Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, August 29, 1886, Image 4

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<Cohwilitt9<Eiu)ttiw-Siw.
ESTABLISHED IN 1828. 58 YEARS OLD.
Daily, Weekly and Sunday.
The KNQUIREft-SUN Is liwucd every 'ley, ex
eepl Monday. The Weekly Ik issued on Moodily.
The Daily ilncludinK Hundnyi is delivered hy
carrier* in the city or mailed, piwtttRe d ee, to *ub-
acriber* for 75c. per month, for three
month*. $4.0(1 (hr *1* month*, or $7.00 n year.
The Sunday is delivered by carrier boy* In tile
city or mailed to subscribers, postage free, nt
81.00 a year.
The Weekly is issued on Monday, and is mailed
to subscribers, postage free, at $1.10 a year.
Transient advertisements will be taken for the
Daily at ft per square of 10 lines or less for the
drst insertion, and 50 cents for each subsequent
Insertion, und (hr the Weekly at $1 for euclt in-
aertlon.
All communications Intended to promote the
private ends or interests of corporations, societies
or individuals will be charged as advertisements.
Special contracts made for advertising by the
year. Obituaries will be charged for at customary
rates.
None but solid metal cuts used.
All communications should tie addressed to the
ENqoiRKn-SirN.
ATI,ANTt AMI PHOIIIIIITI0N.
Atlanta litis boon stirred from renter to
eimimfereniT by (be foUo\vitt)i taken
from the editornl columns of a New
York paper:
“Meantime, there is no doubt concerning tlic
immediate effect of prohibition on the business
interests of the city. II was minimized rather
than exaggerated by the speakers at the meet
ings. We have permission to use portions of a
private letter written on August ill to a friend in
New York by Mr. J. W. Clavton, an old citizen of
Atlanta. Mr. Clayton says:
“Prohibition is working ruin to Atlanta, while
Macon, Savannah, Augusta, Columbus, Mont
gomery, Rome, Birmingham, are ail moving for.
ward, the last two named experiencing a big
boom. Wo here are occupying our time
ill biller Strire over prohibition and
Its results. Business here in all
lines is at a standstill, nearly 8000 houses vacant;
real estate depreciated; assessments of real es
tate increased to raise revenue; taxes increased
wherever tlie charter wiit permit ,t; city can’t
meet her engagements with contractors for street
work, etc., etc. Atlanta may bo put down as a
finished city. While we are cutting cacli other’s
Hiroats our neighbors will gobble up Atlanta’s
trade, which has already been done to a largo
extent, wltic she will never regain for I tic reason
that while Atlanta grows weaker neighboring
cities arc growing stronger. Birmingham lias
gained over 101)0 in population, and Chattanooga
nearly ns much in t lie last twelve months, from
Atlanta, and it is estimated that our population
has decreased 10,000 in the last six or eight
months.”
Wo bavu just talked with ono of our
most prominent and reliable citizen,, who
lias spent several days in Atlanta. He
made active use of (lie opportunity to
observe and ascertain the eltbcts of pro
hibition on that city’s prosperity, and
.judging hy what lie says there is not
much room Ibr such complaints as found
In the above. He says that, if Atlanta is
experiencing any serious depression
from tlic change lie could not discover
it. He states that the places formerly
occupied ns bar-rooms are now used as
green grocers, provision stores and other
kinds of trade, and the people still visit
them and leave their small change with
the occupants, but it is for something for
their own and their family's substantial
benotlt.
As contirmatory of our informant's
statements, the (’-(institution of yesterday
publishes in detail interviews had wiili
iptite a number of Atlanta's leading busi
ness men und prominent citizens repre
senting every trade and class of business,
and the unvarying statement of them till
is to tlie ell'ect tlint Atlanta is not suffer
ing in her trade and business interests
from the effects of prohibition. It
strikes us as exceedingly singular that
prominent citizens will thus attempt to
holster up the whisky cause at the ex
pense of their city.
lAortiland intellectual battles which
jBaee mankind upon a higher pi;
, aui'vevuvu uj uim .living; battles which shall dispe
ies. To it man of refine,W cohorts ol
sensibilities, occupying Jr spirits of ci
I’lOKIilTY UUAIUNTKKS.
The issue of fidelity guarantee polieies
by insurance companies supplies a desid
eratum that has long been deeply felt,
not only in otlicial but in eommereial
life, whilst it furnishes one of the most
striking illustrations of the co-operative
tendencies of the complex civilization of
the present age.
Tlic advantages of the system are so
obvious and the objections to private
guarantee are so many and so great that
it is surprising that the latter has not
long since been superseded by that of
public companie
and delicate sc-,,k,u,iivivo, \,w u,^
p,>-iinm of trust and responsibility
notliing eoulv. be more embarrassing
than to be under the necessity of solicit
ing his personal friends to become pecu
niarily responsible for bis fidelity and
good behavior, not to speak of the
gain in self-respect and personal inde
pendence on the part of the guarantee.
The system relieves the guarantee from
the embarrassing alternative of either be
ing compelled to refuse a personal favor
or of inetirring, without any valuable'
consideration, a greater or less degree of
pecuniary responsibility.
There appears to be no good reason
why one should ask a friend to insure bis
honesty any mere than his life or his
dwelling house. In either ease it is, or
should he, a purely business transaction,
in which the applicant should be expect
ed to furnish a quid pro 4110. This be
comes more obvious in view of the fact
that during a given period, and under
M certain prescribed conditions, the number
W of cases of dishonesty or breaches of
^ trust may he calculated and tabulated
with the same approximate accuracy as
the number of deaths, or fires, or ship
wrecks.
Besides, there is this great moral ad-
mfSTitUfWmfilir
in tag”,' that us the character of the ap-
p i- ant for honesty and fidelity is suh-
ectod to a searching ordeal, and the ex-
iminntion is conducted on business prin
ciples, unbiased by personal or political
considerations,the system has a tendency
to elevate the moral status of the great
body of officials occupying positions of
trust and responsibility.
The system of fidelity guarantee by
companies appears to have mot with great
-'uccess in sonto of the British provinces,
where it lias been established for nearly
a quarter of a century. There is one
company in Melbourne doing business
in the several departments of fire, ma
rine, life and fidelity guarantee, in which
the profits in the last named branch
during a period of twenty-five years
were equal to ten percent, per annum on
the entire capital employed in all the
branches.
With such a system in operation, no
man need lie deterred, because of the
difficulties and embarrassments of giving
security, from seeking any ollice or
position of trust. He will not have to go
hat in hand to any one, but with good
character at his back, he can buy the
commodity he wants. Guarantee would
be tut article purcltaseablu in the market
from companies which make it tlieir
business to sell it, and which do so, not
ns a benevolence, but as a profitable
source of revenue.
LIFE'S FITFCI. FEVER.
With a great many persons life is little
else than a continual worry. The great
problem of “How are we to he fed and
clothed?” is ever uppermost in their
thoughts, and its solution is never
reached. The fear of starvation looms
up as a gloomy spectre and will “not
down ut tlieir bidding.” Forebodings of
coming ill are always obtruding them-
selves, und croaking becomes chronic.
With such people life is tt bother and
fret from morn till night, and peace and
contentment arc unknown, bifeis given
for better purposes titan murmuring and
repining. In n country like ours starva
tion is rarely beard of, and “where there’s
a will there’s a way.” People manage
to get along somehow or other, and all
live till they die. In the wide domain
of nature no place is found offering such
rich rewards for industry and frugality
us our own native land. Here wo have
ample elbow-room, a diversified climate,
with an endless range of employment to
suit all talents and tastes. With ordinary
energy and forcaste no one need to give
way to despondency or go whining over
the hard decrees of fate. As to pauper
ism, there ought to he very little of it in
America, and there would be but little if
everybody who are able to do so would
work.
Instead of eternally looking on the
dark side of life’s picture, how much bet
ter it were if all could adopt the lan
guage of one of the great i*>ets:
"Whatever skies above nte,
Here’s a heart for every fate.”
Hopeful, sanguine temperaments are
best, and all should strive to cultivate
them. Sunny, cheerful dispositions arc
an antidote to most of life’s ills. To
take things as they come and make the
best of them, is (he wisest of all philoso
phy. People should never quench the
buoyant outgushing of nature in tlieir
children, but encourage them by all
means to look on the bright side. It is
true that life lias severe battles which must
bo fought, but let tlic fighting be done
in a brave, heroic spirit. Instead of
studying how to be miserable, why not
assume the more pleasing task of learn
ing to he happy. The Cheat Teacher
has left on record that
“life is more than food and raiment.”
While these are necessary and ought to
he obtained by honest effort, yet these
are the commonest elements of good, and
are supplied by a bountiful creator to in
ferior creatures. Life has higher claims,
and it is the highest wisdom to study
them out and profit by them. To do and
got good is worthy of effort. As we jog
along in the every day treadmill of life
our labors may he sweetened by the
thought that tA groat promise stands,
"Seed time and harvest shall never fail.”
Tlterei are other battles than that of
braid and meat to be fought—grand
lBoralanil intellectual battles which shall
a no of
the
of evil, and enthrone the happy
pints of contentment and peace.
The Sun’* Erl Ipse To.lfey
The total eclipse of the sun occurs to-day. It
is expected to reveal *ome additional knowledge
respecting the sun’s atmosphere, and perhaps
' other scientific information. Our own govern
ment hus not taken the pains that some of the
European countries have to send out observation
parties. The duration of the period of total
; obscuration in this eclipse Will be nearly four
and spreads It out and exhibits to tile pub- 1 minutes-a very unusual feet, ami one which
lie at so much a peep,the damnation being promisesHUeresUng ^^iNRWIb
thrown in for nothing. The paper’s
writer ought to beg the buzzard’s pardon
for the comparison.
The Cincinnati Knquirer creates filth
every day that no vulture however hungry
would touch with his hooked talons.
It brings up villainy, unholiness
and scoundrelistn that no eye
has yet seen, and no ear has yet heard,
chief editor and owner has for weeks
been running his smut mill at the rate of
ten columns a day to prove that he is a
smaller villain than those over whom he is
smearing his smut. It Is a defensive wav,
and It has not yet been a successful one.
The managing editor aud chief lieuten
ant of the owner of the paper has been ar
rested for perjury and hound over to ap
pear during the past week; and the pa
per’s chief of staff and principal traveling
correspondent is now under bonds to ap
pear in the United States court in Macon,
Georgia, to answer wholesale libel, par-
observations which have been arranged for this
event. The eclipse will begin on the Panama
isthmus at sunrise, and, sweeplug out over
the Atlantic ocean, will cross the West
Indies obliquely, and be total as seen from
the island of Grenada about an hour and
a half after sunrise. That is the spot which has
been chosen by the British Royal Astronomical
s clety as the site for its chief observations, as
,. ] there the obscuration will continue longer than
on any other available spot—the maximum dura
tion occurring not there, hut out on the open
ocean, within a few hundred miles of the African
coast, and where there is not even a little Island
for a foot-hold for the observers ami their instru
ments. The eclipse will not be due in south
Africa till n somewhat advanced hour in the
ticularized libel, the libel of little children afternoon—such is the vast space, mostly
ocean surface, over which the shadow of our
satellite will sweep, in its oblique course athwart
the isles and seas, the continents and capes,
until it ends at sunset in the Indian ocean near
the outer coast of Madagascar. The conditions
AUK POOP WOMEN UAltK I
“The world is ftill of beautiful women, but a
truly good woman is a rarity.”
The man who wrote the above sentence
has evidently lost bis faith in the true
goodness of the gentler sex. But he had
to lose himself first—sell himself to the
devil as it were—before he could mount
the apex of such an infamous creed. The
sentence quoted is clipped from tne Cin
cinnati Enquirer. It seems eminently
fit that this journal should be the mouth
piece of such an announcement. What is
the Cincinnati Enquirer, anyhow? It is the
money-making monstrosity of American
journalism. It is a sort of dumb-waiter
of perdition, bringing tip tilth at so much
a waiter-full, from a depth to which
no other paper or person has
ever yet had the combined
temerity and turpitude to dive. Another
puper in Cincinnati recently called the Cin
cinnati Enquirer the “Scavenger of a Con
tinent.” But this was a misnomer and a
faulty figure. The scavenger is pure be
neath his dirty covering. He is the honest,
divinely ordained destroyer of filth. He
preyB upon uncleanness, it is true; but he
preys upon it to its own annihilation.
Hence it is a rhetorical wrong to stand up
the honest vulture as the representative
bird of the Cincinnati Enquire*. The
and their dead mothers—all that the puper
might sell fast in the scums where it circu
lates. These are a nice crowd
to discover that “ good wo
men are rare.” They are evidently
rare where these men most do congregate.
One of these creatures couldn’t tell a good
woman from a temporal Bection of proto
plasm, if he were formally and uninten
tionally introduced to both as a gentleman.
But it is not with the Cincinnati Enquirer
we propose to deal, with any hope of doing
missionary work, in this article. The Cin
cinnati Enquirer is joined to lucre and
filth—the twin Molochs of its infidel am
bition.
But it would bo well to remember that
when au individual man speaking his own
opinion asserts that the truly chaste women
are becoming rare, he has said enough. He
has advertised his own character as a cage
of unclean birds. The wish is father to
tlie thought. He hopes, that good women
are becoming rare. This class of men are
infestors of everywhere. We meet them
in counting houses and banks und at book
keepers’ desks, sailing under the euphoni
ous and elastic title of “business men.”
We meet them in the grey dawn on ques
tionable streets, neurotic hawks of tlie
darkness, tlieir eyes expanded und red
with the dying fires of tlie night’s name
less debauch, and clothed in thread
bare apparel; we meet them as
screeching und effeminate young men, too
dainty to touch anything viler than a
cologne bottle and a cane; we meet them
as athletic idolators of the fleshy and the
physical, but still buckram dandies with
more broad cloth than brains. But where-
ever we meet them, however sweet their
manner, and soft their touch, and tickling
their conversation, they are men whose
tongues have stained the white name of
their mother’s sex; they “are neither beast
nor human, they are ghouls.” When a.
man stands in a public place and watches
a woman walk by, whose cast-off shoe he
is unworthy to touch, and shrugs his
shoulder and leers with his mean, merciless
eye, and says ruinous things in an indefinite
yet convincing way, there ought to
be a . law to let some
good woman’s husband or father smite
him down to the earth like the serpent
witose hiss he tries to imitate. It is true
good men do not listen to him, and bad
men do not believe him; but he may be
planting his poison in some little boy’s
ear, who has been regarding his sisters as
little saints and his mother as heaven’s
commissioned angel on earth.
One of these men will sit on a barrel
head in a groggery at midnight with a
group of gaping numbskulls at his elbow
and say, with sophistic ignorance; “Solo
mon, the wise man, said, ‘I have found one
man true in a thousand, but of women not
a one.’ That’s what the wise man of
tlie Bible said. He knew. I tell you, gen
tlemen, you have to watch a woman. You
have to watch every one. There are no
exceptions. According to Solomon every
one has her price.”
It would be a sort of Christian satisfac
tion to an honorable man—a man with a
mother and a sister and a wife—to abhor
the author of such a speech. But he might
be told that when Solomon penned those
words he was closing his career—a career
which all the orthodox Bible commenta
tors ended by his dying as an idolator and
a fool. Solomon was once wise and good.
Perhaps one adjective would have been
enough here. For only the good are wise
and only the wise are good. He went off
after strange gtfds.
These writings are preserved in the holy
canons as warnings, not as wisdom. We
are to profit by them only by comparison.
And yet one of his latest and vilest asser
tions is quoted by his successors in folly as
a piece of inspiration to impeach the
chastity of women in every age and
country.
No; women are pare. Lucretia was only
one of a vast multitude who preferred
death to dishonor. Lucretia was a heathen.
How many more must there be under the
sweet inspirations of the gospel of Jesus
Christ who prefer death to dishonor?
If the chastity of men and women
could be compared by bulk it would be
like rolling n marble against Mt. Ararat—
that monarch among mountains.
It was an undue admission to argue this
question. Where is tlie man who ever
watched his aged grandmother go to sleep
in her rocking chair at twilight with her
spectacles lying ou her tear-stained Bible,
while the angels came down and peeped,
beckoning to her to see if she was ready
to go up and remarry the husband of her
youth in heaven? Where is the man
whose mother tied up his cut finger as a
baby, and held his hot fevered hand all
! night as a youth, and at last stood in court,
I where she had never been before, and with
her white hair and her tears begged for his
life as a murderer? Where is the man who
pillowed his cheek against his little sister’s
in the trundlebed so many years ago?
Where is the man who has ever had the
superlative honor of calling some good
woman his wife, and who watches her
pluck up the thorns day by day in front of
him with her dainty fingers? Wherever
these men are, they will answer in unison
that the assertion that “good women are
becoming rare” is aa vile a lie aa ever float
ed up from the bottom of perdition or the
bottom of a bad man’* heart,
- l -... . .... ..
for observation, on the West Imlia island of
Grenada, are not expected to be perfect, for this
is the rainy season there; but the showers are apt
to be real showers on that particular island, not
long continued downpours, but intermittent;
with spoils of sunshine between; and it is hoped
though the chances seem dubious—that one
of these lucid intervals may occur at tlie time
of the eclipse. Not muc ', apparently, is to be
attempted in Africa; and yet it would seem as if
the African west uoast, the nearest laud to the
point of longest solar obscuration, might at least
afford a field for premising results, in the various
plans to utilize to the best advantage those three
or lour minutes. Something seems to be hoped
from distributing; the observation parties over as
wide intervals as possible on the West India
island; but Grenada is a small island, only twen
ty -four miles long by ten miles wide—hardly big
enough to radically divide up the showers. In
the United States, and particularly this side of
Mason and Dixon's line, little of the eclipse will
be soon.
Miss Emiisa Mosely.
Floridians and many people in other states
will regret to learn of the death of Miss'Lou
Nlosely, who died a few days ago in Waukeenah,
Florida. She was a niece of tlie governor of
Florida by her name. She was fifty years old at
the time ofher death, aud although of unusual
intellect and attractive physique, both being en
hanced by her social prestige, she never married.
She seemed to regard it some people's mission to
live single—she thought they were called to it
through a dispensation. Among these she r
garded herself as one. Her younger
sister, Miss Henrietta Mosely—while both
sisters were yet young—married Dr. William
Bellinger, a rising physician and business man in
Waukeenah. Miss Lou Mosely accompanied her
sister to her new home, and through choice, not
necessity, began her career as a teacher of chil
dren. This avocation she pursued with signa
success for many years. Her scholars of long
ago are now men and women, and wherever one
is when he hears ofher death he will drop a tear.
She left an Impress on each little soul
that will outlast the elements. Her sister, Mrs.
Bellinger, was blessed with many children,
last her elder sister—the subject of this sketch—
began to devote herself entirely to her sister'
children, her sister’s health being bad. They
looked on her as a second living mother. Under
her they flourished until several were grown and
the others well advanced on the way. None of
these children who grew, up have made ship
wreck of faith or failure of life. The eldest, Mr.
Wm. P. Bellinger, is regarded as the
best business man of his age, as well as one of the
brightest men of his age ir, all the section. The
other three brothers are fast completing their
education, along with four sisters of unusual
culture and beauty. The other day all these
children and many scores of friends were sud
denly summoned to Miss Lou Mosely’" death
bed. She had lived well, and it doesn’t matter
how she died. But she died like a star
fading in tlie glaylight, or us
quietly ns a rill runs on a slight decline. The
death of such people as she was is tlie best argu
ment in favor of a future existence. Such charac
ters must live on somewhere else, for good is
eternal. The cold earth never settled over a
purer heart, and the flowers that will blossom
each year above her couch of clay will be the
mute emblems of the resurrection to which she
I will be one of the heirs at “the gathering to
gether unto Him of all His at His appearing and
I His coming.”
MDSCPWE 14,1,0.#;!.
Merit is the Trade Mark
% .A-IDTID
TEST OF
of Success,
QUALITY THE TRUE
Upward and Onward, Each Day Adds New Laurels to the Already
Enviable Reputation of Columbus’s Favorites.
No
We
Dull Days at Gray’s!
ALWAYS CROWDED.
Came, We Saw, We Conquered,
Confidential, but tell all your neighbors about it—that Gray this week will have the
greatest bargains of the age. We must make room for our New Fall Stock, which is
on the way now. There is blood on the moon, so competitors look out. Note the un
heard-of prices and come early. a
Double Width De DAISON BLACK CASHMERE, worth 35c, price now 15c.
Double Width Lupin’s Extra Wide BLACK CASHMERE, worth 55c, price now 25c.
Double Width VERMDAL8EY IMPORTED MOHAIRS, worth 50c, price now 23c.
Double Width TORTER-SHELL CLOTH, fancy, all wool, worth 85c, price now 50c.
All our DRESS GOODS on our 12Jc Bargain Counter, pick at 10c.
4-4 1800 Fine Best PACIFIC COLORED LAWNS, worth 121c, at 5c.
Two new cases Best FANCY COLORED LAWNS, worth 6jc, at 2Ac.
40-Inch WHITE LAWNS, worth 25c, at 8c.
Splendid MONAHALK GINGHAMS, worth 10c, at lie.
A new line of FRENCH GUIPURE LACE CURTAINS, worth .«4 50, at £2 25.
We claim the best BLEACHED DOMESTIC in the city. It is registered in Eng
land worth 12|c; during this sale price will be 8c; 4-1 full; see it.
All full size MOSQUITO NETS will be 38 cents a piece.
Best FALL PRINTS only 41 cents; also good BLEACHING at 4 cents.
Ask to see our TOWELS, LINEN DAMASK and BED SPREADS.
All our FLANNELS are now in. See our prices; ’twill pay you; also how we
price AU Wool BLANKETS at this season of the year.
limn
IT GRAY’S”—-THE LIES’
The overwhelming aigumcnt in favor of the cash system is that it insures success; but there is
another even of weightier consideration, that it lengthens the career and doubles the chances and
years of business life, anihilating tlie exacting and exasperating annoyance that wear and tear with
"merciless severity until the big well stops. To the merchant driven to absolute desperation by the
miseries and agonies of the twin barbarians, the “Credit and Debit Ledgers,” oblivion or even death
itself is a welcome messenger. New aspii ants for fame and wealth under the curse of credit rarely
survive but few years of the terror and intense mental strain of the two infernal inevitables—how to
buy cheap and how to sell cheap. There is no pity mixed up with the inexorable demands of neces
sity. Self respect, lofty ambition, ability, peace and opportunity are swept down into one common
ruin, and sympathy and sentiment are utter strangers at the final scene. ’Twill be too late then to
say, “If we only had done like GRAY—sell them low for spot cash, make quick sales and small
profits, ’twould be better for us now, instead of drawing down the great curtain of oblivion over the
bitter, irremediable, irreclaimable past.”
It is our proud boast that we always ftilfill our pledges. We shall not deviate from this rule.
Therefore, genuine bargains may be expected. We mean what we say, and say what we mean.
What we always think of—sell them high, they pass you by.
Respectfully submitted by the Crushers of High Prices.
The largest business connections South—Columbus, Savannah, Augusta, New York.
OLT-TOF-HiIV'E-LLOXJSE,
C. P. GRAY & CO.,
Opposite Rankin House.
THIS IS THE WEEK FOR BARGANS,
-JLUSTD-
R F.GU LAH MEETING to-morrow
evening at 8 o'clock. Transient brethren in
gooff standing are cordially invited to attend.
^ J. F. WISE, N. G.
F. W. LOUDENBER, Sec’y. mh28eely
UNPRECEDENTED
STOCK OIF 1
Piece Goods
NOW READY
For Fall, 1886.
if,
Variety Unparalleled.
I'rieos Kensmiiiible.
Nat Wine, ion.Guaranteed.
GOODS selected now will be made ready for
delivery at any date desired. Call and favor us
with au order.
G. J. PEACOCK,
Clothing Manufacturer, 1200 4k 1202
Bran* Street. Columbus Oa.
eodtf
Hill & Law’s
Is tlie place to get them. All parties who desire to save
their money, and get great bargains, should call on us as
early next week as possible. It is well knowh that we sell
goods on very close margins, and in addition to this we have
marked our entire stock down in order to close out that part
of our Spring Stock which we now have on hand.
TO BE CLOSED OUT NEXT WEEK :
A beautiful line of Embroideries in Swiss and Nainsook.
These goods are marked at such prices that will charm every
one, aud those who fail to see them will be losing the golden
opportunity which does not come often in a lifetime.
A beautiful line of new Ruchings just received. This is
the newest and most beautiful line of these goods in this
market. Don't fail to call and see us,
HILL &c
Gin Houses Insured,
AIno Cotton autl Machinery Therein, by
JOHN BLACKMAR, General Insurance Agent.
Next to Telegraph Office, Telephone No. 51, Columbus
flugO se&w4m
Ga.
ACTIVE AGENTS WANTED
A CTIVE AGENTS WANTED to ael]
A ipeotolttw. Big k ]
FOR RENT.
$10 00. The Gaboury Residence, Rose Hill.
20 00. Tlie Dessau Dwelling and Store, Rose
Hill.
16 75. New four-room Dwelling, Rose Hill.
37 50. The Jordan Brick Dwelling* north Jack-
son street.
32 00. Mr. Geo. Glenn’s new two-etory Dwell
ing, north Jackson street.
15 00. Four-room Dwelling north Troup street.
20 00. New two-story Dwelling on Troup
street, hall square north of Grier’s store.
10 00. Barber Shop opposite post office, occu
pied by Sandy Alexander.
18 75. Store ou Broad street north of Epping
House.
L. H. CHAPPELL,
Bnktr, Seal Estate ui Iuvuce Agttt.
At*
RUNNING OF TRAINS.
Arrival nml l>«*i>armr<» of All Traiuc
ill foliiiiilniM <’afrying- PaNNcngers-
In Effect July is, iss«
ARRIVALS.
COLUMBUS AND ROME RAILWAY.
Mail train from Greenville 10:11 a. m.
Accommodation from Greenville 7:07 p. m.
SOUTHWESTERN RAILROAD.
Mail train from Macon 2:25 p. m.
Accommodation from Macon 2:43 a. m.
COLUMBUS AND WESTERN RAILWAY.
Mail train from Montgomery 11:55 a. m.
Mail train from Atlanta 6:31 p. m,
MOBILE AND GIRARD RAILROAD.
Mail train from Troy and Eufaula......... 9:55 a. m»
Accommodation from Troy, Eufaula
and Montgomery 2:02 p. m.
Accommodation from Union Springs... 10:48 p. m.
DEPARTURES
COLUMBUS AND ROME RAILWAY.
Mail train for Greenville 3:00 p. m.
Accommodation for Greenville 7:00 a. m.
SOUTHWESTERN RAILROAD.
Mail train for Macon 12:00 m.
Accommodation for Macon 11:45 p. m*
COLUMBUS AND WESTERN RAILWAY.
Mail train for Atlanta 8:54 a. m.
Mail train for Montgomery. 2:28 p. oil
MOBILE AND GIRARD RAILROAD.
Mail train for Troy 2:80 p.m.
Accommodation for Troy and Eulhula.. 4:56 a. m.
Accommodation for Union Springs and
Montgomery................ 8:48 P m