Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, November 18, 1886, Image 6

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DAILY ENQUIRER - 8UN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 18, 1896. Ingersoll Demand* the Land for All the People. I* Buy. It I. Time that PrlTSlc rr«|iortr III It itkoald End—Orest Invention., Ho neclnnw. Were Never Mount lo be the I'urw of l.nbor-A Picture «f * Brest Future of Happiness. New You*. November 15.—The Free Thinkers ami Secular Unionists closed their conpress of tho past week at Chick- erinp Hall last evening. Colonel Ingersoll was down for a lay sermon, but there was lady, too, who had something to say, and he gallantly accorded her first place. Miss Oarii nor wanted to protest—and did it,too, In many a sharply turned sentence— against the power which the church had over women. “The Bible,” she protested, “regarded woman as a thing for man’s lowest uses, and if all that the Bible says to and about women were gathered to gether it would make a book fit for the Yeat pocket in size, but unfit, because of Its indecency, to go through the United States mails. The woman filled with the teaching of the church was the mothor of sons who feared ghosts, who Worshiped things that were not and {tailed to make the best uses of the thousand opportunities nbout them. Aa men flung off these thralls the day of woman’s complete freedom or equality grew near.” Col. Ingersoll was introduced after the chairman had announced that the union had decided upon keeping up a reg ular Sunday evening meeting in this city, to open next week a,t No. 1H Lafayette place. The text of Mr. Ingersoll’s talk, as he described it, was in the grandest prayer ever uttered by mail, to lie found in the grandest tragedy ever written, “King tear.” It was when the demented old king prayed for those out in the storm and for those who had not felt the smile of for tune. There was something altogether wrong, thought Col. Ingersoll, when there was so much poverty and so much wealth concentrated m separate hands. “No man can own live millions of dol lars—the dollars own him,” said the speaker. “He becomes the key to the safe in which the shining pile is hoarded, lie is up in tho morning early to see that his fortune is safe, and he stays up late at night to see that no one gathers it in. He loses hU friend, his home becomes a safe deposit vault and he is miserable in his Burroundings. What would you think of a man who should gather iu a heap a mil lion coats, and in another warehouse a few million hats, aud then over the way another mountain of a dozen million of oravats, and then how ridiculous you would account him if he got up and workod all day long for another necktie—• [laughter] — and yet that is just what our rich men are doing and just what the civilization of tho near future will say to them in no uncertain tones ‘Thou shalt not do. ’ Wo have in each of our - cities the West Eud and the East End, the T>*rt where the proud palaces of the rich are reared in ostentution and the part far '“‘away Tffmoved where the hovels and tene ments of the poor are 1 uddled together in wretchedness. This is wrong. The poor nave to learn that pity rather than envy is what the rich need from them, and the rich have to learn that true and honest it earls beat beneath rags. “Anarchism is the protest against tyran ny, and that is out of place in this country, where we have, despite all its shortcom ings, the greatest and grandest govern ment the world has ever seen. Here the rich and poor can and do meet on one plane—it is the bench where rests the ballot-box. There the questions of the- fkiture will be answered, truthfully and quickly. It will speak in no uncertain tones, saying that the land which God put outdoors is free to every child of nature. No man lias a right to own more land than he can use and no man who wants land to use ought to be deprived of it. Why. I think if the air about us could be bottlea up we would have a big syndicate forming the great American air-bottling association and thousands would die because they had not money enough to pay for air to breathe. That is what is going on with the land, and it must stop, but not by any rash means. When a man preaches justice and advocates robbery as a way to get it I sus pect him. I do not blame t he rich for what they have, and would not take a pennyworth from the richest of them ex cept at a fair valuation, but 1 would take it until every man and woman born into the world bad a ehatiue to live through his or her days here in comfort and happiness. “Great inventions were never intended to pile lip great fortunes and curse tho la borer. No, uor will strikes settle any thing. The first successful strike will la the last, for the people will rise and show that the grasp of the laborer tyrant, muse be kept front tho throat of capital .just as sure ax the grinding heel of monopoly niusl not be placed upon tho prostrate form of toil, 1 am an individualist, and the majority lias no right to crush my manhood out of me. When we have a na tion of homes of these centres where loves reigns, where the race is not for riches but for happiness, then the goal will lie reached and content prevail. The unfair test of supply and demand will not be paid, but the hirod man will be given a living compensation and bo a free man among freemen, the peer of any of his fel low-citizens.” turned hair of silver. Blaine’s eyes are bright He has no nervous affection. His courtesy Is unfailing and his patienee miraculous. I would not travel around the country and stand tho rude expressions ol popularity he must receive to be president. I asked him how he did go through that campaign performance and not lose his temper, con sidering how many things of congeniality he might occupy his mind with. He said be put himself fn a purely passive condi tion, and took the world cordially. I.anirlita-r I,emit a .New Chnrin To hcautv when it discloses a pretty set of teeth. Whiteness, when nature has sup plied this element of loveliness, may he retained through life by using fragrant SOZODONT. sat se tu th&w Not Eninured In Prim I mil 1’rnrtirn. The Washington correspondent of the Alexandria Gazette says that Mr, Blaine wrote a letter to Rosooe Conkling in 1854, asking tho ex-senator to make three speeches in New York for the national re publican ticket. Mr. Conkling’s charac teristic reply was: “Mr. Blaine, I am not engnged in criminal practice.” No won der they never speak as they pass by. Nervous, llelillilnteil Men. You are allowed a free trial of thirty days of tho use of Ur. Dye’s Celebrated Voltaic Belt with Electric Suspensory Ap pliances, for the speedy relief and perma nent cure of Nervous Debility, loss of Vital ity and Manhood, and all kindred troubles. Also for many other disenses. Complete restoration to health, vigor and manhood guaranteed. No risk is incurred. Illus trated pamphlet, with full information, terms, etc., mailed free by addressing Vol taic Belt Co., Marshall, Mich. decl" Ui.t.h,sat,soAwly IJucor Pi ts. The ninja snake is frequently kept by- planters in their barns for the purpose of catching rats, which duty it faithfully per forms. One planter lias in his country res idence, as pets, a whole family of majas— the father, mother and eighteen young ones. But this is a Cuban eccentricity, not the rule.—New Orleans Picayune. Free Trade. The reduction of internal revenue and the taking off of revenne stamps from Pro prietary Medicines, no doubt has largely benefited the consumers,as well as relieving the] burden of home manufacturers. Es pecially is this the case with Green’s Au gust Flower and Bosehoe’s German Syrup, as the reduction of thirty-six cents per dozen, has been added to increase the size of the bottles containing these remedies, thereby giving one-fifth more medicine in the 75 cents size. The August Flower for Dyspopsia and Liver Complaint, and the German Syrup for Cough and Lung trou bles, have perhaps, the largest sale of any medicines in tho world. Tneadvantage of increased sizo of the bottles will be greatly appreciated by the sick and afflicted, in every town and village in civilized coun tries. Sample bottles for 10 cents remain the same size octl2 d&wly Extciiilinir til,- Tiimits. There is a law in Arkansas which pro vides that no liquors shall be sold within three miles of a school house And it is enforced. When a saloon keeper finds that he is within the prohibited limits be calls a meeting of citizens and they re move the school house.—Peoria Tran script. Catarrh ELY’S BLAINE PORTRAYED. A Picture of Him in Repo***--How lie Keeps HU Health. ’.old in Head, PATAU KIT, HAY FEVER. lota Liquid, Snuffo» ’owder. Free fVon HAY-FEVER :& 8 S 8 lul " A particle Is applied into each nontril and is agreeable. Price 50 cents at Druggists: by mail, registered 50 eta. Circulars free. ELY BROS.. Druggists Owego, N. Y. aug8 eod.twlf nrm Bradfields An infallible specific for nil the diseases peculiar t<> women, such as painful or suppressed Menstruation, Falling of the Womb, Lcu- corrhcea or Whites, etc. Female ( IIANliK OK LIFE. If taken during this crit ical period, great Buffering and danger can be entirely avoided. Qath iu the Cincinnati Euquirer. The last day before the election, Mon day, I had the privilege of riding with Blaine by the merest accident from Jersey City to Trenton, over Nome seventy miles of country, occupying, perhaps, an hour and a halt. I had no idea that lie was in that region, and was myself bound for a distant point. The first thing I saw was young men hurrahing at the door of the usual regular parlor car in which 1 had a seat. 1 spoke to Blaine almost immedi ately, and he. was very cordial, and after tlie train |moved oil', seeing that he was not much entertained, I went over to him, and an army oitieer courteously relin quished his sent to me. Mr. Blame, as I looked him all over, was rather the better for the- wear -of twenty years than the worse. He 1ms skin of'a very clear yel lowish tint, so healthy that if you were to take a section of that skin’within a circle and show it to a stranger he would gues-s that the. person there was a woman , and not a man. No liquor in the blood, no tobacco poison in the skin, nothing exis s there but the healthy action of the blood not too much disturbed by meat and appetite. I suppose that he has about the best habits uniformly of any living public mail. I can pass over iu my mind persons who rauk themselves with him, and nearly every one of them has some vice; one gets drunk periodically; another is all broken up with the gout from past follies; a third has chronic ill-temper resulting from succesful ambition which ought to have gratified him; another has been taken into society and spoiled so that he lias but little sense left, in spite of all his learning. Blaine has a peculiar face which no picture that I have ever seen accurately reveals. There is in the prints even of his own party, when they exploit him, a something surly aud belligerent, while in reality he is os mild, tranquil and sociable as one would expect a widow to be who had been left money* and could marry if she chose. His hair is not only gray, but it is white, aud yet it is so fine and there is so much of it that one almost envies him that turned hair as some women envy their women friends a full Regulator Send for book containing valuable information for women. It will be mailed free to applicants. Bradfikld Regulator Co., Atlanta, Go. DRUNKENNESS OR THE LIQUOR HABIT. POSITIVELY CURED BY ADMINISTERING DR. HAINES’ GOLDEN SPECIFIC. It can bo ifivon in cup of coffee or too without tho knowledge of the porhon tak ing it; U absolutely harmless, ami will ef fect a permanent and speedy cure, whether the patient is a moderate drinker or an al coholic wreck. It has been given in thou sands of cases, and in every instance n per fect cure lias followed. It nercr falls. The system once impregnated with the Specific, it becomes an utter impossibility for the liquor appetite to exist. For Sale by FOR SJlXzE BY M. D. HOOD A CO., DRUGGISTS, 03 BROAD ST., COLUMBUS, GA, Coll or write for circular & full particular*. FOR SALE! AURANTII Mo«*fc of tho riisonsofi which afflict, mankind are origin ally cfitiHod by a disordered condition of tho LIVER. For nil complaints of this kind, such a* Torpidity oi the Liver, Biliousness, Nervous Dyspepsia, Indiges tion. Irregularity of the Bowels. Constipation. Flatu lency, Eructations and Burning of the Stomach (sometimes called Heartburn) Miasma, Malaria, Bloody Flux, Chills anc Fever. Breakhone Fever. ExnauKtion before or after Fever*, Chronic Diar rhoea. Loss of Appetite, Headache, Foul Breath, Irregularities incidental to Females, Bearing-down is Invaluable-* It is not a panacea for all diseases but 11 E> S7 all diseases of the LIVER, will iTg. STOMACH and BOWELS- It chung‘>s the complexion from a waxy, yellow tinge, to a ruddy, he/iltliy color. It entirely remove* low, gloomy (spirits. It is one of the BEST AL* TERATIVES and ^UMFIERS OF THE BLOOD, and is A VALUABLE v ONIC. SYADiCEF’ s"~ikLiRANTII For sale by all Drugsirts. Brice 81-00 per bottla C. F.STADICER, Proprietor, *40 SO. FRONT ST., Philadelphia, Pa. (Copy.) Chicago, April 21st, 18v.». This is to certify, that the Illinois Trust ana Savings Bank lias this day received from tho Union Cipar Company of Chicago, to be held as a Special Deposit, U. s. 4 °lo Coupon Bonds, as follows: go. 220281). $500. % Market Value of which is ** 41204 100. I •• 41205 100. V $1012. *» 52810 lhO- f W $800. ' (S.) y<xs. S. Gibbs, Cash. We offer the above as a FORFEIT, if our ‘FANCY GROCER” does not prove to be a genuine Havana-filler Cigar.-Union Cigar Ca cOfl X 7" CIGAR Our LA L03IA 10c. Cigar is strictly Hand made. Elegant quality. Superior workmanhip, 8oid by all Grocers. UNION CIGAR COMPANY, 75 N. CUatoa SL, • CHICAGO. Retail by C- D. HUNT, Columbus, Gt fzale’4 dlv BOSTON, MASS, UAUSTA SntFLl’N, 8101).000 100.000 M Y place on Talbotton road, about two miles from city,on line of Georgia Midland. Has a new five room House, all necessary out-house-, in excellent repair; splendid spring. The place contains 102 1 acres, about 25 acres of whicn Are heavily wooded. TERMS EASY. . Foley, opera house. C. P. SPRINGER Accounts of Banks, Bunkers and Corporations solicited. Our facilities for COLLECTIONS are excellent and we re discount for Banks when balances warrant it. Boston is a Reserve Citr, and balances with up from Banks not located in other Reserve Cities. 1 counted i s a reserve. We draw our own Exchange on London and the Continent, and make Cable transfers and place money by telegraph throughout the United States and Canada. Government Bonds bought and sold, and Ex changes in Washington made for Banks without extra charge. We have a market for prime flrst-c’ass Invest ment Securities, and invite proposals from States. Counties aud Cities when issuing Bouds. We do a general Banking business, and invite correspondence. ANA P. POTTER, PreMldonf. JON. W. WORK, (RNhler. oc30 wedAsatCm FOR SALE. Temperance Hall, two-story brick building, walls and timbers perfectly sound. Could be converted into a splendid warehouse at nominal expense. Quar.er acre lot. Will sell for what the land is wotth—thirty per cent below assessed value. The Wilkerson Residence, Third avenue, op posite Mi. Jno. Hill’s. The Harrison Dwelling and 40 acres, Beall- wood. Two-story Brick Store occupied by J. H. Gabriel & Co. Quarter acre lot north Jackson street. FOB IR/EnSTT. Offices and Sleeping Rooms over Singer Sew ing Machine Co’s office. L. H. CHAPPELL, ilrokfr. Ileal Estate anJ Insurance Agent, air Hattie R. Johnson vs. James M. Davis. Petition for the removal of Trustee, and for the ap pointment of another Trustee. Columbus. Ga., at Chambers, October 8, 188b. the petition in the above case read and consider ed; it is ordered that the defendant. James M. Davis, show cause before me at 10 o’clock a. m. on the 15th of December, 1886, at the Court House in the city of Columbus, why he; should not be n moved fYom his trust and another trustee ai>- S ointed as prayed for, and it appearing that said ames M. Davis resides beyond the limits of this State, it is ordered that service be perfected or him by publication of this order iu the Columbut Enquirer-Sun, a newspaper published in the city of Columbus, twice a month for two months be fore the hearing. Given under my hand and official signature. J. T. WILLIS. Judge S. C. C. C. oct9 2tam2m COLUMBUS Iron Works COMPANY, Columbus, Georgia. FOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS, -DEALERS IN- Lime, Shingles, Dressed and Matched Ceiling and Flooring and other Lumber. Specialty made of Dress ing Lumber for other parties. -AGENTS FOR Royal Pumps, Judson Governors, Eberman Feeders, Standard Injectors, Hancock Inspirators and BROWN COTTON GINS MANUFACTURERS OF Stratton’s Improved Absorption Ice Machines, Saw Mills. Pumps, Hollow Ware, Syrup Kettles, G-OIYDIEItT OOTTOHSr PBESSES —and— The Improved Calender Rollers, |>1) T 7U Send six cent* Tor postage and 1 I\ 1 /j fj. reoceive free a costly Box oi goods which will help all, of either sex, to nuke more money right away thaw anything else i this world. Fortunes await the workers abso lutely sure. Terms mailed free. Tbce A Co. Augusta. Maine. The above cut represents the Improved Calender Rollers, so much admired and extensively used by Colton Manufac turers of the present day. They consist principally of five Rollers, six inches in diameter, 40 inches long; two of them hollow, being a receptacle for steam. They are furnished with all necessary pipe and valves, fitted up read) 7 to be at tached to a Boiler; has all the latest improvements on same, including the Selvage Rollers ane Cloth Yard Folder ; a taut and loose Pulley, 20 inches in diameter, 4 inches face, all ready to be connected, to a line of Shading. It only requires a trial to demonstrate their indispensibility. je20 wed.se&wfim ESTABLISHED 1866. 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. Gcprescutatire Companies, Courteous Treatment. Fair Adjustments, Prompt Payments. A share of your business solicited. EMPIRE STABLES. Successors to JOHN DISBROW & CO. Sale, Feed and Livery Stables East Side of First Ave., between 12th and 13th Sts. Sew and Nobby Turnouts, Safe and Showy Horses, Careful and Experienced Drivers. FUNERALS personally conducted and properly attended to. The finest Hearses In the city. AFTER SEPTEMBER 1st, Horses boarded and caretully cared for at fl6 per month. Ample accommodations for LIVE STOCK. Headquarters for dealers. SS-Tel«ph«ae Mo. 58. 0C 31 dly COMMISSIONERS’ SALE -FOB PARTITION— Valuable City Property. ft EORGIA—MUSCOGEE COUNTY : Under and by virtue ot an order from the Sunerinr Court of Muscogee County, passed at the Mai Term, 1880, thereof, the undersigned Commission ers, appointed by said Court, will sell in front or the Court House of said county, in the city of On. lumbus. on the first Tuesduy In December next between the legal hours of sale, at public outcrv to the highest bidder, the following described city property, alilying in the city of Columbus county of Muscogee, State of Georgia, to wit • 7 ry at——.— r ., ,, HrHWUU , . rr . fJI .j, v „ Co. as a livery stable being known and distin guished iu the plan of said city as lot number 228 bounded on he north by lot formerly owned bv Garland B. Terry, on the south by lot former), owned by Jones, McDougah- and Clegliorn on U»e east by lot number 226. and on the west bv First avenue (formerly Oglethorpe street,, on which said First avenue said property fronts.hav- ing a front of ninety-nine (9B) feet, more or less and runs back with a depth of one hundred anil forty-seven feet and ten inch, s (147 feet 10 inches, more or less. '• ciw oPcolYmbus! to*w?t* and PBrtS ° f lo “ ln 8ai * All of t ity lots numbers 626 and 628, containicn of an acre each, more or less; also, the north parts of city lots numbers 623 and 624, said parts being of the breadth of forty-nine feet three and one-third inches (49 feet 3,N inches) each, runnina through both of said lots the same width fYom Forsyth to McIntosh streets, being the north thirds of said lots numbers 623 and 624, the whole of the aforesaid property being tne same property which was owned bi the late James M. Quinby in bis life time. The four lots last described lie in a contiguous body and are unimproved. For the purposes of this Hale the four unim- E roved lots and parts of jots.last above described ave been subdivider ii,to eight equal lots, com mencing on Fifteenth stre et (formerly Lee street) eet 10 inches. Lots numbers 1, 3, 6 an cf 7 in the above subdivision are situated on the east side of Fourth avenue (formerly Forsyth st,ect>, each lot fronting on said Fourth avenue forty nine feet three and one third inches (49 feet a 1 :, inches),and running back east 147 feet 10 inches. Lots numbers 2,4, 6 and 8 iu said subdivision are situated in the west side of Fifth avenue (formerly McIntosh strpetj, each of said lota fronting on said Fifth avenue 49 feet 3H inches and running back west117 feet 10 inches. Terms—Cash on day of sale. Possession given on payment of purchase money. D. A. ANDREWS. TOL Y. CRAWFdRD, JAS. G. MOON, nov2dlm Commissioners. J.C.REEDY, Real Estate Agent, SO. 22. NEXT BOOB TO POST OFFICE, COLUM BUS, OA. FOR HALE. $1460. V\ acre lot, five room House, all complete, on upper Second avenue. 660 One vacant lot on 4th avenue, between 8th and 9th streets. 22?0. h acre lot. six room house and other homes, all new, on lower Broad. 2760. 6 room house, two servant houses. 250 One vacant lot fronting park. 1800. l /\ acre lot, G room house and store house. 450. h acre lot on 3d avenue, between 6th and. 6th streets. 3000. Small farm two miles east of city. 1000 10 acres land, 5 room house, 3 miles east of city. 1200 20 acres land, 6 room house, good fence, two miles north of city. 1 have, also, other city property, which I will show you, and several small farms iu Geo gia. and Alabama. Cal and see me before you rntute any arrangements, as I mean business. J~. O. REEDY, Real Estate Agent, No.22 12th St PLANTATION FOR SALE. I OFFER my plantation in Crenshaw county for sale, containing 620 acres, with 250 acres under good fence. Good frame dwelling house with seven rooms, new lYamed kitchen adjoining, and good servants’ house in tht» yard; also plenty or f lood tenants’ houses and all necessary outbuild- nos. My place is situated two miles south of New Providence, on Conecuh river, also on the line of the Montgomery and Florida railroad which is being rapidly built. Convenient to three churches, Primitive Baptist, Missionary Baptist and Methodist. A good school conve nient all the time. There are three good wells of wati r and several good springs on the plantation,, good cattle and nog range, and facilities for hunting and fishing good. I will sell cheaper thun any one and give lh;ee payments, one-third cash, one-third in twelve months and one-third in two years with 8 per cent interest on last pay ment. My reason for wishing to sell is on account oi being too old to attend to a farm of th s size. W. P. MOUNT. New Providence, Ala., Oct. 15, 1886. oct24seit THE FAIVtQUS S3RAND OF OLD KILL PURE OLD RYE This vir sky was introduced originally in the year and is constantly making new friends. It • 1 the produce of the most approved process of d!stil.« Htu>n, from carefully selected grain, being held uni formly in ware i< use until fully matured by age, is justly celebrated for its purity, delicacy of flavor and uniform quafity. For sale, and orders solicited by the agent. T. 3f. h)|j;y* Opera House, ^ Lor 10th Street and 1st Avenue. Columbus, Ga, C ZE3I IE W RUDOLPH FINZER’S STARLIGHT AND CAPITAL PRIZE A u At Wholesale by LOUIS BUHLER & Co„ OOILTTIM: TEXTS, Q-JL. JeS oodem R.0L> S^r.n *ni nroes BUILDING LOT $150, Payable ^10 a Month. /'kUARTER-ACRE LOT in Northern Liberties,, v*- on extension of Third avenue. Good settle ment. Buy thiB lot anil stop paying rent. No. 235. JOHN BLACK MAR. Real Estate Agent, Columbus, Ga.