Newspaper Page Text
the daily times.
LIKUKST CIRCULATION
• t Ikiuawllti AiUueeat l» »■< TrikdlM
Hi Ddliimhiil,
Columbus, tteorssia,
BUNDAV JANUARYIB,IBB6
George P. Court, of Augusta, was
on Wednesday couvioted of larceay
utter trust, and was sentenoed by
Judge Roney to five years in the
penitentiary. His offense was the
conversion to his own use of a SI,OOO
bond that had been entrusted to his I
oare, as a banker, for safe keeping.
PltmouthChurch has cut down all
expenses except Bucher’s S2",UUO
salary, they cut from missions,
charities, etc., to keep Beecher’s ex
travagant income up, while he drib
bles about the money wasting the
larger half of it. When Beecher dies
Plymouth Church will probably erect
for their worship his brazen image.
The Atlanta Journal says: “Ooi.
Clifford W. Anderson has been ap
pointed by Governor McDaniel to
represent the Btato of Georgia at tin
ceremonies of unveiling the Wash
ington monument February nex .
He has also been notified that he
would be expected to serve on the
staff of Gen. P. H. Sheridan, wno will
be marshall of the day on that oceu
eion. This Is quite an honor to
the Georgia military.”
The Vindicator expects Greenville
to have a big boom when its railroad
gets in good and regular workiug
order. We hope it may, but wnat
about Cnipiey? Will not the going
up of the oue cause a sort of come
down of the other? In other words,
Is there business enough at that end
of the road to sustain a boom in two
cities so close together as Cbipley
and Greenville, with good trading
statljns between them? The Vindi
cator represents a most delightful
little city, and we hope every expec
tation of Its people may be fully
realized.
Athens, Ga,, Jau. U. Mr. Lem
Howard, of Jackson county, has late
ly discovered that he is the decen
daut of the Q mens of England, and
that he is.the legal heir to $7,000,000,
His title .la. Lord of Baltimore. Mr.
Howard is employing lawyers to look
after his claim, and it is more than
probable .that ha will sail for Eng
land before the leaves again begin
to turn and olaim his title and for
tune.
Savannah, Jan. 15.—The body of
Jas. McGarvin, a white man, was
found floating in the back river to
day and brought to the city. At the
inquest to-day it was developed that
McGarvin, with a companion named
Andrew Welsh, borrowed a boat to
go to Murray Hill, up the river.
They bought some things (among
them a bottle of whisky) and started
back. This was on the 20th of Decem
ber. Nothing was heard of either
until to-day, when the body of Mc-
Garvin was found in the river.
Welch’s body has not yet been found.
It is supposed that the parties got
drunk and.either fell out of the boat
and were drowned, or the craft was
upset.
Tired of Being Depressed,
When people get to disputing
whether times are hard or not, it
would seem reasonable to suppose
that times cannot be extremely bad.
The years open with the optimists
and pessimists hard at it, each Bide
armed with arguments of a cogent
nature; but the optimists are likely
to win In the long run, as the Ameri
can people, now fifty million strong,
in the richest country on earth, must
sooner or later grow tired of being
depressed. By this time the bad
symptoms are well known, and it ie
natural that the signs of healthy
growth and development should re
oeive attention. It appears that, in
spite of shutting down, half time,
slack trade and the like, the number
of operatives out of work !s less than
350,000. Tms oannot b regarded as
abnormal In the depth of winter, oui
of a population of 50,000 000, and as
tbS percentage in New England i
ouly 7 percent,, while In Minnesota
It ranches 40 per cent., it is evident
that manufacturers are not by any
means in their last gasp, but art
holding their own with firmness. A
recent canvass of trade ai! over the
land shows, too. that stocks are uc
usually light,and inquiries for spring
delivery are numerous. Things do
not long remain at the point where
men starve because bread is so cheap
and where they cannot clothe them
selves and possess comfortable home?
because garments and furniture cost
so little.—lndustrial America.
Cotton Crop £ B t mates.
Kew York Commercial Bulletin.
'The New OrleansTimes-Democrat
Louisville Courier-Journal and other
papers make serious complaint as to
the alleged "bad blunders” of the
Department of Agriculture in its cot
ton crop estimates. The complaint
is fortified by statements which cer
tainly call for some explanation on
the part of the Department. Thus
the statician estimated the crop in
October at 6,250,000, in November at
6,888 000 and Id December at 5 580 000
dropping 670.000 bales in two months
"The crop,” says the Times-Demo
crat, "was not reduced 670,000 bales
during October and December. The
Injury to It was long anterior to this
and was due to the drouth that pre
vailed in the summer, and which had
the effect of stopping the fruitage of
cotton much earlier than usual. It
was before October that the greatest
damage was done, and that a com
paratively small crop was assured
notwithstanding the large acreage
under the staple. The department
ought to have known this,but did not
discover it until long after it had been
published to the world through un
official channels.” The eff ots f this
wnd figuring we are then told are
most Injurious to the trade,inasmuch
as the greater portion of the cotton
was sold under the disadvantage ol
an over estimate of the crop, produc
ing iow prices. In other words the
Depar mant, which is oreated
specially in the interest of agricul
lural classes, has injured ti«em by
putting forth erroneous reports as to
the prospective yield. It now re
mains to he seen what, the Depart
ment has to say in defence,
Dll. TALMAGE’S SERMON.
Brooxi.vn, N. Y,, Jan. 11.—A series
of levivaiistic servioes is now in pro
gress In the Brooklyn Tabernaole,
and is exciting great interest in tbe
publio mind. The opening hymn
was:
•«Oome Holy Hp’rtt, he»venly
Wit* all tlij qq ciemug power*l"
After expouudioK appropriate pus*
sages oi Scripture Dr. I'm Image
preached on the subject "Awaken
ing 1” taking his text from Malachi
ill, 1: "Behold I will send my mes
senger and he shall prepare the way
before me; and the Lord, whom ye
seek, shall suddenly come to ids
temple, even the messenger of the
Covenant, whom ye delight in, be
hold, He shall oome, saitu the L jrd
of hosts.” Dr. TMmage said:
fciometim s a minister’s subjeot is
suggested by his arijstio tastes; some
times by the occurrences of the pre
vious week ; sometimes by a hearer
wh desires some particularrellgious
tubjsct discussed, My subject comes
in no such way. it drops stiaigh'
(rom God into my heart. Give me
vour prayerful aud intense listening.
I want to snow this moi Ding so far as
God may help me tnat tbe greatest
need cf the church universal is a
mign y awakening. Tne ox in the
pasture hold looks around aud per
tiaps oom-, s to the conclusion that all
the world Is a clover Held. So we,
standing in the midst of luxuriant re
ligious advantages. tnl-bi iumk p- r j
mips thit the earth is covered with
the knowledge of G id; DU’ s> far
from that, If this platform w-re the
world, so muoii of it as i now cover
with my right so it would represent
ail that is conquered for Emauuel.
Ur if tnis wnote rrbernaole were trie
world, then one p,-w wou'd represent
so muon of it as the grace of God nas
already conquered. O i there is ueed
ot a radical changet Something
must be doue and 1 snail show this
mu thing that the greatest need of
the oouroh is a great awakening.
1 learn this need lu ihe first place
from the culdn sa in the majority ot
church members. It a religious so
defy nave a thousand members,eight
buudred of them are sound asleep,
if it nave five hundred members,four
hundred are leihargie. If the Chris
tiaas eau rally—that is, the professed
Christiana—for communion day, and
succeed in not dropping the wine cup
now' many or tuem are satisfied? If
it be a choice between Ohiisr, and tne
world, the world has it. You know
it as well as I do. If a religious meet
tag be on a certain night, and on that
same night tnere bo an extraordinary
operatic entertainment, or a social
gatheiing, or a literary club, or a
political meeting, or a Free Mason
society, or an Odd Fellow’s associa
tion, you know whioti they go to'
God there rainy demonstrating that
while suoh professed Christians pre
teod to be on His side they are really
on the other side; for mere is a point
clank issue between Christ and the
world, and the world has it. You
know very wail whether you aie a
professed Christian or not; you know
very well that tbe dividing line be
tween the ohurch and the world to
day is—like the equator, or Arctio or
An arctic circle —an imaginary line,
and that there are men and women
sworn of God who sit discussing in
finitesimal questions: "Shall we
Jauoe? Shall we play cards? Shall
we go to the theatre? Shall we at
tend the opera?" while there are live
millions of the race going down to
darkness unwarned. Tuese sham
Christians will go on, occasionally
taking a little religion with the tip
end of their Augers, sauntering on
lazily towards the b ir ot Christ, untii
thev come in front of God’s swift re
volving mill, and And themselves to
oe "the chaff which the wind driveth
away.”
Oa, how much dead wood we have
in ail our churches. The Day of
judgment will make a teariul thin
ning out among professed Christians.
I suppose it will be found on that day
that there are hundreds of thousands
of men who have their names on the
church books who really made re-
Tgion a seojnd rate or a third rate
thing; living for themselves,unmind
ful of God aud the salvation or the
race, and then tumbling over the
embankment where Judas went, and
Achan weur, and Where all those
shall go who do not make religion
tne primordial thing—the first and
the last matter ot the soul. On,
w ridiy prob-ssor or religion, vaoiila
ting professor, idle professor,tremble
before God to day. Do you not know
that if you die as you are. all the com
munton tables at which y,,u hav
ver sat will lift up h -.nds’of bloo.l.
crying for your condemn ttion ! Ana
your neglected B.ble and you:
prayerless pillow winery : ‘ Godown I
jo down ! you pretended to have re
iigion but you h-rd none. Oat. of the
seven days of the week you gave not
live hours to Christ. Y>u broke vour
sacramental oath, Gj down! go
town!" And the fiercest and mighti
est thunderbolt of God’s indignation
that is ever forced will smite you into
darkness. On, I would rather be th:>
than in the fast day who has never
seen a church than you who professed
to be so much,and to do bo much.aDd
yet did Duelling. You shall perish in
the way wheu God’s wrath is kindled
out a little. O worldly professor oi
r> iigion—and there are hundreds of
the a here to-day, I am aiming at the
mark—if you could to-day rea|iz»
your true condition, and your true
position before God, you would bi*e
vour lip until the blood
came; you wouid wring your
hands until the bones cracked;
you would utter a cry that
would bend this whole audience to
their feet with a horror. May God
wake you up. worldly professor of re
ligion, berore you wake up in the
barred aud flaming dungeons of a do
stroyed eternity. When you look
abroad and sea lethargy amoDg the
professors of religion almost all the
world over, do you not see that there
Is a need that the bugles and the
ovmbals and the drums and the
trumpets of all earth and heaven call
upon the church to wake up all those
dormant professors ot religion?
"Awake, thou that Bleepest; awake
and Christ shall give thee life.”
Still further, I see a need for a
great awakening in the faot tna
those of us who preach the gospel
have so little enthusiasm and zeal
oompared with what we ought to
have. N iw, you see. the gun kicks.
I say, we who preach the gospel have
so little zeal and enthusiasm for
Christ compared with what we ought
to have. Oa, it’s a tremendous thing
to stand berore an audience on Sab
bath days realizlug the fact that the
nnjority or them will believe what
you say about God and tne soul and
the great iuture. Suppose a man
asked of you the road to ncertain
piaoe, and you carelessly and falsely
told him, and afterwards vou heard
that through lack of right direction
that roan was lost on the mountains,
fell over the rocks and lost his lire
you could not forgive yourself. Ym
would say: "I wish I had taken
more time with that man. I wish I
had given him such specific directions
that he would not have been lost.
How sorry I feel about it!” But on,
| to misdirect the eternal interests of a
! large congregation I fl >w cold and
j stolid we stand in our pulpits, actual.
;lv sometimes priding ourselves on
I our deliberation, when we have no
right to bo cold, hucl ought, to be al
most frantic with the perils that
( threaten our hearers, So much so
■ ■—— V . -- " . . . .
DAILY TIMES: COLUMBUS. GEORGIA. ,SUNDAY. .TANT)AR/vTh Tssk
that some of us give no warning at all
aud we stand Sabbath arter Sab
bath, talking about "human
development,” and we pet
men on the back,and we please them,
and we sing them all down through
the rapid 4 to the last plunge; or, as
the poet has it:
•Mmonth down the stubborn text to toira polite
And tnugly keep damnation out oi ilg-itl”
O, my brethren lu the ministry—for
I see them always in the au-dieuce—
my brethren in the ministry, we can
not afford to do that wav. It you
prophesy good things, smooth things
to your people, without regard to
their character, what chance will
there be for you In the day when you
meet them at the bar of God? You
had better stand clear of them (hen.
They will tear you to piecoß. They
will say: “I heard you preach live
hundred tim- s, and admired your
philosophic disquisition and your
graceful gestures, and your nicely
moulded sentences, cutvillihear and
stelliform, and I th night you were
the prince ot proprieties; bur you
didn’t help me prepare for this'fay.
Cursed be vour ihetoric, cursed be
your art. I ie going down ai d I’ll
take you with me. It is your fain ;
witness nil the hosts of heaven and
all the hos s of darku sr. It is your
fruit, sir.” And the chorus win
c-une up rrom ail worlds : "His fault!
His fault!” All of us who preach this
gospel need to speak as thougn the
pulpit quaked with the tramp ot eter
nal realities, as though beneath us
were the bursting graves of the
resurrection morn, as though risiug
above us tier after tier, w re the
myriads of heaven looking down
ready to applaud our fidelity, or hiss
at our stolidity, while coming through
the Sabbath air were the long, deep,
harrowing groan oi the dying nations
that are never dead. May God, with
a torch from Heaven, set an me pul
pitsof England, Scotland and Ireland
and the United Stales on fire. As lot
luyself.staudlug note iu this presence
i his morning, I feel as it I had never
begun to preach. If God will forgive
me tor the past I will do better for
the future.
i‘ Tia not i cause of small Impart
1 he p istor’s care domautic;
but what might UUau angel’s heart,
It filled a Savior's bauds.
"They watch for souls for which the Lord
Did heavenly Mlse forego;
For souls that must forever live
In raptures or in woe."
Still further: I see a need for a
great awakening in the fact that the
kingdom of God is making such slow
progress. I simply state a fact when
I say chat in many places the church
is surrendering and the world is
oonqueriug. Where there is oue man
brought into the kingdom of Goa
through Christian instrumentality,
there are tea men dragged down by
dissipations. Fifty grogshops built
to oue ohurch established. Literary
journals iu diff.rent parts of the
country filled with scum and dand
ruff and slang; controlled by the very
scullions of society; depraving every
thing they put their hands on. Three
hundred and tea newspapers and
journals and mavaziueaiu New York,
and more than 200 of them depraving
to the publio taste, if not positively
inimical to our holy Chiistianity.
Look ahroad and see the surrender,
even on the part ot those that pre
tend to be Gnristian eburohes, to
spiritualism and humanuarianism
and all the forms ot devilism. If a
man stand in his pulpit aud say
chat unless you be horn again you
will be lost,do not the tight kid gloves
of the Christian, diamonds bursting
through, go up to their foreheads in
humiliation and shame? It is not
elegant. A mighty host in the Chris
tian church, positively professing
Oaristianity, do not believe in the
Bible, out and out, in and in, from
the first word ot the first verse ol the
first chapter of the book of Genesis,
down to the last word of the last
verse or the last chapter of the book
of Revelation. On, we have niigum
oent ohurch machinery ia this coun
try ; we have 60,000 American minis
ters, we have costly music, we have
great Sunday schools, and yet I give
the faot that while the great cause oi
God is marching on, there are many
regiments falling back, and it the
army does not come to complete
route—aye, to ghastily Bull Run de
feat—it will be because some tudivid
ual churches hurl themselves to the
front, aud ministers ol Cniisi, tramp
ling on tne favor of this world and
sacrificing every thing,snail snatch up
cne turn and snattered bann- r ot
Emanuel, and rush ahead, ciying:
Oul on! This is no time to mn.tnis
is the time to advance.”
I see still lurcher the need of a
great awakening In tbe multitudinous
going down of unforgryan scuis.
Since mmy of you cam* on i ha stag''
jf action, a wnoie generation has
gone into 'he gates of eternity, Youi
opportunity to act upon them is gone,
they have disappeared from th
churches, from the stores, the shops
tne streets, from the homes. You O
Christian man, had an oppororot-y or
meeting i hero. You did meet them.
You ta ked with tntrn on otbarnuo
jeots. You had an opportunity of
sayn g tne saving w ord, aud you did
nut say tt.-a sav.ng word Just thirds
of ihatl Oa, where is the fountain,
where, with sleeves rolled up,we may
wasn our hands from the blood of
souls? The only question is, whether,
as Christian man and women, we can
now interrupt the other procession
that is mauhing down and will after a
while, if uuarrested by God’s grroe,
fail off. There are going out from
our stores hundreds of thousands of
clerks; goi-ig out irom our factories
Liu dreds of ihousauds of operatives;
t.nere are going out from our colleges
nundreds of thousands of students;
there are going out of our fields hun
dreds of thousands of husbandmen,to
j Jin the ranks of death. They are
fighting their way down. They storm
and take every impediment put in
tueir way, aud who wili throw him
self iu the way of this stampede of
dying men and women—who? crying,
"Halt! halt!”
Is it not time for something despe
rate? Inanimate solicitation will not
do. They will not stop for that. You
need a momentum gathered by a
whole nignt’s wrestle with theomfi
potent God. Oh, these dying souls 1
these dying soul3l What shall we
say to them? What shall we do fir
them? Catch th m before they make
the last spring. Put down everything
else and tun tor the rescue. To
morrow may be too late. Three
o’clock this afternoon may be too
late. Now reach over the pew and
seize that soul before T flashes out of
your sight forever. Their house is
on fire ;and no ladder to the window.
Their ship is going down and no life
boat. Oh, men and women of God,
awakelawakel Oh, that all rewards
aud punishments, ail joys and sor
rows, and the agonizing and raptur
ous vociferaTOLS of three worlds
would arouse you to-day I O God,
flame upon us thesi overwneiroing
realties! Kill our stolidity. K,ook
from under us our couohes oi ease.
Consume our indifference and threw
us into the battle. An eternity of
work—an eternity cf work o do in
ten years. Aye, perhaps in one year,
perhaps in onemonth.perhaps in ne
day, perhaps in oue hour, par ha os n
oue minute perhaps iu one second,
and this the last. But no one drops
down and so I think God is going to
sp ire us to w-.be up out of our i ,do
lecoe, and realize the truth that the
greatest need of the chucn to-d iy is
a gri at awakening.
I Deed uot rehearse la this prea-
I enoe what God has done for us as an
individual church, You have heard
with your own ears the cries for
mercy, aud you have seen the talning
tesrs of repentance. Ido not believe
that there is any church In this land
that owes God more gratitude than
this chuoh owes Him to dav. But
who oan count the number of our per
manent congregation who are not
Christians? Aud what about the
eighty or hundred thousand souls of
strangers thnt during tbe last year
II iated in and ou f our atsi-Uiblages.
and what about the eternity of those
who are now and will be this year In
our permanent congregation ; and the
eighty or one hundred thousnd souls
that during this coming tw five
months will float in? If John Liv
ingston ia a small ohurch in one ser
vice had five hundred souls brought
to G ■i, why may you not in a larger
ohurch have three thousands souls as
easily as he h»ri five huritired? It is
the same Gospel, John Livingston
did not save them. It is the same
Holv Ghost. It Is the same great
Jehovah. If John Knox could put
the lever of prayer under Scotland
until he moved <t from end to end,
ei)«ll you not by the lever of impor
tunat petiiion move this whole city
>f Brooklyn from the East
riv r to N w Utrecht, and
t orn N w Utrecht to Lmg
island Oitv? God oan do It and
He will do it, if you mighdlv nod ra
bmUeesly ask Him to do it, Oa, fling
body, mind aud soul.and eternal des
t.iuv into this oue thing. Swing out
and enlarge In vour pnyerftd expec
tations. You asked God for hundreds
cf eouls and He gave ihem to you,
and 1 sometimes heard you ask fur
thousands; and I um vey certain that
if you had asked fur thousands with
the same faith you asked fir bun
irers, God would hsve given you
thousands. There is no need, ia this
presence, of bringing the old stereo
fvped illn trations cf the fact that
God hears Dray r, nor telling you
ahou H z kiah’s iester- d health,ana
about Eujth anil the gi-at rain and
ibout ihe post mortem tx-.minaiioo
of tile Apcstia James, wuleh found
that his knees had become callous by
much praying; nor of Richard Baxter
who stained the walls of his study
with the breath of prayer; nor of
John Welsh and tbe midnight plaid:
nor of George Whitfield flat on his
face before God, No need ot my tell
ing you these tbiogs. I turn in on
your own oohsciouuess aud I review
the memory of that time wheu your
own soul was sinking and God heard
your cry : and of that time when your
child was dying and God heard your
petition ; and of that time when your
fortune failed and God set in your
empty pantry the cruse of oil and the
measure of meal. I wan noillustra
tiou at. all.
I just take a ladder with three rungs
and sec It down at your feet. Oa that
vou can mount up, and, if you wili
look off,see the salvation of ten thou
sand of you fellow-citixsns. "Ask
and it shall be g ven you. Seek and
ye shall find. Knock and it w.ll t-e
opened unto you.” Put your right
foot on the lower rung of that ladder
and your left foot on the second rung
of it, and that will bring your right
foot on the top rung. Then hold fast
and look out and see the wave of the
divine blessing dashing higher than
the top gallants of your snip. Oh,
yes; God is ready to hear. I think
the Lord put on us as a churob a
grea responsibility. We set our
nands to the work of evangelization.
Jfe are doing nothing else here. We
do not want to do auytmng eise here
but this work of evaugeiizition. That
is, we want to bring men aDd women
to Christ and bring them now. Ido
not know how you feel, my brethren
but my heart is breaking wit h a lodk
ing tnat I have for the redemption of
this people. If God does not give me
my prayer, I emuot endure it. I of
fer myself,l offer my life to this work.
Take- it, O Lord. Jesus, and slay me it
that be beat. Whether by my life or
by my death may a great multitude
of souls here be borne to God. Ii
from the rnouud ot grave more can
step into tne king fom ot God than
through my life, let me now lie down
to the last sleep. But only let the
people be saved. Lord Jesus, it is
sweet to live for Thee; methinks it
wouid be sweet to die for Thee. If iu
the N .polejulo wars all millions tell;
if in the wars of the Roman Empue
one hundred and eighty minions fell,
shall there Dot be a great many in
our day who are wiliicg to sacrifice
>ot only worldly amtitluu, but sacri
flea tt.fi f ir Chris ?
S, H. TIGN£R,
DEALER IN RFAL ESTATE
B/ KTJW, POLK OOUNTY, FLA.
Will Buy or Sell Beal Estate. Corres
pondence solicited Any lntormatlon given
m regard to healin, eilin tte, Ao.
j ihlß vtf
Msrciiants, Banker* and Mji.ufdcturers
diioUL. i<L»D
BEAD iTH uETS
a wekkly journal of trade finance,
ANDfPUBLIC ECONOMY,
Sixteen P.iges Every .Saturday. OjUtnhm/s Tweney
Pages Someiimes Twenty-iour Paget
FIVE DOLLARS A YEAR.
Thu foremost purpose of Pbadbt'Kkt’s 1b to
be of pr&o leal B«rri e X> uuaii->.-ais uieu. ltd
dpeci&i and luduetrUl iep(n t«; its weefei
ep t o.e of ba« kruj. toiea tHroujjßou l tbe Unia d
Sta-OB a <1 ah a th> suoimtr ee oi a<.aeis
And Labilities, arc Alone wo th the ruosoripiion
pnoe; La synopses of reo-Dt legal de uioua are
ec-e i iily th, aahie As oommsre a trAOBA:-*
tlojib, ia the wider henae, Are i oulck ',o b«. more
and moth conducted on a sta iitioal bisis, the
inforixation contained lu B&adstexet a <g ol th.,
fir t lruyoitance both t' prootioera aud middle
men.
.Tbe trade and Agricultural situation
throrwhout tie U lteddtaiea and Canada
ia reported by up to toe dour ol
Publication.
81NULE COPIES, TEN CENTS.
THE COMPANY.
279, 281, 288, Broadway,
Tew EorkCitt.
m i more money than at an> thing else by
J taking an agenoy for the In st leiilng
4fb ok out, BeKlonera Huooaed grand
None fail Term* free Hatharr Boo* Co,
and, Maine deo».d«_Q-wly
Valuable Plantation for Sale
or Rent.
X offer my plantation (or .aio or rent, lrino
In Talbot county, thrae uallea nortb ol Boi
Springe. Ptrtlei that arlan to look can oall on
undersigned.
M. W. HOLLIS.
PATENTS
Obtained, aud ail PATENPj BUSINESS
attended to for MOUEHa i E FEEs.
Our office is opposite ttie U. a. Patent
Office and we oao obtain Patents in legs
time than tnose remote trora Washington.
Send MODEL OK D RAWING. We ad
vise as to patenuibHity ir-e oi charge; and
we make NO OtiAKiiE UNLESS PAT
ENT' IS SEOUKED.
We reler, here, to tbe PoetmaPter, the
SupI'., 1 '~ o' Money O der Dl’v, and to offi
cials ol the U. 8. Patent Office. For cir
cular, advice, teims and references to
actual olloets lu your own state or coun
ty, J#rUs to
C. V SNOW ACO„
! Opposite Patent Office, Washing ion. D. O
CAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000J
Tlekut* only 95. glmrea In Proportion.
Louisiana State Lottery Company.
“Wo do hereby certify that Wo tbe
arranKLrut-utM for all tae Monthly ana boml
\nnual Drawings of The Louisian* State Lot
tery Company and In person manag* and con
trol tho Drawtu*'* themselves, and that tbt
same are conduotod with honesty, falruees, anr.
la «ood faith toward ail parties, and we autho:
lie the Company to nee tula eurtlftoato, with i
rao-simlles of our signatures Attached, In its ad- I
vartuiemeute ”
tomratuloners.
Incorporated In 186? for 26 years by the t,eglf*
Uture for Educational and Charitable purpose)
—with a oapital of fl.uOO.Ot,)')—to which a r-'serv
fund of over $560,000 i;ae since been added.
By an overwhelming popular vote its franohiai
•/as made a pirt ol the present btate Constitu
tion adopted December 2d, A. D., lbW. (
The only Lottery ever voted on and endorsed
by the people of anj Hi Ate,
no ver soalt's or postpones* ,
Itrt Lmnd ‘►mule MtiuDrr inrswliiKß
lake place miMiiliiy,
A HPLKHUiik OFPOKTIJKITV Til Wilt
A rOHIDKr. SifiO; N 0 (IRANI) I RAWING.
JI. >H It IN THE At’Al>F!Vn Ol MI RIO, fcF.W
ORLEANS, TUESDAY; February 10, 1885—
177th Monthly Drawing.
CAPITAL PUIZL,im.OOO»
UMl.fiott Tickets at Five deilara Kaectu
I factious, ia Fifths In proportion
LIMT Otf raiALd.
1 CAPITAL PRIZL.
1 do do 26,000
1 do do 10,011
2 PBISKBOF *6000.. 12,(X0
6 do 2000,..., 1u.0cu
IU do IOW - lo,oi 0
20 do 6Uv. .a. 10,41 u
I do 20u 2G,C i-O
500 do lUO. 80, W 0
00 do 10.,* a**..****.. 26,040
1000 do 26 26,000
APPUOXIMAIIOM FS&ZBM,
9 Approximation Fmes of $750.*. $ «,76i
2 do do 600... A.6W.
9 do do 250.-, 2,26 t
1967 Prlsea amounting t 0.... .. 9266.50 C
Applications for rates to olabs should be made
July to the oldie of the Company In Na*
Dr leans.
For further informatloa write ulearly, giving
’ all address. .\OTLn, Express
Money Order*, o. is* w York in ordc
uarj letter. Express (all suma of
f 6 auci upward* at our expense) address
SC. A. JDAUriiIN,
Neve Oricwut,
or VI- A. UAI PHllt,
hdl Hrvehih st., WueUlmiJU U, t
Make P. O. Money Orders payable and address
Registered Vetter6 to
v£W NATIONAL fitNli,
New orleaua, La.
OEOROIA securities.
Corrected by John ItiiicUmar,
Broker and Dealer In all btooks aud Bonds.
UOLLUUIb, 9A,
•Sr * a Heads.
Bid Aakt'd
Georgia******..... 100 iu2
jteorgia Us .*..1u7 lot)
Jcurgla 7s, .**...*****l23 124
Georgia 7s. 18116. 110 111
City iLwad*.
Auaut* b* ..***.lol 102
UiAUta 7s . ......106 lOfc
Yuan la b5...*«....» *....*...112 lit
Uianta 10s * lua 112
tugusta 6s..** **-.......106 107
Augusta 75..*..*.... .................. 106 H-fc
J»,i imbua 7s* 110 I*2
Jolumbus 6s 88- »4
LaGrange 7» „.lou 102
A*oon 05.......**....*... *..U>O It 2
jsvbuUkli >fc.**. 63 64
IXulUouc' btndff.
-Atlantic A Gull7a.. 110 IU
Joutrai con mtge7a.*~*. 10& 10Y
Georgia k it 7s. *..100 100
Joorgla K li 6s ..10l 10z
Mobile 6l Girard 2d end O ii 1 107 luo
•V bteru L R Ai*. isl Ultge end (J h R.. 102 110
Western Alabama 2d mtg< end bh-.**..Uo IU
A&zMiroaa 4toclt».
Central, common 6 per 0ent,.......... 76' li
Georgia 11 percent ~**..146 180
Southwestern 7c, prot.... 100 170
J i; R script 0 per cent.... 64 47
Factory SUe&m.
JUagie A Fheuix 9b 10
OOitUnbUß 23 24
Mnacogee 96 Vfc
liicur&iice stock.
Georgia jJomu iLHurance Go, 12 pr 01..13U. 181
Hank stock.
UhatUhoocliet National, 10 perct....
Murohanis & .aeonanicH, 10 per ofc..*.l2<D 120 i
.Mi^cellcuieuti*.
Pioneer Go*Operative Go, 10 per 0t.,. 96 100
For
20 shares Konth Western R. 8., 7 per oi nt.
guaranteed stuck.
10 fchsrus Ccutrai K, k. stock.
1' x-hares Chattahoochee Loan Association
stock.
10 shares Muscogee Lean Association Stook.
at a discount.
U» aii*. * ■ feorgla Gome 1 • urajee Go.
JO Qlia r BB Coiumbns hßJsoay Stock.
t,OUO Mobile & Gliara railroad 6. jer cent,
bonds.
20 Bh*ree Musoogf . Fsctc'y stock,
a shares
Buyer gets the seml-anuaia 4 per cant, dlvi
e’eud, due D<- ot’aiber du.
Wanted
60.(}ixi uor?ed r*te bonds. Or any part.
U. «. Lnua Wai rants,
5,t'00 City ox C lurnbas boaida 6 per cent
boud«,
.IOIIV BLACkJf Us,
BBOKEIi AND Li.VI.AiLbL
in an the above dtcckt. and ior.ds. AI. veou
sn my bauds ‘n*- vor<-pd/r*^
of
COMPLETE STOCK
IOV II!
CLOTHING
Made to Order!
FOR FALUNfI WINTER
8884.
i Beautiful Liue o::
FfKCI HOODS!
A Great Variety of
Styles and Prices!
DOMESTIC, AMERICAN
and FOREIGN GOODS.
Your Order Solicited NOW.
Goods may be delivered
any time during the next
thirty or sixty da' a.
G. J. PEACOCK.!
ClothiDfe- Manufacturer,
Bft 66 M St. COlllllllS, *_-fa
TAX fAIKKS ATTENTION.
STATE AND COUNTY TAXES 1884.
All who ha vs not paid taxes for 1884 are
earnestly requested to do sc at once, and
save Oort or Execution. Lent and saue.
The law demands prompt eettlPtcent from
Tex Collectors, and It cannot uc much
loi.hui deferred.
DAVIS A. AND UIOWS,
Tax Collector Huso* gse County.
OflUe: Georgia Utme Building, u 1
IMMENSE STOCK
OF
Hamburg Embroideries
ANI)
TORCHON LACES
AT
BAROAIN PRICES,
AT
J. ALBERT KIRVEN’S.
TRADE PALACE
169 and 161 Broad Street, Opposite Rankin House.
A FAI3 FIELD--ND FAVfIIOFFEHING PLUMS!
O
350 pairs of 10y4 lilankets at 75c per pair.
Our i xperlenee in this city tells us id unmistakable language that
NOWHeRE in this iiroad land are courtesy and fair dealing surer of
success than in CT LUMBUS.
Tne vast c in-nt of out business—three large establishments at
AUGUST A, SAVANNAH, COLUMBUS,
Guarantees to our customers the supreme advantage of buying from
first hands. We make no wild assertions—OUß FIGURES HPEAK.
IIONIE R Y |
140 DOZEN 1 idi< a end Misses’ Ingrain Hose, full regular, marked from
37J • 10 250.
500 DOZEN L idles’ striped Hose, extra heavy, at sc.
275 DOZEN Gems’ striped Half-Hose, heavy, at sc.
275 DOZEN Lodes’ Balhriggan, eolid colors, reduced from 50c to 33j0.
SO IS; ewmarkets
MARKED BELOW COST TO < LOSE THEM OUII
$5.50 Newmarkets for $3 50 i 20 Russian Circulars from
9,0 U Newmarkets for 675 | $7 60 to sl2 00,
Juei wnat they cost tbe Miinu'aoturer.
BA-FiGuAUSTS iisr
Towels, lame uamask, Napkins and Doyles.
Our sale of BLACK GRO GRAIN SILK still continues. One more
piece of that Uelehiated 990. bILK, equal to any In this market at
$1 50. A full line of
COviTAULDS ENGLISH CKAPES.
GENTS’ SHIRTS, GENTS’ SHIRTS 500.~
LVUNIRIED, UNLAUNDRIED, »sc.
;)-ply (’nil, and Rossom, Xbe bMt ln the worldfortlwmuceyl
sifei 00. ~. 75 DOZEN
80 DOZEN G NTS' Ml KINO Ladles’ Merino Vests
Scotch Kray Wool Suits
AT. si OO Suit, -hi- 1 v -li u.-'l iliiwn f’om $1 50 to SI,OO.
SLACK CAt IIMERES AND MODRNING 0001)3 have passed
beneath the pruning knife
-5u pieces 36 WOOL CASHMERES at 250 have beeD 37J0.
25 pieces 38 VfOOL CASHMERES at 35c—h ive been 60n.
15 pieces 48 in tne grandest Goods out, « yards to a dress, were $1.25, now 950
C. P. GRAY & CO.
COLUMBUS, SAVANNAH, AUGUSTA.
J. A. CALHOUN, F. B. BROOKS,
14 Yeat s with 15 Ycurci with
1,-. UOOJM EY, COEUaiHUri IliON WOltKd
CALHOUN & BROOKS.
DKlkljKriM IN
Furniture, Shades, &c.
142 Broad Street, Next Door to Central Hotel.
THE BEST SELECTED STOCK
JN THE CITY, AND THE
PRICES LOWER
Than Anybody.
GIVE US A T.IIAL AND WE WILL SATISFY YOU
Min 11l lints Ci.
his Old aud R -ifable Ov.-rgla Oudioaiiy uuntinuss to taka Fire risks of all kinds
Charter perpetual. DIVIDEND No. 26 FOB 1884, per tent.
The PHCENIX, of Hartford, Conn.,
ROCHESTER-GERMAN, of New^York,
All solid Companies, represented In this) Agency, bates low. Losses promptly
adjusted,
B- 3. MURDOCK, A^ent.
■ imiw mull lacacargaaa—Maa—■—
Asthma.
Ur. o. w. To.aple’a A«tl ro» Spsclfto. Tbi
"eat rem.-dy t vsr c 'v pcumled for ibe cure < j
Let dietrewHi! i maiidy. Prise 81 aud ff. p*r
lottle. Ask your rngviet for It. Retd 2-cem
4’imp for troailpe to
Or. i'rmple w d'e ne To., COMPOUND
KKS. H a t< ILTON, O.
v ‘ 1 b' J K ' 'lnnU, Ha
LAW PARTNERSHIP.
We have this day formed a partnership
(or the pr actice of law under the
name ot
PEABODY, BRANNON & BATTLE.
•W Collect ions and all other business
placed In cm hands will be promptly anu
.carefully attended to. ‘
t. . \/
John Pbabcdt,
WM. H. liKANNON,
OCtl-tf CAIAimON JL Hattt.p .
i Jordan's Joyous Julep
Will cure the worst cane of
NAilO liALGIA
And nervous headache In a few minutee;
tooth and ear ache in two minutee. Noth*
like It ror pain, it acts like magic.
it you suffer ask your druggist for
JOhl>/Ux‘tt JOYOUtt J ULMP, the fleurad
gla cure, jPrloe 150 cents—for eaie by ai
rugttlßtß
| fUor worklui/ people. Send 10 cents
MM Upoetrge, end we will mail you frtt, a
8i St L. I royal, valuable sample box of good*
ihatwhi put you in the way of n eking more
money iu a few days than you ever thought p_s
ptnle at aoy business. Capital not required.
Icu car. live at home and work in spare time
oLly, or all the time. Allot both seicg, o/all
’'gop, grandly Buocesaful, 60 oenta to f 6 aaally
earned every eyei lug. That all who want work
may teat the business, we make tbla unparalle'ed
offer: To all who are not well satisfied we will
send $1 to pay lor the trouble o! writing ue.
Full particulars, directions. *tc.. sent free.
Immense pay absolutely.*ure for all who start ah
once. Don't delay. Address Sszasos 4 Co,.
Portland Maine. jlec*dftm-vl/