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DAILY ENQUIRER • SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 4, 1886.
ESTABLISHED IN 1828. 58 YEARS OLL
Daily, Weekly and Snmlaj
The ENQUIRER-SUN i« Issued every day, ev
cept Monday. The Weekly is ismied on Monday .
The Daily ‘Including Sunday) is delivered lo
carriers in (he city or mailed, postage free, to suh-
»criders fur 7ne. per month, S-J.fU) for three
months, 8t.tMl for six months, or 87.no a year.
The Sunday is delivered hy carrier hoys in th
city or mailed to subscribers, postage free, at
$ 1.00 a year.
The Weekly is issued ou Monday, and is mailed
to subscribers, postage free, at 81.10 a year.
Transient advertisements will lie taken for the
Daily lit $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
sertion.
All communications intended to promote tin-
private ends or interests of corporations, societies
or individuals will be charged as advertisements.
(Special contracts; made for advertising liy the
year. Obituaries will he charged for at customary
rales.
None but solid metal cuts u.-ed.
All communications should lie addressed to the
proprietor of the EnqvireH-Sun.
(IKS. JOHN It. (ItlllDON.
The primary election in Muscogee
county ip over and <ieneral .Tulin IL < Jor-
don has secured the delegation by a ma
jority even larger than his most sanguine
friends anticipated.
The result of the election in this
county will no doubt lie peculiarly grati
fying to General Gordon, and even more
so to bis friends who have ever regarded
him as a noble specimen of courage and
patriotism. A few years ago when Gen
eral Gordon came to Columbus it was
as if under the shadow of a very
dark cloud. It was during the notable
Colquitt-Norwood gubernatorial oontest.
General Gordon bad just resigned }jin
seat in the senate which was then being
tilled by Joseph K. Brown, a man who, at
that time, was of all men the most ob
noxious to the people of Muscogee. Gen.
Gordon came in the interest of Cohjuitt’s
re-election, and his reception wasof such
a character us to most deeply impress
upon him and them the condemnation of
the jieople. The people fell that they
had cause for indignation and they liutl
the independence to express it in no un
mistakable terms.
Many developments have been made
since then and time has furnished an
opportunity for passion and prejudice to
give way to reason and better judg
ment. Never in the history of
Muscogee county has a fairer elec
tion been held than that of yesterday.
Every democratic voter was allowed
to go freely to the ballot-box and cast his
vote without any exertion to influence
him for one or the other of the candi
dates. No money was used, and the re
sult is a fair and full expression of the
people. It has reversed the decision of
six years ago, and by their own votes the
people of Muscogee have declared that
the testimony was not sutlieient to sus
tain the charges, and that they again ex
tend to General Gordon their conlidoneo
and esteem, and testify to Iiis integrity
and ability to till the highest otlice in
the gift of the people of the empire state.
In this connection it affords us a pleas
ure to say that if General Gordon is the
nominee of the state convention, he will
receive the most cordial support of the
EuNQi'iitKit-Six. Every democrat who!
has, nr who has not participated in the
primary election, should sustain the j
nominee of the democratic party. It is |
to this organization that we owe every- j
tiling for the good government under
which we live, and no man should allow j
prejudice to drive him from it.
TilK UI.OKIUl'S KOI ItTII.
To-day is the glorious fourth of July.
Turnout Americans the fourth of July is j
probably unite as intimately associated
with pymtecnics as with patriotism, hut
as it comes on Sunday this year, such J
displays will he postponed until tn-inor- ;
row, unless they have taken time by the ,
forelock and indulged with their lirc-
works last night.
There is a great deal more in the fourth |
of July than firew orks and other demon- !
strut inns of the kind would indicate. We
give over to-day to the celebration of a j
state paper which has so tilled the
national memory and the world's imagi- ,
nation that it wa- not until a century ;
after, until lsfii, in fact, that the ligures
of all the signers began clearly to emerge
from behind it. and a loving and worship- !
fill personality was gi\, n to the men w ho i
set their hands to it with such emphasis. I
Again to-day, then, and for e\crv recur- 1
rence of the day. let imaginai ion people 1
the state house with th
then delivered their tin
world, scaling with their
papers” of a new nation,
brave and resolute, and t!
:■= an entire mistake and, if possible, is
nnre to lie appreciated hy the south than
uiy other section of the country. The
fact that the‘‘father of his country” was
■ if southern birth and it was mainly upon
‘oittlwrn Imttletields that the great vic-
nry was won, should make us feel that
of all the people in the United States the
•outherners are the more nearly inter
ested, if there could he such a tiling ns
personal feeling in the mutter.
tine thing, however, we are apt to
overlook. We are in fact -o thoroughly,
so integrally patriotic that, except
in the comparatively rare event
of contact with foreigners, or in a
great c.risi-, we give almost no thought to
patriotism. Il Is In-comc for us a matter
of course. Km nto.-l ol us, indeed, Ameri
can institutions, American manner y deals,
condition-, characieristics of all sort-,
represent inevitably the types of these,
the normal, the natural and the universal
order. It is our individual elasticity,
horn doubt h ss of l he fact tluu tin world
is all before us w here hi choose, which
makes us so impressionable, so ready to
see tongues in trees and good
in everything whether it he
American or not. Add to that the
(hot that uinoiigoursi Ives we represent an
immense variety of traits, of moral preju
dices, of ideals of thought and conduct.
It is due to the same cause that our pa
triotism is. really of the latent sort, and
that where it. is boisterous and declama
tory it is visibly stamped with perfunc-
toriness.
Nevertheless, no nation was ever en
titled to base its patriotism on a firmer
foundation of rational and honorable na
tional pride. Nationally our reputation
is without a spot. Republics may or may
not he ungrateful, hut success tends to
make all men and all people so. And we
arc so successful, we have accomplished so
much and triumphed over so many ob
stacles since the declaration was issued,
that we m eant to forget what solid claims
our political ancestry has to that political
grandeur which a nation does well con
stantly to remember. The signers of
the declaration were a unique body of
men in tin* history of the world. To
them this nation owes il that its inceje
tion was as grand an event as the re
formation of older societies. They had
to create a new order. And they per
formed this task with a conservative
wisdom, joined to a radical possession bv
ideas wliic have simply never been
illustrated elsewhere in history.
I.KMHMi VS. DltlYIMJ.
“Love rules the court, the camp, the grove."
Under the head of “Another I’lea for
the Little Ones,” we publish an article
this morning from out of the most esti
mable ladies of this community. It need
not he told those who read the article
that she is a noble, Christian mother.
Her words will involuntarily make that
impress upon the mind and heart, and
we would lie glad each recurring Sabbath
morning to place such pure and true
thoughts from her gifted pen before our
readers. And not only of Iters, hut from
any lady who will contribute to the
column devoted to the interest of the
women of our country.
This article suggests the thought that
love is the ruling power in heaven and
earth. It secures obedience and respect
where every other incentive fails. The
moral suasion it calls into action is in a
majority of cases better than that oppo
site force of coercion. ‘'You may lead
me hut you cannot drive me," is a senti
ment which often escapes the lips, and it
contains a deeper meaning than appears
on the surface. It shows that there is a
wonderful potency in love and kindness
—a itower which draws and attracts and
governs w here arbitrary harshness will
fail. The world can only become better
.is love becomes more dominant. Deep
down in every nature is a spirit of obsti
nacy which is opposed to brute force
and arbitrary mandate, hut the
cohesive qualities of love subdues this
obstinacy and exerts a controlling and
governing influence more absolute than
law and authority. The best families in
the land are those in which lot e is the
paramount principle, whose gentle sway
is tlie sceptre of authority. It has a lead
ing cogency stronger than the rod, arid
an attractive tendency strong as the mag
net. There arc few natures insensible to
its power. Many a child has been har
dened by cruelty and harshness, hut none
are made the Worse hy the supremacy of
love. Many an nne has been rendered
reckless and indilfeivnt hv the rod
of earth might he reclaimed by the ap
plication of this principle. Love and
sympathy can do much to recall those
w ho are straying on the dark mountains
of sin, while harshness and cruelty but
drive them further into abysses of
wretchedness.
In love to God and love to man we
may find a panacea for all our woes.
"A frit] expression of ttie voice of the county
we believed before the election mid believe now
ilk between Messrs. Grimes and Harris, would be
adverse to Mr. Grimes, and if the Enquirer-Scn
is ns friendly to its candidate ar it professes, the
less It says of the Harris comity vote the bette r
it will be for hint."
Just exactly what the Hamilton Jour
nal means in the above we do not un
derstand. The election in Harris county
washy ballot and every democratic voter
in the county had an opportunity to cast
one. One of the must responsible citi
zens of Harris county informed us on
yesterday that the friend- of Colonel
Harris worked much harder to secure
l»is elect ion than did the triendh of Mr.
Grimes to secure his. Mr. Grimes is
justly gratified at the vole lie received
in Harris, and the result shows
that the people of Harris are capa
ble of intelligent discrimination.
Mr. Grimes will he the next congress
man from the fourth district, and to this
end Harris county will contribute as
much as any county in the district.
Orn dispatches have related the sad
experience of tlu* hoy cotters who are
now doing service in the pentitentiary
of New York. It might be well to re
member that never in this country
has any attempt to prostitute au
thority to had uses met with anything
else but rebuke. The scheme of boycot
ting lias no place in this country. It is
safe to say that it will not he tolerated
for any length of time.
win
men
win.
ace t.i ! hr
Ct -h. "free
Tliry were
> wriv no
/■ivernwl hv more
I
rail iu'Vit In* pop- |
i.l.l. and tlu 1 wry I
it in thn liws of
tleulaU'd to toarh f
hail driving with I
concerned for tla moment about cutgovs 1
or personal grains. IVrwnal loi-t*. indwd. :
they counted sum* and knew it:- com ;
but ultimate Mieee^s, if n«»t in their own
persons*, for the people and all peoph-s,
must have sounded out t<- them with the
pealing of “the bell” a few days later on.
It concerns us to discover if there b
such faitli now in the ideas of the 1
declaration among American citizens uf
to-day,and the answer U clear that such .
faith always respond*; to any urgent a|>- I
peals. Whenever the emergency comes ,
there are the men, there tin* metal.
It has sometimes occurred h* us that
we of the south are apt. since ls»»O f to j
look upon the declaration of independ
ence as something not of as much value •
to us as it was before that period. This i
might have been
•avntle pursuits)v«*s.
This <1 riving pro* ess
ular with young or
avoi>inn exhibited t<
grown-uj» people i.- <
that leading is betler
tin* 1 it t K files. Coaxing w ill go further j
than ebulitiims of passion. The era of
the irate ^ehool toucher, with his bunch J
of intimidating hiekorv switches, is J
paling under a more enlightened and
lenient sentiment. The hope uf reward 1
is now regarded as a greater inceptive t<» I
duty than the fear of punishment, and
"ti this platform our educators are now |
taking their stand. Solomon, with all j
his wisdom, was not infallible, and his
teachings as to the use of the rod are not |
regarded as the eliusions of inspiration. !
There may he cases that love and gen- j
lioness cannot roach, hut they are few. I
T" such must he applied the steamer !
dietums of authority. As love is the '
law which should rule the family, wo
should learn from this that there is a j
potency in moral suasion which should 1
not be ignored. Many of the erring ones I
The exceedingly strong popularity in
Harris county of Hon. Henry K. Harris
is conceded by all. That he was defeated
by I Ion. Thomas \V r . < iriines, of Musco
gee, is a compliment to the latter of
which any man in this district should
feel proud.
(H it esteemed cotemporary, the West
Point Press, pays us this neat and appre
ciated compliment :
“Thi* Enquihku-Hcn seems to improve with
i every issue. For years we have read and admired
1 the grand old Georgia journal, but since it has
dressed out and appears in style every day, and
piles on the agony on Sunday, we can but tip our
bat, as we would to the queen of worth and
Leauty.’’
AN HOC It WITH EDITORS.
What They Have to Say ami Their (plaint Way of
Expressing II—A Few Nolen by the Wayside.
Editor William Moore, ofthe Augusta Evening
News, brings this wonderful small boy to the
front:
“A young boy was arrested this morning on the
charge of carrying a concealed pistol and point
ing it at a woman. Another case which is a
grave offense, it is thought by the officials, will
l»e developed.”
When the boy escapes lYom the clutches ofthe
officials, he ought to turn jnggler or join a slight of
baud show, where fortune and fame await him.
When an ordinary, untrained amateur has
reached that stage of legerdemain, where ho can
point a concealed pistol at a woman and
frighten her, his talent should be turned into a
legitimate channel and cultivated. In dealing
with the boy (he court should remember that
there are mitigating cicumstances. Some
thoughtless boys would have pointed the pistol
at the woman without concealing it, and thus
have frightened her much worse. But the one J
mentioned above was careful to conceal his pistol
from the woman while frightening her with it.
If both were captured, it is hard to tell which \
would bring the highest hid us a dime museum ]
freak, the boy, or the author of the parugmh
quoted.
The Augusta Evening News informs the public
that
“Miss Lizzie Alexander has returned from the
Ox lord College commencement. ’
It would be interesting to the people of (Geor
gia to learn where Oxford College is situated.
But there is no such college in the state. The
tact that Emory College is situated in Oxford,
(leorgia, does not make it Oxford Col.ege. Why
not call it Georgia College for a change? It is
just as much in Georgia as it is in Oxford. And
then we could call it Newton College as an occa
sional alias. II is in Newton county, and the logic
of the Evening News would sanction that name
too. The Augusta Evening news is usually ac
curate and well posted, and ought to know better’
The southern watermelon has appeared in our
midst. This is what ails our midst. Philadelphia
Press.
Our esteemed cotempovary has got the “midst”
right, but, we protest, not the watermelon espe
cially it it is the Georgia watermelon. For once
in the longest kind of a time the American press
has used the phrase "in our midst” correctly,and
we credit the whole press with it in the name of
its exemplar, the Philadelphia Press. Butweols
ject to this slur on the watermelon. Watermelon
in your midst won’t make it all. Watermelon is
soothin’, coolin’, tillin'. It is one of the few
things whose consumption maybe safely meas-|
tired by the capacity ofthe consumer, provided |
the melon is full ripe, not stale, and the con
sumer is in a similar condition. Don’t slander \
the watermelon.
A person who lived two years among the Creek *
Indians in Indian Territory says he never knew j
of an Indian man kissing an Indian woman.
The remarkable story would be that an Indian j
did kiss u squaw. Any one who has ever stood j
to the windward of one of Cooper’s "lied Maid
ens of Romance,’’who chews navy tobacco, and !
wears a coat of dirt and grease thick enough to
keep her warm, can readily sympathize with the j
buck who draws the line of his affections before j
h< arrives at the kissing stage. The "Ked Maid
en of Romance” is about as cleanly as the T
l»!e Red matt” is noble. The Indian isnatur
travestv on man.
HILL & LAW.
We wiiroffer this week special bargains in all depart
ments of our business. Look over our list of prices:
20 Pieces Nun's Veiling, 40 inches wide, all wool, in all
Hit,' new shades, 35c. These goods can t he bought elsewhere
for less than 45c.
10 Pieces Nun’s Veiling, 27 inches, 18 cents.
JO Pieces Figured Veiling 12k, former price 20c.
100 Pieces Figured Lawns 4 cents.
100 Pieces 36-inch India Linon 9c, worth 15c anywhere.
A Big Drive in Trunks.
We are going out of this line, and will sell anything in
Ibis department at less than cost.
100 Pieces 4-4 Brown Cotton at 43c; 7c will buy the same
goods elsewhere, nothing less.
SHOES! SHOES! SHOES! We are closing out om 1
line of Shoes for lack of room. Will sell them all in the next
30 days if prices will move them.
WHITE GOODS! WHITE GOODS! In this depart
ment we have all the novelties. Striped Dimities, Plaid
Lawns, India Mulls. India Linons and Persian Lawns. Our
Plaid Lawn at 12k is better than the stuff you buy elsewhere
at 20c. Lack of space limits our list of bargains, but we
promise some startling prices over ttie counter.
HILL &c X-i-A-'W.
TOOMBS CRAWFORD,
Real Estate Agent,
Nil. 1245 BROAD STREET.
IFOIEL S-ZLIOIE.
A Place of twenty acres, large
and commodious House, with
every convenience, in perfect or
der, I 1 * miles from Broad street,
in one of the most desirable lo
calities adjacent to the city. Jf desirable would
exchange for city property.
A desirable full V acre lot with
* good Dwelling, ou Fifth avenue,
will be sold on long time with
easy payments.
A desirable four-room Dwell- I
iug on south Fifth avenue; good
neighborhood and not far From !
business center of Broad street. ]
Terms easy and on long time.
A desirable six-room Dwelling,
two stories, with water works,
on north Broad. Place in thor
ough order.
Sweeping Reductions
IN THE PRICES OP
mi
JJJJ
GOODS
At BOUGHTON & CO'S,
Five two-room Dwellings on
Ninth street, one block of Geor
gia Midland Railroad.
WE WANT to entirely close out our stock of
Spring and Summer Goods, and we realize that
j we have but about four weeks to do it in.
I We had much rather sacrifice now than carry
| our goods over, consequently we offer our stock
, of Flowers, light colored Hats aud Bonnets and
Hummer Materials of all kinds for the remainder
ofthe season at prices way below their actual
value.
We will sell what we have left of Trimmed
Goods at 50 cents on the dollar or less. No rea
sonable offer refused.
Next season we do not want to be obliged to
show any of this season's goods. Now is surely
the time to buy your Summer Hat.
Two Residences on north Seo-
ond avenue (Jackson street] of 5
and 7 rooms, each desirably lo
cated. This property is consid-
ered cheap by those who know
the value of good real estate.
A new and elegant House close
to court house. Dwelling in
thorough order and has all the
room Dwelling, new.
“ “ corner.
A delightful home on Rose
Hill, half acre lot and a new
House This property is consid
ered to be one of the nicest
homes ou the hill. Terms easy
and will be sold cheap.
_ A nice little farm seven miles
k - from the city in Lee county, Ala.
Good four-room House on the
place. Enough timber on place
to pay for same.
For Rent from October ist, 1886.
No. 1524 Sixth avenue, 3 room Dwelling, new.
No. 1522 Sixth avenue, 3 “ “ “
No. 1520 Sixth avenue, 3 “ “ “
No. 1518 Sixth avenue, 3 “ “ “
No. 1518 Sixth avenue, 3 “ “ **
No. 220 Thirteenth St., 5 “ “ corner.
No. 1542 Second avenue, 5 “ “ “
No. 1532 Second avenue, 5
No. 317 Fourteenth St.,
No. 321 Fourteenth St.,
No. 1317 Second avenue,
No. 1314 First avenue, 3 “ “ new.
No. 1316 First avenue, 3 “ “ “
No. 1316 Warren street, 8 “ “
No. 823 First avenue, 4 “ “
No. 932 Fifth avenue, 4 “ “
No. 930 Fifth avenue, 5 “ “
No. 502 Eleventh street, 4 “ “ corner.
No. 1138 Front street, 7 “ “ “
No. Front street, 4 “ “ cor. 6th
No. 710 Fifth avenue.
No. 702 Ninth street.
No. 708 Ninth street.
No. 402 Second avenue.
No. 402 Third avenue.
No. 104 Third avenue.
No. 130 Fifth avenue.
No 428 Fifth avenue.
No. 1233 Fifth avenue, 5 rooms.
No. 1247 Broad Street Store.
No. 1304 Broad Street Store.
No. 1248 Broad Street Store
No. 422 Fifth avenue. 1 rooms, new.
TENANTS
Wanting homes now or from October 1st will
find it to their interest to see me before renting
from any other agency.
TOOMBS CRAWFORD
12J5 North Broad St
JOHN BLUKMAR,
It pul Estate Ayenf.
BOUGHTON & CO
•I
Entrance through Hill &
Law's Store.
Broad Street Store
FOR SALE.
Tlie Two-Story Urirk Stm ,\o. 113, West Side
Broad street, now occupied by J. H. Gabriel &
Co. as a Wholesale Grocery Store, will be sold at
A GREAT BARGAIN
to a cash customer, if application is made at
once. The Store is one of rhe largest in tlie city,
and situated in the business center. For terms
apply to
L. H. CHAPPELL,
BEOXKB,
Real Estate and Insurance Agent.
dtf °
NICE NEW DWELLINGS,
Ceiled and painted. Each house has a lot to
itself.. These houses are near St. John’s church
and will be rented to good tenants, white or col
ored. at $5 a mouth. Now is your chance to get a
clean house that you are the first to occupy.
Call at once and select one.
, , JOHN BLACKMAR,
se wed fri tf _ Real Estate Agent.
THE IMEA-OOIsr
Fire Insurance Company
R EOn.AU MEETING tomorrow (Mondavi
evening at 8 o’clock. Transient brethren in
pood standing are cordially invited to attend.
J. H. ELLIS, N. G.
F. W. LOUDENBER, Sec'y. mh28sely
THE
BEEHIVE
ADVERTISEMENTS now are somewhat mysti
fying. We do not refer to mere exaggeration;
that we expect, and make allowances Tor it. be
cause nothing i* more natuial than to think more
highly of one’s own property than that of oth
ers it was wittily .stud by u very sucessflil mer
chant that “it is extremely difficult for a man
who lias anything to sell to maintain a judicial
frame of mind.” Knowing this, people ought to
be on their guard against ingenious devices.
When you see merchants crying
BARGAINS
which are not Bargains, they are pcared enough
to spend money iii advertising, but not enough
frightened to put prices down to
The Coned
There are always plenty of people to rush to a
fire, or a dog light, so there are plenty to rush to
stores which make a feint at reducing prices.
We haven’t the right to point to any particular
store, no matter how true our statement may be,
but we can be specific on the
CAUTION
point. The devices are numerous, transparent
and ingenious. People like lo be humbugged,
and so you pleasantly lose your money. Our
object is to
E you 1 LOSS!
And have you distinguish between ridiculous
pretensions and the truthful news of our stores
from week to week. We mean to sell as low as
we can in general, but afford it cr not we mean
to sell and always do sell
Lower Than Anyone Else
We do not tell this in strict confidence, but in
STRICT HONESTY.
The uniform, bona fide reductions made bv us
last week in all departments are bona fide, and
not only the prices but the guarantees offered
are bona fide.
To-morrow we offer 190(4
yards of Silks and Satins in
short ends, at prices unheard
of before. 75c Silk for 25c, in
lengths from 2 to 14 yards in
piece. $1.00 Silk for 40c.
Sternberg&Loewenherz
LEADERS OF
Low Prices.
READ WHAT THEY SAY!
Will lies to lit,. Firs, or G ,. n .
Genian that Falls r ritiM Way.
—FOR—
$22)0 and 81800. Two vacant lots on First avenue.
16(10. Sir room House, out-house and kitchen
First avenue. •
Corner Sixth avenue and Eighth street, %
acre lot. Store House, Wagon Yard, and
out-houses
Quarter acre lot, 1 room House, up town
Second avenue. ’
0000.
1600.
soo. Quarter acre lot, 1 room House, up tow
Second avenue.
Q»au v ....v , vl|
Second avenue.
5 room House, up ton
Quarter acre lot. 8 room House, 2 roc
kitchen, well of good water and •--*
works, I* irst avenue.
OF MACOX, IdiOIlGlA
(lash Capital, -
l’ho
season is upon u*. It is time to lay
aside in it measure the cares of business, and en
joy the lazy relaxation of the season, The Bible
says there is a time to be idle, and the two
months to come must certainly be meant. We
advise those who can “lay off” to do so. while
those who are less fortunate will make no mis
take in “taking it easy.”
The picnic is an ancient institution: but it has
reached its full blown maturity on American soil.
With all its big bugs and little bugs, and red
hugs and humbugs, it comes to us like water in a
thirsty land, like a benediction of rest to the
weary. It is better than the full with its full
dress and its flirting, amid lamps above and
11tighter below.
It is better than the religious festival, so com*
mou in the great cities of the north, when a man
is robbed to the sound of sacred music, and eats
oysters for charity at a dollar a dozen.
FOR RLEISTT.
No. 1022 First avenue. Boarding House opposite
Market.
No. 5()‘j Fifth avenue, 2 rooms, 33.
No. 732 Fourth avenue. 5 rooms, 813.
No. 739 Fourth avenue, 2 rooms, 86.
No. 614 Ninth street, 3 rooms, $5.
No. 22 Ninth street, next to Mrs. McAllister, $15.
No. 1036 Sixth avenue, 4 rooms. $10.
No. 1509 Sixth avenue, 2 rooms, plastered, $5.
No. 305 and 307 Sixteenth street, 3 rooms, newly
painted and whitewashed, $6.
No. 1321 First avenue, 7 rooms, plastered, $15.
No. 112 Sixteenth street, 3 rooms, ceiled, $5.
FHO.H OCTOBER 1st.
Durkin’s Corner Store.
No. 1240 to 1208.
Brown House Hotel -27 guest chambers.
No. 806 Third avenue, 6 rooms.
No. 1344 Third avenue, 9 rooms, water works aud
bath room.
Call and see me. If I have not the house you
want I will enter your order and fill as soon as
possible free of charge.
se wed fri tf
JOHN BLACKMAR.
Is now ready to write insurance again.-1 loss or
damage by fire. Rates guaranteed low as
offered by any reliable stock company.
S. T. COLEMAN. iTeVident.
S. R. JAQUES, \ ice President.
EDGARS. WILSON, Secretary.
TOOMBS CRAWAORD,
Local Agent.
1215 ilroml Street. eodtf
DTP I! HP It Tj I
Six Houses and Lots 150 yards from low
bridge, in Girard, Will sell separate.
' House with , acre lot in Girard.
One acre lot and four Houses in Girard,
i One House and Lot in C’hipley.
•wi/wum I T'V° 2 room Houses in city.
s 11 N *,» NJw 1 I have some tine suburban property which
1 will sell cheap.
_ A Go .several i-mall Farmsand some large Fan
will either sell or exchange foi city property.
1J |f,
M ILS, S. CANFIELD, general agent for
the Ross Turkish Rug Machine,
also the Mrs. N. R. Norman Tailor
System, just improved July, 1885, is the
only one known that will cut perfectly every gar
ment that is worn by ladies, gentlemen and chil
dren, cuts Cloaks, Dolmans, gives Drapery, cuts
for irregular forms as well as regular. Positively
no trying ou required. Will give lessons on Sat
urdays. In response to postal cards will call at
residence. I can be found ou First avenue, next
door to Opera House, No, 1010. jyieodlm
ron hk\t.
Several Houses from 8l to $20 per month.
Come ami see and ask questions. We cannot
trade unless we come Lice to face.
CT- O. EEEDY,
Real Estate Agent, No.io 12th St.
FOR FLFG3STT.
' 1 iVGGUlfl,
Hall, with bountiful supplv of chairs
JOHN h
se wed fri tf
. -LACKMAR,
Heal Estate Agent.
Good salary ani
expenses paic
At liora« or to tr»TPli,tn t0 vdiich preferre
Iwanted SI.OAN &t;o.Manufacturer,
■ Wtwlcg&le LetUexX; *94HY, Cincinnati! O*