Funding for the digitization of this title was provided by R.J. Taylor, Jr. Foundation.
About Columbus daily times. (Columbus, Ga.) 1876-1885 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 1883)
THE DAILY TIMES. LARGEST CIRCULATION In the Coan tie* Adjacent to and Tradin* at Columba*. Coluinbue. Go.. BUNDAY JANUARY 14, 1883, Captain Ed. Cox is said to be pre paring to enter into the horse trade in Atlanta, • —— • There is an increasing demand upon the governor for vaccine mat ter. owing to the appearance of small pox in different parts of the State. The Courier Journal thinks there is an affecting connection between M. T. Polk and the State M. T. Treas ury. The connection is a sad one for both parties. The Post-Appeal reports the attack of Col, J, W. Warren much less seri ous than was at first apprehended, and it is thought now that he will be out in a few days. Senator Hoar said if General But ler was elected Governor of Massa chusetts he would move out of the State. Now if Governor Butler should be elected United States Sen ator. Mr. Hoar may move back. Grantville and Senoia have both elected prohibition town tickets and the liquor shops “muet|go.” The city council of Newnan has raised the license for retailing liquors to $15,000 per annum—and her shops have “gone.” Mr. Jim Keene,the great speculator and successful corner-maker in grain and other provision supplies, thinks the country is going to smash, and that the bottom rocks will be hard to find. That only means that Mr. Keene and his corner-men are terribly cramped and may have to crawl into a small sized hole. The Atlanta Oleomargarine Fac tory will go into operation in a few days. It would be funny for some hopeful capitalist to start such a con cern in Columbus and rely on the fat of the beeves brougnt to this market to run it. Should such an enterprise be inaugurated, the butter ought to be popular, for there would be but little if any tallow in it. The white girl thirteen years old, who eloped with a negro lad a tew days ago in Middlebury, Vt, and the negro have been captured. They made their way with a stolen team to a little place, Willsboro, N. Y. They did not want to go back home, bnt did on being threatened with le gal process. The girl is infatuated with the negro and says she will mar ry him. In 1870 the assessessed valueation of the real estate of New York city was $742,103,075; this year it was sl,- 080,879,403, an increase in thirteen years of 338,776.328. or over 45 per cent. Since 1879 the increase has been rapid. The valuation of 1880 showed an increase of $24,500,000, those of 1881 of $34 000,000. In 1882 this increase was $58,500,000, and this year it is $45,500,000. Atlanta is getting a leetle too tick lish for goed health. If a business man is seen to talk to a lawyer it is at once reported that he is broke, or so the rumor runs. They bad Col. Huff broke the other day, and a few days later the air was full of the fail ure of J. P. Harrison & Co. Both ru mors entirely untrue by subsequent report, and all grew out of talking with lawyers. Poor old Tray. The legislature of South Carolina, like that of Georgia, has instructed its delegates in congress to use their efforts to secure the repeal of the ten per cent, tax on state banks. If all the Southern and Western states should co-operate in this matter as they should, that law would soon be wiped away, and the states might take their own finances into their own hands, where they should be. A New York horse doctor, profes sionally and politely called a veter inary surgeon, administered ether to a dray horse a few days ago and ex tracted a snake from the horse’s eye. The little paroside was about 24 in. long, white and hard as wire,and was wonderfully active in its "wiggling.” The horse did not recover from his dose of ether, but died, and the little snake died also. Now, who will tell how the snake got into the horse’s eye? that’s the question. Or the cotton planter’s exposition the Savannah News says: “The of ficers of the cotton planters’ associ elation have changed their pro gramme in reference to the proposed great worlds cotton exposition to be held in any Southern city donating $500,000. Their proposition is to raise $500,000 on their part Instead of sl,- 500.000, and some Southern city is asked to head the subscription list with $500,000 instead of donating that sum. This is coming much nearer to the mark, but the first subscription is still $200,000 too large for the present humor of any Southern city, unless the association will join l& with th* local enterprise of LouiattUe or Bal timore. The wreck of the City of Brussels is the first chapter in the perilow record of the sea for the present year, and happily it has bean attend ed by a very small loss of life. The record of 1882 shows a total of 284 steamships and large river steam boats which met with disaster. On ly a few of these were floated and re paired again. The aggregate ton nage was 320,0*5 tone. Os these the British vessels numbered 192 with a tonage of 236,516 tons; American 16, and 13,972 tons. Os this list 141 were stranded, 32 were sunk by collision, 4 were destroyed by explosion, 52 foundered, 3 capsized, 2 were burned, 6 were sunk by iee, 7 wereabaadesM In a sinking conditio* and 25 are missing. The total number of lives lost was 2,002. .".“Middle measures are often bat mid dling measures.” There are no "mid dlings” about Kidney-Wort. It is the most thoroughly refined "flower”of medi cine. It knows no half-way measurer, but radically uproots all disease es the kidneys, liver and boweie. It overthrows pfies, aboliahea eonstlpatlon and treats the system so gently add soothingly as to prove its true kinship to nature in all ts pratoee. It is prepared in both liquid •nddrylorm. THE BIBLE IIIMNECTFU, The Rev. R. Heber Newton contin ued last Sunday his very remarkable series of sermons, considering that they are delivered from an Episco palian pulpit. Instead of treating the scriptures as the inspired woid of God, and t,be absolutely tiue and unchangeable fountain source of religious truth, the preacher dis cussed and oriticsed them very much as a scholar might the texts of Ho mer or Virgil, Thucydides or Livy, or as the sacred writings of India are examined by the Western philosoph ical student. That method of Biblical criticism and interpretation is already f ,mili n to us, but we are accustomed to look for it in the works of men who have thrown off allegiance to religious creeds; not in the sermon of au or thodoxpreacher. It may, indeed be called the modern method of treat ing the Scriptures when they are ta ken up as ancient contributions to literature merely, orare studied for a purely historical purpose. But that is not the reverential spirit in which the devout believer in inspiration ap proacbes the Bible. It is the spirit of the skeptic and of the critic who discards the inspiration both plenary and literal. For instance, Mr. Newton accepts the new view of the Book of Deuter onomy "presented by the r»searches of criticism,” It is, in substance, that Deuteronomy was a literary tor gory, a work prepared by the pro phets of the time and pained off on the young King of Israel as the long lost law of Moses. The Book of Daniel, instead of being the work of the prophet of that name, “our crit ics have learned,” did not make its appearance until a century and a j half before Christ, “come genius,” Mr. Newton explained, “wrote the . story of Daniel, put into the mouth of the prophet predictions of events which had occurred 2UO years befor-, | and made him declare that after 490 years the Messiah would ap pear.” The Songs of Solomon are a “drama of Hebrew poetry,” a love story ; in Job we have a discus siou of a problem as to goodness and good fortune, and by a si retch of po etic license, Jehovah himself is in troduced upon the scene. The book of Genesis has been “often worked over to answer the deeds of different generation?.” Thus a sun myth is turned into a symbolical story of civilization, and this again into a tribal legend indeed, “none of the books appear now as they were orig inally written. Ail have been edited and re-edited, some of them several times. They offer a form of succes sive layers, all of which must be laid open before a clear and intelligible account can be rendered of them,” So says the Rev. Mr, Newton. If that is true of the Old Testament, it is not the less true of the New. Different texts of the Gospels and Epistles do not agree, and critical scholarship even of the most reverent kind throws out as glosses important passages, while questions of authen ticity arise, Under Mr. Newton’s method, in fine, the Bible is treated as a purely human book, inspired only so far as the men of genius who wrote it were inspired, and as all genius has been inspired from their day to this. It is true so far as men can discern what is true, and no further. Its prophets were the poets of their time, its chroniclers the historians of a primitive age. In Mr. Newton’s words.—" The Bible forms a manual in which we are to s'udy the growth and phases of religion, and from which we are to draw into our lives the inspiration of goodness.” But that is about what Mr. Frothing ham might have said when be was using the Bible along with the V-das and the Koran in the Masonic Tem pie- , Yet the leading men, wardens, vestrymen, and others, in the An thon Memorial Church declare that Mr. Newton’s views of the Scriptures agree with theiisand large congrega tions seem to hear him gladly and approvingly. The Rev. Dr. Rylance, another Episcopal clergyman, ex presses nodissent from them, though he doubts the advisability of bring ing them forward in the pulpit at present, And all this goes on in the most conservative of Protestant churches without rebuke from ecclesiastical superiors. The religious changes which have been taking place within the last ten years, are of startling significance. They are shaking the very foundation of the faith.— New York Sun. DcGratTenriml Rheumatic Liubueut. I have the process for the composition of this unrivalled remedy for Rheuma tism, so well known to the people of Co lumbus. I propose to sell the same or go nto Its manufacture with any responsible person. There is not a bottle of it to be hpulu the world. Apply to J. F. Waddell. ju27tf TRAGEDY IN A BALL ROOM. The Prompter Stabbed to death— Subsequent Suicide of the Murderer. Liberty, N. C, Jan. 8 —A ball was in progress in Bedford county on Saturday night. Wmle the dancers were in the midst of a quadrille Idelle Reid stepped up to Scott Ofay ton, who had consented to call out the figures, and told him that be was nol calling them right. Clayton considered her tone rattier pett, ami replied somewhat indignantly, al though those who were near by affirm that-be did not use ungen'le manly language. Among Miss Read’s admirer. present was At in stead Barksdale, and be chanced to overbear Clayton’s remarks. The girl had hardly lerumed her place among the dancers before Barksdale went up to Clayton and caded him to account for his remarks. Hot words passed, and then Barksdale drew a knife and stabbed C.aytou, cutting a horrid gash from the right eye to the back of the neck, sev.-riog the jugular vein and causing death. Some of the partizans of the two men took up the quarrel and a melee ensued, in which no one was fa'ally hurt. Barksdale escaped from the scene unobserved. This morning early he went to a saw mill and bor rowed a gun from an acquahimnee, saying be wished to kill a rabbit. Instead of doing this be went to a neighboring house and shot himself in the bowels. He died this evening at 5 o’clock. •All ladies who may be troubled with nervous prostration; who suffer from or ganic displacement ; who have a sense of weariness and feeling of lassitude; who are languid in the morning; In whom tbe appetite for food is capricious and Bleep at proper hours uncertain, ehonld hav-- reeourse to Mrs. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. DAILY TIMES: COLUMBUS. GEORGIA. SUNDAY MORNING. JANUARY 14, 1883 PUSHING THE ORANGE. How Tices Can Be Made t > Produce Within Two Years. From the. Mobile Register One of the most serious stumbling blocks that n man finds in hie way When be thinks of becoming au range cuituriet lb s in the fact that it takes the trees t ight or ten years from the start to g,t into profitable bearing, The stumbling blockseetne about to be removed to a great ex tent, at least. A new method of propagating tbe orange has lately b eu discovered, which blds fair to work conoid-fable revolution in tbe orange business, as it does away wi ll tbe neces-ity of waiting so long tor returns. «s is the case of the old methods, Under I'. you plant a tree, say in tise spring of 1883, and In 1884 it will bear a very fair crop of fruit. Toe new method consist in prope gatipg layers made on a certain plan. We will suppose that you have a bearing tree which fork? not far from tne ground. In the spring you pro vide youtself with an emery barrel, with one h< ad out, (a fl mr barrel will answer,) and srw it in” at the bulge until one slave is cut off. This slave you remove, with all the hoops, down to where you have been saw mg. You next remove tbe bark tri in t n- prong of your orange tree, formh g a girdle about an inch wide, located, say, two inches above tbe juuciion with the other prong. Tbe girdle must not go entirely around rhe prong, but a strip of bark an inch in width must be left undisturbed on ih« side nex’ to the other prong. Now slip your bairel over tbe gir dled i rong, res iug it against ihe main trunk of the tree, and letting trie girdled prong pass into it though the opening made by tbe removal of the stave, and through tbe beadb ss top of tbe barrel. Raise the b.rrel umil the girdled prong rests on the end of the sawed stave still in the barrel. Secure tbe barrel in that position. If tbe tree is es good s ze, i a few small nails may be driv.n ! hrough the barrel into the trunk of tbe tree, “toenailed” upward from below, perhaps will do no harm. The bi riel may b-held up in pho ny sometning built under it, or bv s rips of board securely nail dto i'S sides a tbe bulge, i heir lower ends I resting upon tne ground, or, better i sill, upon a bit of board ora brick I on the ground. Having this all arranged, put a rope around tbe top of the barrel ; and draw thestav.. s together by twist -1 ing with a ehoit lever turned like tbe handle of au aug-r. As the staves come together slip in the bit of a'av ■ that has b-en sawed out, letting it rest atop of tbe ghdied prong If rounded a little to fl ihe prongs all the better. N-xt, unlock the coop that were removed, and with email nails tack ; totin iu place around ihe barrel, afti r which the rope may be taken < ft. Now fill the b-.rrel to me top wito garden soil and keep it i wet enough to be in what we would call fair tillable cmdbion by the ad dition of water when it la needed. This water condition is of the ut most imuorance—me soil mustuever | be allowed to get. dry. Le<ve the-bairel as set until the proper time for transplanting or ange trees ihe air winter, then cut tbe noops and remove it from tne tree, dirt and all. You will find that ihe girdled piong has taken root in the barrel and tbere will be a regular mass ot fine roots. Work genii v so as not to injure them. Saw off the rooted prong from the tree and set it out where it is to remain. Two years later, it a large prong, it will be bear ing oranges Any large limb, favorably located on a tree, rcav be manag-d in tbe same way. If it inclines so much from the perpendicular as to ne.es st-ate the setting of the bairl at a consid-tab e ancle, that will make no par icular as regards effect. Then w tree can be set erect at the transplanting. There is nothing of mere toeorv in this rtiing; it has been thoroughly tested. Not long ago Mr. R. E Manly, of the bank or Mobile, told us that he had already made several new orange trees on this plan with entire success, and we think he told us they were now full of fruit, at two years from transplanting. The man who has a few large trees to work upon may increase tbe size or his bearing grove rapidly Dy a re sort to this meth 'd, tor there are often many prongs ami limbs on his old trees he could spare as well as not. Then, h iving io view this plan of propagation, be could favor it by allowing prongs and limbs to grow that would be removed under such circums ances. Then, again, tbe b- st of it is he loses but one year of fruiting in the operation (tne year of rransp'anting). for tne prong, while growing a cr< p of roots tn toe barrel may, at the same time, be growing a crop of oranges above. Honest and Liberal. When the Hops in each bottle of Hop Bitters (at the present price $1.25 per 1b.,) cost more in m a boitle IB sold lor, besides the other costly medicines, and tbe quali ty ano price are kept the same, we ttiltik it i- noueet and libeiafiu tbe proprietors, amt no one ehbuid eompialn, or buy oi use worthless stull, or cheatlug bogus im itations because the price Is Jess. A LONG CHASE. Two Brothers Who Skip are Captured on the Outskirts of the Indian Territory. About Christmas, says the Post- Appeal, Governor Stephens commis sioned Mr. Isaac Swift, of Elberton, as agent for the state to Hod and bring back to tbe state two brothers, Hall, who had run away from Elber ton pending charges for cheating and swindling and larceny after trmt. They were of good family, and had m ide 75 bales of cotton, but h d bor rowed all tbe money they could from tt.eir friends and neighbors and left for parts unknown. Yesterday Mr. Swift arrived in At lanta witn the two young men as prisoners. -nd was met bv several citiz-ns of E bert county. Ha found the young men on the further side of tie Indian Territory. They went to Elberton yesterday afternoon. Colonel Foreacre furnished them with a special train from Toccoa to Elberton, Wm. Levy, Savannah. Ga., says: “Ire e ived great benefit from Brown’s Iron Bitters when suffering with dysptpslal- Dray, Hack, and Retail Li.uor LUaiH. Be It ordained by the Mayor and Coun cil of the city of Columbus, that the fol lowing rates of license for the year 1883 shall be charged, viz: One-horse dray, express or hack.., .. S2O t wo-horse dray, express or baclt 30 Chiee-horse tiray 35 Four-horse dray 40 t wo-horse omnibus and baggage wag- on 30 Four-horse omnibus and baggage wag- on 40 Lice se shall be payable semi-annually in advance, from January Ist and July Ist respectively. Section 2. Drays or other wagons run by any person or firm Ip their own busi ness of otherwise, and hauling any article whatever (as lumber, wood, coal, dirt, etc.) and cnarclng drayage therefor, shall pay the same lioeaee as is charged other drays. Section 8. Be It further ordained that the rates of retail liquor license for 1883 shall be For first-class license S2OO For second-class license 150 Payable quarterly In advance. Section 4. Any person or firm who shall sell any spirituous or mall liquors In any quantity and allow the same to be drank on tfcijr premises, shall be required to take nut seoond-elass license la addition to such special tax as they may be other wise Hable for. Adopted In Council Dec 27’h. 1882. Cliff B. Grimes, M-yor, M. M. Moore, Clerk Council ' <Uy2wk«, LEMONS AS MEDICINE. Their Wonderful Effect on the Liver Stomach, Bowels, Kidneys and Blood. Atlanta, Ga . May 12,1883, Dr. Mozi.ey-Dbaii Sih: Alter ten years ot great suffering from that dread ful disease, Indigestion or dysyrpdr. with great nervous prostration and debl ity, caused by blllou-'iiese, disordered kidney, and constipation, much of the time unabu to attend to my business, duiing whh-b time I used all known re ~e lee, aud nt great expenae < xti.»usted the skill in many of our most eminent ptiy stulans, but continued to grow worse. I have b-en cuied bj' lour bottles of your Lemon E ixir, and am now a well man. I have recommend ed it to many of my friends stiff -ring with ihe same class of disease; It has not talkd In any case to give perrect r lief. The Lemon Elixir at the same time perma nently relieved me of a most severe case of piles of many years’ standing. Rt-v. 0.0 Davit, No. 43 Chapel street, Atlanta, Ga. ! L»mon Elixir prepare ■ by H. Mr zley, M. D., Atlanta. It ><ur druggist has nvi got the E Ixir, send fifty cents and get a half pint bottle by txpress. For sale by B Carter, druggist, Colurn bus, Ga. novl9se-tr Springer Opera House ONE NIGHT ONLY. Thursday Evening Jan. 18 h. The Eminent Oomedian, M. B. CURTIS, In bis remarkabe character creation, Sam’l of Posen, THE Commercial Drummer. As p ayed by him. 200 Nights! 200} IN NEW YORK CITY. Prices sh muil. lie erved stats nowon s*le at Chaffin's. Jan 4 4t Springer Opera House ONE NIGHT ONLY. Friday Evening January I9tli, SECOND ANNUAL TOUR —OF THE - DISTINGUISHED TR.XGIC ACTOR Mr. Frederick Warde, SUPPORTED bT A strong Company of Actors under the m’r.»ge meut of Mr. Jno- J- Collins Presenting Kn w es’ Great Five A- t P sy, ‘•VIRGINIUS,” OR. THE ROMAN FATHER Prie*s as uhubl. R-served sea’s at Cheffia'F. B- mte ana secure yuur nt ata eai y. j <ni4«st FAMILY A FAMY CS-roceries, CANNED G.ODUM) FHIiiTS, Apricots, Green G<ge Plums, Peicbes, EraPiums, Pe»is. Bla'.-k berries, Goosberries 8 r-iwb rries, Dioieons, Raspb rnes White O ' rries. Huck eb-r<i s. Red Cuerr es, Pine Apples, Iu heavy syrup, gra’e i nnf sliced, put. up by Tbuib-r & O Johnson, Bahama & WiocLer Picking Or. CANNED GOODS, VEG-TABUS, English peas, Tomatoes, Batter Beans, Okra, Okra and Tomatoes, Curo, Succotash. Soup, Meats and Fish Fine Asssortment. New and Sta fi ard Goods At living pric< s. J. J. WOOD, 167 Broad St. OPPOSITE RANKIN BOUSE, and next, to Aucston House. ““for'salr - ” HALF -IN- ESTABLISHED DRU 3 BUSI EST JOFFKR for eale half interest in the Drug Biißineßi of J. P. Turner. 3he stund. <u7 Broad Nt, is a g >od one and the butinees long est&bli bed. Tuo moot is fu 1 aud ires , em bracing everything usually kept in a First-Class Drug Store, It is a splendid opportunity fir any one de siring to embark iu a aud prod ab e busi nee-. For terms, Ac., arply to or address, PETEB PBEEB, Columbus, Ga. I janU-lm GEOKGIA KITIEV OOBREOTKD BY JOHN BLAOKMAR, BROKER and Dealer in all Stocks and Bonds. OOL.UMHUB. Mtata fiiond*. Bid Askeo Georgia is. 100 .Georgia 6a l‘>6 leorgia 7«, 18W» o,i2i Georgia Be.due 1848 ..-0? ?JluS City E&udt, MUntaSa A. B)2 AMMtf to 101 ’ to 10 kUtntoto 1- Atl.nWllM 108 ®ll. -.Qgaeta 6a i' 5 - t r . \ognata ft 109 gub tajiimbrj 7e 1' •> -Joiambus 5a >•! <■; VaGrauge 7a 10u iUo taaouti ba Lrf Havannth 7e 8* 84 tia van nah 83 bs Atlantic k Gull7a 11l @ll2 Jeniraioon mage 7a iia tSMia loorgia B R ft lv6 Georgia B B fie. 106 t • 7 Mobile & Girard 2d mtgeond O R K 108 tVeHtern Ebi Aia. lat nibgu cud C K R.. .07 a 09 Western Alabama id mtgeendeb lt/7 fi>lo9 Railroad mneka. Central, common 8 pt-r cent 100 ©lOl Georgia 11 per cent (a 147 BouinweHtem 7c. pr ci 1-6 ol»6 B B script 6 per cent W (di 9<l Jfaetory fttuca*. Eagle k Phenix, 160 A 170 Ofiumbua ,0 @7O Muscugee Uo (g>«3 Innurance stock. Georgia Home Insurance Co. li pr ct .160 @l7O Bank mock. Chattahoochee National, lu per ct.... 160 @156 Merchants A Mechanics, 10 per 0t....122 125 Misceilaneoua. Pioneer Co-Operative co, 10 per ct 108 ft 105 For Male. • 160 City of Coiumbna 7 per cent. bond. 2 City 0f Columbus B nae, SI,OOO meb, Muscogee Factory $i 00 • 7 per bond. aOßhares lagleaud Phenix factory stock. Wanted 60,006 Confederate Bonds. U. S. Land Warrants, JTolxxi. HlaoJaLXXia.x’ BROFKB AND DEALER, th all the above Stoots and Bonis All eecuri tl »s placed in ny hands for sale advertised fret at OMige. West Georgia A. & M. College B3ihinti!ton« Harris Coimly, G'a, r |lHrH College will bo open for 1 1 thH roo jti»n of bu’h «ex /f 'Wk u Monday, bth Jaumry 1883 The bulling *lll ie cotupitted, and : urnjshed with new ai.d improved JjFaOr cboo: furniture Th" bnildiov in uu cd the Lne-.t'-nd fiat st in the South. Tie Mil io par linen t, in < barge o a aiisillaD lady o unUHuai übil-tv, will equipped wti t.ew Ma husbek Th si h>.) >1 ol L ngui os will be In tbe charge >t rot, C-‘a- wb. Puckette A. M, late pro t-es r it ;Le University ot the south, fewauee. Tenn, Tne Preparatory Da artment will Le in the l cb&tgeoi vi s. a f. Branhvu. IhwMa e >.ep»r meut wll b organ sed upon tne mil’ary i.ieis Al student* wi 1 bp re- Iqu r>d 11 wear the U ileg-. unitor l, A thor on. h<y nompetent instruct >r w:l< be iu <ha ge ot ihe Military Dtpartment U.nforins maybe obtained oi G. J Peacock, O' lnmbus Attention i inVt ed to tbe iolio firing low rates oi tu<tion aud bo*rd. Per Month Ist Preparatory /2 (XI 2nd preparatory, 2 AU Collegiate, 8 00 Music, Vocal and Instrumental 3 00 Paiutiug 4 U 0 Drawing, 6U Incidtn al Fee,. 10 1 Board m«y be obtained m th« best pr.vate I amines at fr- m |io 00 to sl2 Ou per month. L-Atin, Greek French, ana G>rmau sought [ without ex'ra A thorough course in B ieiness Fomis ano 1 70 .k keeping will be given surnaa may ce- il u it. wt hmt extri charge. Payiuenta re- i quired momhly clatui ton a pleaea it an 1 healthy village situated iu "he mountain regi »n of West Geor la Parents, wt h boys end girls to educate, could nut send them to a town possessing bet ter eciucvtioual, moral, and health advantages For further iu ormation, address Dr, T, J. Broods, Secretary, Board ot Irustees, Hamil tiou, Ga., or A. I. BRANHAM, i nov7tf President. H IXVrOX ACADEJI Yr A High School for Boys and Girls. ■ Strict Discipline, ThoroWi Instruction. BOYH and Girls can here be pre pared .or bus niss or J ble entrance at any co lege i xer I cises will be resumed on (Monday) • January Btb, 1883- Stvoiaibo s and girls can obtain b -ard wi b the Prim ii al on reasonable term". ' Fur turt er particulars addnss A F. TKIMKLEv PRINCIPAL. Columbus, Ga, de.’2?-'mo j CUTSET A ■■'MALE And Female Academy. THE 'X relies of school will be re'uiu d Monday, January Bth fl 1 1-8 L T..e pn 1 c term wil: at «»me time, aud continue C 5 con i-cutive school days. All sc counts will b<j c edi’«-t with tl eir pr.> rata of tbe schucl fund i uition $1 50. $2 50 & $3 50 ac ordiug to «rad •. No de uction, except for icx.’.ews . rotrtc’ed two or more weeks To ur h r the int rest of our school, many ot uur b -t citizens have agreed to board Ita *tu de»-s at JpG.COto SS.OO per Month, wa h’ng excud'd. 100 pupils admi'ted last - i.oo year, lbs ho •! wii be in ch 'ge •1 a c’Hipetent co’p« of tea h.,T9. No iutux c Uni. i:qu is sold n the place. ior f .her ,ni r a '•’> ad 'regg. d 5.v t WE MUBPHEY. Principal. Chaules iHiLiPs, E. J. Rankin WIILIPS & RANKIN, REAL ESTATE AGENTS For liexit. Store No. 187 Breed street. Formal© or Rent ( Foley p ace on d -e H 11. 9 rooms, 18 teres For f- ale. An uJeeant r- s’ eucetn th« south eaete-npart i th. city Wii p.) per c«n: net A «ood ia-m ot «5 - ere/, w th«u ha fa He if Nat ch- > • .tL-n on tbe & R R. h with a four rm m dwell ng vu h. a largo .tore room and a :0 foot call )h • tipper t»arv of the ol t t- u dor tot rn Ja>’k s< n -treet east - i tbe i ourt House, w.tb * good four room d -e iiUH on it. Fo ir com uo«i «-s on H utb-eas? commons rents rsß per tnouih. Price S4s'» 4 -Veres land ou W- •• utou rOnd i *OO. 2 Valuable river an ati >us near Columbus The rtsiunce of W a. on Troupe ut ed. b tween Thoma* and . aulwln atreets - • room , large pantry atd 2 cloaute; g od well of uattr Wanted. A ho”P° and lot In a * ood neighborhood; price about $ 0,000 Paiiip3& Ba tkin. Ifil People’s line Steamers r- . ,1.1 s i s. ■ A COLUMBUH, G X.. Dec 10, 1882. \N AMD AFT..R THIS AND UNTIL 1 urtbur notice, tbe new and eligant Steel H ill dteamer, CHATTAHOOCHEE, Will 1 ave every Saturday at 10 a. m , for Ap«la cuicola an ■ in e mediate landings, going by Bainbridge only ondo-* n irip ihrough Tickets to Jacksonville, Fla, fro u Columbus, $18.15 From Eufauia, 1J 9l B atb are required to )e«ve promptly on adver ted time. >hipper4 are re u red ib have their !re ght t th<> b at by 10 a. m. ou day o 1 -saving, a lou will be received after that hi ur. Al! claims mnut be presented at the office, on corner Broad and Thomas streets, in order to receive prompt attention. The boats reserve the tight of not landing at in p int when considered da» gerous < n ac •ount t wi> <l, high water or timber, W. B Moore, T. H. MOORE, Freight anu Pass. Ag’t. GenT Agent, fed 26 ts MONUMENTAL MARBLE WORKS, 205 Broad St., Columbus, Ga. Monuments of the best j* Italian and American Marble ou tun i tnd made to or- | der. {fnj | We are alsn agents for a su- a* periur quadty oi Wrought Iron Railing, Fur fences and cemetery eu cioeures, DIFFERENT STYLES AND PAT- TERNS. information g ven %n I esti nates furnished on /thing la out line. __ y vaTaTE <F 010 ft Id CH TIAHOO iWfcE U -UNL Y: b, D Wilßams adm nihtrator de boot n.u o L. D. WH lain d. ce-se , has ap ple" lor leave to sed the dower lands being- H.g to the estate nf said dec as d. All parties iuteres edare hr»-by notic'd to file their obj etion’ if y they hive, on be fore the first Monday •» Feb nary, ’BB3, sbow ng cause why lexve ebon d not be gianted a Id apu icar tto sell said and*. Given under my ha- d officially ‘st Janu-ty 188 JXMKS CiSTLHBKUT jan4w4t cr.iinary. DISSOLUTION. T3E Firm of Edg'* & Prather is this day dis solved by mutual cun*eu<.. All parti s in debted to us wi.l please settl- immediately. L K. Fi GK, A. JL IBATHEB: January Bth 1883. New Finn. A Partnership has this day been entered into between A. M. Prather and 0. W. Emerson, as deal re a d jobbers in Bo.>ts and Hhoes. Th* j also intend putti' v in a line assortment of Hats aud Cups of latest st' les PKaTHER & EMERSON, January Bth 1833. Jan9te»-.frijßt A. H. FRAZER, B. E. CIVIL ENGINEER AnD SURVEYOR. ARBnENT RT»daate of tbe Unlver,ltT of Oeoriie <ff r. hie eerT.oee to tb« vnbllo. auuip, ed wlib tbe very FINBIT IHrt'BUMItNT.-f no >■ prvpe'od to lo -ork in en, Brenrh bfrar- Veylu< with di-petcb .nd aoourw, Offloe »t i. A. rn n.’i H.rdw.re More. Vrdere by melli wW reo.iv. prompt attention. oetttf. L. H CHAPPELL, PROVISION BBOK R&IMSURANCE A£T. 119 Broad St., Columbus, Ga, Home of New York, Imperial nf L »ndon. Guardian ot L ru’on. Nurthern of Lundeu. nnv2*ff fynnwn Residence FOR SALE ! Known as the olemonm $ Place, situated two m e« - of Columbus, Ga. Quart- r of a mile from ihe Uriel Acad• erny, containing twenty ac*es of lan-t, <m «bio vrs all necessary out-building* and a r- Bfden«- jf ten rooms iu excellent repair, A well us goo: vater aud iruit trees of nearly every variet? grown in this climate. Fur terms apply to G, E. THOM nb, Jr., 21440* Ait’y st Law PHCENIX - Mllfflll, (o-o) / i fi Broad St. Columbus, Ga. GOLD WATCHES WATCHES. CLOCKS, and JEWEL RY REPAIRED and WARRANTED. SPECTACLES A PPEO ALTV, which do not tire the Eye. and last lor many years without charge, T S. SPEAR. DEINTAIj CtaYltD. TIGNER & McELHANEY, Kenidetiit Dentists, 35 Randolph Street, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA. r> ESPEOTFPLLY TBNDERTHEIR SERVICE Lto the community. GRIGSBY E.THQMAS,Jr. ATTOKXEY —AND— COUNSELLOR AT LAW COLUMBUS, GA. WILL PRACTICE IN STATE AND FEDERAL Courts. Wib give pu.rsunai attention ;< t nd c!aim> in rs ■ stat-- oi Texan. Albo lias sev -r*l tracts of land for sale indifferent oortiont of Texas Also !B'*o acres of land for sale bob St Mary's, Ga,, suitable for Orange Groves or Mea 18i-nu Got on Also ?BtX- acr-’s O’ >an l u Chattahoochee county, Ga.. teij miles from th’ ity ni Omntnbus. web timbered witix pine sui ■ b e for lumbei | • ■■ ■'- ■ -A P.KiNT£R.' v B i a w f ■..■-.AV - ■ -KIA ■ COLUMBUS. OEOKOIA Pfintinganti Book Shilling. EVriftY DFd JttfPriON AT LOWM-ST JPRICEK. a LARGE variety of all kinds of Paper, 1L iA Binding Letter, Rill Heads, State ments, Packet and Noto £•» is, always on hand ■ also, Envelopes, Cards, Tags. Ac., and printed at <hort notice. TH.OMA.SsI GHLBEKT. 42 Itainlnivh Si.. Ouimslte I'ost.oftlce PATENTS obtained, and ail business in the D. 8. Paten-a ffice, or In tbe Courts attended to for MODER AT - FEES We are opposite tbe U. 8. Patent Office, en gagedin PaTENT BUSIN’BB EXCLUSIVELY aud can obtain patenteiu less time lhau tho>- from WA ‘HINGTON. We refer here, to the Post Master, the Supt of the Money Order Div., and to officials ol t-t U 8 Patent Office. For circular, advice, term*- rand reference to actual clients iu yuur own stair or county, address C, A. VV Ac CO., IPPOSIT PkCB-U C. B. Palmer & Co., NEW DRUG STORE, 208 Broad Street. B >ober’s Coiner. DRUGH, hemicals. Perfumery, Fano A'ti des, T'-bacco Cigar*-. >,ig*re tes, Sm korS G o ’a a d nil srtic es usually kept in firs . cUss Drug Store. XEW* DEPOT. Late Magazines, New p pere, Periodicals of all Kiud, Bta ionery and Writ ng mat rials. jg£*-Pre«criotlocß carefully fi led at ab 1 hours «y an . iilgiit. ■ o<l9 th •> n J. it. GKEGORI, Artiste, 3TtDio, Corner Broad alabama Stbeetb, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, Crayon Portraits a Specialty ART IHBTRUCTION IN Free-hand Drawing, Oil Painting, Water oluis: China Paint.ng. Paionna on bift, Paint ing on Hsitin. China oar tally fired. Jnly2H-tf Times Job Office 3ILL HEADS, SHIPPING TAGS, LETTERHEADS. SHIPPING BOOK." NO I E HEADS, RECEIPT BOOKS, JIKCULARS, BUSINESS CARDS HANDBILLS, POSIAL CARDS, POSTERS, VISITING CARDS, INVITATIONS, PICNIC TICKETS FANCY SHOW CARDS, Afi.l everything else In tbe Job Printlnu tine executed with neatness and dispatch Will duplicate New York orders with ex press charges added. Bring us your Job Printing and we wil give you satlsfucilou In prices and stylr w YMM. DsWolj A Co., PrtOiiifllWw WHY we ara making sn-h Tre mendous deductions in the Price of our i?OO DS« rv d WHY WE SACRIFICE SO MUCH SOLID VALUE AND GE'.’SO LITTLE BACK FOR 11'. OUR CONFESSION. We Have the Goods and you the Momy. You can get our Goods easy enough but we can’t get your Money. —-o :o So we have decided to cut prlce-i to the low -st an 1 and let goods go at prices \v>. ti, ,nk you will i av. iisn n. j. wmi w bil Suits. Pints. Coats, Vests, Hits. Shirt-., Underwear, Collars, Cuffs Handkerchiefs. Overcoats and ev. rything iu oor line will be sol 1 witnout r gard io valu- until stock taking. Don't miss this opportunity to buy genuine value in the above goods. H. J. THORNTON, Southern Clothier. 83 & 85 Hroad St. Lows’s Foundry & Machine Co. MANUFACTURERS OF ■/■) ■ ■ -« / ■ ■ // ! ) / ■ / ■ i ' /• 1 7 i / I 8 \ \ /1 I 1 /// ■ ■ // 'W h-'.. •’.’.‘J.-. ■ STEAM ENGINES. -aw Mil , Wilders’* Turbine u Mir Machinery, IRON AND BWS CASTINGS. ALSO DEALERS IN Gins, Pres.ois, Corn MiUs and (leiwral Wood-Working 3E ACIII IN IQ1« ’V. II.OIVE & Chat tan O'»e», Tenn. CLEARING OUT SALE AT J. S. JONES'. I commence to-day my Seml-annud clearing outsale, and shall offer rare indue-meuts to my customers, and everybody else’s customers to maße •he rest of their pmcheses tor the season from me. IN LADIES 0 >LOR D DRESS GOOD- 1 we < flor most notice eductions. See: Ladies Cl"*h. extra wide, u unsdian h!u •. wine. A’C , reduced from $i to 75 c rm; Shoodahs from IL to 75; Shooiahs from 75 c-n>B to M)cents: O»hmere- from $1 to 69 cents: Haahm'ires from 60 cents to 46 cents; Cashtiu rts from 5 i ce its to 85 o<nts; Robd Flannel? f pm 60 cents to 45 cents: Dress Flan uvle f oui S"C am <■ 3 i uts; Dress F.anuels from 45 ©cats to 2i cents; Plaid Dress Fiauno.s •from 50 cents to 5 cents. C mbinatton Suitings in O -hivr's. Shobdihs and Flannels regardless if c s\ and -ven at half price in rainy cases. Bay—s Suits from sls tn $8; 4 Hu ts Poms sto $7.5p; 6 Suits from $;6 to $9; 14 Suits item $7.5" to $5; 17 xiits f om $6.50 to $4. 4T<“.tfark the signal s n liter in C >mn on ard Medium I|r >ss Good?: 1,000 yards Sp itted Onsh mre h 1 wo ■!. .• good value *t 25c. w« offer at 10c 1,6 »l yards M nchester Moires, worth 30c„ wII off rat 12&c. u prj© n ver known la the history of trade for thrsu rea'iy g »od goods. VELVETS AND PLUSHES.— These Goods will be iabjucted tu a tremendous slaughter. They ♦ju rate ti e tin »> in»i os brought South. SHORT ENDS IN BLACK SILKS. -We ha v e meamrM tbo’e up and w’J bo ready to give you th on .■ t-tj i * a ii with d.e »u>age p- <e mi ached. They contain from 2>£ to 15 yards oacn, sud wi-J be on • ithe .t’r»ct ! ve Return* of this sac, FLANNELS AND JEANS.— Do you need any ? Wei, meet us at 154 and hear the prices on them. PLUMES.— We have a limited number of these pr tt; gools, most of them WHITE. It will pay y u t<- get * y figures on them. HOW IS THIS FOR A SCALPER ? BRITISH HALF-HOSE FOR 18c PER PAIR, nr.. 11 f'i tf? 1 1.500 yards—uli th re is •< fr— of 10 nuts GINGH IMS; nice DRESS STYLES SEE HERE! »tFrVßO>Nrdpery„d. RIBBONS I RIBBONS 11 Oceans of Bibbons 1 Common Rib on?, Medium li.pbi a, Fine Ribbons, Hair Ribbons Hat Bibb "I'. k -”“ h Ribbn -—all so> ts o' Ribo ■us LADIES* HATS.—have m x-d lot of he-e 'node in Strwß nrd Fe’t*. The Straw's will be give., aw y <»l iOc- - >cn th F its at 15c. Table Cloth , Towels and Napkins —W« have the lar-?'st iot of the gO'*<i« ire Ii ve ewer hidat tn k teas Dolin') y«<r; weuiipuit e knife into the price> ii'w EMBROIDERIES Have an el gt t ine of these floods, bavin lecentlyi - plentehed the stoc..; ue cul. spbciul attention of t ariiet vanutg Fine Imbroiderits to this lo . X &. JONE** LOWER M ffl LDW! —— (-O-1. I — To m etv r is?d p : c son Gert • n 1 ties ■ f go )ds and maintain our reputation for sei’ ! ' p mm THAU Tai LOBST, WF OFFER TEE UNPGECEDEN iED I E ES: Factory Obi ck« at 8 ee.ls p y rI. F '■ o'y Shecfinj. yard wide, a*. 7 cents per yaid. Best-7 cents Ci i ■ s r.du d o 5 cuts. Pep, ertll 10 4 Ste tir g, (bkached) 30 cents. TOW: . > LULU- aKil fUPKINS. Ai Ln >n Damask Tow. la, 18138 i is., 12V cen’s. DRESS GOODS. Manchester Moires, half wool, 11 cents, reduced from 25 cents. Colored Cashmeres, all wool, at, 36cents, LARGE LINE DESIRABLE DRESS GOODS AT BO GENTS, A lair investigation will eavey ;u lots of money. A Seamless Sock* extra weight* at 10 Centsi Per Pair. 1T WILL BE IMPOBSIB ’ E TO DUPLICATE THESE GOODS AT ADVERTISED PKICES. R. H. GORDON, KTKWyOFtKZ STORE. LANDRETHS'PfSHH' GEEFAQIforthe MERCHANT2Ho?'J'.®«P!3n|CEEF%© OCCUO For tho MARKET CARDEWERi'*CEtJb QECne For the PRIVATE FAMILY QEEn© OCELZwIQrOWn by nr* Handsome Illustrated Catalogue and Rural Register FREE TO ALL. MERCHANTS, SEND L'S YOUR BUSINESS CARDS FOR TRADE LIST. DAVID LANDRETH & SONS,SEED GROWERS, PHILADELPHIA Portable and Stationary