Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, September 23, 1886, Image 2

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f , U, . *'• •!*'** 4* . , n ,--. - - 17 - , • DAILY ENQUIRER • f*UN : COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING SEPTEMBER 23, 1886. Facts About the Solar System's Central Engine. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey and Duffy’s Formula. l>yM»nto»y, Dlarrlioja, Cramps. The Vhihle Cllohe of the San lt» 1 .i.Vjl>.000 Tlnien m UrKi 1 mthe Earth, anil Within lie Surface So Seen rhero Mon a Hhnh Exceeding the Forth ihio.oth) Times—K vide nee a* follow thettiuhtj Monk In IHh|K>Nod Within That Sortaen. >1)’ trouble wn* Chronic DitrrPi WALTttK HUBBA14U. C'2U Wki/ ii Strbk'i. cheater, l*a. Gentlemen— 1 hare been fn:>rlna for ten yenri* with catarrh r.f ti.c momac!) trepult of typhoid foyer). running Into oyaentery and Harper's Magazine. The visible globe of the sun is 1,250,000 times as large as the earth ; within the sur face so seen there lies a mass exceeding the earth’s 320,000 times; th'e materials present in the sun’s globe are the same as those which form the globe of our earth at least, we know that iron, copper, zinc, sodium, magnesium, calcium, titanium, UDd a number of other metallic elements are present; hydrogen is certainly there in enormous quantities, and Dr. Henry Draper proved also that oxygen is present, and no astronomer doubts that those other elements which have not as yet been de tected in the sun are really present in his mass. Now, have we any evidence aB to tho nir lino 'ir.enterj sn<1 ulrnrallon ol thn lower txiwol. Tho boat brand* of wbiskrr never *uif*d inv palate until l tested your L>offy> i’uro Mall Whiskey, which hoa given entire!r aatlafaciory result*. CRAB a. WKlDNf NKIi. way in which tho mighty mass is dis- rrnce which incloses posed within that sur: what we term his volume? though in reality one can hardly say what Ins vol ume is, seeing that there are portions of his moss outside the surface which bounds his visible globe. Is the sun’s moss uni formly distributed throughout that visible globe, 1.250,000 times ns large ns our earth? or, on tne other hand, is the denser part near the surface so that the sun is what Professor Young once suggested, a gi- gautie bubble? There are three lines on which we can seek for an answer to those questions. Firstly, we find that tho visiblo surface of the sun behaves in a manner incon sistent alike with the Idea that thiB sur face is near tho real surface of an inferior globe, and with the idea that the visible sur- fa ’ace is jpart of a mighty vesicle or buto ble. The spot zones are carried around at different rates, according to their dis. tance from the equatorial solar regions- Not to follow Fayo and others In niceties of calculation (far from justified by the evidence wo have), I may say that the equatorial zone gains about one rotation in seven on the spot zones, or, roughly, some 2,700^000 miles In 200 days—say 13,500 miles *r day. Such a velocity as this. dose on •n miles in a minute, could not possibly exist in a cloud-laden region (such os the :idi visible surface of the sun undoubtedly is) and os affecting regions exceeding the whole surface of the earth thousands of times, unless that cloud-laden region wore wry far away from the real surface of the sun, and therefore from the frictional effects of tho true solar rotation. The reul mass of tho sun, however distributed, can only rotate as one; tho visible cloud surface lias many rates of rotation; there fore there must be an enormous distance between the two. Secondly, calculation has been made by oompetent mathematicians respecting the i which would amount of polar compression arise from the rotution of a globe such as tho sun appears to be at the average rate of rotation indicated by the solar spots. It is found that tho polar flattening would be well within the measuring capacity of our best instruments. But if there is one thi nor certain about the sun it is that (within such capacity) his apparent globe is not battened at all. It is absolutely certain, then, that the real globe of the sun lies fur within the surface of flowing clouds which we see and measure. Thirdly, our earth has her story to toll about the sun’s Interior. We know from the earth’s crust that, for periods of time Bi»yaN. William* County, Ohio Gentlemen- I wm troubled with crami»a of thr stomach for a Ion® thn*. inril I found out your UuU'r'n Pun* Malt W Mr key and Duffy’* Formula. 1 liavo ua»*1 them ai. ; find that the uranira do not return. MARTI 21 SCHOTT. Mt. Horn A vt».. Put*(Itli< l CliD'Inna l, Ohio. J Gentlemen—I have been sick all the winter with catarrh of tho atotnach an t dyaentery, and l find your Duffy's Pure Malt whiskey tho best remedy 1 ever used. Please send your Duffy's Formula to toko MilS. Mf.AHA. WrwaTojf, North Carolina. Gentlemen—For two rears I suffered with what .the doctors called Chronic Diarrhoea, puffy’* Pore Malt Whiskey, since whli... . hare esperUnoed great rolltf. and bay® trained more than ao pound* In wui^nt. 100 Mo«nt btsfbt. PhtH'telphta, Pa. I have used the Drift?’* rornula along with Duffy’s Pure Malt whiskey, giving II to my yvninreat child of soren yeera, unite a doll- ngeat acnid of lofsn year* omi > uttlo thing. Fb« had bcaa ailing a lone a. - --* ] ■ • with maraamua. I am ttad to say that to a deofcSea Improvement. JOHJf BUROAJf. orcor<la>s— «cm a ... eat—0 Dimonm. ’em eetr rrhitkey, ti fur- -forming material, whereby " are inermmi. " palotabl* and epee mode.. It can be had < bOUJLH TEH DOTTLE. t> proeem* making n the mod efficacious beef preparation n be had of mil dealer* ol OAB PERMANENT RELIEF To all persons who are suffering in any way from Nervousness or Nervous Exhaustion. Everybody knows that a strong, vigorous nervous system is essential to good health. MOXIB Is recommended by clergymen and endorsed by eminent physicians. It contains no alcoholic or other stimulant. It is not a dng. It is a food i not a medicine. It induces a good appetite. ‘ alibful sleep. Only HOC i For Bale, wholesale and retail, by M. D. Hood & Oo.. Geo. A. Bradford and Evan* & Howard. ops dly nrm which geologists now estimate by tens of nt millions of years, the sun’s power baa been rust, b; at work on the earth’s ernst by rain, wind and storm, fashioning and refashioning tho structures of that crust, now forming layers, miotiautting them up, but through out leaving clear traces of his handiwork. Croll estimates the duration of this part of the earth’s history—that is, of the time during wlilcji the earth’s crust has been forming under solar action—at fully 100,- 000,000 yours. Ill other words, our earth tolls us of at least, 100,000,000 years of huu work at tho sun’s present rate of working. Itisa matter of no importance whether we suppose that the sun has worked all the time ai the present rate, or has some times worked with more energy, some times with less. it is tho quanti ty of Bun work, not the way in which tho work has been done, which aloue has to lie consid ered. Now, all physicists and astrono mers arc agreed regarding the sun’s emis sion of heat as due wholly or almost wholly to solar gr it itatlon, resulting In tho steady 1 contraction of the sun’s mass. To get from the buu of past, agos tho amount of work which our earth tells us he has actually done, wo must suptio.se him once to have been very much larger than he is now— j how much larger wo caunot say. 1 take it also that the change which I bikes place in tho aspect of the sun’s 1 corona as the number of sun spots varies,! and the alteration of the physical conili-, tion of the corona—iu such sort that when ' there are many spots its spectrum indicates ! tho presence of glowing hydrogen, whereas, when there are few, tho lines of ATARRH ELY'S lolcl in Head, CATARKII, HAY FEVER. tensive odors. A particle Is applied into t*«.ch nostril and is agreeable. Price 50 cents at Druggists: by mail, - ELY BROS., registered 50 ct«. Circulars free. El. Druggists. Owego, N. Y. antrfi eod.vwtf nrm A Stmulard .RhIIchI Work. ONLY lll.mi BY .HA I Is. IMWTPAlIh ILLUSTRATED SAMPLE FREE TO A LI hydrogen are few or wanting—correspond of also with tiic theory that the time smote is a time of great eruptionol activity, hor the rush of ejected masses through the coronal region would cause tho hydrogen present there (not an atiuowphore,' but ir regularly distributed and moving around the sun) to glow with greater luster, so ns to show the lines of hydrogen in tho spoo- truin of tlie corona. It is at any rate remarkable thut all the facta known to us in regard to the sun spots themselves, to the colored flames, ami to the corona, should agreo in con- HOW THYSELF. A Ureal HiMlirAl Work on Manhood. Exhausted Vitality, NervouR and Physical Debil ity, i’l-umaturc Decline in Man, Errors of Youth, ana the untold misery resulting from indiscretion orcxcetiscs. A book for every man, young, mid- »ins 126 presenp ' firming that which iH already all but dem onstrated ‘ *■ ‘ I by throe strong lines of evidence, that the real working mass of tlm sun is very much smaller than tho globo we measure as bis,and that all the phenomena which give so great an interest to the study of the sun are due to tremendous f - vs at work tons of thousands of miles bei w tho surface,which limits our view of his globe and hides from us tho processes by which the life of tho solar system is maintained. 4 Very Sail Statement. At Saratoga this summer I was sorry to see as many ns forty ladies every night eat ing supper and drinking champagne down at the old * ’ ’ ' I John Morrissey club house. One could stand in the doorwuy and at the same time see a hundred men gambling and thirty women drinking champagne and eating. These women were not our re fined Antericau women, though they stop ped at the best hotels. They were a set of women who dote on yacht and horse races and play poker for money in their rooms at night.—Eli Perkins. Rebuking the Young People. Rev. Mr. Breedlove, pastor of the Meth odist church at Marshallville, delivered a very severe rebuke to the young people of that place, on Sunday, for misbehavior iu church, and promised, if caught in the act, to point them out and dismiss the ition. We trust the young people tify their — Fort Valley will not so mortify uw pastor os to cause him to deliver such a severe rebuke.—Fort Valley Mirror Chocked Through. As the train stopped at a small station the attention of a citizen was directed by the yelping of a small dog in the baggage “Is the dog mad!” he asked. “Mad?” replied the distracted baggage master, as he wiped the moisture from his brow, “No, the dog ain’t mad, but the rest of ns are.” dle-curod and old. It contains 125 prescription* fbr all acute and chronic diseases, each one ol which is invaluable. So found by the Author whose experience for 86 years is suen as probably never before befel the lot of any physician. 30C owes, bound in beautiful French muslin, em bossed covers, fhll «rilt, guaranteed to be a finer work in every sense—mechanical, literary and professional- than any other work sold in this country for 8*2.60, or the money will be refunded in every instance. Price only ll.oo by mail, post paid. Illustrated sample 6 cents. Send now Gold medal awarded the anthor by the Nationa Medical Association, to the President of which, the Hon. P. A. Bissell, and associate officers ol the Board the reader is respectfully referred. ild be read * The Science of Life should be read by the young for instruction, and by the afflicted for relief. II will benefit all.—London Lancet. There is no member of society to whom The Science of life will not be useful, whether youth, parent, guardian, instructor or clergyman.—Ar gonaut. Address the Peabody Medical Institute, or Dr. W. H. Parker, No. 4 llulfinch street, Boston, Mass., who may be consulted on all diseases re> inuring skill and experience. Chronic and obsU- uate diseases that have baffled the skill of all Men* apMjily TAX NOTICE. Slate ami County Taxes for the Year ISSli Are now due, and my books are open for collec tion ol same from and alter Monday. Septem ber 6th. D. A. ANDREWS, Tax Collector Muscogee County. Office: Georgia Home Building. 8ep7 eod tdecl ALBEMARLE Female Institute, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA Full corps of superior teachers; course of instrnetto* thorough and extensive: location healthful and ao cesslble; scenery beautiful; surroundings most at* tractive; terms very moderate: order catalogue W. P. DHIU!«s6x, Principal. Bedford Co,, Va. f |iHE 2lBtAnnnalSeBSion opens September 15th, 188ft. For catalogue or ’ig»o!al' information F0 0 D The only perfect substitute for Mother's milk, invaluable In Cholera Infantum and Teething. A pro-digested food for Dys* peptics, Consumptives, Convalescents, rarfoot nutrient in sil Wasting Diseases. Requires no cooking. Our Book, The Caro 8 nd Feeding of In (Tints, mailed free. OUB8H. OOODALH A CO.. Boston. Usss. THE BOSS PRESS Is Without a Rival. THE LIDDELL VARIABLE FEED SAW MILL Most of the diseases which affliot mankind are origin ally caused by a disordered oomlit ion of tho LIV E R . For all complaints of this kind, such ae Torpidity of the Liver, Biliousness, Nervous Dyvpepsia, Indiges tion, Irregularity of the Bowels, Constipation, Flatu lency, Eructations and Burning of the Stomach (somotimes cftJJod Heartburn). Miasma, Malaria, Bloody Flux, Chills am*' Fuver, Breakbone Fever, Exhaustion before or after Fevers, Chronic Diar rhoea. Loss of Appetite, Hendaohe, Foul Breath, Irregularities incidental to Females. Bearing-down SWA STAQIGER’S AUBAWT1I to Invaluable. It is not a panacea fair all disease^ but Aimp all diseases of the LIVER, will STOMACH and BOWELS. It changes tho complexion from a waxy, yellow tinge, to a ruddy, healthy color. It entirely removes low, gloomy spirit*. It is one of tho BEST AL a TERATIVE8 and g*4JMFIF.R8 OF THE BLOOD, and Is A VALUABLE TONIC. STADICEF S AURANTII Far sale by all Drug gift*. Price $1 .OO per bottla C. F. STADICER, Proprietor, 140 80. FRONT ST., Philadelphia, Pm (Copy.) Ckicaoo, April 21st, 1866. This is to certify, that the Illinois Trust am Savings Bank has this day received from the Savings Bank has this day received from the Union Cigar Company of Chicago, to be held as a Special Deposit, U. s. 4°lo Coupon Bonds, as follows: X.. isois D. ,500. . Market Value of which Is •• 41104 loo. ( <>*05 1M. l $1012. 100. I 100. 61830 too. ssoo. J (S.) Jas. S. Gibbs, Cash. We offer the above as a FORFEIT, if our ‘ FANCY GBOCEB” does not prove to be a lt.-Union Cigar Co, genuine Havana-fiHer Cigar.- Is the very best Saw Mill in the market. It took the only medal of the first class at the New Orleans Exposition. For the above, and for all other machinery, address, FORBES LIDDELL&CO, Montgomery, Ala. N. B.—Our stock of Wrought Iron, Pipe, Fittings and Machinery is the largest in this part of the country. JOHN DISBROW & CO. Sale, Feed and Livery Stables New and Nobby Turnouts, Safe and Showy Horses, Careful and Experienced Drivers. FUNERALS personally conducted and properly attended to. The finest Hearses SEPTEMBER 1st, Horses boarded and careftilly cared for at $18 per in the city. AFTER month. Ample accommodations for LIVE STOCK. Headquarters for dealers. • sepl? se&th4w Huckleberry 0RD1AL-! Our LA. LOMA 10c. Cigar is strictly Hand made. Elegant quality. Superior workraanhifA Sold by ail Grocers. UNION CIGAR COUP ANY, 16 N. Clinton SL, • CUICAGO, Retail by G. D. HUNT, Columbus, Ga fe24 dly Printing, Book-Binding Paper Boxes OF KVERY DESCRIPTION AT LOWEST PRICES. A LARGE STOCK of all kinds of PAPER, in cluding letter. Packet and Note Heads, Bill Heads, statements, always on hand. Also En velopes, Cards, &c., printed at short notice in stock mode at short notice. THOK. 4511,BERT. tf 42 Randolph Street, opposite Post Office. THE FAMOUS BRAND OF OLD MILL PURE OLD RYE This whisky was introduced originally in the year 1S62, ami to constantly making new friends. Itii the product of the most approved process of distih- at inti. from mirnfnilv k„: i ACRNT8MBSS8VKSAS! T. SSZ dysentery CHILDREN TEETHINS 50 tPER BOTTLE HOSE! HOSE! IN ORDER TO REDUCE OUR STOCK OF RUBBER HOSE, 1 ILL OFFER SPECIAL BARGAINS FOIL TIE Ml WEEK. We have the best and cheapest Hose in the market. A full line of Hose Heels and Nozzles. GEORGIA STEAM AND GAG PIPE COMPANY Telephone 99. 13 Twelfth Street. THREE L o Columbus, Ga., September 19,1886. N and after this date Passenger Trains will run as follows. Tains * daily; + daily ex! f Niimtor TIip cfanrlnrrl lima Ktr nrMaL li. *' cept Sunday. The standard time by which these Trains run is the same ns Columbus city time. tieave Columbus Arrive Macon “ Atlanta “ Montgomery *• Eufaula “ Albany “ Millen “ Augusta “ Savannah ■12 00 ml+ 8 50 p in ’ tS pm i :t 6 io a m 0 35 pm I* 18!ip m !* JJSpm Uj iopm * 2 45 p In 3 00 n m|* 113 p m B 15 a m|* 3 45 p w < 07 p m 5 55 a mi 1 PassenKcrs for Sylvania, Sanderville, Wrlchts- ville, Milledgevillo and Eatonton, Thomaston Carrollton. Perry, B’ort Gaines, Talbotton. Buena Vista, Blakely and Clayton should take 8 60 n m train. . v Leave Macon i * 10 00 a m; * 8 30 p m “ Atlanta * 8 00am* 310nm “ Montgomery.. “ Eufaula “ Albany “ Millrn “ Augusta " Sav; nnah Arrive Columbus „ 7 40 a m ■•■■■■ * 10 55 a m * 5 40 a in * 12 00 rn * 11 00 p mi* 12 00 m * 9 30 am * 8 20p m * 8 40 am * 2 25 pm * 6 20am Sleeping Cars on all night trains between Co. lumbus and Macon, Macon and Savannah, Ma. con and Atlanta, Savannah and Macon, and Sa- vannali and Atlanta. Tickets for all points and Sleeping Car Berths on sale at Depot Ticket Office G. A. WHITEHEAD, Gen’l Pass. Agent. C. W. MEYER, Ticket Agent. augl tf . Opelika, Ala., September 14th, 1886. fYN and after Sunday, September 14th, 1886, the ' z trains on this road will be rap as follows: No. 1. Leave Columbm 8 22 a m Arrive Opelika 0 62 a m No. 8. Leave Opelika io 05 a m Arrive Columbus li 20 a m No. 3. Leave Columbus 2 28 p m Arrive Opelika ; 3 68 p m No. 4. Leave Opelika. ; 6 18 p m Arrive Columbus 6 43pm No. 0. Leave Columbus 710 a m Arrive Opelika 9 23 a m Arrive Goodwater 6 50 p m No. 6. Leave Goodwater 5 20 a m Arrive Opelika 9 46 a m Arrive Columhus 12 56 p m No. 7. Leave Columbus 1 45 p m Arrive Opelika 3 38 p m No. H. Leave Opelika 413 p m Arrive Columbus 5 54 p m The night trains are discontinued for the pres ent. A. FLEWELLEN, dtf General Manager IT Office General Manager, Columbus, Ga., September 12th, 1836. O N and after Sunday, September 12, 1886, the schedule of Mail Train will be as follows: No. 1—Going North Daily. Leave Columbus 2 29 p in Arrive at Chipley 4 32 p m Arrive at Greenville 5 37 p m No. 2—Coming South Daily. Leave Greenville 7 10 a m Arrive at Chipley 8 11 a m Arrive at Columbus 10 21 a m No. 3—Freight and Accommodation—North. Leave Columbus 6 00 a m Arrive at Chipley 8 14 a m Arrive at Greenville 9 25 a nj No. 4—Freight and Accommodation—South. Leave Greenville 10 22 a m Arrive at Chipley u 38 a m Arrive at Columbus 2 11 p m W. L. CLARK. Gen’l Manager. T. C. 8. HOWARD. Gen’l Ticket Agent. feb24 dly Five Cold and Two 8llver Medall awarded iu 1885 at the Expositions c New Orleans and Louisville, aud the li ventions Exposition of London. The superiority of Coraline over hor or whalebone has now been demonstrate by over five years’ experience. It is moi durable, more pliable, more comfortabli and never bream. m Avoid cheap imitations made of varioii Kinds of cord. None are genuine un’ei “Db. Warner’s Coraline” is print# on inside of steel cover. FOR SALE RY ALL LEADIN8 MERCHANTS. WARNER BROTHERS, 353 Broadway, New York Crt& ■P* f--*f Rr>> GEORGIA. MUSCOGEE COUNTY. Whereas, David A. Anglin, administrator of the estate of Hugh Dever, deceased, makes ap plication for leave to sell all the real and per sonal property belonging said deceased. These are. therefore, to cite all persons con cerned, kindred and creditors, to show cause, if any they can, within the time prescribed by law, why leave to sell said property should not begranted to said applicant. Witness my official signature thi* September 4th, 1886. IF. M. BROOKS, Ordinary. GEORGIA. MUSCOGEE COUNTY: Whereas, Katherine E. Deign an, administratrix of William Deignan, deceased, represents to the court in her petition duly filed that she has fully administered William Deign an’s estate. This is, therefore, to cite all persons concerned, heirs and creditors, to show cause, if any they can, why said administratrix should not be dis charged from her administration and receive let ters of dismission on the first Monday in De cember, 1886. F. M. BROOKS, Ordinary. September 4th, 1886. oawl2w IRON RO OFl^ G ’Send for prices and Illustrated Catalogue ot CINCINNATI (0.) CORRUGATING CO- OPIUM oat pain. Book_of. tan tten fare sent