Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, September 12, 1886, Image 2

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DAILY ENQUIRER * SUN : COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY MORNING SEPTEMBER 12, 1X86. The Pleasures and the Benefits of a Trip from Home. The flatter, nk It Im anil ah It Wh-. I'lilitte llnlfi. Until Hot still Colil Visiting* Mniniefii' Mini- iiCmi'Inrlnic Initllntlnn A lilrl Ciiri'il nTSt Vlfin* llsnrp Thcstrlrnl it. mill Tile Vsi'ht Rnrr. special Correspondence Eni|iilror-Hun. Nkw York, September II.—The Inst, week linn been nonned In New York, and from the sire of the Columbus oniony here and the number we see by the lO.vqrmHR- Hl N who have left Columbus it seems hardly wort’ll while to write to the few who remain. Wcuroglad to nee so many learning that it Ik not best to work all the time, for besides show)ng that people are not so poor ns is represented, we know that nothing is of greater benefit to the health of u family than to tako them away from a town, If only for n few days, in the summer, The weather here for the past week lias been so cool that people are flocking in from the mountains and sea side. We had expected to visit Long Branch for a week, but unless we have another heated term shall not do so. The hotels there have for September greatly reduced their rates, and now idler first class rooms “fantng ocean” at seven and eight dollars a week. There has not been anything unusual to write about this week. The weather whs bo cool that one did not feel disposed to make trips out of town. One day we went down to TIIH BATTKBY, ouco the finest open space for fresh air breathing in the city,but the custom house, elevated railroad, emigrants landing, etc., have sadly encroached upon It, while the houses fronting on it (even in the writer’s memory) the abode ofwoalth and fashion, have become emigrant boardinghouses, stores, etc., while in place of fine ladies and beaux who once wanderdd over the shady walks wo see now only thousands of newly landed emigrants lounging on the benches wearing off their sea sickness and awaiting employment. Our visit was to examine the public baths kept by the city for the benefit of those unable to I nave the city. These baths aro well kept and no doubt are of great benetlt. One is free, while the other for twenty-live cents of- ers HOT OR CO!,I) SEA BATHS. They are both kept full nearly all the time, while the shouts nnd screams of chide them. Now nothing under a time keeper can get in. Timekeepers geta do. lar« day less than engineers, hut thoir work is clerical, you know, and on that .account wn overlook the wages. Of course we don’t admit nil timekeepers. Home of the superintendents don't like to meet their own timekeepers socially, though they consent to associate with timekeepers from other minos. Thearsayers kick a bit, out, hang It, tliis is a republic, as you know, and we cawn’t he altogether strict. I’m sure if we hank clerks don’t object, I he assayurs can stand it. Wliat does so ciety do to amuse itself? Ob, we have a lawn tennis club and a kettle drum now and again. But the principal fun is that i refuse to speak to people not in society, .y of businei It makes : an enviable sort of cxist- except In the way l hem furious, you know. “You must live once.” “Enviablol" cried the sagebrush swell. ‘1 should say so. Everybody envies us. We’re the most, exrlusive society on the coast. Why, the feeling against us Is so high that we really have to go armed.”— Han Francisco Post. laughter heard quite a distance from them testify to the pleasure of their occupants. Tlie theaters are now well patronized and are offering a variety of performances. One of the most popOlur is tli” Casino, at which the light opera Erminie, Iuih for more than a hundred nights filled the house and kept the audience in a roar of laugh ter from beginning to end. As the com pany will soon travel for the winter, it is hoped that Columbus people will have an opportunity to enjoy Its sprightly music and laughable peculiarities. We took the “little lady" to Niblo’s to witness the funny play, “Around the World In 80 Hays." The scenlo effects and costumes are perfect, while the Japanese ballet is said to lie an exact reproduction of one seen in the city of Joddo. The “little lady” seemed to understand t he play, and if any one In the audience enjoyed it move we did not see them. STROLLING ABOUT \ve visited the factory of the Wilsnnia Magnetic Company, and wore surprised to see the number of hands at work. The business steadily enlarges and from every state come hundreds of testimonials of benefit received. While there we heard ofortb girl entirely relieved of St. Vitus dance In three months, when In the be- glnning. she could not oven feed herself. Magnetism is still far from being under stood, but its similarity to the nerve power by which we live and move is something vety strange. The manufacturers told me that they uad some complaints that the insoles made the feet cold instead of warm. Upon investigation it was found that in 1 making them the girls had carelessly put I in the h itteries so that the current ran from toe to heel, while if made to run the opposite way the i fleet was to warm the feet. Ask- ! tug the iv isou the answer was, “ I don't know." Slow many strange secrets nature hits to which we must give the same an swer. Tin more we investigate her won ders the m ,>re we find there is we do not, know. Think of the discoveries in one branch alone, electricity, and whah has been done in fifty years? What may be' done with it In fifty more no man can ever dream. New York is profoundly impress ed by the MIS’.ORTt'NEB OK CHARLESTON. On every side we hear tJie wannest ex- NEW STYLES IN WALL PAPER. Tils Oiii'nhig of Ihe "I’mil Vm r”—Kvcrj I III nir Arrangeil to Avoid <'ostly Antagonism. ,September 20 will open the “pool year” in the wall paper trade. This means that the members of the American wall paper manufacturer’s association will 1 lo gin oil that day to sell goods from the new stocks manufactured since last spring. There are twenty-four muinbers of the as sociation, thirteen of whom are in New York and four in Brooklyn. Of the rest, four are located In Philadelphia and one in Buffalo, whilo there is one associate member (non-manufacturing) on Staten island. A peculiarity of the pool transac tions is thut all invoices of wall paper shipped before October 15 or after the 1st of March following date from the day of shipment, while invoices shipped between the dates named may date as iate as March 1, the object being to concentrate the bulk of the wall paper business in five months. All the large houses in New York agree that the coming “pool year” promises to he one of brisk trade and general profit. There are no differences of any moment in the association, and notwithstanding the fact that the concerns outside the pool have increased in number since last year, ttie association’s schedule is so arranged that costly antagonism without is not ex pected. “Styles in wall paper change almost completely every season” said the head of a large house, ns he displayed a dozen or more sample hooks of the papers that will be offered after September 20. “In all these hundreds of samples that you see there is but one which was in the market Inst year. It is a border that proved espe cially popular, and we have decided to run it again this year. What ure the new styles? They are hard to describe to per sons outside of the trade. In a general way, I may say that the designs m wall paper have for several years been running to rather lnrge figures. There are many of tli is style, lurge but not loud figures, in stock for the coining season. What we call 'blanks’—papers with the designs worked on plain surfaces, brown, buff and white—are decidedlyjthe most in demand, because they are the cheapest, ranging from 0J to 12 cents a roll at wholesale. Satin papers and what are ended embossed grounds are also generally in good demand nnd cost a little more than the blanks, the prices varying according to quality from 12 to 17 cents a roll. Bronzed papers, plain, colored and embossed, are ol a higher grade, costing from 23 to 44 cents a roll, and contain many really rich specimens of wall paper art. Some of the embossed bronzes this year are ns handsome as have ever been seen in the market and rival oil paintings lor delicacy of shade and color. But the most thoroughly artistic work in the wall paper line, is found in the borders, many of which are as skillfully designed and carefully produced as the classic sculptured friezes of antiquity. Everlsince the dado craze of a few years ago, borders have been reaching greater artistic perfection every year. There are bronzed borders, four-band bronzed, em bossed bronzed twenty-two inches wide, and what are called bronzed blotched bor ders. an effect peculiarly striking and unique, and the prices for these goods range from 55 to So cents, and even as high as 81.05 a roll from first hands.” WHAT THEY ARE NOTED FOR. AI pliii liet lea I Notes Upon Hie (Tinriicte some iVuteiiiig I'luees. A Koine of Best. O weary bamls! that, all the day, Were sut to labor hard and long, Now softly (till the shadows gray, The hells arc rung for even song. An hour ago the golden sun Hank slowly down Into the west; Poor, weary hands, your toll Is done: 'Tis time for rest — 'tie time for rest! O weary feet! that many a tniie Have trudged along li stony way, At lust ye reach tile trystlng stile; No longer fear to go ast ray. The gently bending, rustling (roes llock the young birds within the nest, And softly sings the quiet breeze; “ ’Tis time for rest -'Tis time for rest!” O weary eyes! from which the tears Foil many a time like thunder rain — O weary heart! tint through thu years Ileal with such hitler, restless pain, To-night forget thu stormy strife, And know, what heaven shall send is best; I/iv down the tangled web of life; ’Tis time for rest 'tis time for rust! —Clhantbers' Magazine. The Here anil Ihe Klepinint. A Hare gave out that she had been in sulted by the Elephant, and would meejt him in Mortal Combat on a certain day. This, of course, raised a Laugh Against her. und the Fox observed: “Wliat can you hope to Oain by such a Challenge?” “All the credit will he mine,” she re plied. “If the Elephant falls to Appear I can boost that he was Afraid of me. If he comes out I shall have the Fame of be ing the Hare who Declined to Fight him on Account of his Size.” Moral: It is on this line of Reasoning that the President is Maligned. For Fifty Years the great Remedy for Blood Foison and Skin Diseases. For 50 Years. It never Fails! Interesting Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free to all who apply. It should be carefully read by everybody. Address Q THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. g} sssssssssssss T Heal Estate Agent, 10. IMS BROAD STREET. FOR SALE. A Place of t wenty acres, lnrge nnd commodious House, with every convenience, in perfect on* der, 1 1 ^ miles from Broad street, in one of the most desirable lo- | calities adjacent to the city. If desirable would exchBURe for city property. A desirable four-room Dwell ing on south Fifth avenue; good neighborhood and not far from business center of Broad street. Terms easy and ou lorn* time. A desirable six-room Dwelling. t'\o stories, with water works, on north Droad. Place in thor- ough order. Five two-room Dwellings on Ninth street, one block of Geor gia Midland Railroad. Illiml, ami Ifclilng^ tlvely I'iihmI by <iitfi<-nrn. A WARM BATH with Cuticura Soap, an ex quisite Skin Bcautifier, and a single application of Cuticttra, tlie great Skin Cure, will instantly allay the intense itchimr of the most aggravated case of Itching Piles. This treatment , combined with small doses of Cuticura Resolvent, the new Blood Purifier, three times per day, to regu late and strengthen the bowels, overcome consti pation and remove the cause, will cure Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles when all other reme dies and even physicians fail. rrrHiNG imIjEn. I was taken for the first time in my life with Blind Piles, so severe that I could hardly keep on my feet. I used various remedies for three weeks, when the disease took the form of Itching Piles, and growing worse. By advice of an old gentle man 1 tried the Cuticura. One application re lieved the itching, and I was soon cured. I wish to tell the world that in cases of Itching Piles the price of the Cuticura is of no account. From an unsolicited quarter. Concord, N. II. O. C. KIBBY. IT<111*<4 PILES. I began the use of your Cuticura Remedies when you first put them on the market, and know of two cases of Itching Piles that have been unreel b:/ the use, at my suggestion, of these rem edies. F. N. MARTIN. Virdun, 111. I have tried your CuticuKA Remedies and find them all that you claim, and the demand for them in this section is great. rT1 4 AUGUSTUS W. COLLINS. Higgston, Ga. , Cuticura Remedies are a positive cure for every form of Skin and Blood Diseases, from Pimples to Scrofula. Sold everywhere. Price: Cuticura, 50 cts.: Soap, 25 ets.: Resolvent, §1. Prepared by the Potter Drug and Chemical Co.. Boston, Mass. NpimI for *'Hou to 4'urc k Nkln DtaeaNea." ! Xl\ 1 X W e ^ll ies - Plniplfes. Blackheads and 1 Jin by Humors, use Cuticura Soap. ACHING MUSCLES Relieved in one miflntfe by that new, i original, elegant, and infallible anti dote to pain uad inflammation, the I Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster. No ache 'i or pain..or bruise or strain, or cough ; or cold, or muscular Weakness but . , yields to its speedy# all-powerful and never-failing, pain-alleviating properties. At < druggists, 25c.; five for gl.QO: or of Potter Drug and ‘ Chemical Co.. Boston. wed se&w Huckleberry ordialh i/ wPmkjr. ■JPw Philadelphia Times. Atlantic City for angling, its ardent Ar abellas, and the amplitude of the aquatic anatomy. The Adirondack!! for altitude, the azure atmosphere, aboriginal animals and Arca dian attire. Bar Harbor for beauties and boating, big hills and bowlders, and bumping buck- boards. Barnegnt Bay for bait, breezes, briny breakers, buff bathing and brandy bottles. Two Residences pn north Seo- - ^ oml avenue (Jackson street i of 5 L - L - 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 nnd elegantHou.se close V, to court house. Dwelling in L - thorough order and has all the late improvements. Is consider ed one of the nicest homes. l!!t e m,! C ! , H S n ,Vnn^ra t t, ftnC l desire to ,“ id ' ,. AI1 The Catskills for croquet and climbing; mid \'..w mi L 1\'” H<em ^ 01 X°tten, clouds and “cloves;" congenial company and New York will nobly come to the aid of her suffering sister city. Sunday afternoon we accompanied two good Presbyterian sisters to the “High” church. st„ Mar.v the Virgin, of which we j gave some account last year. It scetns ; as if they ltad managed to take a step or \ two higher since then. The music was as ; usual, fine, and a feature we have never before seen has been introduced, which, I while adding much to the effect of the music, would to our uncultivated taste have answered better if put out of sight 1 instead of within the chancel in front of a j part of the altar. We speak of three large melalic kettle drums, such as all j III U'llioli o mn .1 zim.\n congenial company j and crowded caravansaries. Cresson for coolness, choice cuisine, j charming country and cozy cottages. Devon for dancing, delightful drives, ! dainty damsels, dining and diversion. Delaware Water Gap for dress, dullness, doctors 'of divinity, dreamy dells and ! dudes. Elberson for elegance, equipages, ex- I travnganee and everything entirely “Eng lish/” Niagara Falls for flirtation, felicity, for eign hops, fakirs mnf fantastic features. Lake George ifor girls nnd gudgeons, ’ J ‘--~ gondolasinnd germans. gliding Ocean Grove for goodness nnd gro- tesmieness, gossip and giggling girls. The Berkshire Hills for handsome hedges, humid heights, historic hearths ‘life’ fine orchestras use, and which a man came out and tuned during the offertory. Another thing sounded strange in a Protestant church to Protestant cars, viz: 1 rayers for the souls of those departed— not that, there is any more wrong,Iperh.ips, in nraying for what we all undoulflodly do wi h a id hope for our friends—but it ‘was ] 1U w to US. Anyhow, we left better I pleased than before with St. George's, I which belong to the “Low” style. j The coming week we are proposing to ' take several trips. THE OHKAT RACE kmi'»w?nl'air I « 1 Si i8h !’ utt ,V r aml tl \ e Ylul ' I picnics, phautom parties and prettv atn k, c s oup takes piacc for tlm queen’s cup, I phibious poliywogs. baflt' h mm™nff unR° ht i V” h lon8 R, t ? get i Richfield for refinement, romantic rides nat k, con es ott, and as last year will keep and rich rheumatics. New York, sports excited^ We may, in Sen Girt for style, salubrity, splashing • spray, spooning and sylvan shade. AURANTII Most of the diseases wiiii b nffliot mankind are origin ally caused by n disordered condition of tbe LIVER. For all complaints of this kind, such ns Torpidity of the Liver. Biliousness. Nervous Dyspepsia. Indigos- tiou. Irregularity of the Bowels. Constipation. Flatu lency, Eructations and Burning of the Stomach (sometimes culled Heartburn) Miasma, Mukiria, Bloody Flux, Chills an*: Fever, Breakbone Fever, Exhaustion before or after Fever?, Chronic Diar rhoea. Loss of Appetite Headache. Foul Breath, Irregularities incidental to Females, Bearing-down STIOIGER’SIURMTII is Invaluable, ft is not a panacea for all diseases, but PllDC all diseases of the LIVER, will VUBC STOMACH and BOWELS. It. changes the complexion from a waxy, yellow tinge, to a ruddy, healthy color. It entirely remover low, gloomy spirits. It. is one of the BEST AL TERATIVES and t>Ur lFIERS OF THE BLOOD, and la A VALUABLE -ONIC. STADICEPTTuRANTII For sale by all Druggiets Price $1.00 per bottle ^DYSENTERY 13L CHILDREN TEETHING f0 lYAl.LW jGBISTS *3TALL LI' 50tPERBOTTLE A delightful home on Rose Hill, half acre lot and a new House This property is consid ered to be one of the nicest i .I. i ■ homes on the hill. Terms easy and will be sold cheap. A nice little fhrm seven milea from the city in Lee county, Ala. Good four-room House on the place. Enough timber on place to pay for same. A desirable 7 room Dwelling with good vacant lot on north Fifth avenue, one of the most desirable locations in the city, for Bale cheap, as owner wishes to leave the city. Landlords Place the management of your property in my hands and secure good, prompt paying tenants, ns my long experience in renting enables all who place property in my hands to secure good and desirable tenants. For Rent from October ist, i§86. No. 1524 Sixth avenue, 3 room Dwelling, new. No. 1522 Sixth avenue, 3 “ “ 44 No. 1520 Sixth avenue, 3 44 44 44 No. 1518 Sixth avenue, 3 “ 44 44 No. 1516 Sixth avenue, 3 “ 44 44 No. 220 Thirteenth St., 5 44 corner. No. 1642 Second avenue, 5 44 44 44 No. 1532 Second avenue, 5 44 44 44 No. 1317 Second avenne, 5 room Dwelling. No. 1314 First avenue, 3 44 44 new. No. 1316 First avenue, 3 44 44 44 No. 1316 Warren street, 8 44 44 No. 823 First avenue, 4 44 44 4 No. 932 Fifth avenue, 4 44 44 No. 930 Fifth avenue, 5 44 44 No. 502 Eleventh street, 4 44 No. 1138 Front street, 7 44 No. Front street, 4 44 No. 710 Fifth avenue. No. 702 Ninth street. No. 708 Ninth street. No. 402 Second avenue. No. 402 Third avenue. No. 404 Third avenue. No. 430 Fifth avenue. No. 428 Fifth avenue. No. 1233 Fifth avenue, 5 rooms. No. 1304 Broad Street Store. No. 1248 Broad Street Store. No. 422 Fifth avenue, 4 rooms, new. No. 836 Fifth avenue, 4 rooms, new. No 693 Ninth street, 4 rooms, new. No. 709 Fourth avenue, 4 rooms, new, Patton Dwelling in Linnwood. 5 rooms, with tv o acres, fronting Geo. W. WooarufTs. 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 1245 North Broad St. corner. cor. gtti ■figes, humid heights id hospitality. Long Branch for looseness, lackeys, lively larks and loafers. Luray for luxuriance, lethargy, lovely lawns and labyriuthian lairs. Newport for nautical notions, neatness, ' UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, numerous noblemen and Norseman narra- 1 tives. Narritgansett for naughtiness, Naiad nymphs, “noodles” and notoriety. Asbury Park for parsons and pariahs, C. F. STADICER, Proprietor, <40 SO. FRONT ST., Philadelphia, Pa. 1*. 11. MULL, l>. !>., I.h. I)., Chancellor. » sente of our trips, see a portion of it. ibis afternoon, coming down Madison avenue, the magnificent palace of richly carved brown stone, built for the railroad millionaire, Villard, was shown us. It is very large and double, with a courtwav for entrance, by far the finest building on the avenue; but, with the suddenness with winch fortunes are made and lost in New * before the palace was completed the millions had melted away. T. Swvll Sm h‘t> ill the foundock. “What I object to in San Francisco,” said a young gentleman from the Comstock whom I met in the office of the Palace, “is that society here is so very mixed. If you are mvited out, you know, you eawu’t pos sibly tell whom you’re going to meet. You re just as likely as not to get into con versation with a man without a dollar as you are with a millionaire. It’s disgusting. Now, m \ lryinia City we do things better. ill begin Wednesday, 6th of October next. Full courses of study in Letters and Science; in Engineering. Agriculture, TUITION FREE. For j catalogues ana information address the Chan cellor at Athens. Law School opens at the same i time. For information address Prof. Geo, Dudley Thomas, at Athens. Ga. Lamar Cobb. Sec’y Board of Trustees, Athens, Ga. Aug., 1686. Wishing to Change My Business, I Offer My Entire Stock Coffins, Cases and Caskets, Robes, Etc. At greatly reduced prices interest by Purchasers will further their in- examinmg before buying elsewhere. B. F. COLEMAN. Jr. Gin Houses Insured, Also Col Ion anil Tlavliiiiory T'horcln. by society, savants, —-— Saratoga for scandal, satin nun satiety. The White Mountains for waterfalls, wild winds, walkers and woodland wastes. l/KMOX v.uxnt. flu in tile Laud of l.i'iii a common miner! Fact. A few of us got together and drew the line. At first we admitted engineers, who are paid *6 a dav. but some months ago we decided to ex- An old citizen of my town and an old druggist said to me to-day that he had long been looking for a liver medicine that would Dike the place of calomel.producing all its good effects and uoue of its bad, in jurious constitutional effects. After a thorough trial he had found it in Dr. Moz- ley’s Lemon Elixir. I b know, large lots of the spring, and never solid al... biliousness, constipation and diseases re suiting from these causes that pleased the people as much as Lemon Elixir. Send me nine dozen at once. T. Albert Jennincis. „ _ . Druggist, Jasper, Fla. To Dr. H. Mozley, Atlanta, Ga. Sold by druggists. 50c and fl per bottle. Prepared by H. Mozley, M. D., Atlanta, Ga. aepfi solm JOHN BLACKMAR, General Insurance Agent. Next ii Telegraph Office, Telephone No. e&w4m 51, Columbus, Ga. CO.. Boston. Us 1 YTJ T r/X? Send six cents for postage and . IY l £ a Ii. reoceive free a costly box ol goods which will help all, of either sex, to make more money right away than anything else in this world. Fort unes await the workers abso lutely sure. Terms] mailed free. Tana & Co* Augusta, Maine. dawtl HOSE ! HOSE I IN ORDER TO REDUCE OUR STOCK OF RUBBER HOSE, 111 HILL OFFER SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR THE NEXT W , We have the best and cheapest Hose in the market. A full line of Hose Reels and Nozzles. GEORGIA STEAM AND GAS PIPE COMPANY, Telephone 99. 13 Twelfth Street.! Five Gold and Two Sliver Medal*, awarded in 18S5 at the Expositions ol New Orleans and Louisville, and the Ift. ventious Exposition of London. The superiority of Coraline over horn or whalebone hits now been demonstrated by over five years'experience. It is moiv durable, more pliable, more comfortable, and nexar breaks. * Avoid cheap imitations made of variotfi kinds of cord. None are genuine un’ef “Dr. Warner’s Coraline” is print# on inside of steel cover. FOR 8ALE BY ALL LEADING MERCHANTS. WARNER BROTHERS, 353 Broadway, New York Ci& T H J FOR RENT. E STORE.HOUSE No. 1H7 Broad Street, next to Wittich Si Kinsel’s corner. This Store is being remodeled with single pane plats glass windows; has all modern improvements. Also Office and Sleeping Room in Garrard _uildir land attached, known as Ga Also, the place in Linnwoo Jones place, with 28 acres of land attached. This last named place will be put in repairs for a good tenant. Apply to »u*H lm LOUIS F. GARRARD.