Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, September 19, 1886, Image 3

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1 DAILY ENQUIRER-SUN, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 19, 1880. WHERE HUCKLEBERRIES COME FROM. TUc <J#eer Wlio l.lvcfri tin* Mountain* anil l’ick llcrrlcn. A Honesdale, Pa., special says: If New York city folks have a particular weakness it is a fondness for huckleberries and, not withstanding thousands of New York city folks spend the months of July and Au gust out of the city, enough remain at home to iconsumo over 60,000 bushels of huckleberries, which are picked on the mountains of northern Pennsylvania and New Jersey and southern New York, This does not include the large shipments from points in the eastern states and from oth ers further west. Probably in no locality in the country do huckleberries of all va rieties grow in greater profusion or of a better quality than they do in this wild mountain region from which New York draws. It is no uncommon thing for the united work of a family to bring them in flO a day for every day the season lasts, which will be seventy days on an average. That is more than the head of the family, at his usual labor as chopper, bark-peeler, tie-cutter or the like, could earn in a year and a half of hard work. One season in the huckleberry woods has given many a familylthe means to purchase a snug little farm or set them up in other business. At sunrise every morning, from the time the season opens until it closes, the pickers gather in groups at their various rendezvous and from there hurry up the mountain paths before the sun is high. The stronger oi the pickers carry a pine healthy girls we tell them such girls are more lit for labor in the fields, but too frequently receive an account of the hard and immoral life associated with such ser vice. The scene changes when a well managed factory comes into the village. The poor girls must thou cither receive better treatment and better wages or they go into the factory. Tile moral benefit of a well organized factory is still greater; it affects the whole village.” I’enrock Vanity In Wmimii. Paris Letter to London Truth. Does the modern woman of fushion be lieve that there is one man in ten thou sand who knows the diilerenee or can ap preciate the relative value of a gown that has cost 200 or 50 guineas? Women may dress to please themselves, or to out out other women, or to fascinate the men. but they make u desperate mistake if they im agine that they secure the favor of one man by their peacock vanity. The extrav agantly dressed woman of society is the overdressed woman, It is the privilege of English women to burlesque the outra geous dosigiis of modern Paris. The cos tume of modern Paris, with no Eugenio to direct it, is monstrous and hideous enough; but a modern Paris caricatured by a modern Regent street is almost laugh able. Witness the high hats or bonnets smothered with flowers and vegetables that make the wearer of each more hid eous than tlie last. The object of the fashionably dressed woman is to fascinate; the result is to disgust. There can be noth ing that is really womanly, really attrac tive, really pure, or approximately noble in one of the fantastic popinjays, who, in these desperate times, while their sisLers are starving around them, cover their bodies with clothes whose cost does not box, which holds a bushel, strapped to j ?^ on ® ^ or . their hideousness, and who their shoulders. Children carry baskets , .S'?’ each morning when they rise, and and pails, which hold from ten to twelve i when they rest, that they are as un quarts. In northern Monroe comity, Pa,, &b*e to pay for their frivolity as the sad- orthe Pocono mountains, the huckleberry denf!, t wretch who. maddened with hun- dened wretch who, maddened with hull ger, steals n loaf or fingers the till, and goes to prison for a crime not half so mor ally reckless as the one that women of ed ucation commit and women of acatepess foster. CLOSE MEN. t’ttsf It's in the Air. rarden i fresh and fair, I.osi in visions of the future, lluilding castles in the air— Roses bloom in beauty near me, What on earth more fair than they? And what sweeter than to loiter ’Mid their scents this summer day. Where each fairest blossom blows, Watehih* bvios so gaily roving From the lily to the rono- Musing hers, amid Life's beauties, Free fross OT’ry breath of care, Here I wears uiy taudarfhnoios, Building oastlss in the air. Oft tbesa risioas aad in nothing, Fada away with khluga that were, Tet ws leva to Ungsr sometimes In our aantlss built of air] Flowers will (kde aad joys will vanish, Life itaalf must pass away, Ah! thsa, lot such bsart, in pity, Build its castles while it may. .A.3STZD THE I I crop is handled almost entirely bv one man, Thomas Merwine. Thousands of acres are picked over by those who sell their berries, and he carries scores of bis pickers to the bowers in large wagons, which in turn carry the berries to town at the end of the day. The berry grounds are entirely bare of timber and the pickers are exposed ail day not only to the scorching rays of the sun but to a dry and suffocating heat that rises from the rocks and bushes. There are numerous cool retreats among the ravines and patches of woods, where there are lakes and springs, but the pickers waste no time in their refreshing companion ship. They are picking for profit, not . . . pleasure, and a few minutes snatched i tune, just on the caving bank of death, from their work to eat a lunch or get a ; Some member of the family sent foi a drink in some cool place are all they can j physician and when the doctor aimed -<«• j . ' I Pelcg askea: Ail A unit of (iviitlrnipn Wlie* Were'Too Stingy to Knjoy (iiinil Health. Arkansas Traveler. A party of men were speaking of stingy people. "Old Peleg Gregg was the stin giest man IJever knew,’’said Abe Patterson. “Tell you what’s a fact. He was sick one afTord to spare. The skill and rapidity with which boxes and baskets are filled by the huckleberry pickers and the power of endurance man ifested by women and children on the hot barrens and in carrying home the results of their day’s work, are truly" marvelous. It is a frequent occurrence for these Pike county female mountaineers to go out in the barrens |in the morning, pick all the berries they can carry, walk ten miles with them to the station, sell them and walk home again the same day. Some times they are accompanied by three or four children, each bearing a portion of the family stock in trade. These people , usually take the price of their berries out in “store goods,” the purchaser of the ber ries being the village storekeeper. The abandoning of the gravity or in clined plane railway of the Pennsylvania coal company between the coal mines of that company and the Erie railway at Hawley, Pa., was this season a great blow to the huckleberry pickers of the Moosic mountains. The wives and children of coal miners and others employed about the mines make up the army of berry pickers in that region. The long trains of coal cars that climbed the mountains by the gravity system formerly offered a quick although dangerous medium of reaching the berry barrens. Women and children by the score clung to the sides of the nar row cars. standing on the narrow board that ran along the edge, and holding on with-one hand while they clung to their baskets with the other. There was great peril in the ride, as the trains dashed through the narrow rock cuts, with but little space on either side of the track, along the face of high cliffs and around the sharpest of curves; but the berry pickers took all the risks of the trip, as it landed them in the heart of the locality where their work for the day brought them in money of which they ali stood in need. Fi-nla!o Laborer*. Harper’s Bazar. Whether it be the existence of enor mous standing armies, the havoc ot centu ries of war, the absence oi practical edu cational facilities, or the lowness of labor ers’ wages, that compels so many women on the continent of Europe to seek to gam a living in occupations which we deem lit | only for the strongest and rudest ot men, | certain it is that one of the commonest lowness of labor- i “ ‘No, sir.’ Good-bye So long.’ ‘What do yer ask fur yer medicine, doctor—how much a dose?’ “ ‘Let me see, about, fifty cents.’ “‘How many do you think it’ll take to cure me?’ “ ‘Two, I think.’ “ ‘Fifty cents apiece ’bout as cheap as yer kin sell ’em?’ “ ‘Yes.’ “ ‘Tell yer what’ll do; I’ll gin yer sixty cents fur a dose an’ aha’f.’ “ ‘Won’t sell that way.’ “ ‘Wall, then, good day.’ ” “Well, he was surely a very close man,” said Rufe Potter, “a very carefullman, but you never heard of Sack Scollop, did you? He lived down on Longmetre Bayou. One day he was out in the woods and a tree fell across him and mashed him into the ground. Hell yelled and yelled and finally a fellow came along and asked what was up. “ ‘Nothin’lup.’ growled Sack. ‘I’m down, that’s the trouble. I want you to chop this here log in two and roll it otfen me.* “ ‘What’ll yer gimme?’ “ ‘What do yer ax?’ “ ‘Do it for twenty-five cents.’ “ ‘Great Scott! do yer think I’m made outen money?’ “ ‘All right, won’t do it for loss.’ “‘Wall, how much’ll yer charge to go home an’ tell my son ter come out here?’ “Ten cents.’ “ ‘Whut, jes fur walkin’ a little distance. Yer must, take me fur a tool. Go on, I don’t wan’t nothin’ ter do with yer.’ ” “Well, he was prudent,” said Billings, “almost morbidly so. He reminds me, in point of ceremony, oi an old fellow named Jerry Finch. One day he went into a store and wanted to buy six feet oi rope. The dealer, knowing Jerry’s pecu liar love of money, told him that he might have the rope for ten cents. “ ‘I’ll give you five.’ “‘I can’t sell it for that. Why, man, i you’ve got plenty money and ought not to I grumble.’ . , . | “’Yes, but times are powerful hard. Can’t stand that price.’ He went away, I and after staying about two hours came back and asked: l’hat rope fell any?’ ■•U 1'n.kl.u far Mnu. Ali coata and ovorooats, frocks and sacks are made aa soft as possible. Trousers are to be made straight, and considerably larger at the knee and bottom than last year. Sack coats are looser in the back, and have at the waist largor backs and Btraighter side seams. Four-button cutaway coats are still, as they have been for years, very popular forms for half-dress and business pur poses. For single-breasted frock and sack coats the roll is longer, the average depth be ing four and a half to five inches.. In double-breasted coats the roll is but little longer than heretofore, excepting for the double-brenstod frock having six button holes in the lapels. All of the shapes give as being proper for halt dress are equally suitable for busi ness purposes. The suck-coat, however, will be chiefly worn. There are a number of popular styles, hut the favorite will un doubtedly be the four-buttoned sack, with a straight front. Tlie one-button cutaway is an inch shortlior Ilian its brothers and is cut away with a gentle curve from the closing but ton. It always has side flaps except when made of black worsted, and these none of tlie others have, barring the new four hut- toner, which lias them made of narrow wale worsted. The double-breasted sack coat will he worn in the colder weather of winter. It is stylish in appearance, and has always had a fair share oi popularity. It closes high on the chest, and has its lapels well peaked. Tlie pockets are finished with welts instead of flaps. Vests are longer, open about an inch lower, and have tlie last button farther from the bottom, and below it the points are slightly-cut away. The collarless vest is well nigh a thing of the post. A few were made last season, and, as it is no longer good style, the number made will be still smaller during the coming year. The double-breasted ulster will once more, if authority is to be believed, be come popular. It is to have as an adjunct a shoulder cape. It will probably be made of a heavy cheeked suiting, and will have the edges heavily double stitched and the seams widely lapped. It will be rather loose fitting. ITT- Car Load Lots Our Buyer Has Excelled all Previous Efforts In his psirclmsiw. Experience makes as proficient. All are invited to call and inspect our Novelties in Dress Goods. J. A. KIRVEN & CO. CENTRAL, PEOPLE’S steamers: Columbus, Qa., August 7,1886. O N and after August 7, 1880, the local rates of freight on the Chattahoochee, Flint and Apa lachicola rivets will be as follows: Flour per barrel ! Cotton Seed Meal per ton Cotton per bale JJ Guano per ton .fl.ai Other freight in proportion. Passage from Columbus to Apalachicola, |6:00» Other points in proportion, NCHEDVLE8. Steamer NAIAD leaves Columbus Tuesdays at 8 a m for Bainbridge and Apalachicola. Steamer AMOS HAYS leaves Columbus Thurs days at 8 a m for Bainbridge and Apalachicola. Steamer MILTON II. SMITH, with barge Tide, leaves Columbus Saturdays at 8 a m for Bainbridge and Apalachicola. Above schedule will be run, river, etc., permit ting. Schedules subject to change without no- Shippers will please have their freight at boat by 8 a. m. on day of leaving, as none will be re ceived after that hour. Boat reserves the right of not landing at any point when considered dangerous by the pilot. Boat will not stop at any point not named in lint, of landings ftirnished shippers under date of May 1ft, 1886. „ „ . Our responsibility for freight ceases after it has been discharged at a landing where no person U there to receive it. SAM’L J. WHITESIDE, Pres’t Central Line. T. H. MOORE, Agent People’s Line. T. D. HUFF, dtf Agent Merchants & Planters* Liue. DR. RICE, For.5 year* at 37 Coiirt Place, now at 322MarketStroet,Tnil]oyilip Kf Hot. Third and Fourth. liUlUOI J A r .«iil»rlv eitue.ted «n.l lo«.llJ ut-lltoj phyriolu .nl IM - Assra .1 ohiiiiy'x l'rayer. Boston Record. There is a suburban youngster who is evidently intended by nature for a lawyer, if nature can be said ever to have intended a man to bo a lawyer. He lias two prayers that he says at night—sometimes the one and sometimes the other; one is the dear old “Now I lay me,” and the other a prayer that this hoy culls “The Good Shepherd.” The other night his older sister, who was putting him to bed, improved the oc casion by giving him a little lecture 011 the omnipresence and omniscience of the Creator. “Maiine,” said he, after a while, “docs God know just everything we are going to do, before we do it?” “Yes, Johnny.” “Does I10 know that I am going to say ‘Now I lay me?’ ” “Yes, Johnny.” “Ha! Well, J ain’t going to say it—1 in going to say ‘The Good Shepherd!’ ” “The next day he entered the store and remarked: ‘I hear that rope is fallin ali — — - over the country.’ andTto American eyes, the strangest sights j “‘That so?’ . t c tt .. there is the number of women engaged “‘Yas. Hear that oier here at Gotten in agricultural and other severe manual | Town^er ken git ten teet tur a mutei. labor. In France women are still occupied in the mines, dragging or pushing the heavy trucks of coal through the narrow tunnels that run from the seams to the shaft. Of course in such work they adopt the ordinary costume oi the working minerB, and at the first glance are not to be distinguished from the men by whose side they are working. Some of the en tries In the French census as to the labor ing population are strange enough, in Paris there are nine female boat builders, and 245 “wheelwrights, farriers and sad dlers,” eight sawyers, forty-six carpenters and joiners, eight masons, and one ^ It is, however, in Austria^ that tie find the greatest proportion of women en gaged in heavy physical labor, not meiely in agriculture or the mines, but; in pa\ing and cleaning the streets or m carrying huge trays of mortar or hods of bricks up to the workmen on the scaffolding f buildings in the course of erection. These women do not seem to complain of then lot; they have been bred up to hard work from infancy and are used to nothing bci ter; their language auc manners are os coarse as those of the male laborers, in figure they resenible-high-chested, broad-shouldered, 110 trace of a waist, and . possessed of great streni’-t .1. 1 > stout eas; may be seen any day in Antwerp, v ere the milk woman, with her neat while tap and ’kerchief and her assistant dog, is a striking street picture. In J russia about 0000 women are workers in " “W 1 ® ries; and founderies, and about 2000 art classified as “drivers, postillions and rail way laborers,” and about lOOOaa ship, crews, sailors, boatmen and ferrymen, this last category will come women em ployed in towing canal boats, it uas been asked why do not women adopt c ings more adapted to feminine hands. I he reason seems to be the industrial eondi of a great part of the European continent, which affords to them no better means of earning a living, and the fact that these occupations, which are so utterly u inine, are just those in which unskilled la bor can be employed. A change, ho' j. is slowly coming about by the g r °' important industries in every counj' The factory system lias been found‘n Ger many to have a strong tendency prove the condition, not only of th men immediately employed in them, of those working in fhe .country around A large employer at Freimirg, alter thirt' years^expcrience, said: “The condit on of the agricultural laborers is not a saUstac tory one. There is much misery among them, especially moral misery, mothers apply to us for work for B> Why don’t you go over there?’ ‘“Don’t want to wear out iny shoes. Say, lias it fell any here?’ “ ‘Not a bit.’ “ ‘Wall, good-bye.’ “‘So long.’ , , , “Two days later he came back. ‘Sa.y, said he, ‘bain’t yer got some old rope that you ken sell cheap?’ “ ‘No old rope.’ “ ‘New rope hain’t fell none yit?’ ‘“Confound the luck, take it along for a nickel ’ The old fellow carefully meas ured the rope, and, with a disappointed air said: ‘Say, it’s three inches short; can’t you knock of!’ something?’ “ ‘Yes, give me four cents. “ ‘Say three.’ “ ‘Well, three.’ “Hegave him a postage stamp and bur- ried away. That evening he was found hanging from a rafter in his barn. lie left a few lines of writing, congratulating himself on the fact that the rope with which he hanged himself was so cheap. There may be closer men, but I ha'e never met flicm.’’^ ^ ^ The if,III Little Ulrl. Boston Record. As frequently happens in other tannins children, Every Variety of Fall and Winter Goods KNOWN TO THE DRY GOODS TRADE. Every day solid cuses are pouring in, ajid from this time on, they are ready to supply Die wants of every customer, at prices to meet tlie pockets of every one, from the red penny to the gold dollar. The present low price of cotton will not interfere with their selling. They mean to make prices equal ill any rate. Received This Week: In 1 surety by mull or exprena anywhere. Cures Guaranteed in all Case* “S^SuS.mJ’SSon.llr or >>y totlm fro *n* InrlM*. CUurtfos miHiiUttblo au<l correspondence strictly coulluuatiml, 1 PRIVATE COUNSELOR nr will turnon, sent to any address, securely sealed, for thirty riOW-cnts Should be read by mil. Address us ubove SSLfrom 8 A. U. too r —• Bund..., autr.M w Red Plain Flannels at 15c.. 20c., 25u., 30c nit! ant 40c. and 50c. and up. Red Twill Flannel a I 20c. Gray and Navy Blue Twi and Basket Flannels. LA GRANGE, GA. A THOROUGH, non-sectarian School of Lit erature. Art, Vocal and Instrumental Music and normal methods. , Ample, well ventilated buildings, situated on ( NoWmc dollar expended for sickness last year. Full corps of experienced teachers in every de partment. All expenses for board and literature, per annum .(OS Above with music and use ol instrument 2M Art, literature und board *6 Term begins September loth. For catalogue address RUFUS W. .SMITH, PresT. Refers to (J. nimby Jordan, Dr. Seth N. Jordan, Philip Bowers, and other pupils throughout the south uua8 se tu th tf 2‘>C. S III )<* , 55c., 45c. 35c., 40c., and 50c. 50c. Oper Blankets! Blankets! Comforts! Comforts >gy Blankets, Gump I 12-4. Bed Blankets for, up to $10.00. Bankets, Bed Blankets—10-4. 11-4. al $1.25, and imy price you limy cull Muscogee Oil Company 'Has recently refitted their Ginnery with the Most of the diseases which afflict mankind ark origin ally caused by a dis irdonsd condit ion of the LIVE Be For ull complaints of this kind, such iv« Torpidity of thrt Liver, BiUouHnefis. Nervous Dyspepaia, Indiges tion, IriGgnlarity of the Bowels, Constipation. Flatu lency, Eructations and BurniriK of the Stomach (sometimes called Heartburn). Miiisma. Malaria, Bloody Flux, Chills anc Fever, Bronkbone Fever, Exhaustion before or after Fevers, Chronic Dinr- rhfjja. Lisa of Appotito, Headache, Foul Breath, Irregularities incidental to Females, Bearing-down is Invaluable , it is not a panacea for al!diseases, but /f*l IIORT d’seasesof the LIVER, will vU8t.lg STOMACH un<l BOWELS It chaugos tile complexion from ft waxy, yellow tinge, to a. ruddy, houltliy color. It entirely remove? low, gloomy spirits. It, is ono of the BEST AL* TER ATI VES and ‘-UNIFIERS OF THE BLOOD, and Is A /ALUAfaLF * 3 ‘ONIC. TABLE L1NKN, NAPKINS, TOW Blanchard, Booth & Huff If reports cur- d tlie houd mi those good.” Are sure to stand u rent be true, there wil house-keeping this full, which m I liese goods. Their buyers have fact, und pay specie] aflonlion to slock of LADIES" SHAWLS is complete ever bought. Break fast Shawl ii and have: patrutiagu rent i(tuny new beginner; ms an in for this he G/.e -ALL WOOL. DRESS GOODS! STAOICEV but saiu .-•> DuMgiit AURANTII rice 81 -OO per bottle me of the two young ehil- C. F. 3T.’aDICER, Proprietor, mo SO. FRONT ST., Phllatloloht^, Pa. u S t e “daughte?s U of ijan j fired, ol Jmtt^.fin^is Oil ty ta«k to wheel a steeet mb inkier r 'try pot TJie other day the bad f i la I room and prayed that her sister might be u. rf o ENGLISH oiict On’y made a good girl, inserting some particu lars of good conduct into her prayer which she thought desirable to be be stowed upon her sister. , .. When she had finished, the head oi the bad girl popped in past a portiere, and the owner of it began hooping up and down in a sort of triumphant glee. “Oh, I heard everything you said, she exclaimed, “and I’m not going to do a Evidently °she' regarded her sister’s % oraver as an unworthy attempt to steal a march on her, which she was determined to circumvent at all hazards. Cars of Liver Complaint. Iowa Falls, Hardino Co., Iowa, June 8, 1886. I have been using Alleock’s Porous Plasters for four years, and think I could not get along without them, tor a long time I was afflicted with a pain under my right shoulder blade ; I also had eonsidei a ble difficulty in breathing. I applied an Alicock’s Porous Plaster on my back, and one on m.v chest. I kept changing .them every four days, and at the end of three weeks was entirely cured. eod&w unusui.il uemuni yeen advised to note selection of them. Tlieii mid I lie largest they , at 25c. to $1.75; Simple and Double Slmwls al $1.25 to $10.00- DRESS GOODS! DRESS GOODS! To say that BLANCHARD, BOOTH & HUFF’S is headquarters for Dress Goods is si irmly to reiterate a truth awarded to them ever since their beginning. Dress Goods is their stronghold. Never did any establishment in this city enjoy a more enviable reputation for carrying Handsome DroHs Goods and Handsome Trimmings tliun theirs. Everybody in Columbus, and adjacent thereto, who bus ever bought Dress Goods of them, will endorse the above statement. They intend to sustain their reputation by keeping buyers in the market who thoroughly understand their business. I’lieir stock has partly been received ; the balance will follow early this week. The stock already in consists of Novelties in WOOL FABRICS; Imported FBENCH and ENGLISH SUITINGS, in FIGURES AND STRIPES; PLAIN and STRIPED VELVET, SILKS, SURAHS, BUADAMIRES, GROS GRAINS, Etc., Etc. HOSIERY! HOSIERY I HOSIERY! I Their Slock of HOSIERY is about all in. You can find anything you wish in Men’s, Boys’, Ladies’ and Misses’ HOSIERY, from the lowest price to the highest. Ini|X»'leil tori HONS F.DIi I NO, a ml I NSKItTI N<> TO .WATCH a Hen nil fill I,in<- ol llresc I.A< Its .Inal lt< cclveel ! New Goods Come Every Day. We Show Them With Pleasure. BLANCHARD, BOOTH & HUFF Mobile & Girard R. R. Co. jf the public in respectfully solicited. n i s<o<iii:r. on.ro. vN und after this date Trains will run as follows: COLUMBUS, GA., September 19, 1886. WEST BOUND TRAINS. No.L Issuer. No. 3. Accom. No. 5. Accom. 1 Leave Columbus Union Depot “ Columbus Broad Street Depot Arrive Union Springs Leave Union Bprings 2 30 p m 2 46 p m ft 37 p in 6 46 p m 8 80 p III 10 2ft p rn 10 lift p rn 1 4ft a in 2 00 a m 5 05 a m | 5 15 a m 1 9 Oft a m 9 66am 11 GO tt m 1 1 “ Montgomery, M. <& E. R. R | “ Eufaula, M. & E. R. R 7 23 p m 10 33 p rn 4 ftO u m 10 50 a in' I EAST BOUND TRAINS. No. 2. Pas*’ger. No. 4. Accom. No. 8. Accom. j KL E. 8. Btevbss. The College of Letters, Musicand Art. Sixteen Tensors und teachers; five in music, with th*- isses Cox, directors, Misses Reichcnan anc Records, both graduates of Leipsic, and Mis 1 D “iderick f a thoroughly trained vocalist; ful. apparatus with mounted telescope. For cata o-cuch address 1. F. COX, Pres’t j> il a&w2m Leave Montgomery, M. & E It. R... “ Eufhula, M. & E. R. R “ Troy Arrive Union Springs Leave Union Sgrings Arrive Montgomery, M. & E. R R.. “ Columbus 3 30 p i * 01 p m | 4 00 a m 6 10 p m, 5 49 a in 7 15 p in | 6 29 a in j 7 35 a m 1 9 10 a ni 9 25 a in, 7 29 u rn 12 45 p 111 10 49 1) m 10 19 tt m 1 Trains Nos. 1 and 2 .Mail) daily. Nos. 3 and 4 (Macon and Monlgome Accommodation) daily except Sunday. No. 5 and H I'Vay Freight and Accommodation) ceplcept Sunday. Nos. 9 and 1(1 iPasaonger' Sunday, only. W. L. CLARK, Mup’t. Through Freight and daily ex- D. tt. WILLIAMS, U. P. A. Ordinance I'roliiliilinjr Cattle from Running at Large I'|iuii llie Streets. 1 »E IT ORDAINED, That from and ufltr Oc- > tuber 1st, 1880, no cattle shall he permitted at night in any of I he streets or parks of the city, and from October 1 to April 1 shall he permitted neither day or night, except while being driven through the same; and any cattle found so running at large shall be im pounded by the chief of police, who shall adver tise and sell the same after giving three days notice of time and place thereof, and unless the owner shall within that time redeem the same by paying 50 cents for each head of cattle, with 2ft cents per day for feeding. When sold the net proceeds shall be turned over to the city treas urer for account of owner. Be it further ordained, That nothing in this ordinance shall be construed to preveut the grazing of cattle upon any of the commons of the city. Adopted in Council August 4th, 1886. CUFF B. GRIMES, Mayor. M. M. MOORE, C'lerk Council. aujjG se t sep!9 d2vr ADVERTISERS Can loarn the exact cost of an7 proposed line of advertising in American Papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell A Co., Newspaper Advertising Bureau, lO Spruce St., New "York. Send lOets for lOO-oaa© Pamphlet HomeSchool ATHENS, {JEOKGIA. Mad.iMk S Soknowski. I Associate Principals. Miss ( . Sqrnowhki, 1 J , r|MU'. Scholastic year re-opens on Wednesday, J September 22d, 1886. Best educational ad vantages tillered to young ladies. For circular of information apply t< the above. jy8 dtH*