Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, November 28, 1886, Image 6

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    6
DAILY ENQUIRER • SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 28, 1886.
■eofthp IViiIheml Tribe firing Wood Luck—
Othtr* Mran Misfortune.
Mail ami Kxpress.
"MOW SAILORS VIEW BIRDS AT SEA. | for the hour. There is a verse of Maud
^ I that I used to rave over continually when
a boy. It runs:
“The slender acacia would not shake
One long milk broom on the tree;
The white lake blossom fell into the hike,
And the pimperel dozed on the lea.”
aaiin«. ,,,UK Now this pi!nperiiel was not a flower
««™l«t R L,»a Tuina lh v h„vo ! familiar to n.y childhood, and I actually
SEE. 1 ' i , V h every supposed it was a bird. I can see now tin-
- ^ ‘ daily Hie picture us my youthful mind conceived it
their ac tions are ail influenced by some I
one or
land th
peopl
and on
Unhappy
the fri-cuter seenesof the. voyagb. They
are believers in fate, and when at sea they
say their fate is more or less inlluenet il liy
tlie birds that come and perch on II > ir
musts yards. An old and educated
aca captain, who bus weathered many
storms, been shipwrecked a dozen times
and who is yet hearty and hale, was met
recently by a reporter. The weather
beaten tar iind tin
neighboring
steaming '
about the supt
birds nl sea.
“Yes,” said the enptain, as he blew a
long, thin column of smoke through Ins
lips and watched it curling fantastically
through the air. “Yes, wc have a few lit- , . ...
tie fancies when a!, sea about birds, and I ingenious enthusiasm as a selection at
Some, are a little scared when a gull or a j some rending club of “circle,' when to
vxbmt^diaistj11 Lower I i**^^
nYSPFPSlA INmnFfcTlrtM 1m ■ ■ ■ ■■■■ w w
CURB H
DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION,
WEAKNESS, CHILLS AND FEVERS,
MALARIA, LIVER COMPLAINT,
KIDNEY TROUBLES,
NEURALGIA AND RHEUMATISM,
7T i9 Invigorat
ing u::d Dc-
7T gives NEW
1 LIFE to the
away on the pule of truth, the charm of* |
t he stanza whs gom*. for me. Is there any
line of Auhi L ing Syne that simple people
will sing with such appreciative fervor ns
that of the “Pidin^’ the “gowans fine?”
Ami what, idea have they when they de
claim ol’ “shuffling otr tnis mortal eoil?’’
And what feline melodiousness is suggest
ed to them by Milton’s “Eagle me win
1 l«rhtful to take,
Owd of arent value
a i a Medicine tor
v/ocU and A.
Women and <
dren.
whole SYSTEM
by Strengthening
tne Muscles, Tail
ing the NERVES,
and coinpIetetyDi-
gesting the food.
YYY
y by a reporter. l lie we»tni.-r- Iroi- mighty youth?” And how nonplussed
tar and the scribe adjourned to a ,, W ould be if suddenly called onj.o rv
onng hostelry, .and over .ton.,; lh( ,, t 4,agbt
ig hoi grog and < lgais Lin clmttod | n, ()HO ]j nes charming in their “simplic-
the superstitions connected with i... » ” 1
ity, 1
“For the soul is not dead Hint slumbers,
Ami things are not what they seem.”
I tow often have wc heard sjiiu: poem
of Browning or of Emerson delivered with
swallow perches upon our mast, but
rule, wc are pleased to see the feathery
beauties, especially after a long voyage,for
then wc know we are nearing land and
Imve stopped the reading and naively in-
cpiired the meaning; would have brought
on a most painful situation. Depend upon
it, there is nothing that so lends a charm
Will soon be among our friends again. The to versos as the line that is perfect non
belief of old sailors is that if an albatross ! sense to ns, so long as we do not notice that
be slaughtered it at once becomes necessa- ! ticks sense. Even passages that ari
ry to keep one's weather eye lifting for
squalls, hut that no harm follows if the
bird he caught with it piece of fat pork
Midis allowed to dii a natural death on
deck. The common house sparrow is
much respected at sea. It is gravely as
serted that should sparrows he blown
away to sea and alight upon ashipthey are
not to be taken or even chased away, for
in propori ion as the birds are molested
must sail be sliortoned to provide against
the storm that will certainly come. The
harmless and beautiful gull, whose lovely
sweepings and carvings through the air,
whose exquisite self-balancing capacity
in the teeth of a living gale, whose bright
eyes, salt, shrewd voice and webbed feet
folded in bosoms of ermine it is impossi
ble to sufficiently admire, has a commer
cial virtue that sets it high in the long
shoreman’s catalogue of things to be ap
proved. When this hird appears in great,
numbers then is its presence accepted as
'mi infallible sign of the neighborhood of
herring slionls.
“It is reckoned n had sign for ravens to
perch on the mast of a ship. There is an
old superstition that the rotten timbers of
foundered ships generate birds. Even a
dead bird may prove a soothsayer, ac
cording to Jack, for, says he, if a kingfish
er be suspended to the mast by its beak it
will swing its breast in the direction
of the coming wind. Years ago swallows
Were deemed unlucky at sea. If a kite
perches on the mast l he omen is a good
one. A crow lighting on n ship is ac
cepted as a sure sign of prosperous winds,
and they feed the bird with erambs of
bread by way of coaxing it to remain. It
is said tn the English Channel fishermen
attribute the east wind to the flight of the
curlew on dark nights.”
THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE.
The f'H(-ltlt) with Which Mr.
Ills State Papri
t'lcvclailil Writes
The president, I hear, says the Tribune’s
Washington correspondent, has nearly
finished his message, or at least those
.pariH of it which ho is expected to write
himself. People who know the presi
dent’s method of working, and are aware
of the facility with whion he clothes his
thoughts in language —stilted, labored and
grotesque at times though it be—are
daily becoming more astonished ut
the ease with which he dashes
down page after page with his
pen. It w ' hi indeed he iitteresting to
know just how many volumes his corre
spondence, his official pap. rs, his
messages and documents
would make since he assume
president. None of his predecessors was
as copious, as dismissive and diffuse us Mr.
Cleveland. Most of liis pension vetoes,
for instance, were writen, n dozen perhaps
at one sitting, and many of them without
revision. His famous message in regard to j boxes,
the refual to furnish the papers demanded
by the .senate was written in less than
one hour and a half. As sheet alter
sheet left his desk it was carried to one of
the clerks in the office, who copied it, the
ink scarcely being dry upon the last lines
of the page. 1 was shown the original
manuscript the other day. Scarcely a
single word was erased, and here and
there only the punctuation seemod to
have been changed. Quite as remarkable
as his command of words is the president’s
memory. 1 don’t think that anybody ever
saw him deliver a speech from notes.
This, however, does! not prove that he is
in the habit of speaking impromptu or
Without preparation. On the contrary,
every word is carefully weighed before
hand, the whole speech is reduced to
writing, and then as carefully committed
to memory. It was in this way that he
was enabled,for instance, to surprise every
body upon the occasion of his inaugura
tion by delivering his speech from in front
■of the capitol steps without apparently
having recourse to notes. Those near him,
however, pretend to have discovered on
that day a card in the palm of his hand
upon which t hy main points of his address
arc said to have been jotted down.
frankly and avowedly nonsense meet a felt
want. Is it not one of the charms of the
old ballads that they refresh our intellects
now and again with their “Oh and’s” and
“Oh hut’s,” and their “Iley no nonny’s?”
What a terrible line is that in the grand
old ballad of Sir Patrick Spans”—
“And gurly grew the seal”
These meaningless refrains and unintel
ligible words aie like the parenthetical
twirls and “warbles” of the bagpipe, or
like the ban joist strum and stamp. As t lie
bumper of milk refreshes the weary pedes
trian, so do theHe dashes of nonsense the
mind, by a return to the diet of infancy.
Malaria.
Twenty-five hundred dozen bottles of
Ague Conqueror ordered in one month. It
positively eradicates all Malaria, Fever
and Ague, Bilious and Intermittent Fevers
in any climate. Read our book of 1000
testimonials.
Doe West, S. C., March 12,1883.—G. G.
Green, Dear Sir—We will soon need more
Amie Conqueror. It is taking like “hot
cakes” and giving satisfaction.
Yours, Elms Bros.
Fairfield, Mo., August 20,1888.—G. G.
Green, Dear Sir—Your Ague Conqueror
knocks the Chills and Dumb Ague every
time. I warrant every bottle and it never
fails. X have cured eases where quinine
had no elleet whatever.
Yours truly,
actl2 d&wlv W II. Shaw & Co.
In tin* Nrifihliorlioiiil of a Proa I trulli.
BUnloss labor organizations can devise
some way t.o prevent hot-headed, irrespon
sible agitators from plunging thousands
into ill-considered strikes, the fewer labor
organizations the country lias the better it
will be for the great mass of workingmen.
—Madison (Wis.) Democrat.
Morn Monoy for Your Work
If you improve good opportunities. Hal-
lett&Uo., Portland, Maine, will mail free
full information showing how you can
matte from $5 to $25 and upwards a day
and live at home wherever you are located.
Better write; some have made over $50 in
a day; all new. No capital required;
started free. Both sexes; all ages. Suc
cess for every worker. Send address and
see for yourself. • oc2fi dfiin
The 125 steamships plying between the
Jnited States and Europe cost $100,000,000,
si ploy 18,739 men. spend $1,000,030 u
, - , nouth for coal, carry 500.030 passengers a
>ap, rs, ins veto j y,ar and earn $22,000,0.30 for passage money
i lvlnc j. ! exclusive of what, is paid for freight.
med the office ot
A n Extended Popularity. Brown’s
Bronuhail 'Troches have been before
the public ranuy years. For relieving
C.Highs and Throat troubles they are su
perior to all other articles. Sold only in
boxes. tii sat so tu&'w
liy 'an Esquimaux.
An arrow point made of ivory was re
cently extracted from the breast of a goose
shot near Colusa, Cal, As there are no
savages nearer than the Arctic regions
with whom ivory is plenty, the conclusion
is that the arrow was made from the tooth
of a walrus and shot into the breast of the
bird by an Esquimaux.
1ILTKLK3P8 AltXlCA SALVE.
The best Salvo in the world for Cuts,
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever
Sc es, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains,
Corns and all Skin Eruptions, and positive-
i cures Piles, or no pay is required. It is
guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction,
or money refunded. Price '25 cents per
box. For sale by Brannon & Carson.
ie'J-t oed.s-.w
A Horn! i og.
"Yes, sir, that is the best quail dog in
America. Look at him now.”
“He seems to be pointing toward that
restaurant.”
“Yes, sir, and I’ll bet $100 that if you go
in there you will find somebody eatiug
quail on toast.”—Rambler.
advice to Mothers.—Mrs. Winslow’s
Soothing Syrup should always he used
•when children are cutting teeth. It re
lieves the little sufferer at once; it produces
natural, quiet sleep by relieving the child
from pain, and the little eheruli awakes ai
“bright as a button.” It is very pleasant
to taste. It soothes the child, softens thi
gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regu
lates the bowels and is the best known
remedy for diarrlnca, whether arising
from teething or other causes. Twenty-
five cents a bottle. jel7 d*wly
Mother linose in Poetry.
Atlantic Monthly.
It is a very pathetic thing to see the ef
forts some of our industrious young poets
make to write something good. They ap
pear to gird up their loins, and rake the
dictionary, and crowd their verses with
all the choicest kind of language, all to
no avail. “Majors eanamusl” ■ they con
stantly exclaim, but they somehow con
tinue to be minor poe s. *
It has occurred to me that they might
do well to risk an opposite course. In
stead of attempting any longer to make
their verse mean something (for in this
they do not seem fitted by nature to suc
ceed), let them try to enrich it with pas
sages of melodious idiocy. Like the
wretched prisoners in the elevator, since
the thing won’t go up, why not try it
down?
For it has been borne in on me lately
that people like a little Mother Goose in
their poetry. I notice that some of the
stanzas most quoted from our best poets
are those of whose real meaning the
? uoters plainly have not the remotest idea,
t is not merely that the verse is liked in
spite ol' its having, to them, no meaning,
but just because of this fact. I can re
member that 1 used to be fond of chanting
“Corn rigs, and barley rigs,
And Corn rigs are bjuaie”
before I had any notion whatever of the
sense of “rigs.” Since the time of learn
ing tne meaning of the word I observe,
that I do not seem to eare half so much
Active, Pushing anil Reliable.
Brannon Carson can always be relied
upon to carry in stock the purest and best
goods, and sustain the reputation of being-
active, pushing and reliable, by recom
mending articles with well established
merit and such as are popular. Having the
agency for the celebrated Dr. King’s New
Discovery for consumption, colds and
coughs, will sell.it on a positive guarautee.lt
will surely cure any and every affection of
tiiroat, lungs or chest, aim in order to
prove our claim, we ask you to call and get
a trial bottle free. eod&w
Culils.
Many persons take cold by h iving cold
feet, and to these the cold douche to the
feet is a most effective cure. It stimulates
the nerves and arteries of the feet and pro
duces a brisk reaction of warmth. A sin
gle application will sometimes set cold feet
glowing that have not been warm for a
whole winter. Often it will entirely cure
the life-long nllliction of cold feet. The
colder the , water the better; and if one
has not the convenience of a douche it
will serve fairly well to stand in a tub or
basin, filled to six inches deep with the
coldest water at command. The warm re
action is assential.—Harper’s Bazar.
Too Marti Even for Itnston.
I had not been in Liverpool an hour
when I became convinced that I had much
to learn about the English language.
When I entered my hotel I asked the
young woman who received me, “what
are your terms?” and had 1 spoken Choc
taw shecould not have understood me less.
“What do you charge a day?” I next ven
tured. “Charge!” she replied, vaguely,
and I tried again. “Ah! you want tli#
tariff?” she said at last, and sure enough I
did. Now, if I had used the word “tariff”
in that sense iu Boston it would huve been
considered slang. I tried in vain to get a
pair of suspenders, as they would show me
none but those for stockings, but succeeded
finally in buying r oine “braces.A Boston
Man.
r.o hurtful
Minerals, is com-
posed of carefully
selected Vegeta
ble Medicines,
combined eiiiJl-
fully, making a
Safe and Pleasant
Remedy.
Korn.!.- fay all nriii;gf«t
■t keep 1
a
Volina Drug and Chemical Company,
• ualt;:;»ru, £)>., i\ a. a.
Jp-
U»»j Liver *Uiu
ti-m, irresjaiun
leu.7, liruutu*
(a mi tinv.s <ru
Jiloody I'ijx. i
ch r.s Torpidity of
Norvou.i iJ/ttpuptiiu, indigen*
- d > v< in, Ci/iiu lpution, Jj’latu-
i nurmiit! hi me htoniaiii
tutojuai .Mi.ittun, Alulurii,
IV
u.t .iio. F.,ul lireml),
„ . . . Fem«lo0, Boiirii k-
dinvn P,ia< » Jo . .to, ST ADIC^R'S*
AUftAutf . 11 ia .11-I?. ?• if. not a panacea
Irregul ir in
I* is not
all ui’ »’-.i ot out ■* in t. V’Mi ad <VfS<*vUKt9 of
the LIV£ A . r . C Z V* A ;>i>i .-au fei^rkVEL». It
to
i'*uiw tta®.
ity meovtffl J»>w,
(loomy upi'-itb. U in *no «»t ttie vf *•)/«trativea
twi 1 'ti i,-era <f "" d -a -< nilii«b/e tonic.
STASHC.EW• S MS®A$4T11
For Bale by nil Jl*». Friou £ I, JO pfcr bottlo.
C. F. ST AiilUEzl, Proprietor,
■**0 SO. FRONT ST.. Philadelphia, Pa.
THE FAMOUS BRAND OF
OLD MILL PURE OLD RYE
( Tl.L v In
.iiinn, fr»
fm-tnly i*-.
n>Mlv rt*
..•••I r ii i
y tiie j’.,-
ni roil need oriudnally in tho voar
fly new fiienii.-i. Jt
m>sv approveil proems i f disfi)..
. (l urniii, boiler |, c |,i lm i.
‘ hinil fnlly inalined by u^e, ig
Fo
of ll.’l
solicited
T. M. i . t
• ’! aiid 1st Avenue, ('oluml)us, Ge«
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
year,
81(100.
*1703.
Key of Rose Hill.g-ood Store and Dwelling
hj'aere lot * ith new live room rosivlenct
ou Rose Hill
looo. Half acre vacant lot cor. 1st avenue aud fitb
3500.
A handsome Residence and 160 acres of
laud iu Wynnton.
1233. Good four-room House and two-room ten
ant house on lower Fifth avenue* ' i acre
lot.
1000. Four thtee-room Houses in Northern
Liberties—rent for 816 per month.
225. A vacant lot near Slade’s school.
Three 1 1 acre vacant lots near Swift’s factory
cheap tor cash,
FOR RENT.
$20 Per month -Store on Twelfth street.
$20 per month Dr. Schley’s Hou-;e on Second
avenue, between Fourteenth and Fifteenth Sts.
$25 -W. R. Moore’s House, ^outh of court house.
820—Store and Wauon Yard on Sixth avenue.
W. S. GREEN, Real Estate Aot
eodtf
Bradfields
An infallible specific for
all the diseases peculiar to
women, such as painful or
suppressed Menstruation,
Falling of the Womb, Leu-
corrhcea or Whites, etc.
Female
i’UAMiE OF LIFE.
If taken during this crit
ical period, great snlYerinir
and danger can be entirely
avoided.
Regulator
, Send foi- book containing valuable information
lor women. It will be mailed free to applicants.
liRADFiKi.D Regulator Co.. Atlanta, (ia.
THE PATENT MICE & DUST PROOF
TYLERDESK
Bookcases, Tables, Off.oi
Chairs, Letter Presses,
Fine Cabinets, Ac.
TYLER DESK CO.
•W N. Fourh Ht., St. Louis
Seuvl4i> for 40 pp. Cata.o«i»
PENNYROYAL PILLS
"CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH."
Thi' Original nn«l Only (.ounine.
S«* ud alvr.v. RrllaM. 11,'w.ro of w.irlld. .. Imitation!.
I , .dl50.it..blo t.» L«PIES. A.k >our llrunl.t for
‘ ( l,l,.li.'.ter'a EttyU.lr’ and tako n.t other, or hi'lo.r ,c.
(stamp') to us for paiticuluis in letter bv ruturii mull.
NAME PAPER. €Meh»ia»r C’lirmloul Co..
*81B Ma^lnoii Aqunro, RhUudu., 1*»-
Sold bj; llruircUu everywhere. Ask for “Chlctiw
• LualtsE'' Feuuy rovul i'illk. Tfike no ovhv:
IF YOU DON'T BELIEVE WE ARE
OUT THE ALLEN BROS,' STOCK
At lower prices than you ever heard ol', just call and see the
goods and prices. To-morrow we will offer a large lot of
short ends in Silks and Satius, lengths from 2 to 20 yards, in
A licok, ‘Vclfna,’
^ by 1 c a d 1 n %
physicians, telling
how to treat di:•
rasc’3 at HOME,
mailed, together
with a set of hand-
tome cards by new
K c 1 iotypo procco 3,
oil receipt of lo c.
both light and dark shades. These goods cost from 60c
■ 1 10 per yard ; take your choice for 40 cents.
to
| Balance of our stock of Ginghams at 65c, worth 10c.
6o Pairs Harris's Seamless Gloves at 50c, worth $2 25.
26 Pairs 2-Buttoh Opera Gloves at 15c, worth 50c.
j <s7 Pairs 3-Button Opera Gloves at 25c, worth 75c.
; 65 Pairs 4. 6 and 8 Button Opera Gloves at 50c, worth $1 25.
Dress Goods! Dress Goods! Dress Goods!
! Well, if you want a Dress, now cr in the future, it will
pay you to buy of us at once ; ’tis impossible to match our
prices elsewhere.
See our stock of Flannels.
See our stock of Blankets.
See our stock of Table Linens.
See our stock of Hosieryi
See our stock of Corsets.
Wraps! Wraps! Wraps!
Speaking of Wraps, we have a large stock of all styles and
prices, and iiny of them at cost. We have a few very fine
ones, costing from $20 to ijj’38. Just make us a reasonable
offer for one of these and see if you don't get it.
Don't forget the bargains in our Millinery Department.
JAMES A. LEWIS,
1012 BROAD STREET,
Two doors above Rankin House, - - - Columbus, Ga.
Will Offer This Week in addition to the List of Bargains of the Past Week :
1000 Yards Heavy Wool Jeans at 20 cents, worth 25c.
lOOO Yards Good*Cotton Flannel at 5 cents, worth 8c.
500 Yards splendid Black Silk at 75 cents, worth $1 00.
500 Yards Heavy Gros Grain Black Silks at $1.00. worth
$1 25.
300 Yards beautiful Silk Plush at 75c. worth $1 50.
300 Yards beautiful Silk Velvets at 75c, worth $2 00.
500 Yards assorted Colored Silks at the uniform-price
of 50c, worth $100 to 2 00. Come and get first
choice.
SPECIAL BARGAINS in Remnants Dress Goods. Vel
vets, Ac.
New Goods received daily.
J”. EL CAYIRa-IIl.Ili
ni'lfi il.tw.3in
B1S'T’J\.B3XjISE3:E]ID 13SS.
7
Ag’t.
£&L3USr
G.GUNBY JORDAN
Fire Insurance Agent,
Telephone No. 104.
Pioneer Building, Front Street.
REPRESENTING—
AMERICAN FIRE INSURANCE CO., of PHILADELPHIA,
Honestly paid every loss since 1810,
NIAGARA FIRE INSURANCE CO., of NEW YORK,
Everyl 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.
«eni2 dtf
EMPIRE STABLES
Successors to .JOHN DISBROW & CO.
East Side of First Ave., between 12th and 13th Sts.
A’civ aud Nobby Turnouts, Safe and Showy Horses, Careful and Einericuccd Drivers.
the ciYv VEEALS personally c °n d “oted and properly attended to. The finest Hearses in
AFTER SEPTEMBER 1st, Horses boarded and carefully eared for at $16 ner
month. Ample accommodations for LIVE STOCK. Headquarters for dealers
{^-Telephone No. 58. oo3 - , dly
CAPITAL PRIZE, - $150,000,
We do hereby certify that wo tnipervise the at'
rangement for all lhe Monthly and Quarterly
Drawings of The Louisiana State Lottery Coni
pang, and in person manage and control thi
Drawings themselves, and that the same are con
ducted with honesty, fairness, and in good faiO
toward all parties, and ire authorize the Company
to use this certificate, with facsimiles o our sic
natures attached, to its advertisements
CtmamfgsfoiierH;,
We the undersigned Banks and Bankers toil;,
pay all Prizes drawn in The Louisiana State LoU
tcrics which may be presented at our counters.
J. HI. . Pre*. I,n. ITnt’l Bank ...
.1. W. Ii IIL8S0CKTIS. Pros. Ntnto JVat’I Il k.
UAJLIYWIN, fl*ros, X.O. Jiat’l UiuiL;
U
NPRECHDENTED ATTRACTION
Over Half a Hilli
20,00ft 1
10.000 20,00a
5.000 20,000
1.000 20,00a
300
200
100
25,00V
30,00ft
40,008
60,000
60,00ft
Louisiana State Lottery Comp’y„
Incorporated in 1868 for 25 years by the Legisla*
turefer Educational anti Charitable purpoees-
with a capital of $ 1,000,000—to which a reserve
fund of over $650,000 has since been added.
By an overwhelming- popular vote its franchise?
was made a part of the present State Constitu*.
tion, adopted December 2d, A. D. 1879.
IIm Clriuwl Siiijit’lc number Drawlng-i#
will take place monthly. It never scales or post-
pones. Look at the following distribution:
ltfftlli l*riui<l Monthly
AND TIIE
EXTRAORDINARY dlARTEHLY DRAWING
I11 the Academy of Music, Sew Orleans.
Tuesday, December 14,1880..^
Under the personal supervision snd manage
inent of
Gen. G. T. BEAUREGARD, of Louisiana. &
Gen. JVJBAL A. EARLY, of Virginia.
Capital Prize, $150,000.
*8~yotiec--Ttd(ct« urc Tun Dollam only. Halve*
$0. Fifths,$2. Tenths, $1.
LIST OK PRIZES.
1 C APITAL PRIZE OF *150.000 1160 00O'
1 GRAND PRIZE OF 50 000.... ". 60 008
1 GRAND PRIZE OF - ---
2 LARGE FRIZES OF
4 LARGE PRIZES OF
20 PRIZES OF
50 PRIZES OF
too PRIZES OF
200 PRIZES OF
000 PRIZES OF
1,000 PRIZES OF
APPOXIMATION PRIZES.'
100 Approximation Prizes of *200 *20,008
255 7 “ 100 10,000,
_100 75 7.600
2.279 Prizes, amounting to *622,500
Application for rates to clubs should be un de
only to the Office of the Company in New Orleai s.
For farther Information write clearly, givii e
fall address. PONT AI. NOTES, Express
Money Orders, or New York Exchange in orr i-
nary letter. Currency by Express {at our ,x-
pensc) addressed M. A. OAI'PIIIN,
Now Orleans, Ln.
Or M. A. nAl'I'IDX.
WasliiiiKinn. I).
Make I*. «. Jlomy Orders )>ttyai 1*>
and address Keglsterril letters lo
NEW OKI.EANN NATIONAL BANK.
wed se&vvfjiw Now OrlemiN. La..
COMMISSIONERS* SALE.
—FOR PARTITION-
Valuable City Property.
/ ' EORG J A—MUSCOGEE COUNTY : Under
}/ and bv virtue ol iu ovdev from the Superior
Court ol Aiuscogee County. pus>ed at the May
lenn, 1686, thereof, tho unuersigned Commission*
era, appointed by ouid C ur , w il so 1 in front of
tn<: Court House ot suid county, iu the city ofCo-
jinnbu-». on the iirst Tuesilay in December next,
between .the legal hoi.ra of sale, at public outcry.
iO tne highest bidder the following described
city ; rope it.v, all lying m tiie city of Columbus,
connty of MusLOf.ee, State of Uuorgia, to wit:
J he groumt. with the improvements thereon*,
fonnerly km wn as the A’cKee Carriage Reposito
ry aim 8hoi 5, now occupieo by John Disbrow &
Co. ns a In cry stab c neing known uml distin-
frumlicd in the plan of said city us lot number 226 fc
bounded on hn i orth by Jot lormcrly owned by
’U K soutt by lot formerly
owned 1 v Jones, MeDougal ano ('leghorn, on
tne cast by lot numoer 225 and on the west by
/rat aveiitio 1 ormerly Oglethorpe street), on
wind]i said t n>t avenue suia p'opcrty fronts.hav-
mg a front ot ninety-nine (9:» 1 feet, more or less,
and runs back with a dep; h of one hundred an<f
toity-seven feet aud ten inch s 047 i’cetlO inches),
more or less.
.}})*$ following lots aud parts of lots in saidi
citv ol Columbus, to-wit :
All of itv lots numbers 025 and 626, containhun.
■j of an acre each* more or lcs«; also, the nortb
parts of city lots numbers 623 and f.24, >aid parts*
bem^o the breadth of f<»rty-nine feet three nndl
lfij-th.nl luche- (49 feet 3)^ inches 1 each, running:
thi ouch both of sale lots the same width from
Forsyth toMclntosh streets, being the nortb
biros of said lots numbers 623 and 524, the whole
o the aforesaid property beii gthe same property
which was owned b the late James M. Quinby in
Lis nfe time. The four lots last described lie in a
cent guous bi ay «ud are unimproved.
nrnSL» 1 iS* purp i )8e8 i >f l i lis p , ale the four unim-
Prov til lots and parts < t ots.last above described.
fl-to eight equal lots, com-
mencingon Fifteenth str, et v formerly Lee street),
an< numbered as follows, to-wit: 1.2. 3, 4, 5, 6, 7.
8 each ofsaifllot^being ofn breadth of* 49'teet
CWn - 1 i,1,d 4 mi, k b . uck with a depth of 147
eet i» inches. Lots nuu bt rs 1,3, 5 and 7 in the
ibove subdivision are situated on the east side of
I'ourtn avenue (-formerly Forsyth st, eet), each lot
fronting on said Fourth avenue forty nine feet
three and one third inches (49 feet 3.V, inches),and
running back • ust 147 feet 10inches.
Lots numbers 2.4, 6 and 8 in said * uhdivision
M '? t hC i Wt ‘ Kt P ^ ° f Fifth UVeilUC
r y M,, rntosh street), each of said lots
fronting on said Fifth avenue 49 feet 3^ inchea
and rui mng back v est 347 feet 10 inches.
Terms—Cash on day of sale.
I fissesficn (river on payment of purchase
money. D. A. ANIREWS.
TOL Y. CRAWFORD,
„ JAS. G. MOON,
nov2dlm Coinmissioners-
Urcat Rcfritdiiig Tower,
They are as Transparent and Color
less us Light Itself,
n„ n ££? r ii B0 .P’ es V?i r endurance fo the eye ennno
he excelled, enablmt? the wearer to read for hour
without fatigue. In fact, they aie
Perfect Sight Preservers.
^‘ om ,h ® leading physicians ii
the United States, governors, senators, lexis
lators, stockmen, men of note in all profession,
and in different branches of trade, bankers me
cnanics. etc., can be ffiven, who have had thei
sight improved by their use.
AUU EYES FITTED AND THE FIT GUARANTEED BY
BRANNON & CARSON,
Druggists, Columbus, Georgia,
tt i7e h »?5n? lasse8 arc not su PPlied to peddlers ai
any price. ocl5iim
border ii .w„u ji.uians.ouiir.NVsaiKj wiit
btfifts, from *beea-U«'flUi m o t«c tl\is. J.ivo.
Bill, Giook, and others. IliiiBtri; tod w*
‘TSaASEHl'gMia