is to defeat the entire Constitution and annul their entire work. Submit tbe oapital issue separately and you in no way encumber the Constitution, and you place a loug vexed and worn out question where it will be easily, speedily and finally set' tied. THB rUDIOIABY is still on trial. Ali day yesterday passed in diaonsaion of the report on this important subject. The seotion allowing the Legislature to appoint, at ita disore tion, two more judges for the Supreme Court was stricken out, end wisely, 1 think. The question of reviewing the old time Inferior courts was thoroughly disouased, and seemed at one time likely to be oarried, but it at last failed, though it was de tested by no big majority. Tba report will oooupy the body to-day. The propo. oition to reduoe the number of judioial cironits is warming up the enthusiasm of both those who favor and those who op pose it The oommittee think that eaeh Judge ought to work thirty-two weeks, and some of the “reformists'' are in favor of knocking down salaries to #1,800. This will herdly be the sense of eo sensi ble a body. THB HOMESTEAD. The oommittee of twenty-six had a fine time over the homestead yesterday after noon. Gen. Toombs was enthusiastic in hisenpport of the preeent big lump whioh tbe lew aUowe a man to proteot for his wife and babies. He worked might and main to induoa the oommittee to allow to stand unchanged. But tbe great pres sure was for a reduction. A memorial came up yesterday from a large number of oitisana in Hart eonnty, praying tbe reduolion of th* homestead to six hundred dollars, and hinting that unless it was reduoed they would go against th* Con stitution. All th*** things had their foot and a majority of th* oommitteo de termined, though the report has not yet been read, that they would tebommaiid a red notion from three lAonmad dollar* to oixteen hundred, three bond red dollars to ba Inalienable and th* rest snbjeot to the right of waiver by the head of tbe family with th* aonaant of parties In interest. Thi# report will eome np soon and I doubt if It paassa. Sen. Toombs lsso hot against it that it i* sup posed by eome that be will oppoeeth* Constitution if it is incorporated in ik This is only one evidence of. a tendency whioh I regret to my ia oonatantly lu ring. There will rarely be a strong opposition to the new Cooedtatton from the member* of the Convention that framed it. Every day it beoomea plainer that there will be a warm political oonteat 'adoption or rejection” of tba new organielaw. Tat. The Boston Advertiser gives some in. teraeting statistic)* from forty-nine pf the large ootton mills of New England. They make abont thirty par oral of all cotton goods in tbe North, and oonnma annually 888,000 bales. In' the first cix months of tba present year they worked np 89,2 942 pounds. Aa tba quality of the crop of ' 1876-77 was muoh bettor than that of the season before, the Advertiser thinks it safe to assume that these figures repre sent an inoreaae (in pounds) of five per cent. in the quantity of goods turned ont. These goods have found a market, there la no large accumulation on hand, and the demand ia perceptibly improving. If prices oan ba kept down this rammer, tbe Advertiser think* autumn will find the New Eogland mills unable to keep np with their orders. OABDIj rrto all who are rafferiag from the *j«r« aad a redye that will ear# yoa, fro# off Chavs*. Tim gnat remedy was dGmvMjl Iff* •lonary la Boat* DRY GOODS. STRIKE FOR LOW PRICES!! IKE PLAOE To jtTBIKX FOE IS JOIWI *. INMAN, FOR BALE. Camp Hill (41a.) Property.] rrtHE UNDEBSIOND kolas •■Iron* of moving West DRY GOODS STORE, ) Broad Street, sSSSSSffiSS I stock at lowett possible figures, to make room for au un- k “ I 11- line nfVoll flaaila. Callonoraddmm . I x offer for tho next FIFTEEN BATS my entire b: o6nine. Oamp HIU, Ala. MrakleM&tate Iiratiaeit FOR RALR. TVEINGthe twS Brick 1 JL>al-roo( Two-itory Bt Noi.island 1« Broad rtraatj (at praaeot occupied, by E Nf Hay* sad Mr* Kirby), ****** I •tory suitable for Holst. If aot disposed or at private ml* by August Htb, lift, they will be •old at 11 o’oloek A.W.0U that day'by 0.8. Hat- riion, Auotlanaar, at Abbott A If.waom'l cor ner. Titles good and praml*** In *Ee*ll*Dt re pair. JOHN BLAOKMAB, Agrat Mis* Paulin* Adam*. Jyie til arngii■■ ■ ■ usually large and attractive lino of Fall Goods. «r Ail Goods are marked down. Stock moot be re- | duced. Give me a call before buying. jyW’aodtf ' — EXTRA INDUCEMENTS! FOB THE NEXT thirty id a j&san I* round numbers, the gross revenue of the British government for the year end ing Jnne 80, 1877, was £79,000,000. This large ram waa derived from various sources. Custom* £20,000,000, exoine £28,000,000, stahipa £11,000,000, income tax #6,600,000, pmtofflpe £0,000,000, lend tax and home doty £2,500,000, mis- oellaneom source* £6,000,000. The principal Items of expenditure for tbe year are : For interest on national debt £28,000,000, army and navy £27,000,000, civil servloe £18,600,000, ooet of ooUeot- ing the revenue £8,000,000. In addition there ia relied a further snm of £29,000,- 000 by iooal taxes for looat expenditure, whioh swells the annual revenue to £108,- 000,000, equal In the eggregate taxation nearly £3 (actually #18) per bead of > whole population of the British Island*. first-clan stand lor fir Good* or Fane; butlnon. Alio, two stores on Rnn What Prmsuao Lost by thi Riot.— Tbe Pittabarg Telegraph pnt* tbe loss to the eity by the reoent riots at not less than #20,000,000. The editor add*: For the twenty boon that tbe mob held waaeaaion of the oity, each hoar saw not eat than a million of dollars swept ont of existence. Twenty millions, indeed, will hardly oover the losses in money. Almost, if not quite, half that amount, was direot. ' consumed along tbe two mile* of flame end smoke and riot and pillage. What the oonfbquential damage* will be oannot yet ba esti mated, but they will far exoeed the di reot losae* sustained in the very heart of the oity. Of the losses in a moral point of view we need not speak at any great length. It will be yean bafore our oity will recover from the effect* of the late reign of mobooraey. Its fruit* will crop out for months end yen* .to oome in the calendars of the orinunal oonrts; hun dreds of half-grown boys learned a lesson that never shonld have been learned, and in a moment beeame adepts in the school of incendiarism. Tbe lesson ia a terrible one to all good oitixens, bnt if improved it will not have been altogether in vain. Having zeen what it 1* to be without law, will it not impel all classes to ue that the lew is upheld and enforced henoefortb ? ., LCowdery &Co. JAVING takes In partnership L- L. OOWDIRY, Jr., the buslnesr will be oontloued under th* shove I Firm. . L. It, COWDEBY. July 31,1877.eugl lw Letter Irom Mr. Itepheu. Editors Constitution: In your to-day's issue appeared whet purported to be a card from me, iu the following words: Libebty Hall, ) Cbawfobdville, Ga., July 17, 1877.) Thomas P. Branch, Esq., AUguata, Ga —Dear Sir: The pamphlet you fief erred to in a former letter has been received. have read it oarefolly, and in raferenoe to the bonds therein set forth, I oan only repeat what I said before (then oontlu gently, but now positively), that, in my opinion a refusal to pay them ia nothing short of publio swindling, not leas infa mous than the obtainment of money by an individual npon false pretence* rail representations. Very reapeotfolly, Alex. H. Stephens. It is proper to stale that I knew noth ing of the pnblioation—though Major Branch, to whom the letter was addressed, hsd my full permission,' when it waa sent, to use it as he pleased. Under this permission I am informed he handed it to your office for pnbliostion without ray consultation with me on that snbjeot. It is proper also for me to atate that the tetter waa written without ray roferenoe whatever to the nation of the Constitu tional Convention now in session. On that point I have et all time* been very explioit, that in Bay judgment the Con veutiou should not undertake to paw upon the validity or individuality of any olaim against the State, bnt fit to establish or provide a judi tribunal for the jnst and right ful ad judication of ail auoh matters. Very respectfully, Alex. H. Stephens. Kimball Honee, July 81, 18777^ A aw. Ira la Mississippi. General Steward L. Woodford, United States Distrust Attorney of New York, who delivered tho oommenoement address before tbe students of the University of Oxford, Mississippi, a few weeks ago, has made a statement of the resnlt of his observations in that State, whioh, ooming from a strong Republican souroe worthy of notice. General Woodford said to a reporter of the Waabington Re publican : “What attraotad my attention more than anything else was that nearly every body, white rad blaek, was at work. I have been in th* South daring the. put few years several timea^ud I never saw fewer men lounging abont the store than I did on the oooaeion of this last visit. I wu also straok with the fact that tber* were nearly as many sons of oorn nnder cultivation as of ootton, ao that if the ootton crop fails the people down there need not be st a loss for tho neoeauriea of life, with a good crop of oorn in their granaries. In every inetuee that came under my personal knowledge all oon- traots respecting wages entered into be tween the white employer rad th* oolored laborer wore honestly observed. Although I took particular pain* to poet mrself upon this sabjeot, and oonversed with man colored men, I did not hoar of a single instraoe where the employer had failed to keep faith with the oolored laborer in tho matter of wages. I am glad-to say that upon every question except polities I foond the whites and blaoka perfectly oor dial in their relations with each other, For Bout. I N ORDER to reduoe my stock as mnoh as possible before replenishing for lbs Fall Trade, I will, for the next thirty dags, sell BLACK GRENADINE# at Ntw York Ooafc „ . ' , COLORED GRENADINES at half Now York Ooat; PARASOLS and FANS at New York 0«*t; Spoolal Bargain* In LINEN TOWELS, from lOe. upward*; • All-Silk Gross-Grain RIBB0N8 from Bo. upwards, and a GENERAL REDUCTION IN THE PRICE OF ALL OTSRR GOODS. «■ Call at once and secure Bargains. '■■' ' ootl eodfcwly J. ALBERT EIRVEN. WANTED, 00,000 lbs DRIED PEACHES. j I HAVE REMOVED MY STOCK TO No. 158—under Rankin House, Until my Stores are completed. Being desirous of re* diiclng the Stock, I shall offer SPECIAL BARGAINS DURING TEE NEXT THIRTY DAYS spU eodSm JAS. A. LEWIS. AT COST! AT COST! :o: — We will sell our entire stock of SPRING -A- IV 13 SUMMER SouthernFemale C#ge, | DRESS GOODS At LaCrange, Coo W ITH a eorpa of nine practi cal teacher!, open! the Uth annual leflston tba 29th ot Naptala ter, and close* June 12th, without vacation. In addition to th* present oommodlon* buildings, a now chapel, 90X100- feet, will __ ed thiB fall. Tba highest advaatagei in literary, mualo and art department! lernlihed at lowe*t charge!. Our pupil* boar i off the premium! for exotUenoe in muslo a*d art- twelve In recent year*. Drawing, eallitbenlc* and vocal muclo, free. Board, with waihlng, light! and fuel, $199 per annum. Tuition, $90; Music, $90; Art, *19 to $90:^ Write for Catalogue. Correspondent* solloited. 1 j jio cedAwlm I. F. COX, fres't. JAMES A. LEWIS,' Coin—bua, Ba. EDUCATIONAL. AT AND BELOW COST FOB CASH. -:6:- Yanderbilt Univi T he third session wiu begin September 1, 1877. Ton tiou ior the whole leutoa—In* Blblleal Department, free; in Lit erary Department, $90; in Law Department, 980; other fees, $18. The Medical Department will open October 1. Fee for attendance, 185. : 1 For catalogues, apply to J. M. Leech, Score- tary of tbe Faculty, Nashville, Tenn. L _ 1 l.o. Jaklamd, Jyl8 d2*wfcw4w] ftkpmfrtllor Now is the Time to Buy, As we are determined to dispoae of them. Prices on aHother Goods guaranteed. " yi^dkwtf^ BLANCHARD Jfc HILL. STOVES AND TIN WARE. H. ROB ARTS & CO. AND mwhmm, Established In 1842. Principal!—Mae. WitAMr M. Oaky, Mbs Obn. John Fuquah, Nos .187 and 198 North Chariot street.! French th^jauguag^gokon^^^^^JjlA Reduction iu Ba ARE OFFERING THE LARCE8T MOST OOMPXiHTH STOCK STOVES, TIN-WARE AND °H0USE FURNISHING GOODS At Prices Cheaper than Ever J They Have Just Received an Extensive Line of Mean Freezers Flatiiii Haclimea, Reticules & fillew Mils. WROOFING, GUTTERING and all olatiaa of Tin-Work dono to brdor. oct3.neeodl.wtf 1 July, tbe Bates via Can- I Lina Beats to all pc' on the Ohattabooohe ana F rivers will be as follows: Flour, per barrel ....10cents Meal, per 100 lbi Cotton, per bale AU other Freights In proportion. These I Bates will not be changed without N days no-1 “STBASKB WILLY, W. A. fry, Oapteii, Leaves Saturdays at 8 a if for A t, Fla. JSW For further Information call on C. A. MLINK, _ General Freight Agent. Offlocat0. E. Hoehitrassat’s.JuSBtf PEOPLED LINE. The new and elegant Steamer G. Gunby Jordan J T H MOOltE, Master, ' GROCERIES. THE CENTENNIAL STORES JUST RECEIVED s I CAR LOAD BRAN, At a Reasonable Price. W. A. SWIFT, ■ Proprietor. daolt oodfcwly • V day, at 9 a. u. for Bain-. bridge and Apalachicola. Flour per barrel Cotton per bale Other Freight! In proportion. , Through connection mode With J. F.tfi. ty, I will tell, on <he FU B. H. at Chattahoochee for all point! In Fieri- I AtjOUST NEXT, at the i*. and Fornandlna Lina or staamm to New Broad Street, Colombo*, Go., lately eooupled York. Through rate! of freight! lo and from by J. J. Whittle A Oo., a targe and Iroah iteck New York lower than by anyoihtrroate. I ofOrooerio* and Oeoerel Marchandlae, oon- A **m. O. H. Mallory A Ce,19S lUttng of Bacon, S - ~ - Administrator’s Sale. By O. 8. H ABKISOW, Auctioneer. A QBEBABLC to an order of the Honora- XjL Me Court of Ordinary of Mtuoogee Ooun xuESI)AY IN ore-houie, No. iso fight or Passage apply to J. F. MABUBUMj Agent, No. — Broad Street. th* tat* firm of J. J. Whittle t oo. Sold for oooonnt of estate ol John T. McLeod, deoeased, GROCERIES. July 82,1177—td J.J.&W1W00DJ 91 Broad Street, DEALEBS IN FAMILY GROCERIES, P RESERVED JEIaLIES, FOREIGN and DOMESTIC FRUITS. IKIMFUnTinNEUV a akAlaa aliutW CONFECTIONERY-* oholos stock, PIOKL.ES—AU Btst Brands, qusntlty, CANNED FRUITS, VEGETABLES *nd MEATS, MAGNOLIA HAMS, BEEF TONGUES, For Sale at Auction, A T ABBOTT A NEWSOM’S OOBNEB, on the first Tuesday In August next (7th), the property known as the City Warehouse,' now oocupiod by A, Gammtl as a Stable, on Oglethorpe street. Said property oover* half .ere of ground, and u in finbol.ii order, and U protected from dr* by high parapet wall! In th* rear, with a brick and cement roof under neath the outer root aatd to be fire-proof. Termi: One-f"-’ any two yean at leven per eei Pollen give. JjTon oent. tatereet. of October next “ IS F. OABBABD. A^HOIOE^WT NEW A< OBLEAN8 |GBAUD CENTRAL HOTEL, Hot Springs, Ark. SYBUP, APPLE VINEOAB, IDEE ON TAP-Very SBbL'fl^&SHtaMrad pat up fer family nee. fry It SPASKLING GU>] Ntee. THB BEST DUDLEY’S M-buihel look*, put up Our Qooda ar* **l acted for fam- , . Ily trad*. W* guarantaa all we aaM. | mwasm J. J. A W. R. WOOD. OeltuahM, Ga. ectAaedly rlllT-CLASS IN EVENT BIIPMT This House has Bathdtaon ua aaaae roof, supplied fk ou. the Mot Springs. P - iOPTOMssis^^ FRENCH’S HOTEL. ON THE EUBOPEAN PLAN. OrroeiTi City Hitt Fens, Oouirr Hodbv, and New Poar-Ortioo, new vomit. All Modern Improvement!, lneludlng Eleva tor, Gas, and Banning Water In every Boom. Jyl8 8 w T.J.FBENCHhEgg READ T HI S ! FAMILY “BIGHTS” fer th* use or Davenport’s Preserving Balm Ur the prepared Fluid, for sal* by B. A. WABE, Jr, Agent, wtf At Aeec * Yonge'!. CARRIAGES, [WAG ON S, Agricultural IuapleuauuSs, dke., Mad* and repaired at th* lowest CASH prises, on Wynn’s Hill, ncartha oity, by auoa-oodAwly W. M, AMOS: E. N. FRESHMAN & BROS., Advertising Agents, IBB W. Fourth Bt., CINCINNATI. O., Arc authorised to receive advertisement! for tail paper. Estimate* furatahed free upon *p- Send two itampi for our Advortlier'* Manual.