Newspaper Page Text
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DAILY BMQUIRgR • BPS: OOLDMBUB. OWIIWI*. FRIDAY MORBIITO. OCTOBER 14. 1887.
EMBARKING THE MAILS.
Scene* on on Oeean Steamer et Queens
town.
A P»e, st the Steerage Fwm»tn-ti the Tender
Drewe Alongside-Freeh React., of Irlnh Chil
dren— t'oiatlag the Nall Hag*—Outward Bound.
He must be a very nnlmprcsnloneMo
person whose interest Is not roused by the
scene on nn American innil steumeron the
dny after she leaves Liverpool, as she
steams along the Irish const in the brlKht
sunlight of n breezy morning. The vary
ing forms and colors of headland and
Shore would alone be worthy of notice;
but the curious mass of humanity gath
ered on the great ship Is perhaps more in
teresting. And it must he admitted that
the saloon passengers, taken as a whole,
have to the observer less of interest nn<l
character than the miscellaneous throng
who collect in the less favored quarters of
the ship. There is a monotonous appear
ance of comfort and prosperity about the
saloon passengers-—each with his private
chair—which renders them a little dull.
But every step among the steerage pas
sengers gives rise to a guess or a reflec
tion. Here is a sturdy fellow from a
Yorkshire iron works on his way to the
states to seek for employment. Close by
the saloon door is a laborer from Wilts—
tall, raw honed, witli a couple of children
and a weary wife. The whole family have
an air of despondency atiout them which
does not augur well for their future. A
couple of Italian masons are laughing and
joking witli very light hearts indeed; and
so one by one, eucli differing from tlio
other—sail or glad, hopeful or despomleut,
full of confidence in the future or feeling
that across the ocean life cannot he harder
than at home—the miscellaneous throng
moves alMiut the ship.
MOVKMKNT AND BUSTLE.
But the white buildings on Roche’s
point gleaming In the sunlight tell that
the vessel is nearing Queenstown, and a
feeling of movement and hustle comes over
passengers and crew. There Is talk of a
run ashore; there is an eagerness to see
the lust British port, a haste to post the
last letters U> friends In England. The
ship slowly steams up the harbor, past the
heights of Carlisle fort, and on as if she
were 1mmini straight to the white terraces
of Qnpenstown. Uriel mil ly she ceases to
make headway, and comes to a standstill
between the little village of Whitegates
and the bleak sides of Spike island. The
tender is approaching; hut already boats
full of untidy girls, selling apples and with
baskets of hog oak ornaments and lace,
have surrounded the ship. As the tender
draws alongside it is evident that the mails
have not arrived; there are only piles of
luggage and a crowd of passengers. Borne
are English or Americans who have
crossed through Ireland to shorten the
voyage by some sixteen hours, or to viHit
Killnrney; most ure emigrants from Ire
land. Soon t he throng of Irish pours over
the gangway—a widowed father carrying
his infant, followed by half a dozen brown
eyed gentle looking children; a stalwart
youth with a comely sister; a hard wizen
faced old farmer in a coat of frieze dowu
to Ids heels, with his wife.
Nothing is more striking than the fresh
beauty of the Irish children and t he
withered hardness of the middle aged and
elderly men and women. Most of them
carry their wordly goods in a bag or a
handkerchief. Thetr heaps of lieiiding,
with the tin utensils for the voyage fas
tened to them, are pitched one after an
other on the deck, while the owners vainly
try to push past, the line of seamen to
secure their property. It would be a sad
sight, this hurrying of these people from
their homes, if one could forget the
squalid misery from which they are escap
ing. But l lie tender has been emptied,
and Is oil' again for the shore to meet liio
mails. The train Ibis just drawn up, and
soon tiles of pork rs, like a line of ants,
are putting the sacks on board, and the
tender is prepared to make her second
trip.
COUNTING Till! MAILBAGS.
This time she has scarcely any other
•urden hut the malls; and so, when she
comes alongside of the steamer, a dozen
of the crew are very soon at work piling
them on the deck of tlie ship. An otHcer
counts the bags as they come on board—
“one, two, three, four, live,six,seven,eight,
nine, ten, tnlljx’’ So they go over the
gangway by tens. They took up a great
part of the space on the tender, and they
make « huge pile on the steamer; some
80(1 sacks of letters and iwpcrs make it
possible to realize the vast correspondence
of the present day. But for some time
the grout ship has been slowly moving
seaward with the tug attached to her
amidships, and the lino of seamen hurry
ing, each with his sack, across the gang
way. The long dark sides of the mail
steamer, and her lofty upper deck, quite
dwarf the tender; the captain looking
down from his bridge seems far aloft.
The railings are lined with hundreds of
faces—there are fully a thousand passen
gers on the ship—watching the mails
come on board. Every one except the
regular passengers between New York
and Liverpool, of whom there are always
several on board, look a little anxious.
Most of the poorer men and women are
sad.
It is a curious spectacle to stand on the
bridge of the tender and look nlong the
sides of the Nhip at the great vessel and
the varying faces on her. But the last
bag is on hoard, the bell on the steamer is
sharply struck, and a few friends of the
passengers, n newspaper boy, and some
other miscellaneous persons hurry on
board the tender to go ashore. The haw
sers are cast otf and tHe little tug steams
ahead of the big ship, rounds to for the
shore when she has got some lengths
ahead, and is soon, with the quick, rapid
strokes of her wheels, making for the
quay at Queenstown. The great steamer
steals away to the sea with n kind of irre
sistible and almost imperceptible motion.
The passengers’ forms soon become invisi
ble, and the big, black hull nnd high
masts gradually grow less distinct as "the
liner” passes away by the mouth of the
harbor, heading for the west. As the ten-
del touches the' quay side the mail steamer
is rounding the headland by the sea,
and In a few minutes all that can be seen
from the shore is the distant liueof smoke
which tells of her course across the At
lantic.—St. James’ Gazette.
DANCING TURKEYS.
Device of a Creel hit Ingenbio* Barkeeper to At
tract Custom.
Philadelphia News.
In a saloon on Frankfort avenue, below
Norris street, a News reporter yesterd *y
saw
Tobacco Haloed la F.itrlaad,
Mr. Francis De Lanue,ot Shar ped Court,
county Kent, has attracted to himself the
admiring eyes of the British nation, by suc
cessfully rn’slng and harvesting a crop of
tobacco. It is Baid to be the first over
raised in England. The government baa
graciously given consent that he shall go
on with his experiment, but insists that lie
ris street, a Hews reporter yesteraiy , t - hI the same as
two turkeys dancing to the strains of j was iZo&d
ret
th
anorguinette. It was a' strange Bight to i tobacco was im P orled
ungainly birds bobbin;
see the ungainly birus bobbing up and
dowD, first on one foot, then on the other,
then up with both feet, circling and
wheeling around each other, chasseing
and changing sides, keeping perfect time
with an orguniette turned by the hand of
the barkeeper.
AU the onlookers were mystified, whilo
the barkeeper grinned-and rskud in the
nickels which were paid over the bar by
the amused crowd.
Though the turkeys apparently kept
time to the music, when the reporter no
ticed that they danced on when tbo music
stopped, raising first one foot and then the
other, and as they warmed to their work
their steps grew faster and faster, and ttie
musician raising his speed to keep up with
the jumping birds. The turkeys whilo
going through their performance, were
confined in a wire cage at the end of of the
bar. The cage was about three feet square
and five feet high, and tbe floor of the cage
was thin sheet-iron.
The News man, after the crowd went
out, investigated tbe dancing turkeys and
discovered the method by which they
were taught — or rather compelled — to
move. He found that tbe plan waa ingen
ious, though cruel. They were made to
danee by means of fire. Underneath tbe
sheet-iron cage floor there was a shelf set,
leaving a space of about three inches, into
which was fitted an Iron slide.
When the men wanted the turkeys to
dance he would quietly get a shovel of live
coals from the kitchen stove, distribute
them over the iron slide and slip it into
place tinder the sheet-iron cage door, and
in five minutes the turkey fandango would
be in full blast. First one foot would be
raised, then the other, and so on, the pace
The Yftriiti't Unanimous.
W. D. Hull, druggist, Bippus, Ind., testi
fies: “lean recommend Electric Bitters as
the very best remedy. Every bottle sold
has given relief in every ease. One man
took six hottlcs, and waa cured of rheuma
tistn of 10 years’ standing.” Abraham
Hare, druggist,, Bellville, Ohio, affirms:
“The best selling medicine I have ever
handled in my 20 years’ experience, is
Electric Bitters.” Thousands of others
have added their testimony, so that the
verdict is unanimous that Electric Bitters
do cure all diseases of the liver, kidneys or
blood. Only a half dollar a bottle at Bran
non & Carson’s Drug Store. eod&w
Would Ifnve Called II a Ki tills.
That, sir,” said the music dealer to a
countryman, “isa genuine Stradivari us.”
“Honest, mister?”
“Certainly.”
“Well. I’ll be gol darned if I wouldn't
a-called it a fiddle, an’ I b’Jieve I will, any-
now.”—Washington Critic.
Pierce’s “Pleasant Purgative Pellets” are
perfect preventives of constipation. In
closed in glaBS bottles, always fresh. By
all druggists.
Tito Host Flail Likely to be Plenty.
Tbe great lakeB are being gradually re
stocked with whiteflsh.
Nervous, Debilitated lea.
You are allowed a free trial of thirty
lays of the use of Dr. Dye’s Celebrate*.
Voltaic Belt with Electric Suspensory Ap
plianccs, for the speedy relief and perma
nent cure of Nervous Debility, loss of Vital
rnlHQQ| LQCn DD0 Ovist}!} nllU BU Oil} vIlU UHLC "* u “ «ai atvA tvaaij wuuivj• luniui »
quickening as the heat Increased, until the j tty and Manhood, and all kindred troubles,
birds would be going as fast as they could Also for many other diseases. Complete
lift their feet, and they would keep it up
until the floor would cool off again.
“They know what’s coming now as soon
as 1 oegin to fool with the slide,” said tbe
barkeeper, and they begin to dance with
out waiting for the floor to be heated. It's
a good card for the place while It lasts, but
1 guess the novelty will soon wear off. I’m
getting tired of it myself already.”
NOT SO TERRIBLE.
The Military Neandal of Parta Prom to
a Vary Hmall Affair.
New York, October 11.—The following
dispatch has been received by the Courier
dee Etats Unis from Paris:
“The excitement caused in Franoe by the
arrest of General Cafl'arel, accused of hav
ing traded in decorations, continues very
great, but. after all, the affair Is less seri
ous than had at first been supposed. Tbe
scandal is reduced to a traffic In civilian
decorations and to some swindling in
military supplies, but it is now certain
that no state secret has been sold
to Germany by this venal officer.
The Temps publishes on thiB point a
reassuring article, in which it says that It
is impossible to sell to the enemy the mo
bilization plan of the French army, for the
very good reason tbot, to speak accurately,
no such plan is in existence. It is simply
a group of ministerial instructions, giving
to the cbels de corps all the information
necessary to enable them to bring tbe
strength of the troops placed under their
orders up from the peace footing to the
war footing. There does not exist a plan
of concent ration of the troops mobilized,
which is composed of a series of studies
providing lor the most diverse combina
tions; but to cart away from the ministry
of war the archives containing these
studies would require several teams; and,
as for believing that this plan of concentra
tion could be copied or made away with,
that is a hypothesis which is not worth dis-
Ifcussiiig.
‘-Attempts have been made to embroil
Gen. Boulanger in this affair, because it
was he who, being tbe minister of war,
appointed Gen. Uallarel sous chef d’etm
major at the ministry, but a dispatch from
Clermont-Ferrand sets forth the facts
which had been ignored in making up tit
story. According to this dispatch, Gen.
Cafl'arel was appointe d nt the request of
tlio chef d’etat major, at the ministry ol
war. Gen. Cafl'arel was only six weeks
under the orders of Gen. Boulanger, while
no has been four months under Uen. Fcr-
ron, the present minister of war. The
German newspapers nature ly make a
great fuss over this unfortunate affair,
which they seek by every possible mums
to turn to the discredit of France.”
Ilim Rni-riauo Change* a Ran.
San Francisco Chronicle.
It docs look as if aftor a mnn got mar
ried, he lost all capability for looking after
himself. How is it that a man who is n
bachelor Is the pink of neatness, the glass
of fashion, and mold of form, when he gets
a wife, never s-mv a t - able to do any
thing in tin -a, of dressing himself
proper.. n..noiit his wife’s assistance
This you.in man was at one time a most
notorious flirt. He bad the best cut coats,
tbo most beautiftil boots, the most elegant
neckties in town. Hu has been married
several years, and he hardly knows how to
button nis collar now, and would wear
his coat inside out, If his wife didn’t keep
an eye on him. Is it natural cussednes--. ?
Just a desire to give his wife all the work
and worry he can, or is it a psychological
phenomenon attributable to domesticity ?
Ue had a lucid moment onoo, this young
man, in which he noticed his boots were
pretty well worn. It lasted long enough
for him to say to his wife :
“Haven’t! got any other boots I can
wear? These are awful.”
“Yes," she said, there is a pair of side-
button boots in the closet there.”
He fetched them out.
“How docs it coine that I’ve had these
boots all this time and been wearing these
worn-out ones ?” Then ho put them on.
“Yes, I knew there must be something
the matter with the blamed boots. They
don’t fit me at all. 1 can’t walk in them.”
And he made faces as he stumped up and
down the room. They are not my boots,
yet they are a man’s boots. Madam, who
is so familiar in this house ns to have a
pair of b jots”—
“Well, dear, they’ll perhaps be more
comfortable if you’ll put the right boot on
the right foot.”
restoration to health, vigor and manhood
guaranteed. No risk is incurred IUus
(rated pamphlet, with full information*
terms, etc., mailed free by addressing Vol-
tato Belt Co.. Marshall, Mich.
decl7 tu.th.sat.soawU
Where She Is Ahead.
Britisher (to Miss Bunker of Boston)—I
understand. Miss Bunker, that America
huBn’t much of a navy.
Miss Bunker—No, sir; but she has some
thing oi a yachty.—New York Sun.
In brief, and to the Point.
Dyspepsia is dreadful. Disordered livei
is misery. Indigestion is a foe to good na
ture.
f he human digestive apparatus is one ol
the most complicated things in existence.
It is easily put out of order.
Greasy food, tough food, sloppy food,
bad cookery, mental worry, late hours.
Irregular habits, and many other thing
which ought not to be, have made the
American people n nation of dyspeptics.
But Green’s August Flower has done a
wonderful work In reforming this sad
business and making the American people
so healthy that they can enjoy their meals
and be happy.
Remember : — No happiness without
health. But Green’s August Flower
brings health and happiness to the dys
peptic. Ask your druggist for a bottle
Seventy-five cents. ool2 dAwl*
Das Seen for llimself.
Those down eastern folks can no longer
tell the president that the west is “wild,”
“woolly" and “rowdy.” He won’t have
it. He has been In the west and seen it for
himself.—Chicago Times.
Far all forms ol nasal catarrh where
there is dryness of the air passage with
what is commonly called “stuffing up,” es
pecially when going to bed, Ely’s Cream
Balm gives perfect nnd immediate relief.
Its benefit to me boa been priceless.—A.
G. Chase, M. D., Millwood, Kansas.
The bottle of Bly’a Cream Balm that I
obtained of you l.*st summer has entirely
cured my littlo boy of a severe attack of
catarrh.—Mrs. Bailie Davis, Green Post
Office, Ala. oct 13-dawlw
There In Still Hope.
This being a progressive age, in time
some crime may be devised easier of ac
complishment than robbing a railroad
train.—Arkansas Gazette.
A MOST LIBEHAI, OFriiK.
The Voltaic Bei.t Co., Marshall. Mich.,
offer to send their celebrated Voi/taic
Belts and Electric Appliances on thirty
days’ trial to any man afflicted with Nerv
ous Debility, Loss of Vitality, ..IanliooO-
So. Illustrated pamphlet in sealed en
velope with full particulars, mulled free.
Write them at once. lAwti
%
MWitwmhe,, Mid. & Gilf B, R.
Meat—S74 Miles *C'"r1<
, ''iin via liontaiiiic
Piedmont
- ii and
| Shoriec
» l! «
fUl •: flT?
nnd Best
Kou,c to
J
,! ! Points
DIU'i
A ST.
LaGrange 11 46 a • .< .
Xewnan 12 63 p ml o .
Atlanta J 2 20pm| 10 80a.
CURES SPRAIN’S,BRUISES,RHEUMATISM
SOREJhKOAT. SPAY 1(1 SPLINT. RINGBONE
EPIZOOTIC. Etc. 50cENTS PlfiBOTTLE.
CURES RHttlXATI5ft,SCR0n/lAxAUDliEtefS
ofTHE BLOOD._
$IPer bottle-
CURES ALL fORMS of NEIJRALGIASNERVI0I5
HIAdache. 50trs pir box,-
5 OLD E.YERYWHLR3L
fiSKAf
For sale Wholesale and Retail by Brannon A
Carson and Blanchard & Co., Columbus, Oa.
aug 23-daw ly-top col-nrm
ZONWEISS CREAM
FOR THE TEETH
In mad* from New Materials, contain* no Actdi,
Hard Grit, or injurious matter
It is Puna, Refined* Perfect.
Nothing Like It Evan Known.
From Senator Co«tfc»hall.- “I take pleas
ure In recommending ZonweUa on account of its
efficacy and purity.’’
From Mrs. Gen. T.oiran’s Dentlnt, Dr,
E. S. Carroll, Waphlngton, 1). C.-“I have had
Zonwelss analyzed. It la the most perfect denti
frice I have ever seen.”
From lion. Chns. P. Johnson, Ex. Tit,
Gov. of Mo.—“ZonwelR.s cleunses the teeth thor
oughly, Is delicate, convenient, very pleasant, and
leaves no after taste. Bold uy all dbuggistb.
Price, 35 cents.
Johnson & JonxsoN, 23 Cedar fit., N. Y
Via \V. & A. HaUrofeU.
Leave Atlanta
Arrive Home
Dalton
Chattanooga
Cincinnati
1 40 p m
6 50 p m .
4 40 a r
«40pr
Via the Piedmont Air Line to New York and Bai>
Leave Atlanta
Arrive Charlotte
“ Richmond
44 Washington..
44 Baltimore
44 Philadelphia.
740am
6 25 p xl
0 40 an
8 30an
10 03 a n
12 36 p n
New York -i 3 20 p n
0 00 p L
5OS an
8 45 p r
823 pi
11 26 p »
3 20 an
0 20 a r
No. 51, Pullman Palace Buffet Car Mont
tnery to Atlanta and Atlanta to New York wit*,
ont change.
South Bound Trains.
No. 60
Leave Atlanta I 12 45 p m
Arrive Columbus j 0 25 p m
Leave Columbus | 3 45pm
Arrive Opelika
Arrive Chehaw
44 Montgomery....
44 Selma
Arrive Mobile
44 New Orleans
4 50 pm
6 51 pm
7 15 p m
9 40 p m
2 15 a ml
7 10 ft m |
NORTH BOUND.
No. 53.
No. 60.
12 40 n’n
224 p m
2 45 p m
3 55 pm
4 50 p IU
5 40 p m
44 Gritttn
“ McDonough
1215 p m
16pm
44 Brunswick |
SOUTH BOUND.
No. 68.
No. 51.
Leave Atlanta vlaE.T.,V.
& Ga. R. K
“ Atlanta via C. R. R...
650am
7 80 a m
8 25a m
9 85 a m
966 a m
1136 am
2 90 p m
3 00 p m
44 Griffin
5 10 p nt
5 40 p m
7 22 p m
“ Warm Springs
Arrive Columbus
455 p m
10 40 p m
Train 58, solid train—Atlanta to Columbus,
rraiu 60, th rough coach. At lanta to Columbus
without change.
CHAS. H. CROMWELL,
CECIL GABBETT, General Passenger Aft.
General Manager.
L. A. CAMP, Passenger Agent,
dtf City Drug Store, Columbus. Ga,
Nor Small Ones.
There is always room at the top. Few
great men get there.—New Orleans Pier -
yune. _
On a Not Day.
If you really wiah a good drink that will
relieve thirst and that tired feeling, drink
Moxie. (2;
[\m fit,
ill 1‘UNHrK«s, At
lay.
In II a ill m at i ® n.|
Heals tin* More
Rent ores
Snnm of Tan
anil Nmcll.
TRY THE CIIRI
A particle la applied into each nostril and u*
agreeable. Price SO cents at Druggists; by mat',
registered 80 cts. ELy BROTHERS, 238 Green-
-FEVER
wish Street, New York.
mil24 endAwly urn*
Damp Air Not Injurious.
Damp air is not as injurious to the
lungs as to the skin. The electric eondi-
tion of the air lias more to do with its un-
comfortalileness than lias its dampness.
When it is positive it is bracing and re
freshing; when negative it debilitates
and oppresses. If the skin is warm lie
fear uee*i be felt of breathing damp nr coo]
air, either waking or sleeping.—Mrs. E.
G. Cook, M. D., iu Demorest's Monthly.
About 1,000 good sized watermelons cai
he got into a. freight cor.
Steel Hall, ami the Tariff.
Philadelphia Reconi.
The Bessemer monopolists coolly Inform
the American public that an “arrange
ment” will be made to prevent any "de
moralization” in the price ot steel rails.
By this they meantthat their combination,
sitting behind their tariff' hedge will not
perim* American consumers to obtain
steel rails at just and nominal rates. Steel
rails were profitably made in this eonntrv
during 1885 for fdti per ton. But the
Bessemer monopolists, under cover of
the J17 duty, have extorted for two
years ft-om fits to fill a ton for steel rails.
Last year they divided, on a production of
2,000,000 tons of steel rails, nt least $20,000,-
000 among fourteen or fifteen members of
the combination over and nbove the legiti
mate pre-fits. That is what the tariff does
for one of the protected monopolies in this
country. If the production of steel rails
should increase at such a rate as to lower
prices the Bessemer combination would
pay one of Us mills for lying idle for a year
or two. In this tvay prices may be main
tained against consumers, nnd all danger
of “demoralization” be averted.
Menitiag Matter*.
Charley (aged 8, to his sister Fannie’s
new beau): “Say, Mr. Sophtly, Fannie
said last night that you were not such a
fool ns you looked.”
Billy (aged 7): “Why, Charley, she
didn’t say anything of the sort.”
Mr. Sophtly: “I should imagine not,
Billy. What, did she Bay ?”
Billy : “She said you didn’t look as great
a tool as you were.—Tid-Bits.
A Sorb Throat or Couoh, if suffered
to progress, often results in an incurable
throat or lung trouble. “Brown’s Bron
chial Troches” give instant relief.
By L, H, CHAPPELL
FOR SALE.
941)00 Commons Lots 10, 11, 14, 15, 18, 19
Block 5, oppotite Standard Oil Company, on C. &
W. railroad.
93000. Lot 148x108 adjoining Western rail
road yard, north of Willingham’s shops.
91300. Lot 40x1(8 north of Willingham’s
shops, with store and dwel ing.
9100. Lots on the Gunby survey, Rose Hill.
On long time.
91300. The Rose Hill academy, now occu
pied by Prof Flewellen.
93000. Elegant Lota corner Fourth avenue-
and Thirteenth street.
93930. Dwelling and large Lot Second ave
nue, north of Perry House yam.
93330. The Newman residence, Rose Hill.
Five rooms, kitchen and stable.
91300. Frame store, First avenue, south of
DUbrows.
91300. Four room dwelling and half acre
lot, Rose Hill, Talbott-in road.
93000. Forty acres with good dwelling and
outhouses in Beallwood, adjoining lands of W.
H. Young and D. R. Bize. Seven acres heavily
timber d.
91900. Mr. C- H. Harrison’s n
with two lots, Rose Hill.
91700 Comfortable dwelling
eighths of an acre lot, extreme so
avenue. \
FOll RENT.
8300. The R 8. Swift brick resi lence, corner
Hecoud an* Fifteenth street. Five lar e looms,
bftth room,closets, pantry, kitchen ard basement
> uc-ma, Niue fo t hull and double parlors, four
teen feet pitch. Street c.rs and v/ate w. rks.
<?» *) O A Two sto r>, six room Dwelliug, Fourth
Ou*) U • aven ue, between Tenth and Eleventh
streets, now occupied by Mr. M. A. Lott.
i £ A The iiaudsome seven room residence.
U * now in course of construe 1 \ n, Third
(&OA A Brick store, Broad street, north ot up
sP^Ul/i town Drug Store.
9190. Bri k Store, Twefth street, (now occu
pied by Mr. Jno, S. Stewart
9IOO. Brick Stores, opposite Transfer Stables;
9100, Frame Store, south of Disbrow’s.
9173. Four room dwelling halt square north
of Grier’s corner, Third avenue.
9130. Shops opposite Dost o.'ffoe.
930. Offices aud rooms over Rothschild Bros,
coiner Broad and Thirteenth.
Duellings in Mechanicsville$4 per month.
Dwellings, Northern Liberties, |3 per month.
L. H. CHAPPELL,
Broker, Beal Kst&te and Insurant* kfti
ang 18-1887-MH feb lg-’88.-8s-then 4s
Trains 62 and 63 carry tbrongh coaches be-
tween Colnmbus and union depot, Atlanta. Mak
ing close connections with through sleepers for
New York and all points north and east. Close
connections made with through cars for Chatta
nooga, Nashville, Cincinnati, Chicago and the
northwest. This is the most direct route from
Eufaula, Union Springs and Troy via Columbia
for Atlanta and points beyond.
_ „„„. „„ M. E. GRAY, Supt.
0. W. CHEARS,
Gen’l Pass. Agt., Columbus. Ga.
OF GEOUGIA.
O N and after Monday, Oct. 10th, 1887, Passen
ger Trains wUl run as follow. Tralrs
marked thus t will run dally except Sunday.
Trains marked thus * will ran on Sunday only
All other trains daily.
Month western Railroad.
Leave Colnmbus.
Arrive Maoon
Leave Macon
Arrive Oolumbns
12 15 p m 110 30 p m
6 06 p m
10 10 a m
2 66 p m
6 33a m
9 46 p m
12 10 pm
19 86 p m
Mobile A Girard Railroad and Mont
gomery A Enfanla Railroad.
Leave Columbus
Arrive Montgomery..
“ Troy
“ Eufaula
Leave Montgomery...
“ Eufanla
“ Troy
k ljueer Reptile.
Au animal with the bead and tail of an
alii :ator and the back and claws of a tor
toise is on exhibition at the store of George
Hulse, a Liverpool importer of turtles. It
is called an alligator tortoise, and was cap- ;
tured by an English sailor in the swamps
near New Orleans. The English natural
ists have nevor seen anything like it be- |
fore, and are trying to buy it for a public {
museum.
Lung Trouble* anil Waatlug
Diseases can be cured, if properly treated !
in time, as shown by the following state-
ment from D. C. Freeman, Sydney: “Hav
ing been a great sufferer from pulmonary .
attacks, and gradually wasting away for
the past two years, it affords me pleasure
to testify that Scott’s Emulsion of Cod !
Liver Oil with Lime and Soda has given !
me great relief, and I cheerfully recom
mend it to all suffering iu a similar way to
myself. In addition, I would say that it is
very pleasant to take.”^
A Wisconsin Norwegian, who is uudoubt- !
edly the most unpoetieal person iu the
United States, sold his wife for a hog
and bought her back for a calf and two
shouts. I
Chronic Looaeue** ot the Ronel*
cause lies in the torpidity
digesti
of the
liver. A
regular habit of body can be secured by j
taking Simmons Liver Regulator to aid |
digestion, to stimulate the dull and slug- i
gish liver, and rid the system of excessive 1
and poisonous bile. The Regulator cor- j
reets acidity ot the stomach, cures dys- ;
pepsia and insures regularity of the bow- |
els alike free from laxity or costiveuese. j
IfEOSEfisfiffiiiljiffflgT?
USSfSS&ri
ISA LINIMENT PERFECTLY
HARMIF.SS.AP0 SHOULD EE USED A
FEW MONTHS, GEFOHS CONFINEMENT.
send for bco:< TO MOTHER5.
/BRADFIEI D'RE GULATOR C5-
£T ATLANTA.G A. ' .li
vug 1-eodaw ly n r m.
Ms Pills
To cure coat Ivenena tbe mefllrlne mast
be more than a purgative. To be per*
manent, it non contain
Tonic, Alterative and
Cathartic Properties^
Tut I'M KMHn possess these finalities In
an eiulueut degree, anti
Speedily Restore
to the bowels heir iiatiiai perftwtultio
motion, mo eMMentlal to regulsrily.
Sold Everywhere.
m .’26 iu th sat v ly nrm
TALLULAH FALLS, GA.,
On the Piedmont Air Line, In the Blue Bidg-
Mountains, 2000 feet above sea level.
CLIFF HOUSE AND COTTAGER
Open from June to November. For fall partlcu
lara address F. H. A F, B. SCOFIELD,
Proprietors,
Late of Hotel Kaaterskill. Catskill Mountaini
N. Y-, and Luland Hotel, Chicago.
my2A tu th&seSOt
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
Business established 1866. The moet oomplet.
Machine Sib ops in the Rontb. Engines
Boilers, Raw-Mills and Machinery.
Eight and Tramway Eocomotlves.
Pole Road Eocomotlves a Hpeetalty.
For Teething Children
DIXON’S BABY POWDERS
REATR THEM AEE.
F OR children when teething there is nothin,
yet discovered that can equal them. The:
never fail to cure Colic, Diarrhoea, Flux, Sum’
uier Complaints, Cramps, Spasms, Gripes, Ac
They may be given with perfect confidence ir
giving quiet and rest to the crying, fretful, res*
less, teething, nervous child.
For sale by all Druggists. Price 25c per box.
apl9 daw* 1
“ Troy
7 15 p m
Coluinbua and Western Hallway.
L.V Columbus
Ar Opelika
At Goodwater....
Ar Atlanta
Lv Atlanta
Lv Goodwater....
Lv Opelika
Ar Colnmbus
3 15 p m
4 39 p m
12 OS a m
3 15 a m
10 40 a m
11 60 a m
8 35 a m
9 50 a m
115 p m
2 23 p m
12 45 p m
2 10 p m
5 15 p in
0 25pm
4 60 a m
5 56 a m
1 16 p m
10 30 a m
4 66 p m
9 30 p m
10 40 p m
Colain tins and Home Railway
Leave Colnmbus.
Arrive Greenville
Leave Greenville
Arrive Columbus
8 05 p m
, 0 05 p m
7 00 a m
10 00 a m
* 7 45 a mlffl 10 a in
* 1015 a m|t9 50 a m
* 3 00 p m +1050am
* 600pm|f2 35pm
„ W. H. McCLINTOCK, Sup’t.
E. T. CHARLTON, G. P. A. Stf
NOTICE! '
A LL parties, jurors and witnesses In state
cases are hereby notified that there will be
no court held the second week of the circuit
court of Russell county, and that all parties and
witnesses in state cases set for trial during said
second week, must be in attendance upon the
corresponding day of the third week, that is to
Bay, those summoned for Moncay, of second
week, must attend court on Monday of the third
week, etc.
Done by order of the court this October 19 1817.
P. A. GREENE,
. , Clerk of the Circuit Court.
d3l-tues, wed A Fri
low arriving:
PIECE GOODS and SUITINGS
FOR MAKING UP TO ORDER
IFOIEL 1887!
Superb Stock Beautiful Goods I
Intermediate Weights for Early Fall, and Heavy
Goods for later use.
Fall Fashion Plates Now In !
*e- CALL AND SEE US 1
G.J. Peacock,
nothing Manufacturer,
1200 k 1202 Broad Street, Columbus, Gs,
Mdlf
its department oi Hcier.ce, Literature a* _
Arts, Law, Theology. Engineering, Pharmacy,
Dentistry and Medicine the higheet educational
advantages a* a moderate cost. Address
WILS WILLIAMS, Secretary.
aug2-deod-*w lm Nashville, Tenn.
•?nu talekcy Huh
it m iu red at home with
out pain. Book ot na>
lieu tars >nt FHKB
Ailnma. Ixn. imio*
Whitehall 9Mb
WORDS
W ANTED—An intelligent, earnest man to
represent, in his own locality, a large re
sponsible house. A remunerative salary to right
party. Steady growing position. References ex
changed. Gay s Manufacturing House, -’o.
MReade Street, New York. oct 4 tu lm
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
A LL persons having demands upon the estate
of Mary Jane Attaway, deceased, are hereby
notified to render in the same according to law;
and all parties indebted to said estate are requir
ed to make immediate payment.
M. Si. MOORE, Executor
sept 9-oaw-0t Mary Jane Attaway. dec.
first. Splendid teachers. Patronized by
i'SchooiT withbeii »' 10 wbgion. The
the School shown by its success. Lecures
French spoken at tables. The dinineP “
room is the most elegant in the build-
t.j;. For catolojjuc address at one
^ W E. WARD. Nashville,Tenn.
aug 2-d-eod-&'v lm
ures on many subjects.
WARDS
6has taken the ieafi
tn* sales ol *hat class
remMlefi, nnd has vlv*
Atm.'Sr U."’ ■'•USb •
tiwa,
MURPHY
P.ni:. Ti
Ohsiwcn tl - ...ot
the public and .lo-r ran
anicn^ ths IcisJic* Mr
ciacsofthe oildom.
A. L. SMITH.
Brtdfcrd, t
Sold -y Dru;- rts*.
Fiwcei.tith
GULD MEDAL, jfABIS, 18f
BAKER’S
Warranted absolutely put
Cocoa, from which the exceafli
Oil ha« been removed. It hat th\^
time* the strength ot Cocoa mix •>.
with Starch, Arrowroot or Bugtk'
and in therefore far more econct:’
leal, coating leas than one cent
cup• It ia delicious, nourishing
strengthening, easily
and admirably adapted for inr*t
ids os well as for persons in health.
Sold bjr Grocers orerywhertn
^ BAKER & CIO., fiorcliester, Ifasi
m DRYERS
HAS QUICKEST AND 3EST.
...manmaw mr’6 CO.. BURLINGTON, IOWA.