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ENQUIRER - SUN: UULUMBU8, GEORGIA, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 30.
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PERFECTLY SHOCKING.
I wonted the days; hot my diau>ooint
meat we* greet when, the very day before
the bleeeed departure wee to take place,
water* «o„UI tb. .tor, of , j £? k “ dd “ 1 * to (otoMtor
“I have had some basinets to attend to
for some time,’’ he said when we were
veys should be brought home to’ihe h«£rti 1 .-°° e to * rether a few momeot’s Dirk
I have
little bit of my life “shockl ng,” to remind
BJMtiSTtParsffAt lanyas”*?. _
taSsSrtrys“; h, B?, i isss? sifss ts?" *iSS
“ philanthropic cnoogb nAcTSLt j . ..,?S? !h‘ ofh 5 ' 0 “ to *“ l >
my sad experience may act as a warning lieve there is
to all young married women.
of course I do not be*
i it- -M— i . 2 * particle of truth in the
Tbe essence of aotobio^rspby is egotism i too^wbife tin° Kboniibrde* bfbTrP'^E
as some writer remarked, and I shall | visit to Narnurausett a
pot apologize for the number of • to my business ”
afrtDhs hit WU1 ° CCUr ln th * foUowin * P* r ‘ 1 »o*nged to tell him all-yes, all the
My mother w„ . well-koowo person in “knc^tod”?.™™ Sinff-U j £3
S'" T!* Wbioty;. .be .Hood in sod for to tell; bat DirkLm" to£uLu
TH* !ODK Of ART
Ancient and Modern Sculptor* RidUcttind
In the Same Old Way.
In conversation recently the question
of the node in art came np,
opinions were expressed,
ventures to give publicity to the following
notes, not as being in any way authorita
tive, bat merely as an expresion of pri
vate opinion in this matter which is cer
tainly a questio vexata. In some cases
this matter has been brought before the
courts, especially in New York, but these
tribunals will not be regarded by very
many as satisfactory critics per se before
which to decide the merits of the ques
tion Anally. The truth is, as it appears to
the writer, art does not recognize such
terms as are sometimes used -by carping
the luminous disc of the son on the west
ern side by the advancing edge of the
limb of the moon. Before the moon has
advanced so as to cover the sun’s disc an
hour must els Dee.
What will be first noticed will be the j
and various change taking place in tne surrounding
The writer atmosphere, a ruddy glow being apparent. l?p»a|
Up to the time tne sun disappears the a,«as
color will become more and more lurid,
and at the moment of total eclipse the
moon will seem to hang isolated in the
heavens, surrounded by the sun’s corona
—New York Telegram.
REAL KSTATK.
JOHN BLACK3IAR,
RANKS.
ANECDOTES ABOCT UOtiS.
Estate Agent.
FOR RENT—DWELLINGS.
Some Queer
Polks Met in
6 lobe- trotter.
Europe by
the world—the world of hAll-<mino> '.nH muTuL*'' *“ moment, critics to express their dissatisfaction with
am usemeint—and^ Slaved her Mrt *\ n £ t™ ®P p “ rt K a “ t y w « lost. The next works of a Certain nature. The artist, it
” ■ P F her part lo u ,** a ? tr « Q . *° d Dif k order to give expression to his conception
Kioth street, opposite north of E pire Mills,
four rooms. $lt*.
Northeast corter Seventh and Front; vaUr
worts.
Mitchell Place, Lynnwood; four acres, dummv
line.
with much zeal and success.
It was only when an
ness of her nose, caused, I
said, by tight-lacing, disgusted her with
the looking-glass, that she adopted the
High Church pietism to which she is now
so devoted, and as she sits in her favorite
corner of the Church of the Beatific Phar
isee, with her lovely books of devotion,
her smelling-bottle, and her general air of
condescending piety, you really forgot
about her nose, and are inclined to ignore
the reason which has so happily, if pain
fully brought her into the arms of the
church.
She was always a very good mother to
A few days ago 1 had the pleasure of
meeting at a small luncheon party an i -V* • Johnston residence; tl5.
i. in American lady who had but lately re-! ^ Firs; Avenue; new. five rooms, only
ion, ; turned from a tour through some portions v , *i s '
certain ear- . of Europe. It was clear that she had not
there are in “done” the continent in the orthodox way
' his composi- —mere was little enough Baedecker and
ne», three rooms.
E. a. Srrnre. President. E. a. Errata, Cash!**
Chattahoochee National Bank,
OOLCMBT78. OK.
CHpiUl and and [Tided pr fits fJOftOOP. Ac
counts of Merchants, Msnufkclarw* sod Farm
ere reeoect fully solicited. toDectivos made or
•U poinu in tee Ctuled SUGs
Kstbaase bought sad Mid. cov kly
HARDWARE.
Fh e tools, cutlery. Wstt Plows and other kin.ir
of plows. Barbed Wire. Wire Netting. oui^Tiile
sod Portland Cement. Paints and 4>ils, M:xed
Paints, Tube Punu, Brushes. A nice line ot
Feather Dusters. Vases and Hods.
Goods as gvH->d as the best and as cheap as the
cheapest. Thankful to the public for past pat
ronage will do my boat to give satisfaction to th*
ftuure. •
read K “ U V V vulu mene aevermine tne merit ot nis composi- —mere was UtUe enough Baedecker and neighbors !*.
n j T ^V 011 end paid between the lines, : tion. For example, the representation of palace and ruins in her talk to make one j No. 411 First * venue, thi
ana i made up my mind on the spot as Moses in the bulrushes with a milk bottle sure of that. Sne had. however, seto B * cl> of Factory.
U) mv course of action k., r au^ a »_ __ » __ ’ ^, _ _ V ftS 06
my coarse of action. would be laughable. Even the two cele-
vR 1 ?? 11 **, 40 aV »funtil luncheon, i brated statues by Michael Angleo in the
and then, to my horror, he informed me
th&t be had chftoged his plans and was
not going to Narr&gansett!
“Indeed, I wrote to put that off three
days ago,” be said, smiling in such a cun
ning way, “directly I heard he was going
to town. We shall have a whole week to
gether.
I could not turn the man oat of
me, and from the auspicious day which the boose; and yet I knew that the talk
saw my debut in society, till that no less i —bad enough before—-would redouble
auspicious one when sbe wept quietly be- now. What could I do’ What
hind me when Tom placed a gold ring on I say?
my hand at the altar of Grace church, sue I 1 made up my mind. Just as the ser-
was always most careful of my welfare vants were laying the cloth for dinner
and eager lor my advancement and hap- when Dirk was smoking his usual cigar-
piueHH. Ana what a chaperone she was! ette in the conservatory* * veiled tier a re
Even at three in the morning, when oth might have been observed stealing from
er chaperones were asleep or fuming with the side door near the garden gate and
the desire for bed, there she sat, pale and taking the direction of the town. It was I!
determined, ready to encourage a good My terror of the man in the conserva-
parti, or frown upon a bad one, or on me tory was causeless, but it was absolute. I
if I encouraged him. .Many a time have felt that were I ^caught in my flight he
1 reached home from Deimonico’s smart- would keep me chained at home, unable
ing from the pinches she, for my own to escape from his influence; so I stole
good, had bestowed upon my arms, when away, half walked, half ran the five miles
1 had been more than usually obstinate in between me and the railway station; took
preferring some good-looking journalist i a place in the evening train to New York,
with nothing a year, to an aodominai and got in about 9 o'clock, cold, hungry,
bra ^ er » rca dy to place the disposal of his footsore and excited. I had forgotten to
millions at my teet. bring enough money, and fearing, that
And her vigilance had its reward, for at i perhaps I should not find Tom, was afraid
the end of my second season, just as papa to take a cab; so losing my way constant-
was beginning his annual ^ruwl about tne i ly, I walked tnrough the wet streets from
bills and me cottage at Newport, the so-I the Grand Central depot, and eventually
ciety papers were enabled tby mamma i reached the Benedict, where Tom had
sending them iulormation to announce my
forthcoming marriage with Mr.
Thomas Vau Pygg, of Sixth avenue and
Irvington-on Hudson, quite one of the
best men, in a pecuniary sense, of the
year. Tom loved me in the most ridicu
lous, old-fashioned way, and always treat
ed me as if 1 were in some way his supe
rior, whereas—but I suppose I nad better
keep my deficiencies to wyseif. Let it
suffice that 1 was and am rather pretty,
cotsid play on the piano and sing after a
asJuion, and had ueveloped quite a mar
velous amount of esthetic taste in what
we call high.art furniture. I think I know
how how to dre.-s, too, and papa—who
rooms, his old rooms,as the house on Fifth
avenue was being repainted.
The man who opened the door belonged
to the place, and did not know me.
“Mr. Van Pygg is engaged,” he said.
“Oh, tell him that lady wishes to see
him on urgent bnsiuess.”
“Why, that’s what the other lady said
just now,” remarked the man, grinning.
“The other lady?”
‘•Yea—as is with him now.”
“Let me in!” I exclaimed, pushing past
him with the strength of a fury. “Let me
pass! I am his wife!”
I do not know whether my strength or
the announcement of my position did it;
tomb of the Medici family at Florence
the writer has heard characterized as im
pure or even obscene; they woald be re
garded as proper if arrayed in crinolines
and other modern articles of dress. In a
clever work by the late E. S. Dallas, en
titled “The Gay Science,” may be found a
few remarks on the question of nudity. He
states, in effect, that there are some minds
that cannot dwell upon any statuary of the
nude character without impure thoughts,
could | but that the impurity is not due to look
ing at the statue-, being, on the contrary,
a part of their nature, either natural or
acquired.
“To the impure all things are impure.”
The relatively pure minds ot children
would recognize and appreciate, though
tney .could not verbally express,the beauty,
parity and truth of these compositions by
the master artists—that is, ot course, to
the degree that they possessed artistic con
ception. There is really no imparity in
art; to the extent that any work is impure,
to the same extent is it lacking in artistic
merit. Art is a high ideal of truth, purity
and excellence, and the nearer any work
approaches that ideal the more trnly, so
to speak, is it artistic. Bat there are some
remarkable works, which, exquisitely ex
ecuted, cannot be regarded with artistic
satisfaction. Such an one is “Leda.” Then
again, there are some in which the object
is perfectly nude, and yet the slightest
trace of impurity cancot attach itself, so
beautiful has been the conception of the
! artist; a notable example of which is
j Powers’ “Greek Slave.” Some works are
: suggestive, but to that extent lacking in
! merit, and herein is where the realism, so
! the writer thinks, is faulty. It has been
; said by one authority that the suggestive
ness of a work is to be found in the ex
pression of the'face. While this is un
doubtedly an important guide or criterion,
it is also true that suggestiveness can be
conveyed in other ways, such as the lines
of the form, the position given to the
limbs. It is to be remembered that an
cient sculptors are not to be blamed for
the choice of sujects made by them. They
usually found fault with me, so his testi- i but I got in and dashed into the parlor.
mony is important—said that I had an
enormous talent or spending money.
Well, we were wed, and we went off for
our honeymoon, grinning like a couple of
idiots, as we no doubt were. Aud here
comes one of the most humiliating of my
confessions. I was absurdly, inexpressibly
There was Tom standing by the window,
aud there—yes—there on the table were a
bonnet and a jacket.
I could not speak. I merely advanced
to the center of the room and pointed to
the evidence of depravity.
He was too much astonished to speak,
happy, duriLg that same honeymoon. 1 *!**>? aD d w e stood silently confronting one
I haa so oiteu laughed at the thing, and ! another for a moment. Then the door of
vowed it was a relic of barbarism, aud de
clared that a married couple should at
once commence the life apart from each
other, except at meal limes, which in
their after fate, that it was very dreadful
for me to be so happy.
Ot course, no one is in love nowadays
so it couldu’t have been that. No, 1 fancy
it must have been the getting away from
papa and mamma, combined, perhaps,
with the feeling that I was now free to
amuse myself as I listed, with no one to
frown or say unpleasant things to me
when I llirted with dear, handsome Dirk
Vau Khouuhyde. Dirk had always been
my favorite partner, and his dispair when
1, told him that the.announcement in the
papers was true, wus very touching. He
came to the wedding—which he thought
it funny to call “the iuuerai,” I remember
and he roaliy made it look like one—and
the reproachful look he gave me as I got
into the carriage with Tom would have
been touching, only at that moment I was
taken up with Tom’s stupidity in letting
some of my lace get shut in the door.
But, somehow, clumsy and stupid and
ridiculously in love as Tom was, the
honeymoon went like lightning, and I
scarcely opened one of the many books
(Frencn novels chiefly) that I had taken
to while away what 1 thought would be
so dreary a time. I regret to say that we
the other room opened and there came
out—his sister Emily, a dear old thing, but
rather too fond of lecturing her brother's
wife.
The revulsion of feeling, the journey,
the excitement, perhaps the want of din
ner, took effect upoii me, and for about
the first time in my life I fainted away.
When 1 came back to life Emily was gone
aud 1 was alone with Tom.
Then with my head on his door broad
shoulder, I told him everything—every
thing—and he forgave me; and that night
in his old bachelor chambers was the
happiest, I think, of my life.—Drake’s
Magazine.
HOW ULOBLS A HE MADE.
aud
A Process Requiring Much Patience
Skill.
The factory that turns out these won
derful geographical spheres which are
sent hence to ail parts of the civilized
world is a shabby little building up an ob-
secure alleyway, called Mount Vernon
avenue. Tne first process in making a
globe is to cover the model all over with a
thick layer of pasteboard in a moist state.
When it has dried, a sharp knife is passed
around it so as to separate
the pasteboard coat into two
_ hemispherical shells, which are then taken
kept company” just as the footman and I model aud united at the cut. edges
maid do, aud spooued like a couple of sen- with glue. I he hollow sphere thus formed
timental Germau trades people.
The first person to caii in Fifth avenue,
where the house had beeu relurnished in
“high art” style from cellar to aaic, was
Dick Van Kbounhyde, who looked rather
ill aud depressed, poor fellow, but rallied
wheu he saw he was borint' me, aud told
us all the news and made himself agreea-
is the skeleton of the globe that is to be.
The next thing is to cover it with a coat
ing of white enamel about one-eighth of
an iuch in thickness, composed of whiting,
oil, turpentine, glue, and other things.
When this is done tbs ball is turned to a
perfect roundness with a machine, the
operation of which is too 6acred to be ex-
ble, taking Tom off at last to look afsoine j hibited to the casual visitor. At tue con-
» O. ... .. ... . .... I .il. .oi.in f ho nennaua it AAL’C Mira nAthlncr
horns at the Hiding Club—some of his
own 1 think they were—which poor Tom
ended in buying, and did not pay more
thau double their value.
Tom inever oould say “No” to any one.
“What’s the use of my being rich, if 1
can’t help my friends who are poor!” he
would say, and it was in vain I preached
to him on the utter uselessness of such
doiugs.
Of course we didn’t stay in New York
long, but shortly migrated to Irvington,
aud soon after Dick Van Khounbyde ar
rived and took up his abode with us, ap
pareutly for the summer. I thought this
rather cool, for I am sure whatever I may-
have said, I never meant him to stay more
thau a usual visit; but after all, be was
very amusing and useful, and fetched and
carried for me very well, and always
elusion of the process it looks like nothing
so much as a highly-magnified white mar
ble, such as a giant might play knuckle-
down with.
The irou rod running through the center
of the original model and projecting at
both ends through the surface haa left
holes in the new globe, which serve very
well for the ,North and South poles and
through these a metal axis is run to repre
sent tne axis of the earth. To be perfect
the globe must revolve evenly upon its
axis when the latter is held horizontally,
without exhibiting any disposition to stop
with one side up rather than another. If
it does not do so it must be balanced by
boring a hole in the lighter side and fast
ening within a little bag containing as
many shot as may be requisite. Then the
hole is plugged up and the surface made
The next thing is to mark the
more or less of some notable persons in
one way or another, and of these her im- j
pressions were interesting, and may even '
remain so when shorn of the personal
charm in the telling, which is, after all, j
so mocb of any story. j
“While our iittle party was stopoingat i ne AT < -' ? ’’‘ > ' t9f0
tb.«««b««i h, «a «. ;-ih C sarSKf-t
courier told ns one alternoon the landlord ;
had sent word that ‘a family,’ which
woald arrive in time for dinner, had tele
graphed, ordering music, and that, if we
nan no engagements and cared lo come in
early, we sbou.d percaps find it worth
bearing. Of course Venice with inoon-
lightand musie was not to oe resisted. We
came in early, but a glance at the oaieouy
reserved for the expected ‘family’ showed
that its members cad arrived and were
very much at home. There were but two
of them—a gentleman and lady, ihe lat
ter, in white, sat with her heels cocked
upon the balcony rail, well —a good deal
, higher than her head, I should say.
. ‘Americana,’ said one. ‘No,’ replied an
other, ‘it would be, in tnat ease, the
gentleman turned upside aowu; more
likely French.’ We all rushed to tne
office, buDg in the hailway, announcing
arrivals, and read—what do you think?
•Henry Irvmg, tvllen ferry,’ and would
you believe it? that brute of an innkeeper
had written Terry with a small t ”
“The return trip 1 was obliged to make
alone,” she resumed; “that is to say with
; only my courier ahd Alfalia, ray colored
maid from tne South. Traveling thus I
was forced at Basle to take.with tue nmid
a ‘female compartment’ iu tue train for
. Paris. The one I was assigned to no this
j occasion seemed to be stuffed full of the
! forbidding personality of a woman at least
80years old, who was aiso voyaging aione
with her maid. She eyed me with a noil
me tangere air. She bristled and glared
as I entered, gathering her belongings to
| beras if she feared I might at once take
: violent possession of them. For a long
; time I felt, rather thau saw, her eyeing
me keenly and listening to the few words
I addressed to Alfalia. Presently she came
and sat down beside me, and iu a strong,
not unpleasant voice, begging my pardon.
No. 633 Fourth A venae.
plastered. fA
No. 211 Sixteenth street, three rooms, good W~1 ¥ T T ATI
naighbors *6. I ’ • xxxuaxvja
three rooms. J5.
plastered, three rooms.
tS.00
For Rent. Stores on Broad St.
BEACH,
1130 BROAD STREET,
COLINBia,
DOT tsadly
GEORGIA
C. E. Toc.m
F. R. Yocss.
C. E. YOUNG & BRO.
Contractors and Builders.
Estimates Given on All Classes of Brtiding*.
No. iil 13th St., Columbus*. (Ik.
arp2 am
KIT 11A Kb HOW A Kb,
Feed aud Sale Stables.
Mr. Hal Bryant can oe fjaad at the stable* a
( all times.
Special attention given to boarding stock. A
v. „• _ .... , . . i well-equipped line of drays. Telephone lit
Dwellings, Mores, Building I.ots. on long or short ! First avenue- ax tv
tuue. or monthly installments.
Broad ->tree; Budding Lot between Fxpress office : 'Vi X rgv a t> g g-vgs
anu Mrs. Hsascrd’s: also, lot west of Mrs , jaU JL 2l\ J.% JLf X ,
The two S'o-ts formerly occupied by Beehive.
" ‘ west ot Vernon House,
or King A Daniel.
Offices on Broad Street.
Over Third National Bank, last occupied by Cr.
Terry.
Over <-». E Tiomas’ Ciothing Store.
Over H. F Everett's Stove Store. *2.50.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
=
l )>o. 1&S Twelfth e’reet, over b-adi-wd’s new
ornj store Srclt-ly
AM.Hltkj.TK
I'RANK J. DUDLEY, Architect and Superia-
JC teurient. Office.rsxta avenue, opjoeite Untoa
L*ep»»l. l'eiephoue *«. tjovi7*iy
M<rSIClA.V>.
J HENDERSON «TMS. E. H. SIMS. PtajM-
. cians and Surgeoos. offer their re-vtce. in
medicine and surgery. Spe ial attention give*
to diseases of women, surgery in gyneacokgty
and aetomuty of children. One of us can always
be found in office, at Oliver 4 Bur’s Drug Store,
opposite Riddle House. Residence. 11X7 rou.th
avenue. jeS-tf
D R. S. J. OILLESI'IE. Oflke Fvana A
Howard's dm* s ore. 13C2 Breed stiveu Tel-
pbene si. OffL e hours 11 a m. to 1
■hence Mrs. Lary a. corner Front
streets.
. u». 8ee
Eleventh
. jacg- ij
1 iH. R. E GRlteaB. Physician »oi -Aur-
1 * geon. Office over Kvans A Howard's Cen
tral drug Store. Tclepboae 141. Residence 1682
Fifth avenue. dec 17-ly
U DR. R. H McCUTCHKON. Physician and
Pharmacist. Office ”Lively Drug -*tore.”
Lively. Ala.
nay 5-dti’
OtI.cial prescriptions a specialty.
ATTORNEY* AT LAW.
W1VBTSN.
TlMBlSH & GILBERT.
1143 Breed Street.
a r OtLBKKT.
Attorneys at Law.
ocl6 von
L. M ANSON, AUonwjr-sl Is»w, Co ambus.
Gs. Office 1143 Broad" street. jn y 10-Sm
FOR SALE.
Hanserd’s re-ideuce, east of Eagle and Pbe-
nix. on dummy line.
JOHN BLACKMAR.
Real Estate Airent.
But the best Harness and Saddles at the Lowest
1 Price. Leather Tree Saddles, something jew.
Hand Made Harness a specialty.
Mark A. Bradford,
1122 Broad St.
l j*n2bd«S;wly
BY L
choose from their surroundings, were in- j | al di ‘I foel Quit® sure you are American,
tiuenced by their environment, their my
thology, and reached after as high an
ideal as they possessed. Schleigel, the
great German critic, says the difference
between modern aud ancient art is that
the latter had as an ideal material perfec
tion, and the former has one of soul and
spiritual perfection. The ancient sculp
tors attained a greater measure of success
than our modern ones.
It is not proved by experience that nude
statues have had the tendency to have a
bad effect morally. On the contrary, itis j WESTWARD no IN A BOX CAR.
believed that .fine statuary, even nude, has 1
an educating and elevating ii fluence. As j ^ove and Economy Find a w
regards the terms obscenity and impurity grate Cheaply
in art—it is a fact that obscenity is evident J ‘
I assented. Then came the regulation
questions: ‘Do you nappeu to know Mrs.
of Philadelphia? No, 1 did not
happen to know her. “Have you chanced
to meet — family, aiso of Philadel
phia?’ No, I hud no and so on. till at
length, in apparent desperation, -vVell,
didyou ever hear in America of Fanny
Kemble?’ Yes, indeed, I nad. many times
and oft. ‘ Weli, I am Fanny Kemble!’
Wasn’t it dramatic?”—Truth.
ay to Luii-
to any oue of refinement—it need hardly
be discussed; impurity may be used in the
sense of meaning a deficiency or failure to
conceive or attain a high ideal. Obscene
art is a contradiction of terms. Aud even
the composition, “The Rape of the Sa
bines,” which is, with other masterpieces,
in the open square at Florence,is so grand
ly treated that there is not the slightest
suggestiveness in a single line of the fig
ures. In other bauds it would have been
otherw ise. The firm opinion of the writer
is that the nude in art is not in itself ob
jectionable.—Denver News.
A MOON-CROSsED SUN.
January 1st to Be Ushered In by a Total
Eclipse.
first day of the New Year will be
be
A strange incident occurred Thursday at
the N. Y. C. and St. L. freight depot,
which showed a great deal of indomitable
courage upon the part of two young Cleve-
| landers. Tue parties were Mr. Warren E.
I Porter and wife. Mrs. Porter is a pretty
j lady scarcely above twenty-two, while her
i husband is a strong, manly fellow a few
; years her senior. Sometime ago it be
j came necessary for them to move to a
| little place in Kansas, named Baxter
1 Springs, where they wished to take their
; household furniture. Wheu they came to
; inquire the rates to their destination they
| were so fiigh that they were astounded. In
j the first place there was the railroad fare
for themselves, which alone would make
! a big hole in their savings; theD the extras
j must come in, and to keep them well fed
j on the Journey would be considerably
more. To all this the freight on their
The
ushered in by a total eclipse.
The New-Year’s day sunlight will
dimmed by the moon.
It will be a solar eclipse, and is looked
forward to with much interest by thestu i vuo
dent of science, who expects to obtaia im- i goods must be added, and the sum was
portant data therefrom. _ It will not- last . more than they could afford. It first oc-
much longer than two minntes, which is curred to Mr. Porter to sell off the goods.
H. CHAPPELI
FOR SALE
$i750. Eicirant Cottage with all modern improve
ments, iaw Second avenue.
2250. Beau Tul R sidenee Lot psrtlv improved.
Thirteenth street, ou dummy line.
15 1 )'. Small Vacant Lot, Fourth avenue, uear
l'OO
Fourt eutn street, ou dummy line.
. Small Vacant Lot. Second aveui
avenue, near
Thirteeth street, near dummy line.
Hoo. One acre Hamit on avenue' opposite Key
to Rose Hill, ou street car line..
The Willingham Shops.
with 303 feet railroad front.
3800. Two Vacant Lt ts corner Fourth avenue
and Thirteenth street, on dummy line.
1600. Three Choice Lots. Hamilton avenue,Rose
Btil, fronting the Park.
1250. Quarter sere, with two dwellings, 601 and
6i‘6 Fifth avenue, near street cars.
25C0. 3ixH7 Tenth street, near Webster build
ing, with two story frame store.
Enquirer Sun Publishing Company stock.
Eagle and Pnenix Manufacturing Co. stock.
Will be pleased to cohsider offers.
L H. CHAPPELL,
Broker, Real Estate and Ins Agent
FOR SALE.
One-quarter acre lot. with dwelling anti stor
nouse, on First avenue.
One-quarter acre lot, with storehouse, bet wee i
•sjcotid aud Third avenues.
One-half erp .and, two two-roo.n houses ot
Fourth and Fifth avenues.
One-quarter i«_re lot. l-rootn house, good loca
ion, between First and -Second avenues.
‘'tie-halt acre lot on corner of upper Third ave
nue.
ue-quartcr acre ot ou upper cecoud avenue
eras for $25 per month.
One-bait acre lot uear Hamilton road.
On?-half acre lot, 6-room house, room for an
ther, and garden, ou Rose Hiil. Other lots li
■ity and Browneville and Girard. Call and se<
ue. Will take pleasure in showing or giving an -
nfonuation about the city.
FOR RENT—One i>-room dweiliug;one 4-roou
tweiiiug.
To Rollin Jefferson:
Dear Sir : Send me a gallon
of that D. Davis Rye. lt is
the liuest on the market.
Yours truly,
Public Verdict.
S3.0O per gallon.
For Rent.
Two new Residences, yust
being linished), lower Broad
corner Fifth. Five
water, gas, etc. Ap-
sti eet,
rooms,
ply to
G. J
PEACOC K,
1200 ami 1202 Hroatl St.
CHAPPELL FEMALE
COLLEGE.
COLUMBUS, GEORGIA.
YY
ii
r |'OL Y. CRAWFORD, Attorney-at-Uw. Offire
1 over Witnch A Kinset'*. Telephone No 4s.
apt liKllyr.
It'HEELER WILLIAMS. Attorues si L*w,
” Office up stairs over Cuj Drug More. No.
1142 -, Broad street. d-nff ly
f'lOKTCHIU8 2k CHAPPKLL Atiorue,* at
* I Law. tlffice up stairs in Garrard Building.
Telephone 116. febirtly.
t ^RANt'lS D. PEABODY.
Attorney-at-Law. thHce 1119 Bread street.
Isabel tor of f’nited States and foreign pateult
Telephone No. 11(1. R.-*ideuce No. 116.
ZOHK PHAROIir, WILLIAM H. SKAXMOX,
a a. hatch an.
1 )EABODY. BRANNON Jfc HATCH ER. Attor-
ucys-at-L*w, Columbus, 44a., 114s Bread
street. jsuii-ly
WMLLIAM A. LITTLE. Attorney at Law
Yt Office upstairs cor. Bread aud twelfth si.
nov *-ly
uR.Il.sllV R. THOMAS. JR. Utv'NlPAS M ‘ LRsTKR.
'l'HOMAB A M LESTEB. AUorneT»-at-iaw.
I Rooms Sand 4, tleorRia Home builaiug. Of
fice hours: Da. s.lo Sr. w. Will practice in state
and Federal Courts. Telephone 168. inch -*0 ly
\ LONl. > A. DO/.IKR, Attorney at Law.
Office upstairs over 1036 Broad street,
nov 4-ly
M cNeill a levy, attorneys at law.
Office Georgia Home Budding,
nov 8-ly
I F. GARRARD, Attorney at Law. OfLoa
1 Over Wlttich 2t Kinad's store. Office Tel
ephone No. 43; residence Telephone No. 127.
nov 1'2-dly
Annual Meeting of Mocktintdrr*
OR
Tht‘ Third National Bank of Coliimbus,
The regular annual moetingof the Stockholders
of “ The Third National Rank of Columbus’’for
the election of a Board ol Directors for s.id Bank
will be held at their Hauking House, No. 1110
Broad street, in the City of txdumb », Georgia,
on tbe Second Tuesday 18111 day) in January,
1889, at 12 m. J W. dl’RFUEY, Cashier.
CoiumbiiK, (<a., Dec. 8, It88. dec 7-3'Kl
J. M. FLETCHER & SON,
Proprietors Palace Stables,
Have moved their Undertaking business
to No. 1204 First avenue, north eiuu of Iho
postoffice, where they will keep a well
(-elected*-took of Coffins, Caskets, Burial
Robes. Shoes and everything connected
with the Undertaking business. We have
the best make of Meta lies, consisting of
Rolled Steel, Zinc, and Copper, in Cedar
Sheila.
Mr. C. H. Herring is with us. He is a
first-class embalmer and undertaker.
Telephone No. U-i.
oc7 6niO i
J.
mchiS-iy
C. REEDY,
Real Kstate Trader,
Ad\ (Oithges unsurpassed by any lemale educa-
ocal institution in the South. The Boarding
Department offers special attractions. An excel
lent Primary School Is connected with the
Oollege.
.1. HAKHIM CHAPPELL,
ocll tt Principal.
Real Estate for Sale.;
Valuable KesMraw lob ou Dummy Line j T- J. DUDLEY & SONS I FI\f RUST AM) VAUMS1I BlMiS,
OPIUM HABIT
CORED IS FIFTEEN .DA\S
NO cr BE NO HAY.
«ff~Perni.-inent cure guaranteed. Addrrse
OR. J. A. NELMH.
-iiivrns. Os
.JUST RECEIV ED.
A LAKGK|LOT OP
one minate shorter than the;general rule.
The best observations of the eclipse will
be made in California, and many * of the
prominent universities of the country will
sendfrepresentatives to that State to view
the phenomena.
but wheu he suggested It to his wife her
I fallen countenance showed how p orly she
j was pleased. *-It would be so hard to part
1 tvith our precious little goods that will
■ make our new home so homeiilte.” she
! said, and there are Dolly, and Sriep and
Observations will be made in California j Bruno, I could never leave them ”
at fifteen different stations, astronomers
coming from Rochester, N. Y., Greencas-
tle, lnd., Minnesota, Harvard university
and other points in the East to make ob
servations, so that the results will be vo
luminous, and will bfi aw aited with much
interest by astronomers.
The reason for California’s advantages
Dolly must be introduced as a he.tutiful
Jersey cow, the pride of the family, ana
3hep and Bruno were, as their names sug
gests, two pet dogs.
Mr. Porter, though having les? attach
ments for these things than his wife, saw
that it would not to let their property go.
and he started to find an available plan for
in viewing the eclipse is that the line of ! takiDg all with them. One day, not long
_- . . - , even again. ^ —
looked nice, and never dreamed ol nirtiug ( 8Ur f ace with pencil lines into mathe-
with any one but me, though -urs. T)ay- segments corresponding precisely
dreetne would have given her eyes to de- ; j u s jj a p e with the sections of map that are
tach him, So, as long as Tom did not ob- j tQ be paste d on
ject, it was not for me to do so; but after 1
he had been with us about six weeks Tom
did object, and for the first time his man
ner to me was decidedly unpleasant.
“Some ill-natured woman has been
abusing me to you,” I said, for 1 was an
noyed. 1 liked Tom to be always smiling
and affectionate tome.
“I shouldn’t allow any one to abnse you
to me, but I confess I have heard some-
tning that has put me out.”
Tom was getting rather white. I had
never seen him angry before, and I think
it became him. I felt that if he looked at
me long in that stern way, I should give
in, begin to cry, and ask him to pet me
again; but ho said nothing, evidently put
totality where stations can be established
is principally in the northern and southern
portions'of that State.
The different parties will work for dif
ferent results. Some will photograph,
some will sketch, and others will watch
the varying phases of the eclipse aud
write out their impressions.
The purpose of the observation will be
a study .of the surroundings of the sun,
the accomplishment of which can be suc
cessful only when Old Sol’s brilliancy is
dimmed.
after tne limy showed her intention to
take as muen of their happy home with
them as was possible, a plan suggested to
her mind. “Why,” thought she, “can we
not go in the car with our home and our
pets, and do away with the cost of our
passage?” She suggested the idea toner
husband, but he laughed at her aud quot d
someofihe inconveniences to which sue
would be subjected in such a journey. The
lady was determined, however, and he
finally yielded.
Then came the work of fitting up the
These map sections are made from cop
per plates iu just the sizes and shapes re
quired to fit the globes they are made for,
oue set, of course, covering the entire sur
face of a sphere. They are painted, many
of them together, like dress patterns, on
sheets of the finest linen paper, and are
cut out carefully with a sharp-pointed
knife. To paste them on properly, so that
they will meet perfectly at the edges and
not' show the lines of joining, requires
great pains and skill. When this is ac
complished the different countries, and so
forth, are tinted by hand with water
colors. There is no especial rale for this,
save that contrasts are sought to help the
I eye. Finally, the whole is overlaid with
ting agoofi deal ot restraint ou himself j a * u astonishingly brilliant white varnish,
to remain silent, aud left my room. And 1 - * ■ * ~ ^ 1 1
then I set to work and cried, just like tbe
heroine of one of those dreary romances
that amused our grandmothers, who were
always retiring to their own rooms, letting
down their back hair, and while calling
on their lovers by their surnames, shed
ding bucketfuls ot tears. But it was, of
course, important tbat in our first domes
tic difference I should win; so 1 stood
firmly to my guns, and that very night be
fore Torn aud several other people, I ask
ed Dirk to manage so that he could stay
with us to the end of the summer. Dirk,
who had never intended to go, accepted
with a rather amused look in his face, and
said things to me that evening—when
Tom was nodding oviir the paper in the
smoking-room—which I ought not to have
allowed; but I was angry with Tom—and
you might as well have tried to quiet a
mad bull aitha bundle of tracts as try to
bring confusion on a nineteenth century
Adonis with cold looks.
I am not going to weary you by the ac
count of how Dirk got a certain amount
of influence over me, and made me do
things that at heart I did not want to do,
and tell him—which was not true—that I
was fond of him, end made ail sorts of
little mean tricks to blind poor, dear Tom,
who nevertheless seemed te be losing his
spirits and fretting a good deal about
something. But then there wbs one thing
we overlooked, and which I am really
ashamed to put down here, to-wit, that 1
liked my husband better than Mr. Dirk
Van Kounhyde.
At last I think this strange fact seemed
to dawn upon Dirk. He became savage,
and tyrannized over me in the most fear
ful manner. I really had to mauoeuver
with Intense cunning to get a little time
alone with Tom now and then, and Dirk
was always catching os together, and
was angry after having done so, so that
my lire was made perfectly wretched.
Tom’s low spirits, too, did notrnake things
much pleasanter, and my delight knew
no bounds when, one day toward the end
of July, Dirk informed us that he was go
ing to Narraimosett for a week. I tried to
catch Tom’s eye as he told me this, bat
only caught Dirk's, and he divined wbat
was in my mind, and looked positively di
abolic.
Aa the Him for hie departare grew near
*
which is of such almost metallic hardness
that it will wear indefinitely without
scratching, preserving always its bright
ness.
Globes made with such care as those de
scribed are expensive, of coarse, and that
is why no very great number is turned out
iu a year bv the factory in the shabby little
alley. But when a particularly fine one is
wanted by an educational or other institu
tion anywhere in this country or abroad an
order is apt to be sent to Boston for it.
Common globes of the sort one_ ordinarily
sees are carelessly made and inaccurate.
Tney are covered with cheap lithographed
maps and their varnish will not last. The
oolors are often put on with stencils and
soon fade.
Some of the more costly globes are mar
velously elaborate. They revolve inside a
horizontal circle, representing the horizon,
which is inscribed ail over with queer
things, such as no fellow not a scien
tific expert could And out, for the eal-
culation of abstruse astronomical prob
lems. The meridian is represented by a
half circle of metal, and any dunce can
find out at a moment’s notice precisely
what time it is at any given point on the
earth. A dreadful looking thing called an
“analemma” enables yon, if yon so desire,
to find tbe declination of the earth north
or south for every day in the year. Even
the duration of twilight anywhere at any
time may be discovered pretty nearly off
hand. There are also celestial globes, on
which the expanse ef the heavens is rep
resented, witn the constellations untea in
the shapes of mythological beasts and
things, according to their names. And,
most complicated of all, is the solar tellonc
globe, which gives, among other things,
the position of the sun with reference to
the earth for every day in the year. All
these ere constructed ny mechanics accord
ing to the descriptions given by astrono
mers, and their correctness is approve- by
the perfection with which they solve all
the problem.—Boston letter to Globe-
Democrat.
The eclipse will begin in San Francisco car j u which the aid of the courageous
at twenty minutes and eight seconds past j Porter was indispensable. She sup-
tterea™ onrt t.h* onH ref rennet erintended everything, and when ail was
complete the effect was saprising.
These are the most, desirable suburban lots in
tbe vicinity of Columbus ami will be sold at rea-
sonable prices and ou tortus to suit ihe purchaser.
f.G00—One quarter acre lot, with a *ood five room
resilience, ou 4ih ave, bet. 13th and I4th
streets.
1700- -One-quarter acre lot on lower Broad st.
550—Lots east of the pi.rk, 60x140 feet, on the
installment plan,with new 3-room houses.
•259—Vacant lots east of park. 66x140 feet.
250—A corner lot iu the annex ou uorth 'id
kvenue. 61x150 feet.
2000— L.«t 50x147, with five room house, on : d
avenue, between 8th aud jtti streets.
1360--One-quarter acre lot, with good -i-ioom
and 2-room house on lower 5th avenue.
1800—Half acre lot. with three houses renting for
|18 per mouth, near Fan gon mills.
W. S. GREEN. Rei.i Estate Agent,
Office northwest corner Beil Tower tjquare.
WE INVITE THE ATTENTION
—OF-
MEUCHAMS AND MaRKKT CAMHtS
TO OUR IMMENSE
MANUFACTURERS OF
Doors, Sash aud Blinds.
DEALERS IN
Lumber, Lime, Laths, Shingles,
and all UtiLitliug Supplies*.
Telephone No. 81. Office 1248 Fixlh avenue,
sc pi 8m
THE COLUMBIA
CLOTHING CO.
HAVE A FEW
Ready Made Suits,
TO ( Lost ot r.
Willie Lenil, Oil, etc., n!
J. BUSH'S Hardware Store,
KMX) Broad Street.
mch25 su*w
l)r. Cameron’s Ofliee
lu the Crawford Build tug.
Over Rothschild's Slur*. Residence No. I48t.
Third avenue.
acp2H 3m
Supply of New Seeds, half price.
twelve o’clock, and the end of contact
will be at eight minutes and fifty-seconds
past three, the total eclipse not being seen
at San Francisco at all.
The Lick Observatory will have a sta
tion one hundred miles north of San
Francisco, where the belt of totality passes
from the Aleution islands south-easterly
to the Pacific coast and north-easterly,
leaving the earth between Lake Superior
and Hudson Bay. Here it touches the
Pacific coast. The eclipse at the station
will be partial, not total, and will be ob
served by Prof. Holden and Messrs. Burn
ham and Schaeberie.
The Warner Observatory of Rochester,
will have a station seventy-five miles north
of Sacramento, with the Lick.
The partial phase of the eclipse will be
observed by students of the University of | a t, ou t tne room
Across one end was a partition, behind
which Dolly.was quietly chewing her cud;
in one corner of this, tbe barnyard, wits a
kennel for Shep and Bruno. Next came
the kitchen, which was truly a model one;
a small cook-stove, highly polished, was
in the centre, and around it, in perfect or
der. were the cuiinary utensils to be used
on the journeys. Off from this was a
large room to be used for a sitting-room
and bedroom. A curtain hung iu the
middle, which divided the two rooms at
night and could be pusned aside during
the day. This part of the car was as
comfortable and pieasautas rooms of its
size could be made. Two hanging lamps
were suspended trom the ceiling, while
Which we offer at Pbiladcl; hia Prices.
BRANNON A CARSON,
Columbus, Beorg-ia.
They are choice jfoods and well made. Come
and get them.
Handsome Goods to Make Up,
AT CHEAP FR1CEK.
TREASURY DEPARTMENT - Office of Comp-
» troller of; he Currency. Waxhiuirlon October
3:St, 1888.—WL^-retia. by <>atisfactory evidence pre
sented to the u dentiirm-d, it ha* been made to
appear that “The Third National Bank of Co
lumbus," in the city of Columbus, in the county
of Muscogee, and htate of Odonria. has compile*!
with all the provisions of the revised statute* of
tbe United btatea. required to be complied with
before an association shall be authorized U> com
mence the business of banking.
Now therefore 1. Jesse D. Abrahams. Deputy
and Acting Comptroller of Currency, do hereby
certify tbat The Tb-rri National Bank of Colun -
j bus." in the city of Columbus, in the county of
! Muscoiree. and State of Georgia. b> authorized to
! commence the business of banking as provided in
j section lifty-one hundred and sixty-nine of tbe
! Revised statutes of the United states.
i | In testimony whereof witness
- SEAL. >- my band and seal of office thi
I ) 31st. day of October, 18*8,
J. D. ABRAHAMB.
Deputy and Acting Comptroller of Currency
No. JM7. nov4-6C
TERNOCjINE B A LSAH,” j Cleaning and Repairing,
THE
At Reasonable Prices.
California at Berkeley, under Prof. Soule,
at tbe University of the Pacific and at the
Chabot University in Oakland. At this
last a number of photographs will be
taken by members of the Pacific Coast As
sociation of Amateur Photographers.
Harvard’s party of astronomers will be
stationed at Willows, with H. W. Pick
ing in charge. The others in the party
are Messrs. A. Lawrence Rotch, Samuel
Bailey. E. S. King and Robert Slack.
Willows is in the Sacramento Valley, the
observing station having an altitude of two
thousand feet above the sea level and be
ing about two hundred miles from San
Francisco.
were scattered tables,
chairs and everything necessary for a
pleasant household. Pictures, evea, were
hung artistically upon the boards at the
side of the car, and fancy work, which
only a lady’s hands could arrange, was
also to be seen. As Mrs. Porter w*s walk
ing outside with her dogs, while her hus
band was making the final arrangements
for the journey, she said that although
she dreaded to locate in her new home,
she did ot fear being unhappy.
While this article is being read Mr. and
Mrs. Porter in their railway home are be- j
ing jolted over tbe rails and perhaps the
wife has just finished milking the cow to
give a supply of the lacteal fluid for tne :
Great Rheumatic Cure.
A Pure Extract from the Yellow Pine. The
I only Liniment that will positively cure all it is
! said to cure. “Femoiine Balsam" wil 1 care
i Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Earache, Toothache, i
i Frost Bites. Stiugs, Sore Throat, ail Affections ol i
; the Throat and Chest, and a great relief to Con- :
i snmptives. ‘’Femoiine Bal-am" will give yon
I instant and permanent relief. Every household I
should keep it. It is prescribed by all leading !
. Physicians, as being the best Liniment on the !
i market and tbe greatest sick room Disinfectant <
n the world. Send for testimonials, showing 1
j many marvelous cures. Bold by ail Druggist# 1
! and Dealers in Medicine. Price Vj cents for large i
bottles. Ask for FERNOLINE BALSAM and |
•a^e no other. Manufactured only by FESNO- •
LINK CHEMICAL COMPANY. New York and
Charleston, S. C.
Respectfully,
V. 0. SHEPPEKSON A €0.,
PROPRIETORS OF
THE COLUMBUS CLOTHING
No. 17 Twelfth Mre«(.'
mch!9 dl y
BRANNON A* CARSON,
The telescopes to be taken are of thir- j morning meal.—Cleveland Sunday World.
teen inches diameter, and they will re-
main for a time _ on Wilson s Peak, in ji^ded Like Autumn Leaves, Look YYr 1
Southern California, after which they .. t ,
will be taken to Pern, and placed in the W eu Pressed,
permanent observatory there to be estab- i She ^looking over the au’ann landscape
fished ny Havard University to cooperate — « perfectly beauLiful. George?
in the Soutnern hemisisphere with tne ob
serve tory in Cambridge.
Wholesale Agents, falsmbns,
novl4 dly
(ia.
Verv complete apparatus for the photo
graphing of the spectrum will also be in
service, and should the clouds not inter
vene, a great number of plates will be
When th* bicycliata baa wcoeeded to
paying off the last inataUment on we ma-
SXreJhe can, as he skHn* along
lane, exclaim in the famous wmfla of
Christo: “The whirred is mine!
New York Son.
From these it is expected to observe
more accurately than ever before tbe
□amber and magnitude of the stars in the
immediate region of the sun, and also the
changes which may have taken place in
the corona since the last total eclipse
which Prof. Pickering, of Harvard,
observed from a South American station.
Theosnil observations for measuring
He—It is simply delicious! I could gaze
on it for hours. D> you know that every
time I look on those gloriously rioted
autumn leaves they remind me ot you?
“Iu what way?”
“They look as if they appealed to one to
be pressed ”
Mrs. Anglomaniac to butler —“Mathew,
his graee, the Duke of Tweedledum, draes
and sleeps here to-nis no I want every
thing in the most correct Enelrib wav ”
Matthew—-On, yes, hradeed, mam.”
Mrs. Anglomini «c—“Serve tea in tbe
drawing room at 5 and cinn.-r at S.30
z uc M uu „ o’clock. Have no napkins at breakfast
the sun’s distance and heat will be taken, : to-morrow, and serve cold tun: paivb
but the chief object of the Harvard party from the sideboard.”
will be photography. Matthew—“On, yes, indeed, mam.”
The eclipse will be partially visible at “Mrs. Anglomaniac—“And Mauhew, see
Albanv at one o’clock in the afternoon on that the weather t» foggy. I Want nis grace
January 1st. and the end will be after ran- to feel entirely at home.”
set. It will be observed at Dudley Uni- Mat hew-" Oh, JcS, hiudeed, mum.”- , Georgia
vereity, but aa it is only a partial eclipse 3iew York Sun.
there, the astronomers do not attach more ?
BRADYCROTIXE,
The Mire Cure
FOR
HEALACH E.
15 FOR SALE BY
EVANS & HOWARD,
H. T. HALL,
BRANNON & CARSON.
aOTiS d&trlm
THOMASON & TAYLOR,
Job Printers,
SOUTH BROAD
Atlanta, Georgia.
Letter Head# ,3.00 - er lOOO; sixteen to sheet
Dodgers, in 5000 lots. 60c per 1000. We will save
you 50 per rent, cn t work. All orders filled
prom dly and expressed. Hlereot) ping m a first
class manner, or no cnarge.
Write lor prices. ©c24 2m
FEMALE MEDICINE
By zi T tak tour V> and •treDxthenlny the.L'te r
in* System s-id bulldlnf up tbe renerzl health.
.INDIAN WEED
corrects all Irreiiai tribes and annoy In* triable*
trom which -omany ladles suffer. It ylsra tfi«
weak, debilitated woman health and atrenfWi.aad
mak>» cheerful the deapondent. depresaed to
■Dims, in eh aner of life no lady ahould he with-
oat INDIAN WEED, ilia Safi nad Unfat***
lit your Drugglct.
For saie by Branuoo A< arson ai <1 all d;cg**t
mayll-dAr ' ly
I prescribe and fully en
dorse Bir 42 as the only
speclfl' for the certain cut*
Of this disease.
<2 H. IN«iR 4 HAM. US D
Amsterdam, N. Y.
We have *->td Bl? O for
m. .y •• »ars, and it
Kiven’ the beat <->{ gara-^
faetlO'l.
D. R. DYi'TTF kCO..
lit
^1.00. Sold by Vnggl
A. R. CALLAHAN.
Contractor and Builder.
All work guaranteed and promptly exes nt«d.
X«>. 104 Eleventh Street, Colambe*, La.
aep6 cvm
HAVING PURCHASED
One of the Large*! and Best Select Stock
-OP-
OILOTIHIIIISra-, HATS
AND
Gents’ Furnishing Goods
rhat Has Ever Brea Braugkt to Ike City,
I feel capable of meeting all competition . t
qoali.y and pneea.
Ii you need anything in my line, all I ask is j
call and inspect my sloe*, an I am sure v
, lease in qu -lUy an* price. Gail »nu be cot
nuoed.
J. KACFM VX, Jr.,
novD 6mrp 14*43 Broad NtrreL
importance to it. They would have sent
a party oat to California to take obetrva-
tions, bat on account of the short dura
tion of the eclipse tt Is not deemed of
enough importance to warrant the ex-
*^56 * beginning of the eclipe© wiU be
by a * lll » 11 black notch made in
At a Matinee of Camille : Mrs. Hijler—
“I wish you wouldn’t be so uneasy, Cneie
Pnildab. The performance will be over
soon.” Uncle Pbiidab (of Couajoharie;—
“Maria, you’ve went an’ faoleff your old
rel’tive. Here I’ve been a sett in’ more 'n
two boor, an’ I ain’t seen a darn camel
yet.”—Judge.
Steam and Gas
Pipe Company.
*> HOLE9ALS AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
ire&m, 3m and Water Pipe and Pitting*. Bnu*
Gcod*. Some. Dm Fixture*. Gaa Kitten nd
1B3S Breed Sureed. teteetoee n.
Empire Stables.
—THE BUST
Livery, Sole and Feed
IN THE CITY.
Stable*
East tide KixW
Thirteenth atreeci
Yesue. beeweea Twelfth *»
Telephone 5S
Lh.--. _ L
This is the T op of the Genuine
Pearl Top Lamp Chimney.
All others, similar are imitation.
This exact Label
is or. each Pearl
Top Chimney.
A icalermaysay
ai.cl think he has
others as good.
BUT HR HAS NOT.
Insist upon the Exact Label and Tcvj
For Sale Everywhere. IUoe c*iy er
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