Newspaper Page Text
ENQUIRER SUN: COLUMBUS,
GEORGIA, SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 1890,
11
TWO DOROTHYS.
A little maid vrith downcasweyes.
And folded hands, and serious face.
Who waits sedately down the street,
Her dainty dress all smooth and neat.
Each curl and ribbon in its place.
A dovelike maid with brow demure
Beneath her bonnet's shady brim,
Who quiet sits within the pe .v.
And gravely reads the service through,
And joins in every hymn.
The sweetest maid that could be found
From Cuba to the Bay of Fundy;
A flower, the loveliest that springs,
A saint, an angel without wings—
That’s Dorothy on Sunday.
A little maid, in breathless haste,
With glowing cheeks and tangled hair.
Who races up and down the street,
And with her skipping, tripping feet
Is here and there and everywhere.
A saucy maid, with cap askew
Upon her rumpled yellow curls,
With twinkling feet and chattering tongue
And breezy skirts about her swung
In swift, ecstatic whirls.
The merriest maid that ever shocked
The servile slaves of Mrs. Grundy;
A bird, a spark of dawning light.
A romp, a rogue, a witch, a sprite—
That's Dorothy on Monday.
—Margaret Johnson in St. Nicholas.
Get Shoes After Noon.
The best time to get fitted to shoes is
in the latter part of the day. The feet
then are at their maximum of size and
sensitiveness. Activity measurably en
larges them. When the muscles are in
play the flow of blood in the arteries is
increased and the joints also: conse
quently they are more tender. Even
gravity affects the venous circulation, so
that standing on the feet alone tends to
enlarge these members. It is gravity
that produces varicose veins in the legs
and feet of persons of relaxing fibre who
are required to be much in tlie erect
position.
Hence when healthy persons lie down
at night their feet, being relieved from
the weight of the body, resume their
normal size. Try on the new shoes with
moderately thick stockings, too, an5 you
then have a margin of room by putting
on thinner ones when the feet are ill at
ease. For tender feet fit them late in
the day with the aid of heavy stockings,
and the next morning, clad in thinner
etockings, those feet will rest in the new
almost as comfortably as they would in
old shoes.—Herald of Health.
Poor On© Minute, Rich the Next.
One minute with poverty staring him
in the face; the next a rich man for life.
That was the actual experience of S. P.
Armstrong, who died of heart disease at
Butler, Pa. Ho had invested all his
funds in sinking a well in the Thorn
Creek oil region of Pennsylvania. It
was thought to be dry, and as a sort of
farewell protest against his ill luck the
explorer fired ft torpedo in its depths.
Immediately after its explosion the well
began to flow at a tremendous rate, a
volume of oil being lifted into the air to
a height of at least ono hundred feet.
Not having expected a big well no con
nections bad been made to the tanks,
and the oil flowed on the ground, com
pletely deluging the entire neighborhood.
After several hours the oil was turned
into tanks with great personal risk to the
workmen, and the first day's production
was 10,000 barrels, the largest well ever
opened in the oil county It was a mine
of wealth to Mr. Armstrong, and devel
oped a large scope of rich territory.—
New York Press.
Our Flag Abroad.
“Here, for the first time since reaving
New York, I saw the Stars an" Stripes.
It was floating over the gateway to the
American consulate. It is a si: snge fact
that the further one goes from nome tho
more loyal one becomes. 1 :* It that 1
was a long ways off from my own dear
land; it was Christmas day, and I had
seen many different flags since last I
gazed upon our own. The moment I
saw it floating there in the soft, lazy
breeze I took off my cap and said: ‘That
is the most beautiful flag in the world,
and I am ready to whip any one who
says it isn’t.’
“No one said a word. Everybody was
afraid. I saw an Englishman in the
party glance furtively toward the Union
Jack, which was floating over the En
glish consulate, but in a hesitating man
ner, as if he feared to let me see.’’--Nellie
Bly’s Book.
Gymnastics.
Uncle Enoch, from Oldboro. was visit
ing his daughter in New York, and one
evening she took him to a concert at
which Sig. Bangelli was to play a piano
solo.
The signor has a peculiar way of play
ing chords. After each one he gives a
sort of spring into the air, which ena
bles him to attack the next one with
great rigor.
“My stars!" Uncle Enoch was heard
to whisper confidentially after the first
“chord passage," “he struck them notes
so hard they fetched him clean off his
seat!"—Exchange.
Swapping Horses in Maine.
A new kind of swindling or of horse
stealing is leported by The Kennebec
Journal. While Mr. Charles F. Thaxter,
of South Gardiner, was at work a
stranger called at his house and told Mrs.
Thaxter that her husband had sent him
to swap horses and that she was to pay I
him $15 to boot, and that he would leave !
his horse. Mrs. Thaxter carried out the [
instructions and received in exchange a I
white horse which has since proved ut
terly worthless. Mr. Thaxter’s horse was :
a handsome and valuable red bay.
Wanted the Job.
Woman—I waut this room white
washed, but I dread the mnss of it all.
Uncle Pete—Guess you’se had sum
ob dese here cheap whitewashers at wuk.
I’se very ’ticular, ma’am. I’se white
washed sum ob de finest fences in de
city. W hitewash am too ’spensive ter
spill ’roun’ on furniture.—Epoch.
Mr. Henderson is a punctilious man.
with a special antipathy against nick
names and pet abbreviations. The other
day. after much fruitless running about
the city on some errand, he declared
that he had traveled “from Daniel to
Beersheba.”
POSSIBILITIES OF ELECTRICITY.
A Portable Battery for Pergonal Protec
tion and Warfare Now In Use.
The careers of the swaggering bully,
the ferocious dog. the footpad and others
of like ilk are fast drawing to a close.
No longer will the small, weak man go
out at night with th* fear of being
robbed by a footpad or getting the stuff
ing knocked out of him in an argument
with a larger man. A check is put upon
the ravages of the bulldog, and the most
timid and refined lady will be able to go
anywhere at any hour of the night with
out fear of being insulted. To the won
derful inventive talent of George A.
Bnckel, the electrician, is this great
scheme of physical equalization due.
No mercenary motive actuates him in
the matter, ior he gives it without price
to the public. Like the chivalrous
knights of olden time he labors only to
protect the weak from oppression and to
do good for human kind. Beside this in
vention all of the electrician’s previous
efforts sunk into obscurity. It consists
simply of an electric walking cane
heavily charged. The cane is made of
wood or leather, with a thin steel rod
running through the centre of it. A
man puts a small battery in liis hip
pocket, with one fine wire running down
into the left shoe and connecting with a
steel plate .at his heel.
Another wire runs from the battery up
into his coat sleeve and terminates in a
hook at the wrist. Upon the head of the
cane is a wire eyelet, and the hook is fast
ened to it. It is only this and nothing
more, and a man thus equipped could
hold out against twenty men as expert
even as Jolm L, Sullivan.
For illustration, a short, slim gentle
man, weighing HO oounds, and knowing
nothing whatever or pugilism, has occa
sion to go down town after dark. A
short distance from his home a dog with
extended jaws and an I’ll-bite-yon air
about him leaps out. A touch with the
point of the cane electrifies and lays him
out flatter than tissue paper. -
Continuing his journey the gentleman
suddenly comes upon a man with whom
he has not been on good terms for a long
time. The latter is large and is noted as
a fighter.
After first trying to arrange their dif
ferences amicably the small man pro
vokes the other to assault him. and then
electrifies his assailant. Henceforth
people will have to be careful about call
ing even a puny, sash-wearing dude a
liar. No brains are necessary to work
the machine, and ono round will be suf
ficient to put a stop to a fight. Police
men will have their clubs charged in
this way in order to facilitate the mak
ing of arrests, and woe betide the luck
less individual who is so rash, as to re
sist.
Ladies carry their batteries in a con
venient place, and the steel rod goes
through their parasol handles. In the
crowd on Fourth avenue a man snatches
a lady's pocketbook. She sees him ju&fc
in time, and touches him with the end
of her parasol. Of course he falls, and
she then easily takes her purse from his
fingers. Later on a policeman finds him
and takes him to jail. The result is the
same if an impertinent man makes an
objectionable remark to her.
When this invention is perfected there
will be no more of the old style duels in
Kentucky, and it will lose i,ts reputation
for blood spilling. Two gentlemen will
engage in a dispute, and one-will chal
lenge the other to a bout with electric
canes. Two batteries of equal strength
will be selected along with the other
apparatus. Facing each other, they
stand with crossed canes, and at a sig
nal agreed upon each endeavors to prod
the other with t he point of his weapon.
Finally one receives the shock and is
stretched out. There are no black eyes,
no ugly sword or bullet wounds, aud the
fallen man is not dead. Besides, the law
has not been violated, and in a day
everything is lovely.—Louisville Times.
Not Expert Linguists.
I went into a store to look at some
Eastern hangings. A very pleasant
young woman attended to my requests,
and I asked her what they called the
variety of hangings I was examining.
“Doories.” said she. I asked her how
the word was spelled. “D-h-u-r-r-i-e-s,”
she spelled, and added, “I suppose they
were named after Doory lane. They are
Indian, aren’t they?” This struck me as
even more remarkable than a reply l
once received from a girl at Macy’s on
inquiring there for a certain French con
fection. After a good deal of explana
tion on my part she finally seemed to
get the idea, and turning somewhat con
temptuously to a little cash girl standing
by, she bade her fetch a “can of Marion
glaze.” This reminds one of the man
who went to an English costumer to get
a Henri IV costume for a fancy dress
party, and was astonished to hear the
man call up to his assistant. “ ’Any,
bring down the Angry Cat!"—Boston
Transcript.
Hens That Ate Gold.
Even the hens at Bj-ron have caught
the gold fever. Two men got a pan of
mixture supposed to contain about $3
worth of the precious metal and set it
under the stove to dry. The next morn
ing two hens wandering about in search
of good things ventured in through the
door. Spying the pan they at once helped
themselves to every bit of yellow they
conld find and probably went away
wondering at the poor taste of mankind
who could prefer that Mad of fodder to
yellow corn.—-Bangor (Me.) Letter.
Travels of a Cap.
An Oldtown manufacturer bought a
cap for his little boy in Bangor, and at
once recognized tho cloth of which it was
made as a product of his own factory.
The cloth was sold to New York parties
who sold to Philadelphia manufacturers
who made it into caps and sold them to
Boston wholesalers from whom the Ban
gor merchant bought.—Lewiston Jour
nal.
Mr. Haden, the great English etcher,
spent two hours on his well known
plate, “The Agamemnon.” He has real
ized, I am told, over $50,000 from the
sale of prints from this plate.
A Gold Brick Swindles*
An unusual settlement of a criminal
case was effected June 30 in the superior
court at East Cambridge. It was the
famous gold brick bunco case which oc
curred in Lowell in 1888, by which two
New York swindlers and a local accom
plice euchred Mr. George F. Penniman
out of $9,000. The accomplice, named
Chester A. Grinnell, was captured, but
his confederates escaped. Grinnell was
subsequently released on $18,000 bail,
which was furnished by Isador J. and
Isaac Klous. When the case was called
in court the defendant failed to put in
an appearance. His bondsmen were in
dicted by the grand jury in June, and
appeared in court with two certified
checks of $9,000 each, with one of which
they offered to reimburse Mr. Penniman
and the other they tendered to the court
in settlement of the case against them.
Justice Bishop took the proposition un
der consideration and rendered his de
cision by the following order;
“In the above action the penalty
named in the recognizance is adjudged
forfeited and judgment entered for $18,-
000, the amount stated in said recog
nizance. Execution is to be stayed un
til July 15, 1890, and shall then issue for
said sum, without interest or costs; pro
vided, however, that an acknowledg
ment for the sum of $9,000, signed by
George F. Penniman for account of his
claim against Chester A. Grinnell, one
of the defendants, by way of satisfac
tion, shall be filed with the clerk of the
court in this cause before said day; exe
cution shall issue for the sum of $9,000
only.”—Boston Journal.
Sweltering Workmen Find a Snow Bank.
While workmen were employed in ex
cavating a cut a short distance above
Canfield & Wheeler’s mill, in Manistee,
Mich., they came upon a thick bed of
snow. The mercury was above 90 degs.
The snow was covered with several feet
of sand. Many persons visited the place
to ascertain the truth, and every one re-
tnmed with large chunks of the “beauti
ful” to prove the Jact of its existence.
The presence of the snow will interfere
with the grade to some extent, and the
engineer was not at all pleased to wit
ness the phenomenon. The men, how
ever, enjoyed drinMng the ice water
converted from the snow.—Cor. Chicago
Tribune.
A Strange Malformation.
Boise county, Idaho, has a sheep that
is the property of James Johnston, of
Round Valley, and was a year old on
the 22d of May. It has but two legs,
both on the hinder part of the body, and
constantly walks erect, much after tho
manner of a kangaroo. The legs and
tail are smooth as those of a dog, not
showing the least trace of wool. The
head is woolly and is provided with but
one eye, which solitary optic is set in the
center of the head. The neck has a good
showing of feathers resembling those of
the guinea fowl. The shoulders and
place where the forelegs should be are
as woolly as the head, extending back to
where the smooth, doglike hair begins.
—St. Louis Republic.
Caught Two Sharks.
A party of gentlemen at Glen Cove
went to Matinecock point Tuesday even
ing and drew a seine net, catching at the
first haul a large shovel nose shark,
measuring 7 feet 2 inches from tip to tip,
and weighing about 250 pounds. His
8harkship had to be killed before lie could
be landed. A second haul was made,
when a smaller shark of the same species
was captured. The large shark was
taken to the village and placed on exhi
bition near Campbell’s hotel, where it
was viewed by hundreds of people dur
ing Wednesday. It was pronounced one
of the largest sharks ever captured in
these waters.—Brooklyn Times
No Revision.
Presbyterian Enthusiast—The papers
are full of talk about revision. I am un
alterably opposed to it.
Ordinary Citizen—So am L The rules
are good enough now. The only trouble
is with the umpires. Give ns honest um-.
pires and the Giants will win every
game.—New York Weekly.
The work of canalizing the Seine,
which has been in progress for fifteen
years, is still being actively pushed for
ward. According to the engineer, M.
Bouquet de la Grye, the cost will not
exceed 135,000,000 francs. The object
of the work is to deepen the river so that
vessels of 2,000 to 2,500 tons, which at
present have to stop at Rouen, may go I
to Paris.
They are telling of a young man who
was graduated at the Harvard Law
school this year who has taken the full
academic course of four years at Har
vard, followed by three years in the
Law school, and has supported bimaelf
throughout the seven years, coming out
with a balance of $5,000 to the good.
This is good enough to be true.
M. Eiffel is now utilizing his famous
tower and a balloon for aerial telegraph
purposes by night. It is intended to as
certain by the experiments at what dis
tance the lights on the tower can be per
ceived from a balloon, and to what
height from the summit of the tower an
aerostat can be seen and communicated
with by signals.
It has never hitherto been found pos
sible to make a drilling machine which
would drill square, hexagonal, oblong
and octagonal holes in metal, but such a
tool has been devised, and its appear
ance before the public is promised at no
distant date.
An immense skate was recently capt
ured near Victoria, B. C. Its dimen
sions were as follows: From tip of snout
to tip of tail, 6 feet 3 inches; across the
body, 4 feet 11 inches; depth of flesh, 4
incues. It was estimated to weigh 160
pounds.
Pilgrimages to Rome add goodly sums
to the papal exchequer. Since Feb. 1
the French pilgrimage took £8,000, the
various Italian ones £10,000, the Ameri
can £12,000. the Austrian £4,150, and the
German £5,000.
The Baby Chewed a Cartridge.
A colored picnic excursion boarded a
train on the East Tennessee, Virginia
and Georgia railroad on Sunday.
The chattering, perspiring, gayly dress
ed picnickers crowded the seats and aisles
of the smoker and first class cars and the
overflow even flooded the parlor car de
spite protest. The clamor and babel in
cident to such affairs rose above the
clatter of car wheels and made ordinary
railroad conversation impossible. But
at a stoppage at one of the little railway
stations there was a lull. A poorly clad
old negro of solemn visage came up to a
car window and said to an elderly col
ored passenger:
“Sis Sue, I’s ’stonished to see you hyar
gwine off picnicin’ Sunday when yo’
cousin’s baby’s bein’ buried dis hyar
very day.”
“Law, yon don’ tell me! Well, I did
hear de baby was dead, but den I didn’t
look for such a suddent funeral. What
ail’m, anyhow?”
“Well, I tell you, I don’ know ’zactly,
but dere war some dinalemeet cartridges
roun’ de house, and dey s’pose de chile
bit off de de een o’ one of the cartridges;
leastways dey found his head mos’ Mow
ed off an’ one cartridge done gone.” *
There was a moan of sympathy from
the carload of listeners, and when the
train moved on a hush of horror held the
picnickers silent almost to the next sta
tion.—Macon (Ga.) Telegraph.
Mr. Flagler’s Floating Palace.
This year every man who lives near
the Sound and who can afford the lux
ury is investing in a yacht. The craft
range in every conceivable variety, from
catboats to Mr. Flagler’s new floating
palace, the Alicia, which, by the way, is
the sensation of the yachting world just
at present. She is lying off Larclimont
with a big crew of men aboard. Every
thing about the new boat is spick and
span new. Mr. Flagler has had a large
office fitted up aboard the Alicia, where
he can transact some of the business of
the Standard Oil company on his way
to and from New York when he feels in
the humor. There is a typewriter in the
cabin and a commodious desk for the
use of the millionaire's secretary. The
spectacle of a Standard Oil magnate
starting the business of the day while
taking his daily trip from Larchmont to
New York in his yacht belongs to the
latter day history of New York.—New
York Sun.
Travel in the Southwest.
A railroad man who is an agent for an
eastern road doing business with all the
western, southwestern and northwestern
trunk lines says that 70 per cent, of the
emigrant travel goes to the northwest.
About a month from now the bulk of
this business will have been* done for the
calendar year. From that time until
next spring the travel will be chiefly for
business or pleasure. This same ob
server estimates that of the citizens of
the United States fully 60 per cent, of
those moving from their old eastern
homes go to the new northwest in prefer
ence to the middle and southwest. In
general the southwest seems to be pre
ferred to the middle west. The migra
tion to the southwest and the south is
more largely from the central western
states than from the east and New Eng
land.—New York Sun.
Columbia College's President.
Seth Low is putting new life into the
venerable machinery of Columbia col
lege. He has no respect for an old rule
that does not reasonably provide for
a new contingency. For instance, a
young man not overburdened with
wealth entered the law school, paying
what was for him quite a fee. After at
tending two or three lectures business
exigencies forbade his continuance at
study. He applied to the treasurer for
a rebate on his cash payment, only to
meet with a delay and hear a rule re
cited against such a demand. Then he
dropped President Low a line. Within
four hours the postoffice brought a court
eous reply and a check.—Chatter.
A Young Dromedary.
A female dromedary was bom in Capt.
Cassell’s stable Wednesday evening,
about fifteen minutes before 7 o’clock.
The proud mother is Druid. The little
lady stands about three feet high and
has a slender body, but very long legs.
This is the fourth dromedary bom at the
park. The first, Horace, died in infancy.
His hide, hump and all, Capt. Cassell
has mounted. It is now in the captain’3
parlor. The second, Kate, was sold to
the circus with the grandmother of the
baby just arrived. The third, another
Horace, still lives. He, with Druid and
the baby, compose the drove now at the
park.—Baltimore Sun.
w. K. BROWN, President.
GEO. WHITESIDE, Sec’y and Trews.
COLUMBUS IRON WORKS CO.,
FOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS,
OOLTJMBUS, - - - _ f-q. A
Manufacturers of
THE IMPROVED CALENDER ROLLERS
“ d e*te“?ively used by cotton manufacturers of the present day. They consist
0f fix inches in diameter, 40 inches long, two of them hollow bein'/a r«»?L
f Y™ 18lled with a!1 aecessar v pipe and valves, fitted np ready to btfattachifi
ha* al ] fhe latest improvements on same, including the Selvage Rollers and ClcthYaSi
Fulley, 20 tnenes in diameter, 4 inches face, all ready to be connected to a.
lino of Shafting. It only requires a trial to demonstrate their indispensability.
We are Sole Manufacturers of Stratton’s Improved
Absorption Ice Machines
most PRACTICAL, ECONOMICAL, and ."DURABLE TCE MACHINE ever
madejin America.
Southern Plow Company,
i MANUFACTURERS OF THE
COLTJ^TBTJS SIHSrGKDIE PLOW STOOK,
SOLID and WING SWEEPS, STEEL, WROUGHT and CAST IRON PLOW
BLADES, HEEL BOLTS, GRASS RODS, CLEVISES, SINGLE
TREES, and all other Agricultural Implements.
HT’The high qualityof these goods will 1 e maintained, and are sold on as favorable terms as by
any house in the United States.
WOOD WOBK IDEIELA-ILTIMIIEILf? T.
The largest dealers in the State in Lime, Shingles, Dressed and Undressed Lumber, MatchaA
Ceiling_and Flooring. Manufacturers of Sash, Doors, Blinds, Newels, Balusters, and Ornamental
Wood Works.^Dealers in Lime, Laths, Shingles, Lumber, and everying in the Building Line.
[LUMBER BOUGHT AND SOLD IN ANY QUANTITY.;
The Columbus Iron Works are agents for Royal Pumps, Judson iGovernors, Standard Injectors*
and Hancock Inspirators. We are manufacturers of Saw Mills, Pumps, Hollow Ware, Syrup Kettles,
Steam Engines, Cane Mills, Power Cotton Presses, and the celebrated GOLDEN’S IMPROVED IRON
SCREW COTTON PRESS. Within the last twenty-five years we have made and sold a great many
of these Screws, and have yet to hear of the first one that has not given entire satisfaction. We fur
nish all the iron work for these Screws, of which we make two sizes, and fully warranted.
It;
X \
Copyright.
A Cloud with the Silver Lining.
“Be still sad heart and cease repining,
Behind the cloud the sun is still shining.’'
The words of the poet are significant with the discovery of man, since the i..Re
daction of Wooiridge’s Wonderful Cure. The cloud of a blood disease hangs
heavy on any one. It unfits them for labor or rest, like a ghost it stares them ira
the face, and will not down; all such clouds are now being dispelled bv that truly
wonderful vegetable remedy, YV. W. C. Liver and Kidney diseases have never
stood the effects of this medicine. They disappear as fast as the medicine is used.
Columbus, Ga., July 15, 1S&9.
Woolridffe's Wonderful Cure Co., Columbus, Ga.
Gents:—After suffering for twenty vears with my kidneys, and finding only temporary relief,
after taking various remedies and consulting some of the most noted physicians in the country, at t.
cost of hundreds of dollars for no good. I decided to try W. W. C., and \ must confess that to-da • l
am as well as I ever was, and that I suffer no pain whatever from my kidneys and am feeling b* -
in every respect than I have for years, and I attribute it all to two bottles of W. W. C.: and 1 wou.J.
advise all who suffer in the leait with Kidney or Bladder troubles to give W. W. C. a trial.
"Yours truly, A. KIMBROUGH.
For sale by all druggists.
Columbu*. Ga.
Manufactured by Woolridge’s Woaderfnl Care Co.,
ROUSES OF COLUMBUS.
DRY GOODS.
J. Kyle & (Jo.
Established 1838. Wholesale Dry Goods, Notions, Etc.
facturers of Jeans Pants Overshirts, Etc.
Mann-
BOOTS AND SHOES.
J. K. Orr & Co.
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in Boots and Shoes.
A Connecting Link Gone.
The late Hon. Samuel Adams Turner,
of Norwell, possessed a unique interest
to the student of our early history. His
death removes the last link of a very
short chain which connected ns with the
pilgrims. Mr. Turner, who was born in
1792, remembered Ebenezer Cobb—
“Father Cobb,” as he was called—who
died in the first year of this century, at
the age of 107, and who knew the chil
dren of the passengers of the Mayflower.
So in three lives—Peregrine White,
Ebenezer Cobb and Samuel Adams Tur
ner—the entire 270 years of New Eng
land’s existence was represented.—Bos
ton Journal.
Mme. Tavaray, the Russian prima
donna, is mourning the loss of a large
sum of money and a pair of diamond
earrings, perhaps the whitest and finest
stones in Europe. She is now singing at
the Covent Garden theatre, in London,
and left them in a cab on her way home.
The clock recently removed from the
Exchange tower in Savannah, Ga., had
marked off time there for eighty-seven
years. It was removed because it had
become too unreliable. A modem time
piece is to take its place.
Old Pio Pico, the late Mexican gov
ernor of California, is passing his de
clining days in poverty. He is now 90
years old, has lost his property and has
not money enough to pay his house rent.
GROCERIES.
Bergan & Joines.jj
Wholesale Groceries, Cigars, Plug and Smoking Tobae-
cos.
F. J. Kohn.
Wholesale Fancy Groceries and Manufacturer of Candies, Ciders,
Vinegar, Etc., 1013 Broad street.
J. H. Gabriel.
Wholesale Grocer and Manufacturer of Pure Cider and Vinegar
Candies, Etc., 1017 Broad street.
DRUGS.
Brannon & Carson. || Wholesale Druggists.
FURNITURE.
A. G. Rhodes & Co.|| Wholesale and Retail Furniture, Carpets and Wal
JEWELRY.
T. 8. Spear.
Wholesale and Retail Jewelry, Diamonds, Etc., 1121 Broad street.
HARNESS, SADDLES, ETC.
Bradford II wlK> le8ale 411(1 Eeta b Dealer in Harness, Saddles, Etc.
LIQUORS, CIGARS, ETC.
Kaufman 11 ^ holeeale Liquors, Cigars and Tobaccos.
FRAZER & DOZIER,
Wholesale Hardware,
nov3dly COLIJMBTJa C3-A.