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DAILY ENQUIRER - SDN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 13. IWB.
ColumbusdtmjiuTO-'^im.
ESTABLISHED IN 1828. 58 YEARS OLD.
Daily, Weekly and Sunday.
The BNQUIRER-SUN in issued every (lay, ex
tiept Monday. The Weekly is Issued on Monday.
The Daily (including Sunday) is delivered by
carriers in the city or mailed, postage free, to sub
•cribers for 75c. per month, $-.00 for three
months, $4.00 for six months, or $7.00 a year.
The Sunday is delivered by carrier boys in the
dty or mailed to subscribers, postage free, at
$1 .90 a year.
. The Weekly lalwiucd on Monday, and Is m illed
subscribers, postage free, at SI. 10 a year.
Transient advertisements will he taken for the
Daily at$l per square of 10 lines or less for the
Urst insertion, and , r >0 cents for each subsequent
Insertion, and for the Weekly at $1 for each In
sertion.
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. Obit uaries will be charged for at customary
rates.
None but solid metal cuts used.
All communications should be addressed to the
Enqiuber-Hun.
Thebe is more evolution in politics than
in religion, und there is no religion in
evolution.
At the congressional election in the
tentli Ohio district some other man was
, seen”-nnd not I lord.
The occupancy of the Bulgarian throne
will be an empty honor—an honor that
is without profit in its own country.
More cures than the world knows of
depend on faith. If a doctor has no faith
in being aide to secure his fee he does
not feel like wasting his time in efiect-
ing a cure. _________
Mishoubi has a democratic government;
no anarchists; no Pinkertons; no Ar
moury, no Oglesbys; no strikes, and no
riots. Its only drawback is its proximity
to Chicago.
The czar will be all right when he
loves Kussia and her people more
than he loves himself. Crowned heads
are apt fo think their little parlors and
kitchens are nations.
Queen Victoria will receive from the
farmers of the Capo Colony a robe, dol
man and fan of ostrich feathers as a
jubilee present. She will look like a
jubilee when she rigs herself out in these
feathers and lakes a stroll on matinee
days.
It is reported that Speaker Carlisle is
going to shake the dust of Kentucky oil'
his feet forever and move to Kansas.
Kentucky will si ill keep the Mammouth
Cave and the Courier-Journal, und will
maintain her place us the champion
liomiciee state, the same as before.
It seems pretty well settled that one
democratic administration in fifty years
is about all the medicine of that kind
that the country is going to take.—Na
tional Republican. The cure is com
plete. Democratic administration will j
now be continued and taken as food to
keep tlie country well and strong.
The Chicago News says it is a great
mistake to set Jehu Baker down as a I
chump. Certainly it is. Judge Baker
is not a chump by uny means, lie has t
talents which will give him a national |
reputation during the next two years as I
“the man who represents (lot. Morrison’s
district.’’
Hon. Joseph 10. McDonald, of Indiana,
declares that the “democrats of Ins stale i
are dissatisfied with the administration.'’ |
There is, unfortunately, too much reason
to believe it, hut the less said from this |
time on about “dissatisfaction” the bet- !
ter. Democrats must spend I lie next two '
years in solidifying the party. It is time
to “close up."
Pcm.ic Printer Bkskiiut intends to I
appoint only democrats under him, 1ml i
lie does not intend to appoint democrats '
unless he has seen them and "sized them I
up.” After he has watched a democratic j
printer engaged in printing for five
minutes, he will lie prepared‘to say j
whetlii r or not he D a good enough
democrat to hold otiice. This may not ;
strike Mr. l’.aton as “refot-m.” but it is;
business. j
A southern society has been formed
in New York Cit y by a number of south- |
ern gentlemen residing in that metropo- j
lis. Merchants, professional men and j
ethers are members. Among the vice-|
presidents is Mr. Burton N. Harrison, ;
who was private secretary tothepresi-J
dent of the confederate states. The so-'
ciety was inaugurated on Monday last,
and the occasion was celebrated by a
dinner, when speeches were made and
“Dixie" and “Down on the Suwanee
Kiver" were sung. The southern society
is a good thing. Why should not a man
pay the tribute of memory and a dinner
once a year to the land of his birth?
Plugging matches do not often have
so worthy a cause as had that which was
held near Connellsville, Pa., on Sunday
last, and of which the Pittsburg Com
mercial Gazette gives the particular.
Two coal miners were in love with the
same girl, and in order to decide who
should be the favored suitor the fight
was agreed upon. Five rounds were
fought with leaden knuckles, and after
both men’s faces had been horribly cut
one of the contestants was declared the
winner. Then the girl refused to have
him beoauee he wasn’t pretty. Woman
like, she will nurse the man wtio got the
forft of it and marry him,
BEY. nab small.
Rev. Sam Small's careless habit of buying use
less things and promising to pay for them some
other time will clog his usefulness. He Is spoken
ofasa man who would run in debt forth® pearl
of great price, and give a promissory note for a
j ticket to heaven.—New Orleans Picayune.
The man who wrote thin paragraph
has irreverence enough to chunk mud at
an angel. And, a-dde from its irrever
ence, it i.-: an untrue and unkind (ling at
a good mail. It has been established and
proven beyond cuvil or doubt that Mr.
Small’s purchase in Cincinnati of some
| jewelry for his wife was an honorable
| transaction and that thugoods have been
fully paid for in accordance with the
original agreement with the dealer. The
dealer himself retracted bis charges
against Mr. Small in toto, in order to
keep from going to jail for libel.
It is a strange fact, and one not very
complimentary to human nature, that
newspapers and men and womenare ever
ready and ever sedulous to spread evil
tidings concerning a good man. These
harpies of society infest every class of
the body politic, and pollute every
gathering with the filth of their conver
sation. No foul vulture of the air ever
poises his stench-proof and dripping beak
above the rotting carrion he encounters
in the fields with keener appetite than
these people evince for the devilish
pleasure of tearing a good
name into shreds and casting
the fragments to the winds. This dis
graceful and ghoulish proclivity in
human nature is sleepless as time, and
unsuspending as the law of gravitation.
It has driven men to drink and women
to suicide, and both over the last preci
pice of hope. The post ofliec depart
ment charges so much an ounce and the
telegraph companies so much a word for
the transmission of news, but thousands
of men and women are ready and will
ing and anxious to carry bad news and
false news for nothing. They gloat over
it like beasts over a capturo of prey.
If a man lias wandered away from the
true and the good and has
gone down and down and down,
until there is absolutely nothing loft be
tween him and hell, hut the grave; and
if on the very last edge of this last creviee
that corners on perdition, he makes a
last and grand and superhuman strug
gle, and rights about face, and starts
back toward the nerve-soothing and
peaceful paths of a better life, he meets
these serpent-tongued satyrs of society
on the w»y. They will compass his ruin
if they can. If as there ever a better
example of this than the case of Sam.
Small? Until he was 35 years old, was
there ever so much brilliance and so much
badness wrapped up in any one man?
Ilis debaucheries were simply incredible,
and old reprobates stood aghast at the
measure of the young man’s excesses.
During the last two years before his
reformation he seemed to cut loose from
every hope, and every tie, and every
sense of shame. lie appeared to be a
rudderless cruft driven on by unseen and
demoniac bands. lie cared for nothing
and nobody and nobody cared for him. 1
The ghouls of society did not leer and
wink and whisper about him then. ;
There was no need of it. lie advertised
his own infamy abroad. He called him- ]
soli'a "ad man, honest fellow that lie
was, and be showed his faith by I
his works. But from that glandsome
day on which Sam Small, as if tlni de
mons from below were chasing him for j
his sou., made his magnificent leap from '
the orgies of a drunken debauch into the
very altar of the church of God, from j
that day to this he has been the target ol‘
slanderers. They look upon him as J
game worth slaving now.
But Sam sniajl can afford to buffet and j
defy such people a-a v e seeking the blood ;
of his good name. Those people are
the modern descendants of the ugly ,
rubble that jammed the narrow !
streets of Jerusalem in front .
of I’ilato’s court, and who were seeking !
the blood of a Greater than Small, and ■
whose fickleness was illustrated in the
fact that they cried “Hosannah !"to-day, ;
and “Crucify Him!” to-morrow.
Mini terns he is now, Mr. Small has >
his faults. Who lias not? The great!
wonder is that he made so great a change |
in so short a time. The revolution in ;
Sam Small's moral nature from a very !
prince of lu-l and revelry to an humble !
which justice has her perfect work—a
world in which the saying is fulfilled,
“Wiih what measure ye meet, it shall be
measured to you again.”
The New York Tribune declares, edi
torially, that Henry George “has no sol- |
fish and personal ambition.” We have
no doubt that this view is concurred in ;
by Mistress Gall Hamilton, who has ex- j
(•optional advantages for concurring in j
the Tribune’s editorials.
T.wiiFU reform is still tlie issue. As
long as unequal laws centralize wealth
and power In a few hands, it will remain
the issue.
The Urea I •■Hirer In ills Ocean.”
N. Y. Herald.
An Interesting notice to mariners recent
ly issued by the coast survey, states that
the late observations on the gulf stream,
between Fowey Rocks, Florida, and Gun
Cay, in the Bahamas, show some remark
able variations, both daily and monthly,
with the moon’s declination. The greatest
velocity of the great ‘river in the ocean”,
is about nine hours before the upper tran
sit of the moon. The average duily cur
rent varies during the month, the strong- 1
est Bet. apparently coming a day or two 1
after the moon’s greatest declination. At
the axis of tie gulf stream (which at this
point is eleven and a half miles east of
Fowey Rocks lighthouse) the strongest
surface current "was live and one-quarter
knots, the weakest one and three-quarter
knots ; and the average current was three
and six-tenths knots” per hour.
These observations; taken during the
last two exploring expeditions by Lieut. !
Pillsbury,United States navy, in the Btearn- ;
cr Blake, show that the initial velocity of
the gulf stream has been rather underesti- j
mated. Dr. Carpenter lays down the max- !
iraum velocity of th stTeam at four (nau-!
tical) miles and its average in the Florida [
channel at “not more than two miles per
hour.” The greatest velocity noted by the !
Challenger expedition was three knots, j
and the French hydrographer Labrosse !
gives the maximum as five knots.
It is probable that the gulf stream.owing j
its movement in part to tne friction of the j
trade winds, acquires greater velocity at
the season when the trade winds are J
strongest and loses some momentum when !
the trades are weakest. As the northeast l
trades are generally strongest in the sum- |
mer, when the American continent is sd |,
warm that it causes an influx of air from
the tropical Atlantic, we may infer that I
the highest velocities of the gulf stream !
occur between July and September, and j
may possibly even exceed those observed I
by Lieutenant Pillsbury in the earlier j
months of the year. |
NOTHING HIDDEN
THE MANUFACTURERS OF CLEVELAND’S SUPERIOR BAKING
POWDER HAVE FOR MANY YEARS MADE KNOWN TO THE
PUBLIC ALL THE INGREDIENTS OF THEIR POWDER.
In these suspicious times it is not enough that manufactu
rers of food preparations base their claims for patronage on
the simple statement that their goods are “ absolutely pure."
The absolute purity of a poisen intensifies the baneful effects
of its improper use. The absolute purity of ammonia, a drug
often used in the manufacture of baking powder and in
some of the powders most largely advertised, greatly
increases the force of the objection made by the most
eminent scientists of our day to the use of ammonia in food.
This protest of the medical and chemical professions is due
to the fact that ammonia—a product of decomposition—
when taken into the stomach with our daily meals is
exceedingly injurious.
Hence the public should insist upon knowing what all food
compounds contain and ALL that they contain. Let the
edict go forth that no article intended for use in the prepa
ration of our daily bread shall receive public support unless
the manufacturers’ formula be published. Then shall we have
less imposition practiced upon a confiding public, and as a
result less injury to the public health.
Cleveland’s Superior Baking Powder is made only of strictly
pure Grape Cream of Tartar, Bicarbonate of Sof.a, and a little
wheat flour, the latter to preserve the strength of the powder;
nothing else whatever. CLEVELAND BROTHERS,
Albany N. V.
10 ''^ ft XcX h n e ?or F cM mP, ‘ nT '" A »-
<TATE OF GEORGIA—MUSCOGEE OOVN-
£5 TY To the Superior Court of said countv ■
The pi tiilon of.I. T. Wamock L. F. Garrard a
J. Bothuue, A. R, Lawton and Geor, c M. Clann'
respecliblly shows that the; und their ast ociates
and successors desire to lie incorporated aud
made a body corporate and politic under the
name of' Chattahoochee Falls Company. ”
The object oi'said corporators, and for which
they ask to be incorporated and empowered to
eligible in,is:
The utilization, improvement auc operatiov of
ESTABLISHED 1866-
A CARD.
To all who are Buffering from the errors and
Indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early
decay, loss of manhood, &o., I will eend a recipe
that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE. This groat
remedy was discovered by a missionary In South
America. Send a solf-addressed envelope to the
REV. JOSEPH T. INMAN, Station D, New York City
oe 11 eod&wlv ffol* r uri
SPRINGER OPERA HOUSE.
Monday, - - November 15th.
Majestic production and brilliant revival of
w. cr. a-iLivroB^E’s
Greatest and most, popular spectacle
The Devil's Auction!
CHARLES H. YALE, - Sole Manager.
New Scenes. New Situations. New Specialties,
New l*nrii|>licrnnlin.
AND TWO NEW PREMIERS.
Mu.is. LFONILDA STECCIONI. Prima Bal-
larina Assoiuta, from Eden Th» at re, Paris; Mile.
IUVERl, from Alhambra, London, und Mons.
LORELLA, the greatest living Grotesque.
The Dramatic Company is one of unusual ex
cellence, headed by the celebrated Itm\ccio
MartinETTi and Edith Muiiillo.
The specialties consist of the remarkable
BROTHER S KNOW, exponent* of Comic Gym
nasium; the THREE LOR ELLAS, Eccentric i
Grotesque; the Marvelous SALOMONSKN S in i
“Le Quatrc Kiclnipoos”; the Transformation .
Scene, depicting Fairy Land .and Crystal Lake, ;
the most c’ahorate mechanism ever built by ,;
Harley Merry, Rich, Smith and ,J. Thomas; the i
Great Alhambra Ballet, from the Alhambra Pal- \
ace. London, enlarged and strengthened. In
addition to other novelties, will present the fa-i
vorite Miicado Ballet, rearranged an t intro- |
during new terpsiehorean specialties, also the i
Postillion und Peacock Dunces, and riio Domic |
Bullets, "The P.iduca Dragoons” and “Le Q'latre i
KicUapoos.” The whole produced under the I
supervision of (..'has. H. YAle,
LAST SEASON IN AMERICA!
G.GUNBY JORDAN
Fire Insurance Agent,
Pioneer Building, Front Street. Telephone No. 104.
—— REPRESENTING
AMERICAN FIRE INSURANCE CO., of Philadelphia. Honestly
paid every loss since 1810.
NIAGARA FIRE INSURANCE CO., of New York. Every policy
issued under New York Safety Fund law.
SUN FIRE OFFICE, of London. Established 1710. Always
successful.
Policies issued on all classes of insurable property.
Representative Companies. Courteous Treatment. fair Adjustments. Prompt Payments.
A share of your business solicited.
with locka, dams and - uch other means and de-
vices as may be necessary to enabl. them to sup
ply witter power for manufacturing purposes to
such mills and machinery as may be thereon lo
cated and which may he hereafter purchased and
erected by said corporation, a» ; d to such person*
or corporations as may purchase, lease or rent
salfl water power or any part thereof ft 0111 it
To construct and maintain all neccs ary cana's
chute- Humes, sluices, dams, tramways and other
appliances on, upon and through the lands and
properly ofsaui corporation for the proper dis
tribution, utilization and preservation of said
waterpower ami which may be found essential
aud useful tor said purposes.
To utilize and improve all the lands acquired by
said corporation at und contiguous 10 said water
power upon the end, and west hanks ol the Chat
tahoochee river, in the States of Georgia aud Ala
bama, by erecting thereon mills, machinery, fac
tories und other buildings, and engaging in the
manufacture of cotton wool und all other fibrous
am textile materials into yarns, cloth, thread
rope and otlier fabrics, goods and products of ev*
ory kind whatever.
Ginningeottou for toll or teed or other valuable
consideration; manufacturing cotton seed into
such products as cun be obtained then from*
grinding corn, wheat and other grain and produce
for toll or for market and converting the same into
Hour, meal and its other products.
Thefurnishii g of power and the production and
generating thereby of electricity for ligl t and
neat, for motive power and lor such mechanical
and other uses and purposes as it may be adapted
to; und supplying, leasing and selling the same
and erecting and construct!) g in connection
therewith such works, po es, wires above aud un
der groin.cl, and oilier apparatus, electrical de
vices aud stations throughout said Cour ty of
Muscogee as may be necessary to convey, furnish
and supply the same to public and private con
sumers.
The manufacture of paper in all its forms, and
of paper, timber, wood and metals into such
utensils, woodenware, machinery and other
goods as may be produced therefrom; aud the con
ducting and carrying on ol the manufacture of
all and evei y other kind of goods, wares, machine
ry, wood and metal products, or such branches or
parts thereof as may be found eoent.al and de
sirable for the profitable employment and im
provement o> the said water power and property.
Said corporation to have power and authority to
sell, lease or rent its said water power, lands, ma
chinery, facto ies and buildings, or such purts at d
portions thereof as may be ex pedient, to such per
sons or other corporations as it may deem fit and
proper; and to advance from its corporate capital,
funds to such persons or corporations os may oc
cupy its said property; to aid and promote the
carrying on by them of their said manufacturing
business, and to make and execute all necessary
conveyances and other instruments, and to enter
into all proper contracts ano agreements for the
exerche o» this authority and the securing of its
said advana s.
Also, to have power and authority to lay out
K it. ts and building lots upon the lands which may
e hereafter acquired by said corporation in the
States of Georgia and Alabama; to erect buildings
and improvements thereon, and the said lots, va
cant or improved, and the said buildings, to sen,
rent or 1< a e to the operatives of said manufac
turing enterprises, and to such other persons as
may desire to rent, lease or purchase the same.
THE PRINCIPAL PLACE OP BUSINESS
of said corporation will be located at the site of
its said mills and water power in Muscogee Coun
ty, State of Georgia.
ITS CHIEF OFFICE
to be in the City of Columbus, of said County and
State; but it shall have authority in pursuit of its
said business and promotion of its objects to es
tablish bt auch offices at such other points and to
exercise its rights and franchises heretofore men
tioned, and 10 build factories, make improve
ments, contracts, agreements, investments and
carry on business ot t he nature and character
afore mentioned with regard to its property and
upon the lands and property which may be here
after acquired by said corporation in the State of
Alabama, and at such other places within and
without the limits of said States of Georgia and
Alabama, as its objects and interests may re
quire.
THE CAPITAL STOCK
of said corporation shall be one hundred aud fifty
Red Star Store
TO A-
solf-donyiiijr Christian, is one of those!
modern miracles which take place only j
inside tho pal* of the Christian elmn'li. j
Yes, Sam Small is human yet, and he has I
his faults, but that fact is no ar
gument against the genuineness of his
reformation. \Ye might take the best
man in the world to-duv and skim his
record with a muYoseope from the cradle
up, and there would he disclosed spots
too rotten to touch, llow much better
and how much less hitter this world
would be if we condemned each other
only after the method that the God-man
recommended to the accusers of tho frail
and trembling woman in the temple,
“Let him that is without sin ea.-t the
first stone.”
There is a prophecy and a warning in \
the Psalms that we commend to those;
people who are stabbing poor Sam Small
with their whetted tongues. It is this: “The
mouth of him that speaketh lies shall he
stopped.” In this world, when a man
burns a house lie is imprisoned or
hanged, but he who wrecks a reputation
and sinke it forever along with the beau
tiful hopes with which it is freighted,
goes on with none to inoleet or make
him afra'd. Surely there is another
world somewhere, in which the in
equality* of this one are righted, and in
SPRINGER OPERA HOUSE.
FriJiij und N;ilimlav, No, ember !2l!i mid 1,‘illi.
SATI' liDA V JIA I IXEE.
ADELAIDE RANDALL
Bijou Opera Company,
FRIDAY EVEAING.
Audrain’s Latest Success,
The BRIDAL TRAP,
Or The IMnkro of Love.
Saturday Salinee-*T
SATS IDViY NIGHT.
Oftenback’* Delightful Comic Opera,
PI! IN'CESS of TREBIZOMDE.
New and Gorgeous Costumes, imported from
Paris aud made by worth expressly for the above
Operas.
0.0 Admission $100. Gallery 50 cents Re
served seats at Chaffin’s without extra charge.
nov7 5t
A WONDERFUL ROOK OF SONG,
nor INuiiilar MIKADO.
DRY GOODS HOUSE.
The Two Large Stores Nos. 78 and 80 (New Nos. 1136 and 1138)
Broad Street have been thrown into one, and
lithe Elegant Assortment of Dry Goods,
nowcsl and iiio-l fashionable Dress Goods to be
j found in Columbus English Homespuns, plain and striped.
; UNDERtVEAR.—We Imre I he best and cheapest and the
iargo.-t assortment Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Underwear to be
j found in Loin minis.
.A. BIO IBA-IR,C3-A.I3ST.
Commencing Monday, I will place on sale a lot of CHECKED NAINSOpK nt,
i about 25 cents in the dollar on original price. Also, a big- lot of BLEACHED COT-
1 T(IN- RE -inANTS, containing, Wamsutta at 6c; MaSonviue at lit*; New York Mills at
j ; Fi ait of the Loom at tic, und a number of other brands not so well known, nil at 6c.
Positively none sold to merchants, and not more than 15 yj rds to any
j ONE PERSON.
25 Dozen HANDKERCHIEFS at 2c each ; 25 Dozen HANDKERCHIEFS at 4c
! ‘ ach. 14 Dozen Black BERLIN GLOVES at fie, -advertised lust week at 8c, well
I worth 25c.
JUST RECEIVED: Boys* Hats, hoys* Nancy Lets, Boys’ Fur Caps, Men’s Fur Caps.
Ask to look at our Mists’Full Regular RIBBED HOSE for 17c. My stock of
cent, thereof ahull be paid in before said corpo
ration commences to do business; and petitioners
desire said corporation shall have authority to in
crease said capital stock from time to time as it
may deem fit and proper to any sum not exceed
ing one million dollars,
They desire said corporation to have the power
of suing and being sued; to have and to use a
common seal, and to alter, break and change the
same at will; to make rules and by-laws lor*the
management of its business, not in conflict with
the laws of this State and the United States, and
the same to alter, amend and rescind at pleasure;
to receive, lease, rent or purchase aud hold such
real estate and personal property as may be now
oi hereafter necessary for its corporate purposes,
for the expansion auc advancement of its objects,
for the securing of debts due and to become duo
to said corporation, and the same to sell, mort
gage and convey at will,,
That it have power to effect loans and to issue
bonds in the name of said corporation, without
security or to secure such bonds by mortgage of its
property, real and personal, or of such parts or
portions thereof as may be desirable; and to loan
out its surplus earnings upon mortgage or other
available security.
To elect and appoint such officers, managers,
directors and agents as it desires; aud to provide
such rules and regulations with respect to stock-
i holders who lefuse to pay up any balance due on
their stock as will compel them to pay upon pen
alty of sale or forfeiture of such stock, and to do
and perform all such acts as are necessary for the
execution of its powers and to cany out the ob
jects and purposes of this corporation.
The individual property ol each stockholder
shall not be liable for the debts, liabilities, obli
gations or default of said corporation except to
the amount of unpuid stock subscribed by such
stockholder.
Wherefore petitioners pray that they, their aa-
lociates and successors be dul;
; der the name as aforesaid for I
years, with the privilege of renewal, with all the
p »were herein prayed Tor, and with such other
powers and privileges as are incident to corpo-
Ilosiery is one oft he best to he- found.
O. C. JOHNSON.
an order declaring this application granted.
And petitioners will ever pray, etc.
McNEILL & LEVY,
L F. GARRARI) l
Attorneys fof Petitioners.
GEORGIA—MUSCOGEE COUNTY: Filed in
the Clerk’s office Superior Court of said county on
the llth day of October, 1880, and recorded this
12th day of October on page 15, and Records of
Bills and Writs, Muscogee Superior Court, 1885.
GEO. Y. POND,
ool3 oaw 4\v Clerk S. C. M. C. Ga.
THE POEMS
* A T hehj va n ; | EMPIRE stables.
I'oet Priest of the Smith. \
The Amended and DtirhiiHl Edition.
It in "iii;? Ii.yries of the War. Hat-
tic* which tired the
Koiitii mid •coniiieBied file
Admiration of the Foe.
Complete in one volume, 433 pages, beautifully
illustrated. Tlu* engravings include a steel por
trail of the author : bis old Church and adjoining
Residence in Mobile; “Erin’s Flag”; und the
“Conquered Banner.”
The book will be sent to any address on re
ceipt of price, 82.00.
THE RAI/miOlti: lM ItLINIUNU 4 0.,
174 W. Baltimore 8t., Baltimore. Mil.
N. B. -One-hall the profits accruing from the
sale of this volume of nootns from date to March
1st will be devoted to tne fund for the erection of
a Monument to Father Ryan, to be placed
over his grave in Mobile. Help on the work and
swell the fund by purchasing a copy of the book.
tt#’Wanted, men and women in every town,
village and parish to act as agents for the sale or
this book. Liberal pay will be given for services
rendered. Send for descriptive circulars.
BOTH It
Successors fo JOJL\ DISH ROW cf- CO.
Sales Peed and Livery Stables,
East Side of First Ave., between 12lh and 13th Sts.
New and Nobby Turnouts. Safe and -Showy Horses. Careful and Ki|h'rienred Drivers,
FUNERALS personally conducted and properly attended to. The finest Hearses in
the city.
AFTER SEPTEMBER 1st, Horses boarded and carefully cared for at flfl per
month. Ample accommodations for LIVE STOCK. Headquarters for dealers.
Jf*. M. otU *lw
Maple Syrup and Sugar;
New Buckwheat and Fancy Patent Flour;
Mince Meat, Jellies ami*Preserves;
« New Mackerel;
Thurber’s Deep Sea Codfish.
GREEN and DRIED FRUITS.
New Currants, Seedless Raisins, Citron,
Candied Lemon and Orange Peel,
Evaporated Raspberries and Pears,
Dried Pitted Cherries, Huckleberries
and Prunes.
Oranges. Lemons and Apples.
Fancy Dark Cranberries
CXA-lSntTIEID Gt-OOIDS.
A varied assortment of extra fine and standard
goods as is in the city.
FARIXACEOI N GOO!)*. Ete.
New Meal from tills year’s corn. Pearl Grits,
Granula, Cracked Wheat, Shreaded Oats,
Steamed Oat Meal, Split Peas, Green Peas, Sago,
Tapioca, Manioca, etc.
Fine Flour, Sugars. Coilces and Teas.
Ferris & Co.’s Breakfast Bacon and Hams.
Pure Spices, Flavoring Extracts and Baking
Powders.
J. J. WOOD,
1026 Broad - Street.
25 Acres—5 Room Dwelling.
^yiLL^exchanee for city property. Cash a*
No. 263 ,0 “ re JOHN BLACKMAB,
Beal Estate Agent, Columbus, Ga.
ss wedAfri U