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COLUMBUS SUNDAY ENQUIRER -SUN: SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 31, 1883.
SUNDAY ENQUIRER-SUN,
JOHK Else, • • Troprietpr
Indication* .* South Atlantic Mates,
partly cloudy weather and local
rains, winds most'y northeasterly,
stationary or falling barometer and
temperature.
Ingratitude.
•‘How sharper than a serpents' tooth
An lngrate child.’’
Out of the ten lepers who were
cleansed but one returned to give
thanks. Ingrates are as plentiful to
day as they were 1800 years ago, he
it said to the discredit of humanity.
While gratitude is one of the noblest
emotions or passions of the heart, in
gratitude ranks among the basest. A
great many persons seem to take it as
a matter of course that the world owee
them everything, and that favors of
ail sorts are to be expected without
any corresponding return in dollars
and cents, or a responsive thrill of
thankfulness. Ingratitude pertains
to no special class or condition but is
found every where. The child is often
ungrateful to parents, and instead of
proving the joy and prop of declining
years, is as a thorn in the flesh,
the bitterest drug in life’s cup. Chil
dren too rarely repay the toil and
pains-taking of parents during the
years of their minority. If they did
rightly appreciate the obligations due
to father and mother, so many gray
hairs would not descend with sorrow
to the grave. The duties and obliga
tions between parents and their off
spring should be reciprocal. If the
earnest strength ami matured powers
of manhood are due to the training
and development of the young, the
boys and giris thus cared for should
esteem it their bOunden duty to assist
and comfort their parents in the tot
tering steps of age. If the man who
fails to provide for his household is
w r orse than an infidel, what may be
said of the ingrate child who
has no thought or care for
the wants and comforts of their aged
and helpless ancestors. Xor is filial
ingratitude the only species of the
base passion deserving of reprobation.
There is the ingratitude of the friend
towards friends. How many are the
favors asked and granted of which no
note is taken, no remembrance treas
ured up. Life is full of reverses, and
the benefactor of to-day may be the
mendicant of to-morrow. When
such is the case, how sad is the re
flection that among the many who
have received the benefit of one’i
friendly offices in the past, so few are
found to reciprocate in your own evil
day. There is nothing which goes
so lar towards crushing the good that
is in man as the principle of ingrati
tude. There are those in the world
to whom you might grant ninety-
nine favors, who would curse and
hate you eternally if you refused the
hundredth. Alas! that the human
heart is so obdurate.
Then there’s a baser ingratitude
still—the ingratitude of man toward
his maker. There are those who en
joy the inestimable blessing of health
and of strong physical and mental
vigor, who, so far as one might judge
from appearances, plod on through
life without any apparent recogni
tion of the divine hand. They eDjoy
the munificent sunlight, breath the
pure air of heaven, hold pleasant com
munion with their fellows, reap
earths rich harvests, and yet no high
aspiration is stiried, no gratitude
evoked. Ail things seem to be ex
pected as a matter of right and privi
lege. An individual who is ungrate
ful to God and man, hardly deserves
to be called the equal of the dumb
brutes around us, for many animals
recognize the hand that feeds them
and are not insensible to acts of kind
ness. Gratitude, like all worthy heart
principles, should be instilled into
and grafted upon children at an early
age. Ingratitude must certainly be
distasteful to heaven and is contempti
ble in the eyes of men.
BJpadliT£ Uc*nij Mlili I’lilitJ,
Men are too much accustomed to
consider the elemenls of beauty in
their surroundings as a luxury which
only the rich can exjoy, and as a
secondary consideration which must
not intrude upon the routine of every
day life. They are apt to separate in
their minds and in their lives the
ideas of utility and beauty. Thus in
our manufactories the usefulness of
the thing made was formerly the
only consideration. In the same
way beauty would be banished from
the warehouse and courted in the
dwelling; banished perhaps from the
ordinary living rooms, hut cen
tred In the parlor; ban
ished from the schoolroom, but
welcome in the ball room. There is
in some minds a feeling of scorn for
mere beauty, though no one would
deliberately admit it. Busy men will
say they have no time for sentiment;
they will leave all that to the other
sex, showing by such a remark their
secret feeling that women are inferior
to men. Young boys often catch
their tone of thought from
older men, and assume a supercili
ous manner and superior air which
are at once insolent and ludicrous.
This disparagement blunts the nat
ural perceptions. Nothing is so fatal
to any faculty as contempt; no one
will take pains to cultivate what is
lightly esteemed, and wherever this
feeling exists we cannot expect the
sense of the beautiful to develop or
its dominion to expand.
It is from this unjust depreciation
of the elegant that it 1ms come to be
so widely separated from utility.
Nature sets us a very different exam
ple. She does not dress her produc
tions in unattractive costume because
they supply man with food, or give
her rivers a repulsive aspect because
they furnish the means of naviga
tion. In nature the valuable and the
beautiful usually go hand in
hand, and if we do not
always trace their union it is
because our limited experience
has not yet fathomed all her secrets.
We, too, should let them grow to
gether, and both would be enriched
by the contact.
This larger but truer meaning of
beauty is what should prevail. It in-
volves so much that we can never af
ford to sacrifice it. It is as necessary
in age as in youth, in business as in
pleasure, in poverty as in riches. The
truth is that we do not yet know a!!
that is needful to mau. Food, shelter
and clothing do not exhaust
his physical necessties, be they
ever so luxurious. The dis
cipline of the schools will not
satisfy his intellectual wants be it
ever so judicious. The cultivation of
the sterner qualities ot morality will
not suffice for his moral nature, nor
can the ordinary observances ot
society develop his social side. A
beautiful life may or may not include
fill of these, but it must include more. 1
It demands a proportionate exer
cise of every fseu’ty and deve!of ment
of every power.
It will bring taste and harmony to
bear upon the materials of physical
comfort, howtver limited they may
be. It will soften and refine tbeoccu-
pations of life, however bumble they
may be. It will not be content with
power without gentleness, or justice
without generosity, or politeness
without kindliness. Above all, it
will so blend the ideas of utility and
beauty, that nothing will appear
thoroughly useful that leaves the
sense of beauty unsatisfied, nor any
thing perfectly beautiful that sacri
fices any of the useful purposes tor
which it was designed.
KELieiors Sian bb».
t-ro<-«*dins* of Ihe F|»i.
p*l « one# nlioll.
DEATH OF W. C. DEBBT.
A Sfoi-tf mf BefalenUon and sulelde.
■ASSAfHf*EITS POLITICS.
A Letter fro
il-r to the Creen
Boston, October 15.— Gov. Butler
has written a letter accepting the
nomination for Governor ot the >a-
tional Greenback Labor party ol
Massachusetts. The action, he says,
affords him much pleasure as a mark
of appreciation of liife Jabors iu btb&il
of the greenback party and laboring
men. The greenback, be says, has
become absolutely the currency of the
United States in the several dif
ferent burns in which the govern
ment issues its money. Every silver
and gold certificate and every postal
note is essentially a greenback—that
is, paper currency, based on a guar
antee of the nation’s good faith.
True, fur a part of that current gold
and silver is, in my judgment, use
lessly plied up in the vauiU of the
treasury, but it that was taken away
still the note of the United States
will be just as goo-1. I'pon that ques
tion tire green backers have won tbeii
figbt afl-.r a long and severe strug
gle, commencing in obloquy and end
ing in victory. He attempted, he
-ays, in what he wrote to then timers
of the convention of Ihe greenback
party last year, to pay this
compliment, and his and
their enemies took advantage
of the language in which it was
couched to twist it for their nefarious
purposes He trusts he has now made
plain wiiat he meant. The pat ty still
has the higher and nobler mission
before it of establishing relations be
tween labor and capital, which shall
be just and profitable to both of re
straining lawful monopolies, such a.-
the transportation of freight and pas
sengers within the purposes for which
they received the sanction of law.
Organizations under the form of law,
which give any undue advantages by
which the rich are made richer and
the poor poorer, ought to be sternly
dealt with.
A few years ago our currency and
our public debt was such a contri
vance. Let us abolish ail the other
contrivances, such as watering stocks,
bogus mortgages on railroads and
fictitious valuations of property of
incorporated companies, by which
money, without proper equivalent for
it, is taken from one and given to
another. We are not enemies oi
honest capital, we are its true friends
because if capital suffers itself to be
come the opposer of an educated, in
telligent and free people, such op-
poser will be surely swept away, and
who shali say that iu such a case it
ought not to be.
R.sl.e«r.d Bondi,
Special to Enquirer-Sand
Washington, October do.—The
following circular, approved by Sec
retary Folger, was issued by Register
Bruce at the treasury department to
day :
The present regulation of the de
partment requires that if a registered
bond be issued to a coiporatiou or
company, the i ffieial character of the
person executing an assignment
thereof, and the authority of such
person to dispose of the bond or bonds
iu question, should be eltily verified
by a vote cr resolution of the board
of directors of the corporation or com
pany certified under its seal. In all
such cases the copy of the resolution
furnished this department must be
certified by some officer of the corpo
ration, company or institution other
than the one empowered to assign
the bonds.
ii'.rKi t
Special to Enquirer-Sun.]
London, October 20,—A Vienna
dispatch says a violent storm occur
red ou Lake Ladoga aud the Guif of
Finland, causing great loss to life and
shipping. Sixty vessels are stranded.
Sixteen bodies have been recovered.
London, October 20 —The celebra
ted ehatteau belonging to Prince
Czarlouyski at Sieniana, in Austrian
Gailaeia, has been destroyed by fire,
entailing a loss of $600,000.
AI.GERI4.
Algiers, October do.—The report
of the death of ttie Algerian insurgent
chief Sislimau is confirmed. He was
invited to a feast by two other chiefs
Who slew and decapitated him and
sent his head as a present to the sul
tan of Morocco.
sann roj, all
Th« Fxppi ft Ileritlctl Ihitl (lie Epidemic
Rasing; '1 here ft Yellow Fever.
Special to the Enquirer-Sun.l
Washington, October do—Ex
perts sent to Brew ton, Ala , by Sur
geon-Genera! Hamilton of themarine
hospital service to make an investiga
tion of the epidemic at that place,
have reported by telegraph that the
disea-e is yellow lever. Up to yester
day there had been 34 cases and IS
deaths. Dr. Hamilton says this is a
very high rate of mortality. The
population of the town is between 300
and 500, but tiie disease is not spread
ing to any extent. Adjoining towns
have quarantined against Brewton.
Disinfectants from the hospital sup
plies at New Orleans will be sent to
the mayor of Brewton.
Siw itrtim-n -nilcli oir.
Galveston, October do. —a special
to the Sews from Dallas says the
switchmen at the yard of the Texas
Pacific and the Missouri Pacific rail
roads struck last night for an ad
vance in wages from sixty to sixty-
five dollars per mouth. Several
freight trains iu the east yard were
abandoned in consequence of the
strike. Telegrams have been sent to
Fort Worth and Marshall for men,
who, it is thought, will reach Dallas
to day. The strikers are stubborn,
and sav no one else shall switch a ear
until their demands are allowed.
A special to the Sews from Dallas,
says the places of the Texas Pacific
railroad company’s freight handlers
here, who -truck yesterday for an ad*
vs.nee of wages, were easily filled to
day.
« un»frrat<«t Iticliop.
Special to Enquirer-Sun.l
New Y ork, October dO —The con
secration of B;-v. Dr. Henry C Potter
as assistant bishop of the diocese of
New Yoik took place this morning at
Grace church The cereruoneal was
probably the most imposing that has
ever taken place at the consecration
of a bishop of the Protestant Episco
pal church in this country, forty
bishops and over six hundred clergy
men taking part in the services.
CootAu'l Get la.
Special to EuQulrer Sun.l
Toronto, October 20.—The action
brought by Dunn, a colored man,
against the Windsor school board, to
compel that body to admit his daugh
ter to the public central school, has
been decided in favor of the defend
ants. The trustees pleaded that the
girl was refused admission on account
of a want of space.
Killed by a BarsUr.
Special to Enoairer-Sun.]
Wilmington, N. C., October 20.—
A special to the Star from Shelby
says Mr. and Mrs. Win. Logan, both
over seventy years old, were attacked
-L i heir home twelve miles from
Shelby by a negro burglar last night.
Mrs. Logan was killed and her bus-
band choked neariv to death. The
negro escaped with $10 booty.
Stay not until you are told of op
portunities to do good; inquire after
them, i
I Macon was startled Friday morning by
, . 7- ..... . 1 the announcement thrt Mr vV C Der*y, the
Special to Jiq - • 1 bookkeeper of the Telegraph and Messea-
PHILADSLPHIA, 1 A., G, > “ • I ger, had commuted suicide. He drank two
To-day’s session of the Protestant , QUDCtH Q , i SHdsm)m . which prrdaced his
Episcopal-convention opened with > h> Th
e reason* assigned for this rash
morning prayer by Rev Ellison Ga- ac - Lar e thus to:a by Mr J F Hansen to the
pers, of South Carolina, and Rev.
Nelson S. Rulison, D D., of Ohio.
The benediction was pronounced by
Iligtit Rev Bishop Burgess, of the
diocese ot Quincy.
Tbe house of deputies was called to
order by tbe pie3tdeut, Kev. Dr.
Beardsley. A message Horn tbe
house of bishops stated that they bad
concurred iu the message relative to
the appointment of a joint commit
tee ou the duty of tbe church on tbe
sunjeet of marriage, wbicb committee
shall report to tbe bext geueral con
vention.
Mr. Bates, of Delaware,presented a
report of tbe joint commission ou
church iucorpoiations and tbe tenure
of church property, it teferred to the
necessity of uiocesean corporation ca
llable of holding property in
trust. It recommended that the
suoject be presented to the
different dioceses with the request
that they endeavor to obtain as soon
as possible suitable legislation for the
protection of church property. The
committee also suggested me appoint
ment of a permanent board of trustees
in each diocese, and that tbe joint
commission appointed by the geueral
convention be continued. '1 be report
was made tbe special order of the
day lor Monday at 12 o’clock.
'j jjy house ol deputies to-day con-
sidered the reports of the committee
on amendments. Tbe amendment
to article 2d, proposing a reduction in
the number ol deputies from each
diocese, which the committee re
port* d as inexpedient, was first
considered, aud finally rijected,
Atl d the committee was
discharged from consideration of the
subject. Article five was next con
sidered. it provides that no new
diocese shall be formed which shall
contain less loan six parishes, or less
than six presbyters, nor shall such
new diocese be formed if thereby any
existing diocese shali be reduced as to
contain less than twelve parishes or
less than twelve presbyters. The
amendment was to substitute twelve
for six aud twenty-four for twelve.
After discussion, tbe report of tbe
committee was not agreed to.
Rev. Dr. Hail, of Long Island, from
the committee on amendments to
the constitution, to whom had
been referred the message
from the house of bishops on conse
cration for foreign countries, re
ported, recommending that the house
do not concur in the same. Placed
ou the calendar.
Ou motion of Rev. Dr. Huntington,
of Massachusetts, the house took up
the report of the joint committee on
prayer book.
Rev. Dr. Huntington moved the
incorporation of resolution 2S in the
report as follows:
Resolved, That the order of ar
rangement in the prayer book be
changed in such a manner that the
proper anthems aud psalters shall fol
low immediately after tne short office
of prayer for sundry occasions, and
collects, epistles and gospels follow
instead of precede tbe office of holy
communion.
On motion, the house then went
into a committee of the whole, to
consider the resolution, Judge Shef-
fey in tbe chair. It was adopted,and
the committee rose.
The chair appointed the following
persons on the joint committee ou
marriage: Rev. Dr. Dix, New York;
Rev. Dr. Fultcu, Missouri; Rev. Dr.
Franklin, New Jersey; Jasper W.
Gilbert, Long Island, Edward H.
Bennett, Massachusetts; Moses M.
Granger, Southern Ohio.
The following committee was ap
pointed on suggesting a place for hold
ing the next general convention:
Rev. Dr. Battershali, ot Albany, Rev.
Dr. Sansome, of Mississippi, Rev. Dr.
M. McVickor, of Pennsylvania, Hon.
Hamilton Fish, of New York, S.
Corning Judd, of Illinois, Mr, King,
of Long Island,
Adjourned until Monday morning.
A R, murk able oprralioo,
The Paris academy of music has been
considering the remarkable operation
performed by M. Fel zet in the extrac
tion of a spoon from a young man’s
stomach. By the use of 'he Faucher
tube, introduced through tbe mo-ith,
the stomach was first cleaned, thus pre
venting the risk ot peritonitis, and an
incision was then made in th9 epigas
tric region. In order to render the
coat of the stomach easily accessible,
M. Felizat fitted a eperical vessel con
taining ether to the end projecting
from the man's mouth; this he heated
oy immersion in water of 60 c ; the ether
vapor rushing through the tube filled
the stomach, which, becoming distend
ed, was brought forward to the wound
effected by the operators knife. The
spoon, measuring nine inches, was
thus readily found and extracted.
Governor HoDanid'* Order,
Special to enquirer Sctn.1
Atlanta, October 20.—Governor
McDaniel formally announced to-day
that he would direct State
Treasurer Speer to place funds
iu New York to meet the bonds and
interest of the state falling due, and
the treasurer has notified the Fourih
National bank that the money will be
placed there. The trouble grew out
of the refusal of the treasurer to put
the money in New Y’ork at his own
risk.
An EarttiqnnA-e.
Special to the Eaquirer-Sun. J
London, October 20. — Three
shocks of an earthquake of from len
to twelve seconds, in quick succes
sion, were felt at Gibraltar shortly
after midnight, and another at 2
o’clock this morning. The direction
of the movement was from north to
south.
An Important Decision.
Special to Enquirer-Sun.T
Chicago, October 20.—Judge Gary
in the superior court, this morning,
decided that the ordinance by which
the city sought to collect a tax of $1-50
annually from wholesale liquor deal
ers, was void because it partook of
the nature of a tax which the city
had no right to impose.
Sew Telegraph and Cable Company.
Special to Enquirer-Sun. |
New Y'ork, Oct. 20.—The Postal
Telegraph and Cable Company was
incorporated yesterday. Lines are to
be extended throughout the United
States, Canada and Mexico and from
Greeuport, L. I., to London, Liver
pool and Paris.
The World's Expoiliit-n.
Special to Enquirer-Sun.]
New Orleans, October 20.—Di
rect er-General Burk has issued the
prospectus and general announce
ment of the World’s Industrial and
Cotton Centennial Exposition,
Convicted of Harder.
Special to Enquirer-Sun. 1
New Orleans, October 20.—A.
L. Cassette, colored, who shot and
killed Officer Caffey, April last, was
convicted yesterday of murder, with
capital punishment.
Uansfd,
Special to Enquirer-Sun.l
Galveston, October 20.—James
Stanley, colored, was haDged yester
day at Columbus for the murder of
R ibert Strickland in November, 18S2.
Suicide.
Special to Enquirer-SuD.1
New York, Oct. 20 —Henry W.
Gwynner, president of the Hoole
manufacturing company, and at one
time loreman of the Courier of
Charleston, S. C., committed suicide
in his office yesterday.
Appointed Postmaster.
Washington, October 20.—The
president to-day appointed William
McCary postmaster at Natchez.
Useless Fright.
To worry about any Liver, Kidney or
Urinary Trouble, especially Bright’s
Disease or Diabetes, as Hop Bitters
never fails of a cure where a cure is
possible. We know this.
pel# d*wlw i
Macon correapor dant of the Constitution:
“When I toofc the management of the
Telegraph and Messenger Mr Derry was
bookkeeper, and was regarded as thoroughly
henest until ab> ut tbe iast of November,
1882. He wrote me a letter that he was
short about a thousand dollars in his ca 6 h
I was thunder-:tru2k at his confession. On
account ot his family, as well as his old age,
decided not to expose him, and paid np
the amount of his defalcation. His
son, Professor Joseph Derry, gave me
bs notes covering the an ount. I never
uttered an angry word to him in reference
to the matter, aud was surprised beyond
expression when his real character became
known to me. I rgreed to let him remain
in ois position lor a time, in erder that he
might look lor some otner situation. I
noticed a few weeks back that he grew rest-
iGsss and re-wus whenever I went about
his desk, aod looked in his books. His
manner changed whenever I did this. I
told my brother, H C Hanlon, wno Is in
cnarge ol the business office, that we must
get rid of him. He left the i ffice Oc-ober 4.
We found that there were discrepancies
In all our important accounts. I
went to see him—have heard that he was
sick. On Wednesday night of this week I
heard that he had been upon the streets
i hat day. I went to his house and told him
what had been developed at the office, say*
Ing that while I did not propose to under
take to force or bully him to do so. that I
wanted a truthful statement of the /acts in
connection with some iiem3 [proposed to
submit to hiai.and that in view of what
had transpired last year, I was not in a
mood to be trifled with.
“He owned he had continued without in
terruption to appropriate money from the
office, and said that he would furnish me a
statement from memoranda he had or the
am uni* This he promised to bring to the
< ffice yeslerday at 5 p m. Calling at about
6:30, and finding that he had not brought
tbe promised statement, I wrote him a note
calling his attention to the fact, ard sug
gested that this malter was ol sufficient
importance to him to warrant fcis inline
dlate attention. The bearer ol this note
reported, ou his return, that it was
delivered to Professor Joseph Derry
who informed him that his laiher was un
conscious. 1 ills morning I received a sealed
letter from him ai d a statement inclosed.
The slctement has a number cf memoran
dums of amounts and loots cpS8 3 and In
hia letter he refer* to this as s atrment
promised, which I understand, to be ihe
amount of his shortage since I paid him
out cf his ft‘S', scrape.”
Mfcjor Hanson further si*d that no one
conjd have bsen more astonished at the
feels of the case than oe was, aud that he
would, notwitbs’anding the severity of the
charge, have been as lenient as possible with
him.
Mr Derry has been a citizen of Macon a
number ol years, and wr s regarded as an
exemplary man, having been identified
with ihe church aDd its matters. He was
the father of st James church of Augusta,
and organized iis Sunday school. It is said
of b in that he never refused a church do
nation or ever turned a person from his
door. His manner of living was not oi an
extravagant nature, nor were his habits of
a questionable thought. He had lived a
li'e of comfort and ease, but could not ac*-
count fo r his discrepancies. H*>, rather than
foce the ignominy of the crime, ci mmltted
self-destruction, and »laced hiniself before
the bar of God, where he will answer to
that higher tribunal Hi ; body was taken
to Augusta this evening.
FIRE AL1B1I.
I have been a severe s -fierer a long time
with kidney troubles, causing severe pains
in back and sides; and Pom the recom'
mendation of the Chief of Fire Department,
Mr Ira Wood, formerly of Syracuse, who
had used H ant's Remedy with wonderful
success, I commenced using it, and found
speedy relief in a short time, and it has
completely cured me ol the pains in the
back. I have recommended it to others in
tbe department, that have used it with
great succefs a_id I do not hesitate to re
commend It to any one troubled with kid
ney, liver or bladder troubles,
H, Kirkland,
Sup’t Fire Alarm, 8yj acuse, N Y,
June 12,1S33.
FIREMEN'S TROUBLE.
1 have been troubled a long time with
kidney weak less, a great proportion of the
time with severe piles In the back, Hav*
ing heard Hunt’s Remedy recommend
ed very highly for troubles of the kidney
and urinary organs by Ira Wood, ex-chie*
of the fire dej artment of Syracuse, he hav
ing been cured of a severe case of kidney
disease lately by the uEecf Hunt’s Remedy,
I purchased a bottle and used it, ai d have
not been troubled any since; and I know of
many others here in Syracuse that have
used it and recommend it as a great medi
um for the kidneys, and I do not hesitate
to say that it Is a remarkable medicine.
Jacob Wolfrom,
Member of Syracuse Fire Department-
Syrucase, N Y, Jane 11,1883.
N. Y CEXTR *L A II. R. B. R.
For a long lime I have been troubled with
a weakness of kidneys and bladder, and
have been growing worse so steadily that I
was obliged to give up my place at the sta*»
tion, as the heavy work was too much of a
strai n on my kidneys. I have been treated
by tne doctors and have never had only a
temporary re ief and have used many other
medicines aud obtained no benefit from
them, until some time age one of our drug
gists here in Syracuse persuaded me to try
Hunt’s Remedy, as many had used it with
gie.*t success in the cure of kidney, liver
and bladder troubles. I commenced using
it, and found that it helped me, and have
used a small battle, and it has done me
more good than ail the other treatments I
received. P H Palmer,
Late Baggage Master NYC&HRRR.
Syracuse, N Y, June 11,1883.
sepl d&wly
LIST OF LETTERS.
List of unclaimed letters remaining in
Columbus (Ga.) postoffice for the week end
ing Oct. 21,‘1883. If not called for within
thirty days will be sent to the Dead Letter
Office:
King mrs Doll’e
Lereucer mrs Peggie
Leonard mrs H C
Lewis H
Lockhart mrs A
Little A R
Luckle miss E
McGee John
McLeDdoi J
Hill miss M
Mammenck mrs A G
Matthews T
Martin mrs A C
Matthews R
May J col
Mason mrs M A
Miller miss M
Milliner S
Miller W
MiiierT B
Miller miss MM
Marion J W
Mitchell John
Mitchell mrs M
McCarty mrs N
McKay miss A
McKenley W P
McCullough E
Nelson miss B
Oaks miss A
O’Brien H
Odams mrs T
O’Pry H
Owen C J
Anderson G
Adams H .S
Benefield miss L
Bates mrs J
Bell miss M
Berry J F
Bennett J
BowliDg Mary col
Blakely mrs L B
Bloosaw miss J
Boxlam J
Bostick J W
Br yd miss F
Bowers S T 2
Booth mrs N
Brayton mr —
Brook miss M
Bradley Estella
Broadnex mrs M
Brannon J
Buck E A
Bull mrs L
Butts C col
Conrughers A
Cary miss M
earner8 M
Crolid miss L
Carey miss N
Clark miS6 L
Cline miss M
Coleman F
Colbert S
Coli ins J
Cook mrs A col
Davidson mrs J
Davenport G
Danes mbs I
Davis miss A
Devale W
Derricote W M
Du. ger W
Daboos D* 1 W L
Edmonds J A
Edards A F
Eheckin A M
Field mrs L
Fleweilen miss A
Ford miss A
Freeman miss M
Gipson C
Gardner M
Garlick mrs M S
Gnidles T
Giibert C W
GileB
Gilmer miss E
Glass E R
Godfrey A P
Gordon J A
Griffin H
Griffin J D
Grimett miss M
Green J
Green W
Howard mrs n col
Hoover mrs N
Hope Wm
HarPT
Haves R foreign 2
Hames N W
Harvey G
Hurt miss C
Hunt miss F
Harless missS E 2
Harris miss M
Jackson miss Lizzie White miss M
Jackson missG E Whittlesey G
Jackson miss Cally Williams S
Parker miss S
Patterson D B
Pittman mis^ C
Pittman mics C
Pearce miss J
Peters mt«?s D
Phillips R L
Phillips I H
Phillips A J
Pickett mrs s
Powell J T
Pickett Geo D
Prida miss F M .
Rosenrans miss M
Rodgers Mcol
Rseu A col
Raadmhs A
Read G
R3lford H
Robson ra^sS col
Seward 8 col
Schefler W G
Schafler W G
Scott Y R
Searcy A
Smith Smith
Smith miss A
S evens H
Stewart P C
Stoveall H col
Tapscott A D
Tilton W P
ThorntonlJ H
Thomas mrs M
Thomas miss E
Wooiey B M
Walton G
Washington miss M
Wardlaw Rev F H
West mrs Nancy
Wheeler mrsT
a Tie Oust
AND
LOW PfiKE OF COTTON
Will have their it fluence in producing
the usual amount of bile in the liver of
those in the trade who failed to buy
when goods were iow and bargains
plenty ; hence we account for the milk
in the oocoanut This shall not deter
us, however, from offering our usual
quota of bargains for the coming week
aDd it the prices cannot be dnplicated
by some of our neighbors, it is not onr
fault; we are doing business to please
tbe public.
Another shipment cf cur 100 LA
DIES’ and MISSES’ Imported Jer
seys and Walking Jackets at $2, $4, $5
and up.
150 Pieces JEANS, CASSIMERES
and CLOTHS at panic prices. Oar
BLANKETS, FLANNELS, BALMO
RALS and Woolens were bought when
wool was cheaper, consequently we
can give full value in all of this class of
goods.
You should see our ?o 00 10-4 B ank-
ets, the best goods ever sold for $6 :0
Iu Dress Goods we are cfleriug some
notable Bargains, among them three
numbers of Guimot’s Oil-boiled Black
Silks at §1 50, $2 00, $2 25, in which bet
ter value was never given. In Black
and Colored CASHMERES we keep
only Lupin’s straight gc ois, no redyes
or broken twills, but good value, and
known for their excellence the world
over.
50 Dczen CHILDREN’S BROWN
MIXED SCHOOL HOSE only 15c, all
sizes just received. On each day this
week every cash purchaser to the
amount of $1 or over will be presented
with one of J. English & Co’s Needle
Baoks, for which we are the sole agent,
and have entire control in this section,
As usual, bring your cash.
JAS. E. CARGILL.
MARKET REPORrS.
By Tclesraph to Enquirer-Sun.
t or TON.
TOTAL VISIBLE SUPPLY.
Special to Enquirer-sun.]
New York, Oct. 20.—The total visible
supply of cotton for world is 1,944,921, of
which 1,423,321 is American, against 1.7C2,178
and 1,057.878 respectively last year. Re
ceipts cotton at all interior towns for week
158,539. Receipts from plantations, 295,331
bales. Crop in sight 1,174,190.
Livejjfovl,. October 29—noon—LOttoc
dull; uplands at 5 15-16d; Orleans 61-161;
sales 7,000 bales; and for speculation export
1,C00 bales.
Receipts 15,900-American 12,330.
Futures opened steady; uplands, low
middling clause, with the following
delivery:
October...... 5 S5-641
October and November.........5 55-64J
November and December.—5 53-0425 51 64J
December and January- 5 53-04d
January and February 5 53-64@5 56-64d
February and March 5 53-61d
March and April 5 61'64@5 62 64d
1:30 p. m.—Sales ol the day Included 4.850
bales ol American.
col
Jacob F M
Jenkins mrs Julia
Johnsou R H
Jordan miss Idea
Johnson miss D
Jones mrs Y W
Jones mrs Susie
Joues mrs D
Jones mrs Winnie
Jones mrs C col
Jones mrs C J
Williams <fe Co
Williams mrs M
Williams mi*8 C
Williams miss S
W’illiams D ccl
W r illlam8 miss D
W'iggins m:6 E
W’ilson T
Wemerly D col
W r inters J
Walker L col
Waish John
When calling for these letters, please say
they are “advertised,” giving date.
THAD. C. ttTUBGIS, P M.
jl vAun.:
To all who are suffering from the er
rors and indiscretions of youth, nerv
ous weakness, early decay, loss of
manhood, Ac., I will send a recipe that
will cure you, free of charge. This
great remedy was discovered by a
missionary in South America. Send a
self-addressed envelope to the Rev-
Jo6eph T. Inman, Station D, New
York City, cciS eocUwly,
*1:3) p m—Cotton future* closed steady—
uplands, iow middling clause, with tne fol
lowing delivery:
Oatober 5 57-64d
November and Decemoer...5 55-64J
December and January 5 55'fc4d
January and February 5 56-64^5 57-64d
March afad April....... ^..-5 6 -631
April and May........ 6 t2-64d
May and June.. -.6 01*61(^6 05-64d
New York. October 20—Evening-Ool'on
du'l; sales 475 bales; uplands at 10 9 16c,
Orleans 10 13 16c.
Consolidated net receiptp 35 6J9 bates,
exports to Great Britain 2,145; to conti
nent 12,451.
New York, Oct. 20—Evening.—Net re
celpts 236 bales. Futures closed steadj;
sales 80,000 bales, as follows:
October „....J0 46-lOf@10 47-100
November ~..10 47100
December...- 10 55-100^;l0 56*100
January 10 69-100
February —...10 84-100@10 S5-1C0
March - 10 98-100@ilO 99-100
April 1109 100# 11 10-100
May 11 21-100 * 11 22 10.
June 11 32-lCC@ll 33 M
July 11 42-10C@ll 44-100
August dl 50.100@11 52-100
The Post's cotton ariicle says: The
market otened th‘s morning for future de
liveries two ;o three points above the
clos’ng pric 8 yesterday. At the first call
Novemoer delivery sold 10 49 lOGtsfiO 50-lQj
($10 51-100: December, 10 6J-100; January,
10 75‘100$ 10 76 ICO; February, 10 91-100©
10 92-110; March. 11 C6-100; April, 11 18100;
May, 11 28-100311 29*100. April first c»l],
and up to 11:30 a m. prices raneed as lots
lows: October 10 53-10)@10 51-100; Novem
ber. 10 49f-!00310 50 1G0@10 48-lu0; December,
10 60d00t£10 59-106; January. 10 75-10C(iiiU
78-100(310 74-100© 10 76-100 © 10 74-100: Feb-
ru^ry, 10 9i-10o©10 92-100©10 fc9-10C©i0 91-100
©10 89-100; March, 11 Oo-lOO © 11 05-110.311
07-100© 1L 03-100©U 01-100; April, 11 17-100©
11 18-)Uu@ll 16-100: May, 11 29-100©ll 28-100
@11 3’)-100@ll 27-100. Futures were freely
offered and although selling fi r st av an ad
vance of 2-1 K). prices deciintd 4-l( w )©7-100
from the highest point and clo ed steady,
November, December and Jauusry to 4-100,
tne balance 5-100 lower than yesterday.
feAVANNAi?, October 29—Cotton easy,
middlings a. 10c, iow lnicdlings at 9%c;
good ordinary 9*4c: net receipt.* 6.135
sales 2,2f.0j stock yi,C07; exports to conti
nent 7,231.
New Orleans. Oct. 20—Cotton market
quiet; middlings 10 5*16c. low mlddlEg-,
1'^c, good ordinary 9%c; net receipt?
8,661; salep 3,000; stock 169,20J; exports to con
tinent, 5,220.
PRODUCE AMD PROVISIONS.
Louis Till*.
Louisville. October 20-Flour unchang
ed; extra lamiiy 4 00; A Nol 4 00©4 50,
high trades 6k5©6 75. Wheat market
dull; No. 2 red winte) 100. Corn market
steady; No 2 mixed 52c: No 2 white 53c,
Oats steady; mixed western 30c. Pro
visions 6teady; new mess pork 12 00. Bulk
meat*—shoulders 5 25; clear rib 6 90, clear
sides, 7 25. Bacon—shoulders 5 75, clear ribs
7 25. clear sides 7 75. Sugar-curt d hams 16.
Lard—choice kettie 11c. Whisky steady,
unchanged at 113.
New Orleans.
New Orleans, October 20.—Coffee
market good demand, steady; Rio cargoes,
commou to prime 10^@1:%.
Sugar market in good demand:
8 lor yellow clarified, f° r white
clarified; 7% ter kettie, 71* lor centrifugal.
Molasses in good demand; gcol fair 50,
strictly prime 52@55, choice o<, centrifugal
Rice steady; Louisiana, ordinary to
choice, 4^©5^c.
Cotton seed oil—crude 35©36a, refined
surnmtj yellow 4l,§42c.
KAVAL STORES Et«..
Savannah, October 20.—Rosin market
quiet; strained and good strained 120©
140: sales 600 barrels. Turpentine market
quiet; regulars 35]^c. Sales 140 barrels.
New York, October 29 —Rosin market
dull, weak; 150. Turpentine market
dnil at 39^(§39^c.
New Y’ork, October 20.—Wool marker
6»e*dy, moderately active; donaestlcfleece 30
te 43c Texat- 14@27.
Hide market steady aud unchanged;
wet 6adeo New Orleans and Texas select
ed of 50 to 60 pounds 9@10.
New York, October 20 —Freights to
Liverpool firm; cotton per steamer l-64d,
Wheat per steamer 4@5d.
EL "W- BLAIT,
R epairer and tuner of pianos
Organs andAccoraeons.
Sign Fainting also done
Orders may beleft.at J. W. Pease ■ Book
SPRINGER OPERA HOUSE.
GEO. J. BURRUS, - • ■ Manager.
One NIsHt Onlyi
Thursday, October 25.
America’^ Favorite Comedian,
C.B. BISHOP
Supported by the charming actress,
MISS EMMA PIERCE,
And a specially selected Comedy Company,
will appear in A C Gnntber’fl Melo-
Drama Comedy,
Strictly Business.
Phineas Poirery PhUkins...C B Bishop.
Prices as usual. Reserved seats without
extra charge at Chsffln’g.oc214t
For Mayor.
I ANNOUNCE myself «8 a candidate for
re-election to the (ffice of Mayor at.*he
eDsnlng municipal election. Saturday, De
cember Sth, 1683, and most respectfully
solicit the support of the citizens of Colum
bus. (oc21 Id) CI IFF B GRIMES.
For Marshal.
I ANNOUNCE myself as a candidate for
Marshal at the coming municipal elec
tion in December. “Don’t forget to regis
ter.” [oc21 td] R W LED3INGER.
For Marshal.
I RESPECTFULLY’ announce myself a
candidate for Marshal at the municipal
election December 8th,
oc21 td TIFF T MOORE,
For Marshal
I AM a candidate for Marshal at the Mu
nicipal Election in Dtcember, and ask
the support ol the citizens of CoiDmbus.
oc!4 td JOHN H PALMER.
For City Marshal.
[ HEREBY announce myself as a candi
date lor re-election to the office of City
Marshal at the election to be held on the
se ond Saturday in December next.
ocl6 id JOHN W BOWEN.
For City Marshal.
I BESPECTFOLLY announce myself a
candidate for Marshal at the election in
Decemoer, and earnestly solicit the sup
port ol my friends and the vot^s of the
Cl»y. CHARLES H. MARKHAM.
oc:6 td
For Marshal.
I RESPECTFULLY announce myself a
candidate for thr cffice of City Marshal
ut the incoming municipal election, and
solicit the support ol the cltiS9ns. I pledge
myself to do my duty if elected.
oc!7 td THOMAS GRIER.
CtSH HOUSE,
69 B30AD STREET,
IS THE PLACE TO GET
ft Best Tains for Yrnlnej.
JVVERY CUSTOMER ON THE SAME
footing. Wonderful advantages over the
long credit system. Pay as you go the best
plan. Ourslockof
FAIL AND WINTER
DRY GOODS
The largest and cheapest yet. We offer a
magnificent stock ot GENTS' FURNISH-
ING GOODS. SHIRTS! SHIRTS’!
SHIRTS!!! Best anlaundrled Shirt made
at $1 09, worth SI 25 aDywheie. LINEN
COLLARS at 12}$o, LINEN COLLARS at
15c, LINEN CUFFS at 25o, LINEN CUFFS
at 35c and 50c. The largeBt, handsomest and
cheapest stcck o! SILK TIES and SCARFS
in the city. CLOTH GLOVES, DOGSKIN
GLOVES, KID GLOVES, MERINO UN
DERSHIRTS at 35c, 50o, 75c, SI 00 and np-
wards; Scarlet Flannel Shirts and Drawers,
DRILL DRAWERS, COTTON and FLAN
NEL DRAWERS; Linen Handkerchief,
Silk Handkerchief; Men’s and Boya’
HATS, latest styles.
Ladies’ Walking Jackets and
Paletots.
As large and fine a stock i
Prices all right.
3 can be found.
Millinery I Millinery!
We sell only first-cass Gocds. No “Job”
Jots of MliJinery in onr stock. Onr styles
the latest; onr prices Just half. We are
willing to work on small margins.
MERINO UNDERWEAR for Ladies,
Misses, Boys and Infants,
Blankets, Sliawis and Boule
vard Skirts.
RIBBONS—Gros Grains, Satins and Otto
mans, in all the newest shades.
VELVET BIBB0N8, b’ack and colored,
of popular prices,
MOUSQ,UETAIRE KID GLOVES In
blacks, tans, dark street shades and operas,
a! SI 50 per pair, worth $2 09-
CLOTH GLOVES in all qualities.
FINE DRESS GOODS.
SILKS, SATINS, VELVETS, CASH
MERES, PLUSHES.
Full etocka of Domestics always on hand.
JEANS! JEANS! JEANS. In these
goods we have no competition.
Our SPOT CASH PRICES
Insure sales in every department. Go
to Headquarters when you want to buy
Dry Goods.
ALLEN BEU1BERS.
69 BROAD STREET.
eod&wif
CITY'DRUG STORE J. S. J
GEO. 1. BRADFORD, Manager. ELI M. WHEAT, Assistant
W E
E SOLICIT THE PATRONAGE OF THE PUBLIC. OUR STOCK 18 FRESH
and clean, and includes everything usually kept in a Firat-clas* Drug Store. All
the leading Patent Medicines and Preparations. We make a specialty of
iwuuuvij,
ADd respectfully invite the attention of the ladies to onr selections.
Physicians’ Prescriptions Accurately and Care folly Compounded.
oc20 d3m
C. O. D.
We desire to call the attention of the Ladies
to tht3 elegant assortment of
Silks and Velvets
That we now have on exhibitior, among them a beautiful line of the celebrated
RADZTMIB SILKS
Id Black and Colors, which we are offering at prices really much lower than the
same goods are bringing in New York. We have to combine with these goods
a full line o! PLAIN and BROCADE VELY’ETS in colors to match exact.
Without particularizing, we desire to say that W6 have brought out as fine
and as complete a
stock in every department as can be found in the state, and we are prepared to
match prices with anybody and everybody. Plainly, we guaiantee what we
sell to be as good as can be obtained for an equal amount of money in every
case, and in seventy five case3 out of one hundred we will give more for the
same money than can be obtained in C-oiumbus. If a customer should by any
possibility pay us more for any article than tbe same thing could be purchased
for at another store (a very improbable thing, however), we will promptly pay
the difference, if onr attention is called to it on the day of purchase.
NO NONSENSE ! NO SECOND PRICE!
But everything marked in plain figures. Every man, woman and child, rich
and poor alike, can buy the goods at the marked price—no more and no lees.
$3,000 Worth of Jerrejs, Cloaks and Wraps
for Ladies, at prices way under the market Don’t think of buying until
you see what we can do for you.
GENTLEMEN, READ THIS:
We carry a larger stock of GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS that any three
houses in Columbus, and sell them twenty per cent cheaper, because we sell for
spot cash.
We carry a stock of LADIES’ and GENTS’ HANDKERCHIEFS combined,
of over one thousand dollars. How is that for Columbus ?
We sell three thousand dollars worth of DRESS SHIRTS per annum, prin.
cipally the celebrated Elghaaie Shirt.
Our stock of MEN’S HOSIERY and UNDERWEAR is a big department.
Come and see it.
TERaia spot cash.
BLANCHARD & BOOTH,
.123 Broad Street,
Insure Your Gin Houses
THE OLD HELIA.BLE
D. F. WILLCOX’S MICE ACENCY.
FsIr.RateslOnly, Prompt^Settlements,'
—and—
610,000,000.00 to Bnclx tlio Policies
sep8 d<*wtf
REDD & WALKER,
Real Estate Agents.
In Order to Procure
FOR SALE.
A five (5) room House in Wynnton, with
six (6) acres of land, in good neighborhood
and well improved. Terms easy.
Thirty-two Lots on the Gonby place.
Cali and get diagram. Cheap,
A small Farm in Wynnton, with either 6
or ‘20 acres land, 5 room Dwelling and all
necessary out-bulldlngs.
Farm in Russell county, Ala. 160 acres
land, well Improved, with fine orchard and
truck farm.
Farm in Russell county, Ala., containing
3S0 acres land.
FOR RENT.
Residence of Mrs J J Bradford, on Broad
street, newly painted: splendid repair.
Possession given Immediately.
A very desirable place in Wynnton—five*
room House, with bath room and other
conveniences; also from one to ten acres of
land.
The Sammls House, on Front street.
Splendid place for a boarding house.
HFDD A WALKER.
It’s necesspiy to go to the correct place.
Our House is stocked with seasonable
CLOTHING
‘Anything; In the shape of
Men’s. Youths’, Boys’ and
Children’s Wear you will
find at our establishment.
We have an endless variety
of Heavy and Medium
Weis;ht Overcoats at all
prices.
Don’t fall to see our line
of Children’s Caps and
Hats. We have 40 styles
and all shades. The as
sortment is superb and
prices very low.
H.J. I
W. L. BULLARD,
Surgeon & Physician, 1
COLUMBUS,JGA.
Kidx'ey, Bladder, Urethral, .Womb,
and Kectai. Diseases.
el9 u
F. J. Dudley,
ARCHITECT ARD BUILDER.
columbus,:georgia.
ad bids furnish
r General Passenger D
feundaf Lasti
GOLD SEEKERS FRIEN
F
r *T C 8raWn>. other method in the _ wi _
*_ CFtriul* vy'wiaji WV'l^G'uauiafcii.wft
!«8
Jay mail t
READY CAS
PAINT! PAINT! PAINT!
F OR Palatine of sll kinds see FLOUR
NOY, the Painter. Sign and Decora
tion a specialty. Orders leit at Dr. Hood’s
Drag Store will receive prompt attention.
G W FLOURNOY, Painter.
oc!4 seA’.htlal
per day at home. Samples worth
So free. Address feTiNaoN A Co.,
Portland, Maine. dawU
$3 to
Southern Clothier
And Merchant Tailor.
d&wtf
Plantation ior Sale.
P LANTATION of 333 acres 100 cleared,
wimln three miles of Columbus, Lee
county, A>a., cne-qnarter of a mile from
water works. Prospective value enhanced
by same. Excellent well of water. Very
desirable for a summer home, Market gar
den, dairy and titles perfect. Known as B
M Smith place. Sold for a division among
the heirs of urlena J Smith.
B M SMITH,
ly29ae*th 4m For the Heirs.
DR. BLANCHARD.
OFFIUE over Abbott & Cooper’s, Corner
Broad and 8u Clair streets.
RESIDENCE corner Oglethorpe and 3t.
Clair street.. anna lv
BRUOE & MORGAN,
JXR caXTECTS,
ATLANTA, - - - « GEORGIA,
Will prepare plans for first-class Resi
dences, if deelrea. Refer to W. L. Clark, J,
W. Wooliolk, J, S, Garret, Boole Redd.
mhl
GIN HOUSES
XNSURBX>
BY
&
OFFICE!:
Next to Telegraph Office and atiEagle
and Phenlx Mfg. Co.
Lowest Current Rates.
ansr31 sewed Atrily
Assignee's Sale of Books
and Accounts*
O N Tuesday, 23d instant, at eleven o’clock a. m
we vill sell at public outcry, to the highest bid
der. for cash, at the Auction House of T M Foley
the Note-.Books of Accounts, and all other evidence*
of debt of th* late firm of Liefrank 4 Slade. Sale made
under deed of assignment, July 4, 1383, for benefit of
creditor* of said firm. Parties desiring information
can call at law office ef Goethiu* & Chappell,
HENRY r goetchic i.
*17*4
COLUMBUS, CA,
I have culled from my well assorted
Hosiery Stock a lot of
Misses’ Hose,
Worth 50c to 75c a pair, which will be
put on the Bargain Counter at the uni-
foi m price of 35e, an extraordinary bar
gain. Will offer good value in I.adicn
and Men's Hosiery in all grades.
Gloats M Jackets.
We have opened an elegant line of
Cloaks, Jackets, Dolmans and New
markets, and can show them at all
prices
FROM $2.00 TO $50 00 EACH.
Parties wanting elegant Wraps can
be suited with ease, both in style and
price.
We had a big run on Dress Goods
and Silks the past week, and will offer
unusual attractions the present week.
plasms a.\d blaakets.
In this department we have never
been so well stocked, and are having
substantial endorsement from our cus
tomers in large sales.
We want everybody to see our as
sortment in the above; have no trou
ble to sell them whenever we show
them. We carry elegant imported Css-
simeres and a larg6 line of Boys’ Csss:
meres, Waterproofs and Sackings.
CORSETS,
Come in and see onr Corsets at 50-,
75c and fl 00. They are special value.
We carry full lines at ?1 25, fl 50, t- 00
and ?3 00, among which may be found
some beauties.
Merino Underwear!
Our lines are complete in Ladies'.
Men’s, Boys’ and Misses’, and »a
make low prices on them.
Damaged Kid Gloves.
We offer regardless of cost, and are
very desirous of clearing np the lot.
We have full lines of New Kids aud
Fieece-lined and Cashmere Mousque-
taires in all new shades,
J. S. JONES.
MOT & 50R3IA3,
Real Estate Agents,
PROVISION.
Stock and Bond Brokers.
FOR SALE.
Splendid Building Lot on Oglethorpe
street, east side, Just above Presbyterian
cburch. Lot is level, well shaded, ana one
of the most desirable vacant lots in the city.
Six-room Residence, on corner north cl
Mr Eibert Wells. Has outnouses, large
stable, Ac. Good neighborhood, and ;sci»
tered cheap.
Fonri-room Residence on west side nppei
Jackson street, opposite Mr. A. Iilges’ res •
dence— two room Kitchen, Stable and C«>w
House. Full % acre lot.
The elegant Residence of Mr. Henry L.
Woodrufl, on Crawford street, containing
five large rooms, two spacious halls, batn
room, 6tore rooms, kltcnen and ciosets, ser
vant's house in the yard, cistern witn ca
pacity ol 14,000 gallons, stable and cc*
house. Full % acre lot. This properly :s
comparatively new and recently painted
throughout.
The four-room Residence of Mr. William
Snider, on Early street. This place con
tains also a two room kitchen with bnc£
cellar, stable, and good well of water, ibis
is a well improved and cheap home.
An eight-room Residence on soutn
street.
10 Shares Columbus Manfg. Co. stock.
SO Shares Coiumbns Gas Lo Siock.
10 Shares Merchants and Mechanics t-s l i
Stock.
CHEAP HOMES.
Building Lots on Rose Hill,desirable lots,
well located, prices rrom §25 to 175 each.
700 Acres of improved Land in Russed
county, Ala., 15 miles west oi Columbus.
This is the finest Stock Farm in that state.
Price 82,000—% cash, balance m I, 2 and j
years, without Interest.
Four desirable Building Lots In North
ern Liberties.
FOR RENT.
Three-room Dwelling on corner rppo>.; *
residence ol Dr N J Bussey; has kiULru.
stable, Ac.
Apply to JOHNSTON A NORMAN.
141 BroadSireeL
mylO se.tnathly
John blackmar. i cj edge,
Real Estate Agents.
FOR RENT.
5 Rooms w©at side Oglethorpe, betwee-
Bryan and Franxlm.
5 44 east side Troup, south Tfaoma.-.
4 44 southwest cor Oglethorpe h: Ft
8 44 west side Forsyth, south K“.u-
oolph.
4 “ west side McIntosh, north H.%
dolph street-
STORE 3. ■
8tore«» Nos, 14,16 and 62 Broad St.
No. 143 Broad sireet, formerly occupied
W L Tillman.
8outh side of St. Clair, east of Teieg'
office.
Apply to BLACKMAR A EDGE,
Real Estate A ge
se.wedAfr Next to Telegraph Cfli ^
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE
T. M. FOLEY, Auctioneer.
A GREEABLY' to an order lrom ihe 1
of Ordinary of Muscogee county. G >
will sell at public outcry, to th** big
bidder, on the first Tuesday in N'ovr:
next, at Hlrsch’s corner, ail the reai
personal property belonging to ti e
MrsEllzabetn Robertson,deceasfd, c :
lug of a Dwelling House and Lot lou.-':
the Northern Liberties, north ol an
Joining the Wm. Snow place. The House
new and contains four room-, a h
front and back porch, vith a good wr
water on tte premises. The lot fr-.
Jackson street, on the :east side. 37 t
inches, running back 147 feet 10 lLche.-.
At the same time and place wi.i ti
the householu and kitchen furniture
longing to the said estate.
Terms cash. J. F. CLEGG,
Adm’r Elizabeth Roberuc:..
oc2 dim
WashiimtoH & Lee Unmrsi .
LEXINGTON, VA.
I NSTRUCTION in the usual acad*-:
studies and in tbe professional schi >
LJkW and ENGINEERING. Loca’.
healthful; expenses moderate. N»s: --
sion opens Sept, 20. For Catalogue add:
“Clerk of the Faculty.”
Iyl9 dAw2m Q. W. C. LEF,. Pje-
a week in your own town. Ter
w w and ontfit tree. Address FL Ha -
Lo..ParUkna. Mains, ]»6 dtfwxiy
$66