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DAILY ENQUIRER BUN: OOLUMBUB, GEORGIA, THUR8DAT MORNING, OCTOBER 20. 1887.
BILL NYE AS A
Hi* Experience in Tally-Ho Yoiokting
and Hark-Forwarding.
The Delight* of Fox ('honing In a New Country-*
DcMTlptlon Which for Animation Itoatn filly
Way Spanker —A Fen t'oinlti That Will he Chet-
iaheil hy the lluntunin of the Jleadow Brook
Club.
The joyous season for fox hunting is
again upon us, and with the gentle fall of
the autumn leaf, and the sough of the
scented breezes about the gnarled and
naked limbs of the wailing trees, the
huntsman comes with the hark and tho
hulloo and hurrah boys, the swift rush of
the chase, the thrilling scamper across the
country, the mad dash through Long
Islander’s pumpkin patch—also the mad
dash, dash, dash of the farmer, the low
moan of the disabled and frozen-toed hen,
ns the whooping horsemen run her down ;
the wild shriek of the children, the low
melancholy wail of the frightened shoat,
as he llees away to the strawpile, the quick
yet inufHod plunk of the frozen tomato
and the dull scrunch of the seed cucum
ber.
All—all Indicate that our great nationul
autumn sport, tho sport which has for
years characterized us os a nation, and
been imitated, to some extent, in England,
and our other colonies, is here.
Thu huntsman now takes tho flannels off
his fox, rubs his stiffening limbs with
gargling oil, ties a bunch of firecrackers to
his tail, and runs him around tho barn a
few times, to sec if he is In good order.
The foxhound is a cross of the blood
hound, the greyhound, the bulldog and
tho chump. When you step on his tail he
is said to be in full cry. The foxhound ob
tains from bis ancestors on the bloodhound
side of the house his keen scent, which
enables him while in full cry ’crosscountry
to pause and hunt for chipmunks. He also
obtains from the bloodhound branch of his
family n wild yearning to star in an “Uncle
Tom’ 11 company, and watch Little Eva
meander up the flume at f2 per week.
From the greyhound ho gets his most
miraculons speed, which enables him to
attain a rate of velocity so great that he is
unable to pause during the excl'oment of
the chase, frequently running so far during
the day that it takes him a week to get
back, when, of course, all interest baa died
out. From toe bulldog the foxhound obtains
his great tenacity of purpose, his deep
Heated convictions, his quick perceptions,
his love of home and his clinging nature.
From the chump the foxhound gets his
high intellectuality and that mental
power which enables him to distinguish
almost at a glance the salient points of
difference between a two-year-old steer
and a two dollar bill.
The foxhound is about two feet In
height, and 120 of them would be consider
ed an ample number for a quiet little fox
hunt. Borne hunters think this number
inadequate, but unless the fox be unusually
skittish and crawl under the barn, 120 fox
hounds ought to bo enough. The trouble
generally Is that hunters make too much
noise, thus scaring the fofc so that he tries
to get away from them. This necessitates
hard riding aud great activity on the part
of the whippers-ln. Frightening a fox
almost always results in sending him out
of the road and compelling horsemen to
stop in order to take down a panel of fence
every little while that they may follow tho
animal, and before you can get the fenco
put up again the owner is on the ground,
ami alter you have made change with him
and mounted aguin, the fox may be nine
miles awav. Try bv all means to keep
your fox in the road t
U makes a great difference what kind of
fox you use, however. I ohee had a fox on
my Pumpkin Butte estates that lusted me
three years, ami I never knew him to shy
or turn out of the road for anything but a
loaded team. He wus the best fox for hunt
ing purposes that i ever had. Every spring
I would sprinkle him with
Hootch snuff and put him away
in tho bureau till fall. He would
thou outnc out bright and chipper, lie
was always ready to enter into the chase
with all tno chic ami embonpoint of a reg
ular Kenashn. and nothing pleased him
better than to be about eight mile < in ad
vance of my thoroughbred pack in full
cry. scampering cross country, while
stretching back n few miles behind the j fence,
dogs followed a pale voung man and his
llnancocr, eaeli riding a horse that hud sat
down too hard on its tail at some time and
driven it into Ids system about six joints.
Some hunters, who are madly ami pas
sionately devoted to the sport, leap their
horses over fences, moats, donjon Keeps,
hedges and currant bushes with utter sang
froid and the wild, unfettered tootongsom-
hie of a brass band. It is one of tho most
spirited and touchful of sights to sec a
young fox-hunter going home through the
at the time and eonld not reaeh my own | A Rood lark to shoot At.
steed I was oblige to mount a spirited The interstate commerce commission
steed with hlgh.intelligent hips, one white ] should make war on the car stoves. It has
' —.j —- has begun Its fall and winter session with
a particularly melancholy horror.—New
OICCU nitu lUKUltUtCtllKCUli Ulvuu uu.iv
eye and a big red nostril that you could set
a Shanghai hen in. This horse, as soon as
the pack broke Into full cry, climbed over
a fence that had wrought-lron briers on it,
lit in a corn field, stabbed his hind log
through a sere and yellow pumpkin,which
he wore the rest of the day, with seven
yards of pumpkin vine streaming
out behind, and away we dashed
cross country. I remained mounted, not
because 1 enjoyed ft, for I did not, but be
cause 1 dreaded to dismount. I hated to
get off in pieces. If 1 can’t get off a horse’s
back as a whole, f would rather adhere to
the horse. I will adhere that I did so.
We did not see the fox, hut we saw al
ee steverything else. I remember, among
York Tribune.
leiiiqson'. “May (Jneen.”
Who knows but if the beautiful girl who
died so young bad been blessed with Dr.
Pierce’s “Favorite Prescription” she might
have reigned on many another bright May
dav. The “Favorite Prescription” is a cer
tain cure for all those disorders to which
females are liable.
Wrong livery ll'ny.
A man who defends a forty-six per cent,
tariff when thirty-bix per cent, would be
^ ample for both protection and revenue Is
other things, ofriding through a hothouse j neither a sound economist nor a good dem
and how I enjoyed it. A morning’s scam- I ocrat.—New York World.
per through a conservatory when the | —»
syringes ami Jonquils and Jack hoses lie I Lang Trouble* anil Wanting
cuddled up together in their little beds, is | jyjneasoH can be cured, if properly treated
a thing to remember and took back to and t,i,r>e, as shown hy the following state-
pay for. To stand knee deep in glass and munt from D. 0. Freeman, Sydney: “llav-
gladiolas, to smell the mashed and mussed j ni f i- c . en a g rca t sufferer from pulmonary
up mignonette ar.d the last fragrant sigh I attacks, and gradually wasting away for
of the scrunched heliotrope beneath the the past two years, it affords me pleasure
hoof of your horse, while far away the to testify that Scott’s Emulsion of Cod
deeji mouthed baying of the hoarsei I jdverOil with Lhne and Soda has given
hounds, hotly hugging the reeking trail of ! me great relief, md I cheerfully rec jin-
the amse-seed hag, calls on the gorgeously I men a it to nil suffering in a similar way to
caparisoned hills to give back their merry
music or fork it over to other answering
hills, is joy to the huntsman’s heart.
On, on J rode, with my unconlined locks
streaming behind me in the autumn wind.
On and still on 1 sped, the big, bright
pumpkin slipping up and down the gam
brel of my spirited horse at every jump.
On and ever on we went, sheddirg terror
and pumpkin seeds about our glittering
track till my proud steed ran his leg in a
gopher hole and fell over one of those
machines that they put on a high-headed
steer to keep him from Jumping fences.
As the horse fell, the necklace of this hick
ory poke flow up and adjusted itself around
my throat. In an instant my steed was
on his feet ‘.again, and gaily we went for
ward while toe prong of this barbarious
appliance, over and anon plowed into a
brand-new culvert or rooted up a clover
field. Every time it ran into an orchard
or a cemetery it would jar my neck and
knock me silly. But I conld see with joy
that it reduced the speed of my horse.
At last, as the sun went down, reluctantly,
it seemed to me, for he knew that he
would never see such riding again,‘my ill
spent horse fell with a hollow moan,
curled up, gave a spasmodic quiver with
his little, nerveless, sawed-off tail and
died.
The other huntsmen succeeded in tree
ing the anise-seed bag at sundown, in time
to catch the 6 o’clock train home.
Fox hunting is one of the most thrilling
pastimes of which I know, and for young
men whose parents have amassed large
sums of money in the intellectual pursuit
of hides and tallow, the meet, the chase,
tho scamper, the full cry, the cover, the
stellated fracture, the yelp of the pack,the
yip, the yell of triumph, the confusion,
the whoop, the holla, the hallo, the hur
rah, the abrasion, the snort of the hunter,
the concussion, the sward, the open, the
earth stopper, the strangulated hernia, the
glad cry or the hound as he brings home
the quivering seat of the peasant’s panta
loons, the yelp of joy as he lays at his mas
ter’s feet, the strawberry mark of the
rustle, all, all are exhilarating to the sons
of our American nobility.
Fox hunting combines the danger and
the wild, tumultuous ioy of the skating
rink, the toboggan slide, the mush-aud-
milk sociable and the straw ride.
With a good horse, an air cushion, a re
liable earth stopper and an unise-sced bag,
a man must indeed bo thoroughly blase
who cannot enjoy a scamper across coun
try, over the Pennsylvania wold, the New
Jersey mere, the Connecticut moor, tho
Indiana glade, the Missouri brake, tho
Michigan mead, the American tarn, tho
fen, the gulch, the buffalo wallow, the
cranberry marsh, the trleti, the draw, the
canyon, the ravine, the forks, the bottom
of the settlement.
For the young American nobleman
whose ducal father made his money bj* in
venting a fluent pill, or who gaiued his
great wealth through relieving humanity
by moans of a lining pad, a liver pad, a
kidney pud or a foot pad, fox hunting is
first-rate. Bill Nye.
P. B.—Tho above is written in the ut
most good humor, and I hope that noth
ing 1 may have, said can possibly cause any
fox hunter who may have read it to lake u
B. N.
SALE OF THE “GRAPHIC.”
II I'llKM'S IIIto till' ILltills of II Sj llllll'lltl' of
tVeult li v lte|lll 111 Il'MI*.
ng
myself. In addition, I would say that it is
very pleasant to take.”
No (Tuner for n Doulit.
On the wedding journey. He, sentimen-
tall—Darling, do you love me better than
your first husband. She—Certainly. He’s
dead.—Chicago Mail.
For Bronchial, Asthmetic and Pcl-
monary Complaints, “Brown’s Bronchial
Troches” have remarkable curative prop
erties. Sold only in boxes.
Estes, Abbott & Co.,
E,
3STO- 1107 BROAD S T IS ZEJ T,
COLTJM3TJ8, ChA.
Oa. Mid. & Golf R, R,
Shortest, Quickest and Best
Route to
Atlanta and all Points
NORTH AND EAST.
They Hunt (hire It.
Three million women work for money
in this country. The other million make
the men work for it,—Louisville Journal.
Nervous Debilitated Men.
Yon are allowed a free trial of thirty
days of the use of Dr. 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 diseases. Complete
restoration to health, vigor and manhood
guaranteed. No risk Is incurred Illus
Crated pamphlet, with full information!
terms, etc., mailed free by addressing Vol
taic Belt Co., Marshall. Mich.
dcol7 tu.th.sat.seawlv
Not Troubled That Way.
It has not been charged that Mr. Randall
had recourse to the cyclopedia for the ma
terial used in his Atlanta speech. Mr. Ran
dall is bound by no such limitation; when
he wants facts he makes ’em.—Chicago
Herald.
Don’t hawk, and blow and spit, but use
Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy.
To Say Nothing of Uee*o.
If wo were called upon to name three of
the most prolific sources of quarreling be
tween neighbors, we should mention first,
“hens;” second, “hens;
—Danville Breeze.
third, “HENS.’
O-OXjIDEIItT BROS.,
Columbus, Georgia.
FOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS-
Manufacturers of
Cane Mills, Cotton Screws, Gin Gear,
Pulleys, Hangers, Shaftings and Couplings,
oalSTihstg-s or every description
NORTH BOUND.
No. 52.
No. 50.
Leave Colun bus
Arrive Warm Springs
“ Woodbury
“ Griffin
“ McDonough
“ Atlanta
12 40 n’u
2 24 p m
2 45 p m
8 55 p m
4 50 p m
5 40 p m
8 10 a m
9 52 a m
10 17 a m
11 25 a w
12 15 p m
1 ’ 5 p m
10 50 p m
0 16am
6 00 a w
“ Brunswick
SOUTH BOUND.
No. 63.
No. 51.
Leave Atlanta via E. T., V.
& Ga. R. R
6 0 r as
6 50 a m
7 80 a m
8 25a m
9 85 a m
9 55 a in
11 3f am
“ Atlanta via C. R. R...
2 30 p m
3 00 p m
4 10 p m
5 16 p ui
5 40 p m
7 22 p m
“ Griffin
“ Woodbury.....
“ Warm Springs
Arrive Columbus
MiCINERY OF ALL KINDS REPAIRED IT SHORT NOTICE.
sept 1-dAw-Oni
Hose! Hose! Hose I
gloaming with a full cry in one hand and
bis pancreas iu the other.
Some liko to be in at' tho death, as it is
cunuu, auil if is certainly a laudable ambi
tion. To sec 120 dogs hold out against u
ferocious fox weighing nine pounds; to
watch the brave little band of dogs and
wliippurs-in and horses with sawed-ofi’
tails, making up in heroism whut they lack
in numbers, succeeding at last, in ridding
the country of the ferocious brute widen
basso long been the acknowledged foe of
the human race, is Indeed a fine sight.
Wo urc too apt to regard fox-buuting
merely ns a relaxation, a sourc of pleasure,
ami the result of u desire to do the way
people do In the novels which we steal
from the English authors; but this Is not
all. To successfully hunt a fox, to jump
fences ’cross couutry liko an unruly steer,
is no child’s play. To ride all day on a
very hot and restless saddle, trying to lope
while your horse is trotting, giving your
friends a good view of tho countrv be
tween yourself and your horse, then leap
ing stone walls, breaking your collar-bone
in four places, pulling out onu eye and
leaving it hanging on a plum tree, or going
home at night with your tranverse colon
wrapped around the pommel of your sad
dle and your liver in an old newspaper, re
quires the greatest courage.
Men who can do this must be cool and
self-possessed. They are generally aion
who aie prompt to net in ense ef danger,
aud often discover and allude In u. shrill
voice to a fire in a crowded theatre years
before anybody else knows anything about
it.
Too much stress cannot be placed upon
the costume worn while fox-hunting, and
In fact Unit is, after all, the life and soul of
tho chase. For ladies nothing looks better
than a close-fitting jacket, sewed together
with thread of the same shade, and a skirt.
Neat-fitting cavalry boots and a plug iiat
complete tuo costume. Then, with a hue
in one hand and a cry in tho other, she is
prepared to mount, lead the horse up to
a stone wall or a freight car and spring
lightly into the saddle with a glad cry. A
freight car is t he best thing from which to
mount u horse, but it is too unwieldy and
frequently delays the chase. For this
reason, too, much luggage should not be
carried on a fox-hunt. Some gentlemen
carry a change of canes, neatly concealed
in a shawl Htrup, but eveu this may be dis
pensed with.
For gentlemen a dark, four-button, cuta
way coat, with neat, loose-fitting white
panties, will generally scare a fox into
convulsions, so that he may be easily
killed With a club. A short-waisted plug
bat may be worn also, in order to distin
guish the hunter from the whipper-in,who
wears a base bull cap. The only fox hunt
ing that 1 have ever done was on board nil
impetuous, rough-bitted, fore-and-aft horse
that had emotional insanity. 1 was dressed
ina swallow-tail coat, waistcoat of Scotch
plaid Turkish towelling and a pair of clo«i .
fitting breeches of etiquette tucked into
my boot-tops. As I was away from home
PouGHKEErsiK, N. Y., Oetobor 15.—A
syndicate of wealthy republicans huve pur
chased the New York Uruphic, from '. " .
Hinckley. Their names are Levi P. ftiui-
tou, Frank Hiseoek, Thomas 0. Platt,
ltrare Up.
You are feeling depressed, your appetite
is poor, you are bothered with headache,
you are tidgetty, nervous and generally out
of sorts, and want to brace up. Brace up,
but not with stimulants, spring medicines,
or bitters, which have for their basis very
cheap, bad whisky, and which stimulate
you for an hour, and then leave you in
worse condition than before. What you
want is an alterative that will purify your
blood, start healthy action of liver and
kidneys, restore your vitality, and give re
newed health aud strength. Such a medi
cine you will find in Electric Bitters, aud
only 50 cents a bottle at, Brannon & Car-
soirs Drug Store. eod<fcw
Need* tin a III III! lance Coi-|i:i.
A Dartmouth freshman is likely to lose
one of hi) eyes trom injuries received in
the gentle sport of football on .Monday.
The college football convention has just
provided two referees at a game. Two
surgeons, an ambulance corps aud a coro
ner should be added to the football facul
ty.—New York Sun.
Their business Dimming,
Probably oo one thing has caused such a
general revival of trade at Brannon Oar-
son’s Drug Store as their giving away to
their customers of so many free trial bot
tles of Dr. King’s New Discovery for Con-
| sumption. Thoir trade is simply enor-
i ntous in this very valuable article from tho
fact that It always cures and never disap-
i points. Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bren-
I chitis, Croup, and alt throat aud lung dis-
YVe have a larger stock of Hose than ever before, and are de
termined to reduce it, and will offer
Big Bargains for the Next Ten Days!
Call and see the best Hose ever sold in Columbus.
Hose Reels and Nozzles,
GEORGIA STEAM AND GAS PTPE CO.?
1035 Broad Street. Telephone 99.
Schedule
run daily.
in effect October 9, 1887. Trains
Trains 52 and 53 carry through coaches be
tween Columbus 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 Columbus
for Atlanta and points beyond.
M. E. GRAY, Supt.
C. W. CHEARS, P
Gen’l Pass. Agt., Columbus, Ga.
TALLULAH FALLS, GA.,
On the Piedmont Air Line, in the Blue Ridm
Mountains, 2000 feet above sea level.
CLIFF HOUSE 'AND COTTAGES
Open from June to November. For full partico.
Ian address F. H. & F, B. SCOFIELD,
Proprieton,
Late of Hotel Kaaterakill. Catskill Mountains
N. Y., and Loland Hotel, Chicago.
myae tu th&se80t
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
Business established 1885. The most complete
Machine Shops in the Month. Engines
Boilers, Saw-Mills and Machinery.
Light and Tramway Locomotives.
Pole Road Locomotives a Specialty.
WConespondencc solicited. Send for catalogue
mh8l d&wlv
\ TANDERBILT UNIVERSITY OFFERS IN
its department of Science, Literature ard
Arts, Law, Theology Engineering, Pharmacy,
Dentistry and Medicine the'highest educational
advantages at a moderate cost. Address
WILB WILLIAMS, Secretary,
aug 2-deod-Aw lm Nashville, Tenn.
large size $1.
Every bottle warranted.
eodAW
Cornelius Bliss, Stephen B. Elkins, and [ eases quickly cured. You can test It be-
unother gentleman, who is supposed to bo I fore buying by getting a trial bottle free;
William Walter Phelps. Of course it goes J * ** ‘ ’ ’
without the saving, that tho Graphic will
heroaft r be conducted as a republican pa
per, The gentlemen whoso names are
mentioned above are not only very
wealthy, but * y •mioumiy active in repub
lican pnl'Mes. , is i.mir intention to push
thecirei.. >w.i:i of tho Weekly Graphic, in
every state in the union. Tho republican
party has felt the need ot some influential
weekly newspaper. Harper’s Weekly, aud
all the other great illustrated weekly news
papers, are against it. The Weekly
Graphic can be sold for fivo cents per copy,
whereas the other weekly newspapers cost
double thnt amount, and it is believed that
at that price, the circulation of the
Graphic, under republican auspices, can
bo mnde very large.
Having hoard a rumor to the effect that
the republicans had purchased the Graphic,
a World correspondent called upon Mr.
Hinckley this evening and asked for a con
firmation of it. Mr. Hinckley replied that
the story was true. On being asked what
his democratic friends would think of the
change in the policy of the paper he re
plied that the Graphic was originally a re
publican paper, and was so conducted for
many years, and tiiat a lurge number
of the readers- ot tho Daily
Graphic are republicans. Others of its
rentiers are independent in politics. The
same statement applies to the Weekly
Graphic. Mr. Hinckley said that this
change ot ownership was partly a matter
of business, and that in such a matter he
could not allow bis political feelings to in
terfere. He said that iu the early part of
1881, when the Graphic was a republican
paper,Stephen B. Elkins had offered to buy
a half interest, or the controlling interest,
of the Graphic, and also to take 100,000
copies of the paper per week for distribu
tion throughout the country, provided the
Graphic could be kept iu line for the re
publican party. Mr. Elkins urged very
strongly the acceptance of his proposition,
but Mr. Hinckley was personally so anxious
for the electiou of a democratic president
that he decided to change the politics of
the paper from republican to democratic.
Since tuu election of Cleveland and Hen
dricks, the Graphic lues advocated tho elec
tion of Gov. Hill and also Mayor Hewitt,
in fact, it has never supported a defeated
candidate during tho present management.
The amount paid to Mr. Hiuekley for
the majority of the stock of the American
SCALY, ITCHY SKIN
And All Itching and Scaly Skin
and Scalp Diseases Cured
by Cuticura.
|>SORIASlS, Eczema, Tetter, Ringworm, Li*
l chen. Pruritus. Scald Head, Milk Crust, Daud*
rufY, Burners'. Bakers', Grocers' and Washerwo
man's itch, and every species of Itching, Burning,
Scaly. Pimply Humors of the Skin and Sculp.
Loss of Hair, arc positively cured by Cuticu*
PSORI ASIS. OK MMI/V SHIV.
1, John J. Case, D D. S., bavins practised dent
istry in this county for thirty-five years and being
well known to thousands hereabouts, with a view
to help any who are athicted as 1 have been for
the past twelve years, testify that the Cuticura
Remt dies cured me of Psoriasis, or Scaly Skin,
in eight days, after the doctors with whom I had
consulted gave me no help or encouragement.
JOHN J. CASE. D. D. S„
Newton, N. J.
NEW CROCKERY AND CHINA STORE,
WE HAVE JUST OPENED A COMPLETE STOCK OF
OROOKBRY, OBIIDTJA,
SILVER!DC-GDYLSS-W.zYDCIE,
WOOD AND WILLOW-WARE, LAMPS, ETC.
BESIDES MANY NOVELTIES TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION.
YVe cordially invite you to call and see us at
1033 BROAD STREET, COLUMBUS, GA.
two doors below Brannon & Carson's Drug Store.
I. L. POLLARD & CO.
represent, in his own locality. a large re
sponsible house. A remunerative salary to tight
party. steady growing position. References ex-
I changed. Gays Manufacturing House, *o.
30 Reade Street, New York. oct 4 tu lm
For Teething Children
DIXON’S BABY POWDERS
KEATS THEM ALL.
mer Complaints. Cvamps, Spasms, Gripes,
They may he given with perfect confluence in
riving quiet and rest to the crying, fretftU, rest-
leer., teething, nervous child.
For sale by all Druggists. Price 25c per box.
apl9 iLiwtf
WARDS;
sept 24-deod tf
IUNI'IIKNNI\U| KRV 1»TION.
Your Cuticura Remedies performed a wonder
ful cure last summer ou one of our customers, an
old gentleman of seventy years of age, who suf
fered with a fearfully distressing eruption on his
head aud face, and who had tried all remedies
and doctors to no purpose.
Texarkana, Ark.
J. F. SMITH & CO.,
lU HTPANFl L OF M'AI.EN.
H. E. Carpenter, Hendurson. N. Y„ cured of
Psoriasis or Leprosy, of twenty years* standing,
by Cuticura Remedies. The most wonderful cure
ou record. A dustpuuthl of scales fell from him
daily. Physicians and his friends thought he
must die.
IXZK.HA UAUIt'AUY tT'KED.
For the radical cure of au obstinate case of
Kczcma of longstandirg, I give entire credit to
the Ci’Ticc li a Remedies.
K. B. RICHARDSON. New Haven, Conn.
Sold by all druggists. Price: Cuticura, 50 cents;
Resolvent, $1.00, Soap. 25 cents. Prepared by Pot*
^ . . ter Dru.r aud Chemical Co., Boston, Mass.
Graphic Company cannot be ascertained, I ,„ r sul „ „ lH ,, asOM
hut it id liiiflAistnod flint tno nftor mnno tn » ., ... , ...
61 pages, 50 illustrations, and 100 testimonials.
but it is understood that the oiler made to
Mr, Hinckley was a liberal one. He in- i
formed some of his democratic friends of j
his intention to sell the paper and when '
the price to be paid him was made known i
no one advised him not to accept it. Mr. !
Hiuekley will retain a minority interest in
the stock of the company,
Chipmsn’s Fills will cure your sick
headache, or relieve you of dyspepsia. ,
d&wtt
1 * I AI l l.Ks. Blackheads, chapped and oily
I l iu.skin prevented by Cuticcra Medicated
Soap.
OLD FOLKS PAINT
, Full of comfort for all Pains. Inflam*
' matiou. and Weakness of the Aged is
l the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster, the
Hirst and only pain-killing Strength
ening Plaster. Ntw, instantaneous aud infallible
■W. J*. WATT,
WHOLESALE GROCER,
No. 1000 Broad Street, Columbus, Ga.
Having entered into the Wholesale Business with a largely- Increased trade has ne
cessitated t he building of a commodious and roomy Brick Warehouse on the railroad
with side-track facilities. I buy ray goods for cash in car load lots and unload the cars
into my own warehouse, thus making a great saving in storage and drayage. I have
in warehouse and in store and am prepared to offer to the trade a
A Full Line of Groceries and Provisions
At prices which defy competition. Col. E. G. RAIFORD, so well and favorably
known to the public, is with me as Traveling Salesman, and will call on the merchants
along the lines of road leading to the city with samples and prices. Those who would
er car load.
JOT Special attention paid to the filling of orders entrusted to my care.
sep21-eod8m
W. J. WATT.
TO THE PUBLIC.
SPECTACLES
SPECTACLES
SPECTACLES
SPECTACLES
SPECTACLES
SPECTACLES
SPECTACLES
SPECTACLES
SPECTACLES
SPECTACLES
SPECTACLES
the most superior Glasses t
been brought to our beautiftil city, aud
will charge but a reasonable protit *on the
money invested ; will not charge for our
skill and knowledge in fitting you; will
sell you real Stone Pebble Lenses, also
the bestgroundand polisheduiass Lenses
iu the market, put in any kind of frame
you want. In authenticated cases of
poverty we will furnish Glasses free of
charge, for we want every one to see
what istobe seen In this wonderful world.
;eye glasses
EYE GLASSES
EYE GLASSES
EYE GLASSES
EYE GLASSES
EYE GLASSES
EYE GLASSES
EYE GLASSES
EYE GLASSES
EYE GLASSES
EYE GLASSES
Seminary for Young LADIES.
A coal Homo for girls. Health aud ,ire
’first. Splendid tcaciiers. Patronized hy
men of liberal minds in all Churches
■xercise. —hh city advantages. A nan-secta*
School, with best aids to religion. The tone and ralueol
the School shown by its success. Lecures on many supjecis.
French spoken at tables. The dlningV “
room is the most elegant in the build* 1
ing. For catalogue address at once, 1
Dr W* 8. WASD. Nashville,Tean. \
aug 2-d-eod-&*lm
cures on many subjects.
NOW ARRIVING!
PIECE GOODS and SUITINGS
FOR MAKING UP TO ORDER
FOR 1887!
Superb Stock Beautiful Goods!
Intermediate Weights for Early Fall, and Heavy
Goods for later use.
Fall Fashion Plates Now In!
#s- CALL AND SEE US!
G.J. Peacock,
nothing Mann far Surer,
12(10 St 1202 Broad Street,
Schomburg’s Jewelry Store
mh27 dly W J
FOB RENT!
Store (in Springer building), Broad street, form-*
erly occupied by J. Joseph.
Store with dry cellar in Garrard building.
A nice, comfortable house coruer Ninth Street
and Third avenue.
Call at once.
SOULE REDD A CO. #
Brokers, Real Estate aud Fire Ins. Agents,
oct 18-dly
THE
WHELESS STAMP
fST0tCilCCM3lHATIDN) -PRESS CO-
748 REYNOLD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA,
Agents Wanted I Catalogue FREE I
RUBBER STAMPS, SEALS,
BADGES, CHECKS, STENCILS,
STEEI. STAMPS, &C.
Sole Manufacturers of
The Wheless Self-Inking Rubbei
Stamp Printing Press.
™loott
r At Dame or t
Good salary and
ALL EXPENSES PAID
to travel;stv.o which preferred
ed. SLOAN & t'O. Manufacturers fit
■ Wholesale Dealer*; Gourgo bt., Cmuunau, O*