Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, June 23, 1886, Image 7

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DAILY ENQUIRER • SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 23, 1886. HOW THE MONEY GOES. Ihf Sljjmil Service, the dralnptlinl Work, anil (hr Count khiI Ueoilotlc Surrey* Run on Conti) Plani Thera* Moat lie » Ueflirm. Washington, June 20.—The majority and minority reports of the joint commis sion on the signal service, geological sur vey, coast ana geodetic survey, and hy drographic office are fori d ble docu ments to examine, but there is a good deal in them to repay the labor. The commis sion lias been at work nearly two years, and lias taken an enormous amount of tes timony, and the voluminous reviews of it are not more elaborate than the import- lance of the subject justifies. The general results reached have already been stated in a few words of press summary, but there is much more that is worth attention. The majority are not disposed to turn over the coast and geodetic establishment to the charge of the navy department till the primary survey is complete; but their report nevertheless shows that the expen ditures for this work up to June 30, 1884, had been $20,182,400, and that there is at least nine years’ work to be done. The minority favor the transfer to the hydro- graphic office of the navy department, and declare that the work as now done is tedi ous and costly, and is used by the organi zation which controls it “as simply a step ping stone to a larger and more congenial field of work, which, when once entered, will afford it perpetual employment.” This coast and geodetic survey, say the minority, “is running a grand arc of trian gles across the continent,” on a basis of fl,000,000 for that one job, and fifty years for the time required. It also finds that $24,503,143 is the true amount already expended, without even complet ing the primary survey of our coast line. The methods of the coast survey were found to be loose, salaries having been paid for years to persons who had rendered no thority of organic law,” a grand arc of tri angulation was constructed all along the Appalachian chain, for the alleged pur pose of correcting errors in the coast tri angulation. The minority consider it to be really intended for “an ultimate trigo nometrical survey of the whole area of the country,” which would be an affair of hundreds of millions or billions. The coast survey is, in fact, at this moment seeking an appro priation toward constructing a magnetic map of the whole of North America. The conclusion of the minority is that it will take thirty-six, instead of nine, years to finish the primary survey. A sharp pub lisher reprints the coast survey limps, and leaves out nearly all their costly topogra phy, with the result of getting $2.50 for charts which the coast survey sells for 50 cents. The cost of the topography is be lieved to tie $333 per square mile, or, even with the most liberal drawbacks, $250 per square mile. Yet “it is absolutely certain that, Hat as most of our coast is, much of the topography on the coast and geodetic maps cannot be seen from a vessel when such topography runs from one to three miles from the shore.” In other words, the cost is thrown away. In some cases features like houses are liable to be changed, and thus to become even mis leading. Yet while this elaborate work was going on, the maps had not. made known the true location of Nantucket yhoals. The reasons why all other countries put such work under their marine ministries are that sailors know best what they need; that naval officers become familiar, by doing this work, with their own coasts; that it gives them proper professional oc cupation in time of peace; that they do for their ordinary salaries, payable in any case, what otherwise civilians must be hired to perform. The signal service also produces dis agreeing reports. Three members of the commission are not ready to make it a civilian bureau, but nevertheless recom mend that the Fort Myer school of in struction shall be abolished. The three other members favor the transfer of the weather service to a civilian organization, but draw up a bill for another form of weather bureau in the war department, which would employ 373 persons instead of 534, and yet increase the number of ob serving stations from 132 to 195, while mak ing an annual saving of $100,000. At pres ent, they say, the signal service men are soldiers only in name, and a “mere uni formed police to watch the weather and watch each other.” This is not the only evil in the organization .- Frequent complaints have been made by enlisted men of rude personal insults by their officers; of undue and illegal and harsh punishments indicted contrary to the rules and articles of war, of denials of the rights to petition their officers for re dress of personal grievances; of refusals to court martial non-commissioned officers for offences they bad committed toward the men; of insufficient supplies of edible food; of favoritism in the assignment of men to signal stations and in promotions, and of efforts to induce or force men to make representations to congress favori.iq the continuance of the military features of the signal service, and to secure an in crease of rank in the official staff of the corps. Without passing judgment on these complaints, half the members of the com mission hold that the system has resulted in discord rather than harmony. But the item of expense is the most extraordinary. England expends for home weather ser vice annually sfiS,150; Russia, $38,090; Aus tria, $14,003.' i.ast year’s expenditures of the United States were 1*792,593; the cur rent year’s appropriations arc $840,0S0; next year’s estimates are $1,130,833. The geological survey in some respects outdoes in extravagance even the coast survey. A portion of the committee have the estimate of Director iPowell that the completion of the geological map of the United States will occupy twenty-four years more at a cost of $18,484,000; but they remark that “ in tho nature of things these estimates are only approximate and largely below the true cost.” These members are those who most favor the present system. The remaining members go into a great number of details showing that the cost and time will be far greater than Major Powell admits, and that most of his proceedings are without the slightest authority of law. The one tiling on which all the members agree is Hint to place these various works under the charge of a common scientific bureau would make matters even worse than they are now. Follies nm| Kitsmlitics. Counterfeit $20 bills, raised from a $10 by changing the figures on the corners, are in circulation. A man recently took out a postal note at the Avon post office, N. Y., meaning to send the money to a relative in Rochester, and kept t lie note as a receipt. A new counterfeit *5 gold piece is in circulation. It is dated 1821, and may be detected by the fact that the n ill tho word “United” is upside down. The Freeman’s Journal says there are men in New York city who spend one- fourth of their year’s earnings in hiring carriages in which to appear at funerals. A Louisville woman tried vainly to buy a bonnet for less than the $25 asked. Hie* described the baniiot to her servant, who went to the shop and bought it for $12. A costume adopted by the Fat Men’s base ball club of Orlando, Fla., consists of a Mother Hubbard dress, and is said to be cool and comfortable, if not an aid to fast running. A young man in Gainesville, Fla., sent seventy-five cents to a fellow in New York who advertised “How to make money fast.” He received from the New Yorker the valuable information, “Take a paper bill and make it fast to something with paste.” The Galveston News tells of a farmer who cut down ft maple tree a hundred jeirs old and found a live toad in the ceu- i ;F'. . 1 ' le editor of t lie paper merely states that ho might have doubted the story had I j 1 e not seen,a live codfish taken from the i center of an anvil that was melted down. I An Honest M»n’« Word. Westmoreland’s Collsayn Tonic is meet mg with unprecedented snles, because it docs what tne manufacturers claim for it. Westmoreland Bros, sole proprietors, Greenville, B. C. GREENVILLE, S. C.— Messrs. Westmore land Bros.: I have for years been a sufferer from weak stomach—lack of power to di gest tood—and consequently gcdcral debil- ‘ty. I had tried all helps' that eminent physicians and all the materia mediea could suggest, ami found little or no relief. \ our Culisaya Tonic was recommended to me by a friend who had used it, who had been suffering like myself. 1 tried it, and j by the use of three or four bottles found I was much stronger, could eat and sleep and do hard work as 1 never did before. It is now more than a year that 1 have en joyed uninterrupted good health, and by the occasional use of your Tonic I have en joyed a degree of health that I have not enjoyed for fifty years, and 1 have now got to tlie three score. I am very desirous that ■ others suffering ns I have done should ! know the great value of your Tonic, and therefore make this statement that it should'induee them to try it. Gratefully yours, J.‘B. SHERMAN, Genernl Mechanic. Brannon it Carson, Wholesale Agents, Columbus, Ga. jelS dlw FOR A VERY LOW RATE! Central, Southwestern, Montgomery & Eufaula l will insure your building: or contents against oss or damage by a TORNADO. CYCLONE OR WIND STORM. By careful watching you cad reduce the change* of loss by fire, but a Tornado Policy is the only protection against Wind Storms or.Cyclones. JOHN BLACK MAR, se wed fVi f Insurance Agent. IRz-A-ILIR/O-A-ID OOlMIIF-A.rN'IiEiS. All Trains on this syitem are run by Central or 90 Meridian time. ^ \N and after Sunday, June 20th, 1880, Passenger Trains on these Hoads will run ns follows: .Al) DOWN. Hu READ IT 1*. No. 16* Act*. No. 53* , Pnss’g'r. No. 51* null «i itiiinta lYivi«ion. Unss'g'r. No. 52* VnkH'g'r. No. 54 | Unss’g'r. | No. UY‘ Act*. 5 10 p ill 7 26 p m 8 20 p 111 9 50 p ni 8 49a m Lv SAVANNAH Ar! 10 25 a in Ar Oliver Lv 4 07 p m 2 35 p m 1 (too a in' 4 It a m| 8 05 a i 0 22 a i SOAP. Used fo cleaning and work as Sa polio and much cheaper. No. r 9 45 a l ] J 25 n i 11 25 a i 12 00 i 1 35 p i 11 40 a 111 12 00 in 2 10 p m 3 27 pm I 20 p in 6 AO p ni 7 19 ]> m 7 19 p m 7 50 pm 9 35 |> ill . Milieu.. . .. Milieu.... ... 'Pennilie... Gordon... MACON ... .MACON .. Bamcsv Hie . Bartlesville. Grifiln .... ATI.AN I’A Lv 1 30 p i Ar 113 pi A r II 28 :t i Ar 10 19 a i 10 10 a i 9 03 p t 9 03 p i « I* ' 5 20 pm 5 20 p in | I 16 p m 3 in p m dt) the same Very Acconiiinalutimr. A firm wrote to a western piano dealer who owed them money: “Dear sir: Will you be kind enough to send us the amount of your bill? Yours truly. To this the firm received the following reply: “Gen tlemen: Your request is granted with pleasure. The amount of my bill is $575. Yours very truly.”—Musical Courier. Most Excellent. J. J. Atkins, chief of police, Knoxville, Tenn., writes: “My family and I are bene ficiaries of vour most excellent medicine, Dr. King’s New Discovery for consump tion; having found it to be all that you claim for it, desire to testify to its virtue. My friends to whom I have recommended it, praise it at every opportunity.” Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption is guaranteed to cure coughs, coldsj bron chitis, asthma, croup and every affection of throat, chest and lungs. Trial bottles free at Brannon Carson’s Drug Store. Large size, $1. eod&w A Low (Jratio of Skill. The Kansas City lawyer who fired at an editor and hit three innocent persons would not be permitted to retain his mem bership in the Vincennes gun club.—Vin- ceenes Sun. FOR ALL House Cleaning Purposes. FT AVI I,I, ( Paint, Marble, Crockery Ware, Kitchen Utensils, Door and Window Casing and (»la&s. IT WILL IOOMSR! Silver and Tin Ware, Brass and Metals. IT IK SOLD in handsome solid cakes for scouring, Arc. ration or tiii: lisniik.N sow will clean paint, takes grease off the dishes, pots, nans, makes oil cloth bright. It will make Knives, forks and spoons as bright as new; do any work that Ha polio " ill do. A Solid t2-ox, 4'nhe for .If. J. J. WOOD, 13S Broad Street. No. 19'’ 1 Pnss’g'r. Pass Vr. j « culmi I(:t i 11 Olid llmiich. % ll|£ IIMl II No. 18* No. 20' | Unss’g'r. Unss’g’r. 3 10 a m i 1 30 p in Lv Milieu Ar 11 45 am 1 00 a m « 15 a in i 3 15 p ill Ar ...Augusta Lv 9 30 ft ill 9 30 a in No. 20t UDlcdgex ill** n mi IhllOlllOII No. 251 \cc. Act*. 2 55 p in Lv ... .Macon A l* 9 30 a m 4 00 p m Gordon... Ar s in a in 5 45 p in Ar Milled gevillt • Ar 0 30 a m 7 40 p in Ar ... .Eiitoiitoii . Lv 5 15 a m i , No. 35r No. 331 i No. 341 No. 304 I’nss’g’r. UiiRs’g’r. 1 1 4'ocanty ltjii!r*»i««l. PassVr. i PassV’r. | J 11a mi Lv ..BarncsN ill**.. Ar! 7 50 1) in' 1 34 p ill 1 It 35 p 11 i 12 35 pin Ar ..Tlioniaston... Lv 0 50 a m 3 30 pm ... No. 2t Pass'g'r. iiininli u 44. A X, ICullroml.j | I . 12 3o p nil i Lv Griffin Ar 9 10 a ml ■ 3 IS P "1 Ar ... Newimn A rl 6 SS a m i . 5 10 p 111 i Ar ('arrolUmi. Lvl 5 30 a ml J Many a person is starving with a full ta ble before them. Appetite gone! Ambi tion gone! Life is a burden ! What is the matter? The Liver has ceased to do its proper work. The life channels are clogged. Poisonous fluids are thrown back into the blood, which should be thrown out. SMITH’S BILE BEANS will surely stimulate the liver to do its work well, and headache, sallowness mid bad breath will flee away. Price 25 cents per bottle. All druggists. my25 eod&wlm Why Surillne* Are lllidier. “What! 40 cents for a little can of French sardines like thnt?” exclaimed a lady at a fish store yesterday. “Yes_, mum,” replied the dealer, “you see this Canadian fishery fuss has cut off our French sardine supply, and the price has riz.”—Pittsburg Chronicle. Scott's Emulsion of Pure foil Elver Oil, With Hypophosphites is a most valuable remedy for Consumption, Scrofula, Wast ing Diseases of children, colds and chronic coughs, and in all conditions where there is a loss of flesh, a lack of nerve power, and a general debility of the system. He Merely Affirms. “You say the trout weighed ten pounds?” “Yes, sir; it was the biggest trout X ever saw.” “And he got away from you?” “Yes.” “Will you take an oath to that?” “I’ll take no more oaths; l swore enougli about it when he got away.”—Yonkers Statesman. ltlTKLKN'S ARNICA SALVE. The best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns and all Skin Eruptions, and positive ly cures Piles, or no pay is required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Brannon & Carson. jc24 oed.Aw A HurKlnr-Rcfyimr Lock. A lock is on exhibition at the French Crystal palace which has 3,647,385 combi nations. tral&TJ!! ;No. 51* j Puss’K’r. | No. 1 8*. TY . Unss’g’r. | iiiki w. »i r.. itiiiiwii> Main 11 i ii**. No. 2* , Unss’g’r. No. 52* Pass'K’r. 1 ! Ar 5 15 p in 4 01 p m| 10 59 a m Ar 2 28 a 111 1 3 50 a in i 2 52 p ill Ar 3 58 p in Ar 4 01 p ni Lv 5 41 p m Ar 5 41 p mi Lv 7‘>3 n m *\r Cuthbert . A r i Ar ! 124 pm; 11 59 a ill 1 01 a 111 11 34 )> ill 10 33 p m 10 33 p mi 9 04 p m | 9 01 p m, 7 30 p ill 1 4 50 a m 1 6 21 a in Eufaula Union Springs Union Springs -MONTGOMERY . A r .Ar! 10 50 ft ill 9 18 a m' Lv ALL FIRST-CLASS Unss’g’r. 1 Uass'g'r. j Uass’g’r. J S. \\. It. It. Albany IJm*. j i I PassVr. j 1 45 p iii 1 oi a iii 1 2 45 r» m 1 l 57 a m 7 10 p nil Lv MACON Ar , 8 17 p ni;Ar Fort Valley Lvl 8 17 p mi Lv Fort Valley Ar, 10 11 p ni Ar Smithville Lv 10 11 p m Lv SmitlivilU* Ar il 10 p m' Ar ALBANY Lv' ' 9 20 a 111 l 8 14am 8 I I a 111; 6 20 a in 1 0 20 a m! 5 to a m THE BEST liikiiiK’Powder S. W. It. It. IVrry Itrimcli. 3 45 p in 1 3 00 p m 251 S. \\. It. It. ..SmitlivilU*. Albany... ...Blakely... ... A r 1 00 p i ...Ar 12 00 l ...Lv 8 oo a I TO PARENTS. Many baking powders are very pernicious to health, ami while every one regards Lis own. he should also have a care for the tender ones—the little children. SEA FOAM oontainfi none of the bad qualities of taking owdera—soda or saleratus. It contains no i or ammonia. powders—soda or saleratus. hurtful ingredient—no alum c SCIENTIFIC. All Chemistattvho have analysed Pea Foam oommend it. Housekeepers who have used it will have no other. Cooks, whose best efforts have failed with other powders, are jubilant over Sea Foam. Saves time, eaves labor, save6 money. It is positively unequaled. Absolutely pure. Used by the leading hotels and restaurants in New York city ana throughout the country. For sale by all flrst-class grocers. GAXTZ, JONES CO., 170 Thtane St., X. Y. $1,850 Will Buy Nearly New 4-Room Street. Now rented to (iood Tenant at £17 per month. JOHXMTOX A NOiniAN. jel 6 wed, fri.su n.2w , No. 274 S. W. It. It. ?ort 44aiii**H Nil. 281 PassVr. Itraneli. ! l’ass'g’r. 3 05 p ill Lv.. Cuthbert Ar' 11 28 a m J 4 28 p in Ar.. Fort Gaines ,A 10 05 a m 1 No. 294 i No. 304 Pass n'r. Iciifniilu an*l Clayton Itailroad. Pass'K’r. 1 I i 4 45 p ni Lv.. Eufaula Ar] 8 58 a m i Ar.. Olavton Lv! 7 45 a ml 1 1 No. 19; j No. 5* N. >V. It. K. -4'oliiinbiiM Niiiu 1 No. 0* No. ih; I j Ace. i Uass’g’r. UllO. Pnss’g’r. Acc. Ar.. Ar j 3 20 ji 111 5 12 h 111 1 2 43pm 2 23 pm Ar . 12 00 ill 11 45 p m Trains marked thus * run daily. Trains marked thus | run daily except Sunday, 'i'ruins marked J run daily except Saturday. Elegant Local Sleeping Cars on night Trains as follows: Between Savannah and Augusta trains Nos. 50 and 54; between Savannah and Macon, trains Nos. 53 and 54; between Savannah and Atlan ta, trains Nos. 53 and 54. Pullman Buffett Cars between Cincinnati and Jacksonville, and through Sitting Car between Chattanooga and Jacksonville via Atlanta, Albany and Waycross. Through Palace Sleeping Car between Montgomery and Wnycross. Tickets for all points and Sleeping Car Berths on sale at Union Depot Ticket Office 30 minutes prior to leaving time of all trains. WILLIAM ROGERS, Gen’l Hnpt., Savannah. T. I). KLINE, Hupt. S. W. R. R., Macon. W. F. SHELLMAN, Traffic Manager, Savannah. G. A. WHITEHEAD, Gen.I Pass. Agent. W, L. CLARK, Agent, Columbus, Ga, An Unfailing R< nicilv. Braudreth’s Pills cure dyspepsia or indi- I gestion, headache, pain iii the shoulders, j ! coughs, tightness of the chest, dizziness, ! ! sour stomach, bad taste in the mouth, bil- | ious attacks, palpitation of tlie heart, in- • fiammation ot the lungs. Pain in the re- ■ ! gion of the kidneys and a hundred other painful symptoms are the offspring of dys pepsia. One or two pills every night for a | week are sufficient. eod&w Enough to Pin ker All Creation. A solid bed of alum, five hundred feet thick, lias been discovered in Graham i j county, Arizona. j Simmons’ Iron Cordial stimulates the ! Brain and cures mental and physical : prostration. ■ Sold by John P. Turner & Bro., Colum- I bus, Ga. _ eod&w Tlint Always lines Free. j There is no duty upon the growth of i wool that is pulled over the eyes of honest voters.—Galveston News. CHEW TOBACCO!! BUI DON'T CHEW POISON TM’DOLPU FINZER’S Pat. “ Havana Cure - process for treating Tobacco removes nico tine, dirt and grit, enabling the leaf to absorb pure, ripe fruit, and making the most delicious, th«* most lasting, and the only whole.-o TURF. Fine Cavendish. Brandy- peach flavor, an everlast ing chew. SUNLIGHT NUGGET. STARLICHT. A fruit-flavored pocked piece for the people. Guaranteed not toeontain u traceof chemical or noxious drug. < 'hew it a week and you w ill chew it always. The pilot wheel on every plug. ltl’I)OLPI*l 11NZER TOBACCO CO., Louisville, Ky. LOUIS BUHLER & CO,, Agents, WESTERN RAILROAO OF ALABAMA, The First-Class Direct Route to all Eastern Cities—30M Miles Shorter lo \ew York Ilian via Louisville. Close connection made with Piedmont Air Line, Atlantic Coast Line, and Cincinnati Southern Only 37 hours and 20 minutes from Montgomery to New York, and only 36 hours and 10 minute? from New York to Montgomery. June 13, 1830. Akron (beenshorn. Marion Selma • Montgomery Montgomery • ( owles Cltehaw. Notasulga . . L< mchapoka Auburn. (melika No. 53 8 30 a n 5 15 p . 8 45 p i 10 21 p i 10 50 p i 11 17 p I 11 34 p l West 12 15 ’oint. Lat i range* Montgomery and 4 olmnlms I lirough Leave Montgomery Arrive Opelika Arrive ( nlumbiis 9 18 a m | 9 89 a m 9 53 a in loot a nr Id 17 a in 10 3o a m 1 150 am 1117am ;.... : 2 40 a in 11 50 a mi | 4 OH a in 12 57 p m 5 50 a ill 2 30 p in and \ *****mii iimhI n I ion. PROI'F.NftlOMAI* CARDS. n R. GEO. McELHANEY, Resident Dentist. Room No. 2, 02' a Broad street, up Rtairs, ovet Wittich & Kinset’s. jal(My U R. C. T. OHBURN, Dentist, (Successor to Dr. J. M. Mason.) Office next door to Rankin House. Same eii- l ranee as Riddle’s gallery. oc4-ly F. TIC!NEK, , . Dentist, 35 1 ., Twelfth .4h***et , formerly Randolph street.) e7-l y Q. Ii. THOMAS, .1!?. O. K. CHANDLER. MIOMAS & CHANDLER, \\ 3 30 p i 8 fh p r 10 05 p i Via tIn* Piedinon Leave Atlanta Arrive ( harlotte ” Richmond... Washington.. “ Baltimore " Philadelphia. New York ... Pullman Palace * Atlanta (ipelika Auburn Loachanoka N >t isulgn ( heha'v York and East. 'ill. lloidgoiiicry to Wash i Mg'ton M iihoui < liang< TRUSTEE’S SALE, Property of the Columbus Manu facturing Company. Complete mid I’nfly B.'<|nipped Coftoa I'aetory. Together with Sourly a Rile of the I'inesl Water Power on tlie Chattahoochee Kivei\ JmM Above the City of Columbus. By virtue of the power vested in os under the terms ami conditions of a certain deed of trust executed to the undersigned, J. Rhodes Browne and A. Illgcs. trustees, by the Columbus Manu facturing Company, of Muscogee county, state of Georgia, dated VaVeh 1. 1884, whereby the said corporation conveyed to us all of the property, real and personal, hereinafter described, in trust, to secure the payment of its certain issue ox bonds and the interest coupons thereof as in said trust deed specified and enumerated nil of which appears duly of record in Mortgage Deed Book “A,” folios 337 to 373. March 5. 1881. in the Clerk’* ollicc of Superior Court. Muscogee county, Geor gia. and in Record Deeds, volume O O, pages 81 to H8 inclusive, March 22, 188*1. office of tne Pro bate Court in the county of Lee, state of Ala bama, and in conformity with the directions and terms prescribed in the resolutions passed by the holders of suid bonds on April 24, 1886, under the authority conferred by said deed of trust.} We will sell in the city of Columbus, Muscogee county, Georgia, on the 3d day of August, 1886, between the legal hours of sale, in front of the auction house of F. M. Knowles Co., on the northwest corner of Broad street and Tenth iformerly Crawford street), <being the usual place for sheriff's sales in said city of Columbus) at public outcry, to the highest bidder, for cash, the following described property of the Columbus Manufacturing Company, to-wit.: Ail those lot* and parcels of land situated, lying and being a* follows: Fractiona 1 section number twenty-six 126' and the north half of fractional section num ber thirty-five (351. both in fractional township number i igliteen 118i, range number thirty (30), in formerly Russell, now Lee county, state or Alabama. Also the following lots of lands lying and being in the eighth >81 In district of Muscogee county, stale* of Georgia, known as lots number* eightv-M\ (80- and eighty-seven i87i and the west half of lot number seventy-four .74) and fraction* numbered ninety-one dlli and ninety-two (92), and Island number three '3i in Chattahoochee river ami a small enclosure situated oust of the residenee formerly occupied by J. H. Clapp, used as a residence and grazing lot, containing seven 17> acres more or less. All of said lands last de scribed lying and being in the county of Musco gee and state of < Jcorgiu, and. together with said lands in Lee county, Alabama, containing eight hundred and thirty <830i acres more or less,. Also, all of the said Columbus Manufacturing Company's buildings on said land in Muscogee county, Georgia, operated as a Cotton Factory, and with all of the improvements in any manner appendant and niipurtenaut thereto, inclusive, of tin* cards, spindles, looms, machinery and fix tures of every kind whatsoever contained in said buildings; also, all and singular the other im provements on all of tlie lands aforementioned and described; also, the entire water power owned ami controlled by said Columbus Manufacturing Company on and in said Chattahoochee river, together with all and singular the rights and franchises by tlie said Columbus Manufacturing Company held and possessed therein under the laws of (Georgia. The plant of said cotton factory consists at present of 4344 spindles, 149 looms and other suit able machinery, all iu good condition and pro ducing good work. Present capacity 7600 yards a day of heavy sheetings and shirtings, three yard* toft he pound. The operatives’houses and improvements gen erally in excellent condition, labor abundant, lands elevated and location of property unsur passed for health, convenience ami economical production free from the burden of municipal taxes paid by all the other Columbus mills, yet within three miles of the city of Columbus and three-quarters of a mile of Columbus and Home railroad The water power is the finest in the south, controlling and embracing the whole bed of the Chattahoochee river for the distance of about one mile along the lands of said company, said lands extending along its bunks upon the Georgia ami Alabama sides of tlie river. Only a small portion of the water power is required and utilized in running the present mill, and the nat ural falls in the river render but a simple inex pensive dam of logs and plunk necessary. Thi* magnificent water power is easily controlled, and lias .i lid) of 42 1 iforty-two and a hall’ feet within •*4’three-quarters) of a mile. With a compara tively small expenditure upon a new dam 125,000 (one hundred and twenty-nvethousand) spindles, with looms in proportion, can be driven by thi* waterpower. Capital for the erection of addi tional j'dlls and utilization of the immense power no.v wasted is all that i.-> needed to make (his property the site of a prosperous and popu lous manufacturing village. 3'he personal inspec tion of capitalists is invited. Full and satisfac tory details will be furnished upon application. J. RHODES BROWNE, A. ILLGES, ap27-d3in Trustees. Printing, Book-Binding AND Paper Boxes OF EVERY DESCRIPTION AT LOWEST PRICES. 4 LARGE STOCK of all kinds of PAPER, in* ;\ eluding Letter, Packet amt Note Heads, Bill Herds. .Statements, always on hand. Also En velopes, Curds .Ye., printed at short notice. Paper Box.**, of any size or description not kept in stock made at short notice. Ml OS. GlI.ltLKT, tf 42 Randolph Street, opposite Post Office. W. S. GREEN, Rea! Estate Agt. Kilt S t I.E. It rim* Up. j You are feeling depressed, your appetite I is poor, you are bothered with headache, ! you are lidgetty, nervous and generally out j of sorts, and want to brace up. Brace up, ! but not with stimulants, spring medicines, or hitters, which have for their basis very ] cheap, bad whisky, and which stimulate I you for an hour, and then leave you in I worse condition than before. Wlmt you ; want is an alterative that will purify your blood, start healthy action of liver and kid neys, restore your vitality, and give re newed health and strength. Such a merii- ; cine you will find in Klectrie Bitters, and I only 59 cents a bottle at Brannon .V Car- 1 son’s Drug Store. eod&w Somi lhinL' Thai! Hasn't l.i*aki*«l Out. If there is anything that Colonel Dan La ment can’t do, the public don’t know about it.—Lebanon Patriot. I Advice to Mothkks.—Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Svrl'P should always lie used when children are cutting teeth. It re lieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natural, quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain, and the little cherub awakes as 1 “bright as a button.” It is very pleasant | to taste. It soothes the child, softens the j j gums, allays al! pain, relieves wind, regu lates the bowels and is the best known | remedy for diarrhoea, whether arising 1 from teething or other causes. Twenty- ; J five cents a bottle. _ _ je!7 d&wly ; Must host* All Arnuuil. All of the railroads in Louisiana are run \ I at a loss so far as local traffic is concerned. 1 Si=>iGITSTC3- GTOOIDS) Spring Fashion Plates, PIBCEMOODS! Suits Made to Order, CLOTHING! CLOTHING-! ( 1GME and give us your onk-r. Do not wait til. j you arc pressed by tin* season, and then want a suit made in a hurry. We are prepared, how ever. to get up suits at very short notice. If you want a suit quick, give us your order. If you want a suit in thirty days, give us your order. II you want a suit in sixty days, give us your order G. J. PEACOCK, M<>,UK- Northe K is pei ew three rooi "tR*. all rente ud clear of tax* •*ct. Thecheaj <*t too cheap t u me at once •stment. I IgOIIMT.V E'lll I M p I 1 fin p : li I'niulil and K ceoni moda I i<»r ■ Bn •-Arec attached At !ai Administrator’s Sak BY .due of an order from the < *o»irf of Grdiaa recount Georgia, v. ill he sold oil tin* first fu'-vlay in July next, on tin eorm.r of Broad and Tenth streets i'l the city of ('..himinis between tin* legal hours of sale, to the hVhest bidd'-r, t he loi lowing d< -crihcd propt rt y, to-wit: One hundred and sixty-five aen*s of land, more or less. King ra.-i of t he city of Uo! ambus and known and deseriin d as part, of lots 93, 95 and ;*«, in the ('ou t !;i Reserve .,i - »id county. Sold as the prop erty of E. 11. Thornton. H. II. THORNTON, jy5 oaw t\v Administrator. < CINCINNATI Cm CORRUGATING CO my9 deod»V wcowRm N EW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY 0F MUSIC Boston, Mass. Street. eodtf I ^ i Manhood! RESTORED Ifrmrity V Mctim ot youth* •riuleni o causing Decay, Ner- A life experience. Remarkable and julekcire*. Trial punk* agon. Consultation ami Booki by /.ail FRFE. Addresf Or WARD & CO- LOUISIANA, HO. U< »l.Ci liUB (ID 3e*id FKEI _ w-\oiih Dehiilty.Lor-. ....... .tf tried In vain every know n remedy "4, which lie will THE LARCESTai.,1 BEST EQUIPPED WORLD — 1* " I n-ti u< v • - . > stinlvnt*i I rot v»* .r. otigh Instruction :u V.-ca! u 1 li.-truim ntu. Mu-i P ar Orp&n Tuninir, Kan* Art*. Orntmv, Liti rauir* . l reie h man and Italian I, etc. Tui' Bend FREE to his fellnw-Hiiliorern. Address J. LL i-ilL YE& 43 Chatham dtnxOiew Yoik CikW. Eng.nh ISrnr.riie 4 and room with StPftin II Electric IJifliUjC' t> p. r . rm Fa 11 T e rm fit*.. tcmh< r'.i, J*> V| '- >*>r I Ju-iruted i u'en fir, with tall infirm -Idmbs, K. TOURJLE. b r . Fmakhu 8<j , DUSTUN, eo wv25d2m w tow (t id servat • enueand FLft .• 3 room llous an houses, c sell ou instal oup street an •reer street, c T< mis c asy. initrous to a. I. s. GREEN. mhv ori:\ roit Al'AOIJ'Y 7UU. Buildings al! substanti I, lick w<>rk. Hotel-and cottages. Lawn ti -t hcan' iliil in Virginia. Waters that are e •ivei.v tor the u-e of my guests. The tint iicinal water iu Virginia. We take pleasu eferring as to their curative powers to M II. lev Brown. Mr. W. L. Chirk and Mr. J< jet dim] J. A. FRAZER, Prop’r, $ THE PATENT MICE & 0U8T PR0( ? Bookcases.Tables, Offl Chairs, Letter Pressei Fine Cabinets, 4tc. , TYLER DESK CO I SfiuN. Fourth st., St. Lou bendh) Ivi 40 pp, Unalun