Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, June 09, 1886, Image 4

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DAILY ENQI'MEK • SI N: COU'MBl'S. GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE !), 1886. ESTABLISHED IN 1828. 58 YEARS OLD. Daily, Weekly mid Slimin' Thi' KNCjeiRKIGHIlN Is lssiii'il every clay, n rept Monday. The Weekly in issued on Monti,i The Daily (Jiioludiutf Sninlayl is cl, ’'vace.i by i ,u rieis in Uie elty or ninUad, jioelaffe free, to suit serihers for Toe, per month, AO.‘HI for three months, Al.oo for six months, or lji,.(HI a year The Sunday is cleliveead by carrier hoys in the city or mailed to subscribers, po-teye free at is I.till a year. The Weekly is issued on Monday, and is made tl to subserihers, postage free, at If,1.10 a year. Transient advertisements will be taken for the Daily at $1 per square of 10 lines or less for the first insertion, and 50 cents for each subsequent insertion, and for the Weekly at ?1 for each in- ,\ 11 communications intended to promote the private ends or interests of corporations, sooiet ies i r individuals will lie charged as advertisements. Special tracts made lor advertising by the year. Obituaries will be charged for at customary tales. None lint sniid metal cuts used. • Ail communications should lie aridressed to the proprietor of the I'Inquirur-Hun. Now t lint the c< ill vent' < trt Inis Iumui Pill Its I, jail it ies in the li hi fill ft i;i”fL'S.sitina I district will Witrni U|> a lillle. | Tun .Malinina stale mu volition will as staiilile in Miintooimu v to-day. If il tines in it liing else it will end the s]ioen- latinn as (o I tow the vote sin lids on the lirst ballot. No ttNii believes that .Mr. Blaine is I>rnni|itei! lty a gooil motive in offering to dianipirm the New Kngland fislter- hit'ii. Blaine is so thuroiighly selfish that he is never found engaged in anything thill is not to his personal henelit. Now that .)<■)■ 11 Kelly is no inure, t In* repnhlieans of New York are figuring with a view of rapturing the nmninpal eleeiion ill the met ropoiitun eit On'v iiotorinns neglect of duly on the part of democrats will make republican suitress possible. It now turns not that the report of the sodden death id' ltev. I Bury Ward Bi erher, anise from a telegi'inn announc ing that “Blcceker strike is dead." After giving various reasons to show that he Wits still alive, lie proceeded lo denounce the tie np with all the energy at his com inand. He goes to Kurope soon. When gentlemen in any political rapacity endeavor to impress upon the public mint! that they have no personal uteres.s to serve, it will at least lie well to watch them. Kspecinlly will they hear watching us the time approaches for schemes to lead “dark horses” out of their stalls. GOVKIINOIt SM. I ll’S Sl’KKI II. AVe have been requested hy (iovernor Smith, who left yesterday for Atlanta, to state that upon reading'll synopsis of his speech, as it nppe tred in the F.NQiiumi- Scs on yesterday, lie recognizes il as in ♦ lie main correct, But he says that our re porter is incorrect in two particulars, though lie easily understands how the error was made, lie is reported as sav ing of Captain Uatml, "lie did not care to say who he was lor lie cured nothing about the man." This, (-iovernor Smith says, was not used in an olfen-uve sense, lutl only as a bit of pleasantry. Then he says the expression, "lie was what they called an cxpci t—il rad road jobber and gambler," was not used in reference to ('apt. Kamil at all, who lie frankly says is neither one nor the Other, but of .lay Mould, who is both. As the (iovernor was speaking of both he says that the reporter applied to Captain Raoul what was intended for.lay Mould. We are very glad to lind that the re port was not correct in this particular, as it is generally known that Captain Kamil is not now, and never lias been a dealer in stocks, and we feel quite sure Mov. Smith did not intend to make such a charge against him. A WOltlt Ullll'l 01 KSKI.VKS. In conversing with one of the promi nent business men of this city yesterday, he incidentally remarked that "in look ing over the Sunday issue of one of the leading daily papers in this state, he could only find one short article on an editorial page of seven|columns that was not devoted to Cordon and Bacon.’’ lie went on to say that he took occasion at the time to make a critical comparison of the paper with the Kmji ineu-Si n of the same date, and, to use his own language: "1 found more news and more subject- discussed in the Kniji iijkk-Si \ of eight pages, than there were in the other paper of sixteen pages.” There is not a more disc:iminaling gentleman in Columbus than the one to w hom we have referred, lie commended i be course pursue.i bv the Kmji n:ui;-Sr\ m not allowing political affairs to absorb tlw attention of the paper to the detri ment of the new s sen ice, and expressed the opinion that this was decidedly the preference of nim-tenths of our citizen-. (tt course this could not be otherwise than gratifying to \is. It is the intention ot il e management of the KsurniEh-Six to give the news in as palatable form as energy and our resources will admit. Our news service is by no means com plete—not even so lioa-lv as we propose to make it within the next few days. Nevertheless we must submit that we are already giving our readers a good paper. The many kind and appreciated words of encour- i agement which greet ub daily is an 1. creased incentive to attain still neat the pinnacle of a perfect newspaper, t we ask is the hearty co-operation i those whom it is in. the power of a fir 1 i la-s paper in Colnmlms to benefit, at. we have no fears of the result. In o vocabulary there is no HUch word as fa and we n;v going to give the people i this section of the country a paper which th v run refer with pleasure in. I with pride. I lit ( 0\l. lit.sSION A I, ((INVENTION, i ’fii" proceedings of the democratic e.. eeiitive I'onillbttee of the Court 11 eoilgri -ioiial <ll.-i "iet w ill be found elsew here b, ihis paper. Il will be seen that I. 11 range ha • been selected as the place f> hoi' ling I lie ei in \ cut ion and Hint it v. il convene on the .'nth of.Inly. While li.' people of this section much prel'om 1 the. eoiiventi iu to be held in L'olumbns or Ilamillo,]. no serious objection can be I raised either n“ to the time or place. In fact. iI’the eumpaign is to lie at all spirit ed, il is miieli better for ad eoneerne.l that il should be as short us practicable. There is very litlle argument to be used favorable to long political campaigns. Tlie campaign lias hardly developed itself so far. Il is tine that lion. T. \V. i irimes, of Muscogee, am Hon. Alva. A Freeman, of Coweta, are the only two avowed candidates. Both of these gen tlemen have announced themselves as candidates and are now before the people in that capacity. Whether or not the calling of the convention will develop new aspirants for congressional honors remains to he seen. In a few days the counties will begin to select delegates, and, as a matter of course, they will ex ercise their own discretion as to whom the delegates will lie instiucted to sup- port, or whether they will he sent to the convention uninstrueted. It is quite true that no one can foretell what will be the result of any county’s action in the promises, but all the intli- entions pi int to the fact that Hon. Thomas \V. MrimeS, of Muscogee, will receive the favorable support of the delegates from the six counties in this end of tiie dis- tr.ot. We also have information from several sources that a strong element exists in some parts of the upper end of the district that Muscogee is entitled to the nomination, and that the candidacy of Mr. Grimes adds to its strength, lie is not only popular where he is known, but he is recognized ns one of the most able and capable young men in the dis trict,ami whose democracy is and always has boon beyond question. It is believed that Muscogee county w ill be a practical unit for Mr. Grimes and that she w ill speak in no uncertain tones when the people come to select the congressional delegates. ONLY ONE OK Ills TItIGKS. 1 f lie", James (1. Blaine were as sound on other public questions as he is on home rule in Ireland there would be no troub'e about li is election to the presidency of the p itted States, the Pall Ma'l Gazette to the contrary, "M . Blaine showed in his Purl 'and speech just wtiat ttie meaning of home ru'e is. it meant that Ire'and was to have legisladve and judicial control of matters purely tosh. That Ire'and at present cannot charter a raiVoad company or a ferry, or a gas company or do ttie slightest thing ttint implied legislative power. This is the simple I question between England and Ireland, except I that there is the great fact in addition, there me eenturiesof wrongwhich have built npmouutatns of hatred on ttie part of those who are tile sills jeets of oppression, and which have aggravated tiie question between them." For ways that are dark and tricks that . are vain, 1 Inn. .lames M. Blaine, of Maine, is peculiar. It is quite probable that it 1 does not occur to the Augusta Chronicle. 1 f'oiii which we take the above extract, j that Ibis Portland speieh is only one of ! Blaine’s schemes, and that lie is talking j for Ireland in order to get the votes of Irishmen in America. What sympathy can there possibly exist between Mr. Blaine and Mr. Hludstone'.’ A cotempo- J vary strikes the key note when it asserts I that "no two men have less in common : than the ]ilumed knigbl and the great commoner; and i( is a necessary inference from any contrast of any passages of the lives of the two men that they stand ex actly the same chance of ever getting to gether on any common ground of sympa thy as two moving forces on the same line proceeding in opposite directions— they would come together after going around the globe, and there would lie a collision then. Permitting 1 rish-American patriots to be unlawfully imprisoned in Kngland without protest, while encum bering the olliciul station which an honest secretary would have employed for their immediate relief, Mr. Blaine never had another opportunity to prove his sym pathy with Ireland in act insteadbf the cheap clap-trap which he lias so often used in self-defense to traverse his acts in other -dilations. The Irish side of the Kngli.-li quarrel i.- justly the popular one here, and it means nothing more than its popularity for Mr. Blaine to advocate it." That Ireland, in her struggle, has our sympathy goes without the saying, but such clap-trap as that coming from such a man as Blaine smacks too much of a hollow mockery. THANKS t ot! IIIK cun ll.tl.t . Wi?eetlately feel graceful to the es teemed KufauUi Mail for defining the term "news” for us, and then permitting us to publish it. While the Exqvikkr-Svn- lias not at any time claimed that its table with reference to the gubernatorial candidates' strength is absolutely corrreet, we do claim that it amounts to "more than a vow of pins,” as the Mail is pleased to put it. The fact that “there are 445 un- instructed delegates” may he news suili- I dent to satisfy our Eufaula cotemporary, but it has not satisfied the Esqi-iimu-ScN Consequently, we have corresponded an. used the telegraph wires freely in ascei tabling how these 445 uninstrueted dolt gates will vote in the convention. Th result of this labor, time and expen- may be found in the table published ve.- terday morning, which shows that tl first ballot will approximate tlie follow big: Clayton ini’. Ilawsuit 2"lt. MeKlern I7-, Seay Bis.* As we have already stated, the Iv >gt'iiiki-: >rx tines not claim that the lie tires tire absolutely collect, and it In, been explained tint* t• -11111 11 *s only a: used in -mmy iii-tauce-. Smite of tie e.Minute- Live lute,i m.t le in tlrts otfiee Iml to snow ,t*ixv i'a 1 ' wf.tu tvn are, ant in order to uhow our readers to mak eoiupar'“'it -'. we subnet the estimate made bv some ce the lecdhig Mahtnn. pagers. The Mmii/niner v Adv.i't'-, on - It tl is way : ('hi vimt I si, *1 Mu se | l. 17a s.-ay UM. The 1 iningbam Clf otnele makes a table wind gives I )a wson 2"(i, (''a ct'>n Iso, MrKh'en 1<) » jinti Seay Hi!. li**' 1 v-aio no’ greatly <liil‘c •cut ••(•m ton-'- «»j‘ i]j. AH von isr \ Tlio Selma Times ir» vos I>a\\ son 211, Ciiiyion !<;:», MoKIerov 1 anti Seay 1<A. Tlio Mo v^omorv (\ipiD-i jjp ves Mi Kloroy 207, IiM, CMa\ mn 177 ami Stay lol. Thu Ktifa Ha MM!, that bolievos sn sivomr'y in j»-i\inj? tin- “nows that is news,” ^ivts ClavtiHi 127. Dawson o<>, McKIevoy 2S, Seay 70, am! 445 uninsi meted. I.iit the eotivi utinn meets to-dav and as the lirst ballot will he taken all specu lation and estimates will pass for nothing. In the meantime we shall see what we While matrimony is calculated to ennoble, it is a'.so an equalizer. r l he words which unite the chief officer of a great nation > h s 3 bride are the 1 me a s the wedding- words of those in the hitm- h 1 eit station in i’fe. It is not the president and liis lady, hut “this man and this woman” who are joined together in “holy irut? iuiony,” whiuii is not to be entered into “umul> i.sedly or lightly but reverently, discreetly, wise.y, soberly and in the fear of Qod.” In this holy stale these two persons are now joined. Unhappily for the United States senate, it has helped to give a reputation to Mr. Ingalls, of Kansas, as a sha p debater, one who can say irt ug things and inflict venomous stings -and he is taking or making frequent opportunities to give senator i tastes of his quality. The too fre quent indulgence of a t .ile.it of t li at sort may easily become a mesa nee. Virginia lias sold its famous hcl! punches, the contrivances by which barkeepers registered drinks for a while, so that tiie state could collect its tax of two cents each. They cost the state $5 each and were sold to tlu* saloon-keepers at $10, but had to be taken back, and, a. er paying storage for a time, the Old Dominion has realized six cents apiece for them at auction. Secretary Lamar is admitted by the lad'es to have been the best dressed mail among the guests at the president’s wedding. His white waistcoat gave him a particularly festal air, and li is man ner had aH the chivalrous warmth of his own sunny south. It is believed that he will soon fol low the example of his chief, and marry an old love, now one of the wealthiest widows in Geor- gia. Usually a party man of Secretary Manning’s prominence has to die before he can gain enco miums from his party opponents; but the secre tary of tiie treasury has gained such strength of good character with his convalescence that the newspaper organs of his party adversaries are discovering him to be a marvellously proper man. What is best about the matter is that he deserves the eulogies he is getting as an earnest, honest, able public man, without regard to protection, revenue reform, or a bi-metallic currency. A Chicago citizen talks of transplanting one of the big California trees to his summer residence near that city. The one he has selected is 300 feet high and 93 feet in circumference. It is esti mated that the transportation will cost him f 18.- 000. The weight of the leviathan is about 40,000 pounds. Dr. Bell has discovered when people join a conversation in the drawing room of an evening, that the gas burning ove* their heads repeats every word that is said. And some one else has discovered that is the reason why the gas is tuned down when the young lover goes to see h s intended. BY A LARGE COLLECTION OK Live Birds From all Parts’ of the World. ALSO FLYING V AM PI RF, Or Human Blood-Sucker. UNDER CENTRAL HOTEL. Open from 9 u *o 9 p i Children 10 cents. Admission 15 cents: je'J Iw THE PATENT tCdCE & DUST PROOF Bookcases,Tattles, Office Chairs,Letter Presses, Fine Cabinets, &c. TVLER DESK CO. X)N. Fourth *t.. St. Louis. Semi 4u- lor 4c i>jj, Catalog!*? FOR! VERY LOWRATti I will insure your building or contents against oss or damage by a TORNADO, CYCLONE OR WIND STORM. By careful watching you can reduce the chances of loss by fire, but a Tornado Policy is the only protection against Wind Storms or Cyclones. JOHN BLACK MAH, 80 wed fri 1 .Insurance Agent. CLEVELAND’S SUPERIOR BAKING POWDER Has been before the 1 public fifteen years, and wherever introduced during that ttdhe has, on account of its purity and great merit, superseded very largely all other similar' preparations for producing delicious, light and healthful bread material. The manufacturers of CLEVELAND’S SUPERIOR BAKING POWDER, recognizing the fact that the public have a right to know what they are using as food, have for many years published their formula, which has been confirmed by analyses made by the Government chemists, State chemists and leading scientists of various States, showing that their Baking Powder contains only purest grape cream of tartar, bicarbonate of soda and a little wheat flour, the latter to preserve the strength of the powder, and that it does not contain ammonia, alum, lime, or any adulteration whatever- The public thus has not only the assurance that CLEVELAND’S SUPERIOR BAKING POWDER is " absolutely pure,” but also a knowledge of all the ingredients that enter into its manufacture. This latter information is too often withheld by other baking powder companies. The scurrilous advertisements of rival manufacturers will not deter the citizens of this vicinity from giving an article so flatteringly recommended as CLEVELAND’S SUPERIOR BAKING POWDER the trial which its merits so justly deserve. CLEVELAND BROTHERS, Albany, N. Y. BILIOUSNESS, Central Line of Boats, So common at tin's season of the year, is effectu ally cured by Hood's Eureka LIVER MEDICINE The Eureka causes the liver to act, thereby de pleting that gland of excess*ve bile, corrects in digestion, regulates the bowels, tones up the sys tem generally and makes you feei well. You can’t estimate the good that one bottle of Eureka will do you. It is the perfection of household medicines. Particularly at this season of the year, keep it in the house. Jordan's Joyous Julep Is an instant and infallible cure for Neuralgia, 1 however seveie the case. A physician of note says: “I never knew Jordan’s Joyous Julep to fail in a genuine case of Neuralgia.” Try it if you suffer. Gossyped i a, Woman's True Friend. It. surpasses any prepara tion of the kind made, and those who will try it once will use no other Female Regulator THE OLD RELIABLE Columbus, Ga., May 12, 1886. O N and after May 12. 1833, the local rates o freight on the C iatta.'oochee, Flint and Ana lacliicola rivers will be .as follows: Flour per barrel 5 cents Cotton Seed Meal per ton 10 cents Cotton per bale 25 cents Other freight in proportion. Passage from Columbus to Apalachicola, $6:00. Other points in proportion. STEAMER NAIAD Will leave Columbus for Apalachicola via B° 'n bridge* every TUESDA Y morning at 8 o'clock, re turning via Bainbridge. Above schedule will be run, river, etc., permit ting. Shippers will please have their freight at boat by 8 a. m. on day of leaving, as none will be re ceived after that hour. Boat reserves the right of not landing at any point when considered dangerous hy the com mander. Boat will not stop at any point not named in list of landings furnished shippers under date of April 1, 1886. Our responsibility for freight ceases after it has ischarged at a landing where i no person been disc! there to receive it SAM’L J, WHITESIDE, Pres’t. GEO. B. WHITESIDE, Sec’y and Treas. febH-tf M. D. HOOD & CO., Manufacturing Dinggists, 93 Broad Street, Columbus, Ga. dtf Home Insurance Co. OF NEW YORK. (Established 1854.) Cash Assets, $7,618,116 i ning and Tornado, at rates guaranteed as low as offered by any reliable stock company. The Lightning clause will be inserted in Dwelling policies without extra charge. . CHAPPELL, Agent. i 1 >001vS now open, but will close July 1st, 1886. i> No 10 Twelfth Sheet, eod&w i f _ J.C.JtEEDY, IL3\R_M.C_ GEORGIA. MUSCOGEE COUNTY. W ne re as, James F. Waddell having resigned the guardianship of the property of Terscharuer ■ deGratlenreid. minor, and no one having appued for the ‘.ruantian.-liip of tlu* said Terscharuer (leGraifenreid, notice is hereby given to all per sons concerned tlmt the guardianship ot the said Terscharuer deGraffonned will be vested in the clerk of the superior court, or some other nt and proper person, after the publication ot this cita tion once a week foi four weeks, unless valid ob jection is made to his appointment. Given under my hand and official signature this May 6th, 1886. F. M. BROOKS, my6 oawlw Oramary. Paper Boxes OF EVERY DESCRIPTION AT LOWEST PRICES. A LARGE STOCK of all kinds of PAPER, in cluding Letter, Packet and Note Heads, Bill Heads, Statements, always on hand. Also En velopes, Cards, <fec., printed at short notice. Paper Boxes of any size or description not kepi iu stock made at short notice. THOM. (jlUIKKT, tf 42 Randolph Street, opposite Post Office. DR. RICE, ~ • Court Place, now nt ?• Louisville,Kj For is years at 37 Court Place, now nt *22 Market Street, ’ Bet. Third and Fourth, . • ^ A r^fftilarly educated and legally qualified physician ao-1 tM oio«i successful, as his practice will pri vc. n c|||n$ and^S&ESrai: Spermatorrhea and Impotency, *8 the result of scir-abusc in youth, sexual excesses in in a* Hirer rears, or other causes, aud pioducing some of the fol- low fug oficots: Xcrvousucss, Seminal Emissions, (ui^bl e:nis- ri.ius hy drcaniB). Diuiuesn of bight, Directive Memory, Phy* f-i-al Decay, Pimples on Face, Aversion to Society of Females, Confusion of Ideas, Loss of Sexual Power. Ac., rendering marriage improper nr unhappy, are thorougnly and peru.fi- m ntly cured. ' SYPHIL IS on- tiri.lv er.-..lioatc,i f ro m the system; Gonorrhea, GLEET, Stricture, Orchitis, Hernia, (ji Hupiure), Piles nnd other private diseases quickly cured. It is self-evident that a pity sicitui w he pays special attention to a certnin class of diseases, and treating thousands annu ally, Acquires great skill. Physicians kunwing this fact often recommend persons to my cuic. When it i. c inconvenient to visit the city for treatment, medicines can be fleut privately sa l safely by mail or express auywhere. Cures Guaruaiteed in all Cases undertaken. v « Consultations personally or by letter free an'Mnvl efl* Charges reasonable aud correspondence strictly conuaauuai. A PRIVATE COUNSELOR or W0 pH Office hours from ■ > P. M. Sundays, 2 to * P- M. ZRSPBINGS E A S I T i: N N ESS E 1C. f (BLEBRATED in the c L ironic DuirrhuMt and Beau, fully situated on the banks of :i crystal mountain stream. r >0 miles north of Glint*anooga. Splendid fishing. Climate unsurpassed, .'l .rtc tlrst-ciiss. No mosquitoe*’. fogs or malaria. Board reasonable. Wr.te for circular. T. B. GORMAN, Proprietor, Formerly of Warm Springs liote 1 , N. C. my 261 in N EW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY 0F MUSIC Boston, Mass. THE LARCEST and BEST EQUIPPED lnth« WORLD —100 Instructors,2005 Students Inst year. Thor- _ ougn instruction in Vocal and Instrumental Muaic, Piano and yHU a Organ Tuning, Fine Arts, Oratory, Literature, French, Gcr- \ \\l%i%VV . man and Italian Languages, Engiisn Branches, Gymnastics. V. KKUVtM'sV ■ WALKorm. M WEAKXKSSABP etc. Tuition, *5 to $»); board and room with Steam Heat and A life •sperieBee.* Remarkable and quick cures. Trial padfc ages. Consultation sod Books by 4>ail FREE. Addrea# Or WARD A CO " iiteis, 'E. TOVBJEE, Dir., Fraaklio Sq., BOSTOM, LOlXSiiXi, HO. JSy2o eod.2m weowet GRAY’S LIMITED Cannon Ball Sale T fa i s W © © k, The Railroad Gauge airtiXicTa-iEiD So us lo forward Goods more quickly to keep up with us. Having completed arrangements for this sale, we take pleasure in announcing some of our I l i lard Hide White Lawn at 9c, worth l.ir. I 1-i Yard Wide White Faluss Lawn at Ik worth I Sc. The best 19c White Lawn iu Georgia at it. We will offer 50 pieces of Persian Lawn, Para Mull. India de Soy, India de Lyra, While Goods, 45 iDchcs wide, at 22J^c, worth from 40c to GOc. Wilson’s 2', o and \ Cord "P. K." at I cents. Spider Web Organdy reduced from hoc to ilk French Dotted White Swiss from it l-'2c lo 37 I-2c. All Check Nainsooks reduced from 111 and 13 cents to Sc. AVe have some broken lots oi' Children’s H O SI ERY, Sizes from 5 to 8, we want to close out. They ar« worth 65c a pair, but we offer them now at 35c. OUR STOCK OF Laces and Embroideries Which are Complete. If yon neeil a BLACK SILK we can tr'ne yon a temptation price on it, as we recently received a5 pieces. They were our share »f» big lot our buyer made an oiler on fur «nr three, houses. 1 Case Tan Dress Goods .a.t io omnsTTs. 2 Cases of Sattccn Prints at 5e, worth Se. t Pieces Black All Wool Drap Yaloss, -i.» inclfi wide, worth $1.25, at Sac, 59 Boxes Lisle Thread Cloves at 25c, xvortli'» ,i ‘- WE ARE SELLING 75c. $1 Corsets ai 50ct Remember GRAY buys iu larger quuni:^ 4 than any other house here. He buys tor ‘ •' ' u t-re-1 >> c-.Miuiaiidiiig the large d.- ount gi\c ; • wholesale buyers only. When you b’»y i goods from us you save at least 25 per eon.. Remember the Trade Palace. C, P, EH 4 C0„ Opposite Rankin House, COLUMBUS, - - GEORGIA. Savannah, Ga. Augusta, Ga.