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DAILY ENQUIRER-SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA. v THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 20, 1879.
CCbltnubus CCitqti i rrr^utt.
COJjtJMIlUH. OA. i
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1870.
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A HOT riOHT Bronx.
A heated contest lias begun in the
House of Representatives. Yesterday
an amendment was offered to the
legislative, executive and judieial
appropriation bill repealing the sec
tion authorizing the appointment of
lection supervisors. The Republicans
immediately rose in arms, Hale anil
(larileld leading. They and their
followers will oppose the measure to
tlie end. They know thnt with these
Republican “overseers” removed, the
last slay of their party is gone. Hence
comes their lamentations and fierce
resistance. Without these props to
their fulling edifice, how can they
hope to pro veil t their structure founded
on -passion and liatcft, from tot
tering to the ground? These people
have unlimited power in elections,
and when they dare not interfere
they are continually annoying and
harassing managers and voters on
trumped up charges -of tho low and
ignorant and have them tried before
juries us bail ns the witnesses. With
out these creatures the Radicals’ sys
tem of terrorizing by the threats of
wlint they will do after an election,
must be abandoned and the preju
diced judges will not be feurod. If
the Democrats will only remain firm
they can carry their point. It is bet
ter, to have an extra session than for
tho South to bocontlnuully oppressed
and wronged by tills shameful legisla
tion. The Southern member who
shirks ids duty at (ids Juncture
should for the future be allowed to
remain at home.
THIS PAPER
(Vh NnWHpnper Ad
Hpruoo stroet). ■
limy bo made
file
nmy lio found
. at Goo. I*. K<
Advertising Bur
here artverllnlng <j<
’or it IN NEW YORK
f(io
Weather indications for to-day :
For the South Atlantic States, partly
cloudy weather, and in the northern
portions areas of rain, winds shifting
to southerly and westerly, or north
westerly, stiff hi change in temperature,
and in Ihc northern portions followed
by rising barometer.
The moaHlos aro making rapid utricles
in Oglethorpe county.
Vakha n College girls nro fond of
vocal music, “Gum, oh (lutn \n
Mo,” Is their favorite chewin’.
— ■ ♦- -♦■ -♦
The Maploson Opera Company lost
money In St. Louis. Throe dollas for
a tickot lookod biggor than the talent
offered by tho mAiiagemont.
In eight years of Orantism, with
George Robeson in charge of tho Navy
Department, two hundred millions of
monoy, and almost an ontiro navy Wore
sunk.
There arof)r> churches in Richmond,
Va., of all kinds—'43 for white and 12
for colored people. Thoro are 11,011
members in the colored churches, and
29,8611 white members.
Nkw York sponds nearly f3,000,000
annually to police tho city, yet reports
of highway robbories in broad daylight
on such thoroughfares ns Broadway
and Fifth avenue aro not infrequent.
The Pppe has been fairly Inundated
with abusive, offensive and threaten
ing letters from Socialists in all parts
of Europe, who have been moved to
anger bocauso of his recent encyclical.
His Holiness is making a collection of
them.
The World says there is always a
crowd of Frenchmen or foreigners
about the windows of tho Bible depot
iu the Place du Theatre Francnis, in
tho hoart of Paris, reading by daylight
or by electric light from the open bibl
there displayed.
Pope Leo has issued an order for
bidding the sale of relics. lie say?
tratlle has become an abuse and a scan
dal, and thnt enemies of tho Catholic
faith steal and soli authentic relics, to
the great scandal of the faithful, and
especially of foreigners.
The women of Amorica—that is, the
womon who aspire to honors In a pro
fessional lino which have heretofore
boon usurped by tho masculine gender
—got a big lift by the President’s ap
proval of tho bill allowing females to
practice in tho Supreme Court.
4 ♦ • — ■ ■
Tni?XIVthand XVth amendments
to tho Constitution must ho terribly
weak affairs to demand for their en
forcement tho passage of a resolution
in their behalf by a pared of bob-tail
Republicans. The patriots aro getting
to be too amusing for anything.
Old Mr. Oncken, the famous Baptist
missionary of Germany, has boon at
work forty-four years, llis various
missions comprises 22,000 members,
who are served by about 200 missiona
ries. Tho old gentleman is SO years of
age, and so feeble that he cannot attend
public worship.
♦ -♦
Senators Butler ami llill voted
against tho passage of the Chinese law
on Saturday evonlng, while Senators
Gordon, Blaine, Cameron and others.
North and South, voted for it. The
law goos into effect after July 1st, 187U,
and not more than fifteen Chinese aro
allowed to land from one ship.
“ I had the honor of having a little
something to do with the election of
187t>,” Observed Zach Chandler in his
speech to tho Republican caucus that
nominated him. Z»eh was all thomoro
encouraged to make this impudent ol
nervation from the fact that the laws
were such as to enable him to escape
the penitentiary for his shore in the
crime.
TREASURY DEFICIT.
Hecretary Sherman, since the Dem
ocrats have had control of the House,
has been discovering deficits. He is
ever on the alert to sell more bonds.
He has a passion for ttie business.
Abundance of money is voted, anil
there 1h ever economical talk in the
departments, but no action. This
time lie 1ms announced (lint the reve
nues fur the coming fiscal year will
fall short ¥27,002,411). He proposes to
issue four per cent, bonds to make it
tin. The Courier-Journal rightly
says tliis is due to the enormous draft
nit tlie Treasury for $41,600,000 to
make the first payments incident to
tlie pension arrearages hill, which
was (lie work of Republican poli
ticians who have been yelling "rebel
claims" to frighten llitt people while
they quietly made Ibis Northern
raid on tlie treasury. Bherman
thinks lie must either Increase taxa
tion or increase tho public debt by
issuing new bonds. Had us tlie situ
ation -Is from the Northern raid on
(lie treasury, the secretary should
do neither of these tilings. He 1ms
tlie legal tenders housed in (lie treas
ury vaults to pay these extra pctlsion
claims. There is no reason why lie
should not use cash on hand to pay
them, instead of increasing tlie pub
lic debt and increasing taxation-
methods which reveal his lack of
business qualifications.
NEXATMSX ItATAIttl tNOTItl'IOItX.
Tho reported differences between
these two grunt Senators is wide
but litey lmve tlie same end in
view. Their plans for repealing ob
noxious laws—tlie test oath and elec
tion supervisors—nro quite divergent.
Senator Thurman desires the parly
placed immediately in a lighting
attitude, attack at once and con
tinually, and force the defense
on the Republicans. He believes
it the best policy lo seek the
repeal of both laws and throw tlie re
sponsibility of an extra session on
tlie Republicans. Senator Bayard
holds thnt the repeal of tho test oath
should he fought for immediately, hut
Tills Is an age of challenges. Every
Tom, Dick and Harry boldly challen
ges all animateil creation to walk,
shoot, row, run, wrestle, jump, climb,
swim, skate, box or whatever it may
be, tlie, aforesaid T., D. or H., for tlie
gate money, $SO0 a Hide and the cham-
piionsliip of the entire universe. Pin-
cinnatl boasts of having tlie champion
pic-eater. N'o one, even in Cincinnati,
has over ate to within several dozen
pics of him. Aencording to tlie Knqxii-
rer he has beeii victorious in all con
tests oxcopt once, when they run in
plos on him hotter than the most sul
try cornor of a July day. After recov
ering from tho effects of this heated
torm, he traveled around Ohio giving
exhibitions, when ills health gave way.
IIo could not stand the enebres. After
eating his exhibition of pios they would
encoro him, and thon he would have lo
oat another basketful, and this gradu
ally undermined him. South Norwalk,
Connecticut, has another champion.
Pickles are his speciality, and he hasn’t
been to Europe to finish his pickle
education either, yet lie challenges any
man in America to cuthalfa barrel of
pickles with him for *100 a side and
tho championship.
There has been a good doal of
grumbling from first to last about the
charges for sleeping car privileges, and
tho Legislatures of Illinois and Mis'
sotiri have hills bofore them looking to
a reduction and regulation of tho ratoH
imposed by the Pullman Palaco Car
Company. Tho attoruoy-general of tho
former Stato lias given his opinion that
sloeping enr companies can be con
trolled by statute in tho samo way as
other corporations, and now that tho
legislators feel fortified in their power
to restrict tho operations of tho “ Pull
man monopoly,” they aro Haid to bo do
terminod to make tho.cliargo more than
a dollar for a single berth illegal. The
Missouri law-makers aro similarly in
dined, hut Mr Pullman is promptly in
tho field in defence ol his thlentonod
interests, niut tlioro aro to ho “hear
ings,” which may result in a consider
ahlo woakoning of tho present offort to
protect tho pockots of passengors.
THE GREAT LONG PEST.
London, with its suburbs, within
tlie
•lection law 1
nil he attended to by
the
forty-seven t
1 Congress which
is
Democratic.
The Republicans
will
yield tin
test 011th hut
will
struggle
(0 retain the
election law. From the action of
the Democrats in the House yester
day it would seem that the Thurman
course is the favorite, and the Bern-
erats mean to press it. Bold and de
termined advances attract and en
thuse followers, and give hope and
confidence in the ranks. It is best
every way. We trust there will be
no faltering on our side. •
Mouse Puockkdinos.—They pre
sent rather lively reading this morn
ing. Garfield went too far yester
day and was promptly checked by
Blackburn, when the former ex
plained ami apologized. The discus
sion was exciting.
»-■» ♦
Tin; prize of 81,000, offered by tho
Cincinnati Musical Festival Associa
tion for tho host musical compositi
is likely to call out large competition.
It has boon thought host to limit tho
competitors to citizens of tho United
States. “The respective merits of the
pieces aro to bo determined by tiv«
judges, of whom Theodore Thomas i
to he one. Composers are given till
next October to obtain the' nocossary
inspiration, and until the May festival
of 1880 to hoar tho glorious strains of
the prize composition. In tho mean
time those who have drawn blanks can
keep the secret of their failure to them
selves, as not oven tho judges are to
know the names of the unsuccessful
competitors.” The author who gains
the prize will hear his music at the
coming festival in 1SS0, and he entitled
to his copyright in addition.
A New York lettor to tho Charleston
News it Courier says: “Agents of hanks
and bankors aro going round and offer
ing money, both on call and paper, on
tho most tempting terms. This is a
somewhat now business for tho parties
in question to run about with their
monoy for a custom or, hut it shows,
first, tho great abundance of money,
and Hocond, that business does not be
gin to ho lively onough to absorb it—
certainly not active enough to sock tho
capital, rather than the capital seeking
it. Monoy in apparently unlimited
amounts is olforod at 1 por cent, por
annum for 90 days, on pledge of gov
ernments and securities equally good,
whilo tho Stock Exchange gets all it
wants at 2 por etyit. Threo months’
indorsed paper is down as low as 1} per
:ent. while singlo six months’ has been
placod at
— — ♦ ♦ 4
The native States of India cover an
area of noarly 600,000 squaro miles,
Thoy contain a population of about 55,-
000,000, and their united military forces
are estimated at moro than 000,000 men.
The gvoss rovonues of tho chiefs come
to about 10,000,000 sterling, and
annual tribute of .€725,000 is paid, to tho
Briiish Government. The popula
tion subject to tho Crown if
189,0193,208. Tho population of the
native or feudatory States is 50,-
325,457. Tho Indian debt, 31^t March
1877, was €127,320,159; tho number of
miles of railway completed 7,551, and
the total strength of tho army 190,148,
of which 125,240 woro natives.
» ■» ■»
It will ho romemborod thatalittlo
unpleasantness occurred in that order
ly and law abiding State, Pennsylva
nia, summer before last, which w
nally suppressed by the military. The
taxpayers aro now culled upon to set
tie the cost of maintaining tho poace
for which purpose a bill is now before
tlie legislature appropriating $4,000,000,
The Philadelphia Record says the bill
will he passed, and adds: “Tho reason
for such confhlonco arises from the as
surance that $2,000,Q00 aro to be used to
cover actual lossos, while the other
$2,000,000 aro to bo devoted to brouking
“In fuc’, my bruddren-ah, do Secre-
taireyum of do Missionary ’Siety what
I hah now do pleasuuh ov introducin’
to vou-ah, is a distinguish' an’aneleyo-
quont man ; fac’, my bruddren, ho am
soundin’ brass an* a tinklin’ cymbal,”
With such an introduction as this t|ie
the fifteen miles radius gf'Charing ^‘''BoUhod Secretary of the Mission-
ould not do otherwise
s dusky brethren a stir-
Cross, covers 700.86 square miles, and
numbers over 4,000,000 inhabitants, of
whom 37 per cent, are country-born.
There is a birth in tho metropolis every
four minutes and a death every six.
There aro 7,000 miles of streets, and 28
miles of new streets aro opened and other Southern outrage.—Philtulelphia
y,000 new bouses built every year, I Chronicle- Herald.
Society
than make 1
ring speech.
In the J3outh tho boys can go in
swimming two months earlier than can
tho juveniles of tho North, This is an
The “hardly evor” by-play is fast
bocoming a social boro, and hence it
will afford a suffering community
positive rolief to learn that tho well
worn dialoguo is classic in its origin,
and lum worried generations of schol
ars. In the First Satire of Porsius, ns
tho Lancaster Examiner rides its pony,
occurs tills passage: “Quia luce legot?”
(Who roads this trash?”) “Nemo
mokercule.” (Nobody, by jingo!'
“Femo?” (Nobody?) “Voi duo vol
nemo.” (Well, hardly anybody.) Per-
sius, bo it romomborod, was a gentle
man who wroto for tho press about
oightoen hundred years ago.
Two colored men woro refused tho
privilege of skating at tho rink, in
Worcostor, Mass., a few days ago, on
tho ground that, while tho proprietors
made no distinction as to color, race, or
previous condition of servitude, tho
majority of their eustomers objoctcd
to the presence of colored skaters. The
colored men have brought an action
against tho rinkmon, but it is vory evi
dent that a severo color lino oxists in
tho Republican Stato of Massachusetts.
Senator Hoar should procoed at once to
Worcostor.
»♦ ♦
In the March number ol tho North
American Review, an arlielo is printed
from Hon. .1. G. Blaine, of Maine, in
which he is in lavor of disfranchising
the negroes of the South, whilo arti
cles in the same number from Sonator
Lamar, Wade Hampton, Mr. Stephens
and others, opposo it. Just as soon as
the Radicals discover that they can
not control the negro vote, they go to
work and make an attempt to rob him
of his constitutional rights. The at
tention of the darkey is called to this
fact. _
How Massachusetts Loves Him.—
In Massachusetts there is a 1a w on the
Ntatute books which provides th »t*if a
negro “strikes any person of the En
glish or Christian nation, lie shall be
punished by a severe whipping.” Ah !
Senator Hoar, how can you sleep at
night with such a horrible law hanging
over the head of the “poor black man”
in vour own Stale?
l*l«>iiro-l*iieiimonla a« Dr«crlbed by an
Expert— Wlaal l*rof. Know*
of England'aLalr Action.
Washington Po*t, Frit. 15.]
“What are tlie real facts about the
exclusion of American cattle from
England ?” Risked a Pont reporter of
Prof, (ianigee yesterday at the Riggs
House. “You know there are con
flicting reports, I suppose?” con
tinued the knight of the Faber, “as
tho Post’k New York correspondent
telegraphs that the largest New York
shipping firm lias received advices
from its London agent ttiat the
British Privy Council have made no
late order on the subject.” >
•‘Whatever nmy lie telegraphed, I
have no doubt that tho United States
lias been scheduled.”
"And what do yon mean by
scheduled?"
“Under the recent act to prevent
tlie importation of contagious diseases
in animals, all stock arriving in
England /rom countries declared to
be infected must be slaughtered
within ten duyH of arrival at tlie point
of debarkation. These countries ure
named or scheduled.”
“Wlipt is the law in brief?”
“it 1ms three main provisions. By
ttie firijt, importation is prohibited
from countries known to be generally
infected; by the second, countries
where the infliction is not general
importation is restricted as I huve
just told you, and by the third, abso
lute free tfade is permitted.”
“When was this law passed ?”
“In 1S7S. When it was under dis
cussion in 1K77, I appeared before the
House of Commons as a witness, l-’or
over a year, in 1868 and 18(59, I was a
commissioner under your Agricul
tural Department to examine into
tlie cattle disease and pleuro-pneumo-
nin. It was while making that in
vestigation that I struck upon tlie
subject of artificial refrigeration.”
"The Texas cattle disease, what is
that?” *
“Almost purely local. It is propa
gated during tlie first two or three
months of travel, but after that dies
out in a Northern latitude."
"And pleuro-pueutnonla."
“ThatIs a lung plague, highly in
fectious and insidious, first imported
to this country-in 184:1, from Germa-
ny. u
“Where did it first make itsuppear-
ance in tlie United States?' 1
‘I think in Long Island. It is
stated iu my book, which tlie Gov-
rnment published in 1880, with elab
orate illustrations, probably tlie only
report on the cattle disesases of Amer
ica.”
"How far did it spread?”
I traced it iu Long Island, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, this
District and Virginia.”
“Had it gone no further West?”
“So far as I could learn, it hud not.
Rut I warned tlie authorities that if
some positive- repressive measuris
were not adopted it was quite likely
to gain a firmer foothold and finally
lie almost ineradicable.”
“Rut it can be eradicated, can it
not?"
Yes at considerable cost. Preven
tion is much ehenper. Tlie State of
Massachusetts stamped it out in 1807
at a cost of $70,000.”
“How?”
‘By buying up the infected cuttle
and killing them.”
“How is tlie disease caught?”
“My close herding, through tlie
breath. It goes jiiHt like small-pox
among mankind.”
“Then healthy cattle herded with
Infected cattle nro sure to outeli it?"
“Sure. The only salvation for this
country is to stamp it out. It is an
Industry or product too great to be
hazarded for an hour. England has
tlie right view of it. She is determ
ined to go to any extent to prevent
her own cattle from being infected,
even to tlie extent of largely increas
ing tlie price of meats to her poorer
classes. She lias been twenty-five
years arriving at this conclusion, and
will stay by it, whatever tlie cost.”
"How long have you been inter
ested in the subject?"
“For tlie same length of time. I
began when a boy almost to investi
gate the diseases in dairies, and
traced diseased cows to the butcher
and infected lungs to the sausage ma
chine.”
“Can you describe wlint thediseosc
is in a few words?”
“ I can. It is a malignant fever,
with tumefaction of tlie lungs. It
lias a long period of incubation, fully
six weeks, and it is not uncommon
for the lungs of a steer to increase
from seven to twenty pounds in a
night."
“And that is pleuro-pneumonia I”
"in brief that is tlie description of
tho most fatal and ruinous disease to
which Americaneattlearesubjected.”
“And if not stumped out will fi
nally inflict incalculable loss?”
“Literally incalculable. I suppose
England lias lost a thousand dollars
by this disease to every dollar from
any other form of fatal disease.”
•‘What remedied method «lo you
suggest?”
“Compulsory registration of all
eases of disease. New York lias
started at it, but it needs a central
nnd comprehensive administration.
Whenever a case is found tlie infect
ed animal should be bought and de
stroyed. That is tlie cheapest and
readiest way.”
“is there no other way ?”
“You can limit the disesase by in
oculation, Imt it is much more costly
(hail the stamping-out process. There
is only one safe position for the
United States to take.”
“Aud what is that ?”
“That never, except in the case of
famine, should traffic in diseased ani
mals or their carcasses be permitted."
"Have you any personal interest in
the matter?”
“None whatever. My dear sir, un-
derstand me and so represent me.
There is no consideration that could
induce me to takeeharge of tlie work.
I have given thirty years of my life
to it, ami am willing to give tlie re
sults of my observations whenever
and wherever they will do good.
Out of my researches in tills path
has grown my present nhsoldrg
interest in artificial refrigeration,
that I cannot leave nor* neglect.
There are plenty of competent men
to take charge of tliis matter of cattle
disease. It is a great interest in the
United States, and no cost would be
too large to free this country from all
infectious cattle disorders. * All that
is needed is intelligent and stringent
legislation and an honest enforce
ment of it. In less than twelve
months, if thoroughly aud honestly
taken hold of, pleuro-ptcumouiu
could be extirpated.”
“Who lias cliargeof the New York
measures?”
"A very accomplished and honora
ble gentleman, Prof. Law.”
"And is New York tlie only State
.that is now moving in it?”
“So fur os I know.”
Saving which the reporter folded
up his notes ami rapidly moved uway.
Tke Doorstep.
From the Detroit Free jPras,]
The conference meeting through fit last,
We boys around the vestry waited
To see the girls come tripping past,
Like snow birds, willing to be mated.
And one, she blushed nnd took my arm!
We let the old folks have tlie highway,
And started toward the Maple farm,
Along a kind of lovers’ byway.
Her face wifi? youth and health was
beaming.
The little hand outside her muff—
O, sculptor! If you could but mould it!
8o lightly touched my Jacket cuff—
“ * 11H * ‘ *
>p it warm, I had to hold It.
o light
To have her with me, there alone,
Twas love, nnd fear nnd triumph blended;
At last we reached the foot-worn Ntone,
Where that delicious Journey ended.
The old folks, too, were almost home,
Her dimpled hand the latches lingered;
We heard the voices nearer come,
Yet on the door step still we lingered.
Hhe shook her ringlets from her hood,
And with a “thank you, Ned,”dissembled,
But yet I Knew she understood.
With whut a daring wish I trembled.
A floud passed kindly over head,
Too moon was slyly peeping through it,
Yet hid Its face, as if It said: „
“Come, now or never! do It! dolt!”
My lips till then had only known
The Kiss ot mother and of sister;
But somehow, full upon her own
.Sweet, rosy,darling mouth—I kissed her!
Perhaps ’twas boyish love, yet still,
O listless woman, weary lover!
To feel once more, that fresh, Wild thrill
I'd give—but who can live youth over!
TUTTS PILLS.
SYMPTOMS OF A
TORPID LIVER.
XjOsh of Appetite. Bowels costive, Pain In
the Head, with a Dull sensation in tho back
part, Pam under the shouldorblado. full
ness alter eating, with a disinclination to
exertion of body or mind, Irritability ot
temper, Low spirits, with a feeling of hav
ing neglected some duty, Wearincss; Diz
ziness, Fluttering at the Hoart, Dots bo-
loro the eyes, Yellow Skin, Headache
generally ovor tho right eye, RestlessnesL-
A Rare Chance
with fitful dreams, highly colored Urino,
IF THESE WARNINGS ARE UNHEEDED,
SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVELOPED.
TUTT’S PILLS
nro especially adapted to such cases, a
single dose effects such a change of feel
ing as to astonish the sufferer.
A NOTED DIVINE SAYS:
Dr. TUTT —Dear Sir: For ton years I have been
a martyr to DvspepHbi, Constipation and Piles. Lost
Burins your Hills were recommended to me; I used
them < but with littlo faith).
ppetite, digestion in
piles gone, and 1 lmvogained.forty pu
They are worth their weight In gold.
IIkv. It. L. SIMPSON, Louisville, Ky.
The first effect Of TUTT’S PILLS iBto In
crease the Appetite, und cause the body to
Take on Flesh, thus the system is nourished,
ami by their Tonic Action on the Digestive
Organs, Regular Stools are produced.
Dr. J. F. HAYWOOD,
OF NEW YORK, SAYS:-
" Few diseases exist that cannot bo reliovod by re
storing the Liver to its normal functions, nnd for
this nurnose no remedy has ever been Invented that
has ils happy on effect us TUTT’S HILLS.”
SOLD EVERYWHERE, PRICE 25 CENTS.
Office 35 Murray Street, New York.
TO ZBTJ"Y"
Hamburg Embroideries Cheap!
Jot
We have ready for inspection the most extensive line of
these Goods ever displayed In this market. The designs
ere all new, and sre worked on a superior quality of Jaconet.
Ladies wishing to Invest In these Goods will find it greatly
to their advantage to see them, as they haye been bought
out of season with the view of getting them at such prices
as would sell them rapidly.
They begin as low as 3 cents per yard, and
run to $1.00.
Such Goods as sold last season at 10,12} and 16c, we offer
for 6, 9 and l2o, and the finer grades In Ihe same propor
tion. We shall endeavor to close them In 10 or 15 days to
make room for second shipment.
Will open next week, -new lot Torchon Laces and Lace
Ties-'something entirely new.
Just opened a new lot of 10-4 Sheetings and Bleached
Cottons, embracing all the favorite brands.
Handsome line Real Damask Towels.
Another lot of fOOdoz. Embroideried Collars, 3 for IOc.
25 pieces Dress Coods at 8c, the best article for the
money shown yet.
BLANCHARD & HILL,
AWlf 123 Broad street.
TUTT’S HAIR DYE.
OnAY Hair on Whiskers changed to n Glossy
Black by a einglo application ot this Dyi - It im
parts a Natural Colur. nets Instantaneously, und is
us Harmless as spring water. Hold by Druggist.*, or
sent by express on receipt of
Qffice, 35 Murray St., New York-
febll ecdAwly
Fins Whiskies a Specialty,
'qua'.cd for Medicinal and Family Use.
Laboratories of Waijs& Analytical!
Fire! Fire! Fire!
Jot-
am] Consulting Cheuil-
n. y. f i on. r», jhth.j
made a cnrclui
l of Whiskey
r om TU«*w*rn.
, ('uinitK’jcr A:
"u.Wrt. uintkcd
Pure Old
flu * I the Him
i:-II 011 or
letcrloiift
iTILLWELL.
Sold by Druggists aul Wine Merchants generally.
DODGE, CAWER & CO.,
LEAVER STREET, NEW YORK
febl8 tu.vthflm
People’s Line Boats!
Damaged and Perfect Goods Slaughtered!
MY ENTIRE STOCK OF
DRY GOODS. NOTIONS, CLOTHING, SHOES,
Hats, «fco.,
Rescued from the recent fire under Rankin House, tho sound as
well as the damaged, offered at much less than original cost, in
order to make room for an entire
New Spring Stocls.!
Sosr BEST CALICOES at 5 cents, and all
other goods in like proportion. Call and be
convinced.
J.
SO BrOad Street.
&3grOne door below Chattahoochee National Bank.
Only a Few Days Left
TO IBTTY
“Opposition to Monopoly!”
Reduction in Freights
From Sew York, Baltimore nnd lMiilmlolphla,
via Fcrtiundlnn mid .InekNonville nnd
«)., P. A M. Railroad,
As follows:
Classification 1st, $1; 2d, 02c: fid,
72c; 4th, file; 5th, JMc; Ctli, 40c.
C It MALLORY & CO,
Pier No 20 East River, New York,
Agents for Jacksonville Steamship.
I lv ROBERTS,
Agent for Fernandlna Steam Ships,
No 177 West St., New York.
AFTER JANUARY 1st, 1870,
St’r G. Gunby Jordan
Will leave Columbus on WEDNESDAYS
for Chattahoochee, Bain bridge
and Apalachicola,
and intermediate Landings.
Steamer T. H. Moore
Will leave Columbus on SATURDAYS lor
Chattahoochee
and Intermediate Landings. Through Tick
ets from Columbus to Jacksonville for
TEN DOLLARS!
This Is the only Line that connects at
terminus of J, 1‘ & M Railroad. The other
lines land one mile from J, 1’ dc M R It; with
a swamp Intervening.
*4#-All claims and damages will be set
tled promptly. •
Ctto’t T. H MOORE.
44 J. W. FITZGERALD.
Columbus, On,
Agents People's Line and J, P M R R.
Ja8 tf
03 -a S-= gSo ¥
.a
■ :
. — «
a 5 * 4
05
►-9 <
-|s2?» .J«!sSt-7c .1 s 55
SPECIAL BARGAINS
OF
J. ALBERT KIRVEN.
-tot-
Asl will
leave for Northern markets in two weeks, I am
determined to closo out my stock of
Tail Linens, Towels and Napkins,
sols and Hosiery
Para-
before going. If you need any of these Goods, now is the
time to buy them cheap.
J. ALBERT KIRVEN.
3VL_ JVC. T"TiT ZED 3
Architect and Builder.
-M-
I IIA'V E recently leased and intend to thoroughly restock and refurnish with
new machinery tho
"COLLI1TS UVCIXjXjS ”
Situated on Upper Oglethorpe Street, on Square Below the
“Centennial Stores,”
To do a general BUILDING business. A ol prepared to furnish Plans, Specifi
cations and Estimates on all kinds and styles of Building. Will keep on hand
a full stock of DRESSED and UNDRESSED LUMBER.
SASH, DOORS and BLINDS.
I will keep constantly on hand, a full stock of YELLOW PINE SASH,
DOORS and BLINDS.
.Mr Be sure to see me before buying elsewhere or letting out vour eon tract
Ja{eodly