About Columbus daily enquirer. (Columbus, Ga.) 1874-1877 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 6, 1877)
DAILY ENQUIRER-SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 6. 1877. eMBSH MEW*. njsmin Gerald, who wss sent to ie asylum from Stewart oounty abet, 1875, died on the 19th of . Beeson Fenlk, e well know end irtby oitizen of Irwin ooanty, died ddenly in bis gin house lest Thars- disesse of tne heart. J Valdosta Times says several naval 'manufacturers from North Caro- i looking through Southern Goor- i seleot new turpentine farms. lolliday, Lane & Oo., of i ooanty, have 1,600 barrels of i'and a large quantity of turpentine r for shipment early in this month. jMr. J. 0. .Herndon has Bnffloiently rered from the elf sots of bis .wenqd* i able to ride in Lumpkin on TuAdky at week. He is still looking quite ble. -The report that Ospt. Cook, of the ond Infantry, was killed by Indians, enied at General Buger’s headquarters, hat regiment has not yet reaehed the at of war. -A new steamboat to run between Ha nnah and Enterprise, Florida, is being It in New York. She is 165 feet long, will oommenoo running - about No ember 20th. —There has been nearly a hundred now bombers added to the colored Methodist bhuroh in Lumpkin within the past few toks. The most of them, however, are i probation. —A. negro man was brought op from bo rivor this week and put in jail in Lumpkin, under a sentence of twenty lays' imprisonment for refusing to work be pnblio roads. —A man living near Jefferson had oo- sion, the other day, to out down and lit open a large oak tree, and found nbedded there a live scorpion. Aooord- ; to his calculation, by the grain of the od, it had been imprisoned eighteen years. —A gentleman who has been feeling kroubd a good deal says that Ool. Thomas Hardeman will be the next Governor of Georgia. He is certainly in the direct ine of promotion as he iB President of he State Agricultural Sooiety. What "1 Hon. John H. James say to this? -While palling down his stable at erton last Friday, Mr. W. H. Glarke met rith a severe aocidont whioh came near ansing his instant death. The roof of he building foil upon him, orushing him fereadfnlly. The full extent of tho inju ries sustained his physioian was unable to Itate. -During a game of base ball at the bool house near Mr. W. H. Griffis’ i on tho Eufaula road, on Monday *t, in Stewart oounty, one of the bats hs broken and a piece struck a son of X. 0. B. Willett over the left eye, cut- jig through to the bone and inffioting an y and very painful wound. -Tho most suooessful gat raiser in the ato is a Mr. Itose, of Upson county,who it about 125 buBhela from an aore. He owed deep and olose, made his ground r riob, and Bowed four bushels of seed i the aore. He grazed half a dozen head ! cattle on it from November to Maroh. s will show what can be done. -During lost week a most interesting jtligious revival was carried on at Elam Baptist) Ghuroh in Stewart oounty. “ o servioes were oonduoted by Bevs, M. Howell and Thos. A. Muse, and suited in about thirty additions to tho hurob membership; twenty-three being experience and the remainder by letter and restoration. —It is the intention of Bight Bev. lishop Gross, who has assumed the du- of President of Pio No'no College at tacon, to establish a complete meteoro- ogioal observatory, a cabinet of physios, a chemical laboratory. The Bishop give bis personal attention to the fairs of the college, and to this end he taken up his abode in the oollege buildings. -A writer in the Berrien County News omplains that the Board of Education i introduced a history into the publio ehools “whioh is oaloulated to teaoh the ng generation that the Southern sol ry acted as poltroons and oowards, and t the publio men of the South aoted in 1 faith to the 'principles espoused by i so-called Southern Confederacy. ” The ok referred to by the writer is Barnes’ ief History of tho United States. —A market wagon was being drivon in (Atlanta before tho early dawn. Some- I thing with shining eyes commeneed an [attack on the meat. Butcher thought it fa dog and went for it with his axe, but it f beat jpim off, and be went to howling, tsummoning the “porleeoe.” One oame and announocd the thing was a wolf, and emptied his revolved, and fled one way while the wolf went another. Tame wolf, owned by a gentleman at Ponce de Leon. —Lumpkin Independent: A nogro woman was “struok dead in her sins” on Sunday night last, and remained in a “trance” until the next evening at 4 o’clock. She was Baid to have been ap- , patently lifeless and lay with her eyoB set and without nourishment during the time. Some of them say that she was in hell during this time and that she would come too free from sin. If the negroes really believe this, they should be oare- ful how they visit the domains of his satanio majesty as he is subtle enemy and might conclude to keep them there. NEVER TO RE SOLVED. A nniOAOO TBAQKDT OOKPLXTKLT VXILXD IK MY8TEBY. A Chicago exchange gives this account of a strange tragedy in that city : Tne murderer was a man named William O'Sullivan, apparently 28 or 30 years old, who was employed as a sexton in St. Jar- lath’s Ojiurch, and but little is knowu of him, as he has no relatives in the oity. Ho is represented as a young man of some ability and fair habits, but with a nature so tempestuous that, even under restraint, it borders on insanity, and the terrible deed committed by him was merely the oat-cropping of the fnry of the man smarting with the bitterness of refusal. The innooent viotim of a vengeanee so sweeping andlruel was a young woman narnod Katie Brannoek, 23 years old, who resided with he* parents at No. 596 West Monroe street. She was a person of un usual graoe and beauty, and how muoh she is responsible in encouraging the feel ings of snob a man of passion is not known. In form, faoe and by education, she is represented as far the superior of the man who cgmpassed so tragical an end for both. The exaet relations between the two young people do not seem to be known by the friends of either. Young O'Sulli van met the girl somewhat more than a year ago, since whioh time the intimacy betweon thorn has been somewhat marked. The attentions paid the young woman ap pear to have been somewhat offensive to her friends, and the visits of O'Sullivan to her homo ceasod almost entirely about six months ago, owing, it is understood, to the desire of her father. Sinoe that timo O’Sullivan has mot Miss Brsnnock at various places. She had vUited tho house of Gregory Weloh, at No. 32 Smith street. It was at this plaoe that the tragody ooourred, and the shooting happenod very shortly after the young people had been holding a pri vate conversation, tho nature of whioh is not known, but it is acoepted as the ter mination of a love affair whioh had never “ran Bmootbly,” and whieb ended most tragically. Kate had spent nearly all tho afternoon aStlio house, in the company of a Bewing girl named Mary Brady, who was tho only witness of the tragioal deed. - The two were seated in a small room on the flrst floor, in whioh there was one window facing the west. A door was open loading to a hallway, and a few min utes after 8 o'clock young O'Sullivan ap peared at tho doorway. He passed a fow commonplace remarks, and with a feeling of delioaoy, oooasioned possibly by her being a oonfldante of Katie Brannoek, Mary Brady left the room, and, aooording to her own statement, wont out into the garden in tho roar of the house, and was absent not moro than five minutes. In the moantime O'Sullivan and Katie Bran- nook had occupied the room alono, and what passed between them of love and anger can never be known. When Miss Brady returned to the room whispering ooased, and t(io situation ap peared to become awkward for a moment. Katie was Bitting ou a box plaoed near the window, and Mary Brady sat down by her Bide, and noxt to the window. O'Sullivan was sitting in a chair directly in front of Katie, and in the darkness of the room pulled a smnll pistol from his pookot, and in the ignorance of the two. persons who sat in front of him, cooked the peace, took a doliberato aim, and, without speak ing a word, pulled the trigger. A sharp report echoed through the room, and with a slight groan the young woman fell forward almost in tho arms of her mnrderor. Mary Brady oaught at the sleeve of the dying girl and remarked, “Ratio, are you hart ?” To this there wsb no reply, upon whioh she said to O’Sul livan, “You have hurt her, Will,” and started to leavo the room. O’Sullivan followed her to the kitohen, where ho procured a matob, and returned to the room where tho dying girl lay and lit the gas. One look at the faoe of the dead and he left the room without a word. When tho officers went to his home the murderer was doad. Gold and stark lay the rigid corpse upon the floor. The body was slightly turned upon its side. Several of the fingors of the hand were clenched in the grip of death. From one hand seomed to be just slipping the deadly weapon whioh had effectually rid him of earth. It was a small, single barrel pistol, tho bullet from whioh was Boaroely larger than a good size pea. Yet it had done its work. So deliberate bad been the work of the assansin-suioide that although nothing but little pea-sized bine mark gave ovidenoe against him, yet it was the silent witness* of his violent death. The face was not oonvnlsed; so far from that, there was an expression that was almost pleasant upon the faoe of the dead. The repose of death hBd saved the murderer ond suioida from the rope of the hangman. The body was carried out and put into an express wagon, and taken to the West Lako street station. EDUCATIONAL. Mount de Sales Academy FOR YOUNC LADIES, MACON, - - QA. i- St. Joseph's Academy, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, Whose reputation for educational advantages Is unsurpassed ** *- out tho States. It is delightfully situated on an eminenco, commanding an exten sive view of the surrounding ooun- _____ try, and only twenty minutes rldo from Plo Nouo Uolloge. so'that parents sending their daughters to the Mount and having sons at the College, oan visit heth without additional trav eling expenses. The street oars pass In Imme diate vicinity. Tho spacious recreation grounds aUord ample spaco for exercise. The new building comprises study halls, refeotory, re creation halls and dormitories. Terms moderato, to suit the times. Young ladles not oonneoted with the Acade my who wish to enjoy the advantages of Mu sic, Needle Work, etc., will be reoelved as pri vate pupils. Studies will bo resumed on Tuesday, Sep- address DIRECTRESS OF THE ACADEMY. B6p2 dlwdSUSt State Agricultural and Mechanical COLLEGE. X the Acadomlo yoar, 1877-’8. will bogln WEDNESDAY, SEP TEMBER Mtu, 1877. The dis cipline is Military. Tuition for rosUlonts of Alabama or any other State or Territory Is kukh. Each Cadet from Alabama, or elsewhere, at tho beginning of each term or half year, must deposit with the Treasurer—. Contingent Foe oo Surgeon’s Fee 2 r>o Total Oollogo Fees, por term $7 60 EXPENSES PER TERM: Tuition, froo. Board and Lodging $40 §0 to $68 60 Washing 4 60 4 60 Fuel, Eights and attondanoo.... 0 00 9 00 Surgoon’s Foo 2 60 2 60 Contingent Foo 6 00 6 00 Total $0160 $79 60 Cadot Uniforms aro furnished in Auburn at tho lowest possible rato furthor information semi for Catalogues. Add. ess any membor of the Faculty, or 1. T. TICUENOK, President. Auburn, Ala. t July 20th, 1877. augll ill ootl University of Georgia. of this Institution will bogln on tlio 83 of October, 1877. Sctiol- lnrshlps la tho Stato tlollcgo of Agriculture ami Meokanlo Arts aro grantoil to ns many studonts, residents of the Stato, as ihore nr. meuibors of tho Gonoral a sgombly. in addition, 60 Ben- ellolarloa aro appointed In the Aoademlo Do- imrtment. Every branoli of a Ltberal and Practical Education Is taught. The annual suasion oT tho M.-dlonl Department at Augusta, will begin on first Monday in November. For ' ‘ to tho Doan of the Faculty, Board Hz 60 a month. For Uatuloguos and farther particulars, address WM. HENRY WADDELL. Soo’y of tho Faculty, Athens, Ga. ALABAMA NEWS. Gov. Houston has appointed Hon. Peter G. Wood, of Selma, Judge of Pro bate of Dallas county, vioe Joseph Goth- ard, resigned. —Bishop Manucey arrived in Mont gomery Tuesday night, having for Boveral mouths been absent on a visit to Borne, Italy. The European Plan. New York Star.) Yesterday evening a stranger, elad in a duster and carrying a carpet-sack, enter ed a hotel on Delaware avenue. He marched straight up to the counter, whero the amiable landlord stood pioking bis teeth, and the moment ho set his bag down the amiablo landlord whiBkod it off and set it <V>wn with the pile of other bag gage in the rear of the bar. ‘Please register your name,’ said the landlord, passing him a pen. ‘How mneh is it, mister?’ ‘That depends on what yon get. We keep hotel here on tho European plan.’ ‘I aay, mister,’ said tbooountry man, ail in a tremble ‘please give me that bag and I’ll get right ont end not say a word.' The landlord gazed at him, but made no movement toward the bag. “Pleaae, mister, give me my bag. There is nothing in it bat a few shirts, indeed there isn't. Here’s the key. I’ll let you aearoh it,” oontinued the stranger, trem- bling still more violently. The landlord passed him the bag, and as the stranger instantly ahot for the door the tormoT exolaimed: “Well, blame me if I ain’t pnzzied to know what kind of a fool yon are.” But the stranger paused to hear no oompliments, and ho was a good half-mile away before he took oonrage to lean against an awning post and matter : “Gracious! What an caaape! Keeps a hotel on the you rope in plan, doo« he ? I anppoae he wanted to rope me in and perhaps kill me. Lord, what wioked places these ottiea are. I’ll go home im- fnodiatel;.” And he kept his word. How He Startled Her. A whoop-bang sort of a boy, with feet as broad and flat as a pie-tin, trotted through the Central Market yesterday till ho reaohed a stall kept by a ail woman about thirty years old. Halting there, ho yelled out: Say ! Bay ! Your little boy has been run over and killed, up by the Oity Hall!” Oh ! oh ! Heavens—oh I oh—1” She sarcamod as Bho made a dive under the oonnter, came np on the outside, and started to follow the boy. After going ton feet she halted, looked vory foolish all of a sudden, and remarked: What a poono I am ! Why, I ain’t even married!” —The best way to inorease the army is by the addition of private soldiers. There are offleers enough at present. DRTUTTS PILLS Meet the wants of those who need a safe and reliable medicine. The immense demand which has so rapidly followed their introduction is evidence that they do supply this want, and proves them to be University of Virginia _ g 1 Is organized In schools on tho eleo- 1 tive system, with full courses In Classics, Science (with Praotlce In Chemical and Physical Labrato- rlos), Literature, In Law, Medlolne, Engineer- MOBILE & GIRARD RAILROAD. ROUND TRIP TICKETS to Montgomery 87.60. ra»UN anil alter the FIRST DAY OF SEPTEMBER, 1877, HOUND TRIP TICKETS will be un lalo at all Tlokot Offlees of.this Rood at four cents por mllo. Tiokets so purchased will ontltlo tho holder to go to places of destination aud roturn at any timo during five days from tho time of purohase. This is a reduction of twknty vbu curt. from tho regular agonts’ rates. Agent's Tiokets FIVE CENTS per inilo. Round Trip Tiokets FOUR CENTS per mile, good to roturn in five days. Five Hundrod Mile Tlokots FOUR CENTS per milo. Conductors’ Ratos FIVE and ON E- HALF CENTS per mllo. Round Trip Tiokets aro only availablo to those who runonABu turm ukvouk gutting ON TUB TIIAIN. D. E. WILLIAMS, Agent W. L, CLARK, Superintendent. Columbus, Ga., August 31,1878. sopl 2w Notice to Shippers. ]• i-IV* • »S»j SUPERINTENDENT’S OFFICE: J Southwkhtukn Railroad, > Macon, (1a,, August 31st, 1877. ) NOTICE. From this da to tho Agonoy at Ju- nlper will bo discontinued, and Intu. turo will bo knowu as a “Flag” or no Agont Station. All froights for that point must be prepaid. W. G. RAOUL, sep2 lw Sup't. GROCERIES. A. (VI. ALliRN, Prsflldcnf, O. N. JORDAN, Treasurer. PIONEER STORES. CHARTERED CAPITAL $50,000. Pioneer Building, Front Street, opposite E. & P. Mills. Two New Stores Full of New Goods! AGENTS OF CHEWACLA LIME CO., AND Wholesale and Retail Dealers in General Merchandise. Crocery Department. Dry Goods Department. Crockery of Every Style- Clothing In Endless Variety. Boots and Shoes, specially made for us. Everything now. Everything bought for eaah. Everything sold olose. The oolo- brated GUEWAOLA LIME, by oar load, barrel or buidiel. All rotail purohasos de livered in Brownevillo, Girard, ltoso Hill, Wynnton and the oity. A. M. ALLEN, late Allen, Preor A Hlges; OSCAlt 8. JORDAN, late salesman Eagle and 1‘heuix; THOH. OHAPMAN, late Ohapmau A Vorstillo ; WM. COOPER, £R^g|jJj£erjjviini^hapK^rnje(^rom^ aug29 dtf CLOTHING 1 Suits Furnished Singly —•OR— - BY THE HUNDRED. tton from tho stock, or maiorlal brought In from olsuwhoro. 49* HntlNfaction KiiuriintiTd. G. J. PEACOCK? Clothing Manufactory, 02 llroad St. au20 if PEOPLE’S LINE. Tho now and ologant Steamer G. Gunby Jordan, , T U MOOltE, Mas tor, . for Apa-. 300. Flour por barrol Cotton por bale Other Freights In proportion. Through oonnootion inado with J. p. A Me R. K. at Chattahoochee for all points I11 Flori da, and Fornandina Lino ot Steamers to Now York. Through rates of trolghts to and from New York lower than by any other route. New York Agents, C. 11. Mallory A Co., 163 Matdon Lane, New York. Aar* For Frolght or Passago apply to J. F. MARURUM, Agont, jy0 2m No. — Broad street. iiun,,uuui niuiu, lliuun, lliaillUlUD, C.UKlIlUOr- k.olo Ing, Natural History, and Pruotloal Agrlcul- cotton, per bale turo. Expenses (including overvthlmc) about Those rates wll Reduction in Rates. O N AND AFTER tho 3d or July, tho Ratos via Cen tral Line Duals to all points on tho Chattalioochu and Flint 1 rlvors will be as follows : Flour, por barrel 10 cents Meal, per 100 lbs.... * " i. Exponsos (including everything) about $&on. Apply for catalogue to JAMES F. HARRISON, M. D., Chairman of the Faculty Post Office: University of Virginia. nuio dAwlm BOOTS AND SHOES. NEW SHOES The Old Shoe Store. FALL and WINTER STOCK Just Received! NKW AND ATTRACTIVE STYLUS L Gents’ Shoes, BrofD CM-Tw Button tips, “FIFTH AVENUE” CONGRESS. And all other Styles, in Hand and Machine Sowod, and Fino Pegged Work. Ladies & Misses’ Fine Shoes, Kid and Pebble-Button Side Lace TON S Tho boat Misses’ ’PROTECTION-TOE SCHOOL SHOES ever olfered in this market. An extra large stook of HBOC ANN, PLOW SHOES. KIP HOOTS, WOMEN’S PLOW SHOES, Ac., for Farmors. Our stock lor tho WHOLE- 8 A LE TRADE is being dally rocoivod, and in quantity, quality and prlcos is unsurpassed in the city, wo invito the attention of Coun try Morohants. 4QT* For anything you want in the Shoe and Leather Line, at bottom prloos, call at No. 73 Broad Street, (Sign of the Big Boot.) WELLS & CURTIS. BOp30 tf ..26 i will oxplro October 1st. STKAHK8 WYLLY, W. A. Fry, Captain, Leaves Saturdays at dam for Apalaohloo- la, Fla. *4" For furthor information oall on V. A. KLINI4, General Freight Agent. Oliloo at G. E. Hoohstrassor's.ju23 tf CHEAP SUGLARS! CUT LQAF'8UCAR, CRUSHED8UCAR. POWDERED 8UCAR, STANDARD A SUGAR, CREAM C SUGAR, BROWN SUGAR, 7 1-4 pounds for 81 OO; 7 1-4 pounds for 81 OO; 7 pounds for81 OO; 8 pounds for 81 OO; 8 1*4 pounds for 81 OO; 9 pounds for 8100. NEW CROP FLOUR at $8.50 to $9.00 per barrel. All other Grooeries reduced, and gsursntsed of the flne.t quality. ifetT I BKLIVKU ALL 1‘UltUUASliS. C. E. HOCHSTRASSER. Atlantic Coast Line PuNHengei* Routes TO ALL POINTS NORTH and EAST Reorganized for the summer of 1877. Present the following attractive Lines to the attention of all North-bound Tourists and Truvolors: Route No. 1—All Rail. Via Macon, Augusta, Wilmington and Rich mond. 43 Hoar* 26 iiiimue* Columbus to New York. Tlsin being 4 Hour* 4|ulcker Time titan by any other Line. Solid Day Trains from Columbus to Augusta, with Pullman Sleeping Car attached at Maoon lor Wilmington. Through train Wilmington to Rich mond and New York, with Pullman Stooping Cars attached at Rich mond for New York. ALL OU ANGES at SEASON A BLE HOURS and Into CLEAN and PROPERLY VENTILATED CARS. Route No. 2—Bay Line. A 61 hours run, only 7 hours In excess of all rail time, with the advantage ol undisturbed night’s rost, and superior accommodations on tho Chesapeake Day. Route No. 3-The Old Do minion Line. The sanio Lines to Wilmington and Ports mouth as Routes 1 and 2. Thence on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays at 6 4<> pm by tho magnlllcoht side-wheel Steamships of the Old Dominion Compauy, whioh invariably arrive at their $low York wharves by 9 i* m. A through ruu of 69 hours, oombtnlng the es- Hontlal elements of cheapness, spood and com fort. Passongors should leavo Columbus Sundays, Tuesdays aud Fridays to connect closely with Agent, at Vassenger Dopot, Southwestern Railroad. A POPE, General Passenger Agent. J H WHITE, Southern Passenger AK°ut. »Ug6 2iu THE CENTENNIAL STORES HAVE JUST RECEIVED 1.000 BUSHELS GENUINE RUST - PROOF OATS! W. A. SWIFT, deol6 end&wly Proprietor. DRY GOODS. New Advertisements. Nearly new 1 Sot Rood 12 Stop. Sub Hass A Octave Couplor Organs, cost ovor $360, only $66. Lowost prices ever olfored sent on 16 days tost trial. You ask why 1 oiler ho oheapT 1 roply, Hard Times. Rosult sales over 1,000,000 annu ally. War commenced by monopolists. Bo- ware anonymous Circular. Writefor explana tion. Rattle raging. Full particulars Iron, Addross llaiilci I’. licit I y wiuhiiigton, New Jcrncy. DAVIDSON COLLEGE, N. C. PREPARATORY CLASS. Taught by tho Profs, of Latin, Groek and £££ a week in your own town. Terms and POO $6 outfit freo. U. liALLETT Al CO., Portland, Maine. ORKitra jaO IO cor Nassau, N. 1 BlsgaaB Those Terrible HoaduclieR Generated by obstructed secrotions, and to which ladles aro especially subject, oan always bo rnllovod and thoir recurrences proventod by thounool Ta«• JiANT’H El'KKKVKBOICNT SBLTZUII Al’KKIKNT. Procurable at all drug stores. THE MOST POPULAR PILL furnished the American est medical authorities coneei over all others, because they possess altcrativo, tonic, aiui healing properties contained in no other medicine. Being strongly Anti-Bilious, they expel all humors, correct a vitiated state of the system, and, being purely vegetable, they do not, like other pills, leave the stomach and bowels in a worse condition than they found them, but, on the contrary, impart a healthy tone and vigor before unknown. jOUR WORDS INDORSED! Df. C. L. MITCHELL, FI. Mc«do. Fla.. Mya . . . “ / know the superiority of'jrour fills, ami want la set them used instead of the worth less compounds sold in this country." . . . Rev. R. L. SIMPSON, Loul.villo. Ky.,.ay»: . . . "Tull's fills arc worth their weight ingold." . . . Had Sick Headache & Piles 30 Years. . . . “/ am 7jell. Gaining strength and flesh every day.” . . . H- S. Austin, Springficlu, Mass. He Defle9 Chills and Fever. ...” With Tull's fills, we defy chills lit.not. owes you a debt of gratitude." . . F. U. Ripley, Chicago, 111. Sold everywhere. Price $S cents. Office, 35 Murray Street, New York. TUTT’SHAIR DYE Qrsy hair it chanead to a glossy black by a single application ol this dye. It is easily ap plied, acts like magic, and is as harm less ns spring water. Never disnp|H»ints. Sold by druggists. Price fi ,oo. Office,35 Murray SlKOt, New Y orlfe PHENIX CARRIAGE WORKS. HERRING & ENCLAND, East of and opposite Disbrow'sL^erv Stable, OGLETHORPE STREET, Carriage Work NEW WORK of Various Stylos. myl8 eodly NOTICE 1 One Hundrod Cooking Stoves! FUR SALE for 30 DAYS For less monoy than they _ woro ovor sold at in Columbus, at 161 Hroad Street, Columbus, Ga. E. N. HATH. au20 lm GAURANTEED SPECULATION. 3100 Invested by us In 60 days Nlrml dies havo mado 33 750. 3100 have paid 31,700 in 3o dajs. Wo Gaurantee all 60 day Straddles; money refunded If no profit is made. Reloroncos given. Correspondence solicited. W. F. IIUBBKLL fc CO., MBMRKRft Nkw York Min»n<» Stook Ex- on a nor, 46 Broadway, N. Y. i au28 dfcw2ru O. Do* S5SS20C Portland, Malno. We have secured the exclusive oontrol In this market of the Celebrated “BON TON” CORSET. Doctors. UK. «. E. EMTEM. Ovriuk Ovuu Khrt'h Dkuo Stour. ju»iy Lawyers. ALONZO A. UOZ1EH, Attorney tautl t’ouusvllor at Law. Olfioe Ovor 126 Broad Street. PkaotlooH In State and Federal Courts In both Georgia aud Alabama. mhl8'77 ly CHARLES COLEMANy Atloruey-at-Lnw. Up stairs over C. E. Hochstiasser’s store. [febll,’7T tf] BENNETT II. CJHAWfrOKD, Attorney and Counnellor tat Lsaw. Olfioe over Frazer's Hardware Store. Jal4’77 ly UKKHU OUAWrOUD. j. m. m’nmill. DMA wroiiu Sc JVlcNIlCLL, Attorney* and Counsellor* at Law, 128 Broad Street, Columbus, Ga. janl0,»70 ly U. E. THOMAN, Attorney and Connnellor at Law. OMtiou: Over lioohstrasser’s Store, Columbus, Georgia. ljunu,7a ly] MvKK H. 111. A N 1> VO III*. Loum F. GAttUAQD ULANHI'OKU Sl UAIIRAIIIh Attorney* and UounnellorN at Law Office No. 67 Brood street, over Wlttloh A K insol’s Jewelry Storo. Will praotloo In the State and Federal Courts sept ’76 IT IN MAUL WITH AND Fine Curved Side-Steels, BEAUTIFULLY EMBROIDERED, AND THIS Most Serviceable CORSET _ IN THE MARKET. \ EVERY PAIR Extra LONG WAIST, VERY STYLISH, Perfect Fitting, AN1I Til U MOST COMFORTABLE CORSET KV El! SOLD. WARRANTED ! FOR BAXiXl BY THE IN’e-w York Stor©. GORDON & CARGILL, snl2 82 Broad Street. Only Five Dollars FOR AN ACRE! bo RENT LAND In AM Elf 1C A, near the OUlfiAT UNION I’AC line RAILROAD. A FARM FOR $200 In easy paymontn with low ratos of intorost, SEOUHE IT NOW! Full Information sent iroo, address O. F. DAVIS, Land Agent U. P. K., OMAHA, NEB. FREE. P. O. V1CKEKY Augusta, Me. /pin a day at home. Agents wantod. Out- fit and terms lroe. TRUE A CO, Augus ta, Malno. REAL ESTATE SCENTS. JOHN BLACKMAIL, Real Estate, Brokerage and Insurance Agenoy. I./VNII WAKKANTS BOUGHT. Kotor, by iJorinlMlon, to Hun La „f tula city. (no ,’76 tri ANHOOD RESTORED. Victims of youthful '.raprudmt who have tried in vutii every kn< will leant of a simple proscription KltKl for tho speedy euro of nervous dobillt; premature decay, lost manhood, awl a •disorders brought on by excesses. An. druggist has thV Ingredients. Add re* DAVIDSON A: CU..8U N»»mu Slrcot.N.I. OUNUw AT COST[ AT COST! We will sell our entire stock of SPRING AND SUMMER DRESS GOODS .A-INTID BELOW O OS T FOR CASH 3 Piano Tuningt &c. E. W. IILAlf, Repairer and Tuner of Pianos, Organs and Watchmakers. CJ. II. LE4KIN, Wale li maker, 134 Broad Street, Columbus, Ga. Watches and Clocks repaired In the best manner and warranted,Jyl,*76 Tin and Coppersmiths. wm. ii;e, Worker In Tin* Nine4 Iron, Copper Orders from abroad promptly attended to. jyl,’76 No. 174 Broad Street. 50 CENTS PER BOTTLE; AT Now is the Time to Bny, As we are determined to dispose of them, w Prices on all other Coods guaranteed. my4 dfcwtf BLANCHARD & HILL. AUCTIONEERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS. M. M. HIRSGH. JACOB HECHT. AUCTION and COMMISSION MERCHANTS, OPPOSITE RANKIN HOUSE, COIAJMIJUS, - - GEORGIA C. S. HARRISON, Auctioneer and Salesman. STOCK, bLC., al Auction and Private Salo. Administrators' and other Legal Salos In the oity and surrounding country attended to on liberal terms. Tho frlonds of Mr. Harri son and tho public generally are Invited to glvo us a oall when they wish to buy or hoU prop erty of any description. AST LIHEKAL ADVANCES MADE ON CONSIGNMENTS, which aro rospootlully Solicited. REFERENCES, by permission : Chattahooelieo National Bank, National Bank ol Coluin- 3HJ.OB U3d SJ.N30 OS 3 s 3.5-?S'8 • "3’S'^SW Iv f 1 H § f ?. r| I £ 5 S ff f 51 sislJflfHfHfsIf *6^1 ■s-B« si s’ § s cl “• E-s5“5P2'—S- 3- ?®' 3 5 S 53 >-t?£ 8^-= si? ft fFsS’J-.K'"- Se.|s £-3 » C 0.n p ® O® a £-0.3 a-o a.2/ ■*? o o • Ad-Sold in Columbus by A. IN, BRAN NON and M, JO. HOOD A 4JO. faug!4 dfrwtf l||| j u> list g 3 fils ^ | 5 ■ Stg ^ Isrs i A PHYSIOLOGICAL View of Marriage! WcinSk >uj WOMAN r it; Hie f of Wo; r lteproduotion *»‘l k for pr MARRIAGE todiug LYW price soir AbuHo, Excobhoh, or 8oorot Disoasefl, with tlio best liieuiiH of cure, 2lM (nrepj'UK*“J. pnVu.Wtr tK. A CLINICAL LECTURE on the above diseases and thorn- ofthr Throat ami Lungs, Cutarrli.Rupturo, the Opium Habit,pricy lUcTs. .... Klih.rbook si-nt postpaid on receipt ot price; or allthree, coiituiniiiu' •‘•"<11'uifi”.. IvatitiAilly illustrated, lor 75 cts. Address Lit. liUTTS, No. fi! N. 8tli St. St. Louia, Mo. [au!7 dhwly • < I hT CO co O u IbWTTlIILIUV t. Hl'M. MKN Irum the elfeets of Errors 30 O an«l Abases In early life. Msn-L ^ hood UeHtored- Impedlmonts! 1 ^ to Marriage Removed. New uiethosl of treatment. New Si and remarkable remedies Books and olrcularr sent free W In sealed envelopes. Address ^ HOWARD AKSOi'lATI05I, 410:^ N. Ninth at., Philadelphia, m Pa. An lnstltntloii having a 1 1 high reputation for honorable q icomluot and prulosslunal skill 1 .