Newspaper Page Text
^^g^HRHpPPI
DAILY ENQUIRER-SUN: GOLUMBTJS, GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 14. 1877.
THE CONVENTION.
PROCEEDINGS SATURDAY.
fcWCIUMOM OX TBS OmOl OF IfiTI BOXOOL
oomnMxoxxx—m oomnaaioarex'a UL"
AM FIZXD A* HOOO—BB tiAVD MnUPT
nn wmrcre on a uimn dooumxxt,
which a ooxmoxxD to thx wait*
■aikR—thi uonunn dxpaxthxnt
hhpm onotmuox.
Meta, f.Toted twenty-five Senatorial DU-
trtet,, each eleotlog one Senator and three
BepraaantatiTuG. In thta amenmdant
Burke, Johnaon, Waahlngton and: Glaae-
nodi eoaapoaa the Fifth District, while
Bteiunond, Ooiumbia, MoDaffle ana Wars
ran oompoae the Sixth. The pay of
member, in not to exoeed four dollars par
diaaa end ten oenta mileage.
Pending dlaenaaion on the amendment
the Oonrenilon adjourned. There wan
no afternoon session to-day.
Special to the Ohioalsls and OomUtattonallit.
AClamta, August U.—The Oonrention
met in the Capitol this morning, the
President, Hon. Oharlaa J. Jenkins, in
the Chair.
The educational report was resumed.
Mr. Holcombe, of the Thirty-ninth
Uetxiet, mored to-reeonaidar the adop
tion of Hr. Howaii’a amendment (os sec
tion two. He thought the offioe of State
Bobool Commissioner ought to be retain
ed. Everything nooda a head. If you
want to kill the system speak out like men
and do it,but do not thus maim the sohOol
system after appropriating, already, mnoh
money to it.
HAHAOtxa emoxa waxtxd.
, Mr. Hesse, of the Twenty-ninth Dia-
triOl, thought as they had put heads to
every department of the State, and to
every publio and’ private enterprise, so
they ought toll a managing offloer for
the State sbhool system. We should not
leave the jpptter .us yesterday’s amend
ment does, to the whims and eaprloes of
the General Assembly to put any one or
no one at the head. Now that the system
la beginning to work well we should not
tear down the mode or management The
instability of onr people is likely to prove
the curse of the land.
Hr. Hammond, of the Thirty- fifth Dis
trict, also thought the system ought to
be fixed and the oflloera named and duties
defined.
Mr. Little, of the Twenty-fourth Dis
trict, oalled attention to the faot that the
amendment adopted yesterday did not
dispense with the present management or
the present able and effloient offioer. The
entire school system of Georgia is ah ex
periment and the Convention should not
irrevocably fix its management. He op
posed reconsideration, for in some boun
ties the school system did not give satis
faction.
Mr. Furman, of the Twentieth District,
hoped the matter would be reconsidered
ana that the valuable offioe of State
Bobool Commissioner would be restored
to the State.
HXCONBIDKBATXOH FBXVAIUI.
The motion to reoonsider prevailed and
Mr. Howell’s substitute was rejected.
Mr, Davis,of the Twenty-third Distriot,
offered an amendment striking out the
words "competent eelary’’ inthe original
seellon and inserting "salary not exceed
ing f2,000” in lieu thereof, wbloh was
oarried and the original aeotion was
agraed to.
Hr. Augustus Beesc, of the Twenty-
eighth Distriot, moved to reoonsider sea
tlon 4. He thought this thing of dele
gating snoh powers of taxation to mu
nicipal ourporations dangerous.
Mr. Dawson, of the Twenty-eighth Dis
triot, thought that as the ttate fund was
insufficient, counties and municipalities
should be allowed to sustain the sohools
by taxation. He bad yat to bear of an
-instanoe where .the people had overtaxed
themselves for education. Beoooaidera-
tion prevailed.
Mr. Matthews, of the Thirtieth Distriot,
moved to amend the aeotion by inserting
in line three, after the-word "vote of the
qualified voters,” and in line four, after
the word "corporation,” the words, "and
supported by two-thirds of said qualified
voters.” Adopted.
wao should votb f
Hr. DuBose, of the Twentieth Distriot,
thought these matters should only be
voted upon by the tax payers or property
owners In each county, and moved to so
amend the section. The motion was ta
bled.
Hr. Augustus Beasa, of the Twenty-
fifth District, moved to amend section
four, by adding after the word “oounties,’
in line one, the words, “upon the reoom
mendation of two grand juries,” and add
ing after the words "municipal corpora
tions,” the words, "upon recommendation
of the corporate authorities." Adopted.
Hr. Simmons, of the Twenty-seoond
Distriot, moved to strike out the section
Hr. Johnson, of the Thirtieth District,
aeoonded the motion. He thought the
whole thing superrogatory as amended.
. The motion to strike out was tabled,
and the section, as attended, adopted.
At LAUD SOBIPT quxanox.
Mr. Wellborn, of the Fortieth Distriot,
eontinued the discussion upon section six,
- opposing Mr. Boyd’s amendment to donate
one-third of the University land script to
theDsblonega College. Though a trustee
of that ooliege, he believed this aotion in
bad fsitb, as the trustees had agreed to
aooept two thousand dollars from the
University. If the North Georgia Agri-
onltural Ooliege had taken any subsequent
action he did not know it. He believed
Hr. Boyd was aotiug on his own respon
sibility in introducing the resolution.
MB. BOYD BUIS TO BXFLAIN.
Mr. Boyd here arose to a personal expla
nation, contending that, though author
ised by no formal action of the Dablonega
Ooliege Trustees, still they were with him
in spirit, and he waa bat conforming to
their wishes.
MB. WOFTOBD is tablxd.
Mr. Wofford’s resolution, that the in
terest arising from the $240,000 in land
soript be equally appropriated to Dahlon
ega, Middle and Southwest Georgia, was
lost, but was a fine buncombe buokeye
withal.
Mr. Boyd's amendment appropriating
ona-IUrd of the annual interest to the
Ndrth Georgia Ooliege was also defeated,
and aeotion six, unamended, was adopted.
THX XDUOATIOH BXFOBT ADOPTED.
The report of the Education Committee
was agreed to as a whole.
Mr. Tift, of the Tenth Distriot, offered
two additional sections as long as the hun
dred and nineteenth Psalm, whiob, with
the assistance of Mr Holoombe, were
consigned to the table, where many of
their oomrades lie.
THI TAXATlok EXPO XT AOA1H.
The taxation report was here reverted
to, and line 3, in paragraph 1st,so obanged
as to read : "Taxation may bs levied and
ooUactad for the support of the State
Government and public institutions.”
Ibis was done so as to inolnde the Lune
lle Asylum and the like. The Finance
Committee's taxation report waa now
dosed up.
APPOBTIOHDIO THI LXOISLATUBI.
The Legislative Department was taken
up, and section 1st agreed to.
Hr. Bass, of the Forty-eeoond Distriot,
offered an amendment to the eeooud sec
tion, first paragraph, allowing only
three Senators from caoh of tba nine
Congressional DiaMota.
Hr. MeDoaald, of the Fifth Distriot,
moved to amend s6 at to preserve the
Hen ate as now, but allow tbs House of
. Bepreaentatives only a hundred members,
this to be done by. giving eaehSenato-
rial District ftao Bepreaentatives and al
lowing tha twelve largest counties three
ms it bars each, besides.
Hr. Gartreil, of tha ftilrty>-flfth Dis
triot, wished to preserve the Legislative
aeotion as in the present Constitution.
Mr. Warren of the Twenty-third Die-
8«f. TOOMBS Off Till BAIL-
llOADI.
Gen. Toomfae in the Convention offered
the following in the Committee of Finel
Bevision, wee reed, the first section there
of adopted, and the Ohdrman at add
oommittee requested to report the remain
ing sections to the Convention without
further notion by tha oommittqs thereon :
powsb or thi obhibal assxmblt ovxb
TAXATION.
ABTIOLX —. BXOTION L
Pah. L The right of taxation is a sov
ereign right—inalienable, lndiatruotlble—
Is the life of the State, and rightfully be
longs to the people in all Uepublioen gov
ernments, end neither the General Assem
bly, nor any, nor all, other departments
of the government, established by thie
Constitution, shall ever have the authori
ty to Irrevocably give, grant, limit, or re>
strain, this right; and all lews, grants,
oontraota, and dl other sots whatsoever,
by said government, or any department
thereof, to effect sny of these purposes,
shall be, and are hereby, deolared to be
nail end void for every purpose whatso
ever; end said right of taxation shdl al
ways bs under the oomplete control of,
and revocable by, the State, notwith
standing any gift, grant, or oontraot
whatsoever, by tbe General Assembly.
section n.
Pab. I. Bsilwsys heretofore oonatrnot-
ed, or that may hereafter be oonstrnoted,
in tbts State, are hereby declared publio
highways, and railroad companies com
mon carriers. Tbe General Assembly
shall piss laws to eorreot abuses, prevent
unjust discriminations and extortion in
the rates of freight and passenger tariffs
on tbe different railroads in this Stale,
and shall, from time to time, pass laws
establishing reasonable maximum rates of
eharges for tbe transportation of pasaen
gers and freights on said railroads; estab
lish by law uniform rates on the same
commodities as nearly as praotioable,
and en fores all such laws by adeqnste
penalties.
-Pau. II. No discrimination inohsrges,
or facilities for transportation, shall be
made between transportation oompanies
and individnals, or corporations, or in
favor of either, by abatement, drawbaok,
or otherwise, and no railroad oompany, or
any lease, manager or employe thereof,
shall make any preferences in tarnishing
earn or motive power.
Pab. III. The exeroise of the right of
eminent domain shall never be abridged,
or so oonstrued as to prevent the General
Assembly from taking tbe property and
franchises of incorporated oompanies and
subjeotiug them to publio use, the same
as property of individuals; and ths exer
cise of the polios power of the State shall
never be abridged, or so oonBtrued, as to
permit oorporations to oondnot their busi
ness in snoh manner sb to infringe the
equal rights of individnals, or the general
well-being of the State.
Pab. IV. Any one or more citizens of
this State may, in Mb or their own name,
or in tbe name of tbe State, at Ms or their
own expense, institute proper legal pro
oeedmgs, by quo warranto, or otherwise,
in the Superior Courts of this State, to
iDqf ire into any and ail violstiona of tbe
obartera of any railroads, or other oorpo
rations of this State, and have judgment
of forfeiture against said railroads, or
other corporations, in the same manner,
and to the same extent, and for tbe same
oanses, as tbe State may now do for vio
lations of law.
Pab. V. The General Assembly shall
not remit the forfeiture of tbe oharter of
sny corporation now existing. Nor
alter or amend tbe same,
pass any other general or special taw for
the benefit of said corporation, except
upon the condition that snoh corporation
shall hereafter hold its oharter snbjeot to
the provisions of this oonstitntion, and
every amendment of any oharter of any
corporation in this State, or any speoiai
law for its benefit, aooepted by them,shall
operate as a novation of said charter, and
shall bring the same under tbe provisions
of tMa constitution.
Pab. VI. In all oases of private char
ters, hereafter granted, tbe State reserves
tbe right to altor, amend, or annul the
same, and withdraw the franchise, when,
in tbe opinion of the General Assembly,
tbe pnblio interests may demand it.
Upon the dissolution of s corporation, all
of its property or nsseta of every descrip
tion shall oouatitnte a fund: First, for
the payment of its debts, sndThen for
equal distribution among its members,
according to their several intermits.
Pab. VIL The General Assembly of
this State shall have no power to author-
ize sny corporation to hny shares or stook
in any other corporation in this State, or
elsewhere, or to make any oontraot or
agreement whatever, with any snoh cor
poration, which may have tbe effsot, or
be intended to have tbe effect, to defeat
or lessen competition in their reepeotive
business, or to enconrage monopoly; and
all such oontraots snd agreements shall be
illegal snd void.
Pab. VIII. No provision of this artiole
shall be deemed, held, or'taken to impair
the obligation of any oontraot heretofore
made by the State of Georgia.
Pab. IX. The General Assembly shall
enforoe the provisions of this artiole by
appropriate legislation.
TOOMBS OK CONVENTIONS,
HE IS OPPOSED TO NOMINATING CONVENTIONS.
In his speech in the Constitutional Con
vention on Friday last Gen. Toombs gave
expression to tbe following views:
“Why? You talk about representing
tbe people; letting the people do this,
that and tbe other, and yet you bold your
State Conventions snd nominate your
Governor with a parcel of delegates who
may not represent the expressed will of
twenty people in the oonuties. It is a
scheme to defraud tbe ''people. How to
get around the people is the ruling prin
ciple in all snoh organizations, and they
put thta scheme iu operation all over the
State. They get up their oouoty meetings
in the eonrt bouses and get their friends
to go and send delegates up here.
How do I know who they are going
to nominate, and how am I to be
bound by what they do? Look
at this, gentlemen who are for having this
thing done. They are prepariag to de
fraud tbe people. You nominate these
men while the people are at home at
work, and if a man says be won’t be
boand by it, and that he is going to vote
for somebody else, that be is going to
vote for sn independent, you bring all
the power of the party and tbe press, and
you bound him until you virtually disfran
ohise him and ostracise him in the oora-
mnnity. I have been to none of them
for a good while. I have had nothing to
do with them heoauae I did not think
them proper engines to express the will
CAPT. W. A. I.ITTLB.
HU SPXHOH IN THE OONVXNTtOM Of OPPOSI
TION TO IU EEOONSIDXEATION OP OMIT-
TING THE OrriOE OF SOHOOL COMMISSION-
HAS V£OM IBS CONSTITUTION.
I rise, Mr. President, in response to n
remark of the gentleman from Milton,
Mr. Holoomb, as one who voted for the
snbstitnte sought to be reconsidered, sod
’ eannot be considered unless gentlemen
misrepresent me as being opposed to s
system of common sohools; nor, Indeed,
of uncommon sohools. I yield to no man
In the desire to see the people of this
country, white and blsok, eduosted, snd I
take no issue with gentlemen on this
floor, who insist honestly end ainoerely
that a Bystem of pnblio education as to
matter ot detail, shall be settled. It is
comparatively a new thing in tMa State,
snd we know that the workiuge of the
system as at present organised, ore not
satisfactory to tbe people in every part of
the State, snd I desire, if it be possible,
that there may be improvements
made. How shall we sooomplish
this object? Certainly, by not
raising objeotions to the gentleman who
has vary scoeptably filled the offioe of
State Sohool Commissioner, But we
sho.nld not, in my judgment, prescribe
the constitutional offioe ol' State Sohool
Commissioner. And why? Because in
this matter of pnblio edoostion, in taking
the pnblio money and applying it to the
ednoation of the cMldren of the State, it
may not be neoesaary to hava a State
Sohool Commissioner. What is neoesaa
ry? I frankly oonfeaa that I am not able
tossy. Oertaiuly we have gone to a suf
ficient length in this article not to be
misunderstood. We say that there shall
be a system of pnblio sohools; not that
the Legislature may provide snob 8 sys
tem; not that it shall depind npon contin
gencies, but that there Bhall be auoh s
system; furthermore I would not leave it
to the Legislature to say what funds shall
be appropriated to maintain the system.
We provide iu this organio law that tho
fund Bbatl be raised and we
designate how, and I submit
that when persona from
abroad, outside the limits of the State,
call upon the gentleman from Fulton, to
know what onr. State is doing for the
cause of ednoation, it would be k full
reply to the question, to say, that we pro
vide s system of publio ednoation and s
fund to support it, more than that, we
tell tbe Legislature that it must inaugu
rate the best system to do the greatest
amount of good to the people! I deny
that all of us who voted for this substi
tute, on yesterday, are against a system
of pnblio sohools, and I would prefer be
fore the system should be done away
with, to vote for a Ststo Sohool Commis
sioner, and one,two or more oonnty Com
missioners, if necessary. Let os have the
system although we may have to take an
offioer whom some of us do not consider
neoesaary. I do not understand that by
adopting this substitute we dispense with
the servioes of the able and effloient offl
oer now at the heed of the department.
Our statutes provide the present system
and fix the present head, End ha remains,
until it is deoided by the Legislature, not
to have a Btate Sohool Commissioner.
But do not let us prevent the Legislature
from determining whether it is best that
other oflloerB be appointed to carry out the
details, and if so, that they shall be ap
pointed. Let them be permitted to take
this matter, consider it oarefully and hon
estly, having done so, if they believe it
is best to oontiuue as at present, they oan
do so. Bnt suppose that they should
come to the oonoluaiou that they oan ex
pend this money to much better advantage
under a different plan, then I say let us
leave it bo that they oan dispose of it in
that way. -Who ia opposed to the gentle
man who has bean at the head, of this in
stitntion ? I oan only aay, I am not. Who
is opposed to the system of publio sohools?
I oan not answer further than to say I am
not; but I do propose to leave tbe system
as we have organized it, and let the Leg
islature fix the details.
The gentleman from Wilkes, says that
we have not done this way with the Gov
ernor and Judges of the Supreme Court,
but I contend that these are not parallel
oases. Experience has demonstrated that
in their departments they are necessary,
but it has not been so deoided in thlB. It
is yet an experiment. I attaoh no blame
to the present head of the department for
tbe faot, but I do say that in some coun
ties of the Btate, there is dissatisfaction
with tbe workings of the system. I am
inolined to believe that it is not due io
him that it is so, but to the
operation of the system in those
oounties. Let the Legislature if it find
that it can establish a board In eaoh
oonnty, to take charge of tbe fundB, and
who oan distribute it to the greater ad
vantage of ths people and to the oause of
edoostion, make that disposition of tbe
matter. To me this is not merely a
question ef economy, whoever may be
obosen as to the bead, if one be chosen,
let him have a liberal salary, for in this
field of all others it ocours to me, that the
laborer is worthy of hla hire. The dnties
are onerous, and if we continue him be
Bhould have competent pay for his ser
vices. This by no means is the oause of
opposition to a State Sohool Commis
sioner, but is in a wCrd, beoause the Bys
tem is yet an experiment with the people
of Georgia. In framing a Constitution
we'eannot afford to experiment, we should
frame no system and place it in the oon
stitution, while it is still an experiment.
I sincerely favor the law that providea for
the maintenance of schools, and I hope
the day will oome and come soon when
educational advantages will be extended
to every child and every adult in the State
of Georgia. I would not interpose one
word or one obstaole to such a Constitu
tion, but I think that the substitute aB it
stands, is best for onr system of educa
tion. For these reasons I voted for it,
not for opposition to a system, nor to tbe
Commissioner, nor upon tbe simple
ground of eoonomy.
stand you to any su-and so?” “Thai is
what 1 said.” “I deny it,"s-idthe Judge,
with great emphasis. Tbe ex Governor
put bis hand in his side pocket and drew
forth a document. "Judge, is that your
handwriting?” The judge wilted.
Maxgabr Hauohsbtt, the generous
woman whom all New Orleans knows ss
Margaret,” has presented General Augur
with a $400 sword, in appreciation of bis
law-abiding behavior while in oommsnd
in that eity last spring.
EaSs’ Jessies.
Washington Speoiai to N. O. Picayune ]
Waseington, August ’10. — For the first
time sinao Ospt. Eads began hia work at
the month of the Mississippi river a re
port has been made by the army engineer
in charge, which substantially admits tbe
Buooess of the jetty system. Uapt. Brown,
of the United Stales Engineers, tbe offloor
in charge, has just forwarded a full report
to the Secretary of War on the present
condition of the jetties. He states that
more work baa been done there during tbe
past four monthi than during any pre
vious four months sinoe the commenoe
ment of tbe improvement.
He states that over one million six
hundred thousand onblo feet of mattress
work has been pnt in position on the jet
ties snd at tbe need of tbe pass, sod shunt
s<xty thousand oubio yards of stone; that
tbe settlement previously observed at the
end of the east jetty has stopped, and that
no further observable settlement has oc
curred sinoe last Maroh. During the past
four mouths one million five honored
thousand onbie yards of deposit have been
aeonred ont from between the jetties and
oarried ont to sea. Abont a quarter of s
million onbtc feet of deposit have been
removed from the shoal at the head of the
pass, and the only obataole to the passage
of a ship drawing 22 feot of water is near
tbe end of the jetties and ia only 145 feet
in length. There is a dear ohannel of
20 feet and six-tenths through the whole
improvement.
Captain Brown thinks that there ia ev
ery probability that Captain Esds will be
entitled to Ms next payment of halt a mil
lion dollars at an early day.
He alluded to the Gulf surveys which
have been made out a mile beyond the
end of the jetties, to ascertain the altera
tions In the Gulf bottom made by the
jetty currents, and ends by a comparison
with previous snrveys, that there has been
a alight average deepening. The twenty
foot and thirty foot otirres have also re
ceded. These two faots are regarded as
dearly proving that there has been no re
formation of the bar io advance ot the
i etties. The extreme ends of the jetties,
e says, are permanently established and
not likely to be damaged by severe storms.
The report oontains a large amount of
valuable scientific and explanatoiy statis
tical matter. Its tons is highly enoonrag-
ing to Captain Eads, who is confident that
he will obtain his next payment from the
Government in ninety days nr sooner.
BOOTS AND SHOES.
DRY COOD8.
FINE SHOES!
LADIES' AND MISSES'
NEWPORTS,
Plain and with Buckles.
Sandals 1 Slippers,
In New and Tasty Styles.
BURTS’
Fine Button Boots.
G- a N T B’
Brown Cloth-Ton Button Oxfords,
THE HANDSOMEST SHOE OUT.
EDUCATIONAL.
State Atrialtral ad Mectaical
COLLEGE.
mHE FIRST TERM or hair or
JL the Academic year, 1877-’8,
will begin WEDNESDAY, (SEP
TEMBER 88th, 1377. Tho dis
cipline is Military. Tuition lor
residents of Alabama or any other
State or Territory 1b prer.
Eaoh Cadet from Alabama, or elsewhere, at
the beginning of • aoh term or half year, must
deposit with the Treasurer-
Contingent Fee $6 00
Surgeon's Fee 2 60
Total College Fees, per term $7 60
EXPENSES PER TERM:
Tuition, free.
Board and Lodging $40 10 to $68 60
Washing 4 60 4 60
Fuel, Lights and attendance.... 0 < 0 0 00
Surgeon’s Fee 8 60 U 60
Contingent Fee.................. 6 00 6 00
Total $8160 $70 60
Cadet Uniforms are furnished In Auburn at
the lowest possible rate.
Board, washing, fuel, lights, and attendance,
are paid for at the beginning of eaoh month.
For further information send for Catalogues.
Lddiess any member of the Fnoulty, or
L T. TIOHENOR, President.
Auburn, d/a., July 80th, 1877.
. augll til ootl
University of Virginia
PENS October 1; oontin-
_ ues throuhg nine months. It
Is organised In sohools on the eleo-
tivo system, with lull courses in
Classics, Science (with Practice in
Chemical and Phjsioal I.abrato- r
rles). Literature, In Law, Medicine, Enulneer-
tng, Natural History, and Praotloal 'Agricul
ture. Expenses (Ineluding everything) about
$600. Apply for catalogue to JAMES F.
HARRIHON. M. D., Chairman of the Faculty
Post Office: University of Virginia.
auiodfcwlm
PARK HIGH SCHOOL,
TUSKECEE, ALA.,
mokes Among tbe Bulldosers.
A Ooiumbia (South Carolina) corres
pondent of the New York Sun, writing
at length of tbe proceedings before tbe
State committee of inveetigation, says of
tbe testimony given before the oom
mittee :
Tbe revelations show that tbe State
Treaeurers have received thejbnlk of tbe
stolen income of the Btate wince recon
struction. There wbh nothing whiob
peesod the Treasury mill which did not
pay from 10 to 25 per oeut. toll. Tbe
more rascally tbe job the more to pay.
As a specimen of these disclosures, one
man deolared that he had a claim of
|il 16,000, out of whiob, after paying all
his tolln, be only netted $40,000, and then
waa well paid. Tbe scope of tbia investi
gation baa now taken in all tbe Gover
nors, Lieutenant Governors, Btate officers,
tbe old Bupreme Court Judges, several
members of tbe Cirouit bench, tbe officers
of tbe Legislature, and many bankers,
wealtbly merchants, brokers, editors and
lawyers.
Most of these revelations have been
obtained through tbe testimony of ex-
Governor Mosee, who has opened bis
astounding budget without sparing friend
or foe. Already tbe cry has gone up from
the stricken game. “Who would beleive
Moses on oath?” But this has been tried
ouoe too often. A distinguished Judge,
tftte’^XToow }ZVuui~io put I hearing .hat ha bad been implictod, 5.’-
. . ^ w a a_ il. manrlnd fin immediate hearing before the
persists!
tematlc , „ ,
skillful teachers; thoroughness In
every department; healthful locaclon; refine
ment, culturo and good moral t of people; what
it does and what it hat done, and Its exceedingly
moderate char get.
$9* Bend lor new catalogue.
JAMES F. PARK, A. M..
aug6 ood'Jwfewlm Principal.
Southern Female College,
At LaCrange, Georgia,
W ITH a corps of Dine practl-
cal teachers, opens the 86th
annual session the 88th of Neptem-
tor, and closes June 10th, without
vocation. In addition to tho
present commodious buildings,
welve io recent years. Drawing, calisthenics
and vooal music, free. Board, with 'washing,
lights and fuel, $166 per annum. Tuition,
$60;Muslo, $60; Art, $.'6 to $60. Write for
Catalogue. Correspondence solicited,
j) 10 eodfcwlm I. F. COX, Pres't.
Also a full Lino of
SPRING WORK In til tho
Popular Stylos, ALL AT
REDUGED PRICES.
A Heavy Stook of Brogans,
Piew Shoes, and Sta
ple Goods,
FOR WHOLESALE TRADE
STRIKE FOR LOW PRICES!
THE PLACE TO STRIKE FOR IS
DRY GOODS STORE,
89 Broad. Street.
I offer for the next FIFTEEN DAYS my entire
stook at lowest possible figures, to'make room for an un
usually large aud attractive line of Fall Goods.
^ All Goods are marked down. Stock must ba re
duced. Give me a call before buying,
jyaa eodtf M. JOSEPH,
EXTRA INDUCEMENTS!
FOR THE NEXT
i" For anything you want in the Shoe and
Leather Line, call at
THE OLD SHOE STORE
No. 73 Broad Street,
(Sign of the Itiy Hoot.)
WELLS & CURTIS.
i.psu tr
GROCERIES.
aiii
Bl Broad Streets
DEALERS IN
FAMILY GROCERIES,
.RESERVED JELLIES.
FOREIGN and DOMESTIC FRUITS,
CONFECTIONERY—a oholoo stock,
PICKLES—All Best Brands, iu sny
quantity,
CANNED FRUITS.
VEGETABLES and MEATS,
MAGNOLIA HAMS, BEEF TONGUES,
FERRIS' BREAKFAST BACON,
A CHOICE LOT NEW ORLEANS
SYRUP.
APPLE VINEGAR.
SPARKLING CIDER ON TAP—Very
Nice.
THE BEST 6o. CIDER IN THE CITY,
DUDLEY’S BOLTED MEAL—In % and
^•bushel sacks, put up for family uso. Try it.
W Our Goods are .elected for fam
ily trad*. We guarantee all we sell.
J. J. A W. R. WOOD.
I'olnmbus, Orta
ootR.eoilly
New Advertisements.
DAVIDSON
COLLEGE, N. C.
PREPARATORY CLASS.
Taught by the Profs, of Latin, Greek and
Mathematics. Session begins Sept. 87, 1877.
send tor catalogue to J. It. BLAKE, Chair
man of Faculty.
N. If. BUUNHAM'fi “1874”
IIINE," by over 6110 persons who uso it.
Prices reduced. New pamphlot, froe,
N. F. BURNT * ** *
The Crucial lesl of the value of a medl-
oine Is time. Does experience oontlrm the
claims put forth in Its favor at the outset? is
the grand question. Apply this criterion, so
simple, yet so searching, to Tauiiant » Ervsu-
VEBUHNT SULTSRU Al'KRIKMT. IlOW llRS it
worn ? What has been Its history ? ilow does
It stand to-day ?
rarruui’n Meitner Aperient
Is a household name throughout tho United
States. It is administered as a spooltlo, and
with feuooess, in dyspepsia, sick hoadaohe,
nervous debility, liver oomplalnt, bilious re
mittents, bowel complaints (especially consti
pation), rheumatism, gout, gravel, nausea, tbe
oomplalnts peculiar to the maternal sex, anfl
all typea of Inflammation. Ho mild Is it in Its
operation that It oan be given with ported
safety to the feeblest child ; and so agreeable
Is It to the taste, so refreshing to the palate,
fhdt. ntllltlmn VtAVAr ralms In Inlin It Vnr anU
^ _ outfit free. H. HALLETT A CO.,
Portland, Maine.
Extra Fine Mixed Cards, with name,
JfdtJ 10 cents, post-paid. L. JONRT * ""
Nassau, N. Y.
Samples
Vanderbilt University.
rpHE THIRD SESSION will
A beglfl September 1, 1877. Tut-
tlou lor tho whole eeselon—In
Biblical Department, free; in Lit
erary Department, f>< 1 ; in Law
Department, 480; other fees, $16.
The Medical Department will open October
1. Fee lor attendance, $65.
For catalogues, apply to J. M. Leech, Secre
tary ot the Faculty, Nashville, Tenn.
L. U. GARLAND,
jy!8 d8awfcw4w] Ohanoellor.
w
■DAI
ALTIMORE S
SOUTH-
SCHOOL
Little Girls.
Principals—IVliiB. Wilson M.
Meal College of Alabama,
A t Mobile.
this Institution will commenoe on the 14th
of November next.
The Preliminary Course will begin about tho
middle of Oc ober, at whloh time the Dissect-
the eleotioa of Judge, to the people, eo manded an imm^.ata Uaating before the
,l a _ nn Mn Dfi t n n vonr little bands and committee, id ordoH to dear his skirts,
that you can get up your uwioDonmi • emphatically the statements
br'taeae 8 fraudulent ^ureMi^ i em md.ebv .be ex^orernoV The ooremittre
to It? sir. end em in fe.or of I rent for Mo.ee and confronted him w.th
hSd^tbe election with the Legislature. ” I the Judge. ‘Governor, did we under'
su4 eod6tw3w
. H. ANDERSON, M. b.,
Dean of the Fsoult
$3
For terms iiddruiM COULTJ
. *'hcancst in tlir known
mull ami nuOII /ire to Jaenh,
». COULTER A CO .Chicago
S5h $20 &
Portland, Maine.
$55 r
Augusta, Me.
worth 4
week to Agents. $10 Outfit
THI
I N OKDEll to rednee my etock a. mnoh a. pnn.ible before repleni.hing for ths
Fall Trade, I will, for tbe next t/iirti/ days, sell
BLACK GRENADINES s« New York Cost;
COLORED GRENADINES at half New York Cost;
PARASOLS and FANS at New York Cost;
Speoiai Bargains In LINEN TOWELS, from lOo. upwards;
All-Silk Gross-Grain RIBBONS from So. upwards, and •
GENERAL REDUCTION IN THE PRICE OF ALL OTHER GOODS
*8" Call at once and secure Bargains.
ootl ood&wly
J. ALBERT KIRVEN.
AT COST! AT COST!
We will sell our entire stook of Spring and Summer
DRESS GOODS
AT AND BELOW COST FOR CASH.
Now is the Time to Buy,
As we are determined to dispose of them.
lBr Price* on all other Coods guaranteed.
myt dhwtr BLANCHARD & HILL.
BANKING AND INSURANCE.
Q GUNBYJORDAN.
JOHN BLACKMAR.
JORDAN & BLACKMAR.
FIRE INSURANCE AGENTS,
Representing the Well-known, Responsible and Justly Popular Companies,
Commercial Union Assurance Company,
LONDON Aa.ets $19,351,671 02, Gold.
Westchester Insurance Company, N. Y.,
Assets 81,000,000, Cold,
Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company,
SAN FRANCISCO—The Most Popular Ina. Co. in the United Statee.
All of these dompnnlee oheortully deposit Hoads (U. S.) with the Slate Treasurer, to oompl
with the Georgia laws for protection of Policy Holdora.
Risks reasonably rated, Policies written, Lohpoh 'alrlv adjusted and promptly paid.
49" Applications for Insurance made at either our Office, next to Telegraph Office, or to G
GUNBY JORDAN, Eagle At Phenlx Manufacturing Company's Offioe, will reoalve prompt
attention. *yl 8m
AUCTIONEERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
HIKS011 & HECHTf
Auctioneers and Commission Merchants,
160 Broad Street (Opposite Rankin House),
COLUMBUS, - GEORGIA.
CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED OF EVERY DESCRIPTION
AND
LIBERAL CASH ADVANCES MADE;
ANI)
SALES SETTLED PROMPTLY.
OOH.RH0FO»rDBD7OH SOLICITED
f KITH, GA.J KAGLE A I'HKNIX MAN'P'O CO.
HUMANITY.
PRIVATE ASYLUM
FOK THE INSANE.
CINCINNATI SANITARIUM.
S UPERIOR accommodations for all olassos
Beparate departments for epileptics and
nervous Invalids, For turms or admission and
circular address W. H. UU1PLEY, M. D.,
Hup't, Ooliege HID, O.
$100, $200, $500, |l t 000.
ALEX. FROTH INGHAM A
CO., Brokers, No. 18 Wall street, New York,
ffiaka desirable Investments In stocks, whloh
frequently pay from five to twonty times the
amount invested. Stocks bought and curried
as long as desired on deposit of throe per oent.
Expi story circulars and weekly reports sent
ee octal eodly
ay'LPMI IU.I.IW 1 W,
II4K!4 from the ellocts of Errors M
31
CO
O
0 and Abuses In early lllo. Mho
hood Restored Impediments
to Marriage Removed. New
method of treatment. New
and reniarkablo remedies
Books and circular sent fre«
In sealed envelopes. Address
HOWARD ASSOCIATION, 410
N. Ninth St., Philadelphia,
IV. mill II Db.i ■ in wi'.utimire,
Pa. An Instlintlon having a
high reputation for honorable n
eonduot and professional skill!,
onds.
“The Best is the Cheapest!”
This Maxim applies with peculiar force to vour
FIRE INSURANCE I!
PLACE YOUR RISKS WITH THE
RICH, PROMPT, RELIABLE
COMPANIES
We represent, and when Losses occur, you will surely by
Indemnified ;
LONDON ASSURANCE CORPORATION,
HOME OF NEW YORK,
MOBILE UNDERWRITERS,
GEORGIA HOME.
Office In the CEORCIA HOME BUILDINC.
FHENIX CARRIAGE WORKS.!GRAED CENTRAL HOTEL,
Hot Springs, Ark.
_ of the new lsaua, with aorued interest since
April 1st. Coupons, April and October, re
ceivable for Taxei and all other eity dues.
JOHN BLACKMAR.
auiO it Brokor.
HERRINC A ENGLAND,
East of and opposite Disbrow’s Livery Stable,
OGLETHORPE STREET,
potent Workmen to do
Carriage Work
In all Its various branches in the best style,
and as low as the lowest. We also manufacture
NEW WORK of Various 8tyl6s.
myia eodly
! FIKNT-ri.AMM IN EVERY RESPECT
! TIiIh House has Bath-Rooms under
HMiue roof, a up pi led from the Hot Springe.
D. BALLENTINE.
mh27<l8tu Proprietor
R £ A U> T II I N !
FAMILY "RIGHTS" fur tho of
Davenport’s Preserving Balm
Or the prepared Fluid, for sale by