Newspaper Page Text
m
Columbus
^v^stxd
DAILY
r 0L. XVI.
COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1874.
NO. 2B
tebmb
ALFRED R. CALHOUN,
Proprietor.
Volvo months. In advance 1)8 00
4 00
2 00
75o.
2 00
WASHINGTON.
Nltlcnt ScikU ,\o MeNRiure-tior*
lou lntcri-cilc* for l*rl*oi»or*
CoiiHnmNiounl Proceed-
iiiKk ( »|ilt»l Hem*
tees and regaled the members with driv-
j eling platitudes about his being a work-
AILY, WEEKLY, AND SUNDAY I “ nd bo ' di "' ! out d6l " H ' ve
MlfQtTIliUllli. j TUK COMMUNIST*’ demands pnsposTsauim.
That the action of the police will excite
a vast amount of sympathy for those men
I in ttlrtody apparent. Many, very many of Wabhixuton, Jau. 27.—K delegation
them, aro suffering for want of food, from North Carolina, headed by Mr. Ar-
Uusiness is dull, and work hard to got. nold, banded the President a potilion for
Still, these laborers are not a whit worse the appointment of G. L. Malison, col-
off than thonaands of clerks and profes- | ored, for Collector of Customs at Wil-
sional men. There are families in this mington. The petition is signed be in
city whoso last blanket has been rnurt- 1 fluential Republicans of North Carolina.
months,
’brae months, “
)ne month, “
i.y Enquibbb, one year.
unday Enquirhu, one year 2 50
undar and Wjucly Enquismi to-
gather, one year a 00
NEW YORK.
loimminlet Hlot-Official ProUibi-
(ton of a Public Meeting—Fifty-
Two Meade Clubbed—Tlie
Hed Flag JBolnted In a
Mu loon -A Horror—
Cle., Etc., Ete.
L OORBMPOSaiNOS EXQUIHUt AMD SUM.]
New York, January 20, 1874.
There aro in this city, among the labor-
men (principally Germans, French
ud Italians), a very considerable number
f idiots, who rigorously adhere to their
lootrines. As compared with the groat
ody of our laborers, their strength is in-
ignifioant; but they make up for this by
prodigious amount of howling. “Bread
" is their battle-cry, and when
•able dotard (Mayor Havemeyer)
Teohue open the city treasury at their
'lomaud, lit *y shako the red flag of the
Umunuuu ia his ancient face aud threaton
to coiue down to tho City Hall “ twenty
housand Htroug" and “ know the reason
why."
KllIOIITKNED BY THE SPECTRE ROUGE.
Why Ilavoiueyer and the Police Com
missioners should grow frightened over
this miserable Spectre liougc it were hard
to tell. But scared they have been—
scarod as tho very dovil, if you will par-
(lou the profanity. These “raw head aud
bloody houes" of the Commune desired
fto hold a meeting iu Tompkius’ Square,
and afterwards to march in procession
dawn to the City Hall, there to. interview
Irtvemeyer and demand that they bo put
to work on the publio improvements.
T he Park GotntuissiouerH first gave them
lermission to use tho Square, and subse
quently withdrew such permission. The
uugunt and awful Hoard of Polico mag
nates refused to allow them to inaroh in
-rooessiou liolow Canal street, but gra
ciously decided tlmt they could perambu
late above. True, the Square and the
streets are public property, and tho right
ot' publio assemblages is guaranteed by
the Constitution ; but Gardner and the
“ther polioe autocrats oro a law and a
onstitotion uuto themselves, and when
hey put their foot down, why the thing is
ettled.
OPENING OP THE BATTLE,
However tho Commuuiat idiots deter-
-iued to meet in tho park, and yesterday
fternoou about live thousand of them
asembled there As 1 learn to-day they
ad sworn tc try conclusions with the
olice, but when a force of one hundred
ix-footera marohod upon the square all
but about one hundred iugloriously ske
daddled. The undaunted five score stood
their ground. The Metropolitans closed
n arouod them and begun playfully to
dub them. Ono lierculeau Communist
tamed Meyer, who has not eaten meat
for three weeks, gently tapped a Captain
of Polioe on the head with u “claw ham
mer," sending him to grass insensible.
Whereupon half a dozen policemen club
bed Meyer into a breathing mass of pulp,
and iu the twinkling of an eye afterwards,
had cleared tho square.
HOW THB MOB WAS THRASHID.
By this time an immense crowd had
gathored iu tho streets, and haviug car
ried tho enemy's position iu tho square,
the heroic pulicemeu determined to push
r into—not Africa—but Germania.
Tetfon and Latin, with a sprinkling of
Celtic, woroon tho avenue, closely packed.
With olubs swinging and revolvers
cleuchsd, the Metropolitans charged them.
They lied and were pursued. Everytiuie
policeman came sufficiently near to a
head he cracked it. Thus tho battle raged,
the officers doing ull the fighting, until
fifty clubbod and cracked heads lay Blood
ing and gory on the field, with their
bodies attached. Resting content with
otory thoy had nebiovod, tho police
gathored the oracked heads together nud
carried them to the stutiou.
THE POLICE TO ULAMK.
Such is tho history of tho first Comrnu-
niat riot in this city, f must not omit to.
mention that, while tlio clubbing was at
its height, an outhusiastic son of Gaul
rushed into an ndjacont saloon, called for
a glass oT tin ordinaire, rushed out again,
forgetting to pay for it, and pulling from
beneath his dilapidated coat tail a rod
flag, waved it in the air, shoutiug, “AUonx
unfans de la pa trie /" aud immediately
beat a frantic retreat from a stalwart
Metropolitan club ! Truth to aay, there
» riot, bnt it was all tho work of the
olice. The attack on the mob was an
outrage. Their right to meet iu the
Square was a guaiauteed one. The Square
belonged to thorn as citizen* of New York,
and the prohibitfoa of their meeting there
gaged to keep the wolf from tho d>
but we do uot see thorn holding meetings
and clamoring for tho authorities to fur
nish them with clerkships and other offi
cial positions. What greater right has u
starving carpenter to work from the city,
than an equally starving book-keeper ?
And if tho city is to provide means of
subsistence for the one, why not for tho
other as well ?
A HORROU IN HIGH LIFE.
The city was startled by another horror
yesterduy morning. At a very lute hour
Mr. Jacob Stiver, a millionaire, and his
family returned to their magnificent nmn-
Fifty-eighth street, from the bull
of the Twenty-socoud Regiment. Ex
hausted, probibly, after their night's
amusomout, thoy must have slept heavily,
for when fire was discovered in their
house toward duylight, it had already
made considerable headway. All the fami
ly, bowover, with one exception, succeed
ed in gaining the roof of a bow window at
tached to the third floor, and would all
buve been saved had thoy remained there.
Mr. Stivor, however, an old man, in hm
terror, leaped oft' and was instantly killed;
a servant girl followed and was so badly
injured us probably to be dead at this
writing. The youngest daughtor, Flor
ence, was rescued by u gentleman in the
adjoining house, who also implored tho
eldest sister, Deborah, to save herself iu
iu tho same way. Doboruh refused. Her
mother, a very corpulent woman, weigh
ing nearly throe hundrod pounds, had uot
been able to esoapo. With a heroism and
affection exceedingly rare, the girl de
clared that she would remain and die with
her mother. Leaving tho bow window,
she returned to her mother's room, and
when the firemen mastorod tho flames and
entered tho room, they found tho daugh
ter and her mother lying dead, shocking
ly burned. Deborah was engaged to a
gentleman of this city, aud was to have
married shortly. The family nro Israel
ites aud move iu tho highest ciroles.
RANKING HOUSES RESUMING.
One by ono tho prominent bankors
who suspended during tho panic last full
aro resuming payment. Henry Clews is
ou his legs again, aud Gilman, Sou & Co.
resumed yesterday. While most of the
banking houses which suspended will
eventually resume, they will do so with
terribly diminished capital. Ono Arm
which was worth four millions of dollars
beforo tho panic, above their liabilities,
admit that they are uot worth half a mil
lion to-day. So frightful has been the
shrinkage in the value of tho stocks and
bonds which constituted tho bulk of their
wonlth.
THE WESTERN CANAL PROJECTS AND NEW
YORK.
The proposition to out a canal below
New Orleans aud the sevoral canal pro-
jects from the West to tho Atlantic are
exoiting some attention here. New York
will spend millions to prevont the West
ern trade slipping from her grasp.
Should these projects succeed in spite of
her opposition, tho canals which unite her
to the lakes will be thrown open to the
Wostern trade free of charge and the peo
ple taxed directly to support them. You
will thus perceive that oven if the Groat
Western Canal is successfully carried
through it will not follow that New York
will lose any considerble portion of West
ern trade. Astca.
UKOKOU HEWN.
—Savannah shipped 2,040 bnles of cot
ton to Bremen on Saturday.
—Two Cuthbert negro children were
burned to death last week.
—Several small pox coses have boon de
veloped in Collinsville, opposite Macon.
—Dick General was hung at Valdosta
Friday, for tho murder of an another ne
gro.
—Mrs. Gen. Grant ii
McLaws, of Augusta,
“Fayette."
—Mr. Charles J. Gamble, of the firm of
Gamble, Beck «fc Co,, died iu Macon Sun
day, of consumption.
—The February term of the IJ. S. Court
ut Savannah has been adjourned to the
second Monday in April.
— Washington county Grangers want
the Capitol curried buck to Millodgeville,
and a Constitutional Convention.
—Dr. W. W. Towusoud's residence,
near Marsbalvillo, was burned Saturday.
Loss .*4,000. No insurance.
—Two colored women were drowned
soar Rome, last week, while trying to
ford the Etowah river.
—Tho Savannah bar warmly eulogized
thelatoJudgo Law on Saturday. Gen.
Jackson was brilliant and eloquent in his
remarks.
—It is said there are 0,000 hales of cot
ton ready to be shipped as soon os
Grangers' Direct Trade Association
chartered.
—Tho Atlanta merchants have pledged
themselvos to resist every unlawful effort
to tako advantage of the bankrupt law,
and keep a lawyer to look aftersuch cases.
—Since the decision on the Goorgia
homestead law by the Federal Supreme
Court, aixty-two bankrupt applications
have been tilod in the register's office at
Griffin aud sixty at Macon
He fought
of 1812, was an ox-memhor of
the Legislature, and during Gov. Cobb's
administration keeper of the Peniten-
clear rib
Louisvn,
Corn quiet
FOXURESfllOXAI..
Senate —Morn lug Report.
On motion of Mr. McCroeny, the cre
dentials of Hon. Win. L. McMillan, of
Louisiana, woro recommitted to tho Com
mittee on Privileges nud Elections.
President ‘-Won’t Mcnanue.''
The President, after consideration with
tho Cabinet to-day, decided not to send
the message ou Loutaiana matters which
ho hud partly concluded to send in to-day,
and it is now very doubtful if he will, at
anytime, consider that there iR any requi
sition for him to do so.
Senator Uortlou »ml l.oulaiann
Prisoner*.
Senator Gordon, of Georgia, applied to
the President to-day in behalf of tho
Grant parish (Louisiana) prisoners, who
wore arrested lust fall by a United Statos
Mnrshul and liuvo been kept incarcerated
siuce then, without trial. 11a asked that
they ho allowed a upoedy trial, or be
leased on bail until tho United States
courts were ready.
Tho President promptly ngreod to call
tho Attorney Gonond's attention to
matter to-day, and Senator Gordon hopos
for good rosults.
Tho Committee ou Ways and Means
disagree to Kelly's convertible bond hill
Cushing sails for Madrid on tho 7th
proximo.
W. C. Carsou has beeu re-nominated
postmaster at Thomnsville, Ga.
W’ltitc Accept*.
Chief Justice Waite has written to tho
President accepting his appointment, and
saying that ho will ho iu Washington in
the course of two weoks.
Aflei-noon News ion House.
Tho long-debuted West Virginia elec
tion cases wore decided in tho House to
day by tho admission of Messrs. Davis
and Hagans, Republicans. The majority
report of tho Eloctiou Committee was ad-
verrfo to their right, but tho minority ro-
port whs adopted by a strict -pnrty vote—
only soino half dozen Republicans votiug
against Davis and Hagans, and only two
Democrats votiug for them f McGee of
Ponusylvania und Waddell of North Caro
lina).
Mcimte.
Cameron, from the Committee on For
eign Relations, reported a bill to pay the
French spoliation claims.
Morton spoke at length on his resolu
tion providing for a railroad commis
sioner.
Tho Civil Rights bill was discussed all
day, and referred to the Judiciary Com
mittee.
No executive* session, aud no Southern
nominations.
The llniikruptcj Hill.
The additional amendments recommen
ded by tho Judiciary Committee to tho
bankruptcy bill, relate mostly to matters
of detail involved in the amendments
already reported. The following, how
ever, uro new and important :
First—An amendment providing that iu
oaso of voluntary bankruptcy no dis-
obargo shall be granted to u debtor w hoso
assets shall not lie equal to thirty-three
per cout. of tho claims proved against bis
estate, upon which ho shall be liable as
principal debtor, without the assent of his
creditors, iu number aud value as pro
scribed by existing law. This repeals the
provision which now requires fifty per
coutum of such assets.
.Second—An amendment providing thut
in computing the number of creditors
who shall join iu a petition to have u
debtor adjudged a bankrupt, creditors
whose respective debts do uot exceed
$250 shall not bo reckoned as part of the
requisite proportion of oue-fonrth of tho
creditors : but if tboro be no creditors
whose debts exceed said sum of or
if tho requisite number of creditors hold
ing debts exceeding :ji250 fail to sigu tho
petition, the creditors having debts of a
loss amount shall bo reckoned for the
purposes aforesaid.
Logan’s bill provides that a pension of
eight dollars per month shall be given to
each honorably discharged surviving offi
cer aud enlisted man, including the mili
tia and volunteers of the military and
naval service, who served sixty days in
the war with Mexico, and also to the sur
viving unmarried w idows of such officers
and soldiers.
Free Thinkers must give a bond of ijuj.nPO
to pay damages to the furniture. . _
committee of merchants will visit j “ n , 1
Washington to show tho Secretary of the H *'
Treasury the necessity of changing tho
ad valorem to specific duties on still wines,
and also to advocate tho construction of
the law so that one liquidation of cus
toms shall be mado final, in accordance
with a vote of tho Chamber of Com
merce.
The post office money order business iu
this city last year amounted to $32,500,IVOR.
North Carolina Cotton Mill Darned.
The extensivo cotton mills locatod iu
Alamance county known as the Big Flag
Mills, belonging to Messrs. W. A. it A. J.
Murray, wore destroyed by lire on the
22d, together with a flour mill adjoining.
Tho tiro was tbo result of an accident,
catching from some of the machinery.
Tho loss sustained is some $40,000, there
being no insurnuco upon eilhor tbo build
ings of machinery. Tho mills woro es
tablished some twonty-fivo years ago,
have been for eighteen yours in posses
sion of tho preseut firu. Aside from the
loss sustained by tho Messrs Murray,quite
n number of operutors have boon deprived
of work.
RAILROADS.
Central Railroad.
Jim
Cincinnati, J»uuiry27.—Flour quiot
and unchanged. Corn i-a*y, offattl. Hoik
Lard firm, trifle
—shoulders 7ja7g,
lesr !• J. Whiskey firm, Of*.
e, January 27.—Flour quiet.
Provisions quiet and firm.
Sr. Louts, Jan. 27.—Flour uuchanged l
iu lower grades. Corn active and higher
—No. 2, mixed, opened ut 04, dosed at j
08 iu elevslor ; 05 ou track. Pr»
quiet.
t’ettoM Market*.
Liverpool, January 27.—Cotton quii-t [ TWAIN No. l, GOING NolUTI AND WEST.
and uuchaugod-, Halos 10,000 bales, in- \ Leave Savannah tv.tb a m
eluding 1,000 fop speculation and export. 1 Arrive iit^u^sta 4-oo A M
Cotton to arrive steady. | Arrive utMlllodguviUe!!!!!!!.’ /.'.!! i'.loloJJ I!
Later.—Of tho sales to-day 7,Its) bales ( Arrive at Eatoutou »• m
were American.
3 p. m.—Sales of uplands, nothing be
low low middlings, deliverable January,
7 lfl-lUd; sales of Orleans, nothing below
good ordinary, shipped December and
January, 8^d.
Later.—Sides of uplands, nothing be
low good ordinary, deliverable January
and February, Nd; February and March,
7 Kbl(id; nothing below low middlings,
shipped February and March, Hd.
IftBis-r! trrJTvi
OEN'JjSUPT’S OFFICEU.lt. U. )
Savannah, November 1, ls73. j
O N AND AFTEli SUNDAY, 2U Instant,
Ph«nctiger Trains on the Georgia Central
> Railroad, Its liranelios aud uuunccliuuH, will run
Arrive at Culumlitw 3;L7 A
Arrlvo at Kufhulu 10:510 a
Arrive at At bifttu 1:40 j
COMING SOUTH AND EAST.
NEW YORK.
V \ It IOCS ITEMS.
Farmer, cook for the Steiner family,
four of tho members of which were
burned to death, with thoir house, two
weoks ugo, bus been arrested ponding
tho inquest of tho coroner. Silver plate,,
known to havo boon iu tho house, and
jowelry belonging to tho dead, cannot be
found sinco tho lire, and robbery and
murder are now intimated in connection
with tho terrible affair.
• The Freoidenker Bund, Turn Vorein,
and other German Societies, will meet m
Cooper Institute, Friday night, to protest
against the uctioii of the polico and other
FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE.
I.lvlngstonc’* lloiitli llimbtril.
London, January 27.—Several members
of the Geographical Society doubt tho re
port of Liviugstono's death.
Terrible Kill I rood Collision.
Glasgow, January 27.—While the ex
press passenger train from Edinburgh for
Glasgow was runuing at great spoed, it
carno in collision with] another express
train. Sixteen persons woro iustuutly
killed, and a number received severe in
juries. Several coaches were demolished.
Tl»c l'nrliunioiitnry Election.
London, January 27.—It is believed
the gouurnl election will bo completed by
the Kith of February. Both parties mu
coufideut of success. Betting iR now iu
favor of the Liberals.
D'Inrueli on Ulmlwtouc.
London, January 20.—Hon. Benjamin
D'lsraoli, iu au address to his constitu
ents in Buckinghamshire, seoking a ro-
eleotiou to Parliament, strongly con
demns the course of tho Government.
Tho Premier is charged with haviug vio
lated tho constitutional law by continuing
for several mouths iu occupation of a scat
to which ho was no longer entitled, and
the action of the Ministry in inaugurating
the Ashauteo war without communicating
with Parliament ou tho subject is se
verely dooouaced. D'lsraoli says he finds
nothing definite in Gladstone's address
regarding tho policy of tho latter, except
that ho iutondu to apply the largo surplus
to tho remission of taxation, which would
ho tho course of any Ministry. Thu prin
cipal measures of relief spoken of by
Gladstone havo always boon favored by
tho Conservatives. It would havo been
fur bettor for tho country if, within tho
last five years, tho foreign policy of the
Government had beeu a little inoro ener
getic. D israeli characterizes tbo argu
ment for the extension of household suf
frage to counties uh fallacious, and says
that no ouo lias more strongly opposed
the contemplated assimilation of frail-
chiso than the Prouder.
Ti: I.KG lt;l 1*1114' NOT KM.
—The Ohio Falls Cur Company having
urrangod with creditors, will resume.
—Prof. J. F. Holton died of heart d
ease at Boston, yesferday.
—Negroes Uoseusteiu and Moody we
convicted yesterday, at llrrrishurg, Pi
of murder in the first degree ft»r killing
farmer Bohut.
—A young muu named Porrino, of ’
York, ou his way home, died of consump
tion on the Union Pacific train which ;
rived at Omaha on Saturday.
—P. F. Davenport, a native of Mam
chusetts, brother-in-law of o.\-Govorn
Clailin, died of the same disease on I
truin which arrived at the sums place
Monday. The two were intimate friem
aud had been traveling iu California f
thoir health.
THE WEATIIE1
Dei
■ Wa
Washington, Jan. 27, 1871
Probabilities. — For tho Southern Stutos
cast of llie Mississippi river, southerly t<
westorly winds, with cloudy weather am
light rain, followed by clearing woathe
and a slight fall of temperature iu tin
Mississippi valley.
MARINE INTELLIGENCE.
AimiVAl.H AM» IHll*.A It'll It KM,
New York, Jan. 27.—Arrived—John
Parker, Nelson Robert, bark Kron Pri
Clide, Abraham Lincoln, Western Ei
pirc, CouiptosKoo Dm-hatol, Jennie
pbonzo, Mario.
Departed, homeward Magnolia, Prim
ton, Mile, Herman, Zoila, Queen Wert.
Kviline, Helimand Kepuhlica.
London, January 27. Burk Cothlor,
possibly Kathleen, from Charleston for
Bremen, was towed into Deal. She
picked up at sou, water logged. She had
beeu in a collision.
Li>
-Cot
ton, sales of uplnnds, nothing below good
ordinary, deliverable iu March and April,
‘ill.
Nkw York, Jauuury 27.—Cotton weak;
sules 1,055 bales; uplands 15j: Orleans
10 j.
Futures opened as follows : January 15;
February 15 l-32al5 11412; March 15 11-10
a 15*{; April UIjJs May 10 7-IOalOj; Juno
10 KMOalOji.
New York, January 27. Evouiug.
Cotton woak; sales fltw.i at lfȣal0j; nut
ceipls 1002.
Futuros closed weak; sides .‘12,400 bales
follows: January 15 lo-lOaloj;
Fubruury 14jjal4 20-32; March 15j}al5
13-32; April 15jal5 2'J-32; May 10 7-32..
15.1-10; Juno 10 1 l-UialG) 1 : July I7ul7
1-10.
New Orleans, Jan. 27. -Cotton slendy;
middlings 15^e, low middlings 14.Jo.
good ordinary I3jo; not receipts 2,405;
exports to Great Britain 3,110, to Conti
nent 2,151), to France 11,230; sales 3,0<>t
last evening 4,000.
Charleston, January 27.—Colton quiet;
net receipts 34)82; exports to Groat
Britain 15, to Cmitinei
2,7Ct»; salos 1,000.
Augusta. Jan. 27.—Cotton firm aud in
good demand ; receipts 1,203; Hales l,(H)o.
Mkmi-his, Jan. 27.— Colton, demand
good; recoipts 3,442 hales: shipments
2,310.
Mobile, January 27.—Colton quiot n< d
btondy, nominally unchanged; middlings
15]; net roceipts 3,108: sales 1,500.
Boston, January 20.—Col Ion dull; re
ceipts 4,007; sales 200. •
Norfolk, January 27. -Cotton- not io-
coipts 1200.
Arrive
Arrive
Arrive
Arrive in AuuiiHta....
Arrive ut Nuvunnuh..
Tit AIN Nu .2,GOING
NOKTU AND WEST
Doavo AuuuhW
Arrive al Auuu.'tu ...
A rrlvo ill Maoon
Leave Macon lur Coir;
Ixinvu Mu eon tor Eat;
Leave Macon tor Alla
Arrive at (Jeluiubui)..
Arrive at EuIhiiIh ....
BANKS.
W. L. SALISBURY. A. O. BLACKMAK,
MERCHANTS’ & MECHANICS'
BAKTKL,
Columbus, Ga.,
Does n General Banking Business.
DEALS IN
llu'lmiiKc, ««okl, Nllrnr, siorka, Ac.
Spec lit I nKentlon kIvcii to <oii 4 ,<..
I Ion*, nml prompt return* made.
Ns* Yoke Oorkcsfonddit:
American KxrhanRc Nntlotml ttiuik.
SAVINGS BANK.
l>F.l*ONIT« received In nmii* <»|
cent* »n«l upnitrd*.
NKYK.\ per rent, per iinnuiui to
I ere* t nl lowed, pajalilu i*t lanuart,
April, Jul> and October, .compound
ed lour time* nnnimlly.)
Dl l’osns PAID ON DEHAND.
1)111 KOTO Its .
w. b. SALtSDUUY—Vuinwrtjr ot Warnock JK\>.
A. 1LLUES-Of |'iwr, 111*.* k Co.
W. It. ItllOWN—Of Colnnil>u« Iron Worki o.
C. A. It HDD—Of 0. A. Ito,Id A Co.
0. L. McOOUOII—Of John Melt..ugh A «k»
• ut Mllloili(nvlllo .
3 III Eat ..n ton
- August
, 7:16
1,137, to l’n
I'r
i0t receipts 58.
Baltimore, January 27.
;ross recoipts 321).
•Savannah, January 27. -(
et receipts 1(158 ; sales BUG
Galveston, January 27.
nd demand limited; net
ales; exports to Great Bnti
■ In No ‘i I.cIiik a through t
rill Kullroiiil, HtoppliiK only at whole *U
, piiHieiiRora lor h.ill ctitllunn naiinot he
a on oi put oil. PaHiionuorfl lor MIIIo.Iko
and Ealonton will laho4’raln No. 1 fron
nnnli and Aiimi.ila, and Train No. 2 Iron
is on tho S. W. K.K , Atlanta and Macon
« MlUedKCvlUe aud Eatuntou train tun
. “Sundays oxcoptcd.’’
Western Railroad of
Alabama.
53 ; | HOURS TO NEW YORK
Nov? York and Now Orleans Mail Lino,
Palace Sleeping Care Run Through from
Opelika to Lynchburg.
WESTERN RAILROAD OF ALABAMA,
TRAINS LEAVE OOLUMUUH DAILY
FOR NEW YORK, DAILY,
Notice to Stockholders,
■ I v “ ,M
eplnft fill's
Opelika
TRAIN.** ARUM
SACRED MUSIC BOOK8.
THE STANDARD.
A Collection of Sncred Music for
Baumbach’s Sacred Quartette*.
Baumbach’s New Collection.
Buck's Motette Collection.
Buck's Second Motette Collection.
Trinity Collection. • ■* i Tuck-r.,
Oliver Ditccn !i Oo., Oha:. II. Ditson Co.
Change of Schedule.
u b' uL.w
O'I
N. .1. HUSSEY, U.UUNHY JORDAN.
I'n-iidwnt. Sini’y A Ti.uu
, OFFICE OF THE
Manufacturing Comply,
ColiunhiiH, Georgia
Paid up Capital, $1,250,000;
TO INCULCATE THE 1IAI1IT ()]•'
HAVINti ON TI1E I’AUT OU THU.
Ol'EHATTVEH, AND TO PROVIDE A
safe nml reliublo arrangement for lhe
bonofloial nconmuiptiMi rf the uarniug*
of artiHanH and all other classes, tin.
Company has established, under
HPKOIAL CHARTER FROM TIIJ2
STATE OF GEORGIA,
A SAVINGS DEPARTMENT,
in which I he following advantages ore
offered to Depositors id either largo «*t
small amounts :
1.
PERFECT HEOUItITY. 1 h* ansets
the Company wore on the 1st of January,
and nro steadily increasing,
The Reserve Fund is $2D7,7tki 32
All of which property is mbkgiali y
I'i.l'.Doi.i) by net of the General Axncmidy
for tho protection of 'Dupositoih ; and in
addition, by tho same act, the Htockho>d-
urs of the Company are made 1NDIYID-
ALLY RESPONSIBLE in prupoilion t.
their shares, for tho integrity of im.
Havings Department and Uh certificates . i
Deposit.
2.
LIBERAL INTKRESl . iUte allowed
3.
DEPOSITS can Ih» withdrawn man,
lime without notice. Imp,isiiui* iesi,Jir,g
out of the mtv can di »w dejMisits I.y
checks.
4.
, III I.ES AM) REGULATIONS ei th;,
Department furnihliod u 4 m»i. appb.ni/ :..,
and all desired information given
5.
BOOKS CERTIFYING DEPoSiT'
given to depoaitor*.
6.
.1// accounts oj Dqt ito, > m
Hi'ltTCd strict!I, ,,rivatc and co„/id,nf-U
DIRECTORS:
DRY GOODS.
PEACOCK & SWIFT,
N ' 'i- <'i!oni; '<»• r' ' 11
ALL WINTER GOODS
MARKETS.
w*g tyranny pure and simple. Not that I —Major Lewis Zachary died in Coving- j c '*y ^ l,Dct
aympathuo with them. I do not believe [ ton last Friday, aged 79 y
it the duty of the oity government to give
work to unemployed laborers because
legitimate sources of labor have coaaed
to exist. If, instead of parleying with
these people, Mayor Havemeyer had
blnntly told them, from the start, that
their demand would not be acceded to,
there would not have been any further
trouble. But k* received their commit-
—A correspondent of the Constitution-
alist says recollections of a lovely bride
he Haw married in Augusta, caused Gen.
Sherman not to carry his army through
that place ou his march to the aea He
pronounced her the handsome*! lady he
had ever a«an
regnrd to the meet-
uployed work-
IKI.K4.lt .11* II TO rVdURIK
Money mid Stork Market*.
Paris, Jan. 27.—Hem- 58f. 22\c.
New York, Jan •• —Stocks active,
upward tendency. Money, 5 bid. Gold
11 A- Exchange—long 4*3$, short 487.
Governments active and strong. St.ito
bonds Rtrong.
Provision Market*.
Liverpool. Jon. 27.—Breadstuff*quiot.
40 and 3, for long
ing aud clubbing of
men in Tompkius Square.
The trustees of Cooper Institute had n
conference with tho Police Commission
ers, and wore informed by tho latter that Corn 41 aud
thoy could protect tho apoakers from vio- | clear middlings; 41 and 3 for short olen
lonco in tho expression of their opinions, I middlings. Lard 44 and <».
but might not be able to protect the prop- New York Jan. 27. 1 lour steady
. e ! Wheat dull and huuvr. Corn dull am
orty in til. hall in caao of disorder; h.uco, uorl t uu u Pork « m , *ir. i .. l.uu
iu addiUuu to ths rent ol $250. th u |«iaad) steam 9j.
STOVES AND TIN WARE.
<200
COOKING STOVES!
W. H. Robarts & Co.,
Hi; .»-»••» <4 ""' ir
Cooking Stoves,
Grates, Hollow Ware, Wood
and Willow Ware,
sii.vmt I'lariai am, imiTWiA oodu.-.
Crockory & Class Waro,
Pocket and Tablo Cutlory
M :r I 1 >. :n \ M>
SHI.II \\ A It L
i LI ItKD l VO
il (RLKI OKI
Southern Stove orks,
Columbus, Ca.
J. W. DENNIS & CO.
W - 6
i
SIDY l.S
4. It VI I S I I H I. IMM. S.
ttllMIO IMISHH I
IIOI.I.OU \\ \ltl-.
HOTELS.
Rankin House,
Columbus, (ait.
J. W. RYAN. I’rup'r.
Frank Gom.fn, Clerk
Ruby Rostuiinnit,
Bur ’ find Billiard Silicon,
Under tub Rankin Homo..
inj'.M .l»utl .1. \V. 11YAN, I’ii.j
Candy, Candy, Candy !
Manufactured at No. 80 Broad St.,
Profumo & Hoffman.
;.I It
T. S. SPEAR, AGENT
for Non-Electro Plating,
rni r. i,..t -riiri. .... ,uit. t i. -
.1 I ml-, m ?,i..r ™,t i u, :
Tiy II h. i .1 »:• u.wvl .
CHATTERBOX FOR 1873.
FOR SALK BY
J. W. PEASL it NOKMAN,