Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, July 08, 1886, Image 3

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DAILY EKQriKER-Sry. COTrMTTF. OFnTIGlA. TIintSPAY MORNING, JULY *, 18SR. 'iD.fJklin News from the Three States tout Brief Paragraphs. A Colored Mini Killed by Idirlilnlnir-Henry IIhIiik In Itoitiv County—A Moekluu Bird'* tirutltode —A Xnake lllte V*. A (Jullon of Whlitky—Mr. •Iann» A,nil'lley Sue* the Clh of Alliony for *olMI>. n requisite lor voting in the United States, The Phi Kappa lias the nfilniintive and are represented lay E. P. Upshaw, of Social Circle, P. H. Siumk, jr., oi Atlanta, and ti. JV, fcwtifll - : j».. of Savannah. The Demos- , ^IfVtve the negative and are renre- xellr • "■* * MttDanifei, of Atlanta, \v. h. i Clay, of WavikjHiah, ana W. C. Cousins, of Jonesboro. Tin debate occurs on Satur day night before commencement Sundn . Hon. L. E. Bleckley will preside over de bate. Mr. I. M. Slaton to act ns secretary. A correspondent writing from Sol kee, j Decatur county, says: On Wednesday last this section was visited by a very severe and destructive rain .n • wind' storm. Early on the morning of June 30th the rain began to fall, nnd continued during the day. Toward the middle of the even- fieorglit. The recent storm damaged corn and cot- rnin f cl1 torrents, when the wind ton considerably near Alapaha. froln the eust Hlul northeast set in, which w ns "killed h\M»hMni? 1 whiletid.’W aViif ft S e to this section. All the water inills>fov ter under a troe '™ C tiiking shtl- , m jj es ground that wc have heard from arc cie a tree, 1 badly broken. Fencing was demolished At Pearson at 1 o’clock Sunday evening by falling timber, blown down or washed Elbert Lott, aged 17, shot and killed him- away. Bridges are swept away. The road self instantly through careless handling of is cut and washed in huge'gullies and a pistol. He was colored. j blocked up with rubbish and The third quarterly meeting for the fallen timbers. The fields of corn Baldwin circuit will be held at Pleasant which wus just in its roasting ear stage, is Grove church July 10 and 11. Dr. Jesse ' a tangled mass of stalks, silks, shoots, tons. Boring, the new presiding elder, will be etc. Stalks are broken, bent or lying fiat present. on the ground. The blades are whipped Athens’ public schools will oneu on Oc- : off or ,0 u‘J shreds - Tho . L ? Conte pear tober l in temporary biiildings,'ami desks tbtT*'' have now been ordered for them. It will ''LL imL „ „ .r.Vnt mA ' r iT re e ad a v?o. a use Cf0re ““ b " MingS Prttt> °ripc fi u't is o” the|round Cotton reaay tor use. ur.d other vegetation is badly damaged, M. S. \\ are, of Marshallville, has about font can’t tell to what extent just now. completed his large brick store. He ex- One of the largest creeks in this section is peets to conduct a banking business in said to have been six feet higher than was connectied with merchandizing, which ever known before. Ten inches of water Will be quite an addition to the town. fell in six hours. At this writing we can The commencement exercises of the not form an idea oft lie extent of the dam- Middle Georgia Agricultural and Median!- age already done or which may he done cal college are in progress at Milledgeville from tlu- falling showers which continue this week. They have been very enter- to come, taining and drew large crowds. Dr. Mel I - ~ and Gov. McDaniel are in attendance. A Istomin. F. M. Wellborn, near Lithonia, killed a Mobile is now extensiveiv ilhimimitid blue crane in his fish pond which mens- 1 with electric lights. i 1 ? ig u t ’ and ? f ve , r The electric lights were turned on in the tvmJilt 1. e f °i " nfer3, f 1 B ' city of Selma for the first time on Saturday \* ellborn caught two German carp from niJiw the pond each measuring two feet out inch ”. ‘ . , , ,, , ... in length. 1 he Episcopal church at Columbia is r , n . soon to be remodeled and made one >f the Gov. Brown, m obtaining an increase ol prettiest in t be state, the appropriation for the harbor ol Sn- , vannah. brought forward some figures that ^ U; Escambia Star does not speak very are both surprising and cheering. The encouragingly ot crop prospects in s total commerce of the port for the year county, though there is hype ot escap,. g 1884, the latest year for which the figures “ luch d «'»age if there is fair weather nr are obtained, was $61,030,618. the next six weeks. An Eastman, Dodge county, letter savs: ,, 0n Saturday last a son of Mr. Wo^ds The recent heavy rains have done much Guice, of Eufaula,while ciossmg the street damage in this county. Bridges and grist on a velocipede, was run over by Mr. Mc- mills on water courses have been washed Tyre s horses and carriage, and miracu- awny, and crops have been greatly injured, lously escaped being killed. The ordinary says the loss to the ecu lit,y . A great deal of interest is being stirred on account of bridges is not less than $600. up in Morgan county on the subject of The damage to property can hardly be es- temperance. There is some di&atiefnc- timated. Some think that it may approx- tion in regard to the democratic state con- imate $100,000, unless tlje seasons'hereafter veiition in regard to prohibition, are most favorable. It is quite certain that Watermelons are beginning to appear on there will be a heavy shortage in crops. the streets of south Alabama towns, anil Waynesboro True Citizen: A pleasing editors in those parts are beginning to re- incident occurred in our city a few nights mind their country friends that they are ago. A young lady sitting at her piano +'.,..0 >.r »'-!"»■ Ko * played and sung a few notes of‘•Come, Listen to the Mocking Bird.” The strains of music having attracted the attention of one of the sweet songsters of the south, who was roosting in a tree near by, it commenced singing and for hours after the ladv had retired she was rewarded ,'L.V 1’’ MOST PERFECT MADE Trepar*d wVh **>ccinl rocnM to health. Ko Ammonia, laruc <-r A ban. PRICE BAKIK'O PCIVCCR CO., CHICACO. CT. LOUIS. CLINCMAN’S T obacco REMEDIES THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO OINTMENT THE HOST EFFECTIVE PREPARA TION on the market for Piles. A S| RE Cl RE for Itching Pile*. Han never fulled to give prompt relief. Will cure Anal Ulcers. ALsohbb. Fistula, Tetter, Suit Rheum. Burber’b Itch, Ring- worms, Pimples, Sores and Boils. Flier o<) ctH. THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO CAKE NATI IIK’S OWN ItK.AIKOr, 1'iircK nil Wounds. Cuts, Bruises, Sprains, Erysipelas. Boils, Carbuncles, Bone Felons, Ulcers, Sores. Sore Eyes, Sore Tliroat.BunionH,Corns, Neuralgia. Rbeunuiti&vn, Orchitis, Gout. Rheumatic Gout. Colds, Coughs, Bronchitis, Milk Left, Snake and Dog Bites, Stinga of Insects, Ac. In fact allays ull local Irritation and Inflammation from whatever cause. Prior g»j ots, THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO PLASTER Prepared iicourdinff to the* most scientific principle*' of the lUKFST SEOATIVE iNttllEBIENTS, compounded with the purest Tobacco Flour, and is specially recommended for Croup,Weed or Cake of the Breast, and foi that class „ inflammatory maladies. Aches and Pains where, from too delicate a state of the system, the patient is unable to bear the stronger anplication of the Tobacco Cake. For Headache or other Aches very fond of melons and must not be f - gotten the next time they come to town. A Fayette county man sent 10 cents to a New York man fora “beautiful steel en graving” he saw advertised. By reti; n mail he relieved a postage stamp, Fu says he was a little disappointed in the size of the picture, but thinks he was serv ant! Pains, it is invaluable. Price 15 el*. Ask your druggist for these remedies, or write to the CLINGMAN TOBACCO CURE CO. DURHAM, N. C„ U. S. A. strains of song that would have charmed eel right for expecting to get something lor ,-,..1 - u ■ nothing. The colored people’s paper at Hunt: - ville, the Gazette, speaking of tlie action c f the colored republicans in the late con vention says: “The forbearance of the colored delegates was great. They had it in their power to capture the convention, but unlike Adam cast the apple aside." Both rivers have been out of tlieir banks even Calypso and her nymphs. A man was carried to the asylum at Milledgeville last Sunday night who had been an inmate there some fifteen years ago. He presented Dr. Powell with a bunch ot keys, and upon being asked by the doctor as to where he got them, he replied : “I took them away with me when I was here fifteen years ago, and have since kept them to return them to yon.” Upon A h byen destro yed on some of 7. h L' : ‘7*?,' 1°h- nthe finest corn lands in Marengo. Fair iom *' e J s " ere fotmerlj used about the weather during the last few days has • m y i - cheered the hearts of planters and nnr- Wliile Tim Alexander and two ur three chants. Capt. W. P. Chenev and Mr. others were seining at Sloan A Johnson's Mil wood Compton has managed to keep mill, in Sumter county, Friday morning, their plows going and are said to have the .Jeff Oxford, a negro, got into water over finest crops ever made on their pianta- bis depth and sank. In his struggles he tions. if '!HiiiJSr Vi. lept got hold of the seine pole, which was in the hand of Alexander, and was drawn to the surface by that gentleman. Oxford caught Alexander and together they sank again, but Alexander finally gi t to the bank of the paid with the half drowned negro. Boh Rowan, of Rockdale county, was bitten on each hand by a highland mocca sin a few days since. While feeling around in a hollow log after a rabbit he felt some - thing strike him, and in jerking his hand out pulled the snake out with it, its fangs had stuck so deep into the hand. While attempting to release himself from the snake he was bitten on the other hand. It is said that he drank a gallon of wnisky. His arms were considerably swollen and he suffered terribly. Tt was thought at the time that he would die, but he is a little easier now. On Major Napier’s place in Baldwin county, last Sunday, a negro man's skull was badly fractured with an ax in the hands of his step-son. lie had married a woman with a lot of children, and it seems on Sunday last, he had indulged in beating his wife a little. This son was off at the time, but when tie came back lie di-. own ed the fact and bided his time to avenge it. When ail was quiet and serene and the o'd man was silting before the fire, the son got an ax and slipped up from behind and dealt him a blow. Dr. Harris is attending the darky, and says his skull is badly frac tured, but has great hopes of his getting over it. At a meeting of the board of directors of the Macon Gas company, held Saturday, a discountof 10 per cent, on gas hills when promptly paid was authorized, and a still larger one of 20per cent, was granted large consumers, to take effect next October. This reduction is granted by the company without being forced from it by fear of competition, or bv any outside pressure, but merely because it is and has been its policy to reduce the price and increase the use of this important article as fast as is consistent with safety and proper regard for the capital invested. Five years ago the price was $6 per thousand feet. and it will be after Oct. 1, down to $2 26 to tlu general public and $2';er thousand feet to large consumers. James Gaffney, tlie engineer of the Sa vannah. Florida and Western rnilv ... who was cut in an affray with h bar keeper in Albany recently, and was after wards locked up in the guard bouse all night, hns instituted suit against the city for .«6d00. The police say they did not know he was cut when they locked him up. Gaffney, on the other hand, claims that they did know it: that the fact was too apparent to have been overlooked under tne circumstances ; that he was ar- ■\ : 3.1,7 \ «\ ' Vs / „ ■ V \ V \ *£j.‘ .£ Kfc*f tea. k ■. A—< a war ):-.l i i ; ht tin* Expos tions o New Ol it'- ■v .s ;i ,-i ;. • ip*.; . c. mid lie.- ii. vciitlo, «•? : ’va. o li'jq. Tlie su ; " I I- y 1 Col liliut* over bon or wliai ■ hi ' l.h- a- %>' OC: :•*/ tieinODNlrater by ovi-i ;i- <■ 'Xl'cric LLL*. If is mor» durabic. ; 1 ■ It |It.! I. . L.l. ..i(* Cuaif* riabir and 'id' r >u Av .i.l , : i --jijj imitn: io;,'-. nju'b* i f vamup kinds of i -II N ;• ■ iriT.vdne i ? • Dn. W lUNSIl'a C-'IIAl.. XL ” ;s prime on inside of Steel ct.vci In speaking of the East Alabama Fail- Association. tiie Eufaula Mail says: The outlook for a fair the coming tall was never more promising, nor lias there ever been so much interest exhibited by the stockholders and officers, nor as much en thusiasm as on yesterday. We congratu late the association in the selection of Col. McKay as its president, who. with Mr. Skillnian nnd the able and untiring secre tary. will, we feel sure, make "things “hum” from now on. Pluritlii. Hon. Charles Dougherty is worth $260.- ~ )v£j Co(rf arVvJ Two C|lver Watermelons are celling in Tampa two for a nickel. Sales in rcai estate continue active at Tallahassee, and the tendency is steadily upward. It requires over one thousand kcas of beer monthly to quench the thirst ol' St. Augustine. Fry’s experimental farm at Kerr C’iry has again been beard from, this time in the shape of a monster watermelon weigh ing 53 pounds. It is reported that Judge Fortner has been promised by the Lakeland people £500 for his services in case the scheme of removing the county seat from Bartow to Lakeland is successful. The work of renovating and enlarging the post -)ibce at St, Augustine progresses in a satisfactory manner. When all this work shall haw been completed the habit ual victors will nbseiwe some 500 new lock boxes. S. B. Maine, of St. Angusrinc.isthe«nvn- er of a horse which an inveterate lover of tobacco, in any fi rm, and \\ ill at any time turn away in disgust from his daily prownder if offend a chew of tine-cut “pig tail.'* or even “nigger-head.’’ Dr. Alba’s lease of the Plaza drug store building at St. Augustine will expire about Oct, 1st., after which date it has be»*n leased for a trim of years by the First Na tional Hank of St. Agusiiuc. Another story will be added, and tin* hank will be ti;r d up in metropolitan style. Dr. J. W. Smith, of c* iliahnii. has a paii of pet fauns whirl) weic numd in the woods about six m!h from 1 buck is about four wc« ks old apparently about three, and was in an almost heiph nearly starved, and its left ear. Smith ln:u now the little animal cricket. f QK SAU 3Y AML LEASES MERCHANTS- WARNED CI?C7HERS, 353 3ro* ciway, N tw York C.tt Crab Orchard WATER. -I'HIi MVfcR. l'H£ KIUNEV8. Ltm*5 stomach. [THE BOWELS. A PI.SITIVK i VI1F. !<>lt ~ DYSPEPSIA Constipation. ^ iiiii.iuin. T!iv a.iil tin- dm- when fount! ■a condition, large boil on *.i the boil, and ias liwly as a ;,'vllUiUe hulln i "1 unit. Crab Orchard Water Co-, Prop’rs. N. TtiNE5. Ma 1 ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. pn!iaaer$ H uc kleberry IK AITI VI, I*It 1/1, «79.0»0.'t' I'lrkrls only N.v. Nhnn 1 , in |iro|>orlion. Louisiana State Lottery Comp'y, ! “IFc do hereby cert ! *if that we supervise the ar rangement /nr all the Monthly and (Quarterly Drawings of The Louisiana State Lottery Com pany, and in person manage and control the Drawings themselves, and that the same are cor>- ducted with honesty, fairness, and in good faith toward all parties, and we authorize the Company to use this certificate., with facsimiles of oar siej natures attached, to its advertisements.” <'oiiimlN«loncr* tlV the undersigned Banks and Bankers wi1\ pay all Prizes drawn in The Louisiana State Lot- ! teries which may be presented at our counters, { .1. II. OBI.IINIIY, Pres. I.u. Xut l ItuuK j J. \V. 14 II.HUKTII.Pre*. Millie Nufl K*k A. IIAI.IMVIN, l»re*. N. O. SnVl llimk Incoqjorftted in 1MH for 25 years by the Legisla ture for Educational and Charitable purposes— with a capital of #1.000.000—to which a reservo fund of over $.")50,UOU has since been added. By an overwhelming pojujlar vote its franchise was made a nart of the present State Constitu tion. adopted December 2d, A. 1>. 1H79. Tin only Lottery ever voted on and endorsed by the people of any Slate. ! IT NEVER SCALES OR POSTPONES. It* (oimd Single Number llnmiiiu* talie |»Ijm*c Tlmillil.v. and the Extraordinary drawings regularly cveiN three months, instead i of Hemi-annually as heretofore, beginning March.. . 1HM). a spiiiNimt oppoimmtv n> WIN A EuRTCNK. SEVENTH GRANT) DRAW ING, CLASS 4m. IS THE AC ADEMY OK Ml'SltJ, NEW ORLEANS. TUESDAY, July Uitli., lsst» IB I III Monthly Drawing. ( A PIT A I. PRIZE 873,000. 100.000 Ticket* til Five Dollar* Facia Fractions in Filtli* in |*ro|»ortion. $75,000 do do 25,000 do do 10,000 I* RIZES OF $0000 12,000 do 2000 10,000 do 1000 10,000 do 500 10,000 do 200 20,000 500 100.. 50.. UJ rDYSENTERY CHILDREN TEETHING ^llVuJ?£Sts ... 30,000 ... 25,000 ... 25.000 ... 6,750 ... 4,500 ... 2,250 ..$265,500 50$PER BOTTLE At KIRVEN’S Summer Silks 2o cents: Ponyct 1 Silks '2~> cents; Foulard Silks 40 cents; Printed Nun's Veilings 15 cents; All Wind Huntings 15 cents; Linen Lawns 1() cents ; Li inn Drills for Punts routs; Linen Crash 01 cents; Cuthniadrs for Roys' Wear 8 cenls ; Manilla < '.hecks, new and (lesinihle, l-J-2 cents W Idle Linen de India 5 cenls; While l’hiid Lawns 10 cenls ; While I’laid Linen de India l^j cenls; While Linen Law ns 12L 15 and 2a cenls. Good Bargains in Silk Umbrellas! APPROXIMATION PRIZES. 9 Approximation Prizes of $750 9 Approximation Prizes of 500 9 Approximation Prizes of 250 1967 Prizes, amounting to Application for rates to clubs should be mad© only to the Oflice of the Company in New Orleans. For further information write clearly, giving Bill address. PONTAI* SOTES, Express Money Orders, or New York Exchange in ordi nary letter. Currency by Express <at our ex pense'addressed Mb A, PAFP1IIX, New Orleans, ha. Or .11. A. OAIPIIIX. Wnstiiiigton. D. i\ Make ■». O. Money Or«ler* |>nyiUrle« and mldre** Henl*t«*re<l EHIern to SEW Oltl.lt\S NATION A F HANK. ' jel6 wed se«&w4w New Orlonn*, ■/«. TRUSTEE'S SALE, Property of the Columbus Manu facturing Company. Complete innt Fully F.«|Ui|»|»ed fottou Fiietory. Togetlier tvllli Nearly » Mile of the Fine*! Mater Power tyx I lie Flint laliooeltee ltiver, JiinI AIiovo l the Fity of fol»im‘*o*. i oTA TF. O F t J FORD 1A. M l f S( ()0 EE l C )TN3'Y —* • ay By vimir of the power vested in us under the terms and conditions of a certain deed of trusl executed t<» the undersigned, J. Rliodes Browu© and A. Illge.s, irustee.-. by the Columbus Manu- flicturing ( ompany. of Muscogee county, stale of Georgia. ted March 1, lhs-l, whereby the said corporation c mveyed to us all of the property, real and pe.somil, hereinafter described, in trust,, to secure the payment of its certain issue oh bonds and the interest coupons thereof as in said trust deed specified and enumerated all of which’ appears duly of record in Mortgage Deed Book “A," folios 367 to 373, March 5, JHK4, in the Clerk’af oflice of Superior Court. Muscogee county, Oeor» gia. and in Record Deeds, volume () O, pages 8.1* to 8K inclusive, March 22, 1HK4, office or the Pro* bate Coun in the county of bee, state of Ala^ bama, and in confonr.it;, with the directions % terms prescribed in tlie resolutions passed by th^ holders of said bonds on April 21. 1HK6, under the authority conferred by suiu deed of trust,j We will seii in the city of Columbus, Muscogeo county, (ieorgia, on the 3d day of August, 18H6j between the legal hours of sale, in front of the auction hou^e of 1 ; . M. Knowles & Co., on the northwest corner of Broad street and Tenth ■ formerly Crawford streeti, 'being the usual place ft.r sheritrs sales in sairi city of (.'oluni bus) at public outcry. t<> the higlie.rt bidder, foreash, th© Following th-cribc<1 property oi tin- Columbus Manufacturing Company, to-wit.: All those lota and parcels of land s.turned, lying nnd iieing aa follow-: Fractional section number twenty-six 20 mid tin- mirth hulfni tract ioiatl sect ion num- ber tliiity-Hv« 35 . both in fraetioiiul township number eighteen IN , rungc number thirty (30), in formerly Russell, now bee counts, state oi Alabama. Also tlu* following lots of lands lying and living in the eighth >Kth district of Muscogee county, state of (ieorgia, known as lots numbers eighty-six H6 and eighty-seven NT 1 and the west hall of l,»t number venty-lbur 71 and tractiontf. nuniln*re<l ninety-one !ii and ninety-two .92). and IManu number three 3> in t battuhouche© river and a simil! (Mielosure situated east of the re-.ideuee tbrmerlv occupied by J. R. Clapp, used a.- a residenco am’l grazing lot. containing seven 7'aen -mine or less. All of said lands last de scribed King and being in the county of Musco gee and slate of «ieorgia, and, togetner with said lands in bee county, Alabama, containing eight hundred and thirty S3u acres more or less. Also, all of the said Columbus .Manufacturing Compuuyn buildings on said land in Muscogeo county. (ieorgia, operated as a Cotton Factory, and wilii ail of the improvements in any manner appendant and appurtenant thereto, inclusive, of the cards, spindles, looms, machinery and fix tures of every kind w hatsoever contained in said buildings: also, all and singular the other im provements on all of the lands aforementioned andde-eribed: also, the entire water power owned and controlled by said Columbus Manufacturing Company on and in said Chattahoochee river, together with all and singular tlit* rights and f'rancliLe.s by the sain Columbus .Manufacturing ' <>mpan\ helu and i>os«.<-* M ( | therein undei the W.‘ ret i'ivi' new giiotk- daily. : I id i•( 1111111'• t e. ; ot ' kt*c|)iiiL r our slock fro The ■ot t" flic*. able cllig uI it i* i capacity msists at liter sui‘- and pro- ii' yards a ree yard» Hy F. M. i uo\\ !«•* A William Roberts and another small negro bov, living near Taihthassei*, were luuid- BY VI1 Ordinal, fr-.m oi rr*.st«-cl anil imprisoned without the lormnli- ling an old pistol a few weeks apo, wii ty of a warrant and without having an op- went off'and lodged a bullet in William's portunity to give bond for his apjiearanei left eye, i-anaing upward. The eyeball In to answer any charge that the city might came so badly affect, d thut Dr. Hubert G. prefer against hint, and that bv being east Gamble, assisted hv Dr. Charles F. Shine, into prison he was denied medical atten- la*t week took out the diseased eyeball, hat tion, which treatment subjected him to were forced to leave the leaden ball sti’l great hardship and suffering, and came lodged somewhere in tlie head. At last ai- J. A. KIRVEN & CO. The Brown Cotton Grin Co. great near costing him his life. The following is the latest in regard to tlie approaching commencement exercises of the University of Georgia: R. I'. Meader, jr., of Brunswick, has liven added to the list of senior speakers, from the uni- versity. Tin- reunion of the class of 1881, of tlie university, whirl was to have taken place at com mencement, has been postponed Among the most interesting exereis. s of the university wili be the champion de bate between'the Demostlienian and din Kappa societies. The question decided upon for debate is. Resolve-.1, Flint i con - moil school education should n.t 1 ■ counts the wound was healing up nicely. The following civil appointments have bc-en made bv the governor during tin- past week: William Thompson, to lie ji - lice of the peace for Polk county; t'. W. C'onolly, to be justice of the weave for Orange county: J. (). t'osbv, to l>- ju-ti,- of the peace for Alachua county; T. il. Kills, to be coil, tv C' mmissioiici' for Holmes county; William H, Wiigm.to b,- conimissioin r of deeds for Florida fur Pennsylvania: B. DuI’re Hodge, K. O. Perrin, jr., to be justices of the peace for Marion 'county; Daniel McLeod, jr.. James M. Hart, to he justices of the pi nee for Walton i , Hint'.-. mmi: NEW LONDON, CONN. ManufauturtTs «»f tlu* “OI«i RA'lIable* 1 Brown Cotton C«iiir>, Fuctl« rs ami C'ou- dciiscrs. All tlu* vury latv>t improvements: im* proved roll bov, patent whipper, two lirusli belts, extra .strong lirusli, ca.*»t steel bearings, u; improved Feeder, eiilarK' ’uustproo. omlcnser. uiiKtSitupIo^ . jii-trnetioTu durable ’gin tbt »• ..»» cleans t lie s«.-ud per- et,. and prodilees flr»t e!.i.*3 samples. IMIblVMRKll I’ur.i: OF FREIGHT nt any aeee.s*ibl»* point, heud tor full description and price ii-t. shirtings tojthe |>"und. Hu* "jicratives* bouses and improvements Rt*n- eraliy in excellent condition, labor abundant, lands ek vated and locali«»n of property uusur- pass.-d for liealth, con\enieiiue and econoiincaJ production free 1 Vo in the bunlcn of municipal taxi - paid by all the other Columbus mills, yes within three miles of tlie city of Columbus and three-*inatters of a mile of Columbus and Romo railroad Tin water power is the finest in the south, controllim- and embracing the whole bed of the Chattahoochee river for the distance about one inib* along the lands c>f said company, -aid lands extending along its banks upon tha (•eorgia and Alabama sides of the river. Only n 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 plank necessnrv. Tbto magnilieem water power is easily controlled, anti has a fall of I2Lflwty-two and .• halt*' feet within ., thrt*e-qimrte"rs»- of a mile. With a compara tively small expenditure upon a new dam l’Za.UOR one Jiumiicil and Inent.v-lnetJioiisan 1 spindles, with lo >nis in proportion, can be driwn by tliia waterpower, capital for the erection of adf*b ti'-nal lui'.s and utilization of the immense P" - cr > v wasted is ail that ;s needed to make .1 pope- this property tlie Ions mantilacturii t-on oft annalists Tin* p< i . Full ual i ('OL! '.'IIH'S IIP >.\ W'ollKb A gi C"]ll!ll])l!S. Gil. 'll K I t-7WiL i':,j Jtv. y.i